Sunday, October 13, 2019
The Recluse Essay -- Literary Analysis
Wordsworth suffers solitude, even as he celebrates it. Alone, the poet can explore his own consciousness; it exists at both poles of the notion of ââ¬Ëemotion recollected in tranquillityââ¬â¢, and is the dominant developmental mode of Wordsworthââ¬â¢s childhood as depicted in The Prelude (1805). Independence is what is exalted in his introduction to that poem: he greets the ââ¬Ëgentle breezeââ¬â¢ as a ââ¬Ëcaptiveâ⬠¦ set freeââ¬â¢ from the ââ¬Ëvast cityââ¬â¢ which has been as a ââ¬Ëprisonââ¬â¢ to his spirit. The oppression of city living is alleviated in this opening reacquisition of isolation; the relief is evident: ââ¬ËI breathe againââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëthat burthen of my own unnatural self [is shaken off], /The heavy weight of many a weary day/ Not mine, and such as were not made for meââ¬â¢. In this, the commencing statement of his autobiography, the independence of solitude is represented as the essential quality of his poetic felicity. T he ââ¬Ëegoistical sublimeââ¬â¢ observed by Keats is manifest in this poetry in a separation from other men, rather than in that of a Byron, whose narratorsââ¬â¢ egotisms are evinced by their social interactions. Wordsworthââ¬â¢s company is nature; his sister, his wife, his children exist as assimilations rather than relationships. The sister of Lines Written a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey, is conjured into independence in the final paragraph, so as to exist as a previous self: ââ¬ËFor thou are with meââ¬â¢, he suddenly reveals, ââ¬Ëand in thy voice I catch/ The language of my former heartââ¬â¢. She is externalised when poetically useful; and it is by this externalisation that Wordsworth is able to avert and diminish his poemââ¬â¢s undercurrent doubts. ââ¬ËThis prayer I make/ Knowing that Nature never did betray/ The heart that loved herââ¬â¢, has a contrary traction as a plea intimating des... ...this as his essential condition, but it is worth observing that ââ¬Ërecluseââ¬â¢ does not imply total isolation. Wordsworthââ¬â¢s solitude, as he left childhood, was never again to be absolute; for as consciousness developed, so did his capacity to apprehend himself, in language, so even alone he could not be alone without self-intercourse, mediated by language. His solitude was necessary for his vocation, but his vocation trespassed on that solitude; for to be a poet is to cast experience away from the self: even in egotism, isolation is disrupted by the projection of an audience. Works Cited Gil, Stephen ed. William Wordsworth: The Major Works (OUP 1984) Hartman, Geoffrey Wordsworthââ¬â¢s Poetry 1787-1814 (Yale University Press 1971) Morgan, Monique R. ââ¬ËNarrative Means to Lyric Ends in Wordsworthââ¬â¢s Preludeââ¬â¢ (Narrative, Volume 16, Number 3, October 2008, pp. 298-330)
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