The following text field will produce suggestions that follow it as you type.

Barnes and Noble

Loading Inventory...
The Unfolding of Seasons: A Study James Thomson's Poem

The Unfolding of Seasons: A Study James Thomson's Poem in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $170.00
Get it at Barnes and Noble
The Unfolding of Seasons: A Study James Thomson's Poem

The Unfolding of Seasons: A Study James Thomson's Poem in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $170.00
Loading Inventory...

Size: Hardcover

Get it at Barnes and Noble
First published in 1970,
The Unfolding of The Seasons
provides an interpretation and evaluation of James Thomson’s poem
The Seasons.
Professor Cohen urges its reconsideration as a major Augustan poem, arguing that Thomson’s unity, diction and thought combine with a conception of man, nature and God which is poetically tenable and distinctive. The case for
The Seasons
as an important work of art depends upon its effectiveness as a moving vision of human experience, and Professor Cohen believes that many critics have not felt this effectiveness because they have misconceived Thomson’s vision and misunderstood his idiom. His study aims to persuade them to return to the poem and to examine it within the context of an Augustan tradition.
Professor Cohen shows that Thomson’s great achievement is to have fashioned a conception which, by bringing nature to the forefront of his poem, became a new poetic way of defining human experience. Thomson was not the first nature poet in English, but he was the first to provide an effective idiom in which science, orthodox religion, natural description, and classical allusions blended to describe the glory, baseness and uncertainty of man’s earthly environment, holding forth the hope of heavenly love and wisdom. This study shows that Thomson found a personal idiom by means of which he created an artistic vision. It will appeal to those with an interest in English literature and in philosophy.
First published in 1970,
The Unfolding of The Seasons
provides an interpretation and evaluation of James Thomson’s poem
The Seasons.
Professor Cohen urges its reconsideration as a major Augustan poem, arguing that Thomson’s unity, diction and thought combine with a conception of man, nature and God which is poetically tenable and distinctive. The case for
The Seasons
as an important work of art depends upon its effectiveness as a moving vision of human experience, and Professor Cohen believes that many critics have not felt this effectiveness because they have misconceived Thomson’s vision and misunderstood his idiom. His study aims to persuade them to return to the poem and to examine it within the context of an Augustan tradition.
Professor Cohen shows that Thomson’s great achievement is to have fashioned a conception which, by bringing nature to the forefront of his poem, became a new poetic way of defining human experience. Thomson was not the first nature poet in English, but he was the first to provide an effective idiom in which science, orthodox religion, natural description, and classical allusions blended to describe the glory, baseness and uncertainty of man’s earthly environment, holding forth the hope of heavenly love and wisdom. This study shows that Thomson found a personal idiom by means of which he created an artistic vision. It will appeal to those with an interest in English literature and in philosophy.

Find at Mall of America® in Bloomington, MN

Visit at Mall of America® in Bloomington, MN
Powered by Adeptmind