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Archibald Lampman [1861-1899] CAN
Ranked #147 in the top 380 poets
Votes 83%: 53 up, 11 down

"Canadian Keats". Finest of Canada's late 19th-century poets in English. Nature poetry in the current late-Romantic style.

"The prime literary antecedents of Lampman lie in the work of the English poets Keats, Wordsworth, and Arnold,but he also brought new and distinctively Canadian elements to the tradition. Lampman, like others of his school, relied on the Canadian landscape to provide him with much of the imagery, stimulus, and philosophy which characterize his work... Acutely observant in his method, Lampman created out of the minutiae of nature careful compositions of color, sound, and subtle movement. Evocatively rich, his poems are frequently sustained by a mood of revery and withdrawal, while their themes are those of beauty, wisdom, and reassurance, which the poet discovered in his contemplation of the changing seasons and the harmony of the countryside."

The Canadian Encyclopedia calls his poems "for the most part close-packed melancholy meditations on natural objects, emphasizing the calm of country life in contrast to the restlessness of city living. Limited in range, they are nonetheless remarkable for descriptive precision and emotional restraint. Although characterized by a skilful control of rhythm and sound, they tend to display a sameness of thought."

Confederation group, which thrived from the 1890s to the 1920s, generally paid attention to classical forms and subjects, but also realistic description, some exploration of innovative technique and, in subject matter, an examination of the individual's relationships both to the natural world and modern civilization.

Widely regarded as Canada`s finest 19th-century English-language poet, Archibald Lampman was a member of the so-called "Confederation" group of poets which also included Charles G.D. Roberts, Bliss Carman and Duncan Campbell Scott. 

Lampman was born in 1861 in Morpeth, Ontario, a village near Chatham. In 1867, his family moved to Gore`s Landing in the Rice Lake district, where Lampman came to know the Strickland sisters, Susanna Moodie and Catharine Parr Traill. 

In 1868, at the age of seven, he contracted rheumatic fever, which weakened his constitution and probably contributed to his early death. In 1879, he began studies at Trinity College, Toronto (now the University of Toronto) where, in the spring of 1880, he read a new book of poems, Orion (1880) by Charles G.D. Roberts, which inspired him to begin his writing career in earnest. He contributed literary essays and poems to Rouge et noir, the college magazine. By the time he graduated in 1882, he had begun to submit his poems to literary magazines. From this point on, until the last year of his life, Lampman`s poems appeared frequently in Canadian, American and British periodicals, notably the Week, the Globe, and the American magazines Harper`s and Scribner`s. 

In 1883, after a brief and unsuccessful attempt at teaching high school in Orangeville,Ontario, Lampman took an appointment as a low-paid clerk in the Post Office Department, Ottawa, a position he held for the rest of his life. He soon formed a close friendship with fellow poet Duncan Campbell Scott, also a government employee, and the two enjoyed walking tours of the countryside surrounding Ottawa and canoeing expeditions into the wilderness north of Ottawa

In 1887, Lampman married Maud Playter and, with the help of a small legacy she provided, he published privately Among the Millet, and Other Poems (1888). Among the Millet demonstrated Lampman`s technical mastery as a poet and his skill at observing and contemplating nature. It met with critical acclaim and established Lampman as the finest English Canadian poet of his time. Lampman was shrewd enough to send out copies of his first book of poems to major periodicals in Canada, the United States and England. This ensured international attention for his work, and the receptivity of these periodicals to his poetry. 

From February 1892 to July 1893, Lampman and his friends Duncan Campbell Scott and W.W. Campbell collaborated on a weekly column of literary and social commentary entitled At the Mermaid Inn for the Globe. Lampman`s literary talent was recognized and appreciated, and in 1895 he was elected to the Royal Society of Canada. 

Among the most influential of Lampman`s friends was Katherine Waddell, a fellow clerk, with whom he fell in love in 1889. This attachment was a source of great distress for Lampman and its effect can be seen in the melancholic and socially critical tone of his later poems. His second book of verse, Lyrics of Earth was published by Copeland and Day of Boston in 1895. Despite Lampman`s efforts at promotion, the book did not sell well and received little notice among reviewers. After this experience, he chose to pay for the publication of his third volume, Alcyone, which he intended to have published in Edinburgh. Lampman was at work on the proofs of Alcyone when he died in February 1899 at the age of 37. Duncan Campbell Scott, as Lampman`s literary executor, ordered a printing of 12 copies in 1899. This was the first of several editions of Lampman`s poems edited by Scott, who endeavoured, all his life, to keep his friend`s literary reputation alive. 

Lampman`s reputation as the finest of Canada`s late 19th-century English poets stands to this day. He was a master of the sonnet, and his nature poems abound in vivid pictures of the Canadian landscape. Although the English Romantic influence is evident in his poetry, Lampman had the genius to create a distinctive voice of his own.

Sonnet, Confederation poets, Nature

YearsCountryPoetInteraction
1770-1850
ENG
William Wordsworth
→ influenced Archibald Lampman
1795-1821
ENG
John Keats
→ influenced Archibald Lampman
1822-1888
ENG
Matthew Arnold
→ influenced Archibald Lampman


WorkLangRating
A January Morning
eng
6
Snow
eng
5
The Truth
eng
5
In November (2)
eng
3
In November (1)
eng
2
A Niagara Landscape
eng
1
A Prayer
eng
1
A Song
eng
1
April
eng
1
April Night
eng
1
Ballade of Summer`s Sleep
eng
1
The City at the End of Things
eng
1
To my Mother
eng
1
Unrest
eng
1
Winter Evening
eng
1
Winter Uplands
eng
1
Winter-Solitude
eng
1
A Ballade of Waiting
eng
0
A Forecast
eng
0
A Night of Storm
eng
0
A Re-Assurance
eng
0
A Sunset at Les Eboulements
eng
0
A Thunderstorm
eng
0
A Vision Of Twilight
eng
0
Abu Midjan
eng
0
After Rain
eng
0
Alcyone
eng
0
Among The Millet
eng
0
Among The Orchards
eng
0
Among The Timothy
eng
0
Amor Vitae
eng
0
An Athenian Reverie
eng
0
An Autumn Landscape
eng
0
An Impression
eng
0
An October Sunset
eng
0
An Ode To The Hills
eng
0
An Old Lesson From The Fields
eng
0
April in the Hills
eng
0
Aspiration
eng
0
At The Ferry
eng
0
At the Long Sault: May, 1660
eng
0
Autumn Maples
eng
0
Before Sleep
eng
0
Between The Rapids
eng
0
By An Autumn Stream
eng
0
Chione
eng
0
Cloud-Break
eng
0
Comfort
eng
0
Comfort of the Fields
eng
0
Deeds
eng
0
Despondency
eng
0
Distance
eng
0
Easter Eve
eng
0
Evening
eng
0
Favorites of Pan
eng
0
Forest Moods
eng
0
Freedom
eng
0
Gentleness
eng
0
God-Speed to the Snow
eng
0
Good Speech
eng
0
Heat
eng
0
In Beechwood Cemetery
eng
0
In March
eng
0
In May
eng
0
In October
eng
0
Indian Summer
eng
0
Inter Vias
eng
0
June
eng
0
Knowledge
eng
0
Lament Of The Winds
eng
0
Life and Nature
eng
0
Love-Doubt
eng
0
Love-Wonder
eng
0
March
eng
0
Midnight
eng
0
Midsummer Night
eng
0
Morning on the Lièvre
eng
0
Morning On The Lievres
eng
0
Music
eng
0
New Year`s Eve
eng
0
On Lake Temiscamingu
eng
0
On The Companionshi
eng
0
One Day
eng
0
Outlook
eng
0
Passion
eng
0
Peccavi, Domine
eng
0
Perfect Love
eng
0
Personality
eng
0
Reality
eng
0
Refuge
eng
0
Sapphics
eng
0
September
eng
0
Sight
eng
0
Sleep
eng
0
Snowbirds
eng
0
Solitude
eng
0
Song
eng
0
Song of The Stream-Drops
eng
0
Spring On The River
eng
0
Storm
eng
0
Sunset
eng
0
Temagami
eng
0
The Autumn Waste
eng
0
The Better Day
eng
0
The Bird and the Hour
eng
0
The Child`s Music Lesson
eng
0
The City
eng
0
The City (2)
eng
0
The Clearer Self
eng
0
The Coming of Winter
eng
0
The Cup of Life
eng
0
The Dog
eng
0
The Frogs
eng
0
The Growth Of Love XI
eng
0
The Islet And The Palm
eng
0
The King`s Sabbath
eng
0
The Land Of Pallas
eng
0
The Largest Life
eng
0
The Little HandMaiden
eng
0
The Loons
eng
0
The Martyrs
eng
0
The Meadow
eng
0
The Monk
eng
0
The Moon-Path
eng
0
The Mystery Of A Year
eng
0
The Organist
eng
0
The Poets
eng
0
The Poet`s Possession
eng
0
The Poet`s Song
eng
0
The Railway Station
eng
0
The Return of the Year
eng
0
The Song Of Pan
eng
0
The Song Sparrow
eng
0
The Sun Cup
eng
0
The Sweetness of Life
eng
0
The Three Pilgrims
eng
0
The Weaver
eng
0
The Woodcutter`s Hut
eng
0
Three Flower Petals
eng
0
To a Millionaire
eng
0
To My Daughter
eng
0
To My Wife
eng
0
To The Cricket
eng
0
To the Ottawa
eng
0
To The Prophetic Soul
eng
0
Viva Perpetua
eng
0
Voices of Earth
eng
0
War
eng
0
We too shall Sleep
eng
0
What Do Poets Want With Gold?
eng
0
White Pansies
eng
0
Why Do Ye Call The Poet Lonely
eng
0
Winter
eng
0
Winter Break
eng
0
Winter Hue`s Recalled
eng
0
Winter-Store
eng
0
Winter-Thoug
eng
0
With The Night
eng
0

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