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Leigh Hunt's Oriental Motifs – Abou BenAdhem*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2009

Extract

On an October day in 1869 Lord Houghton, friend ofThackeray and Tennyson, appeared in the cemetery atKensal Green, in West London. He was there to unveila tomb memorial to the poet Leigh Hunt; this wassurmounted by a bust, and bore the legend:

It is not really surprising that place of honour onLeigh Hunt's tomb is taken by a quotation from “hisexquisite little fable ‘Abou ben Adhem’” which “hasassured him a permanent place in the records of theEnglish language”,1 and whose “touch ofglory, like a sacred flame on a clear and gracefulaltar, has captured the succeedinggenerations”.2 The poet himself, LeighHunt, regarded this poem as one of hisbest.3 It is recorded that a friendpresented to him an illuminated copy of it, which hehung above his writing table.4

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1997

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