Abstract

ABSTRACTThis meditative essay uses the metaphor of the patagium, the unique fold of skin that stretches between the limbs of a bat, as a way to conceptualize John Clare’s and John Keats’s engagement with ancient poetic traditions and Romantic theories of mind. It explores Clare’s and Keats’s encounters with real and imagined bats as recorded in a selection of their letters, marginalia and journals. The essay concludes that, for Clare and Keats, bats were not figures associated with darkness and death, but with dusk, childhood and human imagination.

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