1764 |
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Muller, London; 1959; 343 pages |
February 2002 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Close history is more than small coin Jack Lindsay's 1764 is close history that you might read in headlines or the neighborhood news, hear as gossip about government officials, or as rumor of the famous wits and infamous criminals. The human motivations are quite like today's. Details from 1764 in Britain are close enough to be readily recognizable, yet far enough into that undiscovered country that we often have a frisson of surprise. We easily feel a superior mirth at quaint early-modern touches, as in the one above from 2 May 1764. Imagine counterfeiting not gold sovereigns but half-pennies, twelve-hundred pounds by weight of them! What a lot of trouble for such small coin. — But we may sympathize with a time when a half-penny was, if no great sum, at least a piece of cash that most people could not afford to despise. And this may lead us to reflect on the economic forces — natural or mal-managed? — that have led to the extinction of British farthings and half-pence and old pennies and even gold sovereigns, American two-cent pieces and silver half-dimes and gold eagles, large coin after small, in the course of centuries of inflation. The currency continues to cheapen. Are we wiser? Jack Lindsay is a thoughtful polymath, not a chronicler. His 1764 is an evocative diary of things public and private in that year, but also a slice of cultural history.
Lindsay suggests that "In the 1760's we meet the decisive turning-point of the century." In his Introduction he sets out some of the historical developments coming to a crux, such as enclosures of the commons and the shift away from landed control of resources to mercantile control. "A century of violent clashes, which had slowly torn England, first of the world, away from what we may conveniently call the feudal system in its final form of absolute monarchy..." The American Revolution is scarcely on the horizon, but as Lindsay says, "the stubborn resistances to the new way of life" would in a few years provoke it. 1764 is a fascinating journey through Britain. Lindsay follows every month's chapter with several pages of comments largely in his own voice, and additionally has side look-ins at themes from Children to Science to John Wesley's Social Ideas. The book is illustrated with a couple of dozen engravings; I particularly like the architectural Fleet Ditch mid-century and the stage and sellers and visitors at Bartholomew Fair. Lindsay provides a year's cornucopia of nifty vignettes and tidbits, great fun to read. A few of the many brief ones that caught my eye:
Some themes and people are followed more or less throughout the year. In the background is the ongoing political struggle of John Wilkes against arbitrary action by the government. Horace Walpole, King George III, William Pitt, David Garrick, Oliver Goldsmith and other representative types turn up recurrently. Odd or commonplace accidents, murders and thefts and executions and highway robbery commanded frequent contemporary attention. John Wesley's diary is mined for numerous instances of his Methodist preaching to gatherings across the realm. On 21 March 1764,
And on 31 March, Theatre, riots, & other entertainments Despite Wesley and an array of spiritual and political reformers, people gave a lot of attention to amusements, from cock-fighting to theater. John Gay's The Beggar's Opera (1728) was performed at Covent-garden in March 1764. The Earl of Sandwich had a nickname from the play, and poet Thomas Gray used this tie-in for political satire. The perennial Beggar's Opera was performed again at Drury-lane in September. Often the London spectators were active themselves: Selling a wife for an ox While out in the countryside, on 22 November 1764,
Lindsay says "The belief that a man could sell his wife thus haltered went on well into the 19th century, and many examples are recorded." (Thomas Hardy's The Mayor of Casterbridge begins with one.) — I misdoubt that the grazier's ox was likewise returned; and I wonder if some couples even repeated this lucrative trade from time to time in well-separated country fairs. Of course virtue, or the semblance of it, may be sold in subtler ways. Those who follow even casually the ups and downs of the publishing trade shan't be surprised by the following. Many literate readers have marveled that academic jargon triumphs over plain, clear writing. Or wondered why so many books, even scholarly ones, or works obviously the beloved labor of years, seem to have been cloistered away from any sight of a proofreader. Ups and downs? Sometimes it seems more like tempests on the bookshelves, or even spirals of sense and senselessness to shame a child's broken spinning-top. Despite all, care for quality may attempt to regain the ascendant. Thus, on 28 November 1764:
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© 2002 Robert Wilfred Franson |
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