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Guy Noel Pocock (1880–1955)

Auteur de Modern Poetry

31+ oeuvres 149 utilisateurs 4 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Œuvres de Guy Noel Pocock

Modern Poetry (1921) — Directeur de publication — 29 exemplaires
A Poetry Book for Boys and Girls (1933) 29 exemplaires
Modern Humour (1940) 15 exemplaires
Ballads and Ballad Poems (1921) 11 exemplaires
Modern Short Stories 9 exemplaires
Modern Prose (1922) 8 exemplaires
Junior Modern Essays (1931) 8 exemplaires
Later Modern Poetry (1927) 6 exemplaires
Some English Diarists (1938) 4 exemplaires
David Copperfield as a Boy (1949) 2 exemplaires
Herodotus: Stories and Travels (1932) 2 exemplaires
More Light Prose (1936) 2 exemplaires
Brush Up Your Own Language (1936) 2 exemplaires
A story book for boys and girls (1955) 2 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Robinson Crusoé (1719) — Introduction, quelques éditions24,829 exemplaires
Theras and His Town (2002) — Introduction, quelques éditions678 exemplaires
Youth and Gaspar Ruiz (1920) — Contributeur, quelques éditions43 exemplaires
The Letters of Charles Lamb, Volume I of II (1888) — Introduction, quelques éditions7 exemplaires
Bevis & Mark from Bevis (1956) — Directeur de publication — 3 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1880
Date de décès
1955
Sexe
male

Membres

Critiques

The low-ish rating for the book is just me. I'm sure that a reader who better appreciates poetry would rate it higher. I never really learned how to properly read poetry, probably because I didn't want to be bothered by dwelling on nuanced meaning. For me, that is especially true of the Romance exponents. I persevered, however, and found that I enjoyed to two by Kipling and Masefield included at the back of the book.
½
 
Signalé
gmillar | Oct 15, 2022 |
Another super presentation in the Kings Treasuries series by Guy Pocock. Yes, it's a collection of pieces from the novel "'Pickwick Papers" but it stands alone beautifully. Dickens is a consummate comedian and here he skewers English mores and culture of the times to wonderful advantage, all the way down to describing things without actually describing them. It seems that lawyers, however, have not changed their courtroom antics much. I think my dad must have loved Pickwick as much as I do because a lot of his 1950's vernacular came obviously from the book: like his frequent trips to Dingley Dell.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
gmillar | Sep 15, 2022 |
This Everyman anthology, originally published in 1940, collects late 19th and early 20th century humorous writing of a kind which now tends to seem very ponderous. It is the kind of thing that I used to leaf through in old copies of Punch, ignoring the text and looking for the cartoons. Much of it is verbose anecdote, facetious narrative, caricatures of bores or socially pretentious ladies, or verse which treats trivial subjects in a mock-serious manner (such as Ruth Pitter's "Maternal Love Triumphant, or Song of the Virtuous Female Spider").

Some of the excerpts are fine, but one might as well have the whole book rather than a mere chunk of Cold Comfort Farm, The Once and Future King, or one of Wodehouse's tales of Jeeves and Wooster. There are some archetypal limericks and clerihews, but you can find those anywhere. I did enjoy A. D. Godley's classic poem taking "Motor Bus" as a Latin phrase and declining it ("motorem bum", "motores bi", etc.), to the amusement of anyone who studied Latin at school; Quiller-Couch devoting a string of sapphics to the romance of Lady Jane and her gardener; and magisterial parodies of G. K. Chesterton by Sir John Squire and of Henry James by Sir Max Beerbohm. (The Chesterton parody in particular is notably more entertaining than the piece from Chesterton himself.) But I don't think the highlights justify keeping the whole volume on my shelf.

MB 6-ix-2021
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
MyopicBookworm | Sep 6, 2021 |
A nice little collection of poems grouped under the following headings: England, The Call of the Sea, The Call of the Country, Animals, The Great War, Fancy, Life and Death, and Free Verse. I remember my favourite English master using this at High School.
 
Signalé
gmillar | Apr 9, 2014 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
31
Aussi par
5
Membres
149
Popularité
#139,413
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
4
ISBN
7

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