The Sacred Wood and Major Early EssaysWith the 1920 publication of his first collection of essays, The Sacred Wood, Eliot established himself as an authoritative and influential literary critic. These insightful meditations on poetry, drama, and literary criticism include observations on the works of Dante, Shakespeare, Blake, and other authors. Plus 4 essays from The Times Literary Supplement. |
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Contents
Swinburne as Critic | 10 |
The Local Flavour | 19 |
The French Intelligence | 25 |
The Possibility of a Poetic Drama | 34 |
Euripides and Professor Murray | 40 |
Notes on the Blank Verse | 49 |
Hamlet and His Problems | 55 |
Philip Massinger | 71 |
Swinburne as Poet | 84 |
Dante | 93 |
ANDREW MARVELL | 101 |
JOHN DRYDEN | 112 |
THE METAPHYSICAL POETS | 122 |
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admirable appears Arnold artist beauty become beginning better called century certainly character comedy complete contemporary creative criticism Dante deal direct Donne drama Dryden effect Elizabethan emotion English essay essential existence experience expression fact feeling force gives greater Greek Hamlet hand human humour ideas important impressions intelligence interest Jonson kind lack language least less lines literary literature living look Marlowe Marvell Massinger master means merely method Milton mind nature never object observation particular passages perhaps period person philosophy phrase play poem poet poetic poetry precise present prose pure remains result rhetoric satire scene sense serious Shakespeare simple soul statement style success Swinburne Swinburne's taste term thing thought tion tradition tragedy translation understand variety verse whole writer Wyndham