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De Vere, Aubrey (1814-1902), poet, son of Sir Aubrey de Vere; born at Curragh Chase, Co. Limerick, and educated there and at TCD. During the Famine of 1845-8 he assisted his elder brother, Sir Stephen de Vere (1812-1904), in relief schemes. These experiences informed the writing of English Misrule and Irish Misdeeds (1848). In 1851 he was received into the Catholic Church. May Carols or Ancilla Domini (1857) was a serial poem on Mary as ‘religion itself in its essence’, while Legends of the Saxon Saints (1879), and Legends of St. Patrick (1889), memorialized early Christianity. In 1856, at Cardinal Newman's invitation, he delivered a series of lectures on literature at the Catholic University [see universities] in Dublin. De Vere's most accomplished poem, Inisfail (published with The Sisters in 1861 and separately in 1862), attributes a spiritual mission to the country. The Foray of Queen Maeve (1882) celebrates the simplicity of the ancient Irish heroes. Amongst his other publications were Picturesque Sketches of Greece and Turkey (1850) and Recollections (1897), the latter containing portraits of his many friends.

 
 
Wikipedia: Aubrey Thomas de Vere

Aubrey Thomas de Vere (10 January 181420 January 1902) was an Irish poet and critic.

He was born at Curragh Chase, County Limerick, being the third son of Sir Aubrey de Vere Hunt (1788-1846). In 1832 his father dropped the final name by royal licence. Sir Aubrey was himself a poet. Wordsworth called his sonnets the most perfect of the age. These and his drama, Mary Tudor, were published by his son in 1875 and 1884. Aubrey Thomas was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, and in his twenty-eighth year published The Waldenses, which he followed up in the next year by The Search after Proserpine. Thenceforward he was continually engaged, till his death in 1902, in the production of poetry and criticism.

His best-known works are: in verse, The Sisters (1861); The Infant Bridal (1864); Irish Odes (1869); Legends of St Patrick (1872); and Legends of the Saxon Saints (1879); and in prose, Essays chiefly on Poetry (1887); and Essays chiefly Literary and Ethical (1889). He also wrote a picturesque volume of travel-sketches, and two dramas in verse, Alexander the Great (1874); and St Thomas of Canterbury (1876); both of which, though they contain fine passages, suffer from diffuseness and a lack of dramatic spirit. His best remembered poem is Inisfail.

The characteristics of Aubrey de Vere's poetry are high seriousness and a fine religious enthusiasm. His research in questions of faith led him to the Roman Church; and in many of his poems, notably in the volume of sonnets called St Peters Chains (1888), he made rich additions to devotional verse. He was a disciple of Wordsworth, whose calm meditative serenity he often echoed with great felicity; and his affection for Greek poetry, truly felt and understood, gave dignity and weight to his own versions of mythological idylls. But perhaps he will be chiefly remembered for the impulse which he gave to the study of Celtic legend and Celtic literature. In this direction he has had many followers, who have sometimes assumed the appearance of pioneers; but after Matthew Arnold's fine lecture on Celtic Literature, nothing perhaps did more to help the Celtic revival than Aubrey de Vere's tender insight into the Irish character, and his stirring reproductions of the early Irish epic poetry.

A volume of Selections from his poems was edited in 1894 (New York and London) by G. E. Woodberry.

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Irish Literature Companion. The Concise Oxford Companion to Irish Literature. Copyright © 1996, 2000, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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