What is an essay? The literary
essay is indefinable as a spring day in the wood, but it does
suggest some qualities of an essay like the day itself. The root meaning of the
term, essay is an attempt or trial. Dr. Johnson defined an essay as “a loose
sally of the mind, an irregular undigested piece, not a regular and orderly
composition.” The emphasis is on the informality of tone and the fact that an
essay in not an exhaustive, argumentative disquisition on a theme. The essay
could be objective as well as subjective. In subjective essays, the object is
not important, any subject will do.
It is the writer’s personality
which lends charm to this type of essay. J.J. Lobbans’s definition of
the essay as, “a short discursive article on any literary, philosophical or
social subject, viewed from a personal or historical standpoint” includes all
types of essays.
Montaigne and Bacon: The
essay as a distinct form was born in the 16th century with French writer,
Montaigne’s Essays. He frankly confessed that his essays were about himself, in
the sense that they portray him in a number of moods and habits. Bacon borrowed
this form from Montaigne but suited it to his own purpose. Bacon lived in a
time and country where life was both serious and vigorous and he is occupied
with serious matters. One can say that these essays show his egotism in the sense
that they show his ideas and thoughts based on his own experience. But in
Bacon’s essays we don’t find the chatty quality found in Montaigne’s or Charles
Lamb’s essays. Emerson is the one modern writer with whom Bacon may be
fairly compared, for their method is much the same. But Hugh Walter rightly
says, “With Bacon we enter the world of stark realities, rational and grave,
having no place for lively humor or conversational ease. But this
doesn’t detract us from his greatness as an essayist. To him goes the
credit of being the first of English essayists, as he remains, for sheer mass
and weight of genius, the greatest”
The form and subject of
Bacon’s purpose: Bacon’s essays come home to men’s business and bosoms.
Bacon’s essays group themselves round three great principles: (a) Man in
relation to the world and society (b) Man in relation to himself and (c) Man in
relation to his Maker. In all of these categories of his essays he has given
variety. Man is the subject of Bacon’s essays. This human interest is one
reason why his essays are popular and have universal appeal because human
beings are most interested in themselves. For Bacon’s purpose, only this form
was the most suitable. He developed this genre with his essayistic qualities.
The subject of his essays is varied and bears a wide range. He writes on a
variety of themes such as family life, politics, marriage, friendship, studies,
ambition and many others. Bacon thus proved the capacity of the essay form to
be all-inclusive. Later essayists too proved it so we have political,
historical and biographical essays. Bacon’s intent in writing essays was a
serious one. He intended them to be “Counsels Civil and Moral”. They were not
written for amusements or leisure time. They do not have the personal
element that make Lamb’s essays too charming. In this differs fromMontaigne too.
Bacon gives opinions and never speaks of himself. He speaks like a statesman or
a moralist, not like a street boy. Bacon is concerned in most of his essays
with ethical qualities of men and with political matters and thought it clear
that he admires moral and intellectual truth, he is practical and
rather opportunistic in the advice he offers. He doesn’t expect his reader to
aspire to a high standard of morality; he simply approaches to him with practical and
worldly didacticism. His essays have historical significance, too, for they
were written for a particular group of men to offer them guidance that they
must rise in the world and do good to the state. His essays are brief as any
essay should be. He is not lightly dealing with important topics. He deals with
all essay topics seriously even if they are unimportant. As he writes about
gardens, but authoritatively and in a dignified manner, not humorously and
subjectively like Lamb orMontaigne. A man who wants to achieve worldly and
material success and popularity could easily find very useful principle here in
Bacon’s essays. The reader’s interest is held by the historical and literary
allusions tinged with Greek and Latin references.
Style: His essays are also
important from stylistic point of view, too. To Bacon must go the credit, not
only of introducing a new literary form into England but also that he
developed a style which is marked for its pitch and pregnancy in the
communication of thought. It was the first style set in England which
later traveled to the age of Addison, Steele and Swift. He discovered the value
of brief, crisp and firmly-knitted sentences of a type hitherto unfamiliar in
English. He also rejected the elaborate euphuistic style overcrowded with
imagery and conceits. The most important characteristic of his style, that
which gives the essays the position of a classic in English Language is
the terseness of expression and epigrammatic force. He has an unraveled ability
of packing his thoughts into the smallest possible space. The essays may be
described as one critic says, “Infinite riches in a little room.” (Give
sentential examples from his essays). Bacon was a man of the renaissance and in
his essays; we find a characteristic of his age: the use of figurative
language. Similes and Metaphors and striking comparisons are found in his
essays. The scholar’s love of learning is evidenced by the frequent use of
quotations and allusions in the essays. What is most important regarding
his contribution is the terseness and epigrammatic quality of his essays.
Conclusion: Bacon’s essays
are a proof of his strength of mind, intellect and knowledge. They are packed
with remarkable sagacity and insight, shrewd and profound observation. He
showed for the first time with (along with Hooker) that English was as capable
as Greek or Latin of serving the highest purposes of language. Sercombe and
Allen say, “Trite as the subjects are familiar as the treatment of those who
know the Essays, the reader is seldom unrewarded by a sensation of novelty, so
multitudinous are the face of Bacon’s thoughts.” John Freeman says, “The
intellectual spend-thrift is the true essayist.” As one of the world’s
epoch-making books, Bacon’s essays have done much to mould and direct the
character of many individuals. The brevity of these essays has been
recommendation to readers with limited leisure. They have become a classic of
the English Language and they owe this position, not to their
subject-matter, but to their style.
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