List of Published Works
- The Place of Meaning in Poetry (1935)
- New Literary Values; Studies in Modern Literature (1936)
- Literature and Society (1938)
- Poetry and the Modern World: A Study of Poetry in England Between 1900 and 1939 (1940)
- Virginia Woolf (1942)
- Robert Louis Stevenson (1947)
- A Study of Literature (For Readers and Critics) (1948)
- Robert Burns (1950)
- Stevenson and the Art of Fiction (1951)
- A Century of the Essay: British and American (1951)
- Willa Cather - A Critical Introduction (1951)
- Two Worlds : An Edinburgh Jewish Childhood (1956) (memoirs)
- Literary Essays (1956)
- Critical Approaches to Literature (1956)
- The Present Age in British Literature (After 1920) (1958)
- Two Studies: The Poetry of Dylan Thomas, Walt Whitman: Impressionist Prophet (1958)
- Robert Louis Stevenson - a Laurel Reader (1959) editor
- A Critical History of English Literature (1960) two volumes
- The Novel and the Modern World (1960)
- White Man in the Tropics: Two Moral Tales (1962)
- D. H. Lawrence (1963)
- George Eliot: Middlemarch (1963)
- English Literature (1964)
- Milton (1964)
- The Idea of a New University. An Experiment in Sussex (1964) editor
- The Paradox of Scottish Culture: The Eighteenth Century Experience (1964)
- More Literary Essays (1968)
- The King James Version of the English Bible (1968)
- Scotch Whisky: Its Past and Present (1969)
- Some Late Victorian Attitudes (1969) Ewing Lectures
- A Third World (1971) (memoirs)
- Penguin Companion to Literature - Britain and the Commonwealth (1971) editor
- Sir Walter Scott and His World (1971)
- Robert Burns and His World (1972)
- Literature and Western Civilization (1972-6) editor with Anthony Thorlby, six volumes
- Robert Louis Stevenson and His World (1973)
- Bonnie Prince Charlie: The Life and Times of Charles Edward Stuart (1973)
- Moses: Man in the Wilderness (1975) Moses: The Man and the Vision in the US
- Was: A Pastime from Time Past (1975)
- James Boswell and His World (1976)
- Shakespeare: Julius Caesar (1976)
- Glasgow (1977)
- Scotland and the Union (1977)
- Edinburgh (1978)
- The Butterfly and the Cross (1978)
- The Selected Poems of Robert Burns (1979)
- Andrew Fletcher of Saltoun. Selected Political Writings and Speeches (1979) editor
- Literary Landscapes of the British Isles. A Narrative Atlas (1979) with John Flower
- A Companion to Scottish Culture (1981)
- The Avenel Companion to English and American Literature (1981) editor
- Literature and Gentility in Scotland (1982)
- God and the Poets (1984) Gifford Lectures (1983)
- A Hotbed of Genius: The Scottish Enlightenment, 1730–1790 (1986) editor with Jean Jones and Peter Jones
- Let's Collect Scotch Whisky (Jarrold Collectors Series) (1988)
- A Wee Dram: Drinking Scenes from Scottish Literature (1990)
- A Weekly Scotsman and Other Poems (1994)
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“Literature that is not the breath of contemporary society, that dares not transmit the pains and fears of that society, that does not warn in time against threatening moral and social dangerssuch literature does not deserve the name of literature; it is only a façade. Such literature loses the confidence of its own people, and its published works are used as wastepaper instead of being read.”
—Alexander Solzhenitsyn (b. 1918)
“Loves boat has been shattered against the life of everyday. You and I are quits, and its useless to draw up a list of mutual hurts, sorrows, and pains.”
—Vladimir Mayakovsky (18931930)
“I made a list of things I have
to remember and a list
of things I want to forget,
but I see they are the same list.”
—Linda Pastan (b. 1932)
“Man cannot bury his meanings so deep in his book, but time and like-minded men will find them. Plato had a secret doctrine, had he? What secret can he conceal from the eyes of Bacon? of Montaigne? of Kant? Therefore, Aristotle said of his works, They are published and not published.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
“You are always looking for already-felt emotions, just as you like to get an old pair of trousers back from the cleaners, which seem new when you dont look too closely. Artists are cleaners, dont let yourself be taken in by them. True modern works of art are made not by artists but quite simply by men.”
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