John Clare: Voice of Freedom
About this book
Providing a firsthand account of the land enclosure movement of the 19th century from a major English poet, this extensively researched study gives modern readers an appreciation of the divisive effects of such policies. Structured chronologically, this exploration of John Clare's life highlights the socioeconomic and environmental aspects of his observations and includes his reports on an insidious revolution taking place in England, where a Parliament dominated by landowners authorized the enclosure of large tracts of land by private acts. Claiming that an impoverished rural population was consequently driven into urban slums—providing cheap labor at the dawn of the Industrial Revolution—the study argues that this is the cause of many poverty issues that modern governments struggle with to this day. Clare's poetry and writing reveals something of the pre-enclosure way of life and also presents his appreciation of what was happening and his anger at its injustice.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- INTRODUCTION
- YOUTH: 1793 to 1820
- FAME BUT NOT MUCH FORTUNE: 1820 to 1832
- ‘FLITTING’: 1832 to 1841
- ASYLUM: 1841 to 1864
- REFLECTIONS
- Bibliography
