What is it about?

This article explores Alice Meynell's negotiation with her Romantic predecessors in "The Shepherdess." This poem parodically engages the conventions of lyric verse as exemplified in Byron's "She Walks in Beauty" and Wordsworth's "She Was a Phantom of Delight."

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Why is it important?

The article is important because it shows how "The Shepherdess" illuminates the tensions generated by the turn-of-the-century poet's effort to turn conservative aesthetic practice to modern feminist use.

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This page is a summary of: Looking "Past Wordsworth and the Rest": Pretexts for Revision in Alice Meynell's "The Shepherdess", Victorian Poetry, January 2000, Project Muse,
DOI: 10.1353/vp.2000.0011.
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