The Art of Love - E-book - ePub

Edition en anglais

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 Derek Parker - The Art of Love.
All sex is here. Poetry has nothing to learn from prose, as far as eroticism and pornography are concerned. A glance through this book will prove that... Lire la suite
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Résumé

All sex is here. Poetry has nothing to learn from prose, as far as eroticism and pornography are concerned. A glance through this book will prove that there's no aspect of sex - straight, gay and anything in between - which isn't given full rein: from dressing to undressing, from seduction to near-rape, from foreplay to orgasm. Men and women have enjoyed fucking since humankind first stood on two legs - and very possibly even earlier than that.
And even before the invention of writing they have made up rhymes about that particular pleasure. But the poems don't just celebrate the pleasure - they show us (as if we didn't suspect it) that there's nothing new where sex is concerned. Time and again, the poet imagines an insatiable mistress. When he has fucked the girl almost to death, the country lover imagines her wanting more: 'My joys do now begin:/ Oh, dearest, quickly, to't again.' And if it was the lover who couldn't get it up for a third or fourth time, the voracious mistress had her ways of enlivening the recalcitrant cock: 'the nymph found her pleasure too great to restrain/ And with kindness excessive, she killed me again.'There really is nothing we can teach our forebears: though sometimes disguised, almost everything a man can or would do with or to a woman - and vice verse - is somewhere in these verses, though perhaps disguised: an eighteenth century poet would have been chary of describing anal sex in so many words, or for instance his desire to ejaculate on his mistress's breasts - but both cravings are there if you look for them.
And the language is often amazingly unrestrained - so frank, indeed, that the poems would sometimes not be published until three centuries after the poet's death. Finally, the beauty and lovingness of good sex is celebrated on every other page, and its fulfillment:'Were the bright day no more to visit us, Oh, then for ever would I hold thee thus, Naked, enchained, empty of idle fear, As the first lovers in the garden were.'

Caractéristiques

  • Date de parution
    04/12/2013
  • Editeur
  • ISBN
    978-1-311-94107-7
  • EAN
    9781311941077
  • Format
    ePub
  • Caractéristiques du format ePub
    • Protection num.
      pas de protection

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À propos de l'auteur

Biographie de Derek Parker

Derek Parker was Educated at Fowey Grammar School, and started his working life as a reporter on The Cornishman, a weekly newspaper in Penzance, going on to become drama critic of the daily Western Morning News in Plymouth. Having made his first radio broadcast at the age of fifteen, he left newspapers to join the staff of TWW, an independent television station in Cardiff, Wales, as announcer, newscaster, scriptwriter, presented and interviewer.
From 1960 he worked as a freelance writer and broadcaster. Between 1965 and 1970 he edited Poetry Review, and in 1968 published (as his first prose book) a short biography of Lord Byron. During the 1960s he wrote and introduced innumerable programmes for both the domestic and World Service of the BBC, most of them concerned with the arts. He reviewed television and books for The Times and various periodicals.
He has been a member of the Grand Council of the Royal Academy of Dance, and was for many years a member its Executive Committee, for some time as chairman of its Development Committee. He has been chairman of the Radiowriters' Committee of the Society of Authors, was for two years (1981-2) chairman of its Management Committee, and between 1985 and 2002 edited its journal, The Author. He remains a member of its Council.
Between 1969 and 2002 he was a member of the General Committee of the Royal Literary Fund (as Registrar between 1977 and 2002). His publications include: The Fall of Phaethon (poems, 1954); Company of Two (poems, with Paul Casimir, 1955); Beyond Wisdom (verse play, 1957); Byron and his World (1968); The Twelfth Rose (ballet libretto, 1969); The Question of Astrology (1970); The Westcountry (1973); John Donne and his World (1975); Familiar to All: William Lilly and 17th century astrology (1975); Radio: the great years (1977); The Westcountry and the Sea (1980); The Memoirs of Cora Pearl (fiction, as William Blatchford, 1983); Fifteen erotic novels, published anonymously (1988-96); God of the Dance: Vaslav Nijinsky (1988); The Trade of Angels (fiction, 1988); The Royal Academy of Dancing: the first 75 years (1995); Writing Erotic Fiction (1995); Nell Gwyn (2000); Roman Murder Mystery: the true story of Pompilia (2001); Casanova (2002); Benvenuto Cellini (2004); Voltaire (2005); Outback (2008); Banjo Paterson (2009) (2010); Governor Macquarie (2010) He has collaborated with his wife, Julia Parker, on over thirty other books, including The Compleat Astrologer and Parkers' Astrology.

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