Quizzes & Puzzles16 mins ago
John Clare
11 Answers
Where did the poet John Clare first meet his future wife, Patty? I have found Tickencote. Any help appreciated.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Top Cat2. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The first of the 2 locations mentioned here looks good to me:
http://www.johnclare.info/chronology.htm
http://www.johnclare.info/chronology.htm
-- answer removed --
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Mctavish
I still prefer the first location.
Top Cat2
If your question is connected to the Sunday Times Where Was I? then this should help settle it:
http://www.rutnet.co.uk/pp/gold/viewGold.asp?I DType=Page&ID=13994
I still prefer the first location.
Top Cat2
If your question is connected to the Sunday Times Where Was I? then this should help settle it:
http://www.rutnet.co.uk/pp/gold/viewGold.asp?I DType=Page&ID=13994
I have found this extract:
Every Sunday afternoon, the labourers at Mr. Wilder's lime-kiln were in
the habit of visiting a small public-house, at the hamlet of Tickencote,
called 'the Flower Pot.' Thirsty, like all of their tribe, they spent
hours in carousing; while John Clare, after having had his glass or two,
went into the fields, and, sitting by a hedge, or lying down under a
tree, surveyed the glories of nature, feasting his eyes upon the
thousandfold beauties of earth and sky. It was on one of these Sunday
afternoons, in the autumn of 1817--Clare now past twenty-four--that he
saw for the first time 'Patty,' his future wife. She was walking on a
footpath across the fields, while he was lying in the grass not far off,
dreaming worlds of beauty and ethereal bliss.
http://www.fullbooks.com/The-Life-of-John-Clar e1.html
Every Sunday afternoon, the labourers at Mr. Wilder's lime-kiln were in
the habit of visiting a small public-house, at the hamlet of Tickencote,
called 'the Flower Pot.' Thirsty, like all of their tribe, they spent
hours in carousing; while John Clare, after having had his glass or two,
went into the fields, and, sitting by a hedge, or lying down under a
tree, surveyed the glories of nature, feasting his eyes upon the
thousandfold beauties of earth and sky. It was on one of these Sunday
afternoons, in the autumn of 1817--Clare now past twenty-four--that he
saw for the first time 'Patty,' his future wife. She was walking on a
footpath across the fields, while he was lying in the grass not far off,
dreaming worlds of beauty and ethereal bliss.
http://www.fullbooks.com/The-Life-of-John-Clar e1.html