33 Matching Annotations
  1. May 2018
    1. lottery tickets

      "a numbered ticket bought in order to participate in a lottery," (OED). Resembling the modern version, "lottery tickets" is a game of chance. It is detailed in full by Edmond Hoyle in his guide, Hoyle's Games: Containing Laws & Directions for Playing the Various Games Now Prevalent : with Many Improvements and Additions.

  2. Oct 2017
    1. And let the Grove, if not the Parlour, stand

      Leapor reminds us that all change, innovation, new directions come at a price. Like the Romantic poets before here who placed such emphasis on Nature and it's impact on the world abroad she bears the question, "at what cost?" Is this a question that we should still be asking ourselves today?Nature, mother earth, surrounds us whether we like it or not. So should it be our duty to preserve it? Or should we just change it as we see fit?

    2. Sad Mira vows to quit the darling Crime: Yet takes her Farewel, and Repents, in Rhyme.

      The "darling Crime" can possibly be seen as a connection to writing and poetry in general. The act of writing for a female individual was nothing short of transgressive. Leapor's efforts were mirrored by the efforts of poets like Anne Finch These are early allusions to feminist writings that are to come in the future years.

  3. Sep 2017
    1. Here Biron sleeps, with Books encircled round; And him you’d guess a student most profound. Not so — in Form the dusty Volumes stand: There’s few that wear the Mark of Biron’s Hand.

      The issue in Crumble-Hall is not just about the battle between fine buildings and intellectual value but also between the those who own books and those who do not and what they choose to do with the opportunity afforded to them.

    2. Crumble-Hall

      There seems to be a considerable amount of disagreement on the nature of "Crumble Hall" and the intent of Leapor. From mocking, to betrayal, to anger, and discontent different views and interpretations are abundant. Jeannie Dalporto comprises a vast collections in her book [Landscape, Labor, and the Ideology of Improvement In Mary Leapor's "Crumble Hall.](https://www.jstor.org/stable/41467881?seq=16&refreqid=excelsior%3Ade0acf6f39739707dd656972746b2cff#page_scan_tab_contents)

    3. From hence the Muse precipitant is hurl’d, And drags down Mira to the nether World.

      The earlier part of the poem is an exploration/tour of the estate. But notice the shift to the outside grounds. It's a rather unorthodox change of scenery. In her "Alienated Insider" article, Valerie Rumbold writes of the "tensions between rootedness and aspirations..."

    4. “Ah! Roger, Ah!” the mournful Maiden cries: “Is wretched Urs’la then your Care no more, “That, while I sigh, thus you can sleep and snore? “Ingrateful Roger! wilt thou leave me know? “For you these Furrows mark my fading Brow: “For you my Pigs resign their Morning Due: “My hungry Chickens lose their Meat for your: “And, was it not, Ah! was it not for thee, “No goodly Pottage would be dress’d by me. “For thee these Hnads wind up the whirling Jack, “Or place the Spit across the sloping Rack. “I baste the Mutton with a chearful Heart, “Because I now my Roger will have Part.”

      In a brief moment of communication between the Lord of the house and the "servant," Leapor gives a voice to those who do not traditionally get to have a voice. She gives some value, some credence to the duties and work of female individuals. Much as Mary Collier outlined her work duties in her response to Stephen Duck, Leapor takes the opportunity to seek recognition.

    5. See! yon brown Parlour on the Left appears, For nothing famous, but its leathern Chairs, Whose shining Nails like polish’d Armour glow, And the dull clock beat, audible and slow.

      In a traditional country-home poem you would get a grand description of a beautiful parlour. But the way in which Leapor describes the room we get the feeling of a bland, barren, somewhat "dead" room. Nothing about this room really feels appealing or draws us in.

    6. Yet (or the Muse for Vengeance calls in vain) The injur’d Nymphs shall haunt the ravag’d Plain: Strange sounds and Forms shall teaze the gloomy Green; And Fairy-Elves by Urs’la shall be seen: Their new-built Parlour shall with Echoes ring: And in their Hall shall doleful Crickets sing.

      Why use Nymphs to illustrate her point? Does the use of mythological characters strengthen or weaken her argument? It seems to add some color and imagination to her argument, and it may seem to add some connection to past intellectuals.

    7. While the slow [Carr] bears off their aged Limbs, To clear the way for Slopes, and modern Whims; Where furnish’d Nature leaves a barren Gloom, And awkward Art supplies the vacant Room?

      In "Crumble-Hall" Leapor criticzes the wealthy for the destruction of nature and their constant renovation of their homes to fit the ever-changing trends of society. Is this need to "fit-in" or this need to adjust to societal norms still prevalent today? Why do we as people feel the need to adjust to the norms of society?

    8. Sophronia sage! whose learned knuckles know To form round cheese-cakes of the pliant Dough; To bruise the Curd, and thro’ her Fingers squeeze Ambrosial Butter with the temper’d cheese: Sweet Tarts and Puddens, too, her skill declare; And the soft jellies, hid from baneful Air.

      Looking to the "help" Leapor praises "sophronia" for all the hardwork she puts in as a servant of the the oh so grand household she has been making her way through in "Crumble-Hall." A theme that's still prevalent today, the "help" is looked at as less, despite the hard work they go through everyday. They work twice as hard in life to get half as far, if that.

    9. The Roof — no Cyclops e’er could reach so high: Not Polyphemus, tho’ form’d for dreadful Harms, The Top could measure with extended Arms. Here the pleas’d Spider plants her peaceful Loom: Here weaves secure, nor dreads the hated Broom.

      Leapor's distaste for the grandeur size of the house is shared by other poets like, Alexander Pope. His "Epistle to Burlington" sheds some common sentiments on the matter of an excessive tendency shared by the elite.

    10. O’er-stuff’d with Beef; with Cabbage much too full, And Dumpling too (fit Emblem of his Skull!) With Mouth wide open, but with closing Eyes Unwieldy Roger on the Table lies.

      A second socialite that Leapor does not hesitate to scathe. She points out the excessive nature they revel in. Just as they eat in excessive amounts they surround themselves with excessive and unnecessary luxuries while so many others have so little. But even more so it is unfortunate that those with opportunities afforded to them do not take advantage of all that life has afforded them.

    1. Crumble-Hall

      The Country House genre places the home directly into the main narrative as an essential piece of subject matter. The country house poem (or country estate poem) of the seventeenth century which praised the houses and estates of the landed elite was the early form of this genre. Click here for some extra reading on Country House poetry and its development since the 18th century. Knowing that estate poetry is a form of praise, how does that effect the way you take in Mary Leapor's poem?

    1. They Lion grow.

      A long list of reactions to Levine's work here. Look specifically to the responses of Michael Peich and David St. John. This whole time we've been speaking about industrialization and unconsciously focusing on (at least personally) on the white population of the time. But they introduce a whole new depth to the poem. Does it change perspective at different points in the poem?

  4. Aug 2017