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Cambridge History
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The Period of the French Revolution
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George Crabbe
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Sir Eustace Grey
The Parish Register
The Borough
CONTENTS
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VOLUME CONTENTS
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INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
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BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume XI. The Period of the French Revolution.
VII.
George Crabbe
.
§ 6.
Sir Eustace Grey
.
Of the other poems in the 1807 volume,
The Hall of Justice
is a strong and horrible narrative, in stanzas, of the life of a gipsy woman; while
The Birth of Flattery
is a pompous allegory showing how flattery is the fortunate child of poverty and cunning. More remarkable is
Sir Eustace Grey,
a poem very different from Crabbes usual pedestrian and minutely natural work. In or about 1790, Crabbe had been recommended by his doctor to take opium for severe indigestion; and opium-taking became a habit. It was suggested by Edward Fitz-Gerald that opium influenced Crabbes dreams, and, through them,
Sir Eustace Grey
and
The World of Dreams,
a poem of somewhat the same nature, which was first printed after his death. The scene of
Sir Eustace Grey
is a madhouse, where a patient, once rich and happy, relates to his physician and a visitor his downfall and the visions of his madness. Parallels have been found between some of these imaginings and those recorded by De Quincey in
The Confessions of an Opium-Eater.
The poem, which is written in eight-line stanzas with linked rimes, is wild and forcible in a very high degree; but Crabbe, with fine art, allows it to sink gradually to rest with Sir Eustaces account of his conversion by what the poet admitted to be a methodistic call, his singing of a hymn and the reflections of the physician.
13
CONTENTS
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VOLUME CONTENTS
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INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Parish Register
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