’s Satires Essay, Research Paper
Despite the fact that Pope made most of his money from subscriptions to his Classical translations, it is for his sharp and gritty satires that he is best remembered and justly revered. It is these that proved most entertaining and that, in literature, remained pertinent personal accounts of social history. During the Restoration and 18th Century satire was a popular generic choice for those writers who wanted to pass comment on some issue of contemporary life whilst still practicing their art. By definition satire is Œthe use of ridicule, irony, sarcasm etc. in speech or writing for the ostensible purpose of exposing and discouraging vice or folly¹. Satire is then necessarily didactic because its aim is to realign its target with a particular ideal from which the satirist believes it to have strayed. This definition alone though is not enough to help us define and examine why Pope delighted in this particular genre and why he used it as a vehicle for his political and moral beliefs. Satire is distinct from pure didacticism because of its ability to entertain; Complaint and teaching alone…do not themselves make satire…satire at all levels must entertain as well as try to influence conduct… (by) the joy of hearing a travesty, a fantastic inversion of the real world. An inversion such as the realm of the Queen of Dullness in the Dunciad. Likewise Pope makes it clear that what he writes is not slander or lampoon, which is what litters the texts of the Grub Street writers, and which he attacks in The Dunciad with the lines, Œ”Here strip, my children! here at once leap in,/Here prove who best can dash through thick and thin,/And who the most in love of dirt excel,¹ (II 275-7). He makes his opinion clear on this in the lines; There is not in the world a greater Error than that which Fools are so apt to fall into, and Knaves with good reason to encourage, the mistaking of a Satyrist for a libeller; wheras to a true satyrist nothing is so odious as a libeller, for the same reason as to a man truly Virtuous nothing is so hateful as a hypocrite. In 1725 Pope wrote to his eminent friend Swift, of his desire for his proceeding poetry to be a, Œuseful investigation of my own territories….something domestic, fit for my own country, and for my own time;¹ This definition could apply to many types of works and it is possible that he was referring to the epic he had always wanted to write, just as Virgil had written the Aeneid to instill a sense of patriotism in his people, or like Milton whose Paradise Lost explained the Œways of God to men¹. However satires, in which he excelled, proved to be an excellent reflection of the moral and social climes of England in the 1730s. Rather than a purely historical account, a satire is a good illustration of personal contemporary experience within any given historical period. It is obviously biased because it is imbued with opinion, but it is this that gives us insight into a slice of contemporary life, so seeing how the larger social and political machinations turned the miniature cogs of the people.Pope was reluctant to leave his position as a literary poet and turn to satire. In his Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot Pope claimed that he had resisted the provocation of responding to slander directed at him until the publication of the Dunciad , ŒFull ten years slandered, did he once reply?¹ (l 374). However throughout his entire literary career Pope was the subject of constant literary attack. So much so that the body of critical literature against him was sufficient to earn itself the name ŒPopiana¹. These attacks were largely in the form of pamphlets. Pamphleteering in the Eighteenth century was a cheap and effective way of reaching a large audience often with topical and controversial issues. Those liable laws that did exist were rarely brought into play over personal attacks and so the people who wrote them stood to profit financially without the risk of legal action. Pamphleteering was one of the chief employments of the Grub Street hacks. Grub Street was a place, as Dr Johnson kindly put it Œmuch inhabited by writers of small histories, dictionaries and temporary poems.¹, and these inhabitants were less sympathetically described by Richard Savage as Œof very low Parentage, and without any Pretence of Merit,( are) aspiring to the Rank of Gentlemen,¹. The possible causes for attacking Pope were many fold. Let us look at some of those reasons and some of Pope¹s satirical responses. Pope¹s early success and affluence, in spite of deformities and irrespective of his unorthodox political and religious tendencies, was enough in itself to irk those hack writers whose hands were tied to the pens of their publishers. Pope had managed to beat the booksellers at their own game, making a fortune from subscriptions to his Classical translations, a thing which provided much fodder for the pamphleteers. Pamphlets dealt with questions from Pope¹s knowledge of Greek, ŒIf I did not understand Greek, what of that; I hope a Man may translate a Greek Author without understanding Greek,¹, to criticisms over his continued financial return from revised editions in a line such as, ŒAnd all your laurels from Subscriptions grew:¹. All these sorts of attack were largely fueled by the envy over the fact that Pope¹s translations freed him from the sort of literary work that the hacks were destined to carry out. Their sort of livelihood was brilliantly described by Richard Savage in his aptly titled An Author to be Lett of 1729. This is the story of a fictitious Grub Street writer Iscariot Hackney who works for the real life bookseller Edmund Curll. His work under this man is described thus; ŒTwas in his service that I wrote Obscenity and Profaneness, under the Names of Pope and Swift. Sometimes I was Mr.Joseph Gay, …..I abridg¹d Histories and Travels, translated from the French, what they never wrote, and was expert at finding out new Titles for old Books…¹ As the hacks saw it, Pope was an outsider to this sort of penury and was instead moving in prolific political and literary circles backed by the support of many affluent men such as Bolingbroke and Swift. The maxim that you had to be famous before you could be successful was one of which many hacks were aware and to them it would seem that Pope was not roped in to this viscous circle. As Johnson said in his Life of Richard Savage, the hack ate Œonly when he was invited to the tables of his acquaintances, from which the meanness of his dress often excluded him,¹. However what Johnson also said of Savage¹s talent did not necessarily hold for all hack writers, On a bulk, in a cellar, or in a glass-house among thieves and beggars, was to be found the author of The Wanderer,…the man whose remarks on life might have assisted the statesman,…whose eloquence might have influenced senates… If this had been the case Pope might have been more sympathetic. Many hacks chose to believe that Pope was ridiculing poverty, with lines such as Œsupperless¹ hero, (I 115), and retorted, Œas if the want of a Dinner made a man a Fool, or Riches and good Sence only kept company.¹ Instead it was his own staunch principles regarding the duty of the author to spread cultural tradition or to hold a critical mirror up to a degenerate society and so on, that meant he abhorred the kind of cheap slander and titillation which characterized Grub Street journalism. It was the fact that many of the writers in Grub Street should never have chosen a literary vocation in the first place, and if we take the time to look at how Colly Cibber, or Bayes in the Dunciad, became a supperless hero, we see that his choice of vocation is not made out of enthusiasm but out of necessity; Swearing and supperless the Hero sate, Blasphem¹d the Gods, the Dice, and damn¹d his Fate. Then gnaw¹d his pen, then dash¹d it on the ground, sinking from thought to thought, a vast profound! Plung¹d for his sense, but found no bottom there, Yet wrote and flounder¹d on, in mere despair. (I 115-20) Moreover the hacks criticism of Pope on this topic, and their failure to grasp his point, only further supports his belief that they had no concept of good literature. The hack writer¹s tendency to plagiarize and to fabricate and his love of hyperbole were tactics that offended Pope¹s very raison d¹etre. The motive for these tactics are nicely explained by the hack writer Ned Ward; I borrowed my method from our Moorfield¹s conjurors, who use their utmost art to put on a terrible countenance, that everybody that gazes on their outsides may think the devil is in them; and they undoubtedly find it a useful policy, for I have commonly observed, that he thrives best, and has his door most crowded, that can look the most frightful. The results were largely empty promises of something fantastic and in themselves insubstantial and weak. The formats in which these kinds of writings flourished saturated the literary world making it easy to vent personal gripes in the press. All these things provided Pope with ample provocation to write responsive and often defensive satire. The Dunciad is the best known and most comprehensive attack on these issues. The hacks cry ŒThe more we rail, the more bespatter,/¹Twill make our pamphlets sell the better.¹, was justly answered by the mud slinging scene in Book II of the