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Algernon Charles Swinburne (1837–1909)

Auteur van Works of Algernon Charles Swinburne

198+ Werken 1,551 Leden 5 Besprekingen Favoriet van 20 leden

Over de Auteur

Poet Algernon Charles Swinburne was born April 5, 1837 in Grosvenor Place, London, but spent most of his boyhood on the Isle of Wight, where both his parents and grandparents had homes. He was educated at Eton and Oxford University but was expelled from Oxford before he graduated. Although some of toon meer his work had already appeared in periodicals, Atalanta in Calydon was the first poem to come out under his name and was received enthusiastically. "Laus Veneris" and Poems and Ballads, with their sexually charged passages, were attacked all the more violently as a result. Swinburne's meeting in 1867 with his long-time hero Mazzini, led to the more political Songs before Sunrise. In 1879, with Swinburne nearly dead from alcoholism and dissolution, his legal advisor Theodore Watts-Dunton took him in, and was successful in getting him to adopt a healthier style of life. Swinburne lived the rest of his days at Watts-Dunton's house outside London. He saw less and less of his old friends, but his growing deafness accounts for some of his decreased sociability. He died of influenza in 1909. (Bowker Author Biography) toon minder
Fotografie: Courtesy of the NYPL Digital Gallery (image use requires permission from the New York Public Library)

Werken van Algernon Charles Swinburne

Poems (1905) 67 exemplaren
Selected Poems (1950) 61 exemplaren
Selections from A. C. Swinburne (1884) 57 exemplaren
Major Poems and Selected Prose (2004) 51 exemplaren
Poems and ballads (1873) 45 exemplaren
Songs Before Sunrise (1888) 34 exemplaren
Swinburne: The Penguin Poets (1961) 34 exemplaren
Atalanta in Calydon : a tragedy (1865) 31 exemplaren
Lesbia Brandon (1952) 31 exemplaren
Poems & Ballads (First Series) (1866) 26 exemplaren
Selected poetry and prose (1968) 24 exemplaren
William Blake : a critical essay (1906) 23 exemplaren
Tristram of Lyonesse (1917) 17 exemplaren
A Study of Shakespeare (1918) 16 exemplaren
Erechtheus: a tragedy (1876) 15 exemplaren
Laus Veneris (1866) 13 exemplaren
Poems and prose (1940) 12 exemplaren
The Springtide of Life (1918) 12 exemplaren
Choice of Verse (1973) 12 exemplaren
Poems and Ballads: Third Series (1889) 10 exemplaren
Astrophel and Other Poems (1894) 10 exemplaren
The Age of Shakespeare (1908) 10 exemplaren
Chastelard, a tragedy (2011) 9 exemplaren
Studies in song (1880) 8 exemplaren
Selected verse (2015) 7 exemplaren
A Century of Roundels (2011) 7 exemplaren
Swinburne, a selection (1960) 7 exemplaren
The Swinburne letters 6 exemplaren
The Tale of Balen (2011) 6 exemplaren
Dolores (1916) 6 exemplaren
The Heptalogia (2012) 5 exemplaren
BALLADS OF THE ENGLISH BORDER. (1925) 5 exemplaren
Songs of Two Nations (1875) 5 exemplaren
Algernon Charles Swinburne (2017) 4 exemplaren
Swinburne's Poems 4 exemplaren
Locrine: a tragedy (2008) 4 exemplaren
The Duke Of Gandia (2004) 4 exemplaren
A Dark Month (2010) 4 exemplaren
Collected Poetical Works (1927) 4 exemplaren
Essays and studies (1875) 4 exemplaren
UNDER THE MICROSCOPE. (1899) 4 exemplaren
A study of Ben Jonson 4 exemplaren
Charles Dickens (1913) 3 exemplaren
Two Nations (2012) 3 exemplaren
A study of Victor Hugo (1970) 3 exemplaren
The Posthumous Poems (1917) 3 exemplaren
Tragedies 3 exemplaren
Songs of the springtides (2008) 3 exemplaren
The Best of Swinburne (1937) 3 exemplaren
The Sisters: A Tragedy (1892) 3 exemplaren
POEMAS (Swinburne) 2 exemplaren
Three Plays by Shakespeare (1909) 2 exemplaren
Pasiphae. A Poem (1950) 2 exemplaren
A Song of Italy 2 exemplaren
Garden of Proserpine (1990) 2 exemplaren
Shelley 2 exemplaren
A note on Charlotte Brontë (1970) 2 exemplaren
Shakespeare (1909) 2 exemplaren
Anactoria (1989) 1 exemplaar
White Butterflies 1 exemplaar
Poetry 1 exemplaar
Poèmes choisis (1990) 1 exemplaar
Hymn to Proserpine 1 exemplaar
Swinburne 1 exemplaar
Miscellanies (2011) 1 exemplaar
Bothwell: a tragedy 1 exemplaar
Dikter i urval 1 exemplaar
Letters: 1875-77 v. 3 (1960) 1 exemplaar
Letters: 1890-1909 v. 6 (1962) 1 exemplaar
Letters: 1883-90 v. 5 (1962) 1 exemplaar
Letters: 1877-82 v. 4 (1960) 1 exemplaar
Letters 1 exemplaar
Siena 1 exemplaar
Dead love 1 exemplaar
Lyrical poems 1 exemplaar
Poems-Poesie (1990) 1 exemplaar
The Queen Mother 1 exemplaar
Swinburne's Dramas 1 exemplaar
Queen Yseult 1 exemplaar
Works Volume 3 (2015) 1 exemplaar
[The palace of Pan] 1 exemplaar
The brothers 1 exemplaar

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The Broadview Anthology of Victorian Short Stories (2004) — Medewerker — 20 exemplaren
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Masters of British Literature, Volume B (2007) — Medewerker — 16 exemplaren
Christmas classics: A treasury for Latter-Day Saints (1995) — Medewerker — 14 exemplaren
The Religion of Beauty: Selections from the Aesthetes (1950) — Medewerker — 11 exemplaren
Men and Women: The Poetry of Love (1970) — Medewerker — 8 exemplaren
Selected Ballads (2002) — Medewerker — 5 exemplaren
La poesía inglesa románticos y victorianos — Medewerker — 4 exemplaren
Poetry & prose : with Swinburne's poem and essays (1978) — Medewerker, sommige edities3 exemplaren
The Best Plays of the Old Dramatists: Thomas Middleton (1887) — Introductie — 1 exemplaar

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Swinburne does Shelley and Blake. The world needs more ranting poetry.

"The wrongdoing is not ours, but ours the wrong,
Who hear too loud on earth and see too long
The grief that dies not with the groan that dies,
Till the strong bitterness of pity cries
Within us, that our anger should be strong."
 
Gemarkeerd
judeprufrock | Jul 4, 2023 |
As the lost white feverish limbs
Of the Lesbian Sappho, adrift
In foam where the sea-weed swims,
Swam loose for the seas to lift...


This is typical: it has Sappho, it has death, it has the sea. He was as much fixated on Sappho because she threw herself into the sea, as because in her he has a spokeswoman for himself and his explorations. Sappho's perfect for him, it's not just that he's a perv.

Swinburne writes endlessly about the sea. I tried his novels and remember a few pages on a drowning man, than which, I thought at the time, I never expect to find a more lifelike experience written down. But the sea's everywhere, and I bet he set himself the task to be like the sea: similar, yes, to itself, yesterday, but infinitely different, and who's bored by the sea? I don't know better sea descriptions.

Poems & Ballads was his first splash and highly notorious. He's more attached to French Decadents than the English Pre-Raphaelites – he was Baudelaire's champion in England. In brief he explores cruelty; first the cruel instincts in love, then outward to the cruelty of the world. His pagans attack Christianity as too optimistic a religion, and in that untrue – as well as being life-negative and anti-sensual.

'Faustine' is about a decadent Roman, a female Faust, a queen given over to evil and evil lusts, but magnificent. One of his gaudy poems, that can be quite funny:

You seem a thing that hinges hold,
A love-machine
With clockwork joints of supple gold –
No more, Faustine.


Is that steampunk?
More gaudy is 'Dolores', a tribute to “Our Lady of Pain”...

What tortures undreamt of, unheard of,
Unwritten, unknown?


Not any more. And published in Victorian England.
But onto more serious poetry. 'Hymn to Proserpine' has a note 'After the proclamation in Rome of the Christian faith'. It's a pagan's lament for things past and lost, and uses the sea again, with ocean-rhythms:

Will ye bridle the deep sea with reins, will ye chasten the high sea with rods?
Will ye take her to chain her with chains, who is older than all ye Gods?
All ye as a wind shall go by, as a fire ye shall pass and be past;
Ye are Gods, and behold, ye shall die, and the waves be upon you at last.


I've spent most time with 'Anactoria', which is Sappho in first person to her absconded lover. She too moves from cruelty towards Anactoria, in her abandonment, to a metaphysical statement. I think 'Anactoria' is a great poem. And once you get past the lesbian sadism, it culminates in Sappho's triumph as a poet. That may be an old claim – I shall not die. I'm a poet – but where is the claim made better?

Sappho is not the weary sort, weary of life and sensation like Faustine; she's healthy, she has far too much self for that. Yes, she swings between moods, and has her exhausted death-moods:

I would the sea had hidden us, the fire
(Wilt thou fear that, and fear not my desire?)
Severed the bones that bleach, the flesh that cleaves,
And let our sifted ashes drop like leaves.


But she's a presence, a personality, as the other women in this book aren't. She has a voice. Though at her lover's feet in one sentence, in the next she is above her, above her love. In her throes she can say, Last year when I loved Atthis, and this year/ When I love thee. You can see why Anactoria ran away. She has Aphrodite under thumb: Mine is she, very mine. Aphrodite offers her redress:

...and she bowed,
With all her subtle face laughing aloud,
Bowed down upon me, saying, 'Who doth thee wrong,
Sappho?'


She's nothing if not possessive:

That I could drink thy veins as wine, and eat
Thy breasts like honey! that from face to feet
Thy body were abolished and consumed
And in my flesh thy very flesh entombed!


Her own cruelty morphs into that of God (singular):

For who shall change with prayers or thanksgivings,
The mystery of the cruelty of things?


And she goes on with a vision of the universe's cruelty. With a God behind it:

Is not his incense bitterness, his meat
Murder? his hidden face and iron feet
Hath not man known, and felt them on their way
Threaten and trample all things and every day?


On behalf of the suffering she declares,

Him would I reach, him smite, him desecrate;
Pierce the cold lips of God with human breath
And mix his immortality with death.


The last third shifts to her victory over Anactoria, and over death, and over God in fact.

Yea, thou shalt be forgotten like spilt wine,
Except these kisses of my lips on thine
Brand them with immortality; but me –
Men shall not see bright fire nor hear the sea...


and so on and so on, without they think of Sappho, or know her, for I Sappho shall be one with all these things. This is her conquest of God:

But, having made me, me he shall not slay...
Of me the high God hath not all his will.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
Jakujin | Mar 10, 2013 |
These characters are articulate, clever, but very cold indeed.
 
Gemarkeerd
markbstephenson | Jun 5, 2010 |
The collected works of a significant, if often (I think) underrated, Victorian poet. Definitely worth reading by lovers of poetry and good English.
 
Gemarkeerd
Fledgist | Jan 13, 2008 |

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Statistieken

Werken
198
Ook door
40
Leden
1,551
Populariteit
#16,610
Waardering
½ 4.3
Besprekingen
5
ISBNs
175
Talen
5
Favoriet
20

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