Algernon Charles Swinburne is outstanding for prosodic …

Years: 1885 - 1885

Algernon Charles Swinburne is outstanding for prosodic innovations and noteworthy as the symbol of mid-Victorian poetic revolt.

The red-haired Swinburne is pagan in his sympathies and passionately anti-theist.

Swinburne's health is being undermined during this era by alcoholism and by the excesses resulting from his abnormal temperament and masochistic tendencies; he experiences periodic fits of intense nervous excitement, from which, however, his remarkable powers of recuperation long enable him to recover quickly.

He had collapsed completely in 1879 and had been rescued and restored to health by his friend Theodore Watts-Dunton, who has maintained a strict regimen and encouraged Swinburne to devote himself to writing.

However, apart from the long poem Tristram of Lyonesse (1882) and the verse tragedy Marino Faliero (1885), his most important poetry belongs to the first half of his life.

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