Daniel
Defoe
Daniel Defoe was born in
In 1670 Defoe's mother died and he
was sent to boarding school. He attended Charles Morton's academy at Newington
Green, where he received an excellent education and developed a taste for
political radicalism.
Defoe finished his studies at Morton
in 1679 and entered the hosiery business. In 1684 he married Mary Tuffley, a wealthy young woman. He prospered in business
and became a member of the Butcher's Company—one of several companies that
controlled business in
Unfortunately. Defoe overextended his
investments—at one point he owed seventeen thousand pounds—and was sued eight
times between 1688 and 1694, ending up in debtor's prison in 1692. However,
King William III proved to be a true patron and by the late 1690s Defoe's
fortunes were on the mend.
His first
important work. An
Essay upon Projects (1697), proposed social improvement schemes; his first
profitable work was a political poem satirizing xenophobia. The
True-Born Englishman (1701).
After the death of William III,
Queen Anne succeeded him on the English throne. There was no one to protect
Defoe when he was revealed as the author of The Shortest Way with the
Dissenters (1702), A pamphlet which satirically
advocated extermination of religious nonconformists. For his work, Defoe
suffered three days in the pillory—but he was somewhat vindicated when the
crowd threw flowers instead of rotten vegetables. Meanwhile, he went bankrupt.
Robert Harley, the Tory who headed
Queen Anne's government, made Defoe a spy and forced him to gather information
on his political opponents. Defoe's opinion journal, The Review,
became a mouthpiece for Harley's views. While a Tory spy, Defoe toured
Queen Anne's death in 1714
precipitated the decline of the Tory Party and put Defoe—a Tory spy but a Whig
at heart—in an awkward position. When Defoe was imprisoned for slanderous
remarks, Lord Chief Justice Parker decided to release Defoe and make him a spy
for George I. Defoe became saboteur of the anti-government Tory paper, Weekly
Journal.
Meanwhile. Defoe experimented with prose and
began to write innovative fiction. His first novel was his 1717
"memoir" chronicling the story of peace negotiations with
In 1719 Robinson Crusoe was
published to commercial success. It was followed by lour more very popular
"biographies," as well as essays on crime, the family, and economics.
He died in 1731.
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