Mimic Fires: Accounts of Early Long Poems on CanadaMcGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 1994 - 354 pages Bentley includes eighteen long poems by writers with first-hand experience of Canada, including Henry Kelsey, Thomas Cary, John Strachan, Thomas Moore, Oliver Goldsmith, John Richardson, Joseph Howe, William Kirby, Isabella Valancy Crawford, and Archibald Lampman. His commentaries offer a wealth of vital information on each poem, such as its place in the Canadian tradition, its prose sources, incidents and people from whom the poet drew inspiration, and structural and stylistic analysis. Mimic Fires provides a historical overview, a retrospective conclusion, and an extensive bibliography, and is informed throughout by ecopoetic, feminist, new historicist, and post-colonial theories. By improving our understanding of nineteenth-century Canadian writing, Mimic Fires in turn affects how we view writing in Canada in this century. |
Contents
A General History | 3 |
Henry Kelsey Now Reader Read | 13 |
Thomas Cary Abrams Plains | 25 |
J Mackay Quebec Hill | 39 |
Cornwall Bayley Canada | 52 |
John Strachan Verses 1802 | 68 |
Thomas Moore Poems Relating to Canada | 80 |
Adam Hood Burwell Talbot Road | 93 |
John Richardson Tecumseh | 139 |
Adam Kidd The Huron Chief | 154 |
Joseph Howe Acadia | 170 |
Standish OGrady The Emigrant | 188 |
Charles Sangster The St Lawrence and the Saguenay | 204 |
William Kirby The U E | 225 |
Alexander McLachlan The Emigrant | 248 |
Isabella Valancy Crawford Malcolms Katie | 272 |
Oliver Goldsmith The Rising Village | 109 |
George Longmore The Charivari | 124 |
Archibald Lampman The Story of an Affinity | 292 |
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Common terms and phrases
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