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Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Radcliffe and Wordsworth: Nature, Travel, and Memory Essay -- Traveli

Radcliffe and Wordsworth Nature, Travel, and Memory In preparation for my presentation on the character of M. St. Aubert in Radcliffes The Mysteries of Udolpho, I examined mixed passages from the novels offset printing few chapters which described St. Auberts responses to nature in terms of the picturesque, the sublime, and sensibility. wiz passage which especially attracted my at 10tion, hardly which ultimately fell outside the reporting of our groups presentation, is Radcliffes account of St. Auberts feelings about the small estate in Gascony (Radcliffe 6) where he and his family lived To this detail he had been attached from his infancy. He had often made excursions to it when he was a boy, and the impressions of delight given to his mind . . . had not been obliterated by deliver the goods circumstances. The green pastures along which he had so often bounded in the exultation of health, and youthful freedom - the woods, under whose refreshing shade he had first indulged that pensive melancholy . . . the wild walks of the mountains, the river, on whose waves he had floated, and the foreign plains, which seemed boundless as his early hopes - were never after remembered by St. Aubert but with enthusiasm and regret. (Radcliffe 6) This passage was interesting to me because many of the travel writings we defecate read so far tend to focus more on the travellers immediate responses to relatively new and unfamiliar environments which they are visiting for the first time, rather than on a return to a familiar abode or the memories evoked by those familiar places. However, St. Auberts emotional responses to familiar places - as well as his responses to less familiar places he sees on his travels - word form a significant part of his characte... ...remembered them when we had been there before - in a similar manner to the way in which Wordsworth does this in Tintern Abbey. As well, though on the more recent trips I have been more sharp aware of the ways in w hich my relationships with my family have changed over the years - maybe a side effect of travelling with three other spate in a small space for a period of ten days - it is still easy for me to sympathize with Radcliffes evocation of the memory of those we relish . . . all tender and harmonious as this landscape (47). Works Cited Radcliffe, Ann. The Mysteries of Udolpho. 1794. Ed. Jacqueline Howard. capital of the United Kingdom Penguin, 2001. Wordsworth, William. Lines Written a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey, on Revisiting the Banks of the Wye During a Tour, 13 July 1798. 1798. Romanticism An Anthology. Ed. Duncan Wu. Oxford Blackwell, 1998. 265-269.

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