√ | Century of Experience | Evidence | Name of Reader / Listener / Reading Group | Author of Text | Title of Text | Form of Text | |
| 1900-1945 | '[Muir's] account of his reading material as a young man in Glasgow points to an involvement with poems of the Romanti... | Edwin Muir | Algernon Charles Swinburne | 'Atalanta in Calydon' | Print: Unknown |
| 1850-1899 | "In 1862, as a 25-year-old rebel ... [Swinburne] took it on himself to scandalize a dinner party at Fryston. His tar... | Algernon Swinburne | Algernon Swinburne | Les Noyades | |
| 1850-1899 | 'In 1864 George Du Maurier witnessed ... [a] bravura performance [by Swinburne] at a bachelor party in the studio of t... | Algernon Swinburne | Algernon Swinburne | unknown | Unknown |
| 1900-1945 | 'Wil John Edwards...pursued Gibbon, Hardy, Swinburne and Meredith. His reading was suggested by the literary pages of ... | Wil John Edwards | Algernon Charles Swinburne | | Print: Book |
| 1850-1899 1900-1945 | 'Annabel Huth Jackson recalls the impact of a copy of Swinburne's "Poems and Ballads" at Cheltenham Ladies' College: "... | Pupils at Cheltenham Ladies' College | Algernon Swinburne | Poems and Ballads | Print: Book |
| 1850-1899 1900-1945 | "Prior to ... [her] marriage [in 1911], [Marie Stopes's] only sexual knowledge came from reading Browning, Swinburne, ... | Marie Stopes | Algernon Swinburne | | Print: Book |
| 1850-1899 1900-1945 | 'Fine writing and realism were what John Masefield was after in prose. In poetry, it was the upsurge of feeling and rh... | John Masefield | Algernon Charles Swinburne | Chastelard | Print: Book |
| 1850-1899 1900-1945 | 'Fine writing and realism were what John Masefield was after in prose. In poetry, it was the upsurge of feeling and rh... | John Masefield | Algernon Charles Swinburne | [poem on the death of Baudelaire] | Print: Book |
| 1850-1899 | 'Brooks loved literature, and during their long walks together he introduced Willie to the most important contemporary... | John Ellingham Brooks | Algernon Charles Swinburne | [unknown] | Print: Book |
| 1850-1899 | 'I suppose Poems and Ballads will stand in the way of a Laureateship.' | Robert Louis Stevenson | Algernon Charles Swinburne | Poems and Ballads [first series] | Print: Book |
| 1850-1899 | 'I came up from Lincolnshire to town on Monday and went down that night to Magdalen to read my Catullus, but while lyi... | Oscar Wilde | Algernon Charles Swinburne | unknown | Print: Book |
| 1850-1899 1900-1945 | 'When it was discovered that she liked Swinburne's poetry, Sir George demanded that she forego such sensual verse. If ... | Edith Sitwell | Algernon Charles Swinburne | Poems | Print: Book |
| 1900-1945 | 'Owen seems to have started reading Swinburne in earnest in 1916. When he returned to the front in 1918, knowing that ... | Wilfred Owen | Algernon Charles Swinburne | Poems and Ballads | Print: Book |
| 1900-1945 | 'One late evening in the dim firelight of our rooms at Oxford after the War, she turned from reading aloud to me Swinb... | Winifred Holtby | Algernon Charles Swinburne | Super Flumina Babylonis | Print: Book |
| 1850-1899 | 'Wilde loved to curl up with a book in bed. In one letter he mischievously described himself as "lying in bed... with ... | Oscar Wilde | Algernon Swinburne | unknown | Print: Book |
| 1900-1945 | 'I ought to have thanked you before, for the very curious pamphlet containing Swinburne's sweet little joke. I enjoyed... | Joseph Conrad | Algernon Swinburne | A Letter to Ralph Waldo Emerson | |