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Anna Akhmatova Critical Essay | Critical Essay by John Bayley

This literature criticism consists of approximately 3 pages of analysis & critique of Anna Akhmatova.
This section contains 637 words
(approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Akhmatova, Anna (Pseudonym of Anna Andreyevna Gorenko) 1889?–1966 - Critical Essay by John Bayley

Critical Essay by John Bayley

Akhmatova was a very unselfconscious poet in many ways; she had qualities of elemental force, utterance haunted and Delphic; yet these went together with elegance and sophistication, even a certain kind of mirror-gazing and a cunning which is chétif, or, as the Russians say zloi. She is not in the least like Blake or Eliot, and yet those are the English poets—different as they are—who offer some sort of parallel with her finest work. The incongruity in coupling such names shows how exceptional is her own poetic being….

Strangely enough she has as a poet more in common with what are—in a degraded form—Soviet ideals: restraint, correctness, propriety. Her poetry is dignified in the grandest sense without pretending to dignity, an equivalent in art of what she called the severe and shapely spirit of Russian orthodoxy….

The role of conscience in her poetry reminds us how unfamiliar such a possession...
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This section contains 637 words
(approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Akhmatova, Anna (Pseudonym of Anna Andreyevna Gorenko) 1889?–1966 - Critical Essay by John Bayley
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Akhmatova, Anna (Pseudonym of Anna Andreyevna Gorenko) 1889?–1966 - Critical Essay by John Bayley from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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