An informal Times feature on literary classics, published recently, included a list drawn up by a director of Penguin Classics: 'The 50 Greatest Classics (pre-1900).' Such lists can be dispiriting, and it could be said of this one that it had too little Shakespeare and no short poems at all (in such contexts, 'great' means 'long'). But though there were omissions, there were no silly inclusions; Homer and Virgil and Chaucer accompanied Stendhal and Jane Austen, Dickens and Tolstoy and Henry James; and near the end was one poem that certainly might, in its intensity, be described as 'short' - Coleridge's Rime of the Ancient Mariner.
LRB 7 August 2003 | PDF Download
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