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" The grand distinction of the under forms of the new school of poets is their vulgarity. By this I do not mean that they are coarse, but "shabbygenteel," as it is termed. A man may be coarse and yet not vulgar, and the reverse. Burns is often coarse, but... "
The Works of Lord Byron: With His Letters and Journals, - Page 171
by George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1833
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Letters and Journals of Lord Byron: With Notices of His Life, Volume 2

George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1831 - 576 pages
...Shabby-genteel,' as it is termed. A man may be coarse and yet not vulgar, and the reverse. Burns is often coarse, but never vulgar, Chatterton is never vulgar, nor...they treat of low life in all its branches. It is in their,/?nery that the new under-school are most vulgar, and they may be known by this at once ; as...
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Letters and Journals of Lord Byron: With Notices of His Life, Volume 1

George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1830 - 528 pages
...shabby-genteel,' as it is termed. A man may be coarse and yet not migar, and the reverse. Burns is often coarse, at an hour's distance. Not twin« satisfied with the...be lighted on the hill above the village, and som ¡Is branches. It is in their ...-•-v that the new under school are most vulgar, and they may be...
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The Quarterly Review, Volume 44

William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1831 - 620 pages
...be coarse and * Quarterly Review, No. LXXIV. yet not vulgar, and the reverse. Burns is often coarse, but never vulgar. Chatterton is never vulgar, nor...they treat of low life in all its branches. It is in theirs/men/ that the new under school are most vulgar, and they • maybe known by this at once ; as...
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The Quarterly Review, Volume 44

1831 - 632 pages
...be coarse and * Quarterly Review, No. LXXIV. yet not vulgar, and the reverse. Burns is often coarse, but never vulgar. Chatterton is never vulgar, nor...they treat of low life in all its branches. It is in their^/fnery that the new under school are most vulgar, and they maybe known by this at once ; as what...
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Letters and Journals of Lord Byron: With Notices of His Life, Volume 2

George Gordon Byron Baron Byron, Thomas Moore - 1831 - 572 pages
...Shabby-genteel,' as it is termed. A man may be coarse and yet not vulgar, and the reverse. Burns is often coarse, but never vulgar, Chatterton is never vulgar, nor...they treat of low life in all its branches. It is in their^nery that the new under-sehool are most vulgar, and they may be known by this at once ; as what...
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The Quarterly review, Volume 44

1831 - 624 pages
...coarse and » Quarterly Review, No. LXXIv! yet not vulgar, and the reverse. Burns is often coarse, but never vulgar. Chatterton is never vulgar, nor...though they treat of low life in all its branches. Jt is in their•/mery that the new under school are most vulgar, and they may be known by this at...
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The works of Thomas Moore, Volume 17

Thomas Moore - 1832 - 592 pages
...'shabby-genteel,' as it is termed. A man may be coarse and yet not vulgar, and the reverse. Burns is often coarse, but never vulgar. Chatterton is never vulgar, nor...once ; as what we called at Harrow ' a Sunday blood' miyht be easily distinguished from a gentleman, although his clothes might be the better cut, and his...
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The Original: A New Miscellany of Humour, Literature, and the Fine ..., Volume 1

1832 - 368 pages
...termed. A man may be coane and yet not culgar, mnd the reverse. Burns is often coarse, but never rulgar. Chatterton is never vulgar, nor Wordsworth, nor the...Lake school, though they treat of low life in all its brunches. It is in their finery that the new under school arc matt vulgar, and they may be known by...
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The Works of Lord Byron: With His Letters and Journals,

George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1833 - 440 pages
...shabby-genteel," as it is termed. A man may be coarse and yet not vulgar, and the reverse. Burns is often coarse, but never vulgar. Chatterton is never vulgar, nor...distinguished from a gentleman, although his clothes might be the better cut, and his boots the best blackened, of the two ; — probably because he made the one,...
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The Works of George Byron: With His Letters and Journals, and His Life, Volume 6

George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1835 - 446 pages
...shabby-genteel," as it is termed. A man may be coarse and yet not vulgar, and the reverse. Burns is often coarse, but never vulgar. Chatterton is never vulgar, nor...distinguished from a gentleman, although his clothes might be the better cut, and his boots the best blackened, of the two ; — probably because he made the one,...
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