Grongar Hill
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Grongar Hill is located in the Welsh county of
Carmarthenshire Carmarthenshire ( cy, Sir Gaerfyrddin; or informally ') is a county in the south-west of Wales. The three largest towns are Llanelli, Carmarthen and Ammanford. Carmarthen is the county town and administrative centre. The county is known as ...
and was the subject of a loco-descriptive poem by John Dyer. Published in two versions in 1726, during the Augustan period, its celebration of the individual experience of the landscape makes it a precursor of Romanticism. As a prospect poem, it has been the subject of continuing debate over how far it meets artistic canons.


The location

The hill lies in the parish of
Llangathen Llangathen () is a community located in Carmarthenshire, Wales. The population taken at the 2011 census was 507. The parish church of St Cathen is a Grade II* listed building and houses the tomb of Anthony Rudd, an Elizabethan Bishop of St Davi ...
and rises abruptly not far from the River Tywi. The Ordnance Survey reference is SN573215 / Sheet: 159 and the co-ordinates are latitude 51° 52' 23.85" N and longitude 4° 4' 23.17" W. Its name derives from the
Iron Age The Iron Age is the final epoch of the three-age division of the prehistory and protohistory of humanity. It was preceded by the Stone Age (Paleolithic, Mesolithic, Neolithic) and the Bronze Age (Chalcolithic). The concept has been mostly appl ...
hillfort on its summit, in Welsh ''gron gaer'' (circular fort). At the hill's foot is the restored mansion of
Aberglasney Aberglasney House and Gardens is a medieval house and gardens set in the Tywi valley in the parish of Llangathen, Carmarthenshire, West Wales. It is owned and run by Aberglasney Restoration Trust, a registered charity. It is a Grade II* li ...
that once belonged to John Dyer's family and where he grew up from 1710. The area was important during the Mediaeval period of Welsh independence and from the 150 metre summit of the hill the ruins of several neighbouring castles can be seen; most notably "the luxurious groves of Dinevor, with its ruinated towers, present themselves with venerable majesty on the left; while the valley spreads in front….and the ruins of Dryslwyn castle, upon an insulated eminence in the middle of the vale."


The poem

The first version of John Dyer's poem appeared with a selection of others by him among the ''Miscellaneous Poems and Translations by Several Hands'', published by Richard Savage in 1726. It was written in irregularly lined
pindarics Pindarics (alternatively Pindariques or Pindaricks) was a term for a class of loose and irregular odes greatly in fashion in England during the close of the 17th and the beginning of the 18th century. Abraham Cowley, who published fifteen ''Pindariq ...
but the freshness of its approach was concealed beneath the heavily conventional poetic diction there. In the second section one finds "mossy Cells", "shado'wy Side" and "grassy Bed" all within six lines of each other; and in the fourth appear "watry Face", "show'ry Radiance", "bushy Brow" and "bristly Sides", as well as unoriginal "rugged Cliffs" and at their base the "gay Carpet of yon level Lawn". Within the same year the poet was able to mine out of it the unencumbered and swiftly moving text which is chiefly remembered today. This was written in a four-stressed line of seven or eight syllables rhymed in couplets or occasionally triple rhymed.
Geoffrey Tillotson Geoffrey Tillotson, FBA (30 June 1905 – 15 October 1969) was an English literary scholar and academic. He was Professor of English Literature at Birkbeck College, London, from 1944 to 1969. Biography The son of a millworker, he attended Ke ...
identified as its model the octosyllabics of Milton's ''
L'Allegro ''L'Allegro'' is a pastoral poem by John Milton published in his 1645 ''Poems''. ''L'Allegro'' (which means "the happy man" in Italian) has from its first appearance been paired with the contrasting pastoral poem, ''Il Penseroso'' ("the melan ...
'' and of
Andrew Marvell Andrew Marvell (; 31 March 1621 – 16 August 1678) was an English metaphysical poet, satirist and politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1659 and 1678. During the Commonwealth period he was a colleague and friend ...
's "Appleton House", and commented that he "learns from Milton the art of keeping the syntax going". He could also have mentioned that Marvell had employed the same metre in the shorter "Upon the Hill and Grove at Billborrow", which takes its place in the line of prospect poems stretching from
John Denham John Denham may refer to: * John Denham (died 1556 or later), English MP for Shaftesbury * John Denham (judge), (1559–1639), father of the poet below, and one of the Ship Money judges * John Denham (poet) (1615–1669), English poet * John Denham ...
's "Cooper’s Hill" (1642) through Dyer to the end of the 18th century. Dyer's poem differs from most of these in that it is shorter, no more than 158 lines, and more generalised. Although the hill itself and the
River Towy The River Towy ( cy, Afon Tywi, ) is one of the longest rivers flowing entirely within Wales. Its total length is . It is noted for its sea trout and salmon fishing. Route The Towy rises within of the source of the River Teifi on the lower sl ...
are named in the poem, the old castles on the neighbouring heights are not, nor is their history particularised. Instead they are made an emotional image and given Gothic properties: From this contrast with their former glory, the poet says that he learns to modify his desires and be content with the simple happiness that his presence on the hill brought in the past and continues to do. The drawing of a moral is more a private affair, in the same way that the poet's contentment is a sincere personal response to the natural scene, rather than made the occasion for public lesson-drawing – still less is it, as in the case of the several later parson poets that adopted other hills, used for professional admonitions from their pulpit. The different professionalism that Dyer brought to the poem was that of his recent training in painting. The "silent nymph, with curious eye" addressed at the start watches the evening "painting fair the form of things". She is called to aid her "sister Muse" in a dialogue where poetry and painting cross-fertilise each other: 'Landskip' was by then an art term and is soon partnered by others from the professional vocabulary: "vistoes" (line 30) and "prospect" (line 37). Authorial music is subdued by this place "where Quiet dwells" and "whose silent shade sfor the modest Muses made". The effects are predominantly visual, as in the description of how perception of the surrounding natural features is modified on ascending the hill slope (lines 30–40), or in the likening of the contrasting aspects of the view to "pearls upon an Ethiop's arm" (line 113). While the view is not minutely detailed, what Dyer sees from the summit is authentic, as is apparent from a comparison with the prose description in the guidebook already quoted. But it is possible for the eye to be guided by the vision of the painters then in vogue. Among the influences on Dyer identified by critics have figured
Claude Lorrain Claude Lorrain (; born Claude Gellée , called ''le Lorrain'' in French; traditionally just Claude in English; c. 1600 – 23 November 1682) was a French painter, draughtsman and etcher of the Baroque era. He spent most of his life in It ...
,
Nicolas Poussin Nicolas Poussin (, , ; June 1594 – 19 November 1665) was the leading painter of the classical French Baroque style, although he spent most of his working life in Rome. Most of his works were on religious and mythological subjects painted for a ...
, and
Salvator Rosa Salvator Rosa (1615 –1673) is best known today as an Italian Baroque painter, whose romanticized landscapes and history paintings, often set in dark and untamed nature, exerted considerable influence from the 17th century into the early 19th ...
, the latter of whom was, like Dyer, both a poet and painter. The mellow light effects of Dyer's poem are certainly Claude's, but without the Classical trappings. As a vista, with the abrupt ascent rising from the river in the foreground, leading to a view of distant towers, it approximates more closely to Rosa's "Mountain Landscape", now in Southampton Art Gallery. Another way in which Dyer's poem differed from much that had gone before, and is prophetic of the change in sensibility to come, is its personal tone. What is drawn by him out of the landscape are not the gleanings of his bookshelf but reflections "so consonant to the general sense or experience of mankind, that when it is once read, it will be read again", as
Samuel Johnson Samuel Johnson (18 September 1709  – 13 December 1784), often called Dr Johnson, was an English writer who made lasting contributions as a poet, playwright, essayist, moralist, critic, biographer, editor and lexicographer. The ''Oxford ...
observed. In the words of a later commentator, "his gentle, quaintly precise moralizing is unlike the typical classical didacticism in that it seems to spring inevitably from the effect of natural objects on the poet's mind, instead of being itself a main thing and laboriously illustrated by such natural facts as came to hand." It was by means of such generalised humanism, says another, that Dyer “broke with tradition by making himself, as both poet and person, an object of study and contemplation.” The interest of the last two critics was in tracing the thread that leads from the neo-classicism of Dyer's time to the personalised Romantic vision of nature. For
William Wordsworth William Wordsworth (7 April 177023 April 1850) was an English Romantic poet who, with Samuel Taylor Coleridge, helped to launch the Romantic Age in English literature with their joint publication ''Lyrical Ballads'' (1798). Wordsworth's ' ...
, in his sonnet addressed to the poet, Dyer is rescued from the fashionable preference formerly given unworthier models by his ability to conjure up “a living landscape” that will ultimately be remembered "Long as the thrush shall pipe on Grongar Hill." Here Wordsworth refers to the final lines of Dyer's poem. But in fact the whole of it fits the Wordsworthian paradigm. At the very beginning, Dyer invokes the "sister muse" lying on the mountain top, as he had done himself in the past, to call up the memory of the scene. In this way the poem's inward reflective quality reaches towards that "emotion recollected in tranquillity" which was Wordsworth's own definition of the wellspring of poetry. "The emotion is contemplated till, by a species of reaction, the tranquillity gradually disappears, and an emotion, kindred to that which was before the subject of contemplation, is gradually produced, and does itself actually exist in the mind."


A landscape in words

Among the other poems by Dyer that accompanied the first appearance of "Grongar Hill" in Savage's miscellany was his epistle to his teacher
Jonathan Richardson Jonathan Richardson (12 January 1667 – 28 May 1745), sometimes called "the Elder" to distinguish him from his son (Jonathan Richardson the Younger), was an English artist, collector of drawings and writer on art, working almost entirely as a ...
, "To a Famous Painter", in which he modestly confessed that “As yet I but in verse can paint”. After Dyer's death, it was included among his poems as a continual reminder that he had practised both arts. Richardson had been well known as an art theorist and the poetic practice of his apprentice was soon to be questioned by other theorists. William Gilpin, in his popularisation of the concept of the
picturesque Picturesque is an aesthetic ideal introduced into English cultural debate in 1782 by William Gilpin in ''Observations on the River Wye, and Several Parts of South Wales, etc. Relative Chiefly to Picturesque Beauty; made in the Summer of the Year ...
, ''Observations on the River Wye and several parts of South Wales, relative chiefly to Picturesque Beauty'' (1782), found Dyer's poetry deficient in that quality. "His distances, I observed, are all in confusion; and indeed it is not easy to separate them from his foregrounds." And while the immediate detail of the passage beginning "Below me trees unnumber'd rise" (lines 57ff) was justly observed, it was perceptually wrong to discern in equal detail the ivy on the walls of Dinevawr Castle. Not all artists were so outspoken. In his textbook ''Instructions for Drawing and Colouring Landscapes'' (London, 1805),
Edward Dayes Edward Dayes (1763 in London – May 1804 in London) was an English watercolour painter and engraver in mezzotint. Life He studied under William Pether, and began to exhibit at the Royal Academy in 1786, when he showed a portrait and views o ...
returned to the same description of trees downhill that Gilpin cites as a correct middle ground. Though perhaps "it is too much detailed for any mass in a picture" in itself, he finds it commendable nevertheless as illustrating the principle that diversification of form and colour is needed in painting "to prevent monotony". Bishop John Jebb appealed to other qualities in the text. The demand that a poet should keep to the single viewpoint of an observer is
no more than the objection of a mere painter. It is not the objection of a man of moral sensibility; for who would sacrifice for a technicism of art those specialities which ... prepare us for one of the most touching applications in English poetry; for which, be it observed, had we been kept at a distance, according to the rules of perspective, we should not have been sufficiently interested spectators.
Gilpin's own nephew,
William Sawrey Gilpin William Sawrey Gilpin (4 October 1762 – 4 April 1843) was an English artist and drawing master, and in later life a landscape designer. Biography Gilpin was born at Scaleby Castle, Cumbria on 4 October 1762, the son of the animal painter Saw ...
, sided with the bishop's appeal in a theoretical work of his own. "Can the mind be ''pleased'', nay ''delighted'', without being ''interested''?" he objected. "How different the estimation of an extensive prospect that suggested the beautiful reflections of the poet" in the passage beginning “See on the mountain’s southern side" (lines 114–28). For all that, the debate over the pictorial qualities of Dyer's poem continued into the 20th century in much the same terms. Christopher Hussey, in his book ''The Picturesque: studies in a point of view'' (1927), finds in it a
Claudian Claudius Claudianus, known in English as Claudian (; c. 370 – c. 404 AD), was a Latin poet associated with the court of the Roman emperor Honorius at Mediolanum (Milan), and particularly with the general Stilicho. His work, written almost ent ...
landscape "composed into a unity", an assessment dismissed by
John Barrell John Charles Barrell FBA FEA (born February 1943) is a British scholar of eighteenth and early nineteenth century studies. Early life John Barrell was born in February 1943. He took his first degree at Trinity College, Cambridge, and his Ph ...
in ''The Idea of Landscape and the Sense of Place'' (1972). For Barrell the poetic effects are random and the sense of place is disrupted by the way that "the eighteenth century poet is forever interrupting his scene-painting to find its moral or emotional analogue". On the other hand, Barrell saw little difference between the approaches adopted by either Dyer and William Gilpin. Where the latter lingered over a landscape "according to whether it fulfilled or not his 'picturesque rules', the topographical poet chose his subject by its ability to furnish him with apt images to 'moralize'." Later still,
Rachel Trickett Rachel Trickett (20 December 1923 – 24 June 1999) was an English novelist, non‑fiction writer, literary scholar, and a prominent British academic; she served as Principal of St Hugh's College, Oxford, for nearly twenty years, between 19 ...
exposed the "innate absurdity" of the supposition "that the technique Dyer acquired as a painter could be reproduced with a kind of transliterated accuracy in language." Furthermore, it is a legitimate part of the poet's role to comment and "Dyer does in fact make a distinction between the visual and the perceptual by separating his passages of description and of moralizing".


Tributes

Verse tributes to “Grongar Hill” have been somewhat oblique. The second stanza of the young
William Combe William Combe (25 March 174219 June 1823) was a British miscellaneous writer. His early life was that of an adventurer, his later was passed chiefly within the "rules" of the King's Bench Prison. He is chiefly remembered as the author of ''Th ...
’s “Clifton” names as among the forerunners of his own prospect poem Pope's “Windsor Forest”; the “gentle spirit…who hail’d on Grongar Hill the rising sun”; and
Henry James Pye Henry James Pye (; 20 February 1745 – 11 August 1813) was an English poet, and Poet Laureate from 1790 until his death. His appointment owed nothing to poetic achievement, and was probably a reward for political favours. Pye was merely a ...
’s “Faringdon Hill”. Later Combe was to avenge William Gilpin's insult to Dyer's poem by caricaturing his work in ''The Tour of Dr Syntax in Search of the Picturesque''. Another youthful tribute to Dyer's poem occurs at the start of Coleridge's undergraduate squib “Inside the coach” (1791), which parodies the opening lines. In place of Dyer's “Silent Nymph with curious eye! Who, the purple ev'ning, lie”, he invokes the “Slumbrous God of half-shut eye! Who lovest with limbs supine to lie” (lines 5–6) as he vainly seeks rest on a night journey. During the 19th century there were two translations of Dyer's celebration of the Welsh countryside at the tail end of the Welsh literary renaissance. The first was the “Duoglott Poem, faithfully imitated” as ''Twyn Grongar'' by Rev. Thomas Davies in 1832. A second, ''Bryn y Grongaer'', was written by William Davies (1831–1892) under his bardic name of Teilo. The site itself was painted early in the century by
Henry Gastineau Henry Gastineau (1791–1876) was an English engraver and prolific painter in water-colours. He was born in London to a family of Huguenot descent. One of his daughters, Maria Gastineau, painted in a similar style. Life He was a student at the ...
and later appeared as a woodcut in ''Wales Illustrated'' (1830). Although the poem was frequently anthologised, it did not appear as an individual work (apart from in the Welsh duoglott translation) until the scholarly edition of C. Boys Richard (Johns Hopkins Press, 1941). This was accompanied by a topographically incorrect woodcut taken from Dodsley's 1761 collection of Dyer's poems showing a riverside mansion at the steep foot of a castled hill. There were, however, several limited small press editions. These included the hundred copies from the Swan Press (Chelsea) in 1930; one illustrated with woodcuts by Pamela Hughes (1918–2002) from the Golden Head Press (Cambridge, 1963) ; and two editions including other poems from the Grongar Press (Llandeilo, 1977, 2003) with woodcuts by John Petts. The poem's most devoted artistic admirer has been John Piper, who described it as “one of the best topographical poems in existence because it is so visual.” He first painted the hill in 1942 and the oil was subsequently issued as a coloured print. Later he produced three lithographs for the edition issued by the Stourton Press (Hackney, 1982). This used the much rarer original version in pindarics. The Piper print was also redeployed as the CD cover of a setting of Dyer's words by the Welsh composer
Alun Hoddinott Alun Hoddinott CBE (11 August 1929 – 11 March 2008) was a Welsh composer of classical music, one of the first to receive international recognition. Life and works Hoddinott was born in Bargoed, Glamorganshire, Wales. He was educated at Gowert ...
, who knew the area well in his youth. In 1998 he took four stanzas from the pindaric version of the poem and set them for baritone and string quartet with piano as “Grongar Hill” (Op.168). He also set other sections in 2006 for soprano, baritone and four hands at the piano, titling it “Towy Landscape” (Op. 190). The work is in the form of a dramatic ‘scena’ which is subdivided into recitative and aria-like sections.Jeremy Huw Williams, “Alun Hoddinott – a singer’s perspective”, in ''Alun Hoddinott: A Source Book'', Ashgate 2013
pp. x–xi
/ref>


References

{{reflist Mountains and hills of Carmarthenshire 1726 poems English poems