tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4750601976843429146.post3974384202800570809..comments2024-01-25T09:38:39.998+10:00Comments on Lady Godiva and Me: Bunting, Wyatt, editors.Liam Guilarhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04031376624826567522noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4750601976843429146.post-23791017345825890592010-03-07T03:00:06.228+10:002010-03-07T03:00:06.228+10:00That's what I like about Graves too, he may be...That's what I like about Graves too, he may be wrong, but he doesn't care. And over the years I find that he's great to have arguments with (well, in my mind - he is dead after all...); he makes you think about what your own stance is.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06280161801824435219noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4750601976843429146.post-68210008051548929642010-03-06T14:56:40.445+10:002010-03-06T14:56:40.445+10:00Ah the Muse.
She has a lot to answer for in Graves...Ah the Muse.<br />She has a lot to answer for in Graves' scheme, doesn't she? <br />But reading Graves on poetry is always... Instructive? and enjoyable. It's such a pleasure compared with reading a lot of critics. Even when he's wrong, or being deliberately wrong headed, there's something magnificent about the upright "Here I stand like it, or lump it" part of it.<br /><br /> I like "These be your God's" as well: I was not the kind of boy who liked breaking windows, says he, and then gleefully stands there and sticks the boot into all and sundry.Liam Guilarhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04031376624826567522noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4750601976843429146.post-10978089190584718762010-03-06T02:19:38.394+10:002010-03-06T02:19:38.394+10:00Wow, just reading Graves's grand Harp, Anvil O...Wow, just reading Graves's grand Harp, Anvil Oar lecture - I know what you mean, though. He didn't make apologies for his theories (well, excepting in the first lecture - and even then it's all down to the Muse...).Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06280161801824435219noreply@blogger.com