Wales Visitation

"Wales Visitation", also styled as "Wales—A Visitation", is a poem by Allen Ginsberg written in July 1967 while Ginsberg was staying in Wales with his British publisher Tom Maschler. The poem makes reference to Romantic literary traditions and utilises imagery of the Welsh landscape.[1][2] It was published in The New Yorker on May 11 1968 and also in Ginsberg's Planet News collection of the same year.[3][4]

Background and inspiration

Ginsberg had been invited by R. D. Laing to speak at the Dialectics of Liberation Congress in London in July 1967.[5][6]

After the conference, Ginsberg travelled with Tom Maschler to Wales and, according to Ginsberg's biographer Barry Miles, they stopped at Tintern Abbey on July 29 to allow Ginsberg access to the same source of inspiration as Wordsworth.[2][7] They stayed at Maschler's stone cottage called Carney in the Black Mountains near Capel-y-ffin.[8]

The pair took LSD and, in the fifth hour of the acid trip, Ginsberg wrote the poem.[5][9]

Form and content

The poem is written in free verse and has nine stanzas.

Ginsberg employs a cataloguing technique, commonly used in Walt Whitman's poetry (who Ginsberg was strongly influenced by), in which descriptions of many entities of the landscape are presented to provide the reader with a rich absorbing image of the natural environment.

The most prevalent poetic device Ginsberg employs is personification, which helps to unite the objects described in the poem by recognising the humanity in all entities, ultimately building upon the primary theme of the poem, oneness.[3]

Cultural impact

Ginsberg was interviewed on May 7 1968 by William F. Buckley Jr. on his television show Firing Line and he recited the poem in front of Buckley and the live audience.[10]

Philip Glass composed a piece of music called Echorus in the winter of 1994–95 for the Compassion Through Music project. This was first performed in 1996 with Ginsberg reading his poem Sunflower Sutra over the music. In a later recording in 2001 with the Czech Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra, Echorus was performed again but with Wales Visitation being recited instead.[11]

An exhibition was installed at the National Museum Cardiff called "Wales Visitation: Poetry, Romanticism and Myth in Art" in 2014, in which the poem was used as a origin to explore other works that were inspired by or connected to the culture and landscape of Wales.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b National Museum Cardiff (2014). "Wales Visitation: Poetry, Romanticism and Myth in Art" (PDF). Amgueddfa Cymru. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2025-05-26. Retrieved 2025-05-26.
  2. ^ a b Walker, Luke (2013). "Allen Ginsberg's 'Wales Visitation' as a neo-Romantic response to Wordsworth's 'Tintern Abbey'" (PDF). Romanticism. 19 (2): 207–217. doi:10.3366/rom.2013.0133. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2025-05-27.
  3. ^ a b Shackelford, D. Dean (2022). "Wales Visitation by Allen Ginsberg | EBSCO Research Starters". EBSCO. Archived from the original on 2025-05-26. Retrieved 2025-05-27.
  4. ^ Ginsberg, Allen (1968-05-03). "Wales Visitation". The New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X. Archived from the original on 2021-09-24. Retrieved 2025-05-27.
  5. ^ a b Brockway, Anthony (2007-05-26). "Babylon Wales: Ginsberg's Welsh Acid Trip". Archived from the original on 2007-11-05. Retrieved 2025-05-27.
  6. ^ The Allen Ginsberg Project (2011-07-11). "Dialectics of Liberation 1967 (ASV 9)". The Allen Ginsberg Project. Archived from the original on 2020-09-29. Retrieved 2025-05-27.
  7. ^ Gerry in Places (2016-09-28). "In border country: haunts of ancient peace". That's How The Light Gets In. Archived from the original on 2023-03-29. Retrieved 2025-05-27.
  8. ^ Doward, Jamie (2018-09-15). "Writers' wilderness haven split over Brecon Beacons phone mast plan". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Archived from the original on 2018-09-15. Retrieved 2025-05-27.
  9. ^ The Allen Ginsberg Project (2015-01-27). "Meditation and Poetics - (Wales Visitation)". The Allen Ginsberg Project. Archived from the original on 2019-05-24. Retrieved 2025-05-27.
  10. ^ Hoover Institution Library & Archives (2017-01-25). Firing Line with William F. Buckley Jr.: The Avant Garde. Retrieved 2025-05-26 – via YouTube.
  11. ^ The Allen Ginsberg Project (2023-08-10). "Philip Glass/Allen Ginsberg - Echorus". The Allen Ginsberg Project. Archived from the original on 2025-05-27. Retrieved 2025-05-27.