'Houghton-Walker does have a pointed and significant criticism to make of Clare scholarship: that it 'ignores the less-than-concrete' so consistently it cannot recognize 'that vision can be both physical and metaphysical' (p. 169). This book helps redress that critical error by attending carefully and sympathetically to Clare's metaphysics, to the myriad ways in which he infuses the concrete world of nature with religious significance and powerfully presents his moments both of doubt and of transcendent faith.' English ’John Clare’s Religion promises to be a continuing influence in Clare studies for the foreseeable future. Houghton-Walker’s book, due to the depth and breadth of the research, also serves as an extremely useful explication of the varieties of religious practice in England in the early nineteenth-century.’ Romantic Textualities