PENGUIN SELECTED ENGLISH POETS
GENERAL EDITOR: CHRISTOPHER RICKS
POEMS AND BALLADS & ATALANTA IN CALYDON
ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE was born in 1837 of an aristocratic family. He was educated for a time at Eton (where he may have developed his fascination with flagellation) and later matriculated at Balliol College, Oxford. There he met and formed lasting friendships with Pre-Raphaelite artists and writers, including William Morris, Edward Burne-Jones and Dante Gabriel Rossetti. Over the next few years, he travelled in France and Italy, wrote many poems and led a Bohemian life in London. He lived for a time in Tudor House, with Rossetti. Under the influence of the death of his sister, the end of his romantic attachment to his cousin Mary Gordon, and the collapse of the Tudor House ménage, Swinburne wrote Atalanta in Calydon, published in 1865, the work that first brought him critical notice; Tennyson praised it highly. Poems and Ballads appeared in the next year and brought sensational success and the angry attention of critics who were outraged by its choice of topics (sado-masochism, lesbianism, necrophilia and the rejection of Christianity). His behaviour and bouts of drinking became worse, and he was often rescued by his family. Eventually, in 1879, he was taken to live with his friend Theodore Watts (later Watts-Dunton) in Putney, under whose watchful eye Swinburne’s health improved and drinking ceased. Many more volumes of poetry followed, including the second and third series of Poems and Ballads (1878 and 1889) and Tristram of Lyonesse (1882). In addition, he published many dramas and works of literary criticism. He wrote in a wide variety of literary forms, from classical verse styles to medieval and Renaissance genres, from burlesques to ballads and roundels, and had a large influence on early Modern poets. Swinburne lived in comparative seclusion with Watts-Dunton at The Pines, Putney, until his death in 1909.
KENNETH HAYNES has written on German and British Hellenism and edited Horace in English (with D. S. Carne-Ross) for Penguin Classics. He is a member of the Department of Classical Studies at Boston University and the Assistant Director of the Editorial Institute at Boston University.
ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE
POEMS AND BALLADS & ATALANTA IN CALYDON
Edited by KENNETH HAYNES
PENGUIN BOOKS
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Poems and Ballads first published 1866
Atalanta in Calydon first published 1865
Published together in Penguin Classics 2000
Selection, Preface and Notes copyright © Kenneth Haynes, 2000
All rights reserved
The moral right of the editor has been asserted
Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser
ISBN: 9781101492710
CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
PREFACE
TABLE OF DATES
FURTHER READING
POEMS AND BALLADS
A Ballad of Life
A Ballad of Death
Laus Veneris
Phædra
The Triumph of Time
Les Noyades
A Leave-Taking
Itylus
Anactoria
Hymn to Proserpine
Ilicet
Hermaphroditus
Fragoletta
Rondel
Satia te Sanguine
A Litany
A Lamentation
Anima Anceps
In the Orchard
A Match
Faustine
A Cameo
Song before Death
Rococo
Stage Love
The Leper
A Ballad of Burdens
Rondel
Before the Mirror
Erotion
In Memory of Walter Savage Landor
A Song in Time of Order. 1852
A Song in Time of Revolution. 1860
To Victor Hugo
Before Dawn
Dolores
The Garden of Proserpine
Hesperia
Love at Sea
April
Before Parting
The Sundew
Félise
An Interlude
Hendecasyllabics
Sapphics
At Eleusis
August
A Christmas Carol
The Masque of Queen Bersabe
St. Dorothy
The Two Dreams
Aholibah
Love and Sleep
Madonna Mia
The King’s Daughter
After Death
May Janet
The Bloody Son
The Sea-Swallows
The Year of Love
Dedication, 1865
ATALANTA IN CALYDON
NOTES
APPENDIX 1: Notes on Poems and Reviews
APPENDIX 2: Map of places in Atalanta in Calydon
INDEX OF TITLES AND FIRST LINES
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I am grateful to friends for their generous help: Rosalie Anders, Ron Bush, Donald Carne-Ross, David Ferry, Jeff Henderson, Ellen O’Reilly, Bruce Redford, Christopher Ricks, Lisa Rodensky, Roger Shattuck, and Rosanna Warren. I am also grateful to the Interlibrary Loan Department of Mugar Library at Boston University, the Arnold Arboretum, and the Fitzwilliam Museum of Cambridge University.
PREFACE
Selection
The present volume contains Poems and Ballads (1866) and Atalanta in Calydon (1865). Although it was published later, Poems and Ballads is here printed first. Many of the poems in it were written before Atalanta, and it is, perhaps, the better introduction to Swinburne. The two works are the most famous and influential of Swinburne’s writings, and they also contain much of his best poetry.
Dates
Poems and Ballads was published in mid-July 1866 (Lang, Letters Vol. 1, p. 167) by Edward Moxon & Co. The volume inspired violent criticism, and Moxon withdrew the book. John Camden Hotten bought the approximately 700 remaining copies from Moxon and reissued it with his own title-page. Later in the same year, Hotten reprinted it.
In ‘Dedication, 1865’ Swinburne describes the earliest poems of the collection as written seven years previously, that is, in 1858. A convenient summary of what is known about the dates of the composition may be found in Ann Walder, Swinburne’s Flowers of Evil (Uppsala, 1976) pp. 64–7; she relies mainly on Georges Lafourcade, La Jeunesse de Swinburne (Paris, 1928). In 1876, Swinburne assembled a list of seventeen poems that he planned to have transferred to a projected volume of specifically early verse: ‘The Leper’, ‘Rondel [‘Kissing her hair’]’, ‘A Song in Time of Order’, ‘A Song in Time of Revolu
tion’, ‘Before Parting’, ‘The Sundew’, ‘At Eleusis’, ‘August’, ‘A Christmas Carol’, ‘The Masque of Queen Bersabe’, ‘St. Dorothy’, ‘The Two Dreams’, ‘Aholibah’, ‘After Death’, ‘May Janet’, ‘The Sea-Swallows’, and ‘The Year of Love’ (Lang, 3, 200).
Atalanta in Calydon was published in March 1865 by Edward Moxon & Co., Swinburne’s father having paid ‘considerably more than £100’ for it (Lang, 2, 213). Moxon brought out a second edition in 1865, and Hotten took it over in 1866. For more details, see the notes to Atalanta in Calydon.
Text
The text of this selection relies on the 1904 Poems, which differs only slightly from the 1865 Atalanta in Calydon and the 1866 Poems and Ballads. Uncertainties about stanza breaks at the foot of the page in the irregular choral odes of Atalanta have been resolved by consulting the two editions of 1865. The few minor errors in the first dedicatory Greek epigraph have been silently corrected and the correct 1865 text restored. Four errors apparently reintroduced into the 1904 Poems from an uncorrected Poems and Ballads have been corrected (see Thomas James Wise, A Bibliography of the Writings in Prose and Verse of Algernon Charles Swinburne, 1925, p. 52). Several poems in Poems and Ballads had been published previously, sometimes with significant variations; bibliographical citations to these earlier versions have been included in the notes to individual poems.
Manuscripts
References to facsimiles, reproductions and descriptions of manuscripts have been included when known to me.
Life
In the Table of Dates and elsewhere, I have freely drawn on Rikky Rooksby, A. C. Swinburne: A Poet’s Life (Scolar Press, 1997), the best-researched and most accurate of the biographies of Swinburne. In those cases where biographies offer conflicting accounts, I have followed Rooksby.
Annotation
The explanatory notes at the end of this volume are metrical, textual and contextual. I have specified the metre of each lyric, occasionally offering parallels or discussing its history. Difficult passages have been glossed, and I have tried to identify sources, explain allusions, and provide parallels. In addition, I have drawn on the large scholarly literature about the French and Victorian contexts of many of Swinburne’s themes. I have tried to give credit to previous readers for their discoveries but in general have corrected occasional errors in silence.
Scholarly reception
See Clyde K. Hyder, ‘Algernon Charles Swinburne’ in The Victorian Poets: A Guide to Research (ed. F. E. Faverty, Harvard, 1968) and Rikky Rooksby, ‘A Century of Swinburne’ in The Whole Music of Passion (Scolar Press, 1993).
Currently, the only complete edition of Swinburne’s works is The Complete Works of Algernon Charles Swinburne, edited by Sir Edmund Gosse and Thomas James Wise (known as the Bonchurch edition, published 1925–7 and reprinted in 1968); however, the text of this edition is unreliable. This collection includes the only full bibliography, which is likewise untrustworthy.
In the second volume of La Jeunesse de Swinburne (Paris, 1928), Georges Lafourcade attempted the only comprehensive criticism of all Swinburne’s early works. Critics who have subsequently examined particular manuscripts in greater detail (among them, Randolph Hughes in his edition of Swinburne’s Lucretia Borgia, 1942, or Edward Philip Schuldt in his dissertation, Four Early Unpublished Plays of Algernon Charles Swinburne, 1976) have found many inaccuracies in Lafourcade’s account. Nonetheless, Lafourcade provided much information still not available elsewhere.
Several careful studies of Swinburne’s style exist in German, including H. W. F. Wollaeger, Studien über Swinburne’s Poetischen Stil (Heidelberg, 1899), Bruno Herlet, Versuch eines Kommentars zu Swinburnes ‘Atalanta’ (Bamberg, 1909–10), and Alfred Eidenbenz, Das Starre Wortmuster und die Zeit in Swinburne’s ‘Poems and Ballads’ (Zürich, 1944).
Cecil Y. Lang published six volumes of Swinburne’s letters in 1959–62, with comprehensive annotations and index. Terry L. Meyers has published (and is publishing) additional letters by Swinburne.
Clyde K. Hyder has edited Swinburne Replies (Syracuse, 1966), a collection of three of Swinburne’s responses to his critics; Swinburne: The Critical Heritage (New York, 1970), a representative sample of the critical responses to Swinburne; and Swinburne as Critic (Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1972), an annotated and indexed anthology of Swinburne’s literary and artistic criticism.
Kirk H. Beertz published a bibliography of secondary works about Swinburne in 1982.
The most pressing need in the Swinburne scholarship is a critical edition of his works, based on a careful study of the manuscripts and the establishment of the dates of composition. Timothy A. J. Burnett gives an example of such work in his study of the first manuscript page of ‘Anactoria’, and he and Nicholas Shrimpton offer another example in their editing of an early version of ‘The Two Dreams’ (both printed in The Whole Music of Passion, 1993).
Critical reception
Swinburne’s poetry has inspired conflicting critical reactions. For the contemporary uproar over the immorality of Swinburne’s Poems and Ballads, see Clyde K. Hyder, Swinburne: The Critical Heritage (1970). In the following paragraphs, when bibliographical information is not given, it can be found in Further Reading.
His poems have sometimes been found too long or too diffuse. Robert Browning objects to his verses because they combine ‘the minimum of thought and idea in the maximum of word and phraseology’ (Critical Heritage, p. 115). Swinburne’s mother ‘constantly deplores’ the fact that he spoils his writing by not knowing when to stop (Lang, 4, 214). Matthew Arnold is offended by ‘Swinburne’s fatal habit of using one hundred words where one would suffice’ (Critical Heritage, p. 117). A. E. Housman finds that even in Swinburne’s best work ‘there is no reason why they should begin where they do or end where they do; there is no reason why the middle should be in the middle; there is hardly a reason why, having once begun, they should ever end at all’. T. S. Eliot finds that Swinburne is diffuse but believes that his ‘diffuseness is one of his glories’. Other critics, including Jerome J. McGann, have found that Swinburne’s diffuseness is a way of creating effects through echoing and enhancing suggestions rather than through the concentration of a mot juste.
He has been found vague or meaningless. Tennyson’s praise, ‘He is a reed through which all things blow into music’, is equivocal (Critical Heritage, p. 113). Housman believes that Swinburne almost totally lacked the ability to write descriptive poetry; instead of rendering nature, he ‘picks up the sausage-machine into which he crammed anything and everything; round goes the handle, and out the other end comes… noise’. Ezra Pound writes that Swinburne ‘neglected the value of words as words, and was intent on their value as sound’, though he also finds that Swinburne’s ‘inaccurate writing’ is ‘by no means ubiquitous’. W. H. Auden generalizes that nineteenth-century poets typically have much greater prosodic skill but much less control of diction than twentieth-century poets (19th Century British Minor Poets, 1966), and perhaps the generalization applies with particular force to Swinburne. Lang disputes the charge of vagueness and finds in the poetry and the letters ‘literal accuracy of the natural scenes’ (Lang, 1, xxi).
His metrical accomplishments have been variously judged. Of the major Victorian poets, he employed the largest number of verse forms, according to Robert Huntington Fletcher: Browning wrote in about 200 verse forms; Tennyson, in about 240; Swinburne, in about 420 (Journal of English and Germanic Philology, 8, 1908). Pound admires his rhythm-building faculty, and in particular his ability to perceive and recreate Greek melopoeia. Housman enumerates his achievements: he made the anapest fit for serious poetry, dignifying and strengthening it so that it yielded a combination of speed and magnificence new to English poetry; he revitalized the heroic couplet; he had an unexampled control of rhyme and in particular a pre-eminent mastery of feminine rhyme. Nonetheless, Housman finds that his metres, like Pope’s, appeal only to the ‘external ear’. T. S. Eliot finds that the technical novelty of the m
etres wears off and their effect is diminished (‘Reflections on “Vers Libre” ’, 1917).
Swinburne has been thought to be writing about literature rather than life. William Morris confesses that he could never really sympathize with Swinburne’s poetry because he thought it ‘founded on literature, not on nature’ (Critical Heritage, p. 123). Housman agrees that the only theme Swinburne ‘thoroughly loved and understood’ was literature, and disputes Swinburne’s insistence that literature is as valid a subject for poetry as any living thing. Eliot has been influential in his insistence that in Swinburne the object has ceased to exist and we are left with a complete, self-sufficient world of words. On the other hand, ‘The Triumph of Time’ has been called a cri de coeur. William Rossetti notes a paradox in many of the poems in Poems and Ballads: Swinburne is simultaneously exceedingly imitative and distinctly original (Critical Heritage, p. 70).
He has been found monotonous or narrow, especially in his later poetry. Gerard Hopkins writes that ‘Swinburne’s genius is astonishing, but it will, I think, only do one thing’ (letter to Bridges, 1879). Housman contrasts the ‘great and even overpowering richness’ of Poems and Ballads with the threadbare style in the poems of his later life. Empson writes that Swinburne ‘normally… only wrote well about his appalling ideas about sex’ (The Modern Poet, ed. Ian Hamilton, 1968, p. 184). Rikky Rooksby provides a discriminating defence of some of the later poetry in ‘Swinburne without Tears: A Guide to the Later Poetry’, Victorian Poetry 26:4 (Winter 1988), 413–30.
A contemporary reviewer complained about the difficulty of his syntax and the ‘wild prodigal way’ he heaped images, metaphors, and allusions (Critical Heritage, p. 11). Some later critics have argued that this difficulty is intrinsic to the meaning of his verse, that the tension between the onward-rushing metre and a complex grammar requiring patient glossing is related to the experience of living a torn and divided life.
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