"Between the Tiger's Paws": Scotland, Czechoslovakia, And the Poetry of Edwin Muir (Critical Essay) "Between the Tiger's Paws": Scotland, Czechoslovakia, And the Poetry of Edwin Muir (Critical Essay)

"Between the Tiger's Paws": Scotland, Czechoslovakia, And the Poetry of Edwin Muir (Critical Essay‪)‬

Modern Age 2008, Summer, 50, 3

    • 2,99 €
    • 2,99 €

Beschreibung des Verlags

In the course of the past three decades, the poetry of Edwin Muir (1887-1959) has fallen into deep neglect, especially on this side of the Atlantic. Even during his lifetime Muir was better known as a critic and translator--he and his wife, Willa, were responsible for introducing the novels of Kafka and Hermann Broch to the English-language world--than he was as a poet. The achievements of a poet writing in the plain style, as Muir for the most part did, were easily overlooked amid the pyrotechnics of T.S. Eliot and the other high modernists. It is thus something of a surprise to discover, reading Lyndall Gordon's biography of Eliot, that by the mid-1950s Eliot himself had come to view Muir as the finest poet then working in Britain. (1) Muir never regarded the modernists as his rivals. For him originality meant not novel techniques or subject matter but getting down to spiritual bedrock--meant, as Eliot has it in "East Coker," "the fight to recover what has been lost / And found and lost again and again." (2) Muir's search for what he calls in his Autobiography the "fable," the pattern of eternity as it inflects our experience, has been a source of perplexity for readers of postmodern inclination, insofar as they arecognizant of Muir at all. These tend to be the same people who regard Yeats's concern with Indic philosophy or Eliot's Christianity as damaging to their poetry. It comes down to a suspicion of the striving for religious transcandence and a vehement rejection of any claim to have attained it. In the best of Muir's work the fable and what he refers to as the "story," the particulars of our lives in nature and society, are held in tension, as they are, for example, in his poem "In Love for Long" (1946), a paean to the mystery of a love

GENRE
Gewerbe und Technik
ERSCHIENEN
2008
22. Juni
SPRACHE
EN
Englisch
UMFANG
14
Seiten
VERLAG
Intercollegiate Studies Institute Inc.
GRÖSSE
191,2
 kB

Mehr Bücher von Modern Age

Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged: From Romantic Fallacy to Holocaustic Imagination. Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged: From Romantic Fallacy to Holocaustic Imagination.
2004
"I Know More Than I Can Tell": The Insights of Michael Polanyi (Biography) "I Know More Than I Can Tell": The Insights of Michael Polanyi (Biography)
2007
Ortega Y Gasset's "Revolt" and the Problem of Mass Rule (Critical Essay) Ortega Y Gasset's "Revolt" and the Problem of Mass Rule (Critical Essay)
2004
Idealism and Realism in Politics: A Response to Richard J. Bishirjian's "Origins and End of the New World Order" (Comment) (Critical Essay) Idealism and Realism in Politics: A Response to Richard J. Bishirjian's "Origins and End of the New World Order" (Comment) (Critical Essay)
2005
The Idea of the University, Again (The Institution of Intellectual Values: Realism and Idealism in Higher Education) (Book Review) The Idea of the University, Again (The Institution of Intellectual Values: Realism and Idealism in Higher Education) (Book Review)
2008
Robert Frost: Philosopher-Poet (Robert Frost: The Poet As Philosopher) (Book Review) Robert Frost: Philosopher-Poet (Robert Frost: The Poet As Philosopher) (Book Review)
2008