Lady Jane Grey (poem)
"Lady Jane Grey" is an English epic poem by Francis Hodgson. It was published in 1809. It tells about the life and death of Lady Jane Grey.
The hero
changeJane Grey, known as The Nine Days Queen, was a great-granddaughter of the king Henry VII, father of Henry VIII. When Henry VIII's son and successor Edward VI died, the crown of England was offered to her. She was however soon put in prison by Queen Mary I of England, called Bloody Mary. She was sentenced to death. She had her head cut off in the Tower of London. She was seventeen years old at the time.
The author
changeFrancis Hodgson was an English romantic poet. He was born in 1781. He was a friend of Lord Byron.[1] He was known as a translator. He translated into English many works by Roman poets. He died in 1852.
The form
changeThe poem is written in iambic pentameter[2][3] put in heroic couplets. Such form was typical for English poetry in 18th century.[4]
Through these low grounds of sorrow, toil and strife,
As runs the troubled stream of human life,
Why should the poor laborious crowd repine?
For wealth, for honour, lovely Jane were thine,
Yet my sad tale examplifies in thee,
How equal are our shares of misery
Or in the highest, or the humblest lot,
The king's proud palace, or the straw-roof'd cot.
Reviews
changeThe poem was reviewed in The Satirist: Or, Monthly Meteor[5] and The Anti-Jacobin Review and Magazine Or Monthly Political and Literary Censor.[6]
References
change- ↑ Oskar Wellens, Francis Hodgson: Reviewer of Byron.
- ↑ Shakespearean Sonnet Basics: Iambic Pentameter and the English Sonnet Style.
- ↑ Iambic pentameter at Encyclopaedia Britannica.
- ↑ Heroic Couplet at Encyclopaedia Britannica.
- ↑ The Satirist: Or, Monthly Meteor. Samuel Tipper. 1809. p. 68.
- ↑ The Anti-Jacobin Review and Magazine Or Monthly Political and Literary Censor. 1809. p. 173.