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Elizabeth Jennings Critical Essay | Critical Essay by Peter Scupham

This literature criticism consists of approximately 1 page of analysis & critique of Elizabeth Jennings.
This section contains 263 words
(approx. 1 page at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Jennings, Elizabeth 1926– - Critical Essay by Peter Scupham

Critical Essay by Peter Scupham

In Consequently I Rejoice, a substantial collection of eighty-eight poems, experiences are ordered with that meticulous precision we have grown to expect, and the whole book is marshalled impeccably so as to lead us from the preliminary night-thoughts, stirrings of creative activity, through a cycle of the year, dominated by bird-flight and bird-song, to a world of men and women: the old, who have attained wisdom or declined from it. Conscious of the timeless equation of bird and soul, we pass to a sequence of meditations on the Christian faith, some cast in the form of dramatic monologues by Christ and Mary, and so to a group of poems whose theme is the relationship between the artist and his achievement.

Elizabeth Jennings's world is lucid, topiaried. When she moves deeply inside herself, the poems have that edgy feeling of the convalescent for whom the small event bears a press of...
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This section contains 263 words
(approx. 1 page at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Jennings, Elizabeth 1926– - Critical Essay by Peter Scupham
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Jennings, Elizabeth 1926– - Critical Essay by Peter Scupham from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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