The devastated areas would strike most people as a singularly unpromising scene in which to place an idyll, yet Miss Enid Bagnold has performed this feat with striking success [in "The Happy Foreigner"]. The very incongruity between the little human romance and gloomy, uncomfortable reality in which it is enshrined is pleasing; and one is not sure whether one admires more the author's skill in keeping the love passage—which is the idyll—light, delicate, and fleeting, though poignant, or the descriptive power and poetic feeling with which the ruins left by war and the workers engaged on clearing them up are represented.
On the whole, we should give our vote for the descriptive power, which never flags….
This is a free excerpt of 115 words. There are 266 words (approx.
1 page at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.
Read the rest of this Criticism with our Bagnold, Enid 1889–1981: Critical Essay by The Times Literary Supplement Access Pass.