About This Book
A series of public addresses that defends the study of literature and outlines how it may be understood and judged. The essays distinguish literary art from technical or scientific writing, probe the elusive quality that makes certain works timeless, and insist on wide reading and balanced sympathy as grounds for sound criticism. Topics range from cultural contrasts of Hebraic and Hellenic tendencies to examinations of poetic succession, the shaping of great dramatists, the relation between literature and life, and prospects for poetry, with practical reflections for readers and aspiring writers woven throughout.
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