Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > Robinson, Edwin Arlington - Louis Coxe (essay date 1954)
Robinson, Edwin Arlington - Louis Coxe (essay date 1954)
Louis Coxe (essay date 1954)
SOURCE: “Edwin Arlington Robinson: The Lost Tradition,” in Enabling Acts: Selected Essays in Criticism, University of Missouri Press, 1976, pp. 7-26.
[In the following essay, originally published in 1954, Coxe identifies strengths in Robinson's poetry that place him among the most important American poets of the twentieth century.]
To the contemporary reader it seems strange that Allen Tate, in 1933, should have referred to E. A. Robinson as the “most famous of living poets” and again as the writer of “some of the finest lyrics of modern times.” As far as most of us are concerned, Robinson ekes out a survival in “anthological pickle,” as he called it, and few readers try to go beyond, for if any poet has been damned by the anthologists it is Robinson. Why the decline in his reputation? Did critics puff him far beyond his deserts? Can a critic today judge him on the basis of the old chestnuts,...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Marianne Moore (essay date 1924)
- Malcolm Cowley (essay date 1948)
- Louis Coxe (essay date 1954)
- Richard Crowder (essay date 1962)
- Glauco Cambon (essay date 1963)
- Wallace L. Anderson (essay date 1969)
- Irving Howe (essay date 1970)
- R. W. B. Lewis (essay date 1973)
- John Lucas (essay date 1985)
- Leon Satterfield (essay date 1984)
- Anna Blumenthal (essay date 1989)
- Anna Sabol Blumenthal (essay date 1991)
- Robert Pack (essay date 1991)
- Turner Cassity (essay date 1993)
- Donald Hall (essay date 1994)
- Donald Justice (essay date 1996)
- Allen Trachtenberg (essay date 1998)
- Further Reading
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