Careless Rambles by John Clare

A Selection of His Poems Chosen and Illustrated by Tom Pohrt

Fiction & Literature, Poetry, British & Irish
Cover of the book Careless Rambles by John Clare by Tom Pohrt, Counterpoint
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Tom Pohrt ISBN: 9781619020764
Publisher: Counterpoint Publication: March 10, 2012
Imprint: Counterpoint Language: English
Author: Tom Pohrt
ISBN: 9781619020764
Publisher: Counterpoint
Publication: March 10, 2012
Imprint: Counterpoint
Language: English
Born in 1793, John Clare lived and worked during the Golden Age of British poetry, the time of Shelley, Byron, Keats, and Coleridge. In the grand tradition of English nature writing, he stands alongside Wordsworth as a poet of extraordinary humanity and great spirit. Clare was 18 years old when the first Luddite riots occurred. He was deeply resistant to the first years of England’s Enclosure, and he offers a contemporaneous look at what the world was like for those struggling with the impact of the first Industrial Revolution. Uneducated but remarkably well read, Clare was briefly celebrated in London, only to spend his final years in a lunatic asylum. He died in one on May 20, 1864, almost exactly one year before William Butler Yeats was born and the world set out on the path to Modernism.

As James Reeves, an early critic and admirer, has said, “The existence of Clare the poet is, of course, a miracle . . . This is its most precious gift. Clare was a happy poet; there is more happiness in his poetry than in that of most others. This was no mere animal contentment of body and senses, but a quiet ecstasy and inward rapture. Such happiness is not to be had except at a price.”

Tom Pohrt’s drawings and watercolors have been widely admired. There are few alive whose sensibility more properly matches Clare’s-it’s as if Samuel Palmer had taken the commission to illustrate a selection of the peasant poet. Pohrt has himself made the selection of poems from the vast quantity that survived Clare’s chaotic life. Robert Hass joins the project to place Clare’s work in the larger context of nature poetry in the West. The result is a book sure to please those who know already of Clare’s fine poems and those for whom this book will be their exciting introduction.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Born in 1793, John Clare lived and worked during the Golden Age of British poetry, the time of Shelley, Byron, Keats, and Coleridge. In the grand tradition of English nature writing, he stands alongside Wordsworth as a poet of extraordinary humanity and great spirit. Clare was 18 years old when the first Luddite riots occurred. He was deeply resistant to the first years of England’s Enclosure, and he offers a contemporaneous look at what the world was like for those struggling with the impact of the first Industrial Revolution. Uneducated but remarkably well read, Clare was briefly celebrated in London, only to spend his final years in a lunatic asylum. He died in one on May 20, 1864, almost exactly one year before William Butler Yeats was born and the world set out on the path to Modernism.

As James Reeves, an early critic and admirer, has said, “The existence of Clare the poet is, of course, a miracle . . . This is its most precious gift. Clare was a happy poet; there is more happiness in his poetry than in that of most others. This was no mere animal contentment of body and senses, but a quiet ecstasy and inward rapture. Such happiness is not to be had except at a price.”

Tom Pohrt’s drawings and watercolors have been widely admired. There are few alive whose sensibility more properly matches Clare’s-it’s as if Samuel Palmer had taken the commission to illustrate a selection of the peasant poet. Pohrt has himself made the selection of poems from the vast quantity that survived Clare’s chaotic life. Robert Hass joins the project to place Clare’s work in the larger context of nature poetry in the West. The result is a book sure to please those who know already of Clare’s fine poems and those for whom this book will be their exciting introduction.

More books from Counterpoint

Cover of the book Grace by Tom Pohrt
Cover of the book Fading Hearts on the River by Tom Pohrt
Cover of the book Tell Me by Tom Pohrt
Cover of the book Prague Summer by Tom Pohrt
Cover of the book I Have Seen the Future by Tom Pohrt
Cover of the book Anarchy! by Tom Pohrt
Cover of the book Stranger Than We Can Imagine by Tom Pohrt
Cover of the book Last Days in Shanghai by Tom Pohrt
Cover of the book Complete Poison Blossoms from a Thicket of Thorn by Tom Pohrt
Cover of the book A Kind of Freedom by Tom Pohrt
Cover of the book Danger on Peaks by Tom Pohrt
Cover of the book A Lovesong for India by Tom Pohrt
Cover of the book The Doper Next Door by Tom Pohrt
Cover of the book Greasewood Creek by Tom Pohrt
Cover of the book Three Continents by Tom Pohrt
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy