Rural Life in Eighteenth-Century English Poetry
Recent research into a self-taught tradition of English rural poetry has begun to offer a radically new dimension to our view of the role of poetry in the literary culture of the eighteenth century. In this important new study John Goodridge offers a detailed reading of key rural poems of the period, examines the ways in which eighteenth-century poets adapted Virgilian Georgic models, and reveals an illuminating link between rural poetry and agricultural and folkloric developments. Goodridge compares poetic accounts of rural labour by James Thomson, Stephen Duck, and Mary Collier, and makes a close analysis of one of the largely forgotten didactic epics of the eighteenth century, John Dyer's The Fleece. Through an exploration of the purpose of rural poetry and how it relates to the real world, Goodridge breaks through the often brittle surface of eighteenth-century poetry, to show how it reflects the ideologies and realities of contemporary life.
- Important contribution to revisionary views on eighteenth-century poetry and culture
- Exciting new links revealed between poetry and agricultural and folkloric developments
- Detailed analysis of work of individual poets including Thomson, Duck, Collier, and Dyer
Reviews & endorsements
"Few scholars bring to the study of rural poetry a working knowledge of modern as well as 18th-century agricultural life. Goodridge writes about his subject as if he knows his sheep and understands the seasons and rhythms of country life....The best book on 18th-century poetry in years. Rigorous enough for period specialists and historians, but accessible to all." Choice
"...(Goodridge) has given fellow scholars an example worth imitating." Modern Philology
Product details
April 2011Adobe eBook Reader
9780511882333
0 pages
0kg
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Part I. 'Hard Labour We Most Chearfully Pursue': Three Poets On Rural Work:
- 1. Thomson, Duck, Collier and rural realism
- 2. Initiations and peak-times
- 3. Three types of labour
- 4. Compensations
- 5. Homecomings
- Part II. 'A Pastoral Convention and a Ruminative Mind': Agricultural Prescription In The Fleece:
- 6. Sheep and poetry
- 7. 'Soil and clime'
- 8. Environment and heredity
- 9. The care of sheep
- 10. The shepherd's harvest
- Bibliography
- Index.