Wonders in the Deep: Sailors and the Imagination in the Poetry of William Wordsworth
In December 2023, The Australasian Journal of Victorian Studies published my essay on the poetry of William Wordsworth. The abstract is below, along with links to the full text:
The poetry of William Wordsworth is haunted by rootless mariners,
filled with elevated powers of imagination and a fervent desire to share
their gothic tales. Wordsworth’s sailor poems may be grouped into four
classes: those in which a sailor or sailing features prominently
throughout the poem (with “The Thorn” as the exemplar case); those in
which a sailor or sailing features prominently in one part of the poem;
those in which a sailor is missed by his family and friends; and those
in which ships are observed, but sailors do not appear. Yet despite
sailors’ quasi-poetic abilities, derived from their sublime experiences
upon the waves, they are ultimately unable to articulate their
experiences. Wordsworth’s sailors are imaginative, yet highly emotional;
compelled to repeat their stories, but uninterested in dialogue; and
eager to be heard, but incapable of integrating themselves into the
community. They possess numerous poetic gifts, but their lyrical
potential is stymied by the very qualities that lead them to sea in the
first place. Their vast capacity for imagination and disposition to
self-expression notwithstanding, sailors’ physical rootlessness and
disinterest in community correspond to an inability to ground their
words. Much as they wander across land and sea, they drift across the
surface of language itself, never settling upon a solid meaning.
HTML: https://openjournals.library.sydney.edu.au/AJVS/article/view/17408
PDF: https://openjournals.library.sydney.edu.au/AJVS/article/view/17408/15236