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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
The Age of Johnson
>
Fielding and Smollett
>
Pasquin
and
The Historical Register;
Journalistic work:
The Champion
His marriage
Joseph Andrews
and
Pamela;
The character of Parson Adams
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume X. The Age of Johnson.
II.
Fielding and Smollett
.
§ 6.
Pasquin
and
The Historical Register;
Journalistic work:
The Champion
.
Early in 1736, he took the Little theatre in the Haymarket, formed a company of actors, and in this and the following year produced
Pasquin
and
The Historical Register for the year
1736. Of these celebrated dramatic satires something will be said elsewhere,
2
as well as of the share which the second of them had in bringing about the Licensing act of 1737. For Fielding, the passing of this act meant, practically, the end of his career as a dramatist. Two or three plays, written by him in whole or in part, were, indeed, produced in 1737; but, in the same year, he dismissed his company and turned to other fields of work. Of himself, he said, later, that he left off writing for the stage when he ought to have begun.
3
He resumed his legal studies, and, in the month of November, became a student of the Middle Temple. There is evidence that he worked hardwithout, apparently, ceasing to live hardand he was called to the bar in June, 1740. Meanwhile, he had not given up authorship altogether. An Essay on Conversation, published in the
Miscellanies
of 1743, was probably written in 1737. In November, 1739, appeared the first number of
The Champion,
a newspaper published thrice a week, and written mainly by Fielding (whose contributions, signed C. or L., are the most numerous
4
) and his friend James Ralph. He adopted the not uncommon plan of inventing a family or group as supposed authors or occasions of the various essaysin this case, the Vinegar family, of whom captain Hercules, with his famous club, is the most prominent. Among the best papers are the four called An Apology for the Clergy. Fielding had attacked the clergy in
Pasquin;
in An Apology, his ironical method exposes even more clearly the vices of place-hunting and want of charity then prevalent among them, while he reveals the deep admiration and reverence for the qualities which were afterwards to glow in his portrait of parson Adams. In an essay on Charity, again, the Fielding of the future is evident in the warm-hearted common sense with which the subject of imprisonment for debt is treated. The personal interest in these papers is strong. One of them has high praise for the humour and moral force of Hogarths Rakes Progress and Harlots Progress. Another furnishes a glimpse of Fieldings own personal appearance, familiar from Hogarths drawing. Yet others continue the persistent attacks on Colley Cibber which Fielding had begun in his plays. Cibber, when, in his
Apology
(1740), noticing the Licensing act, retorted by an opprobrious reference to Fielding. Thereupon, Fielding vented all his humour, all his weight and all his knowledge of the law and of the world in slashing replies, in which Colley and his son Theophilus are successfully held up to ridicule. The last paper in the essays collected from
The Champion
is dated Thursday, 12 June, 1740,
5
just before Fielding was called to the bar. He went the western circuit.
6
Note 2
. See Chap.
IV,
post.
[
back
]
Note 3
. He afterwards produced
The Wedding Day
(in 1743).
The Good-Natured Man
appeared posthumously.
[
back
]
Note 4
. Some of Fieldings papers in
The Champion
were collected in book-form in 1741.
[
back
]
Note 5
. He seems, however, to have continued to write for the paper till June, 1741.
[
back
]
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
His marriage
Joseph Andrews
and
Pamela;
The character of Parson Adams
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