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the experience of reading in Britain, from 1450 to 1945...

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Listings for Author:  

Uvedale Price

  

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Uvedale Price : Essay on the Picturesque

"My Brother has read Mr Price's Book on the picturesque ... "

Century: 1800-1849     Reader/Listener/Group: William Wordsworth      Print: Book

  

Uvedale Price : Draft ode on French retreat from Moscow

Uvedale Price to Mary Berry, 19 January 1813, accompanying his ode on the burning of Moscow by French forces: 'I sent an early copy to Fitzpatrick, and Rogers happening to come in [...] he could not resist showing it to him: I have since altered it a good deal, and as Rogers had seen the first sketch, I have sent him this new, and I hope improved, edition.'

Century: 1800-1849     Reader/Listener/Group: Rogers      Manuscript: Unknown

  

Uvedale Price : An essay on the picturesque

'Read the 1st Part of Price's "Essay on the Picturesque"...'

Century: 1800-1849     Reader/Listener/Group: Thomas Green      Print: Book

  

Uvedale Price : An Essay on the Modern Pronunciation of the Greek and Latin Languages

Elizabeth Barrett to Uvedale Price, Foxley [Price's home] October 1826: 'Mr Price's desire that I should have read these sheets [proofs of Price's Essay on the Modern Pronunciation of the Greek and Latin Languages] with the design of remarking on them I have obeyed with much deference to him [...] I have read them with deep interest & attention [goes on to discuss and dispute text in great depth and detail]'.

Century: 1800-1849     Reader/Listener/Group: Elizabeth Barrett      Print: Unknown

  

Uvedale Price : dissertation on modern pronunciation of classical Greek

Uvedale Price to Elizabeth Barrett, 20 December 1826: 'When Luxmoore was with us, a little before he called at Hopend [sic; for Hope End, Barrett's family home], I shewed him what I had just been writing on the Charter-house mode of pronouncing [classical Greek], chiefly that of their passing over the vowel to the consonant in iambi & pyrrhics but continuing to accent them, as we do, on the first syllable: He read it with more interest than he is apt to do on such subjects, & wished me to go on with it'.

Century: 1800-1849     Reader/Listener/Group: [probably] Charles Scott Luxmoore      Manuscript: Unknown

  

Uvedale Price : dissertation on modern pronunciation of classical Greek

Elizabeth Barrett to Uvedale Price, 30 December 1826, in response to his MS dissertation on Charterhouse pronunciation of classical Greek: 'my brother [a Charterhouse pupil] & I were much gratfified by reading your m.s. before we dispatched it [to John Russell]'.

Century: 1800-1849     Reader/Listener/Group: Elizabeth Barrett and Edward Barrett Moulton-Barrett     Manuscript: Unknown

  

Uvedale Price and James Commeline : correspondence on pronunciation of classical languages

Elizabeth Barrett to Uvedale Price, c.15 April 1827: 'I have done reading your correspondence with Mr Commeline [...] I thought it odd that an article of the Edinburgh Review should be referred to, on a philological subject; &, on looking into the one which Mr Commeline calls the "Manual of his heresy", I was surprised to find us accused there of ["]subverting the true metrical structure of Latin hexameters, even according to the accentual system" by [italics]not[end italics] laying our accent on the [italics]long[end italics] syllable, & by laying it on the short ones. The Reviewer seems confused in his speculations'.

Century: 1800-1849     Reader/Listener/Group: Elizabeth Barrett      Manuscript: Letter

  

Uvedale Price : An Essay on the Modern Pronunciation of the Greek and Latin Languages

James Commeline to Elizabeth Barrett, 1 December 1827: 'Together with Mr Price's book, allow me to return you my best thanks for the perusal of it. Though written [...] with great elegance & felicity of composition, it really strikes me as a remarkable specimen of that order of architecture [...] of which all the parts are perfect in their kind, except the foundation [goes on to criticise work in detail].'

Century: 1800-1849     Reader/Listener/Group: The Rev. James Commeline Jr      Print: Book

  

Uvedale Price : An Essay on the Modern Pronunciation of the Greek and Latin Languages

Uvedale Price to Elizabeth Barrett, 11 December 1827: 'It gave me great pleasure to hear that you think so favorably of my Essay now that you have read the whole of it, & that what you [italics]had[end italics] read in MS., has gained by being in print.'

Century: 1800-1849     Reader/Listener/Group: Elizabeth Barrett      Print: Book

  

Uvedale Price : Essay on the Picturesque

Elizabeth Barrett to Hugh Stuart Boyd, 28-29 May 1828: "If you have not read the Essay on the Picturesque, will you let me send it to you [...] It is one of the books which I read for the sake of its style, without feeling an interest in its subject'.

Century: 1800-1849     Reader/Listener/Group: Elizabeth Barrett      Print: Book

  

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