Dr Kat and The Libertine Earl of Rochester

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • John Wilmot, second earl of Rochester is remembered as a libertine and author of lewd poetry. Today's video looks at his life and work. CONTENT WARNING: although some words have been redacted or substituted, this video will reference texts that contain extreme language and sexual imagery - it is not suitable for all audiences and is certainly not intended for those under 18.
    Other poems by Rochester can be found here: www.luminarium....
    I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
    Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
    Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media:
    Instagram: / katrina.marchant
    Twitter: / kat_marchant
    Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
    Intro / Outro song: Silent Partner, "Greenery" [ • Greenery - Silent Part... ]
    Images:
    The execution of King Charles I, after Unknown artist (circa 1649). Held by The National Portrait Gallery.
    King Charles the 2d. in Disguise riding before Mrs Lane by which he made his Escape; the Lord Wilmot at a distance, by Michael Vandergucht, after P. La Vergne (early 18th century). Held by The National Portrait Gallery.
    John Michael Wright’s portrait of Charles II of England in Coronation robes (circa 1661-1662). Held by the Royal Collection.
    Willem Blaeu’s map of Europe (1635). Held by the National Library of Norway.
    Portrait of Elizabeth Wilmot, Countess of Rochester, after Peter Lely (date unknown). Held in a private Swiss collection.
    Portrait of John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester by an unknown artist (c.1665-1670). Held by The National Portrait Gallery.
    Quoted texts:
    The account of the kidnapping of Elizabeth Malet by John Wilmot from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, 6.110
    John Wilmot, A Ramble in St James’ Park. Available at: www.ealasaid.co...
    Claudine van Hensbergen (2019). From ‘liquid raptures’ to ‘saucy pricks’: How poets have been writing about sex for centuries. [online] The Independent. Available at: www.independen... [Accessed 7 Nov. 2018].
    John Wilmot, A Satyre on Charles II. Available at: famouspoetsandp...
    John Wilmot, The Disabled Debauchee. Available at: www.poetryfoun...
    Austen Saunders. (2012). The shock value of John Wilmot, earl of Rochester | Coffee House. [online] The Spectator. Available at: blogs.spectato... [Accessed 7 Nov. 2019].

Комментарии • 269

  • @justme.1st
    @justme.1st Год назад +8

    I thought Johnny Depps portrayal of the Earl of Rochester was perhaps his best work. Thank you for illuminating more of this character

  • @rhiahlMT
    @rhiahlMT 2 года назад +29

    Not that it's important, but I just had a major surgery. In a lot of pain the prescriptions are not helping. I put in my headsets and laid back listening to you. Your voice helped me relax. I was able to fall asleep. Which means, since I found it all interesting, I'll have to listen again when I feel better. So, thanks for the history, and the desperate need for rest. Your voice is very soothing.

    • @OdeInWessex
      @OdeInWessex Год назад

      Ten months after you post and I hope that you are feeling a lot better now Rhiahl. Blessings.

    • @rhiahlMT
      @rhiahlMT Год назад +1

      @@OdeInWessex Doing well. Going back for the second surgery in late Feb. But know what to expect.

    • @margaretkerr4591
      @margaretkerr4591 Год назад +2

      ​@@rhiahlMT all the best with your upcoming surgery,💗

    • @Nickyknits
      @Nickyknits 11 месяцев назад

      I'm going through chemo at the moment and use these videos when I can't sleep, am in pain or just need a good distraction. I love her style and am so happy I found her videos

    • @rhiahlMT
      @rhiahlMT 11 месяцев назад

      @@Nickyknits Yeah, she is a great person, not only for her insight, she should be doing voice over work if she's interested.

  • @foxenandfamily5060
    @foxenandfamily5060 Год назад +8

    Your substitute words ("fudge" and especially "cucumber") have made me giggle like a twelve year old boy! I am glad that you've done this video. To suffocate such poetry, however lewd and naughty, is to stifle a facet of humanity which cannot and should not be ignored. I also did not know about the story of this nobleman and I found it fascinating.

  • @luvnlife3332
    @luvnlife3332 4 года назад +102

    What struck me most about the first poem wasn't so much the lewdness, but the viciousness of the mysogeny.

    • @zoewilkins2896
      @zoewilkins2896 4 года назад +8

      Yes, me too.

    • @tricivenola8164
      @tricivenola8164 4 года назад +7

      I don't see misogyny. I see helplessness in the teeth of uncontrollable desire, rage at the power the female principle has over him.

    • @MintyCanRead
      @MintyCanRead 3 года назад +46

      @@tricivenola8164 I see an intense contempt for women, who are nothing more than tools to facilitate his own pleasure. He certainly doesn't respect women. It's pure misogyny wrapped in the superficial charm of youth and privilege.

    • @dnr2089
      @dnr2089 2 года назад +6

      @@tricivenola8164 Eh?

    • @cl5470
      @cl5470 2 года назад +11

      @@tricivenola8164 you just described the core of misogyny. That is what drives it.

  • @kelleymckinnon4753
    @kelleymckinnon4753 4 года назад +137

    "In all its sweary glory" is one of the most delightful phrases ever.

  • @jordanwilliams9300
    @jordanwilliams9300 4 года назад +76

    This channel should have way more subscribers than it does.

  • @elfsemail
    @elfsemail 4 года назад +108

    Johnny Depp's portrayal in "The Libertine" is amazing. I'm glad to know more about the real John Wilmont.

    • @pamelarogers1141
      @pamelarogers1141 Год назад +5

      Same for me. Johnny Depp’s skill as an actor led me to acquire as much knowledge about Wilmot as I can. And knowing more about Wilmot led me back to Depp and gave me even more respect for him for his sensitive portrayal of this complex rake and poet. And I only just now happened upon this site and I immediately subscribed. I look forward to seeing/listening to your work.

    • @eccogatti
      @eccogatti 7 месяцев назад +2

      I, too, found Johnny Depp's portrayal stunning. I had no idea he was a serious actor. And, naturally, the subject he portrays is of great historical interest.

  • @kellyalves756
    @kellyalves756 4 года назад +37

    My wifi kept stalling during the reading. I think my phone fainted a couple times.

    • @dnr2089
      @dnr2089 2 года назад +2

      🤣🤣🤣

  • @conemadam
    @conemadam 2 года назад +9

    How did I miss this? I found the poetry fascinating, not for its lewdness, but for the sharp eye and The perspective of life around the Poet. Thank you again, Dr. Kat!!!!

  • @robynw6307
    @robynw6307 3 года назад +14

    I knew that the word "cucumber" had been around for quite some centuries, but I didn't know that "fudge" went that far back (and presumably further). Thanks for the education.

  • @musicchickie99
    @musicchickie99 3 года назад +8

    Hahaha, the act of fleeing court after realizing what he’d done is the historical equivalent of throwing your phone after sending a risky text or realizing you’ve sent a text to the wrong person. 😂

  • @lisakilmer2667
    @lisakilmer2667 4 года назад +38

    You do a very nice job of turning what is essentially a lecture into a very interesting delivery. While the Earl may have been praised for his wit and deemed "fun-to-be-with" for his mischievousness, it seems he was also quite mean-spirited. The poem "A Ramble in St. James' Park" is not just a description of the lewd use of the park, but also a diatribe against a certain Corinna who refused the Earl's advances. And the "Satyre on Charles II" is even more vicious.
    I think people like this Earl are rather sad. I work at an alternative school which serves a lot of troubled teens. Many are charming ne'er-do-wells, and while we love them, we usually watch their lives spin into tragedies.

  • @emmahardesty4330
    @emmahardesty4330 3 года назад +7

    Every once in a while an artist appears with the same urge as John Wilmot, a need to lay everything out. I'm wary of persons like that, can't be entirely relaxed with or close to them, but yet I'm absolutely appreciative of their vision, their output, even their arrogance. It seems to me they're wayward animals, outside the fold, because of the raw honesty they possess. Emeralds with inclusions, yes.

  • @rossedmonds1828
    @rossedmonds1828 4 года назад +54

    Thanks Dr Kat for yet another insightful and interesting video. The Puritan's moralistic policies, when they ruled between 1649 - 1660, were deplorable, then after 1660 much of the English Court goes to the opposite extreme - and Rochester is the most blatant example of all. While he had a way with words, he was an upper class thug of the worst type who had no regard for the people he hurt. I'm glad his poetry has survived as there is something refreshing in his honesty, but I can't have much pity for him in his latter years which must have been so miserable. And his ingratitude to Charles ll takes my breath away! It would be interesting to know if Rochester actually had any real friends: I doubt it. As for Aphra Behn, I wonder how well she knew Rochester!

    • @ReadingthePast
      @ReadingthePast  4 года назад +25

      There certainly was a sort of pendulum swing in morality during this period, wasn't there?
      It can be pretty difficult to know how people in the same social circle feel about each other deep down (I think that's as true now as it was then, to be honest). Nevertheless, we could argue that Rochester must have had (at least some) powerful friends. I think they would be necessary for him to get away with what he does, and to preserve his poetry so that we can still access it. If he was resoundingly hated, he would likely have been exiled from court and expunged from history after his death.

    • @collettemcquaide1956
      @collettemcquaide1956 4 года назад +5

      I think he may have had bi-polar disorder.

    • @tricivenola8164
      @tricivenola8164 4 года назад +4

      We tend to hate those we are totally dependent on.

  • @barbarahowarth4953
    @barbarahowarth4953 4 года назад +58

    How did his wife, Elizabeth feel about her husband? Did she want to marry the man who had kidnapped her? Or was she forced into it?

    • @mscott3918
      @mscott3918 4 года назад +14

      That's an interesting point. The impression that I have gained from the research that I did for an article that I wrote some years ago is that she loved him, in the way that put upon women can love very unfaithful husbands. Look at Jane Clark, widow of Alan Clark. He had multiple affairs, at one time with a married woman and her two daughters. He called them the Coven. Yet she said that he was the love of her life, and his death devastated her. She said she knew that, despite his philandering, that he loved her. Perhaps Lady Rochester felt the same way. Very sadly, she died about a year after him.

    • @JackMagiclydelicious
      @JackMagiclydelicious 3 года назад +1

      What about the VD, did she not contract it also?

    • @pistolannie6500
      @pistolannie6500 3 года назад

      @@JackMagiclydelicious I was thinking that also. but maybe he spent soo much time w/o ppl (female AND probably male) that he didnt have, time... for her... (which would have been fortunate for her frankly). The fickleness of the time....your NoT GOOD ENOUGH...oohh weelll now...ok, NEVERMIND how you mishandled our daughter
      .......HERE YA GO! NOT MY DAUGHTER.... I would have fought it w/ everything in me to prevent my daughter from being married to a "man" like that!! And then the DISGRACE... he brought upon the family, his poor Wife... I feel SSSOOOOO SORRY for his poor wife!!!!

  • @maryblaylock6545
    @maryblaylock6545 4 года назад +17

    He strikes me as being a perpetual teenager. Angry at the world and determined to show it and himself no respect. Pity. He was intelligent and charismatic. He could have done great things.

    • @maryblaylock6545
      @maryblaylock6545 4 года назад +4

      @alison webster At this time we don't have far to look to see the leaders of countries behaving BADLY. Benjamin Franklin said that if our nation didn't watch it we would get the President we deserved. MERCY! The world needs all of our prayers.

  • @indiciaobscure
    @indiciaobscure 4 года назад +6

    I knew he died young but I was surprised it was at 33. I didn't know the damage that could be done by drinking and venereal disease, and how quickly it would catch up with him, though I did have a friend who died at that age from complications from alcoholism. I suppose there's the cliche of the 'old debauchee' who continues his raking into his 50s and 60s. He seems like an interesting, but also vengeful and spiteful person.

  • @angelasmith5174
    @angelasmith5174 4 года назад +63

    I would love to watch video of Nelly Gwinn. From Orange girl at the theatre to long term beloved of Charles II who mentioned her on his death bed to James. Would love any info about her.

    • @bkathrynbladgett8274
      @bkathrynbladgett8274 4 года назад +2

      nice pick

    • @georginaellison6280
      @georginaellison6280 3 года назад +1

      Nell Gwinn bore Charles, 2 sons, he eventually made one a Duke and other an Earl, I think. She was full of fun and sang, danced and told bawdy jokes for king and his friends.

    • @mtngrl5859
      @mtngrl5859 3 года назад +2

      @@georginaellison6280 The King was reluctant to give titles to their sons because of her station in life but got tired of her calling the boys little bastards, so he gave them tittles that are still in use today. She never asked for any titles for herself. Like Rochester, the King died of complications from syphilize which he also passed on to Nell and she died 2 years after the King.

    • @moushka2692
      @moushka2692 2 года назад +3

      I remember reading a book about Nell Gwynn and King Charles II when I was very young. It was definitely not intended for someone my age (10 or 11!) but I, of course, found it fascinating. Wish I could remember the title. It was published c.1949, I think, and replete with the careful innuendo of the time. The story, perhaps apocryphal, that I loved most about Gwynn was of how she tricked Charles into giving her land for a veterans hospital. After much pleading he agreed to give her as much land as she could cover with his pocket handkerchief. The resourceful Nell presented him with a map of London overlaid by the handkerchief thereby covering acres of land. Charles, delighted with her cleverness, gave her the property. I believe that the hospital was still standing when I read about it in 1960.

  • @juliestone9371
    @juliestone9371 2 года назад +2

    I'm buckled up! Go Dr Kat!!

  • @stevelaurieelliott3896
    @stevelaurieelliott3896 Год назад +1

    I recently watch The Libertine, and found you as I was searching to know more about John Wilmot. Thank you for presenting this poetry and the background. I found it very interesting, something definitely lacking in my college education!

  • @1pussychicken
    @1pussychicken 4 года назад +10

    Just brilliant. I had forgotten about the Earl of Rochester movie called 'The Libertine' starring Johnny Depp. There was another movie too, made about the Marquis de Sade starring Geoffrey Rush, Kate Winslet, Joaquin Phoenix and Michael Caine called 'Quills' that was equally shocking. This was a really interesting posting as I was unaware of the poetry Rochester produced. The content whilst a little shocking was no worse than the Marquis de Sade's 'Justine' or his other scatological literary output. I actually really enjoyed the wordplay in the compositions, though the subject was ripe. Rochester and de Sade both paid dearly for experience in the end. I really appreciated the beautiful reading that you did of all three works of poetry. We[l done and thank you so much for the fabulous content on this channel and the meticulous research that you do on our behalf. You are a great teacher and I wonder at which UK University you lecture? Cheers ;-)

  • @jaww22
    @jaww22 3 года назад +2

    Love ur chanell dear. Please do more of john wilmot. U read his poem so good. I would love for u to read all of his works. What a man. I write poetry too. Had a live full of the same issues. Truly. My name is john wajda. I was born on april 1st. And writen poetry since 14. Alot more. But i love every episode. Keep up the wonderful word.k. huzzah🙏💙💜💙

  • @trojanette8345
    @trojanette8345 3 года назад +2

    I think one other thing that strikes me about Wilmont's writings is the fact that language such as this existed at all in the 17th century. In the modern era we really don't think people could have talked like that.

  • @lvbdevinelove2329
    @lvbdevinelove2329 4 года назад +12

    I just found and subscribed to your interesting channel. I've watched almost all of them already! I'm also a fan of the Showtime show The Tudors. Particularly partial to the actor David O'Hara excellently playing The Earl of Surrey. Maybe one day I'll find you talking about him in one of your videos!
    Thank you for keeping history alive. I enjoy your voice too.

  • @caseyslove
    @caseyslove 4 года назад +5

    John Wimont was a spoiled brat who dismissed his responsibilities in order to live a life that met his needs no matter whose other lives he ruined and one indeed killed. He is a debased boy that never grew up and only wanted to play with his toys on his terms. He was a pitiful piece of slime in every way. His poetry is bizarre and basically says f the world. He is saying I can do and say and write down whatever the h.. I like.
    Very interesting story.

  • @dianewalker9154
    @dianewalker9154 4 года назад +34

    The poetry reveals the author’s hatred of women.

    • @elizabethdony1228
      @elizabethdony1228 4 года назад +5

      His poetry reveals an indifference to humanity, and I wonder how much of his indifference was genuine?

  • @jacquelineedwards4140
    @jacquelineedwards4140 4 года назад +4

    I must remember the phrase "in all its sweary glory". It's wonderful :)

  • @margaretquienalty5670
    @margaretquienalty5670 10 месяцев назад +1

    I’m going to have a hissy fit if RUclips has a problem with truth- no matter how horrid, graceful, lewd and fantastical. Thank you for being a part of my life… you are a wonderful orator, I love your accent and approach to all subjects!! Bonjour from SW Louisiana, USA. ❤

  • @diogenes5654
    @diogenes5654 2 года назад +3

    What a poet. What a poem. Makes me so proud to have spent most of my childhood in Rochester. He's so full of hatred for women. His assumption that any woman would be so grateful for his attention is so repulsive and grown in the nastiest fertilizer of a class obsessed society

  • @snapoutofit4884
    @snapoutofit4884 4 года назад +5

    This is history, surely youtube has the ability to have a simple warning. Thanks for doing it anyway. Im going through all the videos I have missed since finding you recently!

  • @elizabethdecell5495
    @elizabethdecell5495 3 года назад +2

    I can't get enough of your videos! I've been going through watching old ones until you can post a new one! 😀Thank you!!

  • @jenniferberensen3048
    @jenniferberensen3048 4 года назад +2

    Brilliant Kat..Thank you so much. He reminds me of all the great rockstars, particularly Jim Morrison.

  • @jaww22
    @jaww22 3 года назад +2

    Wonderful....great job

  • @paigeconnelly4244
    @paigeconnelly4244 4 года назад +3

    As you were talking about trying not to have your channel deleted by youtube because of John Wilmot's poetry, I spotted a book by/about the Marquis de Sade behind the stuffed dino teddy - now THAT would really send youtube over the edge!

  • @AmberGraves80
    @AmberGraves80 3 года назад +1

    Wow, that first poem. My eyebrows just rise higher and higher.

  • @julieblackstock8650
    @julieblackstock8650 4 года назад +15

    I loved the movie that starred Johnny Depp in the title role.

    • @Chief2Moon
      @Chief2Moon 4 года назад +5

      Julie Blackstock Johnny Depp has always brought "out there" type characters to life. His role in "The Libertine" was as outstanding as was Jack Sparrow, Edward Scissorhands, Tonto,etc,etc,etc,

    • @karenmullen3210
      @karenmullen3210 4 года назад +1

      @@Chief2Moon yeah and I don't understand the critics' problem with the Lone Ranger movie with him as Tonto

  • @camillafeliciano4656
    @camillafeliciano4656 4 года назад +2

    I have been doing research on my family, the Wilmot’s and found that 2nd Earl of Rochester is in my line. Although our direct line is a John Wilmot, a high borne Engineer from Somerset to America in the late 1600. Our family history is rich and interesting and now filled with “color” in language and lifestyle😀.
    Thanks you for your explaining English history.

  • @tricivenola8164
    @tricivenola8164 4 года назад +5

    "Claiming" authenticity? The man literally died of his excesses: no sniveling, no sudden conversion, no self-pity. He was most certainly authentic. The pungent language just alerts us to that, perfectly appropriate to the circumstances. Thank you for mentioning Johnny Depp's performance in The Libertine. He conveyed the nastiness and pathos of Rochester, as well as his aesthetics and vulnerability, which made him so infuriating. Rochester reminds me of Neal Cassady, who inspired the Beat writers around him simply by living his life.

  • @annettebernier8346
    @annettebernier8346 2 года назад +1

    MARVELOUS video!! This journey that you take us on to discover history is vastly informative, well thought out and perfectly delivered!! In this particular instance, I wish I could know more about his other accomplishments! lol

  • @georginaellison6280
    @georginaellison6280 3 года назад +3

    The debauchery of the restoration was the result of the puritanical life forced on the English people by Oliver Cromwell. So, when Charles came on the throne, everyone went a little crazy. I also think that Rochester was remembered as a libertine because of his poetry, whereas the Duke of Buckingham was worse!

  • @SarahGreen523
    @SarahGreen523 3 года назад +1

    Thank you. This is my first exposure to John Wilmot's poetry, other than just descriptors. This adds real depth to my understanding of him.

  • @alicia.mckenny
    @alicia.mckenny Год назад +2

    I love the idea that artists "doing it for the shock value" is nothing new at all. (Don't love Wilmot's blatant misogyny in that first poem, though.) Thank you for going over those with us, Dr. Kat!

  • @kateh2007
    @kateh2007 4 года назад +4

    I think that the Earl of Rochester sailed pretty close to the wind and loved the chaos he created. Quite the character and quite the libertine, and like most people, not all bad and certainly not all good!!!
    I think the fact that he was played by the beautiful Johnny Depp in the film of his life and times has helped to rehabilitate him somewhat lol.
    I personally loved the film and found it riotous and hilarious in parts and sad and pathetic in others. Although I need to remember that I shouldn't judge people from the past through a modern lens. Imho people are people are people but what appears wrong to us now would not have appeared quite so unacceptable during the time in question. It's tempting to put one's own moral stance / sensibilities on certain actions but imho doesn't really help unveil the past with any clarity. Stay safe Dr Kat xx

  • @kellyalves756
    @kellyalves756 4 года назад +5

    Man, he dragged Charles II. 😮

  • @amandapittar9398
    @amandapittar9398 4 года назад +15

    Oh for the times of the Restoration. Rochester and his potty mouth! There HAD to be a Rochester in that time, sometimes I think it “saves” history that we have folk like him who pop up. Saving it from the ordinary and routine of political machinations.

  • @elizsend6604
    @elizsend6604 4 года назад +4

    I have learned so much from your many RUclips videos.
    Your authoriatative English accent is entertaining and enlightening.

    • @annwilliams6438
      @annwilliams6438 4 года назад +4

      Clear, precise but without sounding snotty. Perfect.

  • @Mrjacharles
    @Mrjacharles 4 года назад +26

    Honestly, Thomas Shadwell got it right with "The Libertine" - Rochester was a glorified sinner who just loved to cause trouble everywhere XD

    • @ReadingthePast
      @ReadingthePast  4 года назад +17

      However, the real, and thoroughly non-academic, question is: do you think he would have been fun to hang out with? Or just an insufferable letch?

    • @Mrjacharles
      @Mrjacharles 4 года назад +10

      @@ReadingthePast oh dude he'd be like one of those stereotypical wealthy kid types - rich, troubled and alot of Daddy issues ;)

    • @Mrjacharles
      @Mrjacharles 4 года назад +10

      So not my type, but if you went out clubbing every weekend... 😏😏😏😏

    • @kayallen7603
      @kayallen7603 4 года назад +5

      @@Mrjacharles Excuse me but why are you assuming he's wealthy? Most of them weren't. True a thousand pounds/year was money back then but he had a wife, a house, servants and four kids to take care of as well as such monies he kept for himself to spend in riotous living in London which doesn't come cheap. If one enjoyed hanging out with drunken men who never met a woman they didn't like, one might enjoy their company. but stop focusing upon the outward show and think about what his works are telling us - that beneath the fine clothes lies festering rot - and he wasn't afraid to say so blatantly and from direct experience - no hypocrite he, unlike many during that licentious age. He was willing to pay the price.

    • @giddygrub7176
      @giddygrub7176 4 года назад +9

      @@ReadingthePast no, not fun being around an attention seeking narcissist.

  • @amerkakos5850
    @amerkakos5850 4 года назад +2

    I love the you explained things about paintings and earl of Rochester !

  • @terri200
    @terri200 Год назад +1

    The shock factor is what Rochester wanted people to get. It was a way for him to express what was truly happening in the upper chasses and monarchy. The lower classes suffered, while the royals, etc. did whatever they cared to do.

  • @azgal8210
    @azgal8210 3 года назад +1

    Cannot say that this in any way edified me. ..some part of history best left to lie..

  • @rogerlacaille3148
    @rogerlacaille3148 3 года назад +3

    Having done this piece, which I thought was brilliant, I'd love to hear your take on the Marquis de Sade

  • @pistolannie6500
    @pistolannie6500 3 года назад +1

    Watching this for 2nd time, just noticed the CUTE Brooch your wearing. LOVE IT!
    Im a Brooch person!!!!

  • @MsLogjam
    @MsLogjam 4 года назад +8

    Freud would have had a field day with this one.

  • @boldbearings
    @boldbearings 3 года назад +2

    Delightful. I'd like to see your review or reaction or both, of the Depp film.

  • @madiola1234
    @madiola1234 4 года назад +1

    good one!...but I couldn't help admiring that cute velociraptor on your shelf...

  • @spiderlime
    @spiderlime 4 года назад +9

    the earl of rochester had an understanding of the expressive power of poetry, but his choice of subjects diluted it's effect. dryden and others in his day had a more astute talent for choosing their subjects.

  • @dawnmason9558
    @dawnmason9558 3 года назад +2

    I really love his poetry because he tried to give a warts & all view of society a whole world.

  • @lindawitowski5652
    @lindawitowski5652 Год назад +1

    What a troubled soul! His sin was that he verbalized what others silently tolerated. The raucous words merely a window to how he saw others effective on his life and found through mockery a way to explain his mimicry of others more empowered but less moral and accountability than himself.

  • @bernaldelcastillo1768
    @bernaldelcastillo1768 4 года назад +3

    I don't know why, but Charlee Sheen comes to mind!!

  • @shelleygibbons1065
    @shelleygibbons1065 4 года назад +12

    Wow to actually write the second poem to the KING is actually appalling to someone who took care of him
    Amazing he actually had his head on after , If it had been Henry the eight or even Elizabeth? I think being Charles the second and his father having being executed! This may have saved his life

    • @kayallen7603
      @kayallen7603 4 года назад +3

      Charles II wasn't the sort of man who would be put out by swearing, drinking or licentiousness. I believe Rochester made Charles II laugh.

  • @annettewilliams6136
    @annettewilliams6136 4 года назад +1

    Dear Dr Kat, thank you for sparking my interest in finding out more abt this character! Thanks for vid. ❤

  • @kelvinallen2624
    @kelvinallen2624 3 года назад +2

    Interesting, I’ve not heard much about the Earl of Rochester, I noticed a couple of well read Marquis de Sade on the shelf have you done a video of him?

  • @Myke_OBrien
    @Myke_OBrien 2 года назад +2

    Fascinating presentation. In all honesty, his poetry wasn’t any more lewd than the Roman poet, Petronius.

  • @Erickvazquezc
    @Erickvazquezc 4 года назад +17

    Thanks for uploading, I enjoyed it very much. Do you know Graham Greenes account of his life and works? He says Rochesters works in the Brittish Museum was catalogued under "a green letter phi", which was I believe the victorian cathegory for pornography. I think Rochester was deliberately pornographic to ensue a critical view of his time, and in this was following a tradition in which crude sex is used to attack the morals of the age, as did Catullus in classic Rome and did Ginsberg in modern New York.

    • @ReadingthePast
      @ReadingthePast  4 года назад +10

      Hi Erick! Thank you so much for commenting - I haven't read Graham Greene on Rochester, but I will be sure to check that out - great tip, thank you again!
      I think you are definitely onto something with the use of shock tactics to decry the morals of the age as well. While Rochester seems willing to own (even partially celebrate) his own lax morality; he certainly doesn't make the behaviours seem attractive or without deep personal cost. This is one of the factors that makes his poetry so fascinating to me!

  • @pentegarn1
    @pentegarn1 2 года назад +3

    Ohh Johnny would be so thrilled to offend RUclips. And hundreds of years later to boot. The Goddess bless all satyrs. ;)

  • @angelawilmot3588
    @angelawilmot3588 4 года назад +4

    It's so bizarre to hear my family name said so much out loud. I wonder if my Wilmot family have any relation to him.

  • @ameryek.9607
    @ameryek.9607 4 года назад +3

    This great! Please cover Ld Byron next.

  • @zkrg3
    @zkrg3 3 года назад +1

    Have there been any updates on the archeological dig at Roanoke that had to be postponed last year due to the pandemic?

  • @amerkakos5850
    @amerkakos5850 4 года назад +2

    Hi my name is Amer .I loved the you explain things about this video !

  • @CalienteDesign
    @CalienteDesign Год назад

    Very interesting would love to hear more about the interesting courtiers.

  • @joslyndouglas807
    @joslyndouglas807 3 года назад +1

    A thought perhaps a video on marquis de sade?

  • @glorialange6446
    @glorialange6446 4 года назад +2

    The sharing of his mistress with the king obviously gave Rochester an inflated sense of his own taste and it sounds from his poetry that he was not just decrying the Kings policies but also expressing sour grapes at the continued appropriation of Nelly by Charles II and even of her continued presence by the Kings side... and her seeming satisfaction at whatever efforts it required...

  • @mememachine7044
    @mememachine7044 Месяц назад

    I find your voice very relaxing reading the poetry.

  • @barbehrhart
    @barbehrhart 11 месяцев назад

    Wow that made for a very interesting video to listen to on my way home from work!!

  • @cinemaocd1752
    @cinemaocd1752 3 года назад +1

    It all makes me wonder what happened on that grand tour...

  • @nomdeguerre7265
    @nomdeguerre7265 Год назад

    Rochester was pretty good with the stylus. His work isn't bad at all, for what it is. But you now! You're work here is impressive, both in content and presentation in these 'c___'. ('Casts' , as in 'pod-casts', sorry I couldn't resist, a failing I have in common with Wilde.) ;) It would be hard not to admire your consummate historical artistry! Bravissimo!

  • @joannshupe9333
    @joannshupe9333 4 года назад +46

    He died at 33? Well, he lived long enough to learn to write poetry, but in my opinion he didn't live long enough to become a Man. Just because your reproductive organs are functioning doesn't make it so.

    • @karenmullen3210
      @karenmullen3210 4 года назад +5

      If you're not a man by 33 something went wrong in your life or in your mind

  • @beth7935
    @beth7935 4 года назад +1

    Aha! When you said he was a poet, I wondered if he wrote That Poem :D about Charles II! I dunno where I found it, & it was ages ago so I'd forgotten the author, but I thought it was hilarious! Pretty insulting, but the stuff like the comment about his sceptre was sort of a stupid-young man compliment. I have to say it helps to know some of the archaic naughty words like swive & spend- I thought you might "translate", but then maybe it's totally obvious? :D Great vid!

  • @Eloraurora
    @Eloraurora Год назад +1

    Weirdly struck by the first, in that he seems to be mad at her, not for sleeping around, but for sleeping with _and caring about_ people he doesn't like. I'm not sure how honest that presentation is, because the tone feels hyperbolic. But it's interesting to imagine the vitriol as a result of someone who thought himself very cynical and worldly (I sleep around, she sleeps around, human nature, par for the course) finding himself wounded at a loss of emotional intimacy and lashing out because he doesn't want to admit to experiencing sentimental attachment.

  • @nettie607
    @nettie607 4 года назад +1

    Thank you! This was, as always, fascinating!

  • @dougr.2398
    @dougr.2398 4 года назад +1

    Cucumbers in fudge will become a new craze :)

  • @scribbleknit
    @scribbleknit Год назад

    Growing up in the 60s and 70s, shock poetry and other graphic works were supposedly signs of freedom and liberation from societal norms. In my youth, I loved reading such works for their shock value. It made me feel edgy. As I get older, I find it lacking in substance and reliance upon shock only.
    As an exposé of the court of Charles II, I think Wilmont’s work does somewhat the same thing. Exposing the coarse underbelly of society, rather than what society would like one to think.
    Thank you so much for doing this video. It just goes to show that the more things change, the more they stay the same!

  • @sarahrhodes491
    @sarahrhodes491 3 года назад +1

    Even by today's standards it's very "blue" language. I know the "pit" is the pit before the stage; latterly known to most as an orchestra pit. In Charles II's time no doubt it was a rowdy place where a lot of colourful things went on.

  • @TalairanPerigord
    @TalairanPerigord 4 года назад +2

    I'm a little late to the ball, as I have only just discovered this channel quite recently and am enjoying it quite a lot. I really respect your research and academic approach, Dr. Kat, but also how you make the information so accessible. It's easy to make history as dry as an old bone, and you manage to avoid that.
    I guess the questions I have are first, is it possible that Wilmot's relatively rare circumstances (i.e. being a favourite of the King, having status and a certain notoriety) brought forward any latent narcissism he may have suffered? I understand perfectly the pitfalls of posthumously diagnosing historical persons with modern pathologies, but can all of his impulsive behaviours be blamed on syphilis?
    The second question I have is about the language you carefully avoided in the verses presented. I can certainly see why the Victorians got the vapours and buried Wilmot's poetry as deeply as they could, but in Wilmot's time, I'm not sure those words carried the same horror as in subsequent centuries.

  • @lilystonne4108
    @lilystonne4108 4 года назад +12

    You are wise to redact because RUclips has become unpredictable in it's enforcement of the rules. I love Samuel Pepys. He is such a gossip, lmao! 😂 Rochester was an all around badass! As you said, he was a model libertine for historical novels. Georgette Heyer comes to my mind. His poems have been rightly banned because they are pornographic, but there is a place somewhere for them. Wow, what a vulgar piece to write about the king! The man had a lot of nerve! He lived a debauched life and died by it. Oh well, at least he had no regrets.

    • @ReadingthePast
      @ReadingthePast  4 года назад +7

      Totally! Pepys is hilarious! It's such a gift that we have still his diaries to give us an insight into how life was when he was knocking around.

    • @DawnSuttonfabfour
      @DawnSuttonfabfour 4 года назад +3

      True, it was spitefully written of the King; however when it came to women Charles was the biggest fool and like a kid in a sweet shop. One was never enough. He loved them all extremely well until the day that he didn't. He could never just put a woman away though, they were usually well rewarded even if he had to go against ministerial advice to give them titles, money etc. Sad that he found genuine happiness in the company of a woman like Nell so late in his life. That he did love her seems to be in no doubt to me or that she loved him and not just because he was King. I would say in spite of actually.
      Love the Restoration period and really enjoying all the videos. The Tudors too, love them. Thank you Kat.

    • @dnr2089
      @dnr2089 2 года назад +2

      @@ReadingthePast I love Pepys! My mother had copies of all his diaries and I loved the first hand account of the Great Fire. It was very gripping!

  • @reinadegrillos
    @reinadegrillos 4 года назад +1

    Years ago I watched a film on him. I remember it was Johnny Depp who portrayed him. I also had a biography of him and I don't remember the name of the author.

  • @arsangelica6858
    @arsangelica6858 Год назад +1

    It isn’t hypocritical to warn people not to embark on the same process through which you destroyed yourself and others. I don’t believe that was his being self aware. I think he was desperately trying to protect himself from the realization that he had wasted and destroyed his own life, made a mockery of his talents, and from the sound of things, made misery for everyone he ever had any significant relationship with. Often on purpose. I think the accusation of cowardice wasn’t that far off.

  • @marilynt9599
    @marilynt9599 Год назад

    I found the poetry raw and real; a true expression of the artist’s experiences and worldview.

  • @anny1613
    @anny1613 4 года назад +4

    No regrets about his past, I subscribe to that.

  • @mm-yt8sf
    @mm-yt8sf 3 года назад +3

    i wonder if there's an earl of cucumberland :-)

    • @dnr2089
      @dnr2089 2 года назад

      The Earldom of Cumberland became extinct in 1643

  • @emilybryyson9562
    @emilybryyson9562 3 года назад +3

    I just found your channel looking for the movie. I am so glad I found you! I love history and now I have you! I'm having such a good day today!! New sub!!

  • @Cicco2008
    @Cicco2008 4 года назад +2

    To think we have to be concerned about censorship in a literary discussion in this day and age .... in my view your disclaimer at the beginning should have been enough so that anyone likely to be "offended" by a "bad word" should exercise his/her discretion NOT to watch - and let the rest of us get on with another fascinating commentary by Dr. Kat! But I must say, Dr. Kat, that you proved how futile censorship actually is! even though the allegedly "offensive" words were replaced with other "non offensive" words, they effectively conveyed the same meaning as the words they replaced ... hence the result is the same! Words are merely symbols of ideas, which censorship cannot erase .... even though you didn't say it, we were thinking it ... To me it is strange that someone might be offended by the word c... but not by cucumber, which in the context in which it was used has the same meaning! I found Wilmot's vitriol against women and ingratitude far more disturbing than any use of "cucumber" which merely exemplified his overall attitude within the context of these poems as a whole... Anyway, I really love your commentaries!

  • @Arree1969
    @Arree1969 4 года назад +1

    Hi Dr. Kat. Love the info! If he had died of tertiary syphilis, how did so many others (cucumbers) not get it?? It seems that during the last bit of his life, he suffered greatly, but his wife was steadfast in helping in any way she could.

  • @jeanglendinning1860
    @jeanglendinning1860 4 года назад +1

    love your biographies. Have you thought off doing bio's of the following? Charles Radcliffe earl of Derwentwarer, Judge Jefferies and Owen Glyndower

  • @auntkaz422
    @auntkaz422 4 года назад +3

    He seems to be a person who lacks something core. How can one write something dripping with such disdain for someone who supported you (through some pretty serious things) and gave you everything, including basically adopting you as a foster son (when under no obligation to do so)? So the very King himself was loyal and loving to him, but he hated him in return? Perhaps there were things that contributed to it, losing his father at 10 years of age, alcoholism, other illnesses we might not be aware of... But one can't help but think that a person who is aware enough to run when his poem showing such distaste for the king gets out ought to at least be thankful (if not able to dredge up any deeper feeling) to the man who provided him with as much opportunity and freedom as he had.

  • @rcdc1ty
    @rcdc1ty 4 года назад +4

    so helpful thank you x

  • @richardpaddington4216
    @richardpaddington4216 4 года назад +1

    Bravo. Absolutely superb.

  • @ariel4742
    @ariel4742 Год назад

    I looked this video up after watching the Libertine last night. I hoped you would have one, and I was right! In the movie it starts by saying he's a terrible person and we won't like hom, but I find him endearing compared to most of the arseholes back then. At least he knew he was nasty and owned up to it instead of pretending to be a gentleman.

  • @andreesandahl300
    @andreesandahl300 3 года назад

    Yes I know, very superficial... but your make up is gorgeous! Thanks for another entertaining and informative video.

  • @shirleyharold1698
    @shirleyharold1698 2 года назад

    Dr. Kat who was Queen Barbara and who is her grandson, Lord Michael Couchback. I can’t find anything on them….thank you