- Henry Fielding
Infobox Writer
name = Henry Fielding
pseudonym = "Captain Hercules Vinegar", also some works published anonymously
birthdate = Birth date|1707|4|22
birthplace =Sharpham ,Somerset ,England
deathdate = Death date and age|1754|10|8|1707|4|22
deathplace =Lisbon ,Portugal
occupation =Justice of the peace , novelist, dramatist
nationality = English
period = 1728-1754
genre =satire ,picaresque
movement = Enlightenment,Augustan Age
influenced =George Orwell Henry Fielding (
April 22 ,1707 –October 8 ,1754 ) was an Englishnovelist anddramatist known for his rich earthy humour and satirical prowess, and as the author of thenovel "Tom Jones".Aside from his literary achievements, he has a significant place in the history of law-enforcement, having founded what some have called London's first
police force, theBow Street Runners , using his authority as a magistrate.Biography
Born into an aristocratic family at
Sharpham nearGlastonbury inSomerset in 1707, Fielding was educated atEton College , where he established a lifelong friendship withWilliam Pitt the Elder . His younger sister, Sarah, also became a successful writer.After a romantic episode with a young woman that ended in his getting into trouble with the law, he went to
London where his literary career began.In 1728, he travelled to
Leiden to study classics and law at the University. However, due to lack of money he was obliged to return to London and he began writing for thetheatre , some of his work being savagely critical of the contemporary government under SirRobert Walpole .The Theatrical Licensing Act of 1737 is alleged to be a direct result of his activities. The particular play that triggered the Licensing Act was "The Vision of the Golden Rump", but Fielding's satires had set the tone.
Once the Licensing Act passed, political satire on the stage was virtually impossible, and playwrights whose works were staged were viewed as suspect. Fielding therefore retired from the theatre and resumed his career in law and, in order to support his wife Charlotte Cradock and two children, he became a barrister.
His lack of money sense meant that he and his family often endured periods of poverty, but he was also helped by
Ralph Allen , a wealthy benefactor who later formed the basis of Squire Allworthy in "Tom Jones". After Fielding's death, Allen provided for the education and support of his children.Fielding never stopped writing political satire and satires of current arts and letters. His "Tragedy of Tragedies" of
Tom Thumb (for whichHogarth designed the frontispiece) was, for example, quite successful as a printed play.He also contributed a number of works to journals of the day. He wrote for
Tory periodicals, usually under the name of "Captain Hercules Vinegar".As Justice of the Peace he issued a warrant for the arrest of
Colley Cibber for "murder of the English language".During the late 1730s and early 1740s Fielding continued to air his liberal and anti-Jacobite views in satirical articles and newspapers. Almost by accident, in anger at the success of Richardson's "
Pamela ", Fielding took to writing novels in 1741 and his first major success was "Shamela", an anonymousparody ofSamuel Richardson 's melodramatic novel. It is a satire that follows the model of the famous Tory satirists of the previous generation (Jonathan Swift andJohn Gay , in particular).He followed this up with "
Joseph Andrews " (1742), an original work supposedly dealing with Pamela's brother, Joseph. Although also begun as a parody, this work developed into an accomplished novel in its own right and is considered to mark Fielding's debut as a serious novelist.In 1743, he published a novel in the "Miscellanies" volume III (which was the first volume of the Miscellanies). This was "The History of the Life of the Late Mr Jonathan Wild the Great."
This novel is sometimes thought of as his first because he almost certainly began composing it before he wrote "Shamela" and "Joseph Andrews". It is a satire of Walpole that draws a parallel between Walpole and
Jonathan Wild , the infamous gang leader and highwayman.He implicitly compares the Whig party in Parliament with a gang of thieves being run by Walpole, whose constant desire to be a "Great Man" (a common epithet for Walpole) should culminate only in the antithesis of greatness: being hanged.
His anonymously-published "The Female Husband" of 1746 is a fictionalized account of a notorious case in which a female transvestite was tried for duping another woman into marriage. Though a minor item in Fielding's total "oeuvre", the subject is consistent with his ongoing preoccupation with fraud, sham, and masks.
His greatest work was "Tom Jones" (1749), a meticulously constructed
picaresque novel telling the convoluted and hilarious tale of how a foundling came into a fortune.Charlotte, on whom he later modeled the heroines of both "Tom Jones" and "Amelia", died in 1744. Three years later Fielding - disregarding public opinion - married her former maid, Mary, who was pregnant.
Despite this, his consistent anti-Jacobitism and support for the
Church of England led to him being rewarded a year later with the position of London's Chief Magistrate, and his literary career went from strength to strength.Joined by his younger half-brother John, he helped found what some have called London's first
police force, theBow Street Runners in 1749.According to the historian
G.M. Trevelyan , they were two of the best magistrates in eighteenth-century London, and did a great deal to enhance the cause of judicial reform and improve prison conditions.His influential pamphlets and enquiries included a proposal for the abolition of
public hanging s. ["Words, Words, Words", From the Beginnings to the 18th Century, La Spiga languages, 2003] This did not, however, imply opposition to capital punishment as such—as evident, for example, in his presiding in 1751 over the trial of the notorious criminalJames Field , finding him guilty in a robbery and sentencing him to hang.However, Fielding's ardent commitment to the cause of justice as a great humanitarian in the 1750s, coincided with a rapid deterioration in his health to such an extent that he went abroad to
Portugal in 1754 in search of a cure. Gout, asthma and other afflictions meant that he had to use crutches.He died in
Lisbon two months later and his tomb at the English Church may be visited. Despite being now blind, John Fielding succeeded his older brother as Chief Magistrate and became known as the 'Blind Beak' of Bow Street for his ability to recognise criminals by their voice alone.Literary Style
Whereas Defoe and Richardson both attempt to hide the fictional nature of their work under the guise of 'memoirs' and 'letters' respectively, Henry Fielding adopted a position which represented a new departure in terms of prose fiction—in no way do his novels constitute an effort to disguise literary devices. In fact, he was the first major novelist to openly admit that his prose fiction was pure artefact. Also, in comparison with his arch rival and contemporary, Richardson, Fielding presents his reader with a much wider range of characters taken from all social classes.
Fielding's lack of psychological realism (i.e. the feelings and emotions of his characters are rarely explored in any depth) can perhaps be put down to his overriding concern to reveal the universal order of things. It can be argued that his novel "Tom Jones" reflects its author's essentially neoclassical outlook—character is something the individual is blessed with at birth, a part of life's natural order or pattern. Characters within Fielding's novels also correspond largely to types; e.g. Squire Western is a typically boorish and uncultivated Tory squire, obsessed with fox hunting, drinking and acquiring more property.
So Fielding's comic epic contains a range of wonderful—but essentially static—characters whose motives and behaviour are largely predetermined. There is little emotional depth to his portrayal of them, and the complex realities of interactive human relationships that are so much a part of the modern novel are of negligible importance to him. Perhaps the character we come to know best is the figure of the omniscient narrator himself (i.e. Fielding) whose company some of his readers come to enjoy. ["Words, Words, Words", From the Beginnings to the 18th Century, La Spiga languages, 2003]
In popular culture
* Fielding, played by
John Sessions , satirically narrates the 1997 television adaptation of his own work "The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling ". His brotherJohn Fielding also appears as the magistrate at Jones' trial.
* Fielding is the central character in the 2008 Channel 4 historical drama "City of Vice ", an account on the early cases of the Bow Street runners, which used Fielding's diaries as a source. Fielding was played by the actorIan McDiarmid .References
In Joe Wright's 2007 film adaptation of "Atonement" (novel by Ian Mcewan), Cecilia admits to Robbie that she "prefers Fielding anyday; he's much more passionate" as opposed to the other 18th century Romantic writers.
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Partial list of works
* "Love in Several Masques" - play, 1728
* "Rape upon Rape" - play, 1730. Adapted byBernard Miles as "Lock Up Your Daughters!" in 1959, filmed in 1974
* "The Temple Beau" - novel, 1730
* "The Author's Farce" - play, 1730
* "The Tragedy of Tragedies; or, The Life and Death of Tom Thumb" - play, 1731
* "Grub-Street Opera" - play, 1731
* "The Modern Husband" - play, 1732
* "Pasquin" - play, 1736
* "The Historical Register for the Year 1736 " - play, 1737
* "An Apology for the Life of Mrs. Shamela Andrews " - novel, 1741
* "The History of the Adventures of Joseph Andrews and his Friend, Mr. Abraham Abrams" - novel, 1742
* "The Life and Death of Jonathan Wild, the Great " - novel, 1743, ironic treatment ofJonathan Wild , the most notorious underworld figure of the time.
* "Miscellanies" - collection of works, 1743, contained the poem Part of Juvenal's Sixth Satire, Modernized in Burlesque Verse
* "The Female Husband or the Surprising History of Mrs Mary alias Mr George Hamilton, who was convicted of having married a young woman of Wells and lived with her as her husband, taken from her own mouth since her confinement" - pamphlet, fictionalized report, 1746
* "The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling " - novel, 1749
* "A Journey from this World to the Next" - 1749
* "Amelia" - novel, 1751
* "The Covent Garden Journal" - 1752
* "Journal of a Voyage to Lisbon" - travel narrative, 1755
* "Tom Thumb N.D."Bibliography
The first collected edition [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_International_Encyclopedia] of Fielding was "Works" (London, 1762); other editions are those edited respectively by Scott and Roscoe (Edinburgh, 1840), by Browne (London, 1871), by Gosse (New York, 1898), and by Saintbury (New York and London, 1902). Fielding's first biographer was Arthur Murray, whose essay on Fielding's life and genius was introduced in the first collected series. (See above). The best life is that of Martin Battestin and Ruthe Battestin, "Henry Fielding: A Life" (London & New York: Routledge, 1989).
* Lawrence, "Life and Times of Fielding" (London, 1855)
*Leslie Stephen 's admirable essay on Fielding in "Hours in a Library" (London, 1874-79)
* Linder, "Henry Fielding's Dramatische Werke" (Dresden, 1895)The best survey of Fielding scholarship and criticism is by H. George Hahn, "Henry Fielding: An Annotated Bibliography" (Metuchen, NJ and London: Scarecrow Press, 1979). Full and excellent critical introductions to each of Fielding's important works will be found in G. E. Saintbury's edition of the "Works" (ten volumes, London, 1898).
External links
*
* [http://www.classicistranieri.com/english/indexes/authf.htm Works by Henry Fielding] in e-book
* [http://quotationpark.com/authors/FIELDING,%20Henry.html Famous Quotes by Henry Fielding]Persondata
NAME= Fielding, Henry
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION= EnglishJustice of the peace , novelist, dramatist
DATE OF BIRTH= birth date|1707|4|22|mf=y
PLACE OF BIRTH=Sharpham ,Glastonbury ,England
DATE OF DEATH=October 8 , [1754
PLACE OF DEATH=Lisbon
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