Joseph Mallord William Turner Inscription by Turner: Draft of Poetry 1811
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Folio 135 Verso:
Inscription by Turner: Draft of Poetry 1811
D08619
Turner Bequest CXXIII 132a
Turner Bequest CXXIII 132a
Inscribed by Turner in ink (see main catalogue entry) on white wove printing paper, 75 x 117 mm
Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856
Exhibition history
1990
Painting and Poetry: Turner’s ‘Verse Book’ and his Work of 1804–1812, Tate Gallery, London, June–September 1990 (57, reproduced).
References
1862
Walter Thornbury, The Life of J.M.W. Turner, R.A. Founded on Letters and Papers Furnished by his Friends and Fellow-Academicians, London 1862, vol.II, p.28.
1897
Walter Thornbury, The Life of J.M.W. Turner, R.A. Founded on Letters and Papers Furnished by his Friends and Fellow-Academicians: A New Edition, Revised with 8 Coloured Illustrations after Turner’s Originals and 2 Woodcuts, London 1897, p.217.
1909
A.J. Finberg, A Complete Inventory of the Drawings of the Turner Bequest, London 1909, vol.I, p.349, CXXIII 132a, as ‘Verses’.
1980
John Gage, Collected Correspondence of J.M.W. Turner with an Early Diary and a Memoir by George Jones, Oxford 1980, p.55 under letter no.49 note 3.
1990
Andrew Wilton and Rosalind Mallord Turner, Painting and Poetry: Turner’s ‘Verse Book’ and his Work of 1804–1812, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1990, pp.141–2 no.57, reproduced, pp.143–4 under no.60, 174.
The whole page is taken up with the following lines of verse:
Exalted sat St Michael in his Chair
Full many a fathom in the c[...]ling air
Scarce can the giddy ken of mortal sight
Behold the dreadfull chasm but in fright
Forget the reason Heaven on her bestowd
And strike appalld from thir high abode
The raging waves tumultuous roard around
As on the Western side [?precipitous] abound
Cover with manacles <and [?both]> that to the tread give way
To those adventurers who dare thir slippry way
Upon the muddy steep the owner stands1
Full many a fathom in the c[...]ling air
Scarce can the giddy ken of mortal sight
Behold the dreadfull chasm but in fright
Forget the reason Heaven on her bestowd
And strike appalld from thir high abode
The raging waves tumultuous roard around
As on the Western side [?precipitous] abound
Cover with manacles <and [?both]> that to the tread give way
To those adventurers who dare thir slippry way
Upon the muddy steep the owner stands1
Interspersed with drawings and the printed pages of Coltman’s British Itinerary, sixty-nine pages of this sketchbook are given over wholly or partly to these verses which Turner intended as a commentary for publication with the Picturesque Views on the Southern Coast of England which he sketched on the 1811 West Country tour (see the introduction to the sketchbook). The first lines are on folio 18 verso (D08396), and the last on folio 207 verso (D08736; CXXIII 204a).
The previous passage, on folio 133 verso (D08616; CXXIII 130a), describes a lurid death by lightning. Here Turner begins equally dramatically, and seems to refer to St Michael’s Chair, the beacon on the roof of the church tower at the highest point of St Michael’s Mount, overlooking Mount’s Bay and Penzance towards the western tip of Cornwall. He drew this precipitous view in the Ivy Bridge to Penzance sketchbook (Tate D08936; Turner Bequest CXXV 45a), along with many other views of the steep site, and may have recalled the experience when he produced the watercolour vignette The Death of Lycidas – ‘Vision of the Guarded Mount’ (Taft Museum of Art, Cincinnati), engraved in 1835 for Milton’s Poetical Works,2 with the Archangel Michael silhouetted above the distant tower.
Wilton and Turner follow Thornbury’s suggestion of ‘circling’ in the second line, but the word is unclear. Having provided a surprisingly diligent transcription of all the extensive poetry in the sketchbook thus far, Thornbury arbitrarily breaks off altogether after the fourth line, dismissing ‘these painful efforts of [Turner’s] crippled muse.’3 This passage or a version of it puzzled William Coombe, the historian commissioned to provide the letterpress for the Southern Coast, and was instrumental in the rejection of Turner’s poetry for this purpose (see the introduction to the sketchbook).4
Matthew Imms
June 2011
How to cite
Matthew Imms, ‘Inscription by Turner: Draft of Poetry 1811 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, June 2011, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, December 2012, https://www