Thomas, Edward - J. Middleton Murry (essay date 1920)
J. Middleton Murry (essay date 1920)
SOURCE: Murry, J. Middleton. “The Poetry of Edward Thomas.” In Aspects of Literature, pp. 29-38. London: W. Collins Sons & Co. Ltd., 1920.
[In the following essay, the author, a British literary critic and editor of Rhyme magazine, concludes that Thomas is “not a great poet,” but nevertheless praises the search for truth in Thomas's poetry, comparing him favorably to Keats.]
We believe that when we are old and we turn back to look among the ruins with which our memory will be strewn for the evidence of life which disaster could not kill, we shall find it in the poems of Edward Thomas.1 They will appear like the faint, indelible writing of a palimpsest over which in our hours of exaltation and bitterness more resonant, yet less enduring, words were inscribed; or they will be like a phial discovered in the ashes of what was once a mighty city. There will be the triumphal arch...
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Criticism
- George F. Whicher (essay date April 1920)
- J. Middleton Murry (essay date 1920)
- Theresa Ashton (essay date November-December 1937)
- Cecil Day Lewis (essay date 1954)
- Ralph Lawrence (review date summer 1959)
- Michael Kirkham (essay date summer 1979)
- R. P. Draper (essay date 1985)
- Peter Mitchell (essay date summer 1986)
- Stephen McKenzie (essay date 1990)
- David Bromwich (essay date 1990)
- Edna Longley (essay date 1996)
- Stan Smith (essay date 1999)
- Martin Dodsworth (essay date summer 2000)
- Clive Wilmer (essay date March-April 2001)
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