J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours

ISBN 978-1-84976-386-8

Joseph Mallord William Turner Ship-building (An Old Oak Dead), for Rogers's 'Poems' c.1830-2

Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Ship-building (An Old Oak Dead), for Rogers’s ‘Poems’ circa 1830–2
D27692
Turner Bequest CCLXXX 175
Pencil and watercolour, approximately 110 x 145 mm on white wove paper, 190 x 248 mm
Stamped in black ‘CCLXXX 175’ bottom right
Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856
This vignette, Ship-building (An Old Oak Dead), was published in the 1834 edition of Rogers’s Poems and appears as the tail-piece to a poem entitled, To an Old Oak.1 It is a pair with another illustration, An Old Oak, which appears as the head-piece to the same poem (see Tate D27691; Turner Bequest CCLXXX 174). Both prints were engraved by Edward Goodall.2 The poem describes the life of an old oak tree and Turner’s illustrations correspondingly show the tree in life and in death. The first vignette accompanying Rogers’s verse shows the tree at the centre of English village life. This scene, however, shows the trunk of the oak felled and stripped and carted off to a naval dockyard:
Round thee, alas, no shadows move!
From thee no sacred murmurs breathe!
Yet within thee, thyself a grove,
Once did the eagle scream above,
And the wolf howl beneath
(Poems, pp.176–7)
Turner marked this stanza with pencil in the margin of his own copy of the 1827 edition of Poems (see Tate D36330; Turner Bequest CCCLXVI p.188). As Adele Holcomb has noted, a small thumbnail sketch on the opposite page shows the skeletal branches of a tree devoid of leaves (Tate D36330; Turner Bequest CCCLXVI p.189).3 This seems to suggest that the artist was originally planning to illustrate the final verse:
Thy singed top and branches bare
Now straggle in the evening–sky;
And the wan moon wheels round to glare
On the long corse that shivers there
Of him who came to die!
(Poems, p.178)
Ultimately however, he opted for a more positive angle, depicting the frame of a large ship under construction from the wood supplied by the old oak. The tree’s death is not in vain, for it is soon to begin a proud new life as part of the timbers of a vessel in the British navy:
Father of many a forest deep,
Whence many a navy thunder-fraught!
Erst in thy acorn-cells asleep,
Soon destined o’er the world to sweep,
Opening new spheres of thought!
(Poems, p.177)
Judy Egerton has suggested that the buildings beyond may depict the naval dockyard at Chatham.4
Despite the somber tone of Rogers’s poem, Turner here shows a bright and light-hearted scene filled with activity. A spirit of patriotism is introduced by the proud standard of the Royal Navy flying about the skeleton of the ship. As Egerton has discussed, oak trees were a symbol of enduring strength and became a metaphor for the nation’s naval defences. Mordechai Omer has noted a line of Turner’s own poetry which described the ‘stubborn British oak’ from which the ‘mighty frame’ of ships was formed, and in which great honour was achieved: ‘Some dare the restless billows to provoke | And float secure to fame in British Oak’ (see the Perspective sketchbook, Tate D07388–9; Turner Bequest CVIII 20–1).5 English ships were traditionally built of oak, although by the nineteenth century a shortage of the trees meant that other materials such as iron and Indian teak were more commonly substituted.6 A popular song, ‘Hearts of Oak’, originally written by David Garrick, had been adopted as the unofficial anthem of the Navy. An additional reference for both Rogers and Turner may have been the poetry of James Thomson (1700–48).7 In the poem ‘Autumn’, part of his famous epic The Seasons, Thomson describes a British warship:
... Whence ribbed with oak
To bear the British thunder, black, and bold
The roaring vessel rushed into the main.
(‘Autumn’, The Seasons, lines 131–33)
Turner greatly admired Thomson and owned a copy of Dr Anderson’s Works of the British Poets with Prefaces Biographical and Critical (1795) which contained the poet’s complete works.
1
Samuel Rogers, Poems, London 1834, p.178.
2
W.G. Rawlinson, The Engraved Work of J.M.W. Turner, R.A., vol.II, London 1913, no.392. There are three impressions in Tate’s collection (T05118, T05119, and T05797).
3
Holcomb 1966, p.88.
4
Egerton, Wyld and Roy 1995, p.20.
5
Omer 1975, p.701.
6
Ibid., pp.20–1.
7
Holcomb 1966, p.99 note 32.
Verso:
See D41513

Meredith Gamer
August 2006

Revised by Nicola Moorby
August 2008

How to cite

Meredith Gamer, ‘Ship-building (An Old Oak Dead), for Rogers’s ‘Poems’ c.1830–2 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, August 2006, revised by Nicola Moorby, August 2008, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, December 2012, https://www.tate.org.uk/art/research-publications/jmw-turner/joseph-mallord-william-turner-ship-building-an-old-oak-dead-for-rogerss-poems-r1133364, accessed 24 November 2024.