Word Power Books

Book Search

A value is required.

Word Power Books
Word Power Books

TOP 10 BOOKS

Word Power Books

Making the Future

Noam Chomsky

£9.59

More Info
Word Power Books

Selected Poems

Tom Leonard

£9.00

More Info
Word Power Books

A Thorn in Their Side

Robert Green

£14.39

More Info
Word Power Books

Britain's Empire

Richard Gott

£18.75

More Info
Word Power Books

The Poor Had No Lawyers

Andy Wightman

£7.49

More Info
Word Power Books

Scottish Novels of the Second World War

Isobel Murray

£12.99

More Info
Word Power Books

Occupy!

Eli Schmitt

£7.49

More Info
Word Power Books

Neo-Liberal Scotland

David Miller

£24.99

More Info
Word Power Books

Outside the Narrative

Tom Leonard

£11.99

More Info
Word Power Books

All Made Up

Janice Galloway

£11.04

More Info
Word Power Books

A Dirty Hand
The Literary Notebooks of Winfield Townley Scott

 

You are here: Language, Literature And ... > Literature: Texts > Collections & Anthologies... 

Word Power Books

A Dirty Hand
The Literary Notebooks of Winfield Townley Scott

by Winfield Townley Scott (Author)
Merle Armitage (Foreword)

 

Paperback

ISBN: 9780292741652

 

Availability:
If Item in stock, posted within 24 hours. Otherwise expected despatch within 5 to 15 working days.

 

Our Price: £12.17

RRP £13.99 , Save £1.82

 

0 customer(s) reviewed this product



  • Description
  • Reviews
  • Book Details

From "a dirty hand":

Words are very powerful. You aren't sure of that? Think of all the things you won't say.

Wonderful remark in a note I had this week from William Carlos Williams. He spoke of the "disease" of wanting to write poetry; said he had been "off" poetry for many months and—he said—"I feel clean and unhappy."

One reason for keeping this kind of notebook: you can put on record the retort you couldn't think of at last night's party.

Photographs of Henry James in his middle years should be commented upon. Gone is the shy aesthete of the youthful portrait (by LaFarge?) . This bearded man has a fierce look, even a bestial one. Here is perhaps-I don't know-James at his most generative. Again this man disappears in the shaven, bald, final James, the famous James—the Grand Lama.

I noticed when Lindsay (thirteen) read aloud a passage from a hunting book the other day he pronounced "genital" as "genteel." I'd love to see a literary history titled "The Genital Tradition."

Contrast "business ethics" and the ethics of art. Nobody writes a poem hoping it will wear out in four or five years.

Between 1951 and 1966 the distinguished American poet Winfield Townley Scott kept a series of notebooks in which he set down his thoughts on poetry, literature, the literary scene, and life in general. Shortly before his untimely death in 1968 he made a selection of the entries he thought were best and gave it the title "a dirty hand." These perceptive notes, some tart, some gentle, some boisterous, some wistful, give us a remarkable insight into the workings of his creative mind. George P. Elliott has said of Scott: "In a very solid way, I think he was as rock-bottom American a poet as we have had since Frost." The introduction is by Scott's good friend Merle Armitage, who also designed the original edition of this book



 

ISBN 292741650
ISBN13 9780292741652
Publisher University of Texas Press
Format Paperback
Publication date 15/11/2011
Pages 176
Weight (grammes) 267
Published in United States
Height (mm) 229
Width (mm) 152