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LRB Article PDF: Saved for Jazz (<i>LRB</i> volume 17 number 19, 5 October 1995) 

LRB Article PDF: Saved for Jazz (LRB volume 17 number 19, 5 October 1995)

David Trotter

There are some curious aspects to Frank Lentricchia's study of four Modernist poets: T.S. Eliot, Robert Frost, Ezra Pound and Wallace Stevens. For a start, it's a book about poets which doesn't seem much interested in poems. Lentricchia has written a lengthy chapter on each member of his quartet. Yet Eliot is represented by 'The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock' and The Waste Land only, Stevens primarily by 'Sunday Morning' and 'The World as Meditation', Frost by a handful of short poems; while the chapter on Pound devotes almost as much attention to an early polemical essay, 'Patria Mia', as it does to the Cantos. Of course, these are much-discussed writers, and it would be suicidally churlish to spurn new emphases. In a previous book about Stevens, Lentricchia upbraided Harold Bloom and Helen Vendler for 'proceeding as if they had never read the poet's letters and journals, or as if, having read them, they had come to the conclusion that the worldly life they found portrayed therein pertained to somebody else.' But he sometimes proceeds as though he had never read anything else, and I began to wonder, during his substantial analysis of the poet's views on shopping and interior decoration, whether Bloom and Vendler weren't right to stick to the supreme fictions.

LRB 5 October 1995 | PDF Download

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