
Contents
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The True Face of Death The True Face of Death
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Amor Longa, Vitae Brevis Amor Longa, Vitae Brevis
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Exile Exile
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World’s End at Last World’s End at Last
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Misericord Misericord
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7 Betwixt the Bounds of Life and Death
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Published:December 2023
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Abstract
Chapter 7 traces the advance of Dowson’s tuberculosis, from his first ‘nasty jar on account of [his] lung’ in 1893 to his medically enforced ‘exile’ in Paris and Pont-Aven in 1895. The early realization that he would probably die young necessarily contributed to the disorder of his life after 1896, but its impact is best appreciated in his writing from this time, where death becomes an explicit and persistent preoccupation. Recognizing his own mortality caused Dowson to withdraw from the society of friends who had hitherto sustained him, and to re-evaluate his attachment to Foltinowicz. While this period was darkened by penury, illness, and severe depression, it also witnessed the publication of his epoch-making first book of poems, and the subsequent reinvention of his lyrical style, influenced by the painters of the Pont Aven School and the avant-garde company he was now keeping as a regular contributor to The Savoy.
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