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Informationen zum Autor Eric Homberger Klappentext This set comprises 40 volumes covering nineteenth and twentieth century European and American authors. These volumes will be available as a complete set, mini boxed sets (by theme) or as individual volumes. This second set compliments the first 68 volume set of Critical Heritage published by Routledge in October 1995. Zusammenfassung Ezra Pound (1932-63). Writings include: Drafts and Fragments of Cantos CX-CXVII, Homage to Sextus, Prospertius. Volume covers the period 1904-1970. Extras: Includes a selected list of the printing Pound's works from 1908-1960. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction; Note on the Text; Meeting Ezra Pound; 1: William Carlos Williams; 2: Edward Thomas; 3: D. H. Lawrence; 4: W. B. Yeats; 5: T. S. Eliot; 6: Harriet Monroe; A Lume Spento; 7: Unsigned notice, Book News Monthly; Personae; 8: Unsigned review, Evening Standard and St. James's Gazette; 9: W. L. Courtney, unsigned review, Daily Telegraph; 10: F. S. Flint, review, New Age; 11: Edward Thomas, 'A New Note in Verse' Daily Chronicle; 12: Edward Thomas, from 'Two Poets', English Review; 13: Unsigned review, Observer; 14: Unsigned review, Bookman (London); 15: Unsigned review, 'Heresy, and Some Poetry', Nation (London); 16: Rupert Brooke, review, Cambridge Review; 17: A new poet makes his debut; Exultations; 18: Edward Thomas, 'The Newest Poet', Daily Chronicle; 19: Unsigned review, Spectator; 20: Unsigned review, Observer; 21: F. S. Flint, 'Verse', New Age; 22: Unsigned review, Nation (London); The Spirit of Romance; 23: Unsigned notice, Nation (New York); 24: Edward Thomas, review, Morning Post; Provença; 25: Floyd Dell, review, Chicago Evening Post; 26: H. L. Mencken, review, Smart Set; 27: Reverberations in America; 28: J. B. Yeats to his son; Canzoni; 29: Charles Granville, 'Modern Poetry', Eye-Witness; 30: Unsigned review, Westminster Gazette; 31: G. D. H. Cole, initialled review, Isis; 32: J. C. Squire, review, New Age; 33: F. S. Flint, review, Poetry Review; Sonnets and Ballate of Guido Cavalcanti; 34: Arundel del Re, review, Poetry Review; 35: John Bailey, unsigned review, The Times Literary Supplement; Ripostes; 36: Harold Child, unsigned review, The Times Literary Supplement; 37: F. S. Flint, review, Poetry and Drama; 38: Ezra Pound in Chicago; 39: Pound and Poetry: a letter to Nation (New York); 40: Pound and Poetry: Wallace Rice in Dial; 41: Pound and Poetry: Harriet Monroe replies; Cathay; 42: Ford Madox Hueffer, 'From China to Peru', Outlook; 43: A. R. Orage on the thought and form of Cathay; 44: Carl Sandburg, 'The Work of Ezra Pound', Poetry; 45: William Marion Reedy on the position of Pound; Gaudier Brzeska: A Memoir; 46: Unsigned review, Dial; Lustra; 47: The problem of getting published, 1 A postcard from Elkin Mathews's reader; 48: The problem of getting published, 2 The memorandum of agreement; 49: Kate Buss, 'Ezra Pound: Some Evidence of his Rare Chinese Quality'; 50: A poet in rebellion against emotion; 51: Louis Untermeyer on a poet in pantomime; 52: Babette Deutsch, 'Ezra Pound, Vorticist' Reedy's Mirror; 53: Maxwell Bodenheim, 'A poet's Opinion', Little Review; 54: J. B. Yeats to John Quinn; 55: Joseph Conrad to John Quinn; 56: A. R. Orage on Ezra Pound: His Metric and Poetry; Pavannes and Divisions; 57: Louis Untermeyer, 'Ezra Pound-Proseur', New Republic; 58: Conrad Aiken, 'A Pointless Pointillist', Dial; 59: Emanuel Carnevali, 'Irritation', Poetry; 60: W. G. Hale on Pound's failings as a Latinist; Quia Pauper Amavi; 61: A. R. Orage on Pound, Propertius and 'decadence', Readers and Writers (1917-1921); 62: Grumbles about the 'Homage', New Age; 63: Pound's defence of the 'Homage'; 64: Robert Nichols, 'Poetry and Mr. Pound', Observer; 65: A reply from Wyndham Lewis; 66: Pound defends the 'Homage' again; 67: John Gould Fletcher on the decline and fall of an expatriate; 68: Harold Monro, from Some Contemporary Poets; 69: May Sinclair, 'The Re...