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E-grāmata: C.H. Sisson Reader

  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Nov-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Fyfield Books
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781847772855
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Nov-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Fyfield Books
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781847772855
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The great English, Anglican and modernist poet and writer C.H. Sisson was born in Bristol a hundred years ago. This Reader draws on his poetry, fiction, translations, and his literary, political and religious essays. It justifies what his peers and critics said of him. Of the poems Donald Hall wrote in the New York Times Book Review that they 'move in service of the loved landscapes of England and France, they sing (and growl) in love of argument, in love of seeing through [ - ]; they move in love of the old lost life by which the new life is condemned.' Writing of his essays in the same pages Louis Simpson notes 'his fearless views'. 'Mr Sisson isn't afraid to say what he thinks. He isn't looking over his shoulder at an establishment as he writes.' Jasper Griffin in the Times Literary Supplement dubbed him 'one of the great translators of our time'. As a writer he was always starting anew, rejecting, he said, 'whatever appeared with the face of familiarity' and referring the present to those defining periods of English and European history and culture that tried humanity and languages most harshly: the seventeenth century, for example, and the twentieth.
Introduction xi
Poems
From The London Zoo (1961) and other early poems
On a Troopship
3(1)
In Time of Famine: Bengal
3(1)
The Body in Asia
4(1)
In a Dark Wood
5(1)
In London
6(1)
Sparrows seen from an Office Window
6(1)
In Kent
7(1)
Maurras Young and Old
7(2)
On the Way Home
9(1)
Silence
9(1)
Ightham Woods
10(1)
Family Fortunes
10(2)
In Honour of J.H. Fabre
12(1)
Nude Studies
12(1)
Tintagel
13(1)
To Walter Savage Landor
13(1)
Cranmer
14(1)
Knole
14(1)
On a Civil Servant
15(1)
Money
15(1)
Ellick Farm
15(1)
The Un-Red Deer
16(1)
The London Zoo
17(5)
From Numbers (1965)
My Life and Times
22(2)
The Nature of Man
24(1)
A and B
25(1)
A Letter to John Donne
26(2)
Words
28(1)
The Thrush
28(1)
Adam and Eve
29(1)
Easter
29(1)
In Memoriam Cecil De Vail
30(2)
The Death of a City Man
32(1)
No Title
32(1)
Thomas de Quincey
33(1)
The Theology of Fitness
34(1)
What a Piece of Work is Man
35(2)
The Reckoning
37(1)
From a Train
38(1)
Numbers
38(3)
From Metamorphoses (1968)
Virgini Senescens
41(4)
Catullus
45(1)
In Allusion to Propertius, I, iii
46(1)
The Person
47(1)
Every Reality is a Kind of Sign
47(1)
On my Fifty-first Birthday
48(1)
From the new poems in In the Trojan Ditch (1974)
The Discarnation
49(17)
No Address
66(1)
Evening
67(1)
Aller Church
67(1)
The Usk
67(2)
Morpheus
69(1)
Somerton Moor
70(1)
In insula Avalonia
71(7)
Martigues
78(4)
A Ghost (1974, uncollected)
82(1)
From Anchises (1976)
Cotignac
83(1)
The Quantocks
84(1)
Gardening
85(1)
The Evidence
85(1)
Eastville Park
85(1)
Marcus Aurelius
86(1)
The Garden
87(1)
Anchises
87(1)
Troia
88(1)
Est in conspectu Tenedos
88(2)
From Exactions (1980)
The Desert
90(1)
Place
91(1)
The Zodiac
92(2)
The Pool
94(3)
Differently
97(1)
Style
98(1)
Ham Hill
98(1)
Moon-rise
99(1)
from The Garden of the Hesperides (****)
100(1)
The Herb-garden
100(1)
The Surfaces
101(1)
The Red Admiral
101(1)
The Morning
102(1)
For Passing the Time
103(1)
Leaves
103(1)
Autumn Poems
104(1)
Across the Winter
105(6)
In Flood
111(1)
Burrington Combe
111(6)
From the new poems in Collected Poems (1984)
The Time of Year
117(1)
Two Capitals
118(1)
Athelney
119(1)
The Broken Willow
120(1)
Blackdown
120(2)
From God Bless Karl Marx! (1987)
Read me or not
122(1)
Vigil and Ode for St George's Day
122(6)
Waking
128(1)
The Absence
129(1)
The Hare
129(1)
God Bless Karl Marx!
130(1)
Looking at Old Note-Books
131(2)
Taxila
133(2)
From Antidotes (1991)
Fifteen Sonnets
135(7)
The Christmas Rose
142(1)
Uncertainty
143(1)
Muchelney Abbey (from On the Departure)
143(2)
From What and Who (1994)
The Mendips
145(1)
Et in Arcadia ego
146(1)
Steps to the Temple
146(1)
April
147(1)
The Lack
147(1)
Peat
148(1)
Trees in a Mist
148(1)
The Levels
149(1)
Broadmead Brook
149(1)
Absence
150(1)
Casualty
151(1)
Poems from Collected Poems (1998)
Five Lines
152(1)
Triptych
152(2)
Tristia
154(4)
The Verb To Lie
158(1)
Indefinition
158(1)
Finale
159(4)
Translations
Roman Poems
Carmen Saeculare (Horace)
163(2)
Palinurus (Virgil, Aeneid V, 835ff)
165(1)
The Descent (Virgil, Aeneid VI)
165(4)
Tu ne quaesieris, scire nefas, quem mihi, quem tibi (Horace, Odes I, xi)
169(1)
Hactenus arvorum cultus (Virgil, Georgics II)
169(1)
Eheu fugaces, Postume, Postume (Horace, Odes II, xiv)
170(3)
Essays
From the New English Weekly (1937--1949): Charles Maurras and the Idea of a Patriot King
173(25)
Prejudice as an Aid to Government
175(2)
English Liberalism
177(2)
The Civil Service
179(3)
Charles Peguy
182(4)
Epitaph on Nuremberg
186(2)
T.S. Eliot on Culture
188(6)
Ego Scriptor: The Pisan Cantos of Ezra Pound
194(4)
Order and Anarchy: An Essay on Intellectual Liberty
198(17)
Charles Maurras
215(17)
Reflections on Marvell's Ode
232(12)
The Nature of Public Administration
244(7)
A Note on the Monarchy
251(11)
Autobiographical Reflections on Politics
262(17)
Natural History
279(10)
The Study of Affairs
289(6)
William Barnes
295(13)
Sevenoaks Essays/Native Ruminations
Introduction
308(1)
A Possible Anglicanism
309(6)
An Essay on Identity
315(3)
'Call No Man Happy Until he is Dead'
318(4)
On the Eros of Poetry
322(2)
A Note on Morality
324(2)
On Poetic Architecture
326(1)
Le Roi Soleil
327(2)
By Way of Explanation
329(6)
The Politics of Wyndham Lewis
335(8)
From English Poetry 1900--1950: An Assessment: W.B. Yeats
343(54)
T.S. Eliot
363(25)
Edward Thomas
388(9)
From The Case of Walter Bagehot:
Chapter Four: The Art of Money
397(20)
Songs in the Night: The Work of Henry Vaughan the Silurist
417(12)
Forewords from In the Trojan Ditch
429(7)
Looking Back on Maurras
436(8)
A Four Letter Word
444(8)
Poetry and Myth
452(7)
Poetry and Sincerity
459(8)
The Poet and the Translator
467(14)
Notes 481(10)
Bibliography 491(3)
Index of Poem Titles 494(4)
Index of First Lines 498
Born in Bristol in 1914, C. H. Sisson was noted as a poet, novelist, essayist and an important translator. He was a great friend of the critic and writer Donald Davie, with whom he corresponded regularly. Sisson was a student at the University of Bristol where he read English and Philosophy. As a poet he first came to light through the London Arts Review founded by the painter Patrick Swift and the poet David Wright. He reacted against the prevailing intellectual climate of the 1930s, particularly the Auden Group, preferring to go back to the anti-romantic T. E. Hulme, and to the Anglican tradition. The modernism of his poetry follows a 'distinct genealogy' from Hulme to Eliot, Pound, Ford Madox Ford and Wyndham Lewis. His novel Christopher Homm experiments with form and is told backwards. Sisson served in the British Army during World War II in India and joined the Ministry of Labour in 1936. He worked as a civil servant and wrote a standard text The Spirit of British Administration (1959) arising from his work and a comparison with other European methods. Sisson was a 'severe critic of the Civil Service and some of his essays caused controversy'. In his collection The London Zoo he writes this epitaph 'Here lies a civil servant. He was civil/ To everyone, and servant to the devil.' C. H. Sisson was made a Companion of Honour for services to literature in 1993. Carcanet publish his Collected Poems, his novels, essays, and his autobiography On the Lookout, as well as his versions of Dante, Virgil, La Fontaine, Du Bellay, Lucretius and others.