132- ) English Literature
John Clare – Summary
John
Clare, (born July 13, 1793, Helpston, near Peterborough, Northamptonshire,
England—died May 20, 1864, Northampton, Northamptonshire), English peasant poet
of the Romantic school.
Clare
was the son of a labourer and began work on local farms at the age of seven.
Though he had limited access to books, his poetic gift, which revealed itself
early, was nourished by his parents’ store of folk ballads. Clare was an
energetic autodidact, and his first verses were much influenced by the Scottish
poet James Thomson. Early disappointment in love—for Mary Joyce, the daughter
of a prosperous farmer—made a lasting impression on him.
In
1820 his first book, Poems Descriptive of Rural Life and Scenery, was published
and created a stir. Clare visited London, where he enjoyed a brief season of
celebrity in fashionable circles. He made some lasting friends, among them
Charles Lamb, and admirers raised an annuity for him. That same year he married
Martha Turner, the daughter of a neighbouring farmer, the “Patty of the Vale”
of his poems. From then on he encountered increasing misfortune. His second
volume of poems, The Village Minstrel (1821), attracted little attention. His
third, The Shepherd’s Calendar; with Village Stories, and Other Poems (1827),
though containing better poetry, met with the same fate. His annuity was not
enough to support his family of seven children and his dependent father, so he
supplemented his income as a field labourer and tenant farmer. Poverty and
drink took their toll on his health. His last book, The Rural Muse (1835),
though praised by critics, again sold poorly; the fashion for peasant poets had
passed. Clare began to suffer from fears and delusions. In 1837, through the
agency of his publisher, he was placed in a private asylum at High Beech,
Epping, where he remained for four years. Improved in health and driven by
homesickness, he escaped in July 1841. He walked the 80 miles to Northborough,
penniless, eating grass by the roadside to stay his hunger. He left a moving
account in prose of that journey, addressed to his imaginary wife “Mary Clare.”
At the end of 1841 he was certified insane. He spent the final 23 years of his
life at St. Andrew’s Asylum, Northampton, writing, with strangely unquenched
lyric impulse, some of his best poetry.
His
rediscovery in the 20th century was begun by Arthur Symons’s selection of 1908,
a process continued by Edward Thomas and Edmund Blunden at a date when World
War I had revived the earlier enthusiasm for a poetry of directly apprehended
rustic experience.
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