114-) English Literature
Mary Delarivier Manley
Delarivier
"Delia" Manley/ Mary de la
Riviere Manley, (born April 7, 1663, Jersey, Channel Islands—died July 11,
1724, London) Some outdated sources list her first name as Mary, but recent
scholarship has demonstrated that to be an error: Mary was the name of one of
her sisters, and she always referred to herself as Delarivier or Delia.was an
English author, playwright, and political pamphleteer. Manley is sometimes
referred to, with Aphra Behn and Eliza Haywood, as one of "the fair
triumvirate of wit", which is a later attribution. A British writer who
achieved notoriety through presenting political scandal in the form of romance .
Her Secret Memoirs . . . of Several Persons of Quality (1709) was a chronicle
seeking to expose the private vices of Whig ministers. After its publication
she was arrested for libel but escaped punishment.
Early life and theatrical writings
Her
cousin John Manley married her bigamously in about 1688. In 1711 she succeeded
Jonathan Swift as editor of The Examiner and in 1714 wrote her “fictitious
autobiography,” The Adventures of Rivella. . . .
Much
of what is known about Manley is rooted in her insertion of "Delia's
story" in The New Atalantis (1709) and the Adventures of Rivella that she
published as the biography of the author of the Atalantis with Edmund Curll in
1714. Curll added further details on the publication history behind the Rivella
in the first posthumous edition of the quasi-fictional and not
entirely-reliable autobiography in 1725.
Manley
was probably born in Jersey, the third of six children of Sir Roger Manley, a
royalist army officer and historian, and a woman from the Spanish Netherlands,
who died when Delarivier was young. It seems that she and her sister, Cornelia,
moved with their father to his various army postings.
After
their father's death in 1687, the young women became wards of their cousin,
John Manley (1654–1713), a Tory MP. John Manley had married a Cornish heiress
and, later, bigamously, married Delarivier. They had a son in 1691, also named
John. In January 1694 Manley left her husband and went to live with Barbara
Villiers, the 1st Duchess of Cleveland, at one time the mistress of Charles II.
She remained there only six months, at which time she was expelled by the
duchess for allegedly flirting with her son. There is some indication that she
may have been by then reconciled with her husband, for a time.
From
1694 to 1696, Manley travelled extensively in England, principally in the
southwest, and began her dramatic career. At this time she wrote her first
play, a comedy, The Lost Lover, or, The Jealous Husband (1696), and the
she-tragedy The Royal Mischief (1696), which became the subject of ridicule and
inspired the anonymous satirical play The Female Wits . The satire mocked three
female playwrights, including Manley, Catharine Trotter, and Mary Pix. Manley
retired from the stage for ten years before returning with her 1707 play,
Almyna, or, The Arabian Vow. Ten years later, Manley's Lucius, The First King
of Britain, was staged.
Political
satire
Manley
became well-known, even notorious, as a novelist with the publication of her
roman à clef the New Atalantis in 1709, a work that spotted present British
politics on the fabulous Mediterranean Island. Contemporary critics like Swift
might consider that her caricatures missed the mark much more often than they
hit it ; but a historian like G. M. Trevelyan would at least rate her portrait
of Godolphin as a telling one: "...the greatest genius of his age with the
least of it in his aspect. The affairs of a nation in his head, with a pair of
cards or a box of dice in his hand" .
Such
was the scandal the work produced that Manley was arrested, and immediately
questioned by the authorities in preparation of a libel case against her. She
had discredited half the arena of ruling Whig politicians, as well as moderate
Tories like John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough, who, she said, had begun
his career at court in the bed of the royal mistress, Barbara Villiers. Manley
resolutely denied all correspondencies between her characters and real people,
and the charges were eventually dropped: part of the difficulty of those
offended was proving that she had actually told their stories, without exposing
themselves to further ridicule. Manley's semi-autobiographical Adventures of
Rivella repeated the claim that her work was entirely fictional.
The
result was a tacit agreement as to the fictional status of her works, under
cover of which she continued to publish another volume of the Atalantis and two
more of the Memoirs of Europe. The latter found a different fictional setting
to allow the wider European picture. Later editions sold the Memoirs, however,
as volumes three and four of the Atalantis, which also came to incorporate the
earlier skit, the Secret History of Queen Zarah; while the Atalantis also
sparked several imitations by others.
Meanwhile,
with the Tory electoral victory of 1710, Manley came to collaborate with Swift
in a number of pro-Tory pamphlets, and also took over the editorship of The
Examiner from him. Her satirical attacks on the Whigs resulted in a payment
from the new Prime Minister Robert Harley, 1st Earl of Oxford and Mortimer; but
with the accession of George I and the ensuing Tory collapse, her position
disintegrated, as a begging letter to Harley reveals: "I have nothing but
a starveling scene before me, Lord Marlborough and all his accomplices justly
enraged against me. Nothing saved from the wreck".
Later
writings
Manley,
however, was a resilient figure. In 1714, she had been threatened with being
the object of a biographical text planned by Charles Gildon, but Curll,
Gildon's prospective publisher warned Manley of the work in progress. She
contacted Gildon and arranged for an agreement: she would write the work in
question herself within a certain time span. The result were her Adventures of
Rivella, a book evolving between two male protagonists: the young chevalier D'Aumont
has left France to have sex with the author and finds a rejected lover and
friend who does not only offer his assistance in arranging the contact but also
tells the story of her life, both as related in public gossip and as only her
friends know it. In this work, Manley has been seen as repositioning herself
politically as a more moderate figure, in preparation for the power shifts to
come; and it may be significant that it was a Whig, Richard Steele, who was
later to produce her lucrative drama Lucius in 1717.
Her
last major work, The Power of Love in Seven Novels (London: J. Barber/ J.
Morphew, 1720), was a revised version of selected novellas first published in
William Painter's Palace of Pleasure well furnished with pleasaunt Histories
and excellent Novelles (1566). In Manley's The Power of Love novellas, her
female characters often participated in violent acts of revenge against the men
who betrayed them. While betrayal by men was common in her earlier works,
scenes of violent revenge enacted upon them by women was new to her later works
.
Death
Manley
died at Barber's Printing House, on Lambeth Hill, after a violent fit of the
cholic which lasted five days. Her body was interred in the middle aisle of the
Church of St Benet at Paul's-Wharf, where on a marble gravestone is the
following inscription to her memory:
"Here
lieth the body of
Mrs.
Delarivier Manley,
Daughter
of Sir Roger Manley, Knight,
Who,
suitable to her birth and education,
Was
acquainted with several Parts of Knowledge,
And
with the most polite Writers, both in the French and English tongue.
This
Accomplishment,
Together
with a greater Natural Stock of Wit, made her Conversation agreeable to
All
who knew Her, and her Writings to be universally Read with Pleasure.
She
died July 11th, 1724."
Reception
She
lived on the fame of her notorious personality as early as 1714. Her precarious
marriage past, numerous quarrels, her obesity and her politics were topics that
she sold in constant revisions of the fame she had acquired. That was apparently
no problem before the 1740s, as Manley was translated into French and German in
the early 18th century, and received new English editions during the first half
of the century. Alexander Pope satirised the eternal fame that she was about to
acquire in his Rape of the Lock in 1712—it would last "as long as the
Atalantis shall be read."
Manley
was recognised for her dramatic contributions to the stage from the late 1690s
to the late 1710s. Her tragedy, The Royal Mischief, was criticised for its
resemblance to 1670s heroic tragedy. Almyna, her dramatic adaptation of The
Arabian Nights Entertainments also found itself entangled in controversy by
Anne Bracegirldle's retirement from the stage and the high cost of the
production.
Manley
was also an avid supporter and defender of the first fully-fledged it-narrative
in English, Charles Gildon's The Golden Spy (1709).
The
revision of her fame and status as an author began in the early decades of the
18th century and led to manifest defamations in the 19th and early 20th
centuries: she became seen as a scandalous female author who, some critics
audaciously asserted, did not deserve to be ever read again. Later critics,
however, looked back on the conclusions of Richetti and others were
short-sighted and perhaps even outright misogynistic and more reflective of
their era than of general historic scholarship on the author as an important
political satirist.
Manley's
present reappreciation began with Patricia Köster's edition of her works. The
more accessible edition of The New Atalantis, which Rosalind Ballaster turned
into a Penguin Classic, brought Manley wider recognition among students of
early 18th-century literature. Janet Todd, Catherine Gallagher and Ros
Ballaster provided the perspective of Manley as a proto-feminist. Fidelis
Morgan's, A Woman of No Character. An Autobiography of Mrs. Manley (London,
1986) put the (auto-)biographical information into the first more coherent
picture. More recent critics such as Rachel Carnell and Ruth Herman have
professionalised her biography and provided standardised scholarly editions.
Manley
has been erroneously claimed to have written The Secret History of Queen Zarah
(1705). That was first doubted in Köster's edition of her works, which still
included the title. The claim was openly rejected by Olaf Simons (2001) who
reread the wider context of early 18th century Atalantic novels.
J.
Alan Downie (2004) went a step further and cast light on the presumable author
of the Queen Zarah: Dr Joseph Browne.
Bibliography
Letters
written by Mrs Manley (1696)
posthumously
republished as A Stage-Coach Journey to Exeter. Describing the Humours on the
Road, with the Characters and Adventures of the Company (1725)
The
Lost Lover; or The Jealous Husband: A Comedy (1696)
The
Royal Mischief (1696), a tragedy
Almyna,
or the Arabian Vow (1707), a tragedy
The
Secret History of Queen Zarah and the Zarahians. Containing the true reasons of
the necessity of the revolution that lately happen’d in the Kingdom of Albigion
(1705)
Secret
Memoirs and Manners of Several Persons of Quality of Both Sexes, from the new
Atlantis, an island in the Mediterranean (1709), a satire in which great
liberties were taken with Whig notables
Memoirs
of Europe towards the Close of the Eighth Century. Written by Eginardus (1710)
The
Adventures of Rivella, or the History of the Author of The New Atalantis (1714)
Lucius,
The First Christian King of Britain (1717), a tragedy
Delarivier
Manley revising William Painter: The Power of Love in Seven Novels (London: J.
Barber/ J. Morphew, 1720).
She
also edited Jonathan Swift's Examiner. In her writings she played with
classical names and spelling. She was an uninhibited and effective political
writer.
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