Imagen del autor

John Clare (1) (1793–1864)

Autor de John Clare / edited by Eric Robinson and David Powell

Para otros autores llamados John Clare, ver la página de desambiguación.

82+ Obras 1,124 Miembros 16 Reseñas 3 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Créditos de la imagen: Engraving by Edward Scriven (1821) after portrait by William Hilton (1820)

Series

Obras de John Clare

The Shepherd's Calendar (1964) 108 copias
Bird Poems (1980) 36 copias
John Clare By Himself (1996) 23 copias
John Clare : poems (2016) 14 copias
Poems (1908) 13 copias
The Essential Clare (1992) 12 copias
The Letters of John Clare (1970) 10 copias
The Wood Is Sweet (1966) 10 copias
The midsummer cushion (1979) 10 copias
Selected Poems (1954) 8 copias
John Clare's Birds (1982) 8 copias
The prose of John Clare (1970) 8 copias
Northborough sonnets (1995) 8 copias
The Rural Muse: Poems (1982) 5 copias
This Happy Spirit (2013) 4 copias
Clare's Countryside (1981) 3 copias
Flower Poems (2001) 2 copias
Cottage tales (1993) 2 copias
Idle fame 1 copia
Poems. pp. 1-207 (2016) 1 copia
A Country Calendar (1979) 1 copia
Kilvickeon 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Winter Poems (1994) — Contribuidor — 1,184 copias
The Nation's Favourite Poems (1996) — Contribuidor — 625 copias
The Best Loved Poems of Jacqueline Kennedy-Onassis (2001) — Contribuidor — 546 copias
The Standard Book of British and American Verse (1932) — Contribuidor — 116 copias
The Everyman Anthology of Poetry for Children (1994) — Contribuidor — 72 copias
Poetry of Witness: The Tradition in English, 1500-2001 (2014) — Contribuidor — 42 copias
Elegy written in a country churchyard and other poems (2009) — Contribuidor — 42 copias
AQA Anthology (2002) — Autor, algunas ediciones19 copias
Masters of British Literature, Volume B (2007) — Contribuidor — 16 copias
The Country Child (1992) — Contribuidor — 10 copias
All Day Long: An Anthology of Poetry for Children (1954) — Contribuidor — 9 copias
Poetry anthology (2000) — Contribuidor, algunas ediciones6 copias
La poesia inglesa — Contribuidor — 4 copias
To You With Love: A Treasury of Great Romantic Literature (1969) — Contribuidor — 2 copias
English Romantic Poetry (1996) — Contribuidor — 2 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Miembros

Debates

Reseñas

Clare is great for nature poetry, but gets dull quickly because he never looks *into* things; he only sees the surface. Wordsworth, by contrast, though often thought of as a nature poet, doesn't describe things with any detail most of the time, but his nature is somehow more real by being transcendent (or transcended, perhaps).

Clare's lack of punctuation and capitalization also tires one a few poems in. Sure, it's easy to get used to it and figure sentence and clause breaks, for the most part, on the fly, but it's more work than one really wants from poetry, or rather not the *sort* of work one wants. Think of it like reading Spenser (or whomever you like) without the spelling modernized or even reading Middle English: it's that much work without any of the fun.

The poems are full of repeated thoughts and lines, and one would be forgiven for never reading another line of Clare the first time he uses one of his favorite words, "pooty," for "snail." I'm not sure which is worse between that and "diaper" used by Herrick to mean "with an interlacing pattern."

When Clare's poems are about natural objects, they are interesting enough taken in small portions. Interest rises when Clare writes about himself and/or love. Sadly, the poems with love as their subject are almost exclusively from the period of Clare's madness, as are his only satirical pieces (included in this selection, anyway), an attempt at "Childe Harold" and "Don Juan." One hesitates to say that a man is more interesting when mad, but it seems to be the case with Clare.

I can't say I'm sad to be done with this book. Perhaps a smaller selection would have been wiser, but I have wanted to read Clare for some time, and I have a thing about getting all or most of a poet's works in one volume when possible. I see that the Penguin edition has considerably fewer poems than this Oxford World Classics, but it doesn't seem to have added punctuation either.

I don't think I'll ever read another poem about a bird's nest again.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
judeprufrock | otra reseña | Jul 4, 2023 |
I do not know this collection, but John Clare's poetry is one of the most moving bodies of work anywhere. I feel much akin to Clare, as someone who emerged from the most backward of rural places, and who is haunted by the fact that that place made me, created my potentials, gave me its sensual and harsh nature, so I feel responsible to it.

John Clare bore this burden much more heavily, and more responsibly, than I, as he was the only--the only--voice saying anything like what he said, and somehow noone really understood its import. In some ways he himself did, but his role was not one that could be borne alone, and it broke him.

I first heard his name in a John Berryman poem, where Berryman calls him "that sweet man, John Clare." No better phrase, no better praise, could be devised.
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Denunciada
AnnKlefstad | 2 reseñas más. | Feb 4, 2022 |
This edition has fine wood engravings by Thomas Bewick. The author describes aspects of individual breeds of birds, but often with a melancholy tone, leaving the reader rather depressed and feeling lonely. I would have liked it to include seagulls and magpies, but I guess he didn't see any of these types.
 
Denunciada
AChild | Feb 17, 2021 |
Another “green” and prophetic poet, crying out to us to stop taming and destroying nature. Favourites: “All nature has a feeling”, which is inexplicably missing from this edition, as is my other favourite, “Glad Christmas Comes” which I traced online however.
 
Denunciada
PollyMoore3 | otra reseña | May 14, 2020 |

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Obras
82
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Miembros
1,124
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#22,857
Valoración
4.0
Reseñas
16
ISBNs
174
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