William Watson (poet)
| Sir William Watson | |
|---|---|
Photo by Elliott & Fry, Ltd. |
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| Born | 2 August 1858 Burley-in-Wharfedale, Yorkshire |
| Died | 13 August 1935 (aged 77) Rottingdean, Sussex |
Sir William Watson (2 August 1858 – 13 August 1935), was an English poet, popular in his time for the political content of his verse. He was born in Burley, in West Yorkshire.
He was a prolific poet of the 1890s, and a contributor to The Yellow Book, though without 'decadent' associations. Indeed he was very much on the traditionalist wing of English poetry. He had a gift for resonant phrasing and reiterative rhythms which he mistook (and for 20 years many critics mistook) as a gift for poetry. He was, however, well equipped to write suitable effusions on public occasions, indeed better equipped than any of his contemporaries. This made him, on Tennyson's death (1892), a strong candidate for Poet Laureate, but his often extreme views on foreign policy (he was passionately anti-Ottoman) and a breakdown in 1894 led to him being passed over by the then Prime Minister Lord Salisbury in favour of Alfred Austin, who was a poor poet but a loyal conservative. Again after Austin's death in 1913, Asquith seriously considered him for the post, despite the fact that he had written a cruel pasquil against Margot Asquith ('She is not old, she is not young/ The woman with the serpent's tongue'). In exchange for writing a panegyric of Lloyd George (1917) he was awarded a knighthood. After the Great War he was largely forgotten, until a number of literary men in 1935 issued a public appeal for a fund to support him in his old age; but when he died the following year, his widow Lady Watson was obliged to seek employment in domestic service. In all he was a sad example of a writer who was at first overrated and then neglected because of changing tastes, a misfortune all too common in the twentieth century. He deserves, however, to be remembered for a few poems (such as 'Wordsworth's Grave') that say conventional things gracefully and rightly.
[edit] Works
- The Prince's Quest and Other Poems (1880)
- Epigrams of Art, Life and Nature (1884)
- Wordsworth’s Grave and Other Poems (1890)
- Poems (1892)
- Lachrymae Musarum (1892)
- Lyric Love: An Anthology (1892)
- Eloping Angels : A Caprice (1893)
- The Poems of William Watson (1893)
- Excursions in Criticism: Being Some Prose Recreations Of A Rhymer (1893)
- Odes and Other Poems (1894)
- The Father of the Forest & Other Poems (1895)
- The Purple East: A Series Of Sonnets On England's Desertion of Armenia (1896)
- The Year of Shame (1897)
- The Hope of the World and Other Poems (1898)
- The Collected Poems of William Watson (1899)
- Ode on the Coronation of King Edward VII (1902)
- Selected Poems (1903)
- For England. Poems Written During Estrangement (1904)
- New Poems (1909)
- Sable and Purple (1910)
- The Heralds of the Dawn: A Play in Eight Scenes (1912)
- The Muse in Exile (1913)
- Pencraft. A Plea For The Older Ways (1916)
- The Man Who Saw: and Other Poems Arising out of the War (1917)
- Retrogression and Other Poems (1917)
- The Superhuman Antagonists and Other Poems (1919)
[edit] References
- Jean Moorcroft Wilson (1981) I Was an English Poet: a Critical Biography of Sir William Watson 1858-1936
- Kunitz, Stanley J and Howard Haycraft, Twentieth Century Authors. H.W.Wilson, 1942.
[edit] External links
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