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Early English Periodicals and Early Modern Social Media

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2024

Margaret J. M. Ezell
Affiliation:
Texas A & M University

Summary

Using the lens of early modern social authorship and contemporary social media, this Element explores a new print genre popular in England at the end of the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, the periodical. Traditionally, literary history has focused on only one aspect, the periodical essay. This Element returns the periodical to its original, complex literary ecosystem as an ephemeral text competing for an emerging audience, growing out of a social authorship culture. It argues that the relationship between authors, publishers, and audiences in the early periodicals is a dynamic participatory culture, similar to what modern readers encounter in the early phases of the transition from print to digital, as seen in social media. Like our current evolving digital environment, the periodical also experienced a shift from its original practices stressing sociability to a more commercially driven media ecology. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
Type
Element
Information
Online ISBN: 9781108866590
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication: 17 October 2024
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This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

1 Introduction: Early English Periodicals and Early Modern Social Media Forms

Social authors take advantage of the interactive elements afforded by Web 2.0 infrastructures to form an online community. … These authors’ online connection to their audience is not driven by their royalty publisher, but by their own choice to expand the author – reader dynamic.

R. Lyle Skains, Digital Authorship: Publishing in the Attention Economy (Reference Skains2019)

What can one learn from [this] early culture of authorship that is relevant to our current situation? Are we returning to the early modern model of manuscript text and social authorship?

Margaret J. M. Ezell, Social Authorship and the Advent of Print (Reference Ezell1999)Footnote 1

In 1999, I concluded my study of a feature of late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century literary culture, social authorship, by wondering what, if any, application that model might have for the emerging digital publication media at the turn of the twentieth century. I argued then that English literary culture in the early modern period was marked by a vibrant literary culture based on the circulation of handwritten, manuscript copies, which complemented and competed with a burgeoning print market for the attention of writers and readers. In this model of coterie or social authorship, readers were also writers, editors, and curators of their own and their coterie’s literary productions, not merely passive, paying consumers of it. This is not the same as “scribal publication,” where professional scribes reproduced handwritten manuscript texts that were commissioned or purchased by readers, often clandestinely; instead, social authorship, as its name implies, values interactive, reciprocal forms of literary exchange with no financial aim, a form of literary culture that we now know continued well into the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.Footnote 2

In this brief study, I would like to apply this concept of social authorship to explore, paradoxically, a highly commercial form of print media which became popular in England at the end of the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, the periodical. In particular, I will look at how in its early stages, periodicals made use of the practices found in the older social manuscript literary cultures to attract and sustain a paying readership. Questions quickly suggest themselves when we observe how this genre changed over time: How did an originally cheap form of printed ephemera become a collectible literary commodity, with some of its authors such as Joseph Addison, Richard Steele, and Samuel Johnson, joining the ranks of canonical English writers? What were the expectations of the original periodical readers of the genre as compared to today’s academic ones? Why do many of the strategies and tactics employed by early periodical writers and publishers to create and sustain an audience seem so familiar to us now, during a transition period from commercial print to digital media?

Those familiar with early modern authorship practices in general, including social authorship and scribal publication, find themselves surprised by the enthusiasm which the commentators on digital media have typically declared that the shift from paper to screen, from print to digital, is a “revolutionary” phenomenon, creating a new forms of literacy, journalism, and of course, literary culture – as the nerdy genius Egon in the film Ghostbusters announced in 1984, “print is dead,” and it is commonplace to assert that “no one” now reads except on a screen.Footnote 3 While indeed the digital media ecology is transforming the traditional print one as found in the twentieth century, is it as original and unprecedented in its practices, as is often declared?

This is not intended as an in-depth scholarly comparison between early eighteenth-century print and twenty, twenty-first digital media, but instead an experiment to see what emerges when one thinks about the practices and issues for writers and readers of each, what might a juxtaposition of observations about the ecology or behavior of each might cause us to see occurring in the other. Rather than only looking for transhistorical parallels, by using the lens of digital authorship practices in the age of contemporary social media, we may also disrupt in a positive way traditional formulations of eighteenth-century periodical writing, which would then permit us to see aspects of past practices usually overlooked. Referencing features of participatory culture in the digital age, I hope, highlights those within late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century literary ecologies which permitted and propelled the popularity of those periodicals while shaping their contents. Observing the nature of the dynamics of earlier periods’ literary ecologies may well also serve as a gentle corrective to the often-ahistorical understanding of our own literary ecology that is manifest in discussions of digital authorship practices. Finally, we see in the changes between practices found in the early periodicals such the Gentleman’s Journal and those in the Rambler a different type of relationship between readers and authors, which, while gesturing at the expected formal elements established in the earlier periodicals, rejected the dynamics of participatory literary culture for creating content.

Most twentieth- and twenty-first-century readers who are familiar with the early periodicals I will explore know them through the classroom and know only a tiny fraction of the writers who were engaged in creating them. One thing that clearly emerges is that in our modern teaching anthologies and in most critical discussions of the origins of periodicals, the entries under the names Addison and Steele consist only of a portion of the original contents of the Spectator or Tatler. Typically, only the essay in each issue is offered to modern readers, with no mention of the other contents that characterized the periodical form, the flower cut off, as it were, from a complex literary ecosystem. Modern readers are presented with short pithy essays conveniently packaged as examples of timeless, enduring English “literature” that serve as exemplary English prose models: in fact, in their complete and complex original publication format, the Tattler and the Spectator were ephemeral publications that were competing for readership in an aggressively expanding “new” media market. Likewise, grouping Samuel Johnson with Addison and Steele as the masters of the periodical essay based on the essays’ contents and narrative voices obscures not only what these authors shared as writers for periodical publications, but also the ways in which Johnson chose to deliberately reject many of the conventions that his predecessors had used so successfully, signaling a significant change in the nature of the periodical genre in the process.

1.1 General Characteristics of Early English Periodicals

British Newspapers and Periodicals 1641–1700: Short Title Catalogue (1987) broadly defines periodicals from this period as being “numbered and/ or dated issues of proposed or actual sequences of pamphlets or sheets, bearing uniform titles and formats.”Footnote 4 It has been estimated that approximately “one-quarter of the publications in Britain between 1641 and 1700 were issues of serials (or ‘periodicals’ in British usage),” offering multiple formats for readers to choose from: “over 700 such titles were published, including newsbooks, newspapers, literary and leisure miscellanies, trade bulletins and official journals.”Footnote 5 Although as we shall see, subsequent commentators have assigned this new genre significant cultural weight, it was originally an ephemeral product. It is important to realize that the term “periodical,” according to the Oxford English Dictionary, did not come into widespread usage until the latter part of the eighteenth century to signify “a magazine or journal issued at regular or stated intervals (usually weekly, monthly, or quarterly).” Seventeenth- and eighteenth-century readers and writers, however, generally referred to them simply as “papers.”

As the editors of a recent collection of essays on women’s periodicals in the eighteenth century have noted, “periodical” “is a deeply difficult term to define in the eighteenth-century context: It can reasonably be argued to encompass everything from the news-sheet, to the advice column, to the essay periodical, or the magazine or even pseudo-periodicals.”Footnote 6 They characterize periodicals in the long eighteenth century as being comprised of “hundreds of titles, many short-lived and hard to trace; others stunningly voluminous and hard to summarize.” They urge that rather than attempt to divide these ephemeral publications into discreet subgenres, such as newspapers versus literary periodicals versus magazines, the periodical should be understood in an eighteenth-century context: that “periodical culture” was composed of “diverse but contiguous” forms. I would suggest that this is not unlike our evolving digital media culture, as My Space competed with Facebook, and YouTube spawned TikTok.

That said, some general characteristics can be cautiously suggested when one is speaking of the type of early eighteenth-century periodical publications, which have been enshrined within traditional literary histories and classroom anthologies. These periodicals typically appeared weekly, if not more often – the Tatler, for example, was published three days a week and the Spectator initially appeared daily – and they appeared on specific days announced in the publication. They were typically printed either with two columns, front and back, on a single folio half sheet, as were the Athenian Mercury and the Spectator, or as a small quarto pamphlet, such as Daniel Defoe used for the Review. They were relatively inexpensive publications: It is estimated that the Spectator cost two pence each issue, but it is also the case that many people enjoyed reading them for free, courtesy of their favorite coffee house which often offered a wide array of ephemeral printed materials for the entertainment of their customers. They were not intended to be primarily a private reading experience but, as Abigail Williams has suggested about eighteenth-century reading practices in general, a shared one, whether reading aloud in the family or listening to others in public spaces.Footnote 7

1.2 English Periodicals in Literary History

The names “Addison and Steele,” like Shakespeare’s contemporaries Beaumont and Fletcher, are inevitably coupled in literary histories. Together, these two friends and collaborators, Joseph Addison and Richard Steele, and the essays they published in the periodicals the Tatler and the Spector helped create later generations’ perceptions of both the early eighteenth-century culture in which they lived, and the genre in which the wrote, the periodical essay. In essays of around 2,500 words, they presented their views on contemporary topics ranging from the silliness of Italian opera and contemporary women’s hair styles to the poetics of Milton’s Paradise Lost and the importance of commerce and the merchant class in England.

The eighteenth-century periodical essay has long been considered by literary critics to be a new English literary genre that, like the novel, arose out of rapidly changing social structures in the early eighteenth century. Its contents have been typically described as providing a particularly good window into the manners and tastes of its original readers. In addition, canonical authors have been seen as helping to shape those tastes, acting as powerful social influencers, Terry Eagleton, echoing a nineteenth-century biographer’s observation that Addison was the “chief architect of Public Opinion in the eighteenth century,” endorses the essential point that the Spectator determined the topics and attitudes of “this ceaseless circulation of polite discourse among rational subjects … the cementing of a new power bloc at the level of the sign.”Footnote 8

In terms of genre, the periodical essay has enjoyed lasting critical approval. Samuel Johnson, himself the leading critical voice at the end of the eighteenth century, proclaimed Addison’s essays as being models of English prose style that addressed subjects of universal truth and human nature. Of course, not all readers agreed with this assessment: The narrator in Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey (1818), defended young ladies reading novels by Frances Burney as opposed to the more socially acceptable Spectator, noting that “either the matter or manner” would “disgust a young person of taste … their language, too, frequently so coarse as to give no very favorable idea of the age that could endure it.”Footnote 9 On the other hand, nineteenth-century academic commentators such as Henry Reed (1808–1854), the first American editor of William Wordsworth, applauded the ways in which Steele and Addison had turned away from the “grossness of manners and speech which had disgraced society in the years just previously … the mire of that obscenity which defiled the times of Charles the Second.”Footnote 10

In the early twentieth century, the admiration for Addison and Steele continued. Walter Graham in his history of the English periodical press enthused that while there had been periodicals published in the seventeenth century, it was “produced by inferior pens,” and that from the beginning of the eighteenth century, “the periodical was the nursery of literary genius.”Footnote 11 The online Virginia Open Anthology of Literature in English created in the twenty-first century, declares that the Spectator “set the pattern for a kind of essay writing that persists to the present day. … written in a clear and straightforward style without partisanship or professional jargon: This is a mode that is still standard in print and online journalism.”Footnote 12 In his provocatively entitled 1990 work Addison and Steele Are Dead: The English Department, Its Canon, and the Professionalization of Literary Criticism, Brian McCrea argues that it is exactly these qualities of clarity and inclusiveness in the essays’ accommodation for a “mass” audience which caused Addison and Steele to lessen in popularity in academic literary circles in the 1970s and 1980s, in favor of the more arcane and thus more in need of scholarly interpretation works by Swift and Sterne.Footnote 13

For much of the twentieth century, however, the vehicle for these essays, the eighteenth-century periodical publication itself, was a dead zone for most literary scholars. This was in part due to the difficulties in studying the original ephemeral publications prior to the creation of digital databases, but principally because with the exception of the ones written by these literary geniuses – Defoe, Addison, and Steele – periodicals were considered to be “subliterature” and not worth the effort to read.Footnote 14 By the mid-1970s, there were some literary historians who began to find the periodical itself as a genre of more interest; James Tierney pointed out that “curious indeed is a situation where many who have made the eighteenth century their life’s study have never examined more than a pittance of what the contemporary British was actually reading.”Footnote 15 In particular, the Spectator again became significant, not this time for its elegant prose style, but as part of the mechanism Jürgen Habermas argued it helped to create, a “bourgeois public sphere” through the cultivation of public opinion and the formation of good taste.Footnote 16 Commentators such as Timothy Dykstal and Erin Mackie subsequently pointed to the ways in which the contents of popular periodicals such as the Spectator and the Tatler chronicle a society transitioning into a bourgeois, capitalist society whose increasing urban middleclass readership had a seemingly insatiable desire for fashionable consumer products, especially those produced from England’s expanding colonial spaces.Footnote 17 In the 1980s, the bold claim was made that historians viewed periodicals as “an important source of insight into the early development of modern society in the West.”Footnote 18 As J. A. Downie noted in the late 1980s, for “the ideological critic, the periodical essay can truly be said to be a happy hunting ground.”Footnote 19

Presently, when we read or teach eighteenth-century periodical essays in our classrooms, regardless of whether we consider them to be exemplars of English prose style or windows into eighteenth-century English culture, we encounter them first as important literary texts worthy of being enshrined in internationally sold anthologies for the teaching of English literature. The tenth edition of one of the most widely used classroom anthologies, The Norton, offers twenty-six pages in a section on the Tatler and the Spectator and eleven pages of the section on Samuel Johnson are given to the Rambler and the Idler: Addison and Steele are credited as developing “one of the most characteristic types of eighteenth-century literature, the periodical essay.”Footnote 20 The Norton likewise offers students “the grave Rambler essays, which established his reputation as a stylist and a moralist … what Johson uniquely offers us is the quality of his understanding of the human condition” (711, 712). Broadview Press’s Anthology includes as well as these authors some excerpts from the Female Tatler and the Female Spectator, and describes the periodical essay as being an important step in the development of commercial print culture that “played a prominent role in the formation of popular taste and political opinion.”Footnote 21

In the anthologies’ presentation of the periodical as a genre, care is given to make an attribution of individual essays, either to Steele or Addison, or more rarely the occasional contribution by a friend, such as the poet Alexander Pope or Lady Mary Wortley Montagu. Attention is also focused on the use of fictional first-person narrators, Isaac Bickerstaff and Mr. Spectator, as a characteristic feature of eighteenth-century satire. Samuel Johnson is represented as attaining the pinnacle of the genre but there is very little sense of the Rambler and the Idler as having originally been written for ephemeral publications, and in the case of the Idler, surrounded by other materials. By stripping the essays out from their material context, this trio of neatly packaged early periodical authors has worked well as part of a chronological anthology to represent popular eighteenth-century taste and manners as well as the development of the essay as a significant literary genre alongside the novel.

As interesting and important as the contents of these periodical essays are to understanding the socio-literary views of their times, as we shall see, this was not the way in which these essays were originally conceived and designed by its authors, nor received by their initial readers. When we explore the context in which Steele and then Addison were creating their periodicals, it becomes clear that while they were masters of the craft, they were often canny adaptors, not the inventors, of conventions from many earlier popular publications. By focusing on the content of a single element within this new genre of periodical publication, the essay, and isolating it from the context in which it was created and read, we lose the sense of the ways in which its authors engaged its original readers and the dynamic nature of this new genre, which could be interactive and multimodal.

The goal of this study is to replace the periodical essay in its original format and environment, to explore how during this formative period in the long eighteenth century, its authors and creators wove together news, entertainment, creative literary forms, and social commentary in ways not dissimilar to our contemporary digital media creators. As we shall see, early periodicals also exhibit tensions between sociability and competitive commercial strategies, which have marked the development of the internet and its media forms. We will explore how the format of the new periodicals itself draws attention to the ways in which authorship and readership were both changing in response to a developing competitive media environment, an interactive literary ecology emerging from and supported by oral, manuscript, and print practices.

In the same way that late twentieth- and early twenty-first-century readers have been migrating from older print-based technologies for writing and reading into newer internet-based digital media through what is called “remediation,” seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century innovators made strategic use of “residual” features to ease that transition from one to the other. For example, still today the “save” function in Microsoft Word is the emblem of a floppy disk, a nostalgic icon of the earlier days of desktop computing of the late twentieth century, email messages on your phone can be put into an icon of a trash can, and the symbol for “search” on most digital media is an old-fashioned magnifying glass. Readers in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth century were likewise becoming accustomed to reading new forms of information and entertainment in print, and it is in earlier seventeenth-century ephemera that we find the emerging strategies for establishing an audience and maintaining readership as the media changed.

1.3 Creating an Audience: Topicality, Fake News, and Newsbooks

If you’re old enough to remember fax machines, you probably remember that pre-1999, we got most of our information from print media. But it’s 2022 … Print media isn’t dead, but more often than not, I believe digital media features are the way to go in 2022 and beyond.

Kristen Wessel, “Should you Seek Out Online Press or Print Placements?” Forbes, January 25, 2022

TikTok is fastest growing news source for UK adults … . A quarter of US adults say they always use TikTok to get the news, with nearly half of US millennial and Gen Z adults – under-41s and under-25s, respectively – indicating the same.

Dan Milmo, The Guardian, July 20, 2022Footnote 22

Readers in the second decade of the twenty-first century in search of the news are more likely than not to turn to online, digital sources and combine reading the news with watching it being performed. The transition from printed newspapers and magazines as the conveyers of both timely news and entertaining features is still ongoing, however, as many readers still are learning different ways to acquire the news information they desire, and this also requires access to the new media platforms on the internet. Those in search of news in the seventeenth century, likewise, had to learn how to acquire and to evaluate the news they sought in a volatile and rapidly changing social culture and media environment. Prior to the English Civil War, the publication of domestic “news” was illegal and controlled through a network of censorship involving the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Star Chamber, and the Stationers’ Company.Footnote 23 At the start of the seventeenth century, James I had commented on what seemed to him the unseemly desire in his English subjects to find out about “the deepest mysteries that belong to the persons or state of kings and princes,” with “an itching in the tongues and pens” to talk and write about these topics.Footnote 24 The government traditionally made its news known through proclamations, which were printed as broadsides, averaging 1,000 copies made by the King’s printer, and then delivered to the local sheriffs by messengers to be posted in a public place in the towns.Footnote 25 The majority of the residents, however, probably learned its contents through hearing the proclamations being read aloud. Important news was also delivered orally from the pulpit: as early as the nineteenth century, the historian Thomas Babington Macaulay declared the pulpit announcements were “to a large portion of the population what the periodical press now is.”Footnote 26

There was a type of news in print which escaped the censors and was eagerly consumed by seventeenth-century English readers and their appreciative listening audiences. Along with topical ballads, pamphlets featuring “strange and terrible news” had been popular sellers since the late sixteenth century, and with the expansion of news publications in the mid-century, as Julie Sievers argues, they “played a key role in the development of the ‘news’” as an emerging concept and media form.Footnote 27 Typically, such publications featured an exciting woodcut illustration amplified by a lengthy descriptive title, such as the

True and Wonderful. A Discourse relating a strange and monstrous Serpent (or Dragon) lately discovered, and yet liuing, to the great annoyance and diuers slighters both of Men and Cattell, by his strong and uiolent poison, In Sussex two miles from Horsam, in a woods called S. Leonards Foreest, and thirtie miles from London, this present month of August. 1614.

This exciting pamphlet shows a flame breathing dragon with the prostrate bodies of a man, a woman, and a cow, and a solitary dog bravely barking at it. Such “news” was presented as verifiably true, with multiple “eye and ear witnesses” willing to confirm the details, and, as seen in the dragon of Horsam, offering a high level of specific descriptive details suggesting the care taken and the veracity of the reporting.

On the other hand, strange and terrible news pamphlets also have many of the characteristics of a timeless good story: Step-mothers are merciless, murders are unnatural, and gratifyingly, the criminals typically received “most wretched endes.” These ephemeral publications were designed to inform and entertain a wide audience, from those that purchased and read them to the audiences at home and in the tavern, to those who enjoyed the pictures and listening to the dramatic accounts. Such publications thus provided material for conversation for the whole group. The contents were not intended to be meditated on in private nor be carefully preserved but instead shared and circulated, making it a sociable form of print media, one speaking to immediate events and interests.

As we shall see, topicality and the use of a persuasive authorial persona found in earlier seventeenth-century pamphlets and newsbooks are characteristics of the late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century periodicals. Not only did readers want the latest information, but they also wanted it presented with a narrative voice that generated trust in its truthfulness. As the English Civil war broke out and censorship collapsed, the pamphlet producers had a different source of shocking and sensational news of the greatest interest to their readers, but often in forms and formats familiar to the readers of strange and wonderful news. The newsbooks and pamphlets that were produced by both sides of the English Civil War in the 1640s and early 1650s loudly proclaimed the accuracy and authenticity of their content, even when it clear that the account is biased, and the narrative is serving as propaganda (Figure 1).

Figure 1. Terrible and Bloudy Newes (1648).

(c) The British Library Board. E.462. (28).

Between 1645 and 1660, newsbooks and pamphlets were the main source of information about domestic military and domestic events for English readers, with an estimated 300 periodical publications appearing, despite attempts by the powers in charge to control their publication through ordinances. After the censorship mechanisms collapsed during the early days of the war, with an estimate that over 300 periodical publications appeared between 1645 and 1656, although like the pamphlets few of these cheap, ephemeral publications survived.Footnote 28 They were variously referred to by titles that emphasized their speedy delivery of timely information, as well as their international scope, such as “diurnals,” “gazettes,” “currants,” “mercuries,” and “corantos,” the last of which were single sheets produced in Amsterdam but printed in English which featured foreign news. While “Gazetta,” is derived from Italian gossip sheets published in Venice in the mid-sixteenth century, names such as “mercurius” emphasized the importance and the veracity of the contents, being transmitted as it were by Mercury, the messenger for the classical gods.

Both forms, the pamphlet and the newsbook, were early forms of journalism that catered to the interests and literacy levels of the broadest possible audience. As one historian observed, modern readers “need not assume that the purpose of this early journalistic effort was to spread the truth. … Newsbooks could not help being informative,” he observed, “but the truth of their content was not as important as that there be something for sale every Monday.”Footnote 29 Using woodcut illustrations as well as dramatic dialogues and poetry to capture their audiences, their announced function was to inform readers and listeners of all the important political, military, and religious news of the day; they also served as political propaganda, incorporating popular ballads and sensational fictions in a witty and reader-oriented style. Sold by street vendors and “Mercury Women,” who also sold ballads sheets typically for a penny, these publications like the earlier “wonders” pamphlets were also able to be enjoyed by those who heard them being read aloud in public spaces.Footnote 30

This new print genre, however, generated anxieties that still mark readers’ responses to topical media today. Since the 1930s, there has been increasing concern and anxiety in western European societies that the “news” has become merely “entertainment.” However, media critics observe that “the line between news and entertainment is inherently blurred and contestable and never fully maps the boundaries between politically relevant and politically irrelevant media forms”: instead, “it was only the regulations, institutions, norms, and practices that came to define the broadcast news media regime that made such distinctions seem natural.”Footnote 31 Whether it is called “soft” news or, in the 2020s, “fake news,” the practice of mixing entertainment with news in popular mainstream media served to keep audiences engaged and eager for more.

Marchamont Needham was a leading figure in the evolution of newsbooks. Regardless of which side he was writing for at the time, he believed in mixing information and news with entertainment. Writing in 1649 for the royalist Mercurius Pragmaticus, Nedham explained the purpose of including verse in his news accounts: poetry serves “to tickle and charme the more vulgar phant’sie, who little regard Truths in a grave and serious garb … yet I would have you know, in the midst of jest I am much in earnest.”Footnote 32 In 1650, now writing for Parliament, he shows a shrewd awareness of how to amplify his voice not dissimilar to a Twitter or Instagram poster seeking to attract followers who will share his content: “The designe of this Pamphlett being to undeceive the People,” he explained, “it must be written in a Jocular way, or else it will never bee cryed up.”Footnote 33 Likewise, John Hall writing for Parliament in 1648 Mercurious Britanica Alive Again declares that the newsbook which opens with four stanzas of verse only does so because readers expect it: “thus do we according to the solemnity of a Pamphlet begin with verse; for it we should not retain the accustomed ceremonies of abusing the people, we should render them useless, and loose our labour.”Footnote 34 Commenting on the audience’s expectations of more than just a list of the events of the day, he makes the point that “how many Ballads would sell without a formal wood cut? These general complyances must needs to observed, or else the people out of the rate of their madnesse will not be brought to parley.”

Joad Raymond has suggested that the preference for poetry as the medium for the royalists writers reached its height in Mercurious Melancholicus which not only featured the news in verse, but also branched out into satiric playlets with titles such as Craftie Cromwell (1648) and Mistris Parliament Brought to Bed of a Monstrous Childe of Reformation (1648).Footnote 35 Describing “poetry as integral to its identity,” Raymond suggests that Mercurious Melancholicus from its start was a “literary” newsbook; other royalist periodicals including Mercurious Elencticus and Pragmaticus followed its lead. They, too, were formatted by opening with poems consisting of four quatrains in a ballad format to set up the contents of the editorial commentary that followed, and they proudly boast of the superiority of royalist poets and their followers.Footnote 36 In addition to reporting events, such publications also offered reflections on the state of the nation, urging royalist readers to remain loyal and encouraging those who were becoming disenchanted with Parliament to embrace their points of view.

Even with the spread of printed news with its entertaining woodcuts and verses, commercial handwritten newsletters remained competitive, offering its subscribers information such as reproducing parliamentary speeches which its printed counterparts could not. During this period, Henry Muddiman and Sir Joseph Williamson oversaw the production of both printed newsbooks and manuscript newsletters. As Rachael Scarborough King has noted, even though the handwritten newsletters were more expensive than a printed newsbook, costing from £5 to £20 per year as opposed to the printed pamphlet at 1d per issue, nevertheless the circulation of the scribal ones rivaled those of the printed versions.Footnote 37 The handwritten newsletter was a compilation of individual news items sent by letters from multiple sources, which was mailed from London to the subscriber, who was often living outside of London. These handwritten accounts were obtained by subscription and apparently enjoyed a significant readership outside the immediate environs of London.

The scribal newsletters retained residual features of private correspondence, creating an aura of exclusivity and a social connection between the reader and the imagined “author.” Rather than appealing to its readers by opening with amusing verses, the handwritten versions were formatted in the form of a letter, typically opening with the salutation, “Sir,” which some literary historians have compared to creating a more personal relationship with the reader, “giving the recipient the pleasant feeling that he was reading his own private correspondence.”Footnote 38 We are fortunate that they were sufficiently valued by their readers that some were kept intact and collected in a set, providing invaluable information to subsequent generations of historians, and also suggesting how in the future printed ephemera might also be viewed as collectible by its readers.Footnote 39

Whether handwritten or printed, the relationship between the creator of the newsletter or newsbook and the reader was different from that of the official proclamation, printed or announced. It is in the creation of this illusion of familiarity, of social connection, which resonates with our contemporary digital media experiences, especially in who (or what) we trust to give us news – who do we follow online? Unlike creating a news bulletin or a simple commercial, the hopeful social media influencer, for example, is advised present “content” in an attractive package, one that “gives the impression that the followers are learning more about a creator, and … build this relationship.”Footnote 40 Essential to an influencer’s success, apparently, is creating this friendly virtual relationship, cultivating the audience’s sense of familiarity to create trust and loyalty. It is the prevalence of this illusion of friendship which will be explored in Section 2 “Sociable Periodicals, 1690s–1700s” on periodicals devoted primarily to entertainment reading. In these “sociable periodicals,” the reader is invited to become part of a supposedly select audience who not only support the media “platform” by acquiring all of the issues and collecting it in multiple formats, but also create much of its contents.

2 Sociable Periodicals, 1690s–1700s: The Royal Society of London’s Philosophical Transactions, John Dunton’s the Athenian Mercury, and Peter Motteux’s, the Gentleman’s Journal

The concept of the active audience, so controversial two decades ago, is now taken for granted by everyone involved in and around the media industry.

–Henry Jenkins, Fans, Bloggers, and Gamers: Exploring Participatory CultureFootnote 41

After the restoration of the monarchy in 1660, writers and publishers were eager to satisfy the expanding reading public’s appetite for topical news combined with entertainment, a combination to which readers had become accustomed through the popular mid-century newsbooks and pamphlets. Continuing many of the practices established by those earlier periodicals, these new publications also shared several formal characteristics that helped to establish a bond with their readers: For example, they typically featured a standard title page format that was dated, with numbered issues and volumes, and which contained information about the regular publishing days during the week and from whence the publications could be obtained and advertising left. These features highlight that the contents were part of an ongoing narrative sequence, a serial publication rather than a single title. In contrast to purchasing an individual sensational pamphlet, these serial publications, although ephemeral in nature, sought to engage their readers’ attentions over the long term, and to build a stable, loyal readership for that particular title. Much like modern media marketing, the periodicals employed various strategies to encourage and entice their readers to look forward to each new issue and other literary “products” associated with that title. In addition, these new style periodicals encouraged the active participation of their readers, to create content for the periodical for the pleasure of the association rather than any financial or business inducement.

2.1 Publishing Serial Periodicals and Topical News

The serial nature of these publications was both a challenge for the writers and publishers and a marketing advantage. It challenged the booksellers to produce their periodicals on schedule, with informative, entertaining content. On the other hand, it enabled the publishers to point readers to content in previous issues, an interactive feature that relied on the reader to have been engaged with the periodical over a span of time and to be willing to reread this supposedly disposable ephemeral work. It also creates the conditions under which the reader can anticipate the paper being worth while holding on to over time and rereading. To promote that feature, as we will see with the bookseller John Dunton, single sheet publications could be packaged later as collected bound volumes, with extra features such as indexes and companion volumes – and the ephemeral is transformed into the collectible.

Book historians grappling with the large question of what is “print culture” and how can it be recognized have pointed to this element of seriality as being a central factor in making the claim that such a culture existed. “There is a strong argument to be made,” Jason McElligott and Eve Patten suggest, “that it is impossible to conceive of a print culture in any society without the presence of serial publication: corantoes, newsbooks, newspapers, magazines, or literary journals.”Footnote 42 Serial publications not only demonstrate that the technical ability existed to produce texts reliably in a fixed pattern of publication but they also extended booksellers’ ability to attract buyers on a regular, predictable schedule: “The development of seriality was obviously a function of living in interesting times,” they observe, “but it was also a striking technical achievement and a sophisticated commercial strategy” (6). As we shall see, it also created new avenues for sales, both through including advertisements and what today we would refer to as “spin-off” merchandising, or just “merch.”

What I am referring to in this section as “sociable” periodicals had a different style of relationship with their readers, in contrast to that of the also newly forming genre of the newspaper. For example, during this period, the London Gazette stakes its claim to be the oldest continuously printed newspaper in Britain. It first appeared under the title the Oxford Gazette on November 7, 1665 when the court had relocated to Oxford attempting to escape the Great Plague decimating London. On the court’s return, it was rechristened the London Gazette on February 5, 1666, with the seasoned journalist Henry Muddiman overseeing its publication until 1688.Footnote 43 During this time, Muddiman also continued his very successful manuscript subscription newsletter, mentioned in the previous section, which had the advantage of being able to report on parliamentary proceedings, which was once again forbidden to appear in printed accounts. Initially published as a single sheet with two columns on each side, London Gazette subscribers were assured every issue that its contents were “Published by Authority.”

The contents of the Gazette were derived from multiple sources both international and domestic. Readers of the February 5, 1665 issue learned from a dispatch from Falmouth dated January 27 that a ship of eighty tons from Dublin filled with tallow and hides, bound for Cadiz, “proves so leaky” that the Captain was obliged to cut short the voyage and sell the goods and the ship itself. From Rome, we read an account dated January 16 of how the Pope fearing that Christendom is rushing into war asked the Cardinals to join with him to pray that war would be avoided. The account of this pious action is combined with gossip that the French representative to the Vatican had been strongly offended by the performance there by “a company of Ordinary Players” of a play which he viewed as mocking the French and he had “complained to the Popes [sic] Nephew of this designed insolence and National dishounour.”Footnote 44 The Gazette, like the manuscript newsletters that had proceeded them, was dependent on the steady flow of letters from a network of business and diplomatic correspondence for its contents.

2.2 The Royal Society and the Philosophical Transactions

While the London Gazette became established as the source of reliable, government authorized information about shipping, diplomatic events, and military matters, other contemporary periodicals focused elsewhere. Through the publication of its Philosophical Transactions starting in 1665, the newly formed Royal Society of London kept its members informed of scientific developments in London and the provinces, on the continent, and in the Americas. Its full title gives some sense of its original scope and appeal: Philosophical Transactions: Giving some Accompt of the Present Undertakings, Studies and Labours of the Ingenious in Many Considerable Parts of the World.

Initially, its contents reflected the scientific interests and international connections of the first secretary of the Royal Society, Henry Oldenburg. Oldenburg had informed the eminent scientist Robert Boyle that he intended to establish a manuscript subscription newsletter devoted to science, but perhaps in response to the appearance of the French print periodical, the Journal des Scavans, he instead developed a monthly printed publication which sold for a shilling a copy.Footnote 45 Oldenburg was the compiler, editor, and also a contributor. In the “Introduction” to the first issue, he explains that “there is nothing more necessary for promoting the improvements of Philosophical Matters, than the communicating to such as apply their Studies and Endeavours that way, such things as are discovered or put in practice by others”; he concluded that “it is therefore thought fit to employ the Press,” as the best means of sharing discoveries both in England and in “other parts of the World.”Footnote 46

The table of contents of this first issue reflects the wide range of topics to be found inside and the ways in which content came to Oldenburg: “A Spot in one of the Belts of Jupiter,” was the discovery of Robert Hook, who did “some months since, intimate to a friend of his, that he had, with an excellent twelve foot Telescope, observed, some days before, he than [sic] spoke of it (videl. On the nineth of May, 1664, about 9 of the clock at night) a small Spot on the biggest of the 3 obscure Belts of Jupiter.”Footnote 47 A lengthy synopsis of a publication from France followed, sent by its author, the French astronomer Adrian Auzout, on the motion of a recent comet. This was followed by a list of experiments being conducted by Robert Boyle; Boyle additionally communicated news of “a very odd Monstrous Calf,” communicated to him in a letter from Mr. David Thomas from Hampshire.Footnote 48 Finally, an anonymous “understanding and hardy Sea-man,” had contributed an eye-witness account of whale fishing in the West Indies. Clearly, the journal offered something for every interest remotely connected to the new mode of science, very broadly defined. There is no indication that any of the contributors received or expected payment.

For the rest of the seventeenth century and the first half of the eighteenth, the contents of The Philosophical Transactions were determined the editor alone, who was typically the Secretary of the Society. By 1693 when John Dunton’s the Athenian Mercury, was well established, Richard Waller had the editorship of the Transactions. Issue 196 contained a posthumous account of Boyle’s method for making Phosphorus, an exchange in Latin by John Wallis, extracts of two letters from the continental scientist Anthonie van Leeuwenhoek to Dr. Gale, Waller’s own description and anatomical drawings based on his dissection of a rat, and a list of books recently published. This practice of including a medley of topics and accounts at the discretion of the Secretary alone lasted until 1752, when the financial side of the periodical was taken over by the Society itself and the process for submitting materials became regularized, with a committee of twenty-one Society members formed to decide what merited publication.

2.3 John Dunton, the Athenian Mercury, and the Ladies Mercury

By the 1690s, other periodicals began to appear that offered the general reader the chance to engage with a variety of topics ranging from theology to astronomy and literary pursuits. The publisher and bookseller John Dunton previously was known to Restoration scholars primarily as a struggling, quarrelsome bookseller who published his autobiography, The Life and Errors of John Dunton (1705). In the last few decades, however, he has become increasingly studied for his successful development of the “question-answer” periodical, the Athenian Mercury, and in particular his attempts to engage women readers, resulting in the Ladies’ Mercury (1693).Footnote 49 Helen Berry has made a compelling case for the Athenian Mercury as “one of the most original and culturally-significant works to have emerged from the popular press” in the late Stuart period, indeed the forerunner of “what we would now recognize as an embryonic mass media” (6). In addition, E. J. Clery views Dunton as “the greatest early innovator of the discourse of feminization.”Footnote 50

Dunton’s success and his impact with this journal came from an original idea to generate content for his paper: While manuscript newsletters had encouraged readers also to be correspondents and to contribute information to be circulated, Dunton invited “All Persons whosoever” to send “any Questions that their own Satisfaction or curiosity shall prompt ‘em to,” and, as long as the questions were not malicious, obscene, or promoting atheism, they would be answered by a sociable club of anonymous intellectuals. In his autobiography, he recorded how the idea for this new type of periodical came to him as he was walking home one evening, a publication whose content relied on questions on an astonishing range of topics submitted by its readers. Dunton attributes the inspiration to the Bible, Acts 17.21: “For all the Athenians and strangers which were there spent their time in nothing else, but either to tell, or to hear some new thing.” The title of the periodical was originally the Athenian Gazette, which highlighted its claims to veracity and topicality. However, Dunton records in his memoir that “to oblige Authority,” the title was changed to the Athenian Mercury; it is also possible that Dunton perhaps realized this association with the government was a limitation on the potential of the journal rather than an asset.

The design, as laid out in the first issue, was ambitious by any standard. It was supposed

to satisfy all ingenious and curious Enquirers into Speculations, Divine, Moral and Natural, &c and to remove those Difficulties and Dissatisfactions, that shame or fear of appearing ridiculous by asking Questions, may cause several Persons to labour under, who now have opportunities of being resolv’d in any Question without knowing their Informer.Footnote 51

Because Dunton had imagined the periodical to be the platform for a type of learned society or club, whose interests encompassed “the whole compass of Learning,” and because it was to appear twice weekly, as Dunton noted, it “required dispatch” in assembling his experts.Footnote 52 “The Athenian Society had their first meeting in my brain,” he confesses.Footnote 53 To answer the questions posed, he initially called on for help from his associate the mathematician and schoolmaster Richard Sault; it would appear that in launching the new project that Dunton and Sault composed both the questions and the answers for the first two issues. Questions in these initial issues, which presumably would inspire readers to submit their own for future ones, included “whether the Torments of the damn’d are visible to the Saints in Heaven? & vice versa,” “Whether ‘tis lawful for a Man to beat this Wife?” “What is the Cause of Dreams?” and “Why does the Needle in the Sea Compass always turn to the North?” After the first few issues, the ingenious Mr. Sault was joined by Dunton’s brother-in-law the Reverend Samuel Wesley (an Anglican minister and poet and the father of the future founders of Methodism, John and Charles Wesley), and occasionally by “Dr. Norris,” identified variously as either the physician Edward Norris, or Dr. John Norris, the poet and philosopher associated with the Cambridge Platonist.Footnote 54

Berry and Shevelow have interpreted the readership of the Athenian Mercury once it was established as being composed of the “middling sort” of reader; commenting on the frontispiece in Charles Gildon’s History of the Athenian Society (1692; Figure 2), Berry notes that illustration, “the most striking aspect is its social diversity and inclusion of men and women of all ranks presenting questions to the Athenian Society.”Footnote 55 It is significant to note that in addition to the “Athenians” being anonymous experts, the readers who submitted questions also retained their anonymity, each question being presented as a numbered query. As Dunton noted, this protected the reader from being revealed as either poorly educated or being young and naïve; it also gave license to ask about a seemingly unlimited range of topics.

Figure 2. Emblem of the Athenian Society (1692).

© The Trustees of the British Museum.

The success of the Athenian Mercury was clearly its format and the use of a new method of textual transmission to create content. Instead of relying on government dispatches or shipping accounts for its contents, the Athenian Mercury instead relied upon its readers to suggest questions by sending them in letters to Dunton in London through the newly established Penny Post. The Advertisement at the end of the first issue reiterates how readers can become involved with this ingenious design to promote human knowledge.

All Persons whosoever may be resolved gratis in any Questions that their own Satisfaction or curiosity shall prompt ‘em to, if they send their Questions [in] a Penny Post letter to Mr. Smith at his Coffee-house at Stocks-Market in the Poultry, where orders are given for the reception of such Letters, and care shall be taken for their Resolution by the next weekly paper.

Writing in hindsight about the early response to the call for questions from readers, Dunton records that “the Project being surprising and unthought of, we were immediately overloaded with Letters; and sometimes I have found several hundreds for me at Mr. Smith’s Coffee-house in Stocks Market, where we usually met to consult matters.”Footnote 56

The Penny Post had been established in 1680 by William Dockwra and taken over by the government in 1682; by the time of the Athenian Mercury in the early 1690s, it would have been a well-established and familiar mode of communication.Footnote 57 This new form of textual technology made London publishers and booksellers such as Dunton accessible to a wide range of readers outside London proper; as the invitation to “all people” suggests, individuals such as genteel young ladies who might never enter a London coffee house to read the papers or present their writings in person now had an inexpensive way of accessing the London publishing market and the booksellers had an apparently unlimited supply of free content makers.Footnote 58

Indeed, so many women readers responded enthusiastically to the new format and publishing venue that for four weeks in spring of 1693, Dunton produced the spin-off, the Ladies Mercury separately.Footnote 59 The first issue opens with an address “To the Athenians,” assuring the gentlemen that “Your Worth and Learning to which we  must pay a just Esteem, is the occasion of  this Address, in which we desire you to excuse this Undertaking, as not at all intended to encbroach [sic] upon your Athenian Province.”Footnote 60 Continuing in a deferential strain, the presumably female speaker promises that the “fair and larger Field; the Examination of Learning, Nature, Arts, Sciences, and indeed the whole World” will remain a masculine province while “We are for sitting down with Martha’s humbler part, a little homely Cookery, the dishing up a small Treat of Love, &c.”

In contrast to the regular issues of the Athenian Mercury, where the questions are presented merely as numbered queries, those featured in the Ladies Mercury contextualize the question with information about the situation of the writer. This narration results in much longer questions and also much more complicated answers that offer advice as much as information. It also supports the voice of a sophisticated female responder, or rather the corporate voice of a “female society,” which appears not to be shocked by even the most complex emotional entanglements and potentially compromising situations.

The very first question, for example, is posed by a “very young woman,” who had the misfortune to be seduced by “a lewd and infamous Trifler, with whom I secretly continued this vile and unhappy Conversation for near a Twelve Month together.” Her dilemma, however, is not how to negotiate her way out of social ruin from this premartial affair but how to assuage her guilty conscience when she enters into marriage with “the kindest and most passionate of men,” who is besotted with her and she with him: “The more I dote on him, and he the like on me, a rueful Remembrance makes me consider my self so much the more unworthy of him.” She declares that she is “haunted” by “what Delusion and Pollution I brought to his Bed; what practiced Cheats and Impostures have I used, all my affected feigned Innocence … practiced even the vilest of Arts in his very Bridal Night Joys, being in that dearest Scene the highest of Counterfeits.” The Answer urges her to put her sin against Heaven behind her and “when that Honourable Lover afterwards addres’d himself, no Obligation even of the most Rigid Laws compel’d you to be your own Accuser,” and it was not up to her to point out his mistake in believing her a virgin. As “your sin lyes concealed from the world,” no “infamy” is attached to their union, and pragmatically, she should “exert thy tenderest, kindest, duteous, softest Love in all the opening, blooming, ravishing, melting fragrance, that the whole Paradise of Truth and Faith, with all its endless boundless Joys can give him,” and keep her repentance to herself.

As the Advertisement made at the end of the first number makes clear, both “Ladies and Gentlemen” are asked to send their questions to “the Latin-Coffee House in Ave-Mary Lane.” The second question in the first issue comes from a young man, not quite of age yet, who is making “honourable Love to a young and Beautiful Lady.” He describes in some detail the nature of this wooing and its “Innocent Dalliances,” which involve passionate, reciprocal kisses and embraces, firing his imaginings of “the Raptures of Possession.” His concern is whether such thoughts and acts are sinful, although he hopes that being “a Good Christian and a Good Lover are things not incompatible.” This query required only a brief assurance that if a marriage followed, no sin was involved.

The second issue published Sunday a week later on March 6, appears to have built upon the favorable response to the first, for its advertisement announces that questions on love are still being solicited and that the third issue will be published on the following Friday. It noted that “the Ladies Society” sought to provide answers “with all the Zeal and Softness becoming the Sex.”Footnote 61 The Ladies Mercury, in fact, had only four issues, but were highly influential in shaping imitators seeking to enter this entertaining new market, which offered the reader a combination of scandal and probity, romantic scenarios, and supposedly a peek behind the curtains of respectability of one’s fellow readers, familiar today in personal advice columns.Footnote 62 Although the advice column is typically described as an invention of mid-nineteenth-century newspaper proprietors, the argument has also been made that it was a feature of eighteenth-century American periodicals as well. Lisa Logan points to the popularity of the “Dear Matron” column which appeared in the Boston periodical The Gentleman and Lady’s Town and Country Magazine: or, Repository of Instruction and Entertainment (1784–1785) which features questions about topics such as bigamy and adultery answered by the “worldly-wise wit of a respected (and respectable) woman.”Footnote 63 This desire, however, to have advice as well as to preserve one’s anonymity, tracks neatly from Dunton in the previous century through current periodicals.

In addition to devoting individual issues to questions posed and supposedly answered by women, Dunton also began offering special issues featuring verse. In a December issue in 1691, a reader wondered “Is there ever a Poet among the Athenian Society, and supposed a Question shou’d be sent in Verse, shou’d it be anser’d in the same?”Footnote 64 The journal had published individual poems prior to this, but in January 1692/93 the first “poetical mercury” appeared. As Barbara Benedict has noted over the latter part of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries, “periodicals thus became a new venue for publication by part-time writers, amateur critics, and authors in training.”Footnote 65 The young Jonathan Swift, writing from his position as Secretary to Sir William Temple in 1691 sent his “Ode to the Athenian Society,” perhaps his first published poem, to Dunton, asking if it could be printed in the supplement of the Fifth Volume, observing that “since every Body pretends to trouble you with their Follies, I thought I might claim the Priviledge [sic] of an English-man, and put in my share among the rest,” and that “before its seeing the World, I submit it wholly to the Correction of your Pens.”Footnote 66 Temple, Dunton notes in his Life and Errors, was “a man of clear judgment and wonderful penetration” and “pleased to honour me with frequent Letters and questions, very curious and uncommon,” while he characterizes Swift only as “a Country Gentleman.”Footnote 67

Perhaps the most celebrated poet who contributed to the Athenian Mercury was the young Elizabeth Singer Rowe (1674–1737), not long out of boarding school. Rowe would go on to achieve literary fame during her lifetime for her poetry and her prose fiction.Footnote 68 The young woman had by 1694 become, in Katheryn King’s words, “the leading contributor of verse to the Mercury.” King speculates that she had begun in 1691 by sending “poetically inclined” queries; her first known poem was printed October 21, 1693, “Habbakkuk,” which even though it was introduced as being “somewhat uncorrect,” was nevertheless published “for the Honour of her Sex” – the Athenians responded enthusiastically in the poem which followed it, “How vast a Genius sparkles in each Line!”Footnote 69 The full poem later appeared in Rowe’s Poems on Several Occasions Written by Philomela (1696), which was also published by Dunton, who crowned her “the Pindarick Lady.” Heidi Lauden suggests that following her contributions to the Athenian Mercury, one can “see how she consciously carves out a space for herself in the public domain and craft, with the help of the Athenians, a poetic identity that becomes a critical component to the periodical and to her own future success.”Footnote 70

There is no evidence that Dunton offered payment to those readers such as Swift and Rowe who contributed to the content of the Athenian Mercury, nor indeed that they expected any. There is no doubt, however, that the periodical was a successful commercial venture for Dunton. The Athenian publications were remarkably popular for many years, typically appearing in single sheets twice weekly between March 1691 and 1697 (Figure 3). Such was their appeal, Dunton also collected the individual papers and bound them into volumes, each composed of thirty issues, which Dunton records “swelled at least to Twenty Volumes folio” and which, like the single sheets, could be purchased at his shop. As his biographer Gilbert McEwen noted, such was his confidence in the sales of the new periodical that Dunton in the second issue of the fledging paper, he had already envisioned the spin-off product which would include both a preface and an index, both of which McEwen describes as “innovations” for English periodicals.Footnote 71 Dunton also promised the reader of his memoirs that they would also be able to purchase Athenian Mercury merch, “a choice Collection of the most valuable Questions and Answers, in Three Volumes.”Footnote 72 Dunton also produced multiple supplements which were bound into the volumes offering the purchaser extra value: The first supplement contained information about “transactions and experiments of the Forreign Virtuoso’s [sic],” and an account of “most of the considerable Books Printed in all Languages; and of the Quality of the Author, if known,” in addition to translations of excerpts from learned journals such as the Paris Journal des Scavans and “in the New Book Entituled, Entretiens Seriuses & Galantes, &c.”Footnote 73 Towards the end of his career, Dunton attempted to revive the brand, publishing four volumes of yet more questions and answers under the title of The Athenian Oracle (1703–1710).

Figure 3. The Athenian Mercury (1691).

Private collection, M. J. M. Ezell.

The Athenian model of soliciting content in terms of questions, puzzles, and poetry was so successful, it soon attracted imitators, adapters, and satirists. The Grub Street writer Tom Brown (1662–1704) did a satirical counterpart, initially called the London Mercury, which quickly became Lacedemonian Mercury in February 1692/93. Brown, who earned his precarious living exploiting whatever genre was popular at the moment, deliberately tied his publication to Dunton’s periodical by titling after Athens’ ancient rival and enemy, the Lacedemonians (Spartans). Initially assisted in this effort by his friends Charles Gildon and William Pate, Brown released the first issue on Monday February 1, and brazenly announced that would it answer all questions sent to its preferred coffee house, Welsh’s, near Temple Bar. As commentators have noticed, being published on Mondays and Friday, it thus could beat the Athenian Mercury’s responses which were printed on Tuesdays and Saturdays.Footnote 74 The University educated Brown ruthlessly skewered what he considered to be the overly pedantic and serious tone of Dunton’s periodical, especially as it busied “the Press with impertinent Questions of Apprentices and Chamber-maids,” and, rather than tackling serious intellectual issues of history and philosophy, “they have everlastingly stuff’d their Papers with Receipts for Fleas &c and such like.”Footnote 75 Continuing this unflattering attention given to Dunton’s periodical, Elkanah Settle, the dramatist and City Poet in charge of writing the annual pageants celebrating London’s prestige and prosperity, published in 1693 The New Athenian Comedy. In it, Settle mocks the pseudointellectualism of “coffee-house culture” and the social status of its members; Settle’s characters underscore Brown’s mockery of the Athenians’ membership, with names such as Obabia Grub, the leader, and Dorothy Tickleteat, a milkmaid.

2.4 Peter Motteaux and the Gentleman’s Journal

A year after Dunton launched his periodical, the professional writer Peter Anthony Motteaux (1663–1718) started the Gentleman’s Journal, which enjoyed thirty-three issues between 1692–1694. Born Pierre-Antoine Le Motteux in 1663 in Rouen, the young Huguenot had fled France in 1685 after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes and joined a large French refugee population in London. Although he is probably best known today as the translator of both Rabelais and Cervantes and whose death was the subject of a notorious murder trial, Motteux’s pursued a varied career as a shopkeeper, auctioneer, dramatist, and librettist during the last decade of the seventeenth century.Footnote 76 Motteux’s was a monthly periodical, which instead of being the front and back of a single-sheet, was a quarto pamphlet averaging around thirty pages (Figure 4). This expanded format offered the reader a variety of short reading entertainments, including verse by popular contemporary London poets such as the soon to be poet Laureate Nathum Tate, Aphra Behn, Matthew Prior, John Phillips, the ever-busy Charles Gildon, and the dramatist William Congreve. In addition, it also featured accounts of new plays, information about national events and personalities, such as the Duke of Bavaria being made the Governor of Spanish Netherlands, as well as new songs, complete with musical scores.

Figure 4. The Gentleman’s Journal (1692).

Private collection, M. J. M. Ezell.

Motteux dedicated the first issue to the Earl of Devonshire, announcing the desire the little journal should “attend your Lordship when you enter into your Closet, to disengage your Thoughts from the daily pressure of Business.”Footnote 77 While its title page describes the contents of consisting of “News, History, Philosophy, Poetry, Musick, Translations, &c,” poetry, songs, and translation dominate the pages, not news. Told in the form of a familiar letter from a Londoner to his friend in the countryside, the Gentleman’s Journal breaks with this narrative when in the next issue, it opens with an advertisement preceding the table of contents stating that the author has had so many letters commenting on the first issue that he cannot answer them all, but he promises to insert his readers’ observations and contributions as long as they do not libel any one or speak against “Religion, or good Manners.”Footnote 78 The narrator opens this “letter” to his friend observing that the “Generality of Readers lik’d the Design of the Book” and that several “ingenious Pieces … have been given me,” such as the poem which follows that is attributed to the fashionable Matthew Prior (1664–1721) (“Howe’r; ‘tis well, that whilst Mankind,/ Thro’ Fates Fantastick Mazes errs”), and an imitation of one of Horace’s Odes, “given me by a Friend” (5–6, 9). The appeal to the reader to become a contributor, to send by post their or their ingenious friends’ poems, enigmas, and fictions, as I have argued elsewhere, is a step further than Dunton’s request for queries: by urging his readers to become active content makers for his periodical publication, Motteux is essentially commercializing the traditional practice of coterie or social authorship, with its circulating and curating social network’s manuscript pieces.Footnote 79

As critics have noted, while Dunton was indeed in the business of books, he was not himself primarily a professional writer, as was Motteux. Walter Graham in his early study of the literary periodical noted that Motteux was, “a man of letters [and] for the first time the literary periodical as in the hands of professional writers.”Footnote 80 Motteux’s literary skills were wide ranging – he not only translated Cervantes and Rabelais, but he also wrote prologues and epilogues for multiple dramatists including George Farquhar, John Vanbrugh, Mary Pix, and songs for Aphra Behn’s comedy The Younger Brother. He also had several of his own tragedies, comedies, and operas performed. He achieved a measure of commercial success in the most popular Restoration literary enterprises, even if his biographer Robert Cunningham described him as having “versatility” rather than brilliance.Footnote 81 Pragmatically, Motteux knew what would sell; to meet this demand, he skillfully attracted a group of amateur contributors as well as calling on his professional literary acquaintances to create the contents. As I argued elsewhere, Motteux was able to secure and sustain the Gentleman’s Journal for three years in part through his recognizing and exploiting the characteristics of coterie, social authorship practices within a commercial framework, not unlike today’s participatory culture.Footnote 82

Some of the elements that characterized earlier social or coterie literary exchanges included the use of pen names, the popularity of response pieces, and the feeling of community or familiarity among the writers and readers. Motteux used a direct form of appeal: The “Advertisement” below the table of contents of the Volume 2, issue 5 May, 1693 desired that “the Ingenious are desir’d to send such Pieces in Verse or Prose that may properly be inserted in this Miscellany.” These can be left at the shops of either of the booksellers mentioned on the title page, Richard Parker at the Unicorn under the Piazza at the Royal Exchange or Robert Baldwin’s near the Oxford Arms in Warwick-lane. Parker was a successful young bookseller in the fashionable Royal Exchange, while Baldwin, along with his wife Anne (who continued his business after his death in 1698 and published the Female Tatler to be discussed in the next section), was among the best known of the London printers and bookbinders of this decade, publishing not only political pamphlets, satires, and periodicals but also plays and romances. In addition, those who wished to contribute but did not live in near the two booksellers or in London, could address a letter to the “Author” of the Gentleman’s Journal at the Black-Boy Coffee-house in Ave-Maria Lane, “not forgetting to discharge the Postage.”

Among the contributions published in the May 1692 issue were a satire, “they came to me out of the Country … I am not told who is their Author,” the correct solution to the enigma poem in the previous issue answered in verse by Mr. Jon. Olt, which was also correctly solved by “Aurelia,” T. S., T. Powell, and “S. Strephon.”Footnote 83 A new enigma poem was sent to Motteux by “Philander” in “Edenburgh”: “An unborn Queen of Sweets and Beauties I,/ Still blushing, and still smiling, live and die./ In richest Robes of purest Light, I shine;/ And all my happy Nourishment’s divine.” The answer as revealed in the June issue is a rose and it inspired Mr. Patrick Johnson to address verses “To the Ladies on the Enigma for May”: “A Darker Riddle, Ladies, ne’er you knew/ ‘Tis hard to guess what’s meant, a Rose, or You.” This type of literary game offered readers the chance to participate in a literary network outside their immediate family and friends.

Relying on the ingenious readers for content, however, could be unpredictable. In March of 1692, Motteux informs his fictious acquaintance in the country that he is running out of materials to be included, laboring as he says under the “necessity there is of a constant Supply of Ingenious Prose and Poetry, to carry on the Undertaking.”Footnote 84 “I hope, Sir,” Motteux observes, that “the Ingenious of both Sexes will maturely consider of the Exigency of the Case. For tho’ I have had several very fine things sent Me: yet I shall have occasion for more, and some things, as I declared it in my last Month’s Advertisement, tho’ never so ingenious, I cannot insert.” The content of Motteux’s Journal was, like the initial form of the Philosophical Transactions, largely dependent on what the editor could persuade his network of friends and correspondents to contribute, balanced out by his own works; the September 1692 and the July 1693 issues were entirely Motteux’s own work.Footnote 85

The Gentleman’s Journal, more than the Athenian Mercury, focused on literary matters, in particular what was “new.” In addition to publishing a wide range of contemporary poets, the Gentleman’s Journal is unique in including not only the lyrics to new songs, but also the scores. During its two-year run, the Journal printed twenty songs by the celebrated musician Henry Purcell.Footnote 86 It also included a notable amount of short fiction, some thirty-six narratives that appeared under various titles ranging from “adventure,” “story,” “True History,” “fable,” and “novel.” Critics from the beginning of their commentary on this periodical have observed that the fictions are about contemporary people, places, and events, with Dorothy Foster arguing in 1917 that they “portray contemporary types, contemporary manners,” and Coperías-Aguilar in 2022 pointing to the degree to which the plots and character types have been drawn from contemporary social comedies that stressed realistic settings and characters.Footnote 87 As Coperías-Aguilar observes, the framing narrative that shapes the Journal and its contents, a fictive letter from a friend in London to a person in the city to keep them au currant with fashionable topics, music, and literature, “enhanced the fictionality of the ‘novels’ and also reinforced their condition of true stories.”Footnote 88

There is no evidence at present that the periodicals discussed in this section paid their contributors – as we have seen even warning them that they would not cover the cost of the Penny Post – although it would be reasonable to expect that other professional writers and musicians such as Wycherley and Handel might be. Instead, to generate content, they relied on creating a sense of community in their general reading audience, encouraging them to become content creators, and voluntarily to share their questions, literary works, and discoveries. It is clear, of course, that from the publishers’ and editors’ perspectives, the journals from their first conceptualization were intended to make a profit, and Dunton was particularly ingenious in devising ways in which his readers’ curiosity could be monetized. When the readers’ interest slacked and their contributions declined, the periodical ceased publication. As we shall explore in the next section, the periodicals that followed them preserved many of the features of this participatory, active audience which characterize the periodicals of the end of the seventeenth century, but as we shall see, with increasing commercial considerations for the writers.

3 Sociable Periodicals, 1700s–1720s, Continuity and Change: Aaron Hill’s the British Apollo, the Female Tatler, and Daniel Defoe’s the Review

… [news] media faces a scenario marked by global instability, economic crisis, misinformation, falling trust and renewed consumption habits with a specific challenge to reach young audiences. This scenario implies experimenting with channels, technologies and formats, to approach such an audience in an innovative, attractive, friendly, simple and fun way.

–Jorge Vázquez-Herrero et al. – “Let’s dance the news! How the news media are adapting to the logic of TikTok” (Reference Vázquez-Herrero, Negreira-Rey and López-García2020)Footnote 89

Two periodicals and a challenger to one highlight strategies used by what I am calling sociable periodicals to cultivate and sustain a subscribing participating readership over a long period of time. They did so in part by combining attractive features of their predecessors the Athenian Mercury and the Gentleman’s Journal with new types of content presentation and new marketing strategies to encourage readers to become paying followers rather than merely enjoying the copies offered for entertainment at public houses and helping to create its content. The British Apollo, which appeared twice weekly on Wednesdays and Fridays 1708–1709, then additionally on Mondays until 1711, was overseen by the poet Aaron Hill. It engaged in a lively literary spat with the upstart Female Tatler (July 1709–1710) for several months, August 1709 through early October, over some of its tactics to lure paying subscribers, including the use of music, and the quarrel between the two offers some revealing glimpses of the competition for readers as well as how the readers of this early form social media were viewed by the public at large.

Daniel Defoe’s periodical, the Review, originally titled A Review of the Affairs of FRANCE (October 1704–February 1705), was also initially published twice weekly, increasing to three times per week 1704–1713. Significantly, Defoe made use of the new, expanding postal system, and his paper appeared on Tuesdays, Thursday, and Saturdays, the same days that the Post Office in Lombard Street in London sent the post to all the English counties. As J. A. Downie points out, this means Defoe from the beginning was envisioning a national audience rather than a London one, that the periodical “appears to have been designed for distribution throughout England from the outset.”Footnote 90 As we shall see, while Defoe initially made use of several of the expected conventions of the sociable journal at the beginning of his periodical which was devoted to news of international affairs and domestic politics, over time the content as well as the relationship between the author and his readers would change.

3.1 Aaron Hill and the British Apollo, Mrs. Crackenthorpe and the Female Tatler, and the Battle over Readers

A decade after Dunton’s question and answer periodical stopped publishing, there was apparently sufficient demand again that another aspiring literary man, Aaron Hill, offered the public The British Apollo, which ran from February 1709 to 1711 [Figure 5]. This placed the British Apollo in direct competition with Steele’s the Tatler, which used a much different format and rapport with its target audience, which will be discussed in the next section. In its first issue, the British Apollo. Or, Curious Amusements for the Ingenious. To which are added the most Material Occurrences Foreign and Domestick. Perform’d by a Society of Gentlemen announced confidently to its potential subscribers that it would appear on Wednesday and Fridays, and that the Society of Gentlemen would

Figure 5. The British Apollo (1708).

Private collection. M. J. M. Ezell.

answer all Questions in Divinity, Philosophy, the Mathematicks, and other Arts and Sciences, which appear fit and worthy to be answer’d; Also insert Poems on various Subjects and Occasions, both Serious and Comical, Compos’d New Purposely for the Paper.Footnote 91

On the title page of the subsequent volumes of the collected issues of the British Apollo, it is notable that the description of the membership of this “Society of Gentleman,” in fact apparently led by Hill and later assisted by John Gay (the future author of the Beggar’s Opera), is expanded: The answers are “approved of by many of the Most Learned and Ingenious of both Universities, and of the Royal Society.” No doubt the prestige of association with the learned society and university dons might appeal to potential purchasers of this handsome production, which by 1741 comprised three collected volumes and a fourth edition, featuring a dozen pages of prefatory verses contributed by admirers of both sexes. Among Hill’s other known associates answering questions were the physician to Queen Anne, Sir John Arbuthnot; Marshall Smith, a poet who would go on in 1715 to propose another periodical, The Oracle, being calculated for the answering questions in all arts and sciences, either serious, comical, or humerous [sic], both in prose and poetry; the physician and theological writer Dr. William Coward, and Dr. James Mauclerc, a member of the College of Physicians, who would in 1745 publish The Christian Magazine discussing a wide range of theological matters. Were they paid for their answers? At this point we don’t know.

As with the Athenian Mercury, the questions posed in each issue of the British Apollo were wide ranging in topic and seemingly random in sequence. Inquirers in the first issue wanted to know why God took six days to create the earth rather than do it instantaneously; in later issues, readers demanded to know when and why the custom of “throwing at Cocks on Shrove-Tuesday” arose. Readers were interested in the size of the moon compared to the size of the earth and why when one drinks turpentine it causes urine to smell like violets. There were also some more romantically inclined queries: “Tell, me, O! Tell me, What is Happiness?” drew the poetic response, “If Madam, yet some Husbands arm you bless, /Ask Him, for He, if any, sure can guess.”

Ten months later, by the December 3–8, 1709 issue, the journal was well established and offered its readers a characteristic range of content comprised of a balance of queries, poetry, news, and advertising. By this time, it had also published a separate quarterly collection, also for sale by the printer of the British Apollo, to which it could refer readers asking the more common questions, such as “of what sort of Fruits, was the Forbidden Tree?”Footnote 92 Also in this issue is a lengthy melancholy tale from a young man. This is less a question than a short fiction: The sad and perplexed gentleman has fallen in love with a young lady of a different religion, but his father opposes the match, stating it would break his heart as well as cause them to forfeit their family estate; the father proposes another more suitable match; the true object of his affection urges him to obey his father’s wishes, although she declares this will cause her to die of a broken heart. The letter concludes “we have both agreed to follow your Directions.” The answer from the Gentlemen is not to propose to the suitable Other Woman, but to wait and hope time sorts things out, for, although all parties will be made miserable by this, “your Conscience and Honour will be satisfy’d, not without a Possibility in time of Satisfaction al all Parties.”

This romantic conundrum is followed by an unromantic query about the cause of snoring. That pragmatic domestic question is given a brief and straightforward answer. The next section of the issue is composed of a series of questions posed and answered in verse. The first verse petition of the journal, strikingly, is in the voice of a young African:

From Africk’s scorching Sands my place of Birth,
In my Younger Years transpos’d to Britian’s Isle,
By all esteem’d the happiest Isle on Earth,
For Beauty, Pleasure, and a fruitful soil.
Thus hither brought, I by my Master’s care
In way of Traffick, did Instructions learn.
Thus he did readily my Mind prepare,
Mankind by Conversation to discern.

The problem is that in these conversations, the Christian religion has remained merely a name to the writer. “My Fellow Creatures tell me” that after death they will be returned to Africa, but in contrast, Christians speak of going after death to “Realms of Bliss and Regions of Delight.” The question posed by the poet is if he, or she, might go to heaven, too, and, if so, how? The response, also in verse, is a resounding yes: to achieve a Christian Heaven, the African poet must first read the Scriptures, those “Oracles Divine,” and only then converse further with Christians; eventually thus will the petitioner come to “feel the Blessings of Unsullied Day/ And Hug th’ Enjoyment of a Peaceful Mind.” Was this poem really written by a young person of color?Footnote 93 We have no way of knowing at this point, but regardless, it was a topic which the society of “gentlemen” of the British Apollo felt was worthy of addressing and would be of interest to their readers.

The British Apollo exerted itself to create a sense of select community and privilege among its subscribers, including making its quarterly collections and supplements available first to its subscribers only. In another attempt to market the periodical, to increase paying subscribers, while sustaining a sense of social networking community, the publishers hit upon a scheme which initially seemed very attractive, but which would backfire spectacularly. As Rosamund McGuinness notes “the British Apollo was eager to appease its readers and to be seen to be so … us[ing] its amenability as an additional selling point.”Footnote 94 Responding to requests from several ladies and gentleman, it began in July 1709 to advertise it would publish not only new songs but new music to go with them, which as we have seen, the Gentleman’s Journal had done previously. The British Apollo initially published only the vocal line of the song, without all the instrumental ones, because of space; one could, however, acquire all the musical parts, at the shop of “Mr. Walsh in Katherine-Street against Somerset House” (October, 1709). In August of 1709, the periodical announced that its Subscribers of more than a quarter of a year would be eligible to get tickets for “a Grand Consort” of their music, which was quickly amended to those who had subscribed already for a half a year. The Concerts never took place, possibly for financial reasons.

The poet Nicholas Rowe found the prospect of the periodical including music delightful. He enthused that

Apollo now in full Meridian Shines,
By joyning Music to his Tuneful Lines.
Before y’improv’d our Minds with Notions new,
But now you Charm our Souls and Senses too. (10–12 August 1709)

As we have seen, including the lyrics and basic melodies to new songs, especially those written for the London theatres, had proved a popular final section of the Gentleman’s Journal. Not all readers, however, were so taken with the idea of including music and, in particular, of offering possible musical entertainments for the pleasure of the British Apollo’s London subscribers. A lively, controversial new periodical paper had come to life as a counterpart to Steele’s Tatler, the Female Tatler, written by one “Mrs. Crackenthorpe, a Lady that knows every thing” [Figure 6]. The identity of those involved with this periodical has long vexed literary historians, as it appeared under the same title simultaneously in two versions, one published by Benjamin Bragge in Paternoster Row, and the other published by Anne Baldwin at the Oxford Arms in Warwick Lane. These rival Female Tatlers were identical in format and numbering but different in content. The authorship of the periodicals has been variously ascribed to a minor dramatist Thomas Baker, according to the British Apollo, and by later generations of literary historian as possibly being the work of the philosopher and satirist Bernard Mandeville (author of the satire The Fable of the Bees), and recently the dramatist and political journalist Delarivier Manley.Footnote 95

Figure 6. The Female Tatler, no. 7 (1709).

By permission of Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas, Austin.

In Issue 11, August 22–24, 1709, published by Bragge, there was an account of a visit by “Lady Sly” who mocked the idea of including music in a question-and-answer paper. “After a world of dull, indigested incoherent Stuff” inflicted on their readers, she observes, now they intend to publish musical scores, but whom among their readers, Lady Sly wonders, will know what they are? “Does one in five hundred understand Notes? The Dissenters will swear ‘tis Popery in Hebrew Characters, and their Subscribers at Wapping think it down-right Witchcraft,” she cackles, but “the best jest is, they are to have a Consort, an’t please you, and ev’ry Subscriber is to have a Right to a Ticket.” Just imagine the scene at the concert, she urges her listener/reader, “there must be a noble Appearance, his Grace and my Lady Dutchess, Jack Tar, and Mrs. Top-gallant-sail, with every Coffee-Man, and his Wife, that takes in their Papers.”

As Robert White observes, “the Female Tatler had begun the fight, but the Apollo was to win it.”Footnote 96 [Figure 6a] After a lively exchange of insults over the relative merits of the two publications and their readerships, the Female Tatler published by Baldwin on August 31–September 2, 1709 claimed that when Mrs. Crackenthorpe sent a servant to find issues of the British Apollo to see what had been written about her in it, “no Booksellers had ‘em, the chief Coffee-houses have thrown ‘em out these six Months, the Mercury Women laugh’d,” while the British Apollo riposted that back issues of the Female Tatler could be purchased at 2 pennies “per Pound, to stock the Chandlers, Tobacco shops” as wrapping paper.Footnote 97 The Female Tatler published by Baldwin on August 31–September 2, rebuts the Apollo’s claim that everyone is used to audiences of mixed social status at the theatre and no one is offended, countering that “the Theatre has Pit, Box and Galleries for Distinction, and when the meaner sort have the assurance to crowd into best place, how they are jostl’d and ridicul’d.” Mrs. Crackenthorpe notes that “at Consorts of Note the Prices are extravagant, purposedly to keep out inferior people”:

Figure 6a. The Female Tatler, no. 7 v (1709).

By permission of Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas, Austin.

But as their Tickets are to be delivered gratis to each Subscriber, ev’ry Purse-proud Ale-Wife thinks her self as good as Quality, and as she does ‘em as much Service, expects as forward a Seat; and what Woman o’ Fashion will lessen her Character, or care to have her Cloathes sullied by sitting Jig by Jole with Apollo’s Taplashes [pub owner]: In short, they are a pack of very silly Fellows, do they so wonderfully praise themselves.

(#25, August 31–September 2, Baldwin)

Attacking the readership of the periodical as being lower class social climbers presuming to appreciate elite culture clearly was a way to tarnish both its contents and the publishers. It is notable that a former collaborator of Hill’s on the periodical, John Gay, after he ceased contributing also made snide comments about the social origins of the British Apollo’s readers, observing that “it still recommends itself by deciding wagers and cards, and giving good advice to shopkeepers and their apprentices.”Footnote 98 As we will see Daniel Defoe was at some pains to establish that the readership of his periodical, the Review and its Supplements, was genteel, perhaps to ward off such damaging notions.

Musical controversies aside, the contents of the British Apollo have been a treasure trove for later generations of literary historians interested in how the periodical trade worked because it was so explicit in explaining to its readers how the journal operated. The early issues clearly lay out how much it would cost, who could be paid for subscriptions, where to send letters and advertisements, and where the subscriber could purchase the growing number of additional items that were associated with it. As William Belcher noted in his 1957 article, the British Apollo was perhaps the first periodical that operated on a subscription scheme and he attributes the careful explanations carried in each issue about how to obtain the paper and how to submit advertising were intended to guide “those who [were] unfamiliar with the details of this method of publication.”Footnote 99 Instead of relying largely on the public coffee houses or inns to supply the periodical to their customers, the British Apollo would, for two shillings a quarter deliver the periodical to your house on Wednesdays and Fridays, as long as you resided within the area specified by the London Bills of Mortality (I,1, Friday, February 13, 1709). Interestingly, given the subsequent sneers at the social status of its readers after it was well established, from the first issue the British Apollo announced as an inducement to potential subscribers that “this Design was incourag’d by several Persons of Quality and others of the Brightest Parts, before it was Publish’d, and a great many Subscrib’d for it as soon as the Proposals were out.”

To subscribe, according to the directions that appeared in the first issues, one should direct a letter for the British Apollo at its printer’s shop, John Mayo, in Fleet Street. Mayo apparently kept the list of subscribers, and his shop also was one of the places where you could direct your letters containing queries for the club to answer. The bookseller William Keble in Westminster-Hall and Thomas Bickerton, a bookseller at the Golden Flower-de-luce, in St. Paul’s Church-yard, additionally sold the British Apollo as single sheets and later as sets, and would also accept advertisements and queries, but not requests for subscriptions. Following Dunton’s lead, these outlets also handled the range of merchandize associated with the British Apollo, from missed single issues, title pages for collected issues, bound volumes with indexes and prefatory materials, to additional supplements with even more questions than had failed to make it in the original individual issues. Bickerton, for example, could supply one with the individual issues and planned monthly supplements for the journal and, until the loose issues could be bound, “books of Guards [folders holding 150 papers] to keep ’em in” at only two shillings a piece.Footnote 100

Another key source of income for this turn of the century periodical was advertisements. In the first few issues, it was stated firmly that advertisements from “quacks” for miraculous cures would not be accepted; by the twelfth issue, however, the lucrative medical narrative ads were accepted, with the publishers denying any responsibility for the reliability of the information within. The advertisements in the pages of the British Apollo cover a variety of topics and products, from the commonplace and boring, to the mysterious: A lady and her servant maid, identified as a “Blackamore,” were taken to the Old Baily by convenance, but had left behind their little bandbox and if it was returned, it would earn a reward of ten shillings. In another ad, the enormous sum of five guineas was offered for a lost purse containing a ring with a “large Table-Diamond and six Small ones about it” along with another ring bearing a large ruby with eight diamonds, while the ad asking for assistance in returning a runaway servant, “James Armond in Green Livery lin’d with red,” could only earn you two guineas.

According to his biographers, unlike Dunton who seems to have been quite proud of inventing the Athenian Mercury, Hill was only too happy to drop the British Apollo when a steadier source of income arose. While Dunton indeed had used the advertising space at the end of the Athenian Mercury to announce forthcoming titles to be had at his shop and to inquire after libraries for sale, Hill had used the periodical, especially in its first year, as a vehicle for promoting his own publications; Hill published several short poems without his name which were included in subsequent editions of Hill’s works and, like Dunton, he used the advertisement section to draw attention and subscribers for his more ambitious literary projects. These included his expensive illustrated subscription volume, A Full and Just Account of the Present State of the Ottoman Empire (1709). Nevertheless, Hill quit the British Apollo without regret, and it ceased to publish shortly after this departure. As his Oxford Dictionary of National Biography entry states baldly, his new wife’s substantial dowery “enabled Hill to relinquish his journalistic hack work for the British Apollo … to embark on a career as a theatre impresario.”Footnote 101

3.2 Daniel Defoe and the Review: Capturing the Unsuspecting Reader with the Scandalous Club and the Little Review

In contrast to the man of letters fleeing from what was viewed as literary hackwork in connection with a successful periodical, Daniel Defoe, journalist, poet, essayist, and future novel writer devoted nearly a decade of his working life to a periodical in which he was the main contributor. As critics have observed, Daniel Defoe’s Review (1704–1713), originally titled A Weekly Review of the Affairs of France, is in many ways a remarkable accomplishment, not the least of which is that for nine years, Defoe alone was responsible for the overwhelming majority of its content, estimated as writing three to five 2,000- to 2,500-word essays per week.Footnote 102 Its content has proved difficult for literary scholars to place or categorize. Christopher Flynn observes that it was “neither a newspaper, though it reported news, nor a periodical, though it contained essays.”Footnote 103 As Flynn’s digital edition of Defoe’s journal was intended to highlight, the Review was involved in generating “new communities of readers,” what Mary Poovey refers to as the “social imaginary.”Footnote 104 Two spin-off publications from the Review, the Mercure Scandale: Or Advice from the Scandalous Club, which initially appeared at the end of each issue and was subsequently issued as in five monthly supplements starting in September 1704, and the Little Review, which appeared in a separate bi-weekly issue between June and August 1705. The existence of both spin-offs was not part of the original concept of the Review, but their existence, even if short-lived, demonstrate the potency of participatory culture established in earlier papers, whose authors actively invited readers to create its content.

Defoe’s two supplemental publications emerged out of the primarily political opinion journal the Review (1704–1713) but, in contrast to it, were focused mostly on domestic topics. They both used the motif of a select “club” of sociable men with whom readers could interact through letters, although unlike Dunton, Defoe did not exert much effort in creating an actual group of responders, nor did he see it necessary to pretend that the “club” was anything but a fiction, and that at the heart of the supplements was the voice and opinion of a single individual – his.

The section which ended each issue of the early years of the Review, Mercure Scandale: Or Advice from the Scandalous Club (1704) was, as stated in the periodical, primarily intended for entertainment, a counterpoint to the weighty political topics of the main portion. Subsequently, in the bi-weekly Little Review (June–August 1705), Defoe again experimented with inviting readers to contact “Mr. Review” with their stories, gossip, and questions. Apparently, Defoe was overwhelmed by the volume and intensity of the Review’s readers and felt that it might overshadow the political contributions of the Review, for he discontinued both supplements, but not, however, before having them spun off for separate sale on their own and as collectibles to be bound in with the individual Review issues.

Initially, Defoe’s Review focused on the state of affairs in England’s chief international rival, France. As the Review continued, it enlarged its scope to include among other political topics the Union of England and Scotland, but he assured his readers in the second issue, February 16, 1704, the decision to include in each issue a concluding section devoted to Mercure Scandale: Or, Advice from the Scandalous Club was because it was an established feature of Parisian politics that he is merely translating for his English readers. In spite of its name, the function of the Scandalous Club was not to create scandals, and “the Business of this Society is to censure the Actions of Men, not Parties, and in particular, those Actions which are made publick so by the Authors, as to be, in their own Nature, an Appeal to the general Approbation.”Footnote 105

The first example from the Scandalous Club “records” is, tellingly, a man who announced the death of the Duke of Bavaria while he was still alive, and the club declared that it is “a scandalous Thing, That News-Writers shou’d kill Kings and Princes, and bring them to life again at pleasure.” The larger issue here is fake news and the corruption of the relationship between the news writers and the general reading public: “the Club has had a great deal of trouble about the News-Writers, who have been continually brought before them for their ridiculous Stories, and imposing upon Mankind.” The Scandalous Club’s tone is a public spirited one, seeking to guard the unsuspecting reader from consuming misleading information by denouncing the rival purveyors of news, forming an alliance with its reader against unscrupulous news mongers.

As Jean McBain has noted in her study of the eighteenth-century “emotional community” in print, Defoe altered the nature of this entertaining appendix over the course of the first few months of the periodical’s existence. He shifted from the fiction of translating the fictional Parisian club’s verdicts, which were mostly involved with castigating the veracity of the news reported in other periodicals, to answering queries from the English reading community.Footnote 106 As Defoe’s biographer Maximillian Novak observes, “how many of the letters printed in the Review were composed or drastically revised by Defoe, we will never know … but that the vast majority were genuine there can be little doubt.”Footnote 107 Defoe’s contemporaries appear to have believed that the correspondence was real: John Dunton, observing the popularity of Defoe’s new offering was not pleased by this change in the original format, and declaring that Defoe “has done me a sensible wrong, by interloping with my ‘Question-Project,’” which undercut Dunton’s own attempt to revive the brand with his Monthly Oracle.Footnote 108 Was it shrewd marketing by Defoe, or were English periodical readers exerting their influence over the type and format of periodical literature they wished to consume? While John Richetti has suggested Defoe was the prime instigator in altering the Review’s initial format to increase readership, McBain suggests that it was at the demands of his readers that drove Defoe and that “the Scandal Club became a participatory space through the impetus of readers rather than the discretion of Defoe.”Footnote 109 In addition, a fictional identity for the responder began to emerge as well: “if Defoe created a kind of fictional character as ‘as the Author of the Review’ or ‘Mr. Review,’ it was more in these sections than in his writing on politics.”Footnote 110

The Review’s readers clearly had Dunton’s Athenian publications in mind when assessing the new offering. Addressing “the Gentlemen of the Scandalous Club,” one of the Review’s early letter writers observed, “I prefer your Club much before the Athenian Oracle.”Footnote 111 Some early readers objected that the name of the group was confusing – were the members themselves scandalous? Defoe was at pains to reassure the concerned in the preamble to the Club’s “Advice” from the September 5, 1704 issue, stating “the Design and Desire of Our Society being the Reforming, not Exposing the Vicious.”Footnote 112 Likewise, in the “Introduction” to the first of the monthly “Supplementary Journal to the Advice from the Scandal Club,” which appeared in September 1704, he opens by repeating that “this Society, having been design’d for examining and censuring Things Scandalous, and openly deserving Reproof” was not offering a sensational narrative in the sense that the popular roman à clef did, where readers were invited to identify the living persons in the narrative through thinly veiled allusions and clues, but instead seeking to identify types of corruption in public life.

Having settled this minor reader complaint, the writer admits that the Scandalous Club has strayed from its original purpose and that it has “insensibly been drawn into the difficult, nice, and unsatisfying Work of resolving Doubts, answering Questions, and deciding Controversies, Things absolutely remote and foreign to their first Design.” Defoe asserts emphatically at another point that “answering Doubts, resolving Questions, and deciding Controversies, were as remote from his Thoughts, when he began this Paper, as making a Map of the World in the Moon.”Footnote 113 The self-styled “Author” admits “the Hand that operates in this Work, being allegorically rather than significantly call’d a Society; may be for sundry Reasons uncapable of Performance in so vast a Variety as is like to come before him.” In the process of switching between first person “I hope no Man will Censure me, for not knowing how to answer all the Questions Mankind can propose,” to third person, “he humbly desires of the World, to send no Ensnaring Questions,” the character of “Mr. Review” slowly emerges.Footnote 114

While the Review, like the Athenian Mercury which preceded it, was in its format and publication practices a short, ephemeral publication, it seems clear that Defoe like Dunton from the start envisioned its transition into a collectable item, which readers could package and curate to suit their own personal tastes. Desiring his readers not to send “trifling things” to the paper which he cannot include, the Author states that “he hopes to Make the Collection worth a Man’s keeping and worth Posterities Reading.”Footnote 115 “Our Supplement,” he explains, is “made for Want of Room in the Current Paper” to contain those things which are genuinely “Curious, any thing Experimental, either in History, in Politicks[,] in Physicks” and “the Author shall think himself and this Work, highly oblig’d to the Gentlemen who shall please to Communicate such things.”

As a collectable, however, its initial readers apparently had some concerns that the Author directly addresses. Among his readers, the Author realizes that some “People that object against this part of the Work being too large,” because they are concerned that it will be difficult to “bind up with the Collection of the Reviews, and yet necessary to go with them, because of the Connexion of Story and References from one to the other.” In response, the Author declares that “it shall be endeavour’d to order the Volumes of the Reviews to end some thing sooner, that the Addition of these [monthly] Supplements may not make them too bulky to bind together” and “it shall be endeavour’d to make them as Independent of one another as possible, that at last it may not be absurd to bind them apart.” Against the objection that there is no audience for a Supplement, that “all the Coffee-houses, that take in your Penny Papers, will not be so ready to take the Supplement,” it is noted that the Publisher “finds that the Sale of the Reviews differs much from the Common Method of such Publick Papers,” and that “above one half of them are bought by Gentlemen, that lay them up to bind together in Volumes.”Footnote 116 Perhaps sensitive to the perception of periodicals as being merely ephemeral adjuncts to drinking coffee for such readers who frequent public houses, the Author continues, “Gentlemen, and Men of Reading, Collect them, and as for such they were design’d, such will still approve it,” and for the undiscerning casual reader, “they must take their own way.”

Defoe highlights the didactic nature of this periodical in his explanations of why it is not a purely political or historical journal. The Scandalous Club and its Supplement are vital, in the Author’s opinion, for the success of the mission of the Review, to attract and retain readers for the timely and more important historical and political topics contained in the paper. He describes the section as being “this honest Cheat,” with the intention of balancing serious materials with entertaining, “to bring people to read with Delight.”Footnote 117 Much as the civil war newsbook writers had asserted about using verses, Defoe reiterates in the “Introduction” to the first issue of the Supplement, “as the Merry Part of this Paper, [it] is not without its Uses,” and he describes it as “an Innocent Bait, to bring some People in Love with the more substantial Part, and make them Read to their own profit and Instruction.”

Defoe stopped publishing letters and the Supplements for the Scandal Club when “the Urgent Occasion of the Publick Affairs in the Review began also to Crowd it out” (“Introduction,” the Little Review, Wednesday June 6, 1705). However, “the Number of Enquirers still increasing, and some very pressing to revive it,” he consented to publish the Little Review separately on Wednesdays and Fridays in order to respond to readers’ demands for a voice in the Review. As before in the Supplement, the fiction of “the Society” is continued with the majority of the letters addressed to “Gentlemen,” or “Sir,” but by the final issue of the Little Review, Number 21 August 15, 1705, the opening letter is addressed to “Mr. de Foe.” The writer, who signs as “Your Sincere Friend,” demands that the Author should “inform the World what Appellation the Society assumes; and whether it consists of a Number or a single Person; that they may know how to Address themselves properly to it, and not in the Plural if the Number be one, nor in the singular, if it be many.” Defoe flatly admits that “we are one Person, sometimes Mr. Review, sometimes the Scandal Club, sometimes one single Body, sometimes a Body Corporate.” Defoe concludes that “if you Write or Address your self to Us, I shall receive your Letter; or if you send to Me, We shall give you all the Satisfaction I can, for We are your Friend and Servants, Nos Ego.”

As McBain noted, a large proportion of the letters answered by first the Scandal Club and then in the Little Review concern the control of emotions, but one feels that they are not like the friendly, sober exchanges found in the earlier periodicals. The next letter in this issue is in Latin, which is translated so “that the Ladyes, for whose Instruction they Write, may not be at the trouble to enquire the meaning.” The young ladies reading it receive a strong warning as the letter comes from a young man, who having courted a young lady and reached an agreement, could not obtain the consent of her family. Rather than try to appease her family, it caused him to use “my best endeavours to get her to Bed to her without it; which I easily effected.” Because, as he confesses “keeping a Secret being none of my Talent,” the result is that “now her Father Threatens to go to Law with me.” What should he do? First, the Club has some harsh words for the young woman: “a Woman that will take a Man’s word in this Case, really ought to expect such Usage,” and she has placed herself under his insults forever, and he will never believe that she will be chaste, as “Once a Whore and always so.” The young man, on the other hand, “ought to be Punish’d for deluding the young Woman, but he ought to be hang’d for telling of it afterward.” As for their advice, the Club urges that he should again ask her father for permission to marry her, “if she be Fool enough to have him,” and should then take himself off and enlist in the army where perhaps he might be shot or, as an alternative, hang himself as a villain.

These are not the pious reflections of the Rev. Wesley in the Athenian Mercury, the chivalrous gallantry that characterizes the responses of the Gentleman’s Journal, nor even the “young man about town” air of sophistication for which the British Apollo strove to appeal to its readers, but instead the voice of an individual moral authority. While Defoe successfully made use of the conventions of participatory culture initially to cultivate a subscribing readership, in the long run of the life of the Review, his focus was more on establishing and selling a trusted political and moral persona, himself. In doing so, he was operating in a different mode than what we will see with the successful contemporary periodicals by Richard Steele and Joseph Addison. In his growing resistance to sustaining a genuinely participatory culture, one based on the assumption of collegiality and sociable exchange between readers and writers of both sexes as seen in the earlier papers, Defoe foreshadows the practices of mid- and late-eighteenth-century periodicals.

4 Celebrity and the Changing Nature of Periodical Cultures: The Tatler, the Spectator, and their Rivals

Individual interactions are valuable in almost any social media strategy. Why? Because people like to feel like they matter. … focus on answering individual questions, or replying to content created by individuals in your core following. If they feel listened to, valued, and respected, they’ll probably become much more loyal to you – and encourage their friends and followers to follow you as well.

–Jayson DeMers, “The 7 biggest secrets of social media influencers,” X Business

If it doesn’t spread, it’s dead.

–Henry Jenkins, Sam Ford, and Joshua Green, Spreadable MediaFootnote 118

In contrast to Defoe’s apparent rejection of a participatory sociable reading culture, the publications of Richard Steele and Joseph Addison and their friends embraced it and added a further dimension. Defoe’s Review may have run longer, but the popularity of the Tatler and the Spectator among eighteenth-century readers was both rapid and enduring and they became a foundational part of the eighteenth-century literary canon. Rather than ceasing to appear because of lack of readers or financial support, both papers stopped their runs in part because of the simple exhaustion of their writers and editors with the demands of producing serial periodicals that appeared multiple times a week. Readers, on the other hand, were eager to continue to participate: sending their letters to Steele and Addison, many were clearly in hopes of themselves becoming part of this literary phenomenon, as one notes, “it is no Wonder if all Mankind endeavours to get somewhat into a paper which will always live.”Footnote 119 For eighteenth-century readers of both sexes, the Tatler and the Spectator offered not only entertainment that was designed to be shared among family and friends, but also the chance to become members of the fictional world of Isaac Bickerstaff and Mr. Spectator.

As we saw in the opening section, for modern readers the Tatler and the Spectator are the model for periodical essays and their primary authors, Richard Steele and Joseph Addison, are the masters of the genre. “Of the hundreds of periodical essays which flourished in the eighteenth century the Spectator was one of the first in time, as it was also – in the opinion of competent judges – the most widely read and the best.”Footnote 120 We do not think of these two papers as single half-sheet, double-columned, ephemeral publications (Figure 7) competing for advertisers, much less, as Rachael Scarborough King has argued, being “a branch of the news media.”Footnote 121 Given the accumulated praise of generations for their literary accomplishment, it is very easy to lose sight of their original literary ecology. At the time of their first appearance, they were among a host of competitive rivals, all vying to entertain a very similar audience. During the five-year period 1709–1714 when the Tatler and the Spectator were being written, there were at least one hundred other competing periodicals, gazettes, and newspapers for reader to choose from.Footnote 122

Figure 7. The Tatler, no. 8 (1709).

Private collection, M. J. M. Ezell.

To a modern eye, the numbers of copies printed for the initial runs of the Tatler and the Spectator might not seem that impressive. Mr. Spectator proudly declares in issue #10 that 3,000 copies per issue were published of the paper, although Steele estimated that with the imposition of the stamp tax in 1712, the circulation was probably then cut in half.Footnote 123 Given the practice of one paper being shared among many readers in public spaces such as coffee houses and inns, however, it is difficult to say exactly how many readers they had based on numbers of copies. The Tatler had 330 issues in its two-year life (April 12, 1709 to January 2, 1711) while the Spectator appeared daily for sixteen months, (262 issues between March 1, 1711 and December 31, 1712), before changing to a thrice weekly distribution, concluding with issue 635 in December 1714. In the context of competing media of the day, however, these were impressive figures, with the Tatler having to bring in a second printing house to satisfy demand, and the Spectator from its start required an ever-increasing number of distribution outlets. What might be some of the reasons for their immediate popularity and what might have propelled these two publications from the coffee house and tea table into the English literary canon? Was it because they were so significantly different from the periodicals that preceded them and their contemporaries, or because they simply did what they did better?

The list of failed literary periodicals in the first and second decades of the eighteenth century is long. Samuel Phillips attempted to match the Gentleman’s Journal with the Poetical Courant by offering only verse; much of, however, it appears was written by his colleagues in Oxford rather than the London theatre crowd. In an advertisement at the end, like Motteaux, he encourages “all Gentleman, Ladies &c who have any Original Copies of Verses, Heroical, Humourous, Galant, Satyrs, Odes, Epigrams, Riddles, Receipts, Songs, Prologues or Epilogues, &c. proper to insert in this Paper,” to send them to Goddard’s Coffee house or to the publisher Benjamin Bragg and the author “will faithfully Insert ‘em, and carefully Correct ‘em.”Footnote 124 The Poetical Courant, however, managed only twenty-three issues between January and June 1706. The Muses Mercury, a monthly periodical publishing contemporary poetry, including some by Dryden and in which Motteaux himself published verse translations, lasted only a year after it first appeared in 1707. Likewise, a periodical publishing only short fictions, the Records of Love, Or Weekly Amusements for the Fair, managed only twelve issues before expiring in the spring of 1710, although its first quarter was republished as a compact volume. As a periodical paper, however, the Records of Love appears to have misjudged the tastes of its readers and its stories, one per issue, “guaranteed to offend neither Political or moral sensibilities” did not last.Footnote 125

Despite the large number of choices being offered readers, in the eyes of contemporaries such as John Gay, the state of periodicals in 1711, when the Tatler had ceased publication and the Spectator yet to start, was grim. According to Gay, the Monthly Philosophical Transactions were no longer being read, and its author ended up in prison for debt; one of Addison’s associates, the translator’s John Ozell’s Monthly Amusement is described by Gay as only giving accounts of “some French Novel or Play indifferently taken Notion of”; Defoe’s Review is “quite exhausted, and grown so very Contemptible” that the writer cannot persuade any of the other pamphlet writers to engage in a controversy with him. The political periodicals such as L’Estrange’s the Observator and Swift’s the Examiner are too embroiled in party politics, Gay asserts, to be entertaining.Footnote 126 But the Tatler and subsequently the Spectator appear to have found a ready and appreciative audience, who had been well-prepared to receive them by their predecessors.

As we shall see, both the Tatler and the Spectator employed many of the familiar and successful strategies of the sociable periodicals from the 1690s and early 1700s to create a community of readers who would be loyal to the papers. They encouraged their readers to create part of the content through correspondence; they offered an attractive group of characters representing a range of English society and family roles, whose stories and opinions appealed to a variety of readers; and, I will argue, they successfully created a sense of the reader being part of a familiar, insider relationship with the writers behind narrators, or the eidolons. Instead of the shadow figure of “P.M.” in the Gentleman’s Journal or the anonymous Athenian Society and British Apollo’s group of learned men, the Tatler and the Spectator offered readers the chance to connect not only to their own social groups but also that of the London-based celebrity writer.

Some of the papers’ success rests on the familiarity readers would have with its format as serial publications. Initially, like the other miscellany format periodicals, the Tatler offered topical news so that “Persons of strong Zeal and weak Intellects … may be instructed, after their Reading, what to think” (#1, April 12, 1709; 1:15). Ashley Marshall has commented that “anyone familiar with the critical consensus on The Tatler must be somewhat surprised by the degree to which the early numbers are saturated by news reportage” and how initially it resembled the Review more than the Spectator.Footnote 127 As we shall see, unlike their predecessors, the content of the Tatler evolved, starting in this miscellany mode but the news aspect quickly faded in importance as its narrator Isaac Bickerstaff’s “lucubrations” on contemporary culture and responses to readers commanded more space and more attention from the readers.

Like their predecessors, these papers, too, relied more and more on reader participation to supply content. Like Defoe’s Review, the Tatler did not originally start out by soliciting letters or poetry, but over time, as Donald F. Bond suggests, Steele’s “practice of printing letters from readers certainly aided in making the paper popular and established further rapport between editor and subscribers.”Footnote 128 In issue #7, April 26, 1709, Bickerstaff makes a direct appeal to his readers: He asks that those willing to “transmit to me the Occurrences you meet with relating to your Amours, or any other Subject within the Rules by which I have proposed to walk” to send them by the now familiar Penny Post to him at Mr. Morphew’s, the printer.Footnote 129 He urges gentlemen and ladies to communicate the “Grief or Joy of their Soul,” adding that without such assistance, “I have not a Month’s Wit more.” Mr. Spectator, having learned the lessons from the changing format of the Tatler, made his appeal for readers’ correspondence in the first issue, giving the address of his printer, Samuel Buckley in Little Britain. Issue #8 offers two letters with contrasting views on masquerades, concluding with Mr. Spectator’s decision to visit the next London masquerade himself “in the same Habit I wore at Grand Cairo.”Footnote 130 Did readers also wish to attend that masquerade and speculate who there was Mr. Spectator?

The success of such petitions to readers is reflected not only in the ones reproduced in the periodicals but also in the subsequent merchandising of materials associated with them. In 1725, Original and Genuine Letters Sent to the Tatler and Spectator During the Time those Works were publishing. None of which have been before Printed was printed by Charles Lillie. Towards the end of his life, Steele permitted the perfumer Lillie to print unpublished letters sent to Bickerstaff and Mr. Spectator that were not “contrary to religion or good manners,” and whose contents would not offend an individual or a family. Lillie had himself written to Tatler in #92, November 10, 1709, to ask Mr. Bickerstaff to “beg the Favour of being advantageously exposed in your Paper, chief for the Reputation of Snuff”; he subsequently enjoyed the custom of “several of my gentle Readers,” although Bickerstaff denies in #96, November 19, 1709 that they are business partners (Tatler, 2: 78; 98). Lillie’s shop on the Strand, along with Morphew’s print shop, received readers’ letters to Bickerstaffe, a role Lillie continued for the Spectator.Footnote 131

Such was its appeal, Lillie’s eight-hundred-page, two-volume collection was published by subscription, with initial purchasers ranging from the Duke and Duchess of Grafton who put down for six copies between them, to “Mr Daniel De Foe” and “Daniel De Foe junior,” and the poet Ambrose Philips, to the unknown Elizabeth and Bersheba Mead, and “Mr. Lewis Lacoude, Merchant. For two Books.” As Lillie notes in his “Preface,” the sheer number of letters in the volumes is evidence of “how Laudable and beneficial a work the Tatlers and Spectators were, when they set all the writing world amongst us to work, each with a view to amend their neighbor.” In the twentieth-century two more caches of unpublished letters that had been preserved and endorsed by Steele were found.Footnote 132 These ninety-six letters clearly are genuine as they are endorsed by Steele, not only with information about their topic but also how they were delivered, whether by Penny Post or its short-lived rival, the Half-Penny Post.

Even the letters which were not used in the Tatler or the Spectator reveal to us how contemporary readers thought about the two periodicals, creating an ongoing conversations between readers and the authors. The writers of the unpublished letters clearly enjoyed role playing, inventing names and identities for themselves, such as “J. Dapper,” “Tom. Tell-Troth,” “R. Middle-Thought,” “Mary Spinster,” and “Antigamus” who writes from the very real Pall-mall Coffee House, as well as more familiar coterie style names such as “Lydia,” “Sylvia,” and “Philis.” Mimicking Bickerstaff and Mr. Spectator, these correspondents often identify from whence they are writing, ranging from “my closet” to “Jacob’s Coffee house behind the Exchange.”

In Letter #1 of Original and Genuine Letters, “Ric. Wildair” sends a copy of a poem sent to him to Mr. Spectator, signing himself “your humble admirer, (not only now you are a mute, but when you was a tatler” (1:1). The writers of Letter #37 addressed to Mr. Spectator allude to an issue of the Tatler: “You having formerly (though in a different capacity) given us expectation of an account of a piece of painting,” a reference a to Tatler #209 when Bickerstaff suggested a topic for a historical piece representing Alexander the Great. The topic was not taken up in subsequent issues, but the letter writers “assure you [it] will be very acceptable” even now to his readers at the Grecian Coffee House (I: 93). The communal aspect of reading the Tatler and the Spectator is highlighted by another reader comments to Mr. Spectator that “every one of your papers is a sermon, which is handed about to greater numbers of readers than most sermons … that were ever printed” (II: 173).

In Letter #4, “Isabella Thoughtful” writes to Mr. Bickerstaff that she has just returned from an “entertainment” where the ladies applauded the Tatler #67 (which contained thoughts on women wearing beauty patches) and “we all toasted you in tea” (1:6). Likewise in #136, “J. Dapper” informs Mr. Spectator that he has just left “the most agreeable tea-table in the world, … [where] the Spectator never failed of being a welcome guest” (II: 349). The persons there agreed with Mr. Spectator’s observations on punning in issue #504 as being fashionable but not amusing and there was a “warm debate” over an anecdote illustrating the practice of “biting” or misleading a credulous hearer with a fictitious tale.

Whether or not all the letters in Lillie’s printed collection were genuine, they consistently represent the reading of the Tatler and Spectator papers as being part of a participatory social media event, involving multiple readers discussing and circulating their contents. Nicola Parsons’ analysis of the function of gossip as a key source of content for the Tatler notes the relish with which readers discussed the real-life identities of characters in the essays and the ”convivial reading and discussion the paper stimulated,” an aspect clearly seen in the unpublished letters.Footnote 133 Parsons records the example of a Lady Marow advising her daughter she should be reading the Tatler, for “all the town are full of the Tatler, which I hope you have to prepare you for discourse, for no visit is made that I hear of but Mr Bickerstaff is mentioned.”Footnote 134

In addition to providing their readers with real addresses and real people to which they could send their letters to be read by Bickerstaff and Mr. Spectator, the two papers reinforced the sense of community through other strategies. Readers became acquainted with Bickerstaff’s friends and family, including his sister Jenny, more of whom later, as well as real individuals such as the printers and Charles Lilli who served as a living point of connection between readers and the worlds of Mr. Bickerstaff and Mr. Spectator. Both featured the stories of a collection of characters that were representative of the readership itself. The Club, introduced in the second issue of the Spectator, introduced readers to a collection of personalities with whom to identify, from the charming eccentric bachelor Sir Roger de Coverley, the modern merchant Sir Andrew Freeport, the military man Captain Sentry, and the man about town, Will Honeycomb.

The blending of fictional characters with real life London settings and people created for the original readers a sense that one might encounter personalities they knew from the papers in person. By heading the various sections of the papers as arising from specific public locations, whether Will’s Coffee House or the Exchange, the reader is given a sense that they, too, if they were in London, might be present at the events and conversations being described by Bickerstaff and Mr. Spectator. As with the Gentleman’s Journal discussed before, this helps to create a sense for the reader that they, too, might become contributors, not just consumers. As Iona Italia commented on the Spectator, “knowing the editor’s haunts invited readers to guess at his real identity, … or recognize the pen-portraits of friends and acquaintance. Frequenting the same coffee-houses as the editor made them part of the extended club formed by the periodical’s readers.”Footnote 135

The success of both the Tatler and the Spectator in creating these artificial communities where readers are invited to interact with the central characters, I would argue, make the Tatler and the Spectator stronger literary “brands” than many of the rival periodicals; like bloggers today are encouraged to do, they offered a lifestyle appealing to their target audience. They likewise created a more successful first-person narrators, or eidolons, ones which combined idealized characteristics designed to appeal to an eighteenth-century reader and to establish an authoritative voice, and ones which readers, through their careful reading, might well be able to find out the names of the real authors behind them.

The “eidolon,” as defined in the Oxford English Dictionary is “a character in a literary work who represents or embodies the author,” “a fictional authorial or editorial persona adopted by the writer or writers.” It is considered by recent critics to be a defining characteristic of the eighteenth-century English periodical, “the eponymous authorial persona … is the genre’s most characteristic formal feature,” according to Osell; Manushag N. Powell suggests that “the eidolon makes the invisible visible, giving solid print form to the relationship between reader and author, manifesting, in a profitable and creative way, the reader’s desire to ‘see’ authorship itself.”Footnote 136 While Osell interprets the periodical eidolon as being “basically transparent, meant to point to the author rather than substitute for or shield him or her,” Powell in contrast declares that the eidolon is a performative, socialized self-identity, a “public piece of writing” designed in part both to entice and satisfy the reader’s desire to have a relationship with the author.Footnote 137

This artificial authorial identity, in Powell’s argument, is a crucial one to distinguish the periodical writer from the anonymous gazetteer or a Grub Street hack writer for hire. As she notes, the eidolons of eighteenth-century periodicals typically are “at pains to declare, generally falsely, the lack of economic interest among their reasons for publication: Isaac Bickerstaff in the Tatler, and Mr. Spectator in the Spectator are gentlemen of leisure and reflection.”Footnote 138 It is important to note here that “Bickerstaff” and “Mr. Spectator” did not function like pseudonyms such as Mary Ann Evans’s George Eliot, intended to hide the author’s name and gender, but were characters themselves that become merged with the writer’s public image. As Carla L. Peterson notes, Bickerstaff and Mr. Spectator were “not meant to confer anonymity, functioning instead as an open secret. … the eidolon was never identical to the author but rather the author and his fictional representation simultaneously, thus offering readers a carefully constituted public image.”Footnote 139 As Powell notes, in general, early eighteenth-century eidolons were meant to be “puzzles for the reader to cipher through.”Footnote 140

Readers in the first part of the eighteenth century had long been accustomed to deciphering the identities of real people presented in fictional garb, especially when embedded in satires. Whether it was interpreting the exotic romance Hattigé as being about Charles II and his mistress the Duchess of Cleveland, or speculating on the identities of Queen Anne’s courtiers in the scandalous roman á clef by Delarivier Manley, Secret Memoirs and Manners … the New Atalantis (1709), early eighteenth-century readers were conditioned to be aware of characters’ resemblances to real persons.Footnote 141 The Tatler regaled the reader with veiled accounts of actual scandals, which its readers were apparently quick to decipher: Peter Wentworth writing to his brother identifies the character of “Africanus,” as being Sir Scipio Hill (I: 265 n.4), while Abigail Harley deciphered the character of Cynthio in first issue for her aunt as being Lord Hinchinbrooke who in the throes of love appeared drunk at a playhouse.Footnote 142

“Isaac Bickerstaff” was already established as a vehicle for social critique through Jonathan Swift’s use of it in satirizing the popular astrologer and Whig propagandist John Patridge in 1708; the name was subsequently adopted by multiple Tory authors in 1710 writing about the celebrity trial of Dr. Sacheverell.Footnote 143 The real “authors” behind the eidolons of Isaac Bickerstaff (both in the case of Swift and later the Tatler) and Mr. Spectator were widely discussed, although, of course, it is impossible to say how many or how quickly readers guessed correctly. Bond records that Peter Wentworth sent two issues of the Tatler to his brother in Berlin in early May 1709, shortly after the paper began appearing: “Three of the authors are guest [guessed] at, viz. Swift, that writ the tale of the tub, Yalden, fellow of Magdilin [sic] College, Oxford, and Steel, the Gazzetier,” scoring a two out of three.Footnote 144 Steele states in the final issue of the Tatler, #271, January 2, 1711, not quite two years after the first paper appeared, that the reason he is stopping is because he is now so widely known to be the author. He starts pragmatically by noting that his printers inform him that there are enough issues to make up the fourth volume; he concludes that he has “nothing further to say to the World, under the Character of Isaac Bickerstaff. This Work has indeed for some Time been disagreeable to me, and the Purpose of it wholly lost by my being so long understood as the Author.”Footnote 145

Osell observes that “virtually all canonical essay periodicals are identified with particular authors, especially authors whose literary success extended to other genres.”Footnote 146 This is not the way in which the authors and editors of the periodicals we examined in previous sections functioned. In contrast with the Athenian Mercury and the Gentleman’s Journal (especially in their original single-sheet and pamphlet formats), the fictions which framed their contents, a nameless society of learned gentlemen and a chatty London correspondent who moved in fashionable literary circles, served to veil the commercial literary entrepreneurship which was propelling the creation of the journal and its contents. As I have argued before, the fictional speaker(s) in each of these periodicals was not a stand-in for the author, but a cloaking device which wrapped the commercial aspects of the publication in the refined garb of familiar coterie, social authorship practices.Footnote 147 One cannot imagine, for example, that it would have improved the circulation of the Athenian Mercury if Dunton had explained that the “society” was himself and his brother-in-law – it was imperative that the identities of the society be left pleasingly ambiguous, or as critics such as Berry and Powell have argued, that the Athenian Mercury readers remain “duped” into believing that “the society was both more educated and more specialized than in reality.”Footnote 148 The author of the British Apollo and his society of learned gentlemen was vigorously attacked in the Female Tatler, but his identity stayed resolutely behind the mask of the learned society – there was no “Mr. Apollo.”

Figure 8. The Spectator, no. 89 (1711).

Private collection, M. J. M. Ezell.

In contrast, as Mr. Spectator observed in the first issue of the paper, “a Reader seldom peruses a Book with Pleasure ‘till he knows whether the Writers of it be a black or a fair Man, of mild or cholerick Disposition, Married or a Batchelor, with other Particulars of the like nature, that conduce very much to the right Understanding of an Author.”Footnote 149 The opening issues of the Spectator are designed to provide these fictional biographies of not only the speaker, but also of his friends. Mr. Spectator firmly establishes about himself that “where-ever I see a Cluster of People I always mix with them, tho’ I never open my Lips but in my own Club,” and famously “I live in the World, rather as a Spectator of Mankind, than as one of the Species.” Mr. Spectator concludes this issue by stating that he chooses not to reveal “my Name, my Age, and my Lodgings,” even though he realizes that such personal details “might tend very much to the Embellishment of my Paper”; he does, however, leave the possibility open that in future issues, along with the details of his “Complexion and Dress,” that “I may make Discoveries of both in the Progress of the Work I have undertaken.”Footnote 150

Addison is demonstrating his awareness that readers would very much like to know more personal details about Mr. Spectator’s appearance and temperament, and in fact that including such personal details about the author are now, as with social media platforms today, an important element being an “author” and in creating and sustaining an audience. By 1709 when the Tatler first appeared, Richard Steele was well-known to the reading public (Figure 9) as the author of The Christian Hero, which went through twenty editions, as well as having produced three plays and serving as the editor of the London Gazette. Both Addison and Steele were members of the powerful, widely networked Whig Kit Kat club; Addison had carved out success in the literary realm with the publication of his poem The Campaign celebrating the victories of the Duke of Marlborough, and his libretto for the opera Rosamond, dedicated to the Duchess of Marlborough, and had been elected to Parliament.Footnote 151 Continuing Osell’s observation that the authorship of the Tatler and the Spectator was soon an open secret to its readers, I suggest that the popularity of these eidolons as linked to known, public individuals is part of the contemporary phenomenon of the invention of a celebrity media culture, also based on the creation of a type of artificial public intimacy between writer and reader, again a defining characteristic of modern successful social media authors, generating fans and followers.

Figure 9. Mr. Richard Steele (1712) by and sold by John Smith, after Jonathan Richardson mezzotint, 1713 (1712). NPG D42159.

© National Portrait Gallery, London.

Literary and cultural critics such as Joseph Roach and Felicity Nussbaum have attributed origins of many of the techniques of celebrity to Restoration actresses such as Nell Gwynn, Elizabeth Barry, and Kitty Clive, with their strategic deployment of elements of their personal, private lives merging with their professional performances, which I have argued was also manifest in the marketing of women writers such as Aphra Behn and Susanna Centlivre.Footnote 152 The creation of a celebrity figure, whether actor or writer, in the early eighteenth century involved the strategic deployment of several media, functioning like today’s transmedia, to present, circulate, and sell to the eager public the celebrity’s image as well as letters or personal writings. This helps to create an artificial sense of intimacy with the admired figure and a desire to gain even more “insider” knowledge about them on the part of their fans. Celebrity went hand in hand with the marketing of a figure’s personal artifacts such as printed portraits or letters, which is different from that associated with collecting the loose papers of earlier periodicals in nice bindings with an index.Footnote 153 While Addison and Steele may have lacked the glamor of the actresses, they were both public men, known for their literary abilities as well as their political writing, and their associations with the Kit Kat club.

Unlike the notoriety strategically wielded by celebrity actresses, however, as Kathryn Shevelow noted, the established tone of the eighteenth-century eidolon in periodical culture was that of a moral authority.Footnote 154 This also highlights the public image of the speaker/ author as a figure with public authority to comment on social mores. While periodicals such as the Philosophical Transactions and the Athenian Mercury entertained their readers on a wide range knowledge on various topics, as we have seen, Defoe had highlighted in the Review the moral and ethical function of his two supplements to the Review, in particular the opinions of the Scandalous Club. The Tatler increasingly offered essays devoted to general social critique and news, and the eidolon of Isaac Bickerstaff emerged as that acceptable voice of authority. As Steele explained in his final issue, his sole intention was “to recommend Truth, Innocence, Honour, and Virtue, as the chief Ornaments of Life” through censoring examples of lamentable “fashionable Vices.” He describes Bickerstaff as “an old Man, a Philosopher, an Humorist, an Astrologer, and a Censor,” whose “Severity of Manners,” would counter-balance Richard Steele the writer’s widely known less than perfect moral life: Mr. Bickerstaff was thus able to criticize contemporary individuals and events “with a Freedom of Spirit that would have lost both its Beauty and Efficacy, had it been pretended to by Mr. Steele.”Footnote 155

Likewise, Mr. Spectator declared in #10, March 12, 1711 that having heard from his publisher that some three thousand copies are distributed daily, and with “Twenty Readers to every Paper, which I look upon as a modest Computation,” that in pursuit of his goal of making “their Instruction agreeable, and their Diversion useful,” he shall “endeavour to enliven Morality with Wit, and to temper Wit with Morality.”Footnote 156 “I shall be ambitious,” he concludes, “to have it said of me, that I have brought Philosophy out of Closets and Libraries, Schools and Colleges, to dwell in Clubs and Assemblies, at Tea-Tables, and in Coffee-Houses.” Information itself, whether scientific, historical, theological, or topical news was not the reason for these periodicals to come into existence, nor the foundation for their success; they were read for entertainment, but entertainment presented under the banner of public good. As a result, their eidolons had to be figures of trust and of some social standing, not an anonymous club of experts nor your friend living in London.

Their printers also happily supplied their fans with multiple formats of collected editions of the once ephemeral Tatler and Spectator papers, with an appealing range in prices and formats. The Tatler advertised the price per volume for legitimate duodecimo as 2s 6d., printed on “good paper” with “new Elzevir Letter” (a small, elegant Dutch type face associated with finely printed small format books), while collectors could choose between paying 10s 6p for the octavo volume on “medium paper,” versus 21s for “royal paper.” Buyers could feel confident that they were purchasing the genuine edition because of the style and format of its “running title,” which is reproduced in the advertisement. Jacob Tonson published the first collected editions of the Spectator by subscription in January 1712. Tonson demonstrated his confidence in his merchandizing of the Spectator, offering it in both octavo and duodecimo format, the latter advertised as “a neat pocket edition” in the 18 January issue.Footnote 157

As one critic has admiringly noted, in Tonson’s hands “the Spectator was one of the greatest publishing sensations of the eighteenth century.”Footnote 158 Tonson subsequently published fifteen matching volumes of the complete Tatler, Spectator, and Guardian. If this was not enough to fill the fan’s bookcase, by 1737 one could purchase The Mottoes of the Spectators, Tatlers, and Guardians, Translated into English and there was also A General Index to the Spectators, Tatlers, and Guardians to round out one’s collection. With Jacob (the younger) and Richard Tonson’s 1753 edition, one could purchase a set complete with illustrations designed by the popular artist and illustrator Frances Hayman, keyed to the essays by number. The unadorned ephemeral sheet has been transformed into an enduring literary collectible.

4.1 Spinoffs, Rivals, and Duds

The Tatler emboldened a flock of imitators shortly after its initial publication, but none of which gained the traction enjoyed by the initial paper. While some used the name to make the connection – the Tatling Harlot (3 issues in August 1709), Titt for Tatt (5 issues in 1710), and the Tory Tatler (16 issues, November 1710–December 1711) – others spun off the “family tree” of Isaac Bickerstaff, such the Gazette A-la-Mode: or Tom Brown’s Ghost (5 issues, May–June 1709), narrated by Sir Thomas Whipstaff.Footnote 159 The Female Tatler (1709–1710) discussed previously openly attached itself to the successful Tatler in its first issue in its first line: “I Hope Isaac Bickerstaff, Esp; will not think I invade his Property, by undertaking a Paper of this kind, since Tatling was ever adjudg’d peculiar to our Sex,” states Mrs. Crackenthorpe, and she insists that “my Design is not to Rival his Performance, or in the least prejudice the Reputation he has so deservedly gain’d.”Footnote 160

The Female Tatler, which as we have seen previously engaged in a vigorous contest with the British Apollo for readers, came into being on July 8, 1709, only two issues after “Mrs. Jenny Distaff,” Bickerstaff’s half-sister has taken over writing the Tatler while her brother is in the country on business in issue #36 July 2, 1709. The character of Jenny Distaff, believed by some to have been written by Addison, only contributed five issues, #10, 33, 36, 37, and 38; one cannot help but think that the addition of a female eidolon in this already popular series must have provided some encouragement to the writer of the Female Tatler.Footnote 161 This is particularly true as Jenny Distaff makes it clear that she is a woman writing about things that interest women. In her first paper, May 3, 1709, Jenny Distaff explains that she has been entrusted by her brother with “all the Papers in his Closet, which he has left open for my Use on this Occasion” (I: 87). She discusses some of the books she finds there, including The Batchelor’s Scheme for Governing his Wife (“I have not Patience with these unreasonable Expectations”) and the sixth part in Tonson’s Poetical Miscellanies, which itself had been published the day before the paper was issued. This volume with its “Collection of the best Pastorals that have hitherto appear’d in England,” pleases her more, especially since the best in her opinion was by a woman, “where all our little Weaknesses are laid open in a Manner more just, and with truer Raillery, than ever Man yet hit upon,” Anne Finch, Countess of Winchelsea’s “A Pastoral Dialogue between Two Shepherdesses” (I: 89–90). Jenny Distaff continued her focus on matters pertaining to women and relations between the sexes, declaring in #36 that “you must expect the Advices you meet with in this Paper to be such, as more immediately and naturally fall under the Consideration of our Sex” namely “Love in all its Forms” (I: 261).

Likewise, the Female Tatler, as we saw in the previous section, used a decidedly feminine persona to encourage readers of both sexes to find its contexts amusing and instructive without restricting itself to matters of the heart. Rather than reporting from various coffee houses, Mrs. Crackenthorpe dates her entries as being from “my Own Apartment,” where she hosts twice weekly “a very great Assembly of both Sexes”; guests range in social status from “his Grace my Lord Duke, to Mr. Sagathei the Spruce Mercer” and their wives attend. Her intent, much like that stated in the Review and then the Tatler, is to “gently to correct Vices and Vanities which some of Distinction, as well as others, willfully commit,” without reflecting on any individual, thus promoting “Religion, Virtue, and Sobriety.” She concludes by defending herself from those that say, “I write this Paper meerly for the Profit that may accrue to me by it.” Following Steele’s pattern, the opening numbers of the paper are to be distributed for free; in order to avoid any confusion, the Female Tatler was only published on Monday, Wednesday, and Fridays, the days when the Tatler does not appear.

Rather than claiming kinship to Mr. Bickerstaff, Mrs. Crackenthorpe instead is told by Lady Coupler “she could not propose any Match half so suitable as Mr. Bickerstaff and my self” and that their offspring would all be “Bishops, Judges and Recorders, and the Daughters Behns, Philips’s and Daciers,” a fascinating combination of abstract male authority figures and actual women writers.Footnote 162 Mrs. Crackenthorpe hastily declines the offer by Lady Coupler to introduce this idea to Mr. Bickerstaff but does say she’d welcome an acquaintance with his sister Jenny Distaff and that Lady Coupler could invite him to attend her public day assembly. References to the Tatler and Bickerstaff are frequent but typically in a joking complementary style; as Iona Italia has noted, the periodical presents itself as a “female answer to Steele’s publication and continually defines itself in reference to the Tatler.”Footnote 163

The case is very different between the two rival versions of the Female Tatler, which, as we saw in the controversy with the British Apollo, seems focused on conflicts over social status. It is a case of dueling personas, as Powell observes, “both eidolons try to persuade the reader that the rival paper is connected to a lower-class male, and so her work is the one the astute reader ought to choose.”Footnote 164 After issue #51, Mrs. Crackenthorpe, however, bows out, claiming “resenting the Affront offer’d to her by some rude Citizens, altogether unacquainted with her Person,” turning the editorship over to a “Society of Modest Ladies, who in their turns will oblige the Publick with whatever they shall meet with, that will be Diverting, Innocent, or Instructive.”Footnote 165 This “Society of Ladies,” consists of Lucinda, Emilia, Arabella, Rosella, Artesia, and Sophronia, recalling those earlier clubs whose members are named but unlike them not creating a strong sense of individual personality.

Although the Female Tatler made use of a great many letters, many, if not all, are fictitious. Likewise, there are advertisements which are clearly jokes or spoofs. There is internal evidence that the invitations to readers to participate are also fictious. Unlike other sociable periodicals we have explored, the practical details of how and where readers are to submit letters is not a regular feature. On the one hand, at the start of issue #68, Mrs. Baldwin, the publisher, states “I have read till my Eyes ake; and confess that looking on this help of Letters before me, I have no reason to Complain for want of Intelligence from Abroad.” Likewise, in Issue #53 above the advertisements, there is an announcement that “A Table of Fame for the Ladies well be Publish’d as soon as Materials can be Collected, to which end, the Publick are desired to Contribute, and it will be gratefully acknowledg’d.” But in fact, in neither instance is any information given about where or how to send such correspondence. Iona Italia suggests that the invitation to readers to send materials to the Female Tatler is genuine, citing #7 where Mrs. Crackenthorpe wishes that only “Gentlemen or Ladies please to write any thing … it will be kindly receiv’d.” However, as Italia also points out, this is followed by Mrs. Crackenthorpe’s suggestion that those interested in corresponding should first attend her public days, events which are clearly fictional.Footnote 166

Why did this lively and contested periodical sink into the footnotes of literary history rather than rise into the canon? As we have seen, with both the Tatler and the Spectator, the identities behind the eidolons of Isaac Bickerstaff and Mr. Spectator were an immediate source of conversation among contemporary readers and Steele and Addison appear to have become quickly associated with them. In contrast, the authorship of the Female Tatler has continued to be debated well through the twentieth century and twenty-first centuries. Some, like the writers of the British Apollo, still ascribe the first version it to the dramatist Thomas Baker, while others subsequently detect the styles of Delarivier Manley, Bernard Mandeville, Eliza Haywood, and possibly Susanna Centlivre. As Paul Anderson observed “such a variety of pseudonyms is bewildering to the reader who would like to discover the real person or persons concerned in writing The Female Tatler.”Footnote 167

Even though it ran for 115 issues, there was no collected, bound edition for the Female Tatler. There is also no indication in its contents that its publishers, either Benjamin Bragge or Anne Baldwin, made any attempt to market it as a collectible publication or offered readers copies of single sheets of any missed issues or ways of compiling them that we find characterizing other only moderately successful homages to the Tatler and Spectator, such as Charles Povey’s, The Visions of Sir Heister Ryley (1711) or Sir Richard Blackmore’s The Lay Monk, published in a single-volume collection as The Lay-Monastry (1714).

The Female Tatler is a good example of a periodical that embraced many of the features of popular papers which preceded it and was more immediately successful than most of its rivals. Nevertheless, it failed to make the leap from popular ephemera to collectible literary commodity. Compared to the Tatler and the Spectator, its was a fleeting fame. It does not appear that the Female Tatler sold copies because of the identity of its author(s); it did not create a participatory audience through interacting with correspondence. It lacked the community-building appeal of central, celebrity eidolon, much less did it possess elegant prose, to help propel it into the canon of English literature. Instead, its publishers, unlike Jacob Tonson, moved on to other short-lived ventures.

5 Epilogue: From Sociable Clubs to the Voice of Authority, 1740–1750s: Eliza Haywood’s the Female Spectator and Samuel Johnson’s the Rambler

… Building topical authority is one of the best ways to rank higher in Google’s search results … one thing Google says over and over again is your content should demonstrate your authority and expertise in the topic.

–Eb Gargano, 2023

… Yes, there are other blogs out there about the same thing you want to write about. Question: So why is your blog different? Answer: Because of youYou are what makes your blog different. It’s about your perspective, your creativity, the value you add.

–Joshua Fields Millburn and Ryan NicodemusFootnote 168

Two successful publications in the mid- and late-eighteenth century, Eliza Haywood’s the Female Spectator and Samuel Johnson’s the Rambler, while clearly building on the audience for periodicals created by the earlier sociable journals that had been based on an active reader participation, were in several respects different from their forerunners. What changed from those earlier social periodicals such as the Athenian Mercury and the Tatler which enthusiastically solicited their readers’ contributions, to the Female Spectator and the Rambler? What did they offer their readers rather than the sense of belonging to a social club of like-minded people, sharing their literary creations and determining content?

Once again, we find a continuation of those by now well-established conventions, an eidolon standing in for a named author, the use of the letter format to frame content, and the presence of a “club” representing multiple social points of view. With Haywood and Johnson’s periodicals, however, there are significant differences in that content and also the relationship between the readers and the authors. Both of these periodicals, I would argue, achieved their success by inhabiting the form of the earlier journals, the eidolon and letter format, while rejecting its dynamic, the participatory culture, and reliance on amateur reader-authors for content.

Although authorship of the Female Spectator (1744–1746) remains contested, many of Eliza Haywood’s contemporaries as well as recent critics attribute the majority of the work to her. There has never been any confusion of the authorship of the Rambler (1750–1752); while Samuel Johnson was completing the monumental task of assembling and writing the English Dictionary, his indefatigable chroniclers James Boswell and Hester Thrale tell us that he turned to essay writing as a source of immediate income. When viewed through the lens of earlier periodicals as platforms for social media and participatory culture, we see in these two titles a shift, which is reflected in their format and marketing, as well as how the writers seem to have viewed their readers as contributors.

There are many familiar features in the Female Spectator that contributed to the success of its forerunners. As with the Spectator, there is a “club” to assist the narrator, each of whom embodies a different stage in female life and point of view. Like the issues of the Tatler using the eidolon of Bickerstaff’s sister, the subject is typically matters of the heart–marriage and female virtue. This narrator, however, seems determined to hold the readers at arm’s length. As she states in the first issue, the eidolon of the Female Spectator bases her essays on her own experiences, augmented by essays contributed by the other ladies of the club, and “any others I may hereafter correspond with,” not letters left at a coffee house directed to her by unknown persons. In sharp contrast to earlier periodical authors and their clubs, who provide a platform for their readers’ contributions, she notes that her readers, “provided the Entertainment be agreeable, will not be interested from which Quarter it comes”: all the content will appear “under the general Title of The Female Spectator, and how many Contributors soever there may happen to be to the Work, they are to be consider’d only as several Members of one Body, of which I am the Mouth.”Footnote 169 The readers’ friendly community of correspondents also has been replaced by “spies,” who have been planted not only in all the London social gathering spots, in Bath and Tunbridge, but also abroad as well as abroad, measures which negate the need for readers to supply any content whatsoever. Rejecting the pattern found in the Tatler and Spectator, the narrator notes that if there are gaps in content, she will turn to “the Ancients” for her examples to avoid the possibility of scandal from readers attempting to uncover contemporary references.

Readers of Haywood’s risqué early fiction Fantomina may be surprised by this Female Spectator’s denunciation of giddy young women intent on experiencing life to the fullest. Instead of reading romances and visiting the theatre, the readers of the Female Spectator were encouraged to study philosophy, along with history and geography. “It is very much, by the Choice we make of Subjects for our Entertainment,” the narrator observes in the first issue, “that the refined Taste distinguishes itself from the vulgar and more gross.”Footnote 170 The contents of the essays cover a variety of topics and have led recently to considerable critical discussion as to their exact nature: with its stress on education and moral improvement, does Haywood in her stories offer her female readers a means of subverting social limitations or of surviving within them?Footnote 171 Most telling, Eve Tavor Bannet has pointed to the ways in which the Female Spectator directly challenges the ways in which the Spectator purports to educate and elevate its female readers; the Female Spectator makes clear from the beginning her “Power to be in some measure both useful and entertaining to the Publick,” and her intention “to be as universally read as possible.”Footnote 172 Within the range of characters and problems introduced through the fictious letters, mostly by Haywood, however, Richardo Miguel-Alfonso has argued that the narrator stands in an elevated position of moral authority based on her experiences: “the difference between Haywood and her readers is clear from the beginning,” he suggests, with the Female Spectator established not a friend but the “counselor” for her “inexperienced readers,” producing a tone not unlike Defoe’s Scandalous Club, who, as we have seen, announced that his “we” was indeed “I.”Footnote 173

As Kathryn King observes, by the time of the Female Spectator is published “Haywood is no longer the ‘bedraggled’ Grub Street hack churning out copy for her bookseller,” but instead a literary professional, heavily involved in the print trade, “an editor and chief writer whose job would have included obtaining contributions from other writers and coordinating production.”Footnote 174 The contents have shifted from the miscellany format, pointedly eschewing “news,” and resisting ephemerality both in content and packaging. Unlike Motteux pleading for reader contributions to keep the Gentleman’s Journal going, the fate of the Female Spectator’s does not appear to have rested on its receiving content from unpaid readers. The reader is offered a single topic essay each month, not a compendium of unrelated questions and miscellaneous verse. When we look at this periodical through the lens of social media and participation culture, the Female Spectator is much less concerned with soliciting readers’ questions or contributions than serving as vehicle for an authoritative moral voice, that of the Female Spectator/ Haywood.

In addition, as opposed to sociable periodicals such as the Athenian Mercury and the original Spectator with their multiple appearances throughout the week, the Female Spectator was printed and published by Thomas Gardner in monthly installments. The initial form is no longer a double-columned ephemeral broadsheet or pamphlet publication; typically, the Female Spectator offered readers a substantial sixty-four octavo pages, which subsequently were, like its predecessors, gathered in individual “books” (Figure 10). As Patrick Spedding has documented, each individual collected book from the two-year run enjoyed two editions and there were nine editions of the complete set published in four elegant volumes.Footnote 175 The popularity of the Female Spectator rested not on its ephemeral format nor on its interaction with loyal readers who created content; instead, readers are offered a charmingly packaged collectible item, done through corporate authorship, under the guidance of an experienced professional writer, Eliza Haywood.

Figure 10. The Female Spectator (1746).

(c) The British Library Board. 94.c.12.

Like the Female Spectator, as Johnson’s biographers and critics have commented, the Rambler in its original periodical format was not an immediate success (Figure 11). In part this might be attributed to Johnson’s openly ambivalent attitude towards many of the conventions that had made earlier periodicals popular. While very much aware of the conventions of the genre, there is evidence that Johnson apparently deliberately rejected them. W. J. Bate observes that in writing the Rambler, Johnson was “on his guard against the usual – and expected – topicality of the periodical essay: “I have never complied with temporary curiosity, nor enabled my readers to discuss the topick of the day,” Johnson declares.Footnote 176 Likewise, initially he was determined to keep his authorship secret, apparently in hopes of avoiding having to have the expected interactions with his readers and responding to their letters. Even though he did use epistles, supposedly from readers, to frame the content of some essays, in spite of occasionally including directions where letters might be sent, Johnson apparently told Samuel Richardson that “he had never intended to use random letters from outside correspondents,” which caused some hard feelings in readers who sent letters that were ignored.Footnote 177 While sixty-five of the two hundred and eight Ramblers do use epistles to structure the essay, as Manushag Powell observed, they are “(almost) all written by Johnson,” resulting in “a large body of letters written apparently from various persons to Mr. Rambler, but in fact to himself from himself for the benefit of strangers.”Footnote 178

Figure 11. The Rambler, no. 1 (1752).

By permission of Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas, Austin.

Instead of interacting with the questions and challenges of his readers, Johnson is not writing the periodical essay as it was popular at the time, but instead offering readers a “direct moral essay.”Footnote 179 Johnson states in his final issue #208 that he had deliberately avoided many of the expected features of a periodical:

I have never complied with temporary curiosity, nor enabled my readers to discuss the topick of the day; I have rarely exemplified my assertions by living characters; in my papers, no man could look for censures of his enemies, or praises of himself; and they only were expected to peruse them, whose passions left them leisure for abstracted truth, and whom virtue could please by its naked dignity.Footnote 180

Unlike the contents of its predecessors, mingling information with deft social commentary mixed with scandal, and with a seemingly accessible relationship between writer and reader, the contents of the Rambler are the iteration of Samuel Johnson’s views, illustrations of his philosophy only. Indeed, the reader is not really interested in or concerned with “Mr. Rambler,” but instead with Dr. Johnson: As Helen Deutsch has observed Johnson inspired in his time and since a phenomenon she calls “author love,” the desire “to know the author himself,” both the public quotable persona and the private man revealed in personal anecdotes.Footnote 181 “To write an interpretative introduction to the Rambler is to write a general and interpretative introduction to Johnson,” observes Bate, “here, more than anywhere else, we have the essence of Johnson.”Footnote 182 While the individual issues never enjoyed more than 500 copies in a run, like the Female Spectator, the success of this periodical came when it was reprinted in bound, book form: it appeared in a folio edition in 1750–1752 as well as a duodecimo edition (1752), and had gone through nine editions by 1779.

The Female Spectator and the Rambler offer readers a very different experience from the earliest sociable periodicals. As the contents moved from the miscellany format of news, verse, and queries, there was a shift from the participatory, social culture of the periodicals of the 1690s and early 1700s where anonymous clubs would provide answers to the questions of subscribers; there seems to have been another shift with the emphasis on the celebrity eidolon and contents in which readers might participate and decode topical references. Although preserving many of the conventional features that characterized earlier periodical writing, by the mid-century, the eidolon is an authoritative moral voice speaking on universal human problems. The shared experiences of writers inviting readers to become authors, of readers interacting sociably with a celebrity eidolon has been replaced by this admirable authoritative voice. While all of the early periodicals claimed to be written with the intent in Haywood’s words to reform “the Faulty, and give an innocent amusement to those who are not so,” the experience of the reader by the middle of the century is not to provide poetry, queries, or information, but to ponder with gratitude the illuminating representation of human nature. The imagined social relationship between reader and writer found in participatory social media has been transformed into that of an appreciative but silent audience. Johnson in the last issue of the Rambler seems to note with relief that since “my principal design [has been] to inculcate wisdom or piety,” he has been released from gratifying correspondents’ desires for appearing in print.Footnote 183 By the time of the Female Spectator and the Rambler, the periodical form’s early function as a platform for participatory literary culture has become an enabling fiction and the eidolon a voice of moral authority for the reader to admire – what results is the emphasis on the literary essay as we conceive of it today, and, clearly, is the forerunner to a successful blog on Substack, the writer speaking directly to the subscriber in a voice at once personal, attractive, and authoritative.

******

Of course, not all periodicals in the latter part of the eighteenth century eschewed accepting content from unpaid readers, the Ladies Magazine; or Entertaining Companion for the Fair Sex, Appropriated Solely to Their Use and Amusement (1770–1847) being a notable example. Edward Cave’s Gentleman’s Magazine had been the first to use the French term “magazine” to distinguish its contents, being a “storehouse” of miscellaneous content. As Jennie Batchelor has noted, this shift in the nomenclature from periodical to magazine may seem minor, but magazines are defined by “their miscellaneous character and the absence of the kind of unifying perspective provided by eidolons such as Mr. Spectator, the Female Spectator, or the Old Maid.”Footnote 184 After the 1810s and 1820s, the Ladies Magazine also began to shift from a “culture of nonpayment” to a more complex commercial one.Footnote 185 Magazines, one might argue, preserved elements of participatory culture after the periodical became defined as its essay.

The model of participatory culture as we discuss it now in a digital environment was a viable and familiar literary ecology for periodical readers in the latter part of the seventeenth century and beginning of the eighteenth century. The initially ephemeral pamphlet and broadsheet publications utilized the latest communication technology, the Penny Post, to create its audience and content makers. As Henry Jenkins has observed of the emergence of digital technology, it “did not make fandom more participatory, but … [it] did dramatically expand who got to participate.”Footnote 186 In studying it, we have traditionally concentrated on one small element, the essay, and thus we have lost sight of the complex, dynamic literary culture that originally created and sustained it. Focusing on changes and choices created today by digital forms and social media as unprecedented, we likewise lose a sense of our own connections with the past, of how we, too, are part of that larger story of how literary cultures embrace changing technologies.

Acknowledgments

I am grateful to Texas A&M University and the John and Sara Lindsey Chair of Liberal Arts for supporting this research and its Open Access publication. I enjoyed the help and expertise of multiple libraries and librarians including the British Library, the Bodleian, and Cushing Memorial Library at A&M; Celine Luppo McDaid at Dr. Johnson’s House, London, was particularly gracious in letting me explore that library and Aaron Pratt at the Harry Ransom Center, UT Austin, gave generously of his time and expertise. Early readers include Vera Camdem and Lawrence Griffing, and I had very helpful conversations about digital skeuomorphs with Alexander and Daniel Griffing. In particular I would like to recognize two very important “influencers” in my intellectual life, J. Paul Hunter at the start and Robert Hume towards the end. Finally, this Element would not have been possible without the insights and encouragement of Eve Tavor Bannet, who didn’t think it odd to discuss Aphra Behn and Japanese cell phone novels in the same conversation.

Series Editors

  • Eve Tavor Bannet

  • University of Oklahoma

  • Eve Tavor Bannet is George Lynn Cross Professor Emeritus, University of Oklahoma and editor of Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture. Her monographs include Empire of Letters: Letter Manuals and Transatlantic Correspondence 1688-1820 (Cambridge, 2005), Transatlantic Stories and the History of Reading, 1720-1820 (Cambridge, 2011), and Eighteenth-Century Manners of Reading: Print Culture and Popular Instruction in the Anglophone Atlantic World (Cambridge, 2017). She is editor of British and American Letter Manuals 1680-1810 (Pickering & Chatto, 2008), Emma Corbett (Broadview, 2011) and, with Susan Manning, Transatlantic Literary Studies (Cambridge, 2012).

  • Markman Ellis

  • Queen Mary University of London

  • Markman Ellis is Professor of Eighteenth-Century Studies at Queen Mary University of London. He is the author of The Politics of Sensibility: Race, Gender and Commerce in the Sentimental Novel (1996), The History of Gothic Fiction (2000), The Coffee-House: a Cultural History (2004), and Empire of Tea (co-authored, 2015). He edited Eighteenth-Century Coffee-House Culture (4 vols, 2006) and Tea and the Tea-Table in Eighteenth-Century England (4 vols 2010), and co-editor of Discourses of Slavery and Abolition (2004) and Prostitution and Eighteenth-Century Culture: Sex, Commerce and Morality (2012).

Advisory Board

  • Linda Bree, Independent

  • Claire Connolly, University College Cork

  • Gillian Dow, University of Southampton

  • James Harris, University of St Andrews

  • Thomas Keymer, University of Toronto

  • Jon Mee, University of York

  • Carla Mulford, Penn State University

  • Nicola Parsons, University of Sydney

  • Manushag Powell, Purdue University

  • Robbie Richardson, University of Kent

  • Shef Rogers, University of Otago

  • Eleanor Shevlin, West Chester University

  • David Taylor, Oxford University

  • Chloe Wigston Smith, University of York

  • Roxann Wheeler, Ohio State University

  • Eugenia Zuroski, MacMaster University

About the Series

  • Exploring connections between verbal and visual texts and the people, networks, cultures and places that engendered and enjoyed them during the long Eighteenth Century, this innovative series also examines the period’s uses of oral, written and visual media, and experiments with the digital platform to facilitate communication of original scholarship with both colleagues and students.

Footnotes

1 Skains, Digital Authorship, pp. 54–55.

2 For studies of scribal authorship, see Hobbs, Marotti, Woudhuysen, and Love; for examples from eighteenth century and later of the continuation of social authorship in the context of print culture, see Schellenberg, Levy, and McKitterick.

3 See for example, Jeff Gomez, Print Is Dead: Books in Our Digital Age (Reference Gomez2007); for a more nuanced account of media shifts and social changes, see Bolter, The Digital Plenitude (Reference Bolter2019), and on the “myth of the disappearing media,” Ballatore and Natale, “E-readers and the death of the book” (Reference Ballatore and Natale2016).

4 British Newspapers and Periodicals 1641–1700: A Short Title Catalogue, p. vii.

5 BNP, p. vii.

6 Batchelor and Powell, Women’s Periodicals and Print Culture in Britain, 1690–1820s, p. 8.

7 Williams, The Social Life of Books.

8 Eagleton, The Function of Criticism, pp. 13–14.

9 Austen, Northanger Abbey, p. 24.

10 Reed, Lectures on English Literatures, p. 230.

11 Graham, English Literary Periodicals, p. 13.

13 See McCrea, Addison and Steele Are Dead.

14 Tierney, “British Periodicals,” p. 168.

15 Tierney, “British Periodicals,” p. 167.

16 Cowan, “Mr. Spectator and the Coffeehouse Public Sphere.”

17 See Dykstal, “The Politics of Taste in the ‘Spectator’” and Mackie, Market a la Mode.

18 Botein, “The Periodical Press in Eighteenth-Century English and French Society,” p. 464.

19 Downie, “Reflections on the Origins of the Periodical Essay,” p. 302.

20 The Norton Anthology of English Literature, The Restoration and the Eighteenth Century, eds. Stephen Greenblatt, Lawrence Lipking, and James Noggle, Tenth Edition. New York: W.W. Norton, 2005, p. 461.

21 The Broadview Anthology of British Literature: The Restoration and the Eighteenth Century, p. 668.

23 Raymond, Making the News, p. 4.

24 Quoted in Davies, “English Political Sermons, 1603–1640,” p. 2.

25 British Royal Proclamations Relating to America 1603–1783, p. viii.

26 Macaulay, History of England from the Accession of James II, I: 305.

27 Sievers, “Literatures of Wonder in Early Modern England and America,” p. 769.

28 Ezell, “Learning the News: Pamphlet Mercuries and Newsbooks,” https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780191849572.001.0001.

29 Sommerville, The News Revolution in England, p. 36.

30 See Spufford, “‘First Steps in Literacy.”

31 Williams and Carpini, “And That’s the Way it (Was),” p. 59.

32 Mercurious Pragmaticus, April 4, 1648.

33 Mercurious Politicus (1650).

34 Mercurious Brianticus Alive Again, May 16, 1648, p. 2

35 See Raymond, “The Daily Muse.”

36 Raymond, The Invention of the Newspaper, p. 165.

37 R. King, “All the News that’s Fit to Print,” p. 103.

38 Sutherland, The Restoration Newspaper and Its Development, p. 8.

39 See, for example, The Carl H. Pforzheimer Collection of English Manuscripts at the Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas at Austin, and the 1469 manuscript newsletters sent to Sir Richard Bulstrode (1610–1711) between 1667 and 1689.

40 “How to Build a Career as a Social Media Influencer,” The Economic Times, November 20, 2022.

41 Jenkins, Fans, Bloggers, and Gamers, p. 1

42 McElligott and Patten, New Directions in Book History, p. 5.

43 See Muddiman, The King’s Journalist.

45 The origins of the Philosophical Transactions are well-documented: For a brief account, see the “Royal Society of London Philosophical Transactions: 350 Years of Publishing at the Royal Society 1665–2015.”

46 The Philosophical Transactions, Vol. 1, Footnote n. 1, p. 1 The early issues are available for free at www.jstor.org/stable/101400.

47 Philosophical Transactions, Vol. I, 1: 3.

48 Philosophical Transactions, Vol. 1, 1: 10.

49 See Berry, Gender, Society, and Print Culture in Late Stuart England.

50 Clery, “The Feminization Debate,” p. 26.

51 Athenian Mercury, issue #1, March 17, 1691.

52 Dunton, Life and Errors, I: 189.

53 Dunton, Life and Errors, I: 188.

54 Berry, “Dunton, John (1659–1732), bookseller.” ODNB.

55 Berry, Gender, Society, and Print Culture, p. 64; Shevelow, Women and Print Culture, pp. 82–86.

56 Dunton, Life and Errors, I: 189.

57 See Brumell, The Local Posts of London, 1680–1840 (Reference Brumell1938); T. Todd, William Dockwra and the Rest of the Undertakers (Reference Todd1952).

58 See Ezell, “Late Seventeenth-Century Women Writers and the Penny Post” and Berry, Gender, Society, and Print Culture in Late Stuart England, pp. 56–57.

59 Available online through Adam Matthews Digital. “Eighteenth Century Journals.” https://www.18thcjournals.amdigital.co.uk/; and “Defining Gender.” https://www.amdigital.co.uk/collection/defining-gender.

60 Ladies Mercury, I: 1 (February 28, 1693/94).

61 Ladies Mercury, I: 2 (March 6, 1693/94).

62 See Nicola Parsons, “The Ladies Mercury,” and Slaney Chadwick Ross, “John Dunton’s Ladies Mercury” for analyses of ladies as readers and as subjects to be regulated.

63 Logan, “‘Dear Matron,’” p. 57.

64 Athenian Mercury, December 1, 1691.

65 Benedict, “Publishing and Reading Poetry,” p. 76.

66 Temple, “To the Athenian Society,” Supplement to Volume 5 (1691), p. 76; As critics have observed, this Ode was modelled after Abraham Cowley’s “Ode to the Royal Society”; Daniel Cook argues that it is not a failed attempt at panegyric but instead a satire. See Cook, “Swift after Cowley” and Moyra Haslett, “Swift and Conversational Culture.”

67 Dunton, Life and Errors, I: 193.

68 See Backscheider, Elizabeth Singer Rowe and the Development of the English Novel for a critical reassessment of her literary stature.

69 Athenian Mercury: 11, no. 30 (December 1, 1693); King, “Elizabeth Singer Rowe’s Tactical Use of Print and Manuscript,” p. 163.

70 Lauden, “Birthing the Poet,” p. 8.

71 Gilbert D. McEwen, The Oracle of the Coffee House, p. 49.

72 Dunton, Life and Errors, I: 194.

73 The Supplement to the First Volume of the Athenian Gazette (1691), title page.

74 McEwen, The Oracle of the Coffee House, pp. 35–36.

75 Quoted in McEwen, The Oracle of the Coffee House, p. 37.

76 See Cunningham, Peter Anthony Motteux, 1663–1718.

77 “Epistle Dedicatory,” The Gentleman’s Journal: Or, the Monthly Miscellany, January 1692, Issue 1.

78 Gentleman’s Journal, February 1692.

79 See Ezell, “The Gentleman’s Journal.”

80 Graham, English Literary Periodicals, p. 55.

81 Cunningham, Peter Anthony Motteux, 1663–1718, pp. 195, 201–05.

82 Ezell, “The Gentleman’s Journal.” On the term “participatory culture,” see Jenkins et al, “Confronting the Challenges of Participatory Culture.”

83 Gentleman’s Journal, May 1692, p. 161.

84 Gentleman’s Journal, March 1692.

85 Foster, “The Earliest Precursor of Our Present-Day Monthly Miscellanies,” p. 28.

86 Radice, “Henry Purcell’s Contributions to the Gentleman’s Journal,” p. 25.

87 Foster, “The Earliest Precursor of Our Present-Day Monthly Miscellanies,” p. 45.

88 Coperías-Aguilar, “Between Fictionality and Reality,” p. 10.

89 Vázquez et al. “Let’s Dance the News!”

90 Downie, “Stating Facts Right about Defoe’s Review,” p. 16.

91 British Apollo, no. 1, February 13, 1709.

92 British Apollo, Footnote n. 86, 3–8, December 1709.

93 An estimated 20,000 Africans were living in England in the first decades of the eighteenth century. Many Black residents had been brough as children to work as servants, such as an unnamed African in the household of a West Indies merchant, https://secretlibraryleeds.net/2021/10/07/before-windrush-black-people-in-leeds-bradford-1708-1948-part-i/. Advertisements in the British Apollo also make mention of “blackamore” servants.

94 McGuiness, “Musical Provocation in Eighteenth-Century London: The ‘British Apollo,’” p. 333.

95 See White, A Study of the Female Tatler for a discussion of the rival periodicals, especially Section 2. It considers the Bragge publications to be the “real” Female Tatler, with the ones published by Anne Baldwin “spurious.” Starting with issue # 19, August 19, 1709, Bragge and Baldwin published simultaneous identically numbered issues with differing content. Bragge dropped out in October with issue number 44, but Baldwin continued through November with issue 51 where “Mrs. Crackthorpe” announces she is turning the periodical over to a “Society of Ladies” to write; this lasted until issue # 111, March 31, 1710. See Graham, “Thomas Aker, Mrs. Manley, and the Female Tatler,” Smith, “Thomas Baker and the Female Tatler.” For Manley, see Anderson, “The History and Authorship of Mrs. Crackenthorpe’s Female Tatler.” This will be further discussed in the next section.

96 White, A Study of the Female Tatler, p. 368.

97 Quoted in White, p. 367.

98 John Gay, The Present State of Wit (Reference Gay1711), p. 23.

99 Belcher, “The Sale and Distribution of the British Apollo,” p. 75.

100 Belcher, “The Sale and Distribution of the British Apollo,” p. 89.

101 Gerrard, “Hill, Aaron (1685–1750), writer and entrepreneur.” ODNB.

102 Cowan, “Daniel Defoe’s Review and the Transformations of the English Periodical,” p. 79. The original title of the Review was Weekly Review of the Affairs of France, changed to Review of the Affairs of France in 1705 when due to its popularity it began appearing three times a week. Subsequently, from 1706 it was called Review of the State of the English Nation, and in 1707 Review of the State of the British Nation after the union with Scotland.

103 Flynn, “Defoe’s Review: Textual Editing and New Media,” p. 18.

104 Flynn, 20; Poovey, “The Liberal Civil Subject and the Social in Eighteenth-Century British Moral Philosophy,” p. 137.

105 Footnote N. 2, February 26, 1704. All subsequent references will be to the John McVeigh edition of Defoe’s Review and refer to the Volume and page numbers of that edition, not Defoe’s original publications.

106 McBain, “‘Love, Marriages, Mistresses, and the Like,’” p. 71.

107 Novak, Daniel Defoe, p. 214.

108 Dunton, Life and Errors, II: 423.

109 Richetti, Life of Daniel Defoe, pp. 87, 89; McBain, “‘Love, Marriages, Mistresses, and the Life,’” p. 71.

110 Novak, Daniel Defoe, p. 215.

111 The Athenian Oracle was Dunton’s 1703 collection, reissued several times, of popular questions and answers that had been published in the old Athenian Mercury.

112 The Review, I: 226.

113 The Review, I: 390, 391.

114 The Review, I: 391.

115 The Review, I: 391–92.

116 The Review, I: 392.

117 The Review, I: 393.

118 Jason DeMers, “The 7 biggest secrets”; Jenkins, Ford, and Green, Spreadable Media, p. 1; https://business.twitter.com/en/blog/secrets-of-social-media-influencers.html.

119 Richmond P. Bond, New Letters to the Tatler and Spectator, pp. 10–11.

120 Spectator, I, xiii.

121 King, “The Gazette, the Tatler, and the Making of the Periodical Essay: Form and Genre in Eighteenth-Century News,” p. 48.

122 See McLeod, Graphical Directory for this time span.

123 See Donald F. Bond, “The First Printing of the Spectator,” pp. 166–67.

124 The Poetical Courant, January 26, 1706.

125 McLeod, A graphical directory of English newspapers and periodicals, 1702–1714, p. 46. It is notable that one of his advertisers appears to have been his mother, Mary Carey, who ran a boarding school: It is described in the ad as educating “young Gentlewomen” in the “Inditing of Letters … also that Graceful Accomplishment of Reading the most difficult English Authors with the greatest ease and exactness,” who might have seemed the perfect target audience. The Record of Love (1710), p. 175.

126 Gay, The Present State of Wit (Reference Gay1711), pp. 6–10.

127 Tatler, I: 15; Marshall, Political Journalism in London, p. 160.

128 Tatler, I, xx.

129 Tatler, I: 63.

130 Spectator, I: 38.

131 “Preface,” Original and Genuine Letters, n.p.

132 Richmond P. Bond, New Letters to the Tatler and Spectator, pp. 10–11.

133 Parsons, Reading Gossip, p. 98.

134 Parsons, Reading Gossip, p. 98.

135 Italia, Rise of Literary Journalism, p. 79.

136 Osell, Ghost Writer, p. ii; Powell, Performing Authorship, p. 23.

137 Powell, Performing, pp. 26–27.

138 Powell, Performing, pp. 31, 32.

139 Peterson, “Mapping Taste,” p. 695.

140 Powell, Performing, pp. 26, 27.

141 See Loveman, Reading Fictions, 1660–1740 and Carnell, “Slipping from Secret History to Novel.”

142 Parsons, Reading Gossip, p. 97.

143 McTague, “Patridge, Pittis, and Jonathan Swift,” p. 98, Footnote n.9.

144 Quoted by Bond, Tatler, I: xiii. The Wentworth family were enthusiastic readers of the Tatler and the Spectator, frequently commenting on its contents and sharing issues. Wentworth Papers 1705–1739, ed. Reference CartwrightCartwright (1883).

145 Tatler, 3: 362. It is also significant the extent to which Steele, while acknowledging the assistance of others, by the end of his life is firmly claiming the Tatler and the Bickerstaffe “brand” as his. Steele was irritated that Jacob Tonson intended to include the essays in the Tatler by Addison in his edition of Addison’s works: “I apprehend certain Persons desire to separate the works of Mr. Addison from mine in a Book called the Tatler. Be pleased to observe that I insist I payd Mr. Addison for what he writ under that title,” Steele wrote in 1719, a month after Addison’s death, apparently feeling that the entirety of the Tatler was his and his family’s literary property.

146 Osell, Ghost Writer, p. 151.

147 See Ezell, “The Gentleman’s Journal and the Commercialization of Restoration Coterie Literary Practices.”

148 Berry, Gender Society and Print Culture, p.20; Powell, Performing Authorship, p. 33.

149 Spectator, I: 1.

150 Spectator, I: 5–6.

151 See Winton, “Steele, Sir Richard (bap. 1672, d. Reference Winton1729), writer and politician,” ODNB; Rogers, “Addison, Joseph (1672–1719), writer and politician,” ODNB.

152 See Roach, It, chapter one; Nussbaum, “Actresses and the Economics of Celebrity, 1700–1800” and Rival Queens; and Ezell, “Penny Post.”

153 See for example the vogue for publishing letters by famous writers as seen in the publisher Samuel Briscoe’s multivolume sets of Familiar letters of love, gallantry, and several other occasions (1718–1724).

154 Shevelow, “Re-Writing the Moral Essay.”

155 Tatler, III: 363. By 1709, Steele had not only had successful comedies staged, married and buried an heiress, edited the London Gazette, and joined the Whig Kit-Kat Club, but he had also fathered an illegitimate child with the niece of the publisher Jacob Tonson, nearly killed a man in a London duel, was frequently attacked in the press by name by Tory commentators, and was constantly being harassed by creditors.

156 Spectator, I: 44.

157 Bond, “The Text of the Spectator,” p. 111.

158 Wilkinson, “The Complete Spectator: A Bibliographical History,” Abstract.

159 Osell, “Tatling Women in the Public Sphere,” p. 285; see McLeod, Graphical Directory for the publication runs of the imitators.

160 The Female Tatler, #1, Friday July 8, 1709.

161 Tatler, I: 261.

162 The Female Tatler, #2, Friday July 8, 1709.

163 Italia, Rise of Literary Journalism, p. 64.

164 Powell, Performing Authorship, p. 70.

165 The Female Tatler, #51, Monday October 31, 1709.

166 The Female Tatler, #7, July 22, 1709.

167 Anderson, “Splendor out of Scandal,” p. 286.

168 Gargano, “How to Use Topical Authority to Boost Your Ranking and Grow Your Blog Traffic”; Milburn and Nicedemus, “How to Start a Successful Blog in 2023.”

169 Haywood, The Female Spectator, I: 5.

170 Haywood, The Female Spectator, I: 1.

171 See the collection edited by Wright and Newman Fair Philosopher: Eliza Haywood and the Female Spectator for a good overview of the debates.

172 Bannet, “Haywood’s Spectator and the Female World,” p. 46.

173 Miguel-Alfonso, “Social Conservatism,” pp. 34–5.

174 King, A Political Biography of Eliza Haywood, p. 116.

175 Spedding, Bibliography, p. 432.

176 The Rambler, 3: xxvi

177 The Rambler, 3: 367, fnt 4.

178 Powell, “Johnson and His ‘Readers,’” p. 573.

179 The Rambler, 3: xxx.

180 The Rambler, 5: 316.

181 Deutsch, Loving Dr. Johnson, p. 4. Here I am diverging somewhat from Manushag Powell’s use of this term to explain the dual nature public-private of the eidolon (Performing Authorship, p. 26) to suggest that “Dr. Johnson” was at this point a social construction, who did not need or desire a fictional persona to narrate his views.

182 The Rambler, 3: ix.

183 The Rambler, 5: 319, 317.

184 Batchelor, The Ladies Magazine, p. 15

185 Batchelor, The Ladies Magazine, p. 129–31.

186 Jenkins, Participatory Culture, p. 17.

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Figure 0

Figure 1. Terrible and Bloudy Newes (1648).

(c) The British Library Board. E.462. (28).
Figure 1

Figure 2. Emblem of the Athenian Society (1692).

© The Trustees of the British Museum.
Figure 2

Figure 3. The Athenian Mercury (1691).

Private collection, M. J. M. Ezell.
Figure 3

Figure 4. The Gentleman’s Journal (1692).

Private collection, M. J. M. Ezell.
Figure 4

Figure 5. The British Apollo (1708).

Private collection. M. J. M. Ezell.
Figure 5

Figure 6. The Female Tatler, no. 7 (1709).

By permission of Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas, Austin.
Figure 6

Figure 6a. The Female Tatler, no. 7 v (1709).

By permission of Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas, Austin.
Figure 7

Figure 7. The Tatler, no. 8 (1709).

Private collection, M. J. M. Ezell.
Figure 8

Figure 8. The Spectator, no. 89 (1711).

Private collection, M. J. M. Ezell.
Figure 9

Figure 9. Mr. Richard Steele (1712) by and sold by John Smith, after Jonathan Richardson mezzotint, 1713 (1712). NPG D42159.

© National Portrait Gallery, London.
Figure 10

Figure 10. The Female Spectator (1746).

(c) The British Library Board. 94.c.12.
Figure 11

Figure 11. The Rambler, no. 1 (1752).

By permission of Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas, Austin.

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