Copyright

R. H. Winnick

Published On

2025-11-10

Page Range

pp. 227–244

Language

  • English

Print Length

18 pages

12. ‘Cyclops’

In episode 12 (‘Cyclops’), in works by Shakespeare, Trollope, Arthur Machen, Anton Chekhov, Robert Montgomery, James Thomson, John Keats, Milton, Emerson, Torquato Tasso, Ethna Carbery, Edward Waller Claypole, Rosalia St. Clair, John Sterling, T. H. Darlow, Jeffery Farnol, William Hamilton Maxwell, Robert Fabyan, Marlowe, Francis Quarles, Giovanni Boccaccio, the anonymous author of ‘Execution of Probert, &c.’ in The Examiner, Shakespeare, Jonson, Milton, John Hollingshead, the anonymous author of ‘The Shakespeare Night’ in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée, Friedrich Schiller, Alessandro Manzoni, Zola, Karl Kraus, Horace Traubel, Thomas Campbell, Shakespeare, Sir John Harrington, the anonymous author of The Captive of Valence; or, The Last Moments of Pius VI, the fraudulent ‘Baroness von Beck’, and an anonymous account of a one-sided naval engagement published in The Nautical Magazine and Naval Chronicle for 1841.

Contributors

R. H. Winnick

(author)

R. H. Winnick earned his Ph.D. in English and American Literature from Princeton University in 1976, receiving dissertation credit for his co-authorship, as a graduate student, of Robert Frost: The Later Years, 1938–1963 (Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1977), vol. 3 of the late Lawrance Thompson’s Pulitzer Prize-winning (for vol. 2) ‘official’ Frost biography. He next researched an authorized biography of the American poet, playwright, educator, journalist, and statesman Archibald MacLeish, and edited Letters of Archibald MacLeish, 1907 to 1982 (Houghton Mifflin, 1983). Winnick’s next book, Tennyson’s Poems: New Textual Parallels, published in 2019 by Open Book Publishers, documented more than a thousand previously unrecognized, unidentified, or misidentified textual parallels in the work of that poet, and has since been accessed online or downloaded more than thirty thousand times. He has also published sixteen article-length studies on Chaucer, Sidney, Shakespeare, Melville, Clough, Hardy, and Larkin, appearing in, among other journals, The Chaucer Review, Nineteenth-Century Literature, Literary Imagination, The Hardy Review, and About Larkin.