â¦
Gordon, âOxford and Cambridge Magazineâ.
â¦
Houghton, The Wellesley Index, pp. 723-731.
⦠âWilliam Aldis Wright.â In Oxford Dictionary of National
Biography.
â¦
Gordon, âOxford and Cambridge Magazineâ.
â¦
Houghton, The Wellesley Index, pp. 723-731.
⦠âWilliam Aldis Wright.â In Oxford Dictionary of National
Biography.
This collection contains 1 text or image, including:
The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine text
Scholarly Commentary
Guest Editor: PC Fleming
IntroductionÂ
This essay is by William Aldis Wright (1831-1914), and was his only contribution to the Magazine. He later became well-known as a biblical and literary scholar.
Wright begins his essay with a discussion of Herrickâs life and ancestry. This biographical approach to non-contemporary poets is typical of the essays in the Magazine; see for example Heeleyâs essay on Sidney, and Priceâs essay on Shakespeareâs minor poems. Wrightâs essay is similar to Priceâs in its use of the poems to investigate biographical questions.
Wrightâs essay can be differentiated from others in the Magazine by his use of quotations; he quotes extensively, and seems content to let Herrickâs poetry speak for itself. This is in contrast to Fulford, who tends to favor long explanatory passages in his essays.
Wrightâs evaluation of Herrick is less laudatory than other essays in the Magazine. Though he clearly admires Herrick, he criticizes his poems that take on the character of the âgay cavalierâ. These poems, says Wright, are âquenched by the torrent of coarseness and sensuality which disfigures so much of his writingsâ (530).
Printing HistoryÂ
First printed in The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine , September, 1856.