Srngaraprakasa of Bhoja, Part 1,
Venkatarama Raghavan
This edition is based on new manuscripts of this important treatise on classical Sanskrit poetics. It was composed by the famous eleventh-century King Bhoja of Malwa (W. India), a patron of traditional learning. The text has never received a complete critical edition. It is important not only because of the theoretical treatment of the erotic sentiment (srngara) in classical Sanskrit texts. It is also a mine of quotations from extant and also from lost Sanskrit and Prakrit poetical texts.
Hardcover 1999
Alexander Pope
John Paul Russo
Hardcover 1972
American Poetry and Culture, 1945-1980
Robert Von Hallberg

Challenging the common perception of poets as standing apart from the mainstream of American culture, Robert von Hallberg gives us a fresh and unpredictable assessment of the poetry that has come directly out of the American experience since 1945.

Hardcover 1985 / Paperback 1988
An Appetite for Poetry
Frank Kermode
This is a book in which Kermode asks the reader to share his pleasure in the literature of a set of major writers--Milton, Eliot, Stevens. Other essays draw our attention to debates on the literary canon and problems of biblical criticism and their implications for the study of narrative in particular and the interpretation of secular literary texts in general.
Hardcover 1989
The Anglo-Saxon Poems in Bright's Anglo-Saxon Reader
Francis Peabody Magoun
Hardcover 1969
Antonio Machado
Translated by Alan S. Trueblood
Antonio Machado
Hardcover 1982 / Paperback
Art Inscribed
Emilie L. Bergmann
Hardcover
Arthur Hugh Clough
Evelyn Greenberger
In this fresh examination of Clough, Greenberger traces the intellectual development of a poet who was considered a brilliant failure in his own day, a reputation that still persists despite the fact that Clough is now attracting considerable critical attention. Her study contradicts this traditional view of him as ineffectual and uncommitted and reveals instead a complex figure whose varied interests enriched his prose and poetry.
Hardcover 1970
The Bab Ballads
W. S. Gilbert
Edited by James Ellis
W. S. Gilbert, renowned author of the Savoy Operas, was also the creator of the Bab Ballads--"possibly the best comic verse--and surely the best illustrated--in the English language," according to James Ellis. Gilbert published these poems, together with his own, grotesque drawings signed "Bab," a childhood nickname, in Fun and other magazines in the late nineteenth century. In 1898, the older and by then distinguished Gilbert substituted pallid and inoffensive drawings for the originals, which he had come to believe "erred gravely in the direction of unnecessary extravagance." Since then the ballads have been collected and published in various editions, most of which have featured the revised drawings and only a selection of the poems. This is the only book to offer the complete collection of ballads with all original illustrations, a tribute to the comic genius of a writer known as "the most original dramatist of his generation."
Hardcover 1970 / Paperback 2003
Baldo, Volume 1, Books I-XII
Teofilo Folengo
Translated by Ann E. Mullaney
Folengo (1491-1544) was a native of Mantua and a member of the Benedictine order, later to become a runaway monk and satirist. Blending Latin and various Italian dialects in a deliberately droll manner, Baldo follows a sort of French royal juvenile delinquent through imprisonment, fantastical adventures, and a journey to the underworld. This edition provides the first English translation of this hilarious send-up of the ancient epic and Renaissance chivalric romance traditions.
Hardcover 2007
The Book the Poet Makes
Peter Nohrnberg
Peter Nohrnberg asks the largely unexplored question of how and why a collection of lyrics is transformed into a unified book. Nohrnberg's subject is not the lyric sequence, a recognized form, but the ordinary collections of poems. For his examples the author dwells on Yeats's The Tower and Lowell's Life Studies.
Paperback
The Breaking of Style
Helen Vendler
Opening fresh perspectives on the work of three very different poets, Helen Vendler's masterful study of changes in style yields a new view of the interplay of moral, emotional, and intellectual forces in a poet's work. Throughout, Vendler reminds us that what distinguishes successful poetry is a mastery of language at all levels--including the rhythmic, the grammatical, and the graphic.
Hardcover 1995 / Paperback
Browning's Youth
John Maynard
Hardcover 1977
The Canon
Constantine Cavafy
Translated by Stratis Haviaras
Foreword by Seamus Heaney
This volume of 154 poems by Constantine Cavafy is the entire body of work by the artist widely considered a master of modern Greek poetry. Published here in the original Greek, with a new English translation by the noted poet Stratis Haviaris on each facing page, and with a foreword by Seamus Heaney, The Canon is Cavafy, familiar and fresh, seen through new eyes, yet instantly recognized.
Paperback 2007
The Canon of Sir Thomas Wyatt's Poety
Richard Harrier
Hardcover 1975
Charles Olson
Robert Von Hallberg

Charles Olson is often described as one of the most influential American poets of the last quarter century; some would rather describe him as a cult figure, prophet of the Black Mountain poets and their descendants. Both judgments refer to an influence exerted as much through theories as through poems. Here is an examination of Olson's understanding of poetry that is cogent and a pleasure to read. It provides the framework needed for understanding Olson's work.

Hardcover 1978
Children of the Mire
Octavio Paz
Hardcover 1974 / Paperback
The Collected Prose of Robert Frost
Robert Frost
Edited by Mark Richardson
During his lifetime, Robert Frost notoriously resisted collecting his prose--going so far as to halt the publication of one prepared compilation and to "lose" the transcripts of the Charles Eliot Norton Lectures he delivered at Harvard in 1936. This volume allows readers and scholars to discover in the prose that he did make public--in newspapers, magazines, journals, speeches, and books--the wit, force, and grace that made his poetry famous.
Hardcover 2008
Collected Works of Velimir Khlebnikov, Volume III, Selected Poems
Velimir Khlebnikov
Translated by Paul Schmidt
Edited by Ronald Vroon
Dubbed "a Columbus of new poetic continents" because of his search for a poetics as diverse as the universe itself, Velimir Khlebnikov is the creator of some of the most extraordinary poems in the Russian language. Sometimes surreal, sometimes esoteric, but always dazzlingly innovative, the 192 poems in this volume range broadly from the lyrical to the epic.
Paperback 1998 / Hardcover 1998
Coming of Age as a Poet
Helen Vendler
To find a personal style is, for a writer, to become adult; and to write one's first "perfect" poem--a poem that wholly and successfully embodies that style--is to come of age as a poet. By looking at the precedents, circumstances, and artistry of the first perfect poems composed by John Milton, John Keats, T. S. Eliot, and Sylvia Plath, Coming of Age as a Poet offers rare insight into this mysterious process, and into the indispensable period of learning and experimentation that precedes such poetic achievement.
Hardcover 2003 / Paperback 2004
Complete Poems
John Keats
Edited by Jack Stillinger
Here is the first reliable edition of Keats's complete poems designed expressly for general readers and students. Jack Stillinger provides helpful explanatory notes to the poems which give dates of composition, identify quotations and allusions, gloss names and words not included in the ordinary desk dictionary, and refer the reader to the best critical interpretations of the poems. The new introduction provides central facts about Keats's life and career, describes the themes of his best work, and speculates on the causes of his greatness.
Hardcover 1982 / Paperback 1991
Consuming Myth
Stephen Yenser
The Consuming Myth is a discerning account of his work that will well serve amateur and initiate alike. Yenser ranges over all of Merrill's writing to date, from a precocious book printed when its author was fifteen to his most recent publication, a verse play. He writes about both of the poet's novels and pays particular attention to the epic poem The Changing Light at Santkver His close readings shed light on Merrill's boldly and subtly original techniques, his kinship with Mallarmé, Proust, Yeats, Stevens, and others, and the network of connections among his diverse undertakings.
Hardcover
Costly Monuments
Barbara Leah Harman
Harman begins by surveying the critical tradition on Herbert's work in our century--from George Herbert Palmer to Stanley Fish. In this penetrating assessment Harman explores the relationship between critical practice and belief.
Hardcover 1982
The Creative Mind in Coleridge's Poetry
Kathleen M. Wheeler
Hardcover 1982
Dante
John Freccero
Edited and with an introduction by Rachel Jacoff
Freccero enables us to see the Divine Comedy for the bold, poetic experiment that it is. Too many critics have domesticated Dante by separating his theology from his poetics. Freccero argues that to fail to see the convergence of the letter and the spirit, the pilgrim and the poet, is to fail to understand Dante's poetics of conversion.
Hardcover 1986 / Paperback
Death in Quotation Marks
Svetlana Boym
Hardcover 1991
Democracy and Poetry
Robert Penn Warren
In these two essays, one of America’s most honored writers fastens on the interrelation of American democracy and poetry and the concept of selfhood vital to each. “I really don’t want to make a noise like a pundit,” Mr. Warren declares, “What I do want to do is to return us—and myself most of all—to a scrutiny of our own experience of our own world.” Indeed, Democracy and Poetry offers one of the most pertinent and strongly personal meditations on our condition to have appeared in recent letters.
Hardcover 1975 / Paperback
The Dhvanyaloka of Anandavardhana with the Locana of Abhinavagupta
Edited and translated by Daniel H. H. Ingalls
Translated by Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson
Translated by M. V. Patwardhan
Hardcover 1990
Disseminating Whitman
Michael Moon
Hardcover 1991 / Paperback
Edwin Arlington Robinson's Letters to Edith Brower
Edwin Arlington Robinson
Edited by Richard Cary
The letters begin when the twenty-seven-year-old poet writes gratefully to the stranger who has expressed appreciation of his first, privately printed, book of poems. Soon he was carrying on an intense correspondence, baring his soul--safely, he believed, because the woman he described as "infernally bright and not at all ugly," with "something of a literary reputation," was "too old to give me a chance to bother myself with any sentimental uneasiness."
Hardcover 1968
Elizabeth Bishop
Bonnie Costello
In this finely written companion to Elizabeth Bishop's poetry, Bonnie Costello gives a compelling use of Bishop and her ways of seeing and writing.
Hardcover 1991 / Paperback
Emily Dickinson
Cristanne Miller
Paperback 1989
Epiloke
Thomas Cole
Hardcover 1988
Essays on Mandel'stam
Kiril Taranovsky
Hardcover 1976
Eugenio Montale
Rebecca J. West
Hardcover 1981
Fleeting Things
Gerald Hammond
Hardcover 1990
A Fugitive from Utopia
Stanislaw Baranczak
Baranczak, himself a poet, critic, and translator, emigrated from Poland in 1981, and is therefore eminently qualified to supply a politico-cultural context for Herbert while describing and analyzing the texts and themes of his poems. Herbert's poetry is based on permanent confrontation--the confrontation of Western tradition with the experience of a "barbarian" from Eastern Europe, of the classical past with the modern era, of cultural myth with a practical, empirical point of view.
Hardcover 1987
The Given and the Made
Helen Vendler
To explore how a poet repeatedly makes art over a lifetime out of an arbitrary assignment of fate, Helen Vendler looks at the work of four American poets--Robert Lowell, John Berryman, Rita Dove and Jorie Graham--and suggests a new way of understanding poetic strategies.
Paperback 1995 / Hardcover 1995
Greek Iambic Poetry
Edited and translated by Douglas E. Gerber
Archilochus
Semonides
Hipponax
The poetry of the archaic period that the Greeks called iambic is characterized by scornful criticism of friend and foe and by sexual license. The purpose of these poems is unclear, but they seem to have some connection with cult songs used in religious festivals--for example, those honoring Dionysus and Demeter. In this completely new Loeb Classical Library edition of early Greek iambic poetry, Douglas Gerber provides a faithful and fully annotated translation of the fragments that have come down to us.
Hardcover 1999
A History of Modern Poetry, Volume I, From the 1890s to the High Modernist Mode
David Perkins
This book embraces an era of enormous creative variety--the formative period during which the Romantic traditions of the past were abandoned or transformed and a major new literature created. More than a hundred poets are treated in this volume, and many more are noticed in passing. Perkins discusses each poet and type of poetry with keen critical appreciation.
Hardcover 1976 / Paperback
A History of Modern Poetry, Volume II, Modernism and After
David Perkins
Perkins discusses some 160 poets, mentioning many others more briefly, and does not hesitate to explain, to criticize, to admire, to render judgments. He clarifies the complex interrelations of individuals, groups, and movements and the contexts in which the poets worked: not only the predecessors and contemporaries they responded to but the journals that published them, the expectations of the audience, changing premises about poetry, the writings of critics, developments in other arts, and the momentous events of political and social history.
Hardcover 1987 / Paperback
Homer and the Nibelungenlied
Bernard Fenik
Hardcover 1986
Homer's Odyssey
John H. Finley
Throughout his book, Finley applies a lifetime's learning to a work that is universally recognized as one of the highest achievements of our civilization. At a time when Homer is in danger of being swallowed by specialists, it is important to recognize and uphold the poet's basic concern for life and myth and legend. Such sympathy combined with knowledge is Finley's fine achievement.
Hardcover 1978
Iliad, I
Homer
Translated by William Wyatt
Translated by A. T. Murray
The works attributed to Homer include the two oldest and greatest European epic poems, the Odyssey and the Iliad. These have been published in the Loeb Classical Library for three quarters of a century, the Greek text facing a faithful and literate prose translation by A. T. Murray. William F. Wyatt brings the Loeb's Iliad up to date, with a rendering that retains Murray's admirable style but is written for today's readers.
Hardcover 1924
Introspection and Contemporary Poetry
Alan Williamson
Hardcover 1984
Is Milton Better than Shakespeare?
Nigel Smith
Smith makes a compelling case for Milton’s relevance to our present situation. In direct and accessible terms, he shows how the seventeenth-century poet, while working to write the greatest heroic poem in the English language, also managed to theorize about religious, political, and civil liberty in ways that matter as much today as they did in Puritanical times.
Hardcover 2008
John Keats
Walter Jackson Bate
Since most of Keats's early poetry has survived, his artistic development can be observed more closely than is possible with most writers; and there are times during the period of his greatest creativity when his personal as well as his artistic life can be followed week by week. Bate has been concerned to show the organic relationship between the poet's art and his larger, more broadly humane development. This is a book of many dimensions, not a restricted critical or biographical study but a fully integrated whole.
Hardcover 1963 / Paperback 1979
John Keats
John Keats
With an essay by Helen Vendler
Edited by Jack Stillinger
Hardcover 1990
Kalevala
Translated by Francis Peabody Magoun
Compiled by Elias Lönnrot
The national folk epic of Finland is here presented in an English translation that is both scholarly and eminently readable. To avoid the imprecision and metrical monotony of earlier verse translations, Magoun has used prose, printed line for line as in the original so that repetitions, parallelisms, and variations are readily apparent. The lyrical passages and poetic images, the wry humor, the tall-tale extravagance, and the homely realism of the Kalevala come through with extraordinary effectiveness.
Paperback
The King of Time
Velimir Khlebnikov
Translated by Paul Schmidt
Edited by Charlotte Douglas
Hardcover 1985 / Paperback 1990
Language in Literature
Roman Jakobson
Edited by Krystyna Pomorska
Edited by Stephen Rudy
This book is the first comprehensive presentation in English of Jakobson's major essays on the intertwining of language and literature: here the reader will learn how it was that Jakobson became legendary. This will become a basic book for contemplating the function of language in literature--a project that will continue to engross the keenest readers.
Hardcover 1988 / Paperback 1990
The Lunar Light of Whitman's Poetry
M. Wynn Thomas
In this many-sided analysis Thomas relates Whitman's work to American painting of the period; examines the poet's evocation of nature, which he sometimes saw as a challenge to man's confidence in himself; documents the revisions and additions Whitman made to Leaves of Grass in order to demonstrate that "my Book and the War are One"; and pays sympathetic attention to the postwar poetry, usually slighted.
Hardcover 1987
Mi-lou
Stephen Owen
Hardcover 1989
Minotaur
Tom Paulin
Hardcover 1992
The Music of What Happens
Helen Vendler
Insight and wit distinguish these essays, in which Vendler elucidates the function of criticism as well as different critical methods and styles. Poets commented on range from Seamus Heaney and Czeslaw Milosz to Silvia Plath, James Merrill, and Amy Clampitt.
Hardcover 1988 / Paperback
Mythology and the Romantic Tradition in English Poetry
Douglas Bush
A brilliant study of the continuing and changing uses of classical mythology in English poetry, this book treats most of the major and many of the minor English poets since 1680 and includes a chapter on the use of myth in American verse. It provides an illuminating overview of English poetry since the end of the Renaissance.
Hardcover 1969
The Odes of John Keats
Helen Vendler
Vendler widens her exploration of lyric poetry with a new assessment of the six great odes of John Keats and in the process gives us, implicitly, a reading of Keats's whole career. She proposes that these poems, usually read separately, are imperfectly seen unless seen together--that they form a sequence in which Keats pursued a strict and profound inquiry into questions of language, philosophy, and aesthetics.
Hardcover 1983 / Paperback
On Extended Wings
Helen Vendler
Though Wallace Stevens’ shorter poems are perhaps his best known, his longer poems, Helen Hennessy Vendler suggests in this book, deserve equal fame and equal consideration. Stevens’ central theme—the worth of the imagination—remained with him all his life, and Mrs. Vendler therefore proposes that his development as a poet can best be seen, not in description—which must be repetitive—of the abstract bases of his work, but rather in a view of his changing styles.
Paperback
On the Outside Looking Out
John Shoptaw
Hardcover 1995 / Paperback 1995
Our Secret Discipline
Helen Vendler
The fundamental difference between rhetoric and poetry, according to Yeats, is that rhetoric is the expression of one's quarrels with others while poetry is the expression (and sometimes the resolution) of one's quarrel with oneself. This is where Vendler's Our Secret Discipline begins. Through exquisite attention to outer and inner forms, Vendler explores the most inventive reaches of the poet's mind.
Hardcover 2007
Part of Nature, Part of Us
Helen Vendler
The poets nearest to us in time often seem the most remote and difficult. Helen Vendler closes the distance. She keeps the poet in view not only as thinker and artist, but as a man or woman whose humanity never disappears in her analysis. With her penetrating critical gift, Vendler assesses American poets from T. S. Eliot to Charles Wright.
Hardcover 1980 / Paperback
The Past That Poets Make
Harold Toliver
This is an analysis of the literary art of recapturing the past as the artist perceives it. It examines such questions as how a fictional narrative differs from other ways of seeing a past time; to what extent literature is nontemporal, transcending its time, and to what extent it is tied to the institutions and traditions of its era; how given works conjure up a sense of time; and how fictional narratives function as transmitters of ideas to societies prepared to absorb them.
Hardcover 1981
Petrarch’s Lyric Poems
Francesco Petrarch
Translated by Robert M. Durling
For teachers and students of Petrarch, Durling's edition of the poems has become the standard one. Readers have praised the translation as both graceful and accurate, conveying a real understanding of what this difficult poet is saying. The literalness of the prose translation makes this beautiful book especially useful to students who lack a full command of Italian. And students reading the verse in the original will find here an authoritative text.
Hardcover 1976 / Paperback
Poems (3 volume boxed set)
Emily Dickinson
Edited by Thomas H. Johnson
Hardcover
The Poems of Emily Dickinson
Edited by R. W. Franklin
Emily Dickinson
Edited by R. W. Franklin
In 1955, the first important attempt was made to collect and publish Dickinson's work, edited by Thomas Johnson for the Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. After many years of preparation by Ralph Franklin, the foremost scholar of Dickinson's manuscripts, a new comprehensive edition is available. This three-volume work contains the largest number of her poems ever assembled, arranged chronologically and drawn from a range of archives. The text of each manuscript is rendered individually, including, within the capacity of standard type, Dickinson's spelling, capitalization, and punctuation.
Hardcover 1998
The Poet as Mythmaker
George G. Grabowicz
Hardcover 1982
The Poet's Work
Leonard Nathan
Arthur Quinn
Paperback 1991
A Poetics
Charles Bernstein
In a wild variety of topics, polemic, and styles, Bernstein surveys the current poetry scene and addresses many of the hot issues of poststructuralist literary theory. What role should poetics play in contemporary culture? Bernstein finds the answer in dissent, not merely in argument but in form--a poetic language that resists being easily absorbed into the conventions of our culture.
Paperback 1992 / Hardcover 1992
The Poetics of Impersonality
Maud Ellmann
Hardcover 1988
Poetry and Pragmatism
Richard Poirier
Hardcover 1992 / Paperback
The Poetry of George Herbert
Helen Vendler
Hardcover 1975
The Poetry of Pablo Neruda
Pablo Neruda
René de Costa
Hardcover 1979 / Paperback
Preface to Plato
Eric Havelock
Hardcover 1963 / Paperback
The Problem of Shape in The Prelude
Jonathan R. Grandine
Paperback 1968
Rimbaud's Theatre of the Self
James Lawler
In a new interpretation of a poet who has swayed the course of modern poetry--in France and elsewhere--Lawler focuses on what he demonstrates is the crux of Rimbaud's imagination: the masks and adopted personas with which he regularly tested his identity and his art.
Hardcover 1992
Robert Lowell
Vereen M. Bell
Hardcover
Ruin the Sacred Truths
Harold Bloom
Bloom surveys with majestic view the literature of the West from the Old Testament to Samuel Beckett. In so doing, he uncovers the truth that all our attempts to call any strong work more sacred than another are merely political and social formulations.
Hardcover 1989 / Paperback 1991
Sanskrit Poetry from Vidyakara's Treasury
Edited and translated by Daniel H. H. Ingalls
In this rich collection of Sanskrit verse, the late Daniel Ingalls provides English readers with a wide variety of poetry from the vast anthology of an eleventh-century Buddhist scholar. Although the style of poetry presented here originated at the royal courts, Ingalls shows how it was adapted to all aspects of life, and came to address issues as diverse as love, sex, heroes, nature, and peace. More than thirty years after its original publication, Sanskrit Poetry continues to be the main resource for all interested in this multifaceted and elegant tradition.
Paperback 2000 / Hardcover
Shelley's Major Verse
Stuart M. Sperry
Shelley has long been viewed as a dreamer isolated from reality, a "beautiful and ineffectual angel," in Arnold's words. In contrast, Sperry's book emphasizes the life forces originating in the poet's childhood that impelled and shaped his career, and reasserts Shelley's relevance to the social and cultural dilemmas of contemporary life.
Hardcover 1988
Shifting Ground
Bonnie Costello
Just as the look of the American landscape has changed since the nineteenth century, so has our idea of landscape. Here Bonnie Costello reads six twentieth-century American poets who have reflected and shaped this transformation and in the process renovated landscape by drawing new images from the natural world and creating new forms for imagining the earth and our relation to it.
Hardcover 2003
The Singer of Tales
Albert B. Lord
Edited by Stephen Mitchell
Edited by Gregory Nagy
This 40th anniversary edition of Albert Lord's classic work includes a unique enhancement: a CD containing the original audio recordings of all the passages of heroic songs quoted in the book; a video publication of the kinescopic filming of the most valued of the singers; and selected photographs taken during Milman Parry's collecting trips in the Balkans. Parry began recording and studying a live tradition of oral narrative poetry in order to find an answer to the age-old Homeric Question: How had the author of the Iliad and Odyssey composed these two monumental epic poems at the very start of Europe's literary tradition? Parry's, and with him Lord's, enduring contribution--set forth in Lord's The Singer of Tales--was to demonstrate the process by which oral poets compose.
Mixed 2000
Solomon and Marcolf
Translated with commentary by Jan Ziolkowski
Solomon and Marcolf pits wise Solomon, famous from the Bible, against a wily peasant named Marcolf. Cited by Bakhtin in Rabelais and His World, Solomon and Marcolf is widely known by name. But until now it has not been translated into any modern language. The present volume offers an introduction, followed by the Latin and English, detailed commentary, and reproductions of woodcut illustrations from the 1514 edition.
Paperback 2008 / Hardcover 2008
Sor Juana
Octavio Paz
Translated by Margaret Sayers Peden
Mexico's leading poet, essayist, and cultural critic writes of a Mexican poet of another time and another world, the world of seventeenth-century New Spain. His subject is Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, the most striking figure in all of Spanish-American colonial literature and one of the great poets of her age.
Hardcover 1988 / Paperback 1990
Soul Says
Helen Vendler
In these eloquent essays on recent American, British, and Irish poetry, Helen Vendler shows us contemporary life and culture captured in lyric form by some of our most celebrated poets. An incomparable reader of poetry, Vendler explains its power; it is, she says, the voice of the soul, rather than the socially marked self, speaking directly to us through the stylization of verse.
Hardcover 1995 / Paperback 1996
Tennyson and Tradition
Robert Pattison
Here is an analysis of Tennyson's major poetry that clarifies the poet's relationship to the artistic traditions he so extensively exploited and so radically modified. It is a portrait of Tennyson as manipulator, not mere borrower, of forms.
Hardcover 1980
Thomas Hardy
J. Hillis Miller
Hardcover 1970
Three Classical Poets
Richard Jenkyns
In this engaging essay Jenkyns shows us how to read three quite different ancient poets. In a close and sensitive reading of Sappho, Catullus, and Juvenal, he delineates the uniqueness of the poet's individual voice in relation to poetic traditions. His book constitutes a challenge to the view that one method will suffice for the interpretation of ancient poetry.
Hardcover 1982
Tottel's Miscellany, 1557-1587, Rev. ed
Richard Tottel
Hardcover 1965
The Transmission of the Text of Lucan in the Ninth Century
Harold C. Gotoff
Hardcover 1971
The Use of Poetry and Use of Criticism
T. S. Eliot
The 1932-33 Norton Lectures are among the best and most important of Eliot's critical writings. Tracing the rise of literary self-consciousness from the Elizabethan period to his own day, Eliot does not simply examine the relation of criticism to poetry, but invites us to "start with the supposition that we do not know what poetry is, or what it does or ought to do, or of what use it is; and try to find out, in examining the relation of poetry to criticism, what the use of both of them is."
Paperback 1986
Verse with Prose from Petronius to Dante
Peter Dronke
Hardcover
The Witness of Poetry
Czeslaw Milosz
A Nobel laureate reflects upon poetry's testimony to the events of our tumultuous time.
Hardcover 1983 / Paperback 1984
Wordsworth
Mark L. Reed
As a poet whose art developed in a remarkably coherent chronological pattern and whose overt use of his own life for the subject matter of his verse was unparalleled in extent, Wordsworth presents an especially compelling claim to such systematic treatment. An invaluable tool for students of this major writer and of the Romantic period generally, this book offers a rapid means of access to factual information for any type of study making use of either the dates or relative order of Wordsworth's writings or personal experiences.
Hardcover 1975
Wordsworth and the Poetry of Sincerity
David Perkins
This book presents not just the Romantic Wordsworth, but Wordsworth as part of a large historical movement in poetry, beginning in the eighteenth century and continuing to the present day. It concentrates on the difficult, much discussed, but little analyzed problem of "sincerity" in poetry, which it treats both critically and historically, as a demand relatively new in Wordsworth's time and still with us.
Hardcover 1964
The Works of Anne Bradstreet
Anne Bradstreet
Edited by Jeannine Hensley
Foreword by Adrienne Rich
Hardcover 1967 / Paperback
i--six nonlectures
e. e. cummings
The author begins his "nonlectures" with the warning "I haven't the remotest intention of posing as a lecturer." These talks contain selections from the poetry of Wordsworth, Donne, Shakespeare, Dante, and others, including e.e. cummings. Together, they form a good introduction to cummings's work.
Hardcover 1953 / Paperback 1991