
Edward Young
Edward Young (June 1681 (as stated in Rev. J.
Mitford's
Biography of Young) - 5 April 1765) was an English
poet, best remembered for Night Thoughts.
Early life
He was the
son of Edward Young, later Dean of
Salisbury, and was born at his father's rectory at Upham, near Winchester
, where he was baptized on 3 July 1683.
He was
educated at Winchester
College
, and matriculated in 1702 at New College,
Oxford
. He later moved to Corpus
Christi
, and in 1708 was nominated by Archbishop Tenison to a law fellowship at All
Souls
. He took his degree of
D.C.L. in 1719.
Literary career
His first publication was an
Epistle to ... Lord
Lansdoune (1713). It was followed by a
Poem on the Last
Day (1713), dedicated to
Queen Anne;
The Force of Religion:
or Vanquished Love (1714), a poem on the execution of
Lady Jane Grey and her husband, dedicated to
the Countess of Salisbury; and an epistle to
Joseph Addison,
On the late Queen's Death
and His Majesty's Accession to the Throne (1714), in which he
rushed to praise the new king. The fulsome style of the dedications
jars with the pious tone of the poems, and they are omitted from
his own edition of his works.
About this
time he came into contact with Philip, Duke of Wharton, whom he
accompanied to Dublin
in
1717. In 1719 his play, Busiris was
produced at Drury
Lane
, and in 1721 his Revenge. The
latter play was dedicated to Wharton, to whom it owed, said Young,
its "most beautiful incident."
Wharton promised him two annuities of £100
each and a sum of £600 in consideration of his expenses as a
candidate for parliamentary election at Cirencester
. In view of these promises Young refused two
livings in the gift of All Souls' College, Oxford
, and sacrificed a life annuity offered by the
Marquess of Exeter if he would
act as tutor to his son. Wharton failed to discharge his
obligations, and Young, who pleaded his case before
Lord Chancellor Hardwicke in 1740,
gained the annuity but not the £600. Between 1725 and 1728 Young
published a series of seven satires on
The Universal
Passion. They were dedicated to the Duke of Dorset,
George Bubb Dodington, Sir
Spencer Compton,
Lady Elizabeth Germain and Sir
Robert
Walpole, and were collected in 1728 as
Love of Fame, the
Universal Passion. This is qualified by
Samuel Johnson as a "very great performance,"
and abounds in striking and pithy couplets.
Herbert Croft asserted that
Young made £3000 by his
satires, which
compensated losses he had suffered in the
South Sea Bubble. In 1726 he received,
through Walpole, a pension of £200 a year. To the end of his life
he continued to seek preferment, but the king regarded his pension
as an adequate settlement.
Young, living in a time when patronage was slowly fading out, was
notable for urgently seeking patronage for his poetry, his
theatrical works, and his career in the church: he failed in each
area. He never received the degree of patronage that he felt his
work had earned, largely because he picked patrons whose fortunes
were about to turn downward.
Though his praise was often unearned, often fulsome, he could
write, "False praises are the whoredoms of the pen / And prostitute
fair fame to worthless men."
In 1728
Young became a royal chaplain, and in
1730 he obtained the college living of Welwyn
, Hertfordshire
. In 1731 he married Lady Elizabeth Lee,
daughter of the
1st
Earl of Lichfield. Her daughter, by a former marriage with her
cousin Francis Lee, married Henry Temple, son of the
1st Viscount
Palmerston.
Mrs Temple died at Lyons
in 1736 on
her way to Nice
. Her
husband and Lady Elizabeth Young died in 1740. These successive
deaths are supposed to be the events referred to in the
Night
Thoughts as taking place "ere thrice yon moon had filled her
horn".
Night Thoughts
In the preface to the poem Young states that the occasion of the
poem was real, and Philander and Narcissa have been rather rashly
identified with Mr and Mrs Temple. It has also been suggested that
Philander represents
Thomas Tickell,
an old friend of Young's, who died three months after Lady
Elizabeth Young. The infidel Lorenzo was thought by some to be a
sketch of Young's own son, but he was only eight years old at the
time of publication.
The Complaint, or
Night Thoughts
on Life, Death and Immortality, was published in 1742, and was
followed by other "Nights," the eighth and ninth appearing in 1745.
In 1753 his tragedy of
The Brothers, written many years
before, but suppressed because he was about to enter the Church,
was produced at Drury Lane.
Night Thoughts had made him
famous, but he lived in almost uninterrupted retirement. He was
made clerk of the closet to the Princess Dowager,
Augusta of Saxe-Gotha, in 1761. He
never recovered from his wife's death. He fell out with his son,
who had apparently criticised the excessive influence exerted by
his housekeeper Mrs Hallows. The old man refused to see his son
until shortly before he died, but left him everything. A
description of him is to be found in the letters of his curate and
executor, John Jones, to Dr Thomas Birch (in Brit. Lib.
Addit. M/s 4311). He died at Welwyn, reconciled
with his spendthrift son: "he expired a little before 11 of the
clock at the night of Good Friday last, the 5th instant, and was
decently buried yesterday about 6 in the afternoon" (Jones to
Birch).
Young is said to have been a brilliant talker. Although
Night
Thoughts is long and disconnected, it abounds in brilliant
isolated passages. Its success was enormous. It was translated into
French,
German,
Italian,
Spanish,
Portuguese,
Swedish and
Magyar. In France it became a classic of
the romantic school. Questions as to the "sincerity" of the poet
did arise in the 100 years after his death. The publication of
fawning letters from Young seeking preferment led many readers to
question the poet's sincerity. In a famous essay,
Worldliness
and Other-Worldliness,
George
Eliot discussed his "radical insincerity as a poetic artist".
If Young did not invent "melancholy and moonlight" in literature,
he did much to spread the fashionable taste for them. Madame
Klopstock thought the king ought to make him
Archbishop of Canterbury, and some
German critics preferred him to
John
Milton. Young's essay,
Conjectures on Original
Composition, was popular and influential on the continent,
especially among Germans, as a testament advocating originality
over neoclassical imitation. Young wrote good blank verse, and
Samuel Johnson pronounced
Night Thoughts to be one of "the
few poems" in which
blank verse could
not be changed for rhyme but with disadvantage. The poem was a
poetic treatment of
sublimity
and had a profound influence on the young
Edmund Burke, whose philosophic investigations
and writings on the Sublime and the
Beautiful
were a pivotal turn in eighteenth-century
aesthetic theory.
Young's masterpiece
Night Thoughts emerged from obscurity
by being mentioned in
Edmund
Blunden's World War One memoir,
Undertones of War
(1928), as a source of comfort during time in the trenches. This
latter work emerged from the darkness of the more recent past
thanks to its mention and discussion in
Paul Fussell's
The Great War and Modern
Memory (1975), which discussed Blunden's reliance on
Night
Thoughts. Blunden's mention of Young's poem reintroduced an
interesting, sometimes bombastic precursor to the early Romantics
to students of English literature.
William Hutchinson included a
gloss on
Night Thoughts in his series of lectures
The
Spirit of Masonry (1775), underlining the
masonic symbolism of the text.
German Connections
The young
Goethe told his sister in 1766 that
he was learning English from Young and Milton, and in his
autobiography he confessed that the Young's influence had created
the atmosphere in which there was such a universal response to his
seminal work
The Sorrows of Young Werther. Young's
namesoon became a battle-cry for the young men of the
Sturm und Drang movement. Young himself
reinforced his reputation as a pioneer of romanticism by precept as
well as by example; in 1759, at the age of 76, he published a piece
of critical prose under the title of
Conjectures on Original
Composition whichput forward the vital doctrine of the
superiority of “genius”, of innate originality being more valuable
than classic indoctrination or imitation, and suggested that modern
writers might dare to rival or even surpass the “ancients” of
Greece and Rome … The Conjectures was a declaration of independence
against the tyranny of classicism and was at once acclaimed as such
becoming a milestone in the history of English, and European,
literary criticism.
It was immediately translated into German at
Leipzig
and at Hamburg
and was widely and favourably reviewed. The
cult of genius exactly suited the ideas of the Sturm und Drang
movement and gave a new impetus to the cult of Young’ (Harold
Forster, ‘Some uncollected authors XLV: Edward Young in translation
I’).
Clerical career
Young was nearly fifty when he decided to take holy orders. It was
reported that the author of
Night Thoughts was not, in his
earlier days, "the ornament to religion and morality which he
afterwards became," and his friendships with the Duke of Wharton
and with Dodington did not improve his reputation. A statement
attributed to
Alexander Pope probably
gives the correct view. "He had much of a sublime genius, though
without common sense; so that his genius, having no guide, was
perpetually liable to degenerate into bombast. This made him pass a
foolish youth, the sport of peers and poets; but his having a very
good heart enabled him to support the clerical character when he
assumed it, first with decency and afterwards with honour " (O
Ruffhead,
Life of A. Pope, p. 291).
Other works
Other works by Young are:
- The Instalment (to Sir R. Walpole, 1726)
- Cynthio (1727)
- A Vindication of Providence ... (1728), a sermon
- An Apology for Punch (1729), a sermon
- Imperium Pelagi, a Naval Lyrick ... (1730)
- Two Epistles to Mr Pope concerning the Authors of the
Age (1730)
- A Sea-Piece ... (1733)
- The Foreign Address, or The Best Argument for Peace
(1734)
- The Centaur not Fabulous; in Five Letters to a Friend
(1755)
- An Argument ... for the Truth of His [Christ's]
Religion (1758), a sermon preached before the king
- Conjectures on Original Composition ... (1759),
addressed to Samuel Richardson
- Resignation ... (1762), a poem.
Night Thoughts was illustrated by
William Blake in 1797, and by
Thomas Stothard in 1799.
The Poetical
Works of the Rev. Edward Young ... were revised by
himself for publication, and a completed edition appeared in 1778.
The Complete Works, Poetry and Prose, of the Rev.
Edward Young ..., with a life by John Doran, appeared in
1854.
Sir Herbert
Croft wrote the life included in Johnson's
Lives of the
Poets, but the critical remarks are by Johnson.
External links