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Samuel Butler | |
|---|---|
Portrait by Charles Gogin | |
| Born | (1835-12-04)4 December 1835 Langar, Nottinghamshire, England |
| Died | 18 June 1902(1902-06-18) (aged 66) London, England |
| Occupation | Novelist, critic |
| Education | Shrewsbury School |
| Alma mater | St John's College, Cambridge |
Samuel Butler (4 December 1835 – 18 June 1902) was an English novelist and critic, best known for the satiricalutopian novelErewhon (1872) and the semi-autobiographical novelThe Way of All Flesh (published posthumously in 1903 with substantial revisions and published in its original form in 1964 asErnest Pontifex or The Way of All Flesh). Both novels have remained in print since their initial publication. In other studies he examined Christianorthodoxy,evolutionary thought, and Italian art, and made prose translations of theIliad andOdyssey that are still consulted.[1][2]

Butler was born on 4 December 1835[3] at the rectory in the village ofLangar, Nottinghamshire. His father was Rev. Thomas Butler, son ofDr. Samuel Butler, then headmaster ofShrewsbury School and laterBishop of Lichfield.[4] Dr. Butler was the son of a tradesman and descended from a line ofyeomen; despite his family's social class, his scholarly aptitude was recognised at a young age, and he was sent toRugby andCambridge, where he distinguished himself.
His only son, Thomas, wished to go into theNavy but succumbed to paternal pressure and entered theAnglican clergy, in which he led an undistinguished career, in contrast to his father's. Samuel's immediate family created for him an oppressive home environment (chronicled inThe Way of All Flesh). Thomas Butler, states Samuel Butler's biographer, "to make up for having been a servile son ... became a bullying father."[5]
Samuel Butler's relations with his parents, especially with his father, were largely antagonistic. His education began at home and included frequent beatings, as was not uncommon at the time. Samuel wrote later that his parents were "brutal and stupid by nature".[5] He later recorded that his father "never liked me, nor I him; from my earliest recollections I can call to mind no time when I did not fear him and dislike him.... I have never passed a day without thinking of him many times over as the man who was sure to be against me."[5] Under his parents' influence, he was set on course to follow his father into the priesthood.
He was sent toShrewsbury at age twelve, where he did not enjoy the hard life under its headmasterBenjamin Hall Kennedy, whom he later drew as "Dr. Skinner" inThe Way of All Flesh.[6] Then, in 1854, he went up toSt John's College, Cambridge, where he obtained afirst inClassics in 1858.[7] The graduate society of St John's is named theSamuel Butler Room (SBR) in his honour.

After Cambridge, he went to live in a low-income parish in London 1858–1859 as preparation for hisordination into the Anglican clergy; there he discovered that infantbaptism made no apparent difference to the morals and behaviour of his peers and began questioning his faith. This experience would later serve as inspiration for his workThe Fair Haven. Correspondence with his father about the issue failed to set his mind at peace, instead inciting his father's wrath. As a result, in September 1859, on the shipRoman Emperor,[8] he emigrated toNew Zealand.
Butler went there, like many early British settlers of materially privileged origins, to maximise distance between himself and his family. He wrote of his arrival and life as a sheep farmer onMesopotamia Station inA First Year in Canterbury Settlement (1863), and he made a handsome profit when he sold his farm, but his chief achievement during his time there consisted of drafts and source material for much of his masterpieceErewhon.
Erewhon revealed Butler's long interest inDarwin's theories of biologicalevolution. In 1863, four years after Darwin publishedOn the Origin of Species, the editor of a New Zealand newspaper,The Press, published a letter captioned "Darwin among the Machines", written by Butler, but signedCellarius. It compares human evolution to machine evolution, prophesying that machines would eventually replace humans in the supremacy of the earth: "In the course of ages we shall find ourselves the inferior race".[9] The letter raises many of the themes now debated by proponents of thetechnological singularity, for example that computers evolve much faster than humans and that we are racing toward an unknowable future through explosive technological change.
Butler also spent time criticizing Darwin, partly because he (in the shadow of a previous Samuel Butler) believed that Darwin had not sufficiently acknowledged his grandfatherErasmus Darwin's contribution to his theory.[10]
Butler returned to England in 1864, settling in rooms inClifford's Inn (nearFleet Street), where he lived for the rest of his life. In 1872, theUtopian novelErewhon appeared anonymously, causing some speculation as to who the author was. When Butler revealed himself,Erewhon made him a well-known figure, more because of this speculation than for its literary merits, which have been undisputed.
He was less successful when he lost money investing in a Canadian steamship company and in the Canada Tanning Extract Company, in which he and his friend Charles Pauli were made nominal directors. In 1874 Butler went toCanada, "fighting fraud of every kind" in an attempt to save the company, which collapsed, reducing his own capital to £2,000.[11]
In 1839 his grandfather Dr. Butler had left Samuel property at Whitehall in Abbey Foregate, Shrewsbury, so long as he survived his own father and his aunt, Dr. Butler's daughter Harriet Lloyd. While at Cambridge in 1857 he sold the Whitehall mansion and six acres to his cousinThomas Bucknall Lloyd, but kept the remaining land surrounding the mansion. When in the 1870s his old Shrewsbury School proposed to relocate to a site at Whitehall, Butler publicly opposed it and the school ultimately moved elsewhere. His aunt died in 1880 and his father's death in 1886 resolved his financial problems for the last 16 years of his own life. The land at Whitehall was sold for housing development; he laid out and named four roads – Bishop and Canon Streets after his grandfather's and father's clerical titles, Clifford Street after his London home, and Alfred Street in gratitude to his clerk.[12]
Butler indulged himself, holidaying in Italy every summer and while there, producing his works on the Italian landscape and art. His close interest in the art of theSacri Monti is reflected inAlps and Sanctuaries of Piedmont and the Canton Ticino (1881) andEx Voto (1888). He wrote a number of other books, including a less successful sequel,Erewhon Revisited. His semi-autobiographical novel,The Way of All Flesh, did not appear in print until after his death, as he considered its tone of satirical attack onVictorian morality too contentious at the time.
Butler died on 18 June 1902, aged 66, in a nursing home[13] in St. John's Wood Road, London.[14] By his wish, he was cremated atWoking Crematorium and by differing accounts, his ashes were dispersed or buried in an unmarked grave.[13][14]
The Way of All Flesh was published after Butler's death by his literary executor,R. A. Streatfeild, in 1903. This version, however, altered Butler's text in many ways and cut important material. The manuscript was edited by Daniel F. Howard asErnest Pontifex or The Way of All Flesh (Butler's original title) and published for the first time in 1964.
Butler's sexuality has been the subject of academic speculation and debate.[15] Butler never married, although for years he made regular visits to a woman, Lucie Dumas. Herbert Sussman, having arrived at the conclusion that Butler was homosexual, opined that Butler's sexual association with Dumas was merely an outlet for his "intense same-sex desire". Sussman's theory calls Butler's assumption of "bachelorhood" merely a means to retain middle-class respectability in the absence of matrimony; he observes that there is no evidence of Butler's having any "genital contact with other men", but alleges that the "temptations of overstepping the line strained his close male relationships."[16]
His first significant male friendship was with the young Charles Pauli, son of a German businessman in London, whom Butler met in New Zealand. They returned to England together in 1864 and took neighbouring apartments in Clifford's Inn. Butler had made a large profit from the sale of his New Zealand farm and undertook to finance Pauli's study of law by paying him a regular sum, which Butler continued to do long after the friendship had cooled, until Butler had spent all his savings. On Pauli's death in 1892, Butler was shocked to learn that Pauli had benefited from similar arrangements with other men and had died wealthy, but without leaving Butler anything in his will.[17][18]
After 1878, Butler became close friends withHenry Festing Jones, whom he persuaded to give up his job as a solicitor to be his personal literary assistant and travelling companion, at a salary of £200 a year. Although Jones kept his own lodgings atBarnard's Inn, the two men saw each other daily until Butler's death in 1902, collaborating on music and writing projects in the daytime, and attending concerts and theatres in the evenings; they also frequently toured Italy and other favorite parts of Europe together. After Butler's death, Jones edited Butler's notebooks for publication and published his own biography of him in 1919.[17]
Another friendship was with Hans Rudolf Faesch, a Swiss student who stayed with Butler and Jones in London for two years, improving his English, before departing forSingapore. Both Butler and Jones wept when they saw him off at the railway station in early 1895, and Butler subsequently wrote an emotional poem, "In Memoriam H. R. F.",[19] instructing his literary agent to offer it for publication to several leading English magazines. However, once theOscar Wilde trial began in the spring of that year, with revelations of homosexual behaviour among the literati, Butler feared being associated with the widely reported scandal and in a panic wrote to all the magazines, withdrawing his poem.[17]
Some critics, beginning withMalcolm Muggeridge inThe Earnest Atheist: A Study of Samuel Butler (1936), concluded that Butler was a sublimated or repressed homosexual and that his lifelong status as an "incarnate bachelor" was comparable to that of his writer contemporariesWalter Pater,Henry James, andE. M. Forster, also thought to becloseted homosexuals.
Whether in hissatire orfiction, Butler's studies on the evidence for Christianity, his works on evolutionary thought, or in his miscellaneous other writings, a consistent theme runs through, stemming largely from his personal struggle against the stifling of his own nature by his parents, which led him to seek more general principles of growth, development, and purpose: "What concerned him was to establish his nature, his aspirations, and their fulfillment upon a philosophic basis, to identify them with the nature, the aspirations, the fulfillment of all humanity – and, more than that, with the fulfillment of the universe.... His struggle became generalized, symbolic, tremendous."[5]
The form that this search took was principally philosophical and – given the interests of the day – biological: "Satirist, novelist, artist, and critic that he was, he was primarily a philosopher," and in particular, a philosopher who looked for biological foundations for his work: "His biology was a bridge to a philosophy of life, which sought a scientific basis for religion, and endowed anaturalistically conceived universe with a soul."[5] Indeed, "philosophical writer" was ultimately the self-description Butler chose as most fitting to his work.[20]
Butler developed a theory that theOdyssey came from the pen of a youngSicilian woman, and that the scenes of the poem reflected the coast ofSicily (especially the territory ofTrapani) and its nearby islands. He described his evidence for this inThe Authoress of the Odyssey (1897) and in the introduction and footnotes to his prose translation of theOdyssey (1900).Robert Graves elaborated on the hypothesis in his novelHomer's Daughter.
Butler argued in a lecture entitled "The Humour of Homer", delivered atThe Working Men's College in London, 1892, that Homer's deities in theIliad are like humans, but "without the virtue", and that he "must have desired his listeners not to take them seriously." Butler translated theIliad (1898). His other works includeShakespeare's Sonnets Reconsidered (1899), a theory that the sonnets, if rearranged, tell a story about ahomosexual affair.
In a book of essays published after his death, entitledGod the Known and God the Unknown, Samuel Butler argued for the existence of a single, corporeal deity, declaring belief in an incorporeal deity to be essentially the same asatheism. He asserted that this "body" of God was, in fact, composed of the bodies of all living things on earth, a belief that may be classed as "panzoism". He later changed his views, and decided that God was composed not only of all living things, but ofall non-living things as well. He argued, however, that "some vaster Person [may] loom ... out behind our God, and ... stand in relation to him as he to us. And behind this vaster and more unknown God there may be yet another, and another, and another."[21]
Butler argued that each organism was not, in fact, distinct from its parents. Instead, he asserted that each being was merely an extension of its parents at a later stage of evolution. "Birth", he once quipped, "has been made too much of."[21]
Butler wrote four books on evolution:Life and Habit;Evolution, Old and New;Unconscious Memory; andLuck, or Cunning, As the Main Means of Organic Modification?. Butler accepted evolution but rejected Darwin's theory ofnatural selection.[22] In his bookEvolution, Old and New (1879), he accused Darwin of borrowing heavily fromBuffon,Erasmus Darwin andLamarck, while playing down these influences and giving them little credit.[22][23][24] In 1912, the biologistVernon Kellogg summed up Butler's views:
Butler, though strongly anti-Darwinian (that is, anti-natural selection and anti-Charles Darwin) is not anti-evolutionist. He professes, indeed, to be very much of an evolutionist, and in particular one who has taken it upon his shoulders to reinstate Buffon and Erasmus Darwin, and, as a follower of these two, Lamarck, in their rightful place as the most believable explainers of the factors and method of evolution. His evolution belief is a sort of Butlerized Lamarckism, tracing back originally to Buffon and Erasmus Darwin.[25]
HistorianPeter J. Bowler has described Butler as a defender ofneo-Lamarckian evolution. Bowler noted that "Butler began to see in Lamarckism the prospect of retaining an indirect form of the design argument. Instead of creating from without, God might exist within the process of living development, represented by its innate creativity."[23][26]
Butler's writings on evolution were criticised by scientists.[27][28] Critics have pointed out that Butler admitted to be writing entertainment rather than science, and his writings were not taken seriously by most professional biologists.[29][30] Butler's books were negatively reviewed inNature byGeorge Romanes andAlfred Russel Wallace. Romanes stated that Butler's views on evolution had no basis in science.[31][32]
Gregory Bateson often mentioned Butler and saw value in some of his ideas, calling him "the ablest contemporary critic of Darwinian evolution". He noted Butler's insight into the efficiencies of habit formation (patterns of behaviour and mental processes) in adapting to an environment:
[M]ind and pattern as the explanatory principles, which, above all, required investigation, were pushed out of biological thinking in the later evolutionary theories, which were developed in the mid-nineteenth century by Darwin, Huxley, etc. There were still some naughty boys, like Samuel Butler, who said that mind could not be ignored in this way – but they were weak voices, and, incidentally, they never looked at organisms. I don't think Butler ever looked at anything except his own cat, but he still knew more about evolution than some of the more conventional thinkers.[33]
Butler and Darwin "argued fiercely in the last years of Darwin's life over the text of a biography [by Darwin][34] of Dr.Erasmus Darwin [Charles Darwin's grandfather].... It ended in complete personal estrangement".[35]
InErnest Pontifex or The Way of All Flesh, protagonist Ernest Pontifex says that he had been trying all his life to like modern music but succeeded less and less as he grew older. On being asked when he considers modern music to have begun, he says, "withSebastian Bach". Butler liked onlyHandel, and in a letter to Miss Savage said, "I only want Handel's Oratorios. I would have said and things of that sort, but there are no 'things of that sort' except Handel's."[19] With Henry Festing Jones, Butler composed choral works thatEric Blom characterised as "imitation Handel", although with satirical texts. Two of the works they collaborated on were the cantatasNarcissus (private rehearsal 1886, published 1888), andUlysses (published posthumously in 1904), both for solo voices, chorus, and orchestra.[36] George Bernard Shaw wrote in a private letter that the music was invested with "a ridiculously complete command of the Handelian manner and technique."[37] Around 1871 Butler was engaged as music critic byThe Drawing Room Gazette. From 1890 he took counterpoint lessons withW. S. Rockstro.[38]
Butler's friend Henry Festing Jones wrote the authoritativebiography: the two-volumeSamuel Butler, Author of Erewhon (1835–1902): A Memoir (commonly known as Jones'sMemoir), published in 1919, and reissued by HardPress Publishing in 2013.[19] Project Gutenberg[39] hosts a shorter "Sketch" by Jones, first published in 1913 inThe Humour of Homer and Other Essays[40] and reissued in its own volume 1921 byJonathan Cape asSamuel Butler: A Sketch. The most recent biography of Butler is Peter Raby'sSamuel Butler: A Biography (Hogarth Press, 1991; University of Iowa Press, 1991).
Butler belonged to no literary school and spawned no followers in his lifetime. He was a serious but amateur student of the subjects he undertook, especially religious orthodoxy andevolutionary thought, and his controversial assertions effectively shut him out from both the opposing factions of church and science that played such a large role in late Victorian cultural life: "In those days one was either a religionist or aDarwinian, but he was neither."[5]
His influence on literature, such as it was, came throughThe Way of All Flesh, which Butler completed in the 1880s, but left unpublished to protect his family. Yet the novel, "begun in 1870 and not touched after 1885, was so modern when it was published in 1903, that it may be said to have started a new school", particularly in its foreshadowing the use ofpsychoanalysis in fiction, in "his treatment of Ernest Pontifex".[5]: 6–7
Sue Zemka writes that "Among science fiction writers,The Book of the Machines has a canonical status, for it originates the conceit by which machines develop intelligent capacities and enslave mankind." For example, inFrank Herbert'sDune the "Butlerian Jihad" – "in-universe ancient revolt against 'thinking machines' that resulted in their prohibition" – is named after Butler.[41]
The English novelistAldous Huxley acknowledged the influence ofErewhon on his novelBrave New World. Huxley's Utopian counterpart toBrave New World,Island, also refers prominently toErewhon. InFrom Dawn to Decadence,Jacques Barzun asks, "Could a man do more to bewilder the public?"[42]