Almost everything that could have seemed, to a nineteenth-century reader, like a reason to count Clare as minor, or not to read him, makes him a resource for poets today. “Bard of the fallow field / And the green meadow,” as he called himself, Clare remained closely attentive to what we now call his environment, what he called “nature,” in a way that is neither touristic nor ignorant of agricultural effort. He saw tragic ironies all over the place, but he never sought verbal ironies himself: he is about as sincere (if not naive) as poets get. Clare seems to have benefited from few of the changes wreaked on the planet since the invention of the steam engine and cannot be blamed for whatever brought them about: he may be the last significant white Anglophone poet for whom that was true.Of course, poetry demands that the poet be observant of all about him wherever he may be. It is certainly salutary to observe nature. But a lot besides needs to be looked at, too.
Sunday, October 18, 2015
Literary offspring …
… John Clare's Heirs | Boston Review. (Hat tip, Rus Bowden.)
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