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The Victorian Age
The Reform
Bill of 1832 gave the middle class the political power it needed to
consolidate-and to hold-the economic position it had already achieved. Industry
and commerce burgeoned. While the affluence of the middle class increased, the lower
classes, thrown off their land and into the cities to form the great urban
working class, lived ever more wretchedly. The social changes were so swift and
brutal that Godwinian utopianism rapidly gave way to attempts either to justify
the new economic and urban conditions, or to change them. The intellectuals and
artists of the age had to deal in some way with the upheavals in society 747c23h , the
obvious inequities of abundance for a few and squalor for many, and, emanating
from the throne of Queen
The Novel
The Victorian era was the great age of the English novel-realistic, thickly plotted, crowded with characters, and long. It was the ideal form to describe contemporary life and to entertain the middle class. The novels of Charles Dickens, full to overflowing with drama, humor, and an endless variety of vivid characters and plot complications, nonetheless spare nothing in their portrayal of what urban life was like for all classes. William Makepeace Thackeray is best known for Vanity Fair (1848), which wickedly satirizes hypocrisy and greed.
Emily
Brontė's (see Brontė, family) single novel,
Thomas
Hardy's profoundly pessimistic novels are all set in the harsh, punishing midland county he called
Nonfiction
Among the
Victorian masters of nonfiction were the great Whig historian Thomas Macaulay
and Thomas Carlyle, the historian, social critic, and prophet whose rhetoric
thundered through the age. Influential thinkers included John Stuart Mill, the
great liberal scholar and philosopher; Thomas Henry Huxley, a scientist and
popularizer of Darwinian theory; and John Henry, Cardinal Newman, who wrote
earnestly of religion, philosophy, and education. The founders of Communism,
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, researched and wrote
their books in the free environment of
Poetry
The
preeminent poet of the Victorian age was Alfred, Lord Tennyson. Although
romantic in subject matter, his poetry was tempered by personal melancholy; in
its mixture of social certitude and religious doubt it reflected the age. The
poetry of Robert Browning and his wife, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, was
immensely popular, though
In the middle of the 19th cent. the so-called Pre-Raphaelites, led by the painter-poet Dante Gabriel Rossetti, sought to revive what they judged to be the simple, natural values and techniques of medieval life and art. Their quest for a rich symbolic art led them away, however, from the mainstream. William Morris-designer, inventor, printer, poet, and social philosopher-was the most versatile of the group, which included the poets Christina Rossetti and Coventry Patmore.
Algernon Charles Swinburne began as a Pre-Raphaelite but soon developed his own classically influenced, sometimes florid style. A. E. Housman and Thomas Hardy, Victorian figures who lived on into the 20th cent., share a pessimistic view in their poetry, but Housman's well-constructed verse is rather more superficial. The great innovator among the late Victorian poets was the Jesuit priest Gerard Manley Hopkins. The concentration and originality of his imagery, as well as his jolting meter ("sprung rhythm"), had a profound effect on 20th-century poetry.
During the 1890s the most conspicuous figures on the English literary scene were the decadents. The principal figures in the group were Arthur Symons, Ernest Dowson, and, first among them in both notoriety and talent, Oscar Wilde. The Decadents' disgust with bourgeois complacency led them to extremes of behavior and expression. However limited their accomplishments, they pointed out the hypocrisies in Victorian values and institutions. The sparkling, witty comedies of Oscar Wilde and the comic operettas of W. S. Gilbert and Sir Arthur Sullivan were perhaps the brightest achievements of 19th-century British drama.
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