Oxford religious poetry anthologies

Oxford religious poetry anthologies

Several anthologies of religious poetry have been published by Oxford University Press.

Contents

Oxford Book of English Mystical Verse

The Oxford Book of English Mystical Verse was a poetry anthology edited by Daniel Howard Sinclair Nicholson and Arthur Hugh Evelyn Lee, and published in 1917 by the Oxford University Press. The compilation contains much religious verse, mainly from English Christian traditions, and some from other religions. It also gives a representative cross-section of the esoteric interests of the first decade of the twentieth century, most notably in the presence of poems by A. E. Waite and the young Aleister Crowley. Lee, an Anglican clergyman, associated with Waite. Nicholson later published a work on mysticism and St. Francis of Assisi. They both joined the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, Lee in 1908,[1] and Nicholson in 1910[2]; both were friends of Charles Williams. Therefore the selection touches on the side of occultism thought compatible in its time with Christian belief.

The very varied scope of the collection shows through in poems from the latter part of the nineteenth century onwards. Its eclectic nature is shown by the presence of: Alfred Gurney, a clergyman most notable for his friendship with Dante Gabriel and Christina Rossetti; Edward Carpenter, Fabian socialist and homosexual; Frederick William Henry Myers, academic and psychic researcher; John Addington Symonds, aesthete; Walter Leslie Wilmshurst, writer on freemasonry and Wagner; Darrell Figgis, better known as a novelist and Sinn Féin member; George Santayana, the philosopher; Fred G. Bowles who was a Tin Pan Alley lyricist.

The entire collection is available online.

Poets in The Oxford Book of English Mystical Verse

Lascelles Abercrombie - William Alexander - Edwin Arnold - Matthew Arnold - Philip James Bailey - Elsa Barker - George Barlow - Clifford Bax - Henry Charles Beeching - Arthur Christopher Benson - John Stuart Blackie - Francis William Bourdillon - Fred G. Bowles - Emily Brontë - Thomas Edward Brown - Elizabeth Barrett Browning - Robert Browning - Robert Buchanan - Alice Mary Bunston - John Byrom - Bliss Carman - Edward Carpenter - Henry Bernard Carpenter - Edward Caswall - Madison Julius Cawein - Nora Chesson - G. K. Chesterton - Wilfred Rowland Childe - Amy Clarke - Ellen Mary Clerke - Mary Elizabeth Coleridge - Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Henry Constable - James H. Cousins - William Cowper - Dinah Maria (Mulock) Craik - Christopher Pearse Cranch - Richard Crashaw - Arthur Shearly Cripps - Aleister Crowley - Victor James Daley - Thom Davies - William James Dawson - Margaret Deland - Aubrey Thomas De Vere - Ella Dietz - Richard Watson Dixon - Digby Mackworth Dolben - John Donne - Edward Dowden - Augusta Theodosia Drane - Agnes Mary Frances Duclaux - John Charles Earle - Edwin J. Ellis - Ralph Waldo Emerson - Frederick William Faber - Michael Field - Darrell Figgis - Phineas Fletcher - Christina Catherine Fraser-Tytler - Harold E. Goad - Eva Gore-Booth - Edmund Gosse - John Gray - Dora Greenwell - Alfred Gurney - Christopher Harvey - Frances Ridley Havergal - Robert Stephen Hawker - William Ernest Henley - George Herbert - Robert Herrick - Emily Henrietta Hickey - Kathleen Tynan Hinkson - Horace Holley - Edmond Gore Alexander Holmes - Paul Hookham - Gerard Manley Hopkins - Gertrude M. Hort - Lord Houghton - Laurence Housman - Jean Ingelow - Harriet Eleanor Hamilton King - Archibald Lampman - Richard Le Gallienne - Ruth Temple Lindsay - Alfred Comyn Lyall - George MacDonald - James Clarence Mangan - Andrew Marvell - John Masefield - Eugene Mason - George Meredith - Alice Meynell - Richard Monckton Milnes - Susan Mitchell - Harold Monro - Lewis Morris - John Spencer Muirhead - Frederick William Henry Myers - Sarojini Nayadu - Henry Newbolt - John Henry Newman - Roden Noel - Alfred Noyes - Arthur William Edgar O'Shaughnessy - Henry Nutcombe Oxenham - John Oxenham - Francis Turner Palgrave - Coventry Patmore - Joseph Mary Plunkett - Edgar Allan Poe - Alexander Pope - May Probyn - Francis Quarles - James Rhoades - James Rennell Rodd - Richard Rolle - Christina Rossetti - Dante Gabriel Rossetti - George William Russell (A. E.) - George Santayana - William Bell Scott - William Sharp - Percy Bysshe Shelley - R. A. Eric Shepherd - Dora Sigerson Shorter - Robert Southwell - James Stephens - Algernon Charles Swinburne - Joshua Sylvester - John Addington Symonds - Arthur Symons - John Bannister Tabb - Rachel Annand Taylor - Alfred Tennyson - Edith Matilda Thomas - Francis Thompson - Thomas Traherne - Herbert Trench - Richard Chenevix Trench - Evelyn Underhill - Henry Vaughan - C. M. Verschoyle - Samuel Waddington - Arthur Edward Waite - Clarence A. Walworth - Frederick William Orde Ward - David Atwood Wasson - Isaac Watts - Charles Weekes - Walt Whitman - Oscar Wilde - Sarah Williams - Walter Leslie Wilmshurst - William Wordsworth - W. B. Yeats

External links

Oxford Book of Christian Verse (1940)

Edited by Lord David Cecil. Poets included were:

Joseph Addison - Matthew Arnold - John Austin - William Baldwin - Barnabe Barnes - William Barnes - Richard Baxter - Joseph Beaumont - Joseph Hilaire Belloc - William Blake - Edmund Bolton - Horatius Bonar - Katherine Bradley - Robert Bridges - Sir Thomas Browne - Elizabeth Barrett Browning - Robert Browning - Robert William Buchanan - John Bunyan - John Byrom - Thomas Campion - Patrick Carey - Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle - Geoffrey Chaucer - G. K. Chesterton - John Clare - Mary Elizabeth Coleridge - Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Henry Constable - Edith Cooper - Abraham Cowley - William Cowper - George Crabbe - Richard Crashaw - Samuel Crossman - Sir John Davies - Richard Watson Dixon - Philip Dodderidge - Digby Mackworth Dolben - John Donne - Gavin Douglas - William Drummond of Hawthornden - John Dryden - William Dunbar - T. S. Eliot - Michael Field - Giles Fletcher - Phineas Fletcher - Humphrey Gifford - Sidney Godolphin - Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke - William Habington - John Hall - Christopher Harvey - Robert Stephen Hawker - Reginald Heber - Robert Henryson - George Herbert - Mary Herbert, Countess of Pembroke - Robert Herrick - Thomas Heywood - Gerard Manley Hopkins - Lionel Johnson - Ben Jonson - John Keble - Thomas Ken - Charles Kingsley - John Lydgate - Andrew Marvell - James Merrick - Alice Meynell - Henry Hart Milman - John Milton - Henry More - William Morris - Frederic William Henry Myers - John Mason Neale - John Henry Newman - John Newton - John Norris of Bemerton - Clement Paman - Coventry Patmore - Thomas Pestel - Ruth Pitter - Alexander Pope - Francis Quarles - Sir Walter Ralegh - Richard Rolle of Hampole - Christina Georgina Rossetti - Dante Gabriel Rossetti - William Shakespeare - Thomas Shepherd - Sir Edward Sherburne - James Shirley - Fredegond Shove - Sir Philip Sidney - John Skelton - Christopher Smart - Robert Southwell - Samuel Speed - Edmund Spenser - Richard Stanyhurst - William Force Stead - Jeremy Taylor - Alfred Tennyson, Lord Tennyson - Francis Thompson - James Thomson - Augustus Montague Toplady - Thomas Traherne - Richard Chenevix Trench - Henry Vaughan - Edmund Waller - Nathaniel Wanley - Thomas Washbourne - Isaac Watts - James, John and Robert Wedderburn - Charles Wesley - Samuel Wesley (poet) - Robert Wild - Charles Williams - Richard Wilton - William Wordsworth - Sir Henry Wotton - Edward Young

New Oxford Book of Christian Verse (1981)

Edited by Donald Davie. Poets included were:

Joseph Addison - Cliff Ashby - W. H. Auden - William Baldwin - Clifford Bax - Richard Baxter - Wendell Berry - John Berryman - Sir John Betjeman - Thomas Binney - William Blake - Anne Bradstreet - Robert Bridges - John Bunyan - Robert Burns - John Byrom - Thomas Campion - Geoffrey Chaucer - John Clare - Jack Clemo - Samuel Taylor Coleridge - William Cowper - Richard Crashaw - Peter Dale - Elizabeth Daryush - Emily Dickinson - Philip Doddridge - John Donne - Hilda Doolittle - John Dryden - William Dunbar - Timothy Dwight - T. S. Eliot - John Meade Falkner - Padraic Fallon - Giles Fletcher - George Gascoigne - Sidney Godolphin - Fulke Greville - Isaac Hann - Reginald Heber - George Herbert - Mary Herbert, Countess of Pembroke - Robert Herrick - Geoffrey Hill - Gerard Manley Hopkins - Julia Ward Howe - Alexander Hume - Elizabeth Jennings - David Jones - Ben Jonson - John Keble - Thomas Ken - William Kethe - Thomas Kinsella - William Langland - Janet Lewis - Henry Francis Lyte - Andrew Marvell - Alice Meynell - John Milton - Alexander Montgomerie - James Montgomery - Edwin Muir - James McAuley - John Mason Neale - John Henry Newman - John Newton - Urian Oakes - Edward Perronet - F. T. Prince - Matthew Prior - Francis Quarles - Christina Rossetti - William Shakespeare - Sir Philip Sidney - C. H. Sisson - Christopher Smart - Stevie Smith - Robert Southwell - Edmund Spenser - Nahum Tate - Edward Taylor - Alfred, Lord Tennyson - R. S. Thomas - Francis Thompson - Augustus Montague Toplady - Thomas Traherne - Henry Vaughan - Jones Very - Edmund Waller - Robert Penn Warren - Thomas Washbourne - Isaac Watts - Charles Wesley - John Brooks Wheelwright - William Whiting - John Greenleaf Whittier - Charles Williams - William Wordsworth - Sir Thomas Wyatt

Notes

  1. ^ 25 March 1908, taking the name Hilarion; R. A. Gilbert, The Golden Dawn Companion (1986) p.171. Revd. A. H. E. Lee, [...] an active member of Waite’s Golden Dawn but who preferred Co-Masonry to the legitimate Craft.[1]
  2. ^ 27 August 1910, taking the name Per deos ad Deum; Gilbert p.173.

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Oxford poetry anthologies — The Oxford University Press published a long series of poetry anthologies, dealing in particular with British poetry but not restricted to it, after the success of the Oxford Book of English Verse (1900). The Oxford poetry anthologies ( Oxford… …   Wikipedia

  • List of poetry anthologies — This is a list of anthologies of poetry.A C*Anthology of Twentieth Century British and Irish Poetry *American Poetry Since 1950 *Book of Aneirin (c. 1265) Welsh medieval manuscript *Best American Poetry series (with links to articles on annual… …   Wikipedia

  • Poetry — This article is about the art form. For other uses, see Poetry (disambiguation). Literature Major forms Novel · Poem · Drama Short story · Novella …   Wikipedia

  • POETRY — This article is arranged according to the following outline (for modern poetry, see hebrew literature , Modern; see also prosody ): biblical poetry introduction the search for identifiable indicators of biblical poetry the presence of poetry in… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • 1986 in poetry — yearbox2 in?=in poetry in2?=in literature cp=19th century c=20th century cf=21st century yp1=1983 yp2=1984 yp3=1985 year=1986 ya1=1987 ya2=1988 ya3=1989 dp3=1950s dp2=1960s dp1=1970s d=1980s da=0 dn1=1990s dn2=2000s dn3=2010s|Events* New American …   Wikipedia

  • Lyric poetry — [ Henry Oliver Walker, Lyric Poetry (1896). Library of Congress Thomas Jefferson Building, Washington, D.C.] Lyric poetry refers to a usually short poem that expresses personal feelings, which may or may not be set to music. [Tom McArthur (ed),… …   Wikipedia

  • English poetry — The Seeds and Fruits of English Poetry, Ford Madox Brown. The history of English poetry stretches from the middle of the 7th century to the present day. Over this period, English poets have written some of the most enduring poems in Western… …   Wikipedia

  • Irish poetry — The history of Irish poetry includes the poetries of two languages, one in Irish and the other in English. The complex interplay between these two traditions, and between both of them and other poetries in English, has produced a body of work… …   Wikipedia

  • May Probyn — Juliana Mary Louisa Probyn, known as May Probyn (1856 – 1909), was an English poet. Her poem Is it nothing to you is in the Oxford Book of English Verse.[1] She is also included in many other anthologies, such as The Golden Book of Modern English …   Wikipedia

  • James Merrick — (1720 1769), was an English poet and scholar; M.A. Trinity College, Oxford, 1742: fellow, 1745: ordained, but lived in college. It is said that [h] e entered into holy orders, but never could engage in parochial duty, from being subject to… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”