tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7534539169157708222.post2130277850054184502..comments2024-03-26T12:19:52.801-04:00Comments on Tea at Trianon: The Other Inklingelena maria vidalhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17129629173535139807noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7534539169157708222.post-34315491297959560732010-09-26T20:53:07.766-04:002010-09-26T20:53:07.766-04:00Oh yes, and I've just remembered that Williams...Oh yes, and I've just remembered that Williams wrote a few verse plays, rather on the lines of (and presumably in homage to) T.S. Eliot's <i>Murder in the Cathedral</i>. There was a Williams play about Cranmer which was rather good on the printed page, and would, I think, be effective in a theatrical context too.R Jhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17624645479033609279noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7534539169157708222.post-40472395431185320662010-09-26T20:48:59.862-04:002010-09-26T20:48:59.862-04:00I've now read a word of Williams's novels,...I've now read a word of Williams's novels, but years and years ago I did read a good preface that he wrote to a pocket-sized English edition (1947 or thereabouts) of <i>Paradise Lost</i>. This preface struck me as similar to the sort of thing that C.S.Lewis would have produced, which, in view of Williams's background, makes perfect sense. It suggested to me that Williams deserved greater fame in the field of lit-crit, at any rate.R Jhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17624645479033609279noreply@blogger.com