The
eighteenth century was a great period for English prose, though not for English
poetry. Matthew Arnold called it an "age of prose and reason,"
implying thereby that no good poetry was written in this century, and
that,prose dominated the literary realm. Much of the poetry of the age is
prosaic, if not altogether prose-rhymed prose. Verse was used by many poets of
the age for purposes which could be realised, or realised better, through
prose. Our view is that the eighteenth century was not altogether barren of
real poetry.
Even then, it is better known for the galaxy of brilliant prose writers that it threw up. In this century there was a remarkable proliferation of practical interests which could best be expressed in a new kind of prose-pliant and of a work a day kind capable of rising to every occasion. This prose was simple and modern, having nothing of the baroque or Ciceronian colour of the prose of the seventeenth-century writers like Milton and Sir Thomas Browne. Practicality and reason ruled supreme xin prose and determined its style. It is really strange that in this period the language of*prose was becoming simpler and more easily comprehensible, but, on the other hand, the language of poetry was being conventionalised into that artificial "poetic diction" which at the end of the century was so severely condemned by Wordsworth as "gaudy and inane phraseology."
The
Contribution of the Age to Prose:
Much
of eighteenth-century prose is taken up by topical journalistic issues-as
indeed is the prose of any other age. However, in the eighteenth century we
come across, for the first-time in the history of English literature, a really
huge mass of pamphlets, journals, booklets, and magazines. The whole activity
of life of the eighteenth century is embodied in the works of literary critics,
economists, "letter-writers," essayists, politicians, public
speakers, divines, philosophers, historians, scientists, biographers, and
public projectors. Moreover, a thing of particular importance is the introduction
of two new prose genres in this century. The novel and the periodical paper are
the two gifts of the century to English literature, and some of the best prose
of the age is to be found in its novels and periodical essays. Summing up the
importance of the century are these words of a critic: "The eighteenth
century by itself had created the novel and practically created the literary
history; it had put the essay into general circulation; it had hit off various
forms and abundant supply of lighter verse; it had added largely to philosophy
and literature. Above all, it had shaped the form of English prose-of-all-work,
the one thing that remained to be done at its opening. When an age has done so
much, it seems somewhat illiberal to reproach it with not doing more."
Even Matthew Arnold had to call the eighteenth century "our excellent and
indispensable eighteenth century."
After
these preliminary considerations let us briefly discuss the important trends
and writers of the age.
Daniel
Defoe (1660-1731):
Defoe
was perhaps the most copious writer of the eighteenth century. He is best known
for his Robinson Crusoe and some other works of fiction like Moll
Flanders and Roxana. His non-fictive prose consists of a large
number of pamphlets (generally published anonymously) and a staggering bulk of
miscellaneous writings mostly topical in nature. He started a tri-weekly
periodical The Review in 1704, which continued up to 1713. In it he
dealt with political, religious, and commercial matters. There is not much of
the universal in his non-fictive prose to keep it alive, but one just wonders
at the sheer number of his works which total above five hundred.
John
Arbuthnot (1667-1735):
Arbuthnot
was man estimable for his learning, amiable for his life, and venerable for his
piety”-was a close associate of Swift and Pope and was by profession a
physician. His History of John Bull (1712), an, allegorical satire, in
the words of Legouis in A Short History of English Literature, "remains
one of the most famous political satires England has produced". Therein is
described the legal battle between John Bull (England) and Nic Frog (Holland)
ontne one side, and Lewis Baboon (France) and Lord Strutt (Spain) on the other.
Arburthnot upholds evidently the Tory point of view favouring the termination
of hostilities then raging between the countries mentioned above. He manifests
an easy mastery of lucid and vivid style as also delightful strokes of irony,
which made Swift "complain":
Arbuthnot is no more
my friend;
He dares to irony pretend;
Which I was born to introduce,
Refin 'd it first and shew 'd its use.
He dares to irony pretend;
Which I was born to introduce,
Refin 'd it first and shew 'd its use.
Jonathan
Swift (1667-1745):
Swift
was the greatest prose satirist of England. He dominated the first half of the
eighteenth century as Dr. Johnson did the second; and as an intellectual he was
far superior to Johnson. Some of his satires are obscene, misanthropic, and
cynical, but none can question his moral integrity and the unflinching
earnestness with which he removes the externals of things to bring out the
corruption which lies at their heart. Swift's satire is all-embracing. Its
rapier-like thrusts spare neither a fraudulent almanac-maker, nor a misguided
zealot, nor an airy philosopher, nor a glib politician, nor a conceited fop,
nor a pretentious scientist.This greatest of satirists once satirised even
satire! The paltry Partridge (an almanac-maker) and the great Walpole (the
Prime Minister of England) alike winced under his terrible "whip of
scorpions".
Swift's
sensitiveness to all corruption, the numerous frustrations which punctuated the
entire span of his life and the egregious folly, corruption, and self-seeking
which he found tainting "the age of reason and good sense" prompted
him to take up his lash. The age deserved satire, and his personal disposition
and disappointments made him keen enough to give it. Swift is perfectly right
when he says in The Death of Dean Swift:
Perhaps I may allow
the Dean
Had too much satire in his vein,
And seem'd determined not to starve it,
Because no age could more deserve it.
Had too much satire in his vein,
And seem'd determined not to starve it,
Because no age could more deserve it.
The
greatness of Swift's satire is, in the last analysis, a triumph of technique.
His arsenal as a satirist is chock-full of weapons, of all descriptions. Wit,
raillery, sarcasm, irony, allegory, and so many more weapons are used to
perfection by him in his crusade against folly, injustice, and unreason.
Whichever weapon may he be employing for attack, his satire is usually darker
and more telling than that of most writers. He may sometimes touch lightly, but
very often he pierces deep to the very heart of life. In any case, his satire
is very disturbing as it presents things in a fairly unconventional perspective
eminently calculated to shatter the complacency of the reader. When Swift
points out the acquired follies, he is quite constructive, but when he
satirises the very nature of man, he is nothing but destructive.
Of
all the satiric techniques the one most effectively used by Swift is irony.
With Swift irony is often much more than just a figure of speech; it is
extended so that the entire range of thoughts and feelings presented in a
satiric work seems to be coming not from Swift himself but from a fictive
character (a persona) created for the purpose. The irony lies in the
difference between the views expressed by the persona and the common sense
views (the same as the views of Swift himself).
Swift
wrote a very large number of satires of which the most important are The
Battle of the Books, A Tale of a Tub, and Gulliver's Travels. The
first is just ajeu d'esprit and was meant to lampoon in mock-heroic
terms the opponents of his patron Sir William Temple-particularly Richard
Bentley and William Wotton, both of whom had disputed the view of Temple
granting supremacy to the ancients over the moderns. A Tale of a Tub was
meant to be a satire "on the numerous and gross corruptions in religion
and learning."-It represented the Church of England as the best, of all
Churches in "doctrine and discipline," and also lashed the shallow
writers and critics of the age. Gulliver's Travels is the most famous of
Swift's works. In it he savagely indicted "that animal called man."
Though it has the externals of a travel romance yet in reality it is a terrible
but well-calculated satire on all the activities of human life and allthe
attributes of human nature not sparing even the human body. However, its irony
is so deep that it has been a favourite gift-book for children. Kipling once
said that Swift' 'ignited a volcano to light a child to bed." In fact, the
book is enjoyed by all children from nine to ninety!
Credit
must be given to Swift for the clarity, precision, and what Herbert Davis calls
the "conciseness" of his prose style. Swift despises all unnecessary
ornament. His imagery, however, is prolific and concrete. At any rate he gives
us the impression of an easy mastery of the language. Halliday in the
introduction to his Selection from Swift observes: "...the various
phases of scorn and satire, of appraisement and direct denunciation, the
various moods and tempers of the writer are expressed with wonderful and subtle
skill. The secret of his power over his readers is to be sought for here. He
makes you responsive to every nuance of thought and emotion and draws you with
the magic of his pipe into whatever region he desires."
Addison,
Steele, and the Periodical Essay:
From
Swift to Addison is" like coming from a real to a paper tiger. Addison
perfected the periodical essay which was "invented" by Steele with the
Taller in 1709. Addison collaborated with Steele as Steele did with him in
the Spectator which was launched by Addison in 1711 after the Taller
had been wound-up. The periodical paper was extremely suited to the temper
and conditions of the eighteenth century; and that explains its immense
popularity. The genius of Addison was also quite happy with this"new
literary genre. He wrote a few more works, but his popularity today is entirely
due to his work as a periodical essayist,
The
work of Addison and Steele as periodical essayists was actuated by a definite
purpose--that of providing instructive amusement to their readers many of whom
were women. "I must confess," wrote Addison once, "were I left
to myself, I would rather aim at instructing than diverting." But
instruction would not have been welcomed by the readers if it were without some
diversion. As "instructors" Addison and Steele paid special attention
to improving the morals and social manners of the people. As champions of good
taste and reason they did their best to improve the tone of society. They also
popularised "philosophy." With his papers on Paradise Lost and
the old ballad of Chevy Chase Addison did a signal service to literary,
criticism. Steele and Addison were mostly retailers of other men's opinions;
they were not philosophers themselves but they did substantial workto make philosophy
a subject of popular appreciation and discussion.
Addison's
prose style is as lucid and precise as Swift's, but it has much more of polish,
refinement, and studied ease. Dr. Johnson calls his style "the model of
the middle style." And this is his famous advice: "Whoever wishes to
attain an English style familiar but not coarse, and elegant but not
ostentatious, must give his days and nights to the volumes of Addison."
Steele as a man and stylist was less refined and consistent than Addison. He is
sometimes patently ungrammatical even. Even then, sometimes his style, in all
its spontaneity and attending carelessness, speaks, as it were, from the core
of his heart, as Addison's never even seems to do. "I Iike7' said Leigh
Hunt, "Stede with all his faults better than Addison with all his
Philosophers
and Theologians:
George
Berkeley (1685-1753) and David Hume (1711-76) were the great philosophers of
the eighteenth century as Hobbes and Locke had been of the seventeenth.
Berkeley was an upholder of absolute idealism, and as such, went so far as to
deny the very existence of matter. His deep religious convictions had the
colour of mysticism. As regards the clarity of Berkeley's prose style, Legouis
observes: "Nothing could be more admirable than the lucid prose, perfectly
simple and perfectly elegant, in which Berkeley expressed his profound and
subtle views."
Hume
was by far the greatest philosopher of his age. His approach is marked by
scepticism and utilitarianism. Regarding his style Legouis says: "Nothing
could be more tranquil and assured than the march of his thought, nothing
clearer than the prose in which he pursued his most subtle analyses in lucid
and sober language."
Adam
Smith (1723-90) was the father of political economy which Ruskin and his ilk
were to attack in the Victorian age. His Wealth of Nations (1776)
enjoyed a long and undisputed reign as the Bible of political economists. His
style is precise and unadorned to the extent of being altogether sapless:
The
first half of the eighteenth century saw the furious raging of the Deistic
controversy. The Deists including Charles Blqunt, John Tolant, Matthew Tindall,
Anthony Collins and the Earl of Shaftesbury believed in what they called
"Natural Religion," that is, belief in God without corresponding
belief in Christianity, or, as a matter of fact, any religion. Swift was one of
those who controverted the Deistic heresy.
The
rise of Methodism was another theological feature of the century. The two
Wesley brothers-John and Charles-were the initiators of the new move towards
importing the old enthusiasm, simplicity and sincerity into the religion of the
day. John Wesley's prose is characterised by directness, simplicity, and a
rude, compelling force.
Dr.
Johnson (1709-84):
As
a prose writer Dr. Johnson is particularly known for his Dictionary, his
periodical papers, his philosophical tale Rasselas, and his critical
work Lives of the Poets. He was the cham of the realm of letters in his
age and an accepted arbiter of taste. As a critic he made many egregious
errors, but his infectious sanity cannot be ignored. Asa prose stylist he was a
purist. However, his style though vigorous and direct is somewhat heavy-handed,
and as such is sometimes derisively called "Johnsonese", which Chambers's
Dictionary defines as "Johnsonian style, idiom, diction or an
imitation of it—ponderous English, full of antitheses, balanced triads, and
words of classical origin." Goldsmith said jokingly about Johnson's style
that it may fit the mouths of whales but it certainly does not fit the mouths
of little fish.
Biographers
and Letter Writers:
The
eighteenth century produced a number of biographers, autobiographers, and
writers of semi-public letters. James Boswell (1740-95), the biographer of his
idol Dr. Johnson, has the pride of place among them. His work is as massive as
the great Johnson himself! Life of Johnson is a unique work of its kind.
BoswelFs devotion to Dr. Johnson became the cause of his own fame. Among the
autobiographers may be mentioned Gibbon, Lord Hervey, and John, Wesley.
Lady
Mary Wortley Montagu, Cowper, Chesterfield, Gilbert White, Gray, and Horace
Waipole were some of the famous letter writers of the eighteenth century.
Periodical
Papers and Oliver Goldsmith (1730-74):
After
the Spectator there was a remarkable proliferation of periodical
literature in England. To name all the periodical papers which appeared in the
eighteenth century will be an uphill task as their number is legion. Most of
them continued the traditions set by Addison and Steele. The name of Oliver
Goldsmith is associated with numerous periodical papers. His cosmopolitan
attitude, tolerance, delicacy, and sentiment are his hallmarks as an essayist.
He expresses himself in a chaste and elegant style free from artificial
devices.
Historians:
The
eighteenth century saw the establishment of historiography as a respectable and
highly developed branch of learned activity. Edward Gibbon (1737-94)-writer of
the monumental The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire-was the greatest
of the historiographers of the age. His attitude is entirely rational and anti-mystical.
His style is dignified and somewhat ponderous, but he can effectively combine
harmony and majesty with logic and precision.
Edmund
Burke
(1729-97):
Burke
was the greatest orator of the age. He dealt with the pressing political
problems facing the British Empire. His works concerning Indian and American
affairs and the French Revolution are couched in brilliant and rhetorical prose
which cannot but impress the most indifferent reader or listener. He was an
antitheorist who recommended action in keeping with the spirit and complexion
of the times
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