Henry Fielding: Difference between revisions
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== Life == | == Life == | ||
Henry Fielding was born at Sharpham Park near Glastonbury, Somerset, the estate of his grandfather [[Sir Henry Gould]], one of the most distinguished lawyers of the time, on 22 April 1707. His father was Edmund Fielding, a successful army officer, his mother Sarah was the daughter of Sir Henry. | Henry Fielding was born at Sharpham Park near Glastonbury, Somerset, the estate of his grandfather [[Sir Henry Gould]], one of the most distinguished lawyers of the time, on 22 April 1707. His father was Edmund Fielding, a successful army officer, his mother Sarah was the daughter of Sir Henry. After Henry, his parents had six more children, five of them girls, over the following nine years. | ||
Henry | |||
In 1710, the family moved to a farm in the village of East Stour, Dorset, where the children spent most of the time with their mother, father Edmund being frequently away on active service or pleasure trips. Henry's mother died in 1718, and his father found a new wife within less than a year, who was already pregnant when the two of them returned to East Stour. From this moment on, life changed profoundly for Henry and his siblings. They were neglected, if not even abused, by Edmund and his new wife, which caused Henry's grandmother, the widow of Sir Henry Gould, to sue her son-in-law for the income of the farm as well as the custody of the children. After two years of court procedures, Lady Gould won the case and took the children to her new home in Salisbury. Henry, however, only visited his grandmother during his school holidays, because he had been sent to Eton in 1719. | |||
Henry's time at Eton ended in 1724. Although he had made some upper class friends there, his decision what to do for a living was not what one might have expected. The obvious thing would have been to start a career either in the army, as his father and paternal uncle, or as a lawyer, a profession common in his mother's branch of the family. Instead, Henry chose to become a writer. | |||
His first known attempt on literature was a pamphlet containing two poems, published in 1727, but he soon turned towards drama - and successfully so. His first play, ''Love in Several Masks'', was performed in [[Drury Lane]] in 1728, directed by [[Colley Cibber]], at that time the most important figure in London theatre. The play was performed only four times, which made it not much of a success, but at least brought Henry some money (the playwright got the profits from the third performance) and the script was published. | |||
== Works == | == Works == | ||
Revision as of 14:01, 7 December 2009
1707-1754. One of the major 18th-century British playwrights and an important novelist.
Life
Henry Fielding was born at Sharpham Park near Glastonbury, Somerset, the estate of his grandfather Sir Henry Gould, one of the most distinguished lawyers of the time, on 22 April 1707. His father was Edmund Fielding, a successful army officer, his mother Sarah was the daughter of Sir Henry. After Henry, his parents had six more children, five of them girls, over the following nine years.
In 1710, the family moved to a farm in the village of East Stour, Dorset, where the children spent most of the time with their mother, father Edmund being frequently away on active service or pleasure trips. Henry's mother died in 1718, and his father found a new wife within less than a year, who was already pregnant when the two of them returned to East Stour. From this moment on, life changed profoundly for Henry and his siblings. They were neglected, if not even abused, by Edmund and his new wife, which caused Henry's grandmother, the widow of Sir Henry Gould, to sue her son-in-law for the income of the farm as well as the custody of the children. After two years of court procedures, Lady Gould won the case and took the children to her new home in Salisbury. Henry, however, only visited his grandmother during his school holidays, because he had been sent to Eton in 1719.
Henry's time at Eton ended in 1724. Although he had made some upper class friends there, his decision what to do for a living was not what one might have expected. The obvious thing would have been to start a career either in the army, as his father and paternal uncle, or as a lawyer, a profession common in his mother's branch of the family. Instead, Henry chose to become a writer.
His first known attempt on literature was a pamphlet containing two poems, published in 1727, but he soon turned towards drama - and successfully so. His first play, Love in Several Masks, was performed in Drury Lane in 1728, directed by Colley Cibber, at that time the most important figure in London theatre. The play was performed only four times, which made it not much of a success, but at least brought Henry some money (the playwright got the profits from the third performance) and the script was published.
Works
1728 Love in Several Masques (play)
1730 The Author's Farce
1732 The Modern Husband
1732 The Covent-Garden Tragedy
1733 The Miser
1736 Pasquin
1737 Eurydice
1737 Eurydice Hiss'd
1741 Shamela
1742 Joseph Andrews (novel)
1743 Miscellanies
1749 Tom Jones (novel)
1753 A proposal for Making an Effectual Provision for the Poor
1755 The Journal of a Voyage to Lisbon (published posthumously)
Sources
Rawson, Claude (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Henry Fielding. Cambridge: CUP, 2007.
Uglow, Jenny. Henry Fielding. Plymouth: Northcote House, 1995.