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Description
Published online as a special issue of The South Carolina Review (vol. 42, no. 3, summer 2010), this volume reintroduces Edward Dowden, a significant poet of the nineteenth century, to a modern audience which has forgotten, probably, that this distinguished Irish authority on Shakespeare, Goethe and Shelley thought of himself as a poet first. Our perception of Dowden today is that he was a better critic than he was a poet; and in the main, this judgment may be sound, but it goes untested due to the scarcity of his poetic works. Without the commitment he made to his academic post at Trinity College, Dublin, he might have become another Meredith. His poetry was prominently featured in Alfred Miles’s series The Poets and the Poetry of the Nineteenth Century (Routledge, c. 1891-1906)—an influential tome which conferred canonical stature to a broader field of poets than we tend to observe from our distant perspective.
Publisher
Clemson University Digital Press
Publication Date
2010
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Copyright 2010, Clemson University For more information on the Clemson University Digital Press, please visit: "http://www.clemson.edu/cedp/cudp/index.htm