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A Spy on Mother Midnight

A Spy on Mother Midnight (1748) is an erotic epistolary tale published in three chapbooks. Its narrator, Richard F------, disguises himself as a woman in order to have sex clandestinely with a series of women. The full title page of the book reads: A Spy on Mother Midnight: Or, The Templar Metamorphos'd. Being a Lying-In Conversation. With a Curious Adventure. In a Letter from a young Gentleman in the Country, to his Friend in Town. Although the book was originally written as pornography, it is now studied for its depiction of eighteenth-century English gender and sexuality, especially its depictions of dildos, cross-dressing, and homoeroticism.

A Spy on Mother Midnight
CountryEngland
Genreerotica
Publication date
1748
Pages142

Synopsis edit

Richard F------, called Dick, is an urban rake who has spent months pursuing a prudish country girl, Maria. He cross-dresses to assume the persona of "Miss Polly," a disguise he finds easy and enjoyable throughout the book. He follows Maria to an isolated country inn, accompanied by a friend, Nancy, who acts as his maid. Maria is at the inn to attend her cousin's lying-in (i.e., her late pregnancy, birth, and post-natal recovery). "Miss Polly" is also invited to the lying-in, where Dick is shocked by the women's sexually frank conversation. That evening, Maria invites "Miss Polly" to share her bed, a common practice for travellers of the same sex. Dick sees an ivory dildo in Maria's things, revealing that she is not as prudish as she had seemed. "Miss Polly" suggests using the dildo to pretend that Maria is having sex with Dick; he substitutes his own penis, which initially surprises but then delights Maria.

In the morning, Maria is worried because Nancy knows they had sex. Dick defends Nancy's character, telling the story of how she was seduced and abandoned, and then turned to sex work. Dick and Maria enjoy sex a second night. More guests arrive at the inn, including Maria's cousin Fanny, who attracts Dick. Maria is called away to visit an ill relative elsewhere, and Fanny shares a bed with "Miss Polly" instead. Fanny asks for a massage of a sore spot on her thigh, which Dick takes as an excuse to finger her. When Fanny realises he is a man, she immediately rejects him, but decides not to call for help so that her cousin Maria will not face a scandal for sharing his room the past two nights.

 
Casanova and a friend inflating condoms prior to sex to test for holes, in an 1872 illustration. Dick's supply of condoms in Mother Midnight assists him in keeping sex consequence-free.

Dick resolves to talk Fanny into having sex. He reassures her that there is no risk of pregnancy, because he has condoms. He puts one on. Fanny verbally protests, but he embraces and penetrates her, which ultimately inspires pleasure. They continue to have sex over the next two or three days. Meanwhile, Nancy notices an attractive housemaid, Sally, and wagers Dick that he can't resist having sex with her. Nancy invites Sally to share her bed; Dick takes Nancy's place, and they have sex. When Dick returns to Fanny's bed, she laughs at him for losing the bet, and reveals that she had taken Sally's place herself. The next guests at the inn are a Methodist preacher and a young squire, both of whom pursue "Miss Polly." "Miss Polly" seduces both men into planning an assignation, allowing Dick and Nancy to trick the preacher into being locked in the privy overnight, and to trick the squire into marrying Nancy. Nancy, the squire, and "Miss Polly" depart for London in good cheer.

Publication history edit

The story was published anonymously, in three parts. Part two was titled A Continuation of Mr. F--------'s Adventures in Petty-Coats: Being the Second Part of The Spy on Mother Midnight, and part three was A Further Continuation of Mr. F------'s Adventures in Petty-Coats: Being the Third and Last Part of the Spy on Mother Midnight.[1] Part one was advertised for sale for nine shillings in the February 1748 issue of The London Magazine,[2] and part two was advertised the next month for one shilling.[3]

The story was also sold as part of The Temple of Fame: or, the Sc—d—l—s [i.e., Scandalous] Chronicle for the Year 1748, but had no re-issues in new editions in the eighteenth century, suggesting a relatively small audience or lack of commercial success at the time. It did not gain attention until a modern interest in the history of sexuality, especially queer sexuality. An excerpt was reprinted in Secret Sexualities: A Sourcebook of 17th and 18th Century Writing (1997) among its "Sapphic Texts", and the full work was included in Eighteenth-Century British Erotica (2004).[4]

Style edit

The story is told through six fictitious letters, addressed to Dick's friend Jack. It is noted for its light-hearted tone, which makes no apologies for its content.[4] Like most English erotica of the period, it employs metaphor and allusion rather than dwelling in detail on the movement of specific body parts.[5] Its main narrative technique is to build up detailed anticipation during the narrator's flirtation and approach, and then to suddenly stop at the moment of consummation and leave the reader to imagine the rest.[6] When Dick and Maria first have sex, for example, Dick describes embracing Maria, and then penetration is implied by Maria's exclamation of surprise when she realises that Dick's penis is not her dildo. This tendency to allusively gloss over sexual acts distinguishes A Spy on Mother Midnight in the period as erotica rather than pornography, which (especially in French works) would be more descriptive.[5] Often, the metaphorical language for sexual acts relies on punning. Especially when Dick describes meeting Maria at church, the puns play on religious language. Repurposing religious language for double entendres was another common rhetorical technique of eighteenth-century erotic texts, which often lampooned religious morality.[4]

Major themes edit

 
"A Morning Frolic, or the Transmutation of the Sexes," a mezzotint c. 1780 after a painting by John Collett, depicting cross-dressing. On the floor is a copy of Ovid's Metamorphoses, also referenced in Mother Midnight's subtitle The Templar Metamorphos'd.

Cross-dressing as social boundary-crossing edit

In Mother Midnight, the introduction of a disguise would have signalled the book's erotic content to eighteenth-century readers, further emphasized by the subtitles of the two continuations, "Adventures in Petty-Coats."[4] Masquerades and costumes were, in general, associated with social and sexual license in eighteenth-century fiction. At public masked costume parties, the plausible deniability of anonymity allowed both men and women unusual social freedom.[7] Dick's costume allows him to cross boundaries of both gender and class, as "Miss Polly" is not a member of the gentry. As a result, the story presents these social categories as potentially fluid.[4]

Sexual libertinism and homoeroticism edit

The primary theme of the book is an embrace of sexual libertinism. Unlike works like The Libertine (1807), which ends with its titular libertine being swallowed into hell, the ending of Mother Midnight does not punish any of the characters. The sexual encounters are presented as non-violent and enjoyable for all parties, with no negative consequences.[4] Moreover, none of Dick's sexual partners are ultimately restrained by marriage.[6] These factors were not guaranteed in eighteenth-century pornography, and reflect this work's enthusiasm for sex.[4]

A Spy on Mother Midnight is especially notable for extending its lighthearted and permissive attitude to the narrator's cross-dressing and flirtations with men. Other literature of the period is almost universally derogatory of "mollies" and men who cross-dress. Even in pornography, any discussion of sodomy would be followed by harsh condemnations insisting that all sodomites will be punished.[4] Dick, however, brags about how easily his feminine features allow him to cross-dress, and intentionally stokes the lust of his male suitors at the end of the work. The narrator directly addresses the fellow libertine to whom his letters are written, drawing attention to the fact that the expected reader of his escapades is also male and creating an entirely homoerotic scenario in which a man describes his seduction of another man for the titillation of a third man.[6] Through the all-female dialogue at the lying-in, the story also provides an extensive and detailed discussion of the relative attractiveness of various kinds of penis. Taken together, these factors present male homoeroticism as non-threatening and even fun, while remaining sufficiently subtextual that no homophobic disavowals are necessary.[4]

 
Dildos, from the frontispiece of the 1786 book An Account of the Remains of the Worship of Priapus.

In addition to its male homoerotic subtext, A Spy on Mother Midnight is also known for its female homoerotic text. All of Dick's sexual access to women relies on their belief that he, too, is a woman.[8] The secret female-only sexual world that he enters is most prominently represented by Maria's dildo.[9] In eighteenth-century pornography, the dildo is a material symbol of lesbian desire, and potentially threatening.[10] The narrator's act of substituting his penis for Maria's dildo enacted a recurring eighteenth-century fantasy of "outdoing and tricking lesbians whose use of a dildo threatens male power."[8] Afterward, Dick lectures Maria that their sex was "less sinful, and indisputably more natural, than ... she heretofore had Recourse to," reinforcing a heterosexual morality.[8] At the same time, the narrator's identification with Maria's dildo reflects his own gender transgressions in entering female spaces. He fantasizes about first destroying and then becoming Maria's dildo, describing a dissolution of his status as man and heterosexual in pursuit of the secret inner world of female pleasure.[9]

The sexual power of midwives edit

"Mother Midnight"—part of the book's title, and the name of one of its characters—was a cant term for a sexualized midwife, often used for a stock character.[11] Birth and midwifery were recurring themes in eighteenth-century pornography; erotic texts might sell themselves as midwifery manuals. When A Spy on Mother of Midnight was published in the middle of the eighteenth century, midwifery was increasingly practiced by male midwives and physicians. A female midwife was therefore a potentially disreputable figure, notable for her sexual knowledge. In fiction, midwives were typically characterized as bawdy,[6] and frequently as sexual procurers.[4] The Mother Midnight in the novel, like other fictional midwives with this name, uses her position of privileged knowledge to exert power over men. She instructs young women on the standards they should expect from their husbands' sexual performance, and she assists in multiple sexual deceptions. In the story's opening birth scene, for example, Mother Midnight knows that the mother's husband is not the father of her baby, and conceals this disruption of the family line.[12]

The midwife is also the figurehead for the lying-in, a female-only social gathering of friends and family who arrive to support a new mother before and after birth. Because the lying-in was intimate, private, and barred to men, some men viewed it as a tantalizing mystery. In molly houses, men would sometimes cross-dress to act out parodic birth and lying-in scenes, further associating the lying-in with homoeroticism.[4]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ A Spy on Mother Midnight. London: Printed for E. Penn. 1748 – via Internet Archive.
  2. ^ "The Monthly Catalogue for February, 1748". The London Magazine: Or, Gentleman's Monthly Intelligencer. February 1748. p. 96.
  3. ^ "The Monthly Catalogue for March, 1748". The London Magazine: Or, Gentleman's Monthly Intelligencer. March 1748. p. 144.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Thomason, Laura E. (2009). "The Covert Homoeroticism of A Spy on Mother Midnight". The Eighteenth Century. 50 (4): 271–283. ISSN 1935-0201.
  5. ^ a b Harvey, Karen (2004). Reading Sex in the Eighteenth Century: Bodies and Gender in English Erotic Culture. Cambridge University Press. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-521-82235-0.
  6. ^ a b c d Savage, Elizabeth (Fall 2012). "Phallic nationalism: limits of male homosocial desire in A Spy on Mother Midnight". Genders (56).
  7. ^ Castle, Terry (1983). "Eros and Liberty at the English Masquerade, 1710-90". Eighteenth-Century Studies. 17 (2): 156–176. doi:10.2307/2738282. ISSN 0013-2586.
  8. ^ a b c Donoghue, Emma (1996). Passions between women: British lesbian culture, 1668-1801. HarperPerennial. p. 208. ISBN 978-0-06-092680-9 – via Internet Archive.
  9. ^ a b Park, Julie (2020). "Writing with Pen and Dildo: Libertine Techniques of Eighteenth-Century Narrative". Journal of Narrative Theory. 50 (1): 5–47. ISSN 1548-9248.
  10. ^ Klein, Ula Lukszo (2018). "Dildos and Material Sapphism in the Eighteenth Century". Eighteenth-Century Fiction. 31 (2): 395–412. doi:10.3138/ecf.31.2.395. ISSN 0840-6286.
  11. ^ Battis, Jes (2017). "Molly Canons: The Role of Slang and Text in the Formation of Queer Eighteenth-Century Culture". Lumen: Selected Proceedings from the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies / Lumen: Travaux choisis de la Société canadienne d'étude du dix-huitième siècle. 36: 129–141. doi:10.7202/1037858ar. ISSN 1209-3696.
  12. ^ Savage, Elizabeth (2008). ""For want of Clelia": Re-placing the Maternal Body in The Twin-Rivals". Comparative Drama. 42 (4): 481–504. ISSN 0010-4078.

mother, midnight, 1748, erotic, epistolary, tale, published, three, chapbooks, narrator, richard, disguises, himself, woman, order, have, clandestinely, with, series, women, full, title, page, book, reads, templar, metamorphos, being, lying, conversation, with. A Spy on Mother Midnight 1748 is an erotic epistolary tale published in three chapbooks Its narrator Richard F disguises himself as a woman in order to have sex clandestinely with a series of women The full title page of the book reads A Spy on Mother Midnight Or The Templar Metamorphos d Being a Lying In Conversation With a Curious Adventure In a Letter from a young Gentleman in the Country to his Friend in Town Although the book was originally written as pornography it is now studied for its depiction of eighteenth century English gender and sexuality especially its depictions of dildos cross dressing and homoeroticism A Spy on Mother MidnightCountryEnglandGenreeroticaPublication date1748Pages142 Contents 1 Synopsis 2 Publication history 3 Style 4 Major themes 4 1 Cross dressing as social boundary crossing 4 2 Sexual libertinism and homoeroticism 4 3 The sexual power of midwives 5 See also 6 ReferencesSynopsis editRichard F called Dick is an urban rake who has spent months pursuing a prudish country girl Maria He cross dresses to assume the persona of Miss Polly a disguise he finds easy and enjoyable throughout the book He follows Maria to an isolated country inn accompanied by a friend Nancy who acts as his maid Maria is at the inn to attend her cousin s lying in i e her late pregnancy birth and post natal recovery Miss Polly is also invited to the lying in where Dick is shocked by the women s sexually frank conversation That evening Maria invites Miss Polly to share her bed a common practice for travellers of the same sex Dick sees an ivory dildo in Maria s things revealing that she is not as prudish as she had seemed Miss Polly suggests using the dildo to pretend that Maria is having sex with Dick he substitutes his own penis which initially surprises but then delights Maria In the morning Maria is worried because Nancy knows they had sex Dick defends Nancy s character telling the story of how she was seduced and abandoned and then turned to sex work Dick and Maria enjoy sex a second night More guests arrive at the inn including Maria s cousin Fanny who attracts Dick Maria is called away to visit an ill relative elsewhere and Fanny shares a bed with Miss Polly instead Fanny asks for a massage of a sore spot on her thigh which Dick takes as an excuse to finger her When Fanny realises he is a man she immediately rejects him but decides not to call for help so that her cousin Maria will not face a scandal for sharing his room the past two nights nbsp Casanova and a friend inflating condoms prior to sex to test for holes in an 1872 illustration Dick s supply of condoms in Mother Midnight assists him in keeping sex consequence free Dick resolves to talk Fanny into having sex He reassures her that there is no risk of pregnancy because he has condoms He puts one on Fanny verbally protests but he embraces and penetrates her which ultimately inspires pleasure They continue to have sex over the next two or three days Meanwhile Nancy notices an attractive housemaid Sally and wagers Dick that he can t resist having sex with her Nancy invites Sally to share her bed Dick takes Nancy s place and they have sex When Dick returns to Fanny s bed she laughs at him for losing the bet and reveals that she had taken Sally s place herself The next guests at the inn are a Methodist preacher and a young squire both of whom pursue Miss Polly Miss Polly seduces both men into planning an assignation allowing Dick and Nancy to trick the preacher into being locked in the privy overnight and to trick the squire into marrying Nancy Nancy the squire and Miss Polly depart for London in good cheer Publication history editThe story was published anonymously in three parts Part two was titled A Continuation of Mr F s Adventures in Petty Coats Being the Second Part of The Spy on Mother Midnight and part three was A Further Continuation of Mr F s Adventures in Petty Coats Being the Third and Last Part of the Spy on Mother Midnight 1 Part one was advertised for sale for nine shillings in the February 1748 issue of The London Magazine 2 and part two was advertised the next month for one shilling 3 The story was also sold as part of The Temple of Fame or the Sc d l s i e Scandalous Chronicle for the Year 1748 but had no re issues in new editions in the eighteenth century suggesting a relatively small audience or lack of commercial success at the time It did not gain attention until a modern interest in the history of sexuality especially queer sexuality An excerpt was reprinted in Secret Sexualities A Sourcebook of 17th and 18th Century Writing 1997 among its Sapphic Texts and the full work was included in Eighteenth Century British Erotica 2004 4 Style editThe story is told through six fictitious letters addressed to Dick s friend Jack It is noted for its light hearted tone which makes no apologies for its content 4 Like most English erotica of the period it employs metaphor and allusion rather than dwelling in detail on the movement of specific body parts 5 Its main narrative technique is to build up detailed anticipation during the narrator s flirtation and approach and then to suddenly stop at the moment of consummation and leave the reader to imagine the rest 6 When Dick and Maria first have sex for example Dick describes embracing Maria and then penetration is implied by Maria s exclamation of surprise when she realises that Dick s penis is not her dildo This tendency to allusively gloss over sexual acts distinguishes A Spy on Mother Midnight in the period as erotica rather than pornography which especially in French works would be more descriptive 5 Often the metaphorical language for sexual acts relies on punning Especially when Dick describes meeting Maria at church the puns play on religious language Repurposing religious language for double entendres was another common rhetorical technique of eighteenth century erotic texts which often lampooned religious morality 4 Major themes edit nbsp A Morning Frolic or the Transmutation of the Sexes a mezzotint c 1780 after a painting by John Collett depicting cross dressing On the floor is a copy of Ovid s Metamorphoses also referenced in Mother Midnight s subtitle The Templar Metamorphos d Cross dressing as social boundary crossing edit In Mother Midnight the introduction of a disguise would have signalled the book s erotic content to eighteenth century readers further emphasized by the subtitles of the two continuations Adventures in Petty Coats 4 Masquerades and costumes were in general associated with social and sexual license in eighteenth century fiction At public masked costume parties the plausible deniability of anonymity allowed both men and women unusual social freedom 7 Dick s costume allows him to cross boundaries of both gender and class as Miss Polly is not a member of the gentry As a result the story presents these social categories as potentially fluid 4 Sexual libertinism and homoeroticism edit The primary theme of the book is an embrace of sexual libertinism Unlike works like The Libertine 1807 which ends with its titular libertine being swallowed into hell the ending of Mother Midnight does not punish any of the characters The sexual encounters are presented as non violent and enjoyable for all parties with no negative consequences 4 Moreover none of Dick s sexual partners are ultimately restrained by marriage 6 These factors were not guaranteed in eighteenth century pornography and reflect this work s enthusiasm for sex 4 A Spy on Mother Midnight is especially notable for extending its lighthearted and permissive attitude to the narrator s cross dressing and flirtations with men Other literature of the period is almost universally derogatory of mollies and men who cross dress Even in pornography any discussion of sodomy would be followed by harsh condemnations insisting that all sodomites will be punished 4 Dick however brags about how easily his feminine features allow him to cross dress and intentionally stokes the lust of his male suitors at the end of the work The narrator directly addresses the fellow libertine to whom his letters are written drawing attention to the fact that the expected reader of his escapades is also male and creating an entirely homoerotic scenario in which a man describes his seduction of another man for the titillation of a third man 6 Through the all female dialogue at the lying in the story also provides an extensive and detailed discussion of the relative attractiveness of various kinds of penis Taken together these factors present male homoeroticism as non threatening and even fun while remaining sufficiently subtextual that no homophobic disavowals are necessary 4 nbsp Dildos from the frontispiece of the 1786 book An Account of the Remains of the Worship of Priapus In addition to its male homoerotic subtext A Spy on Mother Midnight is also known for its female homoerotic text All of Dick s sexual access to women relies on their belief that he too is a woman 8 The secret female only sexual world that he enters is most prominently represented by Maria s dildo 9 In eighteenth century pornography the dildo is a material symbol of lesbian desire and potentially threatening 10 The narrator s act of substituting his penis for Maria s dildo enacted a recurring eighteenth century fantasy of outdoing and tricking lesbians whose use of a dildo threatens male power 8 Afterward Dick lectures Maria that their sex was less sinful and indisputably more natural than she heretofore had Recourse to reinforcing a heterosexual morality 8 At the same time the narrator s identification with Maria s dildo reflects his own gender transgressions in entering female spaces He fantasizes about first destroying and then becoming Maria s dildo describing a dissolution of his status as man and heterosexual in pursuit of the secret inner world of female pleasure 9 The sexual power of midwives edit Mother Midnight part of the book s title and the name of one of its characters was a cant term for a sexualized midwife often used for a stock character 11 Birth and midwifery were recurring themes in eighteenth century pornography erotic texts might sell themselves as midwifery manuals When A Spy on Mother of Midnight was published in the middle of the eighteenth century midwifery was increasingly practiced by male midwives and physicians A female midwife was therefore a potentially disreputable figure notable for her sexual knowledge In fiction midwives were typically characterized as bawdy 6 and frequently as sexual procurers 4 The Mother Midnight in the novel like other fictional midwives with this name uses her position of privileged knowledge to exert power over men She instructs young women on the standards they should expect from their husbands sexual performance and she assists in multiple sexual deceptions In the story s opening birth scene for example Mother Midnight knows that the mother s husband is not the father of her baby and conceals this disruption of the family line 12 The midwife is also the figurehead for the lying in a female only social gathering of friends and family who arrive to support a new mother before and after birth Because the lying in was intimate private and barred to men some men viewed it as a tantalizing mystery In molly houses men would sometimes cross dress to act out parodic birth and lying in scenes further associating the lying in with homoeroticism 4 See also edit18th century erotic literature Venus in the Cloister Memoirs of a Woman of PleasureReferences edit A Spy on Mother Midnight London Printed for E Penn 1748 via Internet Archive The Monthly Catalogue for February 1748 The London Magazine Or Gentleman s Monthly Intelligencer February 1748 p 96 The Monthly Catalogue for March 1748 The London Magazine Or Gentleman s Monthly Intelligencer March 1748 p 144 a b c d e f g h i j k Thomason Laura E 2009 The Covert Homoeroticism of A Spy on Mother Midnight The Eighteenth Century 50 4 271 283 ISSN 1935 0201 a b Harvey Karen 2004 Reading Sex in the Eighteenth Century Bodies and Gender in English Erotic Culture Cambridge University Press p 26 ISBN 978 0 521 82235 0 a b c d Savage Elizabeth Fall 2012 Phallic nationalism limits of male homosocial desire in A Spy on Mother Midnight Genders 56 Castle Terry 1983 Eros and Liberty at the English Masquerade 1710 90 Eighteenth Century Studies 17 2 156 176 doi 10 2307 2738282 ISSN 0013 2586 a b c Donoghue Emma 1996 Passions between women British lesbian culture 1668 1801 HarperPerennial p 208 ISBN 978 0 06 092680 9 via Internet Archive a b Park Julie 2020 Writing with Pen and Dildo Libertine Techniques of Eighteenth Century Narrative Journal of Narrative Theory 50 1 5 47 ISSN 1548 9248 Klein Ula Lukszo 2018 Dildos and Material Sapphism in the Eighteenth Century Eighteenth Century Fiction 31 2 395 412 doi 10 3138 ecf 31 2 395 ISSN 0840 6286 Battis Jes 2017 Molly Canons The Role of Slang and Text in the Formation of Queer Eighteenth Century Culture Lumen Selected Proceedings from the Canadian Society for Eighteenth Century Studies Lumen Travaux choisis de la Societe canadienne d etude du dix huitieme siecle 36 129 141 doi 10 7202 1037858ar ISSN 1209 3696 Savage Elizabeth 2008 For want of Clelia Re placing the Maternal Body in The Twin Rivals Comparative Drama 42 4 481 504 ISSN 0010 4078 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A Spy on Mother Midnight amp oldid 1216614510, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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