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The period between 1660 and 1785 was a time of amazing expansion for England — or for "Great Britain," as the nation came to be called after an Act of Union in 1707 joined Scotland to England and Wales. Britain became a world power, an empire on which the sun never set. But it also changed internally. The world seemed different in 1785. A sense of new, expanding possibilities — as well as modern problems — transformed the daily life of the British people, and offered them fresh ways of thinking about their relations to nature and to each other. Hence literature had to adapt to circumstances for which there was no precedent. The topics in this Restoration and Eighteenth Century section of Norton Topics Online review crucial departures from the past — alterations that have helped to shape our own world.
can be allowed on the stage, the exaggeration reflects an underlying truth: the monarch stands for the nation. But the eighteenth century witnessed a turn from palaces to pleasure gardens that were open to anyone with the price of admission. New standards of taste were set by what the people of London wanted, and art joined with commerce to satisfy those desires. Artist William Hogarth made his living not, as earlier painters had done, through portraits of royal and noble patrons, but by selling his prints to a large and appreciative public. London itself — its beauty and horror, its ever-changing moods — became a favorite subject of writers.
The
sense that everything was changing was also
sparked by a revolution in science. In earlier
periods, the universe had often seemed a small
place, less than six thousand years old, where
a single sun moved about the earth, the center
of the cosmos. Now time and space exploded,
the microscope and telescope opened new fields
of vision, and the "plurality of worlds," as
this topic is called, became a doctrine endlessly
repeated. The authority of Aristotle and Ptolemy
was broken; their systems could not explain
what Galileo and Kepler saw in the heavens
or what Hooke and Leeuwenhoek saw in the eye
of a fly. As discoveries multiplied, it became
clear that the moderns knew things of which
the ancients had been ignorant. This challenge
to received opinion was thrilling as well as
disturbing. In Paradise Lost, Book 8,
the angel Raphael warns Adam to think about
what concerns him, not to dream about other
worlds. Yet, despite the warning voiced by
Milton through Raphael, many later writers
found the new science inspiring. It gave them
new images to conjure with and new possibilities
of fact and fiction to explore.
Meanwhile,
other explorers roamed the earth, where they
discovered hitherto unknown countries and ways
of life. These encounters with other peoples
often proved vicious. The trade and conquests
that made European powers like Spain and Portugal
immensely rich also brought the scourge of
racism and colonial exploitation. In the eighteenth
century, Britain's expansion into an empire
was fueled by slavery and the slave trade,
a source of profit that belied the national
self-image as a haven of liberty and turned
British people against one another. Rising
prosperity at home had been built on inhumanity
across the seas. This topic, "Slavery
and the Slave Trade in Britain," looks
at the experiences of African slaves as well
as at British reactions to their suffering
and cries for freedom. At the end of the eighteenth
century, as many writers joined the abolitionist
campaign, a new humanitarian ideal was forged.
The modern world invented by the eighteenth
century brought suffering along with progress.
We still live with its legacies today.