Shropshire
Title: Shropshire
Category: /Literature/English
Details: Words: 1171 | Pages: 4 (approximately 235 words/page)
Shropshire
Category: /Literature/English
Details: Words: 1171 | Pages: 4 (approximately 235 words/page)
Shropshire: A Place of Imagined Sexual Contentment
Published in 1869, A.E. Housman’s A Shropshire Lad stands as one of the most socially acclaimed collections of English poetry from the Victorian age. This period in British history, however, proves, by judiciary focus (the Criminal Law Amendment of 1885), to be conflictive with Housman’s own internal conflicts concerning the homoerotic tendencies which he discovered in his admiration of fellow Oxford student Moses Jackson. Housman, much unlike
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to knowingly find unrequited perspectives manifests itself as personified hope in both poems of which speak of experiences of intimate gratification and internal content.
Works Cited
Bayley, John. Housman’s Poems. Clarendon’s Press, Oxford. 1992.
Hoagwood, Terrence Allen. A.E Housman Revisited. Twayne Publishers, N.Y. 1995.
Housman, A.E. A Shropshire Lad. Ed. Stanley Appelbaum. General Publishing Co., Ltd., Toronto. 1990.
Scott-Kilvert, Ian. A.E. Housman: Writers and Their Work No. 69. Longmans, Green and Co., London. 1965.


