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Samuel Butler (novelist)

Samuel Butler (4 December 1835 – 18 June 1902) was an English novelist and critic, best known for the satirical utopian novel Erewhon (1872) and the semi-autobiographical novel The Way of All Flesh (published posthumously in 1903 with substantial revisions and published in its original form in 1964 as Ernest Pontifex or The Way of All Flesh). Both novels have remained in print since their initial publication. In other studies he examined Christian orthodoxy, evolutionary thought, and Italian art, and made prose translations of the Iliad and Odyssey that are still consulted.[1][2]

Samuel Butler
Portrait by Charles Gogin
Born(1835-12-04)4 December 1835
Langar, Nottinghamshire, England
Died18 June 1902(1902-06-18) (aged 66)
London, England
Occupationnovelist, writer
EducationShrewsbury School
Alma materSt John's College, Cambridge

Early life edit

 
Samuel Butler's birthplace and childhood home

Butler was born on 4 December 1835[3] at the rectory in the village of Langar, Nottinghamshire. His father was Rev. Thomas Butler, son of Dr. Samuel Butler, then headmaster of Shrewsbury School and later Bishop of Lichfield.[4] Dr. Butler was the son of a tradesman and descended from a line of yeomen, but his scholarly aptitude being recognised at a young age, he had been sent to Rugby and Cambridge, where he distinguished himself.

His only son, Thomas, wished to go into the Navy but succumbed to paternal pressure and entered the Anglican 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 in The Way of All Flesh). Thomas Butler, states one critic, "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 to Shrewsbury at age twelve, where he did not enjoy the hard life under its headmaster Benjamin Hall Kennedy, whom he later drew as "Dr. Skinner" in The Way of All Flesh.[6] Then in 1854 he went up to St John's College, Cambridge, where he obtained a first in Classics in 1858.[7] (The graduate society of St John's is named the Samuel Butler Room (SBR) in his honour.)

Career edit

 
Butler at the age of 23, 1858

After Cambridge, he went to live in a low-income parish in London 1858–1859 as preparation for his ordination into the Anglican clergy; there he discovered that infant baptism 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 work The 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 ship Roman Emperor,[8] he emigrated to New 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 on Mesopotamia Station in A 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 masterpiece Erewhon.

Erewhon revealed Butler's long interest in Darwin's theories of biological evolution. In 1863, four years after Darwin published On 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 signed Cellarius. 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 the technological 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 criticising Darwin, partly because Butler (in the shadow of a previous Samuel Butler) believed that Darwin had not sufficiently acknowledged his grandfather Erasmus Darwin's contribution to his theory.[10]

Butler returned to England in 1864, settling in rooms in Clifford's Inn (near Fleet Street), where he lived for the rest of his life. In 1872, the Utopian novel Erewhon 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 to Canada, "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 cousin Thomas Bucknall Lloyd, but kept the remaining land surrounding the mansion. 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. 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.[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 the Sacri Monti is reflected in Alps and Sanctuaries of Piedmont and the Canton Ticino (1881) and Ex 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 on Victorian 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 at Woking Crematorium and by differing accounts, his ashes were dispersed or buried in an unmarked grave.[13][14]

George Bernard Shaw and E. M. Forster admired the later Samuel Butler, who brought a new tone into Victorian literature and began a long tradition of New Zealand utopian/dystopian literature that culminated in works by Jack Ross, William Direen, Alan Marshall and Scott Hamilton.

Sexuality edit

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 with Henry Festing Jones, whom Butler persuaded to give up his job as a solicitor to be Butler's personal literary assistant and travelling companion, at a salary of £200 a year. Although Jones kept his own lodgings at Barnard'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 favourite 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 for Singapore. 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 the Oscar 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 with Malcolm Muggeridge in The 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 contemporaries Walter Pater, Henry James, and E. M. Forster, also thought to be closeted homosexuals.

Literary history and criticism edit

Butler developed a theory that the Odyssey came from the pen of a young Sicilian woman, and that the scenes of the poem reflected the coast of Sicily (especially the territory of Trapani) and its nearby islands. He described his evidence for this in The Authoress of the Odyssey (1897) and in the introduction and footnotes to his prose translation of the Odyssey (1900). Robert Graves elaborated on the hypothesis in his novel Homer's Daughter.

Butler argued in a lecture entitled "The Humour of Homer", delivered at The Working Men's College in London, 1892, that Homer's deities in the Iliad are like humans, but "without the virtue", and that he "must have desired his listeners not to take them seriously." Butler translated the Iliad (1898). His other works include Shakespeare's Sonnets Reconsidered (1899), a theory that the sonnets, if rearranged, tell a story about a homosexual affair.

The English novelist Aldous Huxley acknowledged the influence of Erewhon on his novel Brave New World. Huxley's Utopian counterpart to Brave New World, Island, also refers prominently to Erewhon. In From Dawn to Decadence, Jacques Barzun asks, "Could a man do more to bewilder the public?"[20]

Assessment edit

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 and evolutionary 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 a Darwinian, but he was neither."[5]

His influence on literature, such as it was, came through The 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 for its use of psychoanalysis in fiction, which "his treatment of Ernest Pontifex [the hero] foreshadows."[5]

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, in Frank Herbert's Dune the "Butlerian Jihad" – "in-universe ancient revolt against 'thinking machines' that resulted in their prohibition" – is named after Butler.[21]

Philosophy and personal thought edit

Whether in his satire and fiction, Butler's studies on the evidences 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 a naturalistically conceived universe with a soul."[5] Indeed, "philosophical writer" was ultimately the self-description Butler chose as most fitting to his work.[22]

Theology edit

In a book of essays published after his death, entitled God 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 as atheism. 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 of all 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."[23]

Heredity edit

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."[23]

Evolution edit

Butler wrote four books on evolution: Life and Habit; Evolution, Old & New; Unconscious Memory; and Luck, or Cunning, As the Main Means of Organic Modification?. Butler accepted evolution but rejected Darwin's theory of natural selection.[24] In his book Evolution, Old and New (1879) he accused Darwin of borrowing heavily from Buffon, Erasmus Darwin and Lamarck, while playing down these influences, and giving them little credit.[24][25][26] In 1912, the biologist Vernon 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.[27]

Historian Peter J. Bowler has described Butler as a defender of neo-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."[25][28]

Butler's writings on evolution were criticised by scientists.[29][30] 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.[31][32] Butler's books were negatively reviewed in Nature by George Romanes and Alfred Russel Wallace. Romanes stated that Butler's views on evolution had no basis in science.[33][34]

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.[35]

Music edit

In Ernest 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, "with Sebastian Bach". Butler liked only Handel, 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 that Eric Blom characterised as "imitation Handel", although with satirical texts. Two of the works they collaborated on were the cantatas Narcissus (private rehearsal 1886, published 1888), and Ulysses (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 by The Drawing Room Gazette. From 1890 he took counterpoint lessons with W. S. Rockstro.[38]

Biography and criticism edit

Butler's friend Henry Festing Jones wrote the authoritative biography: the two-volume Samuel Butler, Author of Erewhon (1835–1902): A Memoir (commonly known as Jones's Memoir), published in 1919, and reissued by HardPress Publishing in 2013.[19] Project Gutenberg[39] hosts a shorter "Sketch" by Jones, first published in 1913 in The Humour of Homer and Other Essays and reissued in 1921 by Jonathan Cape as Samuel Butler: A Sketch. More recently, Peter Raby has written a life: Samuel Butler: A Biography (Hogarth Press, 1991).

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 as Ernest Pontifex or The Way of All Flesh (Butler's original title) and published for the first time in 1964.

Main works edit

  • Darwin among the Machines (1863, largely incorporated into Erewhon)[40]
  • Lucubratio Ebria (1865)[40]
  • Erewhon, or Over the Range (1872)
  • Life and Habit (1878). Trubner (reissued by Cambridge University Press, 2009; ISBN 978-1-108-00551-7)
  • Evolution, Old and New; Or, the Theories of Buffon, Dr. Erasmus Darwin, and Lamarck, as compared with that of Charles Darwin (1879)
  • Unconscious Memory (1880)
  • Alps and Sanctuaries of Piedmont and the Canton Ticino (1881)
  • Luck or Cunning as the Main Means of Organic Modification? (1887)
  • Ex Voto; An Account of the Sacro Monte or New Jerusalem at Verallo-Sesia. With some notice of Tabachetti's remaining work at the Sanctuary of Crea (1888)
  • The Life and Letters of Dr. Samuel Butler, Head-Master of Shrewsbury School 1798–1836, and Afterwards Bishop of Lichfield, In So Far as They Illustrate the Scholastic, Religious, and Social Life of England, 1790–1840. By His Grandson, Samuel Butler (1896, two volumes)
  • The Authoress of the Odyssey (1897)
  • The Iliad of Homer, Rendered into English Prose (1898)
  • Shakespeare's Sonnets Reconsidered (1899)
  • The Odyssey of Homer, Rendered into English Prose (1900)
  • Erewhon Revisited Twenty Years Later: Both by the Original Discoverer of the Country and by His Son (1901)
  • The Way of All Flesh (1903), text of original manuscript published as Ernest Pontifex or The Way of All Flesh (1964)[41]
  • God the Known and God the Unknown (1909). This is a revised edition, posthumously published. R.A. Streatfeild's "Prefatory Note" to it states that the original edition "first appeared in the form of a series of articles which were published in 'The Examiner' in May, June and July, 1879."[42]
  • The Note-Books of Samuel Butler Selections arranged and edited by Henry Festing Jones (1912)
  • Further Extracts from the Note-Books of Samuel Butler chosen and edited by A.T. Bartholomew (1934)
  • Samuel Butler's Notebooks Selections edited by Geoffrey Keynes and Brian Hill (1951)
  • The Family Letters of Samuel Butler 1841-1886 Selected, Edited and Introduced by Arnold Silver (1962)
  • Howard, Daniel F., ed. (1962). The Correspondence of Samuel Butler with His Sister May. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.
  • The Fair Haven (attributed to 'John Pickard Owen', 1873, new edition 1913, revised and corrected edition 1923; considers inconsistencies between the Gospels)
  • A First Year in Canterbury Settlement With Other Early Essays (1914)
  • Selected Essays (1927)
  • Butleriana, A. T. Bartholomew, ed. (1932). Bloomsbury: The Nonesuch Press
  • The Essential Samuel Butler Selected with an Introduction by G. D. H. Cole (1950)

References edit

  1. ^ "Samuel Butler and Art | StJohns".
  2. ^ "Samuel Butler | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts".
  3. ^ Robinson, Roger. "Butler, Samuel – Biography". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 2 October 2012.
  4. ^ Butler wrote The Life and Letters of Dr. Samuel Butler, Head-Master of Shrewsbury School 1798–1836, and Afterwards Bishop of Lichfield, published in two volumes in 1896.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Clara G. Stillman, Samuel Butler, a Mid-Victorian Modern Retrieved 11 May 2020.[dead link]
  6. ^ Dickins, Gordon (1987). An Illustrated Literary Guide to Shropshire. Shropshire Libraries. p. 14. ISBN 0-903802-37-6.
  7. ^ "Butler, Samuel (BTLR854S)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  8. ^ Lyttelton Times, 28 January 1860.
  9. ^ "Darwin among the Machines" is reprinted in the Notebooks of Samuel Butler on Project Gutenberg
  10. ^ "Evolution, Old & New Or, the Theories of Buffon, Dr. Erasmus Darwin and Lamarck, as compared with that of Charles Darwin", reprinted in the Notebooks on Project Gutenberg
  11. ^ Colour Library Book of Great British Writers, p. 207. Colour Library Books (Godalming, England) (1993). ISBN 0-86283-678-6
  12. ^ Trinder, Barrie, ed. (1984). Victorian Shrewsbury, Studies in the History of a County Town. Shropshire Libraries. p. 118. ISBN 0-903802-30-9. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |agency= ignored (help)Chapter 10 – Cherry Orchard, the growth of a Victorian suburb.
  13. ^ a b Lee, Sir Sidney, ed. (1912). Dictionary of National Biography, Second Supplement, Volume I. Smith, Elder & Co.Article by "E. M. L." (Colonel E. M. Lloyd).
  14. ^ a b Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Volume 8. Oxford University Press. 2004. p. 216. ISBN 0-19-861359-8.Article by Elinor Shaffer.
  15. ^ "Samuel Butler (1835–1902)". victorianweb.org.
  16. ^ Sussman, Herbert. "Samuel Butler as Late-Victorian Bachelor: Regulating and Representing the Homoerotic." Samuel Butler: Victorian against the Grain, a Critical Overview. Paradis, James G., ed. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2007.
  17. ^ a b c Geddis, Catherine. "Butler, Samuel." 14 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine glbtq: An Encyclopedia of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Culture, glbtq.com, 21 July 2006, accessed 8 May 2012.
  18. ^ Robinson, J. Z. "Samuel Butler". Who's Who in Gay and Lesbian History: From Antiquity to World War II, Robert Aldrich and Garry Wotherspoon, eds. New York: Routledge, 2001, pp. 90–91.
  19. ^ a b c Henry Festing Jones, Samuel Butler, Author of Erewhon (1835–1902): A Memoir. London: Macmillan, 1919.
  20. ^ Jacques Barzun, From Dawn to Decadence. Harper Collins, 2000, p. 635.
  21. ^ Zemka, Sue (2002). ""Erewhon" and the End of Utopian Humanism". ELH. 69 (2): 439–472. doi:10.1353/elh.2002.0020. JSTOR 30032027. S2CID 161660966 – via JSTOR.
  22. ^ Morpurgo, Horatio (May 2006). "Samuel Butler, or Sociobiology for Grown-Ups". Three Monkeys Online. Retrieved 20 May 2009.
  23. ^ a b Gouge, T. A. (1967). "Butler, Samuel". The Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Vol. 1. New York City, New York: The MacMillan Company & The Free Press. p. 435.
  24. ^ a b Mark A. Bedau, Carol E. Cleland. (2010). The Nature of Life: Classical and Contemporary Perspectives from Philosophy and Science. Cambridge University Press. pp. 344–345.
  25. ^ a b Peter J. Bowler (2003), Evolution: The History of an Idea. University of California Press. p. 259. ISBN 0-520-23693-9.
  26. ^ C. Leon Harris (1981), Evolution: Genesis and Revelations: With Readings from Empedocles to Wilson. State University of New York Press. p. 279. ISBN 0-87395-487-4
  27. ^ Vernon L. Kellogg (1912), "Samuel Butler and Biological Memory", Science. New Series, Vol. 35, No. 907. pp. 769–771.
  28. ^ Peter J. Bowler (2001), Reconciling Science and Religion: The Debate in Early-Twentieth-Century Britain. University of Chicago Press. p. 142. ISBN 0-226-06858-7
  29. ^ Philip J. Pauly (1982), Samuel Butler and His Darwinian Critics. Victorian Studies. Vol. 25, No. 2, pp. 161–180.
  30. ^ Lee Elbert Holt (1989), Samuel Butler. Twayne Publishers. p. 44.
  31. ^ George Gaylord Simpson (1961), Lamarck, Darwin and Butler: Three Approaches to Evolution. The American Scholar. Vol. 30, No. 2, pp. 238–249.
  32. ^ Peter J. Bowler (1983), The Eclipse of Darwinism: Anti-Darwinian Evolutionary Theories in the Decades Around 1900. Johns Hopkins University Press, p. 72. ISBN 0-8018-2932-1
  33. ^ Alfred Russel Wallace (1879), Evolution, Old and New. Nature 20, pp. 141–144.
  34. ^ G. J. Romanes (1881), Unconscious Memory. Nature 23, pp. 285–287.
  35. ^ Gregory Bateson, Form, Substance and Difference. General Semantics Bulletin, No. 37 (1970) Reprinted in the anthology Steps to an Ecology of Mind – University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-03905-6
  36. ^ "Samuel Butler and Music: an introduction | St John's College, University of Cambridge". www.joh.cam.ac.uk.
  37. ^ "Obsessed with Handel: Samuel Butler's special collection". 9 December 2011.
  38. ^ Blom. Eric, Stepchildren of Music (1925), pp. 183–194
  39. ^ The Humour of Homer and Other Essays
  40. ^ a b Basil Willey – Samuel Butler: English author [1835-1902] Britannica [Retrieved 2016-06-13]
  41. ^ Lauterbach, Edward S. (20 February 1964). "A Definitive Edition of Ernest Pontifex". English Literature in Transition, 1880-1920. 7 (4): 248–249 – via Project MUSE.
  42. ^ The revised edition was also published as God: Known and Unknown (Girard, Kansas: Haldeman-Julius Company, no date).

Further reading edit

  • G. D. H. Cole (1947), Samuel Butler and The Way of All Flesh. London: Home & Van Thal Ltd
  • Mrs. R. S. Garnett (1926), Samuel Butler and His Family Relations. London/Toronto: J. M. Dent & Sons Ltd
  • Phyllis Greenacre, M.D. (1963), The Quest for the Father: A Study of the Darwin-Butler Controversy, As a Contribution to the Understanding of the Creative Individual. New York: International Universities Press, Inc.
  • Felix Grendon (1918), Samuel Butler's God. North American Review, Vol. 208, No. 753, pp. 277–286
  • John F. Harris (1916), Samuel Butler, Author of Erewhon: The Man and His Work. London: Grant Richards Ltd
  • Philip Henderson (1954), Samuel Butler: The Incarnate Bachelor. Bloomington: Indiana University Press
  • Lee Elbert Holt (1941), Samuel Butler and His Victorian Critics. ELH, Vol. 8, No. 2, pp. 146–159. The Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Lee Elbert Holt (1964), Samuel Butler. New York: Twayne Publishers, Inc.
  • Thomas L. Jeffers (1981), Samuel Butler Revalued. University Park: Penn State University Press
  • C. E. M. Joad (1924), Samuel Butler (1835–1902). London: Leonard Parsons
  • Joseph Jones (1959), The Cradle of Erewhon: Samuel Butler in New Zealand. Austin: University of Texas Press
  • Steven Mintz (1983), A Prison of Expectations: The Family in Victorian Culture. New York University Press
  • Malcolm Muggeridge (1936), The Earnest Atheist: A Study of Samuel Butler. London: Eyre & Spottiswoode
  • James G. Paradis, ed. (2007), Samuel Butler, Victorian Against the Grain: A Critical Overview. University of Toronto Press
  • Peter Raby (1991), Samuel Butler: A Biography. University of Iowa Press.
  • Robert F. Rattray (1914), The Philosophy of Samuel Butler. Mind, Vol. 23, No. 91, pp. 371–385
  • Robert F. Rattray (1935), Samuel Butler: A Chronicle and an Introduction. London: Duckworth
  • Elinor Shaffer (1988), Erewhons of the Eye: Samuel Butler as Painter, Photographer and Art Critic. London: Reaktion Books
  • George Gaylord Simpson (1961), Lamarck, Darwin and Butler: Three Approaches to Evolution. The American Scholar, Vol. 30, No. 2, pp. 238–249
  • Clara G. Stillman (1932), Samuel Butler: A Mid-Victorian Modern. New York: The Viking Press
  • Basil Willey (1960), Darwin and Butler: Two Views of Evolution. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company

External links edit

samuel, butler, novelist, this, article, about, 19th, century, novelist, 17th, century, poet, author, hudibras, samuel, butler, poet, samuel, butler, december, 1835, june, 1902, english, novelist, critic, best, known, satirical, utopian, novel, erewhon, 1872, . This article is about the 19th century novelist For the 17th century poet author of Hudibras see Samuel Butler poet Samuel Butler 4 December 1835 18 June 1902 was an English novelist and critic best known for the satirical utopian novel Erewhon 1872 and the semi autobiographical novel The Way of All Flesh published posthumously in 1903 with substantial revisions and published in its original form in 1964 as Ernest Pontifex or The Way of All Flesh Both novels have remained in print since their initial publication In other studies he examined Christian orthodoxy evolutionary thought and Italian art and made prose translations of the Iliad and Odyssey that are still consulted 1 2 Samuel ButlerPortrait by Charles GoginBorn 1835 12 04 4 December 1835Langar Nottinghamshire EnglandDied18 June 1902 1902 06 18 aged 66 London EnglandOccupationnovelist writerEducationShrewsbury SchoolAlma materSt John s College Cambridge Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Sexuality 4 Literary history and criticism 5 Assessment 6 Philosophy and personal thought 6 1 Theology 6 2 Heredity 6 3 Evolution 6 4 Music 7 Biography and criticism 8 Main works 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Samuel Butler s birthplace and childhood homeButler was born on 4 December 1835 3 at the rectory in the village of Langar Nottinghamshire His father was Rev Thomas Butler son of Dr Samuel Butler then headmaster of Shrewsbury School and later Bishop of Lichfield 4 Dr Butler was the son of a tradesman and descended from a line of yeomen but his scholarly aptitude being recognised at a young age he had been sent to Rugby and Cambridge where he distinguished himself His only son Thomas wished to go into the Navy but succumbed to paternal pressure and entered the Anglican 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 in The Way of All Flesh Thomas Butler states one critic 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 to Shrewsbury at age twelve where he did not enjoy the hard life under its headmaster Benjamin Hall Kennedy whom he later drew as Dr Skinner in The Way of All Flesh 6 Then in 1854 he went up to St John s College Cambridge where he obtained a first in Classics in 1858 7 The graduate society of St John s is named the Samuel Butler Room SBR in his honour Career edit nbsp Butler at the age of 23 1858After Cambridge he went to live in a low income parish in London 1858 1859 as preparation for his ordination into the Anglican clergy there he discovered that infant baptism 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 work The 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 ship Roman Emperor 8 he emigrated to New 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 on Mesopotamia Station in A 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 masterpiece Erewhon Erewhon revealed Butler s long interest in Darwin s theories of biological evolution In 1863 four years after Darwin published On 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 signed Cellarius 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 the technological 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 criticising Darwin partly because Butler in the shadow of a previous Samuel Butler believed that Darwin had not sufficiently acknowledged his grandfather Erasmus Darwin s contribution to his theory 10 Butler returned to England in 1864 settling in rooms in Clifford s Inn near Fleet Street where he lived for the rest of his life In 1872 the Utopian novel Erewhon 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 to Canada 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 cousin Thomas Bucknall Lloyd but kept the remaining land surrounding the mansion 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 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 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 the Sacri Monti is reflected in Alps and Sanctuaries of Piedmont and the Canton Ticino 1881 and Ex 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 on Victorian 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 at Woking Crematorium and by differing accounts his ashes were dispersed or buried in an unmarked grave 13 14 George Bernard Shaw and E M Forster admired the later Samuel Butler who brought a new tone into Victorian literature and began a long tradition of New Zealand utopian dystopian literature that culminated in works by Jack Ross William Direen Alan Marshall and Scott Hamilton Sexuality editButler 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 with Henry Festing Jones whom Butler persuaded to give up his job as a solicitor to be Butler s personal literary assistant and travelling companion at a salary of 200 a year Although Jones kept his own lodgings at Barnard 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 favourite 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 for Singapore 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 the Oscar 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 with Malcolm Muggeridge in The 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 contemporaries Walter Pater Henry James and E M Forster also thought to be closeted homosexuals Literary history and criticism editButler developed a theory that the Odyssey came from the pen of a young Sicilian woman and that the scenes of the poem reflected the coast of Sicily especially the territory of Trapani and its nearby islands He described his evidence for this in The Authoress of the Odyssey 1897 and in the introduction and footnotes to his prose translation of the Odyssey 1900 Robert Graves elaborated on the hypothesis in his novel Homer s Daughter Butler argued in a lecture entitled The Humour of Homer delivered at The Working Men s College in London 1892 that Homer s deities in the Iliad are like humans but without the virtue and that he must have desired his listeners not to take them seriously Butler translated the Iliad 1898 His other works include Shakespeare s Sonnets Reconsidered 1899 a theory that the sonnets if rearranged tell a story about a homosexual affair The English novelist Aldous Huxley acknowledged the influence of Erewhon on his novel Brave New World Huxley s Utopian counterpart to Brave New World Island also refers prominently to Erewhon In From Dawn to Decadence Jacques Barzun asks Could a man do more to bewilder the public 20 Assessment editButler 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 and evolutionary 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 a Darwinian but he was neither 5 His influence on literature such as it was came through The 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 for its use of psychoanalysis in fiction which his treatment of Ernest Pontifex the hero foreshadows 5 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 in Frank Herbert s Dune the Butlerian Jihad in universe ancient revolt against thinking machines that resulted in their prohibition is named after Butler 21 Philosophy and personal thought editWhether in his satire and fiction Butler s studies on the evidences 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 a naturalistically conceived universe with a soul 5 Indeed philosophical writer was ultimately the self description Butler chose as most fitting to his work 22 Theology edit In a book of essays published after his death entitled God 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 as atheism 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 of all 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 23 Heredity edit 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 23 Evolution edit Butler wrote four books on evolution Life and Habit Evolution Old amp New Unconscious Memory and Luck or Cunning As the Main Means of Organic Modification Butler accepted evolution but rejected Darwin s theory of natural selection 24 In his book Evolution Old and New 1879 he accused Darwin of borrowing heavily from Buffon Erasmus Darwin and Lamarck while playing down these influences and giving them little credit 24 25 26 In 1912 the biologist Vernon 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 27 Historian Peter J Bowler has described Butler as a defender of neo 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 25 28 Butler s writings on evolution were criticised by scientists 29 30 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 31 32 Butler s books were negatively reviewed in Nature by George Romanes and Alfred Russel Wallace Romanes stated that Butler s views on evolution had no basis in science 33 34 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 35 Music edit In Ernest 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 with Sebastian Bach Butler liked only Handel 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 that Eric Blom characterised as imitation Handel although with satirical texts Two of the works they collaborated on were the cantatas Narcissus private rehearsal 1886 published 1888 and Ulysses 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 by The Drawing Room Gazette From 1890 he took counterpoint lessons with W S Rockstro 38 Biography and criticism editButler s friend Henry Festing Jones wrote the authoritative biography the two volume Samuel Butler Author of Erewhon 1835 1902 A Memoir commonly known as Jones s Memoir published in 1919 and reissued by HardPress Publishing in 2013 19 Project Gutenberg 39 hosts a shorter Sketch by Jones first published in 1913 in The Humour of Homer and Other Essays and reissued in 1921 by Jonathan Cape as Samuel Butler A Sketch More recently Peter Raby has written a life Samuel Butler A Biography Hogarth Press 1991 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 as Ernest Pontifex or The Way of All Flesh Butler s original title and published for the first time in 1964 Main works editDarwin among the Machines 1863 largely incorporated into Erewhon 40 Lucubratio Ebria 1865 40 Erewhon or Over the Range 1872 Life and Habit 1878 Trubner reissued by Cambridge University Press 2009 ISBN 978 1 108 00551 7 Evolution Old and New Or the Theories of Buffon Dr Erasmus Darwin and Lamarck as compared with that of Charles Darwin 1879 Unconscious Memory 1880 Alps and Sanctuaries of Piedmont and the Canton Ticino 1881 Luck or Cunning as the Main Means of Organic Modification 1887 Ex Voto An Account of the Sacro Monte or New Jerusalem at Verallo Sesia With some notice of Tabachetti s remaining work at the Sanctuary of Crea 1888 The Life and Letters of Dr Samuel Butler Head Master of Shrewsbury School 1798 1836 and Afterwards Bishop of Lichfield In So Far as They Illustrate the Scholastic Religious and Social Life of England 1790 1840 By His Grandson Samuel Butler 1896 two volumes The Authoress of the Odyssey 1897 The Iliad of Homer Rendered into English Prose 1898 Shakespeare s Sonnets Reconsidered 1899 The Odyssey of Homer Rendered into English Prose 1900 Erewhon Revisited Twenty Years Later Both by the Original Discoverer of the Country and by His Son 1901 The Way of All Flesh 1903 text of original manuscript published as Ernest Pontifex or The Way of All Flesh 1964 41 God the Known and God the Unknown 1909 This is a revised edition posthumously published R A Streatfeild s Prefatory Note to it states that the original edition first appeared in the form of a series of articles which were published in The Examiner in May June and July 1879 42 The Note Books of Samuel Butler Selections arranged and edited by Henry Festing Jones 1912 Further Extracts from the Note Books of Samuel Butler chosen and edited by A T Bartholomew 1934 Samuel Butler s Notebooks Selections edited by Geoffrey Keynes and Brian Hill 1951 The Family Letters of Samuel Butler 1841 1886 Selected Edited and Introduced by Arnold Silver 1962 Howard Daniel F ed 1962 The Correspondence of Samuel Butler with His Sister May Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press The Fair Haven attributed to John Pickard Owen 1873 new edition 1913 revised and corrected edition 1923 considers inconsistencies between the Gospels A First Year in Canterbury Settlement With Other Early Essays 1914 Selected Essays 1927 Butleriana A T Bartholomew ed 1932 Bloomsbury The Nonesuch Press The Essential Samuel Butler Selected with an Introduction by G D H Cole 1950 References edit Samuel Butler and Art StJohns Samuel Butler Artist Royal Academy of Arts Robinson Roger Butler Samuel Biography Dictionary of New Zealand Biography Ministry for Culture and Heritage Retrieved 2 October 2012 Butler wrote The Life and Letters of Dr Samuel Butler Head Master of Shrewsbury School 1798 1836 and Afterwards Bishop of Lichfield published in two volumes in 1896 a b c d e f g Clara G Stillman Samuel Butler a Mid Victorian Modern Retrieved 11 May 2020 dead link Dickins Gordon 1987 An Illustrated Literary Guide to Shropshire Shropshire Libraries p 14 ISBN 0 903802 37 6 Butler Samuel BTLR854S A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Lyttelton Times 28 January 1860 Darwin among the Machines is reprinted in the Notebooks of Samuel Butler on Project Gutenberg Evolution Old amp New Or the Theories of Buffon Dr Erasmus Darwin and Lamarck as compared with that of Charles Darwin reprinted in theNotebookson Project Gutenberg Colour Library Book of Great British Writers p 207 Colour Library Books Godalming England 1993 ISBN 0 86283 678 6 Trinder Barrie ed 1984 Victorian Shrewsbury Studies in the History of a County Town Shropshire Libraries p 118 ISBN 0 903802 30 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a Unknown parameter agency ignored help Chapter 10 Cherry Orchard the growth of a Victorian suburb a b Lee Sir Sidney ed 1912 Dictionary of National Biography Second Supplement Volume I Smith Elder amp Co Article by E M L Colonel E M Lloyd a b Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Volume 8 Oxford University Press 2004 p 216 ISBN 0 19 861359 8 Article by Elinor Shaffer Samuel Butler 1835 1902 victorianweb org Sussman Herbert Samuel Butler as Late Victorian Bachelor Regulating and Representing the Homoerotic Samuel Butler Victorian against the Grain a Critical Overview Paradis James G ed Toronto University of Toronto Press 2007 a b c Geddis Catherine Butler Samuel Archived 14 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine glbtq An Encyclopedia of Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender and Queer Culture glbtq com 21 July 2006 accessed 8 May 2012 Robinson J Z Samuel Butler Who s Who in Gay and Lesbian History From Antiquity to World War II Robert Aldrich and Garry Wotherspoon eds New York Routledge 2001 pp 90 91 a b c Henry Festing Jones Samuel Butler Author of Erewhon 1835 1902 A Memoir London Macmillan 1919 Jacques Barzun From Dawn to Decadence Harper Collins 2000 p 635 Zemka Sue 2002 Erewhon and the End of Utopian Humanism ELH 69 2 439 472 doi 10 1353 elh 2002 0020 JSTOR 30032027 S2CID 161660966 via JSTOR Morpurgo Horatio May 2006 Samuel Butler or Sociobiology for Grown Ups Three Monkeys Online Retrieved 20 May 2009 a b Gouge T A 1967 Butler Samuel The Encyclopedia of Philosophy Vol 1 New York City New York The MacMillan Company amp The Free Press p 435 a b Mark A Bedau Carol E Cleland 2010 The Nature of Life Classical and Contemporary Perspectives from Philosophy and Science Cambridge University Press pp 344 345 a b Peter J Bowler 2003 Evolution The History of an Idea University of California Press p 259 ISBN 0 520 23693 9 C Leon Harris 1981 Evolution Genesis and Revelations With Readings from Empedocles to Wilson State University of New York Press p 279 ISBN 0 87395 487 4 Vernon L Kellogg 1912 Samuel Butler and Biological Memory Science New Series Vol 35 No 907 pp 769 771 Peter J Bowler 2001 Reconciling Science and Religion The Debate in Early Twentieth Century Britain University of Chicago Press p 142 ISBN 0 226 06858 7 Philip J Pauly 1982 Samuel Butler and His Darwinian Critics Victorian Studies Vol 25 No 2 pp 161 180 Lee Elbert Holt 1989 Samuel Butler Twayne Publishers p 44 George Gaylord Simpson 1961 Lamarck Darwin and Butler Three Approaches to Evolution The American Scholar Vol 30 No 2 pp 238 249 Peter J Bowler 1983 The Eclipse of Darwinism Anti Darwinian Evolutionary Theories in the Decades Around 1900 Johns Hopkins University Press p 72 ISBN 0 8018 2932 1 Alfred Russel Wallace 1879 Evolution Old and New Nature 20 pp 141 144 G J Romanes 1881 Unconscious Memory Nature 23 pp 285 287 Gregory Bateson Form Substance and Difference General Semantics Bulletin No 37 1970 Reprinted in the anthology Steps to an Ecology of Mind University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 03905 6 Samuel Butler and Music an introduction St John s College University of Cambridge www joh cam ac uk Obsessed with Handel Samuel Butler s special collection 9 December 2011 Blom Eric Stepchildren of Music 1925 pp 183 194 The Humour of Homer and Other Essays a b Basil Willey Samuel Butler English author 1835 1902 Britannica Retrieved 2016 06 13 Lauterbach Edward S 20 February 1964 A Definitive Edition of Ernest Pontifex English Literature in Transition 1880 1920 7 4 248 249 via Project MUSE The revised edition was also published as God Known and Unknown Girard Kansas Haldeman Julius Company no date Further reading editG D H Cole 1947 Samuel Butler and The Way of All Flesh London Home amp Van Thal Ltd Mrs R S Garnett 1926 Samuel Butler and His Family Relations London Toronto J M Dent amp Sons Ltd Phyllis Greenacre M D 1963 The Quest for the Father A Study of the Darwin Butler Controversy As a Contribution to the Understanding of the Creative Individual New York International Universities Press Inc Felix Grendon 1918 Samuel Butler s God North American Review Vol 208 No 753 pp 277 286 John F Harris 1916 Samuel Butler Author of Erewhon The Man and His Work London Grant Richards Ltd Philip Henderson 1954 Samuel Butler The Incarnate Bachelor Bloomington Indiana University Press Lee Elbert Holt 1941 Samuel Butler and His Victorian Critics ELH Vol 8 No 2 pp 146 159 The Johns Hopkins University Press Lee Elbert Holt 1964 Samuel Butler New York Twayne Publishers Inc Thomas L Jeffers 1981 Samuel Butler Revalued University Park Penn State University Press C E M Joad 1924 Samuel Butler 1835 1902 London Leonard Parsons Joseph Jones 1959 The Cradle of Erewhon Samuel Butler in New Zealand Austin University of Texas Press Steven Mintz 1983 A Prison of Expectations The Family in Victorian Culture New York University Press Malcolm Muggeridge 1936 The Earnest Atheist A Study of Samuel Butler London Eyre amp Spottiswoode James G Paradis ed 2007 Samuel Butler Victorian Against the Grain A Critical Overview University of Toronto Press Peter Raby 1991 Samuel Butler A Biography University of Iowa Press Robert F Rattray 1914 The Philosophy of Samuel Butler Mind Vol 23 No 91 pp 371 385 Robert F Rattray 1935 Samuel Butler A Chronicle and an Introduction London Duckworth Elinor Shaffer 1988 Erewhons of the Eye Samuel Butler as Painter Photographer and Art Critic London Reaktion Books George Gaylord Simpson 1961 Lamarck Darwin and Butler Three Approaches to Evolution The American Scholar Vol 30 No 2 pp 238 249 Clara G Stillman 1932 Samuel Butler A Mid Victorian Modern New York The Viking Press Basil Willey 1960 Darwin and Butler Two Views of Evolution New York Harcourt Brace and CompanyExternal links editLibrary resources about Samuel Butler novelist Resources in your library Resources in other libraries nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Samuel Butler novelist category nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Samuel Butler novelist nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Samuel Butler Works by Samuel Butler in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Samuel Butler at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Samuel Butler at Internet Archive Works by Samuel Butler at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp 37 artworks by or after Samuel Butler at the Art UK site Official English website for European Sacred Mounts Darwin Among the Machines Portraits of Samuel Butler at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Samuel Butler novelist amp oldid 1215227300, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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