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The Foundation of "Philosophical Criticism": William Taylor's Initial Connection with the Monthly Review, 1792-93
by
DAVID CHANDLER
In his portrait of Francis Jeffrey in The Spirit of the Age (London,
1825), Hazlitt reviewed what
seemed to him the principal advance in periodical criticism of the Romantic Period:
A clear understanding of the circumstances of Taylor's connection with the MR depends to a certain extent on some knowledge of his background, so I give first a brief account of this. The early part of Taylor's life reveals a familiar conflict between parental ambition and personal inclination.[2] Born in Norwich in 1765, Taylor was the only child of a wealthy Norwich textile merchant with an extensive export business. He was brought up with a view to becoming useful in the business, from an early age being tutored in several European languages. The years 1774 to 1779 he spent at Mrs Barbauld's boarding school at Palgrave, Norfolk; he later described the prominent Unitarian Barbauld as "the Mother of his mind" (Robberds, I, 8). She was a major literary figure and there was a strong literary bias to the school's activities that gave Taylor a prolonged glimpse of his later métier.[3] Here, too, he made an important friend in the literary-minded Frank Sayers (1763-1817) (Taylor, I, x). Between 1779 and the end of 1782 Taylor was sent on two long continental tours with a view to his improvement in the relevant languages and to acquaint him with trade. The second tour included a year spent in the small German town of Detmold, where Taylor mastered German, probably the most important event of his intellectual life. Here he was befriended by Lorenz Benzler (1747-1827), a minor literary figure who encouraged Taylor's interest in German literature and introduced him to the work of major contemporary German writers. From 1783 Taylor ostensibly worked for his father but devoted much of his (seemingly extensive) leisure to literary pursuits (Taylor, I, xix). He became devoted to political reform and had an extremely tolerant view of religious differences: although continuing to worship as a Unitarian, he appears to have been essentially a Deist. He was in good company; as historians have noted, there was a liberal atmosphere in Norwich at this time, with Dissenters playing a prominent role in municipal affairs.[4] There was also a real interest in intellectual enquiry among the Norwich intelligentsia, many of whom regularly met at Taylor's family home, and against such a background Taylor, attracted to argument and new ideas, flourished.
Having come of age in 1786, Taylor began to take a more active role in city affairs. In 1788 he served on the committee of a Norwich organisation
At the end of 1789 Taylor's friend Sayers decided to devote himself to literature, abandoning an abortive career in medicine (Taylor, I, xxxvii-xxxix). He immediately began writing a striking series of dramas in something like the style of Mason; the following year they were published by Joseph Johnson as Dramatic Sketches of the Ancient Northern Mythology. This volume established Sayers' reputation in both Britain and Germany and its relative success, according to Robberds, inspired Taylor to contemplate a literary career too (I, 81). Robberds explained that Taylor used the unrest caused by the French Revolution to lever his father out of trade:
In his study of the MR during this period, Benjamin Christie Nangle cites Robberds' account of Taylor's early involvement with the periodical without questioning its authority (The Monthly Review Second Series, 1790-1815
The first of these earlier reviews (N.S. 3, 140-147) proves on closer inspection, however, not to be Taylor's. In the Bodleian copy it can be seen that Griffiths had originally marked it "Anon." (147); another hand has subsequently added "Taylor 1st Art." Although the review is both long and, in many respects, approving, there is a coolness of tone that Taylor certainly would not have applied to his closest friend's first published work (a comparison with his later reviews of Sayers' works is revealing in this respect). He would not have stated "There are, in all these plays, many imperfect lines, and some other symptoms of hasty composition" (146), neither would he have pointed out errors in Sayers' notes on Scandinavian mythology when he could--if he had such information--have so easily set Sayers right prior to the latter's publication. Moreover the mistake is readily explicable. The 1792 review (N.S. 7, 331-332), marked by Griffiths "Anon:--Dr. E's friend" (332), almost certainly is Taylor's work (as Nangle assumed), and thence, by extension, almost certainly his first published review. Griffiths clearly understood that it had come via Enfield, and other manuscript evidence, to be considered shortly, points to Taylor as the writer. The review contains just the sort of energetic praise we would expect --"they [Sayers dramas] abound with efforts of the lyric kind, which, in our language, have seldom been excelled" (331)--moreover it contains recondite information, not in the text, that only an acquaintance of the author is likely to have known; for example (commenting on Sayers' "Pandora"): "The story of Pandora had already been given, as a monodrama, by the inferior hand of Count Pepoli." Stylistically, too, the review
Fortunately, Enfield's extant correspondence with Griffiths, preserved in the Bodleian
Library, Oxford (MS. Add. C.89, ff.53-100v), allows the circumstances
developing from the 1792
review to be filled in with reasonable detail. Enfield's covering letter for the review is not
preserved, but it is clear that Griffiths was impressed by the unsolicited contribution, and that he
enquired of Enfield regarding Taylor's availability for other reviewing work. All this is implied in
the postscript of a letter of Enfield to Griffiths dated 21 February 1792:
Griffiths seems to have instructed Enfield to keep Taylor interested, for in a fragment of a
letter dated April 1792 Enfield reported: "I have prevailed upon my friend Mr W. Taylor junr.
occasionally to undertake an article for the R." He then enlarged on Taylor's suitability:
The impression one gets from this correspondence is that Taylor was still very much involved in business in 1792, and far from committed to a literary career. Had he been so, one imagines he would have made a determined effort to consolidate the favourable impression his review of Sayers' Poems had made on Griffiths. Griffiths, on the other hand, was apparently reluctant to accept Taylor as a merely dilettante contributor. Certainly it appears that he felt there was no immediate vacancy for a reviewer of German material (see below). Enfield seems during the latter half of 1792 to have been more eager to establish the connection than either of the main parties concerned. We can pause here to consider his motives.
Enfield had been a friend of Griffiths for many years, and the two men seem to have had
the highest respect and affection for each other. Enfield, indeed, towards the end of his life, was
able to compare the friendship to a marriage: "I consider ourselves as bound to one another, like
man and wife" (f.100). Enfield's devotion to the success of the MR is thus
not surprising, but his
political radicalism meant that he was prepared to tolerate no compromise in the periodical's
traditional liberal ideology. Among several similar passages in his correspondence with Griffiths,
the following, included in a letter of 5 August 1791, admirably demonstrates Enfield's belief that
the MR could, and should, play a valuable part in the liberal crusade:
It seems to have been late in 1792, or early the following year, that Taylor supplied a second "occasional article", this time a review, perhaps surprisingly, of Joseph Ritson's edition of Ancient Songs, from the time of King
At the beginning of March, meanwhile, Taylor submitted a review that was certainly not solicited. On 1 March Enfield wrote to Griffiths: "I send you a volunteer article of Mr Taylor on his friend Dr Sayers' Essays [Disquisitions Metaphysical and Literary]. It is a tribute of friendship, but I think a very fair one" (f.70) (this was the review that Robberds considered to be Taylor's first). This was Taylor's second "tribute of friendship", and Griffiths was normally opposed to such potentially partisan reviewing; perhaps
On 5 May it was Enfield's turn to supply a "tribute of friendship". He wrote to
Griffiths:
In the letter of 5 May Enfield noted that he was enclosing "Mr. T's articles". This must refer to the review of Pieces of Ancient Popular Poetry which, like Enfield's review of Iphigenia in Tauris, was fitted into the May issue of the MR (N.S. 11, 72-77 and 51-59 respectively), and that of Scotish Poems which appeared in the June issue (N.S. 11, 172-176). Intriguingly it may also refer to a review of a rather different kind of work: William Belsham's Remarks on the Nature and Necessity of Parliamentary Reform (1793). A review of this pamphlet, marked "Tay----r of Nor----h" in the Bodleian copy, appeared in the Appendix to Volume 10 (January-April 1793), apparently published at the same time as the May issue (N.S. 10, 577-580).[12] There is, unfortunately, no mention of this review in the extant Enfield correspondence. As Enfield would have known, Taylor was extremely interested
The third of the July reviews, that of the anonymous Stone Henge: A Poem (1792), clearly identified as Taylor's in the Bodleian copy, is a different case (N.S. 11, 344-345). There seems no good reason for Griffiths' sending Taylor this obscure and second-rate work, apparently published as early as May 1792. Clearly there had been some new initiative to get the work reviewed, for the Critical Review for July, and the British Critic for August 1793, both carried very brief notices. Taylor's longer notice can perhaps be explained by the fact that the poem was by John Wagstaffe (1726?-1808), a minor Norwich poet patronised by Edward Jerningham; quite possibly Taylor took the initiative in endeavouring to attract notice to a work that had previously received little or none.[14]
As Robberds recorded, Enfield was absent from Norwich for a considerable part of the Summer of 1793. On 6 June he wrote to Griffiths that he was going on a tour of the Lakes: "We set out on Midsummers day, & shall be absent six weeks" (f.76). But Robberds seems to have been mistaken in supposing that there was any significant transference of books. In the letter quoted, Enfield expressly stated his determination to complete all his outstanding work for the MR before he left, and there is no obvious increase in Taylor's contributions in the following months. Robberds' sole evidence was probably the letter he prints from Griffiths to Taylor of 27 June, where it is mentioned that Enfield had "turned over" to Taylor "one or two . . . pamphlets" (I, 123); his misrepresentation of this can probably be accounted for by his clear ignorance of the extent to which Taylor had already become an independent contributor. Before he left, Enfield dispatched a parcel to Griffiths that, along with his own reviews, contained "articles concerning Hall, Paine, Owen and Barry" by Taylor (Robberds, I, 124). As noted already, only the Paine review found its way into the July MR; the Hall review appeared in August, "Owen and Barry" in September. Presumably the reviews of Thoughts on . . . the Present Failures and Stone Henge had already been dispatched. Of the other works, William Owen's translation of The Heroic Elegies and other Pieces of Llywarc Hen (1792) (N.S. 12, 18-22), which again seems to have appeared belatedly, was an obvious title for the reviewer of Ritson and Pinkerton, while James Barry's Letter to . . . the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce (N.S. 12, 23-28) had a pronounced political aspect.
The twelve reviews detailed so far seem to have comprised the extent of Taylor's gratuitous reviewing for the MR. They can be classified into three types: the unsolicited notices of Sayers and the probably volunteered one of Wagstaffe; the reviews of works under the rubric "old British poetry"; the reviews of works concerned with the contemporary political scene. It may seem odd, after Enfield's recommendations, that there is no "foreign article" in this list, but Griffiths was almost certainly wary of offending regular members of his "corps" who normally handled this area. Taylor's first review of a German publication appeared in the Appendix to Volume 11 (May-August 1793) and detailed an obviously peripheral work, Johann Hinrich Röding's Allgemeines Wörterbuch der Marine (1793), Taylor, however, demonstrated a surprising knowledge of its rather specialised subject matter (N.S. 11, 563-565). Possibly this was unsolicited. It was not until September 1794 that Taylor's second review of a German work (a translation of Herrmann von Unna) appeared, but thereafter he regularly handled German material.
The principal effect of Enfield's absence was to force Griffiths into direct communication
with Taylor for the first time. This began with his letter of 27 June, already quoted from. The
letter concluded:
This is a revealing letter, demonstrating yet again that Robberds vastly oversimplified Taylor's
transition from merchant to professional man of letters. By this time Taylor must have realised
that there was very little money to be made from translations like Iphigenia in
Tauris, and his
somewhat cavalier attitude towards "remuneration" from Griffiths suggests no desire for a
professional dependence on his writing. The reference to work in "the counting-house"
contradicts Robberds' supposition that the Taylors quickly withdrew from all their business
interests, and that the younger Taylor made an immediate transition to literature. Later in the
decade Taylor certainly did take a pride in being able to live off his earnings as a writer (with the
supplement, it must be added, of an income from some earlier investments).[15] On 1 November he
wrote to Robert Southey:
It is unfortunate that no more letters between Griffiths and Taylor have been preserved
from 1793 after the initial exchange. But when Enfield returned to Norwich sometime in August
he must have been delighted to discover that his efforts over the previous eighteen months had
not been in vain, and that Griffiths and Taylor had now formed a regular connection. Writing to
Griffiths on 3 September, he stated:
The main source for Taylor's biography, despite its many limitations, is John Warden Robberd's Memoir of the Life and Writings of the Late William Taylor of Norwich, 2 vols (London, 1843); hereafter cited as Robberds. Georg Herzfeld's William Taylor von Norwich (Halle, 1897) is an informed abridgement, Herzfeld admitting in his preface "ist es mir trotz aller Bemühungen nicht gelungen, neue Quellen für Taylors Leben (Breife, Memoiren u. dgl.) zu entdecken". I have been slightly more fortunate than Herzfeld: see the first two parts of my article "William Taylor of Norwich", The George Borrow Bulletin, Nos. 7 and 8 (1994), 8-16 and 10-15 respectively.
William Taylor, Collective Works of the Late Dr. Sayers; To which have been prefixed some Biographic Particulars, 2 vols (Norwich, 1823), I, xii; hereafter cited as Taylor.
The best concise account is Albert Goodwin, The Friends of Liberty: The English Democratic Movement in the Age of the French Revolution (London, 1979), 147-158.
The Works of Anna Laetitia Barbauld, 2 vols (London, 1825), II, 6. The two young poets referred to are probably Sayers and Taylor.
Taylor, I, xxxiii. The poem referred to appeared as the opening piece in Robert Southey's first Annual Anthology (Bristol, 1799).
These letters have not previously been attributed to Taylor. I do so for the following reasons: Taylor returned from France sometime in June 1790, and Robberds records "About this time . . . he published, under different signatures, in friendly newspapers, more particularly in the Cambridge Intelligencer, letters on the political questions by which the public mind was then agitated" (I, 67). The Cambridge Intelligencer was not founded until 1793, however, and the only Cambridge paper in 1790 was the Cambridge Chronicle. The "Friend to Liberty" articles appeared between 31 July and 18 September, which makes a suggestive chronology; they contain the style and sentiments we would expect from Taylor, and it seems likely that Robberds made a simple mistake.
Taylor's translations of three of Wieland's Göttergespräche were published as Dialogues of the Gods in 1795, quite possibly because of the appearance of a rival translation of one of the Göttergespräche in William Tooke's Varieties of Literature of the same year. But the Göttergespräche Taylor translated had originally appeared in Der Neue Teutsche Merkur for September, November and December 1790, and were based on the French Revolution as it had then developed. By 1795 many of the sentiments had been rendered absurd by the progress of events; Taylor clearly translated them for their political content and it is therefore likely that he had done so much earlier, perhaps (most plausibly) in 1791. Support for this date is supplied by an anonymous poem entitled "Jupiter's Opinion of Revolutionaries" published in the Norwich Mercury on 8 October 1791; this appears to be an "anti-Jacobin" parody of the Göttergespräch that Taylor translated as "The Federation", suggesting manuscript circulation of the latter. Taylor published five extracts from "Hudibras Modernised" in the Iris ( a Norwich weekly newspaper) in 1803 (19 November-24 December), but a short preface noted that the poem had "been written soon after the Birmingham riots in 1791".
This and subsequent quotations from Enfield's letters are published here with the kind permission of the Bodleian Library.
Griffiths prided himself on using specialists: Benjamin Christie Nangle, The Monthly Review First Series, 1749-1789 (Oxford, 1934), viii-ix.
In 1804 Taylor stated that of the edition of 250 copies, 50 still remained unsold (Robberds, I, 485).
MR, N.S.27, 24; here it is recorded that the Appendix for one volume was published "at the same time" as the first part of the following volume.
In addition to his membership of the Revolution Society see his "Friend to Liberty" letters and his commentary on the French "delegative constitution" written in 1790 and published in the Monthly Magazine, January 1800 (8, 953-959).
For Wagstaffe's authorship and the publication of Stone Henge see Huntington MS. JE 1007 (letter of Wagstaffe to Jerningham, 26 May 1792). On 25 March 1793 Wagstaffe complained to Jerningham that the poem had received no attention (JE 1008). Jerningham seems to have known Taylor, and it may have been at his prompting that Taylor undertook the review.
Robberds, I, 306; Taylor records that he owned shares in the Huddersfield canal; this is unlikely to have been a lone investment.
Robberds prints a letter of Griffiths to Taylor dated merely "Sept. 29th" (I, 130-132), in which he refers to Taylor's "blunt letter of August 17th". Griffiths states that he had already considered raising Taylor's "rate", but that what he "wished to do with a good grace . . . would in consequence of that letter be done with an ill one." The exchange can obviously not be dated 1793, nor can it have occurred in 1795 as Robberds prints a letter from Griffiths to Taylor dated 20 September that year (I, 133-135) in which no mention of the subject is made. As Griffiths speaks of Taylor having "gone through" his "probation" (131), 1794 seems by far the most likely year.
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