Excerpt: "The three essays composing this small book were written
several years ago for publication in the "Times Literary Supplement,"
to the editor of which I owe the encouragement to write them, and now
the permission to reprint them. Inadequate as periodical criticism,
they need still more justification in a book. Some apology, therefore,
is required. My intention had been to write a series of papers on the
poetry of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries: beginning with
Chapman and Donne, and ending with Johnson. This forbidden fruit of
impossible leisure might have filled two volumes. At best, it would
not have pretended to completeness; the subjects would have been
restricted by my own ignorance and caprice, but the series would have
included Aurelian Townshend and Bishop King, and the authors of
"Cooper's Hill" and "The Vanity of Human Wishes," as well as Swift and
Pope. That which dissipation interrupts, the infirmities of age come
to terminate. One learns to conduct one's life with greater economy: I
have abandoned this design in the pursuit of other policies. I have
long felt that the poetry of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries,
even much of that of inferior inspiration, possesses an elegance and a
dignity absent from the popular and pretentious verse of the Romantic
Poets and their successors. To have urged this claim persuasively
would have led me indirectly into considerations of politics,
education, and theology which I no longer care to approach in this
way. I hope that these three papers may in spite of and partly because
of their defects preserve in cryptogram certain notions which, if
expressed directly, would be destined to immediate obloquy, followed
by perpetual oblivion."
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783989731936
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter