William Barnes, Dialect Poems in the Dorset County Chronicle
Emma Mason editor T L Burton editor John Blackmore editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Publishing:31st Dec '25
£150.00
This title is due to be published on 31st December, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

It is commonly believed that William Barnes (1801–1886) steered clear of politics in his poetry. Yet, the first poem he ever published in the Dorset dialect was an attack on the enclosures of the village commons in the 1830s. His next eight poems dealt with such topics as rural poverty, penury-induced emigration, the Poor Laws and Corn Laws, and the People’s Charter of 1838. This edition of his dialect poems – arranged in the chronological order of their first publication in the Dorset County Chronicle – exposes the fallacy of the old assumptions about Barnes’s lack of interest in political affairs. It shows the gradual development of Barnes’s artistry as a poet and of the linguistic means through which he set out to represent in writing the key features of the dialect of his native Blackmore Vale.
William Barnes is a great lyric and political poet, but his achievement has often been obscured by difficulties associated with his dialect. Now, for the first time, the development of his subjects and language are thoroughly illuminated, in an edition which restores Barnes to his rightful eminence among Victorian poets. -- Andrew Motion, Johns Hopkins University
ISBN: 9781474401050
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
608 pages