The Life of Henry Fielding, The Father of Novel
Table of Contents
- Early Life and Childhood
- Henry Fielding's Career
- Henry Fielding The New Magistrate
- Henry Fielding Major Works
- Henry Fielding's Famous Novels
- Henry Fielding's Famous Plays
- Henry Fielding's Personal Life and Legacy
- Henry Fielding Love Affairs
- Henry Fielding Sister Sarah
- Death of Henry Fielding
- Early Life and Childhood
Henry Fielding's Career
After returning to England, he started creating plays for the stage in the 1730s. The British Prime Minister Sir Robert Walpole's administration was criticized by him in his plays. The Theatrical Licensing Act of 1737 is said to have been established in revenge for his actions and the works he has written against the government. Having his creative freedom severely curtailed by the Act, Henry was unable to satirize official characters in his plays. In the end, he quit the stage and became a barrister, a lawyer.
However, Henry never
stopped writing. In his writing career, a writer named Samuel Richardson
published Virtue Rewarded or Pamela in 1740. It tells the tale of a
servant girl who rejects her master's efforts to try to love her and ends up
winning his heart because of her purity. As a result, this work was a big
success. However, the way Richardson presented women in his work was
disliked by Henry. So, Henry wrote a work against Richardson above work
and mocked the women's morality in his newly made work, 'Apology for the Life of
Mrs. Shamela Andrews."
The interesting thing to
note is that this work was not published under Henry's name and Henry never
claimed credit for the piece, and it was published anonymously. Based on his
writing style, it is widely recognized that he was responsible for the book's
success.
His novel 'Joseph Andrews,' is considered one of Henry’s great works. Fielding's debut as a
professional author was marked by the publication of this work.
In the year 1743, he wrote
another great work to honor Mr. Jonathan Wild. That is why he wrote ‘The
History of the Life of Mr. Jonathan Wild the Great." In this work, Henry
compared Robert Walpole and Jonathan Wild.
History saw the great author become famous because of his hilarious humor. He became known as a humorist in the mid-1740s, and in 1749 he wrote 'Tom Jones.' Iconic tales of a low-class hero's travels are depicted in this picaresque book set in an unjust culture.
Henry Fielding The New Magistrate
Many people do not know
that he was a magistrate. For many years in the late 1740s, he served as
both a magistrate in Middlesex and a judge of the peace for Westminster,
London. In 1749, he and his younger half-brother John, both
dedicated to the struggle against crime and formed the Bow Street Runners. They became the greatest magistrates in eighteenth-century London who made the
Bow Street Runners, It is called the city's first professional police force.
Henry Fielding Major Works
Henry Fielding was influenced
by William Shakespeare, Homer, Horace, Miguel de Cervantes, John Milton, and Jonathan
Swift.
"Tom Jones,"
Henry Fielding's best-known work and the first English book to be described as
a novel, is the subject of this article. The work, which spans 18 volumes, is
well-structured despite its length. In his 1948 book 'Great Novelists and Their
Novels,' W. Somerset Maugham listed it as one of the world's top 10 novels.
Henry Fielding's
Famous Novels
- Shamela
- Jonathan Wild
- Amelia
Henry Fielding's Famous
Plays
- Rape upon Rape
- The Modern Husband
- Love in Several Masques
- The Temple Beau
- The Universal Gallant
- Pasquin
- The Covent Garden Tragedy
- The Author's Farce
Henry Fielding's Personal
Life and Legacy
Charlotte Craddock, Henry
Fielding's first wife, wed him in 1734. He loved her so much that he based two
of his heroines (Sophia and Amelia) on her. Only one of the couple's five
children lived into maturity. In 1744, his wife died, and he was devastated.
Charlotte's 23-year-old daughter was also tragically killed after a short
period of time.
Henry Fielding Sister Sarah
Sarah Fielding, Fielding's
sister, was also an accomplished author. In addition, The Governess (1749) by
Sarah Fielding can make her to being the first English children's fiction.
Henry Fielding Love Affairs
He had an affair with his
wife's maid, Mary Daniel, and she got pregnant with his kid due to their
relationship. They were married and had five children as a result of their
romance. Unfortunately, three of the youngsters died of their injuries at an
early age.
Death of Henry Fielding
Henry Fielding had gout and asthma, a disease in the early 1750s, which worsened. The year 1752 was the year that he needed crutches or a wheelchair. To find a solution to his health problems, he traveled to Portugal in the summer of 1754. On the 8th of October, 1754, he passed away in Lisbon.
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