Collected Writings on PoetryCarcanet Press, 1995 - 560 pages The phases of his critical writing are distinct, linked by a serious creative intent and a remarkable eloquence. From the 1925 volume Poetic Unreason and Other Studies to his collaborative works with Laura Riding (not included here), to The Common Asphodel (1949) and other work, much of it hard to find, Graves's concerns and discoveries are often momentous. It is as though, almost single-handed through the harsh anti-Romantic years and into the decades of irony, he maintained and defended the lyric tradition, making it classical and viable against the tide. As advocate, polemicist and mythographer, he has exercised a constant influence on poets, readers and critics ill at ease with fashion, hungry for the traditions that underlie the merely conventional. |
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Page 239
... acceptance . ' Acceptance seems so spiritless , protest so vain . In between the two I live . With this quotation , I make my bow , and thank you for your continued patience . If , in the course of these lectures , I have said anything ...
... acceptance . ' Acceptance seems so spiritless , protest so vain . In between the two I live . With this quotation , I make my bow , and thank you for your continued patience . If , in the course of these lectures , I have said anything ...
Page 294
... accepted in the learned societies of the world . And if we adopt the theory that ' great poetry ' ranks above good poetry because of its perfect translatability , then Kipling's ' If , which loses little by translation into French ...
... accepted in the learned societies of the world . And if we adopt the theory that ' great poetry ' ranks above good poetry because of its perfect translatability , then Kipling's ' If , which loses little by translation into French ...
Page 295
... accepted treatment , he must be a fool . That proverb still holds . In fact , with vitamins and antibiotics and sulpha drugs and tranquillizers and all the other new ingenious medicaments , clearly labelled , a man must be a fool if he ...
... accepted treatment , he must be a fool . That proverb still holds . In fact , with vitamins and antibiotics and sulpha drugs and tranquillizers and all the other new ingenious medicaments , clearly labelled , a man must be a fool if he ...
Contents
Observations on Poetry 19221925 | 1 |
The Poetic Trance | 3 |
Prose and Poetry | 5 |
Copyright | |
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Aeneid ancient Apollo asphodel ballad báraka beauty Ben Jonson Blake borrowed called Catullus century Classical Coleridge colour contemporary critical dare dead death divine Dr Johnson emotional English poetry fashion father feel friends Graves Greek hand heart Heaven honour inspiration Juana Juana de Asbaje Keats King Latin Laura Riding lines literary live lovers magic means metre Milton modern moon moral Muse natural never night nightingale Omar Ali-Shah once original Ovid Oxford perhaps poem poet poet's poetic Pound prose published Queen readers rhyme Robert Graves Roman satire seems sense Shakespeare sing Skelton song sonnet sort soul stanza Suibne T.E. Lawrence T.S. Eliot thee thou thought tion tradition trance translation true Tyger verse Virgil W.H. Auden White Goddess woman women word Wordsworth write written wrote Yeats young