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the experience of reading in Britain, from 1450 to 1945...

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Listings for Author:  

Robert Bridges

  

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Robert Bridges : Shorter Poems

'Arthur Benson ... when rereading the Shorter Poems [of Robert Bridges] in 1910, thought them thin, mere tricks of language ...'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Arthur Benson      Print: Book

  

Robert Bridges : unknown

Saturday 31 July [entry headed 'My Own Brain,' and beginning 'Here is a whole nervous breakdown in miniature']: 'A desire to read poetry set in on Friday. This brings back a sense of my own individuality. Read some Dante & Bridges, without troubling to understand, but got pleasure from them.'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Virginia Woolf      Print: Unknown

  

Robert Bridges : Shorter Poems

'Humphry James is good. Is he very deep or very simple? And by the bye R. Bridges is a poet. I'm damned if he ain't! There's more poesy in one page of "Shorter Poems" than in the whole volume of Tennyson. This is my deliberate opinion. And what a descriptive power! The man hath wings--sees from on high.'

Century: 1850-1899     Reader/Listener/Group: Joseph Conrad      Print: Book

  

Robert Bridges, ed. : [possibly] The Spirit of Man: An Anthology in English & French from the Philosophers and Poets made by the POet Laureate in 1915 & dedicated by gracious permission to His Majesty the King

E. M. Forster to Wilson Plant, 14 February 1917: 'Not many books here [...] I have been enjoying Bridges and sticking, as I always do, in a Zola.'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Edward Morgan Forster      Print: Book

  

Robert Bridges : 

'J.J. Cooper read a paper on Robert Bridges & some selections from his poetry. C.I. Evans dealt with Newbolt & E.E. Unwin with Masefield in a similar way. Alfred Rawlings gave brief readings from Beeching, Alice Maynell [sic] & Frogley's Voice from the Trees'.

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: John James Cooper      Print: Book

  

Robert Bridges : The Testament of Beauty

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 15. I. 35.
Sylvanus Reynolds in the Chair

1. Minutes of last read & approved.

5. It was with a great pleasure to the club to welcome back Charles and Katherine Evans, who with the latter’s brother Samuel Bracher, came to entertain us with their programme of “Bees in Music and Literature.”

6. Charles Evans opened with an introduction that gave us an outline of the bee’s life.[...]

7. We next listened to a record of Mendelssohn’s “Bee’s Wedding.”

8. Samuel Bracher gave a longish talk on Bees and the Poets. He classified the poems as Idyllic, Scientific or Philosophical, and Ornamental; by quoting a great variety of works including lines from Shakespeare, K. Tynan Hickson, Pope, Thompson, Evans, Alexander, Tennyson, & Watson, he showed an amazing knowledge of the Poets. [...]

9. Charles Evans then spoke on Maeterlinck and Edwardes.

10. Charles Stansfield read Martin Armstrong’s Honey Harvest.

11. Another gramophone record gave us Rimsky-Korsakov’s “Flight of the Bumble Bee”

12. Katherine Evans read from Victoria Sackville-West’s “Bees on the Land”. Some of the lines were of very great beauty, & much enjoyed.

13 H. M Wallis then read an extract from the Testament of Beauty, concerning Bees. But he & all of us found Robert Bridges, at that hour in a warmish room, too difficult, and he called the remainder of the reading off.

14. A general discussion was the permitted, and members let themselves go.'

Unknown
Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Henry Marriage Wallis      

  

Robert Bridges : The Spirit of Man

'More enduring [than the chocolates sent by Eden's mother, which were eaten by rats] was a copy of Robert Bridge's The Spirit of Man, sent to me by my cousin Violet Dickinson who alone among my family had an unerring instinct for the present which would delight one most ... the Bridges anthology, which naturally contained much that was a revelation to a nineteen-year-old boy, made a perfect retreat for the sensibilities. Battered now, it still has a place in my library.'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Anthony Eden      Print: Book

  

Robert Bridges : unknown

'In one letter, written in June 1893, he logs Swinburne's Poems and Ballads, Lorna Doone ("seventh or eighth time"), Saintsbury's Essays on French Novelists, Dumas's Tulipe Noire, Maupassant, and some poems of Hugo and Gautier. A month later he is reporting on Andrew Lang's Lectures on Literature ("very good"), P. G. Hamerton's Intellectual Life ("excellent"), the poems of Robert Bridges ("very good") Henry James's Madonna of the Future ("peculiar"), R. L. Stevenson's Kidnapped and Master of Ballantrae ("fourth or fifth time"), Hugo's Notre Dame de Paris, and Ibsen's Doll House, League of Youth and Pillars of Society. "I am beginning to like Ibsen more than I did. I understand him better."'

Century: 1850-1899     Reader/Listener/Group: John Buchan      Print: Book

  

?Robert ?Bridges : ?Poems

'March 11 [1914]
Joined Hampstead Library £1..5.
Books read March [1914:] Mrs Sewell
His Grace of Osmond
Helen Keller Out of the Dark
A Lady of Quality.
The 3 Bronte's
The broken [sic] Halo.
Bridges Poems.
Life of Octavia Hill.
Life of Florence Nightingale Vol. 1
In the Guardianship of God
Rose o' the River. Wiggin'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Harriet Bickersteth Cook      Print: Book

  

Robert Bridges : [unknown]

'Last week I got out of the library the works of our present poet laureate, Bridges, who did not impress me a bit.'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Clive Staples Lewis      Print: Book

  

Robert Bridges : The Spirit of Man: an Anthology in English and French, from the Philosophers & Poets made by the Poet Laureate in 1915 & dedicated by Gracious Permission to His Majesty the King

'By the way, you should get that "Spirit of Man", Bridge's anthology, that everyone is talking about. Mrs K. has it from the library at present: it is one of the prettiest little books I have seen for a long time, and there is a lot of good stuff in it. One "nice point" is that the names of the authors are printed at the end of the volume and not under each piece: it is very amusing - and somewhat humiliating - to see how many you know. [...] 'It must be read ... in the light of its title and avowed purpose.... the book is rather an original work than a collection of poems.... I take it Bridges is here working out an idea of his own: and the medium he chooses is the collective poetry of his predecessors.... One thing in the book I admit is indefensible - the detestable translation from Homer, which, though you may hardly recognise it, is meant to be in the metre of "Oh! let us try". For this Bridges ought to get something with boiling oil.'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Clive Staples Lewis      Print: Book

  

Robert Bridges : Ode on the Tercentenary Commemoration of Shakespeare

'The literary event of the week is our respected laureate's ode in the Times Literary Supplement: truly a most remarkable production, though I am afraid like the honest Major in "Patience", I must confess that "it seems to me nonsense". To do the man justice, the lines about Homer, the ones about the birds, the beginning of the vision, and a few other passages, are rather fine. But the habit of throwing in an odd rhyme here and there is rather uncomfortable: still, if you can lay your hand upon it ... you might keep this number.'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Clive Staples Lewis      Print: Serial / periodical

  

Robert Bridges : [Sonnet on Lord Kitchener]

‘Well … our gallant regiment … have been in it a damn sight more than ever they expected, by the Lord. We are hardened veterans, fed up to the neck, muddy to the eyes, for the weather is execrable. And like Justice Shallow we have had our losses. Two of the nicest chaps in the whole crowd killed. And of our very best Lieutenants more gone than I like. So it goes with us … Have you seen "Child Lovers", W. H. D.’s new book? It has some good stuff in it—but he would do well to shut up shop … Mrs Abercrombie has sent me [Lascelle Abercrombie’s] "Deborah", which I like immensely, except the "Gabriel Hounds", which are poor tykes not worthy of poetic license. And the blank verse, also very fine, is hardly often enough simple. It is too skilled, too educated … But how good the storm is! And the marsh! And Barnaby! … One thing that runs continually in my head out here is L. Binyon’s “To the Fallen” which delights me ever more and more. Did you see Bridges’ Sonnett on Kitcher? That was fine too … I would not believe the news at first—it sounded so like the obvious rumour. Oh, but it’s raining like the blazes!’

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Ivor Bertie Gurney      Print: Newspaper

  

Robert Bridges : The Spirit of Man

‘Today is changeable, rather cold and windy … I hardly think of music at all, but stick to books. My friend Harvey, who is now a lootenant [sic] in this battalion has just lent me the "Spirit of Man"; and I am now browsing therein. Masefield is quite right. “Life is too wonderful to end”, and the better part of me is on fire adequately to praise it before I go.’

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Ivor Bertie Gurney      Print: Book

  

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