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Sir Herbert Grierson's edition of Donne's poems, published by the Clarendon Press in 1912, was sent to Rupert Brooke for review. Musing upon the book as an indisputably fine thing, Brooke listed other grand institutions, including 'Charing Cross Bridge by night, the dancing of Miss Ethel Levey, the Lucretian hexameter, the beer at an inn in Royston, the sausages at another inn above Princes Risborough, and the Clarendon Press editions of the English poets.' And among these he made a temporal discrimination. 'The beer and the sausages will change,' he admitted, 'and Miss Levey one day will die, and Charing Cross Bridge will fall; so the Clarendon Press books will be the only thing our evil generation may show to the cursory eyes of posterity, to prove it was not wholly bad.' Peter Sutcliffe has quoted this encomium in his informal history of Oxford University Press, partly for its intrinsic interest, and partly to illustrate his assertion that by 1914 OUP had established itself 'as a national institution with a responsibility to survive in the interest of civilization as a whole.'
Review, 3268 words
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