Talk:Sarah Fielding
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[edit] Family tree
Because the section on the family is obscure in the prose, with many names repeated across generations and titles coming in and out, the following may help the reader of this article: see Talk:Sarah Fielding#New family tree. (replace old tree originally copied here by Geogre, with link to new one) Carcharoth 01:19, 27 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Who outsold whom?
Information on the "Sarah outsold Henry" issue: First, I had heard it as a general proverb during grad school that Sarah outsold Henry. However, that wasn't sufficient. References indicated that David Simple outsold Tom Jones. Then they indicated that it outsold Joseph Andrews. Well, I haven't gone to the ESTC to find out, so I won't step in front of anyone making changes. However, what I would suggest is that, when all of Sarah's works are combined, her novels outsold Henry's novels. When SF's children's literature is added in, her sales go way up, and when Henry's plays are excluded from his lifetime sales it probable that, during their respective lifetimes, Sarah was the bigger seller (and, of course, Henry died young). Joseph Andrews became a big seller, eventually, but I believe it was not an enormous success at first, and nothing like Tom Jones.
All of this comes down to the following: I had a citation for the outsold, but I don't trust it. I think there is some truth back there somewhere. At least one of the permutations of sales will mean Sarah being more popular than Henry. However, although it makes an attention-grabbing fact, it isn't very necessary. It is enough to say that she was quite successful with David Simple, so I won't revert or argue for the comparison.
As for the "not published until 1764": I have no idea why an anonymous editor wanted to put that in. I had never heard it, and I thought that Volume the Last was published during Sarah's lifetime and at her own discretion. Geogre 11:34, 24 August 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Questions
"family matron" - what does this mean? Does this refer to the mother? If so, why is she called family matron? Modern readers will think of nurses when they read "matron". Carcharoth 12:38, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- They will? That's a bizarre association. It's quite literal, here. A family matron is a mother who is the controller/mother of the whole family -- the operative matriarch. This is quite different from simply being a mother. A nurse? Surely that's some recent, if not local, association. In the US, a matron might be a headmistress of a school or of a convent, but not a nurse. I.e. this is quite literal. Geogre 13:11, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
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- I thought it would be something like matriarch, rather than matron (that is what I thought people would think of, but maybe it is just me), but wanted to check. Thanks. Neither link quite works. I wonder if housewife fits? Don't worry, I'm not going to link anything that doesn't fit. Does this 'matron' concept (or at least the word) go all the way back to the 'Roman matrons'? I did some searching and found quite a few references. Maybe another dissertation there, or have they already been written on female roles within the family through history? Carcharoth 13:21, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- Sure it goes back that far, and that's why I used the word. I wanted that ironic evocation. I wanted to contrast Lady Gould (a Matron) with Ann (the new matron not fitting with the sniffy, nobility-obsessed Lady Gould). I.e. it was coloration that was designed to communicate and was a word choice that was, well, style. I don't understand, though, why it's a stumbling block: female head of family, disliked by old female, and so old lady sues to rip the family apart to "protect them" from the nasty Roman Catholic (implied "slut"). This despite the fact that Ann was apparently a nice lady and not nasty. After all, her own son was John Fielding. I wanted suggestions of cruelty, and "matron" awakens that, esp. in the context of Sarah Fielding's "The Governess." Henry's novels have absent mothers, note. Sarah's do, too. Sarah's have questions of female governance. Henry has very bad aunts (Bridget Allworthy-Blifil). Geogre 13:57, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- It does sound nasty, doesn't it. Anyway, I'm going to list below the changes I've made, plus some things that will need checking to make sure I haven't slipped up due to lack of knowledge of the subject area. Carcharoth 14:27, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Changes for review
This section refers to the changes see here.
- Added image of title page of her children's novel - ideally we would also have a picture of her memorial plaque in Bath Abbey. If I'm ever there, I'll try and remember. Or we could ask around for Wikipedians from Bath.
- I've made a start at a lead section, though it still needs expanding. Probably best to strike a balance here, if the article isn't likely to expand further, of just being an introduction and summary of notability, rather than a summary of the whole article (such summaries are best for very long articles).
- I've split the article into three main sections: Childhood, Writing Career, and Final Years. Does this sound OK? It looks like there is a nascent "literary style" section struggling to be born, but maybe that had better await a future dissertation.
- I've done various rewrites of the sentences and paragraphs. The most extensively rewritten were the childhood bit and the bit about responses to her first novel (well, I didn't want to call it her first novel - was it her first, or is it the first known?). That seemed a bit disorganised, with the anonymous bit and the sequel stuff overlapping, so I tried to knock it into shape. Hope I haven't distorted things there. Please check.
- I linked to two of her brother's novels, please check they are the right ones.
- I've assumed "Remarks on Clarissa" was about the novel by Samuel Richardson (Clarissa)? We have an article, so I linked to it. If not, please correct.
- I fixed the link to the Chawton House biography, which was broken for me.
- I'm preparing to add inline references using the Chawton biography. If you would prefer me not to, I'll happily leave that.
Shall we upgrade to A-class? :-) Carcharoth 14:27, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] More questions
I noticed The Cry: A New Dramatic Fable (1754, with Jane Collier) and The Lives of Cleopatra and Octavia (1757), in the bibliography. Is there nothing to say about these? Carcharoth 14:33, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- I know nothing of them, and none of my refs have much to say. They're not available outside of rare book rooms, that I know of, so it's hard to read them. Geogre 14:51, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- OK, thanks. I just thought it would be nice to know if it was a history, or a fictional novel, or some response to Antony and Cleopatra, or something else. I presume it refers to Cleopatra VII and Octavia Minor, the wives of Mark Antony? Carcharoth 15:09, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- Oh, yes, well, I know what the last is. It's derived from Pliny and Livy, and it's a translation for women who don't read Latin and a reorganization. It is therefore biography based on available sources. I.e. it's a sort of "out of the Roman histories, I will give you the biographies of two women." Geogre 15:23, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- Oh, sorry. The Octavia is wife of Augustus. Yes, that Cleopatra is the Cleopatra. The idea was noble Romans. Part of that "here is how to live" tradition. Geogre 15:25, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- Sister of Octavian (Augustus) surely? I know this now cos I've been watching Rome (TV series)... Last episode next week. Carcharoth 15:51, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- Oh, sorry. The Octavia is wife of Augustus. Yes, that Cleopatra is the Cleopatra. The idea was noble Romans. Part of that "here is how to live" tradition. Geogre 15:25, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
The History of Ophelia one also makes me wonder. Is this a history of the Shakespeare character. Ophelia (character), or, more likely, a history of some Roman Ophelia? Carcharoth 15:53, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- Hang on, I'm being silly. The article says these were novels, so Ophelia is presumably the main character, like the Countess of Dellwyn in the other book. No wonder I couldn't find the presumably fictional Dellwyn! :-) Carcharoth 16:02, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- Exactly. Further, "Ophelia" is a play on Hamlet's main squeeze. By 1755, Bardolatry has begun (see Shakespeare's reputation). After the Licensing Act of 1737, there is an explosion in Shakespeare interest, and seeing Ophelia as the tragic, passive character is starting to build. Thus, the title character is "an" Ophelia, but she surely wants her readers to think about "the" Ophelia that they would have known (Will's). Geogre 17:23, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- Well, the Shakespeare Ophelia was the first thing that came to mind, so it worked! :-) Bardolatry - I must turn that into a redirect! Dang. It's already an article. Anyway, thanks for clearing that up. The only thing not teased out here yet is Jane Collier's status as Sarah Fielding's companion (see the Chawton House bio), and the invite to a proposed utopian female commune by a lesbian (well, as good as). But that way lies the gutter press. Carcharoth 17:32, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- Exactly. Further, "Ophelia" is a play on Hamlet's main squeeze. By 1755, Bardolatry has begun (see Shakespeare's reputation). After the Licensing Act of 1737, there is an explosion in Shakespeare interest, and seeing Ophelia as the tragic, passive character is starting to build. Thus, the title character is "an" Ophelia, but she surely wants her readers to think about "the" Ophelia that they would have known (Will's). Geogre 17:23, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- Ah, well, that's not so hard. Jane Collier was an active author before. She benefits from association with SF, and they're politically and culturally aligned. It's not surprising. S Scott is odd. She is a very, very odd woman who wrote some very odd novels. It's not just lesbian, but frustratedly lesbian. Perhaps there are feminist scholars who find value in her, other than as a case study, but I haven't encountered any who can stare straight at Sarah Scott and not flinch. SF doesn't appear to be a joiner, and Scott's plan seems to have been pretty transparently ridiculous, based on how few would join her. Geogre 17:42, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Earl of Denbigh article
Why does the Earl of Denbigh article say: "Four other members of the Feilding family may be mentioned. The writer Henry Fielding (who spelled the family name differently) was the son of Reverend the Hon. John Feilding, younger son of the first Earl of Desmond. His sister Sarah Fielding was also a well-known author."? This contradicts this article which has the father being Edmund Fielding! Carcharoth 16:10, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- Bah. Henry Fielding doesn't even say who his father was. Surely this isn't some scandal here? Carcharoth 16:14, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
Chawton House's bio is based on DNB from 1898 (Leslie Stephens, father of Virginia Woolf, ed.) with some new material from research since. What's needed is a 2004 DNB, and I can go look at that to get it clear. Geogre 17:25, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- Any luck? Carcharoth 22:25, 21 July 2007 (UTC)
- I really need to wait for a week day, and I'll look. I'm talking about paper books here. Geogre 12:51, 22 July 2007 (UTC)
Ok, with feeling: The Earl of Denbigh article is incorrect, but Henry and Sarah were part of the family. William, 5th Earl, was father to Edmund (3rd son), who was the father of Henry. Henry had no claim on the title at all, but he was in the family tree. Geogre 19:08, 23 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Family tree
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- Sir Henry Gould + Sarah Davidge Gould (Grandmother of Edmund & family controller)
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- Sarah Gould
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- Sir Henry Gould + Sarah Davidge Gould (Grandmother of Edmund & family controller)
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William Fielding, 5th Earl Denbigh + Sarah Gould (dies, and Denbigh remarries Mrs. Not Appearing Here)
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- ?male ?male Edmund Fielding + Sarah
Edmund + Sarah (d. 1718)
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- Catharine Henry Ursula Sarah Fielding Anne Beatrice Edmund
Edmund + Anne Rapha Six children brought in, and John Fielding (half brother)
ThreeFour generations of women called "Sarah". That explains it all. :-) Seriously, great work sorting that out. I delinked Henry Gould as our current article there is about some American poet. I challenge you to write an article on Henry Gould the judge! Or maybe slightly easier, to explain the change in the spelling of the name from Feilding to Fielding. Carcharoth 22:16, 23 July 2007 (UTC)
- Ooh. I also noticed that Henry Fielding still doesn't talk about his family. Do you think the same sort of thing that you wrote here would apply over there? Carcharoth 22:18, 23 July 2007 (UTC)
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- Ok, on Henry.... It's worth mentioning his family, but everyone is following Battestin in their talk, I think. Henry gives few outward signs of being much ado about his family. This is nonsense, as he housed Sarah, gave her money, and did what he could, and his connections probably helped him in his day job (justice of the peace). However, he, like many of the minor nobility and upper gentry, went off to Eton, and that was alike a family killer. Boys who went there basically lost their families early and formed that odd English upper class society. He comes out of Eton polished, goes on to University, and has spent not very much time with his family. For the girls, on the other hand, everything depends on the family. They get sent to finishing schools. They get prepared for marriage, in other words, and do not have a means of generating an income. They have few rights and less power, and they spend time with each other and with the family. The dramatic stuff with Lady Gould would have had a bigger influence, both materially and psychologically, on the girls than the boys.
- Oh, and the DNB today made hints that Sarah was very attached to Jane Collier. This seems...difficult...to me. It also played up the Sarah Scott connection. Again, this just scans wrong, but truth over truthiness. Geogre 03:27, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
- I'm confused now. Are there four Sarahs and two Sarah Goulds? Carcharoth 22:22, 23 July 2007 (UTC)
- ie. Sarah Fielding's mother was called Sarah (you call her Sarah Gould Fielding), but Sarah Fielding's father's mother (ie. her paternal grandmother) was also called Sarah (you call her Sarah Gould), and her mother is Sarah Davidge Gould (the grand old lady and matriarch). So Sarah Davidge Gould is Sarah Fielding's great-grandmother, and the mother-in-law of William Fielding, 5th Earl Denbigh, and grandmother to Edmund. But the Sarah that married Edmund (the "Sarah Gould Fielding" that is the mother of Sarah Fielding) actually married into the family, and William Fielding, 5th Earl Denbigh, was her father-in-law, and the Sarah Gould that was the daughter of Sarah Davidge Gould, was the mother-in-law of Sarah Fielding's mother (Sarah Gould Fielding). I think my head just exploded. Carcharoth 00:38, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
- Let's try a family tree:
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Sir Henry Gould |
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Sarah Davidge Gould (died 1733) |
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William Fielding (5th Earl Denbigh) (1697-1755) |
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Sarah Gould |
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Sarah (died 1718) |
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Edmund Fielding |
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Anne Rapha Fielding |
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Henry Fielding (1707-1754) |
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Sarah Fielding (1710-1768) |
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John Fielding (1721-1780) |
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Does that look about right? Carcharoth 00:37, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
The picture is right. The words make my head spin. I've got to tell you, I've read three accounts, now, and all of them make this stuff confusing, so I'm doing the best I can. I am sure, after the DNB today (and I'll add info and a ref later, after I've done a de novo I researched today on "the Thresher Poet"), that it's Sarah Davidge Gould who was the mean old lady in this story. What no one makes clear is what happened to Edmund's mother. She's always "first wife," and the only thing that makes sense (but which is never stated) is that she died. Ok, now as for Edmund's wife.... She's Sarah, and Chawton House seems to say she's a Gould, too, but that's confused. It's best to leave her simply as Sarah, as we are sure of that, I think. Edmund's mother was dead, and his father had a new wife and new family (and a title), so it's Edmund's grandmother who took over caring for her great grandchildren and protecting them from the nasty Roman Catholic foreigner trollop (who produced the great reformer). Geogre 03:20, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
- The above says Sarah Fielding's mother died in 1712, but the article says 1718. Some sources say she was only seven when her mother died, but 1712 would mean she was around two, which would make a big difference. Which is it?
- Do you think the family tree might make the article clearer? There are several ways of producing such things. The one above might overwhelm the article a bit. Maybe a short stub on the Fielding family, showing the descent of Henry, Sarah and John? Carcharoth 10:28, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
- 1718, not 1712. I was being sloppy while writing here and not looking at the article or my notes (which were a jumble of family trees anyway).
- As for a family tree.... I do think it would be useful, but I don't think we should do anything that licenses anything like the Kittybrewster fiasco. By our own principles, I think it would be a very bad idea, but in places where the names are duplicated so often and the prose so thick that it is difficult for a reader, it is probably best to have a diagram. My suggestion would be, if the date were corrected, to put this diagram on the talk page, first item. We can possibly even work a subtle and appropriate mention in article bodies that we have attempted to do a family tree. Geogre 13:22, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Names
Still a couple of naming points I'm unclear on:
- Sarah Gould Fielding (Sarah Fielding's mother) - what was her birth name? Was she a Gould and related (all those cousins and stuff), or did she adopt both the Gould and Fielding name when marrying into the family?
- Ok, I'm not sure here. We are better simply not offering a last name for her. The sources I've seen have either been silent or muddled, and we should provide only what we can be sure of. Geogre 14:14, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
- John Fielding - he wasn't Edmund Fielding's son, so did he adopt the surname Fielding after his mother (Anne Rapha) married Edmund? And was Anne's birth name Rapha, or was that her first married name?
- Again, unknown, but I believe "Rapha" is her married name. Are you sure that John isn't from the marriage? He was born in '21? Hadn't Edmund married Anne by that point? Geogre 14:14, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
- Was the change from Feilding to Fielding just part of the general trend of spelling changes at the time?
- This would be my guess. The name had been pronounced "field," rather than "feld," and mid-century was a time for a great deal of orthographic reform and hypercorrectiveness, both. Then again, it could have just been one of those famous "the Army did it" things. Edmund was an officer, so it's very unlikely that a foolish quartermaster made the change, but I simply don't know. (After all, Walter Ralegh spelling his last name "Ralegh" on 8 autographs we have by him and "Raleigh" only once, and yet we have decided the latter is his name.) Geogre 14:14, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
- Thank goodness Sarah Fielding didn't marry a Gould and become Sarah Fielding Gould! :-)
After that, I think it is time to get back to what she wrote. An article on David Simple would be nice. Carcharoth 13:32, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
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- Oh, not me. There are some Women's Studies editors out there, and, first, they'd kill me if I did it, and, second, I don't want to usurp the novel, and, third, I didn't like the book. I will put in some of the glowing stuff that Leslie Stephens's boys said about the translation of Xenophon, the subscription data, etc., but I'm not touching DS. (It really bored me. It was like the Heartsfree sections of Jonathan Wild. Basically, one either likes Sentimental Novel or one doesn't. I'm a Swiftian.) Geogre 14:14, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
That answers most of my questions. Just a few more points.
- "the fourth of seven children of Edmund and Sarah Gould Fielding." - this doesn't make clear whether Sarah married Edmund Gould Fielding, or whether Sarah Gould married Edmund Fielding.
- I know. We need to drop the "Gould" there, as we aren't sure enough of ourselves. (If only I read the Battestin biography in my office. I will clarify next time I'm in there.) Geogre 15:01, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
- "Anne Rapha, a Roman Catholic widow, who brought with her six children (including the future reformer, John Fielding)" - this implies John came with her, though as you point out, what is needed is the date she married him.
Anyway, maybe the reference below will help? Carcharoth 14:45, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
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- Ok, the Anne Rapha sentence is from Chawton house and from the glib 1898 DNB. It's one of those circumlocutions that I deplore about those old sources. She brought 6. I think 6 came from the prior marriage and fecundity. I think John is born after the marriage. (Edmund didn't believe in "armor," I guess.) Geogre 15:01, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
- I found this (a cache of this) that says: "Sir John Fielding (son of Edmund Fielding and Anne Rapha)" - so probably, yes, their son. Carcharoth 15:14, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
- Ok, the Anne Rapha sentence is from Chawton house and from the glib 1898 DNB. It's one of those circumlocutions that I deplore about those old sources. She brought 6. I think 6 came from the prior marriage and fecundity. I think John is born after the marriage. (Edmund didn't believe in "armor," I guess.) Geogre 15:01, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Possible sources
This looks good. Do you have access to JSTOR? The Childhood of Henry Fielding. Howard P. Vincent. The Review of English Studies, Vol. 16, No. 64 (Oct., 1940), pp. 438-444. The first page looks fascinating, with references to the case of Fielding vs Fielding, and the struggle between father and grandmother over the children's trust fund. Carcharoth 14:45, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
- And kittybrewster would love this. Carcharoth 14:48, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
- Another old JSTOR reference: [1]. That one is a review from 1920 of a book on the history of Henry Fielding: The History of Henry Fielding by Wilbur L. Cross. Author(s) of Review: J. Paul de Castro. The Modern Language Review, Vol. 15, No. 2 (Apr., 1920), pp. 181-188. Carcharoth 15:05, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
- I also liked the look of this, by Paulson. Seems to get the mother/grandmother thing wrong, but still. Incidentially, that confusion can come about with sentences like "the father and maternal grandmother fought for custody of the children" - people assume (quite rightly) that the father and grandmother bits refer to the same person (ie. the person who is the child of the father and the grandchild of the grandmother), but the sentence should say "the father and his maternal grandmother fought for custody of the children". Carcharoth 15:18, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Incorrect sources
There are a lot of sources out there that confuse Edmund's mother with his grandmother (both called Sarah Gould, and, I think, both called Lady Gould). I'm so confused now I can't sort them out, so is it possible to give a date for the latest verdict and to note that previous sources often got this wrong? Carcharoth 14:59, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
- Aha! So they are all Sarah Gould? What a mess! 'Enery the Eighth she is, she is. I'm going to use Battestin, when I next get an opportunity. Now, he can be wrong, but he just plain isn't wrong very often. (I.e. I disagree with his interpretation of HF's politics, but I could never in my lifetime argue with his facts.) He's as close to a last word as we're going to find. The 1940 source is great stuff about the legal maneuvers, but the two vol. life of HF is going to be our best hope for clear writing and good research. Geogre 15:05, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
- Edmund's mother has to be Sarah Gould, as in the family tree above (if that is right), she is the daughter of Sir Henry Gould. It is Edmund's wife that we only know is called Sarah, and are unsure if she is a Gould or not. Funnily enough, Henry Fielding tried to elope with a Sarah Andrew. He obviously had Sarahs on the brain. Carcharoth 15:10, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
- And this source repeats the claim that Edmund's wife was the daughter, rather than grand-daughter, of Sir Henry Gould, and that Edmund's father was John, not William. Sigh. I give up. Carcharoth 15:36, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Lady Gould and Dame Gould
I keep coming up against that 1940 source which I can' read! I'm reduced to searching line by line and watching it slowly expand. "Lady Gould" and "Dame Gould" are the same person, I presume? Carcharoth 15:46, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
- Prrrrrobably. "Dame" and "Lady" have peerage implications, but "lady" can be used for non-peers, and I think "dame" is the feminine "sir." Like I said: I have our library's Battestin biography of HF, so I'll go over the first few chapters that are biographical to see what he says. Martin Battestin would have read the 1940, as well as all other sources, including primary documents in Dorset, so he'll be our Ariadne, I hope. Geogre 21:45, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] The cyclops turns its eye
I have now done my Thresher Poet, so I'll see if I can spend some time with the HF biography to disentangle these branches of the tree this afternoon (US). Geogre 12:28, 25 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Some questions answered
- It's Edmund Feilding. Henry is the first to write it "Fielding." When a later Earl of Denbigh asked why, Henry Fielding's son said, "I cannot tell, my Lord, except it be that my branch of the family were the first that knew how to spell." Source: D. Nichol's Anecdotes, but I got it from Battestin and Battestin 6-7.
- Family matters:
- Henry Gould: Middle Temple in 1660 (age 17), bar 1667, knighted 1694, Judge of the King's Bench 1699 and reappointed by Anne. Died in 1710. He marries...
- Sarah Davidge Gould: She is the daughter of Richard Davidge and Katharine. Davidge is a very prosperous merchant, but Katharine brings land and money to the equation, including the house in Glastonbury where Henry Fielding would be born and where both Henry and Sarah would think of "home." Sarah Davidge Gould marries Henry Gould 1676-7 (OS/NS). Her sister is Katharine, who married Charles Cottington.
- Goulds have Davidge (inherits), Sarah (1682-1718), and others. Davidge becomes a highly distinguished lawyer himself at the Middle Temple, and he would help Henry Fielding become qualified as a barrister, and he married a Honors Hackmore in 1709.
- Sarah Gould marries Edmund Feilding, but let's go back to pick up his family.
- Edmund Feilding is related to the Earl of Denbigh, but that was a newish title. It had gone to William Feilding (1582-1643) on marrying a sister of George Villiers the infamous Jacobean...friend...(see, e.g. Giles Mompesson for how well Villiers's family did). His son Basil gets the title, then Basil's brother George, who became Earl of Desmond and gathered many Irish titles. George (3rd) had six sons, and the youngest was John (which is no reason not to get the title in that family). The eldest son of the 3rd Earl, George, was William (grandfather of Mary Wortley Montagu). The next eldest, Charles, concentrated on Ireland and helped Edmund along, later, by promotions in Irish army positions. Then there are Basil and Christopher -- the former stabbed in the heart by the latter in a tavern brawl that shocked Pepys. Finally, we get to John.
- John Feilding -- Sarah and Henry's grandfather on the paternal side -- was a minister. He went to Queen's College, Cambridge and got his MA in 1671. He was given his D.D. by the King. He moved to Puddletown as vicar. John had three sons, and Edmund is 3rd. John's connections with the Irish peerage led him to be considered for a bishopric there, although it never came through, and he held three livings.
- Henry and Sarah's uncle George was in the Horse Guard. He was very warm hearted and generous and left the nephews and niece money in his will in 1738. Their older uncle, John, became secretary to the governor of Jamaica, where he died in 1725. They also had an important aunt, Bridget, who married a Major Frederic Lapenotier, a Hugenot.
- Henry and Sarah therefore had a noble but rambunctious masculine side and an illustrious and learned feminine side, but, most importantly, Sarah Davidge Gould had estates, and so did Henry Gould, and both of them took in their daughter's family from the start (until the end, in 1718). It isn't really a Cruella de Ville situation, from what we can gather from Henry's Tom Jones and Sarah's The Governess. Instead, it's more of a lost idyll.
- The feminine side of the family was strongly inclined to preserve maiden names in their children (viz. a son named Davidge). More later, as I did some. Geogre 21:28, 25 July 2007 (UTC)
- So... does that mean that the DNB (2004) was complete rubbish? Where did their William Feilding come from, and how did they insert an extra Sarah Gould? The new family tree is below. Please feel free to delete the rubbish one above. Carcharoth 23:34, 25 July 2007 (UTC)
- No, it means that Chawton House relied on the 1898 DNB. I haven't seen the 2004 DNB on Sarah yet. That will come after I'm done with Henry Fielding's biography. Sarah and Henry <-Edmund <-John <-George 3rd Earl, brother of 2nd Earl Basil, who is the son of <- William, 1st Earl of Denbigh. The extra Sarah Gould came from Chawton House, and Battestin indicates that the genealogy, esp. on the father's side, was continuing research all the way up to the 1920's. Hence, the 1898 DNB would not have been able to get the clearer lines of genealogy. Geogre 03:12, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] New family tree
Sir Henry Gould (died 1710) |
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Sarah Davidge Gould (died 1733) |
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Sarah Gould Fielding (1682-1718) |
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Edmund Fielding (died 1741) |
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Anne Rapha Fielding |
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Henry Fielding (1707-1754) |
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Sarah Fielding (1710-1768) |
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John Fielding (1721-1780) |
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New family tree. Carcharoth 23:34, 25 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Changes
Looks good. I did notice a Felding, but wasn't sure if you meant Fielding or Feilding, so am mentioning it here. I also noticed you left in "by his first wife, Sarah", but do we even know the name of John Feilding's wife (Edmund's mother)? I removed that and also rewrote the section. Carcharoth 22:26, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
- I think she's a... wait for it... Sarah. I'm not sure, though. Geogre 02:54, 27 July 2007 (UTC)
- How ... interesting. I think I understand now why people tend to write about what writer's write, rather than their childhoods or their family trees. Must be careful not to let the "Childhood" section spiral out of control. Main bit of the article should be the "Writing" bit. Obviously. On the other hand, family stuff can be insightful. I've learnt more about Victorian and Edwardian England from reading various obscure sources about Tolkien's childhood, than I would have in any history books. Carcharoth 03:26, 27 July 2007 (UTC)
- If you ever have a few weeks, get Lawrence Stone's Family, Sex, and Marriage 1400-1750. It's a touchstone and should shake some of the shackles off in general. As late as the Edwardians, children were still neither seen often nor heard ever among the upper classes. In the 18th c., it was positively routine for rich folks to see their children only during vacations and for fathers to see the baby at the christening and then, pretty much, not until it was about to move out on its own. Geogre 03:40, 27 July 2007 (UTC)
- I'll keep an eye out for that. I noticed your edit summary "He couldn't have been ticked in 1718, because he'd been dead for 8 years" - LOL! Good catch. Do you have dates for Edmund? Would the children have known of his death, or did they lose touch completely? Carcharoth 15:04, 27 July 2007 (UTC)
- Oh, they surely knew. It was an important event, despite Lady Gould getting custody. I have to watch out for relying too much on Henry information, because there was a big, dramatic difference between the way girls were treated and boys, but Henry had been trying to reconcile the branches of the family, and he claimed that Edmund was reconciled to Judge Gould before the latter's death, but not Lady Gould before hers. Henry did not like his old man, though (and fathers and sons have ever been thus, but with not as much cause). Edmund had his a*se handed to him by the Lord Chancellor in the law suit, and Henry would denounce him viciously in a pamphlet. 6/25/41 was his funeral, I believe. Henry and all of the surviving children attended, according to Battestin 308. Geogre 15:24, 27 July 2007 (UTC)
- I'll keep an eye out for that. I noticed your edit summary "He couldn't have been ticked in 1718, because he'd been dead for 8 years" - LOL! Good catch. Do you have dates for Edmund? Would the children have known of his death, or did they lose touch completely? Carcharoth 15:04, 27 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Image
I'm extremely skeptical about that image. First, it shows cleavage, which is so out of bounds for SF's era as to be unimaginable. Second, the DNB always lists "likenesses" in its biographies and had none listed. Third, it doesn't look at all like Henry. Fourth, the person who supplied the image to commons offers no source at all, no justification. Therefore, I'm inclined to delete it without some indication of source (not web source, you image dweebs, but source source, as in who did it, when, and how). Geogre 01:16, 8 October 2007 (UTC)