Eliot's Reflective Journey to the GardenThis study is a study of Eliot's poetry, with emphasis on the Four Quartets, and is concerned with his attempt to come to terms with the personal so that neither art nor person is sacrificed. |
From inside the book
Page 7
... literary criticism , including explication of Eliot poems I have not dealt with , or dealt with in a different focus , in my T. S. Eliot : An Essay on the American Magus or my more re- cent study of The Reflective Quest for Order in ...
... literary criticism , including explication of Eliot poems I have not dealt with , or dealt with in a different focus , in my T. S. Eliot : An Essay on the American Magus or my more re- cent study of The Reflective Quest for Order in ...
Page 84
... literary criticism is the criticism of artists writing about their own art ; and for this I turn to John- son , and Wordsworth and Coleridge . " The statement is ac- companied by the acknowledgment that in his early essays he was ...
... literary criticism is the criticism of artists writing about their own art ; and for this I turn to John- son , and Wordsworth and Coleridge . " The statement is ac- companied by the acknowledgment that in his early essays he was ...
Page 100
... literary criticism . " In the same essay he will declare that the terms classical and romantic no longer engage him as they once did . He has come to consider that if Baudelaire and Pascal have made Dante accessible to him - as Dante ...
... literary criticism . " In the same essay he will declare that the terms classical and romantic no longer engage him as they once did . He has come to consider that if Baudelaire and Pascal have made Dante accessible to him - as Dante ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Eliot and Il Miglior Fabbro | 8 |
Toward Another Intensity | 16 |
Copyright | |
15 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
accept allows appears argument attempt Augustine awareness Baudelaire becomes beginning calls cause century closed comes concern condition consciousness criticism Dante dark dead death Denis desire direction discover early effect Eliot emotion encounter essay existence experience eyes feeling final give heart human Huxley ideas images individual intellectual interest journey language less light lines literary Little London look mean memory ment mind moment move movement myth narrative nature object once one's pagan particular passage past philosophy phrase physics poem poet poetry position possible Pound Preludes present Press problem published question reason reflect relation remarks requires rest romantic Russell says Scogan seems sense separation soul speak spiritual struggle suggests things thought tion Tiresias turning universe vision voice Waste Land Wordsworth writes York