Restoration and Eighteenth Century - Norton Anthology
Restoration and Eighteenth Century - Norton Anthology
Restoration and Eighteenth Century - Norton Anthology
Eighteenth Century
1660-1785
1660: Charles II restored to the English throne
1688—89: The Glorious Revolution: deposition of James II and acces-
sion of William of Orange
1700: Death of John Dryden
1707: Act of Union unites Scotland and England, creating the
nation of "Great Britain"
1714: Rule by House of Hanover begins with accession of George I
1744^-5: Deaths of Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift
1784: Death of Samuel Johnson
T h e Restoration and the eighteenth century brought vast changes to the island
of Great Rritain, which b e c a m e a single nation after 1707, when the Act of
Union joined Scotland to E n g l a n d and Wales. After the prolonged civil and
religious strife of the seventeenth century, Britain attained political stability
and unprecedented commercial vigor. T h e countryside kept its seemingly
timeless agricultural rhythms, even as the nation's great families consolidated
their control over the land and those who worked it. C h a n g e c a m e most dra-
matically to cities, which absorbed m u c h of a national population that nearly
doubled in the period, to ten million. Britons c a m e together in civil society—
the public but nongovernmental institutions and practices that b e c a m e newly
powerful in the period. T h e theaters (reopened at the Restoration), coffee-
houses, concert halls, pleasure gardens, lending libraries, picture exhibitions,
and shopping districts gave life in L o n d o n and elsewhere a feeling of bustle
and friction. Reflecting and stimulating this activity, an expanding assortment
of printed works vied to interest literate women and men, whose numbers
grew to include most of the middle classes and many a m o n g the poor. Civil
society also linked people to an increasingly global economy, as they shopped
for diverse goods from around the world. T h e rich and even the moderately
well off could profit or go broke from investments in joint-stock companies,
which controlled m u c h of Britain's international trade, including its lucrative
traffic in slaves. At home, new systems of canals and turnpikes stimulated
domestic trade, industry, and travel, bringing distant parts of the country
closer together. T h e cohesion of the nation also depended on ideas of social
o r d e r — s o m e old and clear, m a n y subtle and new. An ethos of politeness c a m e
to prevail, a standard of social behavior to which more and more could aspire
yet that served to distinguish the privileged sharply from the rude and vulgar.
This and other ideas, of order and hierarchy, of liberty and rights, of sentiment
2 0 5 7
2 0 5 8 / THE R E S T O R A T I O N AND T H E EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
M u c h of the most powerful writing after 1660 exposed divisions in the nation's
thinking that derived from the tumult of earlier d ec a d e s . As the possibility of
a Christian C o m m o n w e a l t h receded, the great republican J o h n Milton pub-
lished Paradise Lost (final version, 1674), and J o h n Bunyan's immensely pop-
ular masterwork Pilgrim's Progress ( 1 6 7 9 ) expressed the conscience of a
Nonconformist. Conversely, an aristocratic culture, led by Charles II himself,
aggressively celebrated pleasure a n d the right of the elite to behave extrava-
gantly: members of the court scandalized respectable London citizens and
considered their wives and daughters fair game. T h e court's hero, the earl of
Rochester, b e c a m e a celebrity for enacting the creed of a libertine and rake.
T h e delights of the court also took more refined forms. French and Italian
musicians, as well as painters from the Low Countries, migrated to England;
and p l a y h o u s e s — c l o s e d by the Puritans since 1 6 4 2 — s p r a n g b a c k to life. In
1660 Charles authorized two new c o m p a n i e s of actors, the King's Players and
the Duke's; their repertory included witty, bawdy comedies written and acted
by women as well as men. But as stark as the contrasts were during the Res-
toration between libertine and religious intellectuals, royalists and republi-
cans, High C h u r c h m e n and N o n c o n f o r m i s t s , the court and the rest of the
country, a spirit of c o m p r o m i s e was brewing.
Perhaps the m o s t widely shared intellectual impulse of the age was a distrust
of dogmatism. Nearly everybody blamed it for the civil strife through which
the nation had recently passed. Opinions varied widely about which dogma-
tism was most d a n g e r o u s — P u r i t a n enthusiasm, papal infallibility, the divine
right of kings, medieval scholastic or modern Cartesian philosophy—but these
were d e n o u n c e d in remarkably similar terms. As far apart intellectually and
temperamentally as Rochester and Milton were, both portray overconfidence
2062 / THE R E S T O R A T I O N AND THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
feelings. Perhaps Locke best expresses the temper of his times in the Essay
Concerning Human Understanding ( 1 6 9 0 ) :
If by this inquiry into the nature of the understanding, I can discover the
powers thereof; how far they reach; to what things they are in any degree
proportionate; and where they fail us, I s u p p o s e it m a y b e of use, to prevail
with the busy mind of man to be more cautious in meddling with things
exceeding its comprehension; to stop when it is at the utmost extent of
its tether; and to sit down in a quiet ignorance of those things which,
upon examination, are f o u n d to be beyond the reach of our capacities.
. . . Our business here is not to know all things, but those which concern
our conduct.
piety. Nor did the insistence of Methodists on faith over works as the way to
salvation prevent them or their Anglican allies from fighting for social reforms.
T h e c a m p a i g n to abolish slavery and the slave trade was driven largely by a
passion to save souls.
Sentimentalism, evangelicalism, and the pursuits of wealth and luxury in
different ways all placed a new importance on individuals—the gratification
of their tastes and ambitions or their yearning for personal encounters with
each other or a personal G o d . Diary keeping, elaborate letter writing, and the
novel also testified to the growing importance of the private, individual life.
Few histories of kings or nations could rival Richardson's novel Clarissa in
length, popularity, or documentary detail: it was subtitled "the History of a
Young Lady." T h e older hierarchical system had tended to subordinate indi-
viduals to their social rank or station. In the eighteenth century that fixed
system began to break down, and people's sense of themselves began to
change. By the e n d of the century many issues of politics and the law revolve
around rights, not traditions. T h e modern individual had been invented; no
product of the age is more enduring.
humously in 1667; and others, including Anne Finch, Anne Killigrew, and
later, Lady Mary Wortley M o n t a g u , printed p o e m s or circulated them in man-
uscript a m o n g fashionable circles. A more broadly public sort of f e m a l e
authorship was m o r e ambivalently received. T h o u g h Aphra B e h n built a suc-
cessful career in the theater and in print, her sexually frank works were some-
times d e n o u n c e d as unbecoming a woman. M a n y women writers of popular
literature after her in the early eighteenth century a s s u m e d " s c a n d a l o u s " pub-
lic roles. Delarivier Manley published transparent fictionalizations of the
doings of the Whig nobility, including The New Atalantis ( 1 7 0 9 ) , while Eliza
Haywood produced stories about seduction and sex (though her late works,
including The History of Miss Betsy Thoughtless, 1751, courted a rising taste
for morality). M a l e defenders of high culture f o u n d it easy to d e n o u n c e these
women and their works as affronts simultaneously to sexual decency and good
literary taste: Pope's Dunciad ( 1 7 2 8 ) awards Haywood as the prize in a pissing
contest between scurrilous male booksellers.
M a n y women writers after mid-century were determined to be more moral
than their predecessors. Around 1750, intellectual women established clubs
of their own under the leadership of Elizabeth Vesey a n d Elizabeth M o n t a g u ,
cousin to Lady Mary. Proclaiming a high religious and intellectual standard,
these w o m e n c a m e to be called "bluestockings" (after the inelegant worsted
hose of an early member). Eminent men joined the bluestockings for literary
conversation, including S a m u e l J o h n s o n , S a m u e l Richardson, H o r a c e Wal-
pole (novelist, celebrated letter writer, and son of the prime minister), and
David Garrick, preeminent actor of his day. T h e literary accomplishments of
bluestockings ranged widely: in 1758 Elizabeth Carter published her transla-
tion of the G r e e k philosopher Epictetus, while H a n n a h More won f a m e as a
poet, abolitionist, and educational theorist. S o m e of the most considerable
literary achievements of women after mid-century c a m e in the novel, a form
increasingly directed at women readers, often exploring the moral difficulties
of young women approaching marriage. T h e satirical novel The Female
Quixote ( 1 7 5 2 ) by Charlotte Lennox describes one such heroine deluded by
the extravagant r o m a n c e s she reads, while F r a n c e s Rurney's Evelina ( 1 7 7 8 )
unfolds the sexual and other dangers besetting its naive but good-hearted
heroine.
Readers' abilities and inclinations to c o n s u m e literature helped determine
the volume and variety of published works. While historians disagree about
how exactly the literacy rate c h a n g e d in Britain through the early modern
period, there is widespread c o n s e n s u s that by 1 8 0 0 between 60 and 70 percent
of adult men could read, in contrast to 25 percent in 1600. S i n c e historians
use the ability to sign one's n a m e as an indicator of literacy, the evidence is
even sketchier for women, who were less often parties to legal contracts: per-
haps a third of w o m e n could read by the mid-eighteenth century. Reading was
c o m m o n e r a m o n g the relatively well off than a m o n g the very poor, and a m o n g
the latter, more prevalent in urban centers than the countryside. M o s t deci-
sively, cultural commentators throughout the century portrayed literacy as a
good in itself: everyone in a Protestant country s u c h as Rritain, most thought,
would benefit from direct a c c e s s to the Bible and devotional works, and
increasingly employers found literacy a m o n g servants and other laborers use-
ful, especially those working in cities. Moral c o m m e n t a t o r s did their best to
steer inexperienced readers away from the frivolous and idle realm of popular
imaginative literature, though literacy could not but give its new p o s s e s s o r s
freedom to explore their own tastes and inclinations.
2 0 7 0 / THE RESTORATION AND THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
LITERARY PRINCIPLES
was blank verse: iambic pentameter that does not rhyme and is not closed in
couplets. Milton's blank verse in Paradise Lost provided one model, and the
dramatic blank verse of S h a k e s p e a r e and Dryden provided another. This more
expansive form appealed to poets who cared less for wit than for stories and
thoughts with plenty of room to develop. Blank verse was favored as the best
medium for descriptive and meditative poems, from T h o m s o n ' s Seasons
(1726—30) to Cowper's The Task ( 1 7 8 5 ) , and the tradition continued in
Wordsworth's "Tintern Abbey" and Prelude.
Yet not all poets c h o s e to c o m p e t e with Pope's wit or Milton's heroic striving.
Ordinary people also wrote and read verse, and many of them neither knew
nor regarded the classics. Only a minority of men, and very few women, had
the c h a n c e to study Latin and Greek, but that did not keep a good many from
playing with verse as a pastime or writing about their own lives. H e n c e the
eighteenth century is the first age to reflect the modern tension between "high"
and "low" art. While the heroic couplet was being perfected, doggerel also
thrived, and Milton's blank verse was sometimes reduced to describing a drunk
or an oyster. B u r l e s q u e and broad h u m o r characterize the c o m m o n run of
eighteenth-century verse. As the a u d i e n c e for poetry b e c a m e more diversified,
so did the subject matter. No readership was too small to address; Isaac Watts,
and later Anna Laetitia Barbauld and William Blake, wrote songs for children.
T h e rise of unconventional forms and topics of verse subverted an older poetic
ideal: the Olympian art that only a handful of the elect could possibly master.
T h e eighteenth century brought poetry down to earth. In the future, art that
claimed to be high would have to find ways to distinguish itself from the low.
Early in the eighteenth century a new and brilliant group of writers emerged:
Swift, with A Tale of a Tub (1704—10); Addison, with The Campaign ( 1 7 0 5 ) ,
a poetic celebration of the battle of Blenheim; Prior, with Poems on Several
Occasions ( 1 7 0 7 ) ; Steele, with the Tatler ( 1 7 0 9 ) ; and the youthful Pope, in
the s a m e year, with his Pastorals. T h e s e writers consolidate and popularize the
social graces of the previous age. Determined to preserve good sense and civ-
ilized values, they turn their wit against fanaticism and innovation. H e n c e this
is a great age of satire. Deeply conservative but also playful, their finest works
often cast a strange light on modern times by viewing them through the screen
of classical myths and classical forms. T h u s Pope exposes the frivolity of fash-
ionable London, in The Rape of the Lock, through the incongruity of verse
that casts the idle rich as epic heroes. Similarly, Swift uses epic similes to
mock the moderns in Tine Battle of the Books, and J o h n Gay's Trivia, or the
Art of Walking the Streets of London ( 1 7 1 6 ) u s e s m o c k georgics to order his
tour of the city. S u c h incongruities are not entirely negative. They also provide
a fresh perspective on things that had once s e e m e d too low for poetry to
notice—for instance, in The Rape of the Lock, a girl putting on her m a k e u p .
In this way a parallel with classical literature can show not only how far the
2 0 7 6 / THE RESTORATION AND THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
modern world has fallen but also how fascinating and magical it is when seen
with "quick, poetic eyes."
T h e Augustans' effort to popularize and enforce high literary and social
values was set against the new m a s s and multiplicity of writings that responded
more spontaneously to the expanding commercial possibilities of print. T h e
array of popular prose genres—news, thinly disguised political allegories, biog-
raphies of notorious criminals, travelogues, gossip, romantic tales—often
blended facts and patently fictional elements, cemente d by a rich lode of exag-
geration, misrepresentations, and outright lies. Out of this matrix the modern
novel would c o m e to be born. T h e great master of such works was Daniel
Defoe, producing first-person a c c o u n t s s u c h as Robinson Crusoe ( 1 7 1 9 ) the
f a m o u s castaway, or Moll Flanders ( 1 7 2 2 ) , mistress of lowlife crime. C l a i m s
that such works present (as the "editor" of Crusoe says) "a j u s t history of fact,"
believed or not, sharpened the public's avidity for them. D e f o e shows his read-
ers a world plausibly like the one they know, where ordinary people negotiate
familiar, entangled problems of financial, emotional, and spiritual existence.
J a n e Barker, Mary Davys, and many others brought women's work and daily
lives as well as love affairs to fiction. S u c h stories were not only a m u s i n g but
also served as models of conduct; they influenced the stories that real people
told about themselves.
T h e theater also began to c h a n g e its themes and effects to appeal to a wider
audience. T h e clergyman Jeremy Collier had vehemently taken Dryden, Wych-
erley, and Congreve to task in A Short View of the Immorality and Profaneness
of the English Stage ( 1 6 9 8 ) , which spoke for the moral outrage of the pious
middle classes. T h e wits retreated. T h e comedy of m a n n e r s was replaced by a
new kind, later called "sentimental" not only b e c a u s e goodness triumphs over
vice but also b e c a u s e it deals in high moral sentiments rather than witty dia-
logue and b e c a u s e the e m b a r r a s s m e n t s of its heroines and heroes move the
audience not to laughter but to tears. Virtue r e f u s e s to bow to aristocratic
codes. In one crucial scene of Steele's influential play The Conscious Lovers
( 1 7 2 2 ) the hero would rather accept dishonor than fight a duel with a friend.
Piety and middle-class values typify tragedies such as George Lillo's London
Merchant ( 1 7 3 1 ) . O n e luxury invented in eighteenth-century E u r o p e was the
delicious pleasure of weeping, and c o m e d i e s as well as tragedies brought that
pleasure to playgoers through many d e c a d e s . S o m e plays resisted the tide.
Gay's cynical Beggar's Opera ( 1 7 2 8 ) was a tremendous s u c c e s s , and later in
the century the c o m e d i e s of Goldsmith and Sheridan proved that sentiment
is not necessarily an enemy to wit and laughter. (For the complete text of one
of Sheridan's best plays, The School for Scandal, go to Norton Literature
Online.) Yet larger and larger a u d i e n c e s responded more to spectacles and
special effects than to sophisticated writing. Although the stage prospered dur-
ing the eighteenth century, and the star system p r o d u c e d idolized actors and
actresses (such as David Garrick and S a r a h Siddons), the authors of drama
tended to f a d e to the background.
Despite the sociable impulses of m u c h the period's writing, readers also
craved less crowded, more meditative works. S i n c e the seventeenth century,
no p o e m s had been more popular than those about the pleasures of retirement,
which invited the reader to dream about a s a f e retreat in the country or to
meditate, like Finch, on scenery and the soul. But after 1726, when T h o m s o n
published Winter, the first of his cycle on the s e a s o n s , the poetry of natural
description c a m e into its own. A taste for gentle, picturesque beauty found
expression not only in verse but in the elaborate, cultivated art of landscape
INTRODUCTION / 2077
T H E E M E R G E N C E OF NEW LITERARY
THEMES AND MODES, 1740-85
ness of artistic p u r p o s e than the novel in the hands of two of its early masters,
S a m u e l Richardson and Henry Fielding. Like many writers of fiction earlier
in the century, Richardson initially did not set out to entertain the public with
an avowedly invented tale: he conceived Pamela, or Virtue Rewarded ( 1 7 4 0 )
while compiling a little book of model letters. T h e letters grew into a story
about a captivating young servant who resists her master's base designs on her
virtue until he gives up and marries her. T h e combination of a high moral tone
with sexual titillation and a minute analysis of the heroine's emotions and state
of mind proved irresistible to readers, in Britain and in E u r o p e at large. Rich-
ardson topped Pamela's s u c c e s s with Clarissa (1747—48), another epistolary
novel, which explored the conflict between the libertine Lovelace, an attractive
and diabolical aristocrat, and the angelic Clarissa, a middle-class paragon who
struggles to stay pure. T h e sympathy that readers felt for Clarissa was mag-
nified by a host of sentimental novels, including F r a n c e s Sheridan's Memoirs
of Miss Sidney Bididph ( 1 7 6 1 ) , R o u s s e a u ' s Julie, or The New Heloise ( 1 7 6 1 ) ,
and Henry Mackenzie's The Man of Feeling ( 1 7 7 1 ) .
Henry Fielding m a d e his entrance into the novel by turning Pamela farci-
cally upside-down, as the hero of Joseph Andrews ( 1 7 4 2 ) , Pamela's brother,
defends his chastity from the lewd advances of Lady Booby. Fielding's true
model, however, is Cervantes's great Don Quixote (1605—15), from which he
took an ironic, antiromantic style; a plot of wandering around the countryside;
and an idealistic central character (Parson A d a m s ) who keeps mistaking
appearances for reality. T h e ambition of writing what Fielding called "a comic
epic-poem in prose" went still further in The History of Tom Jones, A Foundling
( 1 7 4 9 ) . Crowded with incidents and c o m m e n t s on the state of England, the
novel contrasts a good-natured, generous, wayward hero (who needs to learn
prudence) with cold-hearted people who use moral codes and the law for their
own selfish interests. This e m p h a s i s on instinctive virtue and vice, instead of
Richardson's devotion to good principles, put off respectable readers like John-
son and Burney. But Coleridge thought that Tom Jones (along with Oedipus
Rex and J o n s o n ' s Alchemist) was one of "the three most perfect plots ever
planned."
An age of great prose can burden its poets. To Gray, Collins, Mark Akenside,
and the brothers J o s e p h and T h o m a s Warton, it s e e m e d that the spirit of
poetry might be dying, driven out by the spirit of prose, by uninspiring truth,
by the end of superstitions that had once peopled the land with poetic fairies
and demons. In an age barren of magic, they ask, where has poetry gone? T h at
question haunts many poems, s u f f u s i n g them with melancholy. Poets who
m u s e in silence are never far from thoughts of death, and a morbid fascination
with suicide and the grave preoccupies many at midcentury. S u c h an attitude
has little in c o m m o n with that of poets like Dryden and Pope, social beings
who live in a crowded world and seldom confess their private feelings in public.
Pope's Essay on Man had taken a sunny view of providence; Edward Young's
The Complaint: or Night Thoughts on Life, Death, and Immortality (1742—46),
an immensely long poem in blank verse, is darkened by Christian fear of the
life to come.
Often the melancholy poet withdraws into himself and yearns to be living
in s o m e other time and place. In his " O d e to F a n c y " ( 1 7 4 6 ) , J o s e p h Warton
associated "fancy" with visions in the wilderness and s p o n t a n e o u s passions;
the true poet was no longer defined as a c r a f t s m a n or maker but as a seer or
nature's priest. "The public has seen all that art can do," William S h e n s t o n e
INTRODUCTION / 2079
• A Day in Eighteenth-Century L o n d o n
• Slavery and the Slave T r a d e in Britain
• T h e Plurality of Worlds
• Travel, Trade, and the Expansion of E m p i r e
THE RESTORATION AND
THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
TEXTS CONTEXTS
1660 Samuel Pepys begins his diary 1660 Charles II restored to the throne.
Reopening of the theaters
1662 Samuel Butler, Hudibras, part 1 1662 Act of Uniformity requires all clergy
to obey the Church of England. Chartering
of the Royal Society
1668 John Dryden, Essay of Dramatic 1668 Dryden becomes poet laureate
Poesy
1673 Test Act requires all officeholders to
swear allegiance to Anglicanism
1678 John Bunyan, Pilgrim's Progress, 1678 The "Popish Plot" inflames anti-
part 1 Catholic feeling
2081
T E X T S C O N T E X T S
1751 T h o m a s Gray, "Elegy Written in a 1751 Robert Clive seizes Arcot, the
Country Churchyard" prelude to English control of India
1760 Laurence Sterne, Tristram Shandy 1760 George III succeeds to the throne
(1760--67)
1783 George Crabbe, The Village 1783 William Pitt becomes prime minister
2082