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Complete Works of W. H. Auden: Prose, Volume IV: 1956-1962 [Kietas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Hardback, 1024 pages, aukštis x plotis: 235x152 mm, weight: 1531 g
  • Serija: The Complete Works of W. H. Auden
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Oct-2010
  • Leidėjas: Princeton University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0691147558
  • ISBN-13: 9780691147550
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 1024 pages, aukštis x plotis: 235x152 mm, weight: 1531 g
  • Serija: The Complete Works of W. H. Auden
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Oct-2010
  • Leidėjas: Princeton University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0691147558
  • ISBN-13: 9780691147550
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
This fourth volume of W.H. Auden's prose provides a unique picture of this legendary writer's mind and art when he was at the height of his powers, from 1956 through 1962, including the years when he was professor of Poetry at Oxford. The volume includes his best-known and most important prose collection, The Dyer's Hand, as well as scores of essays, reviews, and lectures on subjects ranging from J. R. R. Tolkien and Martin Luther to psychedelic drugs, cooking, and Homer. Much of the material has never been collected in book form, and some selections, such as the witty orations Auden wrote for ceremonies at Oxford University, are almost entirely unknown.

Edward Mendelson's introduction and comprehensive notes provide biographical and historical explanations of all obscure refereces. The text includes extensive corrections and revisions that Auden marked in personal copies of his work and which are printed here for the first time.

The series serves as the definitive text for all the works Auden published or intended to publish in the form in which he expected to see them printed. The essays and reviews will appear in the next few volumes, and the final volumes will contain the poems.

This fourth volume of W. H. Auden's prose provides a unique picture of this legendary writer's mind and art when he was at the height of his powers, from 1956 through 1962, including the years when he was professor of poetry at Oxford. The volume includes his best-known and most important prose collection, The Dyer's Hand, as well as scores of essays, reviews, and lectures on subjects ranging from J. R. R. Tolkien and Martin Luther to psychedelic drugs, cooking, and Homer. Much of the material has never been collected in book form, and some selections, such as the witty orations Auden wrote for ceremonies at Oxford University, are almost entirely unknown. Edward Mendelson's introduction and comprehensive notes provide biographical and historical explanations of all obscure references. The text includes extensive corrections and revisions that Auden marked in personal copies of his work and which are printed here for the first time.

Recenzijos

"Volume IV of Auden's prose ... is, like the others, edited by Edward J. Mendelson with unparalleled care and discretion, but it allows us an additional pleasure, since The Dyer's Hand occupies its last major part. Thus we can read that book as Auden wanted us to, before or after we look at the rest of the prose ... or we could just dip and skim in the whole volume, go away and come back, guided by names and titles and chance--there's plenty to keep us busy."--London Review of Books "This fourth volume of W. H. Auden's prose, edited and introduced by Edward Mendelson with customary mastery, covers a mere six years of the poet's life. But they were eventful years for him, personally and intellectually... The whole of The Dyer's Hand appears in this volume of the Complete Works, and most of what Auden drew from in making up the book is here, too, in its original and unrevised form."--Alan Jacobs, Books & Culture "I can give this collection a strong recommendation."--Alfred Corn, Gay and Lesbian Review "If anything, The Complete Works of W. H. Auden: Prose, Volume IV, 1956-1962 is a literary tour-de-force, that covers as well as conveys, almost everything this ultimate poet, writer, quintessential observer of life and critic, was all about... [ This] is a very well conceived and comprehensive 'lucky accident.' Not to mention an all-round, terrific book."--David Marx, David Marx Book Reviews Praise for the previous volume: "Prose, Volume III is wonderfully edited, like all the many editions of Auden supervised by Edward Mendelson... [ T]he articles will delight any reader with their wit, charm, and elegance."--Charles Rosen, New York Review of Books Praise for the previous volume: "When you add in the volumes already devoted to plays, libretti, poems, it becomes hard to avoid describing the whole enterprise as heroic. In fact it could also be described as unique, for no other twentieth-century English poet has been so fully and patiently honoured."--Frank Kermode, London Review of Books Praise for the previous volume: "No major writer's complete works are more fun to read."--Publishers Weekly "While most pieces of the volume can be found in other manners, this compilation enables readers to discover more easily and efficiently gems of prose phrasing about poetry, criticism and their purpose, and the poet's readings of and connections between his work and that of his contemporaries and predecessors in significantly contemplative years of his life."--Emily Kane, Review of English Studies

Preface ix
Acknowledgements xi
Introduction xiii
The Text of this Edition xxxvii
ESSAYS AND REVIEWS, 1956-1962
At the End of the Quest, Victory
3(3)
An Appreciation of the Lyric Verse of Walter de la Mare
6(2)
Stimulating Scholarship
8(4)
Hic et Ille
12(1)
Introduction to Selected Writings of Sydney Smith
13(12)
Introduction to The Descent of the Dove
25(5)
Charles Williams
Wisdom, Wit, Music
30(4)
Making, Knowing and Judging
34(1)
Walter de la Mare
34(3)
An Eye for Mystery
37(2)
Foreword to the Green Wall
39(5)
James Wright
The Great Captains
44(4)
D. H. Lawrence as a Critic
48(5)
Dostoevsky in Siberia
53(4)
Concrete and Fastidious
57(6)
Squares and Oblongs
63(3)
The Wish Game
66(1)
Guy Burgess
67(1)
The Voltaire of Music
67(4)
A Great Hater
71(3)
A Grecian Eye
74(3)
Just How I Feel
77(5)
Sydney Smith: The Kind-Hearted Wit
82(6)
West's Disease
88(1)
Straw Without Bricks
88(4)
Seventh Heavens
92(3)
Crying Spoils the Appearance
95(4)
Preface to Nulla Vogliamo dal Sogno
99(1)
Nino D'Ambra
Commentary on the Poetry and Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet
100(13)
Foreword to A Crackling of Thorns
113(5)
John Hollander
Talent, Genius, and Unhappiness
118(11)
The Great Divide
129(3)
"A Mental Prince"
132(3)
Music in Shakespeare: Its Dramatic Use in His Plays
135(1)
Preface to Jean Sans Terre
135(2)
Yvan Goll
A Jolly Magpie
137(8)
Reflections upon Reading Werner Jaeger's Paideia
145(8)
The Life of a That-There Poet
153(13)
The Kitchen of Life
166(7)
The Sacred Cold
173(4)
A Song of Life's Power to Renew
177(2)
Foreword to of the Festivity
179(5)
William Dickey
Thinking What We Are Doing
184(6)
The Creation of Music and Poetry
190(7)
The Co-Inherence
197(4)
The Greek Self
201(8)
Calm Even in the Catastrophe
209(7)
John Betjeman's Poetic Universe
216(5)
The Private Life of a Public Man
221(5)
Miss Marianne Moore, Bless Her!
226(4)
The Fallen City: Some Reflections on Shakespeare's Henry IV
230(1)
Foreword: Brand Versus Peer
230(11)
Foreword to Times Three
241(6)
Phyllis McGinley
The Magician from Mississippi
247(4)
A Children's Anthology
251(1)
Apologies to the Iroquois
252(7)
An Unclassical Classic
259(7)
The Queen Is Never Bored
266(15)
Foreword to Van Gogh: A Self-Portrait
281(1)
Statement by W. H. Auden on Cultural Freedom
282(1)
Greatness Finding Itself
283(6)
K
289(1)
Introduction to The Complete Poems of Cavafy
290(8)
Two Ways of Poetry
298(5)
The Problem of Nowness
303(4)
Three Memoranda on the New Arden Shakespeare: From W. H. Auden
307(2)
A Public Art
309(3)
II Faut Payer
312(5)
The Poet as Professor
317(3)
Two Cultural Monuments
320(4)
Introduction to Italian Journey
324(9)
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
The Case is Curious
333(2)
Ronald Firbank and an Amateur World
335(7)
A Poet of Honor
342(5)
The Alienated City: Reflections on Othello
347(1)
A Marriage of True Minds
348(6)
Dag Hammarskjold
354(2)
The Untruth about Beethoven
356(4)
The Quest Hero
360(14)
A Universal Eccentric
374(4)
The Conscience of an Artist
378(4)
Books of the Year... from W. H. Auden
382(1)
The Chemical Life
382(3)
Anger
385(5)
Foreword to The Viking Book of Aphorisms
390(2)
A Marianne Moore Reader
392(3)
The Poet and the City
395(1)
Introduction to A Choice of de la Mare's verse
396(8)
Today's Poet
404(1)
A Disturbing Novelist
405(3)
"The Geste Says this and the Man Who Was on the Field..."
408(4)
The Justice of Dame Kind
412(2)
Today's "Wonder-World" Needs Alice
414(8)
Strachey's Cry
422(6)
Are the English Europeans?
428(8)
Do You Know Too Much?
436(5)
Mirror: A Set of Notes
441(1)
England & Europe
441(6)
THE DYER'S HAND
The Dyer's Hand
447(382)
APPENDICES
I Creweian Orations
829(19)
II Auden as Anthologist and Editor
848(10)
III Public Lectures
858(15)
IV Auden on the Air
873(19)
V Endorsements and Citations
892(4)
VI Public Letter Signed
896(2)
Auden
VII Translations
898(2)
VIII Lost and Unwritten Work
900(3)
TEXTUAL NOTES
Essays and Reviews, 1956-1962
903(42)
The Dyer's Hand
945(34)
Index of Titles and Books Reviewed 979
Edward Mendelson is the literary executor of the Estate of W. H. Auden and the Lionel Trilling Professor in the Humanities at Columbia University. His books include "Early Auden", "Later Auden", and "The Things That Matter".