Vol. 28 No. 2 1961 - page 164

"A GREAT WORK"
The Orphic Voice
Poetry and Natural History
BY EUZABETH SEWELL
"The Orphic Voice
will
be
heard.
As one lays down the book, the in–
tricate argument and the evidence
offered by Miss Sewell's own poems,
begin resounding inside one like re–
membered music. It is a great work."
-George Steiner,
The Nation $7 .50
The Voicer of
Matthew Arnold
An Essay in Criticism
BY
W.
STACY JOHNSON
A new approach to Matthew Arnold,
analyzing his poems according to
the "voices" in which they might
be
said to speak and comparing him
to major Romantic and Victorian
poets.
$4.50
H G. Wells and the
World State
BY W. WARREN WAGAR
A full-length study of H. G. Wells
as profit of world order: his think–
ing on the twentieth-century world
crisis and his program for world re–
construction.
$6.00
Poems
Volume
57
in the Yale Series
of Younger Poets
BY
ALAN
DUGAN
"Wonderfully ingenuous and tender.
There is a ferocious comic sense."
-Dudley Fitts,
in
the Foreword
cloth $3.00
paperbound $1.25
Yale University Press
New Haven, Conn.
CONTRIBUTORS
DANIEL BELL, Associate Profes–
sor at Columbia University, is
the author of the recently pub–
lished volume The End of Ideol.
ogy.
DAVID JACKSON'S "The Eng–
lish Gardens" is his first pub–
lished story. He lives in Stoning–
ton , Connecticut.
ROBERT B. HEILMAN, chairman
of the Department of English at
the University of Washington , is
the author of two studies of
Shakespeore.
THEODORE SOLOTAROFF
IS
an Associate Editor of Commen·
tary.
EDZIA WEISBERG is a graduate
student of English literature at
Brandeis University.
FRANCIS GOLFFING, poet end
critic, teaches English at Ben–
nington College.
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