Status
Available
Call number
Genres
Collection
Publication
Penguin Books (1997), Edition: 2nd, 368 pages
Description
Two entirely new sections of poetry by women have been added to the 1970 edition, engaging with topics as diverse as Darwinism and sexual theory. The 1890s were a time of new freedom to explore perverse and morbid love, as is refected in the content.
User reviews
LibraryThing member SelwynImage
Vastly under-rated period of English/British poetry, suffered unjustly by comparison with the French. Symons is a top, top poet; as are Bosie's sonnets. decadence everywhere. Cigarettes, absinthe, dancing girls on the staircase ...
LibraryThing member datrappert
A superior collection of poetry, thus 5 stars, although certainly not every poem is 5 stars. This is a second edition, with an infusion of woman poets, and it is the better for it. The poems by the women are almost all excellent, and there are some humorous ones as well, such as by Constance Naden,
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whose life was sadly short (as is the case for a few of the folks in this book.) This is not all decadent poetry, although it certainly encompasses it, but really a survey of the poetry being written during the 1890s, including lots of Yeats' early work, Kipling, Housman, and many others. You'll discover lots of gems here by writers you may not be too familiar with, and you'll be seeking out their works on Project Gutenberg or elsewhere. There is a later Penguin collection of decadent poetry that I don't have, but it seems much narrower than this collection. I'm so glad I came across this one in a used book store. Highly highly recommended. Show Less
Language
Physical description
368 p.; 7.8 inches
ISBN
0140436391 / 9780140436396
Local notes
previously: Poetry of the 'Nineties