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Well, that was the title,
ably coined by Stuart Curran for the Keats-Shelley Association of America, that
we sent to the MLA, in glad cooperation with President Marjorie Perloff's
invitation for a Convention mega-colloquium on "The Sound of Poetry." The
editors of the Convention Program sighed, and shortened it to "Romanticism:
Poetry and Poetics of Sound," at
once killing off the resonant Sidney sound-bite,[1] and
foreshortening our sprightly leap from instance to theory, and our lovely apt
anagrams. Not poetic, that
Convention bureau. But what they lacked in wit in the program-prose they made
up for in the resourcefulness of material doing: they did manage to schedule
this session on verse in a perversely narrow wind-tunnel of a room
in Philadelphia, 2006, where, too poignantly, hearing was hard, we were told.
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So we, and our
frustrated auditors, are especially grateful for Orrin Wang's invitation to
revise our essays for a new hearing in Romantic Praxis, promoted not
only from narrow wind-tunnel to worldwide web, but also released from the
torture to twenty minutes on the MLA's new LimiTimer: a branded
coinage, catchily two-sided, with a single shared T facing in opposite directions
at once, that reads like a lampoon of those blended phonetic effects in Romantic
verse that each of the speakers tries in various ways to keep in earshot—not
to mention a parody of romantic end-rhyme itself, with its metrically clocked
bounds of sound.
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Our participants, now unbound, are, in
addition to me, Adam Potkay, James Chandler, and Garrett Stewart, and in our
auditorium, all those whom we quote.
I wonder about the sound of sound in Romantic poetry. Adam has his
ear to the sound of Wordsworth's stanzas; Jim relays Wordsworth's Power of Sound into the
Sound of Power and what "sound overpowers" in the Intimations Ode and Shelleyan
coordinates; and the Master-Ear of the Phonotext, Garrett Stewart, catches the
Romantic phone-omenon in Romantic poetry, its reverberations in Victorian
imagination, and its resonance in cognition theory today.
Susan J. Wolfson
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