
Contents
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Unlawful Societies Unlawful Societies
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Wordsworth and Silence Wordsworth and Silence
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“A strange half-absence” “A strange half-absence”
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Speech and Silence in Lyrical Ballads Speech and Silence in Lyrical Ballads
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“Uncertain Notice”: The Case of “Tintern Abbey” “Uncertain Notice”: The Case of “Tintern Abbey”
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Five “I cannot tell”: Wordsworth’s Gagging Acts
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Published:December 2013
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Abstract
This chapter traces the career of silence in Lyrical Ballads. Published in 1798, the year that saw the decade’s highest number of arrests for sedition--an annus mirabilis for government spies--the political texturing of Lyrical Ballads engages the national climate of prosecution and paranoia. The rhetoric of locked jaws and silenced communities that marks the protests against the Gagging Acts by Coleridge and others is deeply impressed on Wordsworth’s Alfoxden poems in fractured dialogues and coerced discourse. Examining this poetics of troubled utterance, this chapter calls attention to Wordsworth’s use of rhetorical devices that characterize much late-1790s discourse: praeteritio and occupatio, figures of the disruption of expression.
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