Thursday, August 15, 2019
Carefully Read the Poem Simon Lee by William Wordsworth
Simon Lee the Old Huntsman is a poem which occurs in Lyrical Ballads and was written in 1798, belonging, thus, temporally to the Romantic period (1780-1830). Romantic writing is commonly identified with some key elements, which concern imagination, nature, symbolism and myth (although there have been writers of this period who were not as ââ¬Ëmainstreamââ¬â¢). William Wordsworth has been characterised as a canonical author of Romantic Poetry in that his work is highly attached to the notion of Nature and plenty of reference is made to it. Approaching a piece of literary work, however, from this perspective is very restraining, therefore, in this essay we will attempt a ââ¬Ësocialââ¬â¢ or ââ¬Ëhistoricalââ¬â¢ kind of approach. We shall try to ââ¬Ëreadââ¬â¢ the idealistic language found in the poem as social or historical discourse through the poetic techniques employed by the writer. In other words, we will analyse the way various elements of poetic form and language combine to create meaning and effects. Simon Lee is about an old huntsman who, while was once strong and active, now strives to fight his declined health and strength. The poem recounts an actual encounter of the poet with this old man. It seems to be a hybrid of lyric and narrative (a lyrical ballad). Lyric in that we have a first-person expression of emotion and concentration upon the actions and feelings of an individual at a particular moment, while narrative, since there is a narrator and another character, whom the former encounters and, later, describes. There are 12 stanzas of eight lines each with a rhyme scheme of ABABCDED that causes the lines to flow smoothly. The first stanza of the poem introduces us with Simon and sets the scene: ââ¬ËIn the sweet shire of Cardiganââ¬â¢. It is obvious from the beginning that Wordsworth is dealing with a matter from common life, since every reader is familiar with and can picture a sweet shire, the same way the notion of ââ¬Ëpleasantââ¬â¢ is easy to grasp. Furthermore, a series of modest, plain adjectives that evoke sadness are used to describe Simon: ââ¬Ëold manââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëa little manââ¬â¢, who ââ¬Ëonce was tallââ¬â¢ making it clear that the ââ¬Ëheroââ¬â¢ of the poem is just a humble, ordinary old man. Nature, Wordsworth argued, can save people from the alienation, frustration and triviality of contemporary urban life. It seems to me that by choosing to start the poem placing the readers in a rural area away from urban life, he seeks to evoke feelings opposed to the ones mentioned above, those that are for him connected with away-from-nature settings. The second stanza is, I consider, somewhat tragic, since two totally contradictory adjectives- ââ¬Ëpoorââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëmerryââ¬â¢- are used to describe this same person only in two different periods of his life: in the past and present. In this way, the winding down of Simonââ¬â¢s life over the years becomes even more intense to the reader. The rhyming couple ââ¬Ëhas he/ seeââ¬â¢ in Lines 1 and 3 of the second stanza is known as poetic inversion. Wordsworth has inverted the word order for the sake of the sound sense of the verse as well as of the rhythm, both of which would have been different if he had used ââ¬Ëhe hasââ¬â¢. Perhaps any other choice would have made the rhyme pattern less unfussy than it is now, and complication is what he has tried to avoid throughout the whole poem. The easy rhymes ââ¬Ëmerry/cherryââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ësound/roundââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ësick/thickââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëdoor/poorââ¬â¢ are also justified by this theory. The metaphor ââ¬Ëlike a cherryââ¬â¢ is directly derived from the ââ¬Ëdictionââ¬â¢ of Nature and can be easily comprehended and pictured by the majority of the common population-especially in rural areas. In the fourth stanza the retrospection stops and Simon is no longer in the prime of his life. He is no longer healthy, rather he is ââ¬Ëpoor old Simon Leeââ¬â¢ again, who ââ¬Ëhas no sonââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëhas no childââ¬â¢, he only has ââ¬Ëan aged womanââ¬â¢ and they both live ââ¬Ëupon the village commonââ¬â¢. Simon Lee is again transformed into the old man that was presented to us in the first stanza and the poetic inversion of ââ¬Ëvillage commonââ¬â¢ functions to leave an echo of the commonness of everything that surrounds this man, for once more. For the following four stanzas this picture of his is highlighted through words such as ââ¬Ëleanââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ësickââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëthinââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëdryââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëweakââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëthe weakest in the villageââ¬â¢ or the image of his ankles, which are ââ¬Ëswoln and thickââ¬â¢. By these means, the reader is ââ¬Ëforcedââ¬â¢ to sympathise with the hero, who is totally helpless. Even more, the repetition (which could also be characterised as alliteration) of the phrase ââ¬Ëhe has noââ¬â¢ in Line 5 of the fourth stanza reinforces the sense of loneliness and misery that is created. The same effect is also achieved by the alliteration that occurs between the words ââ¬Ësoleââ¬â¢ -ââ¬Ësurvivorââ¬â¢ in Line 8 of the third stanza. What is strikingly noticeable is that there is a pause at the end of almost each line, either a comma, a semi-colon, a full-stop or an exclamation mark, with occasional exceptions in some lines in an inconsistent pattern. This stylistic device, known as ââ¬Ëenjambmentââ¬â¢, suggests that these exceptional lines actually run on; however, on account of the actual line ending itself (with no punctuation mark) the reader is made to pause for a while and think. In other words, he can read each line slowly. This works to relieve any sense of suspense or tension within the poem. Or we can say that the writer initially aims at reproducing classical qualities of balance, harmony and proportion, while the variations noticed may function to indicate the disturbance that has occurred to the above. Suddenly, in the ninth octave Wordsworth writes directly to the reader ââ¬âââ¬ËMy gentle readerââ¬â¢- and asks him to expect no action; the poem is not climactic and the poet is addressing this fact (ââ¬ËIt is no taleââ¬â¢). Through the phrase ââ¬ËI perceiveââ¬â¢ he reveals his insight into the readerââ¬â¢s reactions (ââ¬Ë Iââ¬â¢ m afraid that you expect some tale will be relatedââ¬â¢) and he establishes that there is no resolution or climax to be expected. He is also implying the readerââ¬â¢s blindness of the ââ¬Ëtaleââ¬â¢ already told by Simonââ¬â¢s aging body: the fact that he is humbled while he realises that struggling against a decaying organism is hopeless. At this point it might be useful to think of the readers whom this poem was originally created to address. On the one hand, Wordsworth has chosen to include the common people of rural life in his range of audience, and therefore is using their own language. In the ââ¬ËPrefaceââ¬â¢ to his Lyrical Ballads of 1802 he argues that the language of poetry ought to be ââ¬Ëlanguage of menââ¬â¢. As he says, this is because the rural poor ââ¬Ëconvey their feelings and notions in simple and unelaborated expressionsââ¬â¢ (Wu, Romanticism,1994 p. 252). Their habits do not change as they are not affected by fashion, so their language is more sincere. On the other hand, by the phrase ââ¬Ëmy gentle readerââ¬â¢, we could also say that he is addressing the readers belonging to the upper-class of society; the educated people who would expect a more elaborated language and this poem to actually be far less profound that it really is. To those people who cannot see that it functions to be symbolic, but who only see the words and the events without the meaning lying below these. Wordsworth had lived through the Revolutionary period and was against the early ideas, which is why he had the reputation of a radical. He was influenced by the democratic ideas of the period. It seems that through this poem he seeks to change the social circumstances of the time. He seeks for a more democratic state and he attempts to pass this notion through the use of simple, unelaborated language, which is considered as ââ¬Ëuncorruptedââ¬â¢. Letââ¬â¢s not forget that it was written in a period of remarkable social and political change. Therefore, in one sense, he conducted his own ââ¬Ësocial revolutionââ¬â¢, influenced by the social context within which he created poetry. He was against the received idea of poetic language being as refined and eloquent as to be available only to those with an education. We might, thus, say that by addressing his reader in these two stanzas he is being ironic towards this class of society. At the conclusion of the poem, where the only action so far has been the decay of life, this ââ¬Ësingle blowââ¬â¢ in the twelfth stanza seems to be releasing a sense of freedom from this natural law and the writerââ¬â¢s tone suggests this victory over aging and decay. Simonââ¬â¢s response to this comes with ââ¬ËThe tears into his eyesââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëthanks and praisesââ¬â¢ , conveying a shift from negative to positive; from pity to admiration, since attention now passes from Simonââ¬â¢s outward decay to the endless ââ¬Ëactivityââ¬â¢ and openness of his heart. The writer is overwhelmed by this gratitude expressed towards him and suggests that kindness within oneââ¬â¢s heart may overcome any physical decay that comes with aging and bring about this spiritual survival that equals physical vigour of youthful.
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