ABSTRACT

This title was first published in 2001. Thomas Lovell Beddoes (1803-49) was a powerful poet of the English Romantic period, who has been and is still strangely neglected by critics. His macabre blank verse dramatic writings and his delicately balanced lyrics have both won ardent admirers such as Browning, Gosse, Pound and Christopher Ricks. Yet there are formal and generic problems in Beddoes's writings which continue to marginalize him as merely an eccentric, and the canon of Romanticism seems to have found no place for him.

chapter |45 pages

Introductory

chapter 1|37 pages

Immortality in the Early Dramas

chapter 2|35 pages

Scattered Limbs: Quest and Fragmentation

chapter 3|42 pages

Resurrection Songs: Beddoes and the Body

chapter 5|29 pages

Last Things

chapter |7 pages

Epilogue

The Dance of Death