Essays in AppreciationClarendon Press, 1996 - 363 Seiten The successor to Christopher Ricks's The Force of Poetry, this collection of critical essays still attends to poets and poetry: to John Donne's farewells to love, George Crabbe's constraints, Hardy's reading of history, and Robert Lowell as translator of Racine. But other literary worlds are also appreciated in Essays in Appreciation. Drama: Marlowe's Doctor Faustus and the plague. History: the Earl of Clarendon and composition. The novel: Jane Austen and mothering. Victorian lives: E. C. Gaskell's Charlotte Bronte; Froude's Carlyle; Hallam Tennyson's Tennyson; and George Eliot and her age. Philosophy: J. L. Austin and his art of allusion. Finally, critical questions: Literature and the matter of fact, and literary principles as against theory; plus two notes on criticism at the present time, one on talk of the canon, and the other on Empson and political criticism. |
Inhalt
Doctor Faustus and Hell on earth | 1 |
Farewell to Love | 19 |
The wit and weight of Clarendon | 51 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Alfred Lord Tennyson allusion artist babies biography Carlyle's Casaubon Charlotte Brontë child claim Clarendon couplet Crabbe Crabbe's criticism D. H. Lawrence dead death Doctor Faustus Donne's dream Emily Empson English Essays exactly eyes fact father feel Froude Froude's Gaskell Gaskell's George Eliot give Hallam Tennyson honour hope imagination ingeminating insistence irony Jane Austen Jane Welsh Carlyle John Donne joke kind language less letter lines literary literature live London look Lord Tennyson Lowell Marotti matter Memoir metaphor Middlemarch mind mother moved never Nina Auerbach novel novelist once pain perhaps Philosophical Papers plague play poem poem's poet Poetical poetry principle professional prurience quoted Racine Racine's reader remorse repentance rhyme Robert Lowell sense speak stanza story T. S. Eliot theory things thou thought tion translation true truth turn William Empson woman word writing wrote young