The Farmer's Boy: A Rural Poem

The Farmer's Boy: A Rural Poem
Author: Robert Bloomfield
Publisher: Good Press
Total Pages: 91
Release: 2019-12-19
Genre: Poetry
ISBN:

"The Farmer's Boy: A Rural Poem" by Robert Bloomfield is a simple poetic text that captures the essence of life better than many other, more complex poetic works. Complete with a comprehensive preface, readers are given all the context they could ever need before reading how humble farm life can change from season to season.

The Farmer’s Boy by Robert Bloomfield

The Farmer’s Boy by Robert Bloomfield
Author: Peter Cochran
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 245
Release: 2014-01-14
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 1443855960

Robert Bloomfield’s The Farmer’s Boy was the most successful poem of the “Romantic” period, selling 100,000 copies between 1800 and 1830. However, what was marketed was not the poem which the working-class Bloomfield had written, but a highly polished, politely spelled and punctuated re-write, prepared by the local squire, who deliberately covered up the fact that Bloomfield had written originally for a Suffolk voice, with Suffolk vowel-sounds and Suffolk idioms. This edition prints Bloomfield’s first manuscript, and then has a parallel text of the “polished” first edition, opposite Bloomfield’s second manuscript, made for his own use and for that of his family, in which he changes the poem back to the form in which he wrote, heard, and read it. Thus Bloomfield’s intentions appear for the first time, edited in detail from the original manuscripts at Harvard. Also included are the two eighteenth-century poems The Thresher’s Labour by Stephen Duck, and The Woman’s Labour by Mary Collier.

The Collected Poems of Henry Kirke White

The Collected Poems of Henry Kirke White
Author: Tim Fulford
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Total Pages: 568
Release: 2024-07-12
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1802075577

This book is the first-ever scholarly edition of one of the bestselling and most revered poets in the nineteenth century—a poet excluded from the canon by twentieth-century critics. A poor youth who died early from tuberculosis, Kirke White shaped the popular image of the Romantic artist as a young rebel against convention who is too sensitive to survive in the harsh commercial world. As a prodigy who made his incipient death the subject of his tragic poetry, he was influential on both sides of the Atlantic—on Keats, Byron, Shelley, Browning, Emerson and Bryant. The edition restores his powerful, macabre and prophetic verse to attention, and also demonstrates his variety and range. It includes a comprehensive introduction discussing the creation of his public image, the marketing of his poetry, and the impacts he made on nineteenth-century poetry, on labouring-class writing and on publishing history.