Arthur Symons (February 28, 1865 - January 22, 1945), was a British poet and critic.

Born in Wales, of Cornish parents, Symons was educated privately, spending much of his time in France and Italy. In 1884-1886 he edited four of Bernard Quaritch's Shakespeare Quarto Facsimiles, and in 1888-1889 seven plays of the "Henry Irving" Shakespeare. He became a member of the staff of the Athenaeum in 1891, and of the Saturday Review in 1894.

His first volume of verse, Days and Nights (1889), consisted of dramatic monologues. His later verse is influenced by a close study of modern French writers, of Baudelaire and especially of Verlaine. He reflects French tendencies both in the subject-matter and style of his poems, in their eroticism and their vividness of description.

In 1902 he made a selection from his earlier verse, published as Poems. He translated from the Italian of Gabriele D'Annunzio The Dead City (1900) and The Child of Pleasure (1898), and from the French of Émile Verhaeren The Dawn (1898). To The Poems of Ernest Dowson (1905) he prefixed an essay on the deceased poet, who was a kind of English Verlaine and had many attractions for Symons.

Table of contents
1 Verse
2 Essays
3 Reference

Verse

  • Days and Nights (1889)
  • Silhouettes (1892)
  • London Nights (1895)
  • Amoris victima (1897)
  • Images of Good and Evil (1899)
  • Poems (2 vols.), (1902)
  • A Book of Twenty Songs (1905)
  • Knave of Hearts (1913). Poems written between 1894 and 1908)
  • Love's Cruelty (1923)
  • Jezebel Mort, and other poems (1931)

Essays

  • Studies in Two Literatures (1897)
  • The Symbolist School in Literature (1899)
  • Cities (1903), word-pictures of Rome, Venice, Naples, Seville, etc.
  • Plays, Acting and Music (1903)
  • Studies in Prose and Verse (1904)
  • Spiritual Adventures (1905)
  • Studies in Seven Arts (1906).
  • Figures of Several Centuries (1916)
  • Studies in the Elizabethan Drama (1919)
  • Charles Baudelaire: A Study (1920)
  • Confessions: A Study in Pathology (1930). A book containing Symons's description of his breakdown and treatment.
  • A Study of Walter Pater (1934)

Reference