As a working-class poet, born in 1793 to an impovisherished family in rural England, John Clare has often been considered of interest for the unusual nature of his life and career rather than for his poetry. In this book, Johanne Clare argues that he should be taken seriously both as a poet and as a representative figure in a period of social and agrarian upheaval. She discusses Clare's political attitudes and his views on the social issues which most affected him - poverty, economic inequality, class prejudice, and the enclosure movement - and shows how his social identity and experience were intricately related to his major writings.
Largely based on the transcripts made by William Knight and other amanuenses at Northampton , it emends the Knight punctuation in an attempt to get closer to Clare's lost manuscripts . The Early Poems of John Clare 1804–1822 , Volumes i ...
'A real world & doubting mind': A Critical Study of the Poetry of John Clare. Hull: Hull University Press, 1985. ———., ed. ... The Early Poems of John Clare, 1804–1822. Edited by Eric Robinson, David Powell and Margaret Grainger.
Keats ' looked into ' Chapman's Homer . The Journal belongs to a born collector . Clare does not come home empty - handed , and Patty would have sighed and the children would have raided his pockets . As an inveterate collector he ...
... Beattie , Hogg , Cunningham and Tannahill as well as that of Walter Scott and his Waverley Novels has been well described.20 Many poems of the asylum years portray and imagine a vivid Scottishness , expressing a Romantic yearning ...
John Clare, Politics and Poetry challenges the traditional portrait of 'poor John Clare', the helpless victim of personal and professional circumstance.
For an ever-growing annotated bibliography of labouring-class poets before and beyond Clare's time, see John Goodridge et al. (eds), Database of British and Irish Labouring-Class ... NineteenthCentury English Labouring-Class Poets, vol.
The long-awaited literary biography of the supreme "poets' poet" John Clare (1793-1864) is the greatest labouring-class poet that England has ever produced.
BH John Clare By Himself (Manchester: Carcanet, 1996), Eric Robinson and David Powell (eds.) ... EG Egerton Manuscripts, Letters Addressed to John Clare, British Library, 6 vols, 2245–50 EP The Early Poems of John Clare 1804–1822 ...
... British Labouring-Class Nature Poetry, 1730–1837 (Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008) 'Broadsides, Ballads and Books: The Landscape of Cultural Literacy in The Village Minstrel', John Clare Society Journal, 15 (1996) ...
The Shepherd's Calendar; With Village Stories, and Other Poems (London: John Taylor, 1827). The Rural Muse (London: Whittaker, 1835). The Early Poems of John Clare: 1804–1822, 2 vols, ed. by Eric Robinson and David Powell (Oxford: ...