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PHILIP BOURKE MARSTON (1850-1887)

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Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 777 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PHILIP
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BOURKE MARSTON (1850-1887)
  ,
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English poet, was born in
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London on the 13th of August 185o . His
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father, JoHN WESTLAND MARSTON (1819-1890), of
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Lincolnshire origin, the friend of Dickens, Macready and Charles Kean, was the author of a series of metrical dramas which held the stage in succession to the ambitious efforts of John Tobin, Talfourd, Bulwer and Sheridan Knowles . . His chief plays were The Patrician's Daughter (1841), Strathmore (1849), A Hard Struggle (1858) and Donna
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Diana (1863) . He was looked up to as the upholder of the outworn tradition of the acted poetic drama, but his plays showed little vitality, and MVIarston's reviews for the
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Athenaeum, including one of Swinburne's
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Atalanta in Calydon, and his dramatic criticisms embodied in Our
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Recent Actors (1888) will probably claim a more enduring reputation . His Dramatic and Poetical
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Works were collected in 1876 . The son, Philip
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Bourke, was born in a
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literary atmosphere . His sponsors were Philip James Bailey and Dinah Mulock (Mrs Craik) . At his father's house near
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Chalk
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Farm he met authors and actors of his father's generation, and subsequently the Rossettis, Swinburne, Arthur O'Shaughnessy and Irving . From his earliest years his literary precocity was overshadowed by misfortunes . In his
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fourth
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year, in
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part owing to an accident, his sight began to decay, and he gradually became almost totally blind . His
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mother died in 1870 . His fiancee, Mary Nesbit, died in 1871; his closest friend, Oliver Madox Brown, in 1874; his
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sister
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Cicely, his amanuensis, in 1878; in 1879 his remaining sister, Eleanor, who was followed to the
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grave after a brief
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interval by her
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husband, the poet O'Shaughnessy, and her two children .

In 1882 the

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death of his chief poetic ally and inspirer, Rossetti, was followed closely by the tragedy of another kindred spirit, the sympathetic pessimist, James Thomson (" B . V."), who was carried dying from his blind friend's rooms, where he had sought
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refuge from his latest miseries early in
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June of the same year . It is said that Marston came to dread making new friendships, for fear of evil coming to the recipients of his affection . In the face of such calamities it is not surprising that Marston's verse became more and more sorrowful and melancholy . The idylls of flower-
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life, such as the early and very beautiful " The Rose and the Wind " were succeeded by dreams of sleep and the repose of death . These qualities and gradations of feeling, reflecting the poet's successive ideals of
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action and quiescence, are traceable through his three published collections, Songtide (1871), All in All (18i5) and Wind Voices (1883) . The first and third, containing his best
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work, went out of
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print, but Marston's verse was collected in 1892 by Mrs Louise Chandler Moulton, a loyal and devoted friend, and herself a poet . Marston read little else but
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poetry; and of poetic values, especially of the intenser order, his
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judgment could not be surpassed in sensitiveness . He was saturated with Rossetti and Swinburne, and his imitative power was remarkable . In his later years he endeavoured to make
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money by writing short stories in Home Chimes and other
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American magazines, through the agency of Mrs Chandler Moulton . His popularity in
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America far exceeded that in his own country . His
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health showed signs of collapse from 1883; in
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January 1887 he lost his voice, and suffered intensely from the failure to make himself understood .

He died on the 13th of

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February 1887 . He was commemorated in Dr Gordon Hake's " Blind Boy," and in a
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fine sonnet by Swinburne, beginning " The days of a man are threescore years and ten." There is an intimate sketch of the blind poet by a friend, Mr Coulson Kernahan, in Sorrow and
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Song (1894), p . 127 . (T .

End of Article: PHILIP BOURKE MARSTON (1850-1887)
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