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The Romantic Tavern: Literature and Conviviality in the Age of Revolution, by Ian Newman

Peter J. Smith raises a glass to 鈥榗onviviality鈥 in life and literature

Published on
May 30, 2019
Last updated
May 30, 2019
tavern_getty
Source: Getty
Company you can bet on: the tavern functioned as many things, including as a site of 鈥榙iscussions about liberty articulated through toasts, poems, songs and 鈥渃onviviality鈥濃

At the opening of this fascinating study, Ian Newman assures us, with nimble irony, that 鈥淚聽have had more fun researching and writing this book than accords with the usual image of academic pointy-headed severity.鈥 Yet for all its self-deprecation, this is a learned account聽that sets about tracing such intricacies as 18th-century state surveillance, the tensions between feminised 鈥渇ashionable sociability鈥 and 鈥渢he masculine commercialized politics of clubs and coffeehouses鈥, and 鈥渢he pleasure of politics and the politics of pleasure, and how they gave shape to ideas about literature鈥.

狈别飞尘补苍鈥檚 locus classicus is not a literary passage but a literal place, the tavern, which functioned as an influential challenge to the 鈥渁ssumptions about the improving capacities of Enlightenment conversation鈥. Not only were taverns inseparable from politics but, counter to received scholarship, they were the centre of dissent not from labouring classes and the plebeian resistances of the 1790s but rather 鈥渁聽public sphere dominated by wealthy merchants鈥. The emerging commercial class of tradesmen, investors and merchants constituted a powerful threat to 鈥渁ncient laws and institutions鈥. In this way, the tavern functioned as a site of discussions about liberty articulated through toasts, poems, drinking songs and, in 狈别飞尘补苍鈥檚 helpful umbrella term, 鈥渃onviviality鈥, which he defines as comprising 鈥渉umor, pleasure, and mutuality鈥.

One of the most striking things about the two taverns聽that Newman focuses on is their sheer scale. The Crown and Anchor (in London just off the Strand and prominent in the 1790s) boasted a dining room聽that seated 500 and an assembly hall that could accommodate 2,000. Here, ritualised and regular assemblies facilitated the meeting of large numbers of people and allowed a plurality of functions and interpretations: 鈥渋t was seen variously as a venue for drunken revelry, or for elegant dinners; as a site that embodied the political principles of freedom of speech and the liberty of the presses, or a site providing frivolous luxury to the elite鈥. But Newman shows how the Crown and Anchor鈥檚 several literary and visual representations tended to associate it with sedition.

Music was frequently obscene and uncensored, and titles such as Quim听辞谤 The Blue Vein聽typify the unabashed sociability of the gatherings. The ribald lyrics of Captain Charles Morris鈥 The Plenipotentiary聽are not for the squeamish: 鈥淭hro鈥 thick and thro鈥 thin, bowel deep he dashed in,/Till her cunt frothed like cream in a dairy;/And express鈥檇 by loud farts, she was strain鈥檇 in all parts/By the great Plenipotentiary.鈥

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As Newman moves on to the Romantics, his discussion of anacreontic poetry (concerning wine and love) includes an acute reading of Keats鈥 Ode to a Nightingale, its wine glass replete with 鈥渂eaded bubbles winking at the brim鈥. Emphasis has thus shifted from the actuality to the concept of conviviality: poetry is now 鈥渋nspired by the idea of wine and no drop need pass the lips: language itself becomes intoxicating鈥.

Wistfully, Newman concludes by hearkening after the tavern鈥檚 convivial prodigality in defiance of modern individualism: 鈥淥ld taverns are what matter; taverns that we can contemplate with reverence [and] that produce reveries of past associations.鈥

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Peter J. Smith is reader in Renaissance literature at Nottingham Trent University. His latest book, co-edited with Deborah Cartmell, is Much Ado About Nothing: A聽Critical Guide (2018).


The Romantic Tavern: Literature and Conviviality in the Age of Revolution
By Ian Newman
Cambridge University Press, 304pp, 拢75.00
ISBN 9781108470377
Published 28 March 2019

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline:聽A toast to liberty and licentiousness

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