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                  <text>Medievalism on the Page</text>
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                  <text>This Collection examines literary medievalism from the mid-nineteenth century to the present day. It traces an arc from the populist literary medievalism of the nineteenth century, through the more rarefied modernist turn of the mid-twentieth century, to the re-emergence of popular forms such as childrenâ€™s literature and fantasy since the 1980s. In this Collection you will find items relating to printed medievalist works and also to medievalism operating in print, for example in references to medieval events, people, and literature in nineteenth- and twentieth-century texts and dramatic works.</text>
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                <text>'Romance'</text>
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                <text>Alice Werner (1859-1935), castle, chivalry, â€˜Creeve Roeâ€™, Gothic medievalism, knight, L. D. (1859-1935), Lucia Di Valle Rojana (1859-1935), melancholia, poetry, romance, tournament, Victor Daley (1858-1905)</text>
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                <text>The long-vanished past is briefly reconfigured in this sad and poignant poem. It allows us a fleeting glimpse of what has (or may have) been, even though we find ourselves standing in the waking world â€œUnder blue skies in a fair land.â€ True Romance, it suggests, has gone the way of stately knights in armour, beautiful â€˜maidens forlorn,â€™ castles, and all the accoutrements and trappings of the chivalric medieval past. In gothic literary fashion the buildings, mores and customs have all crumbled, decayed, and vanished, and the poem â€œlament[s] the irredeemable loss of this world, which â€˜Ages ago [...] faded out and diedâ€™â€ (Louise D'Arcens, Old Songs in the Timeless Land: Medievalism in Australian Literature 1840-1910 Turnhout, Brepols, 2011, p.139). While these verses do convey sadness and melancholia, Australia was a new land, at least in terms of European settlement and influence, and so it can be concluded, as Louise Dâ€™Arcens suggests, that that, â€œthis melancholy poem is not coupled with any attempt to reanimate the spirit of nostalgia in the presentâ€ (Dâ€™Arcens, p.139). </text>
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                <text>L. D.  (Alice Werner aka Lucia Di Valle Rojana)</text>
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                <text>15 August 1885 (p. 22)</text>
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