Tuesday 29 September 2020

Wordsworth: Nature and Wellbeing

 

 Recently I led a small on-line discussion group about Wordsworth. I do not pretend to be a scholar of the subject, but my notes might be of interest. There were a few short quotations that I distributed beforehand.

 

Four critics

Thomas Hutchinson: “1792 – Nature now yields the first place to Man in Wordsworth’s affections and imagination”

Francis Jeffrey (1802): “The love, or grief, or indignation of an enlightened and refined character is…in itself a different emotion from the love, or grief, or anger, of a clown [a peasant], a tradesman, or a market-wench”

Thomas de Quincey: “Up to 1820 the name of Wordsworth was trampled underfoot; from 1820 to 1830 it was militant; from 1830 to 1835 it has been triumphant”

John Keble, on the occasion of Wordsworth being made a Doctor of Civil Law at Oxford: “One who alone among poets has set the manners, the pursuits and the feelings, religious and traditional, of the poor not merely in a good but…even in a celestial light”

 

Poetry

Poems written in youth

1789 (“An Evening Walk”)

The song of mountain streams, unheard by day,

Now hardly heard, beguiles my homeward way.

Air listens, like the sleeping water still,

To catch the spiritual music of the hill.

 

1792 (“Descriptive sketches taken during a pedestrian tour among the Alps”)

Still, Nature, ever just, to him imparts

Joys only give to uncorrupted hearts

 

Poems referring to the period of childhood

1798 (“Influence of natural objects”)

                                   Thus from my first dawn

Of childhood didst thou intertwine for me

The passions that build up our human soul;

Not with the mean and vulgar works of Man

But with high objects, with enduring things.

With life and nature….

 

Poems founded on the affections

1798 (“The Idiot Boy”)

She kisses o’er and o’er again

Him whom she loves, her Idiot Boy;

She’s happy here, is happy there,

She is uneasy everywhere;

Her limbs are all alive with joy.

 

Poems of the fancy

1802 (“To the Daisy”)

An instinct call it, a blind sense;

A happy, genial influence,

Coming one knows not how, nor whence….

 

Poems of the Imagination

1798 (“There was a boy”)

…a gentle shock of mild surprise

Has carried far into his heart the voice

Of mountain torrents; or the visible scene

Would enter unawares into its mind

With all its solemn imagery.

 

1804 (“I wandered lonely as a cloud”)

They flash upon that inward eye

Which is the bliss of solitude

 

1798 (“Lines composed a few miles above Tintern Abbey”)

                                 For she [Nature] can so inform

The mind that s within us, so impress

With quietness and beauty, and so feed

With lofty thoughts, that neither evil tongues

Rash judgements, nor the sneers of selfish men,

Nor greetings where no kindness is, nor all

The dreary intercourse of daily life,

Shall e’er prevail against us, or disturb

Our cheerful faith, that all which we behold

Is full of blessings.

 

Memorials of a tour of Scotland 1803

1807 (“At the grave of Burns”)

I mourned with thousands, but as one

More deeply grieved, for He was gone

Whose light I hailed when first it shone,

     And showed my youth

How Verse may build a princely throne

     On humble truth.

 

Independence and Liberty

1802 (“To Toussaint L’Ouverture”)

                         Thou hast great allies;

Thy friends are exultations, agonies,

And loved, and man’s unconquerable mind.

 

The River Duddon

1820 (“Sonnet V”)

Mid sheltering pines, this Cottage rude and grey;

Whose ruddy children by the mother’s eyes

Carelessly watched, sport through the summer day,

Thy pleased associates: - light as endless May

On infant bosoms lonely nature lies.

 

Poems of sentiment and reflection

1798 (“The tables turned”)

And hark! How blithe the throstle sings!

He too is no mean preacher;

Come forth into the light of things,

Let Nature be your Teacher.

 

1806

Spade! with which Wilkinson hath tilled his lands,…..

Health, meekness, ardour, quietness secure

And industry of body and of mind;

And elegant employments that are pure

As nature is; - too pure to be refined.

 

Ode: Intimations of immortality

1803

Thanks to the human heart by which we live,

Thanks to its tenderness, its joys its tears,

To me the meanest flower that blows can give

Thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears.

 

 

Letters

1798: “I have written 1300 lines of a poem which I hope to make of considerable utility…”

1801: “The two poems which I have mentioned [“Michael” and “The Brothers”] were written with a view to show that men who do not wear fine cloaths can feel deeply.”

1802: I have often looked upon the conduct of fathers and mothers of the lower classes of society towards Idiots as the great triumph of the human heart.”

1806: To Thomas Wilkinson (1806) “On the other page you will find a copy of verses addressed to an implement of yours; they are supposed to have been composed that afternoon when we were labouring together in your pleasure ground…”

1807: “Trouble not yourself upon their [his poems] present reception; of what moment is that compared to what I trust is their destiny, to console the afflicted, to add sunshine to daylight by making the happy happier, to teach the young and the gracious of every age, to see, to think and feel, and therefore to become more actively and securely virtuous….”

1808: “One of our Neighbours was yesterday walking with me, he suddenly said to me: “I like to walk where I can hear the sound of a Beck. I cannot but think that this Man, without being conscious of it has had many devout feelings connected with the appearances which have presented themselves to him in his employment as a Shepherd, and the pleasure of his heart was an acceptable offering to the divine Being.”

1810, to his wife: “Oh Mary I love you with a passion of love which grows till I tremble to think of its strength.”

1815: “Do you not perceive that my conversations [in “The Excursion”] all take place out of Doors, and all with grand objects of nature surrounding the speakers for the express purpose of their being alluded to in illustration of the subjects treated of.”

1817: “Coleridge talks as a bird sings, as if he could not help it; it is his nature.”

1820: “Nothing which I have seen ion this city [Paris] has interested me at all like the Jardin des Plantes, with the living animals, and the Museum of Natural History which it includes. Scarcely could I refrain from tears of admiration at the sight of this apparently boundless exhibition of the wonders of creation. The Statues and pictures of the Louvre affect me feebly by comparison.”

1830: “Dear Sir Walter [Scott]! I love that man.”

1840: “Scarcely a week passes in which I do not receive grateful acknowledgements of the good they [my poems] have done to the minds of the several writers. They speak of the relief they have received from them under affliction and in grief, and of the calmness and elevation of Spirit which the Poems either give, or assist them in attaining.”

1844: The Editor of the Morning Post: “Rocks and mountains, torrents and wide-spread waters, and all those features of nature which go to the composition of such scenes as this part on England is distinguished for, cannot, in their finer relations to the human mind, be comprehended, or even very imperfectly conceived, without processes of culture or opportunities of observation in some degree habitual.”

 

Before the discussion began I made a few observations to get us started.

 

This is the 250th anniversary of Wordsworth’s birth. My plan is that you should react to the various quotations I’ve sent out and so the discussion will develop; so I hope you have had a chance to look at them. They are all short, anyhow, so you could glance at them as we go.

 

But I have a few things to say before we start discussing.

 

Wordsworth has come under a lot of attack – government agents kept an eye on him for his known radical ideas in the early 1790s when being a radical was by no means safe, especially once the French wars began. Then there were hostile critics in his own lifetime, most notably Francis Jeffrey in the “Edinburgh Review”. Then there were fellow radicals who felt that he had betrayed them by becoming a settled member of society with a regular income as Distributor of Stamps for Westmorland. Then in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries there were plenty more critics, loosely defined, who saw him as a Victorian sentimentalist who wrote absurd poems about leech gatherers and pretty poems about daffodils, but never got to any depth. That’s just ignorant and wrong, of course. If I am trying to redress the balance that does not mean that I’m putting him on a pedestal as someone who can do no wrong, and all of whose poems were wonderful. But I do think he was a very great poet indeed. His contribution to our Creationtide theme of Nature and Wellbeing is enormous.

 

Secondly: It is worth reminding ourselves that he was an enormously prolific poet. My collected poems has 698 pages of small print in double columns.

 

He always insisted that his work should be seen as a whole, not as separate bits. Individual poems about cuckoos or daisies or beggars may seem a bit light weight in themselves but he intended them as bricks in an edifice. He was a life-long reviser and rearranger. He insisted on the categories I’ve used here. This sometimes irritated publishers and readers, but he was determined. It is interesting that he placed as the last of his poems, apart from “The Prelude” and “The Excursion”, his “Ode on The Intimations of Immortality, From Recollections of Early Childhood”.

 

His great life’s work, “The Recluse” was never completed.  “The Excursion” was to be the first part of it. It contains magnificent passages, but in the view of most, doesn’t quite make it. I am going to read you a paragraph from a that Coleridge wrote to him after he read “The Excursion”. It is only two sentences long, but one of them is I think the longest sentence I have ever read. …….. The exhilarating vision they had developed in Alfoxden could not quite be realised.

 

Mind you, it does contain some momentous passages. Here is one that relates to our theme. In it the Wanderer tries to lift the Solitary out of depression….

 

“The Prelude”, incidentally, was to be a prelude to this work. Also, I expect you know, it was not published till after Wordsworth’s death.

Mentioning the “Prelude” I must mention Annette Vallon. It is well known that they fell in love and conceived a child while Wordsworth, in his early 20s, was in France at the start of the Revolution. The affair is skirted round in the Prelude – more or less written out. What ought to be remembered as well is these things.

In 1802, during the brief truce in the French wars, Wordsworth and Dorothy visited France. They got no further than Calais, and meeting Annette, and getting to know their 9 year-old daughter Caroline was one of the most important parts of the trip.

1814: The French Wars over it was Mary who writes “something handsome should be done for dear Caroline”, and they settled on her and her husband £30.00 a year. They planned for Dorothy at least to go to the wedding, but this was prevented by Napoleon’s return from Elba.

1820: William and Mary and Dorothy tour many of the places William had visited in the early 1790s. This included a month in Paris, and we learn of Mary and Annette meeting in the Louvre and Caroline – now a mother herself – calling William “father”.

 

I hope lots of other points emerge in the discussion.

Monday 7 September 2020

History pieces free on Kindle: September 10th - October 7th

 


September

10: The Curse of Donald Bane

11: The Baker Street Irregulars

12: The Congress of Vienna Reassessed

13: The Protestant Reformation Briefly Explained

14: The “Glorious” Whig Revolution: 1670-1720

15: Three Wise Men

16: An Introduction to the Renaissance

17: Cockburn’s Edinburgh

18: Bonnie Dundee and the First Jacobite Rebellion

19: The Place-Names of Scotland: a First Introduction

20: An Introduction to the Scottish Enlightenment

21: James IV, Scotland’s Renaissance King

22: Getting to Know Edinburgh

23: The Jacobites

24: Scotland and the Causes of the First World War

25: The Cold War

26: The Causes and the Course of the First World War

27: Why did the Allies Win the Second World War?

28: Socialism and the Early Years of the British Labour Party

29: The Unification of Italy

30: The Development of Democracy in the UK: 1850-1918

October

1: Bismarck and the Making of the German Empire

2: The Great Liberal Social Reforms: 1906-1914

3: Slavery and the Causes of the American Civil War

4: Hitler’s Rise to Power

5: Votes for Women!

6: The Causes of the Second World War and Appeasement

7: The Russian Revolution of 1917