14 research outputs found
Review of Taliessin through Logres and The Region of the Summer Stars
Review of: Charles Williams, Taliessin through Logres and The Region of the Summer Stars, Introduction by Sorina Higgins (Berkeley, California: Apocryphile Press, 2016). 182 pages. $19.99. ISBN 9781944769314
[Review] Cian Duffy (2014) My purpose was humbler, but also higher: Thomas De Quinceyâs 'System of the heavensâ, popular science and the sublime
Review of article: Duffy Cian, Romanticism, Volume 20 Issue 1, Page 1-14, ISSN 1354-991x Available Online Mar 201
Vestiges of the Phoenix: De Quincey, Kant and the Heavens
© Edinburgh University Press, 2011publication-status: Accepte
John Barrel, The Infection of Thomas de Quincey
Lindop Grevel. John Barrel, The Infection of Thomas de Quincey. In: Romantisme, 1991, n°74. Rire et rires. pp. 103-104
W. David Soud, Divine Cartographies: God, History and Poeisis in W. B. Yeats, David Jones, and T. S. Eliot
Religion is once more respectable, or at least discussable, as a constituent of serious literature. Despite taking J. Hillis Millerâs classic study The Disappearance of God as a starting-point for his examination of the religious element central to the work of three poets, W. David Soud moves on at once to an investigation of the fact that, for all of them, âeven after the Great War,⊠âtheological experienceâ was often the overriding consideration, and it determined a great deal about some of..
Charles Williams and W. B. Yeats
As two prominent system-building poets, and the most significant poets to emerge from the esoteric tradition inaugurated by the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, Charles Williams and William Butler Yeats naturally invite comparison. Both wrote supernatural fiction and avant-garde drama alongside their poetry; both, in their later work, celebrated a symbolic Byzantium. They were alike too in being preoccupied by myth, to the extent of seeing themselves and their acquaintances as immersed in m..
John Barrel, The Infection of Thomas de Quincey
Lindop Grevel. John Barrel, The Infection of Thomas de Quincey. In: Romantisme, 1991, n°74. Rire et rires. pp. 103-104