Lyra Celtica

Lyra Celtica
Author: J. Matthay
Publisher: Ardent Media
Total Pages: 502
Release:
Genre: English poetry
ISBN:

Lyra Celtica

Lyra Celtica
Author: Elizabeth Amelia Sharp
Publisher:
Total Pages: 510
Release: 1896
Genre: Celtic poetry
ISBN:

Lyra Celtica: An Anthology of Representative Celtic Poetry

Lyra Celtica: An Anthology of Representative Celtic Poetry
Author: Various
Publisher: Good Press
Total Pages: 416
Release: 2021-11-05
Genre: Poetry
ISBN:

This anthology of over 200 Celtic poems is representative of classic poems from Ireland, Scotland, Wales and Brittany. It also includes ancient Cornish, early Armorican and some Anglo-Celtic-Manx poems. Broken down into sections sorting the poems from the period and locations, it covers ancient and medieval poems through to modern times.

Sketch

Sketch
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 590
Release: 1896
Genre:
ISBN:

The Modern Poet

The Modern Poet
Author: Robert Crawford
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Total Pages: 310
Release: 2001-08-09
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0191589322

Addressed to all readers of poetry, this is a wide-ranging book about the poet's role throughout the last three centuries. It argues that a conception of the poets as both primitive and sophisticated emerged in the 1750s. Encouraged by the classroom when English literary works began to be studied in universities, this view continues to shape our own attitudes towards verse. Whether considering Ossian and the Romantics, Victorian scholar-gipsies, Modernist poetries of knowledge, or contemporary poetry in Britian, Ireland, and America, The Modern Poet shows how many successive generations of poets have needed to collaborate and to battle with academia.

Modern Irish and Scottish Literature

Modern Irish and Scottish Literature
Author: Richard Alan Barlow
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 189
Release: 2023-01-04
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0192859188

Modern Irish and Scottish Literature: Connections, Contrasts, Celticisms explores the ways Irish and Scottish literatures have influenced each other from the 1760s onwards. Although an early form of Celticism disappeared with the demise of the Celtic Revivals of Ireland and Scotland, the 'Celtic world' and the 'Celtic temperament' remained key themes in central texts of Irish and Scottish literature well into the twentieth century. Richard Barlow examines the emergence, development, and transformation of Celticism within Irish and Scottish writing and identifies key connections between modern Irish and Scottish authors and texts. By reading works from figures such as James Macpherson, Walter Scott, Sydney Owenson, Augusta Gregory, W. B. Yeats, Fiona Macleod, James Joyce, Samuel Beckett, Hugh MacDiarmid, Sorley MacLean, and Seamus Heaney in their political and cultural contexts, Barlow provides a new account of the characteristics and phases of literary Celticism within Romanticism, Modernism, and beyond.

William Sharp and "Fiona Macleod”

William Sharp and
Author: William F. Halloran
Publisher: Open Book Publishers
Total Pages: 269
Release: 2022-02-24
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1800643292

William Sharp (1855-1905) conducted one of the most audacious literary deceptions of his or any time. A Scottish poet, novelist, biographer, and editor, he began in 1893 to write critically and commercially successful books under the name Fiona Macleod who became far more than a pseudonym. Enlisting his sister to provide the Macleod handwriting, he used the voluminous Fiona correspondence to fashion a distinctive personality for a talented, but remote and publicity-shy woman. Sometimes she was his cousin and other times his lover, and whenever suspicions arose, he vehemently denied he was Fiona. For more than a decade he duped not only the general public but such literary luminaries as George Meredith, Thomas Hardy, Henry James, William Butler Yeats, and E. C. Stedman. Drawing extensively on his letters, his wife Elizabeth Sharp’s Memoir, and accounts by friends and associates, this biography provides a lucid and intimate account of William Sharp’s life, from his rejection of the dour religion of his Scottish boyhood, his turn to spiritualism, to his role in the Scottish Celtic Revival in the mid-nineties. The biography illuminates his wide network of close male and female friendships, through which he developed advanced ideas about the place of women in society, the constraints of marriage, the fluidity of gender identity, and the complexity of the human psyche. Uniquely this biography reveals the autobiographical content of the writings of Fiona Macleod, the remarkable extent to which Sharp used the feminine pseudonym to disguise his telling and retelling the complex story of his extramarital love affair with a beautiful and brilliant woman. The biography illuminates not only the talented and conflicted William Sharp, but also the cultural landscape of Great Britain in the late-nineteenth century. From late Pre-Raphaelitism through the "yellow nineties” and on to the excesses of the early twentieth century, Sharp dabbled in all the movements that comprised what some have called the Age of Decadence.