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TALES
OF OTHER TIMES
A Survey of British Historical Fiction, 17701812
Anne Stevens
The years 1760–1820 mark a turning point in the
history of historiography. Methods for studying the past changed
rapidly during this period, as did the forms in which historical
knowledge was displayed. Hume famously called these years ‘the
historical age’, while Foucault’s Order of Things contends
that an epistemic shift from ‘order’ to ‘history’ took place around
the year 1800. [1]
The historical novel, possibly the most important generic innovation
of Romantic-era fiction, is also the most important and underexplored
historiographic innovation of these years. Its importance has
not often been recognised, however, since, following the nineteenth-century
establishment of an autonomous realm of art and the professionalisation
of historiography, history and fiction came to appear more and
more distinct and their earlier connections forgotten. The novel
has come to be studied as a linguistically complex work of the
imagination, using the techniques of close reading to uncover
its hidden meanings, while works of historiography have more often
been studied for the ideas they express than their means of expression.
The best recent book
on eighteenth-century historiography, Mark Phillips’s Society
and Sentiment, examines an expanded set of historiographic
genres, including memoirs, biography, and ‘fragmentary’ histories
(of art, commerce, women, and so on) to discuss developments in
historiography over the period 1740 to 1820. The changes Phillips
describes within historiography are precisely those areas where
historical fiction excels—in the creation of narrative identification,
the exploration of social history, and the depiction of domestic
spaces and everyday life. [2]
This paper seeks to complement the work of Phillips and others
by reading the Romantic-era historical novel as an important and
often overlooked historiographic genre.
By annexing the
subject matter and some of the methods of historians, novelists
participated in one of the most important generic rivalries
of the eighteenth century. Historical works were produced in
far greater numbers (10,000 historiographic works in contrast
to 3,000 novels in the eighteenth century) and had far more
prestige than the novel. Following the popular and critical
successes of David Hume, William Robertson, and Edward Gibbon,
novelists attempted to appropriate the prestige and popularity
of historiography by encroaching upon its subject matter and
techniques. In the process, however, they created an entirely
new form of historical representation, one that played with
new ideals of historical objectivity and new extremes of historical
scepticism.
Most historians of
the historical novel can be placed into one of two camps. The
first of these camps has defined the features of genre by the
Waverley Novels of Sir Walter Scott (published 1814–32) at the
expense of previous incarnations of the form. These critics, such
as Herbert Butterfield, Avrom Fleishman, Georg Lukács, and Harry
Shaw, dismiss the historical fiction published before Scott as
costume drama, Gothic romance, or ahistorical fantasy and begin
their studies of the genre with Waverley. [3]
The second camp, often comparativists, traces a much longer history
for the historical novel. While Margaret Anne Doody extends the
history of the historical novel to ancient Greek romance, Richard
Maxwell and April Alliston have devoted considerable attention
to seventeenth-century French examples of historical fiction.
[4]
Katie Trumpener lays
claim to a third position between the two extremes. [5]
Historical fiction does not begin with Scott, she argues, but
the historical novel of the Romantic period is notably different
from and discontinuous with the historical fiction of the seventeenth
century. Trumpener attributes this rupture to the influence of
a new type of elegiac, nationalist antiquarianism, centred around
the figure of the bard, which develops in Scotland and Ireland
in response to the loss of political sovereignty. The focus of
Trumpener’s study, however, is the thematic issue of nationalism
rather than the generic issue of historical fiction. Consequently,
she does not limit her study to historical fiction but ranges
freely among a variety of fictional and non-fictional forms, including
national tales, Jacobin novels, and travel literature. Like Trumpener,
I contend that historical fiction does not begin with Scott but
that the features of the modern historical novel only begin to
be elaborated in the second half of the eighteenth century. Rather
than focusing on this shift as a political event, caused by an
emergent sense of cultural nationalism, I have chosen to focus
on its implications for the history of the production of knowledge.
Fictionalised representations
of the past, of course, have classical antecedents in Homer and
Heliodorus. For eighteenth-century novelists, the more immediate
model for prose fiction set in a different historical epoch and
featuring historical figures as characters would have been late
seventeenth-century French works such as Madame de Lafayette’s
La Princesse de Clèves (1678) and the heroic romances of
Madéleine de Scudéry (1601–67). In Britain, another type of ‘historical
novel’ flourished in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth
centuries, in the form of scandal fiction, or the ‘secret histories’
of the amours of historical figures. These works, often identified
as ‘historical novels’ in their subtitles, were often translations
of or influenced by the French chronique scandaleuse, a
genre which began in 1660 with Bussy-Rabutin’s Histoire amoreuse
des Gaules. The most famous examples in English are Delarivier
Manley’s Secret History of Queen Zarah (1705) and New
Atalantis (1709). [6]
These works were well
out of fashion by the 1760s, when a new type of historical novel
began to appear. Beginning with Thomas Leland’s Longsword,
Earl of Salisbury (1762) and popularised by Horace Walpole’s
The Castle of Otranto (1764), these new historical novels
downplayed scandalous anecdotes of recent political figures in
favour of ‘tales of other times’. Dozens of historical fictions
were published each year in the 1770s and 1780s. [7]
The real explosion in historical fiction occurs during the 1790s,
coinciding with the popularity of Gothic works by Ann Radcliffe
and M. G. Lewis. Gothic novels, of course, are usually set
in the past, but the use of ‘Gothic’ as a generic indicator of
the supernatural was not fully established until the very end
of the eighteenth century, following the popularity of Matthew
Lewis’s The Monk and the importation of the German schauerroman.
Until that point, the word ‘Gothic’ as a generic tag meant a story
set in the ‘Gothic’ period, or the Middle Ages. Among the novels
that twentieth-century critics have lumped together as ‘Gothic’,
a fairly distinct category of works can be isolated which are
set in the past but lack supernatural machinery. These works tend
to be set in England rather than on the Continent, and usually
feature a mixture of historical and fictional characters, thus
more closely resembling the historical novel than the Gothic in
their modern senses.
While no single
generic designation delineates all the historical novels of
this period, many of these works possess subtitles that call
attention to their claims to historicity. Since historiography
was one of the novel’s greatest competitors for the attention
of the reading public, authors used the title pages of their
works to call attention to the factuality of their content in
a variety of ways:
‘An Historical Tale’ (Louis d’Ussieux, The Siege
of Aubigny, 1782; Anne Fuller, The Son of Ethelwolf,
1789; Rosetta Ballin, The Statue Room, 1790; Lady Jane
Grey, 1791)
‘An Historic Tale’ (Gabrielle de Vergy,
1790; Edwy, son of Ethelred the Second, 1791)
‘A Tale, Founded on Historic Facts’ (Anna Maria
MacKenzie, Monmouth, 1790; Henry Siddons, William Wallace:
Or, the Highland Hero, 1791)
‘An Historical Tale, Founded on Facts’ (Cassandra
Cooke, Battleridge, 1799)
‘A Tale, Founded upon Historic Truths’ (Somerset;
or, the Dangers of Greatness, 1792)
‘A Tale of Other Times’ (Sophia Lee, The Recess,
1783–85)
‘An Old English Tale’ (Martha Hugill, St Bernard’s
Priory, 1786)
‘An Historical Romance’ (The Duke of Exeter,
1789; Arville Castle, 1795; Montford Castle; or the
Knight of the White Rose, 1795; John Broster, The Castle
of Beeston, or, Randolph Earl of Chester, 1798)
‘An Historical Novel’ (Eloisa de Clairville,
1790; The Siege of Belgrade, 1791; Mrs E. M. Foster,
The Duke of Clarence, 1795; Charles Dacres: Or, the
Voluntary Exile, 1797; Mrs F. C. Patrick, The Jesuit:
or, the History of Anthony Babington, Esq., 1799)
‘An Historic Novel’ (Agnes Musgrave, Cicely,
or, the Rose of Raby, 1795)
‘Historic Tracts’ (Anna Millikin, Corfe Castle,
1793)
‘An Ancient Fragment’ (Edward de Courcy,
1794)
‘A British Story’ (William Hutchinson, The Hermitage,
1772)
‘A Fragment of Secret History’ (Ann Yearsley, The
Royal Captives, 1795)
‘An Historic Fact’ (Anna Maria Mackenzie, Danish
Massacre, 1791)
Eighteenth-century subtitles helped to adumbrate
the subject matter of a novel and to market it to a particular
audience. [8]
The subtitles above advertise the basis of the novels on real
events (founded on facts, founded on historic facts, founded upon
historic truths, and so forth) in an attempt to appeal to a reading
public that was turning Hume and Gibbon into best-selling authors.
Turning to the contents
of a few of these novels, then, we can see the ways in which Romantic-era
historical fiction functioned as both a fictional and a historiographic
genre. These novels repackaged the contents of historiography
for a fiction-reading audience. At the same time, however, the
novel did not merely borrow the prestige of historiography to
lend credibility to a ‘low’ form of writing. By its very nature
as a fictional narrative, the novel was uniquely equipped to accommodate
certain new features of eighteenth-century historiography, such
as the expanded range of topics for historical research, while
simultaneously taking up features discarded from an increasingly
scientific pursuit, such as invented speeches. 
In repackaging the
contents of historiography in fictional form, novelists aimed
for an audience likely to be composed of more women, older children,
and middle-rank readers, the patrons of the circulating libraries,
than the more aristocratic male readers of antiquarian and specialised
historical publications. [9]
Gary Kelly has described a new type of didacticism in Romantic-era
fiction, less interested in inculcating moral lessons than in
providing useful knowledge through a fictional medium:
Children, like the common people
(and perhaps women), were supposed to be irrational, incomplete
as inward beings, and given to mere sociability. Hence narrative
and fiction were supposed to be, unfortunately, necessary in
order to secure their attention and interest. Nevertheless,
fiction for the young would preferably include large amounts
of factual, ‘solid’ information and be in a mode of formal realism,
and set in common life. Where the historical or the geographical
and social exotic were used they would be primarily for information
and education. [10]
Kelly’s
characterisation of the structure of children’s literature also
describes the contents of Romantic-era historical fiction. In
the preface to his novel Queenhoo-Hall (1808), the antiquary
Joseph Strutt makes his intentions explicit: ‘the chief purpose
of the work, is to make it the medium of conveying much
useful instruction, imperceptibly to the minds of such readers
as are disgusted at the dryness usually concomitant with the labours
of the antiquary’. [11]
Antiquaries such as
Joseph Strutt worried about the ‘dryness’ of their historical
writings, and turned to fiction as a way to package their materials
for a popular audience. At the same time, historical novelists
borrowed some of the more striking formal features of antiquarian
publications to lend the appearance of authority to their volumes.
These authors often take only the surface features of historiography—inserting
unnecessarily pedantic footnotes or elaborate prefatory material—in
an attempt to make their novels look like historiographic publications.
Following the success of Walpole’s Castle of Otranto, these
novels often use the convention of the discovered manuscript to
introduce their work, even though the artificiality of the device
is quickly apparent. Just as historical novelists drew upon the
antiquarian interest in manuscripts, and prefaced their volumes
as an antiquary would preface a paper to the Society, they also
used the scholarly apparatus developed by antiquaries and antiquarian-influenced
historians to frame their novels. Although only a handful of historical
novelists used them, footnotes were a tool available to novelists
who wished to display their learning, refer readers to other works,
or just to make their prose appear more authoritative on the page.
Historical novels with footnotes include The Minstrel; or,
Anecdotes of Distinguished Personages in the Fifteenth Century
(1793), Henrietta Rouviere Mosse’s A Peep at our Ancestors:
An Historical Romance (1807), and Elizabeth Strutt’s The
Borderers (1812). 
Elizabeth Strutt,
for example, calls attention to her footnotes: ‘Those obsolete
customs and words which it was found necessary to introduce, in
order to render the delineation of manners more perfect, are explained
in notes at the end of the volumes, where may also be found such
characteristic anecdotes as were deemed illustrative of that period
of history with which they are connected.’ [12]
The notes and illustrations place The Borderers within
the battlegrounds of antiquarian controversy, suggesting that
this work shares affinities with more serious works of historiography.
Strutt’s preface further emphasises these affinities: ‘if they
should excite in a single reader the wish to become more fully
acquainted with one of the most brilliant epocha of English history,
the labours of the authoress will not have been in vain’ (p. iv).
Strutt showcases her historical sources in the footnotes, which
include a number of antiquarian publications, such as the Society
of Antiquaries of London’s journal Archaeologia (1770–),
Walter Scott’s ballad collection The Minstrelsy of the Scottish
Border (1802–03), the ballad collections of Joseph Ritson
(1752–1803), the poems of Ossian, and Thomas Warton’s History
of English Poetry (1774–89). Likewise, Mosse’s Peep at
our Ancestors contains numerous footnotes explaining tangential
historical details like the sailing abilities of the Normans,
historical figures like Robert Duke of Normandy, and legal details
like the establishment of the practice of trial by jury. In the
footnotes, Mosse refers readers to antiquarian works such as
Joseph Strutt’s Customs and Manners (1775–76) and Francis
Grose’s Antiquarian Repertory (1775–84), situating her
novel within a scholarly community.
Several novelists
supplement their display of erudition in the footnotes with prefatory
statements of the labours that went into their compositions. In
her preface, for example, Rouvière thanks the British Museum and
the Herald’s Office for allowing her access to their records.
Anna Maria Porter’s Don Sebastian (1809) goes further,
listing the main sources for the novel and in the process illustrating
her process of research and composition:
In my delineation of countries,
manners, &c. I have endeavoured to give as faithful a picture
as was possible to one who describes after the accounts of others;
I consulted the voyages and tours of those days; so that the
modern traveller, in journeying with me over Barbary, Persia,
and Brazil, must recollect that he is beholding those countries
as they appeared in the sixteenth century […] The materials
with which I have worked, have been drawn from general history,
accounts of particular periods, the Harleian Miscellany, and
a curious old tract published in 1602, containing the letters
of Texere, De Castro, and others, with minute details of the
conduct and sufferings of the mysterious personage concerning
whom it treats. [13]
This account of her work serves a credentialising
function for Porter. Just as antiquaries displayed their credentials
through the initials ‘F.S.A.’ (Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries)
on the title page, so Porter, unable to supply any scholarly initials,
demonstrates that she has extensive read and researched her field,
and is thus qualified to write a historical novel that makes some
claim to historical accuracy.
While novelists experimented
formally with the scholarly trappings of an increasingly ‘scientific’
historiography, thematic trends in the historical novel paralleled
trends in eighteenth-century historiography. While it is impossible
to generalise about the content of the eighteenth-century historical
novel, certain topics were more popular than others. Just as historians’
interest shifted from Greece and Rome to native English history
and from antiquity to the Middle Ages, in the historical novel,
medieval settings and English history predominate. The seventeenth-century
heroic romances were frequently set in ancient Greece and Rome
(see, for example, Scudéry’s Clélie, 1654–60, and Charlotte
Lennox’s satiric treatment of it in The Female Quixote,
1752), while the bizarre Memoirs of a Pythagorean (1785),
which surveys manners and customs in several ancient nations,
is the exception rather than the rule by the last decades of the
eighteenth century. [14]
Instead, the historical novels of this period are usually set
in Europe, most often England, and in temporal settings ranging
from Anglo–Saxon times to the ‘recent past’ of the eighteenth
century. [15]
In subject as in setting,
the historical novel participates in larger historiographic trends.
Phillips has noted the increased popularity of biography and memoirs
in the second half of the eighteenth century. Fictionalised biographies
of historical figures, sometimes called ‘heroic novels’, fed off
this demand for more intimate accounts of the lives of familiar
historical figures. [16]
Jane Porter’s The Scottish Chiefs (1810), a fictionalised
biography of William Wallace and a source for the film ‘Braveheart’,
was the one of most popular ‘heroic novels’, but many other novelists
preceded Porter in casting the life story of an intriguing historical
figure as a novel, such as James White’s Adventures of King
Richard Coeur-de-Lion (1791), Henry Siddons’s William Wallace
(1791), or Lady Jane Grey (1791).
The popularity of
memoirs, biography, and heroic novel indicates the demand for
stories about the private lives of public figures. This demand
may partially be a by-product of the reduction in private or dramatic
moments from the narratives of historiography. As Phillips has
pointed out, invented speeches and the monarchical character-sketch
were both important elements of classical historiography. Barbara
Shapiro claims that the invented speech was the first ‘fictional’
element of historiography modern historians rejected. [17]
Indeed, dramatic moments were becoming increasingly hard to find
in historiography. The classics of eighteenth-century historical
narrative depict their historical subjects speaking very infrequently.
Edward Gibbon, for example, de-emphasises the biographical elements
of his Decline and Fall (1776–88): ‘To illustrate the obscure
monuments of the life and death of each individual would prove
a laborious task, alike barren of instruction and of amusement.’
[18]
When a very important character, such as the Emperor Julian, appears,
Gibbon will give him at most a line or two of dialogue. Likewise,
although Hume’s account of the execution of Charles I is as powerful
and dramatic as any comparable incident from a novel, Hume usually
avoids this type of biographical episode, merely providing an
illustration of the character of each monarch at the end of his
sections.
It
is quite likely that contemporary readers would have wanted to
see notable historical figures come to life on the page as they
did on the stage. In order to write historiography with claims
to be quasi-scientific fact, historians had to omit invented speeches,
dialogue, and dramatic situations, first relegating them to the
sidelines as ‘anecdotes’, as in Voltaire’s Le Siècle de Louis
XIV (1751), and then exiling them from general history altogether.
These then became the province of the historical novel. While
some novelists chose to make a single notable figure the focus
of their story, many novels featured only ‘cameo appearances’
by the notable figures of an era. This feature, which Lukács lauds
as a mark of Scott’s originality and genius, was already a staple
trope of the eighteenth-century historical novel. Examples of
this type abound in the novels of this time. The Borderers,
for example, features cameos by John of Gaunt, Geoffrey Chaucer,
and Edward the Black Prince, while William Godwin’s eponymous
protagonist meets Rabelais and Henry VIII in St Leon: A Tale
of the Sixteenth Century (1799). Sometimes these cameos serve
merely to place the novel within a particular period of history,
while in other novels such as The Recess: Or, A Tale of Other
Times (1783–85) the historical characters are as important
as the fictional heroines.
When historical novelists
chose not merely to embellish the detail of a real person’s life
but to invent fictional characters to inhabit a real historical
setting, novelists and reviewers had recourse to concepts of ‘typicality’
or ‘probability’ to defend this choice. Daston and Galison have
discussed the idea of the ‘typical’ in relation to scientific
atlases: ‘In eighteenth-century atlases, “typical” phenomena were
those that hearkened back to some underlying Typus or “archetype,”
and from which individual phenomena could be derived, at least
conceptually. The typical is rarely if ever embodied in a single
individual.’ [19]
They further distinguish between two variants of the typical:
‘the “ideal” image purports to render not merely the typical but
the perfect, while the “characteristic” image locates the typical
in an individual’ (p. 88). For scientists, a ‘typical’ member
of the species is a composite of various individuals which embodies
the most important characteristics of that species. Novelists
create something akin to a ‘characteristic’ image in their creation
of a fictional hero or heroine supposed to be ‘typical’ of a given
historical period. [20]
In the creation of
typical but invented characters, historical novelists help to
erect a boundary between fiction and history, truth and falsehood,
while simultaneously transgressing it. In the preface to A
Peep at our Ancestors, for example, Mosse suggests that certain
rules apply to the writers of ‘historical romance’: ‘Yet Shakespeare,
like some other dramatic and narrative writers, frequently subjects
himself to the reproach of infidelity and distortion of fact.
These writers appear to lose sight of that most essential law
for compositions of this nature, that fiction, but not
falsehood is allowable in historical romance.’ [21]
Historical fiction emerged at the moment when the history/fiction
divide was being established, and in turn helped to create that
distinction. Rouvière’s claim that ‘fiction but not falsehood’
is allowable in historical romance’ suggests the direction that
this distinction followed. By accusing Shakespeare of ‘distortion
of fact’ in his history plays, Rouvière makes space for a category
of imaginative literature based on fact but subject to a different
set of rules than historical composition. Similarly, reviewers
of the anonymous Minstrel (1793) praised its historical
verisimilitude:
it brings before the reader’s
imagination the busy period of English history in which the
contest between the houses of York and Lancaster was at its
height, and places its characters in the midst of the great
events of that period. The incidents, indeed, as well as most
of the persons, are fictitious: but the writer adheres with
fidelity to the general spirit and manners of the times. [22]
By capturing the ‘general spirit and manners of
the times’, the author of The Minstrel has remained faithful
to history, even while employing fictitious incidents and characters.
In choosing to focus
on typical but fictitious embodiments of a particular era rather
than familiar historical personages, novelists opened up new avenues
for exploring ‘manners and customs’ or the everyday life of the
past. In this way, their work is analogous to the that of the
Scottish Enlightenment historians, antiquaries, and other commentators
who were beginning to explore cultural and social history. The
Minstrel is paradigmatic in its use of a ‘typical’ character
to focus narrative and to provide access to a spectrum of historical
detail. Set during the War of the Roses, the novel follows the
noble and beautiful Eleanor, who, after the treacherous St Julian
seizes her titles and lands and tries to force her to marry his
son, escapes disguised as a minstrel. Because of her disguise,
Eleanor is able to enter the ranks and interact with the most
important figures on both sides of the conflict, including King
Henry VI. She also encounters an assortment of medieval social
types, including bear baiters, a ‘travelling vender of pardons
and indulgencies from the pope’, and members of the peasantry.
[23]
While helping a family to improve their cottage, Eleanor sees
the domestic arrangements of a peasant family during this period:
‘there was a chimney, […] pewter spoons, instead
of wooden ones, were used in the family […] the beds and bulsters
were all of feathers, and all of them had sheets’
(III, 81). Through the medium of the minstrel, the novel surveys
a range of social ranks, providing us glimpses of the private
life of both the peasantry and the nobility. [24]
Similarly, Henrietta
Rouviere Mosse’s Peep at our Ancestors offers a voyeuristic
account of private life in English history. The author employs
a visual metaphor to suggest that the novel form allows an eyewitness
approach to history: ‘aided by records and documents she has kindly
been permitted to consult, she may have succeeded in a correct
though faint sketch of the times she treats, and in affording,
if through a dim, yet not distorted nor discoloured glass, “A
Peep at Our Ancestors” ’ (I, xiv–xv). Mosse’s novel is perhaps
closest in spirit to the works of the engraver and antiquary Joseph
Strutt, whose works mingled engravings and descriptions to illustrate
the clothing, pastimes, and manners of the past visually. [25]
Similarly, A Peep at our Ancestors uses narrative description
to recreate the past visually in the mind of the reader.
Joseph Strutt’s own
historical novel Queenhoo-Hall embodies the extremes of
antiquarianism in the novel. Because of his encyclopaedic knowledge
of everyday life in the Middle Ages, Strutt pauses his story every
time he has a chance to expound upon a new historical detail,
for example inserting paragraph-long descriptions of each character’s
clothing in the midst of a dialogue. Strutt also attempts to historicise
the language of the characters, but the resulting dialogue sounds
awkward: ‘ “By our holy-dam, my lady,” said Oswald, bowing,
“I weened they were: but, I trow, the varlets have contrived some
new knackeries” ’ (I, 25). More successful is Elizabeth Strutt’s
Borderers, which balances its depiction of everyday life
in a Scottish castle, including food, clothing, pastimes, heraldry,
and chivalric tournaments, with a sentimental love story. Even
novels that were much less descriptive than The Borderers
emphasise their depiction of ‘manners’. The preface to Edwy;
Son of Ethelred the Second (1791) claims that ‘The Authoress
has endeavoured to make her Hero speak and act conformable to
the manners of the age in which he lived; and throughout the tale,
she has endeavoured to depict manners as they were at that remote
period.’ [26]
The
freedom which the historical novel allowed in creating fictional
characters typical of a particular era was essential to authors
more interested in surveying historical manners than particular
historical figures. Through the concept of ‘typical’ or ‘probable’
but fictional characters and situations, novelists mediated between
historical truth and historical fiction, staking out their territory
as the form of historical representation best suited to depicting
everyday life, domesticity, and interiority. Another historiographic
contradiction that the historical novel was well suited to mediate
was the opposition between local knowledge and universal truths.
Peter Dear has defined objectivity as ‘knowledge that is not local;
it is not contingent on the situation (in the broadest sense)
of the individual knower’. [27]
For eighteenth-century historians, defining a set of standards
for historical objectivity presented a challenge, since much of
the historical record consisted of the testimony of individual
observers, often biased and contradictory. The materialist side
of antiquarianism was one way around the problem of having to
rely on individual testimony for knowledge of the past, based
as it was reading artefacts instead of texts. Where people could
and often did lie or exaggerate, material objects told the truth.
What exactly they were saying, however, was a matter of dispute.
By the second half of the eighteenth century, historians and antiquaries
were attempting in various ways to deduce more general truths
from the individual fragments of antiquarian research. Before
nineteenth-century archaeologists codified more scientific principles
for the study of material artefacts, antiquaries often had to
import some type of general historical narrative in order to make
sense of their fragmentary findings. The Scottish Enlightenment
historians’ general narrative of the progress of society was perhaps
the most productive of these narratives, which also included religious
and mythical schema. Historians struggled to find the correct
balance between local empirical knowledge and general scientific
truths. 
In the historical
novel, a version of this conflict was carried out on the level
of point of view. The majority of historical novels employed
third-person authoritative narrators (the same type of impersonal
voices who narrated historiographic works) in order to lend
an air of objectivity to their novels. These third-person narrators,
such as the narrator of The Minstrel, inhabit the same
historical moment as the readers of the novel and often compare
the past they describe to the present they live in:
Far, very far distant was the
condition of the peasantry of England in those iron times,
from the happy freedom of the present. Now, the poor
man selecting the place of his residence, hires his humble
cottage of the rich, and for its annual stipend enjoys in
it every right of property, but the power of destruction […]
Then, the kingdom distributed into baronies, each lord
reigned despotic in his district, and the lower order of peasants,
termed villains, were the abject slaves of his arbitrary will
[…] (III, 27–28)
The obtrusive narrator of The Borderers
shows a surprising degree of historical relativism, using historical
details to reflect upon class and gender issues. For example,
a note on the phrase ‘above the salt’ explains:
Formerly the whole family, however
numerous, sat down at table together, but that there might
be some distinction retained between the master and his dependants,
a large salt-cellar was placed in the middle of the board,
the most honourable places being above it; at the same time
that it formed a boundary, which any delicacy that the table
might afford was not expected to pass. (I, 210)
In detailing the domestic customs of the fourteenth
century, the novel illustrates an alternative set of class distinctions,
where the servants and the family ‘sat down at table together’.
The praxis is interrupted at another point in order to describe
the education of a woman at the time, in music, dancing, medicine,
and needlework (I, 31). The narrator reflects upon female education:
the difference between an
education of the fourteenth century and the nineteenth, was
not trifling; but the respect paid to the sex, in the interim,
has apparently decreased, in proportion as their claim to
it may have seemed to increase. Women, mortifying as the confession
may be, never more powerfully influenced society than when
they could neither read or write—never were more respected
in it. (I, 32–33)
This reflection indicates a non-progressive
model of history, where women’s social influence has actually
receded. The author seems to advocate a greater degree of
women’s rights, using historical example as a way to highlight
the lack of power women possessed in her time.
Although most
historical novels employed the historian’s point of view to
narrate a ‘tale of other times’ while commenting upon its
significance for contemporary readers, other historical novels
emphasised their status as local knowledge by employing first-person
narrators. Mark Phillips has remarked upon eighteenth-century
experiments with spectatorial narrative, such as Helen Maria
Williams’s Letters from France (1790–92), as indicative
of a shift to a more inward, sentimental engagement with history:
sympathetic reading was part of a crucial
expansion of the aims of historical writing in the course of which
the traditional historical task of mimesis was reinterpreted to
include the evocation of past experience. History enlarged its
scope to incorporate the wider spectrum both of actors and experiences
that made up a modern, commercial, and increasingly middle-class
society. [28]
Through the use of a first-person narrator, an author
could create a more immediate, eyewitness account of historical
life. By encouraging sympathetic identification, readers were
able to live vicariously in another era.
One way in which this
identification was achieved was though annotated editions of memoirs,
autobiography, or collections of letters. Over the course of the
eighteenth century, historians began to look to the personal letter
as a means of gaining a more immediate relationship to the past.
Lenglet du Fresnoy’s early-eighteenth-century treatise, A New
Method of Studying History (1728), is one of the first to
promote the value of letters as historical sources: ‘I do not
believe there is a more secure Method of knowing History, than
from Memoirs and Letters.’ [29]
In letters, he claims, ‘we find History in its Purity, the Passions
of Mankind are better represented than in Historians themselves’.
[30]
In fact, by mid-century collections of personal letters began
to be published for their value as historical sources. At the
same time, an epistolary historical novel, such as Sophia Lee’s
The Recess, presented fictitious letters from Matilda and
Ellinor, the imaginary daughters of Mary, Queen of Scots, as a
means to achieve sympathetic identification with characters from
the past.
While Lee exploits
the epistolary form to generate sympathy, however, she also uses
the form to create the effect of scepticism in the mind of the
reader. The sceptical implications of her novel work to open up
a space for her fictionalisation of history, whereby fiction becomes
the necessary supplement to a historical record fraught with conspiracy,
uncertainty, and conflicting accounts. Deception is the very condition
for success in the Renaissance political world of The Recess:
‘James ardently desired to be nominated as the successor of Elizabeth
by herself, and had not spared bribes, promises, or flattery,
to interest those around her whom he thought likely to influence
her choice’. [31]
Here Lee reiterates the eighteenth-century critique of political
corruption—of the history that takes place behind the history—found
in the ‘secret histories’ of Delarivier Manley or the musings
of Gulliver upon seeing the truth behind history at Glubdubdribb.
[32]
Like her successor, Elizabeth also deceives (and is deceived)
to succeed:
Elizabeth, in defiance of
time and understanding, indulged a romantic taste inconsistent
with either; and, not satisfied with real pre-eminence, affected
to be deified by the flattery of verse. The Lady of the Lake
was the title she chose to be known by here, and nothing art
could invent, or wealth procure, was wanting to render the
various pageants complete. A boat scooped like a shell, and
enclosing a throne, conveyed her to the aight, where I and
many more, habited like Nereids, waited to receive her. (p. 80)
The pageantry of Elizabeth’s court, later romanticised
in Scott’s Kenilworth, is presented here as nothing more
than ridiculous flattery. [33]
The panegyric of the Elizabethan court poets receives its necessary
corrective in Matilda’s account of Elizabeth’s tyranny.
Ellinor’s inserted
narrative, placed at the very centre of the novel, further enhances
the effect of scepticism for the reader. Covering the same period
of time as Matilda’s narrative, Ellinor sometimes fills in gaps
and elsewhere subverts what has come before. In the first page
of ‘The Life of Ellinor, Addressed to Matilda’, Ellinor describes
Matilda’s husband in terms that contradict the preceding narrative.
She calls Leicester ‘callous’, ‘timid and subtle’, and ‘tyrannic’
(p. 156), thus forcing the reader to re-evaluate Matilda’s
panegyric. In fact, in Ellinor’s narrative Leicester is transformed
from romantic hero to the shadowy double of Elizabeth: ‘I feared
the keen eye of Elizabeth, and the colder and more watchful
one of Lord Leicester’ (p. 159). Other features of Ellinor’s
narrative have the effect of destabilising the reader’s certainty
about historical narrative. Most of the major events in Ellinor’s
story, and indeed, of the entire novel, hinge on some form of
falsehood or deception. Leicester’s death may be merely a ‘fiction’:
‘In fine, having bribed the servants employed in blazoning this
pompous fiction, the family were indubitably assured, the body
buried under the name Lord Leicester, was one procured for the
purpose’ (p. 184). Similarly, Ellinor stages her own death
in order to be able to follow Essex to Ireland (p. 218);
while earlier, Elizabeth forced her to sign a false document,
a spurious confession (p. 178). She remarks upon the deceptions
practiced on the world: ‘Oh, misjudging world, how severely
on the most superficial observation dost thou venture to decide!’
(pp. 206–07), but she deceives herself when she masquerades
as a man to follow Essex. The emphasis on deception, forgery,
and fiction creates a sense of scepticism about official historical
accounts, and if there is no sure way to distinguish fact from
fiction, a fictitious history may be the best method to understand
the past.
Fictitious histories
such as The Recess and the other novels discussed in this
paper shared a number of features and functions with the historical
and antiquarian publications of the late eighteenth century. In
form, both fictitious and ‘true’ histories utilised footnotes,
prefaces, and other paratextual devices to display their learning.
In function, novels like The Recess demonstrated dissatisfaction
with received historical accounts and attempted to supplement
them by inventing fictitious accounts of important periods of
history. Antiquaries expressed a similar scepticism about documents
and historical generalisations in a number of activities, such
as their interest in investigating forgers like James Macpherson
and Thomas Chatterton and their revisionist attitude toward familiar
figures, as evidenced in Horace Walpole’s Historic Doubts on
the Life and Reign of King Richard III (1768). In fact, the
subtitle of The Recess: A Tale of Other Times, is taken
from one of the most famous forgeries of the day, Macpherson’s
Ossian poems (1760–65). [34]
Antiquaries and historical novelists also shared the function
of supplementing political and military history by investigating
other aspects of the past, such as social and cultural details
and by providing ways to engage with the past more sympathetically.
These novels, some tedious and derivative and others unjustly
forgotten by literary history, provide new perspectives on the
history of history in the Romantic period. By the time Walter
Scott came to publish Waverley in 1814, he was working
within an already established genre. [35]
A better understanding of the features and functions of this genre
will help us to shed new light on Scott’s remarkable undertaking,
as well as on the achievements of nineteenth-century historian.
NOTES
1. Michel
Foucault, The Order of Things (New York: Vintage, 1970).
2. Mark
Salber Phillips, Society and Sentiment: Genres of Historical
Writing in Britain, 1740–1820 (Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 2000). Other key works on eighteenth-century
historiography and antiquarianism include Devoney Looser, British
Women Writers and the Writing of History, 1670–1820
(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000); Joseph M.
Levine, The Battle of the Books: History and Literature in
the Augustan Age (Ithaca, NY and London: Cornell University
Press, 1991); Martin Myrone and Lucy Peltz (eds.), Producing
the Past: Aspects of Antiquarian Culture and Practice (Aldershot:
Ashgate, 1999); Thomas Preston Peardon, The Transition in
English Historical Writing 1760–1830 (New York: Columbia
University Press, 1933); Stuart Piggott, Ruins in a Landscape:
Essays in Antiquarianism (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University
Press, 1976); and Rosemary Sweet, ‘Antiquaries and Antiquities
in Eighteenth-Century England’, Eighteenth-Century Studies
34 (2001), 181–206.
3. Herbert
Butterfield, The Historical Novel: An Essay (1924;
Folcroft: Folcroft Library Editions, 1971); Avrom Fleishman,
The English Historical Novel: Walter Scott to Virginia
Woolf (Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins University
Press, 1971); Georg Lukács, The Historical Novel,
trans. Hannah and Stanley Mitchell (Lincoln, NE: University
of Nebraska Press, 1962); Harry Shaw, The Forms of
Historical Fiction: Sir Walter Scott and his Successors
(Ithaca, NY and London: Cornell University Press, 1983).
4. Maxwell’s
intriguing ‘Pretenders in Sanctuary’ defines the genre through
a particular thematic element: ‘At the core of the genre, sustaining
it through many changes, is a defining ‘subgenre’, the narrative
of pretenders in sanctuary—first told during the Renaissance
but finding its place in novels only around the beginning of
the 1730s’—Modern Language Quarterly 61 (2000), 289.
See also Margaret Anne Doody, The True Story of the Novel
(New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1996) and April Alliston,
Virtue’s Faults: Correspondences in Eighteenth-Century British
and French Women’s Fiction (Stanford: Stanford University
Press, 1996).
5. Katie
Trumpener, Bardic Nationalism: The Romantic Novel and the British
Empire (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1997).
6. On
the historical novels of the early eighteenth century, see Ros
Ballaster, Seductive Forms: Women’s Amatory Fiction from
1684 to 1740 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992) and John J.
Richetti, Popular Fiction before Richardson: Narrative Patterns
1700–1739 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1969).
7. The
recent publication of Peter Garside, James Raven, and Rainer
Schöwerling’s The English Novel 1770–1829: A Bibliographical
Survey of Prose Fiction Published in the British Isles,
2 vols. (Oxford: OUP, 2000) has enabled a fuller understanding
of the larger publishing trends in this period. In the brief
survey of historical fiction that follows, I make no claims
to exhaustive knowledge of quite a large class of novels. Rather,
I have chosen to focus my attention on the handful of historical
novels in the period which most directly seem to be influenced
by developments in historiography.
8. In
the list above, ‘novel’ and ‘romance’ are used interchangeably.
In fact, one result of my investigation into Romantic-era historical
fiction is a greater sense that these terms were less distinct
during this period than modern scholars would have them.
9. The
popular histories of Hume and Goldsmith, however, were read
widely and often served as schoolroom textbooks.
10.
English Fiction of the Romantic Period
1789–1830 (London: Longman, 1989), p. 99.
11.
Queenhoo-Hall, A Romance: and Ancient
Times, a Drama, 4 vols. (Edinburgh: John Murray, 1808),
I, i . Subsequent quotations will be taken from this edition
and given in the text.
12.
The Borderers: An Historical Romance, Illustrative
of the Manners of the Fourteenth Century, 3 vols. (London:
Minerva Press, 1812), I, iii. Subsequent quotations will be
taken from this edition and given in the text.
13. Don
Sebastian; or, the House of Braganza. An Historical Romance,
2 vols. (1809; Philadelphia: Carey, 1810), I, iv–v.
14. The
preface claims to: ‘exhibit the manners, customs, and state of
the ancient nations in a style more descriptive than has hitherto
been attempted’—Alexander Thomson, Memoirs of a Pythagorean.
In Which Are Delineated the Manners, Customs, Genius, and Polity
of Ancient Nations. Interspersed with a Variety of Anecdotes,
3 vols. (London: Robinsons, 1785), I, iv. In this work, a
Pythagorean is reincarnated in various ancient nations, which
provides an occasion to describe the culture of these places.
15. See,
for example, Charles Dacres: or, The Voluntary Exile. An Historical
Novel, Founded on Facts, 2 vols. (Edinburgh: John Moir, 1797).
It begins in ‘A.D. Seventeen hundred and sixty, odd’ (I, 16),
and features encounters with notable figures, such as the Pretender
‘who, every opera-night, went to sleep at the theatre’ (I, 98).
16. The
phrase is taken from a review of The Castle of Mowbray
(1788): ‘The heroic novel, where characters are taken from real
life, is a pleasing kind of composition; but it is the bow of
Ulysses and requires strength as well as address to bend it. Our
author possesses neither. He has mutilated history, is unacquainted
with the human heart, and deficient in judgment; yet with these
defects, he enters into the lists as the rival of Horace Walpole
and Miss Lee’—Critical Review 66 (1788), 577.
17. A
Culture of Fact: England, 1550–1720 (Cornell: Cornell
University Press, 2000), p. 41.
18.
The Decline and
Fall of the Roman Empire, ed. Dero A. Saunders (1776–88; London:
Penguin, 1981), p. 173.
19. Lorraine
Daston and Peter Galison, ‘The Image of Objectivity’, Representations
40 (1992), 87.
20.
On characterological ‘typicality’, see Lukács, The Historical
Novel, op. cit. and ‘Narrate or Describe?’ in Writer
and Critic, ed. and trans. Arthur Kahn (London: Merlin Press,
1970), pp. 110–48. Lukács adapts the term from Georg Hegel’s
Aesthetics (originally published as part of Georg Wilhelm
Friedrich Hegel’s Werke, 1832–45).
21. A
Peep at our Ancestors: An Historical Romance, 4 vols. (London:
Minerva Press, 1807), I, xiii. Subsequent references will be taken
from this edition and included in the text.
22. Monthly
Review 13 (1794), 192.
23.
The Minstrel; or, Anecdotes of Distinguished
Personages in the Fifteenth Century, 3 vols. (London: Hookham
and Carpenter, 1793), II, 129. Subsequent references will be taken
from this edition and included in the text.
24.
See also Joseph Strutt’s
Queenhoo-Hall: ‘The different degrees of the people, from
the nobleman to the peasant, have their places in
the romance’ (I, iii).
25.
See especially A
Complete View of the Dress and Habits of the People of England
from the Establishment of the Saxons in Britain to the Present
Time, 2 vols. (1842; London: Tabard Press, 1970) and Horda
Angel-Cynnan: or a Compleat View of the Manners, Customs, Arms,
Habits, & c. of the Inhabitants of England, from the Arrival
of the Saxons, till the Reign of Henry the Eighth. With a Short
Account of the Britons, during the Government of the Romans,
2 vols. (London: Benjamin White, 1775–76).
26.
Edwy; Son of Ethelred the Second: An
Historic Tale, 2 vols. (Dublin: For the Authoress, 1791),
I, 6.
27.
‘From Truth to Disinterestedness
in the Seventeenth Century’, Social Studies of Science
22 (1992), 620.
28.
Phillips, p. 127.
29.
Nicolas Lenglet du Fresnoy, A New Method
of Studying History: Recommending More Easy and Complete Instructions
for Improvements in that Science than any Hitherto Extant: With
the Whole Apparatus Necessary to Form a Perfect Historian,
trans. Richard Rawlinson, 2 vols. (London: W. Burton, 1728), I,
221.
30.
Ibid., I, 225.
31.
Sophia Lee, The Recess: Or, a Tale of
Other Times, ed. April Alliston (1783–85; Lexington: University
of Kentucy Press, 2000), p. 259.
32.
‘I was chiefly disgusted with modern History.
For having strictly examined all the Persons of greatest Name
in the Courts of Princes for a Hundred Years past, I found how
the World had been misled by prostitute Writers, to ascribe the
greatest Exploits in War to Cowards, the wisest Counsel to Fools,
Sincerity to Flatterers […] Here I discovered the true Causes
of many great Events that have surprised the World: How a Whore
can govern the Back-stairs, the Back-stairs a Council, and the
Council a Senate’Jonathan Swift, Gulliver’s Travels,
ed. Paul Turner (1726; Oxford: OUP, 1971), pp. 199–200.
33.
On the connections between The Recess
and Kenilworth see Fiona Robertson’s Legitimate Histories:
Scott, Gothic, and the Authorities of Fiction (Oxford: Clarendon
Press, 1994).
34.
For an interesting discussion of the connections
between the forgeries of Macpherson and Chatterton and the historical
novels of Walter Scott, see Ian Haywood’s The Making of History:
A Study of the Literary Forgeries of James Macpherson and Thomas
Chatterton in Relation to Eighteenth-Century Ideas of History
and Fiction (London: Associated University Presses, 1986)
35.
See also P. D. Garside, ‘Walter Scott and
the “Common” Novel, 1808–1819’, Cardiff Corvey: Reading the
Romantic Text 3 (Sep 1999). Online: Internet (Oct 2001): <http://www.cf.ac.uk/encap/corvey/articles/cc03_n02.html>.
COPYRIGHT
INFORMATION
This article is copyright ©
2001 Centre for Editorial and Intertextual Research, and is
the result of the independent labour of the scholar or scholars
credited with authorship. The material contained
in this document may be freely distributed, as long as the
origin of information used has been properly credited in the
appropriate manner (e.g. through bibliographic citation, etc.).
REFERRING
TO THIS ARTICLE
A. H. STEVENS. ‘Tales of Other Times: A Survey
of British Historical Fiction, 1770–1812’, Cardiff Corvey:
Reading the Romantic Text 7 (Dec 2001). Online: Internet
(date accessed): <http://www.cf.ac.uk/encap/corvey/articles/cc07_n03.html>.
CONTRIBUTOR
DETAILS
Anne H. Stevens (BA University of Chicago,
MA New York University) is a PhD student in the Department
of English at New York University. This essay is derived from
her dissertation, ‘An Antiquarian Romance: British Historiography
and Historical Fiction 1760–1820’.

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31 December, 2001
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