The Critical Reputation of Defoe's Novels: A Reflection of Changing Attitudes Toward The Novel in England
The Critical Reputation of Defoe's Novels: A Reflection of Changing Attitudes Toward The Novel in England
The Critical Reputation of Defoe's Novels: A Reflection of Changing Attitudes Toward The Novel in England
OpenBU http://open.bu.edu
Theses & Dissertations Dissertations and Theses (pre-1964)
1955
https://hdl.handle.net/2144/7803
Boston University
BOSTON UNIVERSITY
GRADUATE SCHOOL
Dissertation
THE CRITICAL REPUTATION OF DEFOE'S NOVELS:
A REFLECTION OF CHANGING Ai'TITUDES
TOWARD THE NOVEL IN ENGL.AND
Sidney J. Black
(B.S., Harvard College, 1946; A.M., University of Chicago, 1948)
First Reader • •
~~ sor
or o£ English
• • • •
CONTENTS
Page
INTRODUCTION. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1
PART ONE TRADITIONS
Chapter One The Literary Tradition and the Novel: from
Vraiss.mblance to the Verisimilar • • • • • • • • • • • • • 13
Chapter Two A View of the Novel and the Literature of
Fact and Morality• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 33
PART TWO FACT AND FICTION
Introduction
All approaches have pertinence; some are more inolusive than others;
become dated. The problem presented in this study has been to find
'Wtdch follow the statement of the problem, its limitations. methods, and
of fiction, .!.:.!.:.• the novel and romance as literary forms, and secondly,
novels of Defoe over a period of two hundred years, will rest upon the
2
assumption that such a study will reveal the shif'ts in taste which may
help to define the novel from his period into our own, that it will help
critics.
Further, a study of the gradual acceptance of the work of Defoe
as something permanent in our literature may organize a picture of' the
Crusoe. A legitimate question at this point would be why Defoe has been
and technique connected with the term novel. A simple answer is that
the term was applied before, during and for same time after the lifetime
and II of this study: the first, dealing with backgrounds and traditions;
the second, with the special effects created by Defoe's contribution
almost anecdotal, generally comic in spirit, but which could deal with
intrigue--what Milton call~ "a mere amatorious tale." The change
thing relationship.
satisfy the de.mands of a literate middle class which insisted upon fact
over fie~ion, or preferred that fiction which was most like tact.
both comic and tragic, one or the other. and in its treatment, the author
must attempt to create a reality of circumstance. It is perhaps the
To what degree Defoe was responsible tor this shift in the meaning
of the novel, is a subject upon which critics differ. This study will
indicate, however, that his use of the plain and reasonable prose and
his narrative method derived trom hiS ' ability to create and maintain
real life-like situations has often resulted in his being called "the
to life,• and •maktng the lie go down like the truth.* . Its definition
rests, as shall be sho11n, in the use of language that is close to that
ot report, and in the use ot material verifiable in sources ot
intor.mational literature.
that the inferences and judgments made of the characters and morals
in a novel ought to emerge trom the particulars enumerated and not trom
and occupies a key position 1n the history ot the novel in modern times,
let us say, trom 17<19 to the present. :More than this, his importance
created for literature a tone of' voice, an attitude of' mind, the effects
ot 'Which do not appear in a school of imitators end die away, but which
permeate the Whole tradition of the modern novel as it exists into our
own time.
study o.f the problems raised in the criticism of' seven of his most
popular novels should reveal much about the changing attitudes toward
tation of the novel. For example, the preference for Robinson Crusoe
by earlier critics and their delight in the Memoirs of a Cavalier
contrasted with a later interest in Moll Flanders and The Fortunate
Mistress can lead the student to inferences about the variant defini-
tions the novel was assuming.
the definition of the novel. These provide the basis for organization
in this study.
The first problem in the study of Defoe critici~ and its relation
to the development of the novel as treated in Part II, deals l'Tith the
relative value of fiction and fact. The second problem (Part III) is
in fiction. The third aspect (Part IV) deals with the view of the
novel as an att6mpt to recreate experience--not necessarily a record
of experience, but a creation of a world as individual authors see it.
interest rests in the technique, the how's and why's rather than the
what. The study can by no means be complete, tor as the novel continues to
be written, changes occur that re-define it. For new generations Defoe's tone
·6
There remain two important areas 'Which this introduction must cover
criticism and study 'Which deals 1li th seven o~ Defoe's novels. These
and America: those that were frequently read and frequently commented
hundred and fiTe years since their publication. These will be referred
pf' the Plague Year, Colonel Jack, and The Fortunate Mistress. Others
presented.
2In most criticism. and comment ·to follow the short title refers only to
the first part of the Crusoe tr:Llogy unless otherwise indicated.
except where it was felt that foreign criticism produced new directions
for the course of English fiction, but on the Whole this material--
dealt ~th aummarily. This rule applied particularly when the criticism
.American studies, particularly in Part IV; but they are acceptable for
two reasonS: one, the obvious cultural and language heritage shared
by the two countries; and the other, the spurt of interest in American
in realistic fiction.
sources and methods. The approach adopted here was a simple chrono-
was found in two libraries: The Boston Public Library, llbich houses the
shel-res may not be complete, but may be said to contain the most relevant
material; for even there, much was found that was repetitive.
terls, the chapter headings senred as an index. Once the notes were
George Chalmers, Walter Wilson, William Lee, and Thomas Wright--'Wh!' mayo
were not generally well receiwd by some of the critical aages as per-
manent contributions to the history of the nowl. In any case the comments
were not offered for what they might re-veal about the history of the
novel or Defoe's part -in it. In comparatively recent times only two
Mr. Burch divides his work into two periods, 1719-186o and lSC$-1894·
For these he offered two separate titles which tend to obscure the long
fiction in this early period, rather upon other aspects of his writing
tion of Mrs. Clara Reeve's The Progress of Romance, perhaps the only
novelist in the eighteenth century who comments at length on Defoe as
a novelist or romancer.
Such omissions may nat be crucial, but Buroh' s first article
concludes with the view of Defoe 1 not as a novelist, but as
no more nor less than an able but unscrupulous
journalist, and that this opinion was so deeply
rooted that he (the eighteenth century critic]
could not lay aside this view even temporarily
to evaluate his literary 1'JOrth.3
Buroh also points out significantly that none of Defoe's early bio-
graphers were competent literary scholars, and thus ignored Defoe's
relatively important position as a novelist. These men did, however, offer
criticism which reflected current att itudes toward the novel. George
of Charles Lamb when he came to discuss the fiction. Their views ought
But the a.n~er to the problem of Defoe's upe.rtial eclipse" can just
Burch offers two reasons for the Defoe revival in the early nine-
and social reforms, and partly from the passing of' the classical
tradition. But both of these movements a.re related (this Burch did not
the novel, ldl.ioh at this point in its history wa.s very 1m1ch allied to
political and social conditions. Perhaps, for this reason, the Romantics--
an art form.
In his second article, it becomes apparent in his title that his
scope was larger than he had previously implied. •Defoe's British
-- -
Reputation• enlarges the area of etudy; Burch concentrates upon two
major trends. Defoe ceases to be received as a statesman patriot;
narrative fiction seen less as a fixed genre with rules fo~ application
than as a £or.m relative to the men Who create it, adaptable to prevailing
conditions of manner end taste, and yielding to fresh lines of experi-
mentation and analysis.
There now remains the task of presenting two views of the novel;
first in relation to the literary tradition prior to and contemporaneous
with Deif'oe, and secondly to the substratum literature of morality and
.12,
information. Each in its own way was moving toward a view of reality
that was different in its scope (and hence productive of new forms)
Chapter One The Literary Tradition and the Novel: from Vraisemblance
to the Verisimilar
with such views as were expressed in the works of prose fiction which
were accepted as part of a consciously literary tradition. Such current
received; and when compared with Defoe's o~ critical comments (Part II~
Chapter I), this criticism should reveal at what points he was in accord
Their work supplied this study with subject matter~ but the concept
tury prefaces. 1
The second c~apter deals with literary trends that were seen to be
1
Prefaoes to Fiction, ed. Banjamin Boyce (Los Angeles: Augustan Reprint
Society, 1952).
verisimilar~ the approach to reality was one which the middle class
upon the oomruonplace concept that the novel grew out of social and
scholars, and critics dealing with Defoe and the early eighteenth
the relation between the ethical informational literature and the prose
fiction of Defoe.
:fiction and can be said to reach back to the Greeks and Romans. In
the Restoration figures, and the Augustans all had their forms of
and anecdote had merged into ambiguous synonyms. This wa.s partly the
corruption and frivolity that cllmg to the two terms. Thus~ they
modern scholars in terms of the public that was addressed. They make
They declare that as the bourgeois became the dominating social class
at the close of the seventeenth century, its realism and its morality
were to define literature, and more espe.c ially, the form and tone of the
with the political and religious temper of the tiirs. •3 The local jest,
2Queenie D. Leavis, Fiction and the Reading Public (London t Chat to and
Windus, 1932) , PP• 8&7 •
travel.
Removed and very much opposed in aim end intention 118.& the reading
century, the romance and the anti-romance imported from the French and
Spanish were in vogue for the English ilite. They were adapted as
well to the demands of the drama of the period. Different not so much
ends. On the other hand, "the popular fiction had no literary meritJ
Toward the close of the seventeenth century the two classes began
appeal from both traditions. Not only was the rise of the bourgeois
but that rise in itself involved a decline of social patronage for the
writer. lie soon "found, however, that he 118.8 able to earn a livelihood
quickest returns oame from the translations, the drama., and pamphleteering,
but after Defoe, the novel became a form so popular that it could
the term novel was used to avoid the bad tone that rang from romance;
but in John Kersey's The New World of Words (1706} the novel was defined
as a •short romance." T.he definition shows the kinship between the
novel and romance, and indicates that one of its features was its
the ~rd Historz Which Painter related to the novel. Painter englished
the Italian word, novella, which referred to a short story with a
oompaot plot of situation and a punch line. The action was so contrived
upon backstairs or bedroom comedy that the characters were drawn and
line. But Painter's use was a more general one, in that its only
4awilliam McBurney and Charlotte Morgan claim that the novel became
profitable only after Richardson's Pamela; for until then, novels were
dubious business ventures. Both, however, admit that Defoe showed that
the novel could support its creators.
5see N.E.D., substantive 2a.
Unless otherwise noted all dates given in parenthesis after titles are
dates of the first edition of a book.
distinctions were its familiarity and its brevity.
The modern view of the novel, however, hinges upon the realistic
moderns have looked for such elements in Thomas Nashe' s The Unfortunate
approach to life/1 and its modernity; but Nashe did not refer to his
Thomas Deloney; Jack of Newburz, The Gentle Craft (c. 1598), often
to justify and extol the bourgeois, and his attsmpt to make fiction
read like fact. For similar reasons Thomas Harmon's A Caveat for C011U11)n
readers was still evident, :t'or the English prose fiction of the upper
as
expressed in some kind of code. Tieje listed seven forms that varied
romances, but there was an effort upon the part of later Writers of
Ibraim (1641) and .La Calpren~de's Cassandra (1642) made similar claims,
that he has "made the foundation of my work historical, my principal
personages such as are marked out in the true history for illustrious
personages."?
resemblance to things;' and attacks the authors who adhere "too much
The form is said to have originated in Spain, the earliest significant one
into English by Kirkman and Head, whose The English Rogue (1665) is
described as •an enormous serial ••• reh&sh ot old anecdotes, odds and
the sense that they are prose fiction. Important for our study of
revealed in the growing popularity of the novel forms. which toward the
end of the seventeenth century had developed into a historical, a
forms which become part of the eighteenth century novel are considered.
For all of them tended on the whole to be shorter than the romance and
prose; further they tended not to have the furniture of the romance; the
awkward il'Ibercalated tales. the cardboard characters. and the loose
imitate. '
Many of these novellas came from France, La Princesse de Cleves
Many of the English novel writers, Mrs. Behn, Mrs. :Manley, Mrs.
tions and turn phrases into contemporary jargon in order to give the
court of Louis XV. Plot structure 1V8.S altered so trat virtue might
de Sergeais,"
Hippolytus and The History of John of B.o urbon. She called her works
hi stories, and they were kin in form to that of the key novel or the
clearer than in the native products of Mrs. Aphra Behn and William
Congreve.
The subject remains romantic love; tha figures are stilted and
to the novel, Oroonoko (1688), we find that the central figures are
eye-witness:
On the whole, the work borrows from what it disdains, the romanoe:
Oroonoko and Imoinda. are particularized and so are the minor characters
but not too· muoh farther than romance writers had achieved. Mrs. Behn's
roots are obviously in the heroic drama, which in turn, derived .from the
romance. Even the incidents are bizarre, particularly the torture and
the folksy gossip who narrates the tale. She offers a parallel to
Defoe's objective editor and establishes an effect of verisimilitude.
In the wake of Mrs. Bebn' s popularity--she was primarily writing
for an aristocratic circle, but her works were much read by the middle
novels within the franework tale, paralleling that of ' tbe oriental
and travels. Ernest Baker finds that their services tended to keep the
supply of novels and stories high Which had the effect of accustoming
an expanding reading public to find amusement in fiction, and of opening
If "fJe turn now to Congreve' s Incognita (1692) and study his concept
of fiction in relation to his ~~rk, we can perhaps see that his concept
differs from Defoe's idea of the novel which is discussed in Part II.
The novel at the turn of the century was beginning to shape itself
ridicule and humor may account for the praise of its realism. Congreve 1 s
tion of the rules of the drama. But he sa~ the solution not in the
indisputably give place to the Drama" and "since Drama is the long
The design, he said ought ..to be single, ·.- and the theme suited to
comedy; the latter inevitably being 11 marriage end obstacles which are
The i mport of.' Congreve's criticiSm· lies ' i n. his : r:ecogn-it ion ·that t he coreept
1
6vulli~ Congreve, Inoognita;or,Love and Duty Reconcil'd (New York:
Houghton Mifflin, 1922), P• 5.
28
for the story proper of Incognita is little more than an ironic treat-
and love leading to marriage :fea·sts at the end. There are the usual
dull episode.
hero of romance:
There arose another Sigh; a Sympathy
seiz'd Aurelian immediately, (for by
the Way, sighing is as catching among
Lovers, as yawning amongst the Vulgar) •••• l7
17
Congreve, Incognita, P• .33·
18congreve, Incognita, P• 29·
A source of irritation in the romance was the intercalated tale.
Congreve steered his readers away by remarking: "He was to tell the
had a. small Desert of Numbers to have pick'd and Criticiz'd upon~ had
a deft parody of the romance without really creating a new form; though
the brevity, the middle class characters, the concern with do~ies and
marriages became staples of middle class novels.
romance remained quite accurate for its time (1700). If the concept
of vraisemblance a.s interpreted by the romancers and even the romance
of fiction are related in this period in the sense that! they are kinds
of prose narratives and species of fiction intended to address a high
But there were important changes. One was the developing class
figures ,. {Sarah Churchill~ the queen) wandered through the very blase'
and base world of corruption and greed. Love, instead of being canonized,
became the ere a ture of the hour in the manner of the Restoration comedy.
the French vogue of the ohronique scandaleuse, she offered very sound
She was aware, for example, that the lengthy romance had exhausted
itself'. -F or, as she put it in the preface, the English 11 have no sooner
begun a Book but they desire to see the End of it." Her concept of
upon writing only that ~ich may be morally believed .. " Nero cazmot
nrurder his mother, for that is morally unsound. But at the SMl.e time,
11
vraisemblance required sweetness~ Manley's O'Wil term f'or that quality of
~ the
1
extraordinary characters and situations ought to give wa.y to most
simple Actions" which engage the reader "by the circtUllstances that
attend it. •
the reader to form his O'Wll judgment. At the san:e time she 'WOuld have
history as she called her work, the principal duty of the author was
•to inspire into Men the Love of Vertue and the Abhorr-ence of Vice,
the well-defined plot derived from the pattern of the heroic drama in
Mrs. Behn and the Restoration Comedy in Congreve. This aspect of the
Chapter Two A View o£ the Novel and the Literature of Fact and
Morality
members of the Tudor court and the rakes of the Restoration, the
and nightmares. It wanted to be twitted for its vices and praised for
its virtues of good common sense and morality. By 1700, with only the
remains of the iron discipline and the spirit of individualism that had
little to unity.
On the one hand were the demands of the religious ethic, pro-
were the demands for economic advanoement. 1 The conflict had worked
its changes upon the puritan spirit, "who sixty years back, had been
Defoe. " 1 a
Like the Puritan, the Anglican 'Whig had also to square with his
and moral virtues. • 2 Hence • for the ff!IW, Trade and her handmaiden-s
(George Lillo's London Merchant, 1731). For both the Anglican and the
Dissenter, the way was not al118.ys through a religious ethic, but a kind
of literary sanctification. Hence, in all forms of literature came the
great emphasis on Virtue, but cumbered with the dowry, the, yearly
2R. H. Tawney, Religion and the Rise of Capitalism (London: John Murray.
1936), P• 24J..
3Ta~ey, Religion and the Rise of Capitalism, PP• 211-212.
35
mind--the product of the novelist and romancer; but for the worthwhile
permeated the allegorical narrative, and though it had derived from the
use of fiction:
not regarded for its literary values. It grfSW out of and gave rise
progress along the road from sin to redereption: The Travels of True
Situation of Paradise Found Out (1683) and The Pilgrim's Guide (third
edition in 1684).5
Albeit its instructional value was its chief merit in the eyes
prose and its concrete imagery. They also recognized in its episodic
romances which Bunyan is said to have read: Bevis of Hampton and Guy of
will make a traveller of thee"; his characters also make a voyage. Like
the travel wri tars, Bunyan knew well how to build a sense of reality from
11
an accumulation of telling details. His fancies stick like burs." But
in the end, his readers ware always aware that the dominant theme which
kept the digressions pertinent and gave unity to the 'Whole was the way
to salvation.
its fictional content in the preface to The Holy War (1682), by commenting
that though a book could "divert" and be "pleasant," it could also "be
far from folly." In his study of the evil-hearted man, Mr. Badman (1680) •
fit Bunyan into the pattern of the evolving novel, but it must be
recognized that Bunyan's work is an example of the conditioning process
that was creating the bourgeois mind in its approach to an ethic. The
eighteenth century novel is influenced, at least inso:fat· aa Defoe is
of Roguery calls The Life and Death of Mr. Badman a puritan •romance of
and the justification of the story as a tale of morality 198.S the very
one that served as an excuse for the rogue biographies.
Said Bunyan: ni have put fire to pan and doubt not the report will
be quickly heard •••• let those that would not dye Mr. Badman's death,
take heed of Mr. Badman's ways."
Consider as a parallel the intention expressed by Kirkman and Head
in the first part of The English Rogue:
When the author could offer his public an account of a true life,
or base it upon the events of the day, he ])id_less need of this kind of
plary lives, good and bad. In such an area John Bunyan contributed his
Grace Abounding (1666), in which he strove to lead men to the light by
example of his own spiritual suffering and trial. In the same spirit,
Bishop Gilbert Burnet had offered his Rochester (1680), Richard Baxter,
his Life of II'!I's. Margaret (1681) and his Reliquae (1696), and the
justified the biography and the autobiography, a good many of the lives
In their turn, as they were captured, tried, and executed., the actual
rogues of the seventeenth century were written up by the yellow journalists
of the period for quick sale. James Hind, Richard Hainam., and William
~1tty Rogue (1656}, and The Notorious Imposter (1692). Some of these,
Calendar (1700). But even here under the guise of morality, the
Although the criminal life "Pi h S never viewed with favor by the
he draws his subject matter ( Crid and Punishment • .An American Tragedy) •
The self-respecting, though they might read them on the sly, would never
historian must recognize that the pamphlet life offered the novelist
to the novel as it served also to supply the middle class with informa-
which two aspects will be discussed here: the newspaper and the travel
literature.
With the shift in the political and religious values under the
impact of internal dissensions and foreign wars, the middle class came
leaders as the Whigs--and the Tories were quick to follow their lead--
recognized that even where there was a limited suffrage, there was need
for communication. The f'ree vote 1'18.& not alvrays within the range of the
spoken word, and might be convinced by the vrritten one. Thus, a new
for advancement, and the stakes could be high. Addison wrote for his
secretariat; Steele, for his baronetcy; Swift, for wba t he hoped 'WOUld be
It has been often enough recognized -that his Essay on Projects (1($7)
and his True-born Englishmen (1701) procured him the attention of King
William III.
periodicals, Defoe's Review (1704-1714) was among them.9 Not only was
9The lapse in the LLioensing Act in ll$4 released news reports from
the censorship of governmental and royal matters that had held
through the Stuart period.
his 8l!l.ong the most popular, but it was the most long-lived iii. its period.lO
report invaluable. Taking this factor into aoco'lm.t and even considering
no one that the circulation of the newspapers and periodicals was very
explain and argue points of policy, they also, but less consciously.
10
Apart from Def."oe who always protested his impartiality., partisan
journalists in the period included the High Tory Charles Leslie of
the Rehearsal (1704-1706}, the Whig John Tutohin in his Observator
(1702-1707), and the Tory Jone,than Swift, in his Examiner (1710-
1711); Addison and Steele expressed Whig sentiment in their papers.
11
For discussion., see William Payne, »r. Review: Daniel Defoe as
Author o£ the Review (New York: King'• Crown Press, 1947).
43
in its taste for news provided The Spectator with a subject for ridicule:
was to "enliven morality with wit" and "temper 'Wit "With morality.''
- -
11
and further that he wished it be said of him that 1 have brought
and social position of the middle class, pointed to the obvious fact
that the nation's power -..as more than ever dependent on its oo:rmn.erce.
Defoe's Review devoted itself during the wa.r years to a study of the
progress of the lf8.r trorr, the front office. In fact the Review was more
a political column than a newspaper in that its four sheets were primarily
devoted to a single essay about 1200 words in length. But it too, in the
and replies (the Soandlerous Club, later the "Little Review") as -..ell as
public interest shifted away from the war, Defoe introduced more varied
subject matter than trade and po l itics--though they remained the staple--
there were essays dealing with lov-e and marriage, the place of 'IIOman, the
church ritual, and social reform to questions of domestic life and odd
desert island, away from all society; and: Defoe's realistic pamphlet
during which time she sat decorously before a tea table in a dress of
scoured silk.
the character in creat:ing such personages as Ned So.rtly, Tom Folio, The
Tory Foxhunter, Mr. Review, and Captain Sentry. They BS.de use of
the use of satire in the form of a letter: Spectator i/92, "Books for a
Lady's library." They preached on manners and moral reform, but the
intonation and rhetoric, and had become the reasonable essay of the
eighteenth.
But upon the question of English prose the news reportera were in
return back to "the primitive purity, and shortness, when men delivered
i-ts Donnesque and Browneian me-taphors and conceits were made by "the
level of his plain end middle readers. In his papers and pamphle-ts of
the peri od 1704-1714, he relied more and more upon repetition, blunt
meaning."l5
supplied the middle class with information and a standard of taste and
manners. The news "Wl"iter' s efforts 1'f8re par-t of the middle class
The desire for factual knowledge by the middle class was expressed
North Whitehead's Science and· the Modern World,l9l.,B, Chapter IV, "The
once simple and clear. It should convey the vast stores of information
dependent upon distant lands--in the East India Company and other
0£ these, the most important influence upon the evolving novel was
upon travel fiction written by Defoe, were Robert Knox's Nineteen Years
of Captivity (referred to-in this text by the short title, Ceylon, 1681)
and V¥illiam. Dampier's A New Voyage Round the World (l&Tf). In its o1m.
time. Da.mpier;s Voyage was extremely popular and frequently enlarged and
tion, and, by 1717, Dampier had publiShed five editions of his original
stat ed in his Preface, his desire to give a semblance of unity "a Thread"
of the globe. His thread provided him with a device upon which to hang,
the book.
nati ve peoples.
credul ity about strange events in far off places, ~ simply suggesting
the observer's human limitations--a d~ice later used extensively by
Defoe.
t here was a kinship between these works of travel and Defoe's fictional
voyages, among them Robinson Crusoe. There, too, were found the digressions
on the natives, climates, and produce, occasionally, the flora and fauna,
in the first person, some of the technical jargon pf the sea customs, and
voyage.
The religious or moral element that was conspicuously absent from
many passages are found which attribute all motivation and situation to
in my new house, I began to keep hogs and hens; which by God's blessing,
throve very well •••• ' God's eye did not leave Knox's hogs and hens.
Dampier and Knox on the whole tended to rely upon actual experiences
11
and set an example for later travel writers. Said Dampier: I have taken
nothing from any Man without mentioning his Name, except some few
with similar remarks. Aphra Behn and Jol:m Bunyan both, it will be
rememb ered, had utilized this form of rationale. Behn had further
17'William Dampier, A New Voyage Round the World (London: Adams and
Black, 1937), P• 197.
51
not doubt the truth of his account inasmuch as they could find about
b y Wafer, Woodes Rogers, and Edward Cooke. But it 1V8.S not until
Defoe began to write adventures based upon actual travels that a
Boyle (1726). The Voyage of Richard Castlema.in (1726), and The Hermit
(1727).
sea captains, were able to draw tram the travel books its loose episodic
By way of theme t here was the hint of religious and moral reflection
to be drawn from the incidents; for character, there was the objective
-- ..
52
were the strange and far away lands and peoples. odd and surprising
events: wars with savage tribes, stonns, hurricanes, trade winds,
criminal lives and travels, he was to draw upon the various and tangled
threads that wove in and out of the literary traditions. The literature
of morality had offered the purpose of warning Unsuspecting victims
and setting examples for the good citizen by way of repentance and
and odd aberrant patterns of behavior. From the literature of fact came
11
a plain and middle style. 11 the prose language which was the language
of report. The social purpose of moral reformers and political
subject into news was also part of the heritage acquired from Defoe's
historical detail and topical reference. and lent the aura of the
verisimilar. From both the criminal lives and the travel books came
possible. These Defoe was to incorporate when he sat do1m to write his
fiction and create for his posterity an approach, a tone of voice for
have been an anathema to Defoe. For it was clearly associated with the
terms fict i on and fable~ both of ~oh. as has been indicated. required
some kind of defence. Because to the puritan mind they represented a.
type of moral dishonesty, fiction and fable had to be defended • . In
poetry, the terms were defended by Sidney, Spenser, Jonson, and Dryden;
in the area of prose fiction, Bunyan, the ortminal biographers, the
romancers, and the lady writers had adopted the common defence phrased
their fiction under titles that indicated the · presence of fact rather
than fiction.
mainstroa of t he no rol.
l<or t he I''ir t chapter, ho .evor, study of D foe ' a special vie
c learl y i di ce.to tho.t he ir;hed to avoid t he eho rt unified o.nd rsa li tic
novel~l a ) a s F,~r ctie d by Behn. Congr eve, - 'anley and her f'ol l o :er ;
tanding of' the terms biographz or .!..!.!:!• history, journal or memoir will
Pr cfnoas e.nd t itl es , for t hat matter , t:.er e often deoeptive in Defoe ' s
provi de en i ndex of t he current att i tudes to~ardo ;o rka of prose fict ion:
· /hat c:topl :xpeoted f or the ir money; .hat the authors tad t air _u lio
tions in the p1• faa s t o Lief'oe' s works and ob scures mt v ery rell .ie;ht
fiction under the guise of pretended faot or when heavily overlaid with
Crusoe# his first extended narrative; but before 1705 he was already known
The Mercator, and :Mist' a Weekly Journal. He had as well printed separately
a number of occasional pamphlets and books, among them two famous reports:
of the apparition that appeared to Mrs. Bargrave and the storm that had
and religious events of the period, and he had learned to write about
these topics in an easy, plain style, replete ~th examples and detail,
fUll of fact and moral reflection# which his middle class public relished.
the problems o:f technique# for he did not have to worry about the public 1 s
by manuals of behaviour.
poem, but he felt · his material -was tttoo copious 11 to allow for the
dialogues his moral precepts--borrowing freely from the drwma its des-
little child asks but very little of his father, but what a child at
that age may be capable of asking. 11 The questions concern life 11 death,
to his or her training. An older son and daughter reject, to their o1m
the end, "~·, to bring yol.mg and old alike to set earnestly and heartily
about the great work of serving, glorifying and obeying the God that made
them." The fictional method is, said Defoe, new 11 but perhaps more
11
achieved, i.e., to instruct 'Where a parent may see duty. 11
Of fiction devoted exclusively to worldly pleasures . as opposed to
moral or religious values, Defoe made his view very explicit. A breach
discovers that her ufoolish romances and novels, of which she was mighty
11
fonda are burned in the zeal of reform. I had," complains the daughter,
"a good collection of plays, all the French novels, all the modern poets,
Boileau, Dacier, ••• 11 ; and vmat replaces them?
is to be blamed:
2Daniel Defoe, The Novels and Miscellaneous Works of Daniel Defoe ••• in the
edition attributed to the late Sir Walter Scott, 20 vols. (Oxford: Talboys,
1841), XV, The Family Instructor, P• 75•
3Defoe is thought to ~ve had a hand in the continuation of the Turkish
~ (1718). Mentioning its popularity at this point has been referred to
as a subtle form of advertising that popular romance.
the world even to the seventh and
eighth volume~ if this subject is
less pleasing~ and fails of running
the same length with those looser
works, it must be because we have .
less pleasure in things instructing,
than in thing~ merely humouring and
diverting ••••
The Fwmily Instructor from the date of its publication into the
nineteenth century was a popular success.? but that popularity did not
the second volume appeared; 6 but by the beginning of 1719 Defoe had hit
upon a new formula that proved extremely popular Vlith the middle class
reader. Said one biographer: he had "got an epic entirely after its 01m
heart with a hero it could understand end acbnire because he was taken
when he indulged in the black practice himself~ his views were somewhat
4Defoe, The Novels and Miscellaneous Vlorks, XVI, The Family Instructor II,
P• ix.
?Thomas Wright in The Life of Daniel Defoe (1894) says "no one should sit
dolVIl and go straight through it. A better plan would be to read a portion
out loud to one's family once or twice a week."
Here were the ingredients that comprised his formula: the true
life or autobiography; the sensational undertaking: echoes of the popular
account of the life of Alexander Selkirk;lO and the travel and adventure
in far-off but real places ~th bizarre but real characters of cannibals
8For discussion, see Part Two. Chapter Five of this study, "The Develop-
ment of a Critical Tradition."
lOThomas Wright in The Life of Daniel Defoe (1894) list four of the most
popular versions of Alexander Selkirk's island stay and rescue: (1)
Captain Woodes Rogers. A Cruising Votage Round the World (1712). (2)
Edward Cooke, A Voyage to the Southea (1712). (3) Providence Displayed
(1712), supposedly by Selkirk. but actually no more than a compilation
of the two previous accounts. and (4) Richard Steele's paper in The
Englishman for December 3. 1713--an account Whioh drew moral reflections
from the period of solitude and ingenuity on the island.
and pirates. Once the formula had proved itself11 Defoe put it into
operation for five years, the emphasis shifting from one or another
resultant from the use of fiction. His concern wa.s to make the unreal
seem real, the real as real as possible, and justi~ both by pointing
then, adopted the pose of an editor, Who was passing on the value of the
their publication.
ideas of literature that prevailed in Defoe's time. The first was the
familiar utile and dolce principle, with the emphasis upon utile as the
they were true. The third and overall effect was that of bringing the
reader to a religious and moral frame of mind by virtue of the fact that
11 There was a rapid eale of Robinson Crusoe. The first edition had
appeared on April 25, 1719; a second on May 12; and a third with two
separate printings on June 6 and August 6 of the same year.
61
pamphlet, The Life e.nd Stre.nge Surprizing Adventures of Mr. D••• DeF...
(1719), Defoe found it necessary to present an enlarged apology.
Gildon had noted with malicious satisfaction that the errors clearly
pointed to the faot that Robinson Crusoe was not history but fiction.
of the book, with all its moral reflections purged away, Which tended
to emphasize the fact that the book was enjoyed not so much for its
and real. Defoe responded to his critics by giving them the lie:
Defoe could not, however, show how these endeavors had been proved
abortive, so he turned his argument to a justification of What he
and useful Inf~rences drawn from every Part." Thus, he denied the
were, he dared not oall it a novel which stood as a synonym for amorous
By arguing from the fourth point ("Reflections ••• ") Defoe denied
upon the mannerisms of the travel books then so popular with the middle
class reading public. He indicated that his method of approach was e.n
improvement,
17Defoe, The Novels and Selected Writings of Daniel Defoe, The Farther
Adventures, II, P• 149·
64
narrative; f'or he pointed out that the travel narrative offered the
11
maximum in digressions, "But I," said Crusoe, shall not make
journals, but that he would not "pester his account~: with distracting
and dull detail. The opening passages of' A New Voyage Round the World,
adopted the guise of' the aged marinEr from York and by doing so, took
a further step toward admitting the part fiction plays in his works.
made for the moral, not the moral for the fable. "The neo-Augusten
with its accompanying Vision of the .Angelic World becomes the climax of'
the three parts of' Robinson Crusoe. Though these comprise a series of
18T.he full title is Serious Reflections during th~ life and surprizing
Adventures of Robinson Crusoe with his Vision of t'he Angelic World.
Hereafter it will be referred to as Serious Reflections.
a basic ground of fact in the story--for he would not have Robinson
Crusoe a romance:
placed Robinson Crusoe in a class with Don Quixote, also en " emblematic
hi story."a:>
a:>Though there seems little enough in common between Don Quixote and
Robinson Crusoe~ eighteenth century connnents by Samuel Johnson~ Clara
Reeve, and James Beattie tended to link them together. See Part II,
Chapters II and III of this study.
prove acceptable in its general implications as true to the history of
mankind.
for mankind. Defoe opened the way to that interpretation -b y his develop-
for the use of the far away and surprising elements in the Defoe
and by somebody never heard of. 11 Then 'When delighted by the extraordi nary
situation, even when not true, the reader is enabled to see a parallel
11
of the original that much more clearly when it is so near home."
and instructive ends. In the same category of parables from the Bible
"t hose stories which have a real existence in fact, but which, by the
22Paul Dottin, Robi n$on Crusoe ~~n'd ' an4 , Cr~tioi~'d••• (London:
J .·-M.
Dent and :::>ons, 1923), P• 73·
writer who had mangled the biography of Captain Avery.23
11
Defoe stripped the mangled biography of all romsnoe. 11 . He presented
the ntrue a.coount 11 --a. much cleaned up and more sympathetiC? portrait of
Avery than the ea.rlier one whioh had been drmm. when pirates were still
criticize such old tales which like the "Galley of Venice" had so often
been "vamped, doubled, and redoubled, that there was not one piece of
Despite the confusion of motives that Defoe gave for his publishing
factual account. If not during the writing, then at least after publica-
tion, the difference was clearly registered in the light of the enormous
adventure, which in form and style was much in keeping with the tradition
of travel literature: The Life and Pyracies of the F~ous Captain Singleton,24
written by the hero; the sensational elements in the long march across
William Walters, were squeezed into the narrative to give it the appropriate-
Singleton in a preface. One might infer from this and from the lack of
vision of an editor, but the central character shifts from the sea-
going criminal to the home grown variety: the thief, the whore, the
fence, and the highwayman. New points of defense were offered in the
and in some detail. The two works were often thought of as companion
pieces; Jack being the male counterpart of Moll in the criminal world.
:&l.o ll, pointing an accusing finger at the life she was forced into,
25The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Famous Moll Flanders, 1tbo was Born
in Newgate, and during a Life of continued Variety for three-score Years,
besides her Childhood, was Twelve Year a Vfuore, Five Times a Wife (whereof
once to her own Brother) Twelve Year a Thief, Eight Year a Transported
Felon in Virginia, at last grew Rich, liv'd Honest, and died a Penitent.
Date: June 21, 1722. Hereafter it will be referred to by the short title
Moll Flanders.
complained that her life might have been less scandalous if the
"Had this been the Custom in our own Country. I had not been left a
poor desolate girl •••• " Colonel Jack commented in a like manner upon
11
his native innocence and the consequences of his early training: f or
up to •••• 11
Jack. VJriting under his own signature , but as the editor of Jack's
h i story, Defoe hoped that the work would inculcate the appropriate
moral, would serve as well to alleviate human misery. "HERE'S ROOM, "
he declared in boldface.
which he had developed in the story of the repentant pedagogue who comes
21Defoe, The Novels and Selected Writings of Daniel Defoe, Go;Lanel Jack,
I, p. vii.
72
that Moll Flanders was a private history. But roJ~~~.nce or history, vmat
did it matter, since the end was the same in either case? Reno~, he
left to the reader nto pass his own opinion upon the ensuing sheets and
priety's sake, the presence of an editorial hand, even though the author
28Defoe, The Novels and Selected Writings of Daniel Def oe, Colonel Jack,
I, P• 249.
29Defoe, The Novels and Selected Writings of Daniel Defoe, Colonel Jack,
I, P• vii.
73
were both justified in terms of moral and religious grounds, for the
with his rationale for fiction in the moral instruction of the narrative:
and the greater leniency toward fictional elements are small but
30Defoe, The Novels end Sel ectad Wi"±tings of Daniel Defoe, Moll Flanders,
I,. P• viii.
31Defoe, The Novels and Selected Writings of Daniel Defoe,. Colonel Jack,
I, .p. viii.
74
like Leslie Stephen and George Saintsbury. were never justified upon
esthetic grounds. On that score Defoe never varied from his single-
minded devotion to moral necessity. There are only hints of esthetic
bee.r •••• "32 Thus too, did Defoe advise his readers to observe in
parts.
offered by the apologists of the stage. Vice was always a valid way
understood:
32Defoe, The Novels and Selected Writings of Daniel Defoe, Moll Flanders,
I, P• viii.
33Defoe, The Novels and Selected Writings of Daniel Defoe, Moll Flanders,
I, p. ix.
75
is that it contains one of the few references which Defoe made to the
unity of his work. Crusoe had already pointed out that he preferred to
keep to his o~ story, and Moll's history is made to center about her
And the point gains some validity by virtue of the fact that he did
not even promise them as forthcoming volumes, which might easily nullif'y
what has been said. If the preface revealed anything in its tone, one
there ~s none of the strong feeling that was found in the prefaces to
The Farther Adventures and Colonel Jaok. "The history of this beautiful
be morally instructing, that was the fault of the "Relator" who says
nit must be from the defect of his Performance, dressing up the story
Further, the writer says he was acquainted with the Lady's first
husband, the brewer, and with his f'a ther. He, the "Ylri ter 11 or 11
Relator, u
knows part of the story is true; thus feels he can vouch f'or the rest ..
The second part of' this brief pre£ace is concerned ~~th pointing out
the moral beauties of the work: the "noble Inferences 9 which might be
new form other than that which he lad been of'fering during the years
1719 and 1724• He pointed to the s~e bases for justification that
34aDef'oe, The Novels and Selected Writin~s of' Daniel Defoe, The Fortunate
Mistress, I, P• ix.
34bDefoe, The Novels and Selected Yfritin~s of Daniel Defoe, The Fortunate
Mistress, I, p. ix.
77
Of t~e two other works that are included in the present study,
historical do·c ument. These ~rks, although they may have seemed true
Defoe ' s narrative method. True. there r~ains the fact that Defoe
drew Jr.ost of his material from actual accounts of the wars and the
plague and wove about them the impact of these events upon .fictional
Colonel Jack, and The Fortunate Mistress. In the two historical works,
. events and the tendency to moralize. There is also a focus upon the
11
sensational or surprising 11 event characteristic of the four novels of
the former two there is more history, less fiction; and in the latter
35A Journal of the Plague Year Being Observations or Memorials of the most
Remarkable Occurrences, as ~11 as Publiok as Private, ~ich happened in
London during the Great Visitation in 1665. Written by a Citizen who
oontinu'd all the while in London. Publication date: March 17, 1722.
at 1 or after the fight at Worcester. Defoe did not offer any other
Errorsn upon the subject of the wars "and even in that extraordinary
nowhere else to be found ... though the main facts are confirmed in every
detail by other histories. The only flaw in the work, said its editor,
exist ~ong old family papers and will be readily offered to the editors
When the family saw the first two parts and recognized their value.
papers. But scholars like Lee, Aitken, and Trent have detected i nconsis-
tencies in the text, a soldierly style that reminded theF. of Defoe, arid
All facts related to the matter indeed point to Defoe. The preface
the body of his prose fiction. He tended to build his fiction about a
in this case, actual source material for the two wars. Woven into the
whose presence unites the disparate elements and gives the reader a
text.
Thus, Defoe enlivened the material of the travel book, the moral
tracts, and the book of history by giving each enough of the fictional
38rn Robinson Crusoe the nucleus can be found in Selkirk's island story;
in the Journal, the plague; in Singleton, Madagascar and the march
across Africa; in Moll Flanders and Colonel Jack, prison life, modes of
thievery, and American adventures.
80
Defoe's prose fiction can then be defined in terms of them. For subject
matter Defoe drew upon two rather distinct areas: the strange and
His work then became historical allegory. The purpose of his ~~rk
or instructional one, from which he expected his readers would make the
It is equally clear that Defoe did not concern himself with esthetic
Nmch of the Defoe scholarship and criticism of the last thirty years
in the digressiveness and redundancy in the travel book, and his own
feeling of personal involvement all that was needed was a central character
through whose eyes the panoraw~ could be viewed. This formed the primi-
tive plot structure of the romance and anti-romance forms, for the
into an i~aginary situation. In either case the author could claim for
readers. Defoe made this transition in his fiction, and thereby developed
a genre.
his lifetime in the form of the pseudo-journal, the secret history, the
was the invention of what Defoe called the historical allegory, or what
new fictional form was modified, altered, and justified during the
82
ment of the concept of the novel. For the question of Where to put
Defoe in the annals of prose fiction remained acute into the early
the mainstream of the novel. In the eighteenth century the words novel
or romance were often used synonymously; and neither had much status
in the literary hierarchy. The reason for this lay : in the fact that
fiction was thought of as little better than a deliberate lie and could
century from a strict moral justification to one based upon its truth
how well the author could relata his details so that they became
11
moral and profitable.tt For, he wrote:
"the just standard of nature," he could not relate his material and
his attempt to fuse the moral with the factual has often been criti-
cised as spurious.
morality, and fiction. Mrs. Penelope Aubin came under the spell of
11
Robinson Crusoe and in several of her novels produced a mixture of
ro~~tic adventure and love matters in which faith and virtue were
In short 11 Defoe had shown that love was not enough. Fiction required
Magazine. and in this period there were not more than five or six refer-
of history, voyages 11 and lives was treated as distinct from the novel
even when they possessed fictional elements. The novel when mentioned
gallantry 11 11 ~d frequently 11
debauching the fair sex. n4
positive attitude toward fiction into their criticism; but the fiction
they praised and~ in the latter oases, practiced, was the historical
The very closeness to real life of such works increases their influence
And further:
romance. At any rat.e Tom Jones was offered to the world as a comic
epic in prose.
means of satire and realism, hoped to convert the romance "to purposes
far more useful and entertaining, by making it assume the sock and
first to stem the tide of the improbable and he adopted as his direct
and though he advocated the high moral purpose, Smollett avoided using
the deadly term novel or even romance. Like the works of his contem-
':' '· history, albeit a fictional one.8 Hence it is possible for twentieth
8Tobias Smollett, The Works of Tobias Smollett, ed. John Moore, 8 vols.
(London: 1797), V, . in dedication 11 To Doctor 11
no pagination.
88
of the imaginati-ve ,. ith the moral, and Fielding explicitly stated this
belief.
and Aubin's Noble Slaves, Mrs. Griffiths praised the moral beauties,
and indicated that this evidence revealed that the novel had shifted
11
in its content :t'rom the supply of entertainmentn to the "body of
nutriment," that is, of course, moral nutriment. Thus did she attempt
like Hurd, ~barton,. and Percy,. was becoming limited to the chivalric
and heroic romances of· medieval and renaissance times. The novel was
dichotomy between the novel and the fictional history still persisted.
and Clara Reeve--in the late eighteenth century showed an effort, not
within the pale of the novel. In their work Dafoe began to take a
the epic, and history occupied the top rungs of this hierarchy. Prose
(1783) defined the position of the romance and the novel as they were
then seen to take their places:
This species fictitious history includes
a very numerous,. and in general, very
insignificant class of writings, called
romances and novels •••• Romances and novels
describe human life and manners,. and dis-
cover the errors into which we are betrayed
by the passions •••• Romanoes arose and carried
the marvelous to its swmmit •••• the books
were too voluminous and tedious. Romance
writing appeared therefore in a new for.m,
and dwindled do~ to the f~iliar
novel. Interesting situations in
real life are the groundwork of
novel-writing.lO
Fictitious history was seen to embrace both terms; the romance was
simply the older more voluminous form. But for the most part Blair
Crusoe:
status, but by pointing to the faet that human weakness was respon-
sible for the fable or the novel, he at least agreed to take human
(1783). The modern prose fable was divided into two parts: the
allegorical and the poetical. Each was divided further into serious and
comic parts. But it was the gross division that was of prime importance,
Robinson Crusoe, and Tom Jones were conceived to be in the same tradition:
The old romance, as Beattie saw it, that ·was based upon the tales
light of a tradition that had been beg\m some thirty years prior· to
doing justice to the poor man, is said to have applied these materials
to his o1m use, by making them the groundwork of Robinson Crusoe. 111 3
them superiority over the novel of the period was the fact that the
story did not base itself upon the notion of romantic love. This :made
hands, one may secure independence and open for one's self many sources
of health and permanent amusement. 11 Hence, on the first level are many
agreed with Rousseau in Emile, who offered Defoe's Crusoe as the only
That he did not discuss the other works may be due to his general
(1785) . She pointed to its tradition among the Greeks and Romans,
among the medieval and renaissance writers, and thus was in a position
moral effect. She made the s~e basic distinction between the romance
and the novel that Congreve had developed earlier. The former she s&w
chi val ric heroism. The later development, the nove~ incorporated a
realistic approach to life both in subject matter and treatment; the novel
being
1
~eattie, Dissertations, P• 574.
95
Her idea of the novel's purpose was that it allowed the reader to
enter into e.n experience. Hence the novelist's aiir.. wa.s to achieve
perfect union with the reader, so that the reader becomes one with
must
and original. n It had the remote and ne.rvelous · scene of the romance
yet the ordinary and easy style of the novel. She placed it above the
17clara Reeve, The Progress of Romance ••• (New York: Columbia University
Press, 1930}, p. 111.
19Mrs. Re~ve adopted for her discussion the dialogue form: Euphronia
Sophronia, and Hortensius discuss life and literature in a neat sitting
room each week.
96
The 'VIOrk of fiction that was based upon a life and adventure
had linked hie efforts with Pilgrim's Progress and Don Quixote.
Gildon had coupled the works of the two p;uritans. Johnson had
work. Both she claimed had the mixture of romance and realistic
aspects that put them into a class of originals. Like romances they
were written
Their moral themes, however, gave them far more distinction than either
the easy narrative style or their accounts of ideal countries. For they
were written 11
to promote the cause of religion and virtue and may
safely be put in the hands of youth. 11 Through its moral edification
the work for its adventure. There was a suggestion made by Hortensius,
at least for the first part, was considered at that time as "a book
ac hieve the mean: the just standard of nature. The morality was
Yii th Mrs. Reeve end the latter eighteenth century came the
was pressed into general service for all types of fiction; the novel,
them. If the work served the ultimate principle of all art: the just
But after Defoe's death in 1731 critical thinking about his ~rks
One of the principal reasons for this may have rested in the fact tm.t
works did not receive much serious critical comment. To only one of
His reactions came immediately upon the publication of the first two
fictional biography wa's not yet incorporated into the concept of the
novel, and second, Defoe was not treated in the collective critici&.m
From Defoe's prefaces alone it can be seen that the most serious
charge that could be made of Robinson Crusoe was that the several parts
Memo irs of a. Cavalier. Therefore, the most legitimate and most effective
criticism for Gildon to make would be the charge of fiction, based upon
Labelled l ies , t hese critical barbs, stung Defoe into writing his apolo-
getic prefaces; and the word lie ran a course in Defoe criticism from
Edmund Gosse • l
Criticism of Defoe as a Novelist, '' for the Gildon remarks did offer an
Cruso e , and gave some of the bases from. which subsequent lines of
Surpr iz ing Adventures of Mr. D.. • DeF ••• , 2 Gildon crudely e:xploi ted
the i r cr eator, DeF.... He openly parodied the title page with its
above Fifty Years by Himself in the Kingdom of Nort h and South Britain. 11
Shap es a..11.d Changes which he has pass' d without the least Blush. 11
extent the crit ici&m is unfair; but his criticis.m became more sound
t o D••• DeF •••• the Reputed Author of Robinson Crusoe, Gildon at once
obedience t o his parents in the srly part of the story hard t o credit,
inasmuch as he ran away from home. Curious details annoyed him: how
was Xury able to master English in so short a time? why were there
inconsi st encies between the journal of Crusoe, while he had ink. and
his narrative of the same period~ and finally, the clincher, how was
it poss i ble for a naked man to put anything in the pockets of his
Two further oddities were noted: Friday seemed able to escape from the
savages when he was said to be bound hand and foot; Crusoe was able to
write a contract for the Spaniards long after he had exhausted his
writing materials.
do not now seem important, but since truth-to-fact was insisted upon
making al l that he said sound like the truth. Fielding and Smollett
showed less and less interest in particular truths as his readers showed
Moral, either expressed or implied. 11 From such a remark one might think
which the moral and fictional elements are fused, such as was then possible
this promising argument was weakened when it was made the vehicle
repeated in this connection, that is, that the moral and religious
reflections, which Defoe claimed were "the real beauties, 11 were tedious
communion with God. "But, honest Dan, I am afraid, ••• you do not
sufficiently distinguish between the Fear of God, and the Fear o:f
forc'd perpetually to say the same things in the very same words
four or five times over on cne Page." Nineteenth century critics were
eye was trained upon the errors of an old enemy, and if he recognized
saw the stile ~~clog' d with moral re fleet ions, ilt and the Defoe sentence
The first and foreiiDst was the most cutting in its time: Defoe's
let the cat out of the bag by his careless writing, his improbabilities
vectors for favorable and unfavorable critics into our own time.
esteemed by the wisest and best of Men to be of great Use to the Instruc-
tion of Mankind; but then this Use and Instruction should naturally and
plainly arise from the Fable itself, in an evident and useful Moral,
the conscience of many a Defoe critic, was that of his religious and
m6ral: opportunism which led him into faulty justification and incon-
After Gildon there are very few extended comments on Defoe until
106
the seventies and eighties of the century, When Blair, Beattie, and
Defoe, and how many of them were known to be his? It should be noted
at once that with the exception of Colonel Jack none of the works included
in this study appeared with Defoe's signature in the texts of the editions
some of the reading public may have been deceived into accepting it as
genuine. There is, however, only a hint of this in Bishop Hoadley ' s
doubt undeceived the public in 1719 and 1720. Further Robinson Crusoe
was linked with Colonel Jack on the title page of the latter work:
subject matter that led contemporaries like Mrs. Jane Barker to couple
Moll Flanders and Colonel Jack. In her preface to A Patchwork Screen •••
(1723), Mrs. Barker said that the histories like Colonel Jack and Moll
histories with the lower classes: nDown in the Kitchen, honest Dick and
the f i rst offic ial list ing of his lli"Orka appeared in an appendix
editorial changes were made upon the basis of papers left behind by
8brt was not until 1924 that Arthur W. Secord in his Studies in the
Narrative Method of Defoe established the Memoirs of Captain George
Carleton as the work _of Defoe.
108
authorship of the two works and the value of the author's name
f or selling purposes. 9
But whether or not one can assume oo~on knowledge of the author-
ship of the works included in this study is still perhaps a moot point.
Novel 1700-39" (1948) indicated the popularity on the basis that the
11
works had upon the fictional market of the period. For a time, lt he
Boyle (1726). They both, he pointed out, shared with Robinson Crusoe
preface; Swift in 1728 used the narrative structure and parodied the
But more important than these or sub sequent in1i tat ions • McBurney
claimed, was the marked relationship of the works of' Defoe and those
of his nmost prolific imitator" Mrs. Penelope Aubin. It was her work
more than any other that tied the Defoe narrative with the lifeline
1170 • the critical tre.dition remained roughly the same with the exception
indicated that his popularity was still at a peak with the general
public.
was only in 1775 in the Index to the Gentleman's Magazine that The
edition was listed in the same magazine's index of 1738. appeared under
Colonel Andrew Freeport; the editor from Bristol being at some pains
Dafoe, as a writer. did not sink into obscurity. His name was
and none bad, though none excellent except this [ Robinson Cruse~;
there is something good in all he has written. nl2 This must have
ever yet anything -written, by mere man that 'WB.S wished longer by its
Defoe had implied in his Serious Ref lections: which referred to Pilgrim's
l4J oseph Ephes Brow.n, The Critical Opinions of Samuel Johnson (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1926), p. 325.
15rn Alan D. J'licKillop' s Samuel Richardson (Chapel Hill: University of North
Carolina Press, . 1936), he points out that Schiicking arguednfor a close
connection between Richardson's novels and the literature of domestic life
as represented in Defoe's The Fami ly Instructor (1715, 1718) and Religious
Courtship (1722). n . Also he noted that Mrs. Barbauld conjectured that
Richardson knew The Fwmily Instructor in her correspondence.
112
They
his death. The other works of fiction included in this study were
· not mentioned.
of much of Defoe criticiam of the time, and lent same weight to the
Even as late as 1771 the only two fictional works that were
• immediately thought of in connection with Defoe were Robinson Crusoe
1'11"iter and must be explained in the light of the fact that though
his works of fancy were well known, but seemingly unrelated to his
could they have hid status, inasmuch as that body of fiction "M\8 still
in a developing stage.
on the popularity of the novel might lead the way. She pointed to the
17Theophilus Cibber, T.he Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland,
5 vols. (London: Griffiths, 1753), IV, P• 322. He listed nine principal
performances.
18
Annual Register, ~X (1771), P• 65.
114
the century on. The year 17ti.:J. she exclaimed, was such an example
of prolixity in the "Novel way 11 that they "became a drug in the terms
of the trade."
the utile and the dolce, of giving examples "of virtue rewarded and
vice punished. 11
Mistress (despite eight editions in the swme period). The seamy side
of Defoe was made in connection with them, though literary people knew
for believing that the latter was accepted as a genuine account. None
of these latter four, except perhaps for Colonel Jack19 achieved the
The former was read mostly for the first part as a tale of adventure;
the latter two, adapted by Noble and others as novels and intrigue
resolved, though the definition of the variant forms were still chaotic
the first part; and (2) they placed it in a tradition that offered the
Progress. Tom Jones. and latterly. Tristram Shandy. All were lives
important all used fictional frames grounded upon general truths. What
and how they structured the novel through the centuries of' criticism.
117
Parli~ent (1837):
activities, among th6m his lesser works of fiction, in accord with their
among the romantic critics . Their attitude toward Defoe contrasted with
cover all modes of prose fiction. But they continued to confuse the
terms romance and novel semantically, for the former was used
synonymously with the latter, evan though it had acquired a more specialized
patterns of Jane Austen's works novels. But for the most part distinc-
biographical view of Defoe the man from the esthetic view of his works
as novels and their place in the tradition of that form, as this -was
demands made upon the novel. In short, how was the function of the
novel determined?
The Victorian moral scheme L~posed proprieties upon the novel and
J.J.'j
the novelist alike which Defoe had been ignorant of or had ignored.
For his posterity in this period, however, what blackened the nan,
VHllia.m Lee in 1864 turned up State Office Papers that revealed Defoe's
ambiguous political dealings with both Tories and Whigs in the period
1714- 1724, praise of his works was tempered ~th restraint, a taint
the novelist alike which Defoe bad been ignorant of or had ignored.
For his posterity in this period, however, what blackened the man,
William Lee in 1864 turned up State Office Papers that revealed Defoe's
ambiguous political dealings with both Tories and Whigs in the period
characteristic:
selection did not appear until 1790: A Selection of the Works of De Foe.
This contained the Crusoe trilogy, The True-born Englishman, and the
11
article, 0riginal Power of the People of England. " Done up in three
defend h is rights and the rights of the English, and whose impartial
The new view of Defoe--it was perhaps the first favorable interpre-
Chalmers was the first to offer a long view of -what eompri sed
a novelist .
Fort unat e Mistress. His objection was, of course, made upon the basis
3aeorge Chalmers, The Life of Daniel DeFoe in The Novels and Miscellaneou s
Works of Daniel Defoe (Oxford: Talboys, 1841), XX, P• 81.
the former, he quoted the preface to the second edition which attempted
that obtained between the terms history and romance. The subject
matter concerned ngreat events, 11 its Etyle was ~'simple/' and it was
11
enlivened with such reflections, as to inform the ignorant and enter-
tain the wise. 11 A Journal of the Plague Year was equally executed
It should be clear from the above that Chalmers was aware of the
11
far as t o rhapsodize: our author is studious to convert his various
poisonous or noxious. 11
sized by Defoe, but Which any future critic or scholar must of necessity
the minds of the young. However, and like the others, he considered the
This last statement c~e a long way ~om Beattie's regretful attitude
toward the novel, which blamed human nature for needing fiction and
of the first part. It defeats the purpose of art; yet it is not quite
farther:
~"""ilson
11
latter, it can be said with Walter simply and finally, that it
was a new life, but contained no new f'acts " and addechoonew interprets.-
comment upon the novels. For the most part he was indebted to Chalmers.
Rogers to show how widespread was the Selkirk story, and pooh-poohed the
But of t he lesser novels, To~~rs took note and made comment. Though
summarize the adventures and quote the high spots. Towers was careful
to point out that the popular editions of Moll Flanders and The Fortunate
Mistress (1759, 1775) were expurgated editions. The former had, for
exa.mple, appeared as :1 The History of Laetitia Atkins, vulgarly call'd
9Biographia Britannica, ed. Andrew Kippis, Joseph Towers, et al, 2nd ed.,
6 vols. (London: Jolm Nichols, 1793), V, P• 68.
127
In dealing with the subject matter of the lesser lives, Dr. Towers
Crusoe. In this he agreed with Chalmers, but rather than account for
Defoe could be related to the tradition of the novel that succeeded him.
that the dramatic form into 'Which De Foe has thro'W!l many parts of his
little that was new, but an aggressive tone--it was said his works were
popular among the country folk, where, no doubt, they were of' some
value, the next biogr a.phy of importance was th e one written for
have written this life, and his letters of the period confirm the fact
that he received no help with it. When Saintsbury put out an edition
place for such an examen. 'What is important is that the Lives of the
11
history of the English novel as a genre. The Life of Defoe 11 in
For the first time, too, an interest was shown in Defoe's method
as a writer. He was here noted for his upowerful memory11 'Which 11 furn ished
them up int o a web of his own, and supply the rich embroidery which in
of' Selkirk's stay on the desert island was quoted in full and compari-
sons of his details and t hose of the Crusoe narrative were made. The
suggestion that Defoe did more than report or reproduce other accounts
into three parts: the ram~nce of low life or the roving life, the
works not in this study: Drmcan Campbell, Spy upon a Conjuror, "The
Apparition of Mrs. Veal 1 ; also included was the vision in Robinson Crusoe.
It is, however, the works of the first two categories that concern us here.
130
11
The romances of' the roving life comprise those narratives Which
are the amusement of children and of the lower classes; those accounts
of travel l ers who have visited the rerrtote countries; ••• of pirates and
bucc aneers •••• " A subsection of this classification was the romance
of low lif e--e. style of writing that Scott found related to the
11
Spanish Gusto Picaresco"; its subjects were thieves, rogues, vagabonds
spirit of execution, the very chef d'oeuvre of art, however low and
Moral curtains were, nonetheless, dra~ upon the naked and coarse
improved taste " of a u delicate age" quickly passed by those works , how-
soever fe.i thful to nature they may be, which were not proper for good
The second group fell:' into a category of history and included the
12Sir Walter Scott, The Lives o.f the Novelists, ed. George Saintsbury,
11
Daniel De Foe" (London: J. M. Dent and Sons, 1910), P• 365.
131
1
we re J national conVulsions, war, pestilence, and tempests/' These
I
I
deserved the highe st praise as works of art, particularly the Memoirs
1
11
style, a century :a fter Gildon's attack on Defoe's clog'd and vulgar
stile " had sugge~ted t he a pproach. The language of Defoe, said Scott ,
I
11
was pl ain English, often simple ·to the point of vulgarity, but always
so distinctly imHressive
I
that its very. vulgarity had ••• an efficacy in
1
giving an air of truth or probability to the f act s and sentiments it
I
conveys'' ; but the chief beauty of Defoe's fiction did not lie in his
I
11
language which was also loose and inaccurate., often tame and creeping,
I
11
again in the artfjul conduct of the story":
The nineteenth century was to make much of the unity of plot structure.
Defoe's apparent lack of plot was viewed as a fault. Nor did Scott
I
see that Defoe's apparent lack of plot sense helped him to achieve that
I
great beauty which allowed one to overlook his faults: the "unequalled
I
dexterity with which our author has given an appearance of REALITY to
I
the incidents whi9h he narrates. " The real achievement was Defoe's
I
14scott, The Lives, P• 374.
I
15scott, The Live~, P• 374.
I
tions until he could make a lie seem like the truth. For Scott,
for example, the detail of the scoured silk dress--had its pitfalls: it
he descried the faJ lty language. But he was unable to see how Defoe's
Then, althoug~
I Defoe -
had developed this remarkable achievement
in his use of it. i e lavished his great power of "exact and circumstan-
tial delineation" urn subject matter that was hardly reputable: Moll
Flanders, Colonel Jack, and Roxana. Only in Robinson Crusoe was there
which Scott much admired, and in the view of the two shoes, not mates,
From these flawJ which Scott found in the Defoe narrative one
could easily reconst, .ct an esthetic £or the novels of the former,
plot that struotu)rd the narrative and which worked toward a climax;
and finally, there were those moments of pathos, grand and terrible.
I
I .
The novel of r he ni:eteenth century was already an exceedingly
complex work. It iad ab~~rbed and transformed the elements from the
drama and atte~pted its o~ kind of unity in terms of its moral and
The roEantics before and after Scott introduced this assumption: the
of the more dominanl views among the romantics on the subject of Defoe's
fiction.
the novel, "When i t t hieved the status of great literature, merged with
the classic concept of great poetry. Prose might then be poetic, as
135
a hierarchy, did t"ch to break down the neo-classic rule that placed
verse above prose l
a hierarchy, did ~uch to break down the neo-classic rule that placed
I
verse above prose.
I
Cala.mitya (note the euphemism for plague) no author or aitic could quite
I
approve of the horrible dete.ils. It is, perhaps, and almost exclusively,
I
for this reason tpat the secondary novels were so strenuously objected to.
I
yompare the contemptuous Swift
with the contemned De F'oe and
~ow superior will the latter be
found. But by what test? Even
~y t hi s. The writer who makes
~e sympath ize with his prese.nta-
·hons with the '\\hole of my being,
is more estimable than the writer
who calls forth and appeals to but
a part of my being--my sense of the
ludicrous for instance; and again ,
he who makes me forget my specific
~lass, character, and circumstances,
raises me into the universal man.l8
I
Coleridge noriced certain relationships between Defoe and the
tradit ion which Pf eceded him. He noted, for example~ a connection with
I
commented on the relation of Defoe and the travel writers. Further, he
I
claimed that Defoe was superior to the Dampiers and Knoxes in that he
I
was abl e to selec-p, to " sacrifice" the ''lesser interest to the greater.n
I
~ad he ••• given his Robinson Crusoe any
of' the turn f'or natural history which
f orms so striking and delightful a feature
in the equally uneducated Dampier--had
he made him find out qualitie s and uses
1n the before tto him) unknown plants of
the island, discover a substitute for
hops ••• or describe birds, etc.--many
delightful pages and incidents might have
I
18 I
Thomas M. Raysor, Coleridge's Miscellaneous Criticism (Camb., Mass:
Harvard Unive rsity Press, 193c)~ P• 293, n.
I
137
were ones whose sole intention or necessity was directed toward the
fact that 'they were meant to pass for histories. '11 Coleridge thought
in historical fiction, and that was perhaps one of the reasons Why
Coleridge would place Tom Jones with the three greatest plot! of
1i terature.l9
was unable to see that though there was little structure in the Def oe
novel, the author had used the autobiographical narrative. It was Sir
Walter Scott, who in the essay on Jane Austen, pointed out this factor .
reality:
it has been shown that Scott found the realism in an aspect of style
rather than of structure; but it is easy enough to see that the two
were related. In the Austen article Scott praised the fictional bio-
that form bore nthe same relation to the real that epic and tragic
in the inclusion of prose works into the higher level of poetry and
Tales of Boccaccio were called three works nwh ich come as near to poetry
sheer poetry in these prose writings as ': lifts the spirit above the
earth, ••• draws the soul out of itself with indescribable longings. 11
the ~~.~web and texture of society as it really exists 1 '11 and a reflection
him that the novel and the romance might thus serve a useful social
purpose, far better than moral treatises and histories. Robinson Crusoe
struck this happy note, and fitted in well with Hazlitt's republican
notions of society.
11
For this first novel of Defoe was decidedly best. 11 The subject
and the hwnan heart. 1122 But when speaking of the secondary novels,
Razlitt adopted the point of view that was undoubtedly the basis for
the lack of curiosity among the eighteenth and nineteenth century critics
could acc ept Moll or Roxana as characters who illustrated the advantages
viewed in the same light, excepting that here, *Defoe puts no gratuitous
and was made to suffer the pangs of conscience, but Hazlitt, ignoring
these facts, generalized upon what for him constit uted Defo e's
bility, Hazlitt found some praise for each of them. In Moll Flanders.
the incident of her leading off the horse from the inn-door, though she
humor. nThis was to carry the love of thieving to an ideal pitch. and
admirat ion of the old man at the banking-house , who sits surrounde:d ·
But these novels were seen by Hazlitt as "utterly vile and detestingrr
on the whole; they were for him ex~ples of Defoe's lack of principle ,
A Journal of the Plague Year had the touch of greatness. The first
11
and the last had an epic grandeur, as well as heart-breaking fa-
memoirs and journal of such a convincing character that men like Lord
even poetry . But with respect to the lesser novels, they were, with
but one outstanding exception, agreed. These were not for respectable
reading. At the time When Byron and Lord Cardigan were scandalizing
Jack's pathetic childhood, and Moll's and Roxana's guilt ridden moments
Who was preparing a biography of Defoe, his remarks were full of enthusiasm
11
for the project: Defoe, he said was quite new ground, scarce known
beyond 'Crusoe. 111 It was in fact for Wilson's biography that Lamb pre-
'Walter Wilson's biography v."8.s called Memoirs of the Life and Times
the last word on Defoe for over thirty yea.re. In keeping with th~ ~ · Spirit
particularly in the role that the romantics created for him, that of
the prescient republican, much persecuted in his own day, but vindicated
fiction that was less prudish than his contemporaries; and, having a
legal delight in the collection of details, he brought together masses
excuse Moll Flanders and Roxana solely in terms of the moral lectures
nature. 26 Both men found in Defoe's works cause for admiration in the
11
minute detail of a log-book" that characterized his fiction:
It was the fact that Defoe was a painter of nature, a realist that both
27walter Wilson, Memoirs of the Life and Times of Daniel De Foe containing
a Review of his Writings, 3 vola (London: Hurst Chance, 1830), III, p. 428.
lUt.
men admired, and they considered it apart from the problem of the
itself.
28charles L~b, The Life, Letters and Writings of Charles Lamb, ed. Percy
Fitzgerald, 6 vols. (London: Moxon, 1876), VI, p. 241.
11
L b had stated that De f oe ' s l es ser novels made capi tt:J.l Kitchen
r e adi ng '' b t he al so made a case for t h eir presence upon the shelv·es
f the ; libraries of the weal thi e st a.nd the most learned." For two
art and life, these Tmrks are defended by Lamb. The first vm.s upon
the basis of realism ('But, then, what Pirates, what 'l'hieves, and what
Harlots i .s the Thief, the Harlot, and the Pirate of Defoe! " ); the second
upon the basis of their ultimate morality: · -we would not hesitate to say,
that in no ether work of Fiction, where the lives of such Characters are
Defoe ana relat ive to the works of fiction. He accounted for the
and f innly dismissing the case for Selkirk's authorship of the work,
he remarked:
attempt s to trace out of Defoe's works the events of his life. Thus
did they come to see in Robin son Crusoe a parable for the life of
pl e.g;ue. Wilson early adopted but did not pursue that method "Which
but are ~~rthy of some notice, because the view that Lamb took of
them was so unorthodox. Wilson may have accepted these views because
pre serve the portrait of the much abused republican. But he did
incidents, he allowed it to be 11
a faithful portrait 11 which must amuse,
if not i n struct.
11
In Moll Flanders the "coarser materials" adapted it to a numerous
his moral dialogues 11 ; hence, the real justification lay in the attempt
life: her repentances and remorse. Wilson coul d not entirely approve,
and he was constrained to issue the usual 'Yi·arnings mingled with praise :
make the moral a part of the fable, or spring from t h e fable; they
11
ap pe ar as parts :' not parts of a whole. Wilson did not pursue the
work whe re the principles were more in keeping ~th the character.
might be attributed to the higher station in life of the hero. Wil son
pointed to the en·li ghtened attitude toward slavery and Jack's struggle
part of the story is that of his residence in Virgi nia" wh ere Jack,
subject matter worthy of the upper classes, while Moll, Jack, and
Singleton were idols of the kitchen. Hence, once again is found the
ixnplication that the works were not quite proper,. but justifiable
tiona upon all that passed before him, possessing the minuteness
For some of these works Wilson was the first to attempt to locate
Dr. Hodges, and Dr. Sydenham, and news accounts of the plague at
Marseilles (1722) which Wilson thought may have inspired the saddler's
historical sources:
and for utility of' purpose" and said to be unexcelled upon these
accounts by any other work of Def oe. ?nough he dutifully and even
for the work on the basis that it was a vehicle of moral instruction:
from her ovm frailties and catch her up in the person of her hounding
powers.37
35aLamb gave high praise to the secondary novels, particularly The Fortunate
Mi stress in his prologue to William Godwin's Guy ~~ener (1807) which
was a dramatization based upon continuations of the Susannah episode in
The Fortunate Mistress (spurious editions of 1745, 1774).
Wilson saw as the passion for money and the security which it brought to
his heroes and heroines. Wilson did not particularize on this promising
subject of theme in Defoe, but he did connect the passion for security
ireplied that taking life as it was or is, ~~s perhaps a more salutary
in fiction:
with the help of his friend Lamb, tended in his criticism to open the
f'iction.
The Progress of' Romance for its tendency to give summaries of the sub-
Except for a f'ew brilliant essays in the periodicals of' the early nine-
editions of Def'oe's works. Editions of' Def'oe, even biographies did not
provoke much individual comment until after Walter 'Wilson ' s Memoirs
of' the Life and Times of Daniel DeFoe. While Wilson and Lamb were
reviving the interest of' the public in the secondary novels, two
and one on the 1769 edition of The Risto~ of the Plague (1822).
The anonymous reviewer was very fond on the Memoirs which he chose
to resurrect f'rom the dusty shelves. It was praised for the originality
proceeded to treat Defoe with Pope's esthetic in such a way that might
have turned the stomach of the neo-classic poet. For authors who
would imitate Defoe~ said the critic~ must go to nature herself ; "and
and 11
fancy and eloquence/1 Defoe had two important characteristics of
greatness: ' unbounded genius" and " facul t y of imitation." His fictions
for his objectivity, his ability to see and record with the exactness
11
of a photograph: never for a.n instant obtrudes himself into the presence
of his reader." His characters were perfectly real even though they
a case for the morality being that of his hero rather than that of
of life " rather than love as his subject; the commonplace and unromantic
character rather than the heroic and the ideal. This choice, claimed
11
the critic, imposed the burden of astonishing minuteness of detail
expanded bef ore him in the fulness of light and life, down to the
minutest particular . 11
his art with the idealistic approach. Other fictions, he pointed out
11
in behalf of Defoe, heightened life, gave more emphasis to odd and
"but the combat of intellectual gladiators. " The passions and humours
were hei ghtened--particularly the grief of sickly poets--so that the end
was an epitome of life, rather than life itself. Thus, Defoe's sailors
from Lamb again. The critic on the Retrospective Review had for Defoe
were very different f'rom Lamb 1 s. It was typical that Lamb should find
as real/1 Lamb insisted upon finding the same qualities in the lesser
romantic, only that they want the Uninhabited Island, and ••• the striking
solitary situation 11 :
wishing that Defoe had chosen some other mode of recording the dreadful
trademan's mind:
the despair of the victiJT·S were noted as improvements aver the strict-
upset by the fact that he could not easily classify the book either
Conclusions: 1790-1830.
land, who called for novels that were "pictures sketched from Nature, and
portraits drawn from Life, catching the Manners living as they rise. ~
In the remainder of the review, the critic found that The Denial con-
but both indicated that the novel was important as a form, and further
the middle class was proper to the novel; but they could see form
of a novel than Defoe could every have been capable of producing. The
criticism~ when found, would likely be thin; more than likely the critic
45 11
The Denial" (anon. rev.), Monthly Review; or Literary Journal,
2nd ser., III - (1791), P• 400.
159
that stimulated his biographers and critics to look over his fiction
gentleman by birth; the saddler and the cavalier escaped too, but not
:W. oll (despite birth) r.or Roxana (the same) nor Avery nor Singleton.
The praise was restricted to the first volume or part, which enabled
relating to the sources and analogues which might have shed more light
on Dei'oe' s method of' composition had they been more fully explored.
tracts on the plague as sources for Defoe 's plague journal, and,
on the basis that Defoe was too young to have r~menbered much--3 or
For the most part, ho~er, the subject matter and the descriptions
The Fortunate Mistress and of Captain Singleton were singled out for
45a·Wilson is here referring to the fact that Defoe says the Cavalier
completed the book in 1651 whereas W'i lson found references to events
occurring in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. See
discussion by Aitken of the preface in Chapter Eight.
161
would go the possibility of reading the stories of Moll, Jack and the
Since Defoe's day, form of the novel had grown exceedingly complex.
Scott looked for plot, pathos, character, setting, and style. All
prose fiction. But for Scott, the looseness of his style, the
fictional e lements made his work in fiction too naive for the age.
Scott and Austen indicated the novel was acceptable as a respected form
for the novel, the latter was able to satirize its follies and praise
upon the conventions of readers that only Robinson Crusoe could be said
and the bawdy scenes in Fielding and Smollett, the early nineteenth
162
This automatically cut off some of the subject matter and mulist ic
conventions pos sible in Defoe's fiction. Th novel ist was exp ected
in a century, conv nti ons and d" spensations vmich were expected of it.
Chapter Seven The Development of an Esthetic in Novel Criticis.m
The novelist had to adjust his choice of subject matter and treatment
11
to what ·was deemed proper" in the period 1830-90· The biographical
interest ~'s altered somewhat by the new look given Defoe by the discovery
~~ral character. In the eyes of some, his work reflected the same
At the same time this period was one of the most prolific in the
that arose was what is the nature of the morality the novel should
convey, if any? And did Defoe's moral values fit in with Victorian
Wright. It was Lee's work which was responsible for the new view of
De:foe. Five lesser lives will be accounted for 1 end an attempt will
be made to show the direction which the review literature was taking,
to bring Defoe's works a~y from the area of moral speculations and
after the Ballantyne edition of' 1810. In 1842 The Novels and Miscellaneous
It remains the most complete single edition of his ~rks, despite the
fact that much material has been attributed to De:foe since; the cost of
assembling and editing the entire known canon of De:foe being no doubt
prohibitive. The following year The Works of' Daniel DeFoe appeared
under the editorship of the junior Hazlitt. The work was discontinued
after the third volume. The memoir which it contained prompted the
critic, John Forster, to write a short life of Defoe for the Edinburgh
(1953)
1 T.he British Museum Catalogue/ contains an account of 53 issues and
editions of Robinson Crusoe, exclusive of abridged copies and collections;
of the Journal, 15; of Captain Singleton, 2; Memoirs, 2; of Moll Flanders,
5 abridged copies, 1 complete in 1890; of Colonel Jack, 3 abridged copies;
of The Fortunate Mistress, 1 abridged copy.
l&other partial collections include the Bohn (1853), the Keltie (after
Scott's edition, 1869) and Henry Morley's (1878) editions.
165
Neither the memoir nor the review which it stimulated offered any inter-
the period. Robinson Crusoe remained the masterpiece, and for the
usual reasons:
J u dging from this remark and others contemporaneous with it, Robinson
On the other hand, A Journal of the Plague Year was echieving the
stature of an adult classic. "Por the grandeur of its theme and the
ideal of the fusion of the general with the particular as the basis
for a work o£ art had begun to take a hold upon the leading critics.
the sec ondary novels. They were still found to be objectionable on the
basis of the inti:rnacy of their realism; but they were excused .as efforts
2J ohn Forster, "The Novel and Miscellaneous Vforks of Daniel De Foe ••• 11
Edinburgh Review, LXXXII (October, 1845), P• 530.
166
in their time uto produce a mora indulgent morality, and larger fair
historian:
Some one asked Doctor Robertson to advise
him as to a good historical style. 'Read
De Foe,• replied the historian. Colonel
Jack's life has been commonly reprinted
in genuine accounts of Highwaymen; Lord
Chatham thought the Cavalier a real
person, and his description of the Civil
Wars the best in the language; Doctor
Mead quoted the book of the Plague as
the narrative of an eyewitness; and
Doctor Johnson sat up all night over
Captain Carleton's Memoirs, as a new
writer of English histo~ he wondered
not to have seen before.5
11
And then particular scenes from the minor tales 11 impressed Forster.
He advised a reading of the prison scenes in Moll Flanders, the cul-
minor tales as crude expressions of what the novel would be. Defoe
But Defoe must ramain for Forster, the precursor, the primitive.
His faults betray his lack o£ finish. His language was easy and
Richardson, Scott and :F'ielding11 ; his wit and irony less expansive;
"'Which will keep the later Masters of our English Novel the delightful
generations. 11
works into the canon o£ Defoe fiction. They ~re said to contain (an
William Lee also began with Wilson, but since he had uncovered
The F'lying Post for October 29, 1719 contained an advertisement for the
work giving Defoe as author; that Charles Gildon had in his pamphlets
attacked none but Defoe; and that Read's Journal (July 14, 1719) made
source material from which Defoe wove his narrative, Lee atter.·p ted
to Lee's credit that the opening for analytic study was clearly defined.
7William Lee~ Daniel Defoe~ His Life and Recentlt Discovered Writi~s:
extending from 1716-1729, 3 vola. (London: John amden Rotten~ 1869 ,
I~ P• 315.
170
had preceded end had allowed the moral picture of a man to influence
the critical view of his work and that period Which succeeded in
own fashion so that "it may be said the history8 can be correct, and
the hero imaginary. n At the same time, Lee made an attempt to establish
the work as fiction. He noted that the tradition which clained the
of events that occurred after 1651 when the Memoirs were supposedly
mentioned his family name, his place of birth, and his connections
I
Finally, the historical Andrew Newport was only eight years old at the
time of the siege of Magdeburg in which he was supposed to have taken part.
11
8Even in reference to the historyn George Aitken and others were to
point out inaccuracies.
171
he concluded:
The evidence in favor of such a conclusion was the absence of moraL and
~ms referred to which showed the Scots served with Gustavus Adolphus,
pointed to the fact that Memoirs of a. Cavalier was published only twenty-
grudgingly agree, may turn up. But Lee had once again turned the study
of Defoe fiction to an analysis by sources, and away from moral scruples.
defending Captain Singleton among the secondary novels. That the hero
Baker, and Grant. Lee said he was able to follow the route of Single-
1704. In addition, the pecuniary motive alone would not account for
Moll Flanders, Colonel Jack, and Jonathan Wild, for he had money
to other journalists of the period, Lee pointed out that Defoe did not
1 2ur. Birdwood (Royal .Asiatic Society #22., XI, pp. 49-65) made the
case for Defoe's relative accuracy.W. Minto {MacMillan's Magazine,
October 18, 1878, pp. 459-466) showed that seventeenth century maps
were available to Defoe and gave enough information based on accurate
information. Heno~, Defoe need not have invented details.
174
execution: wto die game. ~' Gay, of course, had satirized this popular
interest in The Beggars' Opera (1728), and Fielding had praised the
"Historian of Jonathan Wildn for not doing just that. Said Lee:
Thus, while he pointed out that the title-page of Moll Flanders was
the method he suggested and worked out for Memoirs of a Cavalier and
Captain Singleton. In works so abhorrent to the taste of the time,
that work. Jack lost all of his illicit gain, paid offall debts~ and
~ms only then offered an opportunity for a new life in the colonies.
the motive for A Journal of the Plague Year in the explicit attempt
to "avoid panic, yet arouse public alarm, 11 and a to awaken the sinners
made use of authentic sources; but this did not necessarily put Defoe's
its morality and its realism were responsible for its superiority
1
~ee, Daniel Defoe~ I, P• 359.
176
would be distasteful to the pure, but the moral was clearly stated:
sizing the note of social reform. Thus, the secondary novels could
' The art in both stories is great, and as regards the episode in Roxana
Chadwick's Life and Times of Daniel DeFoe (1859) was almost exclusively
Daniel Defoe (1879), written for the English ~~n of Letters series )
the relationship that obtained between the literary man Defoe and the
Veal and The Storm and the later works of fiction. Wilson and Lee
hinted at the relationship of the early journalist years and the later
journalism and novels. But Minto went even further. "Defoe, 11 he said,
l5aDavid Masson, British Novelists and Their Styles (1859) was according
to Burch the first "to contend that Defoe, the novelist, evolved from
Defoe, the journalist. " Masson made. a parallel between Swift and Defoe.
The former he called the satirist; the latter the chronicler of the age.
Englisch Studien, LXVIII, P• 194·
16william Minto, Daniel Defoe (New York; Harpers Bros., 1879), P• 131.
178
11
attitude toward literature to that of a shrewd :e ye to the main chance. 11
biography. He was like the artist who sold his soul to become a
books for children. Defoe was primarily a trader, and wherever he saw
the chance for successful development, he worked the vein of his find
purchasers":
The only novelty in his fiction was, as Minto said, the curious
all, when there were many real lives that might have warranted a
and partly out of the demand of the reading public for information--
not esthetic, not really moral, but that of the creation of fiction
wnich was most like the truth. Hence, the method, associated w.i. th
This made goo d sense as a raison d'@tre for the Defoe novel.
boiler novelist, but indicated that both were of the same pattern.
Minto le:rt the frame of reference that he had supplied for the
school, he had to make excuses for the laok of pathos, and declare
came to a close was the P%;ference for :Moll Flanders over Robinson
11
Crusoe. Minto found in the former work, a superior novel" and
history of his speciesn ; but compared with the unified desert island
episode:
·1nt
19M. 0 1
Daniel Defoe, p. 142
181
The unity in Moll Flanders or indeed the other lives has been
fact re.mai ns, however, that Defoe did write episodically, and this,
or life point of view and not from standards of morality set by the
not criminals from malice, but from necessity. ~hy Minto could not
have seen that necessity might have formed that central and undying
principle in Defoe's works that made them last~ may be due to the
fact that Moll Flanders and the lesser lives had virtually ceased
Minto conceded that. though Defoe wrote his stories, presumably for
the moral. he enters into their ingenious shifts and successes with
ad-venturous living by their wits had not had a strong charm for him. 11
There was in his review of the works the indication that has been
21
Minto, Daniel Defoe, PP• 152-3.
183
lind:
a literary one, Thomas Wright's The Life of Daniel Defoe (1894) 22a
general parallel bet?1een the work and the man's life (cr. R.C.Routledge,
11
Robinson Crusoe, n Littel's Living Age, 1859). Very few, however,
1894, it was much too late; too many facts and figures had been
unearthed for such a feat to be seriously accepted. Aitken, Minto,
nDefoe took great liberties with his manuscript, and that in order to
heighten the lights and deepen the shadows, he borrowed facts from other
23see Notes and Queries, 7th ser., VI (October 13, 1888) and (March 31,
1888).
185
works that appeared after the supposed date of the memoir (1651):
Bishop W
bately and William Minto in considering Moll Flanders finer,
subtle~
11
more more complex" than Robinson Crusoe and thus added to
24Thoma.s Wright, T.he Life of Daniel Defoe (New York: Randolph,1894), P• 276.
186
good word for the secondary novels, nor had they much praise for any
work but Robinson Crusoe and only the first part. Both dwelled upon
his ambiguous political role and the prodigious volume of his writings.
the part Defoe was beginning to assume in the history of the English
novel.
if plot and style are to be considered the chief elements then there
there novels before Defoe. If the term novel w,er,e made synonymous with
Defoe as the Father of the English novel. The critics of the period
found this an easy v~y to account for the primitive, plain-spoken quality
of his work compared with the latest of their three volume works, equipped
Magazine for 1841 paused in his review of Hazlitt Jr.'s edition of The
writers~
Scott, and Dickens. The critic pointed out that plot had become more
followers was to be found in the motive: his was moral reform; theirs,
For this direction, Defoe was styled the father of the English novel:
novel. '1
Of his works, Robinson Crusoe stood among the works of the giants
nor yet the amusing and melodramatic elements of the French novelle.
the " average mind ••• ferti l e in expediency. prone to dishonesty, fond of
Bible and his gun ••• utilit arian by instinct ••• the moral ideal and
the secular level was the English mind epitomized. His morality was not
impugned; his art was seen as crude and unformed. But he was seen as a
But vmat kind of novel did he produce? Placed thus in the genre
genre. An article for The National Review entitled •De Foe as Novelistrr
of the problem r€1llained one of definition~ and the revie"ffer chose rather
individual for the same purpose, While the novel was an attempt to
It would. seem~ then, that Defoe's work would qualify more for
2.1"De Foe as Novelist .. lll (anon. rev.}, The National Review, V (1856),
P• 382.
190
history than fiction, except that the reviewer for The national Review
found himself unabl e t o t rust Defoe in the capac i·t;y of historian, for the
to accept the view that his inventions were in harmony with the facts
and one could reasonably enjoy how this technique suited the History
of the Pla gue in scenes describing the bellman, the death cart,
the horr i d pi t , and the solitary waterman. The m=moirs and journals
of lif e.
wha t would be calle d today realism. His mode of composition -was called
11
reconstructive: He takes things just as he finds them; and when he
character:
own image.
mode of composition; but their subject matter was too much for the
ing to the Reviewer's critic, marked the distinction between the novels
Defoe's " strokes are all the same thickness. 1' Dickens., of nineteenth
century moderns, perhaps came closest in his ecope or view; but even
hiYJl. 11 But he lauded the works on the score that they attempted
and Dickens on the score of the social view of London. Said he:
11 1
Defoe did for his time what Dickens did for ours, He was profoundly
conscious of social ills in the minor novels, and he drew broad pictures
literary figure was very high. In an 1858 review for The British
the works of Bunyan and those of Defoe: the former making his appeal
the least fictitious. " Like the critic on The North .American Review,
this writer adopted the view that Defoe was an exemplary Anglo-Saxon.
A virtue in Defoe's writing was seen in his ability to utilize life
and in Newgate led to the minor novels: Moll l<J.anders and The Forttmate
nliterar y genius of the highest rank. 11 In the very year that Lee
.3411 A Gentleman of the Press; 1 (anon. rev.), All the Year Round, II, new ser.
(18t$}, 132-1.37·
.35 nA Great Whig Journalist;1 (anon. rev.), Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine,
CVI (1869), P• 458.
194
persons Who had taken Defoe fiction as authentic, among the.m a Mr.
nit seems," and l!JI guess n which swept the reader into the editor's
confidence. Once there, he regaled them with pros and cons until
they were quite disarmed and forgot that the elaborate chain of
however:
make the lie go down like the truth; for, claimed the critic, in
11
the infancy of novel-writing11 as in that of painting, 11
it was held
for the greatest of triumphs when birds came and pecked at the grapes
in a picture" :
3611 Daniel De Foe, 11 (anon. rev.), The Cornhill Magazine, XVII (1868},
P• ';$7 •
195
Further, it was both a virtue and a failing that Defoe was incapable
characters were in his o-wn image~ merchants with an eye to the main
examining a motive:
Though this critic held that Defoe had neither passion nor drwnatic
one the sense of the whole surface of things, and his apparent disin-
the Japane se priest, Who tells of Englishmen who have come to Japan
comb ined with the peculiar use of unsolved strands of plot that made
At no point in his narration did Defoe strain the credulity of his readers.
even in his handling of the marvelous. There were "no dog-headed men. 11
this keen observation of men and things made for a believable narrative,
Defoe was repetitive in both theme and subject matter. His works
situation powerfully. 11
The historical novels, more history than fiction, showed some skill in
handling details; but of them all, only Robinson Crusoe, part one, was
thought superior as a novel. The advantage here over the secondary novels
was the unique and constrained setting. Colonel Jack might have made
11
another Oliver Twist, less real perhaps, than Defoe had ma.de him,
talent, certainly he was not "of the few who have struck out ever-
mana ged to make fiction seem like the truth. This was his supreme
over.
It, too, reflected the growing disillusion with the man as a national
figu:-:- e, but asserted that his fame did not rest upon his political
life and writings. Indeed, the source of the fame was in his narratives,
Addison , and Gay. In such company he had a claim to some kin d of fame:
4:> aDaniel Defoe, " (anon. rev.), The Cornhill Magazine, .'XXIII (1871),
P• 311.
198
The writer declared that Robinson Crusoe would remain a famous work
secondary novels. For in them, the critic said, Defoe showed that
11
he was incapable of 'understanding the word LOVE in its highest
our common humanity, " the secondary novels ncould only be treated as
the case for Defoe as at the head of the tradition of the English
" father of the English novel." Both praised his fidelity of detail,
(1858) commented before the period of disillusion with Defoe had manifested
'
11
itself. He claimed that Defoe brought into the domain of imaginative
and quick-pointed conversation.u But his criticism took the same form:
42nA New Life of Defoe!1 (anon. rev.), The Saturday Review, November
3, 1894. . P• 485.
mo
as the r ealist and social novelist. Defoe was linked with the
tradition of Realism.
to Zola and Mirabeau had all attempted with varying degrees of success
belly. Critics praised him for his reports, his photographic detail,
and Gissing the subject matter and treatment which had always
11
l u r k ed in Defoe's secondary novels. ::
I t was Taine also who singled out Defoe as the rran who depicted the
structure. In Defoe Walter Besant found the preacher of' morality who
Defoe 11
the sociological novelist. 11
ninete enth century approach to the novel. They strove for a form in
the novel~ if not a rigid formula. But the view of the novel was
Conclusions: 1830-1890.
In the last chapter the point was made that the romantics had
ing genera lization. In 'What v;ays, the critics asked, was the novel a
form? How was it related to other literary forms? Did it have a tradi-
novel be made?
blotted out. carrying with them the witty and licentious drwma. Citizen
manners had been established, br i nging with them domestic and practical
reading. a 45
line of Defoe criticism had observed his work and life as exemplary
in that effort. Wilson, Lee, and Razlitt championed the much pilloried
t i on, Defoe set the conventions of the bourgeois literature that was
lie was seen as a precursor and a primitive~ and then as the father
proper novels~ Robinson Crusoe, Colonel Jack, Moll Flanders~ and The
plain~
11
pentance. In style he offered the matter-of-fact authentic
narration. 11
But it was in his themes that he offered the pattern for ethics
The business class ethic was not always approved but it was defined as
accepted the statements in his prefaces which made a claim for the
morality of purpose: to reform the world and its :mB.!l.ners. Where Minto
11
saw Defoe's whole attitude in his fiction as one of a shrewd eye to
the main chance," Forster and Hazlitt Jr., f'ound them an ef'fort to
on his social reform, and saw in Colonel Jack and Moll }~anders such
As suming, than, that Defoe did head tradition, in What ways was
he related to what had come before and what came after? The parallel
up as a precursor.
wit and irony, imagery and pathos. He lacked a specific plot develop-
ment formed upon the drama: one which rose to a climax and suf£ered
a denouero~nt. For this reason, his works had no unity, £or he was
unable to select the significant, but painted all with the same thick-
and real, but could not make it relate to other significant situations
critical attitude; for all indicated that its chief popularity was
as a children's classic.
Memirs o:f a Cavalier and A Journal o:f the Plague Year ,remained
a few admirers, both for the realism the work contained, and like Colonel
criticism from the major noveliets of the period. Scholars in our o'Wn
time have sho-wn a relationship between Dickens~: Oliver Twist and Defoe's
Historv of the Devil and Colonel Jack,46 but Dickens made few references
between .D~~?.E.l .~~ .:.z:~gue ric)v~ls . and ~a:.?·~~_r.-~y,'s ':Ba-rry Lyndon (18.44~)
·and-:_ Catherine ,.{l839...4Dl~ but the parallel is more clearly between Fielding
47rn a letter to Mr. 'Walter Savage Landor Dickens questioned "that one of
the most popular books on earth has nothing whatever in it to make anyone
laugh or cry? Yet I think, vdth some confidence that you never did either
over any passage in Robinson Crusoe. In particular, I took Friday's death
as one of the least tender, and (in the true sense) least sentimental things
ever v.Titten. It is a book I read much; and the wonder of its prodigous
effect on me and everyone, and the admiration thereof, grows on me the more
I observe this curious fact. 11 Charles Dickens, The Letters of Charles
Dickens, ed . Laurence Hutton~ 2 vols. (Boston: Lauriat, 1923)# I, P• 500.
until the present century that novelists became ' interested in hi_m as
a literary craft·sman.
But Defoe had begun to interest the French realists. Marcel
him and offered Paris translations of Colonel Jack and Moll Flanders.
·when published in Paris to·ward the end of the century, they created
much interest.49 The influence came by. v.r ay of method, and it was
49of a meeting in Daudet's home, Goncourt noted that Schwob had just
completed a translation of Colonel Jack and read portions of it to
the group. They shared Schwob' s enthusiasm declaring Defoe to be a
novelist with "un sentiment d' observation moderne ••• avec toute la
documentation rigoureuse et menue d 1 un roman r6aliste de notre
temps." Schwob published his translation of Moll Flanders in 1895·
From Pierre Champion. Marcel Schwab et son temps (Paris: Grasset, 1927),
PP• 117-118 •.
a> a
:ment 11 --his ability to make the lie appear the truth. Scholars in the
give a view of all the criticism; but it was felt that the four studies
begin at the turn of the century; for by the middle of the nineteenth
of his novels in terms of the mores and the esthetics of then conte.mporary
analytically, to find his method, aims, and set his morality into the
convention of the period in which he lived. Hints of the analytic
approach were to be found in the literature that grew out of the author-
the connection bet\veen Defoe and the traditions that made for his
novels and those that followed were forged, and the position of Defoe
For the cow.mon estimate by 1890 was that Defoe was the father of
ture and the books of travel, and they perceived connections with the
such as Notes and Queries# The Athenaeum~ Library, and Academy• They
and tracked down odds and ends pertinent to his literary habits. The
of just ·what Defoe had used of Selkirk's story and mat he had offered
claims were stated, and all rejected in favor of Stoke Newington# upon
which the IDAjor biographers of the nineteenth centu~J had agreed. Now#
all this had been examined before in biographies, but the questions were
always part of larger issues. Here the two traditions were discussed
i n and for themselves. It was this sort of approach that was a few
l"Vv'ho Wrote Robinson Crusoe?,. (anon. rev.)~ London Society, XVII (1871) 11
67-71.
211
Robinson Crusoe. Chalmers had suggested that the name had come as a
all sorts of addenda that may have been of aid to the contemporary
research student.
parallels ranging from the Spanish Arabian tale of Ibn Tophail in the
contributions and worked them into some kind of pattern. 'Vi' hat was
b iographer so much e.s to the critic of the novel. There was, bOll- ·.
examinat ion" of the text of Defoe's masterpiece. Then, upon the basis
foot, never tamed them. He made no eff ort to make himself at home.
Captain Singleton.
Daniel Defoe (1895). From this point on the major focus in Defoe
channel of creative expression. The task now ~as to study how it got
to be that way. Defoe's fiction became a focal point for the answer
to this question.
conclu sions, but his approach may be viewed as the summation of the
novel. Novels of the early and late renaissance period, those of Nashe,
definite forms or were related to literary forms which were not part of
tion tr~t Defoe's very flaws were to his advantage--his lack of organize.-
which his readers bid always found it hard to deny. The recent theory
which Aitken had made concerning the authenticity of the account of 1'.a""s.
the old formula which claimed that Defoe made lies go do~ like the · truth.
counterpart, he said, Iml.de little difference. Defoe had m:l.de his fiction
215
to a fruitless quibble. Perhaps the an&Wer lay in the fact that much
which Ait ken treated in this connection was the inunorality of "the low
characters. " Aitken adopted the prevailing moderate view ·which John
Forster had advanced a half century earlier. The material was justifi-
able in terms of the mores of the times in which Defoe lived. None of
, .._ _ _!~ _ __ .,L - ..L-L _ _ , _ _ _, .~..., _ _ _ _ _ ,_..! - - ..L - - - .1-...L..--
215
to a fruitless quibble. Perhaps the anmwer lay in the fact that much
which Aitken treated in this connection was the immorality of "the low
Forster had advanced a half century earlier. The material was justifi-
able in terms of the mores of the times in Which Defoe lived. None of
adopted the point of view by Lamb which · justified the coarse material
in terms of the intention and the audience. Defoe, he said, was addressing
And later:
left the re ader to draw from his report-like narratives their o-wn
so ftened the surface picture~ nor did the " conscious artist 11 :insist
Eence, his pictures become complete in their own way. Unlike Dickens.
tells may be dull or trivial, but the details add to the sense of
than had previously been advanced. For hiT , a novel's greatness de-
and Memoirs of a. Cavalier above reproach. For the very reason that
about problems that Defoe, the man, faced, led him to consider Defoe's
the " tr a dition~ the experience. and the literary and social environment
Defoe's library~ Aitken was able to bring up new narr~s, a few titles.
pos sible sources i n Darrpier, Cooke, and Rogers, the possible analogue
episode and many have suggested details to Defoe in his 'Y.Titing of Robin-
son Crusoe.
Henry Pitman (1689); the name Will Atkins may have been derived from
journey across Africa, and Le Due's Voyage a La Chine (1700) woul-d have
offered material for the second part of Robinson Crusoe. All of these
for parallels in Defoe and would illuminate the 'Whole problem o.f Defoe's
work in 1924.
These suggestions impressed critics of Defoe with the need of an
and assimilat ive approach to his sources rather than one of direct
bor rowing or plagiarism or even lying like the truth. This was the
the novel as an art form r e quired first that the novel present a
Wright ' s notion that its structure was allegorical in the sense that
it reflecte d the events of Defoe's life--he argued that that unity did
not result from the theme, but rather from the liroitat ions imposed
with Les lie Stephen that unity in Defoe was structured only in the
the problems that grew out of that environment. Hence, he concluded with
Stephen that:
increasing the store that Gildon had offered upon the book's publica-
composition. The time need not be taken to examine them in any detail,
for the conclusion is what counts. That was simply that the picture
of personal experience when his sources failed him. Such a man wrote
Kno x 's Cey lon (1681). Details of Singleton's personal history, the
accounts of trading and shipbuilding may h~re come from Defoe's own
experience or invented from that source. The fiction and the fact
level ~'~ than Robinson Crusoe, because it did not have the unity of the
the figure of the hoax cavalier, what was fact end what was fiction.
editor, that the second edition identified the most probable candidate
that he WaS eight at the time of the siege of Magdeburg in which Defoe's
cavalier had a part. Second, the manuscript was said to have been
discovered first in 1651, but within its text there were allusions
to the Restoration (166o), Ludlow's Memoirs (1698), Juro Divino (1705),
and Tutchin' s Ob servator (1702-07).
had a manuscript in his possession and had altered and revised it.
in the hands of Andrew Newport. Defoe was the source for both statements
that an historical document did exist . None had so far turned up, nor
even evidence that there had been one. Further, there was internal
evidence of Defoe's idiom ever ywhere in the text. The use of such
phrases as 11
says he/1 11
says 1, 11 11
as I have said,u "however," " in short, 11
a favorite verb of Defoe 1 s nto fright 11 and "frightened," n! confess, " and
---~----------
221
11
the ei ghteenth century abbreviation, the mob 11 --v:ere all distinctly
But, said Aitken, "If we continue the study of the details of the
narrative we shall find various mistakes ~nich could hardly have been
1
made by a man who had gone through the experiences described. He
no ted contradictions made by the cavalier Who at one point denied any
More important evidence came from a military historian, Mr. Firth, who
Moor. The same author reported that the recapture of Newcastle recorded
Aitken himself had noted that Defoe had borrowed from contemporary
·~igure who might have left memoirs which Defoe hastily revised in
1720 . In this way was the short period of time allowed for its
subject before.
The cavalier could offer points of view from several levels as needed
much more important that his readers should have before them a striking
picture of the chief events of the wars than that the story should be
he assumed upon the basis of textual comparison and analysis that Defoe's
would first collect his material, create fictional characters to unify it,
from fiction.
of the plague:
had ~dcussed upon the initials at the close of the volume: H.F •• Were
these the initials of Defoe's uncle, Hen ry Foe? Aitken was suspicious
document. But there were obvious ways to explain the initials as a means
to insure credibility for the document • . He had used them for the same
effect in all probability in the Memoirs; why not here? Besides, according
to Aitken, Defoe was five or six years old at the time of the plague in
London. He might have recalled much from stories at the time and from
But once again, there were sources ready at hand for his use in
1720 when he decided to make capital out of the plague scare: NecessarY
Directions for the Prevention and Cure of the Plague (1665), Madella
This time Defoe had f or a theme a pic t ure of the social relations within
a city under gre at str ess, and made for the noblest effort i n his
vihat Aitken c8JTle to study the minor novels, he was unable to make
much of the source material. As· a matter of fact, no full scale work
Aitken's time. But sources for the geographical, political, social, and
them would go a long way toward verif'ying the hypothesis that Defoe's
method was accretive as Aitken and his follower Secord declared. Edward
Everett Hale had praised the American scenes in Defoe for their accuracy
for Moll and Roxa.TJ.a might be fotmd in the criminal biographies like
Mary Carleton as Bernbaum later suggested. But Aitken did not pursue
On the Whole the novels proper were examined for their literary
Colonel Jack's early life and his grol~h into a tolerant master were
for it lacked c l imax, and it tended to peter away into trivia. Moll
Flanders, a book that was on the verge of a revival in England, was, said
tion of the coarse material. Defoe's purpose was moral in that his
coming from the same pen in the course of twenty-four days. Thirdly,
and this in the interest of artistic unity, the coarse material, though
Defoe. Often, and despite the fact that the supposed completion of
that the edition of 1724 (lst) ended with Roxana returning to Holland
where she says she was brought low. The edition of 1745 brought her
Def oe , who had died in 1731, it was early seen as spurious. Francis
Noble in 1775 further renovated the text of some of its more offensive
sections, and a series of critics including Chalmers and L~b protested
the version .
Aitken felt that it was L~portant that Defoe did not complete
Roxana 1 s story and reprinted the first edition intact . This was, he
she was tempted by necessity, as both Moll and Jack had been, she was
more intrinsically selfish, and could not be allowed to live out her
repentant. Roxana's life was "too hideous for that. 11 This intention,
said Aitken, might have given more art to a story that should approach
moralizes, she was seen to gr C1W out of character, and her arguments in
favor of free-love could not be considered advanced for her time, for
heritage from the age of moral sensibility and delicacy. He could not
relate the techni ques of composition in The Fortunate Mistress with the
effect upon the novel and upon Defoe criticism. There were novels of
were a way of defining aspects of life. The trend found its way into
the Edinburgh Review, The Cornhill Magazine, and the Atlantic Monthly had
governed the research: the impartial or the objective approach, and the
effort to work within smaller and smaller areas, so that the subject
texte, in Which the researcher assumed as given only the text of the
work of art as the artist had written it. Another confining approach
diaries, letters, ana, and editions and printings was emphasized. They
the works t hemselves. Add to this the x-ray, chemical treatments, the
and science had invaded the arts. Of the studies of Defoe which follow •
Secord 1 s b est represents the approach from the cultural context: the
examinat ion of sources and analogues. The work of Roorda and Ross
the extent of his works had assumed first importance. Then came the
the nineteenth century, it was not until 1909 that two German scholars,
sources and analogues to the text of Robinson Crusoe. In 1919 'F atson rti-
Yea r. These works were important in that they offered a discipline for
This work is crucial in the sense' that any work on Defoe fo l lowing
it that does not show an acquaintance with its methods and conclusions
the Vict orian -Georgeian critique of the nov el with its vectors of pl ot,
the novel is dependent upon its period, the conventions understood and
the novel.
criminal and otherwise; and the growth of his novels from the moral
treatise:
between the Crusoe narrative and Robert Knox's Ceylon. Secord found
details for more parallels in phrasing and incident than can be detailed
here, he concluded:
Voyages. The connection between Dampier and Defoe had been suggested
found that there was much to justify this speculation. Numerous details
in each, both in content and style, were examined. Other parallels were
Purchas, Mandelslo, and Olearius. Secord drew his hypothesis that the
from a convincing mass of evidence. This did much to counter the specula-
tion that Defoe was allied to any literary tradition in the romance or
Secord offe red two plausible reasons for Defoe's use of fiction
in Robinson Crusoe. The first rested upon the knowledge that all travel
complaint!--and the second reason was that the explicit effort upon
Defoe's part to pass his stories off as true would more than adequately
f o r h is materials:
other sources than English Rogue, Seco rd concluded "that it owes nothing
of America, Grimw~lhausen 's Simplici smus, and Krinke Kesmes were all
tion , and s t1"Uc ture of Robin son Cru soe. I n conclusion, he state d
particular regions at hand/' and that he did not oft en consult works in
foreign tongues. The lat ter point would further re-emphasize Defoe's
diste.nce from the literary traditions of the novel, which were dominated
by Spani sh and French forms in the late seventeenth e~d early eighteenth
centuries.
Defoe's achievement:
And Defoe iwproved the travel book. He did not linger upon the tedious
detail of charting and logging, the fauna and flora, and the local
plagiarist:
Defoe's authorship of the Memoirs of Captain Car leton (May 16, 1728).
But ~th a. clearer idea of Defoe's methods based upon his previous dis-
cussion, Secord ~~s able to assign the work to Defoe . His conclusions
tion into fact . Chalmers, Coleridge and later Aitken turned over the
ground for this ~~rk. The evidence was provided to support the hypo-
thesis.
Secord, thus, found the lack of plot structure directly attr ibutable
praised portions of Defoe 's works were those :in which he concentrated
his ef forts upon bringing unity into diverse accounts of diverse writers;
subdivisions of the plot are firmer than in the novels as a whole ••••
preble!!! of unity in the Defoe novel. From the special incident and
the hero or heroine's focus upon those incidents came a unity. and h i s
genius could be explained as one which came less from being a muter
11
of ti ght plot construction than from being a master of incident 11 ::
sources a nd analogues, Secord ' s work synthe sized the approach and m:tde
tive technique of fusing the factual vd. th the fictional to present a view
of reality.
His stress, de spite recognition of hasty compo sition in the novels, fell
matter was limited to the first two parts of Robinson Crusoe, Captain
Sin gleton and the Memoirs of Captain George Carleton, the implications
Secord cla imed that it would take very little resear ch, for example,
to show that Colonel Jack was constructed of the same pattern. Ernest
whole to regard Defoe's works within the pale of the realistic novel
As yet, ho~ver, no ~ajar work has been done on the possible sources
of Moll Flanders and Colonel Jack. In the latter Moore has pointed to
the Scottish adventure; pe.rticula.rly that concerned with the stolen horse.22
Continent? All seem to have obvious ro ots in the affairs of the day
in the srur.e manner as Rob inson Crusoe was an artifact created from the
books of travel.
Paul Dottin has traced two possible sources of The Fortunate Mistressf3
this work too is ' preliminary. 1be work on the Memoirs of a Cavalier,
by George Aitken in the preface to his edition of that volum~, , did serve
the novels of adventure. bven on the basis of these preliminary findin gs,
one can see that the secondary novels owe tr~ir existence to the same
formula., with the possible exceptions of Moll Flanders and The Fortunate
Mistress. In the former, Defoe seems more concerned with story elements,
particularly the creation of chara cter ;24 and in the latter, he was more
However, Secord did not have the last word with respect to Defoe's
realism and its place in the development of the modern novel. Two later
sub strat um material Which provided much of the source material for the
novels to include the religious life of the period, and the literary
From this point, Roorda traced Defoe's religious p~phlets and the
vein of morality that pervades his novels. She pointed to the typical
econ omic and the spiritual codes that makes a schizophrenic out of the
religious businessman; but at the same time, she showed that Defoe's
r eligion and did not give a truthful account of actual events " were
mystical aspects of Robinson Crusoe: (1) the fulfil lment of a fat her 1 s
prophecy; (2 ) the evil influence of the Devil; (3) secret hints and
Roorda did not consider these elements as unre alistic~ but made
the case for their being true to Robinson' E view of reality. Hence,
character, said Roorda, is never real. "Defoe drew Fri Ce.y as an ideal
ticip atory r emarks, long digressions and summaries, he had a rudi rr:entary
i n some de scriptions, diffuseness in others? She found here, too, des pite
digre s s ions, that Defoe adhered to v;hat was important in its context.
that is, social statu s of parents, his schooling, and the results of
of the '' first year of Robinson's stay in the island., ••• whereas the
is a.n emphasis on "dry , curt lists/ a.nd the character of the dialogue
is filled with the colloquialisms that are often vivid, but just as
often as dull as the speech '1 of a garrulous talker [who] crowds too
much meaning i nto a sentence." This makes for faulty construction and
grammar , but
it did.
Though she contended that the moral point of the narrative and Defoe's
have soothed a suspicious public, she felt that Robinson Crusoe ~uld
never have achieved the popularity that it did without its genuine
11
resemblance to familiar acootmts of actual experience, and if its
appeal to the imagination had not been strengthened by all those elements
which, in our o>vn examination of the story, have been called realistic
features. 11
feelings, the references to the Devil in human affairs, the secret hints,
and dreams were seen to be in keeping with the eighteenth century habit
tions, end circumstantial descriptions give the v.rork its factual realism.
Further the use of sources and personal experience blended and fused
the eighteenth century and created a realism that could stand the test
of future generations . Ho-mver, in the text the more frequent errors and
The proce s ses that made for unity were less pronounced. The
character of the hero did not dominate the narrative. The effort
t o concentrate was l ess obvious in that Robinson Crusoe did not narrate
u sual patt ern of the mystic and realist ic elements, but found that the
f act ual ::- aa l i sm characteristic of Capt ain Singleton, "indeed all Defoe ,"
p ira cy ~ the detailed journey acr oss Africa. The eth ical dualism of
materi a li sm and morali~y i n Defoe found its best expres s ion in Defoe
Defoe wr i tings : The Political History of the Devil, rurs. Veal"! Ap paritions.
Roxana aboar d shi p, and t~e burying of the dead in A Journal of the
action., 'Wr i ters in and out of the fray. Each attained a lasting great-
ness on the basis of a work of fiction; both 1rere men able to fac ·e fact s
squarely . iVhere Steele and Defoe idealised the merchant, Defoe was
11
also careful to point out as well the frauds of the game a.nd the ever
1
present dangers of bankruptcy. The ability of both men, Swift and
excellence, ordinary Englishmen. They are alert and very capable; but
2
3 John F. Ross , Swift and Defoe: A Study in Relationship (Berkeley:
University of California., 1941)., P• 125.
jangle of nerves in them.'' Finally both have the universality of
everyman:
in Ross' work, his case rested upon the differences in their view of
lay in that fact that he was able "to control the dual process by which
The implication that may be drawn from Ross' analysis is that the
difference between Defoe and Swift iay in the ability to control and
several meanings within a given context, his ability to use the language
Defoe also set limitations upon his theme, and allowed the theme
at times to move away from the story. His reflections and digressions
distract from the loose line of narrative, often interrupting it, said
''Defoe plunged into his long periods careless of what, or how much, was
for
Ross asserted that for Defoe circumstantial detail existed "for its
own sake, as an end in itself. n Once again, Defoe's achi~ement was for
A curious charge that Ross laid at Defoe's door was that Defoe
marvel i ng or despairing.
The differ ences became apparent in their styles. Both advocated a plain
and si!r.ple style; both used such words.· ·a!S to achieve it. But Defoe' s
a llu sion~
Thu s , Ross found t hat Defoe's world was two dimensional despite
11
his wide range of interest and his style was patterned upon the immediate,
11
fac t ual and practical." Even his analyses are chiefly on a horizontal
1
plane. Hi s narrative s, concerned with external adv antages and rr8.terial
His style and external subject matter were on the same external plane
Defoe and with Gi ldon, .Minto, and Stephen, that his interest in the
eth ical and spiritual was half-hearted at best. He could not agree
with Roorda that an organic whole had been achieved, though he ac c epted
the basic noti on, thoroughly developed by Aitken and Se cord, that
fiction .
hardly with the esthe t ic; Defoe saw ·only a necessity for comprow~se
this assumption. His conclus ion was tha. t a t best . there was only
canpromise .
250
urging a. common agreOOtent for the factual basis in his novels. Level s
On t he other hand, Defoe 's view may be t hou ght of as too confining in
compa.r ison with contemporaries and too r emoved f rom the literary tradi-
claim that a. view of Defoe as representing the middle class was in it-
denominator of interest . 11
studi ed in the chapter: Aitken, Secord, Roorda. and Ross. The former
the un derstanding of the novel; the latter, though recog n izing the
methods have be come part of the critical apparatus i n the twent i eth cen-
tury and are not often f ound mut ua lly exclusive. In the fo llowing
chapter we will see them operating in the hist ories of the novel and
place for him in the history of the novel. Opinion has been and still
of the late nineteenth that saw in Defoe the '11 father of the novel. 11 But
novel, which v1ere beginning to trace formative pai;terns, that pro due ed
out tha the " efoe novel had its count rparts in the literary tradi-
tion in the works of' Nashe, Deloney, and Dekker.. Such a conside t ion
manners novel reduced the significance of the Defoe novelj Chandler 's
The two most recent lit erary histories that stand as the most
definitive of their kind in the present period: Baker 's The History
of the Novel and Baugh 's Literary History (1948~ emphasized the
the meaning of the novel, the term became more abstract unt il today so
many patterns e.re accepted 'YJithin its scope that assigning genre :has
almost become fut ile. Some attempt to clarify the issue has been made
in the literary histories, both gen eral and novel histories . In the
anal yses of both, the att itudes toward the development of the novel
and novel histories was the recognition of the multiplicity of' tradi-
tions from "Ylhich the novel--that is~ the modern realistic novel--dr ew
the corr~on tradition of the picaresque and the romance prior to the
marvelous, the fanciful and the imaginative; and those which derived
The latter, the ground in which the modern realistic novel took
root, was, said Raleigh, largely the creation of Defoe . His approach
But even the novels which derived from the romance of the literary
the chief medium of 'Mlich, was the result of the dev elopment of "the
:Plent in protesting the i•redundan.ce and luxury, 11 •:the mists and rmcertain-
2Both Swift and Defoe ad"Vocate a middle style. For a critical comment
on their two styles, see discussion of Ross' Swift and Defoe.
3v'ialter Raleigh, The English Novel (New York: Scribners, 1894), p. 119.
Ralei gh felt t l~t both, united to central situation on the desert island
master piece. The flat simplicity of the style made the concern with
in others of his books, the moral and physical dualism seemed to have
Raleigh ' s discus sian of the other works did not develop their
shwm~ and did not contribute much if anything to Defoe ' s fame. For
Defoe had let the lie serve as an approach to realism Which was not
11
entirely to Raleigh ' s taste. He imitated Scott 's analysis of Mrs. Vea.l 11
which showed how well Defoe could simulate truth~ unaware that the
Defoe story had a real basis in fact. The facile lie that seemed a
'' Those who had been the dupes of simulated argtunent could be made the more
Literature and Society in the Eighteenth Century (1903), and from his
sketch of Defoe in DNB (1908), one can infer that Stephen, though
he marvelled at Defoe 's achievement, nonetheless deplored his technique.
notion that the a.::onomic and political rise of the middle class was
:~licentious '
1
circles. With the denunciation of the comic and drama. of
the Rakes (166o- 1700), there gr~ up a new sst of values and ideals
which were to govern the novel. In addition, the common sense, matter-
century developed a new class of readers and writers far wham Defoe's
genius for the vernacular and for realistic detail proved a standard.
Tatler and the Soecte.tor. In three ways, he said, these papers influenced
a standard for the abstraction, the Augustan Age or the Age of Reason.
brought the abstractions of the Augustan Age into the r ealm of the
paper and partly responsible for the newspaper, cracked the ·walls and
invaded the citadels of the inner aristocratic circle; and writers for
the reiddle class became the arbiters of literary standards. This allowed
and its literary variants, below that of satire and tragedy. The middle
cla.ss, continued Stephen, rejected the idea that ·works of art might
be ends in themselves, but held that form was incidental to the moral,
and that a work's merit depended not upon the quality of the creative
effort, but upon the instructive aspects of the work. The inner cir cle
might reorganize in the Scriblerus Club, but its principles were infected
258
by the importance of the bourgeois moral, and its dominance was challenged
by the writer from Grub Street. The dominant literary figures of the
midcentury wer e all to recognize and many to practice that form created
the short tale of Behn and Manley which began to lose it s hold by the
middle of the century ; the realistic narrative of Defoe, and the morality
an indispensible ingr edient in fiction after him, his work was that of
a precursor; not full blown in the artistic sense that Fielding was i n
Stephen 's estimate. This estimate has had its following among many
modern critics of the novel, among them David Daiches (The Novel and the
for this view, Stephen held, was Defoe's ambiguous morality, and partly
sure, Defoe deserved praise for his ability to fuse tact and fiction:
Year and Memirs of a Cavalier, that have bem ree.d as history, Defoe
But wh t annoyed Stephen in Defoe was the superficial mor ality which
that Defoe tacks same kind of moral to the stories which show no great
eighteenth century was given added weight by two works of the major
literary critic of the period, George Saint sbury. In both The English
Novel (1913) and The Peace of the Augustans (1916), he insisted upon
7Leslie Stephen, 11
Daniel Defoe, 1' DNB, V, p. 738.
of prose charact eristic of the Defoe period was its awareness of the
devel oping novel. It was Saintsbury's idea that as the novel developed
reflected in the talk, the dialogue, and the racy comment of the author.
The int erest sprung from the combined produce of "the mighty quartetten __
the complete English novel was usually end in the main justly ascribed* n
or plain spoken prose to the novel, and it was he who might. take his
in style ru1d content Defoe belonged to the plain-spoken school that did
Defoe who established the Earth as "the special scene of the novel's
operations. 11
Re recognized that the novel was relative to its age and manners:
I n The English Novel he recognized that the novel as a generic term did
form often ascribed to it. Pilgrim~s Progress and The Holy War could
not be excluded upon the basis that they were religious in theme end
content and were structured upon the allegory. For, noted Saintsbury,
both Paradise Lost and The Faerie Queen would necessarily be excluded
from it. He did, however, believe that certain basic ingredients were
were the four criteria mentioned above; and they constitute a permanent
His plots -were the irregular~ chronicle type, and his characters~
for Defoe's success~ Saintsbury was forced to find another reason for
10
George Saintsbury~ The English Novel (London: Dent, 1913), P• 69.
~agicians--not the greatest by any means, but great and almost alone
them all, for he tried to make them fit into patterns recognizable at
the novel and· many such as Williams and Follet:t followed the breakdowns
that he provided. Despite the fact -that many novelists were already
breaking the Victorian patterns (Joyce and Woolf') and creating new
syntheses for the novel, critics remained on the whole rather conserve.-
tive.
Two other historians during this period, Williams and Follett did
1
little or nothing to clarify Defoe's position other than to follow the
the head of' the tradition of the modern novel. In 1911, Harold Williams
ability and his feeling that Defoe was a liar and a cheat in even the
But there was a diff er ence: the hero i n Defoe was n ot a clever rogue~
11
but a very ordinary person, not a whit cleverer than our poor selve s ,
the Dutch merchant, the maid Amy, and the Quaker gentlewoman, suggested
a more mature approach to t~e novel. But Williams was forced to deplore
generalized that the minor novels including Moll Flanders, Colonel Jack,
and Captain Singleton were forever JJa dead letter." Though Memoirs of
11
a Cavalier and A Journal of the Plague Year showed real inventive
plot, pathos, setting, and character, he came well within the range of
Thus , Williams claimed Defoe the first o f modern realists, partly like
Stephens and Saint sbury because of his ability to fuse elements of the
social scene and partly for his colloquial style. Though he remained
11
the first realist, 11 he was not the first of realists .
Wilson Follett in The Modern Novel (1918) made the same case for
11
Defoe's realism on the basis of his use of irrelevant detail. 11 An
inevitably coupled i n this period ~~th praise for Def oe's mastery of
detail.
The general po siti on, then, that the modern novel had its roots in the
seventeenth century milieu, that Defoe v~s the first important fictionist
to give it form, that his nov e ls, but for Robinson Cruso e, were worthy
llHa rold illiams, Two Centuries of the Eng lish Novel (London : Smith , 1911),
PP• 30-31.
l2Viilson Fo llett, The Modern Novel (New York: fillopf , 1918), pp. 28-29.
266
of the pres ent century tends to support this theme. Lovett and
f or re f orm. 1'he middle class reader , Lovett and Hughes asserted, who
character of the novel, applauded the work of Defoe, the first great
English novelist.
Lik e crit ics of the nineteenth century, Lovett and Hughes regarded
of the autobi ogr aphical structure, the lack of plot, the emphasis on
viewed Defoe ' s wo rks in terms of reading habits. She saw the novel
helping the reader to deal less inadequately with actual life. The
n'lind . :t Thus, the novel in any period had to reflect the conventions of
the period. In support of this view she quoted the Lady Wortley Montague:
behavior might prove too tough a diet; fiction made the pill easier to
swallow. In this way Defoe was able to flatter the middle class with
15Q. D. Le avis, F'iction and the Reading Public (London : Chatto and
Windus, 1932), p. 82.
268
For these reasons, said Mrs. Leavis, Defoe's idiom did not permit
hi m to concern himself ~~th art; all his ingenuity was devoted to make
his fiction appear as fact. His link with tradition was in the idiom,
the u s e of the colloquial rhythm with echoes of Bunyan and the Authorized
11
Version of the Bible. Hence, he r6mained outside the circumference of
wit . ''
that dominate d the tradition of the novel during the latter eighteenth
after him:
universality its author did not especially intend. Hence, the n ovel s
Pritchett felt that Defoe 's realistic style was comparable in its
quial stra in, to make dialogue and description less formal in fiction,
moral or spiritual crisis, and "this wait for circumstances takes all
·
ga~n t o r ea 1'1 srr may b e . n Nonethe less, of the Defoe pattern, Rob inson
Crusoe, and A Journal of the Plague Year remained great works which
Defoe pers ists, despite the constant reassurance of the critics, who
Sterne; but they all sugge sted that his permanent v alue =. as a literary
figure in the history of the novel must r emain on the n arrativ e not a
pathos, character, and style and his staten-ent that the nal!el retains
11
a practical infinitude . 11
I n Ernest Baker 's account of Defoe's rol e in The History of the Novel,
both aspects a re welded into his interpretation of the novel's forrrt and
11
function. His tentative definition was simple and sweeping : the
The novel does not l'f1ve a rigid pattern, but admits the maximum of
of the novel, the understand :ing of techniques of campo sit ion. To dis-
his novels.
came the critical discussions of· his various works as they pointed
Baker found the central theme in Defoe ~~s one characteristic of'
11
bourgeois fiction int o our own tire: the identification of goodness
from the travel book . A Journal of the Plague Year, the ltemoirs of a
Caval ier, Colonel Jack, and Memoirs of Captain Carleton ( 1728 ) become
Gil Blas (1718) and was thus linked by Baker to the tra.dition of the
picaresque . Again this work had elements of the criminal life which
were the main s ources for Moll Flande rs and The Fo rtunate Mistress ..
to all of his works of fiction made Defoe the first of modern novelistst
average counterfeit travel book of the period; but that the historical
v ernacular . The immediate appeal of the a ctual and the use of the
·vd th literary tradi tiona; Defoe was simply a relator of edifying stories.
His characters were all chips of himself come to life and lacked
History o f England (1948), the author rel ated Defoe's longer works
11
to his journalism and his love of projects." Suggested relationship s
Whil e the literary and nov el histories were attempting to acc ount
for the Defoe novels and provide · a cant inuous tradition in which they
p ractices . The dire ctions that these s tu die s were taking have been
observationn that produced the ,modern novel. Defoe did not belong so
novel. For Chand ler pointed out he did not content himself with a stor y
f or it s o~~ make, but with one de s igned to incu l c ate a moral. He turne d
away from the Spanish and French mat e ria l ft1 d manner and developed a
native produc ~ and manner rooted in ?hat Chandler called uan observation a l
method . "
aim; the evidence seEmed to point to the contrary. The deser t island
thought that the picaresque form may in some way have offered Defoe a.
her early re turn from a sentence of transportation may have off ered the
substance of Moll Flanders. But the idea of recastin g the story into
one of a wonan who indulged in every vice in the many strata. of middle
and low life D'l..a.y have been suggested by the picaresque tradition. The
in the pi caresque: the bizarre events and the differing habits of nations
and classes.
William V'e.l ters v.ras, according to Chandler, straight from the tradition
of t he picaresque:
In Moll Flanders Cha1dler found that Defoe did not so much depart
build the case f or her growth of moral character which gave it a dimen-
had n ot thought it worth while li to cull choicer frauds from the hundreds
clumsiness, or that gave him an opportunit y for examining her n~ntal and
the necklace from the child--and her fi rst business transaction vdth
her governe ss, Defoe's emphasis seemed always upon the speculations
.•
did this mark a development from the picaresque, but Defoe's selective
former argument, Chandler could conclude that "Defoe assailed not only
the interpolated tale and auto biograph~, but also the extraneous homily.
that it vnll not need discussion here. Chandle r admired the objectivity,
the naturalness with lvhich the seduction and rrarriage scenes were handled.
character element upon the picare sque stem had its limitations. First,
11
Defoe had no perception of fine shades of character or character
fur ther discussion. Examples in point were Colonel j 'll.ck ' s unknown
parentage and the th~ at of mutiny aboard the ras cally captain's ship
in the same book. The unresolved episode, the dangling suspense, was
the contrived plot, but Chandler was in accord with his own time in
unnatural, her curiosity about the Jew 'Who was bla.clcmailL11g her
absurd. TI.!Iost telling , a.t least from a contemporary view, was Chandler's
with her (Roxana's ) lover so that Amy mig ht not be more virtuous than
to the pica.ro who passed from master to I!llster. But a definite relation
Here, "his pr edilection for ethical studies made his thought pivot
Defoe:
becomes par~ount. 2 7
tith Secord's r esearch before hi:r..~ Chandler might have been able to
see the gradual e mergence of fiction from fact; from the tie with
Ch arlotte I\1 organ' s approach vre.s suggest e d in her title: The Rise
Ric hard son 1 s works. She saw that Defoe--and Bunyan for that matter--
fell outside the tradition which she was tracing. So she postulated
novel. The first of these she called the literary fiction, defined as
11
written for a limited aristocratic public by authors consciously
the novel as defined by Congreve , and short tales of Aphra Behn and
his style colloquial. " She traced his apprenticeship from the years
of journalism, from " The Storm, 11 'Ihe Secret IIist ory of the October
II
~~
C and J;cr s. Veal. I'· 'Ihen came the biography of Charles of Sweden,
unity, Miss Morgan pointed to the success of the desert island episode,
the problem of the solitary man at odds with his environment, the practical
11
nature of Crusoe, and the memoir structure which permi ts the hero to
past. 11 She also found in the didactic element, a clear and practical
thematic sort; though the unity was best in the first _p art.
character from novel to novel, in any order that one may place them.
11
All of Defo e 's novels were generalized portraits of human nature. n
But she saw in The Fortunate Mistress an effort to develop plot and it
She percei-~d some kinship between the didactic dialogue and story
tion and hence of minor importance to the novel of manners. Yet she
not of imitations~ but upon the whole tone of voice of the modern
detail.
that he owed a great deal to Char lotte Korgan for his conception of
and Mrs. Heywood; and examined the Defoe trademarks in Robinson Crusoe.
style.
11
30Mc Burney, Formative Influences , 11 p. 143.
284
undiminished and even expanding market for travel books, •• for religious
all kinds."31
by the " easy, plain, and familiar; but this did not mean that his
It suited the purposes of the great segment of the middle and even
lower class readers and suggested that while Defoe lacked the deftness
11
of usage that characterized the Tatler, it was erroneous to say that
3~!cBurney, 11
Formative Influences, H P• 138.
the original autobiographical narrative devices and were without chapter
social ills and their solutions. The former work was the first of
to the tvm part formula of the previous works, The Fortunate Mistress
and offer some development in minor characters. ·such a move was away
t his wor k in its time for the reason that Defoe's analytic novel was
3~icBurney, 11
Formative Influences/' p. 100.
286
11
evidently too far advanced for the fiction reading public, 11 which
forms concurrent with Defoe, and the conditions of publication that the
agreed with H.os s that his achievement was more to be vieVTed as one in
the most significant on Defoe, the first partook of the nature of the
special study. This was William Trent's Daniel Defoe: How to Know Him
writings. Henry fuorley's edition of The Earlier Life and The Chief
verse, the satires, the his tor ie s, economic studies, the travels,
and the news reporting. The task was self-defeating, since a. fair
selection would have been beyond the scope of a. modest volume. But
on the whole, Trent deserved credit for attempting it, and the selections
were catholic enough to impress the reader with the wide range of subject
287
the r eader could see that the nove ls themselves grew upon the substrata.
rumors, local topography, and political ~ac h inery. In his time, indeed
in any time , such a grasp as Defoe had of his language, history, geography,
but lavished upon it extreme praise: "the most life-like and interesting
story of adventure that has been written in Eng lish. !! Its t heme was a
world theme , not a national nor a racial one as some reviewers had claimed.
11
Its popul a rity could be accounted f or by the life-like realism/' not by
its structural unity nor its char a cterization. The island portion of the
story wa s the crucia l episode and its theme ·had· sta.tednhow a weak and
solita ry man strug gles successfully with the pitiless and seemingly
11
un con querab le forces of nature. Defoe's characteriz a tion of' Crusoe "Nas
11
that of an ordina ry 1J1..an, a rather ignorant adventurer of no very high
for Defoe 's being called the father of t he Engl ish novel; but Trent
with the t hem e of loneliness: t h e parrot calling ' Poor Rob:in Crusoer:
and th e disc overy of the footprint in the sand. Both of these were ch osen
Cru s oe , 1954 to intensify his sense of the theme of loneline ss p ictoria lly.
The thi r d selection indic at e d the ingenuity of th e Defoe character in
His a chievement a s the fat h er of the English novel was reinf orced
the man of humble ori gin" ; particularly, in the crude but develo ping
Journa l of t h e Plague Ye ar, Trent found ''the unplea sant realis:rrt of De foe
mast erpiece of r ea. lis.m in the revelation of the London underworld of the
eighte en th century. Colonel Jack was more than anything else an inf erior
II .
version of k oll Flan de rs, b ut showed some command of pathos and a
Public Libr ary), an a rticle on him for the Encyclop edia Americana, and
a chapter on the ''News pa per and the J.ITovel " for the Cambridge History of
of the eighteenth century, James Sutherland and Paul Dottin, have ~Titten
the n ovels, indeed, considered his novels one of the main reasons for
P~binson Crusoe had obscured the amazing life of its author. They asserted
that the biography was a challenge becam:e of the complexity of his nature.
Paul Dottin wrote his Daniel Defoe et ses romans (1925) but the
translation of his ·work by Louise Hagan called The Life and Strange . and
pr etations, and his work, Defoe (1938} has recently enjoyed a second
edition (195 2 ).
35 Bonamy Dobr~e, Daniel Defoe (1949) and William Fre eman, The Incredible
Defoe (1952) have both written recent biographies. Neither offers a
point of vi ew that v.ras deemed significant for inel us ion at this titre.
- - - - -- - - -
8:)1
Thus, Dottin moved swiftly into the realm of inference that Suther-
land would not permit himself. Dottin asswned a meet:lng of Defoe with
tha t i brutal, more dissipated, and n:ore morose" Hobinson Crusoe (Selkirk)
and the latter's creator, suggested that Lafoe might have planned a
le gend . In doing so, he select ed an area little known at the time, but
may easily have come from Sir 'WEt lter Raleigh's account of Guinea. Thus,
f urther t r a ced the course of the book's success with an equal sense of
the dramatic. He pictured Defoe's fight witb pira.t eers and abridgers,
and finally the a ut hor's boredom with old Hobin son. He suggested the
Quarll's The Hermit (1727) and Peter Wilkins (1750). Later works, he
said, failed because they were unable to combine in the same measure
Howe ver~ he noted that attempts to dramatize the work had failed~ - except
reality did not take to the stage except wh en it ~~s made into melodrama.
reasons for going into ecstacies over some winged denizen of the woods
whole Dottin saw virtue in its lack of structure ("like life"), in its
11
circumstantial detail, and in its simple style, stripped of artistry. '1
Its faults lay in Defoe's purpose of informing and instructing the lower
was broad; though there was an occasional hint of wit, especially in his
contrasting portraits of the mild Spanish priest and the wicked English-
man. Such a tol erant view of foreigners ~~s sure to earn Defoe a scolding
serious flaw:
Dottin did not accept the modern view that the pattern of Defoe's
other works was · rooted in the novels of adventure. Old notes, false
called a novel of adventure based upon the popular creation of the hero-
buccaneer. For Dottin, this ·was a failure. Other than the character
success. The difference between the older form and Defoe's version lay
closed its eyes ••• 11 to Moll. But the book had a vogue in France after
romance, A J ournal of the Plague Year and the picaresque, Colonel Jack.
1
The former Dottin dubbed "a masterp iece of realisn:, while the latter
contained in its earlier portions uthe finest pages De Foe ever ·wrote. 11
But his gre atest achievement in the novel was his The Fortunate Mistress,
which grew out of his interest in the picaresque, and only the fact that
Rob inson Crusoe as the chef d'<?euvre; The Fortunate l~ii strass as the most
that Defoe's ability to assess his reader's tastes was one of the major
reasons for the a ppearance of his fiction. One must be aware, he pointed
out, that ;: for a n author ·who had engaged successfully in political and
religious controversy to turn his hand to tales of adventure was ••• a sign
the small shopkeeper, the artisan, the publican, the footman and the
se~ring girls, soldiers and sailors--all of the public of the day who
were lit erate , but did not r ead much. Sutherland clearly believed that
11
Def oe was reaching a new public; it might be said that he was creating
one • 11 ·~ore accomplished writers like Pope and Swift were , though they
the notion that Defoe stumbled upon a new popular form of literature.
enjoyment of reading Robinson Crusoe does not come f rom the dis covery of
cha r ac t er the archtype of the En glish middle class. Suthe rland considered
1
this po i n t; Crusoe is sirrply, like his crea tor, a practic al , level-
headed, intelli gent, and r esolute Englishman. ~ But to account for Crusoe 's
touc hing bas ic themes in human nature-- '' the human delight in rna h.'i.ng t h ings. •l
the sea. 'these play upon the universal pl easure one receives from
"play ing a t hou s e. 11 The wor ld of ima ginings becomes satur at ed with the
Such univer sals ar e reflected from the point of view of the trades-
man; but this does not detract from their universality. True it was that
women, who were systematizing the world within the limits of the !l'..arket
events within g iven situations, which, generally, kept them from being
over ly di gressive. In the rogue histories Defoe worked the novel from
sketches he had prepared for Applebee's Journal into full length lives;
of the Def oe novel from the Review and the moral handbook, indicating a
close tie betw~ en the journalist and novelist. He pointed to the bits
cre ations of character and the hint of plot that was found in The
of this practice:
tended t hat the ''lewd parts '' were ·wrung from him. These, the biographer
45sutherland, Defoe, pp. 244-245. The idea for the theory of imper-
sonat ion caiTe, as Sutherland reiTarked, f rom Rudolf: · G. Strumm's article
in the Philological Quarterly, Vol. X.'0/ (1936), PP • 225-6.
299
insisted came f rom Defoe's desire rrto contemplate human life, to-v.atch
the progress of the human soul, the ebb and flow of worldly prosperity. ~~
Defoe, wa s his capacity for Lmaginative insi ght , the ability to capture
feelings an d errot ions that were in keeping with the character. Suther-
the man in h is period and explaining the works in terms of the biographi-
cal portrait of the man. Trent and Sutherland stre ssed the i mportance
of earlier activitie s and the so c ial milieu rather than the analysis of
articles, many of mich have been mentioned i n the notes or the text of
this st udy and are included in the Bibliography. They come from the
Moore, Secord, Sutherland., and Payne have made contributions . The work
therefore, offered little by way of a theme for the student of the novel.
work in the Critic (1895) took issue with the idea that Defoe's hasty
verisimilar; and, in the manner of Lee and 'VIright, defended the artful
Century Magazine (1899) under the heading 'The fil:s.king of Robinson Crusoe ,'1
the Selkirk-Defoe relationship was raked over the coals netting only
ashes. Academy in the same year offered an article on Defoe 's ability
301
the same magazine, saw Captain Singleton, Moll Flanders, The Fortunate
~.1 istr ees , and Co lonel Jack as effo rts to instruct upon or crit icize
by Baker t hat Moll Flanders and The Fo rtunate Mistress had a direct
de Maupassant and Mirabeau . There was only the barest possibil ity of
In the t wenti es and thirties Dot tin and Secord46 became prominent
46paul Dottin's two chief works on Defoe : The Life and Robinson Crusoe
~xamin'd and Criticis' d have been discus s ed. Two minor articles
rtDefoe et la France" and " Les sources de la Roxana de Daniel De Foe 11
are of tangential i mportance . The latter makes the case that the
career of .Mrs. Elizabeth Barry may have suggested the character of
Roxana. I n addit i on t o many reviews of cri tical studies on Defoe,
Secord ha s published 01 Defo e 1 s Roxa~ and the Grammont :'ennirs. n
in 1903-4 and 1905. His work .followed the pattern set by Aitken , and
dealt mainly with the fiction and more famous prose pieces. The most
Journal numbered only seven editions. However, Moll Flanders and The
47aJohn R. Moore has suggested many possible sources for Defoe ' s ficti on.
He has as well attempted to link him with later novelists. For full
discussion see his art i cles .uThe Character of Daniel Defoe 1; RES, XIV
(1938}; 11 Defoe and Scott , 11 ~!LA, LVI 2 (191!1), J'Defoa, Selkirk;-and John
Atkins , 11 Notes and Queries, CLXXIX (19i.JO ) ; nDefoe, Stevenson, and the
Pirates," ELH, X (1943); and "Defoe's Use of Pe r sonal Experience in
Colonel Jacque , n MLN , LIV (1939). These themes are also to be found
in two volumes of'eritic al stud~: De.fo e in the Pillory and Ot her Studies
(Indi ana University Press, 1939) and Defoe' s Sour ces for RObert Drury's
J ournal (Indiana University Press, 1943).
Fort unate Mistress, now in unexpurgated editions, enjoyed minor vogues;
the former has had fourteen printings, the latter, eight. Colonel Jack,
Captain Singleton, and Metooirs have been less fortunate . Only the first
has enjoyed a recent edition (1952). It would seem that ihey had fallen
Jack : "I reviewed Colonel Jack with ecstasy, the first part is as much
,F'ortni p;htly Review (1909) to ·"'Daniel Defoe • 11 Here, Masefi eld attempted
women which must have been an unhappy one--a point of view ~hich led
meant this in the sense of the - Romantic · · school: the allure of the
faraway, the different, and the bizarre. It also led him to find
and Lee. He labelled Defoe's greatest power his great fear of death.
Both were illustrated in A Journal of the Plague Year and Moll Flanders
11 1
Defoe wa s n ot to be found in hi s p i caresque romances / but in his
11
party ''-Ti tings" where he i s 'wise _, ironica l _, shr ewd , ri ght eous. 11
Mase f ie l d ' s gen e r ally negat ive t one was t r ansm u t ed by two mor e
r ecent novel i st s: Wa. lter de l a Mare and Virgini a Woolf . The f ormer
50v~ a lter de l a Mare , Desert Islands and Rob inson Crusoe (New Yor k : Farrar
an d Ri nehart, 1930), P • 38.
'.306
it might be said that they saw Defoe as a primitive on the whole. His
11
works could never be said to have any but unconsciousn artistry.
scope of this study was an article in The Liv:ing Age (1919), entitled
'uTwo Hundred Years of Defoe. J!! Here, the moral superficiality which
had so often placed Defoe among the lo~~r orders of literary talent ,
Harold Williams , the author of uTvm Hundred Yearsl!• made very little
his e:x:amen upon Mo ll Flanders and The Fortunate Mistress which .ustand
among the fem English novels we can call indisputably great. 11 Unlike
give the novel the shape it now wears , ·1 by offering his public a pattern
51Virginia Woolf, 'Defoe" The Common H.eader (New York: Harcourt Brace,
1948), PP• 132-3. The article here quoted from '"Daniel Defoe/' first
appeared in 1925·
11
5%arold Williams , Two Hundred Years of Defoe/' The Living Age, CCCI
(1919), P• 623.
307
ingenuous view of herself created her; hence, she became more than
facts:
He was equally taken with the character of Roxana, even though his
language often makes the reade r feel as if these women were being handled
with ten foot tongs. Roxana was praised for her understanding of the
rights o f women :
actions, thoughts and behavior were recorded in the novel . This was
Though his heroi ne filled the book , she was not "real, 11 in the sense
that she was like life. The usual repl y to reality i n a. novel--
work of art with its ~~ laws , not those of daily life . The novel is
real onl y in the sense that i t obeys its own laws. But Forster was
· realms:
But novels are often truer than history in that they go beyond the
and thus more manageable human race, they give the illusion of
Though For ster denied to Moll the photographic reality which was
the chief basi s of her fame in the nineteenth century, he was v.rilling
Dorothy Van Ghent in The English Novel (1953 ) followed this general
position, but outlined it more clearly in her disc u ssion of the novel .
n Given such and such conditions, then such and such wru ld take place. '"
I t started from the empirical data, the raw experience of life and
11
selected, or ganized them into a series of hypothetical events ::
It becomes her definition then, that the general procedure of the novel
11
is to individualize. '1 'V>hat it says of permanent value must be
i nferred from the concrete data. Like Forster she emphasiz es t he po int
gives to his work a sense of logical sequence. And the main principle
in taste in the novel , in the ability to eva luate and judge variant
.And she agreed and a ssimilat ed Baker's view of the novel in her final
sta tement that ,r.rwe judge a novel also by the cogency and illuminative
qua lity of the vi ew of life it affords. 1 She absorbed into her theory
11
the view that Saintsbury held in evaluating novels through the analytic
58Dorothy Van Ghent, The Eng lish Novel: fo rm and function (New Yo rk:
Rinehart, 1953), P• 4.
our lives."
of world. The world of Moll is the world of th:in gs ; but not in :the sense
11
t h at the world is made up of "physical, sensuous textures," images for
evaluation. Boyce pointed out that the general critical attitude derive d
by Stephen in Hours in a Library (1874J . Stephen had asser ted tmt Defoe's
method- - "the most marvelous power ••• of giving verisiw.ili tude to his
fiction. u At the same time, Stephen had cl a.~ d, Defoe 's method cost
him much in the way of ' the passionate element 11 ; further, that De foe
11
had no atom of sentiment" in the l iai.sons of Moll and Roxana. This
pot. '' Leavis had also suggested that the absence of passion was
11
characte ristic of an age which was hopelessly incurious where its
feelin g s were concerned. ' v~ illa Cather, too, presented t his view in
what he thought was De foe's " personal morality. n This, Boyce continued,
was dominated by an anxiety, a fear of danger, which Crusoe said, 'is ten
thousand Times more terrifying than Danger it self, when apparent to the
1
Eyes. Th is anxiety dominated the island portion of Robinson Crusoe,
6
~enjam.in
Boyce, 11 The Question of Elmotion in Defoe/' Studies in
Philology, L (J anuar y , 1953), 45-58.
313
the scenes of Jack's childhood, the latter parts of Moll Flanders and
Boyce, was the key word . Defoe a s merchant and journalist yielded
his decisions and actions may seem questionable. From Lamb t o Cather
critic s described the sentiment of prudence that governed Def oe's The
Complete TradesFan. But it was no ,· more and no less than the principle
ma.n ' s life and that Boyce, among others, found as a consistent theme
Conclusions: 1900-1950
mandatory. Thus began the study of the sources and analogues that
both o f the novels in general and of the specific vrorks that we re worked
out in this per iod and that subsequent to it. The first was the theory
thr ee works Secord established beyond any question that they were
derived from informational literature, that they were fact i mper ce pti bly
woven int o the fabric of fiction. From this he concluded t hat t here
which -v.-as strongly influenced by the conventions in his period. Defoe ' s
rea ders wanted fact; Defoe presented them with fictionalized facts. He
upon the current and b ourgeois view of reality . This helped hin' f urther
and €igh~ ee ...t:t ~ntury tracts and pamphlet E · ich serv d s ource
mate rial. The .ork was deve l oped by Dr . Watson Nicholson in his The
Histo ri cal Sources of Defoe's Journal of the Plague Year (1919). Tho e
sources were examined in detail for parallels and led him to the con-
e lusion that the work was history because, ''not a single essential
has repli e d, ho,~ver, that the same can be said for any good historical
Nichol son s ho red clear parallels, even to errors, in many of the works
depend upon whether or not the critic accepts the working hypothe s i s
t hat Defo e's works are nov els, or whether they are not. If they do
which Aitken showed was based upon historical sources but provided with
fictional elements . No full length study has been done on the sources
of the Memoi rs, but Baker and McBurney have suggested in addition to
( 1646-171:2) .
Neither Colonel Jack nor Moll Flanders has receive d full scale
Mistress. Other suggestions for the novels proper of Defoe have been
Gil Blas and the semi - fictitious novels or memoirs of Aphra Behn.
S. Peterson and A.W• . Secord have suggested a parallel for The Fortunate
in the stature of his works seeJ'T'_s to have taken place in critical circles.
Though critics still favor Robinson Crusoe as the chef d'oeuvre there has
been a strong tendency to place Moll Flanders and The Fortunate Mistress
Orlo W illiams~ Paul Dottin, and Spiro Peterson suggested The Fortunate
A Journal of the Plague Year and Robinson Crusoe still hold posi-
tions of high critical favor. Colonel Jack and the Memoi rs of a Cavalier
relationships of the former with Oliver Twist and Defoe's personal ex-
perience; the style of the latter has enjoyed the praise of 'W inston
and Baker suggested a kinship in con'Gent and structure between the two
works, but no detailed •~rk has followed their suggestions. For the
a period of two hlmdred ·and thirty years when a theory of the novel
the · concluding remarks a.t the close of the various parts of this study
The rise of the bourgeois from the medieval guild to the seventeenth
century trading company, from the manorial town to the commercial center,
levels of reality were setn to e.x ist in connection 'Vdth tbue demands
as they grew out of the puritan movement: that of the spiritual life
scripture ).n poetry and prose; and that of the practical and temporal
about the court and the aristocratic circle, and more about the
product of the French and Spanish works, this attitude appeared in the
form of satire directed mainly against the middle class, rut, 1n part,
of the middle class and its interest in trade at the beginning of the
toward a prose style, away from the b~roque and esoteric, and to1VB.rd
the plain and reasonable, one for one relationship between word and
The plot of the novel had its coincidences and reversals. The novel
But the elements of the drama ~re distrusted by the middle class.
Their demands began to make then.selves felt in fiction 'With the appearance
history and biography than the drams. or the epic. The history (fictional)
even when its author reached into the past for subject matter. It must
show a plain, reasonable, and common sense language in its prose style.
Defoe did not equate his histories with the novel. If' he had,
it might have been defined in terms o£ its fictional hero .from the
middle life. of its subject rooted in the business of daily life. of'
Since the novel (short romance) -was mistrusted by the puritan middle
journal. ¥/'hen they used the term novel they justified the form in
But they saw the novel as the modern outgrowth of the romance tram
of unity, plot and character. Nonetheless., the terms novel and romance
were used as ~onyms and were equally disapproved by the middle class.
Defoe came to the area of prose fiction and defined his form of'
and travel 11 terature had played a part in his composition, and he allied
become less and less dependent upon factual soU!ces and ma.terials to
He fUrther pointed out that the attempt to fuse truth and morality had
the resulting work were pure imagination or not, it would become moral
and profitable.
would result in a proper morality. One had simply to avoid the marvelous,
In the great novels (so they are called today) of the mid-century,
322
were united and enlisted sympathies of the reader. The hero was at
these works were historical fictions and not clearly related to the
popular gothic and manners novels. But it was possible for Fielding
admit this was fiction and test his artifices. To the bourgeois of
generic term. though romance was often used in this connection as well.
growth of romance. The romance came home to "a picture of real life and
moral instruction. both general and particular • and its simple. natural
prose style.
off from all society. his solitude. This dismissed the necessity of
323
general aspects w1. th the specific in details that ade for realism.
Robinson Crusoe and the Journal had "an epic grandeur, as well as heart-
breaking familiarity."
of men and manners," and picturing the "web and texture of society as
Scott, though he used the novel and romance as generic terms and
and influences upon the novelist "Was ·.· ~ignificant in the understanding
romances of low life and of roving life, both related to the picaresque;
The novel had become complex enough to have absorbed all of these
elements, and critics were not satisfied unless they found them. But
Scott did not see What Coleridge might have indicated to him: that
found Defoe's language neither elegant nor harmonious; his everyday charac-
ters not penetrating. He lacked wit and irony, imagery and pathos. He
------- ~-----~
make it. live and real, but he · could not make it relate to other signi-
The question was raised by Lamb and Wilson whether or not the novel
life or draw life itself became the central question in his discussion
Defoe of necessity must draw upon the coarse materiel, for it made his
moral and social themes that much more effective.
By the middle of the nineteenth century the total view of the novel
social and economic history was seen reflected in the novel. Defoe
became a man of his time par excellence, and his novels were seen to
head the tradition of the English novel. He had adapted the concept of
politi cal activities. the morality in his novels was subject to question.
The old criticism of Gildon. that Defoe was a master liar. was renewed;
and a dualistic picture of Defoe's works began to appear in the critic i ~
Cather • Anderson. and Ross. and their critioism 1>snds on this account
to be negative.
As the novel began in the mid nineteenth century to reflect very
author • and the literary and social environment. The novel was defined
as a presentation of a problem in life which unified its elements of plot
note of relativi ty has crept into the concept of the novel. It is seen
to possess an infinitude of possibilities. As Defoe was studied more
and McBurney--his achievement and stature trew. His style was seen to
artful prose. He was seEn by Rudolf Stamm to have broadened the base of
Secord claimed that he fused incidents from various sources and created
a view of reality.
To the elements of fiction borrowed from the drana and the epic,
which makes his work unique. For his relations with existing conditions,
the biography, and the moral treatises of his day. ''hlt did he do to
them? In 'What ways did he orient them so that his works ~ong the many
of presenting life while concealing the structure with which they frame
created a sense of the real; not real as in life experiences, but with
Modern writers do not have to convince their readers that their novels
are not fiction; but their v.orks are appreciated in accord with the success
they achieve in convincing readers that what they describe could be.
32.7
the critics have been less inclined to condemn Defoe's works beoause
coarse material the ~ay Stephen, Trent, Saintsbury, and Masefield did.
~illiams, Dottin and others all accept Moll Flanders and The Fortunate
of necessity or prudence.
reality are not seen to be equivalent. For one, the mente.l lif'e treated
tion to the modern novel, but his ability to find a way to create
t iir.e and which is reflected through the individual novelist. The novel
may--and today almost alwa.ys does--contain the dramatic elements. Variant
paradox of the two realities, spiritual and temporal, which is the grain
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before 17yo. London: Bibliographical Society, 1912.
Hutchins, Henry C. Robinson Crusoe and its Printing 1719-1731: A Biblio-
graphical Study. New York: Columbia University Press, 1925.
Johnson, Samuel. A Dictionary of the English Language. 2 vola. London:
Knapton, 1755·
Landa, Louis, Ronald s. Crane, Louis Bredvold, ,.!! .!!.• English Literature
166o-1880: A Bibliography of Modern Studies. 2 vols. Princeton:
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Notes and Queries, a Medium of Intercommunication for Literary Men,
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London: John Francis, 185b-1935·
Pargellis, Stanley and D. J. N~dley, eds. Biblio8raphy of British History:
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T.obin, James E. Ei£teenth Century English Literature and its Cultural
Background. ew York: Fordham University Press, 1939·
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Ander s en, Hans. "The Paradox of Trade and 1\l'..()rali ty in Defoe • 11 Modern
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Century-Crofts, 1948.
Benjamin, :ss.
P. " Symbolic Elements in Robinson Crusoe, 11 ~~ .XXX (April,
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Biographia B ritannica~ ed. Kippis, Towers, et. a1. 2nd ed., 6 vo1s.
London: John Nichols, 11'93. v. - -
Blair, Hugh. An Abridgment of Lectures on Rhetorick, revised and
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Chalmers, George. The Life of Daniel De Foe, in The Novels and Miscel-
laneous Works of Daniel De .Foe. Oxford: Talboys, 184l, XX.
11
• The Life of Defoe, n in The History of the Union between England
---and . Scotland, by .Daniel Defoe. London, 1786, i-xxiv.
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Abstract of a Dissertation
Sidney J. Black
1955
The Critical Reputation o:f De:foe' s Novels:
Captain Singleton. M~nirs of' a Cavalier. A Journal of' the Plague Year,
Colonel Jack, Moll Flanders, and The Fortunate Mistress have been objects
o:f a renewed critical interest in recent years.
De:foe' as novels with definitions o:f the form end function of' the novel.
The dissertation is divided into .four parts, each o.f which has as
its theme the central tendency dominant in the criticism of the period
covered. The :first part, ~Traditions,• involves an account of literary
The second part, "Fact and Fiction./ deals with three aspects
make fiction appear as fact; but his prefaces to Moll Flanders and
were applied loosely to fiction because the nee.d.', for authenticity was
using the term. In the latter part of the century, as Defoe's critical
reputation grew from sparse notes, critics of novels, Who tested Defoe in
Gulliver's Travels, and Tom Jones. These critics and others, notably
Charles Gildon 1 felt that Defoe's personal morality of necessity and
the artistic merit of his work (even of Robinson Crusoe) and disqualified
Defoe criticism.
11
Part three, Art and Morality," traces the acceptance of the novel
from his works. During the romantic period (1790-1830}, Defoe's earliest
projects, the outspoken pamphlets, the plain and easy manner, the magnitude
of his activities and writings--all had enormous appeal in an age or
republican reform. The romantic view accepted the novel as a form and
said the Journal had epic grandeur. Then, Lamb and Wilson directed
attention to the 11
secondary novels 11 : Captain Singleton, Moll Flanders,
Colonel Jack, and The Fortunate Mistress. The coarse material in them
was much respected in the nineteenth century, and his view of the novels
has since been echoed by numerous critics: Forster, Lee~ Stephen, Minto,·
In the present century, this criticism bas taken the form of impugning
find his moral sentiments the chief flaw, and his view of reality::·limited.
other critics point out that the morality in Defoe's fiction is consistent
with his characters, and that it 1W.S a.n effort to reconcile ~ conflicting
Wright, Secord, Roorda, and Boyce are all ~lling to grant Defoe a measure
of sincerity. Same insist that morality in Defoe's fiction is a minor
aspect, that the key to his importance lies in his method of accumulating
tion of the moral and esthetic proble.m in Defoe and identify it ~~th the
problem of a definition for the modern novel. The period 1900·1950
is characterized by an effort in critical canons to see relativity in
novel forms. The Defoe novel has been viewed as a distinct departure, not
strands of Defoe criticism and research that derived and expanded from
moral and social consciousness, to the end of the century, when it became
of the author, and the literary and social environment. Thus Aitken,
prepared the way for the novelists more in terms of technique than in
The Fortunate Mistress, and A Journal of the Plague Year are seen as
their novels are not fiction. Their works are appreciated in accord with
the success they achieve in convincing readers that what they describe
graduated in 1942, and,in the same year~ entered Harvard College. The
following year I ~~s drafted into the Navy. During the next three
Harvard.
In June 1946, I married Miss Adelaide Aronoff, and while she was
1947 and 1948 I took courses leading to a Master's degree at the University
of Chicago. With the prospect of a teaching career~ I turned from my
college major to English language and literature. At Chicago, I directed
both completed course work early in the year (1949) ~ my wife and I spent
the spring and summer in France and England, before taking positions at
ments. During the last five years I have fulfilled requirements for the
degree at Boston University and have worked three years at the Univer-
sity's Junior College as an Instructor in Human.i ties. My specialization
in English has been directed to the Novel. At the Junior College I have
been engaged in preparing a text for a freshman course in Humanities.
Sidney J. Black