Specimens of British Poetesses; selected and chronologically arranged (1825) by Alexander Dyce is an anthology of verse jointly published in London by Thomas Rodd and Septimus Prowett,[1] near the beginning of Dyce's long career as a literary critic, editor, and historian. It was not the first published anthology of poetry by British women writers — that may have been Poems by Eminent Ladies 2 Vols. (London: R. Baldwin, 1755) — but it was the most comprehensive to date: encompassing 446 pages, it includes 196 poems or excerpts from longer pieces by eighty-nine (89) writers written between approximately 1460 and 1821. In the preface, Dyce highlights some of the issues that continue to concern researchers of women's writing, in particular, identifying them: among the eighty-nine he includes the work of four anonymous authors, and many of the brief biographical notes with which he introduces each writer are sparse or in some cases absent altogether. He writes, "we feel an honest satisfaction in the reflection, that our tedious chase through the jungles of forgotten literature must procure to this undertaking the good-will of our country-women....[O]ur work will never be deprived of the happy distinction of being one of the first that has been entirely consecrated to women."[2]
One commentator has called Specimens "an impressively varied collection" that "exemplifies the remarkably catholic taste" of the editor.[3] The collection was well received by literary luminaries William Wordsworth and Leigh Hunt, and was well-reviewed in The Literary Gazette.[4] There was a second printing, by Thomas Rodd alone, in 1827. The British Library reprinted an edition in 2011.[5]
^Berners, Juliana, Boleyn, Anne, Askewe, Anne. Specimens of British poetesses; selected and chronologically arranged, by the Rev. Alexander Dyce. The Women's Print History Project, 2019, title ID 13614. Accessed 2023-08-31.
^Dyce, Preface, iv, v.
^Paul Salzman, "Editing early modern women: Alexander Dyce's Specimens of British Poetesses, (1825)", Public talk, 03 May 2016.
^Salzman, Paul. "How Alexander Dyce Assembled Specimens of British Poetesses: A Key Moment in the Transmission of Early Modern Women’s Writing". Women's Writing, 26:1, 2019.
^ISBN 9781241568191
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