Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Biographical Outline
- Abbreviations and References
- Prologue
- 1 Youth, Plays, and Politics
- 2 Towards Fiction: The Champion and Shamela
- 3 Form and Falsity: Joseph Andrews
- 4 Vice and Vision: Jonathan Wild and A Journey from This World to the Next
- 5 War, Women, and Worldly Judgement: Tom Jones
- 6 Prison Gates: The Enquiry and Amelia
- 7 From Covent Garden to Lisbon
- Notes
- Select Bibliography
- Index
7 - From Covent Garden to Lisbon
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Biographical Outline
- Abbreviations and References
- Prologue
- 1 Youth, Plays, and Politics
- 2 Towards Fiction: The Champion and Shamela
- 3 Form and Falsity: Joseph Andrews
- 4 Vice and Vision: Jonathan Wild and A Journey from This World to the Next
- 5 War, Women, and Worldly Judgement: Tom Jones
- 6 Prison Gates: The Enquiry and Amelia
- 7 From Covent Garden to Lisbon
- Notes
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Amelia was admired by ‘a judicious few’ for its strong moral tone, and later by Dr Johnson, who liked it even better than Clarissa. But many readers complained that Fielding had lost his comic touch. The good characters were dull, while the underworld settings were abominably ‘low’ and offensive to good taste. Having stayed clear of literary controversy for some time, Fielding had re-entered the fray by beginning a ‘Paper War’ in his new Covent-Garden Journal in January 1752. Old enemies were joined by new opponents, like the rebarbative critic John Hill, and Tobias Smollett (who thought Fielding had pinched the character of Partridge in Joseph Andrews from Strap in Roderick Random). To add to the humiliation, in the first edition Fielding had mentioned Amelia's injured nose, but not its mending: since a damaged nose was a sign of syphilis, critics had a field-day.
Pamphlets, satires, and comic verse rained down. Smarting under the onslaught, Fielding defended his novel movingly in a comic trial in the Journal. The ‘Town’ claims the book is:
very sad Stuff; that Amelia herself is a low Character, a Fool, and a Milksop; that she is very apt to faint, and apt to drink Water, to prevent it … That she shews too much Kindness for her children, and is too apt to forgive the Faults of her Husband… That she once mentions THE DEVIL, and as often as not swears BY HER SOUL. Lastly that she is a Beauty WITHOUTA NOSE, I say again WITHOUTA NOSE. All this we shall prove by many Witnesses. (CGJ 58)
In the following issue, ‘a great Number of Beaus, Rakes, fine Ladies and formal Persons with bushy Wigs’, push forward as witnesses when a ‘grave Man’ asks to be heard (CGJ 65). Describing Amelia as his ‘favourite Child’, not free from faults, but the product of loving labour, he suggests a compromise: ‘I do, therefore, solemnly declare to you, Mr Censor, that I will trouble the World no more with any Children of mine by the same Muse’ (CGJ 66).
Amelia was, indeed, Fielding's last novel. But the Covent-Garden Journal and The Journal of a Voyage to Lisbon show he had lost none of his flair.
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- Henry Fielding , pp. 85 - 93Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 1995