swan_tower (
swan_tower) wrote2009-11-17 12:15 pm
Entry tags:
it begins
Okay, so, researching the Victorian book. I've decided my first priority is to come up with something to call it other than "the Victorian book."
The simultaneous convenience and inconvenience of the Onyx Court books is that I know where to go looking for a title (period literature), but I have to go look. I can't just make one up. We therefore come to the first Request for Help of this round: what mid-Victorian literature should I read in search of a title?
My preference is for poetry over prose, because it's more likely to have a short, evocative phrase that I can spin out; fiction (especially in the Victorian era) is rather too fond of going on at length. The book will probably start circa 1870, so I'd like material no later than that. No specific limit on how early it could be, but I'm trying to avoid going as early as the Romantics. So who was writing good (and preferably non-pastoral) poetry around 1840-1870?
The simultaneous convenience and inconvenience of the Onyx Court books is that I know where to go looking for a title (period literature), but I have to go look. I can't just make one up. We therefore come to the first Request for Help of this round: what mid-Victorian literature should I read in search of a title?
My preference is for poetry over prose, because it's more likely to have a short, evocative phrase that I can spin out; fiction (especially in the Victorian era) is rather too fond of going on at length. The book will probably start circa 1870, so I'd like material no later than that. No specific limit on how early it could be, but I'm trying to avoid going as early as the Romantics. So who was writing good (and preferably non-pastoral) poetry around 1840-1870?
no subject
no subject
He lived till 1889, but the majority of the monologues were written before that. "Caliban upon Setebos"! And, of course, "Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came" is from 1855.
P.
no subject
P.
no subject
I'm tempted to suggest William Ashbless, but he's a bit on the early side. I'm sure you can work him in to the story, though :)
no subject
But if Ashbless is in the running, then I must suggest Randolph Ash and Christabel LaMotte. 8-)
P.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
I would also suggest Gerard Manley Hopkins. He was an English Jesuit priest who, as I understand it, gave up poetry when he entered the order, then picked it up again later in life as part of an attempt to deal with the sinking of the Deutchland -- a ship carrying nuns. Religious poetry isn't really my thing. But his poetry is quite good, and possibly quotable.
update: I would also have suggested Sir Richard Burton's translations of the Arabian Nights, etc. But I think they might be too late for your purposes. I haven't read any of his earlier books, but there may yet be something worthwhile there.
no subject
Not poetry, and probably not evocative of the mood you're looking for, but Alice's Adventures in Wonderland fits your timeframe.
no subject
no subject
Alternately, as everyone has said, Rossetti is a wonderful choice.
no subject
But see below, my response to
no subject
And the Rubaiyat, of course.
no subject
(I'm sure I'm even spelling her name wrong, at least, according to Firefox's spellcheck. Failboat.)
no subject
no subject
Is Keats too obvious a choice?
Matthew Arnold is during your period (Dover Beach being the famous poem - it still sends shivers up my spine).
You could take a look at Swinburne, too.
George Macdonald wrote one of my favorite fairy tales of all time, The Light Princess. He was also producing poetry during your period.
If you want to go in a very different direction, you could always check out Edward Lear.
no subject
no subject