Article ID: CBB603351035

Ancient Trees and Aged Peasants (2021)

unapi

This article takes as its starting point Jacob George Strutt’s description, in his Sylva Britannica (1826) of the Cowthorpe Oak, an ancient oak tree, as being ‘like some aged peasant, whose toil-worn limbs still give evidence of the strength which enabled him to acquit himself of the labors of his youth’. Strutt’s etching of the tree may be compared with Thomas Barker of Bath’s painting, Man Holding a Staff. Both works compare the life cycle of a tree to that of a human being, and specifically a male peasant, who has spent his working life in the open air, battered by the weather. Symbols of British history and greatness, from the rites of the Druids to the naval victories of the Napoleonic Wars, ancient oaks could stand for stoicism, steadfastness, independence, and peaceful reform. Depictions of aged peasants, in art and literature, served a similar purpose. They appealed to those who felt nostalgic for the idea of a more settled, rural past, and emotionally attached to paternalistic values.

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Authors & Contributors
Elliott, Paul A.
Hurren, Elizabeth T.
Barahona, Ana Echeverría
Berridge, Virginia
Blume, Stuart S.
Daniels, Stephen
Journals
19: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
Almagest
History Workshop Journal
Northern History
Social History of Medicine
Victorian Literature and Culture
Publishers
Palgrave Macmillan
University of Michigan
Frank Cass
Oxford University Press
Pickering & Chatto
Policy Press
Concepts
Poverty
Trees
Literature
Aging
Science and literature
Public health
People
Carlyle, Thomas
Darwin, Erasmus
Dickens, Charles
Matthew, Patrick
Tennyson, Alfred, Lord
Zangwill, Israel
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
20th century, late
16th century
17th century
18th century
Places
Great Britain
Java (Indonesia)
England
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