
Originally Posted by
mortalterror
I took a look back at his essays again and for the most part he does use the third person, but where he relates his personal experiences and puts himself into the story he does lapse into the first person. But more than that, there's this sort of sublime sense of horror and decay throughout his stuff which I think bears a certain kinship with Poe, with Conrad, and the other authors I've mentioned previously, like links in a chain or the evolution of an aesthetic. De Quincey for all his objectivity and rationality is fairly well seated in the dark side of the Romantic movement. He's not a happy go lightly flower and song romantic. He's got more in common with Goethe's sturm und drang movement, or Lermontov and what was happening in Russia about that time. The recurring themes of madness and decomposition, make me think he was a forerunner of the French Decadent movement with Baudelaire and Lautréamont, except instead of celebrating sickness he is repulsed by it. As it stands, De Quincey's nightmare visions stand as a sort of midway point in British literature between Coleridge's Kubla Khan and Browning's Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came.