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xxiv
CONTENTS
PAGE | ||
Early types | 272 | |
William Leggett and his editorials | 272 | |
Collections of editorials | 272 | |
Circulation of editorials through other means | 272 | |
Improvement in editorials | 273 | |
Wider range of subjects | 273 | |
Improvement in facilities | 274 | |
Extension of newspaper plant | 275 | |
Freedom from errors of fact in editorials | 275 | |
Independence in treatment | 276 | |
The editorial impersonal | 276 | |
The editorial "we" | 276 | |
The deadly parallel | 277 | |
John Bright and The Times | 277 | |
Editorial dilemmas | 278 | |
Editorials in absentia | 278 | |
Editorial changes of manuscript | 278 | |
The Edinburgh Review | 278 | |
Carlyle, Napier, and Jeffrey | 279 | |
Dickens and Mrs. Gaskell | 279 | |
Hazlitt on editors | 280 | |
Delane and Henry Reeve | 280 | |
"Editorial tinkering" in Paris | 280 | |
Howells and the Atlantic | 280 | |
Blanchard Jerrold and Catling | 281 | |
Other difficulties between editors and contributors | 281 | |
Napier and Brougham | 281 | |
Napier and Dickens | 282 | |
Napier, Brougham, Macaulay, and the Whigs | 283 | |
Troubles of the editors of the Edinburgh typical | 283 | |
The editorial as historical material | 284 | |
"The Twelve Labors of an Editor" | 285 | |
To readers, the editorial is "the paper" | 286 | |
Chapter XII | ||
Criticism and the Critic | ||
Difficulty in using criticism as historical material | 287 | |
No agreement concerning functions of criticism | 287 | |
Absence of recognized standards | 288 | |
Theory of Matthew Arnold | 288 | |
The New Laokoon | 289 | |
Theory of Bliss Perry | 289 | |
The ideal critic | 289 |