03026cam a22003853u 450000100060000000300070000600500170001300600020003000700050003200800410003701000130007804000110009104100170010205000070011910000430012624500170016926400510018630000470023733600260028433700260031033800360033649000270037250000310039950501340043050800150056452017170057953400650229665300500236165300420241165300290245383000270248285600690250985600430257899900190262176935UtSlPG20260610134800.0mcr n260607r20251906utu|||||o|||||||||||||| d a06016768 aUtSlPG 7aen2iso639-1 4aPR1 aBenson, Arthur Christopher,d1862-192510aWalter Pater 1aSalt Lake City, UT :bProject Gutenberg,c2025 a1 online resource :bmultiple file formats atextbtxt2rdacontent acomputerbc2rdamedia aonline resourcebcr2rdacarrier1 aEnglish men of letters aRelease date is 2025-09-260 aEarly life -- Early writings -- Oxford life -- Marius the Epicurean -- London life -- Later writings -- Personal characteristics. aSean/IB@DP aWalter Pater by Arthur Christopher Benson is a literary biography and critical study written in the early 20th century. It explores the life, temperament, and aesthetic philosophy of the Victorian critic Walter Pater, pairing narrative with close readings of his major works. The emphasis falls on Pater’s Oxford career, his method of “imaginative” criticism, and the cultural ripple of his Renaissance studies. The opening of the book explains the absence of an official life and how the author builds his account from Pater’s sisters, friends, and published sources, then outlines the contents. It traces Pater’s quiet, observant childhood, Canterbury schooldays, and early sensitivity to beauty and ritual, notes Keble’s brief influence, and points to autobiographical threads in The Child in the House and Emerald Uthwart. At Oxford he reads Ruskin and German thinkers, takes a second in Greats, wins a Brasenose fellowship, and—after Italy and Winckelmann—shifts decisively from metaphysics to art. The narrative dwells on his austere rooms, regular habits, gentle but exacting teaching of essays, and a circle that includes Shadwell, Bywater, Pattison, and the Wards. It then surveys the early writings—Diaphaneitè, the Coleridge essay, and especially Studies in the History of the Renaissance—summarizing key essays on Botticelli, Leonardo, Michelangelo, Giorgione, and Du Bellay, and the debated “Conclusion” and its later revisions. The section closes with the reception: the aesthetic movement’s embrace, Mallock’s satirical caricature in The New Republic, and tensions with Jowett that affected Pater’s standing at Oxford. (This is an automatically generated summary.) pOriginally published:cNew York: The Macmillan Company, 1906 aAuthors, English -- 19th century -- Biography aCritics -- Great Britain -- Biography aPater, Walter, 1839-1894 0aEnglish men of letters4 uhttps://archive.org/details/walterpater0000bens/page/n3/mode/2up40uhttps://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/76935 c117660d117660