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Daily Life in Georgian England as Reported
in the Gentleman's Magazine
Emily Lorraine de Montluzin
Studies
in British and American Magazines, 7.
Edwin Mellen Press, Lewiston, New York, 2002, $99.95 or £59.95
ISBN 0 7734 7351
Reviewed by: Julian Pooley FSA
Email: jpooley@surreycc.gov.uk
The Nichols Archive Project
c/o Surrey History Centre, Woking, GU21 1ND
Samuel Johnson once remarked that Edward Cave, founder
and first editor of the Gentleman's Magazine in 1731, 'never looked
out of the window but with a view to the Gentleman's Magazine.' (1)
This view encompassed the diversity of Georgian life, politics and culture.
It captivated Cave's readers and established the magazine as the leading
periodical of its day. The Gentleman's Magazine is an inexhaustible
mine of information for scholars of eighteenth century life and, in this
rich anthology of articles from its first century of publication, Professor
de Montluzin draws on her unique knowledge of the magazine to provide
an indispensable companion to this vast emporium for Hanoverian history.
Cave's vision was a monthly magazine (arguably the
first to merit the name) that would provide its readers with a monthly
almanack of useful information. Professor de Montluzin shows us that its
contents ranged from foreign and domestic news, agricultural prices, letters
and critical essays, to original poetry, mortality tables, lists of bankruptcies,
births, marriages, deaths, military, civil and ecclesiastical promotions
and titles of new publications. Although the title page proudly announced
Cave as the printer of the magazine, he disguised his editorship under
the fictitious persona of 'Sylvanus Urban', a name encapsulating the magazine's
appeal to both city and provincial readers. Although his successors, (David
Henry from Cave's death in 1754 until 1778 and John Nichols, 1778 until
1826) subtly modified his plan, they maintained the editorial pseudonym
and the philosophy of editorial integrity that was the foundation of the
magazine's success.
The army of contributors who served the magazine
often followed Cave's example, by writing anonymously or cloaking themselves
in a pseudonym. Professor de Montluzin's indefatigable work to identify
these writers and chart the network of interests that linked Sylvanus
Urban's readership will be familiar to scholars through her publications
in Studies in Bibliography and her invaluable database to contributors,
uniting and supplementing the pioneering achievements of Professor James
Kuist and a host of other scholars, that is accessible through the website
of the Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia (http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/bsuva).
In so doing she has turned every page of the magazine many times and this
book is a (naturally) subjective anthology of the most typical and arresting
articles from its first century of publication.
The book's arrangement will appeal to both scholars
and the non-specialist. An Introduction, tracing the course of the magazine's
editorial history, impact upon its readers and summarising research upon
attributions of authorship is followed by nine chapters of extracts illustrating
particular topics. Each chapter - Crime and Punishment, Medicine, Science
Natural History and Archaeology, Preaching the Gospel, The Debates of
the Senate of Lilliput, News from America, The French Revolution, Riots
Radicalism and Reform and Literary Judgements, is introduced by a summary
of the relevance of that topic to both contemporary and modern readers.
Further brief introductions place each extract in context. The whole is
supported by helpful footnotes, a useful bibliography and a selection
of plates that emphasise the role played by the magazine in disseminating
news and the latest scientific and antiquarian discoveries.
Cave's journalistic skills enabled him to boost sales
with sensational stories and by pushing the boundaries of political reporting.
Professor de Montluzin demonstrates clearly how Cave's vivid accounts
of crimes and punishments would have scandalised and fascinated his contemporaries
as much as they horrify and stimulate historians today. The hanging, drawing
and quartering of Tim Croneen for murder (GM 1,1731, p. 26) and the trial
of George Baggerly of Leicestershire for mutilating his wife (GM 7, 1737,
pp. 250-1) are grotesque examples of eighteenth century brutality and
the almost tabloid treatment awarded to Elizabeth Brownrigg's sadistic
cruelty to her female apprentices in 1767 shows that Sylvanus Urban continued
to offer salacious crimes to his readers long after Cave's death in 1754.
The extracts selected by Professor de Montluzin show how the Gentleman's
Magazine is a major source for law, order and social conscience that complements
the primary source material found in quarter session and assize records.
Cave's reporting of parliamentary debates was equally
daring. Although still illegal in 1732, some news sheets risked censure
by reconstructing speeches from notes taken by visitors to the gallery
or 'leaked' texts from Members themselves. Cave included one of these
reports in July 1732 and, from August, it was his leading article, often
formed by his team of writers from notes they had taken themselves in
the public gallery. When the House of Commons attempted to further restrict
this reporting in 1738, Sylvanus Urban retaliated by changing the title
of the reports to 'Debates in the Senate of Lilliput' and veiling the
names of MPs in pseudonyms and anagrams easily decipherable by his readers.
Though many of these reports were prepared during the 1730s by William
Guthrie and Thomas Birch, it was Samuel Johnson, solely responsible for
them from late 1740 to early 1743, who assured their success. He later
admitted that that he often composed the speeches 'in a garret in Exeter
Street' from notes communicated to him by Cave and others who had actually
heard the debates. Boswell's remark to Sir George Staunton that Johnson
'always took care to put Sir Robert Walpole in the wrong' is illustrated
here by Johnson's 'Debate in the Senate of Lilliput' that reported the
fall of 'Sir Rub. Walelup' in 1742 (GM 12, 1742, pp. 344, 466-71 and 507-11).
Though later editors were less brazen in their political
coverage, (2) the magazine is an
important source for the riots and disturbances that occasionally erupted
in Georgian England. Agricultural enclosures, excise taxes, turnpikes,
high prices, religious sectarianism and the growing clamour for parliamentary
reform all sparked violence that was experienced by the magazine's readership
both at first hand and, vicariously, through the magazine. However, while
the accounts of events such as the Priestley Riots against Birmingham
nonconformists (1791), the Peterloo Massacre (1819) and Bristol's riots
for parliamentary reform (1831) contain detailed accounts of the violence,
Professor de Montluzin shows us that Sylvanus Urban was not always even-handed
in his reporting. The account of Peterloo is as contemptuous of Henry
Hunt and his female followers as it is blind to the excesses of the hussars.
Generally, however, the magazine's editorship was careful to tread the
middle way between extremes of popular opinion, anxious not to lose readers
or inflame political authority. As deputy to John Wilkes in the City ward
of Farringdon Without, a prominent liveryman and printer of the Journals
of the Lords and Votes of the Commons, John Nichols, editor of
the magazine during many of these upheavals, was mindful of his responsibilities.
His own account of the anarchy that gripped London during the Gordon riots
of 1780 (GM 50, 1780, pp. 266-8) was based on his observation of the violence
which can be further traced in his surviving personal correspondence.
(3) Later, during the controversy
caused by the return to London of Queen Caroline for the coronation of
George IV in 1820, he urged his son, then a co-editor of the magazine,
to 'Take particular care that nothing escapes or issues from [the magazine's
printing office in] Parliament Street.' He suggested that any reports
they included should give only the names of the witnesses and use an introduction
written by himself. (4)
The view from Cave's window was not limited to domestic
politics. His coverage of events in America and France is an important
gauge of English opinion. Both Cave and his successor, David Henry, were
personally interested in the American colonies, and included descriptions
of indigenous wildlife alongside political reports, details of the suppression
of slave revolts and the visit of Chief Tomochichi of the Creek Nation
to the court of George II. Henry's friendship with Benjamin Franklin may
explain the magazine's fair treatment of the grievances of the colonists
and respectful chronicling of the nation's early history. Examples here
include the magazine's report of General Oglethorpe's treaty with the
Creek Nation (GM 3, 1733, p. 384), two views of slavery in the Colonies
(GM 7, 1737, pp. 58 and 187), a report of the fire that consumed most
of Charleston, Carolina, in 1740 (GM 11, 1741, p. 55) and the obituary
of George Washington (GM 70-i, 1800, pp. 84). Professor de Montluzin includes
John Wesley's missionary activity among the Chickasaws (GM 7, 1737, pp.
318-9) and Benjamin Franklin's experiments with lightning rods (GM 20,
1750, pp. 208 and GM 22, 1752, pp. 560-61) in her chapters relating to
Preaching the Gospel and Science, Natural History and Archaeology respectively.
The Gentleman's Magazine also gave much space to the French Revolution.
Although, initially, British observers were flattered that France's Constituent
Assembly sought to introduce a constitution closely modelled on their
own, Sylvanus Urban quickly realised the potential for bloodshed. Warning
notes were sounded in the magazine's 'Preface' as early as 1791, soon
after John Nichols assumed editorial control, and throughout the revolutionary
period the magazine stoutly defended British 'Religion, Manners, Literature
and the Arts'. The extracts selected by Professor de Montluzin provide
a harrowing narrative of the last days of the French monarchy and, in
the obituary of Robespierre (GM 64-i, 1794, pp. 862-3) we are given a
superb assassination by skilful penmanship of a wily lawyer who, through
diligence and political acumen became the feared director of the Terror
only to die on the guillotine with his jaw hanging loose after he had
failed to shoot himself properly in the head.
Political coverage was, however, only part of the
rich diet offered by Sylvanus Urban to his readership. The magazine's
coverage of discoveries in medicine and science reflected the readership's
preoccupation with health and manufacturing in the same way that its emphasis
on historical essays, reviews of new publications and obituaries of eminent
persons testified to the growing appetite of Mr Urban's audience for news
of cultural life of Georgian England. With a circulation by the end of
the eighteenth century of some 4,450 copies a month, the magazine played
a central part in disseminating contributors' opinions and provides today's
scholars with a compendious source for eighteenth century life.
The pages of the Gentleman's Magazine, like
the letters and papers of the families who read it, are littered with
reports of illness and the cures resorted to by doctors and patients.
Ignorant of the role of germs in spreading infection, they relied on barbaric
and almost magical remedies. Although the century witnessed widespread
disease and fearful mortality levels, it also saw exciting medical discoveries
in addition to social improvements and regulation by county authorities
of the care of the sick. Professor de Montluzin's chapter on medicine
is one of the largest in this anthology and is guaranteed to tempt the
growing number of medical historians to plunder this rich mine of medical
detail. Individual case studies, such as that of William Jones from Bedfordshire
who contracted rabies from a mad dog (GM 5, 1735, p. 386) are joined by
detailed descriptions of analyses of London Mortality Lists and the pioneering
work of Edward Jenner in vaccination against smallpox. It is not always
easy reading: the descriptions of cataract surgery by a knife rather than
scissors with its accompanying plate (GM 24, 1754, p.325) and the accidental
burning to death of Miss Seddon of Aldersgate Street (GM 69-i, 1799, p.
261) are not for the squeamish. However, reports of the copious quantities
of dropsical liquid tapped from widow Haggard of Shrivenham, Berkshire
(GM 2, 1732, p. 585), an 'infallible' cure for the Bloody Flux (dysentery)
(GM 6, 1736, p. 622), and use of 'Russia castor', derived from dried follicles
from the foreskins of Russian beavers, to treat nervous fits (GM 22, 1752,
pp. 495-97) vividly capture the wonderful diversity of eighteenth century
medicine. Local and family historians are becoming increasingly interested
in the health of our eighteenth century ancestors: Professor de Montluzin
ably demonstrates that the Gentleman's Magazine is a rich but neglected
source for further study in this field, complementing the letters, diaries
and household remedies found in many family collections.
Sylvanus Urban's audience was as fascinated by science
as antiquity and the pages of the magazine are full of accounts of eclipses,
reports of natural disasters and archaeological discoveries. Much space
was also given to natural history and the voyages of Captain Cook in the
South Seas. But Professor de Montluzin also shows that the readership
could be as credulous as they were sophisticated. In 1737 the 'Historical
Chronicle' department of the magazine reported the capture of a merman
near Exeter (GM 7, 1737, p. 703) and there was a long debate as to where
swallows might disappear to in the winter. The account of Lunardi's balloon
ascent in 1784 (GM 54-ii, 1784, p711) vividly captures the scepticism,
excitement and fear of the crowds gathering to witness the event. Throughout
the century the excavations at Herculaneum captured the public imagination
throughout Europe and were regularly reported by the Gentleman's Magazine.
The extracts given here (GM 13, 1743, pp. 472, 586-7; GM 19, 1749, pp.
31-2), recording the undisciplined dispersal of numerous artefacts will
make modern archaeologists cringe but they testify to the eighteenth century's
fascination for antiquities and the 'curious'.
Literature, antiquities and biography became a fundamental
feature of the Gentleman's Magazine after the arrival of John Nichols
as editor and printer in 1778. Although Nichols largely maintained the
successful formula that he had inherited, in building upon modifications
that had begun under Cave he ensured the magazine's survival long into
the following century and enriched its usefulness to historians today.
The move away from reprinted articles digested by an editorial team had
begun during Cave's lifetime and continued under David Henry. Increasingly,
articles were contributed by a readership willing to forego payment in
return for publication of their work. Nichols encouraged his readers to
supply letters, essays, poems, illustrations and short notices to an extent
not seen before. His office in Red Lion Passage, Fleet Street, became
the focus of a huge correspondence between Sylvanus Urban and an enormous
contributing readership. (5)
In 1783 he doubled the length of the magazine to allow more space for
essays on historical subjects and reviews of books in place of simple
lists of new publications. Not all of his readers were convinced by this
change: Owen Manning (1721-1801), the Saxon scholar and Surrey antiquary,
grumbled that he saw little reason to fill his shelves with similar fodder
at twice the rate; (6) but Nichols
had brought with him a great many literary and antiquarian connections
that enabled the magazine to flourish, more than ever before, as a place
for scholarly debate. By opening the pages of the magazine to the increasingly
literary public, Nichols inextricably linked Sylvanus Urban to the network
of amateur writers, antiquaries, book clubs, and debating, scientific
and philosophical societies that flourished in the late eighteenth century.
Sylvanus Urban allowed his myriad correspondents in town and country to
have their say in the clamour of debate about ideas, culture and taste
and this is nowhere more apparent than in the reviews of literature that
Professor de Montluzin has selected for her chapter on Literary Judgements.
Though Mr Urban's literary editors (John Hawkesworth 1744-1773, John Duncombe
1773-1786 and Richard Gough (1786-1809) could be capricious in their choice
of items for review, often ignoring works by Wordsworth, Blake or Scott
in favour of works that now seem ephemeral to the modern reader, the works
that they did notice reflect their preoccupation with the moral, political
and religious sentiments of the authors themselves. Faced with revolution
in France and the growing radical movement at home Sylvanus Urban assured
his readers that nothing subversive or offensive would appear in his pages.
Simultaneously, however, his correspondents often criticised the growing
taste for 'popular' literature. The review of Edward Mangin's Essay
on Light Reading, as it may be supposed to influence Moral Conduct and
Literary Taste (GM 78-ii, 1808, pp.914-6) lamenting the corrupting
influence on women of modern novels, ably demonstrates the magazine's
value as a source for gender history.
This theme is found again in 'Remarks on the Life
of Mrs Godwin' by 'Philalethes' (GM 68-i, 1798, pp. 186-7). Mary Wollstonecraft's
agnostic and radical ideas offended contemporaries as much as her campaign
to educate women and her relationship with William Godwin challenged traditional
morals. Despite his conservatism, however, Sylvanus Urban's obituary of
Mary Wollstonecraft is a model of impartiality and sympathetic assessment
of the very human failings of this 'woman of uncommon talents' (GM 67-ii,
1797, p894). It is significant that this memoir was written by John Nichols
himself, for it was in this department of the magazine that he bequeathed
so much to later historians. Under Nichols the magazine's lists of deaths
became literary obituaries that fed the eighteenth century appetite for
biography and anecdotes and formed a 'body of biography' that continues
to provide scholars with a basic tool for research. In the preface to
the centenary volume of the magazine in 1830, Sylvanus Urban noted with
pride that there was 'scarcely an eminent individual of this Country'
about whom some information could not be obtained and 'not a literary
person of the eighteenth or nineteenth century whose life could properly
be written without a reference to [these] volumes'. (7)
The contributors to the Dictionary of National Biography at the
close of the nineteenth century clearly agreed, for the CD-ROM version
of this work cites the Gentleman's Magazine as a source some 7000
times. But it was not just the lions of literature that were celebrated:
readers submitted memoirs of friends and relatives to Sylvanus Urban in
such numbers that details of a huge range of individuals will be found
in the magazine and, in 1821, Nichols was obliged to beg them to be a
little more discriminating. (8)
The joy that Nichols clearly derived from preserving these anecdotes led
John Walcot to satirize him as a 'death-hunter' but, in selecting his
extraordinary obituary of William Lewis of Beaumaris (GM 63-ii, 1793,
p1215), Professor de Montluzin shows us that local and family historians
owe Nichols an enormous debt. (9)
Lorraine de Montluzin is not the first to compile
an anthology of the Gentleman's Magazine. Edward Gibbon, who described
Nichols as 'the last, or one of the last, of the learned printers of Europe',
(10) urged him to print an edition
of the most useful and curious articles, but he had no leisure for this
and the task was left to John Walker of Oxford to edit A Selection of
Curious Articles from the Gentleman's Magazine between 1809 and 1811 in
four volumes (London, 1814). At the end of the nineteenth century George
Lawrence Gomme produced his valuable, but increasingly scarce, multi-volume
Gentleman's Magazine Library. Professor de Montluzin's authorative introduction
to the magazine and hugely enjoyable selection from Sylvanus Urban's panoramic
view of Georgian England will be an essential addition to both libraries
and archives. We can only hope that its undoubted success will prompt
an enterprising publisher to issue the complete run of this important
periodical on CD-ROM.
February 2002
Notes:
1. G. B. Hill
and L. F. Powell, eds., Boswell's Life of Johnson vol. 4, (1934)
p. 409.
2. In 1821
John Bowyer Nichols even questioned the value of such extended parliamentary
reports. In a letter to his father, John Nichols, now in private hands,
he complained that the length of parliamentary debates was now so great
that it was impossible to do them justice in the scanty limits of the
magazine. Although a considerable portion of the volume was devoted to
them, he wondered how many people actually read them or would refer to
them in future: after all, the coverage was 'much fuller and better' in
the daily press. Nichols Family Records volume 13, fo. 12. Nichols Archive
Database reference: NAD4071.
3. For
details of the accumulation, arrangement and dispersal of the Nichols
archive see J Pooley, 'The Papers of the Nichols Family and Business:
New Discoveries and the Work of the Nichols Archive Project' The Library
Seventh Series, 2 No 1 (March 2001), 10-52.
4. John
Nichols to John Bowyer Nichols, 10 Oct 1820, in Nichols Family Records
vol. 12, fo. 190, NAD3207.
5. For a
summary list of some 51 public collections and ten private collections
of Nichols papers, many of which include correspondence relating to the
Gentleman's Magazine, see Appendixes 2 and 3 of J Pooley, 'The Papers
of the Nichols Family and Business: New Discoveries and the Work of the
Nichols Archive Project' The Library, Seventh Series, 2 No 1 (March
2001), 40-50.
6. Owen Manning
to Richard Gough, 6 Feb 1783, Bodleian Library, Oxford, MS. Gough Gen.
Top. 43. fo. 151
7. Gentleman's
Magazine 100-i, 1830, p. iv.
8. General
Index to the Gentleman's Magazine (1821), 3, p. lxxi.
9. 'A Benevolent
Epistle to Sylvanus Urban, Alias Master John Nichols, Printer, Common-councilman
of Farringdon Ward, and Censore-general of Literature' John Walcot, The
Works of Peter Pindar (London, 1794).
10. Edward
Gibbon to John Nichols, 24 Feb 1792, printed in John Nichols, Literary
Anecdotes of the Eighteenth Century 8 (1814), pp. 557-560.
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