Biography
**Alexander Smith** (1830-1867) was born in Kilmarnock to a lowlander John Smith and highlander Murray Smith. He was part of the Spasmodic School along with other poets such as Sydney Dobell and P.J. Bailey, whose works were notable for their rapid rise and fall from fame. These Spasmodic poets were associated for their writing traits of lengthy, displaced imagery, odd themes and dark poems.
He worked in the linen factory since he could not afford college, before he started writing poetry. His earlier poems, A Life in Drama and other Poems (1853) which appeared in the Glasgow Citizen, was well received. However, the morality of the spasmodic poetry was later questioned by critics, especially the one whereby the hero raped a girl who is in love with him. The publication of City Poems (1857), which contained the poem "Glasgow”, was slightly more successful. However by then, Smith was much belittled in his work and even accused of plagiarising the work of Tennyson and Keats. He married Flora Macdonald from Skye in 1857.
Inspired by the event in Crimean War, Smith also worked with Sydney Dobell, his good friend, to produce a series of sonnets known as War Sonnets (1855). Later, Smith was so harshly mocked through the work of WE Aytuon’s parody of genre, Fimilian (1854) that he never recovered from the spasmodic label. Edwin of Northumbria Edwin of Deira (1861) was believed to be Smith last set of poems published.
He then turned to writing prose such as Dreamthorp: Essays written in the Country (1863), A Summer in Skye (1865), Miss Dona M’Quarrie and Alfred Hagart’s Household (1866). Though his proses received more encouraging words from critics, Smith, however, never enjoyed writing proses as much as he did for poems.
He later died in Wardie, near Edinburgh.
**References**:
1. "Smith, Alexander." - Poems, Book, and Life. 9th Edition of Encyclopedia Britannica, n.d. Web. 12 Nov. 2012. <http://www.libraryindex.com/encyclopedia/pages/cpxlbjx057/smith-alexander-poems-book.html>.
2. "Swinburne's spasms: Poems and Ballads and the 'Spasmodic School'." The Free Library. N.p.. Web. 12 Nov 2012. <http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Swinburne's spasms: Poems and Ballads and the 'Spasmodic School'.-a0148675303>.
3. "Dobell, Sydney." 9th Edition of Encyclopedia Britannica. N.p.. Web. 12 Nov 2012. <http://www.libraryindex.com/encyclopedia/pages/cpxl8pk2zi/dobell-sydney-time-poet.html
He worked in the linen factory since he could not afford college, before he started writing poetry. His earlier poems, A Life in Drama and other Poems (1853) which appeared in the Glasgow Citizen, was well received. However, the morality of the spasmodic poetry was later questioned by critics, especially the one whereby the hero raped a girl who is in love with him. The publication of City Poems (1857), which contained the poem "Glasgow”, was slightly more successful. However by then, Smith was much belittled in his work and even accused of plagiarising the work of Tennyson and Keats. He married Flora Macdonald from Skye in 1857.
Inspired by the event in Crimean War, Smith also worked with Sydney Dobell, his good friend, to produce a series of sonnets known as War Sonnets (1855). Later, Smith was so harshly mocked through the work of WE Aytuon’s parody of genre, Fimilian (1854) that he never recovered from the spasmodic label. Edwin of Northumbria Edwin of Deira (1861) was believed to be Smith last set of poems published.
He then turned to writing prose such as Dreamthorp: Essays written in the Country (1863), A Summer in Skye (1865), Miss Dona M’Quarrie and Alfred Hagart’s Household (1866). Though his proses received more encouraging words from critics, Smith, however, never enjoyed writing proses as much as he did for poems.
He later died in Wardie, near Edinburgh.
**References**:
1. "Smith, Alexander." - Poems, Book, and Life. 9th Edition of Encyclopedia Britannica, n.d. Web. 12 Nov. 2012. <http://www.libraryindex.com/encyclopedia/pages/cpxlbjx057/smith-alexander-poems-book.html>.
2. "Swinburne's spasms: Poems and Ballads and the 'Spasmodic School'." The Free Library. N.p.. Web. 12 Nov 2012. <http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Swinburne's spasms: Poems and Ballads and the 'Spasmodic School'.-a0148675303>.
3. "Dobell, Sydney." 9th Edition of Encyclopedia Britannica. N.p.. Web. 12 Nov 2012. <http://www.libraryindex.com/encyclopedia/pages/cpxl8pk2zi/dobell-sydney-time-poet.html
Books by Alexander Smith
Summer in Skye; Volume I
Summer in Skye; Volume I
Laboratory Outline of College
Laboratory Outline of College Chemistry
Pride of Mothers
Pride of Mothers
Scóóby Doó Easter Coloring
Scóóby Doó Easter Coloring
Summer in Skye; Volume II
Summer in Skye; Volume II
Close to the Cradle
Close to the Cradle
Edwin of Deira (Classic Reprin
Edwin of Deira (Classic Reprint)
Embracing Shadows
Embracing Shadows
Poems Third Edition
Poems Third Edition
The Rural Settlement of Roman
The Rural Settlement of Roman Britain
German : Learn German - the Ul
German : Learn German - the Ultimate Crash Course to Learning the Basics of the German Language in No Time - German Dictionary
Complete History of the Lives
Complete History of the Lives and Robberies of the Most Notorious Highwaymen, Footpads, Shoplifts and Cheats of Both Sexes, a
Dead Hollywood Blondes Act One
Dead Hollywood Blondes Act One
SmithGs Introductory college chemistry
An essay on an old subject
General Chemistry for Colleges
General Chemistry for Colleges. Second Edition.
A dynamic method for measuring
A dynamic method for measuring vapour pressures
Laboratory Outline of General Chemistry ...
A Laboratory Manual of Organic Chemistry: A Compendium of Laboratory Methods ...
A Summer in Skye