Swinburne was born in 1837 in London and spent his childhood on the
Isle of Wight and in Northumberland. He attended Eton and then
Balliol College, Oxford, where he became friends with the
Pre-Raphaelites Rossetti, Morris and Burne-Jones. Atalanta in
Calydon was released in 1865 to considerable acclaim, but the
following year his Poems and Ballads generated a firestorm of
critical and public controversy on account of their licentiousness
and anti-theism. His publisher withdrew the book within days of
publication, and he was forced to transfer his works to another
house. His next collection Songs Before Sunrise (1870), the plays
Bothwell (1874) and Erectheus (1876), and the 1878 Poems and
Ballads, Second Series were far more favourably received than the
first Poems and Ballads had been. Swinburne was prodigiously active
through the 1870s, but his personal life was in alarming disarray,
and his alcoholic dissipation forecast an almost certain early
grave. In 1879, he was `rescued’ by the lawyer and writer
Theodore Watts-Dunton, who took him to a suburban retreat in
Putney, weaned him from his drinking habit, and became his
companion and de facto guardian for the rest of his life, which was
productive and largely uneventful. He died in 1909. No Victorian
poet suffered a more precipitous decline in reputation in the
twentieth century than Swinburne. His formal and musical mastery,
however, have never been denied, and more recent readers have found
in his work a surprising precision of language and subtlety and
complexity of thought. Our Lady of Pain is the first selection of
Swinburne’s poetry to focus precisely on what early readers found
most objectionable: erotic passion, in both its `normal’ and
`perverse’ varieties. Swinburne’s treatment of physical
passion, and the varieties of passion about which he chose to
write, retain the power to shock. Swinburne’s early work explores
same-sex desire, necrophilia, transexualism, and even bestiality,
and throughout his writing is an obsession with the conjunction of
`pleasure’ and `pain’. Included here are many of the most
transgressive poems from Poems and Ballads, along with a selection
of other works that make a strong argument for the Swinburne as the
greatest nineteenth-century English poet of sexual desire.
General
Imprint: |
Shearsman Books
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Series: |
Shearsman Classics, 28 |
Release date: |
2019 |
Authors: |
Algernon Charles Swinburne
|
Editors: |
Mark Scroggins
|
Dimensions: |
229 x 152 x 8mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback
|
Pages: |
126 |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-84861-645-5 |
Categories: |
Books
|
LSN: |
1-84861-645-7 |
Barcode: |
9781848616455 |
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