A brief history of English literature
Old English, Middle English and Chaucer
Old English
English, as we know it, descends from the language spoken by
the north Germanic tribes who settled in England from the 5th century A.D.
onwards. They had no writing (except runes, used as charms) until they learned
the Latin alphabet from Roman missionaries. The earliest written works in Old
English (as their language is now known to scholars) were probably composed
orally at first, and may have been passed on from speaker to speaker before
being written. We know the names of some of the later writers (Cædmon, Ælfric
and King Alfred) but most writing is anonymous. Old English literature is
mostly chronicle and poetry - lyric, descriptive but chiefly narrative or epic.
By the time literacy becomes widespread, Old English is effectively a foreign
and dead language. And its forms do not significantly affect subsequent
developments in English literature. (With the scholarly exception of the 19th
century poet, Gerard Manley Hopkins, who finds in Old English verse the model
for his metrical system of "sprung rhythm".)
Middle English and Chaucer
From 1066 onwards, the language is known to scholars as
Middle English. Ideas and themes from French and Celtic literature appear in
English writing at about this time, but the first great name in English
literature is that of Geoffrey Chaucer (?1343-1400). Chaucer introduces the
iambic pentameter line, the rhyming couplet and other rhymes used in Italian
poetry (a language in which rhyming is arguably much easier than in English,
thanks to the frequency of terminal vowels). Some of Chaucer's work is prose
and some is lyric poetry, but his greatest work is mostly narrative poetry,
which we find in Troilus and Criseyde and The Canterbury Tales. Other notable
mediaeval works are the anonymous Pearl and Gawain and the Green Knight
(probably by the same author) and William Langlands' Piers Plowman.
Tudor lyric poetry
Modern lyric poetry in English begins in the early 16th
century with the work of Sir Thomas Wyatt (1503-1542) and Henry Howard, Earl of
Surrey (1517-1547). Wyatt, who is greatly influenced by the Italian, Francesco
Petrarca (Petrarch) introduces the sonnet and a range of short lyrics to
English, while Surrey (as he is known) develops unrhymed pentameters (or blank
verse) thus inventing the verse form which will be of great use to contemporary
dramatists. A flowering of lyric poetry in the reign of Elizabeth comes with
such writers as Sir Philip Sidney (1554-1586), Edmund Spenser(1552-1599), Sir
Walter Ralegh (1552-1618), Christopher Marlowe (1564-1593) andWilliam
Shakespeare (1564-1616). The major works of the time are Spenser's Faerie
Queene, Sidney's Astrophil and Stella and Shakespeare's sonnets.
Renaissance drama
The first great English dramatist is Marlowe. Before the
16th century English drama meant the amateur performances of Bible stories by
craft guilds on public holidays. Marlowe's plays (Tamburlaine; Dr. Faustus;
Edward II and The Jew of Malta) use thefive act structure and the medium of
blank verse, which Shakespeare finds so productive. Shakespeare develops and
virtually exhausts this form, his Jacobean successors producing work which is
rarely performed today, though some pieces have literary merit, notably The
Duchess of Malfi and The White Devil by John Webster(1580-1625) and The
Revenger's Tragedy by Cyril Tourneur (1575-1626). The excessive and gratuitous
violence of Jacobean plays leads to the clamour for closing down the theatres,
which is enacted by parliament after the Civil war.
Metaphysical poetry
The greatest of Elizabethan lyric poets is John Donne
(1572-1631), whose short love poems are characterized by wit and irony, as he
seeks to wrest meaning from experience. The preoccupation with the big
questions of love, death and religious faith marks out Donne and his successors
who are often called metaphysical poets. (This name, coined by Dr. Samuel
Johnson in an essay of 1779, was revived and popularized by T.S. Eliot, in an
essay of 1921. It can be unhelpful to modern students who are unfamiliar with
this adjective, and who are led to think that these poets belonged to some kind
of school or group - which is not the case.) After his wife's death, Donne
underwent a serious religious conversion, and wrote much fine devotional verse.
The best known of the other metaphysicals are George Herbert(1593-1633), Andrew
Marvell (1621-1678) and Henry Vaughan (1621-1695).
Epic poetry
Long narrative poems on heroic subjects mark the best work
of classical Greek (Homer's Iliad and Odyssey) and Roman (Virgil's Æneid)
poetry. John Milton (1608-1674) who was Cromwell's secretary, set out to write
a great biblical epic, unsure whether to write in Latin or English, but
settling for the latter in Paradise Lost. John Dryden (1631-1700) also wrote
epic poetry, on classical and biblical subjects. Though Dryden's work is little
read today it leads to a comic parody of the epic form, or mock-heroic. The
best poetry of the mid 18th century is the comic writing of Alexander
Pope(1688-1744). Pope is the best-regarded comic writer and satirist of English
poetry. Among his many masterpieces, one of the more accessible is The Rape of
the Lock(seekers of sensation should note that "rape" here has its
archaic sense of "removal by force"; the "lock" is a curl
of the heroine's hair). Serious poetry of the period is well represented by the
neo-classical Thomas Gray (1716-1771) whose Elegy Written in a Country
Churchyard virtually perfects the elegant style favoured at the time.
Restoration comedy
On the death of Oliver Cromwell (in 1658) plays were no
longer prohibited. A new kind of comic drama, dealing with issues of sexual
politics among the wealthy and the bourgeois, arose. This is Restoration
Comedy, and the style developed well beyond the restoration period into the mid
18th century almost. The total number of plays performed is vast, and many lack
real merit, but the best drama uses the restoration conventions for a serious
examination of contemporary morality. A play which exemplifies this well is The
Country Wife by William Wycherley (1640-1716).
Prose fiction and the novel
Jonathan Swift (1667-1745), wrote satires in verse and
prose. He is best-known for the extended prose work Gulliver's Travels, in
which a fantastic account of a series of travels is the vehicle for satirizing
familiar English institutions, such as religion, politics and law. Another
writer who uses prose fiction, this time much more naturalistic, to explore
other questions of politics or economics is Daniel Defoe (1661-1731), author of
Robinson Crusoe and Moll Flanders.The first English novel is generally accepted
to be Pamela (1740), by Samuel Richardson (1689-1761): this novel takes the
form of a series of letters; Pamela, a virtuous housemaid resists the advances
of her rich employer, who eventually marries her. Richardson's work was almost
at once satirized by Henry Fielding (1707-1754) inJoseph Andrews (Joseph is
depicted as the brother of Richardson's Pamela Andrews) and Tom Jones.After
Fielding, the novel is dominated by the two great figures of Sir Walter
Scott(1771-1832) and Jane Austen (1775-1817), who typify, respectively, the new
regional, historical romanticism and the established, urbane classical
views.Novels depicting extreme behaviour, madness or cruelty, often in
historically remote or exotic settings are called Gothic. They are ridiculed by
Austen in Northanger Abbey but include one undisputed masterpiece,
Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley (1797-1851).
Romanticism
The rise of Romanticism
A movement in philosophy but especially in literature,
romanticism is the revolt of the senses or passions against the intellect and
of the individual against the consensus. Its first stirrings may be seen in the
work of William Blake (1757-1827), and in continental writers such as the Swiss
philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau and the German playwrights Johann Christoph
Friedrich Schiller and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.The publication, in 1798, by
the poets William Wordsworth (1770-1850) and Samuel Taylor Coleridge
(1772-1834) of a volume entitled Lyrical Ballads is a significant event in
English literary history, though the poems were poorly received and few books
sold. The elegant latinisms of Gray are dropped in favour of a kind of English
closer to that spoken by real people (supposedly). Actually, the attempts to
render the speech of ordinary people are not wholly convincing. Robert Burns
(1759 1796) writes lyric verse in the dialect of lowland Scots (a variety of
English). After Shakespeare, Burns is perhaps the most often quoted of writers
in English: we sing his Auld Lang Syne every New Year's Eve.
Later Romanticism
The work of the later romantics John Keats (1795-1821) and
his friend Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822; husband of Mary Shelley) is marked
by an attempt to make language beautiful, and by an interest in remote history
and exotic places. George Gordon, Lord Byron (1788-1824) uses romantic themes,
sometimes comically, to explain contemporary events. Romanticism begins as a
revolt against established views, but eventually becomes the established
outlook. Wordsworth becomes a kind of national monument, while the Victorians
make what was at first revolutionary seem familiar, domestic and sentimental.
Victorian poetry
The major poets of the Victorian era are Alfred, Lord Tennyson
(1809-1892) andRobert Browning (1812-1889). Both are prolific and varied, and
their work defies easy classification. Tennyson makes extensive use of
classical myth and Arthurian legend, and has been praised for the beautiful and
musical qualities of his writing.Browning's chief interest is in people; he
uses blank verse in writing dramatic monologues in which the speaker achieves a
kind of self-portraiture: his subjects are both historical individuals (Fra
Lippo Lippi, Andrea del Sarto) and representative types or caricatures (Mr.
Sludge the Medium).Other Victorian poets of note include Browning's wife,
Elizabeth Barrett Browning(1806-1861) and Christina Rossetti (1830-1894).
Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844-1889) is notable for his use of what he calls "sprung
rhythm"; as in Old English verse syllables are not counted, but there is a
pattern of stresses. Hopkins' work was not well-known until very long after his
death.
The Victorian novel
The rise of the popular novel
In the 19th century, adult literacy increases markedly:
attempts to provide education by the state, and self-help schemes are partly
the cause and partly the result of the popularity of the novel. Publication in
instalments means that works are affordable for people of modest means. The
change in the reading public is reflected in a change in the subjects of
novels: the high bourgeois world of Austen gives way to an interest in
characters of humble origins. The great novelists write works which in some
ways transcend their own period, but which in detail very much explore the
preoccupations of their time.
Dickens and the Brontës
Certainly the greatest English novelist of the 19th century,
and possibly of all time, isCharles Dickens (1812-1870). The complexity of his
best work, the variety of tone, the use of irony and caricature create surface
problems for the modern reader, who may not readily persist in reading. But
Great Expectations, Bleak House, Our Mutual Friendand Little Dorrit are works
with which every student should be acquainted.Charlotte Brontë (1816-1855) and
her sisters Emily (1818-1848) and Anne (1820-1849) are understandably linked
together, but their work differs greatly. Charlotte is notable for several good
novels, among which her masterpiece is Jane Eyre, in which we see the heroine,
after much adversity, achieve happiness on her own terms. Emily Brontë's
Wüthering Heights is a strange work, which enjoys almost cult status. Its
concerns are more romantic, less contemporary than those of Jane Eyre - but its
themes of obsessive love and self-destructive passion have proved popular with
the 20th century reader.
The beginnings of American literature
The early 19th century sees the emergence of American
literature, with the stories ofEdgar Allan Poe (1809-1849), the novels of
Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-64), Herman Melville (1819-91), and Mark Twain
(Samuel Langhorne Clemens; 1835-1910), and the poetry of Walt Whitman (1819-92)
and Emily Dickinson (1830-86). Notable works include Hawthorne's The Scarlet
Letter, Melville's Moby Dick, Twain's Huckleberry Finnand Whitman's Leaves of
Grass.
Later Victorian novelists
After the middle of the century, the novel, as a form,
becomes firmly-established: sensational or melodramatic "popular"
writing is represented by Mrs. Henry Wood'sEast Lynne (1861), but the best
novelists achieved serious critical acclaim while reaching a wide public,
notable authors being Anthony Trollope (1815-82), Wilkie Collins (1824-89),
William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-63), George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans; 1819-80)
and Thomas Hardy (1840-1928). Among the best novels are Collins'sThe Moonstone,
Thackeray's Vanity Fair, Eliot's The Mill on the Floss, Adam Bede
andMiddlemarch, and Hardy's The Mayor of Casterbridge, The Return of the
Native, Tess of the d'Urbervilles and Jude the Obscure.
Modern literature
Early 20th century poets
W.B. (William Butler) Yeats (1865-1939) is one of two
figures who dominate modern poetry, the other being T.S. (Thomas Stearns) Eliot
(1888-1965). Yeats was Irish; Eliot was born in the USA but settled in England,
and took UK citizenship in 1927. Yeats uses conventional lyric forms, but
explores the connection between modern themes and classical and romantic ideas.
Eliot uses elements of conventional forms, within an unconventionally
structured whole in his greatest works. Where Yeats is prolific as a poet,
Eliot's reputation largely rests on two long and complex works: The Waste
Land(1922) and Four Quartets (1943).The work of these two has overshadowed the
work of the best late Victorian, Edwardian and Georgian poets, some of whom
came to prominence during the First World War. Among these are Thomas Hardy,
Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936), A.E. Housman (1859-1936), Edward Thomas
(1878-1917), Rupert Brooke (1887-1915),Siegfried Sassoon (1886-1967), Wilfred
Owen (1893-1918) and Isaac Rosenberg(1890-1918). The most celebrated modern
American poet, is Robert Frost (1874-1963), who befriended Edward Thomas before
the war of 1914-1918.
Early modern writers
The late Victorian and early modern periods are spanned by
two novelists of foreign birth: the American Henry James (1843-1916) and the
Pole Joseph Conrad (Josef Korzeniowski; 1857-1924). James relates character to
issues of culture and ethics, but his style can be opaque; Conrad's narratives
may resemble adventure stories in incident and setting, but his real concern is
with issues of character and morality. The best of their work would include
James's The Portrait of a Lady and Conrad's Heart of Darkness, Nostromo and The
Secret Agent.Other notable writers of the early part of the century include
George Bernard Shaw(1856-1950), H.G. Wells (1866-1946), and E.M. Forster
(1879-1970). Shaw was an essay-writer, language scholar and critic, but is
best-remembered as a playwright. Of his many plays, the best-known is Pygmalion
(even better known today in its form as the musical My Fair Lady). Wells is
celebrated as a popularizer of science, but his best novels explore serious
social and cultural themes, The History of Mr. Polly being perhaps his
masterpiece. Forster's novels include Howard's End, A Room with a Viewand A
Passage to India.
Joyce and Woolf
Where these writers show continuity with the Victorian
tradition of the novel, more radically modern writing is found in the novels of
James Joyce (1882-1941), ofVirginia Woolf (1882-1941), and of D.H. Lawrence
(1885-1930). Where Joyce and Woolf challenge traditional narrative methods of
viewpoint and structure, Lawrence is concerned to explore human relationships
more profoundly than his predecessors, attempting to marry the insights of the
new psychology with his own acute observation. Working-class characters are
presented as serious and dignified; their manners and speech are not objects of
ridicule.Other notable novelists include George Orwell (1903-50), Evelyn Waugh
(1903-1966),Graham Greene (1904-1991) and the 1983 Nobel prize-winner, William
Golding (1911-1993).
Poetry in the later 20th century
Between the two wars, a revival of romanticism in poetry is
associated with the work of W.H. (Wystan Hugh) Auden (1907-73), Louis MacNeice
(1907-63) and Cecil Day-Lewis (1904-72). Auden seems to be a major figure on
the poetic landscape, but is almost too contemporary to see in perspective. The
Welsh poet, Dylan Thomas (1914-53) is notable for strange effects of language,
alternating from extreme simplicity to massive overstatement.Of poets who have
achieved celebrity in the second half of the century, evaluation is even more
difficult, but writers of note include the American Robert Lowell
(1917-77),Philip Larkin (1922-1985), R.S. Thomas (1913-2000), Thom Gunn
(1929-2004), Ted Hughes (1930-1998) and the 1995 Nobel laureate Seamus Heaney
(b. 1939).
No comments:
Post a Comment