Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- Note on the Text
- Edward Rushton: Timeline
- Introduction: Rushton Edward, Bookseller, 56 Paradise Street
- I Local Radicalism
- 1 ‘Written near one of the Docks of Liverpool’
- 2 ‘A gang of fierce hirelings appears’ Fighting the Press Gang, and Other Sea Stories
- 3 ‘Yet still our isle's enslaved’ The Irish Poems
- II Global Radicalism
- Bibliography
- Index
2 - ‘A gang of fierce hirelings appears’ Fighting the Press Gang, and Other Sea Stories
from I - Local Radicalism
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- Note on the Text
- Edward Rushton: Timeline
- Introduction: Rushton Edward, Bookseller, 56 Paradise Street
- I Local Radicalism
- 1 ‘Written near one of the Docks of Liverpool’
- 2 ‘A gang of fierce hirelings appears’ Fighting the Press Gang, and Other Sea Stories
- 3 ‘Yet still our isle's enslaved’ The Irish Poems
- II Global Radicalism
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
If some gentle reader should wonder why sea songs are included in a volume of Lancashire songs and ballads, our answer to the unuttered query would be twofold: – First, because Lancashire is a maritime county, possessing in Liverpool the greatest commercial seaport in the world; and, secondly, because a few years ago we also had a local Dibdin in the benevolent and lamented Edward Rushton of Liverpool, a few of whose songs we have obtained permission from his descendants to copy.
THUS JOHN HARLAND, journalist of the Manchester Guardian in the mid-nineteenth century and editor of a rich collection of Lancashire songs and ballads, introduces the small body of ‘Sea Songs’ contained in the volume, all by Edward Rushton. The group includes a few poems about sea life; the opening ballad is ‘Will Clewline’, whose added subtitle, ‘A Tale of the Pressgang’, singles out its political significance. The inclusion of those poems in an anthology of that kind and the writer being dubbed a ‘local Dibdin’ by the volume's editor are both indications of the generic affiliation within Rushton's poetic corpus to the articulate tradition of songs and balladry, whose distinctive traits decisively contributed to defining eighteenth-century culture and canon formation in Britain and Ireland. These included the foregrounding of the oral and performative dimensions, intended to express ‘collectivized voices’ in a plurality of media; at the same time the emerging study of ballad and song coincided with the rise of British literary history and criticism. By the end of the century, ballads ‘had of course […] existed in many media: oral tradition, broadsides, chapbooks, book form. As a poetic “kind,” ballads intriguingly ran the gamut from anonymous orality to highly elaborate, authored literary productions’.
Rushton's mostly narrative poetry was actually produced and circulated across different media, aptly epitomizing the inherent hybridity of the genre. Captured in between orality and print culture, but also music and text, narrative and lyric modes, Rushton's experience of writing has Romantic generic contamination as its own underlying generative principle, as will be explored in the following pages.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Talking RevolutionEdward Rushton’s Rebellious Poetics, 1782–1814, pp. 48 - 74Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2014