On the final page of The Making of the English Working Class, E. P. Thompson hails “a resistance movement in which both the Romantics and the Radical craftsmen opposed the annunciation of Acquisitive Man.” He continues, “In the failure of the two traditions to come to a point of juncture, something was lost. How much we cannot be sure, for we are among the losers.” According to Thompson, “After Blake no mind was at home in both cultures, nor had the genius to interpret the two traditions to each other. It was a muddled Mr. Owen who offered to disclose the ‘new moral world,’ while Wordsworth and Coleridge had withdrawn behind their ramparts of disenchantment.”Footnote 2 The book ends as it starts, with the figure of William Blake, whose annotation from 1798, “The Beast and the Whore rule without control,” is the epigraph for part one, “The Liberty Tree.” The fiftieth anniversary of Thompson's classic has come and gone, marked by conferences, journals, books, and broadcasts.Footnote 3 At this point, one could be excused for feeling that little more needs to be said. Yet few historians have explored what might be thought an odd conclusion to a book about the “heroic” culture of working-class radicalism.Footnote 4 This article takes as its starting point Thompson's lament for a historical conjunction that failed to happen.
A number of related issues are at stake. First, this article explores key themes in the political and intellectual life of one of the twentieth century's most influential historians. It argues that Thompson's history of working-class resistance and his study of romanticism should be viewed as integral to a historical project informed by his desire to open alternatives for a socialist future. The place of the Romantics in The Making is neither incidental nor merely illustrative; rather it is seen as central to the republican challenge mounted against Britain's ancien régime and to the forces opposed to the emergence of capitalist industrialization. For Thompson, the 1790s was a moment of enormous possibility ending in disillusion and “disenchantment.” As this article shows, the theme of disenchantment runs through much of Thompson's writing. He was concerned with how the condition of disenchantment influenced the literary and political imagination. This article's first section follows the Romantics’ route from political engagement to retreat and doubt, to the point at which identification with democratic principles associated with France was no longer possible.
The second section of the article concerns the interplay between the lived present and historical past, as the disenchantment of Thompson's own era appeared to parallel both the failed aspirations of the age of revolution and the problem of political and literary reaffirmation. It underscores the importance of Communist Party priorities during the Popular Front, the Second World War, and the immediate postwar period. The Popular Front not only provided a model for popular mobilization, but the goal of Marxist intellectuals to recover a “people's” literary heritage was reflected in Thompson's later efforts to merge a version of England's literary past with a “people's history.” Thompson viewed the final years of the “people's” war as opening a moment of internationalist hope, a prospect soon extinguished by the rise of Cold War culture. The crisis of 1956 marked a sharp break that forced political rethinking and the founding of the New Left.
In the third section, we return to the Romantics, to their trajectory from “disenchantment” to “default,” terms that Thompson initially used with reference to twentieth-century writers and intellectuals. For Thompson, Wordsworth's poetry at the moment of sustained crisis, when political hopes confront a changed reality, illustrates the complex translation of “lived experience” into poetic language. “Experience” remained a key analytical category in Thompson's writing on both history and literature, and it was viewed as something that was lived through and articulated and that was thus available for interpretation. No British historian of his generation, with the possible exception of Christopher Hill, contributed more than Thompson to the field of literary studies. While his work crossed disciplinary boundaries, he remained largely indifferent to the fashions of academic literary scholarship. In debates over contested questions of political theory, he assumed the historian's privileged position. Yet his work provides an opportunity for ongoing exchange between historians and literary scholars and the enhancement of cross-disciplinary awareness.
Thompson died before he was able to finish his long-planned book on the early Romantics. This article's final section turns to the unfinished work. It engages with an absent text, elaborating on what Thompson left undone or what he might have done had he lived to complete his project; it seeks to offer some slight compensation for what we have lost.
“Bliss Was It in that Dawn”: From Romantic Revolution to Retreat
Thompson's interest in romanticism spanned a lifetime: from his first book, William Morris: Romantic to Revolutionary, published in 1955 with a revised edition in 1977, to his study, Witness against the Beast: William Blake and the Moral Law, published shortly after his death in 1993. He grew up within a family surrounded by poets and poetry; both his father and brother, and indeed Thompson himself, were poets.Footnote 5 Had he lived, a full-scale book on the Romantics during the age of revolution was promised.Footnote 6 We are left with the not insubstantial fragments of that book brought together by his wife, Dorothy Thompson. The signature essay, “Disenchantment or Default? A Lay Sermon,” originally published in 1969, focuses on the plight of William Wordsworth and Samuel Coleridge.Footnote 7 This essay is crucial to any discussion of Thompson's interpretation of the romantic poets. It deals with the complicated relationship between literature and political commitment, with literary expression born of the shattered dream of new worlds and retreat from once-held ideologies deemed to be false. In delivering his “Lay Sermon” (a reference to Coleridge's reactionary Lay Sermon of 1817), Thompson returns to themes, incidents, and poetry first introduced in The Making concerned with the Romantics’ active political engagement, their lingering disillusion, and their ultimate disavowal of former beliefs. In this context, he reflects more broadly on the situation of intellectuals and artists during times of intense political struggle.
In the first instance, Thompson countered a prevailing tendency among literary critics to press Wordsworth's moment of political disenchantment earlier and earlier and to present the political break as catastrophic and total, decoupling poetic achievement from political engagement. In this way, romanticism's own ideology, whereby romantic poetry stands beyond the historical conditions of its own production, was reaffirmed.Footnote 8 In contrast, Thompson dates Wordsworth's decisive break as having come after the Peace of Amiens (1802–3), with an extended period of poetic creativity occurring before disenchantment turned to default. One cause of misunderstanding, writes Thompson, “has been an insufficiently close attention to the actual lived historical experience.”Footnote 9 At this point, “experience” is set against abstraction or theory, with William Godwin as the principal culprit. When it was published in February 1793, Godwin's Political Justice caused a sensation among the radical intelligentsia. William Hazlitt later reflected, with a characteristic touch of irony, that Godwin “blazed as a sun in the firmament of reputation; no one was more talked of … wherever liberty, truth, justice was the theme, his name was not far off.”Footnote 10 Wordsworth was deeply impressed and became one of Godwin's regular visitors.Footnote 11 In 1794, Coleridge wrote Robert Southey that he had read Godwin “with the greatest attention.” He sought out Godwin in London, dedicating a poem to the philosopher in which he likened the power of Political Justice to the aurora borealis illuminating “a sunless world forlorn” with an “electric … stream of rosy light.”Footnote 12 Coleridge, ever quick to change his mind, had in fact already begun to see through Godwin's system. Wordsworth's break came somewhat later. For Thompson, the falling of the scales from the poets’ eyes did not mark the abandonment of republican principles but “a rejection of a mechanical psychology and an abstract enthronement of reason.”Footnote 13 The break with Godwin signaled a turn toward “real man and away from abstracted man … away from the déraciné Godwinian intelligentsia but toward the common people.” This view lines up well with Wordsworth's own version of his attraction to and subsequent rejection of the philosophy “That promised to abstract the hopes of man / Out of his feelings, to be fixed thenceforth, / For ever in a purer element” (Prelude, bk. 10, 806–9).Footnote 14
Thompson captures the Romantics’ release from the grip of Godwin's high rationalism; whether his hostile evaluation of Godwin is fully justified is a different question.Footnote 15 The critique of “abstract reason,” the opposition of “experience” to theory, can itself be viewed as an intellectual tradition rooted in British reactions to the French Revolution.Footnote 16 The privilege accorded to “experience” was a key element of romanticism. There is a sense in which Thompson casts Godwin as a stock character, the philosophizing intellectual of the Left sitting out the political struggle, risk-averse, and inconstant in his politics. Versions of this figure recur in his polemics aimed at contemporaries, most notably Louis Althusser. In 1963, the year that saw the publication of The Making, Thompson penned a lengthy memo addressed to the editorial board of New Left Review (a journal that he had helped to found in 1960) in which he detected among the editors “the same tendencies to deracination and intellectualization, in the name of higher socialist theory” that he disliked in Jean-Paul Sartre and “marxistentialism.”Footnote 17 As for Godwin, his grand notions of “Reason” and “Benevolence” lacked roots in the soil of social reality or support among the ranks of artisan democrats. He opposed political activism; revolutions were experiments of the mind. Thompson's judgment of Godwin remained harsh. Toward the end of his life, he reiterated, “There is a sense in which the espousal of Godwinism represented an actual retreat from immediate political commitment. The very utopianism of Political Justice appealed in characteristic ways to the revolting intelligentsia.”Footnote 18
Opposition to what he regarded as retreat to the heights of theory formed a unifying theme in Thompson's life and writing. It is worth pausing, however, to remark on his reference to Godwin's utopianism. In his postscript to the revised edition of William Morris: Romantic to Revolutionary (1977), Thompson embraced Morris's “new Utopianism,” an expressive mode that drew its imaginative force from romanticism. He observes that to vindicate Morris's utopianism “may at the same time be to vindicate Utopianism itself, and set it free to walk the world once more without shame and without accusations of bad faith.”Footnote 19 Morris not only is freed from the critique of scientific Marxism but also provides the means for reopening the Marxist tradition to the realm of human desire. The trajectory taking Morris from “romantic to revolutionary” appears less of a break than Thompson had originally proposed, reflecting his own rejection of Marxist orthodoxy and establishing continuity with The Making and his transition to “socialist humanism.”Footnote 20
Of course, not all utopian visions are to be commended. Tellingly, Thompson dismissed Coleridge and Southey's plan to establish a utopian community on the banks of the Susquehanna as “fantasy.”Footnote 21 “Pantisocracy” was Coleridge's coinage for a small community based on “equal government by all” and the abolition of private property (“aspheterization”). Plans emerged during the summer of 1794 from discussions between Coleridge and Southey and their Oxbridge circle of friends.Footnote 22 These plans were more serious than is often supposed. Plenty of British “Jacobins” toyed with the idea of moving to America to escape the tyranny of Europe. Thompson says little about America or its revolution. In Coleridge's case, his visionary republic was linked to his attack on the institutions of private property, commercial civilization, and slavery. The equalization of land was based on Hebraic law, with the restoration of lands every 50 years at the Jubilee. Coleridge's ideas on property, which in 1794 reflected Godwin's influence, arguably deserve to be placed beside the ideas of John Thelwall and Thomas Spence, whom Thompson regards as the only “considerable theorists” produced by the decade's artisan movement.Footnote 23 Pantisocracy represented a withdrawal; it was not a plan for revolution but idyllic retreat. For Thompson, the plan was obviously a non-starter, without political significance in the real world. Yet its utopian desire reflected the uncertain horizon that momentarily seemed to separate present reality from future possibility. There was a deep radicalism at its core, as well as a deepening disappointment about the prospects for Europe once Britain entered the war against France and once the French Revolution turned violence upon itself.
It is the closing of that moment of perceived possibility, the point at which hope falters and reassessments must be made, that concerns Thompson. In the first instance, retreat and the slide from disenchantment to “apostasy” were the results of the French Revolution's descent from fraternité to fratricide and of the course of European warfare. Like most British Jacobins, the radical intelligentsia's allegiances were properly speaking Girondist; they were shocked by the spectacle of leaders such as Jacques-Pierre Brissot being led to the guillotine.Footnote 24 It is necessary to register, as Thompson does, the sustained commitment among the poets and their network of young friends to fundamental political change. Southey's dramatic poem Wat Tyler, completed in late 1794, might well have landed him in prison had his would-be publishers, a consortium of radical press-men serving time in Newgate prison, not decided the work was too hot to handle.Footnote 25
Wordsworth witnessed the Revolution firsthand—chronicling a version of his experience in books nine and ten of The Prelude. Writing in 1794 to William Matthews, he declared himself “of that odious class of men called democrats.” As an enemy of “monarchical and aristocratical governments” and “hereditary distinctions … of every species,” Wordsworth commented, “I am not amongst the admirers of the British Constitution.”Footnote 26 Thompson cites this correspondence to underscore Wordsworth's radicalism. This was heady stuff, written as the government was arresting more than thirty leaders of London's main reform societies. Wordsworth and Matthews were looking to launch a journal, to be titled the “Philanthropist.” Wordsworth kept much hidden about his activities during these crucial years, and Thompson was subsequently able to throw new light on the mystery of Wordsworth's possible involvement in a journal that appeared in 1795 under the same title, published by the Jacobin printer, Daniel Isaac Eaton. Eaton, recently acquitted on charges of seditious libel, was among the most intrepid radical publishers. It seems likely that Wordsworth sought out Eaton as a printer who might provide financial aid and safe cover for the young men's publishing venture. As Thompson observes, at this point, “intellectual radicalism and the popular societies were bumping against each other all the time.”Footnote 27
While Wordsworth dabbled with radical publishing, Coleridge was more purposefully engaged. In 1795 he delivered his powerful series of lectures on politics and religion at Bristol. He condemned “the causeless Panic” created by the treason trials of Thomas Hardy, John Horne Tooke, and Thelwall, and concluded his diatribe “On the Present War” by asking, “shall we carry on this wild and priestly War against reason, against freedom, against human nature?” He reported to George Dyer, radical Unitarian and fellow poet, of the “furious and determined” opposition he faced at Bristol, where a mob threatened to attack the lecture hall “in which the ‘damn'd Jacobine was jawing away.’” The incident underscores the “unofficial” violence that reformers often faced.Footnote 28 The lecture that Coleridge delivered in November 1795 against the “Two Bills” came as close to sedition as one might risk before the Seditious Meetings and Treasonous Practices Acts made such speech unlawful.Footnote 29 He moderated his tone in his short-lived journal, the Watchman, but kept pressure on Pitt's government. Thompson, in an essay on Coleridge's revolutionary youth, maintains, “the curve of Coleridge's commitment, in 1795–96, took him very close indeed to the popular societies—or towards their more intellectual component.” The trajectory was one that, “had [it] not been arrested by retirement to Stowey, would almost certainly have led him to prison.”Footnote 30 He cites Southey's reaction to Coleridge's later denial of his political sympathies: “It is worse than folly, for if he was not a Jacobine … I wonder who the Devil was.”Footnote 31 As the “Two Acts” curtailed the public presence of plebeian radicalism by restricting public meetings and enlarging the definition of treason, the Romantics felt the blast. As Hazlitt observed in The Spirit of the Age (1825), “It was a misfortune to any man of talent to be born in the latter end of the last century.”Footnote 32 In his recent book on the lost literary generation of the 1790s, Kenneth Johnston argues that not only did Pitt's “reign of alarm” devastate a generation of writers but government repression also affected the idiom of English letters, washing out a “republican voice” left to flourish in America.Footnote 33 Here was part of the loss to which Thompson referred.
As the current of British Jacobinism was driven underground, the Romantics also sought cover. In The Making, as well as in later essays, Thompson follows Wordsworth and Coleridge to the Quantock Hills, where Thelwall—Jacobin lecturer, political theorist, and poet—visited them in summer 1797, soon after the Wordsworths had established themselves at Alfoxden House. The previous spring, Coleridge first wrote to Thelwall, “Pursuing the same end by the same means we ought not to be strangers to each other.” This began an intense correspondence between the two men that underscored differences as well as shared sympathies. As Coleridge observed, “We run on the same ground, but we drive different Horses. I am daily more and more a religionist—you, of course, more & more otherwise.”Footnote 34 Thelwall, whom Thompson describes as “one of the few who tried to straddle the world of letters and that of popular agitation,” was looking for a place to settle.Footnote 35 Thelwall figures as an intellectual who aligned himself with plebeian radicalism and who suffered from isolation and defeat without renouncing his former beliefs or self. As such, he becomes one of the heroes of Thompson's grand narrative and a foil to Godwin. Thelwall's stubborn retreat also tracks the struggle in Thompson's life to sustain a commitment to socialist belief as conditions alter and hopes dim. Fittingly, the story of Thelwall's silencing is the subject of Thompson's final article, “Hunting the Jacobin Fox,” a reconnection to and expansion of his role in The Making.Footnote 36
Thelwall's visit to Nether Stowey coincided with the collaboration between Wordsworth and Coleridge that resulted in the publication of the Lyrical Ballads the following year. Summer 1797 is one of the two “spots in time” that Thompson revisits in his essay, “Disenchantment or Default?”Footnote 37 Not surprisingly, following the naval mutinies of the spring and with fears of a French invasion, Thelwall's arrival caused alarm within the local community. Thelwall was, in fact, searching for tranquility, a “sequester'd dell” where he could live “in philosophic amity” alongside his fellow poets.Footnote 38 Coleridge remembered “sitting in a beautiful recess in the Quantocks,” and saying to his companion, “‘Citizen John, this is a fine place to talk treason in!’—‘Nay! Citizen Samuel,’ replied he, ‘it is rather a place to make a man forget that there is any necessity for treason!’” For Thompson, the exchange is emblematic, foreshadowing, as he writes in The Making, “the decline of the first Romantics into political ‘apostasy.’” A nervous Coleridge was unable to find a cottage for his friend, who instead retired with his family to rural Wales. Shortly after the “Jacobin Fox's” departure, James Walsh (“Spy Nozy”), who had helped to arrest Thelwall in 1794, arrived to sniff out the seditious “nest” of poets at Stowey.Footnote 39
Thompson carefully monitors Wordsworth and Coleridge's slow, anguished retreat from political engagement. The first spot in time illustrates how democrats were driven back into small, embattled enclaves. The second spot in time occurred in spring 1798. Thompson aligns the prosecution of Gilbert Wakefield, Unitarian divine and classical scholar, with Wordsworth and Coleridge's situation.Footnote 40 Wakefield and the bookseller, Joseph Johnson, were imprisoned for Wakefield's Reply to Address to the People of England by Richard Watson, bishop of Llandaff. Wakefield, who died within four months of his release from prison, had seen fit to question the government's conduct of the war and to cast doubt on Pitt's good faith in treating for peace. He described how the ministry protected itself: “they have engendered sham plots, false alarms, and visionary assassinations, for the purposes of deluding the unwary, and to establish their own power by a military despotism in England.”Footnote 41 Johnson, who up to this point had been careful to avoid prosecution, was a crucial linking figure among the radical intelligentsia. He was Wordsworth's original publisher. Mary Wollstonecraft, who reviewed for his Analytical Review, first met Godwin dining at Johnson's table alongside Paine. She also met Blake through Johnson.Footnote 42 Wakefield and Johnson were not the only oppositionists to find themselves in prison. Benjamin Flower, the editor of the Cambridge Intelligencer and publisher of Coleridge and Southey's dramatic poem The Fall of Robespierre (1795), was also sent to prison for his attack on Watson. Thompson identifies Flower's journal as “the last national organ of intellectual Jacobinism.”Footnote 43
One can well imagine how Wakefield's fate might have affected Wordsworth. In 1793, Wordsworth had written his own republican response to the bishop, which he left unpublished, perhaps on Johnson's advice.Footnote 44 Interestingly, the figure of the Solitary from the Excursion can be linked to Wakefield. Thompson was to press the claims of Thelwall as one model for this dejected and reclusive character, a composite drawn from real persons, including the poet himself.Footnote 45 It has been compellingly argued that Wordsworth also had Wakefield in mind as a double for his own predicament and for a fate that he had narrowly avoided.Footnote 46 As Wakefield awaited trial, the situation became precarious for Wordsworth and Coleridge in Somerset, as “volunteers” were being recruited into service to protect the coast against an anticipated French invasion. Thompson concludes that, in departing for Germany in September 1798, they were “hopping the draft”—a contemporary nod to young American draft resisters.Footnote 47 The poets arrived at Hamburg, a neutral city teeming with spies and “suspicious persons,” including Irish rebels fleeing the abortive rising of the summer. They were almost certainly on the British government's local watch list.Footnote 48
By this time, the final ties between “Jacobin” intellectuals and radical artisans had been severed. Here, according to Thompson, set in “that pattern of revolutionary disenchantment which foreshadows the shoddier patterns of our own century.” In the narrative arc of The Making, the Romantics’ withdrawal is linked to the earlier alienation of a reform-minded sector of the bourgeoisie that left artisans and wage-earners without allies to open the doors of revolution. While celebrating the movement's independence, Thompson recognizes the important loss of “badly needed intellectual resources” as middle-class radicals retreated from the political field.Footnote 49 With the final suppression of the Corresponding Societies, with most of their leaders either in prison or in exile, British Jacobinism turned into a small underground stream. When popular radicalism reemerged in full force at the end of the Napoleonic wars, the movement would breed its own intellectual leaders drawn from inside as well as outside the incipient “working class.”
Twentieth-Century Reversion: From the Popular Front to the New Left
As for the “shoddier patterns” of the twentieth century, Thompson had much to say; he continually brought the past to bear on the present, or as some critics would have it, his interpretations of history and literature were clouded by projections of the present onto the past. Certainly, he discerned a pattern whereby intellectuals and artists had moved through stages from political engagement to disenchantment and then to apostasy or default. The connections between the disenchantment of his own age and that of the 1790s run through his writing. He was principally concerned about the role of the intellectual in movements of dissent and about what he regarded as an obligation to maintain truth to oneself even as confidence in previously held commitments and beliefs waned.
Thompson faced key moments of political doubt that challenged him to revise his beliefs and to reaffirm political and moral values as historical circumstances changed. Already a committed communist, he served as a tank commander during the Second World War and, on his return home, shared a general optimism about the prospects for building a socialist Britain. He recalled the war as “an extraordinary formative moment in which it was possible to be deeply committed to the point of life itself in support of a particular political struggle which was at the same time a popular struggle … one didn't feel a sense of being isolated in any way from the peoples of Europe or the peoples of Britain.”Footnote 50 This optimism did not last long as Cold War patterns set in. Thompson wrote his study of Morris in the early 1950s, while he was an active member of the Communist Party living in Halifax and teaching English literature and history as a staff tutor in the extramural department of the University of Leeds.Footnote 51 Morris's significance was clear; he “was the first creative artist of major stature … to take his stand, consciously and without compromise, with the revolutionary working class.” Despite the book's awkward gestures to orthodoxy, as Thompson later commented, a “muffled ‘revisionism’” can be discerned.Footnote 52 With the emergence of the New Left, Morris points the way to “socialist humanism;” to Thompson's call for a recognition of man's moral nature, as an irreducible moral consciousness denied by Stalinist ideology, and the human agency and experience of “real” men and women.Footnote 53 The New Left was born from the “conjuncture” of 1956: the twin shocks of the Soviet suppression of the Hungarian revolution and the British-French invasion of the Suez Canal Zone.Footnote 54 The New Left sought to build a movement for independent socialist renewal. For Thompson, leaving the Communist Party was to cross a threshold, akin to the “river of fire” across which Morris had moved; it meant abandoning ties of loyalty and comradeship. It was also liberating. Written with remarkable speed between 1959 and 1962, The Making reflected the loosening of ideological reins and the energy of the New Left and of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.Footnote 55
The late 1950s and early 1960s were a period of reexamination. “Commitment” became a vogue word among left-wing authors, including Thompson. But it was one that he partially distrusted when connected to poetry because “it can slide all too easily into usages which defeat its apparent intention.”Footnote 56 Yet the question of how art is produced as political confidence fades, how the condition of disenchantment is negotiated in literary terms, recurs in his writing. At the point of default, Thompson contends, “Disenchantment ceases to be a recoil of the responsible in the face of difficult social experience; it becomes abdication of intellectual responsibility in the face of all social experience.”Footnote 57 Thompson addressed this process at length and most directly in “Outside the Whale,” his contribution to Out of Apathy (1960), a collection that sought to reaffirm a socialist agenda amid the malaise of apathy. His essay is a reply of sorts to George Orwell's “Inside the Whale,” and it marks his first linkage of the terms “disenchantment” and “default.”Footnote 58
Published in 1940, Orwell's essay made the case for ranking Henry Miller's novel, Tropic of Cancer, among the few major works of contemporary literature. Orwell argued that Miller's acceptance of a civilization in decay gave his work an authenticity missing in so much contemporary literature. In the face of defeat in Spain, the Moscow trials, the collapse of the Popular Front, the Russo-German pact, and the outbreak of the Second World War, Miller's passivity constituted a justified reaction; his work rang true to the feelings of ordinary people.Footnote 59 Orwell concluded that on the whole the literary history of the 1930s “seems to justify the opinion that a writer does well to keep out of politics”—or at the very least that the writer does well not to confuse good writing with good politics, for “the cause” and the cause of literature were separate issues.Footnote 60 W. H. Auden had reached a similar conclusion and put it more eloquently: “For poetry makes nothing happen: it survives / In the valley of its saying.”Footnote 61
In a sense, Thompson was, as Stefan Collini describes him, “a man of the 1940s.”Footnote 62 Because Thompson came of age politically against the backdrop of the end of the Popular Front and the onset of war, for him to return to Orwell, Auden, and the artist's responsibility in troubled times came naturally. In “Outside the Whale,” Wordsworth's Solitary arrives on cue. Whereas years of self-examination separated the romantic poet as “ardent revolutionary” from renunciation of his former political self, history now repeats itself as farce; the twentieth-century about-face took a mere decade to reenact. “To understand the first stage of this regress,” Thompson turns to Auden's poem Spain, which was published in 1937 as a one-shilling pamphlet.Footnote 63 Whereas Orwell had expressed his scorn—he thought Auden's reference to “necessary murder” came too readily for a poet who had not shouldered a rifle in Spain—Thompson admired Auden's poem, which he thought was underappreciated. But by 1940, when Auden republished Spain in a collection of his poetry, he had changed his mind and revised his poem. Thompson subjects the amended version of Spain to close reading, detailing the omissions from and revisions to the original text (including the change of “necessary murder” to “the fact of murder”). With regard to two verses that Auden completely excised, Thompson observes that—stripped of specific reference to Madrid, “invading battalions,” “Our hours of friendship” blossoming “into a people's army”—the refrain “But to-day the struggle” no longer refers to a pressing moral choice but to a universal human predicament; the poem had lost its focus and moral way. It is fair to say that Auden was ultimately unable to achieve a truthful resolution in his political poetry between private perception and public pronouncement. Thompson makes clear that it is not the “authenticity of Auden's experience” that is in dispute “but the default implicit in his response,” his giving up on the problem and setting sail for America.Footnote 64
At issue is how “authenticity of experience” is handled, how disenchantment is dealt with in verse. Thompson posits a correlation between artistic value and the complex experience of disenchantment; the tensions sustained before disenchantment succumbs to default impart an enhanced creative impulse. His treatment of Auden, of the demise of the Popular Front, and of the onset of the Cold War parallels his analysis of the trajectory of British Jacobinism, of Pitt's regime of repression, and of the fate of romanticism. Political themes from the present and near past are transposed onto the 1790s, most centrally the relationship between disenchantment and art. In his own day, however, the final consequences of disenchantment were delayed by the Second World War. For Thompson, the socialist potential that arose during the war ended around 1948 with the capitulation to “Natopolis” and the surrender to Cold War culture, witnessing “a trahsion des clercs as abject as any that had gone before.” Inwardly, the “insurgent, popular-front-type moment” was destroyed by Stalinism.Footnote 65 On both sides of the Cold War divide, the words “romantic” and “utopian” became swearwords. The Labor government's defeat in 1951 marked the coda to this surrender.
For Thompson, the narrowed vision of the 1950s could be traced back to 1939 and the end of the Popular Front. Not only was the “authenticity of experience” at issue; so was the history of the 1930s. What Orwell dismissed as a “swindle” and Auden dubbed “a low dishonest decade” no more did justice to the thirties “than the self-flagellation of Wordsworth's Solitary is a true comment upon the men of the London Corresponding Society.”Footnote 66 Writing in the first issue of Universities and Left Review in 1957, Thompson proposed that the New Left's goal should be to reopen the circuit that had been closed between intellectuals and the broader socialist movement, to reconnect the sort of lines of communication that had characterized the 1930s.Footnote 67 As co-founder and co-editor of the New Reasoner (1957–59), Thompson insisted on the importance of literary contributions and poetry to the journal's make-up.Footnote 68 The leading Communist literary journal of the thirties, Left Review (1934–38), influenced his thinking on how to produce an activist journal.Footnote 69 There were direct personal links between the New Reasoner and Marxist literary journals of the 1930s and 1940s, including the poet Randall Swingler, who served for a time as editor of Left Review.Footnote 70
Many of the questions concerning literature and politics that Communists raised during the 1930s and 1940s stayed with Thompson. “If poetry is to survive,” wrote C. Day Lewis in 1935, “it must become necessary again to the people.” In the classless society of the future, artists might realize their full potentials and regain their lost relationships to the people, but in the meantime, how was an authentic people's culture to be achieved? The problem of the poetry of the future was linked to recovering the poetry of England's past. Writing in Left Review, Swingler recommended Blake as “a good starting point for redeeming our revolutionary culture.” Not only was Blake a craftsman who lacked a classical education, but “Jerusalem,” the most widely known and sung of English poems, illustrated his “characteristic Englishness.”Footnote 71 The writer Ralph Fox devoted the final chapter of his posthumously published book, The Novel and the People (1937), to the nation's cultural heritage, arguing that “[a] people cannot play its part in history if it renounces its cultural past, any more than if it renounces its political past.” As a case in point, Fox cites Wordsworth's pamphlet, The Convention of Cintra (1809), as among the most sublime pieces of English prose. He finds Wordsworth's tract “revolutionary” and “heroic” in its passionate support for Portuguese and Spanish national resistance to Napoleon.Footnote 72 For a communist intellectual such as Fox soon to be killed fighting in Spain, Wordsworth's return to the cause of liberty via the uprising on the Iberian Peninsula was poignant. Thompson's older brother, Frank—whom he followed into the Communist Party at age seventeen—observed in his wartime journal that the key question for the younger generation of Soviet poets was whether they could “bridge the gulf between the poet and the public” and “make poetry once more the interest and property of the people.”Footnote 73 Killed in the Bulgarian resistance in 1944, he wrote in one of his last letters of the need to build “a new communal ethic” to unite the people of postwar Europe, East and West.Footnote 74
Following the war, as Bill Schwarz shows, the Popular Front's orientation and its construction of “the people” took hold among the Communist Party's Historians’ Group with a transition taking place from the characteristically literary to the historical component of what Antonio Gramsci theorized as the “national-popular.”Footnote 75 In fact, Thompson did not play a significant part in the Historians’ Group, but he was closely associated with the party's literary members; he contributed to Our Time and Arena, successor journals to Left Review.Footnote 76 One thinks of The Making as the fullest flowering of the Historians’ Group's project, a panoramic counter-narrative of working-class struggle. But the embedding of the Romantics within the book's grand structure reflects the intersecting goals of historical and literary recovery and a partial merging of generational priorities.Footnote 77 Significantly, Thompson relates that one of the two or three books he carried with him during the war was A Handbook of Freedom, “an extraordinarily rich compendium of primary sources” complied in 1939 by Edgell Rickword, former editor of Left Review, and Jack Lindsay, who later contributed to the New Reasoner.Footnote 78 Literary sources are brought together with other documents recording twelve centuries of “English Democracy”; extracts from Piers Plowman accompany reports of the Peasants’ Revolt, Milton's poetry appears alongside Leveller debates and Digger tracts, and an anonymous Luddite song joins with Bryon's “Song for the Luddities.”Footnote 79 Remembered for pioneering history as seen from below, members of the Historians’ Group continued to pursue literary as well as historical studies. The intellectually versatile Victor Kiernan published a long essay, symptomatically entitled “Wordsworth and the People,” that prefigured aspects of Thompson's later argument.Footnote 80
In his autobiography, Interesting Times, Eric Hobsbawm notes the striking number of Marxist intellectuals of his generation who moved to historical analysis from literature. He suggests that their passion for literature helps to explain “the otherwise surprising influence of the anti-Marxist F. R. Leavis,” adding, “Cambridge communists who read English swore by him.”Footnote 81 Thompson took a degree in history at Cambridge, with a strong emphasis on the study of literature. There were, in fact, more fundamental reasons than a passion for literature to recommend Leavis and Scrutiny to Cambridge Marxists. Without necessarily subscribing to a Leavisite vision of a lost organic community ruptured by industrialization, Marxists desired to reclaim a popular-national cultural tradition.Footnote 82 The appeal to a version of the opposition between the romantic and the utilitarian also struck a common chord, particularly with Thompson. Moreover, Leavis and Scrutiny provided a portable method of close reading as well as criteria for judging literary and cultural value.Footnote 83 The emphasis placed on the felt measure of “experience,” with “lived” experience set in opposition to abstraction, had an obvious appeal for Thompson as it did for Raymond Williams.Footnote 84 While the concept of experience may have been undertheorized, it remained central to Thompson's analysis of the first generation of romantic poets as it did for his analysis of class. Thompson roundly rejected the idea of a shared evolutionary culture as opposed to ongoing struggle between cultures or ways of life.Footnote 85 What was at stake was the recovery and propagation of a national culture of opposition, with a shift in conceptual emphasis from “the people” to “the working class”—although the populist inflection persisted.
Cultural transformation was a major analytical concern of the first New Left, yet faced with the corrosive effects of consumer capitalism and the mass media on working-class culture, Thompson insisted on the place of workers in the struggle for socialism. The “affluent worker” was not simply to be written off as captive to a materialist ethos of individualism. He took issue with younger socialist intellectuals associated with Universities and Left Review for viewing working people as subjects of history: pliant victims of alienation and false consciousness. Writing in 1959, he maintained, “we are lacking, chiefly, in a sense of history,” a knowledge that working-class history “has always been a way of struggle between competing moralities” in which “the political minority has been the carrier of the aspirations of the majority.”Footnote 86
The Making was his answer to this lack of historical understanding. But by the time the book was published in 1963, the forces of the first New Left had dispersed, and Thompson had entered the political wilderness. In the end, the New Left failed to inspire a broad-based socialist reawakening; the movement did not find a significant working-class following; and no lasting alliance was forged between New Left intellectuals and the labor movement. The New Reasoner merged with Universities and Left Review in 1960 to form New Left Review, which under the editorship of Perry Anderson became a journal of Marxist theory detached from political activism.Footnote 87
Thompson's lionization within the academy, where he never felt fully comfortable, coincided with his increased political isolation. In 1965, he became director of the Centre for the Study of Social History at the newly established University of Warwick; he resigned in 1970 amid protests against the university administration and its relations with corporate industry.Footnote 88 At Warwick, his interests turned to the study of eighteenth-century law and society. In 1967–68, he again collaborated with Williams, Stuart Hall, and others from the first New Left to issue the May Day Manifesto, “a socialist alternative” to the Labor government's reformist policies.Footnote 89 Thompson delivered “Disenchantment or Default?” at New York University in 1968 as part of the Albert Schweitzer lecture series, returning to the Romantics less in the euphoric spirit of revolution sweeping Europe and America than in a state of meditation on failed political aspirations and the relationship of political disenchantment to artistic expression.
Between Disenchantment and Default: The Romantics’ Response
For Thompson, the recoil and ultimate “default” of intellectuals in the face of political disillusion was a phenomenon that bridged the histories of the Cold War and the 1790s. Viewed as a dishonest reckoning with former beliefs and allegiances, “apostasy” retained a strong resonance in his political lexicon. As applied to the Romantics, the charge of apostasy has been questioned by critics who discern underlying continuities as opposed to a sharp ideological break in thinking.Footnote 90 Nonetheless, much contemporary opinion, particularly among younger poets, registered a sense of betrayal.Footnote 91 Thus Lord Byron's denunciation of “Bob Southey” and “the Lakers” was matched by Shelley's response on reading the Excursion. Shelley expressed his disappointment as Wordsworth returned the poet to the traditional path of solitude and order in a poem dedicated to his patron, the Earl of Londsdale, the most powerful landowner of Cumberland and Westmorland counties.Footnote 92 Hazlitt first used the term “apostate” with reference to Coleridge's Lay Sermons; Hazlitt's campaign “against literary apostasy” established an influential framework for distinguishing the generational conflicts and differences among the Romantics.Footnote 93 The essayist's struggle to retain his radical principles placed Hazlitt among Thompson's favorites. As for Blake, Thompson argues that his resistance to Enlightenment reason meant that he escaped the brand of disenchantment suffered by others. The intensity of his vision, which derived from the world of the Ranters and the Diggers, made it impossible for him “to fall into the courses of apostasy” as he withdrew into antinomian quietude. Blake's own terrifying brush with the law in 1803–4, when he was charged for subversive speech on the information of two soldiers, drove Blake deeper into himself.Footnote 94
For the Romantics, as for many radicals, the French Revolution had been a failure. A war mounted against European oppression had become a war of French conquest, and with Napoleon's appointment as First Consul in late 1799, the republic succumbed to dictatorship. The French invasion of Switzerland brought Coleridge's “recantation.” His “deep worship” of the “spirit of divinest Liberty” returns from the “profitless” pursuit of freedom among governments and human society to Nature's inspiration belonging to the individual.Footnote 95 At this point, Thompson regards Coleridge as still “a man of the Left,” for his continued opposition to the war, but Coleridge soon turned on former friends and disavowed his past. Like Auden, Coleridge failed to come to terms with his former political self, foregoing a sustained period to reconcile past and present beliefs, a failure culminating in the “fine fiction” found in book ten of Biographia Literaria (1817), where he claims always to have been an opponent of Jacobinism.Footnote 96
“Apostasy” may seem a blunt term for evaluating the motivations and work of creative artists. For Thompson the couplet “disenchantment” or “default” implies a question of choice as well as a trajectory. If “apostasy” marks an end point, then what most concerns Thompson is the disenchanted writer's struggle to reconcile lost hopes and personal feelings with a changed reality. Unlike apostasy, disenchantment is a productive condition, a creative moment that precedes a final “imaginative failure” marked by forgetting or falsely manipulating “the authenticity of experience.” Thompson defines this condition as “a Jacobinism-in-recoil or a Jacobinism-of-doubt,” insisting on “both sides of this definition.” He sees Wordsworth and Coleridge caught in “a vortex of contradictions” that they were unable to resolve. Aesthetic complexity arises then from “a search for a synthesis at a moment of arrested dialectic”; “it is exactly within this conflict that the great romantic impulse came to maturity.”Footnote 97 “The Ruined Cottage” (1798) opens Wordsworth's extraordinary period of creativity from the Lyrical Ballads to the 1805 Prelude. Margaret, the abandoned wife and mother broken on the wheel of poverty and grief, stands in “The Ruined Cottage” as a text against war. She is this, according to Thompson, and “a great deal more.” For the poem “has leaped out of the rigid framework of paternalist sensibility, in which the interior life of the poor cannot be handled … It was the transposed Jacobin impulse of égalité which broke out of the paternalistic frame.” Moreover, the impulse “is transmuted” from abstract political rights to something more local “but also more humanely engaged.”Footnote 98 There is nothing overtly “Jacobin” about the poem, but Wordsworth's sensibility goes beyond romantic sympathy in his ability to get inside the life and feelings of the poor, closing the social distance between himself and his subject. Thompson confirms Hazlitt's judgment that Wordsworth's “Muse … is a levelling one.”Footnote 99 “Experience” was a key term for Thompson, as it was for the Romantics. We are more accustomed to think about Thompson's concept of “experience” in relation to his concept of class; experience mediates the relationship between material conditions of existence and consciousness.Footnote 100 Less attention has been paid to how “experience” relates to his writings on romanticism. For Thompson, Wordsworth crossed a threshold of understanding; he underwent an education in “real feeling and just sense” (Wordsworth's words) as related in book 12 of the Prelude:Footnote 101
Wordsworth's ultimate achievement is then to be found in the intensity of this direct engagement and the turning of the cultural table against the “vulgar eyes” of the educated elite. The moral imagination of the poet derives from experience, drawing on the sensations and utterance of “men in real life.”Footnote 102 It was this sort of learning that Thompson valued in his adult classes and found largely absent from the educated culture of the university.Footnote 103
When compared to Wordsworth, Thelwall can come off badly. Thompson cites a passage in which the Jacobin orator reports dropping in at a village ale house to refresh himself, “[sitting] down among the rough clowns, whose tattered garments were soiled with their rustic labour … I love the labourer then in his ragged coat, as well as I love the Peer in his ermine, perhaps better.” As Thompson observes, Thelwall “was far from transcending the condescending conventions of his class.”Footnote 104 In contrast, Wordsworth did not lapse into pastoral idealizations; his model “Was not a Corin of the groves … / But for the purposes of kind, a man / With the most common.” Quoting these lines from the Prelude, Thompson notes the accent placed on the word “common.” Wordsworth's enduring strength was that “he aligned himself with the common man … The very word ‘common’ acquired significantly new notations: we are placed with the common against the [polite] culture.”Footnote 105 Wordsworth's purpose and theory of poetic diction take him from the preface to the Lyrical Ballads to the Prelude, in which subjects drawn from “Low and rustic life” provide the sources of “philosophic language.” The expression of common people found in a natural setting constitutes the universal language of humanity. Here, arguably, is where Wordsworth's “experiment” in language and sensibility meets that of Paine.Footnote 106
For a brief time, the romantic poets drew close to the fledgling republican movement that collapsed under the dual pressures of revolutionary betrayal and state repression. In Wordsworth's case, Thompson regards the poet's ability to work through and translate the experience of the disenchanted self—“the sense of philosophy as lived experience”—as a profound political, aesthetic, and moral achievement. In the Prelude, Wordsworth “faces the failure of utopian expectations,” while “he affirms and conveys the force of utopianism.” And while the transition from the Prelude to the Excursion may witness a decline in poetic energies, Thompson never judges Wordsworth an “apostate” in the same terms as Coleridge or Southey; his period of disenchantment was more protracted and complex.Footnote 107 Moreover, even as they retreated to the point of paternalism and embraced the verities of traditional authority, the early Romantics are seen to retain a measure of social radicalism. The romantic critique of industrialization—decrying the abnegation of traditional social responsibility, breakdown of family and community values, and loss of independence among small producers—shared common ground with popular radicalism. In The Making, Thompson warns readers against the mistake of assuming that paternalist feeling must always be detached and condescending. The passionate current of “traditionalist social radicalism” moving from Wordsworth and Southey, through Thomas Carlyle and beyond, contains “a dialectic by which it is continually prompting revolutionary conclusions.”Footnote 108 This dialectic forms part of the tradition that Williams mapped in Culture and Society.
An Unfinished Text: The Romantics, Patriotism, and the Rights of Women
Following his departure from the University of Warwick, Thompson earned his living as a writer and an independent scholar with stints at various American universities. In the late 1970s, he emerged as a vocal critic of Britain's security-state. In his defense of civil liberties, he drew on the history of the “freeborn” Briton and the long struggle to establish the independence of the jury system.Footnote 109 During the 1980s, Thompson's life was dominated by his role in the European peace movement, triggered by plans to site American cruise missiles in Britain.Footnote 110 As the moral leader of the movement for nuclear disarmament, he became a national figure, delivering impassioned speeches at public rallies and appearing regularly on television and radio. His historical and literary scholarship was put on hold. Between 1971 and 1979, he reviewed successive volumes of the collective works of Coleridge, and from the late 1980s, he wrote two lengthy review essays on Wordsworth and Godwin for the London Review of Books; his final article on Thelwall was published posthumously.
Although the main lines of argument developed over his lifetime are fairly clear, we are left to ponder how Thompson would have pulled together and fleshed out his thinking on the Romantics in the age of revolution. There are some interesting hints. The literary historian, Marilyn Butler, recalled a conference in 1989 on the French Revolution as a literary event at which Thompson spoke on Wordsworth's 1802 patriotic sonnets, showing what might have been encompassed by the word “patriot.”Footnote 111 Thompson spoke, as he usually did, from notes, and his thoughts were left unpublished. But one can well understand Thompson's attention to the historical and literary significance of the word “patriot” and the conflicted sense of national belonging set against the background of failed hopes for an internationalist cause of human liberation. He had, of course, experienced a similar sense of isolation from the nation, defending a cause in which he increasingly lost faith. Moreover, 1989 marked not only the 200th anniversary of the fall of the Bastille, but also, as Butler notes, the fall of the Berlin Wall. She might have added that, only a few years before, in 1982, the swelling of popular nationalist sentiment that accompanied the Falklands War reversed Margaret Thatcher's political fortunes. The “people” were seen as hijacked by the Right. Patriotism and constructions of national identity quickly moved onto the agenda of historians.Footnote 112 Thatcherite populism stood in stark contrast to the fusion of patriotic sentiment and socialist aspiration that Thompson had felt during and directly after the Second World War.
In the event, Thompson was out of sync with many in his audience. According to Butler, “The more sophisticated literary critics … were not after dead writers’ intended meanings … but after their unconscious: their self-delusions and linguistic self-betrayals.”Footnote 113 Thompson was a contextual critic whose readings aimed to establish or fix meanings; he did not read for “displacement” or slippage in the text, for how, in Jerome McGann's interpretation, romanticism suppressed its own historical context or, as Marjorie Levinson put it, for how the literary work “speaks of one thing because it cannot articulate another.”Footnote 114 This is merely to say that Thompson was an “old” historical rather than a “new historicist” critic.Footnote 115 He was an astute reader, alert to the measure of tone and nuance, to the sound on the page; he cast a wide textual net, from his interpretation of Methodist hymns, to his study of anonymous threatening letters, to his chapter-long reading of Blake's poem, “London.” He sought meanings that were available to contemporary readers, believing that such meanings could be accessed through close, contextual reading of poetry just as he believed that, by attentive “listening,” archival material could speak to and eventually through the historian.Footnote 116 A parallel can perhaps be drawn with Wordsworth's view of the poet's situation as “translator” who necessarily falls short of language fitting the passion that “the real passion itself suggests.”Footnote 117
Wordsworth's return to the nation, his revived feeling for England, is a theme we might expect Thompson to have developed. While radical constructions of “patriotism” drew on England's libertarian history, among supporters of the French Revolution, older chauvinistic and imperialist associations with the word “patriot” were supplanted by a cosmopolitan allegiance based on the universal principles of reason, liberty, and human benevolence. For Thelwall, to be a “patriot” in the narrow sense of mere loyalty to one's own nation possessed no claim to virtue; it was a “contemptible and illiberal” feeling. A letter to Eaton's Politics for the People observed that there were “few prejudices so firmly riveted in the hearts of men” as the attachments “to particular spots of earth, dignified with the founding name of patriotism,” sentiments opposed to the true principle of “philanthropy.”Footnote 118 By 1802, such universal values were difficult to sustain; the claim to citizenship of the world had lost its appeal. With the short-lived Peace of Amiens, Wordsworth returned to France, although he went no further than Calais.Footnote 119 The Calais sonnets record not only Wordsworth's yearnings for England but also patriotic feelings in conflict. Wordsworth's alienation from France is clear, but his nationalism is qualified: “Far, far more abject is thine enemy … / Oh grief! that Earth's best hopes rest all with Thee!” Yet with the resumption of war and the threat of invasion, Wordsworth joined the Grasmere volunteers, a decisive step in resolving his ambivalent feelings toward the British nation. The same month he composed his sonnet, “To the Men of Kent, October 1803,” concluding, “In Britain is one breath; We are with you now from Shore to Shore:— / Ye Men of Kent, ’tis Victory or Death!”Footnote 120
In assessing the impact of the French Revolution, Thompson stressed that, whereas in France the cause of the Revolution became “entwined with that of national pride,” the betrayal of its own principles had “traumatic consequences” on international Jacobinism, adding, “one thinks of Wordsworth at Calais, lamenting the imprisonment of Citizen Toussaint, the reinstatement of slavery in the French West Indies.”Footnote 121 The reference is not pursued, but prompts us to ask what it meant for Wordsworth to hail the black revolutionary and victim of Napoleon's treachery as liberty's lost hero, and what bearing his lament might have on shifting constructions of nationalist and humanitarian sentiment. Wordsworth's elegy, “To Toussaint L'Ouverture,” is accompanied by a sonnet entitled simply “September 1st, 1802.” Sailing home from Calais with his sister, Dorothy, Wordsworth notices “a fellow passenger” sitting silently: “She was a Negro Woman driv'n from France, / Rejected like all others of that race.” In contrast to the abstractions associated with the fallen leader—“Thy friends are exultations, agonies, / And love, and Man's unconquerable mind”—the woman of color is observed with directness and compassion for an ordinary person's dignity and sad fate: “Dejected, meek, yet pitiably tame, / She sate, from notice turning not away.”Footnote 122 The two figures, Toussaint and an unnamed woman, are linked to the oppressions of slavery and of race and to the betrayed promise of universal liberty and equality.
Ten years earlier, in December 1792, Wordsworth had reluctantly returned from France, self-isolated from his native country. In The Prelude, he arrives to find “a whole nation crying in one voice” against “the traffickers in negro blood.” The defeated effort to abolish the slave trade, “Had called back old forgotten principles” to the nation's conscience and “diffused some truths / And more of virtuous feelings through the heart / Of the English people” (Prelude, bk. 10, 205–07). At the time, this defeat did not trouble Wordsworth, who placed his faith in the success of the French Revolution, feeling “And this most rotten branch of human shame / … Would fall together with its parent tree”Footnote 123 (Prelude, bk. 10, 225–27). In 1802, things looked very different. The Wordsworths were now close friends with the abolitionist leader, Thomas Clarkson, himself an early supporter of the French Revolution, and his wife, Catherine. The abolitionists scored their first victory in limiting the British slave trade with the government's decision to restrict the sale of crown lands in the newly ceded colony of Trinidad. As the French reimposed slavery in their Caribbean colonies and attempted to reconquer Saint-Domingue, Britain appeared to represent humanity's best hope. If the Revolution was to become central to French nationalism, then the abolition of the slave trade and slavery became matters of British national pride.
It is difficult to work from an absent text; we cannot determine whether Thompson would have addressed the tangled relationships among slave abolition, patriotism, and the Romantics. We know that popular support for the abolitionist movement does not figure in The Making. William Wilberforce appears only in the role of “Pitt's moral lieutenant” and arch-evangelical opponent of Jacobinism.Footnote 124 Citizen Equiano receives no mention. It can be argued that, by deflecting attention and support from the cause of popular radicalism, slave abolition ultimately helped to conserve domestic authority and to consolidate nationalist feeling. Nonetheless, during the 1790s, British abolitionism momentarily brought plebeian radicals together with middle-class reformers and crossed paths with the young Romantics.Footnote 125 Thus Thelwall's denunciations of the trade and support for racial equality were matched in 1795 by Coleridge's lecture at Bristol's Assembly coffee house, where he rebuked his audience for asking God to bless their meals, for “A part of that Food among most of you is sweetened with the Blood of the Murdered.” The power of “truth-painting Imagination” is politically charged to present the horrors of slavery and turn the heart to benevolent action. “True Benevolence,” Coleridge declared, “is the only possible Basis of Patriotism.”Footnote 126 In conjunction with Coleridge's lecture, Southey wrote his poem, “To the Genius of Africa,” calling on the forces of slave rebellion, “Avenging Power, awake! Arise.”Footnote 127
However he might have dealt with the meanings of patriotism, we do know that Thompson intended to include a chapter on the “woman question” in the 1790s, provisionally titled “The defeat of the rights of women.” According to Dorothy Thompson, the subject was to have formed “an integral part of the proposed volume.” In a short fragment from a lecture on women's rights, Thompson proposed, “Something large was happening in feminine sensibility among the middle classes in the 1790s—perhaps even beginning to happen between men and women. But scarcely had this small wave begun to rise and crest than it was overtaken by the far deeper wave of counter-revolution.” Here Thompson might have told a different story to the masculine epic of class, alert to female sensibility, personal suffering, and loss.Footnote 128 Tantalizingly, Thompson suggests moving beyond the well-studied figure of Wollstonecraft and several other female writers such as Mary Hays, Anna Barbauld, and Mary Robinson to get at a wider shift in sensibility to be found through the correspondence columns of journals, letters, private diaries, poetry, and novels. Thompson more typically turned to the work of canonical (male) authors, but the literary output of a “lost generation” of female writers, their reputations tainted and works buried throughout the nineteenth and much of the twentieth centuries, constitutes an archive of brilliance, disenchantment, and personal struggle.Footnote 129 Such a study would have taken Thompson into the ranks of rational Dissent, including early female supporters of anti-slavery and a small group of men who endorsed women's rights.Footnote 130 With a few notable exceptions, the rights of women and the cause of sexual liberation were not taken up among artisan radicals, but were, as Thompson acknowledges, mainly championed “within a small intellectual coterie” closely associated with Wollstonecraft and Godwin.Footnote 131 As can be gleaned from his review of Linda Colley's book, Britons, rather than celebrating the activities of patriotic women as opening space for female participation in the nation, he underscores the “profoundly anti-feminist” side of loyalist culture, viewing the terms of inclusion as unfavorable to women. Maintaining a sharp distinction between the forces of radicalism and reaction, Hannah More remains “the well-supported anti-Jacobin and anti-feminist polemicist.”Footnote 132 Thompson never let readers forget the coercive side of patriotism and the active role that reaction and state repression played in stifling dissent.
Thompson reported that, if there were, in fact, a large number of lesser Mary Wollstonecrafts, then he had not found them. But in his review of Claire Tomalin's biography, he countered the image of Wollstonecraft as an isolated thinker and criticized biographers fascinated by her intimate life at the expense of her standing as an intellectual to be placed in the company of Paine, Godwin, Thelwall, Flower, and Coleridge: “she measured herself as an equal in the republic of the intellect.” And yet “she was reminded by every fact of nature and of society that she was a woman … a human being exceptionally exposed within a feminine predicament.”Footnote 133 Wollstonecraft's posthumous fate stands merely as the most symbolically charged sign of defeat. Five years after her death in 1798, her close friend and fellow feminist Mary Hays omitted Wollstonecraft from a list of three hundred “illustrious and celebrated” women covered in her six-volume Female Biography. The feminist tradition was not entirely extinguished; it was carried forward by Shelley, Owenite socialists, and radical Unitarians.Footnote 134 In her own lifetime, Wollstonecraft experienced the disenchantment of the age and suffered deep personal disappointment—“a female Werther” in Godwin's estimate. Had she lived, she would perhaps have persuaded Godwin to start life anew in America, despite her disillusionment with the republic's growing commercialism. As Thompson concludes, she never abandoned “the resilient assent to new experience.” In her Letters Written during A Short Residence in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark (1796), she expresses a feeling of romantic renewal akin to the Pantisocratic vision of primitive independence and virtue. Deciding to press northward from Christiana, she envisions a utopian retreat among the farmers of Norway's back-country.
The description I received of them carried me back to the fables of the golden age; independence and virtue; affluence without vice; cultivation of mind, without depravity of heart; with ‘ever smiling liberty’, the nymph of the mountain.—I want faith! My imagination hurries me forward to seek an asylum in such a retreat from all the disappointments I am threatened with; but reason drags me back whispering that the world is still the world.Footnote 135
Conclusion
Thompson was often enough drawn back by whispers “that the world is still the world.” A current ran between his writings on the Romantics and his own politics, a dialogue was maintained between past and present, a comradeship shared with Blake and Morris, and more tentatively with Wordsworth. As an intellectual who experienced his fair share of disenchantment, there are various moments in Thompson's life that might be revisited—1939, 1948–51, 1956, 1968, 1989—points that tested left-wing beliefs and allegiances. In 1957, he observed, “Withdrawal from the extreme left has been a central motif within our culture ever since the French Revolution left the Solitary meditating upon a creed… ‘the light of false philosophy.’” And then he made clear, “I remain a Communist.”Footnote 136 One is reminded of Thelwall, who in 1796 assumed the name “Jacobin” because it was “fixed upon us, as a stigma, by our enemies” and because despite the “sanguinary ferocity of the late Jacobins … yet their principles … are the most consonant with my ideas of reason, and the nature of man.”Footnote 137 Under the banner of “socialist humanism,” Thompson moved about as far as one could from Marxism while maintaining an allegiance to its main goals.
In 1973, Thompson published his prolix open letter to Leszek Kolakowski as a way to break out of the political isolation that followed the collapse of the first New Left, clarifying his allegiance to Marxism as “a tradition.” He also took the occasion to rearticulate his view of the romantic tradition's centrality to a national culture of opposition. He confessed himself less alarmed than Kolakowski “to observe ‘the growing romantic nostalgia for a pre-industrial society,’” discerning an “affirmative impulse” beneath seemingly “irrational” forms reacting against technocratic society. He went on to add, “Romanticism in this country offered a more radical criticism of the values of industrial capitalism than you seem to suppose; and Wordsworth attained in The Prelude to an insight into the égalité of human worth which one would gladly see appropriated to a socialist culture.”Footnote 138 Thompson's “Englishness” is on full display, a strain of nationalism that exposed him to criticism from the Left. English literature, particularly the romantic tradition, provided a national frame of cultural reference, a common literary language receding in its common resonance. Yet in addressing the Polish dissident, Thompson showed his dual identification with socialist internationalism and English popular nationalism, mirroring earlier tensions in the Communist left's project of cultural appropriation.Footnote 139 Similarly, while defending history and the category of “experience” (or “the dialogue between social being and social consciousness”) against Althusserian structuralism, he did not reject theory or structural analysis tout court but rather opposed a level of static abstraction divorced from political activism and “real” processes of change.Footnote 140
The general isolation of left-wing intellectuals from larger popular movements, their inability or disinclination to engage or learn from the experience or practice of ordinary people, was a recurrent complaint of Thompson's. In the early 1980s, when Thompson reconnected with the grassroots as a leader of the European movement for nuclear disarmament, it was as a peace activist and an outspoken critic of Britain's security state. He became less inclined to describe himself as a Marxist, although his experience in the Communist Party had left an enduring mark. By the end of his life, he was apt to call himself a “Morrisist.”Footnote 141 He was often criticized as an “idealist” prone to “voluntarism” or seen as a lone romantic figure of the Left. In a sense, he spent the better part of his life attempting to reconcile the traditions of the British Left and romanticism, to repair the loss he felt had been suffered during the age of revolution, and to regain the capacity to imagine that which is “not yet.”