Black and white headshot of British poet Algernon Charles Swinburne

English poet and critic Algernon Charles Swinburne was born into a wealthy Northumbrian family in London, England in 1837. He was educated at Eton College and at Balliol College, Oxford, but did not complete a degree. Swinburne was one of the most accomplished lyric poets of the Victorian era and was a preeminent symbol of rebellion against the conservative values of his time. His books include Poems and Ballads, Second Series (1878), Songs Before Sunrise (1871), Poems and Ballads (1866), Chastelard (1865), Atalanta in Calydon (1865), and The Queen-Mother and Rosamond (1860).

The explicit and often pathological sexual themes of his most important collection of poetry, Poems and Ballads (1866), delighted some, shocked many, and became the dominant feature of Swinburne’s image as both an artist and an individual. Nevertheless, critics have found that to focus exclusively on the sensational aspects of Swinburne’s work is to miss the assertion, implicit in his poetry and explicit in his critical writings, that his primary preoccupation was the nature and creation of poetic beauty.

While at Oxford, Swinburne met the brothers William Michael and Dante Gabriel Rossetti, as well as other members of the Pre-Raphaelite circle, a group of artists and writers whose work emphasized medieval subjects, elaborate religious symbolism, and a sensual pictorialism, and who cultivated an aura of mystery and melancholy in their lives as well as in their works. In 1860 Swinburne published two verse dramas in the volume The Queen-Mother and Rosamond, which was largely ignored. He achieved his first literary success in 1865 with Atalanta in Calydon, which was written in the form of classical Greek tragedy. The following year the appearance of Poems and Ballads brought Swinburne instant notoriety. He became identified with the “indecent” themes and the precept of art for art’s sake that characterized many of the poems in the volume. He subsequently wrote poetry of many different kinds, including the militantly republican Song of Italy (1867) and Songs before Sunrise (1871) in support of the risorgimento, the movement for Italian political unity, as well as nature poetry. Although individual volumes of Swinburne’s poetry were occasionally well received, in general his popularity and critical reputation declined following the initial sensation of Poems and Ballads.

Swinburne’s physical appearance, his personality, and the facts of his life have received much attention from biographers and from commentators exploring biographical bases of his works. He was small, frail, and plagued by numerous peculiarities of physique and temperament, including an overlarge head, nervous gestures, and seizures that may have been manifestations of a form of epilepsy. Throughout the 1860s and 1870s, he drank excessively and was prone to accidents that often left him bruised, bloody, or unconscious. Until his 40s, he suffered intermittent physical collapses that necessitated removal to his parents’ home while he recovered. In 1879, Swinburne’s friend and literary agent, Theodore Watts-Dunton, intervened during a time when Swinburne was dangerously ill. Watts-Dunton isolated Swinburne at a suburban home in Putney and gradually weaned him from alcohol—and from many former companions and habits as well. Swinburne lived another 30 years with Watts-Dunton, whose role remains controversial. He denied Swinburne’s friends access to him, controlled the poet’s money, and restricted his activities. However, commentators agree that Swinburne’s erratic conduct could have resulted in his death, and Watts-Dunton is generally credited with saving his life and encouraging him to continue writing into his old age. Swinburne died in London on April 10, 1909 at the age of 72.

The most important and conspicuous quality of Swinburne’s work is an intense lyricism. Even early critics, who often took exception to his subject matter, commended his intricately extended and evocative imagery, metrical virtuosity, rich use of assonance and alliteration, and bold, complex rhythms. At the same time, the strong rhythms of his poems and his characteristic use of alliteration were sometimes carried to extremes and rendered his work highly susceptible to parody. Critics note that his usually effective imagery is at times vague and imprecise, and his rhymes are sometimes facile and uninspired. After establishing residence in Putney, Swinburne largely abandoned the themes of pathological sexuality that had characterized much of his earlier poetry. Nature and landscape poetry began to predominate, as well as poems about children. Many commentators maintain that the poetry written during the years at Putney is inferior to Swinburne’s earlier work, but others have identified individual poems of exceptional merit among his later works, citing in particular “By the North Sea,” “Evening on the Broads,” “A Nympholept,” “The Lake of Gaube,” and “Neap-Tide.”

Throughout his career Swinburne also published literary criticism of great acuity. His familiarity with a wide range of world literatures contributed to a critical style rich in quotation, allusion, and comparison. He is particularly noted for discerning studies of Elizabethan dramatists and of many English and French poets and novelists. In response to criticism of his own works, Swinburne wrote essays, including Notes on Poems and Reviews (1866) and Under the Microscope (1872), which are celebrated for their wit and insight. Swinburne also published one novel, Love’s Cross-Currents (1901), serially under a pseudonym, and left another, Lesbia Brandon, unfinished at his death. The first attracted little notice other than some speculation about its authorship. Some critics have theorized that Lesbia Brandon was intended as thinly disguised autobiography; however, its fragmentary form resists conclusive interpretation.

During Swinburne’s lifetime, critics considered Poems and Ballads his finest as well as his most characteristic poetic achievement; subsequent poetry and work in other genres was often disregarded. Since the mid-20th century, however, commentators have been offering new assessments of Swinburne’s entire career. Forgoing earlier dismissals of Swinburne’s voluminous later writings and reexamining individual poems strictly on their own merit, critics have identified works of great power and beauty from all periods of his career.

More About this Poet

Bibliography

BOOKS

  • The Queen-Mother. Rosamond. Two Plays, Pickering, 1860, Ticknor Fields (Boston), 1866.
  • Atalanta in Calydon, Moxon (London), 1865, Ticknor Fields, 1866.
  • Chastelard, Moxon, 1865, Hurd Houghton (New York, NY), 1866.
  • Poems and Ballads, Moxon, 1866, published as Laus Veneris, and Other Poems and Ballads, Carleton (New York, NY), 1866.
  • A Song of Italy, Ticknor Fields, 1867.
  • William Blake: A Critical Essay, Hotten (London), 1868, Dutton, 1906.
  • (With William Michael Rossetti) Notes on the Royal Academy Exhibition, 1868, Hotten, 1868.
  • Songs before Sunrise, Roberts Brothers (Boston), 1871.
  • Under the Microscope, White (London), 1872, Mosher (Portland, ME), 1899.
  • Bothwell, Chatto Windus, 1874.
  • George Chapman: A Critical Essay, Chatto Windus, 1875.
  • Song of Two Nations, Chatto Windus, 1875.
  • Essays and Studies, Chatto Windus, 1875.
  • Erechtheus: A Tragedy, Chatto Windus, 1876.
  • Note of an English Republican on the Muscovite Crusade, Chatto Windus, 1876.
  • A Note on Charlotte Bronte, Chatto Windus, 1877.
  • Poems and Ballads, Second Series, Chatto Windus, 1878 , Crowell (New York, NY), c. 1885.
  • A Study of Shakespeare, Worthington (New York, NY), 1880.
  • Specimens of Modern Poets: The Heptalogia or The Seven against Sense, Chatto Windus, 1880.
  • Mary Stuart, Worthington, 1881.
  • Tristam of Lyonesse and Other Poems, Chatto Windus, 1882, Mosher, 1904.
  • A Century of Roundels, Worthington, 1883.
  • A Midsummer Holiday and Other Poems, Chatto Windus, 1884.
  • Marino Faliero, Chatto Windus, 1885.
  • Miscellanies, Worthington, 1886.
  • A Study of Victor Hugo, Chatto Windus, 1886.
  • Locrine: A Tragedy, Alden (New York, NY), 1887.
  • A Study of Ben Jonson, Worthington, 1889.
  • Poems and Ballads, Third Series, Chatto Windus, 1889.
  • The Sisters, United States Book Company (New York, NY), 1892.
  • Astrophel and Other Poems, Chatto Windus/Scribner, 1894.
  • Studies in Prose and Poetry, Chatto Windus/Scribner, 1894.
  • Robert Burns. A Poem, Burns Centenary Club (Edinburgh), 1896.
  • The Tale of Balen, Scribner, 1896.
  • Rosamund, Queen of the Lombards: A Tragedy, Dodd, 1899.
  • Love's Cross-Currents: A Year's Letters, Mosher, 1901.
  • Poems Ballads, Second Third Series, Mosher, 1902.
  • Percy Bysshe Shelley, Lippincott, 1903.
  • A Channel Passage and Other Poems, Chatto Windus, 1904.
  • The Poems of Algernon Swinburne, 6 volumes, Harper, 1904.
  • The Duke of Gandia, Harper, 1908.
  • The Age of Shakespeare, Harper, 1908.
  • The Marriage of Monna Lisa, privately printed (London), 1909.
  • In the Twilight, privately printed (London), 1909.
  • The Portrait, privately printed (London), 1909.
  • The Chronicle of Queen Fredegond, privately printed (London), 1909.
  • Of Liberty and Loyalty, privately printed (London), 1909.
  • Ode to Mazzini, privately printed (London), 1909.
  • Shakespeare, Henry Frowde, 1909.
  • The Ballade of Truthful Charles and Other Poems, privately printed (London), 1910.
  • A Criminal Case, privately printed (London), 1910.
  • The Ballade of Villon and Fat Madge, privately printed (London), 1910.
  • The Cannibal Catechism, privately printed (London), 1913.
  • Les Fleurs du Mal and Other Stories, privately printed (London), 1913.
  • Charles Dickens, Chatto Windus, 1913.
  • A Study of Victor Hugo's "Les Miserables," privately printed (London), 1914.
  • Pericles and Other Studies, privately printed (London), 1914.
  • Thomas Nabbes: A Critical Monograph, privately printed (London), 1914.
  • Christopher Marlowe in Relation to Greene, Peele and Lodge, privately printed (London), 1915.
  • Lady Maisie's Bairn and Other Poems, privately printed (London), 1915.
  • Felicien Cossu: A Burlesque, privately printed (London), 1915.
  • Theophile, privately printed (London), 1915.
  • Ernest Clouet, privately printed (London), 1916.
  • A Vision of Bags, privately printed (London), 1916.
  • The Death of Sir John Franklin, privately printed (London), 1916.
  • Poems from "Villon" and Other Fragments, privately printed (London), 1916.
  • Poetical Fragments, privately printed (London), 1916.
  • Posthumous Poems, edited by Edmund Gosse and Thomas James Wise, Heinemann, 1917.
  • Rondeaux Parisiens, privately printed (London), 1917.
  • The Italian Mother and Other Poems, privately printed (London), 1918.
  • The Ride from Milan and Other Poems, privately printed (London), 1918.
  • A Lay of Lilies and Other Poems, privately printed (London), 1918.
  • Queen Yseult, A Poem in Six Cantos, privately printed (London), 1918.
  • Lancelot, The Death of Rudel and Other Poems, privately printed (London), 1918.
  • Undergraduate Sonnets, privately printed (London), 1918.
  • The Character and Opinions of Dr. Johnson, privately printed (London), 1918.
  • The Queen's Tragedy, privately printed (London), 1919.
  • French Lyrics, privately printed (London), 1919.
  • Contemporaries of Shakespeare, Heinemann, 1919.
  • Ballads of the English Border, edited by William A. MacInnes, Heinemann, 1925.
  • 1925-27 The Complete Works of Algernon Charles Swinburne, twenty volumes, edited by Edmund Gosse and Thomas J. Wise, Heinemann/ Wells.
  • Lesbia Brandon, edited by Randoph Hughes, Falcon Press (London), 1952, republished in The Novels of A. C. Swinburne, Farrar, Straus Cudahy, 1962.
  • The Swinburne Letters, six volumes, edited by Cecil Y. Lang, Yale University Press, 1962.
  • New Writings by Swinburne, edited by Cecil Y. Lang, Syracuse University Press, 1964.

DIGITAL EDITIONS

Further Readings

BOOKS

  • Chew, Samuel C., Swinburne, Little, Brown, 1929.
  • Concise Dictionary of British Literary Biography, Volume 4:Victorian Writers, 1832-1890, Gale, 1991, pp. 382-406.
  • Gosse, Edmund, The Life of Algernon Charles Swinburne, Macmillan, 1917.
  • Grierson, H. J. C., Swinburne, Longmans, 1953.
  • Hyder, Clyde K., Swinburne's Literary Career and Fame, Duke University Press, 1933.
  • Hyder, editor, Swinburne: The Critical Heritage, Routledge Kegan Paul, 1970.
  • Lafourcade, Georges, Swinburne: A Literary Biography, Bell, 1932.
  • Louis, Margot K., Swinburne and His Gods: The Roots and Growth of an Agnostic Poetry, McGill-Queen's University Press, 1990.
  • McSweeney, Kerry, Tennyson and Swinburne as Romantic Naturalists, University of Toronto Press, 1980.
  • Peckham, Morse, Swinburne: Eroticism=Politics, Politics=Eroticism, Northouse & Northouse, 1993.
  • Raymond, Meredith B., Swinburne's Poetics: Theory and Practice, Mouton, 1971.
  • Riede, David G., Swinburne: A Study of Romantic Mythmaking, University Press of Virginia, 1978.
  • Rooksby, Rikky, and Nicholas Shrimpton, The Whole Music of Passion: New Essays on Swinburne, Ashgate (Brookfield, VT), 1993.
  • Rooksby, Rikky, A.C. Swinburne: A Poet's Life, Ashgate, 1997.
  • Thomas, Donald, Swinburne: The Poet in His World, Oxford University Press, 1979.