Thomas, Edward - Theresa Ashton (essay date November-December 1937)
Theresa Ashton (essay date November-December 1937)
SOURCE: Ashton, Theresa. “Edward Thomas: From Prose to Poetry.” The Poetry Review 28 (November-December 1937): 449-55.
[In the following essay, Ashton examines the poetic qualities in Thomas's prose and traces his development as a poet.]
The commemorative stone has been duly unveiled on the Shoulder of Mutton Hill in Hampshire and the tablet has been placed on Berryfield Cottage at the foot of the hill: but every memorial is also a memorial to the inadequacy of the heart of man—as doubly significant as the neat signpost of the National Trust set up in the England Edward Thomas loved so faithfully.
Tchehov once wrote to Gorki: “You are an artist, a wise man; you feel superbly, you are plastic; that is, when you describe a thing you see it and touch it with your hands.” The natural world created in Edward Thomas not a rich Lawrentian ecstasy nor a tortured mysticism like...
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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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