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John Clare [1793-1864] ENG
Ranked #95 in the top 380 poets
Votes 73%: 512 up, 194 down

Son of farm labourer. Northamptonshire Peasant Poet. Often absense of punctuation (corrected by editors). Celebratory representations of the English countryside and his lamentation of its disruption. Nature, of a rural childhood, and of the alienated and unstable self. Northamptonshire dialect.

His formal education was brief, his other employment and class-origins were lowly. Clare resisted the use of the increasingly standardised English grammar and orthography in his poetry and prose, alluding to political reasoning in comparing "grammar" (in a wider sense of orthography) to tyrannical government and slavery, personifying it in jocular fashion as a "bitch".

His knowledge of the natural world went far beyond that of the major Romantic poets. However, poems such as "I Am" show a metaphysical depth on a par with his contemporary poets and many of his pre-asylum poems deal with intricate play on the nature of linguistics. His "bird's nest poems", it can be argued, illustrate the self-awareness, and obsession with the creative process that captivated the romantics. Clare was the most influential poet, aside from Wordsworth, to practice in an older style.

I`m a self-taught English poet who was overlooked for years. My poems have made me now more popular than ever. When reading my verses, you may be surprised that I had only 11 years of formal education. Read me and take courage! Let not high or low degrees of schooling hinder you from expressing yourself poetically....John Clare`s life spanned one of the great ages of English poetry but, until about fifty years ago, few would have thought of putting his name with those of Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley, Keats, Browning and Tennyson.

Born in 1793 to humble and almost illiterate parents, Clare grew up in the Northamptonshire village of Helpston and made the surrounding countryside his world. His formal education, such as it was, ended when he was eleven years old, but this child of the `unwearying eye` had a thirst for knowledge and became a model example of the self-taught man. As a poet of rural England he has few rivals.

During his long life, Clare observed a period of massive changes in both town and countryside. The Agricultural Revolution - The Enclosures - saw pastures ploughed up, trees and hedges uprooted, marshy land drained and the common land enclosed.  This destruction of the countryside he knew as a child and the centuries-old way of life it supported, distressed Clare deeply. Large numbers of agricultural labourers, including their children, went to work in the new factories because of the rural poverty caused by the greed of landowners and farmers, which kept wages down but forced prices up. For them, it was migration to the town, or die.  Clare recorded much of this in his poems and prose.

From the moment his first publication - Poems Descriptive of Rural Life and Scenery - appeared in 1820, it was clear that England had a new and original poet. Sadly, the public`s enthusiasm did not last long and each new volume met with diminishing applause. Ill and in debt, he left Helpston for Northborough and, at the encouragement of his editor, John Taylor, was then committed to a private asylum, High Beach in Epping Forest, in 1837.  Leaving the asylum in 1841, he made the long trek on foot back to his home where he spent a few months before eventually being removed to Northampton General Lunatic Asylum in which he died in 1864.

Bipolar disorder, Peasant, Romanticism, Sonnet

YearsCountryPoetInteraction
1795-1852
ENG
John Hamilton Reynolds
← praised by John Clare


WorkLangRating
First Love
eng
100
All nature has a feeling
eng
25
I am!
eng
25
An Invite, to Eternity
eng
18
Birds In Alarm
eng
12
Evening Primrose
eng
10
The Shepherds Calendar - November
eng
7
Written in Northampton County Asylum
eng
3
Autumn
eng
2
Badger
eng
2
Clock-O`-Clay
eng
2
Meet Me in the Green Glen
eng
2
Night Wind
eng
2
Christmas
eng
1
December
eng
1
I Hid my Love
eng
1
Summer
eng
1
Summer Images
eng
1
The Dying Child
eng
1
The Instinct of Hope
eng
1
The Secret
eng
1
The Shepherds Calendar - May
eng
1
The Vixen
eng
1
To a Fallen Elm
eng
1
To John Clare
eng
1
To Mary
eng
1
Young Lambs
eng
1
"The Lass With The Delicate Air"
eng
0
A vision
eng
0
A World For Love
eng
0
Approaching Night
eng
0
Autumn Birds
eng
0
Ballad
eng
0
Bantry Bay
eng
0
Bonny Lassie O!
eng
0
Bonny Mary O!
eng
0
Braggart
eng
0
Country Letter
eng
0
Death
eng
0
Decay
eng
0
Dewdrops
eng
0
Distant Hills
eng
0
Dyke Side
eng
0
Early Nightingale
eng
0
Early Spring
eng
0
Earth`s Eternity
eng
0
Emmonsail`s Heath in Winter
eng
0
Evening
eng
0
Farewell
eng
0
Farewell And Defiance To Love
eng
0
Farm Breakfast
eng
0
Farmer`s Boy
eng
0
Field Path
eng
0
Firwood
eng
0
Fragment
eng
0
From "A Rhapsody"
eng
0
From "January"
eng
0
From "The Parish: A Satire"
eng
0
Gipsies
eng
0
Grasshoppers
eng
0
Graves Of Infants
eng
0
Hen`s Nest
eng
0
Hodge
eng
0
House Or Window Flies
eng
0
I Dreamt Of Robin
eng
0
Idle Fame
eng
0
Impromptu
eng
0
In Hilly-Wood
eng
0
Insects
eng
0
Invitation To Eternity
eng
0
Letter In Verse
eng
0
Little Trotty Wagtail
eng
0
Love
eng
0
Love And Solitude
eng
0
Love Cannot Die
eng
0
Love Lives Beyond The Tomb
eng
0
Market Day
eng
0
Mary Bateman
eng
0
Mary Bayfield
eng
0
Merry Maid
eng
0
Nature`s Hymn to the Deity
eng
0
Nobody Cometh To Woo
eng
0
Now Is Past
eng
0
Patty of the Vale
eng
0
Peggy
eng
0
Peggy`s The Lady Of The Hall
eng
0
Pleasures Of Fancy
eng
0
Ploughman Singing
eng
0
Quail`s Nest
eng
0
Remembrances
eng
0
Rural Morning
eng
0
Scandal
eng
0
Schoolboys in Winter
eng
0
Secret Love
eng
0
Signs Of Winter
eng
0
Snow Storm
eng
0
Song #1
eng
0
Song #2
eng
0
Song #3
eng
0
Song #4
eng
0
Song #5
eng
0
Song`s Eternity
eng
0
Spear Thistle
eng
0
Sport In The Meadows
eng
0
Spring`s Messengers
eng
0
Stonepit
eng
0
Sudden Shower
eng
0
Summer Evening
eng
0
Summer Winds
eng
0
Sunday Dip
eng
0
The Ants
eng
0
The Beautiful Stranger
eng
0
The Cellar Door
eng
0
The Cottager
eng
0
The Cross Roads; Or, The Haymaker`s Story
eng
0
The Crow Sat On The Willow
eng
0
The Cuckoo
eng
0
The Fear Of Flowers
eng
0
The Fens
eng
0
The Firetail`s Nest
eng
0
The Flitting
eng
0
The Flood
eng
0
The Fox
eng
0
The Frightened Ploughman
eng
0
The Gipsy`s Camp
eng
0
The Landrail
eng
0
The Lout
eng
0
The Maid Of Jerusalem
eng
0
The Maid Of Ocram, Or, Lord Gregory
eng
0
The Maple Tree
eng
0
The Mores
eng
0
The Nightingale`s Nest
eng
0
The Old Cottagers
eng
0
The Old Year
eng
0
The Peasant Poet
eng
0
The Poet`s Death
eng
0
The Sailor-Boy
eng
0
The Shepherds Calendar - April
eng
0
The Shepherds Calendar - December-Christmass
eng
0
The Shepherds Calendar - February - A Thaw
eng
0
The Shepherds Calendar - January- Winters Day
eng
0
The Shepherds Calendar - July
eng
0
The Shepherds Calendar - July (2nd version)
eng
0
The Shepherds Calendar - March
eng
0
The Shepherd`s Calendar - August
eng
0
The Shepherd`s Calendar - June
eng
0
The Shepherd`s Calendar - October
eng
0
The Shepherd`s Calendar - September
eng
0
The Shepherd`s Tree
eng
0
The Skylark
eng
0
The Sleep Of Spring
eng
0
The Soldier
eng
0
The Stranger
eng
0
The Swallow
eng
0
The Thrush`s Nest
eng
0
The Tramp
eng
0
The Vanities Of Life
eng
0
The Winter`s Come
eng
0
The Winter`s Spring
eng
0
The Wood-Cutter`s Night Song
eng
0
The Yellowhammer
eng
0
Thou Flower Of Summer
eng
0
To Anna Three Years Old
eng
0
To John Milton
eng
0
To My Cottage
eng
0
To Napoleon
eng
0
Turkeys
eng
0
What is Life?
eng
0
Where She Told Her Love
eng
0
Wild Bees
eng
0
Winter Walk
eng
0
Wood Rides
eng
0

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