Introduction | ix | | The Perfect Critic | 1 | | Imperfect Critics— | | Swinburne as Critic | 15 | A Romantic Aristocrat | 22 | The Local Flavour | 29 | A Note on the American Critic | 34 | The French Intelligence | 39 | | Tradition and the Individual Talent | 42 | | The Possibility of a Poetic Drama | 54 | | Euripides and Professor Murray | 64 | | Rhetoric and Poetic Drama | 71 | | Notes on the Blank Verse of Christopher Marlowe | 78 | | Hamlet and His Problems | 87 | | Ben Jonson | 95 | | Phillip Massinger | 112 | | Swinburne as Poet | 131 | | Blake | 137 | | Dante | 144 |
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