Clough, Arthur Hugh (1819-1861)| English poet. Much of his work is marked by a melancholy scepticism that reflects his struggle with his religious doubt. The Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich (1848) is a witty and entertaining poem in which he presented advanced views on contemporary issues. |
| In 1849 he wrote ‘Amours de voyage’, a poem in the form of letters; ‘Dipsychus’, a satire, followed in 1850. His lyric ‘Say not the struggle nought availeth’ was published posthumously in Poems (1862). |
| Clough was born in Liverpool and studied at Oxford. At this time Oxford was in the throes of fierce theological controversy, and Clough fell for a time under the influence of John Newman's High Church principles; this was followed by a period of scepticism, and in 1848 he felt it necessary to resign his post (lecturers at that time had to be ordained). He was principal of University Hall, London, 1849-52, and in 1856 was appointed secretary to a commission for examining scientific military schools in Europe. |
| Clough's conceits look back to the metaphysical poets, while his honesty, experimentation with style, and his use of modern imagery (such as railways and telegraphy) are precursors of the work of T S Eliot. |
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