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Grasme re 2013 Selected Papers from the Wordsworth Summer Conference compiled by Richard Gravil compiled by Richard Gravil HEBƁFOR ADVICE ON THE USE OF THIS EBOOK PLEASE SCROLL TO PAGE 2 6TJOH UIJT &CPPLU *7KLV ERRN LV GHVLJQHG WR EH UHDG LQ VLQJOH SDJH YLHZ XVLQJ WKH µ¿W page’ command. *To navigate through the contents use the hyperlinked ‘Bookmarks’ at the left of the screen. *To search, click the search symbol. *For ease of reading, use to enlarge the page to full screen, and return to normal view using . *Hyperlinks (if any) appear in Blue Underlined Text. 1FSNJTTJPOT Your purchase of this ebook licenses you to read this work on-screen. You may print a copy of the book for your own use but copy and paste functions are disabled. No part of this publication may be otherwise reproduced or transmitted or distributed without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher. Making or distributing copies of this book would constitute copyright infringement and would be liable to prosecution. Thank you for respecting the rights of the author.
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11 janvier 2021

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0

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English

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3 Mo

Grasmere 2013 Selected Papers from the Wordsworth Summer Conference
compiled by Richard Gravil compiled by Richard Gravil
HEBFOR ADVICE ON THE USE OF THIS EBOOK PLEASE SCROLL TO PAGE 2
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Grasmere, 2013
Selected Papers from The Wordsworth Summer Conference at Rydal Hall compiled by Richard Gravil on behalf of The Wordsworth Conference Foundation HEBHumanities-Ebooks, LLP
© heWordsworth Conference Foundation, 2013 Copyright is asserted by the Foundation on behalf of the contributing authors who retain all rights of further publication. First published byHumanities-Ebooks, LLP, Tirril Hall, Tirril, Penrith CA10 2JE PDF Cover: Piers Ghyll © James Castell
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he Pdf Ebook is available to individual purchasers exclusively from http://www.humanities-ebooks.co.ukand can be supplied to libraries by EBSCO, Ebrary and MyiLibrary. he paperback Is available exclusively fromLulu.com ISBN 978-1-84760-330-2 PDF Ebook ISBN 978-1-84760-331-9 Paperback
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Foreword Heidi Thomson A Perfect Storm: The Nature of Consciousness on Salisbury Plain Peter Larkin Wordsworth’s City Retractions Tom Clucas ‘On these two pillars rested as in air / Our solitude’: Wordsworth’s use of Plutarch’sParallel LivesinThe Excursion Simon Swift Wordsworth and Charles Le Brun: Expression, Colour, Sensation Rowan Boyson Wordsworth’s Anosmia: pleasure, scent and the later poetry Daniel Robinson ‘Unrememberable Being’: Wordsworth Writing about Writing  about Memory Christopher Simons Wordsworth inGeste:Dissolving theEcclesiastical Sketches Richard Gravil Wordsworth’s Sacred Sites: a Short Tour Kimiyo Ogawa Embodying Disinterest: William Godwin and William Hazlitt Richard Lansdown Coralline Geohistory in James Montgomery’s Pelican Island Alexandra Paterson ‘The Atmosphere of Human Thought’: Atmospheric Science  in Shelley’sPrometheus Unbound Deirdre Coleman Keats, India, and the Vale of Soul–Making
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6 Grasmere, 2013
Previous Items in this Series
The following volumes, containing these and many other fascinat-ing essays, are still available in PDF and paperback formats:
Grasmere 2008 John Beer, ‘Coleridge’s Paradoxical Nature’ Judith Thompson, ‘John Thelwall in the Lake District’
Grasmere 2009 Gillian Beer, ‘Darwin and Romanticism’ Nicholas Roe, ‘John Keats and the Elgin Marbles’
Grasmere 2010 Simon Bainbridge, ‘Romantic Mountaineering’ Kenneth Johnston, ‘Memoirs of Lost Generation’
Grasmere 2011 Ann Wroe, ‘The Necessity of Atheism’ Stephen Gill, ‘Wordsworth’s Sequels’
Grasmere 2012 Heather Glen, ‘“We are Seven” in the 1790s’ Pamela Woof, ‘Dorothy Wordsworth, Writer: the Midde Years’
http://www.humanities-ebooks.co.uk
Foreword
This selection of three lectures and eight papers from the 42nd Wordsworth Conference is the sixth such to be published on behalf of the Wordsworth Conference Foundation. It opens with Heidi Thomson’s new approach to Wordsworth’s Salisbury Plain poetry, emphasising the domestic rather than the Gothic, and closes with Deirdre Coleman’s fascinating research on the Keats Circle’s response to India. In a third keynote lecture, Christopher Simons recovers the personal poetry running through ‘Ecclesiastical Sketches’. Also on Wordsworth, Peter Larkin pursues Wordsworth in the city with his customary înesse; Tom Clucas considers how Wordsworth’s Cumbrian characters are digniîed by association with Plutarch’s parallel lives; and Rowan Boyson explores his most famous disability, his deîcient sense of smell, while Daniel Robinson elucidates some issues in textual editing. Kimiyo Ogawa writes on what ‘disinterestedness’ in Godwin may owe to Hazlitt, whose philosophical stock is steadily rising, and in two scientiîc papers, Richard Lansdown introduces James Montgomery’s remarkable poem,Pelican Island, and Alexandra Paterson writes on on Shelley and atmospheric science. Together they give a good sense of the variety and the quality associated with the Wordsworth Summer Conference. An unexpected gap has been plugged by a hastily ‘înished’ Winter School talk from 2011, on ‘Wordsworth’s Sacred Sites’.
Richard Gravil,1 December 2013
Heidi Thomson
A Perfect Storm: The Nature of Consciousness on Salisbury Plain
The Salisbury Plain poems were on Wordsworth’s mind for half a century. Stephen Gill starts off his Cornell edition of these poems with this brief chronology: ‘In 1793 and 1794, partly as a result of experiences while wandering over Salisbury Plain, Wordsworth composed the poem he calledSalisbury Plain. Between 1795 and 1799 this work was transformed into the more ambitiousAdventures on Salisbury Plain.... In 1841 he returned to this early work and revised it for publication in 1842 asGuilt and Sorrow’ (xv). My focus in this talk will be primarily on the mental adventures of the long suffering Sailor turned murderer inAdventures on Salisbury Plain, the story which embeds the narrative ofThe Female Vagrant. The importance of the Sailor’s inner life is afîrmed by the 1842 title in which paired emotions are juxtaposed with casual occurrences: Guilt and Sorrow; or, Incidents upon Salisbury Plain. Wordsworth’s poemResolution and Independencegives us a similar twin pairing of emotions in a poem which started off asThe Leech Gatherer. During the course of that poem the speaker’s encounter with the Buddhistic leech gatherer prompts him to rephrase the question about purposeful labour ‘What kind of work is that which you pursue’ (263, l. 95) into the existential query ‘How is it that you live, and what is it you do’ (264, l. 126). Similarly,Adventures on Salisbury Plainprovides the opportunity for a range of questions which may complicate our view 1 of the characters involved. InAdventures on Salisbury Plainwitness a transition from we
1 For readings of the Salisbury Plain poems, see primarily Averill, Bailey, Fosso, Gill (Wordsworth’s Revisitings), Gravil, Hartman, Jones, Modiano, Potkay, Sheats, Swann, Trott, Ulmer, Wiley.
Heidi Thomson
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fugitive entrapment into a state of enlightenment. What that enlight-enment consists of relates to the guilt for the murder which the Sailor has committed, but it also incorporates the sorrow of the Sailor’s fundamental loss, the loss of his family. Most readings emphasize the Sailor’s conscientious awareness of guilt as opposed to his mere submission to the operations of the judicial system. The discussion as to whether the Sailor goes to his execution because he has been betrayed into doing so or because he fully realizes that this is the price he has to pay for his crime revolves around the characteriza-tion of the Sailor as a murderer. A similar contrast is suggested by the difference between the translated titles of Dostoyevski’s great novel: we think of Raskolnikov differently if we read his narrative under the banner ofCrime and Punishment(in English) than if we consider it under the heading ofGuilt and Repentance(as you would in the older Dutch and German translations). Without discarding readings with an ethical emphasis, I will read Adventures on Salisbury Plainterms of the Sailor’s most griev- in ous loss, the loss of his wife and family, and how the realization of that loss through a process of physical trances amounts to the loss of his own life. The convergence of justice, conscience, and, I add, overwhelming consciousness of loss within the poem reminds me of a perfect storm, in which the calamitous outcome through ‘a rare combination of adverse … factors’ (OED) is offset by an earlier use of the phrase, in a 1718 quotation by Hubert Stogdon, a Presbyterian minister: ‘There was a rushing mighty wind, a perfect storm, and tempest before the descent of the Holy Ghost’ (OED). InAdventures on Salisbury Plainthe rise and fall of the storm coincides with the turbulent behaviour of the Sailor’s body which, in successive trances, expresses and rehearses the loss of life he has experienced and will experience. He dies before he dies, in the same sense that Wallace Stevens writes in the înal part of ‘Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird’: ‘It was evening all afternoon. / It was snowing / And it was going to snow’ (76). In his essay ‘On Chaucer and Spenser’ Hazlitt deînes the strength of Spenser, who presides strongly over the Salisbury Plain poems, as follows: ‘His strength … is not strength of will or action, of bone and muscle, nor is it coarse and palpable—
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Grasmere, 2013
but it assumes a character of vastness and sublimity seen through the same visionary medium, and blended with the appalling associations of preternatural agency’ (203). Wordsworth manages to graft this effect on the Sailor whose body is subject to îts, trances, and trem-ors. Moreover, Wordsworth incorporates those events into a vision of the Sailor’s purpose and direction. When Coleridge reminisces fondly about the recitation of Salisbury PlaininBiographia Literariahe also includes a meteoro-logical element when he refers to ‘the union of deep feeling with pro-found thought’ and singles out ‘above all the original gift of spread-ing the tone, theatmosphere, and with it the depth and height of the ideal world around forms, incidents, and situations, of which, for the common view, custom had bedimmed all the lustre, had dried up the sparkle and the dew drops’ (BL, 1.80). Coleridge’s use of ‘atmos-phere’ here is invoked as an early example of the îgurative use of the word in theOED in which the whole body of terrestrial air is extended into a ‘prevailing psychological climate’, ‘a pervading tone or mood’. InAdventures on Salisbury Plainthe effect of the Sailor’s suicidal vision accompanies the moral purpose of justice, and the profound thought which underlies the deep feeling is the awareness that life is not worth living without ‘the things worth living for’. The Female Vagrant says as much when she talks about the ‘dreadful price of being to resign / All that is dearinbeing’ (ASP, 137, ll. 379– 380), but Wordsworth uses the actual phrase, ‘the things worth living for’, in the 1797Argument for Suicide(included as an Appendix in the Cornell edition ofThe Borderers) which ends on: ‘strange it is / And most fantastic are the magic circles / Drawn round the thing called life – till we have learned / To prize it less we ne’er shall learn to prize / The things worth living for.— ’ (811). In the manuscript the last phrase is repeated below the lines, by itself, in pencil. The Sailor’s full realization of the ‘things worth living for, is intimated by the reactions of his body at crucial moments in the poem, and most strikingly in reaction to the Female Vagrant’s tale. I agree with Richard Gravil who refers to the Sailor’s execution by the justice system as ‘self-chosen’ (254). My focus is on how that choice is revealed to the Sailor himself, and how it is a choice which
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