Wednesday, June 24, 2020
Sensibility and Alienation in Charlotte Smithââ¬â¢s ââ¬ÅThe Emigrantsââ¬Â - Literature Essay Samples
In September 1792, French revolutionaries murdered over one thousand political prisoners to prevent them from being freed and joining enemy forces. After the September Massacres, many, including the English poet Charlotte Turner Smith, had to question their support of the French Revolution and its founding principles. In 1793, Smith published ââ¬Å"The Emigrants,â⬠a two-part poem about French refugees who settled in Brighthelmstone, a city in the south of England. The poemââ¬â¢s first part takes place a month after the September Massacres, and the second part takes place the following spring. Smith uses her poemââ¬â¢s setting, a place where civilization and nature meet, to show how the atrocities committed by French radicals throw humanity out of harmony with nature. In condemning French atrocities, Smith does not show the ways the revolutionaries literally destroy natural beauty; instead, she shows how her knowledge of the suffering in France prevents her from connectin g with nature, even in England, which has been physically unaffected by the conflict. While writers of the literature of Sensibility view such emotional responses as admirable, Smith portrays them as destructive forces which break her connection with the natural beauty which surrounds her. Smith, then, uses ââ¬Å"The Emigrantsâ⬠not only to condemn the atrocities of the French Revolution, but to criticize the efficacy and validity of the literature of Sensibility, philosophically distancing herself from Enlightenment thought and anticipating later writers in the Romantic movement. Smith begins Book I of ââ¬Å"The Emigrantsâ⬠with descriptions of the natural areas around the city to begin hinting at the way the conflict in France causes disharmony between humans and nature. Rather than describing the coast in terms of its beauty in the poemââ¬â¢s first lines, she portrays it in a disturbed state: ââ¬Å"SLOW in the Wintry Morn, the struggling light / Throws a faint gleam upon the troubled wavesâ⬠(1). With these labored descriptions of ââ¬Å"strugglingâ⬠light and ââ¬Å"troubledâ⬠waves, Smith suggests that nature is having difficulty functioning as usual, or that she, at least, is unable to perceive nature without imaging it in conflict. Though this part of the poem is set in November, the weather is ââ¬Å"Wintry,â⬠further suggesting that nature is either not following its usual pattern, or that she is failing to perceive it as usual; this unseasonal description suggests that the weather is worse than expected, which may parall el the way that the French Revolution, falling into violence, is also not going as Smith had expected. Smith does not yet explicitly allude to the Revolution, but hints at its effects: ââ¬Å"Alas! how few the morning wakes to joy!â⬠she writes, referring to those in France who are directly affected by the conflict (1). She writes of those who view ââ¬Å"the day star, but to curse his beamsâ⬠(2). The victims are not simply lamenting the start of another day spent struggling to survive; the sun itself has become a representation of their hardship, so they ââ¬Å"curseâ⬠the sunlight, thereby rejecting a part of the natural world in which they should be able to find ââ¬Å"joy,â⬠but cannot. Smith continues to develop this connection between joy and nature through her descriptions of the landscapeââ¬â¢s creator. She invokes an image of a benevolent, natural god ââ¬Å"whose Spirit into being calld / This wondrous World of Watersâ⬠(2). This is not a distant and impersonal god, but one who is tied to ââ¬Å"Thisâ⬠specific landscape. Here, she finally b egins to describe nature as something beautiful and untroubled. She continues, writing that this godââ¬â¢s breath ââ¬Å"Low murmuring, oer the gently heaving tides, / When the fair Moon, in summer night serene, / Irradiates [the ocean] with long trembling lines of lightâ⬠(2). This calm world of natural beauty she describes inhabits the same physical space as the beginning of the poem, but not the same time. She specifically places this image in a ââ¬Å"summer / night serene,â⬠situating it in the past, before nature was cast into the disarray she has been describing, further emphasizing the lack of such calm beauty in the poemââ¬â¢s current setting. This god bids humanity ââ¬Å"Nothing but good: Yet Man, misguided Man, / Mars the fair work that he was bid enjoy, / And makes himself the evil he deploresâ⬠(3). Nature, then, is meant to be a source of joy or enjoyment, but the ââ¬Å"evilâ⬠of the revolutionaries cuts humanity off from this joy. While Smith herself is not directly threatened by the violence of the French Revolution, she, too, finds herself cut off from nature due to the conflict occurring on the other side of this once ââ¬Å"wondââ¬â¢rousâ⬠and now ââ¬Å"troubledâ⬠ocean. The victims of the Revolution are presumably cut off from nature by their preoccupation with the threat of violence and the actual destruction of their natural surroundings, but for Smith, safe in the unscathed south of England, this alienation from nature must have a different source. Faced with her own troubles along with news of the Revolution, she expresses the desire to leave society and live amidst the natural beauty surrounding her town, in ââ¬Å"some lone Cottage, deep embowerd / In the green woodsâ⬠(3-4). Only here could she appreciate ââ¬Å"The beauteous works of God, unspoild by Man / And [be] less affected then, by human woes / [she] witnessd notâ⬠(4). Here, she begins to connect her relationship to nature with the ideas of the literature of Sensibility; in this genre, readers have the opportunity to display their virtue through their emotional responses to scenes of suffering or hardship which they read about; in other words, by responding to ââ¬Å"human woes / [they] witnessââ¬â¢d notâ⬠with their eyes, but through literature, or in Smithââ¬â¢s case, through the news or through her encounters with the emigrants. While these emotional responses are seen as admirable in readers of Sensibility, Smith expresses a desire to escape from having to emotionally respond to suffering she does not witness, suggesting that a connection with nature can prevent her from being subjected to the scenes which necessitate these responses. However, now that she is aware of the woes of the French people, not even nature can allow her to escape these feelings. She says that nothing, not ââ¬Å"the Cot sequesterd, where the briar / And wood-bine wild, embrace the mossy thatch,â⬠nor the ââ¬Å"more substantial farm,â⬠nor the ââ¬Å"the statelier dome / By dark firs shaded,â⬠nor ââ¬Å"any of the buildings, new and trim / With windows circling towards the restless Sea,â⬠can ââ¬Å"shut out for an hour the spectre Careâ⬠(6). Here, for the first time, she actually begins to describe the city, but does not do so without commenting on the cityââ¬â¢s relationship to nature, and only after describing several other dwellings that are more connected with the natural world. She describes her emotional responses to the Revolution as ââ¬Å"the spectre Care,â⬠ââ¬â a ghost, something to be feared ââ¬â and suggests that nothing, neither nature nor civilization, can get rid of this ââ¬Å"Care,â⬠this feeling of Sensibility, once she begins to feel it. Her tendency to describe the natural world as more important than civilization shows that she still somewhat aligns with Enlightenment thinkers, even if the revolution is making he r question this alignment. Smithââ¬â¢s lingering connection to the Enlightenment is most evident when she says that the French emigrants, who have ââ¬Å"dwelt amid the artificial scenes / Of populous Cityâ⬠¦ [forget] all taste / For Natures genuine beautyâ⬠(25). Echoing Rousseau, she suggests that the emigrants have been corrupted by the ââ¬Å"second-natureâ⬠of city life and have cut themselves off from the true, original nature. She exemplifies this tendency with a French emigrant sitting by the shore with her children. This woman has become ââ¬Å"wearied by the task / Of having here, with swoln and aching eyes / Fixd on the grey horizon, since the dawnâ⬠(22). Contemplating nature, for her, is a tiring task rather than a source of joy, because ââ¬Å"In waking dreams, that native land againâ⬠appears for her; she sees ââ¬Å"Versaillesâ⬠¦ its painted galleries, / And rooms of regal splendour, rich with gold,â⬠only to open her eyes ââ¬Å"On drear realityâ⬠(23). Smith continues to emulate Rousseau by criticizing the way in which the artificial supersedes nature for the French woman, but here, she also begins to anticipate the emerging movement of Romanticism. Twenty-four years after the publication of ââ¬Å"The Emigrants,â⬠the Romantic writer Samuel Coleridge writes about the concept of ââ¬Å"Fancyâ⬠in his Biographia Literaria; ââ¬Å"The Fancy,â⬠he argues, is ââ¬Å"no other than a mode of Memory emancipated from the order of time and spaceâ⬠¦ it is blended with, and modified by that empirical phenomenon of the willâ⬠(478). Coleridge believes that acts of the will cut humanity off from the ââ¬Å"totality,â⬠a mysterious conception of the world opposed to the rational gaze of Enlightenment thinkers. Predating Coleridgeââ¬â¢s text by over two decades, Smiths work applies a similar concept to this French emigrant. This woman sees the beautiful natural setting as dreary and finds no joy in it because, exercising her will and seeing only combinations of images from her memory, she can only observe the old life which she has lost; she thereby fails to participate in the ââ¬Å"totality.â⬠She does not ââ¬Å"[gaze] pleasd on Oceans silver breast, / While lightly oer it sails the summer clouds / Reflected in the waveâ⬠because, due to her willing use of ââ¬Å"Fancy,â⬠as Coleridge might later put it, the ocean now only reflects for her the lost land on its opposite coast (25). Smith, despite her safety in England, experiences the same alienation from nature as the French woman due to the Revolution. For Smith, looking at the ocean, she can hear only ââ¬Å"the deep groans / Of martyrd Saints and suffering Royaltyâ⬠in the wind (19). She is still cut off from na ture by Sensibility, by her emotional responses to the suffering she imagines in France. However, this is not ââ¬Å"Imaginationâ⬠as Coleridge would put it, but ââ¬Å"Fancy,â⬠as she too must borrow and recombine images from her memory to envision these scenes. Engaging in Sensibility, then, to borrow Coleridgeââ¬â¢s later term, is an act of ââ¬Å"Fancyâ⬠and will which lead to alienation from nature. While Smith does not use these terms herself, the language of Romanticism is easy to read in her poem. Smith leaves behind Enlightenment thought and moves toward the Romantic movement in the second part of her poem. Book II takes place the following April, meant to be a time of beauty and rebirth. However, just as the ocean has become a mirror for suffering in Book I, the spring becomes little more than a reminder that the situation has only grown worse with the passing of time in Book II. ââ¬Å"Fain would I snatch an interval from Care,â⬠Smith writes, ââ¬Å"Courting, once more, the influence of Hope / (For Hope still waits upon the flowery prime),â⬠connecting the idea of hope with the newly budding flowers of spring (40). The French Revolution, however, has not become any less violent; the springââ¬â¢s promise of peace, then, is not fulfilled. She continues; ââ¬Å"No shade the leafless copses yet afford, / Nor hide the mossy labours of the Thrush, / That, startled, darts across the narrow pathâ⬠(41). In another unseasonal description, the trees have not yet re grown their leaves, and therefore offer no shelter, either literal shelter from the elements or the spiritual shelter she seeks from the Sensibility to which she is continuously subjected. Again, Smith portrays nature with a sense of disorder, suggesting either that nature has become dysfunctional or that she cannot help but project the dysfunction from the Revolution over nature with her ââ¬Å"Fancy,â⬠as it would later be defined. Even the bird she mentions becomes started in her presence, exposed by the leafless trees. However, the bird, unlike Smith, can recover from its initial fright through its connection to nature; ââ¬Å"But quickly re-assurd, [the thrush] resumes his talk, / Or adds his louder notes to those that rise / From yonder tufted brakeâ⬠(41). Much like the earlier poet Robert Burns in his poem ââ¬Å"To a Mouse,â⬠in which he praises a mouseââ¬â¢s ability to live purely in the moment and not worry about the past or future, Smith seems to envy t his bird for its ability to participate in nature without external concerns for othersââ¬â¢ suffering. Here, she clearly diverges from the Enlightenment philosophy she previously aligned with and helps pave the way for Romanticism; she has no desire to rationally understand or categorize nature. Similar to future Romantic writers such as Coleridge, who wish to cast off their will to participate in the ââ¬Å"totality,â⬠Smith expresses a desire to escape from Sensibility ââ¬â an act of will centered in ââ¬Å"Fancyâ⬠ââ¬â and participate in nature, just as the bird is doing by adding his voice to the surroundings. Near the end of the poem, her condemnations of the literature of Sensibility become more explicit. She acknowledges that although her country is at peace, writing that ââ¬Å"oer our vallies, cloathd with springing corn, / No hostile hoof shall trample nor fierce flames / Wither the woods young verdure,â⬠that ââ¬Å"by the rude sea guarded, we are safe, / And feel not evils such as with deep sighs / The Emigrants deploreâ⬠(51). But though she is safe and her natural surroundings remain intact, she is cut off from them and cannot find the joy she once could. ââ¬Å"Oh! could the time return,â⬠she laments, ââ¬Å"when thoughts like these / Spoild not that gay delight, which vernal Suns, / Illuminating hills, and woods, and fields [gave me]â⬠(59). What cuts her off from nature is the ââ¬Å"thoughtsâ⬠of conflict which she does not directly witness, but imagines ââ¬â an expression of her will which Coleridge might later say is not truly imaginative, but purely fanciful, alienating her from nature. ââ¬Å"The Emigrantsâ⬠clearly laments and denounces the atrocities committed by French radicals in the name of the Revolution, but also denounces the literary movement of Sensibility; not directly affected by the Revolution, Smith portrays her emotional responses to the conflict as being just as destructive to her ability to connect to nature as the actual destruction of her natural surroundings would be. She is alienated from nature all the same, and can think of no way to regain her lost connection. This is a problem which later writers of Romanticism endeavor to fix. Works Cited Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. ââ¬Å"From Biographia Literaria.â⬠The Norton Anthology of English Literature, Eighth Edition, Volume D, The Romantic Period. Ed. Stephen Greenblatt. New York: Norton Company, 2006. 474-488. Print. Smith, Charlotte Turner. ââ¬Å"The Emigrants.â⬠British Women Romantic Poets Project. Ed. Charlotte Payne. Davis: University of California, Davis, 1999. Web.
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