Vanishing Lives: Style and Self in Tennyson, D. G. Rossetti, Swinburne, and Yeats

Vanishing Lives: Style and Self in Tennyson, D. G. Rossetti, Swinburne, and Yeats - Victorian Literature and Culture Series

Paperback (30 May 2015)

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Publisher's Synopsis

One of the characteristic features of Victorian poetry is dimness, a vanishing away-things blur with the motion of their passing, which seems inseparable from the mind's fading as it lets them go. Tennyson, Rossetti, Swinburne, and the young Yeats are elegists of the self; they render life as transparent, ghostlike, dissolving, ungraspable, nearly unrememberable. This vanishing away, this dimness, of Victorian poetry is most obvious in the twilights, mists, shadows, deep horizons, and flowing waters of its central landscape, but it is also a matter of sound and syntax, of repetition and rhythm, texture and line movement. Vanishing Lives examines these features and links them to larger issues, such as the psychology of the individual poets, and the Victorian and modern frames of mind. The tendencies under consideration are less ideas than forms or styles of feeling. They are so universal in the nineteenth century that they may not seem to call for comment, but for all their vagueness they are deep, powerful, resistant to change-an essential stratum of the experience of Victorian poetry. For poets like Yeats, who struggled to move beyond them, they were far more than the trappings of an outmoded poetry. They were a deeply ingrained aesthetic, a style, a morality, not only a way of art to be revised, but a way of living to be outgrown-a Tennysonian way.

Book information

ISBN: 9780813929408
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Imprint: University of Virginia Press
Pub date:
Language: English
Number of pages: 252
Weight: 308g
Height: 229mm
Width: 152mm
Spine width: 16mm