The early Victorian prose is in keeping with the energetic temperament of the time. An expansive energy seems to be characteristic of the whole period, displaying itself as freely in literature as in the development of science, geographical exploration and the rapidity of economic change. This energetic mood prescribes the inventiveness and fertility of the prose-writers of the period and explains the vitality of so many of their works. Carlyle’s The French Revolution, Ruskin’s Modern Painters and Arnold’s Essays in Criticism are not modest and light-hearted compositions, but they represent the aesthetic equivalent of self-assertion and an urgent ’will to survive’ which was characteristic of the early Victorians. Their prose is not, as a rule, flawless in diction and rhythm, or easily related to a central standard of correctness or polished to a uniform high finish, but it is a prose which is vigorous, intricate and ample, and is mone conscious of vocabulary and imagery than of balance and rhythm. The dominant impression of zestful and workmanlike prose.

As the number of prose-writers during the period is quite large, there is a greater variety of style among them than to be found in any other period. In the absence any well-defined tradition of prose-writing, each writer cherishes his oddities and idiosyncrasies and is not prepared to sacrifice his peculiarities in deference to a received tradition. Victorian individualism, the ’Doing As One Likes’, censured by Matthew Arnold, reverberates in prose style.

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Taking the Victorian prose as a whole, we can say that it is Romantic prose. Though Romanticism gave a new direction to English poetry between 1780 and 1830, its fuil effects on prose were delayed until the eighteen-thirties when all the major Romantic poets were either dead or moribund. That is why, early Victorian prose is, properly speaking, Romantic prose, and Carlyle is the best example of a Romantic prose-artist. In fact: it were the romantic elements-unevenness, seriousness of tone, concreteness and particularity-which constitute the underlying unity of the prose of the early Victorian period. All the great prose writers of period-Carlyle, Ruskin, Macaulay and Matthew Arnold have these qualities in common.

(»)   Tbomtu Carlyle (1795-1881)

Carlyle was the dominant figure of the Victorian period. He made his influence felt in every department of Victorian life. In the general prose literature of his age he was incomparably the greatest figure, and one of the greatest moral forces. In his youth he suffered from doubts which assailed him during the many dark years in which he wandered in the ’howling wilderness of infidelity/ striving vainly to recover his lost belief in God. Then suddenly there came a moment of mystical illumination, or ’spiritual new birth’, which brought him back to the mood of courage and1 faith. The history of these years of struggle and conflict and the ultimate triumph of his spirit is written with great power in the second book of Sartor Restartus which is his most characteristic literary production, and one of the most remarkable and vital books in the English language. His other works are: French Revolution (1837); his lectures on Heroes and Hero-Worship; Past and Present (1843); the Letters and Speeches of Oliver Cromwell (1845); Latter-day Pamphlets (1850); the Life of John Sterling (1851); the History of Frederick the Great (1858-65).

Basically Carlyle was a Puritan, and in him the strenuous and uncompromising spirit of the seventeenth century Puritanism found its last great exponent. Always passionately in earnest and unyielding in temper, he could not tolerate any moral weakness or social evil. He wanted people to be sincere and he hated conventions and

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unrealities. In the spheres of religion, society and politics he sought reality and criticised ali sham and falsehood. To him history was the revelation of God’s righteous dealings with men and he applied the lessons derived from the past to the present. He had no faith in democracy. He believed in the ’hero’ under whose guidance and leadership the masses can march to glory. This is the theme of his lectures on Heroes and Hero-Worship. He proclaimed a spiritual standard of life to a generation which had started worshipping the ’mudgods of modern civilisation’. He denounced scientific materialism and utilitarianism in Past and Present. He preached to his contemporaries in a most forceful manner that spiritual freedom was the only life-giving truth. Carlyle could not turn back the currents of his age, but he exerted a tremendous influence.

Carlyle’s style is the reflection of his personality. In fact in hardly any English writer are personal and literary characters more closely and strongly blended. He twists the language to suit his needs. In order to achieve this he makes use of strange ’tricks’-the use of capital initials, the dropping of conjunctions, pronouns, verbs, the quaint conversion of any noun into a verb, free use of foreign words or literal English translations of foreign words. Thus his language is like a mercenary army formed of al! sorts of incongruous and exotic elements. His personifications and abstractions sometimes become irritating and even tiresome. At times he deliberately avoids simplicity, directness, proportion and form. He is in fact the most irregular and erratic of English writers. But in spite of al! these faults, it is impossible to read him at his best without the sentiment of enthusiasm. In his mastery of vivid and telling phraseology he is unrivalled and his powers of description and characterisation are remarkable. His style with its enormous wealth of vocabulary, its strangely constructed sentences, its breaks, abrupt turns, apostrophes and exclamations, is unique in English prose literature, and there is no doubt that he is one of the greatest literary artists in the English language. (b) Job* Rutkin (1819-1900)

In the general prose literature of the early Victorian period Ruskin is ranked next to Carlyle. Of all the Victorian

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writers who were conscious of the defeats in contemporary life, he expressed himself most voluminously. Being one of the greatest masters of English he became interested in art and wrote Modern Painters (1843-1860) in five volumes in order to vindicate the position of Turner as a great artist. Being a man of deeply religious and pious nature he could not separate Beauty from Religion, and he endeavoured to prove that ’all  great art  is  praise’.   Examination  of the principles of art gradually led Ruskin to the study of social ethics. He found that architecture, even more than painting, indicated the state of a nation’s health. In his The Seven Lamps of Architecture (1849) and The Stones of Venice (1851-53)   he   tried   to   prove   that   the   best   type   of architecture can be produced only in those ages which are morally superior.

The year 1860 when Ruskin published Unto this Last marks a great change in him. From this time onward he wrote little on art and devoted himself to the discussing of the ills of society. In this book he attacked the prevalent system of political economy, and protested against unrestricted competition, the law of ’Devij-take-thehindmost’, as Ruskin called it. In his later books-Sesame and Lilies (1865) and The Crown of Wild Olive (1866), Ruskin showed himself as a popular educator, clear in argument and skilful in illustration. His last work, an autobiography called Praterita, is full of interesting reminiscences.

Ruskin was a great and good man who himself is more inspiring than any of his books. In the face of drudgery and poverty of the competitive system he wrote: ”I will endure it no longer quietly; but henceforward, with any few or many who will help, do my best to abate this misery.” It was with this object that leaving the field of art criticism, where he was the acknowledged leader, he began to write of labour and justice. Though as a stylist he is one of the masters of English prose, he is generally studied not as a literary man but as an ethical teacher, and every line that he wrote, bears the stamp of his sincerity. He is both a great artist as well as a great ethical teacher. We admire him for his richly ornate style, and for his message to humanity.

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The prose of Ruskin has a rhythmic, melodious quality which makes it almost equal to poetry. Being highly sensitive to beauty in every form, he helps the reader to see and appreciate the beauty of the world around us. In his economic essays he tried to mitigate the evils of the competitive system; to bring the employer and the employed together in mutual trust and helpfulness; to seek beauty, truth, goodness as the chief ends of life. There is no doubt that he was the prophet in an age of rank materialism, utilitarianism and competition, and pointed out the solution to the grave problems which were confronting his age.

(c) Thomas Babington Lord Macaulay (1800-59)

Though Carlyle and Ruskin are now considered to be the great prose-writers of the Victorian period, contemporary opinion gave the first place to Macaulay, who in popularity far exceeded both of them. He was a voracious reader, and he remembered everything he read. He could repeat from memory all the twelve books of Paradise Lost. At the age of twenty-five he wrote his essay on poetry in general and on Milton as poet, man and politician in particular, which brought him immediate popularity as Byron’s Childe Harold had done. Besides biographical and critical essays which won for him great fame and popularity, Macaulay, like Carlyle; wrote historical essays as well as History of England. As early as 1828, he wrote, ’a perfect historian must possess an imagination sufficiently powerful to make his narrative affecting and picturesque.” That power,,of imagination he possessed and exercised so delightfully that his History was at once purchased more eagerly than a poem of romance.

Macaulay was the representative of the popular sentiments and prejudices of the common English man of the first half of the nineteenth century. But his popularity was based mainly on the energy and capacity of his mind, and the eloquence with which he enlivened whatever he wrote. By the resources and the quickness of his memory, by his wide learning which was always at his command, he rose to the high rank as the exponent of the matter of history, and as a critic of opinions.

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The-chief quality which makes Macaulay distinct from the other prose writers of the period is the variety and brilliance of details in his writings. There is a fondness for particulars in his descriptions which distinguished the poems and novels of the new age from the more generalised and abstract compositions of the old school. Though he may be more extravagant and profuse in his variety of details than is consistent with the ’dignity’ of history, this variety is always supported by a structure of great plainness. The only fault of his style is that at times it becomes too rhetorical and so the continuity of the narrative is sacrificed. His short” sentences, and his description of particular interference with the flow of the narrative, and so the cumulative effect of the story is not always secured. Besides this weakness of style, Macauiay is now given a rank lower than that of Cerlyle, Ruskin and Arnold on account of his lack of originality and depth as a thinker. But on the whole he still remains as one of the most enjoyable of all Victorian prose-writers.

(A)   Mattbew Arnold (1822-88)

Besides being a poet, Matthew Arnold was a prosewriter of a high order. He was also a great literary as well as social critic. Like Cariyle and Ruskin, he. was vehement critic of his age. According to him, the Englishmen needed classical qualities in order to attain harmonious perfection in morais and in literature. It was not to the Hebrews or the Germans (as suggested by Cariyle), or to the men of the Middle Age (as suggested by Ruskin) that England could with advantage look for teaching, but to the Greeks or to that people which among the moderns had imbibed most of Hellenic culture, the French.

In literature Arnold strove to rehabilitate and to propagate the classical =pirit in his country. England had reason to be proud of the literary splendour of the Elizabethan period, 0” of the glories of her Romantic movement, but according to Arnold, she had too long condemned or disdained the ”indispensable eighteenth century.” From 1855 onwards Arnold wrote Incessantly in order to raise the intellectual and cultural level of his countrymen. All his prose works are directed to this end: On Translating Homer (1861), The Study of Celtic

Literature (1867), Essays in Criticism (1865 and 1888) and Culture and Anarchy (1869) in which he declared that^ ”culture is the minister of the sweetness and light essential!! to the perfect character”. Being a poet himself, he lookedH upon poetry as ”a criticism of life”, and laid great emphasisH on the part it played in the formation of character and the! guidance of conduct. He always attacked ”the Philistines”, byl whom he meant the middle class indifferent to theH disinterested joys of pure intelligence. Arnold also attemptedH to eliminate the dogmatic element from Christianity in orderH to preserve its true spirit and bring it into the line with thejH

discoveries of science and the progress of liberal thought.     fl

• Unlike  the  teachings  of  Cariyle  and   Ruskin,   which

appealed to the masses, Arnold’s teaching appealed mainly to the educated classes. As a writer of prose he is simply superb. His style is brilliant and polished to a nicety, possessing the virtues of quietness and proportion which we associate with no other Fngiish writer except Dryden. As his object was to bring home to his countrymen certain fundamental principles of cultured and intellectual life, he has the habit of repeating the same word and phrase with a sort of refrain effect. It was no wonder that critics first and the public afterwards, were attracted, irritated, amused or charmed by his writings. His loud praise of ’sweetness’ and ’culture’, his denunciation of the ’Philistine’, the ’Barbarian’, v and so forth, were ridiculed by some unkind critics. But rightly considered we find that there is something of justice in all that he wrote, and on every line there is the stamp of his sincerity.

When Arnold returned from religion and politics to his natural sphere of literature, then the substance of his criticism is admirably sound and its expression always delightful and distinguished. In spite of its extreme mannerism and the apparently obvious tricks by which that mannerism is reached, the style of Arnold is not easy to imitate. It is almost perfectly clear with a clearness rather French than English. It sparkles with wit which seldom diverts or distracts the attention. Such a style was eminently fitted for the purposes of criticism. As a writer of essays he had no superior among the writers of his time, and he can probably never be surpassed by any one in a certelr? mild

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ironic handling of a subject which he disapproves. He may not be considered as one of the strongest writers of English prose, but he must always hold a high rank in it for grace, for elegance, and for an elaborate and calculated charm.

Other fiction

In the Victorian age, many writers wrote books for young readers. Ever since Robinson crusoe and Gulliver’s Travels in the eighteenth century, some books had been considered children’s books, although they were originally written ror adult readers. But now, as more young people, especially in the middle classes, could read, novels were written for them. Often these novels had a tone of instruction, and a moral, but sometimes they were simply enjoyable stories.

The Water Babies by Charles Kingsley (1863) is one of the most famous moral stories of the time. It was a favourite of Queen Victoria’s and she read it to her grandchildren. It is about a chimney-sweep who falls into the bedroom of little girl, Ellie. He runs away, falls into a river, and becomes, after a series of adventures, a clean middleclass life Ellie represents. (Kingsley also wrote one of the more important industrial novels, Alton Locke (1850).) Among the most famous ’school’ novels is Tom Brown’s Schooldays (1857) by Thomas Hughes. It is set in Rugby school, one of the best-known public school way of behaving and thinking became a part of the English way of life for many years. Coral Island by R. M. Ballantyne (also published in 1857) is an adventure story, about children on a desert island. Ballantyne went on to write more than eighty popular novels. For girl readers Anna Sewell’s Black Beauty (1877) is a classic children’s novel about a horse.

One of the books which has been popular with both children and adults is Lewis’ Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865). Carroll, whose real name was Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, taught mathematics at Oxford University. He wrote the book for the daughter of a friend, the original Alice. Through the Looking Glass (1871) continues the strange story of Alice’s adventures. Carroll plays with reality, language and logic in ways that are both comic and

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frightening. He is sometimes seen as one of the first modern writers, for example in this moment when Alice is told to keep running in order to stay in the same place:

Now, here, you see, it takes all the running you can do, to stay in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else, you must run at least twice as fast as that!

This kind of writing was sometimes called fantasy. Many other kinds of fantasy writing are now popular, but in nineteenth century what is now known as science fiction was just beginning. H. G. Wells wrote The Time Machine in

1895, and in the next few years followed it with such novels as The Invisible Man (1897), The War of the World (1898) and The First Men in the Moon (1901). Wells continued writing far into the twentieth century,

Another kind of fantasy is found in Erewhon by Samuel Butler, published in 1872. the book is more a satire, like Gulliver’s Travels. The title is almost the word ’nowhere’ backwards, and the characters also have backwards names, like Yram (Mary) and Mr. Nosnibor (Robinson). The novel is based on work the author had done on Charles Darwin, and is one of the most unusual observations of what was wrong with Victorian society, Erewhon Revisited (1901) continues the story, and the satire.

News from Nowhere by William Morris (1891) is about another kind of nowhere. This is a Utopia, or perfect place, where society is as perfect as it can be. Morris was a socialist, and all his writings have a political intention, even when they are fantasies. In his ideal world many of the main features of the Victorian age no longer exist: money, industrialism and central government among them.

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