Housman's Poems
Autor John Bayleyen Limba Engleză Hardback – 16 apr 1992
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198117636
ISBN-10: 0198117639
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 147 x 222 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Editura: Clarendon Press
Colecția Clarendon Press
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198117639
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 147 x 222 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Editura: Clarendon Press
Colecția Clarendon Press
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
`John Bayley's Housman's Poems makes a cogent argument for the continuing value of this poet ... Bayley is very good at sorting out the poems in Housman's many books that are still of interest. The book is clearly written and economical, and it contains a good deal of wit and insight. It provides readers, above all, with methods of coming to terms with a poet who has been discredited in the last thirty years.'Magill's Literary Annual 1993
`marvellous new study of the poetry - not a biographical account, but perfectly willing to admit, the poet's uneventful life as a witness when needs be. ...Bayley's book is more than a rearguard action. It comes out fighting for the virtues of the verse ...'The Independent
`Addicts of Housman will be grateful to ... John Bayley, for taking us in critical detail through the poems again and drawing our attention to points we would have missed.'J. Enoch Powell, Daily Telegraph
'The book, though short, is taxing and illuminating; it may be read not merely as a reappraisal of Housman but as a meditation on the nature of poetry by a leading member of the Oxford English school.'Anthony Curtis, Financial Times
'Being an exceptionally good judge of poem's tone, Bayley is well able to catch the meanings buried within meanings, or the sense implanted in creative monsense.'Andrew Motion, The Observer
`John Bayley's study of Housman's poems is a brilliant and rambling book ... Bayley produces literary criticism of the "close-reading" school at its purest and most old-fashioned. Next term John Bayley will surrender his chair at Oxford to Terry Eagleton. I fear we shall not look upon his like again.'Caroline Moore, The Times
`...it is studded with gems, some new-cut, some repolished. Professor Bayley ingeniously strips down well-known Housman issues...'Roderic Dunnett, Church Times
`a witty, inquisitive essay that itself digs out a dangerous wit in a poet who has, until now, failed to receive his critical dues.'Anthony Lane, Independent
`a marvellous book, the kind that shows you what a study of English literature ought to be about, but to a great extent no longer is.'John Whitworth, The Spectator
`Housman's Poems, by John Bayley, is a sympathetic and generally wise book, akin to an extended seminar.'Roderic Dunnett, Church Times
`Readers familiar with the work of Professor Bayley will welcome this new book. The writer is noted for the breadth of his interests and the sensitivity and humanity of his criticism, couched in prose which is subtle and persuasive but free from jargon; ... Professor Bayley has shown superbly throughout his book the appositeness to Housman's own poetry of the line quoted in `The Name and Nature of Poetry' from Wordsworth - `Sorrow, that is not sorrow, but delight'. Alan Holden, Honsman Society Journal Vol 18, 92
'this book is written with assurance, with many telling phrases and pointed observations, however much its principal notions seem to merge: a high and respectful intelligence is at work here'L.K. MacKendrick, University of Windsor, Choice, January 1993
`marvellous new study of the poetry - not a biographical account, but perfectly willing to admit, the poet's uneventful life as a witness when needs be. ...Bayley's book is more than a rearguard action. It comes out fighting for the virtues of the verse ...'The Independent
`Addicts of Housman will be grateful to ... John Bayley, for taking us in critical detail through the poems again and drawing our attention to points we would have missed.'J. Enoch Powell, Daily Telegraph
'The book, though short, is taxing and illuminating; it may be read not merely as a reappraisal of Housman but as a meditation on the nature of poetry by a leading member of the Oxford English school.'Anthony Curtis, Financial Times
'Being an exceptionally good judge of poem's tone, Bayley is well able to catch the meanings buried within meanings, or the sense implanted in creative monsense.'Andrew Motion, The Observer
`John Bayley's study of Housman's poems is a brilliant and rambling book ... Bayley produces literary criticism of the "close-reading" school at its purest and most old-fashioned. Next term John Bayley will surrender his chair at Oxford to Terry Eagleton. I fear we shall not look upon his like again.'Caroline Moore, The Times
`...it is studded with gems, some new-cut, some repolished. Professor Bayley ingeniously strips down well-known Housman issues...'Roderic Dunnett, Church Times
`a witty, inquisitive essay that itself digs out a dangerous wit in a poet who has, until now, failed to receive his critical dues.'Anthony Lane, Independent
`a marvellous book, the kind that shows you what a study of English literature ought to be about, but to a great extent no longer is.'John Whitworth, The Spectator
`Housman's Poems, by John Bayley, is a sympathetic and generally wise book, akin to an extended seminar.'Roderic Dunnett, Church Times
`Readers familiar with the work of Professor Bayley will welcome this new book. The writer is noted for the breadth of his interests and the sensitivity and humanity of his criticism, couched in prose which is subtle and persuasive but free from jargon; ... Professor Bayley has shown superbly throughout his book the appositeness to Housman's own poetry of the line quoted in `The Name and Nature of Poetry' from Wordsworth - `Sorrow, that is not sorrow, but delight'. Alan Holden, Honsman Society Journal Vol 18, 92
'this book is written with assurance, with many telling phrases and pointed observations, however much its principal notions seem to merge: a high and respectful intelligence is at work here'L.K. MacKendrick, University of Windsor, Choice, January 1993
Notă biografică
John Bayley has published numerous critical works, of which the most recent is The Short Story: Henry James to Elizabeth Bowen (1988). He is a regular contributor to the Times Literary Supplement and the London Review of Books.