8vo. 12s. 6d. net.
Oxford Lectures on Poetry
BY
A.C. BRADLEY, LL.D., Litt.D.
ATHENAEUM.—“A remarkable achievement.... It is probable that this volume will attain a permanence for which critical literature generally cannot hope. Very many of the things that are said here are finally said; they exhaust their subject. Of one thing we are certain—that there is no work in English devoted to the interpretation of poetic experience which can claim the delicacy and sureness of Mr. Bradley’s.”
SPECTATOR.—“In reviewing Professor Bradley’s previous book on Shakespearean Tragedy we declared our opinion that it was probably the best Shakespearean criticism since Coleridge. The new volume shows the same complete sanity of judgment, the same subtlety, the same persuasive and eloquent exposition.”
TIMES.—“Nothing higher need be said of the present volume than it is not unworthy to be the sequel to Shakespearean Tragedy.”
DAILY TELEGRAPH.—“This is not a book to be written about in a hasty review of a thousand words. It is one to be perused and appreciated at leisure—to be returned to again and again, partly because of its supreme interest, partly because it provokes, as all good books should do, a certain antagonism, partly because it is itself the product of a careful, scholarly mind, basing conclusions on a scrupulous perusal of documents and authorities.... The whole book is so full of good things that it is impossible to make any adequate selection. In an age which is not supposed to be very much interested in literary criticism, a book like Mr. Bradley’s is of no little significance and importance.”
SATURDAY REVIEW.—“The writer of these admirable lectures may claim what is rare even in this age of criticism—a note of his own. In type he belongs to those critics of the best order, whose view of literature is part and parcel of their view of life. His lectures on poetry are therefore what they profess to be: not scraps of textual comment, nor studies in the craft of verse-making, but broad considerations of poetry as a mode of spiritual revelation. An accomplished style and signs of careful reading we may justly demand from any professor who sets out to lecture in literature. Mr. Bradley has them in full measure. But he has also not a little of that priceless quality so seldom found in the professional or professorial critic—the capacity of naive vision and admiration. Here he is in a line with the really stimulating essayists, the artists in criticism.”
MACMILLAN AND CO. LTD., LONDON.
Second Edition. Crown 8vo. 5s. 6d. net.
A Commentary on Tennyson’s ‘In Memoriam’
BY
A.C. BRADLEY, LL.D., Litt.D.