
At a symposium next month (15 September 2017) academics, artists and ornithologists will share their responses to the work of 19th-century poet John Clare, whose patient and accurate observations of birds in field and hedgerow continue to astonish and inspire.
At a symposium next month (15 September 2017) academics, artists and ornithologists will share their responses to the work of 19th-century poet John Clare, whose patient and accurate observations of birds in field and hedgerow continue to astonish and inspire.
Clare鈥檚 greatest achievement is the conjunction of scientific accuracy with what he calls 鈥榩oetic feeling鈥. He possesses a depth of knowledge only achievable by painstaking observation of birds鈥 behaviour as it changes with the seasons.
Sarah Houghton-Walker
探花直播poet John Clare (1793-1864) was a keen natural historian who knew the countryside in all its moods. His various jobs saw him labouring in farms and gardens; his gravestone remembers him as the 鈥榩easant poet鈥. Best known for his verse, Clare also wrote prose accounts of the plants and animals he observed in his native Northamptonshire.
In a foreword to the anthology, 探花直播Poetry of Birds, broadcaster and bird watcher Tim Dee notes that Clare wrote about 147 species of British wild birds 鈥渨ithout any technical kit whatsoever鈥. His records contain 65 first descriptions of birds for Northamptonshire alone. 探花直播term 鈥榥ature writing鈥 had yet to be coined in the early 1800s 鈥 but Clare was undoubtedly ahead of his time in the way that he wove his detailed observations of the natural world into his writing.
Dee is one of the speakers who will be talking about 鈥楥lare and the Art of Bird Watching鈥 at a symposium held on September 15, 2017 at the David Attenborough Building. 探花直播event is a collaboration between the Centre for John Clare Studies (English Faculty) and the Cambridge Conservation Initiative (CCI), itself a partnership between Cambridge 探花直播 and a cluster of conservation organisations.
CCI鈥檚 emerging programme on the arts, science and conservation is coordinated by Dr John Fanshawe, who has been seconded from Birdlife International. He explains: 鈥淏ringing together academics and practitioners is a core ambition of the community in the David Attenborough Building. John Clare, both as a poet and activist, is a perfect catalyst for exploring the close observation and in situ localism in which so much conservation is rooted.鈥
探花直播symposium will bring together literary scholars with ornithologists, nature writers and artists to consider what it means to observe and record birds. How, for example, does Clare look and watch, and how does he translate what he observes into words? How do today鈥檚 artists and writers respond to his work?
鈥 探花直播idea is to raise questions about the act of bird watching, recording, understanding and classification, both in the early 19th century and the present day, dwelling in particular on the importance of localism and the distinctiveness of Clare鈥檚 environment and voice to his writing about birds,鈥 says Dr Sarah Houghton-Walker from the Centre for John Clare Studies.
Academics speaking at the symposium include Dr Francesca MacKenney (Bristol), Dr Mina Gorji (Cambridge) and Dr Jos Smith ( 探花直播 of East Anglia). Participants will also hear from printmaker Carry Akroyd, textile artist Anita Bruce, and nature writers Alex Preston and Derek Niemann.
Clare鈥檚 work has long inspired artists whose work celebrates the natural world. Akroyd says: 鈥淛ohn Clare is such a visual poet. He wrote outside, his eyes wide open to everything, and wrote inside with visual memory. He switches between a wide-angle bird鈥檚 eye-view of the landscape to hand-lens detail, and even now makes us see more.鈥
Birds soar through the lines of English poetry, but for Clare鈥檚 contemporaries they played an especially important symbolic role. 鈥淪helley鈥檚 skylark is transcendentally a spirit. Keats鈥 nightingale is significant because it represents a sublime kind of not-knowing,鈥 says Houghton-Walker.
Clare, however, insists on the real and the particular. He knows exactly how and where the birds he writes about nest; he knows how many eggs those birds lay; and he leaves behind a meticulous record of every detail, right down to the appearance of the markings on each egg.听 听
鈥淗e鈥檚 intensely interested in habitat, behaviour and song, but also, increasingly, in the threats to birds from his fellow men. He insists on a vital accuracy in his descriptions which continue to astonish scientific natural historians, and yet produces poetry about birds which can claim to be some of the very best in the language,鈥 says Houghton-Walker.
鈥淐lare鈥檚 greatest achievement is the conjunction of scientific accuracy with what he calls 鈥榩oetic feeling鈥. He possesses a depth of knowledge only achievable by painstaking observation of birds鈥 behaviour as it changes with the seasons. He scorns those poets who don鈥檛 take the time to watch and merely recycle, often inaccurate, poetic conventions.
His patient observation is rewarded with an intimate knowledge which is exhibited throughout his prose and poetry. He鈥檚 especially fascinated by nests 鈥 something that has been discussed by many critics.鈥
A determination to represent nature accurately led to struggles, too. 听Voicing his frustration at his inability adequately to transcribe the song of the nightingale, Clare wrote that 鈥渕any of her notes are sounds that cannot be written the alphabet having no letters that can syllable the sounds鈥.听
MacKenney says: 鈥淐lare was extraordinarily inventive in his attempts to get the sounds of birds into his own writing. But the 鈥榩easant-poet鈥 was not naive. Throughout his poetry Clare demonstrates a profound respect for the abiding 'mystery' of birds and their songs.鈥
Without binoculars and with nothing but his senses to rely on, Clare gave us some of the most compelling nature writing of the 19th century.
To illustrate some of the wonders of birds and their behaviour, the symposium will include a screening of 鈥楳urmuration X 10鈥, a short film by filmmaker Sarah Wood and Helen Macdonald, author of H is for Hawk, and a guided tour of the avian collection at the Museum of Zoology.
For more details and to book a place at the symposium 鈥楥lare and the Art of Bird Watching鈥 click .
Inset image: 鈥楨vening Crows鈥 linocut illustration from 'This Happy Spirit鈥.听
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