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The Complex Vision
John Cowper Powys
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R934
Discovery Miles 9 340
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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'Mr. Powys is to be congratulated on having written a book of the
kind that most needs writing and most deserves to be read...Here in
a dozen chapters of eloquent and glowing prose, Mr. Powys describes
for every reader that citadel which is himself, and explains to him
how it maybe strengthened and upheld and on what terms it is most
worth upholding.. The virtue of his book is that it is freshly and
clearly focussed to meet the present situation to encourage and
establish developing experience in growing minds' Manchester
Guardian
"'It is not our struggle to be happy that is mistaken; it is our
false idea that we can find happiness anywhere but in ourselves...
happiness does not depend on outward things. It is born of the
mind, it is nourished by the mind, it is what rises, like breath in
a frosty air, from the mind's wrestling with its fate...'"
"The Art of Happiness" (first published in 1935) belongs to John
Cowper Powys's sequence of philosophical writings, and finds him
exploring the problem of how man lives with his fellow man, and
also with woman - that is to say, here, as opposed to the abstract
arguments concerning Man in the universe, Powys is concerned with
the practical arguments such as arise between man and his
neighbour, his wife, his lover - and also with man's arguments
against himself, all in the pursuit of happiness. The careful
reader will find herein hints, clues, intimations, as to how we all
might become a little happier - an invitation few of us would feel
so fortunate as to refuse.
In Defence of Sensuality was first published in 1930. The author's
own foreword to the book is worth quoting in full: 'The author
feels that perhaps some explanation is due tot eh reader for the
rather unusual employment of the ''Sensuality'' which serves as the
title of this work. The advantage given to the author by the use of
this particular expression is that it enables him to proceed from
rock-bottom upwards as far as he likes. A more refined title would
have cut him off, in his method of developing his idea, from the
physical roots of existence; for while it is easy to indicate the
overtones and undertones of Sensuality it would be hard to bring a
gentle, vague word, like the word ''sensuousness'' down to the
bare, stark, stoically-stripped Life-Sensation which is the subject
of this book. How far has the individual the right to be what is
called ''selfish''? How far has he the right to concentrate on his
own solitary awareness of existence and make this alone his
life-purpose? Is there such a thing at all as a Religion of Nature
or a Cosmic Ethic? Such are the questions the author attempts to
answer; and he finds that in his discussion of the root-sensations
of life the word Sensuality, taken in an unusually comprehensive
sense, serves his purpose better than any other word.' In Defence
of Sensuality is one of the self-help books John Cowper Powys wrote
that owe their genesis to the free-lance lecturing he did in
America. In addition to this one, Faber Finds are reissuing The
Meaning of Culture, A Philosophy of Solitude and The Art of
Happiness.
John Cowper Powys could never be straightforward or orthodox but
here he sets off with a useful purpose. 'The aim of this book,' he
declares, 'is to narrow down a vague and somewhat evasive
conception, which hitherto, like ''aristocracy'' or ''liberty'',
has come to imply a number of contradictory and even paradoxical
elements, and to give it, not, of course, a purely logical form,
but a concrete, particular, recognizable form, malleable and
yielding enough and relative enough, but with a definite and quite
unambiguous temper, tone, quality, atmosphere, of its own.' The
book is in two parts: Analysis of Culture which deals with, in
separate chapters, Philosophy, Literature, Poetry, Painting and
Religion: Application of Culture which covers Happiness, Love,
Nature, The Art of Reading, Human Relations, Destiny and Obstacles
to Culture. John Cowper Powys hoped 'that the fine word ''culture''
. . . might lend itself to an easy, humane and liberal discussion -
a sort of one-man Platonic symposium - and even turn out to
contain, among its various implications, no unworthy clue to the
narrow path of the wise upon earth.' He succeeds completely, in his
own idiosyncratic way, in achieving that. 'Mr Powys is to be
congratulated on having written a book of the kind that most needs
writing and most deserves to be read . . . Here in a dozen chapters
of glowing and eloquent prose, Mr Powys describes for very reader
that citadel which is himself, and explains to him how it may be
strengthened and upheld and on what terms it is most worth
upholding. . .' Manchester Guardian
'I have tried to write my life as if I were confessing to a priest,
a philosopher, and a wise old woman. I have tried to write as if I
were going to be executed when it was finished. I have tried to
write it as if I were both God and Devil.' One is tempted to say
only John Cowper Powys could have written that, and, beyond doubt,
only John Cowper Powys could have written the idiosyncratic and
spellbinding work we have here. Yes, he was influenced by Yeats and
Rousseau, especially the latter's "Confessions," but there is no
other work quite like this. It seems almost too pedestrian to say
it covers the first sixty years of his life (he lived for another
thirty years) and to say anything about them, as J. B. Priestley
memorably put it, 'would be like turning on a tap before
introducing people to Niagara Falls.' J. B. Priestley also said 'It
is a book which can be read, with pleasure and profit, over and
over again. It is in fact one of the greatest autobiographies in
the English language. Even if Powys had never written any novels,
this one book alone would have proved him to be a writer of
genius.'
Published in 1954, John Cowper Powys called this novel, a 'long
romance about Odysseus in his extreme old age, hoisting sail once
more from Ithaca'. As usual there is a large cast of human
characters but Powys also gives life and speech to inanimates such
as a stone pillar, a wooden club,and an olive shoot. The descent to
the drowned world of Atlantis towards the end of the novel is
memorably described, indeed, Powys himself called it 'the best part
of the book'. Many of Powys's themes, such as the benefits of
matriarchy, the wickedness of priests and the evils of modern
science which condones vivisection are given full rein in this odd
but compelling work.
In this panoramic novel of Friar Roger Bacon, John Cowper Powys
displays his genius at its most fecund. First published in 1956,
this novel, set in thirteenth-century Wessex, is an amalgam of all
the qualities that make John Cowper Powys unique. The love-story of
Lil-Umbra and Raymond de Laon, and the quest of the Mongolian
giant, Peleg, for Ghosta, the girl seen, loved, and lost on the
battlefield, are intermingled with the historical, theological and
magical threads which form the brocade of this novel. Dominating
all is the mysterious creation of Roger Bacon one of the boldest as
well as most intricate of Powys' world-changing inventions.
Professor G. Wilson Knight called this 'A book of wisdom and
wonders'.
'What I've tried to do in this tale is to invent a group of really
mad people who have the fantastic and grotesquely humorous
extravagance that, afer all, is an element in life'. So wrote John
Cowper Powys himself in his prefatory note to this novel first
published in 1952. In this 'wild book' Powys creates a 'Philosophy
of the Demented' expressing fundamental truths about madness and
sanity. Most of the novel, though, like so much of his later
fiction, it is more a fantasy, takes place in Glint Hall, a lunatic
asylum. The two main characters are John Hush and Tenna Sheer. They
fall in love. The rapidly developing, psychologically complex
narrative centres on 'Hush's organizationof a conspiracy of revolt
amongst the most fantastically crazy of the inmates'. It makes for
a strange, disturbing, and yet, at times, funny read.
Ducdame was John Cowper Powys' fourth novel published in 1925. It
is set in Dorset. The protagonist, Rook Ashover (a wonderfully
Powysian name) is an introverted young squire with a dilemma: to go
on loving his mistress, Netta Page, or, make a respectable marriage
and produce an heir. Of his early novels (pre- Wolf Solent) this
one is often considered to be the most carefully constructed and
best organized. Like them all it contains a gallery of rich,
complex characters and glorious writing.
First published in 1937, John Cowper Powys originally wanted to
call this novel 'Hell'. One can see why. Powys was a fervent
opponent of vivisection, 'man's most vicious cruelty', and here, in
this strange fantasy, he gives full vent to his feelings. The main
adventures are set in Hell where the narrator, not named but
clearly based on Powys himself, his dog, Black Peter, Morwyn, his
new love and her father, a vivisector find themselves hurled after
a cataclysm on a Welsh mountain-side. The infernal adventures and
encounters are virtuoso displays of Powys's extraordinary knowledge
of the mythical underworld.
After My Fashion has an unusual publishing history. Although it
was John Cowper Powys third novel written in 1920, it wasn't
published until 1980. It seems that when his US publisher turned it
down Powys made no effort to place it elsewhere. Indeed, when Powys
had finished a book he tended to be oddly indifferent to its
fate.
The novel has two other unusual features: its locations (Sussex
and Greenwich Village) and Isadora Duncan being the inspiration for
Elise, the dancer and mistress of the protagonist, Richard Storm
(based quite largely on Powys himself).
As one would expect from Powys the writing is vivid, not least
in the descriptions of the Sussex landscape and the bohemian milieu
of Greenwich Village.
Rodmoor is, unusually for a John Cowper Powys novel, set in East
Anglia, Rodmoor itself being a coastal village. The protagonist,
Adrian Sorio, is a typically Powys-like hero, highly-strung with
only precarious mental stability. He is in love with two women -
Nance Herrick and the more unconventional Phillipa Renshaw. This
was Powys second novel, published in 1916. It deploys a rich and
memorable cast of characters.
Wood and Stone was John Cowper Powys' first novel published in
1915. It is no prentice-work however - the author was already in
his forties. The novel is set in the area of south Somerset that
John Cowper Powys grew up in. The village of Nevilton is based on
Montacute where his father was vicar for many years. When he wrote
it Powys was living in the USA and it is perhaps this absence that
accounts for the heightened vividness of the descriptive writing.
Powys deploys a large and wonderfully delineated cast of
characters. They are loosely divided between 'the well-constituted'
and 'the ill-constituted'. Characteristically Powys favours the
latter.
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Mandragora (Hardcover)
John Cowper Powys; Created by G. Arnold Shaw
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R830
Discovery Miles 8 300
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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