Obbligati: Essays in Criticism"The proper role of criticism [is] as a musical obbligato; that is, a counterpart that must constantly strive to move in strict harmony with and intellectual counterpoint to its subject, and remain always subordinate to the text upon which it presumes to comment." With this declaration, Hecht sets forth the manifesto of this graceful group of essays, implicitly chiding today's academic critics who apply theories to texts. Hecht is particularly elegant and eloquent on contemporary American poetry, from the tension between truth and fiction in Robert Lowell's autobiographical lyrics to the "musicianship" of Richard Wilbur. Hecht's best essay evokes the unique poetic voice of Elizabeth Bishop, and he is equally perspicacious on Frost, Auden, and Dickinson. An extended essay on Marvell's "The Garden" and Keats' "Ode to a Nightingale" offers an unusual comparative reading that captures the energies and langours of both poems. This book offers literary essays of rare quality. The writing throughout is a model of form suiting function--the lucid exposition of well-chosen ideas. |
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Page 115
... seems to suggest that the " We " who were educated either learned and understood or did not learn and understand . It seems to me very probable that a reference is intended here to a familiar passage in the Gospels . Suffer the little ...
... seems to suggest that the " We " who were educated either learned and understood or did not learn and understand . It seems to me very probable that a reference is intended here to a familiar passage in the Gospels . Suffer the little ...
Page 231
... seems like the departure of the soul from the body , and like an inkling of a blissful death ; and in both cases the return to the natural setting , the " real world , " at the end of the ecstasy is accompanied by an intimation that ...
... seems like the departure of the soul from the body , and like an inkling of a blissful death ; and in both cases the return to the natural setting , the " real world , " at the end of the ecstasy is accompanied by an intimation that ...
Page 255
... seems to me unlikely ; or at least I should think it might have inhibited the disquisition of so kindly a person as Keats . It seems more likely to me that the observations on Dilke , while thoroughly fitting , may have come after the ...
... seems to me unlikely ; or at least I should think it might have inhibited the disquisition of so kindly a person as Keats . It seems more likely to me that the observations on Dilke , while thoroughly fitting , may have come after the ...
Contents
The Pathetic Fallacy | 3 |
On W H Audens In Praise of Limestone | 27 |
Othello | 51 |
Copyright | |
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