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14 Reviews
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Words, Glorious Words!,
By FrKurt Messick "FrKurt Messick" (Bloomington, IN USA) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (TOP 500 REVIEWER)
This review is from: Immortal Poems Of The English (Turtleback School & Library Binding Edition) (School & Library Binding)
When a friend of mine wanted to know what volume of poetry I could recommend, adding the caveat that he wasn't going to wade through a thousand pages. I immediately thought of this book, 'Immortal Poems of the English Language', edited by Oscar Williams. This is an absolutely superb anthology. The poetry is arranged chronologically by poet - it begins with Chaucer and contemporary anonymous compositions, and proceeds through the various literary time periods to the present day. All of the greats are to be found here: Chaucer, Shakespeare, Byron, Yeats, Wordsworth (the list can go on and on) as well as some lesser-known but nonetheless great versifiers such a Peele, Cowley, and Landor. These are pieces of the English language, from the Middle English of Chaucer (presented without translation or notes) quickly getting to more modern recognisable texts. The poets come from all around the world; English as a literary language was carried forth by the British Empire, and English poetry now belongs, as a product and as an instrument of creativity. As befits his status as the greatest of English poets, Shakespeare has more pages than any other (29 pages), and some pieces come from the plays rather than his poetry proper. Some poets of giant stature (Chaucer, the first poet in the anthology) seem to get short-shrift here (none of the Canterbury Tales is included; Longfellow and Elizabeth Barrett Browning have less than one page each). However, taken as an accessible, overall compilation, this gives a great insight into the pattern of development of a poetical language. Being available as a portable paperback, this book has been a frequent travel companion. One of the things I traditionally do on airline flights is to pull out this volume and memorise poems; over the course of time I have memorised hundreds of poems, all from this text. Perhaps the one thing I would wish for would be a bit more biography about the poets themselves (they appear only as names and dates; one can place them with other poets into time periods). This would, however, significantly increase the size of the volume. Williams has provided a very brief essay on the importance of poetry. Williams himself is represented as a poet in these pages. While one can quibble at the exclusions and inclusions, it is true that no anthology can ever be complete, and that is true of this one. One unfortunate thing is that it has not been updated to include poets of the past thirty years. It is true that it is difficult to determine what poetry will be honoured and enduring, a nod to some of the more acclaimed poets of this generation would be a welcome addition. If one is going to have but one book of poetry, it would not be a far stretch of the imagination to believe that it might be this one, and that the owner would be well-served for the acquisition.
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Best For the Budget/Travel Reader,
By
This review is from: Immortal Poems of the English Language (Mass Market Paperback)
As with all anthologies, there will be a number of reviewers sniffing in an offended manner at the dearth (or glut) of Cummings, Yeats, Aiken, or Pope, but any 600 page anthology, by it's very nature, must be incomplete. I purchased this compilation three years ago for long flights and such and it has yet to disappoint. For the size and price of this work, one would be hard-pressed to do better.
As for content, all the major poets are more or less liberally represented. Cummings gets short shrift, and several of Yeats' most memorable pieces "An Irish Airman Forsees His Death", for one) are excluded. Yet I am certain novice and old hand alike will find this work passes the time admirably. Having been with me through several housheold moves, military action, and cramped backpacks no self-respecting piece of literature should have to endure, my copy is now fairly falling apart. Yet when it expires, I will buy another copy. No other anthology, especially in terms of price, convenience, and memories, could ever compare.
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Immortal Poems Anthology By My Dad,
By Strephon Kaplan-Williams "writer" (Netherlands-America) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Immortal Poems of the English Language (Mass Market Paperback)
I too love this anthology. A passionate love of poetry has been part of my upbringing. Let me say that both my mother, Gene Derwood, and Oscar Williams, my biological father, contributed to the selection of the greatest of the great poetry of the English language. Thus we have the contribution of a husband and wife team. Reviewers have mentioned updating this volume, but what has happened is that modern poetry writing no longer follows a firm tradition. Modern poetry is a shotgun blast. There are no recognizable standards for universal selection. Plath is recognized because you cannot divorce her from her suicide. Ginsberg you cannot divorce from his beard and little clanging bells, a media invention. Bob Dylan you cannot divorce from his being a song writer and media invention. If you are not a media invention and only a poet, what chance do you have? So Immortal Poems represents classic taste before media took over the American mind. The media is immortal these days, not poetry. Selecting from contemporary poets not using traditional standards would be difficult to do. I would still love to do it. For those interested in Oscar Williams there is information now available on the web. Just search it with oscarwilliams and see what their world was like in the twentieth century.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the best English poetry anthologies,
By
This review is from: Immortal Poems of the English Language (Mass Market Paperback)
As other readers have said this anthology contains selections from the great poets of the English language from Beowulf to the middle of the twentieth century. It is the kind of book which can be read and reread for years upon years. I would however take exception to the claim that it is the best anthology of its kind. It does not have explanatory material provides no introduction to the poets, no interpretation of their work. There are other anthologies ( Among them ' The Concise Treasury of Great Poems' by Louis Untermeyer) which do so. Nonetheless the bottom line is that this Anthology contains very much of the greatest poetry in the English language.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Six Dollars for a Lifelong Enjoyment,
By
This review is from: Immortal Poems of the English Language (Mass Market Paperback)
I own various anthologies of American, British, and modern poetry, but none of them are as portable and densely packed with soul-moving poetry as this six dollar book. You may find it regrettable that the book lacks some of your favorite poems. Sandburg appears but without Chicago, and Poe but no Raven. However, each one of the poems stirs in such a way that you will find the titular adjective "immortal" quite apropriate. My copy has traveled with me over three continents, and now rests on my nightstand. As someone who loves poetry, its the one book that I don't leave home without.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Praise of a wonderful anthology of poetry,
By A Customer
This review is from: Immortal Poems of the English Language (Mass Market Paperback)
Unless this anthology of poetry has been seriously altered since 1965, (that being the edition I borrowed from my mother four years ago and do not plan to return), it a wonderful collection. I have returned to old favorites and discovered poets and poems countless times in its yellowing pages. Whenever I travel it has a place in my bags, wherever I stay it has a place on my shelve until sheer age and use make it fall apart.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Value,
By Mike (CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Immortal Poems of the English Language (Mass Market Paperback)
The poems are listed in chronological order of author birthdate which gives an interesting perspective of the history of the english language. It has two indices that list the poems by author and first line which can be very handy when you are trying to find something. It does not contain any modern work still in copyright, but has most of my favourites (Daffodils, The Traveller, Shall I compare thee..., Kubla Khan, The Ancient Mariner, The Jaberwocky).
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Real Deal Of The Greatest Poems,
By
This review is from: Immortal Poems of the English Language (Mass Market Paperback)
A dear friend of mine had this book and I was intrigued. Although he had an edition that was dated back in the 50's, it was very worn out with its brown loose pages. Depsite that, I read some of the greatest poems that you can imagine and some familiar ones that I knew but not in its entirety. They were some of the most beautiful words written on paper. I decided to get my own copy and got a new edition for my friend and was thrilled with emotion. I knew I gave my friend a renewed treasure that he can now read without worrying about the pages falling out of its binding. I truly recommend this book of poems to anyone who really wants to feel well written words in verses that are truly beautiful and memorable. Get this book!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I love this book!,
By Charles Sutherland (Indy, IN USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Immortal Poems of the English Language (Mass Market Paperback)
I have several books of poetry at home, but this one is my favorite. It is a good collection of poetry from the time of Middle English to almost to the present. There are a few modern poets I would like to see included that haven't been yet. Maybe someday someone will update this wonderful volume.It starts with Middle English poet extraordinaire Geoffrey Chaucer, with excerpts from the Canterbury Tales and other writing. I would like to have seen Beowulf and some Old English poetry included. There are excerpts from anonymous poets of Middle English leading into the "Shakespearean" times where English is becoming more modern. Shakespeare of course is well represented, with passages from plays as well as poems and sonnets. This is true for some others like Marlowe, too. By the time after the Elizabethean period, English poets were not confined to England. There are Celtic poets like Robert Burns of Scotland, Dylan Thomas of Wales, and several Irish poets and American poets well represented in the later part of the book. The poets are arranged chronologically in the book, but there is are indexs of titles and poets alphabetically at the end of the book for cross referencing. This book has over 600 pages, but it is still a small paperback and will fit in a coat pocket, which is where my copy often lives, dog eared and highlighted all over the place! I had heard of most of the poets in this collection before I got the volume, but there are some I hadn't heard of and am glad to know. This is an excellent beginning collection, easy to carry and easy to read. Being a mass market paperback, the printing is not the best, but the poetry certainly is.
12 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Portable and cheap, in immortality sleep,
By
This review is from: Immortal Poems of the English Language (Mass Market Paperback)
Your title confounds me putting you at a distant,A pedestal of immortality, but I want you in the here and now; in the existent. Assigning you 4-stars is akin to the betrayal of a friend. For your dog-eared pages has backpacked peaks with me; your spine water-stained with a tendency to distend. But you try too hard capturing poets and poetry alike through the ages. There is too much of you and too little of Cummings, of Lowell, of Whitman among the other sages. There is no poet's life and who and where There is only the poet's strife and your title's cavalier. But I dog you no further down for your dog-eared pulp has brought me much not leaving my wallet forsaken, For in your ambition you have failed not to include Housman, Santayana, and Aiken. |
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Immortal Poems of the English Language by Oscar Williams (Paperback - 1969)
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