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The Poetry and Prose of William Blake

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Since it was first published in 1965, David V. Erdman's edition has been widely hailed as easily the best available text of Blake's poetry and prose. Comparing it to other Blake texts, Michale J. Tolley in Southern Review observed that it has "very much fuller textual annotations; and incorporates a remarkable number of new readings, including an almost complete recovery of the suppressed or altered passages in Jerusalem and many new readings of hitherto dubious passages in the manuscript, including many in The Four Zoas." F.W. Bateson, writing in The New York Review, pointed out that "the crucial preliminary problem [in establishing Blake's text] is simply to make out what Blake wrote -- including, of course, what he wrote before he deleted the manuscript or erased the engraving (or the copper-plate script). Erdman has used the modern aids such as infra-red photography, micro-photography and a powerful magnifying glass to help his own sharp and experienced eyes, but his real achievement has simply been to look at the physical realities of Blake's text more closely and intelligently than any previous editor."

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The Poetry and Prose of William Blake, David V. Erdman, Harold Bloom

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Titul
The Poetry and Prose of William Blake
Jazyk
anglicky
Vydavateľ
Anchor
Väzba
mäkká
ISBN10
0385031971
ISBN13
9780385031974
Série
Hodnotenie
4,45 z 5
Anotácia
Since it was first published in 1965, David V. Erdman's edition has been widely hailed as easily the best available text of Blake's poetry and prose. Comparing it to other Blake texts, Michale J. Tolley in Southern Review observed that it has "very much fuller textual annotations; and incorporates a remarkable number of new readings, including an almost complete recovery of the suppressed or altered passages in Jerusalem and many new readings of hitherto dubious passages in the manuscript, including many in The Four Zoas." F.W. Bateson, writing in The New York Review, pointed out that "the crucial preliminary problem [in establishing Blake's text] is simply to make out what Blake wrote -- including, of course, what he wrote before he deleted the manuscript or erased the engraving (or the copper-plate script). Erdman has used the modern aids such as infra-red photography, micro-photography and a powerful magnifying glass to help his own sharp and experienced eyes, but his real achievement has simply been to look at the physical realities of Blake's text more closely and intelligently than any previous editor."