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Cambridge History
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The Period of the French Revolution
>
Political Writers and Speakers
>
The New Morality
The Rovers
William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft;
Political Justice; Caleb Williams; St. Leon; Vindication of the Rights of Woman
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume XI. The Period of the French Revolution.
II.
Political Writers and Speakers
.
§ 9.
The New Morality
.
The series of parodies surpass the other poetry of
The Anti-Jacobin
in that they were perfect in their kind. None the less, in absolute merit, they fall behind its most serious piece,
The New Morality.
In 1798,
The Anti-Jacobin
had done its office of cheapening and discrediting the revolutionary propagandists, and its gall and licence of satire were in danger of alienating less fervent supporters. So it was decided to cease its publication. Canning gathered together all his power for a final, crushing blow. With but little assistance from his friends, he composed a formal satire in the manner of Churchill; and, although
The New Morality
is hardly the work of a great poet, yet its sincerity of passionate conviction, no less than its admirable rhetoric and skilful versification, raises it above the ill-formed genius of its model. Canning was not a cosmopolitan philosopher; he was full of insular patriotism and produced his best when giving full-hearted expression to it. From his sneering contempt of sympathisers with France and of half-heartedperhaps impartialcandid friends of the ministry, he rises, through fierce denunciatory scorn of the French publicists, to an appeal to maintain the older England of law and right. Burke is his prophet:
Led by thy light, and by thy wisdom wise;
he urges the claims of the native past
Guard we but our own hearts; with constant view
To ancient morals, ancient manners true;
True to the manlier virtues, such as nervd
Our fathers breasts, and this proud isle preservd
For many a rugged age: and scorn the while
Each philosophic atheists specious guile;
The soft seductions, the refinements nice,
Of gay Morality, and easy Vice;
So shall we brave the storm; our stablishd powr
Thy refuge, E
UROPE,
in some happier hour.
Thus,
The Anti-Jacobin,
at its close, bade farewell to the burlesque spirit which had guided political satire since the days of
The Rolliad.
The utmost in that style of writingafter all, not a lofty style, not an important species of literaturehad been achieved, and the exhausted wave drew back again. Cannings own subsequent political verse, scanty in quantity as it was, never attained the excellence of his contributions to his famous newspaper; and the successors to
The Anti-Jacobin,
which borrowed its title, were unable to supply verse of real merit.
16
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Rovers
William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft;
Political Justice; Caleb Williams; St. Leon; Vindication of the Rights of Woman
Reference
·
Quotations
·
Composition
·
Literature
·
Government
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