Henry Fielding was an 18th century English writer best known as the author of the novel ‘Tom Jones.’ This biography of Henry Fielding provides detailed information about his childhood, life, achievements, works & timeline.
@Eton College, Birthday and Childhood
Henry Fielding was an 18th century English writer best known as the author of the novel ‘Tom Jones.’ This biography of Henry Fielding provides detailed information about his childhood, life, achievements, works & timeline.
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Henry Fielding married his first wife, Charlotte Craddock, in 1734. He loved her deeply and modeled the heroines of two of his novels on her. The marriage produced five children, of whom only one survived to adulthood. His wife died in 1744, plunging him into grief. Tragically, his lone surviving daughter by Charlotte too died after some years at the age of 23.
He became romantically involved with his wife’s maid Mary Daniel who became pregnant with his child. Their relationship culminated in marriage which produced five children. Unfortunately, three of the children died young.
Henry Fielding suffered from gout which worsened in the early 1750s. By 1752, he often had to use crutches or a wheelchair and his health declined rapidly. He travelled to Portugal hoping for a cure for his health problems in the summer of 1754 and died in Lisbon on 8 October 1754.
Henry Fielding was born on 22 April 1707, in Sharpham, Somerset, England, to Col. Edmund Fielding and his wife. His father had served under John Churchill, duke of Marlborough, an early 18th-century general, while his mother was the daughter of a judge of the Queen’s Bench. His mother died when Henry was around 11 and his father soon remarried.
Henry went to Eton College to study classics. It was there that he met George Lyttelton, who was later to be a statesman. During this time he began writing plays.
In 1728, he moved to the University of Leiden in Holland to study classics and law. However, financial problems forced him to abandon his studies and return home after a few months.
On returning home he began writing for the theater, penning several plays during the 1730s. An outspoken young man, he bitterly criticized the government of Prime Minister Sir Robert Walpole in his plays. It is believed that the Theatrical Licensing Act of 1737 was passed in response to his activities.
The passage of the Act greatly restrained his creative freedom and he was no longer able to satirize political figures in his plays. Thus he left the theater and ventured into a career in law by becoming a barrister.
He never stopped writing though. He continued writing satires and also edited a thrice-weekly newspaper, the ‘Champion; or, British Mercury’, which ran from November 1739 to June 1741. He became a novelist entirely by chance.
In 1740 Samuel Richardson published his story ‘Pamela: or, Virtue Rewarded’, a story of a servant girl who resists her master’s efforts to seduce her and ultimately wins his heart by virtue of her morality. The book became a resounding success. Fielding, however, found the story offensive and proceeded to parody it by writing ‘An Apology for the Life of Mrs. Shamela Andrews’, satirizing Richardson’s prudish morality.
The work was published anonymously and Fielding never claimed credit for it. But it is generally accepted that he was the author based on the writing style. He wrote another novel, ‘Joseph Andrews’ in 1742, which is counted among the first true novels in the English language. The publication of this book marked Fielding's debut as a serious novelist.
Henry Fielding’s best known work is ‘Tom Jones, a comic novel counted among the earliest English prose works describable as a novel. Divided into 18 smaller books, the novel though lengthy is highly organized. W. Somerset Maugham included it among the ten best novels of the world in his 1948 book ‘Great Novelists and Their Novels’.