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A sourcebook of Victorian literary life, the diary of the Anglo-Irish poet William Allingham was first published in 1907. Coming from Donegal, where he was in the customs service, Allingham paid his first visit to London in 1847, published his first book of poems in 1850 and in 1851 began a lifelong infatuation with Tennyson. Tennyson is the central character of the book, talking and walking, airing his prejudices, reading his poems - "Allingham, would it disgust you if I read 'Maud'? Would you expire?"--And shown in many of the intimate revealing trivialities of his daily life.
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An illustrated version of the nineteenth-century poem about the "little men" and the mischief that they do.
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A complete bibliography of the minor talent Irish poet, playwright, and scholar, William Allingham. Includes descriptions of individual works, including illustrations, details about covers, publishing information, and the copies examined to create this bibliography.
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