Based on years of archival research in various British and American libraries, Living Forms examines the early nineteenth centurys fascination with representations of the human form, particularly those from the past, which, having no adequate verbal explanatory text, are vulnerable to having their meanings erased by time. The author explores a variety of such representations and responses to them, including Coleridges Shakespeare lectures, Hazlitts essays on portraits, Keatss poems on mythic and sculpted figures, meditations by Byrons Childe Harold on the monuments of Italy, Felicia Hemanss verses on monuments to and by women, and Shelleys poems and letters on figures from Italy, Egypt, and other antique lands. Haley argues that in what has been called the museum age, Romantics sought aesthetically to frame these figures as living forms, mental images capable of realization in alternate modes or forms.
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