This section contains 4,137 words (approx. 14 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: Tillinghast, Richard. “John Crowe Ransom: Tennessee's Major Minor Poet.” The New Criterion 15, no. 6 (February 1997): 24-30.
In the following essay, Tillinghast discusses Ransom as a significant minor American poet.
For a generation of readers influenced by the literary criticism of T. S. Eliot, the distinction between “major” and “minor” poets is an accepted commonplace. The implication, of course, is that a major poet is somehow better than a minor. Most of us, however, reserve a valued place in our reading lives for the “great minor poet”—someone whose work is of the highest distinction, is original and memorable, and gives great pleasure, but who lacks the grand ambition to make, like Milton or Dante, a major philosophical or religious statement; to define, as Homer, Virgil, Chaucer, Shakespeare, Yeats, and Whitman did, an epoch or a national or ethnic identity.
It can be a relief to turn from these...
This section contains 4,137 words (approx. 14 pages at 300 words per page) |