Daniel Defoe
English writer, journalist, and poet
Daniel Defoe was the first of the great
eighteenth-century English novelists. He wrote more than five hundred books,
pamphlets, articles, and poems.
Education, marriage, and early career
Little is known about the birth and early
childhood of Daniel Defoe, as no baptism record exists for him. It is likely
that he was born in
In 1684 Defoe married Mary Tuffley,
who brought him the handsome dowry of
Defoe evidently did business with King William
III (1650–1702). He suffered losses from underwriting marine insurance for the
king and was forced to declare bankruptcy in 1692. Although he settled with the
people to whom he owed money in 1693, he faced the threat of bankruptcy
throughout his life and faced imprisonment for debt and libel (the crime of
writing or publishing untrue statements that harm other people) seven times.
Journalist and secret agent
Arrested in 1703 for having published The
Shortest Way with the Dissenters in 1702, Defoe was tried and sentenced,
put before public abuse, and taken to prison. Robert Walpole (1676–1745)
released him five months later and offered him a post as a government agent. Defoe
continued to serve the government as journalist, pamphleteer, and secret agent
for the remainder of his life. The most long-lived of his twenty-seven
periodicals, the Review (1704–1713), was especially influential in
promoting the union between England and Scotland in 1706 and 1707 and in
supporting the controversial Peace of Utrecht of 1713 (one of the greatest
peace settlements in history that balanced power in Europe).
His nonfiction—essays, poems
Defoe published hundreds of political and
social documents between 1704 and 1719. His interests and activities reflect
the major social, political, economic, and literary trends of his age. He
supported the policies of William III and Mary after the Glorious Revolution of
1688 and 1689, and analyzed
His first major work, An Essay upon Projects
(1697), proposed ways of providing better roads, insurance, and education to be
supported by "a Tax upon Learning, to be paid by the Authors of
Books." Many of these topics reappeared in his later works.
In 1701 Defoe published The True-Born
Englishman, the most widely sold poem in English up to that time. He
estimated that more than eighty thousand copies of this defense
of William III against the attacks of John Tutchin
were sold. Although Defoe's The Shortest Way with the Dissenters (1702),
which ridiculed the harshness of the Church of England, led to his arrest, the
popularity of his Hymn to the Pillory (1703) indicated the favor that he had found with the
Robinson
Crusoe
At the age of fifty-nine, after a full career
as businessman, government servant, political pamphleteer, and journalist,
Defoe began a career as novelist. Within six years he produced six novels, all
of which gave him his greatest fame.
In 1719 Defoe published his most lasting work, The
Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson
Crusoe. The success of the story inspired Defoe to write The Farther
Adventures of Robinson Crusoe later in 1719 and Serious Reflections
during the Life and Surprizing

Daniel Defoe.
Other major fiction
Defoe published comparatively little in 1721,
because he was hard at work on the three major books that were to appear the
following year. In January 1722 he published The Fortunes and Misfortunes of
the Famous Moll Flanders, probably the most successful of his novels. A
Journal of the Plague Year, issued in March 1722, presented a picture of
life in
In 1724 and 1725 Defoe published four
successful books, each displaying his characteristically clear, strong English
words. The Fortunate Mistress; or, … Roxana was the first of three in
1724. The second, A Tour Thro' the Whole Island of Great Britain was one
of the most thorough guidebooks of the period, and the third, The History of
the Remarkable Life of John, was one of his finest criminal biographies. The
True and Genuine Account of the Life and Actions of the Late Jonathan Wild
was the fourth book, published in 1725.
Last Works and death
Although he continued to write, only a few of
Defoe's later works are worthy of note: The Complete English Tradesman
(1725), The Political History of the Devil (1726), A New Family
Instructor (1727), and Augusta Triumphans (1728),
which was Defoe's plan to make "London the most flourishing City in the
Universe."
Daniel Defoe died at age seventy-one on April
24, 1731, outside of
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