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4 - A blue chasm: Wordsworth's The Prelude and the figure of parenthesis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2010

Alexander Regier
Affiliation:
Rice University, Houston
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Summary

These kirkmen have done Scotland harm – they have banished puns and laughing and kissing (except in cases where the very danger and crime must make it very fine and gustful). I shall make a full stop after kissing for after that there should be a better parent-thesis: and go on to remind you of the fate of Burns.

In the first chapter of this book I tried to show how an image of fragmentation such as the ‘fragment of a wooden bowl’ in The Ruined Cottage can play a metonymic role in signifying a larger concern with fragmentation in Wordsworth's poetry. The present chapter wants to illustrate how fracture weaves itself into Wordsworth's texts syntactically, namely, by way of a rhetorical and grammatical figure. The analysis will concentrate on the figure of parenthesis. To ensure a clear focus, I will limit the reading of this figure – at once rhetorical and grammatical – to some specific moments in The Prelude.

Parenthesis is both a punctuation mark and a rhetorical figure. The syntactical break in a textual structure by means of a parenthetical sign is fundamentally disruptive in its effects. Grammatical treatises of the eighteenth century, which often include a section or chapter on parenthesis, are as insistent on this as today's reference works. Parenthesis, both as a grammatical unit and as a rhetorical move, produces a hiatus and a fracture in thought and language.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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