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The Poet Index · Entry 1043

Algernon Charles Swinburne
Poems

Lifespan
1837–1909
Nationality
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
Indexed Works
46

This elegy for the French poet Baudelaire showcases Swinburne at his most measured and emotionally profound, making it a great starting point for readers eager to experience how he achieves a perfect harmony of music an…

Editorial intro

Nikola Gulevski, Editor, Storgy

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Editorial intro

Swinburne made English verse sound alive — a rolling, crashing, internally rhyming rhythm that no other Victorian poet matched. His 1866 collection *Poems and Ballads* shocked readers with its candid treatment of sadomasochism, paganism, and anti-Christian provocations; it demonstrated that sound itself could serve as a form of argument. When critics labeled it depraved, Swinburne responded with gratitude. That wasn't a facade — he genuinely distrusted religious authority and social convention, and this distrust permeates everything he wrote with real intensity.

He emerged from the Pre-Raphaelite circle alongside Rossetti and Morris, but ventured further into sensory and moral realms they avoided. His influence extended to Ezra Pound, Yeats, and the broader movement of modernist free verse, even as modernism later sought to distance itself from his lushness. New readers are often taken aback by two aspects: his humor and deliberate provocations, and the technical rigor that underlies all that sound. He mastered Greek choral forms, French fixed forms, and created his own metrical patterns. The common criticism — that the music overwhelms the meaning — deserves consideration, but at his best, Swinburne makes you feel the argument before you've fully grasped it.

Where to start

The Works

Sort byYearTitle
  1. 01A BABY'S EPITAPHUndated
  2. 02A BALLAD OF BATHUndated
  3. 03A JACOBITE'S EXILEUndated
  4. 04A JACOBITE'S FAREWELLUndated
  5. 05A LYKE-WAKE SONGUndated
  6. 06A MIDSUMMER HOLIDAY, ASTROPHEL, A CHANNEL PASSAGE AND OTHER POEMS.Undated
  7. 07A REIVER'S NECK-VERSEUndated
  8. 08A RHYMEUndated
  9. 09A WORD WITH THE WINDUndated
  10. 10Ave Atque ValeUndated
  11. 11BABY-BIRDUndated
  12. 12BY THE WAYSIDEUndated
  13. 13BY TWILIGHTUndated
  14. 14CALIBAN ON ARIELUndated
  15. 15DEDICATIONUndated
  16. 16FROM THE ITALIAN OF GIOVANNI STROZZIUndated
  17. 17FROM THE ITALIAN OF MICHELANGELO BUONARROTIUndated
  18. 18Hugo at Théophile Gautier's GraveUndated
  19. 19IN A GARDENUndated
  20. 20IN MEMORY OF JOHN WILLIAM INCHBOLDUndated
  21. 21IN MEMORY OF MANY YEARSUndated
  22. 22IN TIME OF MOURNINGUndated
  23. 23Laus VenerisUndated
  24. 24NEAP-TIDEUndated
  25. 25NELL GWYNUndated
  26. 26NEW YEAR'S DAYUndated
  27. 27NIGHTUndated
  28. 28OLIVEUndated
  29. 29ON THE DEATH OF SIR HENRY TAYLORUndated
  30. 30PANUndated
  31. 31THALASSIUSUndated
  32. 32THE ARMADAUndated
  33. 33THE BRIDE'S TRAGEDYUndated
  34. 34THE COMMONWEALUndated
  35. 35The Garden of ProserpineUndated
  36. 36THE INTERPRETERSUndated
  37. 37THE RECALLUndated
  38. 38The RondelUndated
  39. 39THE TYNESIDE WIDOWUndated
  40. 40THE WEARY WEDDINGUndated
  41. 41THE WINDSUndated
  42. 42THE WITCH-MOTHERUndated
  43. 43THIRD SERIESUndated
  44. 44TO A SEAMEWUndated
  45. 45TO SIR RICHARD F. BURTONUndated
  46. 46WindflowersUndated

Recurring themes

Biographical record

About Algernon Charles Swinburne

Algernon Charles Swinburne was born in London in 1837 to an aristocratic family with deep connections to Northumberland—a landscape that would haunt his poetry throughout his life. He attended Eton and then Balliol College, Oxford, but left without earning a degree, already more captivated by poetry and provocation than by academic respectability.

In the late 1850s, he connected with the Pre-Raphaelite circle, forming close relationships with Dante Gabriel Rossetti and William Morris. This group cherished sensory richness, medieval imagery, and a rejection of Victorian moral standards—elements Swinburne embraced and explored even further. His verse drama *Atalanta in Calydon* (1865) established him as a serious talent. Crafted in the style of ancient Greek tragedy, it displayed his mastery of classical form and his ability to create musical, dynamic verse that swept readers along, whether or not they grasped every word.

Then came *Poems and Ballads* in 1866, which caused an uproar.

Critics were appalled. The collection candidly explored themes of sadomasochism, paganism, lesbianism, and a playful antagonism towards Christianity. It was labeled immoral, depraved, and more. Swinburne reveled in the backlash. He was genuinely contrarian and held a lifelong distrust of religious authority, and the ensuing controversy only enhanced his image as the rebellious figure in Victorian poetry.

His personal life was tumultuous. He drank heavily, had a fascination with flagellation that permeated both his life and his work, and his health severely declined throughout the 1870s. In 1879, his friend and literary agent Theodore Watts-Dunton effectively rescued him by bringing Swinburne to live in his home in Putney. This arrangement lasted thirty years, up until Swinburne's death in 1909. Those later years turned out to be quieter and more productive than anyone anticipated—he continued writing, publishing, and softened somewhat without losing his edge.

Biographical span
1837Birth
1909Death

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