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William
Hone, Regency
Radical: Selected Writings
of William Hone.
Eds. David A. Kent and D.
R.
Ewen.
Detroit: Wayne State UP,
2003.
460pp. $51.95.
(Hdbk. ISBN: 0-8143-3060-6).
Bibliographic
Citation:
Grimes, Kyle. "On
William Hone, Regency
Radical: Selected Writings
of William Hone."
[date
of access]. Romantic
Circles Reviews 9.1
(2007): 6 pars. February
2007. <http://www.rc.umd.edu/reviews/hone_w07.html>.
Table
of Contents
Introduction
Chronology
Part I: The Trials and Other Writings
Introduction
The Bullet Te Deum with the Canticle of the Stone (1817)
From Hone’s Reformists’ Register (1817)
From The Three Trials of William Hone (1818)
From The First Trial
From The Second Trial
The Third Trial
Part II: Satires
Introduction
The
Political House that Jack Built (1819)
The
Queen’s Matrimonial Ladder (1820) “Non
Mi Ricordo” (1820)
The
Political Showman–At Home! (1821)
Part III: Prose
Introduction
From
The Every-Day Book (1825-26)
From
The Table Book (1827)
From
The Year Book (1832)
Part IV: Selected Letters of Hone
Introduction
Letters
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Reviewed by
Kyle Grimes
University of Alabama at Birmingham
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Romanticists
have an unusual penchant for "circles" and "schools." We have a Lake School, a Satanic School, and
a Cockney School (which includes the Hunt circle); we have Joseph Johnson's
circle, the Wordsworth Circle, Shelley and his Circle; and we have, of course,
the plural and seemingly all-encompassing Romantic Circles. It is as if romanticists wish to account for
the literary culture of the early nineteenth century in the graphic terms of a
Venn diagram. And yet, for all these overlapping schools and circles, some
figures always seem to lie just beyond the circumference, unlisted on the
roster of any particular school and thus relegated (literally) to the margins
of literary history where they appear only occasionally in the odd
footnote. Until quite recently, William
Hone has been just such a figure. Though
he was well known to many of the central writers and publishers of the Regency
period, and in spite of his general fame (or notoriety) in the public prints,
and though he was the long-time friend of Charles Lamb, the publisher of
Hazlitt's Political Essays, and perhaps the best-selling writer in England
during the post-Peterloo and Queen Caroline affair periods, Hone has not been
widely known or widely read among more recent romantics scholars. Happily, over the last dozen years or so this
state of affairs has begun to change. With the publication of such works as Marcus Wood's Radical Satire and
Print Culture, Joss Marsh's Word Crimes, a handful of essays and electronic
editions (such as The Political House That Jack Built, here on Romantic Circles and on my BioText website), and most recently in Ben Wilson's Laughter of
Triumph, Hone's work as a publisher and journalist, parodist and antiquarian is
coming into increasing prominence.
The
volume under consideration here offers a timely contribution to this swell of
interest in Hone. The first substantial
compilation of Hone's work since Edgell Rickword's Radical Squibs and Loyal
Ripostes (1971), and the first collection ever to offer anything approaching a
comprehensive view of Hone's "life and works," Regency Radical:
Selected Writings of William Hone is a most useful volume. The book presents a biographical introduction
to Hone supplemented by a short chronology; a very brief selection of articles
from The Reformists' Register, a short-lived weekly that Hone
published—initially with the help of Francis Place—in 1817; extended selections
from Hone's famous libel trials of 1817; four of the half dozen or so illustrated
satires produced with George Cruikshank in 1819-21; and a short selection of
material drawn from Hone's very popular late-career antiquarian works, The
Every-Day Book (1825-27), The Table Book (1827), and The Year Book (1832). These excerpts from the published works are
followed by a short sampling from Hone's voluminous correspondence, much of
which is very illuminating and entertaining reading but most of which has never
been published. The works collected here
thus span the period when Hone was at his most prominent and influential as a
public figure, and they suggest something of the range and the development of
Hone's writing and publishing efforts. All of these selections are effectively, but unobtrusively annotated.
And
herein lies the chief value of Kent and Ewen's volume. Heretofore, editions of
Hone's work have been scattered and often very partial. While editions of some pieces—Hone's Three
Trials, for instance, or The Political House that Jack Built—have always been
relatively easy to locate and read, scholarly discussion of such works has
typically appeared in rather limited contexts. Many readers of Romantic Circles, for instance, will be familiar with
Hone as a parodist and satirist, but will know little about his journalism or
his antiquarianism. Likewise, historians
of British jurisprudence may well know Hone from his 1817 libel trials, but be
blind to the broader context of Hone's distinctive "antiquarian
radicalism" and to his literary pretensions. And few romanticists or legal historians are
very keenly aware of the important role
Hone's Apocryphal New Testament (1820) plays in the history of Bible publishing
and discussions of the biblical canon. The inevitable result, of course, is
that it has been difficult to see Hone in any comprehensive way. Regency Radical strives to draw together the
fragments of Hone's reputation into a single volume where students and scholars
of the Romantic period can finally begin to grasp the breadth of the man's
efforts. In effect, the book serves to
"humanize" Hone, seeing his work not as a rich source of marginal
materials and backgrounds for studies focused elsewhere but rather as a
coherent body of work in its own right, the product of the man whose portrait
stares evocatively from the front cover and whose sometimes very personal (and
personable) letters make up the book's final section. Regency Radical presents a new Hone, then,
and the book will likely find its greatest value in this suggestion of a comprehensive
view of the works and, of course, as a kind of ready reference to the numerous
topical allusions that are so frequent in the sort of politically engaged
writing that is typical of Hone's ouvre. This is very useful scholarship indeed.
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Unfortunately,
this comprehensive inclination is also, inevitably, the source of the book's
limitations. While the volume does offer
a broader and more accessible view of Hone than anything else currently in
print, there are some surprising gaps in the coverage. For instance, nothing from the series of
antiquarian and polemical works that followed Hone's controversial publication
of the Apocryphal New Testament is represented here—readers are likely to come
away from the volume with no awareness of this still largely unexplored aspect
of Hone's career. Other editorial
selections are similarly lacking. There
are no works previous to 1817, though the introduction to an 1816 pamphlet (the
lengthy title of which begins Hone's Interesting History of the Memorable Blood
Conspiracy . . . .) offers perhaps Hone's clearest and most unequivocal justification
for his radical publishing activities. Likewise, there are no selections from the Cruikshank-illustrated satire A Slap at Slop and His Bridge-Street Gang (1821), though I am not alone in
thinking it is the best of the satires and would presumably fit perfectly the
selection criteria of a volume called Regency Radical.
Of
course it is easy to complain about works that are missing from the volume—any
"selected works" compilation is going to omit some important pieces,
often for reasons that are fully justifiable. In the case of A Slap at Slop, for instance, the editors may have
omitted the piece because the original was printed in a full sheet newspaper
format that does not transfer well to smaller codex formats (though Hone
himself also printed a rather disappointing octavo version). The problem here involves a kind of
uncertainty about what the book is intended to be and to do. If the editors wished—as their title
suggests—to focus on those works that made Hone famous during the radical years
of the late Regency, then one wonders why the antiquarian prose from the 20s
and 30s (as well as a range of letters extending well beyond the limits of
Hone's "radical years") is included at all. The later prose, after all, seems to crowd
out some other important, even defining works from Hone as a "Regency
radical." Alternatively, if the
editors intended to provide a more comprehensive overview—as is suggested by
the texts chosen for inclusion and as announced in the dustjacket blurb—then
one wonders why excerpts from the Apocryphal New Testament and Ancient
Mysteries Described or even Hone's spurious continuation of Byron in Don Juan,
Canto the Third! or his heavily edited republication of Defoe's Jure Divino might not have made the cut. As it
stands, the selection criteria are never clearly spelled out, and the headnotes
to each major section (in the absence of a Preface and of headnotes to
individual selections) offer only the most minimal guidance.
These
quibbles aside, Regency Radical is a welcome and valuable book. It provides a convenient and well-edited
reading text for some of Hone's more familiar works, most notably the Three
Trials and the (fully illustrated) Hone-Cruikshank collaborations from the
post-Peterloo years. These works are
supplied with annotations and glosses which, if not always as thorough as one
might want, nonetheless offer some original insights as well as sensible
distillations of such important commentaries as those of Dorothy George, Ann
Bowden, Robert Patton, Marcus Wood, Kevin Gilmartin and others. Hone's political writing from the
late-Regency period is highly topical and historically grounded, packed with
allusions to contemporary persons, issues, and events. It is a great help to have a reasonably
accurate and comprehensive key to such allusions collected together in a single
volume. For students and scholars alike, Regency Radical offers both a sound introduction and a handy reference to
Hone's most characteristic writing.
Review
published: 5 March 2007;
last
updated:
12 April 2007.
Romantic Circles
- Reviews - William Hone, Regency Radical: Selected Writings of William Hone. Eds. David A. Kent and D. R. Ewen.
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