1st Edition

A.C. Swinburne A Poet's Life

By Ricky Rooksby Copyright 1997
    336 Pages
    by Routledge

    336 Pages
    by Routledge

    Algernon Charles Swinburne (1837-1909) was one of the literary sensations of the Victorian period. His iconoclastic poetry and prose challenged attitudes to sex, politics, religion and censorship. Not only writing some of the most original lyric poetry of the time and pioneering criticism, Swinburne became a cultural icon. In the 1860s his very name was a symbol of progressive forces emerging in a repressive age. Readers across the world identified with the paganism and humanism of his poetry. Swinburne's was a turbulent life lived against a backdrop of beautiful settings in the Isle of Wight and Northumberland, and shared with a host of Victorian luminaries, or artists and writers such as D G Rossetti, Elizabeth Siddal, Burne-Jones, Morris and Simeon Solomon. It is a life touched by early tragedy and romantic disappointment, by extraordinary fame and abject loneliness, by masochism and alcoholism, but above all by an unquenchable vivacity. At the centre was the charmingly spoken, excitable genius whom Burne-Jones described as 'quite the most poetic personality I have ever known.' the artistic prodigy who seemed to have read almost everything, who was as happy revelling in the sea as in literary discourse. Based on new research and many unpublished letters, Rikky Rooksby sheds light on Swinburne's personality and relationships, and discusses how Swinburne's poetry develops from early pessimism to a recovered joy in the energies of the natural world. This biography is a sympathetic and fresh account of one of the most colourful figures in English literature.

    Contents: Introduction; A Small Satisfied Pagan; The River and the Block; Commoner Swinburne; ’Such Fair Green Seasons’; ’And None be Grievous as This to Me’; A Temple of Lizards; The Libidinous Laureate; The Church of Rebels; ’Glory to Man in the Highest!’; ’A Rain and Ruin of Roses’; The Puppet-Show; ’Closer than a Brother’; ’The Measureless Music of Things’; ’Deep Silence Answers’; Notes; Select Bibliography; Index.

    Biography

    Ricky Rooksby

    ’...a well written, thoroughly readable book, accurate, judicious, sympathetic, and sure to add to its author’s reputation as one of our leading authorities on Swinburne...All in all this is an excellent book..’ English Literature in Transition ’This is a readable, swiftly moving biography filled with meaty quotations from letters and poems, presenting a vibrant portrait of a charming man...A Poet’s Life is a readable, entertaining biography ideal for lay readers interested in Swinburne or British poetry.’ Nineteenth-Century Literature ’This book is beautifully produced and...is also generously illustrated with photographs...Rooksby’s enjoyable study will be required reading for all Swinburnians and students of Victorian poetry, and would be an excellent introduction to anyone new to Swinburne.’ Modern Language Review ’...a milestone of Swinburne studies in the 1990s.’ Symbolism