Blake, William - Algernon Charles Swinburne (essay date 1906)
Algernon Charles Swinburne (essay date 1906)
SOURCE: "Lyrical Poems," in William Blake: A Critical Essay, revised edition, Chatto & Windus, 1906, pp. 123-38.
[A nineteenth-century English poet, dramatist, and critic, Swinburne was renowned during his lifetime for his skill and technical mastery as a lyric poet and is currently regarded as a preeminent symbol of rebellion against the prevailing moral orientation of Victorian aesthetics. Blake scholars also recognize his contribution as the author of the first full-length critical study of the poet, William Blake: A Critical Essay, which was first published in 1868. In the following excerpt, taken from the 1906 edition of that book, Swinburne admires the poignancy of the poems in Songs of Innocence but finds the pieces in Songs of Experience more profound.]
[The Songs of Innocence and of Experience] at a first naming recall only that incomparable charm of...
[The entire page is 3115 words long]
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Criticism
- B. H. Malkin (essay date 1806)
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge (letter date 1818)
- Algernon Charles Swinburne (essay date 1906)
- T. S. Eliot (essay date 1920)
- S. Foster Damon (essay date 1924)
- S. F. Bolt (essay date 1947)
- David V. Erdman (essay date 1950)
- H. M. Margoliouth (essay date 1951)
- Robert F. Gleckner (essay date 1956)
- Northrop Frye (essay date 1957-58)
- Harold Bloom (essay date 1958)
- Karl Kiralis (essay date 1959)
- Paul Miner (essay date 1962)
- Lawrence Mathews (essay date 1980)
- Paul Youngquist (essay date 1990)
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