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John Trusler and the Culture of Sermons in Late Eighteenth-Century England
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 April 2015
Abstract
Using John Trusler's unpublished memoirs, this article seeks to reconsider his trade in printed sermons using imitation manuscript print, which clergy could pass off as their own. While the trade smacks of corruption and dishonesty, and attracted considerable scorn for Trusler, it was in some respects a reflection of late eighteenth-century sermon culture. Trusler's defence to Bishop Terrick of London of trading in imitation manuscript sermons suggests that he was not embarrassed by the enterprise. Trusler's talents as a preacher were considerable, but Victorian Britain came to regard his commerce as reprehensible.
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References
1 The Times, 5 Jan. 1932, 6. Certainly great entertainment was afforded the readers of ‘Dr Trusler's maxims’ in Tinsleys Magazine iv (1869), 118–28.
2 A rare example of an academic assessment of Trusler's sermons is Lupton, Christina's recent ‘Creating the writer of the cleric's words’, Journal of Eighteenth Century Studies xxxiv (2011), 167–83CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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24 Indeed the suggestion that there was concern that he had plagiarised them was mentioned in Encore vii (1945), 127.
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30 Trusler ms, 293–4.
31 Ibid. 295.
32 Ibid. 296.
33 Ibid. 297.
34 Ibid.
35 Ibid. 298–9.
36 Gibson, ‘The British sermon’, 9–10.
37 The length of time taken to compose a sermon varies enormously but most clergy took considerably longer than half a day to compose an original sermon: Ibid. 13–14.
38 Visitations were often used as an opportunity for the gathered clergy to swap sermons: idem, “This itching ear'd age”: visitation sermons and charges in the eighteenth century’, in Francis and Gibson, Oxford handbook, 289–305.
39 Trusler ms, 300–1.
40 Ibid. 301.
41 John Hume, bishop of Salisbury (1703–77).
42 Trusler ms, 303.
43 Ibid. 306.
44 Ibid. 307.
45 Ibid. 305.
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47 The claim that Trusler had ‘no academical education’ in Watkins, Shoberl and Upcott, Biographical dictionary, 1, 815, is erroneous.
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52 Ibid. 4.
53 ‘Trusler looked on lawyers with the same feeling that a sailor regards a shark’: Willis, Willis's current notes, 41.
54 Trusler, Memoirs, 148–9. Trusler continued: ‘it is the office of the minster, when he ascends the pulpit, to consider the congregation as part of his family; whom it is his duty to awaken, to instruct and admonish; and any oscitancy on his part, any lukewarmness or remissness in the preacher will draw down on his head the vengeance of the Almighty'.
55 Ibid. 176–7.
56 The curriculum of the school included, among other things, reading, cadence, inflexion, synonyms, providing examples in language, writing style, development of memory, illustration from history, rhetoric and confidence: Ibid. 185–6.
57 On Trusler's father's death Mr Lowe also became the proprietor of the Marylebone Gardens.
58 Trusler ms, 17. This may be a reference to the fact that William Dodd, who was later hanged for fraud, took turns with Trusler in preaching at the chapel in Charlotte Street, Bloomsbury.
59 Gibson, ‘The British sermon’, 24.
60 Trusler ms, 34. Trusler added (p. 35): ‘It is not an uncommon thing in London to starve a lecturer, not as it is called, when they no longer approve of him by withholding their subscriptions. Indeed the derogatory mode of his election and collecting his money from house to house (for he is often expected to accompany the officers round the parish when they make their collections) is so degrading to religion and its ministers that nothing but necessity would induce many to accept such a provision. Though I met with great respect from my parishioners I made my lectureship a temporary convenience and resigned it when I could live without it.’
61 Ibid. 50.
62 Ibid. 161. Trusler calculated (pp. 163–4) that his income of c. £150 a year was not sufficient for him to bring up his family of three children.
63 Ibid. 191–2.
64 Ibid. 192.
65 For Romaine's success as a preacher see B. Tennant, ‘The sermons of the eighteenth-century Evangelicals’, in Francis and Gibson, Oxford handbook, 114–36.
66 Trusler, Memoirs, 108.
67 Ibid. 109–10.
68 Trusler ms, 192–3.
69 Ibid. 197.
70 Ibid. 311.
71 Morning Herald, I, no. 4151. Trusler styled himself ‘Doctor’, having studied at Leiden for the degree of MD in the 1760s, although there is no record of his having received the degree: Major, ‘Trusler, John’.
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79 The virgin shape warehouse, was published on 1 Sept. 1799, by S. W. Fores, no. 50 Piccadilly: Catalogue of prints and drawings in the British Museum: division I: political and personal satires, v. 7, no. 9456. The reference was to Trusler's various guides to female etiquette.
80 St John was the pseudonym of Samuel Clapham: Notes and Queries, 3rd ser. xi/284 (1867), 469–b–469.
81 Daniel Pape's first venture into print was a decade after Trusler's; he published Manuscript sermons on several subjects in 1787.
82 McKitterick, Cambridge University Press, 35.
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