Abstract
A. S. Byatt’s 1991 novel, Possession, positions “Victorian” poetry at the centre of text and often drives plot in neo-Victorian literature. However, it is extremely rare to see articles focusing on poetry in books and journals dedicated to neo-Victorian studies. This chapter seeks to redress this, offering an overview of the most significant interventions in neo-Victorian poetry, before focusing specifically on poems addressing the pre-eminent Victorian poet, Alfred Tennyson. It considers poets such as Anthony Thwaite, Carol Ann Duffy, Margaret Atwood, Richard Howard, Daljit Nagra, Ruth Padel, Susana Gardner, Andrew Motion, Mick Imlah, Rosie Miles, John Seed, and Oliver Reynolds, all having produced poems and collections which can be considered neo-Victorian in their form (very often the quintessentially Victorian dramatic monologue) and focus (often about eminent or forgotten, Victorians, and sometimes as direct Possession responses to Victorian poems). Morton offers a case study of the varied ways in which poets have returned to address, challenge, and (less often) celebrate Alfred Tennyson and his works, in order to demonstrate a sustained trend in neo-Victorian poetry of hostility to “eminent Victorians” while acknowledging, in a much less iconoclastic fashion, the enduring force of his work.
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Notes
- 1.
Reprinted by kind permission of Carcanet Press, Manchester, UK.
- 2.
See Morton (2018).
- 3.
It is not entirely a coincidence that the book was found at a shop on Peckham Rye, not far from where William Blake claimed to have seen an angel.
- 4.
By kind permission of the author’s Estate and The Gallery Press, Loughcrew, Oldcastle, County Meath, Ireland.
- 5.
See Morton (2018).
- 6.
With thanks to Matthew Campbell, Emily Critchley, Robert Selby, Cherry Smyth, and Daniel Weston for their suggestions.
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Morton, J. (2024). Neo-Victorian Poetry. In: Ayres, B., Maier, S.E. (eds) The Palgrave Handbook of Neo-Victorianism. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-32160-3_15
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