
Poetry in the Making investigates the compositional practices of Victorian poets, as made evident in the autograph manuscripts of their poems. Written in an accessible and stimulating style, the book offers careful readings of individual drafts, paying attention to the revisions, cancellations, interlineations, trials of rhyme and form, and sometimes the large structural changes that these documents reveal. The book shows how manuscript revisions offer insights into the creative priorities and decisions of major Victorian poets (Wordsworth, Tennyson, the Brownings, Clough, Hopkins, Christina Rossetti, Swinburne, and Yeats); and they investigate ideas of composition in the period, particularly the uneasy balance between inspiration and labour. The book testifies to the care that poets exercised at the smallest levels of their craft and demonstrates that the drafts reward an equally close attention on the part of the critic. Collectively, the chapters develop a survey of how Victorian poets experienced and understood their own creativity, setting abstract claims about inspiration and craftsmanship against their own practical experiences. The book responds to and extends a renewed interest in manuscript sources at the present time that has been stimulated in part by the increased availability of digital and facsimile editions. For a long time, scholarly interest in nineteenth-century literary manuscripts has been dominated by editorial and theoretical concerns. This book testifies to the value for criticism of poetic drafts, establishing the significance of revision and of manuscript studies for the field of Victorian poetry and for literary scholarship more generally.
This book investigates the compositional practices of Victorian poets by analyzing the physical evidence found within their original autograph manuscripts. Daniel Tyler, a scholar of nineteenth-century literature, utilizes a close-reading methodology to examine revisions, cancellations, and structural changes in the drafts of major poets. By contrasting these practical manuscript alterations with contemporary theoretical claims about inspiration and labor, the author argues that the physical act of drafting reveals the core creative priorities of the Victorian era.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this work as a significant contribution to the field of manuscript studies, noting its success in bridging the gap between theoretical editorial concerns and practical literary criticism. Readers frequently highlight the clarity of the prose and the effectiveness of the author's focus on the minute details of poetic craft.
Page Count:
254
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191087491
ISBN-13:
9780191087493
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