The arrangement seems to have lasted for some ten years,
1716—26, and, by his discovery of the letters attesting it, Lee
succeeded, not only in showing that the older biographers were in
error in supposing that Defoe's activity as a political journalist
had ceased with queen Anne's death, but, also, in disinterring from
the newspapers of the time, particularly from the weeklies pub-
lished by Mist and Applebee, a mass of articles surely from Defoe's
## p.
1716—26, and, by his discovery of the letters attesting it, Lee
succeeded, not only in showing that the older biographers were in
error in supposing that Defoe's activity as a political journalist
had ceased with queen Anne's death, but, also, in disinterring from
the newspapers of the time, particularly from the weeklies pub-
lished by Mist and Applebee, a mass of articles surely from Defoe's
## p.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v09
He returned in February 1681, and
kept the press busy, not only with apologetic pamphlets, but with
bitter assaults upon the dissenters and with one of the most
important of his works, his political newspaper The Observator:
In Question and Answer.
This journal, of two double-columned folio pages, began its
career on 13 April 1681 and ran to 9 March 1686/7. After no. 5,
readers could not be sure how many issues they would receive
a week; but, as a rule, the tireless editor supplied them with three
or four numbers devoted to abuse of dissenters, whigs, trimmers
and Titus Oates. Throughout, he employed a device, which he had
not originated, but which his example made popular for a genera-
tion—the trick of casting each number in the form of a dialogue.
It is needless to attempt to chronicle the changes in the form of title
and in the persons of his interlocutors, since, in order to avoid
the mistakes already made by bibliographers, one would need to
examine every page of the periodical-an appalling task. It is
enough to say that L'Estrange had a large share in the final
discrediting of Oates; that, until it suited the king's purpose to
issue the declaration of indulgence, clerical and royal favour
crowned his ecclesiastical and political zeal; and that his many
critics had abundant excuse for the diatribes they continued to
issue against him. Defoe, who was probably in London during
the larger part of The Observator's life, may thus early have
determined that, if ever he should edit a paper of his own, he
would avoid the awkward dialogue form and an extravagance
that defeated its own ends.
1-2
## p. 4 (#28) ###############################################
4 Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
The date of his knighting by James II, April 1685, may be held
to mark the zenith of L'Estrange's career. In 1686, he was sent
on a mission to Scotland; in 1687, in his answer to Halifax's
famous Letter to a Dissenter, he supported the king's claim to the
dispensing power; in 1688, he received from James a reward in
money that may have made him feel less keenly the suppression of
The Observator. At the revolution, he was dismissed from his post
of licenser and imprisoned. For several years after his release, he
led a troubled life. He was more than once rearrested; his health
declined ; his wife died ruined by gambling; he was disappointed in
his children; and, long before his death, on 11 December 1704, he
had lost all his influence and become a bookseller's hack. Yet it is
to this period that we owe his most important literary work, The
Fables of Æsop and other Eminent Mythologists : with Moral
Reflections, which appeared as a folio in 1692, and was followed, in
1699, by a second part, Fables and Storyes Moralized. His long
series of translations, many of them from the French and the
Spanish”, is noted elsewhere. Defoe did not follow far in his
steps as a translator; but it is not improbable that, when, in his old
age, he found himself cut off from journalism, he remembered the
example set him by L'Estrange and displayed an even more remark-
able general literary fecundity. It is almost needless to add that,
whether as journalist, pamphleteer, or miscellaneous writer, Defoe, in
comparison with his predecessor, profited from the general advance
made by the late seventeenth century toward a less cumbrous prose.
There was another journalist contemporary with L'Estrange to
whom Defoe was indebted. This was Henry Care, whose opposition
to the church party made him a special object of The Observator's
vituperations. He edited, in 1678—9, a quarto Pacquet of Advice
from Rome, which soon added to its title the word Weekly and
continued its existence, through five volumes, to 13 July 1683.
Later, he supported James and the Roman Catholics. If we may
trust Defoe, there is no doubt that Care's early death was brought
on by bad habits. He is chiefly important to us because it was from
him that Defoe borrowed the general idea of the department in
The Review known as the proceedings of the Scandalous Club. '
Space is wanting for a full discussion of the evolution of
journalism between the fall of The Observator and the founding
of The Review. A few meagre newspapers sprang up to rival The
Gazette so soon as James had fled the kingdom, and, between 1690
and 1696, John Dunton, the eccentric bookseller, later famous for
1 Cf. as to these, post, chap. x.
## p. 5 (#29) ###############################################
Rival Newspapers. The Review 5
his Life and Errors and for his absurd political pamphlets,
published his Athenian Gazette, afterwards The Athenian Mercury,
as an organ for those curious in philosophical and recondite
matters. From Dunton, Defoe borrowed some of the topics dis-
cussed in the miscellaneous portion of his paper. In 1695, the
Licensing Act, which had for some years been administered with
moderation, was allowed to lapse, and several new journals were at
once begun, some of which were destined to have important careers.
Chief among these were The Flying Post, a triweekly whig organ,
edited by the Scot George Ridpath, for many years a bitter
opponent of Defoe, and the tory Post Boy, which was published
by Abel Roper, a special object of whig detestation, and, for some
time, edited by Abel Boyer, who, later, changed his politics. These
and The Post Man, as well as the printed newsletter of Ichabod
Dawks and the written newsletter of John Dyer, notorious for his
partisan mendacity, were primarily disseminators of news. They
were supplemented, in March 1702, by the first of the dailies, The
Daily Courant, which, like the weekly Corantos of eighty years
before, consisted of translations from foreign papers. It soon fell
into the hands of Samuel Buckley, a versatile man with whom Defoe
was often at odds. On 1 April 1702, the most important strictly
political organ of the whigs was begun by John Tutchin, a small
poet and pamphleteer, who had suffered under Jeffreys and was
still to endure persecution for his advanced liberal opinions. He
took L'Estrange's old title, The Observator, and continued the
dialogue form. Two years later, Tutchin's form and his extreme
partisanship were imitated by the famous non-juror and opponent
of the deists, Charles Leslie, whose short-lived Rehearsal became
the chief organ of the high churchmen. Meanwhile, a few months
before Leslie's paper appeared, Defoe, not without Harley's
,
connivance, had begun his Review as an organ of moderation,
ecclesiastical and political, and of broad commercial interests.
Although his satirical discussions of current topics may have given
useful hints to Steele and Addison, it seems clear that Defoe's
chief contribution to journalism at this period is to be found in
his abandonment of the dialogue form and of the partisan tone of
his predecessors and immediate contemporaries. He adopted a
straightforward style, cultivated moderation and aimed at accuracy,
because, more completely than any other contemporary journalist,
be made it his purpose to secure acquiescence rather than to
strengthen prejudice. But, in what follows, we must confine
ourselves to his own varied career.
## p. 6 (#30) ###############################################
6 Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
Defoe is usually said to have been born in London in 1661, the
date being derived from a reference to his age made in the preface
to one of his tracts. That this is an error seems clear from his
marriage licence allegation. He must have been born in London,
the son of James Foe, a butcher of the parish of St Giles, Cripple-
gate, at the end of 1659 or early in 1660. His father came of
Northamptonshire stock; but the name of his mother's family has
not been ascertained. Beyond the fact that his parents were
presbyterians, who early set him apart for the ministry, we know
little concerning his childhood. When he was about fourteen, he
entered a dissenters’ school kept at Stoke Newington by Charles
Morton, a somewhat distinguished scholar and minister, and
he probably remained there three or four years, by which
time he had given up the idea of becoming a preacher. He has
left some account of his education, which appears to have been
practical and well adapted to the needs of his journalistic career,
since emphasis was laid on history, geography and politics, the
modern languages and proficiency in the vernacular.
Scarcely anything is known of his life between 1677 or 1678,
when he may be presumed to have left school, and January 1683/4,
the date of his marriage, when he was a merchant in Cornhill,
probably a wholesale dealer in hosiery. There is evidence from
his writings that, at one time, he held some commercial position in
Spain, and it is clear that his biographers have not collected all
the passages that tend to show his acquaintance with Italy,
southern Germany and France. As it is difficult to place any long
continued absence from England after his marriage, it seems
plausible to hold that he may have been sent to Spain as an
apprentice in the commission business and have taken the oppor-
tunity, when returning, to see more of Europe. His 'wander-years,'
if he had them, must be placed between 1678, the year of the
popish plot and the murder of Godfrey, and 1683, the year of the
repulse of the Turks from Vienna, since it is practically certain
that he was in London at each of these periods.
Not much more is known of his early life as a married man.
His wife, Mary Tuffley, who survived him, was of a well-to-do family,
bore him seven children and, from all we can gather, proved
a good helpmeet. That he soon left her to take some share in
Monmouth's rebellion seems highly probable; but that, between
1684 and 1688, he became an embryo sociologist and was engaged
in the systematic travelling about England that has been attributed
to him is very doubtful. How he escaped Jeffreys, whether he
a
## p. 7 (#31) ###############################################
Defoe in Business. Essay upon Projects 7
ever was a presbyterian minister at Tooting, what precisely he wrote
and published against James II—these and other similar matters
are still mysteries. It seems plain that he joined William's army
late in 1688; that he took great interest in the establishment of
the new government; that his standing in the city among his
fellow dissenters was outwardly high; and that he cherished literary
aspirations. His first definitely ascertained publication is a satire
in verse of 1691. In the following year he became a bankrupt,
with a deficit of about £17,000.
It is usual to attribute his failure to unbusinesslike habits, and
to pay little attention to the charges of fraud brought against him
later. As a matter of fact, this period of his life is so dark that
positive conclusions of any kind are rash. It would seem, however,
that he suffered unavoidable losses through the war with France,
that he was involved in too many kinds of enterprises, some of
them speculative, and that his partial success in paying off his
creditors warrants leniency toward him. Some friends appear to
have stood by him to the extent of offering him a situation in
Spain, which he could afford to reject because of better oppor-
tunities at home. Within four years, he was doing well as secretary
and manager of a tile factory near Tilbury. He also served as
accountant to the commissioners of the glass duty, and there is
no good reason to dispute his claim that he remained in fairly
prosperous circumstances until he was ruined, in 1703, by his
imprisonment for writing The Shortest Way with the Dissenters.
Shortly after his bankruptcy, Defoe, full of the speculative
spirit of the age, was engaged in composing his Essay upon
Projects, which did not appear until 1697. Of all his early
productions, this is much the most interesting to the general
reader, who is left wondering at the man's versatility and modernity,
particularly in matters relating to education, insurance and the
treatment of seamen. At the end of 1697, he plunged, on the
king's side, into the controversy with regard to the maintenance of
a standing army, and he continued to publish on the subject, though
some of his tracts have escaped his biographers. In 1698, he began
writing against occasional conformity in a manner which lost him
much favour with his fellow dissenters, and he also made an effective
contribution to the propaganda of the societies for the reformation
of manners. His duties as head of a tile factory and as govern-
ment accountant clearly did not occupy all his time, save for the
single year 1699, to which not one work by him is plausibly assigned.
It was not until the end of 1700, however, that out of the small
## p. 8 (#32) ###############################################
8
Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
poet and occasional pamphleteer was evolved a prolific professional
writer. The occasion was the will of Charles II of Spain and the
upsetting of William's plans for the partition of the Spanish
monarchy. Defoe supported his sovereign in several tracts, and
he pleaded for the return of a parliament uncontrolled by
moneyed interests. But it was a sprawling satire in favour of
the king, not homely tracts addressed to plain freeholders,
that gave the middle-aged journalist his first taste of literary
popularity.
This satire was The True-Born Englishman, which appeared
in January 1701, and, both in authorised and in pirated editions, had
an enormous sale. It was a reply to a poem by Tutchin, in which
that journalist had voiced the popular prejudice against the
foreign-born king. Defoe's vigorous verses turned the tables on
his own hybrid people, and were good journalism, whatever one
may think of them as poetry. They seem to have been the
occasion of his introduction to the king, an honour which, much to
the disgust of less favoured editors and pamphleteers, was not left
unchronicled in his writings. We know little of his relations with
William ; but, at the time of his arrest for The Shortest Way, it
was suspected that these had been close, and he himself dropped
hints which cause one to believe that occasionally he served
the king as an
an election agent much as, later, he served
Harley.
“The Author of The True-Born Englishman,' as Defoe for
many years delighted to style himself, did not rest on his laurels
as a writer during the short period before the death of his hero
William. He published numerous tracts in which he dealt with
occasional conformity, foreign affairs, particularly the inevitable
war with France, the misdeeds of stock-jobbers and the rights of
the people as opposed to the high-banded independence claimed
by tories in parliament. The most weighty of these pamphlets
is The Original Power of the Collective Body of the People of
England, which is worthy of Somers; but we get a better idea of
the character of Defoe himself through his attitude in the affair of
the Kentish petitioners. There is something of the demagogue in
the famous Legion's Address, which he wrote on this occasion;
but, in his bold delivery of the document to Harley, the speaker,
there is something of the uncalculating love of liberty that marks
the true tribune of the people. Although he was probably still
under a cloud on account of his bankruptcy, and although
fellow dissenters detected treason in his utterances on occasional
## p. 9 (#33) ###############################################
The Shortest Way. Hymn to the Pillory 9
conformity, he was, doubtless, at the zenith of his reputation among
his contemporaries when he sat by the side of the Kentish worthies
at the banquet given them on their release from prison.
The two most important pamphlets of 1702 were both concerned
with ecclesiastical affairs—the acute New Test of the Church of
England's Loyalty and the notorious Shortest Way with the
Dissenters. The latter may have been designed both to serve the
whigs and to reassure those dissenters who had not liked or
understood Defoe's attitude on the now burning question of
occasional conformity. Whatever his purpose, he overshot the
mark by assuming the character of an intolerant 'high-flyer' and
by arguing for the suppression of dissent at all costs, no matter
how cruel the means. It was no time for irony, especially for irony
that demanded more power to read between the lines than either
dissenters or extreme churchmen possessed. The former were
alarmed; the latter were enraged when they discovered that they
had been hoaxed into accepting as the pure gospel of conformity
a tract written by a nonconformist for the purpose of reducing
ecclesiastical intolerance to an absurdity. In January 1703, the
tory Nottingham issued a warrant for Defoe's arrest, but he was
not apprehended until the latter part of May. Where he hid
himself is uncertain; but there is evidence in his own hand that
the prospect of a prison had completely unnerved him. After he
was lodged in Newgate, he managed to resist all attempts to worm
out of him whatever secrets of state he might possess. At
his trial in July, he was misled into pleading guilty, and he
received a sentence out of all proportion to his offence. The fine
and the imprisonment during the queen's pleasure were less terrible
in his eyes than the three public exposures in the pillory, and
he used all the means in his power, including a promise through
William Penn to make important revelations, in order to escape
the more degrading part of his punishment. His efforts proving
of no avail, he plucked up his courage and wrote against his
persecutors his spirited Hymn to the Pillory. When he was
pilloried at the end of July, the temper of the fickle populace had
changed, and, instead of being hooted and pelted, he was hailed as
a hero. Neither he nor the mob knew that the experience marked
a turning point in the career of one of the most variously, though
not nobly, gifted men England has ever produced. Before his
persecution, Defoe may have been somewhat shifty as a man of
affairs and, perhaps, as a writer; but, on the whole, he had been
courageous in facing disaster, and he had been more or less
## p. 10 (#34) ##############################################
10 Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
consistent and high-minded in his attitude toward public matters.
After he was pilloried, the sense that he had been unjustly punished
rankled in him, and he soon became dependent upon the bounty of
Harley; to insure the continuance of that bounty, he sacrificed
some, at least, of his convictions; in revenge, he began to
betray his employer; and, in the end, he stood before the public
as the most discredited and mercenary journalist of the day.
Such was not the view of his early biographers, who found in him,
as we have seen, only a maligned patriot and man of genius;
but it seems impossible for the close student of Defoe's political
writings, despite the sympathy he must feel for a kindly, brilliant
and hardly used man, not to agree, in the main, with the contem-
poraries who denounced him.
It was held until recently that Defoe remained in Newgate
until August 1704, although more careful examination of The
Review would have led to a different conclusion Research in
other newspapers and the publication of his correspondence with
Harley have now made it clear that he was released, through
Harley's good offices, about 1 November 1703. This disposes of
the story that The Review was founded while its editor was in
prison, and it also absolves us from the necessity of supposing
that, when, in his volume on the great storm, Defoe described
devastations of which he had been an eye-witness, he was drawing
on his imagination. The fact that, in this matter and in not a few
others, research has tended to strengthen belief in his ability to
tell the truth about himself ought to make it less possible for
critics to treat him as totally untrustworthy. Such criticism has never
been based upon adequate psychological study of the man, and it
is not warranted by a minute examination even of his most
discreditable writings. Instead of becoming a shameless and
wholesale liar, Defoe, in all probability, developed into a consummate
casuist who was often his own chief dupe. His experience of
the pillory was ever before his eyes, and it seemed to him necessary
and even meritorious to avoid the pitfalls that lay in those days
before all journalists. For more than twenty years, he practised
every sort of subterfuge to preserve his anonymity, and he soon
grew sufficiently callous to write, presumably for pay, on all sides
of any given subject. Within the arena of journalism, he was a
treacherous mercenary who fought all comers with any weapon
and stratagem he could command Outside that arena, he was
a pious, philanthropical, fairly accurate and trustworthy man and
citizen.
## p. 11 (#35) ##############################################
The Review
II
Space fails us for a discussion of the pampblets and poems
of this period, the stream of which not even imprisonment or his
employment as a busy agent for Harley could check. Mention should
be made, however, of the two volumes of his collected writings-
the only collection made by himself—which appeared in 1703
and 1705, as well as of controversial pamphlets against the
eccentric John Asgill, the publicist Dr Davenant, the tory poli-
tician and promoter Sir Humphrey Mackworth and the fanatic
Charles Leslie. Only one tract of them all possesses permanent
interest, the famous Giving Alms no Charity, of November 1704,
and even that is probably less of an economic elassic than some
have thought it. Defoe's real achievement of the time was his
establishment of The Review, the importance of which as an
organ of political moderation has been already pointed out. It
was equally important as a model of straightforward journalistic
prose, and, in its department of miscellanea, its editorial corre-
spondence when Defoe was away from London and other features,
it probably exerted an influence out of proportion to its circulation,
which was never large. In its small four-paged numbers, in the
main triweekly, the student of contemporary France, of English
ecclesiastical history, of the union with Scotland, of the war of the
Spanish succession, of the movements of the Jacobites, of the trial of
Sacheverell, of British commerce and of manners and customs in
general finds abundant materials to his hand. Why its eight large
volumes and incomplete ninth supplementary volume (17 February
1704 to 11 June 1713) have never been reprinted from the unique
set in the British Museum it is hard to say. Even as the record of
one man's enterprise and pertinacity (Defoe wrote it practically
upaided and kept it going with extraordinary regularity during
the years he was serving as a government agent in Scotland), it
would be worthy of a place on our shelves-much more so when that
man is the author of Robinson Crusoe. Such republication would
not be equivalent to the erection of a monument of shame, since,
on the whole, the Defoe of The Review is liberal and consistent in
his politics and far-sighted in commercial and economic matters.
In a sense, too, a reissue of these rare volumes would be a
monument to the prescience of that enigmatical, underestimated
politician Robert Harley, who clearly perceived the political
importance of the press.
Not even the briefest description can be given of Defoe's horse-
back rides through England in 1704 and 1705 as an election agent for
Harley. Highhanded tories and creditors set on by his enemies tried
## p. 12 (#36) ##############################################
12 I
Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
to stop him; but he eluded them and continued both to send Harley
reports which prove him to have been a journalist of the first order,
and to make observations which stood him in good stead in his later
sociological and economic writings. He also found time to compose
and publish his dull political allegory The Consolidator and to
labour on his still more ponderous satire in verse Jure Divino,
which appeared the next year, 1706, in folio, adorned with a full-
wigged portrait of the self-complacent author. These, as well as his
impudent satire The Dyet of Poland, his excellent pamphlets
against religious intolerance in south Carolina, his indiscreet
support, in a tract called The Experiment, of the clerical impostor
Abraham Gill, his spirited answers to Lord Haversham, who had
taunted him with poverty and writing for hire, are all, more or less,
forgotten ; but, so long as the literature of the supernatural
finds favour, there will be interested readers of the one classic
production of this stage of his career, A True Relation of the
Apparition of one Mrs Veal, the next Day after her Death, to
one Mrs Bargrave at Canterbury, the 8th of September, 1705.
Even this convincingly realistic narrative is, thanks to the
researches of George A. Aitken, no longer to be credited, as Sir
Walter Scott and many others have thought, to Defoe the master
of verisimilitude in fiction. It is now seen to be the circumstantial
account of a ghost story current at the time, a product of Defoe's
genius for reporting, not a clever hoax designed to sell Drelincourt's
pious manual.
From the autumn of 1706 to the spring of 1710, Scotland is
the main scene of Defoe's activity, and Scottish affairs are the
main subject of his pen. His movements and whereabouts are not
always certain; but it is evident that none of his biographers has
realised how large a portion of his time he spent out of London
as the agent, first of Harley, then of Godolphin. He was in
Scotland from October 1706 to December 1707, forwarding the
union in every way in his power and, after that was secured,
labouring to allay popular discontent. He kept the press busy
with pamphlets, the full tale of which will doubtless never be
known. He wrote Harley long and interesting letters; he attended
parliamentary committees; he furnished statistics on matters of
trade; he wormed himself into the confidence of men in all positions
-in short, to use his own phrase, he played the part of a perfect
spy, developing his powers of duplicity at every turn. Few agents
have ever more thoroughly earned their hire, or have served more
niggardly masters than was Harley. When, at last, Defoe, almost
## p. 13 (#37) ##############################################
13
a
Defoe and Harley
reduced to penury, was allowed to return without the place in the
customs for which he hoped, he found his patron tottering to his fall.
He was graciously permitted to transfer his services to Godolphin
and, early in 1708, was sent back to Scotland. Of his labours for
his new chief, we have no full account; but there was probably no
decline in his faithfulness and efficiency. There was some decline
in his literary activity, for the main work of 1708—9 is his huge,
dull, but apparently accurate History of the Union, a volume
which shows that Defoe had not a little of the methodical patience
characteristic of latter-day historians, but, as yet, little of the skill
in book-making which he was afterwards conspicuously to display.
In the early months of 1710, Defoe, although he saw clearly
the folly of impeaching Sacheverell, made that noisy clergyman
the subject of several tracts. Later, he transferred his services to
Harley, not, however, without allowing himself free criticism of
the extreme tories. In the autumn, he was sent to Scotland to
watch the Jacobites, and it is a letter written to Harley at this time
which first causes us to suspect that he was betraying his employer.
Some years ago, William Lee attributed to Defoe, on strong
internal evidence, a satirical pamphlet of 1711, entitled Atalantis
Major; but no one would suspect, from the way in which Defoe refers
to his efforts to suppress this tract, that he was its unblushing author.
There is no absolute proof that he was; but, when, a little later, we
find him charged with writing against Harley in The Protestant
Post Boy, and, later still, encounter attacks upon that minister in
pamphlets full of the characteristics of Defoe's style, our faith in
the journalist's fidelity is greatly shaken.
Whether the inscrutable Harley, now earl of Oxford, had
entire faith in his agent does not appear.
Certain it is,
however, that, for the next two or three years, Defoe was con-
tinually making surreptitious visits to the prime minister and
sending him letters, which not infrequently contained requests
for money. That he was as well paid by Oxford as enemies
asserted may be doubted; but there is no doubt that his advice
was sought on many matters and that he was employed by out-
siders to secure the minister's countenance for various schemes.
Meanwhile, the stream of pamphlets flowed unabated, and the
tone of The Review was adroitly changed in favour of peace with
France. As a result, Defoe was despised and distrusted by whigs
and tories alike. The modern student, making allowance for the
factiousness of the times, for the undeveloped state of party
government, for Defoe's pecuniary embarrassments and his social
## p. 14 (#38) ##############################################
14 Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
ostracism after the pillorying, finds it possible to extenuate his
conduct and is impelled to admire his dexterity and his resource-
fulness. There is ground, too, for maintaining that, in some
important respects, he was consistent, and a better counsellor
than Oxford deserved. He opposed the passage of the obnoxious
schism bill, and he seems never to have wavered in his support of
the Hanoverian succession.
As luck would have it, his second imprisonment was the direct
result of his activity against the Jacobites. During a visit to
Scotland in the autumn of 1712, he was much alarmed at the
progress Jacobitism seemed to be making, and he wrote several
tracts on the subject, in some of which he made an unfortunate
use of his favourite weapon, irony. Such a title as Reasons against
the Succession of the House of Hanover should have deceived no
one; but this tract and others furnished certain whigs with an
occasion for bringing an action against him for treason. Their
object was twofold—to crush Defoe and to besmirch Oxford, if the
latter took any overt measures to protect his unacknowledged
agent. The scheme was clever, but Defoe's measures to counteract
it-too intricate to be described here were cleverer. He would
doubtless have come off scotfree, had he not made the tactical
mistake of reflecting in The Review upon chief justice Parker.
This contempt of court led to his being confined, for a few days, in
the queen’s bench prison in May 1713. Immediately upon his
release, he began to edit a new trade journal Mercator, in the
interest of Bolingbroke's treaty of commerce, suffering The
Review to expire quietly. There is some, though, perhaps, not
sufficient, evidence to show that, at this time, bis services were
controlled by Bolingbroke rather than by Oxford; but, towards the
end of 1713, he was again in frequent communication with the
latter, through whose favour he secured a pardon under the great
seal for all past offences, thus effectually stopping, for the time, the
schemes of his whig enemies,
The year 1714 was a turning point for him, as well as for his
tory employers. He continued Mercator almost to the time of
>
1 Perhaps it may not be amiss to give a concrete illustration of Defoe's casuistry.
This is furnished by a comparison of the evasive language he used in his Appeal
(1715) with regard to his editorship of Mercator, and the frank language about his
share in that journal which he permitted himself to use in a short-lived trade paper of
1719, The Manufacturer, which has escaped his bibliographers but was attributed to
him by his contemporaries and is certainly his. Moreover, in the Appeal, he stated
categorically that he had never had any payment or reward for writing any part of
Mercator ; but in his letter to Oxford of 21 May 1714, he wrote that Arthur Moore,
6
## p. 15 (#39) ##############################################
Date of An Appeal to Honour and Justice 15
the queen's death. The paper, together with numerous pamphlets
of the period, including the four which form A General History
of Trade, gives abundant proof of the liberality of his com-
mercial views, although it scarcely justifies his modern admirers in
styling him the father of free trade. He also wrote voluminously
in opposition to the schism bill; and he entered into obscure
intrigues against his old enemy George Ridpath, which resulted in
his forming a connection with a rival Flying Post. In this, he
published a glowing eulogy of the new king and an indiscreet
attack upon one of the lords regent, which led to his indictment
for libel and, in the following year, to his trial and conviction. How
he escaped punishment will soon appear. Meanwhile, apparently
with Oxford's connivance, he published the first of the three parts
of his notorious apology for the administration of that statesman,
The Secret History of the White Staff. This was the signal for a
swarm of acrimonious whig tracts, which made much capital out
of Defoe's careless admissions with regard to his patron's intrigues
with the Scottish Jacobites. A second part, in which Bolingbroke
was treated more leniently, speedily followed, and then, at the end
of the year 1714, Defoe's health broke down-or else he deemed it
expedient to pose as an apoplectic who had not long to live.
A full discussion of this tangled matter would be tedious.
Lee, who did not know the date of publication of Defoe's Appeal
to Honour and Justice, tho' it be of his worst enemies, the
masterly account of the journalist's career which closed with
a pathetic note to the effect that he had been ill for six weeks
and was still in grave peril, seems, by assigning the tract to
January 1715, to have fixed the date of his hero's illness in
November and December 1714, thus managing to make the
bibliography of Defoe square not only with these dates but
with high conceptions of his probity. Unfortunately, it has been
discovered that the Appeal was published on 24 February 1715.
This brings the period of the illness into the early weeks of 1715,
that is, into a time when, according to Lee, Crossley and a con-
temporary of Defoe, the pamphleteer William Pittis, our journalist
was actively plying his trade. It does not follow that Defoe may
.
not have been out of health about this time—his situation, with
an expensive family, no fixed source of income, a worse than
6
who undertook to support the paper, had declined any consideration for it ever since
Lady Day last. ' There is little reason to doubt that Defoe was a poorly paid editor;
bat it is very certain that his relations with Mercator were much closer than he wished
readers of that periodical to believe.
## p. 16 (#40) ##############################################
16 Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
doubtful reputation and an indictment for libel hanging over him,
might well have undermined an even stronger constitution than
his; but it does seem to be clear that, on Oxford's repudiating
the White Staff tracts, Defoe published several others designed to
throw dust round the whole controversy and to minimise his own
part in it, and that, these attempts failing, he wrote his Appeal,
upon which he expended all the resources of his genius for
casuistry, without succeeding in changing the opinions of his con-
temporaries one iota. It is a proof of his literary skill, however,
that this adroit and moving pamphlet has misled many a confiding
biographer and uninformed modern reader.
Belief in a serious breakdown of Defoe's health is rendered
almost ridiculous by an examination of his bibliography, certain
and plausible, for the year 1715. It contains at least thirty
pamphlets and two thick volumes, the first instalments of The
Family Instructor and of a History of the Wars of Charles XII
of Sweden. No newspaper now taxed his pen for regular contri-
butions, he had to support his family and, perhaps, drown his
apprehensions as to the trial awaiting him, and he had every
inducement to display his loyalty. Hence, a multitude of
certain and suspected tracts on nearly every phase of affairs,
especially on the rebellion of the autumn. Meanwhile, in July,
he had been convicted of libel; but sentence had not been
passed. It never was passed, probably because Defoe managed,
through an appealing letter and by pointing to numerous loyal
pamphlets, to secure the favour of that very chief justice Parker
whom he had offended in 1713. Parker introduced him, as a
valuable secret agent and journalist, to Lord Townshend, the
principal secretary of state. A bargain was soon struck, the gist
of which was that Defoe should continue to pass as a tory journalist
still labouring under the displeasure of the government, and that,
as such, he should edit mildly tory periodicals and secure employ-
ment with more rabid Jacobite organs, in order that he might be
able to tone down or suppress treasonable articles and keep
the administration posted upon what was going on in Jacobite
circles.
The arrangement seems to have lasted for some ten years,
1716—26, and, by his discovery of the letters attesting it, Lee
succeeded, not only in showing that the older biographers were in
error in supposing that Defoe's activity as a political journalist
had ceased with queen Anne's death, but, also, in disinterring from
the newspapers of the time, particularly from the weeklies pub-
lished by Mist and Applebee, a mass of articles surely from Defoe's
## p. 17 (#41) ##############################################
Discreditable Later Tracts
17
pen and illustrative of his not inconsiderable powers as an essayist.
His chief activity as a spy dates from 1716 to 1720 and is mainly
connected with the office of the Jacobite publisher, Nathaniel
Mist. Whether he was Mist's good or evil genius, whether,
as Lee opined, Mist tried to kill Defoe on discovering his treachery
and pursued him maliciously for many years, whether, on the
other hand, Defoe's gradual abandonment of journalism was not
due to advancing years and the competition of younger men, are
questions we cannot discuss here. It seems enough to say that,
prior to, and throughout, his short career as a writer of fiction,
Defoe was almost preternaturally active as a journalist and
pamphleteer.
His tracts for the year 1717 alone are sufficiently numerous and
discreditable to warrant all that his contemporaries said of him as
a mercenary scribbler. To this bad year, that of his exemplary
Memoirs of the Church of Scotland, belong his forged Minutes of
Meenager, his unprincipled tracts against Toland, his impertinent
and, in the main, overlooked contributions to the Bangorian con-
troversy. As remarkable, however, as his industry, his versatility,
his unscrupulousness and his impudence, is the confidence some
modern students, notably Lee, have been able to maintain in him.
Many of his tracts belonging to this period have been rejected
because of the assumption that Defoe was too virtuous or too
dignified to have written them, or that no mortal man could
have written so much. It may be safely held that Defoe was
capable of writing almost anything, and that few pens have ever
filled with greater facility a larger number of sheets. On the
other hand, no condemnation of Defoe the spy and scribbler is
just that does not also include statesmen who, like Townshend
and Stanhope, employed him, rivals, who, like Toland and Abel
Boyer, were for ever hounding him, religious controversialists who
set him a bad example and partisan publishers and public who
suffered themselves to be exploited by him. With all his faults,
he was probably the most liberal and versatile writer of his age;
with his comparative freedom from rancour, he seems a larger and
more humane figure than any of the more aristocratic men of letters
that looked down on him, including Pope and Swift; though an
Ishmael, he managed to secure comfort for his family and a partial
amnesty for himself in his old age; and he wrote the most authentic
and widely read classic of his generation.
Our reference to Robinson Crusoe brings us to 25 April 1719,
the date of the publication of the first part of that immortal
E. L. IX.
2
CH. I.
## p. 18 (#42) ##############################################
18 Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
story. Defoe was nearly sixty years old, but he had hitherto written
almost nothing that would have preserved his name for the general
public. During the next five years, most of his fiction was
to be composed, and, during the ensuing six, he was to become
perhaps the most extraordinarily prolific old man in the history
of English literature. Although he never ceased to be a journalist
and pamphleteer, he became, for the last eleven years of his life,
primarily a writer of books, and especially of fiction. The change
has surprised many, and a word or two must be given to an attempt
to describe in outline his evolution.
Although there is evidence that Defoe was rather widely read
in English belles lettres, particularly in Rochester and other authors
of the restoration, there is little or no direct evidence that he
was a wide reader of fiction. It would be rash, however, to assume
that he had not dipped into some of the reprinted Elizabethan
romances; that he had not tried to read one or more of the in-
terminable heroic romances, whether in the original French or in
English versions or imitations; that he was ignorant of the comic
and the satiric anti-romances, or that he had not read with some
enjoyment the novels of his own time—the stories of intrigue by
Aphra Behn, the highly coloured pictures of the court and of the
aristocracy by Mrs Manley, and the attempts at domestic fiction
by Mrs Eliza Haywood and other more or less forgotten women.
If some bibliographers are right, we must hold that he wrote more
than one tract which shows the influence of Mrs Manley's New
Atalantis, and that he translated at least one picaresque story,
abbé Olivier's Life and Adventures of Signior Rozelli (1709,
1713). It is much more certain, however, that he must have been
familiar with lives of criminals, with chapbooks and compilations
such as those of Nathaniel Crouch (ʻR. Burton'), with the work of
Bunyan and with The Tatler and The Spectator. In other words,
it is chiefly to the popular narratives of his day and to con-
tributory forms like the essay and biography that Defoe owes
whatever in his fiction is not due to his own genius and experience
as a writer.
As a matter of fact-setting aside the possibility that he trans-
lated the story of Rozelli and even added a somewhat questionable
appendix to the edition of 1713 and a Continuation in 1724—one
can find in Defoe's writings, prior to 1719, grounds for believing
that he may have evolved into a novelist of adventure and of low
a
life with comparatively little indebtedness to previous writers of
fiction. He had had great practice in writing straightforward
a
## p. 19 (#43) ##############################################
Evolution as a Novelist. Robinson Crusoe 19
prose since 1697; and, by 1706—witness Mrs Veal—he had learned
how to make his reporting vivid and credible by a skilful use of
circumstantial detail. In his political allegory The Consolidator, ,
he had begun, though crudely, to use his imagination on an
extended scale, and he had already, in The Shortest Way, dis-
played only too well his gifts as an impersonator. In some of the
tracts written between 1710 and 1714, notably in the two parts of
The Secret History of the October Club, he had shown great
ability in satiric portraiture and considerable skill in reporting
speeches and dialogue. In 1715, he had introduced some mild
religious fiction into The Family Instructor, and, three years
later, in the second part of this book, he had made still greater
use of this element of interest. In the same year, 1715, he had
assumed the character of a quaker in some of his tracts; and,
since 1711, he had been publishing predictions supposed to be
made by a second-sighted highlander. Again, in 1715, he had
described the career of Charles XII of Sweden as though he
himself were 'A Scots Gentleman in the Swedish Service'; and
there is reason to believe that, in the following year, he wrote, as
'A Rebel,' a tract dealing with the rebellion in Scotland. In
1717, he skilfully assumed the character of a Turk who was
shocked by the intolerance displayed by English Christians in the
Bangorian controversy, and it seems almost certain that, in 1718,
he wrote for Taylor, the publisher of Robinson Crusoe, a continua-
tion of the Letters of the famous Turkish Spy. Finally, when it
is remembered that, in 1718, he was contributing to Mist's, week
by week, letters from fictitious correspondents, that his wide
reading in geography had given him a knowledge of foreign
countries, particularly of Africa and both Americas and that he
had long since shown himself to be a skilful purveyor of instruc-
tion and an adept at understanding the character of the average
man, we begin to see that, given an incident like the experiences
of Alexander Selkirk and an increasing desire to make money
through his pen in order to portion his daughters, we have a
plausible explanation of the evolution of Defoe the novelist out of
Defoe the journalist and miscellaneous writer.
The immediate and permanent popularity of Robinson Crusoe
is a commonplace of literary history. Defoe, who had a keen eye
for his market, produced, in about four months, The Farther Ad-
ventures of his hero, which had some, though less, vogue, and, a
year later, Serious Reflections during the Life and Surprizing
Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, a volume of essays which had no
2—2
## p. 20 (#44) ##############################################
20 Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
vogue at all. The original part, The Strange and Surprizing
Adventures, at once stirred up acrimonious critics, but, also, at-
tracted many imitators and, in the course of years, became the
occasion of legends and fantastic theories. All these—for example,
the story that Harley was the real author of the book-may be
dismissed without hesitation. Almost equally without foundation,
despite his own statements, is the notion that Robinson Crusoe is
an allegory of Defoe's life. It may even be doubted whether he
ever hawked his manuscript about in order to secure a publisher.
Some things, however, may be considered certain with regard to
this classic. Defoe wrote it primarily for the edification, rather
than for the delectation, of his readers, although he did not evade
giving them pleasure and although, assuredly, he took pleasure him-
self in his own creation. It is equally clear that, in many of its
pages, Defoe the writer of pious manuals is to be discovered ; in
others, Defoe the student of geography and of volumes of voyages;
in others, Defoe the minute observer and reporter. The book is a
product that might bave been expected from the journalist we
know, save only for the central portion of the story, the part that
makes it a world classic, the account of Crusoe alone on his
island. Here, to use a phrase applied by Brunetière to Balzac,
Defoe displays a power of which he had given but few indications,
the power to make alive. This power to make alive is not to be
explained by emphasis upon Defoe's command of convincing details
or by any other stock phrase of criticism. It is a gift of genius,
denied to preceding English writers of prose fiction, displayed by
Defoe himself for a few years in a small number of books, and
rarely equalled since, although after him the secret of writing an
interesting and well constructed tale of adventure was more or
less an open one. The form of his story could be imitated, but not
its soul. The universal appeal implied in the realistic account of
the successful struggle of one man against the pitiless forces of
nature was something no one else could impart to a book of
adventure, something Defoe himself never caught again. It is
this that links Robinson Crusoe with the great poems of the
world and makes it perhaps the most indisputable English classic
of modern times, however little of a poet, in a true sense, its
author may have been.
That Robinson Crusoe was written 'all in the day's work' is
clear to the student of Defoe's bibliography for 1719, which in-
cludes, in addition, an attack on bishop Hoadly, a biography of
baron de Goertz, a tract on stock-jobbing—precursor of many
## p. 21 (#45) ##############################################
Miscellaneous Later Writings
21
pamphlets on the South Sea Bubble—a life of captain Avery,
introducing the long series of tracts devoted to pirates and other
criminals, an account of that extraordinary prodigy Dickory
Cronke, otherwise known as “the Dumb Philosopher,' contributions
to Mercurius Politicus, Mist's, The Whitehall Evening Post, and
a new paper founded by Defoe, The Daily Post—but the list
seems endless. There is little reason, however, for believing that he
kept his copy by him and poured it forth at specially favourable
times, or that he had a 'double’ whose style is undistinguishable
from his. He was, rather, the most practised and versatile journalist
and hack writer of the day, known to publishers as willing to turn
every penny, unhampered by regular official or commercial em-
ployment, and obliged to keep up his income in order that he
might continue, as during the past five or six years, to live at
Stoke Newington in a condition approaching affluence. One
change, however, as has been noted, is apparent in Defoe's literary
habits during the last twelve years of his life. Throughout his
early career, the pamphlet was the form of composition best
adapted to his genius, and the books he attempted were somewhat
laboured and amorphous. During his later period, while he still
wrote pamphlets freely, he tended more and more to the production
of elaborate books, in the construction of which, despite continual
lapses into garrulity, he displayed remarkable skill. Except for
the summer journeys, which, from 1722 to 1725, may be presumed
to have furnished him with materials for that delightful and in-
valuable guidebook in three volumes, A Tour thro' the Whole Island
of Great Britain, and for short periods when he was disabled by the
stone, Defoe's old age, up to the autumn of 1729, must have been
that of an animated writing machine. Was he seeking to dull the
pangs of conscience, or to live down a scandalous past? Probably
the latter, and, more probably still, to lay by money for his
daughter Hannah, who was certain to be an old maid.
The next book of importance after the two parts of Robinson
Crusoe was The History of the Life and Adventures of Mr Duncan
Campbell, the deaf and dumb conjurer, which appeared at the
end of April 1720. A bibliographical mystery hangs over this
curious production as well as over other books and tracts relating
to Campbell. That Defoe is the main author of the original
History and of a pamphlet entitled The Friendly Demon (1726)
seems clear: that he may have been aided in the first of these
either by William Bond or by Mrs Eliza Haywood is probable,
and that he had nothing to do with the other works relating to
## p. 22 (#46) ##############################################
22 Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
Campbell, save, possibly, the posthumous Secret Memoirs of 1732,
is likely. In May 1720 came the book, which, together with A
Journal of the Plague Year (1722), shows that Defoe possessed,
not only a genius for producing effects of verisimilitude, but, also,
a considerable share of something which it is hard to distinguish
from historical imagination. This is, of course, The Memoirs of a
Cavalier, the absorbing story of the wars in Germany and England,
for the accuracy of which so many untrained persons have been
willing to vouch that some critics have assumed for it a superfluous
manuscript source. A month later appeared that fine example of
the fiction of adventure, The Life, Adventures and Piracies of
the Famous Captain Singleton, which is a proof at once of Defoe's
extensive knowledge of geography and of his power to extend his
imagination, not only back into the past, as in The Memoirs of a
Cavalier, but out into the regions of the far away and the strange.
Singleton also holds attention by that interest in criminals which
Defoe naturally began to display in greater degree so soon as he
formed his six years' editorial connection with John Applebee, the
chosen publisher of the confessions and biographies of noted male-
factors. It has, moreover, another link with Defoe's next great
book, The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Famous Moll Flanders
(January 1722), for, in Singleton, we find Defoe beginning to
display a power of characterisation which is seen in very respect-
able measure in Moll Flanders and, also, in Colonel Jacque and
Roxana. It is, however, as a realistic picture of low life in the
large that Moll Flanders is supreme, just as the book of the next
month, Religious Courtship, is the unapproachable classic of
middle class smugness and piety. It is pious middle class folk
that figure in the two books devoted to the great plague; but it is
the pestilence itself that dominates our imagination and fills us
with unstinted admiration for Defoe's realistic power. That power
is seen to a less extent in The Impartial History of Peter Alexowitz
the Present Czar of Muscovy and in The History and Remarkable
Life of the truly Honourable Colonel Jacque; but, so long as the
latter book has readers, Charles Lamb's praise of the affecting
picture of the little thief will command grateful assent. If Lamb had
gone farther and asserted that the year 1722, the year of Moll
Flanders, of Religious Courtship, of the Due Preparations and
A Journal of the Plague Year, of The History of Peter the Great,
and of Colonel Jacque, was the greatest annus mirabilis in the
career of any English writer, who would have been rash enough
to say him nay?
a
## p. 23 (#47) ##############################################
Miscellaneous Later Writings
23
The next year is almost a blank unless we accept indecorous
contributions to a controversy about the use of cold water as a
specific in fevers—and an undignified Defoe is a person of whom
some credulous students will form no conception. By March
1724, however, we have our prolific and masterly writer once
more, for that is the date of The Fortunate Mistress, better known
as Roxana, the story in which Defoe makes his greatest advance,
not a very great one after all, toward the construction of a well
ordered plot. This, also, is the year of one of the best of his
sociological works, his treatise on the servant question, The Great
Law of Subordination Considered, as well as of the first volume
of the Tour. Before the year closed, he had written his popular
tracts on Jack Sheppard, and the last of his generally accepted
works of fiction, A New Voyage round the World, notable for its
description of the lower parts of South America and for the proof
it affords that its author's powers of narration and description were
on the wane. From 1725 to his death, Defoe is a writer of books
of miscellaneous information rather than a pioneer novelist, yet
there is reason to believe that he did not abandon the field of
narration so entirely as has been generally held. The Four Years
Voyages of Capt. George Roberts (1726), may be, in considerable
measure, the dull record of the experiences of a real seaman, but
it bears almost certain traces of Defoe's hand. The far more
interesting Memoirs of Captain George Carleton (1728) has for its
nominal hero a man who is known to have existed, and who may
have taken a direct or indirect share in its composition ; but it is
now clear, almost beyond dispute, that the shaper of Carleton's
book, the writer who has vitiated many of the accounts given of
the career of Peterborough in Spain, is not dean Swift, as has
acutely argued, but our protean scribbler Daniel Defoe. It
is less certain, perhaps, that Defoe, in 1729, performed for Robert
Drury's entertaining Journal of his captivity in Madagascar pre-
cisely the services he had rendered to Carleton's Memoirs ; but
there is very strong evidence to support this view, which is that of
Pasfield Oliver, the latest editor of the book.
But, apparently, there was no limit, save death, to Defoe's
productiveness. Accordingly, we must pass over, with scarcely a
word, the numerous pamphlets and volumes of the years 1725—31.
The most important of the tracts are those of a sociological character,
for example, the astonishingly suggestive Augusta Triumphans: or
the Way to make London the Most Flourishing City in the
Universe. The most interesting and important of the books is,
## p. 24 (#48) ##############################################
24 Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
most surely, The Complete English Tradesman, which, for variety
of information, shrewd practical wisdom, engaging garrulousness
and sheer carrying power of easy vernacular style, is nothing
short of a masterpiece. Charles Lamb seems to have been rather
.
fantastic in discovering in it a source of corruption for its author's
countrymen. The book has probably corrupted just as many
promising young men as Roxana—see the exemplary pages of
Lee’s biography of Defoe-has reclaimed wayward young women.
Next to The Tradesman in interest, some would place the curious
group of books dealing in a half sceptical, half credulous and
altogether gossipping, fashion with occult subjects—The Political
History of the Devil, A System of Magic and An Essay on the
History and Reality of Apparitions. Others, with quite as much
reason, will prefer A Plan of the English Commerce, or that
sound and well written treatise The Complete English Gentleman,
which, ironically enough, was left incomplete and was not published
until about twenty years ago. The wiser lover of quaint and
homely books will read, or, at least, glance over, all the productions
of Defoe's last years on which he can lay his hands, will wish that
the world might see a collected edition of them and will not
allow the biographers to persuade him that there was any marked
falling off in the old man's productivity, save for a mysterious
period which stretched from the autumn of 1729 to the midsummer
of 1730.
What happened to Defoe during these months we do not know
and probably shall not know unless new documents unexpectedly
come to light. In the spring of 1729, he had married his favourite
daughter Sophia to the naturalist Henry Baker; in the autumn,
he had been taken ill, just as the opening pages of The Complete
English Gentleman were going through the press. In August
1730, he was writing from Kent to his son-in-law Baker a letter
full of complaints about his own bad health, his sufferings at the
hands of a wicked enemy and his betrayal by one of his sons. It
seems likely that he had transferred some property to his eldest
son, Daniel, on condition that the latter would provide for his
mother and her unmarried daughters, but that the shifty son of
a shifty father had not lived up to his obligations. It is certain
that, for some reason or other, the home at Newington, a pleasant
one according to Baker's description, had been broken up after
Defoe's recovery from his illness in the autumn of 1729. It seems
probable that he believed it necessary to separate from his
family and to take refuge in London and, later, in Kent. Was he
## p. 25 (#49) ##############################################
His Posthumous Reputation 25
the victim of hallucinations—had he any real enemy whose
malice he must avoid—was he trying, as he had tried before the
marriage, to elude certain financial demands made by the canny
Baker-had he reverted to the practices of his early manhood and
engaged in hazardous speculations? Who can tell ? All that we
now seem to know definitely is that, during the autumn of 1730 and
the early winter of 1731, he was writing pamphlets and revising
books in a way that indicates little falling off of energy and absolutely
no decay of mental powers, and that, on 26 April 1731, he died of
a lethargy at his lodgings in Ropemaker's alley, Moorfields, not far
from where he was born,
He was buried in what is now Bunhill fields. The newspapers
of the day took slight, but not unfavourable, notice of his death; his
library was sold in due course; his reputation as a writer went into
a partial eclipse which lasted until the close of the century; and
then, mirabile dictu, he was hailed by admiring biographers and
critics, not merely as a great writer, but as a consistent patriot
and a Christian hero. Of late, it has become impossible to view
him, as a man, in any such favourable light; but it seems probable
that he was more sinned against than sinning, and it is coming to be
more and more admitted that, as a writer and an important figure
of his age, he is second only to Swift, if even to him. Some incline
to regard him as the most wonderfully endowed man of his times,
seeing in him a master journalist, an adroit and influential
politician with not a few of the traits of a statesman, an econo-
mist of sound and advanced views, a purveyor of miscellaneous
information vast in its range and practical in its bearings, an
unequalled novelist of adventure and low life and, last but not
least, a writer whose homely raciness has not been surpassed and
a man the fascinating mystery of whose personality cannot be
exhausted. It is impossible to sum him up, but those who are
not satisfied with calling him 'the author of Robinson Crusoe
may content themselves with affirming that he is the greatest of
plebeian geniuses.
## p. 26 (#50) ##############################################
CHAPTER II
STEELE AND ADDISON
STEELE and Addison are writers of talent who rose almost
to genius because they intuitively collaborated with the spirit
of their age. They came to London at a time when, quite apart
from politics, society was divided into two classes, apparently so
irreconcilable that they seemed like two nations. On the one side
was the remnant of the old order, which still cherished the renas-
cence ideals of self-assertion and irresponsibility and had regained
prominence at the restoration. They followed the old fashion of
ostentation and self-abandonment, fighting duels on points of honour,
vying with each other in quips and raillery, posing as atheists and
jeering at sacred things, love-making with extravagant odes and
compliments, applauding immoral plays, while the more violent, the
'gulls' and 'roarers,' roamed through the town in search of
victims to outrage or assault. The women, in these higher circles,
read and thought of little but erotic French romances, wore false
eyebrows and patches, painted themselves, gesticulated with their
fans and eyes, intrigued in politics and passed the time in dalliance.
But, on the other hand, the citizens of London, who, since Tudor
times, had stood aloof from culture and corruption, were now no
longer the unconsidered masses. Each new expansion of trade
gave them a fresh hold on society, while the civil war, which had
decimated or ruined the nobility, conferred on the middle class
a political importance of which their fathers had never dreamt.
As a rule, members of the citizen class who have risen in the social
scale intermarry with the aristocracy and imitate the manners, and
especially the vices, of the class into which they enter. But, in the
great political revolution of the seventeenth century, merchants and
traders had triumphed through their moral character even more
than by their material prosperity. The time had come when England
was weary of all the medieval fanaticism, brutality and prejudice
which had risen to the surface in the civil war, and it was the citizen
class, apart from the zealots on both sides, which had first
upheld moderation. The feud which Greene, a century before,
## p. 27 (#51) ##############################################
-
Beginnings of the new Civilization 27
had symbolised as a quaint dispute between the velvet breeches
and cloth breeches had entered upon its last phase. Votaries of
Caroline elegance and dissipation had become a set apart. They still
had all the glamour of wealth and fashion; but they had lost their
influence on the civilization of the country. The middle class had
broken away from their leadership and had pressed forward to the
front rank of national progress. It has already been shown? how they
had trodden down the relics of a less humane and less reasonable
age, reforming the laws for debt and the administration of prisons,
refuting the superstition of witchcraft, attacking scholasticism in
the universities and founding the Royal Society-nay, more, how
the more enlightened had pleaded for a purer and simpler morality,
for gentler manners, for a more modest yet dignified self-respect.
To the superficial observer, these protests and appeals must have
sounded like isolated voices in a confused multitude. In reality,
they were indications of a new civilization which was already
fermenting underneath. A new London had sprung up since the
great fire and, with it, a generation of Londoners whose tempera-
ment and occupations led them to form a standard of culture,
honour and religion peculiar to themselves. Such progress is the
work of a whole class. It is never initiated by individuals, though
one or two thinkers are generally needed to give form and ex-
pression to the tendencies of the rest. In this case, the victory of
'cloth breeches' was not complete until Steele and Addison had
discovered in what quarter to look for the movement and in what
form to reveal to men their own ideas. These writers saw further
and deeper than their contemporaries, because each, according to
his own character, had first been born again.
It was Steele who led the way. Nature had endowed him with
the instincts and temperament of one of king Charles I's cavaliers.
He had the same generosity, love of pleasure, restlessness, chivalry
and tincture of classical culture. Like many others of this class,
he was extremely impressionable; but, unlike his prototypes, he
lived in an age when recklessness and self-indulgence, though still
fashionable in some circles, ran counter to the better tendencies of
the time. Thus, the conviviality and gallantry which were popular
in the guardroom caused him many searchings of heart, when
confronted by the disapproval of scholars and moralists. In such
moments of inward discontent, the gay life of the capital lost its
glamour; the puritan spirit came over him, and he perceived that the
1 Ante, vol. VII, chap. XVI, pp. 385–97.
## p. 28 (#52) ##############################################
28
Steele and Addison
dissipation of the young man-about-town was, at best, a pose and
the moral teaching of the ancients a lamentable protection against
the temptation of the senses. Cicero, Seneca and Plutarch had
proved persuasive monitors to many a Jacobean and Caroline
essayist, because the renascence had endowed the classics with
almost scriptural authority. But, though Steele belonged to the
class which still clung to these guides from respect for the old
times, he also came daily into contact with the new enlightened
religion of the middle class. He committed to paper the thoughts
which passed through his mind in these moments of reflection and
published them in 1701 for the edification of others under the title
The Christian Hero.
This booklet is an attempt to persuade educated men into
accepting the Bible as a moral counsellor. Steele describes how
Cato, Caesar, Brutus and Cassius died, and argues that heathen
philosophy failed each in the great crisis of his life. He then
tells over again the story of the creation of Adam and Eve and
how, after their fall, men became corrupt and so a prey to ambition
and the love of ostentation. This dependence on the applause
of the world is, to Steele, the root of all evil ; even the tales
which young fellows tell of debauches and seductions are prompted
by 'fame'; even 'heathen virtues, which were little else but dis-
guised or artificial passions (since the good was in fame) must rise
or fall with disappointment or success. ' Christ, and then St Paul,
by their labours and death, first brought men help, teaching them
that the true guide in conduct is conscience. Man sins or suffers
through dependence on the world; he is saved by the inwardness
and self-effacement of Christianity. In the spiritual distress which
drove Steele to write this pamphlet, he had learnt to think for
himself. The description of Eve's creation shows that he had
studied Milton, then an unfashionable author; the passage on
chivalrous respect for women's virtue was a defiance to the con-
ventionality which regarded immorality as a sign of high spirits ;
the advice that a man should do a kindness as if he would rather
have his generosity appear an enlarged self-love than a diffusive
bounty' was a new ideal for good taste; in his contention that the
false ideals of society led men to err, he touched the true weakness
of his times.
Thus, The Christian Hero is important because it foreshadows
Steele's message to his age. But, though the book passed through
a second edition within the same year and continued to be popular
i Chap. II.
## p. 29 (#53) ##############################################
Steelė's Comedies
29
6
with readers of a certain religious temperament, it was not other-
wise a success. The prosperous middle class, busy with the peaceful
round of city life, did not need to be warned against choosing
Caesar or Brutus for their model or Seneca for their spiritual
pastor. Nor, again, if they ever. opened this little manual of
meditations, would they find it clearly explained how the self-
sacrifice of St Paul and the divinity of Christ could guide them
amid the thousand little perplexities of their growing social
system. Steele sermonised on heroism to readers who were
interested in manners, and deserved the fate that from being
thought no undelightful companion, he was soon reckoned a
disagreeable fellow? '
This missionary spirit, when roused, impelled him to other forms
of expression. Having not yet found his peculiar bent, he was
inevitably attracted to the drama. During a century, comedy and
tragedy, with intervals of repression, had been one of the most
popular outlets for an author and must have seemed exactly the
medium for a man with Steele's sense of humour and knowledge
of character. Besides, the moral movement among the people,
which had been influencing Steele, had also caught the theatre.
Sir Richard Blackmore and Jeremy Collierº were calling for a
pure and reformed drama, and so Steele's conscience, as well as his
tastes, urged him to put his ideas on the stage. Since the restora-
tion, writers of comedies had aimed at brilliance and cleverness.
As the court was amused at cuckoldry, they represented seducers
and seduced as endowed with all the wit, ingenuity, or beauty which
society admired, while intrigues leading to adultery could always
be rounded off into a well constructed, if somewhat unoriginal,
plot. Steele went over the same ground-love, courtship, married
life, intrigue; his purpose, however, was avowedly to paint virtue
and vice in their true colours. Following the example of
Molière, from whom he borrowed freely, he covered his bad
characters with ridicule and confusion. But he was not content
to let them occupy the front of the stage, as Molière had done.
He wished to champion virtue; so his villains, for the most part,
are minor characters, dismissed with humiliation at the dénouement,
while his leading figures are quite ordinary people, whose careers
begin and end in the triumph of homely virtues. Such characters,
however desirable in a book of devotions, lack true comic interest,
and Steele was obliged to lead his heroes and heroines through a
1 Mr Steele's Apology for Himself and his Writings, 1714.
9 Cf. ante, vol. VIII, pp. 163 ff.
a
## p. 30 (#54) ##############################################
30
Steele and Addison
6
series of domestic calamities and surprises, in order to sustain
sympathy. In The Funeral, or Grief-à-la-mode (1701), his first and
best constructed comedy, the defunct Lord Brumpton has to be kept
secretly alive all through the play, in order to shame his worldly
widow's enjoyment of affluence and freedom, and to reward his
daughters' two suitors. In The Lying Lover (1703), copied from
Corneille's Menteur, young Bookwit becomes drunk, then fights
and appears to kill his rival, is arrested, suffers all the pangs of
remorse and the horrors of Newgate and, after this gruesome
lesson against intemperance and duelling, learns that his victim
still lives and ends by marrying the sweetheart whom he had
courted with a fidelity rare on the stage. In The Tender
Husband (1705), the third and last of Steele's plays at this
period of his career, he rises to one of Molière's leading ideas,
in the conception that a son tyrannised till manhood in a boorish
home will end by deceiving his father and contracting a foolish
marriage, and that a girl, left to the companionship of French
romances, will become a 'Quixote in petticoats. ' But, when the
elder Clerimont is represented as despatching his mistress,
disguised as a gallant, to tempt the virtue of his wife and then,
on the failure of the seducer, tearfully seeking a reconciliation,
all dramatic propriety is sacrificed, in order to give a by no means
convincing picture of conjugal tenderness. Such was the tone
which the moral movement of queen Anne's reign introduced into
the theatre, and, since succeeding dramatists came under this
influence, Steele may be regarded as the founder of sentimental
comedy? Unhappily, as in the case of most comedies with a
purpose, plots are sacrificed to the moral, and, apart from im-
probability of incident, Steele’s plays show but little of that
correctness of construction which the age exacted.
If Steele's dramatic work added scant laurels to his reputation,
it was of the first importance in forming his mind. He had come
to his task with the same stock of ideas as had served him in
composing The Christian Hero. But, as a playwright, he had
to make these ideas talk and act. He had to penetrate be-
neath the surface of life, and to show how often a profession or
training degrades a man; how servants inevitably become mimics
of their masters' excesses and frivolities; how women, who are
untrained in the serious responsibilities of life, fall victims
to fulsome adulation and often end in a marriage of convenience;
i Ward, A. W. , A History of English Dramatic Literature, revised ed.
kept the press busy, not only with apologetic pamphlets, but with
bitter assaults upon the dissenters and with one of the most
important of his works, his political newspaper The Observator:
In Question and Answer.
This journal, of two double-columned folio pages, began its
career on 13 April 1681 and ran to 9 March 1686/7. After no. 5,
readers could not be sure how many issues they would receive
a week; but, as a rule, the tireless editor supplied them with three
or four numbers devoted to abuse of dissenters, whigs, trimmers
and Titus Oates. Throughout, he employed a device, which he had
not originated, but which his example made popular for a genera-
tion—the trick of casting each number in the form of a dialogue.
It is needless to attempt to chronicle the changes in the form of title
and in the persons of his interlocutors, since, in order to avoid
the mistakes already made by bibliographers, one would need to
examine every page of the periodical-an appalling task. It is
enough to say that L'Estrange had a large share in the final
discrediting of Oates; that, until it suited the king's purpose to
issue the declaration of indulgence, clerical and royal favour
crowned his ecclesiastical and political zeal; and that his many
critics had abundant excuse for the diatribes they continued to
issue against him. Defoe, who was probably in London during
the larger part of The Observator's life, may thus early have
determined that, if ever he should edit a paper of his own, he
would avoid the awkward dialogue form and an extravagance
that defeated its own ends.
1-2
## p. 4 (#28) ###############################################
4 Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
The date of his knighting by James II, April 1685, may be held
to mark the zenith of L'Estrange's career. In 1686, he was sent
on a mission to Scotland; in 1687, in his answer to Halifax's
famous Letter to a Dissenter, he supported the king's claim to the
dispensing power; in 1688, he received from James a reward in
money that may have made him feel less keenly the suppression of
The Observator. At the revolution, he was dismissed from his post
of licenser and imprisoned. For several years after his release, he
led a troubled life. He was more than once rearrested; his health
declined ; his wife died ruined by gambling; he was disappointed in
his children; and, long before his death, on 11 December 1704, he
had lost all his influence and become a bookseller's hack. Yet it is
to this period that we owe his most important literary work, The
Fables of Æsop and other Eminent Mythologists : with Moral
Reflections, which appeared as a folio in 1692, and was followed, in
1699, by a second part, Fables and Storyes Moralized. His long
series of translations, many of them from the French and the
Spanish”, is noted elsewhere. Defoe did not follow far in his
steps as a translator; but it is not improbable that, when, in his old
age, he found himself cut off from journalism, he remembered the
example set him by L'Estrange and displayed an even more remark-
able general literary fecundity. It is almost needless to add that,
whether as journalist, pamphleteer, or miscellaneous writer, Defoe, in
comparison with his predecessor, profited from the general advance
made by the late seventeenth century toward a less cumbrous prose.
There was another journalist contemporary with L'Estrange to
whom Defoe was indebted. This was Henry Care, whose opposition
to the church party made him a special object of The Observator's
vituperations. He edited, in 1678—9, a quarto Pacquet of Advice
from Rome, which soon added to its title the word Weekly and
continued its existence, through five volumes, to 13 July 1683.
Later, he supported James and the Roman Catholics. If we may
trust Defoe, there is no doubt that Care's early death was brought
on by bad habits. He is chiefly important to us because it was from
him that Defoe borrowed the general idea of the department in
The Review known as the proceedings of the Scandalous Club. '
Space is wanting for a full discussion of the evolution of
journalism between the fall of The Observator and the founding
of The Review. A few meagre newspapers sprang up to rival The
Gazette so soon as James had fled the kingdom, and, between 1690
and 1696, John Dunton, the eccentric bookseller, later famous for
1 Cf. as to these, post, chap. x.
## p. 5 (#29) ###############################################
Rival Newspapers. The Review 5
his Life and Errors and for his absurd political pamphlets,
published his Athenian Gazette, afterwards The Athenian Mercury,
as an organ for those curious in philosophical and recondite
matters. From Dunton, Defoe borrowed some of the topics dis-
cussed in the miscellaneous portion of his paper. In 1695, the
Licensing Act, which had for some years been administered with
moderation, was allowed to lapse, and several new journals were at
once begun, some of which were destined to have important careers.
Chief among these were The Flying Post, a triweekly whig organ,
edited by the Scot George Ridpath, for many years a bitter
opponent of Defoe, and the tory Post Boy, which was published
by Abel Roper, a special object of whig detestation, and, for some
time, edited by Abel Boyer, who, later, changed his politics. These
and The Post Man, as well as the printed newsletter of Ichabod
Dawks and the written newsletter of John Dyer, notorious for his
partisan mendacity, were primarily disseminators of news. They
were supplemented, in March 1702, by the first of the dailies, The
Daily Courant, which, like the weekly Corantos of eighty years
before, consisted of translations from foreign papers. It soon fell
into the hands of Samuel Buckley, a versatile man with whom Defoe
was often at odds. On 1 April 1702, the most important strictly
political organ of the whigs was begun by John Tutchin, a small
poet and pamphleteer, who had suffered under Jeffreys and was
still to endure persecution for his advanced liberal opinions. He
took L'Estrange's old title, The Observator, and continued the
dialogue form. Two years later, Tutchin's form and his extreme
partisanship were imitated by the famous non-juror and opponent
of the deists, Charles Leslie, whose short-lived Rehearsal became
the chief organ of the high churchmen. Meanwhile, a few months
before Leslie's paper appeared, Defoe, not without Harley's
,
connivance, had begun his Review as an organ of moderation,
ecclesiastical and political, and of broad commercial interests.
Although his satirical discussions of current topics may have given
useful hints to Steele and Addison, it seems clear that Defoe's
chief contribution to journalism at this period is to be found in
his abandonment of the dialogue form and of the partisan tone of
his predecessors and immediate contemporaries. He adopted a
straightforward style, cultivated moderation and aimed at accuracy,
because, more completely than any other contemporary journalist,
be made it his purpose to secure acquiescence rather than to
strengthen prejudice. But, in what follows, we must confine
ourselves to his own varied career.
## p. 6 (#30) ###############################################
6 Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
Defoe is usually said to have been born in London in 1661, the
date being derived from a reference to his age made in the preface
to one of his tracts. That this is an error seems clear from his
marriage licence allegation. He must have been born in London,
the son of James Foe, a butcher of the parish of St Giles, Cripple-
gate, at the end of 1659 or early in 1660. His father came of
Northamptonshire stock; but the name of his mother's family has
not been ascertained. Beyond the fact that his parents were
presbyterians, who early set him apart for the ministry, we know
little concerning his childhood. When he was about fourteen, he
entered a dissenters’ school kept at Stoke Newington by Charles
Morton, a somewhat distinguished scholar and minister, and
he probably remained there three or four years, by which
time he had given up the idea of becoming a preacher. He has
left some account of his education, which appears to have been
practical and well adapted to the needs of his journalistic career,
since emphasis was laid on history, geography and politics, the
modern languages and proficiency in the vernacular.
Scarcely anything is known of his life between 1677 or 1678,
when he may be presumed to have left school, and January 1683/4,
the date of his marriage, when he was a merchant in Cornhill,
probably a wholesale dealer in hosiery. There is evidence from
his writings that, at one time, he held some commercial position in
Spain, and it is clear that his biographers have not collected all
the passages that tend to show his acquaintance with Italy,
southern Germany and France. As it is difficult to place any long
continued absence from England after his marriage, it seems
plausible to hold that he may have been sent to Spain as an
apprentice in the commission business and have taken the oppor-
tunity, when returning, to see more of Europe. His 'wander-years,'
if he had them, must be placed between 1678, the year of the
popish plot and the murder of Godfrey, and 1683, the year of the
repulse of the Turks from Vienna, since it is practically certain
that he was in London at each of these periods.
Not much more is known of his early life as a married man.
His wife, Mary Tuffley, who survived him, was of a well-to-do family,
bore him seven children and, from all we can gather, proved
a good helpmeet. That he soon left her to take some share in
Monmouth's rebellion seems highly probable; but that, between
1684 and 1688, he became an embryo sociologist and was engaged
in the systematic travelling about England that has been attributed
to him is very doubtful. How he escaped Jeffreys, whether he
a
## p. 7 (#31) ###############################################
Defoe in Business. Essay upon Projects 7
ever was a presbyterian minister at Tooting, what precisely he wrote
and published against James II—these and other similar matters
are still mysteries. It seems plain that he joined William's army
late in 1688; that he took great interest in the establishment of
the new government; that his standing in the city among his
fellow dissenters was outwardly high; and that he cherished literary
aspirations. His first definitely ascertained publication is a satire
in verse of 1691. In the following year he became a bankrupt,
with a deficit of about £17,000.
It is usual to attribute his failure to unbusinesslike habits, and
to pay little attention to the charges of fraud brought against him
later. As a matter of fact, this period of his life is so dark that
positive conclusions of any kind are rash. It would seem, however,
that he suffered unavoidable losses through the war with France,
that he was involved in too many kinds of enterprises, some of
them speculative, and that his partial success in paying off his
creditors warrants leniency toward him. Some friends appear to
have stood by him to the extent of offering him a situation in
Spain, which he could afford to reject because of better oppor-
tunities at home. Within four years, he was doing well as secretary
and manager of a tile factory near Tilbury. He also served as
accountant to the commissioners of the glass duty, and there is
no good reason to dispute his claim that he remained in fairly
prosperous circumstances until he was ruined, in 1703, by his
imprisonment for writing The Shortest Way with the Dissenters.
Shortly after his bankruptcy, Defoe, full of the speculative
spirit of the age, was engaged in composing his Essay upon
Projects, which did not appear until 1697. Of all his early
productions, this is much the most interesting to the general
reader, who is left wondering at the man's versatility and modernity,
particularly in matters relating to education, insurance and the
treatment of seamen. At the end of 1697, he plunged, on the
king's side, into the controversy with regard to the maintenance of
a standing army, and he continued to publish on the subject, though
some of his tracts have escaped his biographers. In 1698, he began
writing against occasional conformity in a manner which lost him
much favour with his fellow dissenters, and he also made an effective
contribution to the propaganda of the societies for the reformation
of manners. His duties as head of a tile factory and as govern-
ment accountant clearly did not occupy all his time, save for the
single year 1699, to which not one work by him is plausibly assigned.
It was not until the end of 1700, however, that out of the small
## p. 8 (#32) ###############################################
8
Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
poet and occasional pamphleteer was evolved a prolific professional
writer. The occasion was the will of Charles II of Spain and the
upsetting of William's plans for the partition of the Spanish
monarchy. Defoe supported his sovereign in several tracts, and
he pleaded for the return of a parliament uncontrolled by
moneyed interests. But it was a sprawling satire in favour of
the king, not homely tracts addressed to plain freeholders,
that gave the middle-aged journalist his first taste of literary
popularity.
This satire was The True-Born Englishman, which appeared
in January 1701, and, both in authorised and in pirated editions, had
an enormous sale. It was a reply to a poem by Tutchin, in which
that journalist had voiced the popular prejudice against the
foreign-born king. Defoe's vigorous verses turned the tables on
his own hybrid people, and were good journalism, whatever one
may think of them as poetry. They seem to have been the
occasion of his introduction to the king, an honour which, much to
the disgust of less favoured editors and pamphleteers, was not left
unchronicled in his writings. We know little of his relations with
William ; but, at the time of his arrest for The Shortest Way, it
was suspected that these had been close, and he himself dropped
hints which cause one to believe that occasionally he served
the king as an
an election agent much as, later, he served
Harley.
“The Author of The True-Born Englishman,' as Defoe for
many years delighted to style himself, did not rest on his laurels
as a writer during the short period before the death of his hero
William. He published numerous tracts in which he dealt with
occasional conformity, foreign affairs, particularly the inevitable
war with France, the misdeeds of stock-jobbers and the rights of
the people as opposed to the high-banded independence claimed
by tories in parliament. The most weighty of these pamphlets
is The Original Power of the Collective Body of the People of
England, which is worthy of Somers; but we get a better idea of
the character of Defoe himself through his attitude in the affair of
the Kentish petitioners. There is something of the demagogue in
the famous Legion's Address, which he wrote on this occasion;
but, in his bold delivery of the document to Harley, the speaker,
there is something of the uncalculating love of liberty that marks
the true tribune of the people. Although he was probably still
under a cloud on account of his bankruptcy, and although
fellow dissenters detected treason in his utterances on occasional
## p. 9 (#33) ###############################################
The Shortest Way. Hymn to the Pillory 9
conformity, he was, doubtless, at the zenith of his reputation among
his contemporaries when he sat by the side of the Kentish worthies
at the banquet given them on their release from prison.
The two most important pamphlets of 1702 were both concerned
with ecclesiastical affairs—the acute New Test of the Church of
England's Loyalty and the notorious Shortest Way with the
Dissenters. The latter may have been designed both to serve the
whigs and to reassure those dissenters who had not liked or
understood Defoe's attitude on the now burning question of
occasional conformity. Whatever his purpose, he overshot the
mark by assuming the character of an intolerant 'high-flyer' and
by arguing for the suppression of dissent at all costs, no matter
how cruel the means. It was no time for irony, especially for irony
that demanded more power to read between the lines than either
dissenters or extreme churchmen possessed. The former were
alarmed; the latter were enraged when they discovered that they
had been hoaxed into accepting as the pure gospel of conformity
a tract written by a nonconformist for the purpose of reducing
ecclesiastical intolerance to an absurdity. In January 1703, the
tory Nottingham issued a warrant for Defoe's arrest, but he was
not apprehended until the latter part of May. Where he hid
himself is uncertain; but there is evidence in his own hand that
the prospect of a prison had completely unnerved him. After he
was lodged in Newgate, he managed to resist all attempts to worm
out of him whatever secrets of state he might possess. At
his trial in July, he was misled into pleading guilty, and he
received a sentence out of all proportion to his offence. The fine
and the imprisonment during the queen's pleasure were less terrible
in his eyes than the three public exposures in the pillory, and
he used all the means in his power, including a promise through
William Penn to make important revelations, in order to escape
the more degrading part of his punishment. His efforts proving
of no avail, he plucked up his courage and wrote against his
persecutors his spirited Hymn to the Pillory. When he was
pilloried at the end of July, the temper of the fickle populace had
changed, and, instead of being hooted and pelted, he was hailed as
a hero. Neither he nor the mob knew that the experience marked
a turning point in the career of one of the most variously, though
not nobly, gifted men England has ever produced. Before his
persecution, Defoe may have been somewhat shifty as a man of
affairs and, perhaps, as a writer; but, on the whole, he had been
courageous in facing disaster, and he had been more or less
## p. 10 (#34) ##############################################
10 Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
consistent and high-minded in his attitude toward public matters.
After he was pilloried, the sense that he had been unjustly punished
rankled in him, and he soon became dependent upon the bounty of
Harley; to insure the continuance of that bounty, he sacrificed
some, at least, of his convictions; in revenge, he began to
betray his employer; and, in the end, he stood before the public
as the most discredited and mercenary journalist of the day.
Such was not the view of his early biographers, who found in him,
as we have seen, only a maligned patriot and man of genius;
but it seems impossible for the close student of Defoe's political
writings, despite the sympathy he must feel for a kindly, brilliant
and hardly used man, not to agree, in the main, with the contem-
poraries who denounced him.
It was held until recently that Defoe remained in Newgate
until August 1704, although more careful examination of The
Review would have led to a different conclusion Research in
other newspapers and the publication of his correspondence with
Harley have now made it clear that he was released, through
Harley's good offices, about 1 November 1703. This disposes of
the story that The Review was founded while its editor was in
prison, and it also absolves us from the necessity of supposing
that, when, in his volume on the great storm, Defoe described
devastations of which he had been an eye-witness, he was drawing
on his imagination. The fact that, in this matter and in not a few
others, research has tended to strengthen belief in his ability to
tell the truth about himself ought to make it less possible for
critics to treat him as totally untrustworthy. Such criticism has never
been based upon adequate psychological study of the man, and it
is not warranted by a minute examination even of his most
discreditable writings. Instead of becoming a shameless and
wholesale liar, Defoe, in all probability, developed into a consummate
casuist who was often his own chief dupe. His experience of
the pillory was ever before his eyes, and it seemed to him necessary
and even meritorious to avoid the pitfalls that lay in those days
before all journalists. For more than twenty years, he practised
every sort of subterfuge to preserve his anonymity, and he soon
grew sufficiently callous to write, presumably for pay, on all sides
of any given subject. Within the arena of journalism, he was a
treacherous mercenary who fought all comers with any weapon
and stratagem he could command Outside that arena, he was
a pious, philanthropical, fairly accurate and trustworthy man and
citizen.
## p. 11 (#35) ##############################################
The Review
II
Space fails us for a discussion of the pampblets and poems
of this period, the stream of which not even imprisonment or his
employment as a busy agent for Harley could check. Mention should
be made, however, of the two volumes of his collected writings-
the only collection made by himself—which appeared in 1703
and 1705, as well as of controversial pamphlets against the
eccentric John Asgill, the publicist Dr Davenant, the tory poli-
tician and promoter Sir Humphrey Mackworth and the fanatic
Charles Leslie. Only one tract of them all possesses permanent
interest, the famous Giving Alms no Charity, of November 1704,
and even that is probably less of an economic elassic than some
have thought it. Defoe's real achievement of the time was his
establishment of The Review, the importance of which as an
organ of political moderation has been already pointed out. It
was equally important as a model of straightforward journalistic
prose, and, in its department of miscellanea, its editorial corre-
spondence when Defoe was away from London and other features,
it probably exerted an influence out of proportion to its circulation,
which was never large. In its small four-paged numbers, in the
main triweekly, the student of contemporary France, of English
ecclesiastical history, of the union with Scotland, of the war of the
Spanish succession, of the movements of the Jacobites, of the trial of
Sacheverell, of British commerce and of manners and customs in
general finds abundant materials to his hand. Why its eight large
volumes and incomplete ninth supplementary volume (17 February
1704 to 11 June 1713) have never been reprinted from the unique
set in the British Museum it is hard to say. Even as the record of
one man's enterprise and pertinacity (Defoe wrote it practically
upaided and kept it going with extraordinary regularity during
the years he was serving as a government agent in Scotland), it
would be worthy of a place on our shelves-much more so when that
man is the author of Robinson Crusoe. Such republication would
not be equivalent to the erection of a monument of shame, since,
on the whole, the Defoe of The Review is liberal and consistent in
his politics and far-sighted in commercial and economic matters.
In a sense, too, a reissue of these rare volumes would be a
monument to the prescience of that enigmatical, underestimated
politician Robert Harley, who clearly perceived the political
importance of the press.
Not even the briefest description can be given of Defoe's horse-
back rides through England in 1704 and 1705 as an election agent for
Harley. Highhanded tories and creditors set on by his enemies tried
## p. 12 (#36) ##############################################
12 I
Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
to stop him; but he eluded them and continued both to send Harley
reports which prove him to have been a journalist of the first order,
and to make observations which stood him in good stead in his later
sociological and economic writings. He also found time to compose
and publish his dull political allegory The Consolidator and to
labour on his still more ponderous satire in verse Jure Divino,
which appeared the next year, 1706, in folio, adorned with a full-
wigged portrait of the self-complacent author. These, as well as his
impudent satire The Dyet of Poland, his excellent pamphlets
against religious intolerance in south Carolina, his indiscreet
support, in a tract called The Experiment, of the clerical impostor
Abraham Gill, his spirited answers to Lord Haversham, who had
taunted him with poverty and writing for hire, are all, more or less,
forgotten ; but, so long as the literature of the supernatural
finds favour, there will be interested readers of the one classic
production of this stage of his career, A True Relation of the
Apparition of one Mrs Veal, the next Day after her Death, to
one Mrs Bargrave at Canterbury, the 8th of September, 1705.
Even this convincingly realistic narrative is, thanks to the
researches of George A. Aitken, no longer to be credited, as Sir
Walter Scott and many others have thought, to Defoe the master
of verisimilitude in fiction. It is now seen to be the circumstantial
account of a ghost story current at the time, a product of Defoe's
genius for reporting, not a clever hoax designed to sell Drelincourt's
pious manual.
From the autumn of 1706 to the spring of 1710, Scotland is
the main scene of Defoe's activity, and Scottish affairs are the
main subject of his pen. His movements and whereabouts are not
always certain; but it is evident that none of his biographers has
realised how large a portion of his time he spent out of London
as the agent, first of Harley, then of Godolphin. He was in
Scotland from October 1706 to December 1707, forwarding the
union in every way in his power and, after that was secured,
labouring to allay popular discontent. He kept the press busy
with pamphlets, the full tale of which will doubtless never be
known. He wrote Harley long and interesting letters; he attended
parliamentary committees; he furnished statistics on matters of
trade; he wormed himself into the confidence of men in all positions
-in short, to use his own phrase, he played the part of a perfect
spy, developing his powers of duplicity at every turn. Few agents
have ever more thoroughly earned their hire, or have served more
niggardly masters than was Harley. When, at last, Defoe, almost
## p. 13 (#37) ##############################################
13
a
Defoe and Harley
reduced to penury, was allowed to return without the place in the
customs for which he hoped, he found his patron tottering to his fall.
He was graciously permitted to transfer his services to Godolphin
and, early in 1708, was sent back to Scotland. Of his labours for
his new chief, we have no full account; but there was probably no
decline in his faithfulness and efficiency. There was some decline
in his literary activity, for the main work of 1708—9 is his huge,
dull, but apparently accurate History of the Union, a volume
which shows that Defoe had not a little of the methodical patience
characteristic of latter-day historians, but, as yet, little of the skill
in book-making which he was afterwards conspicuously to display.
In the early months of 1710, Defoe, although he saw clearly
the folly of impeaching Sacheverell, made that noisy clergyman
the subject of several tracts. Later, he transferred his services to
Harley, not, however, without allowing himself free criticism of
the extreme tories. In the autumn, he was sent to Scotland to
watch the Jacobites, and it is a letter written to Harley at this time
which first causes us to suspect that he was betraying his employer.
Some years ago, William Lee attributed to Defoe, on strong
internal evidence, a satirical pamphlet of 1711, entitled Atalantis
Major; but no one would suspect, from the way in which Defoe refers
to his efforts to suppress this tract, that he was its unblushing author.
There is no absolute proof that he was; but, when, a little later, we
find him charged with writing against Harley in The Protestant
Post Boy, and, later still, encounter attacks upon that minister in
pamphlets full of the characteristics of Defoe's style, our faith in
the journalist's fidelity is greatly shaken.
Whether the inscrutable Harley, now earl of Oxford, had
entire faith in his agent does not appear.
Certain it is,
however, that, for the next two or three years, Defoe was con-
tinually making surreptitious visits to the prime minister and
sending him letters, which not infrequently contained requests
for money. That he was as well paid by Oxford as enemies
asserted may be doubted; but there is no doubt that his advice
was sought on many matters and that he was employed by out-
siders to secure the minister's countenance for various schemes.
Meanwhile, the stream of pamphlets flowed unabated, and the
tone of The Review was adroitly changed in favour of peace with
France. As a result, Defoe was despised and distrusted by whigs
and tories alike. The modern student, making allowance for the
factiousness of the times, for the undeveloped state of party
government, for Defoe's pecuniary embarrassments and his social
## p. 14 (#38) ##############################################
14 Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
ostracism after the pillorying, finds it possible to extenuate his
conduct and is impelled to admire his dexterity and his resource-
fulness. There is ground, too, for maintaining that, in some
important respects, he was consistent, and a better counsellor
than Oxford deserved. He opposed the passage of the obnoxious
schism bill, and he seems never to have wavered in his support of
the Hanoverian succession.
As luck would have it, his second imprisonment was the direct
result of his activity against the Jacobites. During a visit to
Scotland in the autumn of 1712, he was much alarmed at the
progress Jacobitism seemed to be making, and he wrote several
tracts on the subject, in some of which he made an unfortunate
use of his favourite weapon, irony. Such a title as Reasons against
the Succession of the House of Hanover should have deceived no
one; but this tract and others furnished certain whigs with an
occasion for bringing an action against him for treason. Their
object was twofold—to crush Defoe and to besmirch Oxford, if the
latter took any overt measures to protect his unacknowledged
agent. The scheme was clever, but Defoe's measures to counteract
it-too intricate to be described here were cleverer. He would
doubtless have come off scotfree, had he not made the tactical
mistake of reflecting in The Review upon chief justice Parker.
This contempt of court led to his being confined, for a few days, in
the queen’s bench prison in May 1713. Immediately upon his
release, he began to edit a new trade journal Mercator, in the
interest of Bolingbroke's treaty of commerce, suffering The
Review to expire quietly. There is some, though, perhaps, not
sufficient, evidence to show that, at this time, bis services were
controlled by Bolingbroke rather than by Oxford; but, towards the
end of 1713, he was again in frequent communication with the
latter, through whose favour he secured a pardon under the great
seal for all past offences, thus effectually stopping, for the time, the
schemes of his whig enemies,
The year 1714 was a turning point for him, as well as for his
tory employers. He continued Mercator almost to the time of
>
1 Perhaps it may not be amiss to give a concrete illustration of Defoe's casuistry.
This is furnished by a comparison of the evasive language he used in his Appeal
(1715) with regard to his editorship of Mercator, and the frank language about his
share in that journal which he permitted himself to use in a short-lived trade paper of
1719, The Manufacturer, which has escaped his bibliographers but was attributed to
him by his contemporaries and is certainly his. Moreover, in the Appeal, he stated
categorically that he had never had any payment or reward for writing any part of
Mercator ; but in his letter to Oxford of 21 May 1714, he wrote that Arthur Moore,
6
## p. 15 (#39) ##############################################
Date of An Appeal to Honour and Justice 15
the queen's death. The paper, together with numerous pamphlets
of the period, including the four which form A General History
of Trade, gives abundant proof of the liberality of his com-
mercial views, although it scarcely justifies his modern admirers in
styling him the father of free trade. He also wrote voluminously
in opposition to the schism bill; and he entered into obscure
intrigues against his old enemy George Ridpath, which resulted in
his forming a connection with a rival Flying Post. In this, he
published a glowing eulogy of the new king and an indiscreet
attack upon one of the lords regent, which led to his indictment
for libel and, in the following year, to his trial and conviction. How
he escaped punishment will soon appear. Meanwhile, apparently
with Oxford's connivance, he published the first of the three parts
of his notorious apology for the administration of that statesman,
The Secret History of the White Staff. This was the signal for a
swarm of acrimonious whig tracts, which made much capital out
of Defoe's careless admissions with regard to his patron's intrigues
with the Scottish Jacobites. A second part, in which Bolingbroke
was treated more leniently, speedily followed, and then, at the end
of the year 1714, Defoe's health broke down-or else he deemed it
expedient to pose as an apoplectic who had not long to live.
A full discussion of this tangled matter would be tedious.
Lee, who did not know the date of publication of Defoe's Appeal
to Honour and Justice, tho' it be of his worst enemies, the
masterly account of the journalist's career which closed with
a pathetic note to the effect that he had been ill for six weeks
and was still in grave peril, seems, by assigning the tract to
January 1715, to have fixed the date of his hero's illness in
November and December 1714, thus managing to make the
bibliography of Defoe square not only with these dates but
with high conceptions of his probity. Unfortunately, it has been
discovered that the Appeal was published on 24 February 1715.
This brings the period of the illness into the early weeks of 1715,
that is, into a time when, according to Lee, Crossley and a con-
temporary of Defoe, the pamphleteer William Pittis, our journalist
was actively plying his trade. It does not follow that Defoe may
.
not have been out of health about this time—his situation, with
an expensive family, no fixed source of income, a worse than
6
who undertook to support the paper, had declined any consideration for it ever since
Lady Day last. ' There is little reason to doubt that Defoe was a poorly paid editor;
bat it is very certain that his relations with Mercator were much closer than he wished
readers of that periodical to believe.
## p. 16 (#40) ##############################################
16 Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
doubtful reputation and an indictment for libel hanging over him,
might well have undermined an even stronger constitution than
his; but it does seem to be clear that, on Oxford's repudiating
the White Staff tracts, Defoe published several others designed to
throw dust round the whole controversy and to minimise his own
part in it, and that, these attempts failing, he wrote his Appeal,
upon which he expended all the resources of his genius for
casuistry, without succeeding in changing the opinions of his con-
temporaries one iota. It is a proof of his literary skill, however,
that this adroit and moving pamphlet has misled many a confiding
biographer and uninformed modern reader.
Belief in a serious breakdown of Defoe's health is rendered
almost ridiculous by an examination of his bibliography, certain
and plausible, for the year 1715. It contains at least thirty
pamphlets and two thick volumes, the first instalments of The
Family Instructor and of a History of the Wars of Charles XII
of Sweden. No newspaper now taxed his pen for regular contri-
butions, he had to support his family and, perhaps, drown his
apprehensions as to the trial awaiting him, and he had every
inducement to display his loyalty. Hence, a multitude of
certain and suspected tracts on nearly every phase of affairs,
especially on the rebellion of the autumn. Meanwhile, in July,
he had been convicted of libel; but sentence had not been
passed. It never was passed, probably because Defoe managed,
through an appealing letter and by pointing to numerous loyal
pamphlets, to secure the favour of that very chief justice Parker
whom he had offended in 1713. Parker introduced him, as a
valuable secret agent and journalist, to Lord Townshend, the
principal secretary of state. A bargain was soon struck, the gist
of which was that Defoe should continue to pass as a tory journalist
still labouring under the displeasure of the government, and that,
as such, he should edit mildly tory periodicals and secure employ-
ment with more rabid Jacobite organs, in order that he might be
able to tone down or suppress treasonable articles and keep
the administration posted upon what was going on in Jacobite
circles.
The arrangement seems to have lasted for some ten years,
1716—26, and, by his discovery of the letters attesting it, Lee
succeeded, not only in showing that the older biographers were in
error in supposing that Defoe's activity as a political journalist
had ceased with queen Anne's death, but, also, in disinterring from
the newspapers of the time, particularly from the weeklies pub-
lished by Mist and Applebee, a mass of articles surely from Defoe's
## p. 17 (#41) ##############################################
Discreditable Later Tracts
17
pen and illustrative of his not inconsiderable powers as an essayist.
His chief activity as a spy dates from 1716 to 1720 and is mainly
connected with the office of the Jacobite publisher, Nathaniel
Mist. Whether he was Mist's good or evil genius, whether,
as Lee opined, Mist tried to kill Defoe on discovering his treachery
and pursued him maliciously for many years, whether, on the
other hand, Defoe's gradual abandonment of journalism was not
due to advancing years and the competition of younger men, are
questions we cannot discuss here. It seems enough to say that,
prior to, and throughout, his short career as a writer of fiction,
Defoe was almost preternaturally active as a journalist and
pamphleteer.
His tracts for the year 1717 alone are sufficiently numerous and
discreditable to warrant all that his contemporaries said of him as
a mercenary scribbler. To this bad year, that of his exemplary
Memoirs of the Church of Scotland, belong his forged Minutes of
Meenager, his unprincipled tracts against Toland, his impertinent
and, in the main, overlooked contributions to the Bangorian con-
troversy. As remarkable, however, as his industry, his versatility,
his unscrupulousness and his impudence, is the confidence some
modern students, notably Lee, have been able to maintain in him.
Many of his tracts belonging to this period have been rejected
because of the assumption that Defoe was too virtuous or too
dignified to have written them, or that no mortal man could
have written so much. It may be safely held that Defoe was
capable of writing almost anything, and that few pens have ever
filled with greater facility a larger number of sheets. On the
other hand, no condemnation of Defoe the spy and scribbler is
just that does not also include statesmen who, like Townshend
and Stanhope, employed him, rivals, who, like Toland and Abel
Boyer, were for ever hounding him, religious controversialists who
set him a bad example and partisan publishers and public who
suffered themselves to be exploited by him. With all his faults,
he was probably the most liberal and versatile writer of his age;
with his comparative freedom from rancour, he seems a larger and
more humane figure than any of the more aristocratic men of letters
that looked down on him, including Pope and Swift; though an
Ishmael, he managed to secure comfort for his family and a partial
amnesty for himself in his old age; and he wrote the most authentic
and widely read classic of his generation.
Our reference to Robinson Crusoe brings us to 25 April 1719,
the date of the publication of the first part of that immortal
E. L. IX.
2
CH. I.
## p. 18 (#42) ##############################################
18 Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
story. Defoe was nearly sixty years old, but he had hitherto written
almost nothing that would have preserved his name for the general
public. During the next five years, most of his fiction was
to be composed, and, during the ensuing six, he was to become
perhaps the most extraordinarily prolific old man in the history
of English literature. Although he never ceased to be a journalist
and pamphleteer, he became, for the last eleven years of his life,
primarily a writer of books, and especially of fiction. The change
has surprised many, and a word or two must be given to an attempt
to describe in outline his evolution.
Although there is evidence that Defoe was rather widely read
in English belles lettres, particularly in Rochester and other authors
of the restoration, there is little or no direct evidence that he
was a wide reader of fiction. It would be rash, however, to assume
that he had not dipped into some of the reprinted Elizabethan
romances; that he had not tried to read one or more of the in-
terminable heroic romances, whether in the original French or in
English versions or imitations; that he was ignorant of the comic
and the satiric anti-romances, or that he had not read with some
enjoyment the novels of his own time—the stories of intrigue by
Aphra Behn, the highly coloured pictures of the court and of the
aristocracy by Mrs Manley, and the attempts at domestic fiction
by Mrs Eliza Haywood and other more or less forgotten women.
If some bibliographers are right, we must hold that he wrote more
than one tract which shows the influence of Mrs Manley's New
Atalantis, and that he translated at least one picaresque story,
abbé Olivier's Life and Adventures of Signior Rozelli (1709,
1713). It is much more certain, however, that he must have been
familiar with lives of criminals, with chapbooks and compilations
such as those of Nathaniel Crouch (ʻR. Burton'), with the work of
Bunyan and with The Tatler and The Spectator. In other words,
it is chiefly to the popular narratives of his day and to con-
tributory forms like the essay and biography that Defoe owes
whatever in his fiction is not due to his own genius and experience
as a writer.
As a matter of fact-setting aside the possibility that he trans-
lated the story of Rozelli and even added a somewhat questionable
appendix to the edition of 1713 and a Continuation in 1724—one
can find in Defoe's writings, prior to 1719, grounds for believing
that he may have evolved into a novelist of adventure and of low
a
life with comparatively little indebtedness to previous writers of
fiction. He had had great practice in writing straightforward
a
## p. 19 (#43) ##############################################
Evolution as a Novelist. Robinson Crusoe 19
prose since 1697; and, by 1706—witness Mrs Veal—he had learned
how to make his reporting vivid and credible by a skilful use of
circumstantial detail. In his political allegory The Consolidator, ,
he had begun, though crudely, to use his imagination on an
extended scale, and he had already, in The Shortest Way, dis-
played only too well his gifts as an impersonator. In some of the
tracts written between 1710 and 1714, notably in the two parts of
The Secret History of the October Club, he had shown great
ability in satiric portraiture and considerable skill in reporting
speeches and dialogue. In 1715, he had introduced some mild
religious fiction into The Family Instructor, and, three years
later, in the second part of this book, he had made still greater
use of this element of interest. In the same year, 1715, he had
assumed the character of a quaker in some of his tracts; and,
since 1711, he had been publishing predictions supposed to be
made by a second-sighted highlander. Again, in 1715, he had
described the career of Charles XII of Sweden as though he
himself were 'A Scots Gentleman in the Swedish Service'; and
there is reason to believe that, in the following year, he wrote, as
'A Rebel,' a tract dealing with the rebellion in Scotland. In
1717, he skilfully assumed the character of a Turk who was
shocked by the intolerance displayed by English Christians in the
Bangorian controversy, and it seems almost certain that, in 1718,
he wrote for Taylor, the publisher of Robinson Crusoe, a continua-
tion of the Letters of the famous Turkish Spy. Finally, when it
is remembered that, in 1718, he was contributing to Mist's, week
by week, letters from fictitious correspondents, that his wide
reading in geography had given him a knowledge of foreign
countries, particularly of Africa and both Americas and that he
had long since shown himself to be a skilful purveyor of instruc-
tion and an adept at understanding the character of the average
man, we begin to see that, given an incident like the experiences
of Alexander Selkirk and an increasing desire to make money
through his pen in order to portion his daughters, we have a
plausible explanation of the evolution of Defoe the novelist out of
Defoe the journalist and miscellaneous writer.
The immediate and permanent popularity of Robinson Crusoe
is a commonplace of literary history. Defoe, who had a keen eye
for his market, produced, in about four months, The Farther Ad-
ventures of his hero, which had some, though less, vogue, and, a
year later, Serious Reflections during the Life and Surprizing
Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, a volume of essays which had no
2—2
## p. 20 (#44) ##############################################
20 Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
vogue at all. The original part, The Strange and Surprizing
Adventures, at once stirred up acrimonious critics, but, also, at-
tracted many imitators and, in the course of years, became the
occasion of legends and fantastic theories. All these—for example,
the story that Harley was the real author of the book-may be
dismissed without hesitation. Almost equally without foundation,
despite his own statements, is the notion that Robinson Crusoe is
an allegory of Defoe's life. It may even be doubted whether he
ever hawked his manuscript about in order to secure a publisher.
Some things, however, may be considered certain with regard to
this classic. Defoe wrote it primarily for the edification, rather
than for the delectation, of his readers, although he did not evade
giving them pleasure and although, assuredly, he took pleasure him-
self in his own creation. It is equally clear that, in many of its
pages, Defoe the writer of pious manuals is to be discovered ; in
others, Defoe the student of geography and of volumes of voyages;
in others, Defoe the minute observer and reporter. The book is a
product that might bave been expected from the journalist we
know, save only for the central portion of the story, the part that
makes it a world classic, the account of Crusoe alone on his
island. Here, to use a phrase applied by Brunetière to Balzac,
Defoe displays a power of which he had given but few indications,
the power to make alive. This power to make alive is not to be
explained by emphasis upon Defoe's command of convincing details
or by any other stock phrase of criticism. It is a gift of genius,
denied to preceding English writers of prose fiction, displayed by
Defoe himself for a few years in a small number of books, and
rarely equalled since, although after him the secret of writing an
interesting and well constructed tale of adventure was more or
less an open one. The form of his story could be imitated, but not
its soul. The universal appeal implied in the realistic account of
the successful struggle of one man against the pitiless forces of
nature was something no one else could impart to a book of
adventure, something Defoe himself never caught again. It is
this that links Robinson Crusoe with the great poems of the
world and makes it perhaps the most indisputable English classic
of modern times, however little of a poet, in a true sense, its
author may have been.
That Robinson Crusoe was written 'all in the day's work' is
clear to the student of Defoe's bibliography for 1719, which in-
cludes, in addition, an attack on bishop Hoadly, a biography of
baron de Goertz, a tract on stock-jobbing—precursor of many
## p. 21 (#45) ##############################################
Miscellaneous Later Writings
21
pamphlets on the South Sea Bubble—a life of captain Avery,
introducing the long series of tracts devoted to pirates and other
criminals, an account of that extraordinary prodigy Dickory
Cronke, otherwise known as “the Dumb Philosopher,' contributions
to Mercurius Politicus, Mist's, The Whitehall Evening Post, and
a new paper founded by Defoe, The Daily Post—but the list
seems endless. There is little reason, however, for believing that he
kept his copy by him and poured it forth at specially favourable
times, or that he had a 'double’ whose style is undistinguishable
from his. He was, rather, the most practised and versatile journalist
and hack writer of the day, known to publishers as willing to turn
every penny, unhampered by regular official or commercial em-
ployment, and obliged to keep up his income in order that he
might continue, as during the past five or six years, to live at
Stoke Newington in a condition approaching affluence. One
change, however, as has been noted, is apparent in Defoe's literary
habits during the last twelve years of his life. Throughout his
early career, the pamphlet was the form of composition best
adapted to his genius, and the books he attempted were somewhat
laboured and amorphous. During his later period, while he still
wrote pamphlets freely, he tended more and more to the production
of elaborate books, in the construction of which, despite continual
lapses into garrulity, he displayed remarkable skill. Except for
the summer journeys, which, from 1722 to 1725, may be presumed
to have furnished him with materials for that delightful and in-
valuable guidebook in three volumes, A Tour thro' the Whole Island
of Great Britain, and for short periods when he was disabled by the
stone, Defoe's old age, up to the autumn of 1729, must have been
that of an animated writing machine. Was he seeking to dull the
pangs of conscience, or to live down a scandalous past? Probably
the latter, and, more probably still, to lay by money for his
daughter Hannah, who was certain to be an old maid.
The next book of importance after the two parts of Robinson
Crusoe was The History of the Life and Adventures of Mr Duncan
Campbell, the deaf and dumb conjurer, which appeared at the
end of April 1720. A bibliographical mystery hangs over this
curious production as well as over other books and tracts relating
to Campbell. That Defoe is the main author of the original
History and of a pamphlet entitled The Friendly Demon (1726)
seems clear: that he may have been aided in the first of these
either by William Bond or by Mrs Eliza Haywood is probable,
and that he had nothing to do with the other works relating to
## p. 22 (#46) ##############################################
22 Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
Campbell, save, possibly, the posthumous Secret Memoirs of 1732,
is likely. In May 1720 came the book, which, together with A
Journal of the Plague Year (1722), shows that Defoe possessed,
not only a genius for producing effects of verisimilitude, but, also,
a considerable share of something which it is hard to distinguish
from historical imagination. This is, of course, The Memoirs of a
Cavalier, the absorbing story of the wars in Germany and England,
for the accuracy of which so many untrained persons have been
willing to vouch that some critics have assumed for it a superfluous
manuscript source. A month later appeared that fine example of
the fiction of adventure, The Life, Adventures and Piracies of
the Famous Captain Singleton, which is a proof at once of Defoe's
extensive knowledge of geography and of his power to extend his
imagination, not only back into the past, as in The Memoirs of a
Cavalier, but out into the regions of the far away and the strange.
Singleton also holds attention by that interest in criminals which
Defoe naturally began to display in greater degree so soon as he
formed his six years' editorial connection with John Applebee, the
chosen publisher of the confessions and biographies of noted male-
factors. It has, moreover, another link with Defoe's next great
book, The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Famous Moll Flanders
(January 1722), for, in Singleton, we find Defoe beginning to
display a power of characterisation which is seen in very respect-
able measure in Moll Flanders and, also, in Colonel Jacque and
Roxana. It is, however, as a realistic picture of low life in the
large that Moll Flanders is supreme, just as the book of the next
month, Religious Courtship, is the unapproachable classic of
middle class smugness and piety. It is pious middle class folk
that figure in the two books devoted to the great plague; but it is
the pestilence itself that dominates our imagination and fills us
with unstinted admiration for Defoe's realistic power. That power
is seen to a less extent in The Impartial History of Peter Alexowitz
the Present Czar of Muscovy and in The History and Remarkable
Life of the truly Honourable Colonel Jacque; but, so long as the
latter book has readers, Charles Lamb's praise of the affecting
picture of the little thief will command grateful assent. If Lamb had
gone farther and asserted that the year 1722, the year of Moll
Flanders, of Religious Courtship, of the Due Preparations and
A Journal of the Plague Year, of The History of Peter the Great,
and of Colonel Jacque, was the greatest annus mirabilis in the
career of any English writer, who would have been rash enough
to say him nay?
a
## p. 23 (#47) ##############################################
Miscellaneous Later Writings
23
The next year is almost a blank unless we accept indecorous
contributions to a controversy about the use of cold water as a
specific in fevers—and an undignified Defoe is a person of whom
some credulous students will form no conception. By March
1724, however, we have our prolific and masterly writer once
more, for that is the date of The Fortunate Mistress, better known
as Roxana, the story in which Defoe makes his greatest advance,
not a very great one after all, toward the construction of a well
ordered plot. This, also, is the year of one of the best of his
sociological works, his treatise on the servant question, The Great
Law of Subordination Considered, as well as of the first volume
of the Tour. Before the year closed, he had written his popular
tracts on Jack Sheppard, and the last of his generally accepted
works of fiction, A New Voyage round the World, notable for its
description of the lower parts of South America and for the proof
it affords that its author's powers of narration and description were
on the wane. From 1725 to his death, Defoe is a writer of books
of miscellaneous information rather than a pioneer novelist, yet
there is reason to believe that he did not abandon the field of
narration so entirely as has been generally held. The Four Years
Voyages of Capt. George Roberts (1726), may be, in considerable
measure, the dull record of the experiences of a real seaman, but
it bears almost certain traces of Defoe's hand. The far more
interesting Memoirs of Captain George Carleton (1728) has for its
nominal hero a man who is known to have existed, and who may
have taken a direct or indirect share in its composition ; but it is
now clear, almost beyond dispute, that the shaper of Carleton's
book, the writer who has vitiated many of the accounts given of
the career of Peterborough in Spain, is not dean Swift, as has
acutely argued, but our protean scribbler Daniel Defoe. It
is less certain, perhaps, that Defoe, in 1729, performed for Robert
Drury's entertaining Journal of his captivity in Madagascar pre-
cisely the services he had rendered to Carleton's Memoirs ; but
there is very strong evidence to support this view, which is that of
Pasfield Oliver, the latest editor of the book.
But, apparently, there was no limit, save death, to Defoe's
productiveness. Accordingly, we must pass over, with scarcely a
word, the numerous pamphlets and volumes of the years 1725—31.
The most important of the tracts are those of a sociological character,
for example, the astonishingly suggestive Augusta Triumphans: or
the Way to make London the Most Flourishing City in the
Universe. The most interesting and important of the books is,
## p. 24 (#48) ##############################################
24 Defoe—the Newspaper and the Novel
most surely, The Complete English Tradesman, which, for variety
of information, shrewd practical wisdom, engaging garrulousness
and sheer carrying power of easy vernacular style, is nothing
short of a masterpiece. Charles Lamb seems to have been rather
.
fantastic in discovering in it a source of corruption for its author's
countrymen. The book has probably corrupted just as many
promising young men as Roxana—see the exemplary pages of
Lee’s biography of Defoe-has reclaimed wayward young women.
Next to The Tradesman in interest, some would place the curious
group of books dealing in a half sceptical, half credulous and
altogether gossipping, fashion with occult subjects—The Political
History of the Devil, A System of Magic and An Essay on the
History and Reality of Apparitions. Others, with quite as much
reason, will prefer A Plan of the English Commerce, or that
sound and well written treatise The Complete English Gentleman,
which, ironically enough, was left incomplete and was not published
until about twenty years ago. The wiser lover of quaint and
homely books will read, or, at least, glance over, all the productions
of Defoe's last years on which he can lay his hands, will wish that
the world might see a collected edition of them and will not
allow the biographers to persuade him that there was any marked
falling off in the old man's productivity, save for a mysterious
period which stretched from the autumn of 1729 to the midsummer
of 1730.
What happened to Defoe during these months we do not know
and probably shall not know unless new documents unexpectedly
come to light. In the spring of 1729, he had married his favourite
daughter Sophia to the naturalist Henry Baker; in the autumn,
he had been taken ill, just as the opening pages of The Complete
English Gentleman were going through the press. In August
1730, he was writing from Kent to his son-in-law Baker a letter
full of complaints about his own bad health, his sufferings at the
hands of a wicked enemy and his betrayal by one of his sons. It
seems likely that he had transferred some property to his eldest
son, Daniel, on condition that the latter would provide for his
mother and her unmarried daughters, but that the shifty son of
a shifty father had not lived up to his obligations. It is certain
that, for some reason or other, the home at Newington, a pleasant
one according to Baker's description, had been broken up after
Defoe's recovery from his illness in the autumn of 1729. It seems
probable that he believed it necessary to separate from his
family and to take refuge in London and, later, in Kent. Was he
## p. 25 (#49) ##############################################
His Posthumous Reputation 25
the victim of hallucinations—had he any real enemy whose
malice he must avoid—was he trying, as he had tried before the
marriage, to elude certain financial demands made by the canny
Baker-had he reverted to the practices of his early manhood and
engaged in hazardous speculations? Who can tell ? All that we
now seem to know definitely is that, during the autumn of 1730 and
the early winter of 1731, he was writing pamphlets and revising
books in a way that indicates little falling off of energy and absolutely
no decay of mental powers, and that, on 26 April 1731, he died of
a lethargy at his lodgings in Ropemaker's alley, Moorfields, not far
from where he was born,
He was buried in what is now Bunhill fields. The newspapers
of the day took slight, but not unfavourable, notice of his death; his
library was sold in due course; his reputation as a writer went into
a partial eclipse which lasted until the close of the century; and
then, mirabile dictu, he was hailed by admiring biographers and
critics, not merely as a great writer, but as a consistent patriot
and a Christian hero. Of late, it has become impossible to view
him, as a man, in any such favourable light; but it seems probable
that he was more sinned against than sinning, and it is coming to be
more and more admitted that, as a writer and an important figure
of his age, he is second only to Swift, if even to him. Some incline
to regard him as the most wonderfully endowed man of his times,
seeing in him a master journalist, an adroit and influential
politician with not a few of the traits of a statesman, an econo-
mist of sound and advanced views, a purveyor of miscellaneous
information vast in its range and practical in its bearings, an
unequalled novelist of adventure and low life and, last but not
least, a writer whose homely raciness has not been surpassed and
a man the fascinating mystery of whose personality cannot be
exhausted. It is impossible to sum him up, but those who are
not satisfied with calling him 'the author of Robinson Crusoe
may content themselves with affirming that he is the greatest of
plebeian geniuses.
## p. 26 (#50) ##############################################
CHAPTER II
STEELE AND ADDISON
STEELE and Addison are writers of talent who rose almost
to genius because they intuitively collaborated with the spirit
of their age. They came to London at a time when, quite apart
from politics, society was divided into two classes, apparently so
irreconcilable that they seemed like two nations. On the one side
was the remnant of the old order, which still cherished the renas-
cence ideals of self-assertion and irresponsibility and had regained
prominence at the restoration. They followed the old fashion of
ostentation and self-abandonment, fighting duels on points of honour,
vying with each other in quips and raillery, posing as atheists and
jeering at sacred things, love-making with extravagant odes and
compliments, applauding immoral plays, while the more violent, the
'gulls' and 'roarers,' roamed through the town in search of
victims to outrage or assault. The women, in these higher circles,
read and thought of little but erotic French romances, wore false
eyebrows and patches, painted themselves, gesticulated with their
fans and eyes, intrigued in politics and passed the time in dalliance.
But, on the other hand, the citizens of London, who, since Tudor
times, had stood aloof from culture and corruption, were now no
longer the unconsidered masses. Each new expansion of trade
gave them a fresh hold on society, while the civil war, which had
decimated or ruined the nobility, conferred on the middle class
a political importance of which their fathers had never dreamt.
As a rule, members of the citizen class who have risen in the social
scale intermarry with the aristocracy and imitate the manners, and
especially the vices, of the class into which they enter. But, in the
great political revolution of the seventeenth century, merchants and
traders had triumphed through their moral character even more
than by their material prosperity. The time had come when England
was weary of all the medieval fanaticism, brutality and prejudice
which had risen to the surface in the civil war, and it was the citizen
class, apart from the zealots on both sides, which had first
upheld moderation. The feud which Greene, a century before,
## p. 27 (#51) ##############################################
-
Beginnings of the new Civilization 27
had symbolised as a quaint dispute between the velvet breeches
and cloth breeches had entered upon its last phase. Votaries of
Caroline elegance and dissipation had become a set apart. They still
had all the glamour of wealth and fashion; but they had lost their
influence on the civilization of the country. The middle class had
broken away from their leadership and had pressed forward to the
front rank of national progress. It has already been shown? how they
had trodden down the relics of a less humane and less reasonable
age, reforming the laws for debt and the administration of prisons,
refuting the superstition of witchcraft, attacking scholasticism in
the universities and founding the Royal Society-nay, more, how
the more enlightened had pleaded for a purer and simpler morality,
for gentler manners, for a more modest yet dignified self-respect.
To the superficial observer, these protests and appeals must have
sounded like isolated voices in a confused multitude. In reality,
they were indications of a new civilization which was already
fermenting underneath. A new London had sprung up since the
great fire and, with it, a generation of Londoners whose tempera-
ment and occupations led them to form a standard of culture,
honour and religion peculiar to themselves. Such progress is the
work of a whole class. It is never initiated by individuals, though
one or two thinkers are generally needed to give form and ex-
pression to the tendencies of the rest. In this case, the victory of
'cloth breeches' was not complete until Steele and Addison had
discovered in what quarter to look for the movement and in what
form to reveal to men their own ideas. These writers saw further
and deeper than their contemporaries, because each, according to
his own character, had first been born again.
It was Steele who led the way. Nature had endowed him with
the instincts and temperament of one of king Charles I's cavaliers.
He had the same generosity, love of pleasure, restlessness, chivalry
and tincture of classical culture. Like many others of this class,
he was extremely impressionable; but, unlike his prototypes, he
lived in an age when recklessness and self-indulgence, though still
fashionable in some circles, ran counter to the better tendencies of
the time. Thus, the conviviality and gallantry which were popular
in the guardroom caused him many searchings of heart, when
confronted by the disapproval of scholars and moralists. In such
moments of inward discontent, the gay life of the capital lost its
glamour; the puritan spirit came over him, and he perceived that the
1 Ante, vol. VII, chap. XVI, pp. 385–97.
## p. 28 (#52) ##############################################
28
Steele and Addison
dissipation of the young man-about-town was, at best, a pose and
the moral teaching of the ancients a lamentable protection against
the temptation of the senses. Cicero, Seneca and Plutarch had
proved persuasive monitors to many a Jacobean and Caroline
essayist, because the renascence had endowed the classics with
almost scriptural authority. But, though Steele belonged to the
class which still clung to these guides from respect for the old
times, he also came daily into contact with the new enlightened
religion of the middle class. He committed to paper the thoughts
which passed through his mind in these moments of reflection and
published them in 1701 for the edification of others under the title
The Christian Hero.
This booklet is an attempt to persuade educated men into
accepting the Bible as a moral counsellor. Steele describes how
Cato, Caesar, Brutus and Cassius died, and argues that heathen
philosophy failed each in the great crisis of his life. He then
tells over again the story of the creation of Adam and Eve and
how, after their fall, men became corrupt and so a prey to ambition
and the love of ostentation. This dependence on the applause
of the world is, to Steele, the root of all evil ; even the tales
which young fellows tell of debauches and seductions are prompted
by 'fame'; even 'heathen virtues, which were little else but dis-
guised or artificial passions (since the good was in fame) must rise
or fall with disappointment or success. ' Christ, and then St Paul,
by their labours and death, first brought men help, teaching them
that the true guide in conduct is conscience. Man sins or suffers
through dependence on the world; he is saved by the inwardness
and self-effacement of Christianity. In the spiritual distress which
drove Steele to write this pamphlet, he had learnt to think for
himself. The description of Eve's creation shows that he had
studied Milton, then an unfashionable author; the passage on
chivalrous respect for women's virtue was a defiance to the con-
ventionality which regarded immorality as a sign of high spirits ;
the advice that a man should do a kindness as if he would rather
have his generosity appear an enlarged self-love than a diffusive
bounty' was a new ideal for good taste; in his contention that the
false ideals of society led men to err, he touched the true weakness
of his times.
Thus, The Christian Hero is important because it foreshadows
Steele's message to his age. But, though the book passed through
a second edition within the same year and continued to be popular
i Chap. II.
## p. 29 (#53) ##############################################
Steelė's Comedies
29
6
with readers of a certain religious temperament, it was not other-
wise a success. The prosperous middle class, busy with the peaceful
round of city life, did not need to be warned against choosing
Caesar or Brutus for their model or Seneca for their spiritual
pastor. Nor, again, if they ever. opened this little manual of
meditations, would they find it clearly explained how the self-
sacrifice of St Paul and the divinity of Christ could guide them
amid the thousand little perplexities of their growing social
system. Steele sermonised on heroism to readers who were
interested in manners, and deserved the fate that from being
thought no undelightful companion, he was soon reckoned a
disagreeable fellow? '
This missionary spirit, when roused, impelled him to other forms
of expression. Having not yet found his peculiar bent, he was
inevitably attracted to the drama. During a century, comedy and
tragedy, with intervals of repression, had been one of the most
popular outlets for an author and must have seemed exactly the
medium for a man with Steele's sense of humour and knowledge
of character. Besides, the moral movement among the people,
which had been influencing Steele, had also caught the theatre.
Sir Richard Blackmore and Jeremy Collierº were calling for a
pure and reformed drama, and so Steele's conscience, as well as his
tastes, urged him to put his ideas on the stage. Since the restora-
tion, writers of comedies had aimed at brilliance and cleverness.
As the court was amused at cuckoldry, they represented seducers
and seduced as endowed with all the wit, ingenuity, or beauty which
society admired, while intrigues leading to adultery could always
be rounded off into a well constructed, if somewhat unoriginal,
plot. Steele went over the same ground-love, courtship, married
life, intrigue; his purpose, however, was avowedly to paint virtue
and vice in their true colours. Following the example of
Molière, from whom he borrowed freely, he covered his bad
characters with ridicule and confusion. But he was not content
to let them occupy the front of the stage, as Molière had done.
He wished to champion virtue; so his villains, for the most part,
are minor characters, dismissed with humiliation at the dénouement,
while his leading figures are quite ordinary people, whose careers
begin and end in the triumph of homely virtues. Such characters,
however desirable in a book of devotions, lack true comic interest,
and Steele was obliged to lead his heroes and heroines through a
1 Mr Steele's Apology for Himself and his Writings, 1714.
9 Cf. ante, vol. VIII, pp. 163 ff.
a
## p. 30 (#54) ##############################################
30
Steele and Addison
6
series of domestic calamities and surprises, in order to sustain
sympathy. In The Funeral, or Grief-à-la-mode (1701), his first and
best constructed comedy, the defunct Lord Brumpton has to be kept
secretly alive all through the play, in order to shame his worldly
widow's enjoyment of affluence and freedom, and to reward his
daughters' two suitors. In The Lying Lover (1703), copied from
Corneille's Menteur, young Bookwit becomes drunk, then fights
and appears to kill his rival, is arrested, suffers all the pangs of
remorse and the horrors of Newgate and, after this gruesome
lesson against intemperance and duelling, learns that his victim
still lives and ends by marrying the sweetheart whom he had
courted with a fidelity rare on the stage. In The Tender
Husband (1705), the third and last of Steele's plays at this
period of his career, he rises to one of Molière's leading ideas,
in the conception that a son tyrannised till manhood in a boorish
home will end by deceiving his father and contracting a foolish
marriage, and that a girl, left to the companionship of French
romances, will become a 'Quixote in petticoats. ' But, when the
elder Clerimont is represented as despatching his mistress,
disguised as a gallant, to tempt the virtue of his wife and then,
on the failure of the seducer, tearfully seeking a reconciliation,
all dramatic propriety is sacrificed, in order to give a by no means
convincing picture of conjugal tenderness. Such was the tone
which the moral movement of queen Anne's reign introduced into
the theatre, and, since succeeding dramatists came under this
influence, Steele may be regarded as the founder of sentimental
comedy? Unhappily, as in the case of most comedies with a
purpose, plots are sacrificed to the moral, and, apart from im-
probability of incident, Steele’s plays show but little of that
correctness of construction which the age exacted.
If Steele's dramatic work added scant laurels to his reputation,
it was of the first importance in forming his mind. He had come
to his task with the same stock of ideas as had served him in
composing The Christian Hero. But, as a playwright, he had
to make these ideas talk and act. He had to penetrate be-
neath the surface of life, and to show how often a profession or
training degrades a man; how servants inevitably become mimics
of their masters' excesses and frivolities; how women, who are
untrained in the serious responsibilities of life, fall victims
to fulsome adulation and often end in a marriage of convenience;
i Ward, A. W. , A History of English Dramatic Literature, revised ed.
