Name : Vaghasiya Alisha S. Class: M.A.
(semester -1)
Roll No. 1 Paper : 2 ( Neo Classical
literature)
Topic :Major
writers of the Neo Classical age
Submitted to: Department of English
M.K. Bhavnagar University.
‘Major writers of the Neo-Classical Age’
· Introduction
Neo-Classical
age is considered as a very remarkable age of English literature. In this age
literature proceeds in many forms like prose, poetry, drama, novel and many
others. And in creating this wonderful form of literature there is immense
contribution of many great writers. Some very important of them are describe
as under.
Ø Prose
writers
v
Jonathan
Swift (1667-1745)
Biography
Swift was born in Dublin in 1667. His
father died before swift’s birth so the boy was thrown upon the charity of an
uncle, who paid for his education in Ireland. Much of his distemper was due
to purely physical causes, for he suffered from an affection of the ear that
ultimately touched his brain and caused insanity. In 1686, at the age of
nineteen, he left trinity college. An embittered man , he spent the last
thirty years of his life in gloom, and largely in retirement. His last years
were passed in silence and, at the very end lunacy.
His poetry
Swift would have been among the first to smile at any
claim being advanced for him on the score of his being a great poet, though
he always longed to excel in poetry, yet in bulk his verse is considerable.
His poems were to a large extent recreations, add verses to his friends.
In his poems he is as a rule lighter of touch and more
placeable in humour than he is in his prose. His favourite metre is the
octosyllabic couplet, which he handles with dexterity.
His prose
His first noteworthy book was the Batttle of the books, published in
1704. The theme of the work is well known one, being the dispute between
ancient and modern authors. Swift gives the theme a half allegorical, mock
–heroic setting, in which books in a library at length literally contend with
one another.
A Tale of a Tub also published in
1704, though it was written as early as 1696, is regarded by many as swift’s
best work. It certainly reveals his power at its highest. It is a religious
allegory.
A Tale of a Tub is full of wit and brilliant in its
imaginative power and the incisiveness of its thought.
From a literary point of view, the next important period
of life was from 1710, several of them were written for The Examiner, a Tory
journal of which he was given charge, and the best known are The conduct of Allies (1711) and Some Remarks on the Barrier Treaty
(1712). And The Public Spirit of the Whigs
(1714). To this period also belongs journal to
Stella, which is a kind of informal
private log book.
His other important work are The Drapier’s Letters(1724) , which gives him
population. Then followed some miscellaneous political work, aimed at the
improvement of the lot of the oppressed and poverty stricken irish. And then
longest and his most famous book The
Gulliver’s Travels (written between 1720 and 1725 and
published in 1726).
The
style of swift is best is not mannered or laboured , clean,
powerful, and tireless, ease without being slovenly and as clear as summer
noonday.
Swift is greatest
English dramatist. He restrict himself to general rather than personal
attacks,
and his work has a cosmic , elemental force, which is
irresistible and, at times, almost frightening. His directions of humanity
shows a powerful mind relentlessly and fearlessly probing into follies and
hypocricy, but he is never merely distructive.
Joseph
Addison (1672-1719)
· HIS LIFE
Educated
at the charter house, Addison went to Oxford. He early made his mark as
a serious and accomplished scholar.
In 1704 it is said that the instigation of the
leaders of the whigs, he wrote the poem The Camoaign, praising war policy of
the whigs in general. This poem brought him fame and fortune. He obtained
many appointments and pensions, married a dowager countess and became a
secretary of state. Two years later he died, at the early age of
forty-seven.
His poetry
In
his Latin verses Addison attained early distinction. These verses were highly
praised at a time for proficiency in such a medium was of some significance.
Then his campaign in 1704 gave him reputation as one of the major poets of
the age. It is written in Heroic couplet.
His
other poetical works worthy of notice are hymns which are melodious,
scholarly and full of cheerful piety. The one that begins ‘The Spacious Firmament on High’ is among the best.
His Drama
In
1773 he produced the tragedy of Cato. It shows that Addison , whatever his
other qualities may be , is no dramatist. It is written in laborious blank
verse, in which wooden character devlaim long, dull speeches. But it caught
the ear of the political parties.
Addison
also attempted an Opera Rosamond (1707), which was a failure and the prose
comedy ‘The Drummer’ (1715) adds nothing to his reputation.
His Prose
Addison started writing with his school and college friend
Steele in ‘The Tatler’ and ‘The Spectator. In The Spectator Addison rapidly
became the dominating spirit, wrote 274 essays out of a complete total
of 555. In march 1713 Addison assisted Steele with ‘The Guardian’ which Steele
began.
Addison wrote nearly 4 hundred essays ,
which are of nearly uniform length, excellence of style and the wide
diversity of subject, they are faithful reflection to the life. His aim was
to point out those vices which are too trivial for a chastened of the law.
Literary criticism of a mild and curious kind , found a prominent place in
his essays.
some times he adopted the allegory as a means of throwing
his ideas vividly before his readers, and so we have a popular ‘The Vision of
a Mirza’ and the political allegory of Public Credit.
Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729)
His Drama
He wrote some prose comedies, the
best of which are ‘The Funeral’(1701)
· ‘The Lying Loner’(1703)
· ‘The Tender Husband’(1705) and
· ‘The Conscious Lovers’(1722)
His essays
it
is as a miscellaneous essayist that Steele finds his place in literature.
He
started ‘The Tatler’
in 1709 and ‘The Spectator’
in 1711, and several other periodicals such as
Ø ‘The
Guardian’ (1713)
Ø ‘The
English Man’ (1713)
Ø ‘The
Reader’ (1714) and
Ø ‘The
Plebeian’ (1719)
The aim of Steele’s essays was
frankly didactic, he desired to bring about a reformation of contemporary
society manners and is notable for his consistent advocacy of womanly virtue
and the ideal of gentleman of courtesy, chivalry and good taste. His essay on
children are charming and he is full of human sympathy.
In versatility and in originality
he is at least Addison’s equal. His humour is broader. His pathos is more
attractive and more humane. He is incapable of irony.
Daniel Defoe
Ø Biography
Much of Defoe’s life is still undetermined. He was born in
London in the year 1660. He altered his original surname foe to
Defoe. He became a soldier, and then took journalism.
As a young man, Daniel Defoe was a great traveller
and went all over Europe. his career had ups and downs and he was also put
into prison several times.
When he was nearly sixty, Defoe started writing novels. He
was considered to be founder of English novels.
Ø His prose
His
work can be divided into two greater groups.
1 Political Writing
Like most of the other writer of his time Defoe turned out
a mass of political tracts and pamphlets. Many of them appeared in his own
journal ‘The Review’ which issued in 1704.
His ‘The Shortest Way with the
Dissenters’ (1702) brought upon him official wrath, and caused him to
be fined, imprisoned and pilloried.
The best known of this class is ‘The True-born Englishman (1701).
In all his propaganda Defoe in vigorous and acute and he
has a fair command of irony and invective.
2 His fiction
his
work in fiction were all produced in the later part of his life, at almost
Incredible speed.
First came
v‘Robinson Crusoe’ (1719)
v‘Duncan
Campbell’(1720)
v‘Memoirs of cavellier’(1720)
\
v‘Captain Singleton’(1720) all this books appeared in 1720,
in 1722 appeared
v‘Moll Flanders’
v‘A journal to the plague year’
v‘Colonel
Jacque’ then
v‘Roxana’ (1724) and
v‘A New Voyage round the World’
This great body of fiction has
grave defect, largely due to the immense speed with which it was produced.
The general plan of the snovel in each also loose and unequal.
At its best in finest part in
Robinson Crusoe, his writing has a realm that is rarely approached by the
most ardent of modern realists. This is achieved by Defoe’s grasp of details
and his unerring sense of their supreme literary value, a swift and resolute
narrative method and a plain and matter of fact style that inevitable lays
incredulity asleep.
To this development of the novel
Defoe’s contribution is priceless.
Poetry
Alexander Pope (1688-1744)
His life
Pope
was brn in London, the only son of a considerable city tradesman. From his
birth two conditions were influence very deeply the career of the future poet
, first he was puny and delicate and secondly, he was baptized into the
roman catholic faith. His bodily infirmity, which amounted almost deformity,
caused him to be privately educated.
Pope’s religious faith, though he was
never excessively devout as a roman catholic , closed to him all the careers
, professional and political , in which a man of keen intelligence might have
been expected to succeed. From his earliest youth we find him passionately
desirous of making his name as an author.
His early verses , admirably attuned
to the ear of the age, brought him recognition and applause. His translation
of homer brought him wealth and from that point he nrver looked back .he
became the dominating poetical personality of the day. In 1719 he removed to
his house at Twickenham. It remained his home till “that long disease , his
life” was finished in 1744.
His poetry
Pope’s earliest important work was his Pastorals. These poems almost
certainly written before he was eighteen, were published in 1709. The
characters and scenery, based as they are on Classical models, lack vigorous
and reality. but the work is important as an experiment in
verse technique. Pope has already choose his medium , the Heroic
couplet , which is here handled with great metrical skill, variation of
speed and tone and delicacy of touch. The rich discriptions are perhaps over
loaded with epithet. And the diction is often artificial . we give a specimen
of his earliest number.
And
yet my numbers please the rural throng,Rough satyrs dance, and pan applauds
the song;The nymph, forsaking ev’ry cave and spring,Their early fruit, and milk
white turtled bring,Each am’rous nymph prefers her gift in vain,On you their
gifts are all bestowed again,For you the swains the fairest flow’rs
design,And in one garland all their beauties joined,Accept the wreath which
you deserve alone,In whom all beauties are compri’d in one.
Summer: the second pastoral
In 1711 appeared ‘An Essay on Criticism’ also written in heroic couplet . the
poem professes to set forth the gospel of wit and nature as
it applies to the literature of the age. There is no attempt at
originality of thought , pope’s aim being merely to restate the
code of the ancients. This he does with a conscious and
epi-grammatic neatness which has given his remarks the permanence of proverbs.
I give below four well-known examples.
ü A Little Learning is a
Dangerous thing!
ü And snatch a grace beyond the reach of art
ü TO err is Human, to Forgive, divine
ü True wit is nature to advantage dressed;
What of was though , but ne’er so well expressed.
Windsor
Forest (1713) is another pastoral in the familiar meter.
In 1712 was published the
first version of ‘The Rape Of the Lock’ one of the most brilliant poems
in the language. It is in mock-heroic strain, and its effectiveness was
greatly increased when , in 1714 pope added the machinery of the
sylph to the original version. For the most part, this satire is gentle and
good humoured , though occasionally the half-line of couplet give us a
foretaste of the most incisive tones of the later pope.
Then pope translated Iliad , the
Iliad was followed in 1725 and 1726 by the Oddyssey.
Between 1731 and 1735 pope pope
published a series of philosophical poems, including
§ ‘TO Lord
Bathrust’
§ ‘Of the use of Riches’
§ ‘Of the knowledge and characters of men’
§ ‘Of the character of women’ and most famous of
all
§ “An Essay on Man”, in which
he discussed man’s place in the universe.
The
years 1733 to1737 marks pope’s last important period of production. In them
appeared his ‘Imitations of Horace’, in using the latin satirist as his
model.
His
famous prologue “Prologue to the Satirists”, better known by it’s other
title, “Epistle to dr. Arbuthnot” (1735) contains some of his most
brilliant and finished work. The style shows the ultimate development
of pope’s couplet in its ease, naturalness and versatility.
Both in subjects and in style his poems are limited. They take people of
their own social class, and they deal with their common interests and
aspirations. Pope rarely dips below the surface, and when he does so he is
not at his best. With regards to his style we have seen that it is almost
wholly restricted to the heroic couplet, used in narrative and
didactive subject.
Within these limits his work is powerful and effective. The wit is keen, the
satire burns like acid, and his zeal is unshakable.
Above all he was a
great artist. A study of his technique shows a meticulous sense of the exact
word in the exact place.
Pope’s use of the heroic couplet marks a great change from Dryden. The
couplet is tighter and more compressed.
THUS, we can Thus say that Alexander
Pope was truly was one very important figure of the Neo-Classical age.
vConclusion
Thus,
Swift, Addison, Steele, Defoe, Pope and many other writer gave their immense
contribution to English literature
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