Szirtes, George - Alan Jenkins (essay date August 1982)
Alan Jenkins (essay date August 1982)
SOURCE: Jenkins, Alan. “A Barbarous Eloquence.” Encounter 59, no. 2 (August 1982): 55-61.
[In the following essay, Jenkins discusses Szirtes's poetic style.]
The poems contained in George Szirtes's November and May are largely concerned with propitiating the grimmer or less manageable gods and with trying to wrest a quirky, by no means comforting morality—in both senses—from the already quirky occurrences of the everyday and the domestic. The epigraph from Mac-Neice's “Snow” (“There is more than glass between the snow and the huge roses”) suggests that Szirtes has sensed the limitations of meticulousness, starkness, cleanliness, a strong visual quality, unblurred impressions, confidence and clarity—the terms in which his previous volume was praised—and begun instead to look out for the “mundane apparition,” the unattended moment of mystery or menace; to look out, too,...
[The entire page is 538 words long]
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- William Palmer (review date December 1980)
- Alan Jenkins (essay date August 1982)
- John Lucas (essay date 13 January 1984)
- Andrew Motion (review date April 1984)
- John Lucas (review date 26 August 1988)
- Mark Ford (essay date 19 January 1989)
- George Szirtes (essay date spring 1989)
- Stephen Romer (review date 16 August 1991)
- Stan Smith (review date 9 January 1992)
- Nicholas Murray (review date 7 June 1996)
- Caitriona O'Reilly (essay date March-April 1999)
- Judith Kitchen (essay date summer 1999)
- George Szirtes with András Gerevich (interview date winter 2001)
- James Sutherland-Smith (review date September-October 2001)
- James Hopkin (essay date 27 October 2001)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
