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James Ward
   
Life
fl.1718 [Rev. James Ward]; Phoenix Park; by James Ward [in
his Miscellany of Poems, 1718], first genuinely topographical Irish
poem; the Park was laid out by Chesterfield in fulfilment of plans of
Duke of Ormond, in 1745. The poem was also included in Concanens
Miscellaneous Poems, Original and Translated by Several Hands (Lon.
1724). [No DNB entry.] PI FDA OCIL
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Criticism
J. W. Foster, Colonial Consequences (Lilliput 1991), writes: While
falling short of Coopers Hill and Windsor Castle,
Phoenix Park is a better poem than Garths Claremont
[...] Ward established Irish versions of topographical motifs ... that
became obligatory for Irish loco-descriptive poets; Further, Wards
Phoenix Park enacts most of the conventions including the
adulation of Caroline monarchy, and the three dimensional "walking"
space of the poems [13].
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Notes
D. J. ODonoghue, Poets of Ireland (Dublin: Hodges Figgis
1912), lists Phoenix Park, a poem (Dublin 1718); Mully of Mountown,
a poem [by Dr. W. King], and Orpheus and Euridice, a poem, and
Phoenix Park, a poem, by James Ward (Dublin 1718); sixteen poem
by Ward in Concanens Miscellaneous Poems (1724), including
Phoenix Park; BA TCD, 1711; MA, 1714. According to ODonoghue,
Ward was a TCD grad.
Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing
(1991), Vol. 1, 427-28 selects Phoenix Park [What scene
more lovely, and more formd for Bliss/What more deserves the Muses
strain than this ... Deep in the Vale old Liffy [sic] rolls his tides,/Romantic
Prospects crown his revrend Sides/ ... Britains Glory fills
my widning soul (FDA1, pp.427-27). FDA1, 492, 498, Bibl. & BIOG.,
little known; ed. TCD, and ordained; contributed to A Miscellany of
Poems and Translations (Dublin 1716), and Concanens Miscellaneous
Poems (London 1724); see D. J. ODonoghue, Poets of Ireland
(1912); WORKS, as above, and Phoenix Park (Dublin 1718). [Note
confusion over editor and date of Miscellany.]
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Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco)
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