Robert Bridges

Robert Bridges
Author: Lee Templin Hamilton
Publisher: University of Delaware Press
Total Pages: 254
Release: 1991
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780874133646

Robert Bridges, poet laureate of England from 1913 to 1930, is an important cultural link between the Victorian Age and the modern period. This bibliography updates and expands George McKay's A Bibliography of Robert Bridges (1933) and is the first gathering of reviews, articles, essays, books, and other scholarly notes about Bridges.

The Rise and Fall of Meter

The Rise and Fall of Meter
Author: Meredith Martin
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 286
Release: 2012-05-06
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 069115273X

Why do we often teach English poetic meter by the Greek terms iamb and trochee? How is our understanding of English meter influenced by the history of England's sense of itself in the nineteenth century? Not an old-fashioned approach to poetry, but a dynamic, contested, and inherently nontraditional field, "English meter" concerned issues of personal and national identity, class, education, patriotism, militarism, and the development of English literature as a discipline. The Rise and Fall of Meter tells the unknown story of English meter from the late eighteenth century until just after World War I. Uncovering a vast and unexplored archive in the history of poetics, Meredith Martin shows that the history of prosody is tied to the ways Victorian England argued about its national identity. Gerard Manley Hopkins, Coventry Patmore, and Robert Bridges used meter to negotiate their relationship to England and the English language; George Saintsbury, Matthew Arnold, and Henry Newbolt worried about the rise of one metrical model among multiple competitors. The pressure to conform to a stable model, however, produced reactionary misunderstandings of English meter and the culture it stood for. This unstable relationship to poetic form influenced the prose and poems of Robert Graves, Siegfried Sassoon, Wilfred Owen, W. B. Yeats, Ezra Pound, and Alice Meynell. A significant intervention in literary history, this book argues that our contemporary understanding of the rise of modernist poetic form was crucially bound to narratives of English national culture.

The Laureateship

The Laureateship
Author: Edmund Kemper Broadus
Publisher: Oxford : Clarendon Press
Total Pages: 258
Release: 1921
Genre: English poetry
ISBN:

The Forger's Tale

The Forger's Tale
Author: Stephanie Newell
Publisher: Ohio University Press
Total Pages: 245
Release: 2006
Genre: Authors, English
ISBN: 0821417096

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