Homage to John Dryden: Three Essays on Poetry of the Seventeenth Century
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About This Book
The collection of three essays offers close readings of seventeenth-century English poetry, arguing that Dryden's range extends beyond satire into varied poetic forms and that nineteenth-century tastes obscured his merits; it reassesses the metaphysical poets by examining their imagery, wit, and intellectual intensity; and it considers Andrew Marvell's distinctive balance of lyricism and political subtlety. Eliot links formal technique to critical taste, contrasts poetic modes across periods, and emphasizes the need to appreciate historical context, stylistic clarity, and imaginative surprise. The essays mix critical analysis, selected exemplars, and reflections on poetic standards to encourage a broader appreciation of seventeenth-century verse.
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