- John Davidson (poet)
John Davidson (
April 11 ,1857 –March 23 ,1909 ), Scottishpoet andplaywright , best known for hisballad s.He was born at
Barrhead ,East Renfrewshire as the son of a Dissenting minister and entered the chemical department of a sugar refinery in Greenock in his 13th year, returning after one year to school as a pupil teacher.He studied at theUniversity of Edinburgh . He was afterwards engaged in teaching at various places, and having taken to literature went in 1889 to London.He achieved a reputation as a writer of poems and plays of marked individuality and vivid realism. His poems include "
In a Music Hall " (1891), "Fleet Street Eclogues " (1893), "Baptist Lake " (1894), "New Ballads " (1896), "The Last Ballad " (1898), "The Triumph of Mammon " (1907), and among his plays are "Bruce " (1886), "" (1888), "Godfrida " (1898). He also wrote novels. From 1901 he wrote pessimisticblank verse "Testaments". He was given aCivil List pension in 1906.Davidson disappeared on
March 27 ,1909 , under circumstances which left little doubt that under the influence of mental depression he had drowned himself at Penzance. Among his papers was found the manuscript of a new work, "Fleet Street Poems ", with a letter containing the words, "This will be my last book." His body was discovered a few months later.Davidson's poetry was a key early influence on important Modernist poets, in particular
TS Eliot andWallace Stevens . Davidon's poem "In the Isle of Dogs", for example, is a clear intertext of later poems such as Eliot's "The Wasteland " and Stevens' "The Idea of Order at Key West ".Works
* "Diabolus Amans" (1885), verse drama
* "Fleet Street Eclogues" (1893)
* Contributor to "The Yellow Book "
* "Ballads and Songs" (1894),
* "A Full and True Account of the Wonderful Mission of Earl Lavender" (1895)
* "Fleet Street Eclogues (Second Series)" (1896)
* "New Ballads" (1897)
* "The Last Ballad" (1899).References
* "John Davidson, First of the Moderns; A Literary Biography" (1995) by John Sloan
* "Karl E. Beckson, London in the 1890s: A Cultural History" (1992)External links
* [http://www.accuracyproject.org/cbe-Davidson,John-poet.html John Davidson] profile at Internet Accuracy Project
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