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What is ‘Popular Poetry’? by W. B. Yeats

What is Popular Poetry? by W. B. Yeats

Posted on March 21, 2011April 3, 2025 by Richard

W.B. Yeats challenges literary conventions in ‘What is Popular Poetry?’, exploring authentic Irish verse and how true poetry transcends cultural divisions

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About War Poetry by George Herbert Clarke (1917)

Posted on March 13, 2011July 30, 2017 by Richard

About War Poetry by George Herbert Clarke (1917) Because man is both militant and pacific, he has expressed in literature, as indeed in the other forms of art, his pacific and militant moods. Nor are these moods, of necessity, incompatible. War may become the price of peace, and peace may so decay as inevitably to…

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Of Love by Francis Bacon

Posted on March 7, 2011May 8, 2019 by Richard

THE stage is more beholding to love, than the life of man. For as to the stage, love is ever matter of comedies, and now and then of tragedies; but in life it doth much mischief; sometimes like a siren, sometimes like a fury. You may observe, that amongst all the great and worthy persons…

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What is Genius by Joseph Addision

Posted on March 5, 2011May 8, 2019 by Richard

—Cui mens divinior, atque os Magna sonaturum des nominis hujus honorem. Hor., Sat. i. 4, 43. On him confer the poet’s sacred name, Whose lofty voice declares the heavenly flame. There is no character more frequently given to a writer than that of being a genius.  I have heard many a little sonneteer called a…

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Mark Twain Autobiography: On Duels and Shakespeare

Posted on February 28, 2011May 8, 2019 by Richard

In those early days duelling suddenly became a fashion in the new Territory of Nevada, and by 1864 everybody was anxious to have a chance in the new sport, mainly for the reason that he was not able to thoroughly respect himself so long as he had not killed or crippled somebody in a duel…

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50 Common Mistakes in Speaking and Writing

Posted on February 27, 2011June 1, 2017 by Richard

1. “The business would suit any one who enjoys bad health.” [From an advertisement in a daily newspaper of New-York.] Few persons who have bad health can be said to enjoy it. Use some other form of expression: as, one in delicate health, or, one whose health is bad. 2. “We have no corporeal punishment…

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Charles Dickens a Letter to His Wife

Posted on February 21, 2011May 8, 2019 by Richard

My dearest Love, I received your welcome letter on arriving here last night, and am rejoiced to hear that the dear children are so much better. I hope that in your next, or your next but one, I shall learn that they are quite well. A thousand kisses to them. I wish I could convey…

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Percy Bysshe Shelly on Beatrice Cenci by Guido Reni

Posted on February 19, 2011February 3, 2023 by Richard

On my arrival at Rome I found that the story of the Cenci was a subject not to be mentioned in Italian society without awakening a deep and breathless interest: and that the feelings of the company never failed to incline to a romantic pity for the wrongs, and a passionate exculpation of the horrible…

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True and False Humour by Joseph Addison

Posted on February 18, 2011May 8, 2019 by Richard

Nothing so foolish as the laugh of fools. Among all kinds of writing, there is none in which authors are more apt to miscarry than in works of humour, as there is none in which they are more ambitious to excel. It is not an imagination that teems with monsters, a head that is filled…

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Truthfulness by Charles Dudley Warner

Posted on February 15, 2011May 8, 2019 by Richard

Truthfulness is as essential in literature as it is in conduct, in fiction as it is in the report of an actual occurrence. Falsehood vitiates a poem, a painting, exactly as it does a life. Truthfulness is a quality like simplicity. Simplicity in literature is mainly a matter of clear vision and lucid expression, however…

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A Little on John Dyer by Samuel Johnson

Posted on February 14, 2011May 8, 2019 by Richard

John Dyer, of whom I have no other account to give than his own letters, published with Hughes’s correspondence, and the notes added by the editor, have afforded me, was born in 1700, the second son of Robert Dyer of Aberglasney, in Caermarthenshire, a solicitor of great capacity and note. He passed through Westminster school…

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A Mountain Town in France (1879) by Robert Louis Stevenson

Posted on February 13, 2011May 8, 2019 by Richard

Le Monastier is the chief place of a hilly canton in Haute Loire, the ancient Velay.  As the name betokens, the town is of monastic origin; and it still contains a towered bulk of monastery and a church of some architectural pretensions, the seat of an arch-priest and several vicars.  It stands on the side…

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Shakespeare; or The Poet by Ralph Waldo Emerson

Posted on January 27, 2011May 8, 2019 by Richard

1. Great men are more distinguished by range and extent, than by originality. If we require the originality which consists in weaving, like a spider, their web from their own bowels; in finding clay, and making bricks, and building the house; no great men are original. Nor does valuable originality consist in unlikeness to other…

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Dante, the Divine Poet by Alice Birkhead

Posted on January 26, 2011May 20, 2019 by Richard

There were still Guelfs and Ghibellines in 1265, but the old names had partially lost their meaning in the Republic of Florence, where the citizens brawled daily, one faction against the other. The nobles had, nevertheless, a bond with the emperor, being of the same Teutonic stock, and the burghers often sought the patronage of…

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Printing and Printers by Oscar Wilde

Posted on January 25, 2011May 8, 2019 by Richard

Nothing could have been better than Mr. Emery Walker’s lecture on Letterpress Printing and Illustration, delivered last night at the Arts and Crafts.  A series of most interesting specimens of old printed books and manuscripts was displayed on the screen by means of the magic-lantern, and Mr. Walker’s explanations were as clear and simple as…

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