Subjects
The Poetry of British India, 1780–1905
Editor: Máire ní Fhlathúin
978 1 85196 985 2: 234x156mm: £195.00/$350.00
This two-volume reset edition draws together a selection of Anglo-Indian poetry from the Romantic era and the nineteenth century. The poets engage with India in different ways: some deal with the experience of migration, others respond to the Indian landscape, whilst the wider project of British rule in India also provides an important theme. The lament, the sonnet and the comic verse are all favoured forms.
This extensive body of literature is not well known, and can be accessed only in rare books and periodicals of the nineteenth century. This edition will restore a group of marginalized voices to the poetical canon.
Extensive new editorial matter, including a substantial general introduction, volume introductions, headnotes, endnotes, textual variants, chronologies and an index of titles and first lines will make this edition a vital resource for scholars researching Romantic and Nineteenth-Century Literature and Poetry.
- Offers a broad range of poetic works, including many which have not been published since their original publication
- Attributes works to previously unidentified authors
- Presents an overview of the tradition of British poetry as it developed in India during the Romantic and Victorian periods
- All texts are reset, with full scholarly apparatus and indices of first lines and titles
Contents
Volume 1: 1780–1835
William Jones, 'A Hymn to Camdeo' (1784); Elizabeth Ryves, from The Hastiniad; an Heroic Poem (1785); Ralph Broome, from The Letters of Simkin the Second, Poetic Recorder of All the Proceedings, Upon the Trial of Warren Hastings (1791); ‘Timothy Touchstone’, from Tea and Sugar, or, the Nabob and the Creole (1792); Anna Maria Jones, from The Poems of Anna Maria (1793); John Horsford, from A Collection of Poems written in the East Indies (1797); Warren Hastings, occasional verses (1797); Amelia Opie, Hindoo Airs (1800); Anon, from Calcutta: A Poem (1811); ‘W.’, from India: A Poem in Four Cantos (1812); Anon., from The Cadet, a Poem (1814); ‘Quiz’, from The Grand Master; or, Adventures of Qui Hi in Hindostan: A Hudibrastic Poem in Eight Cantos (1816); Henry Barkley Henderson, from The Goorkha, and Other Poems (1817); Henry Barkley Henderson, from Satires in India (1819); John Leyden, from The Poetical Remains of the Late Dr John Leyden: With a Memoir of His Life (1819); Anon, 'Letter from Sir Anthony Fudge, to his Friend, Sir Gabriel...', Calcutta Journal (1820); Thomas Medwin, from Oswald and Edwin: An Oriental Sketch (1820); Thomas Medwin, from Sketches in Hindoostan (1821); Maria Nugent, occasional verses from Calcutta Journal (1821, 1822); [T D Morris], from 'The Griffin', Bombay Gazette (1821); Anon, from Life and Adventures of Shigram-Po (1821); Anon, from Life and Adventures of James Lovewell (1829); George Anderson Vetch, from Poems: Containing Sultry Hours, and Songs of the Exile (1821); 'A Jolly Old Writer', from 'Rinaldo', Calcutta Journal (1822); John Lawson, from Orient Harping (1822); John Lawson, from The Maniac (1826); James Atkinson, from The City of Palaces (1824); Horace Gwynne, from Abdalla, an Oriental Poem: With Other Pieces (1824); Henry Meredith Parker, from The Draught of Immortality, and Other Poems (1827); Henry Meredith Parker, from Bole Ponjis (1851); Reginald Heber, occasional verses (1828); Mrs G G Richardson, from Poems (1828); Charles D'Oyly, from Tom Raw, the Griffin: A Burlesque Poem in Twelve Cantos (1828); Colonel Young, 'The Mosquito's Song', Bengal Annual (1830); David Lester Richardson, from periodicals (1830s); David Lester Richardson, from Literary Leaves (1836); David Lester Richardson, from Literary Chit-Chat (1848); Emma Roberts, from Oriental Scenes (1830, 1832); Augustus Prinsep, from 'The Dakoit', Bengal Annual (1831); Anon, from 'Frederick and Flora', Calcutta Magazine (1831); Robert Calder Campbell, from Lays from the East (1831); Robert Calder Campbell, from The Palmer's Last Lesson (1838); Anon ('a Young Civilian of Bengal'), from India. A Poem, in Three Cantos (1834); W F Thompson, occasional verses from Bengal Annual (1834–1836)
Volume 2: 1836–1905
Anon, from 'Griffe Epistles', Oriental Observer (1837); James Hutchinson, from The Sunyassee, an Eastern Tale (1838); Samuel Sloper, from The Dacoit, and Other Poems (1840); James Abbott, from The T'hakoorine: a Tale of Maandoo (1841); Mary Ann Hartley, from The Chaturanga; or Game of Chess (1841); James Henry Burke, from Days in the East: A Poem (1842); W R Bingham, from The Field of Ferozeshah, in Two Cantos, with Other Poems (1848); Ralph Thomas Hotchkin Griffith, from Specimens of Old Indian Poetry (1852); Ralph Thomas Hotchkin Griffith, from Scenes from the Ramayana (1868); John Dunbar, from Poems (1853); 'Koi Hai', from Poems (1853); Mary Carshore, from Songs of the East (1855); Henry George Keene, from Ex Eremo: Poems Chiefly Written in India (1855); Henry George Keene, from Peepul Leaves: Poems Written in India (1879); Mary J Jourdan, from Mind's Mirror: Poetical Sketches (1856); Mary Eliza Leslie, from Sorrows, Aspirations, and Legends from India (1858); ‘D M’, from Scenes from the Late Indian Mutinies (1858); Anon, from Ex Oriente: Sonnets on the Indian Rebellion (1858); 'L I T', from East and West (1859); Charles Arthur Kelly, from Delhi and Other Poems (1864); G O Trevelyan, from The Competition Wallah (1864); Thomas Benson Laurence, from Augusta, a Tale of the Mutiny of 1857, in Three Cantos, and Other Poems (1866); ‘Pips’ (W H Abbot), from Lyrics and Lays (1867); William Waterfield, from Indian Ballads, and Other Poems (1868); Robert Caldwell, from The Chutney Lyrics: A Collection of Comic Pieces in Verse on Indian Subjects (1871); George Augustine Stack, from The Songs of Ind (1872); ‘Chili Chutnee’, from Social Scraps and Satires (1878); W T Webb, from Indian Lyrics (1884); Edwin Arnold, from The Secret of Death (1885); Edwin Arnold, from Lotus and Jewel (1887); Thomas Frank Bignold, from Leviora: Being the Rhymes of a Successful Competitor (1888); A C Lyall, from Verses Written in India (1889); ‘Aliph Cheem’ (Walter Yeldham), from Lays of Ind (1893); G H Trevor, from Rhymes of Rajputana (1894); ‘Ram Bux’, from Boojum Ballads (1895); Alec McMillan, from Divers Ditties, Chiefly Written in India (1895); John Renton Denning, from Soldierin': a Few Military Ballads (1899); ‘S’, from C P Pieces, and Other Verse (1899); ‘Laurence Hope’ (Adela Nicolson), from The Garden of Kama, and other Love Lyrics from India (1901); ‘Laurence Hope’ (Adela Nicolson), from Stars of the Desert (1903); ‘Laurence Hope’ (Adela Nicolson), from Indian Love (1905); Alice MacDonald Kipling and Alice 'Trix' Kipling, from Hand in Hand (1902)