Shakespeare country, and rain. In deepest Warwickshire, when light goes out of the day at three, there's nothing to do but bring in the dogs and build a huge fire and try for the nth time to believe that 'Shall I die?' might be by the Bard. To get the ambience right, I fill a pewter mug with ale. A taper winks in the timbered hall. Even so, the poem seems very bad. Intoned, it sounds banal; sung, it simply upsets the cat. Something goes wrong in stanza two. Either the piece runs into sand, or the illusion slips, but I can never reach
LRB 6 February 1986 | PDF Download
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