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For other authors named George Watson, see the disambiguation page.

25+ Works 237 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

George Watson is a Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge, author of The Literary Critics and general editor of the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature. He is author of The Lost Literature of Socialism (1998, 2nd edition 2010); Never Ones For Theory? England and the War of Ideas show more (2001); Take Back the Past: Myths of the Twentieth Century (2007); and The Story of the Novel (2008). show less
Image credit: Times Higher Education

Works by George Watson

Literary English since Shakespeare (1970) — Editor — 10 copies
The study of literature (1969) 8 copies
The story of the novel (1979) 6 copies
Coleridge the poet (2016) 4 copies

Associated Works

Biographia Literaria (1956) — Editor, some editions — 426 copies, 3 reviews
Edmund Burke: Appraisals and Applications (1990) — Contributor — 9 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1927-10-13
Date of death
2013-08-02
Gender
male
Organizations
University of Cambridge (St. John's College ∙ Fellow)
Relationships
Lewis, C. S. (teacher)
Birthplace
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Associated Place (for map)
Queensland, Australia

Members

Reviews

2 reviews
I have really enjoyed this book. There are a sufficiency of plums ('They do not contribute: they interrupt' ... 'dogmatism based on the uncertainty of its dogmas') and, what matters much more, the solid cake in between is nutritious. I am glad [the author doesn't] over-rate Dryden. [He] diagnose[s] Lamb exactly right. And [his] severities about Arnold and Leavis are just, besides being much better bred than A's own superciliousness or L's yahoo howls.

I don't think Wordsworth really held the show more theory of metre [he is blamed] for on p. 116. The sentence about 'superadding' the 'charm' of verse is introduced by the words 'Now supposing for a moment'. i.e. even if metre were merely something added (like jam on bread and butter) why should I not use it? He supposes, positionis causa, a concession he refuses actually to make. His real theory of metre (to my mind the best, perhaps the only valuable, part of the Preface) follows in the next two paragraphs and begins appropriately with the word 'But' ('But various causes...')

On p. 202 where it appears...as if W.P. Ker had been a Christian? Was he? I never heard of, nor remotely suspected, it. Even I, by the way, wrote nearly the whole of the Allegory book while I was still an agnostic.

There is one passage (p. 29) that completely defeated me. What is snobbish about finding Laodamia [one of Wordsworth's poems] 'not wholly free' from artificiality? ...I don't mean that I disagree... (which is what people sometimes mean, when they say they don't understand). I mean that I am baffled...

But it's a good book.
- from a 12 May 1962 letter to the author, in The collected letters of C.S. Lewis, volume III
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Statistics

Works
25
Also by
2
Members
237
Popularity
#95,613
Rating
3.9
Reviews
2
ISBNs
76
Languages
1

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