A Critical Edition of Thomas Tod Stoddart's ‘The Death-Wake’ or 'Lunacy'

A Critical Edition of Thomas Tod Stoddart's ‘The Death-Wake’ or 'Lunacy'

A Necromaunt in Three Chimeras

Edited by Michael J. Abolafia

Anthem Studies in Gothic Literature

Thomas Tod Stoddart’s innovative gothic epic poem The Death-Wake (1831), now little known, may have been lost to history if not for the interventions of Edgar Allan Poe in 1842 and Andrew Lang in 1895. This critical edition reprints and contextualises Stoddart’s morbid and distinctive masterpiece, bringing to light an important but overlooked expression of the Scottish Gothic with transatlantic cultural implications.

EPUB, 200 Pages

ISBN:9781839994135

February 2026

£25.00, $35.00

PDF, 200 Pages

ISBN:9781839994142

February 2026

£25.00, $35.00

  • About This Book
  • Reviews
  • Author Information
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  • Table of Contents
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About This Book

Thomas Tod Stoddart is best remembered, if at all, for his angling poems, but few know the significance of Stoddart’s poetic output: when he burst onto the scene in 1831 as a 21-year-old romanticist with the incredible Gothic epic, The Death-Wake: Or Lunacy, a Necromaunt in Three Chimeras, he was anticipating Baudelaire, Poe and the Decadents, and crafting a new form of Scottish Gothic verse. Stoddart's poem is animated by a peculiar Gothic spirit: the title of the poem provides some indication of its utter strangeness and remarkable ubiquity. It tells the morbid and beautiful story of a monk who falls madly in love with a nun, Agathe, who dies in her youth. The monk, in a fit of madness, exhumes her body and voyages across the sea, encountering talking avatars of skeletons, a hermit and other sublime Gothic marvels.
The Death-Wake spawned imitations and parodies in major intellectual magazines such as Blackwood's, and Stoddart was also intimately associated with James Hogg and his intellectual circle. Yet most copies of the poem were either destroyed or lost, and it languished out of print until its mysterious afterlife in the hands first of Edgar Allan Poe and then later of Andrew Lang (of Lang's Fairy Tales fame). Edgar Allan Poe, as the editor of Graham’s Magazine, reprinted a fragment of the poem in 1842 under a modified title, which was signed by one ‘Louis Fitzgerald Tasistro’, a mostly forgotten American lawyer, writer and acquaintance of Poe’s. He had evidently plagiarised it, which caused a minor scandal. Praised by Poe, the poem’s morbid themes uncannily intimate Poe’s own obsessions in poems published around the same time (including ‘Annabel Lee’ and others). George MacDonald, the noted fantasist, owned and commented on the book as an inspiration for his otherworldly work. Later, in 1895, Andrew Lang, publisher of The Yellow Book, reprinted The Death-Wake under John Lane’s imprint, bringing it to the readership of the 1890s and providing an introduction extolling its merits.
This project will reprint, introduce and contextualise Stoddart’s poem for readers and, in the process, rediscover a Gothic writer of unparalleled imagination whose unique phantasmagoria are of as yet unexamined transatlantic cultural significance.

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Author Information

Michael J. Abolafia is a biographer, editor and archivist based in New Jersey. His work has appeared in The Times Literary Supplement. He graduated from Columbia University in 2017 with a BA in English.

Series

Anthem Studies in Gothic Literature

Table of Contents

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