Robert williams buchanan, a poet, novelist and dramatist, diet

April 26th , 1881

Robert Williams Buchanan (August 18, 1841 - June 10, 1901) was a British poet, novelist and dramatist.

He was the son of Robert Buchanan (1813-1866), Owenite lecturer and journalist, and was born at Caverswall, Staffordshire. Buchanan senior, a native of Ayr, Scotland, lived for some years in Manchester, then moved to Glasgow, where Buchanan junior was educated, at the high school and the university, one of his fellow-students being the poet David Gray. His essay on Gray, originally published in the Cornhill Magazine, tells the story of their close friendship, and of their journey to London in 1860 in search of fame. After a period of struggle and disappointment Buchanan published Undertones in 1863. This tentative volume was followed by Idyls and Legends of Inverburn (1865), London Poems (1866), and North Coast and other Poems (1868), wherein he displayed a faculty for poetic narrative, and a sympathetic insight into the humbler conditions of life.

On the whole, Buchanan is at his best in these narrative poems, though he showed more ambition in The Book of Orm: A Prelude to the Epic, a study in mysticism, which appeared in 1870. He was a frequent contributor to periodicals, and obtained notoriety as a result of an article which, under the nom de plume of Thomas Maitland, he contributed to the Contemporary Review for October 1871. Entitled The Fleshly School of Poetry, this article was expanded into a pamphlet (1872), but he subsequently withdrew from the criticisms it contained, and it is chiefly remembered by the replies it evoked from Dante Gabriel Rossetti in a letter to the Athenaeum (December 16, 1871), entitled The Stealthy School of Criticism, and from Algernon Swinburne in Under the Microscope (1872).

Buchanan afterwards regretted the violence of his attack, and the old enemy to whom God and the Man is dedicated was Rossetti. In 1876 The Shadow of the Sword, the first and one of the best of a long series of novels, was published. Buchanan was also the author of many successful plays, including Lady Clare, produced in 1883; Sophia (1886), an adaptation of Tom Jones; A Mans Shadow (1890); and The Charlatan (1894). He also wrote, in collaboration with Harriett Jay, the melodrama Alone in London. In 1896 he became, so far as some of his work was concerned, his own publisher. In the autumn of 1900 he had a paralytic seizure, from which he never recovered. He died at Streatham. Buchanans poems were collected into three volumes in 1874, into one volume in 1884; and as Complete Poetical Works (2 vols., 1901). Among his poems should also be mentioned:

The Drama of Kings  (1871)  
St Abe and his Seven Wives , a lively tale of   <a href=-wiki-Salt_Lake_City title=Salt Lake City>Salt Lake City </a>, published anonymously in 1872  
Balder the Beautiful  (1877)  
The City of Dream  (1888)  
The Outcast: a Rhyme for the Time  (1891)  
The Wandering Jew  (1893).  

His earlier novels, The Shadow of the Sword , and God and the Man (1881), a striking tale of a family feud, are distinguished by a certain breadth and simplicity of treatment which is not so noticeable in their successors, among which may be mentioned:

The Martyrdom of Madeline  (1882)  
Foxglove Manor  (1885)  
Effie Hetherington  (1896)  
Father Anthony  (1898)  
David Gray and other Essays, chiefly on Poetry  (1868)  
Master Spirits  (1873)  
A Poets Sketch Book  (1883), in which the interesting essay on Gray is reprinted  
A Look round Literature  (1887), and the previous contain Buchanans chief contributions to periodical literature.  
The Land of Lame  (2 vols., 1871), a vivid record of yachting experiences on the west coast of Scotland.  

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