George Walker (novelist)

George Walker (December 24, 1772 February 8, 1847) was an English gothic novelist and publisher. He was born in Falcon Square, Cripplegate, London, England. He worked as a bookseller and music publisher, into which business his son George (18031879) also entered. His writings were anti-reform, reacting to writers such as William Godwin and Thomas Holcroft.[1]

The Vagabond (1799)

Walker's anti-Jacobin novel The Vagabond: A Novel (1799) anachronistically sets the Gordon Riots of 1780 amidst the political events of the late 1790s. After attending a lecture by "Citizen Ego", a character based on John Thelwall, its narrator unwittingly becomes a prominent figure in the riots. Inverting radical accounts of the significance of the riots, The Vagabond presents them as solely destructive and acquisitive. Later, the hero's mentor Stupeo, based on William Godwin, attempts to establish a pantisocratic community in the American wilderness, but is captured and burned at the stake by Native Americans.[2]

In the novel's dedication, Walker describes the novel as "an attempt to parry the Enemy with their own weapons" and to undermine radicalism's political romance".[3] The literary critic Ian Haywood reads The Vagabond as evidence that the Gordon Riots "still exerted a powerful hold on popular memory" at the time of its publication.[3]

Books

  • The Romance of the Cavern, 1792
  • The Haunted Castle, 1794
  • The House of Tinian, 1795
  • Theodore Cyphon, or The Benevolent Jew, 1796
  • Cynthelia, or a Woman of Ten Thousand, 1797
  • The Vagabond, 1799
  • The Three Spaniards, 1800
  • Poems on Various Subjects, 1801
  • Don Raphael, 1803
  • Two Girls of Eighteen, 1806
  • The Travels of Sylvester Tramper in Africa, 1813
  • The Adventures of Timothy Thoughtless, 1813 (for children)
  • The Battle of Waterloo, A Poem, 1815[1]
gollark: As far as I know most discussion and invitation to esoserver happened over DMs anyway.
gollark: You're quite literally metaphorically acting like a repressive authoritarian government (I mean, not torturing people and such, but denying the existence of opposition, thinking you're the only one who can save the people from themselves, censoring anything (invites) which *might be* opposition), except with less power since you can't stop people directly communicating with each other.
gollark: That would probably not have helped.
gollark: Olivia left, but they were on there a bit.
gollark: ...

References

  1. Harvey, A. D. (1977). "George Walker and the Anti-Revolutionary Novel". The Review of English Studies. 28 (111): 290–300. doi:10.1093/res/XXVIII.111.290. JSTOR 514722.
  2. Haywood, Ian (2006). Bloody Romanticism: Spectacular Violence and the Politics of Representation, 1776–1832. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 196–198.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  3. Haywood 2006, p. 196.
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