Senin, 12 April 2010

[I606.Ebook] Download PDF Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), by John Clare

Download PDF Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), by John Clare

From now, finding the completed site that sells the completed publications will be lots of, however we are the trusted website to go to. Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare with simple web link, very easy download, as well as completed book collections become our excellent services to get. You could find and use the perks of choosing this Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare as every little thing you do. Life is constantly establishing as well as you need some brand-new publication Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare to be reference consistently.

Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), by John Clare

Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), by John Clare



Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), by John Clare

Download PDF Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), by John Clare

Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare. In what situation do you like reviewing so a lot? Exactly what concerning the sort of the book Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare The should check out? Well, everybody has their very own reason should read some books Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare Primarily, it will associate with their need to obtain expertise from guide Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare and also intend to review simply to obtain enjoyment. Novels, tale book, and also various other enjoyable books end up being so prominent today. Besides, the scientific books will likewise be the very best factor to decide on, specifically for the students, instructors, doctors, business person, and various other occupations who enjoy reading.

The reason of why you could receive as well as get this Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare quicker is that this is the book in soft file kind. You can read guides Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare wherever you want also you are in the bus, workplace, home, and also various other areas. However, you might not should relocate or bring guide Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare print any place you go. So, you will not have larger bag to bring. This is why your option making far better concept of reading Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare is truly valuable from this situation.

Knowing the method the best ways to get this book Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare is likewise important. You have remained in appropriate site to begin getting this info. Get the Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare web link that we supply here as well as see the link. You can get the book Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare or get it as quickly as possible. You can swiftly download this Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare after getting bargain. So, when you need the book promptly, you can straight receive it. It's so simple and so fats, right? You should prefer to through this.

Just connect your tool computer system or device to the web hooking up. Obtain the modern-day innovation making your downloading Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare completed. Also you do not want to check out, you could straight shut guide soft documents and also open Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare it later. You can likewise conveniently obtain guide all over, because Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare it remains in your device. Or when remaining in the workplace, this Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), By John Clare is additionally recommended to check out in your computer system device.

Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), by John Clare

After years of indifference and neglect, John Clare (1793-1864) is now recognized as one of the greatest English Romantic poets. Clare was an impoverished agricultural laborer, whose genius was generally not appreciated by his contemporaries, and his later mental instability further contributed to his loss of critical esteem. But the extraordinary range of his poetical gifts has restored him to the company of contemporaries like Lord Byron, John Keats, and Percy Bysshe Shelley.

This authoritative edition brings together a generous selection of Clare's poetry and prose, including autobiographical writings and letters and illustrates all aspects of his talent. It contains poems from all stages of his career, including love poetry and bird and nature poems. Written in his native Northamptonshire, Clare's work provides a fascinating reflection of rural society, often underscored by his own sense of isolation and despair. Clare's writings are presented with the minimum of editorial interference, and with a new introduction by the poet and scholar Tom Paulin.

About the Series: For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has made available the broadest spectrum of literature from around the globe. Each affordable volume reflects Oxford's commitment to scholarship, providing the most accurate text plus a wealth of other valuable features, including expert introductions by leading authorities, voluminous notes to clarify the text, up-to-date bibliographies for further study, and much more.

  • Sales Rank: #323377 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-09-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 4.90" h x 1.50" w x 7.70" l, 1.00 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 576 pages

About the Author
Eric Robinson, former Professor of History, University of Massachusetts, Boston. David Powell, retired Senior Librarian , Nene College, Northampton.

Most helpful customer reviews

18 of 18 people found the following review helpful.
Good collection, but missing what I needed
By jessbcuz
Overall I would say this is an excellent collection of Clare's work. I especially appreciated the prose section at the back. My main criticism is that it includes some excerpts of his longer poems, but does not have them in full. For my own purposes, I wish they would have included the full text of The Village Minstrel as they are using more of a manuscript version and the only printed version of this poem available is the 1821 edition with the editor's sometimes radical changes. However, I recognize my own needs as rather narrow and can appreciate the wide and rich variety included in this edition.

I have only recently "discovered" Clare, and this is surprising to me given all the reading in this time period I have done. He has been taken up by the Eco-critics and new work is being done on him, but somehow he still moves just underneath the radar of "the canon." I would recommend him highly to anyone looking to feel out some other poets in this era besides the usual suspects (Keats, Byron, Shelley, Wordsworth, etc.). He is worth the time and can provide an interesting contrast to them.

13 of 15 people found the following review helpful.
A Real World & Doubting Mind
By tepi
John Clare Major Works. Edited by Eric Robinson and David Powell. Oxford World's Classics, 2008. Paperback 531 pages. ISBN-10: 0199549796

It's more than sad that John Clare (1793-1864), a major poet of towering genius, should have been so unfairly marginalized by society that he never succeeded in being accepted into the canon of English literature. Any reader of English poetry knows of Byron, Shelley, and Keats; glance in any anthology and you will find them represented by large chunks of their work. But although Clare was their contemporary and his work is certainly as great if not greater than theirs, it can take a long time to discover him and, as the sprinkling of reviews here attests, few bother to read him.

It's true that Clare was born into the lowest and most oppressed class of all and that, as a peasant and agricultural laborer, he remained (at least in the formal sense) uneducated, never did learn how to spell or punctuate, and was so poor that there were times when he couldn't afford to buy paper or even ink. It's also true that, after suffering a nervous breakdown, he was certified as insane and spent the last twenty-two years of his life in a lunatic asylum.

But despite this it has to be said that the man was a veritable fountain of the most sublime poetry, and some of his finest work was actually written during his asylum years. Clare's exquisite sensitivity to the world around him was so acute, and his love of that world was so great, a superabundance of marvelous lines embodying his perceptions and feelings constantly flowed from him and at his death, besides many thousands of pages of a prose which is often every bit as interesting as his poetry, he left over 3500 poems less than one tenth of which saw print during his lifetime as he never did achieve the kind of success he both deserved and longed for.

His complete poems were not even published until the 20th Century when they appeared in the extremely expensive and now virtually unobtainable 9-volume Oxford English Texts edition of 1989-1996; sadly, no reader's edition of this scholarly magnum opus has appeared and most of his prose still remains in manuscript.

The present 531-page 'Major Works', edited by Eric Robinson, is the fullest and finest selection of Clare's work to have appeared. This gives us, besides over 400 pages of poetry and 60 pages of prose, an Introduction, Chronology, Notes, Further Reading, Glossary, and Index. It is an edition that all lovers of Clare must be grateful for and is well-printed (though in a rather small typeface) on a somewhat soft poor quality paper (which does not take kindly to readers who like to scribble notes) and is bound in a thermoplastic binding with sturdy paper wrappers which feature a highly appropriate color illustration.

This illustration, a detail from 'Harvesters Resting' by Peter de Wint (1784-1849), depicts a group of peasant harvesters at rest from their labors in the field and serves wonderfully to lead us directly into Clare's world, a real world of real things and of real people with no pretensions to superiority, the kind of people who knew the meaning of real work and who weren't afraid of getting their hands dirty.

As a peasant, Clare may be said to depict in his works not the somewhat artificial and attenuated world of the upper classes but a far more vigorous and earthy world, a world bursting with life and teeming with an abundance of forms. Nothing is too mean for him to notice, nothing is beneath his gaze: men and women of all sorts and conditions and their joys, sufferings, and hardships; animals, birds, fish, frogs, bees, flies, beetles, spiders, ants, trees, flowers, fields, rivers, streams, storms, floods - all of these and more are set before us in the most powerful and moving verses.

As an example of how powerful his work can be readers should look up his poem "The Flood" (pp.193-4), a poem which is readily available on the internet. Daniel Myers tells us that ""The Flood" is an account of an actual flood witnessed by Clare, but also an account of the flood roiling within him, a presentiment of [the madness] he knew was to engulf him."

This is an interesting reading I would agree with. I would add, however, that although the flood may symbolize Clare's approaching madness, we needn't restrict ourselves to this single meaning. It seems to me that the flood water as it crashes against the stone bridge also symbolizes the growing anger and frustration and despair of Clare himself, as representative of the vigorous life of the peasantry, crashing in futility against the cold, hard, stony and unyielding mass of the privileged upper class of exploiters whose enclosures were dismantling the world he loved and that was so much a part of him.

In his very first poem, "Helpstone", Clare wrote:

"Accursed wealth, o'er bounding human laws
Of every evil thou remainst the cause...
Thou art the bar that keeps from being fed
And thine our loss of labor and of bread..." (p.4)

Lao Tzu said of the Tao, the universal law that is in harmony with human nature:

"If kings and barons can abide by it,
All creatures will arrive as guests to a banquet." *

Nature is Abundance; it spreads out before us a banquet to which all, whether human or non-human, are invited. Clare's outrage that the common people have been shut out from this banquet of Nature's abundance by the greed of their social superiors, along with the many other stresses in his life such as poverty, ill health, difficulties with publishers, etc., are reasons enough, one would think, to eventually drive someone as sensitive as him into madness.

"The Flood" closes with the somber lines:

"- On roars the flood - all restless to be free
Like trouble wandering to eternity." (p.194)

For a while, as a 'peasant poet' and therefore something of an interesting oddity, Clare had been lionized by the smart set. But as time went by their interest fell off. The world was changing and the public's taste for poetry was drying up as novel-reading became more popular. If he had been born in the heyday of poetry twenty years earlier he might have succeeded in getting more of his work published and carving out a niche for himself in the canon, but it was not to be.

To fully appreciate his poetry one needs to know something of his life and he himself in his 'Autobiographical Fragments' has provided the best account. An excellent edition of these fragments, along with much other biographical material, will be found in John Clare - By Himself (Fyfield Books) This is a thoroughly enjoyable and truly fascinating book and is written in an incredible prose that reminds one at times of Joyce's "Ulysses". After learning something about the life and character of the man who wrote "The Flood", I feel sure that the poem will bring tears to the eyes of at least some readers when they return to it.

*(see The Tao Te Ching: A New Translation With Commentary 32.1)

12 of 14 people found the following review helpful.
A Reading Of "The Flood"
By Daniel Myers
[[VIDEOID:33362741]]Clare, who spent the last 22 years of his life in a madhouse (where he also wrote his best poetry) is a difficult poet to review, still more difficult to read aloud. He deep, inner numinous connexion with the natural, as conveyed throughout this excellent Oxford edition of his works, reminds one of nothing so much as Van Gogh's letters to brother Theo - and also his truly tortured sense of loneness and alienation from mankind.

Reading one of his powerful, majestically tortured madhouse poems would be akin to attempting to paint like Van Gogh at his best. It's just not on unless one is either a madman or a genius, titles to which I'm unable to lay claim.

"The Flood" is an account of a an actual flood witnessed by Clare, but also an account of the flood roiling within him, a presentiment of what he knew was to engulf him. I have chanced a reading of it, as it seemed the most powerful poem within my grasp to capture in the reciting it the shatttered poet's perturbed sensibility and bewildered state of mind.

See all 3 customer reviews...

Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), by John Clare PDF
Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), by John Clare EPub
Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), by John Clare Doc
Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), by John Clare iBooks
Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), by John Clare rtf
Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), by John Clare Mobipocket
Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), by John Clare Kindle

Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), by John Clare PDF

Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), by John Clare PDF

Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), by John Clare PDF
Major Works (Oxford World's Classics), by John Clare PDF

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar