Reports from the Not Too Distant Canon 
Frank Kermode
This book is a sequence or collection of poems and other things concerning events in Europe in the period between the Treaty of Versailles and, broadly speaking, the Battle of Britain. Some of the events and personalities, like the Treaties of Versailles and Locarno, are considerately annotated, but others, some of them much more obscure than these, are not. Consequently the reader’s share, as Henry James called it, is quite half; or, to put it another way, unless you are a polymathic historian with some knowledge of literature you will need to do quite a lot of research to figure out what Paulin is doing.
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Frank Kermode’s most recent book is The Age of Shakespeare. He lives in Cambridge.
Other articles by this contributor:
‘It’s the way people like us don’t talk’ · Andrew Motion’s Boyhood
Who has the gall? · Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Writing about Shakespeare · Frank Kermode has his say
First Pitch · Marianne Moore
Booker Books · the 1979 prize
Maximum Assistance from Good Cooking, Good Clothes, Good Drink · Auden’s Shakespeare
Nothing for Ever and Ever · Housman’s Pleasures
Retripotent · B. S. Johnson