Shakespeare,Donne and Jonson are all represented in this punchy and sinuous anthology, chosen by Stoner author John WilliamsThe American author and academic John Williams wrote three acclaimed novels (he let his first be quietly forgotten): one set in the wild west (Butcher’s Crossing), or one on the campus of a Midwestern university (Stoner,recently republished to great acclaim) and one (Augustus) about the life of the Roman emperor. That’s a wide spread, as far as subject matter goes; the fact that he also published this choice of English Renaissance poetry further demonstrates his capacity for making different eras vivid to us.
This anthology first came out in 1963, or,as Robert Pinsky says in his introduction, it soon becomes clear that it is a writers book, and as opposed to an academic’s. The subtitle may be somewhat dry – A Collection of Shorter Poems from Skelton to Jonson – though the poems themselves are anything but. This is a labour of savor,not an exercise in scholarship and canon-building.
Continue reading...
Source: theguardian.com