What is it about?

This essay considers John Clare’s experiments with the dynamic interplay between poetry and speech, examining his lifelong interest in the diction and grammar of speech, the aural qualities of dialect, and the many ways poems prompt live voicings and inner subvocalization. For Clare, speech opened written verse to strands of English that lay outside the prestige sociolect of Standard English, drawing onto the page the words and rhythms of regional and historical vernaculars. In poems that engage most directly with the unique powers of speech, he forges a collaborative exchange between the media of orality, writing, and print. By taking seriously these poems’ claims to capture speaking voices, this essay casts new light on Clare’s poetic language and on the larger relation between print, writing, and orality in nineteenth-century poetry.

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Perspectives

This essay is an attempt to think through an aspect of Clare's poetry, and of nineteenth-century English poetry more broadly, that has long puzzled me. I hope my meditation is helpful to others who are interested in similar concerns.

Stephanie Weiner
Wesleyan University

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This page is a summary of: John Clare’s Speaking Voices: Dialect, Orality, and the Intermedial Poetic Text, Essays in Romanticism, April 2018, Liverpool University Press,
DOI: 10.3828/eir.2018.25.1.7.
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