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“Soundings of Things Done”: The Poetry and Poetics of Sound in the Romantic Ear and EraThe "Power of Sound" and the Great Scheme of Things: Wordsworth Listens to WordsworthJames Chandler, The University of Chicago |
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Notes1 My thanks to Susan Wolfson
and Maureen McLane for searchingly helpful conversation on this essay.
2 Such a distinction has been
fundamental to the modern study of poetry at least since I. A. Richards's
course-setting Principles of Literary Criticism (1924).
3 See also Jonathan
Culler, "Apostrophe," and Garrett Stewart's essay in this issue of Praxis.
4 Wordsworth's
attention to such matters is well-attested. Recall his comment in the
Preface to the Poems of 1815—a memorable instance of Wordsworth
listening to Wordsworth—on the (Milton-influenced) line in Resolution
and Independence, "over his own sweet voice the Stock-dove broods": "The
stock-dove is said to coo, a sound well imitating the note of
the bird; but, by the intervention of the metaphor broods, the
affections are called in by the imagination to assist in marking the
manner in which the bird reiterates and prolongs her soft note, as
if herself delighting to listen to it, and participating of a still
and quiet satisfaction, like that which may be supposed inseparable
from the continuous process of incubation" (2: 437). Here sound and
sense unite in a single word, while On the Power of Sound requires
a full poetic "scheme," divinely sanctioned, to bring about such resolution.
5 "The Colonialist
Beginnings of Comparative Musicology"; see also Enlightenment Orpheus:
The Power of Music in Other Worlds.
6 It is this
later text that I discuss here.
7 I elaborate
this reading of the "Intimations" Ode in "Wordsworth's Great Ode and
the Progress of Poetry."
8 Compare the repeated "But for . . ." in Felicia Hemans's The Sceptic, the context not terribly dissimilar: And say, cold Sophist! if by thee bereft I don't mean that Hemans echoes Wordsworth, though "the vision of the days to be" certainly invokes the idiom of the early stanzas of the "Intimations" Ode. Since The Sceptic is likely a response to Byron (see Sweet and Taylor), it is interesting to speculate on Hemans's possible invocation of the idiom of Byron's nemesis, Wordsworth. At the very least, her clear syntax serves as a foil, in Empson's phrase (see n. below), to the "shuffling" grammar of the "Intimations" Ode, stanza IX. In Shelley's Mont Blanc—the publication (1817) falling between Wordsworth's Ode (1807, 1815) and The Sceptic (1820)—a well known But for crux occurs: The wilderness has a mysterious tongue But for might mean "except for" or, more in keeping with the context
(and standard editorial commentary), "only through" (Shelley's Poetry
and Prose 99n4).
9
William Empson, Seven Types of Ambiguity (New York: New Directions,
1947; revised from British editon 1930), 151.
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