The poetic theory of Edmund Clarence Stedman has yet to be seen in its proper perspective. From the mid-1870\u27s through the first decade of the twentieth century, Stedman\u27s was the definitive voice of new critical principles which displaced the older criticism dominated by New England figures. Centered in New York, the critics led by Stedman were sensitive to new tendencies in American criticism, combining them with principles orthodox and long established. Their critical theory was a synthesis of new and old, consciously placed in the service of fostering poetry as important to the moral and spiritual health of an emerging America. Following the French critic, Hippolyte Taine, Stedman saw literature as a cyclical production within a f...