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                            <forename>Joseph</forename>
                            <surname>Addison</surname>
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                        <title>The Spectator</title>

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                            <publisher>Samuel Buckley</publisher>
                            <date when="1711">1711</date>
                            <note resp="editors.xml#JOB"> The texts for <hi rend="italic"> The
                                    Spectator</hi> are taken from Project Gutenberg's digital
                                edition, which uses the 1891 printing of the three-volume collected
                                edition of <hi rend="italic"> The Spectator</hi> edited by Henry
                                Morley and printed by George Routledge and Sons. That is in turn a
                                reprint of Morley's 1883 edition, which was published as part of <hi rend="italic">Morley's Universal Library</hi>, a series offering
                                inexpensive reprints of canonical texts. The annotations have been
                                added by students and faculty at the University of Virginia. </note>
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                    and American literature of the 18th century. This project is funded by the
                    National Endowment for the Humanities and developed by faculty at The University
                    of Virginia and Marymount University. </p>
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                    <p>Research informing these annotations draws on publicly-accessible resources,
                        with links provided where possible. Annotations have also included common
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                        sources. If you notice an error in these annotations, please contact
                        lic.open.anthology@gmail.com.</p>
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                <pb n="Recto" facs="https://lic-assets-staging.s3.amazonaws.com/addison-steele-spectator/1r.jpg"/>
                <head>
                    <ref target="Spectator_" corresp="Spectator">THE SPECTATOR #1 </ref>
                </head>
                <note xml:id="Spectator" target="Spectator_" resp="editors.xml#JOB" type="editorial">
                    <p>
                            <hi rend="italic">The Spectator</hi> is the most famous work of
                            journalism of the eighteenth century in English. It helped define
                            what journalism could be. The series of daily essays, published like a
                            newspaper, set the pattern for a kind of writing that persists to the
                            present day. Comparatively short essays on topics of interest to
                            middle-class readers (politics, fashion, the arts), written in
                            straightforward, unfussy prose without professional jargon: this is a
                            mode of writing that is still standard in print and online journalism. A
                            collaboration between Joseph Addison and Richard Steele, <hi rend="italic">The Spectator</hi> was for a long time after its
                            initial run in 1711 and 1712 held up to English students and readers as
                            a model of prose style, and although to our eyes there are moments where
                            the prose feels a little archaic, Addison and Steele's version of
                            English prose is much closer to the way that we write now than the prose
                            from a hundred, or even fifty years earlier (Elizabathan prose, for
                            example, is far more challenging to most modern readers than that
                            period's poetry, which is a reversal from what we might expect.) Addison
                            and Steele's main influence on writers and readers over the last three
                            hundred years may lie mostly in the way that the two of them developed
                            and popularized a style of English prose that is more or less the one
                            that we still use in much expository writing. </p>
                    <lb/>
                        <p>In modern times, <hi rend="italic">The Spectator</hi>has been credited
                            with being essential to the formation of what the sociologist Jürgen
                            Habermas has influentially dubbed “the bourgeois public sphere.”
                            Habermas describes the bourgeois public sphere as being made up of
                            private individuals coming together to constitute a public, in this case
                            a public that was not affiliated with the government or the church, but
                            an independent body that could discuss important issues on its own.
                            Gathered together in coffee houses, over tea tables, or simply in their
                            homes, readers of <hi rend="italic">The Spectator</hi> were among the
                            first citizens to have a print publication that became a common frame of
                            reference for middle-class English-speaking people. The journal set an
                            agenda and a way of thinking about society and the arts that seemed
                            derived, not from the aristocracy or the church, but from the shared
                            world of the readers themselves.</p>
                    <lb/>
                        <graphic url="https://lic-assets-staging.s3.amazonaws.com/addison-steele-spectator/Spectator_page.jpeg" alt="Image of an issue of the Spectator" source="Private collection" desc="Recto of issue from January 1712 (private collection, used by permission)"/>
                        <p>
                        <hi rend="italic">The Spectator </hi>followed on the heels of <hi rend="italic">The Tatler</hi>, which had run from April 12, 1709 to
                            December 30, 1710. Steele had taken the lead with <hi rend="italic">The
                                Tatler</hi>, asking for help from Addison and others on occasion to
                            fill out the pages. But it was Addison who seems to have been the leader
                            for <hi rend="italic">The Spectator</hi>, supplying the first issue and
                            many others after that. In this case, timing was everything. Addison and
                            his Whig party had just lost a parliamentary election towards the end of
                            1710. Addison was a cabinet member, at the center of government
                            policy-making, so he suddenly found himself kicked out of office with
                            time on his hands; writing in collaboration with his old friend
                            Richard Steele was just the thing to keep his hand in the public
                            conversation. <hi rend="italic">The Spectator</hi> differed in format in
                            significant ways from its immediate predecessor. It was published daily,
                            except for Sunday; <hi rend="italic">The Tatler</hi> had come out three
                            days a week. Where <hi rend="italic">The Tatler</hi> had generally had
                            several items in each issue, most issues of <hi rend="italic">The
                                Spectator</hi> focused on a single topic. The new journal also had a
                            different framing device than the older one. Where Steele had arranged
                            the articles in <hi rend="italic">The Tatler</hi> by the imagined
                            location in London from which various “correspondents” were sending him
                            information (theater news coming from Will's Coffee House, political
                            news from the St. James Coffee House, the whole thing being a parody of
                            the way that official newspapers published correspondence from foreign
                            cities), <hi rend="italic">The Spectator</hi> had a fictional “club”
                            that would come up with ideas. Steele described its members in the
                            second issue: there was a country squire, Sir Roger de Coverly, a
                            lawyer, a businessman (Sir Andrew Freeport), a soldier (Major Sentry),
                            an aging libertine (Will Honeycomb), and a clergyman. Between them, the
                            Club represented many of the important segments of middle-class culture
                            in the eighteenth century. The Spectator Club never worked quite as it
                            seems to have been intended—relatively few issues feature it in any
                            central way—but it was another means by which the journal was projecting
                            itself as giving a voice to a variety of contemporary interests.</p> <lb/>And
                        the journal occasionally referred to the coffee-house culture that
                        middle-class people (well, middle-class men, since women were generally not
                        welcome) had developed in this period, a milieu (depicted here), where men
                        met to socialize, gossip, talk over issues of the day, read from the
                        coffee-shop's stock of newspapers and journals (which were expensive enough
                        that individuals might not subscribe), and get their caffeine fix
                            satisfied.<graphic url="https://lic-assets-staging.s3.amazonaws.com/addison-steele-spectator/London_coffee_shop1700.jpg" alt="Painting of customers in a London coffee house, circa 1710" source="Wikimedia Commons" desc="A London coffee-house, circa 1710 (Wikimedia Commons)"/>
                        <p>Most importantly, <hi rend="italic">The Spectator</hi> introduces a new
                            kind of persona, what critics call an <hi rend="italic">eidolon</hi>, in
                            the figure of “Mr. Spectator,” in whose voice all of the essays were
                            composed, no matter which of the two men was the actual author. <hi rend="italic">The Spectator</hi> did not invent the concept of the
                                <hi rend="italic">eidolon</hi>, but it provided perhaps its most
                            influential model, one imitated over and over again in works such as
                            Benjamin Franklin’s “Silence Dogood” pieces in <hi rend="italic">The New
                                England Courant</hi> (1721), Samuel Johnson’s<hi rend="italic">Rambler</hi> essays (1750-52), and even the Federalist essays
                            composed by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay to defend
                            the U. S. Constitution. Mr. Spectator projected himself as a civilized
                            man of the world, an observer looking on society like a fly on the wall.
                            He is well educated, but not a specialist in anything, which enables him
                            to comment on all sorts of things. In the course of its run, <hi rend="italic">The Spectator</hi> offers essays on fashion, on
                            politics, on religion, on literature. Steele’s essay on Inkle and Yarico
                            (#11) popularized the story to eighteenth-century readers; it would
                            become a cultural phenomenon, with plays, musicals, and poems about the
                            doomed pair of lovers abounding in English-speaking culture over the
                            next few decades. Addison’s essays on John Milton's epic <hi rend="italic">Paradise Lost </hi>and the series generally known as
                            “the pleasures of the imagination” became widely influential works of
                            literary criticism and aesthetic theory that to some extent established
                            a paradigm for what modern criticism could be. To be sure, this is a
                            very male <hi rend="italic">eidolon</hi>, and it is no surprise to
                            discover that <hi rend="italic">The Spectator’s</hi> essays are very
                            frequently condescending towards women readers. In the 1740s, Eliza
                            Haywood published a journal called <hi rend="italic">The Female
                                Spectator</hi> http://www2.scc.rutgers.edu/spectator/haywood/, one
                            that forms a nice counterweight to the bluff masculinity of Addison and
                            Steele’s journal.</p>
                    <lb/>
                        <p>
                        <hi rend="italic">The Spectator</hi> ran from March 3, 1711 to December
                            6, 1712, comprising 555 issues in all. (On his own, Addison revived <hi rend="italic">The Spectator</hi> briefly for a few months in 1714,
                            but these essays were generally not as popular.) Of these, about 250
                            issues each were written by Addison and Steele; Addison’s cousin Eustace
                            Budgell contributed a small number, as did the poet John Hughes. Over
                            time, we hope to add more issues of both <hi rend="italic">The
                                Tatler</hi> and <hi rend="italic">The Spectator</hi> to this digital
                            anthology.</p>
                </note>
                <lb/>
                <lb/>
                <head type="sub">Thursday, March 1, 1711.</head> <lb/>
                <lb/>
                
                    <head type="sub">
                    <ref target="Horace_" corresp="Horace">
                        <hi rend="italic">Non fumum exfulgere,
                            sed ex fumo dare lucem Cogitat, ut speciosa dehinc miracula
                            promat.</hi>--Hor.</ref>
                </head>
                <note xml:id="Horace" target="Horace_" resp="editors.xml#JOB" type="editorial">"He intends not smoke from the flame, but
                        fire from the smoke, so as to reveal wonderful things. Horace." Addison is
                        quoting here from "The Art of Poetry," a verse treatise by the Roman poet
                        Horace that was widely read in the eighteenth century. Addison could count
                        on most of his educated readers knowing the allusion, since the poem was so
                        widely taught in secondary schools. The joke here is that Addison is
                        imagining this essay as being read aloud in smoke-filled
                        coffeehouses.</note>
                    <lb/>
                <head type="sub">To be Continued every Day.</head>
                <lb/>
                
                <p>I HAVE observed, that a Reader seldom peruses a Book with Pleasure 'till he knows
                    whether the Writer of it be a <ref target="black_" corresp="black">black or a
                        fair Man</ref>
                    <note xml:id="black" target="black_">This is not a racial category in Addison's day; the distincion is between having dark or light hair and complexion.</note>, of a <ref target="cholerick_" corresp="cholerick">mild or
                        cholerick Disposition</ref>
                    <note xml:id="cholerick" target="cholerick_">A
                        relaxed or angry disposition.</note>, Married or a Batchelor, with other
                    Particulars of the like nature, that <ref target="conduce_" corresp="conduce">conduce</ref>
                    <note xml:id="conduce" target="conduce_">Contribute to.</note>
                    very much to the right Understanding of an Author. To gratify this Curiosity,
                    which is so natural to a Reader, I design this Paper, and my next, as <ref target="prefatory_" corresp="prefatory">Prefatory</ref>
                    <note xml:id="prefatory" target="prefatory_">introductory.</note> Discourses to my
                    following Writings, and shall give some Account in them of the several persons
                    that are engaged in this Work. As the chief trouble of Compiling, Digesting, and
                    Correcting will fall to my Share, I must do myself the Justice to open the Work
                    with my own History.</p>
                <p>I was born to a small Hereditary Estate, which according to the tradition of the
                    village where it lies, was bounded by the same Hedges and Ditches in <ref target="William_" corresp="William">
                        <hi rend="italic">William</hi> the
                        Conqueror's</ref>
                    <note xml:id="William" target="William_">The Norman warlord
                        who defeated the English king Harold at the Battle of Hastings in 1066 and
                        became William I. </note> Time that it is at present, and has been delivered
                    down from Father to Son whole and entire, without the Loss or Acquisition of a
                    single Field or Meadow, during the Space of six hundred Years. There runs a
                    Story in the Family, that when my Mother was gone with Child of me about three
                    Months, she dreamt that she was brought to Bed of a Judge. Whether this might
                    proceed from a Law-suit which was then depending in the Family, or my Fathers
                    being a Justice of the Peace, I cannot determine; for I am not so vain as to
                    think it <ref target="presaged_" corresp="presaged">presaged</ref>
                    <note xml:id="presaged" target="presaged_">Predict or foretell.</note> any Dignity
                    that I should arrive at in my future Life, though that was the Interpretation
                    the Neighbourhood put upon it. The Gravity of my Behaviour at my very first
                    Appearance in the World, and all the Time that I <ref target="sucked_" corresp="sucked">sucked</ref>
                    <note xml:id="sucked" target="sucked_">breastfed</note>, seemed to favour my Mothers Dream: For, as she has often
                    told me, I threw away my Rattle before I was two Months old, and would that was
                    the Interpretation which the Neighbourhood put upon not make use of my <ref target="coral_" corresp="coral">Coral</ref>
                    <note xml:id="coral" target="coral_">That is, his teething ring; these were often made of coral
                        in this period.</note> till they had taken away the Bells from it.</p>
                <p>As for the rest of my Infancy, there being nothing in it remarkable, I shall pass
                    it over in Silence. I find that, during my <ref target="nonage_" corresp="nonage">Nonage</ref>
                    <note xml:id="nonage" target="nonage_">Youth or
                        childhood. Source: Oxford English Dictionary</note>, I had the reputation of
                    a very sullen Youth, but was always a Favourite of my School-master, who used to
                    say, that my <ref target="parts_" corresp="parts">parts</ref>
                    <note xml:id="parts" target="parts_">Characteristics or elements of a person.
                    </note> were solid and would wear well. I had not been long at the University,
                    before I distinguished myself by a most profound Silence: For, during the Space
                    of eight Years, excepting in the publick Exercises of the College, I scarce
                    uttered the Quantity of an hundred Words; and indeed do not remember that I ever
                    spoke three Sentences together in my whole Life. Whilst I was in this Learned
                    Body, I applied myself with so much Diligence to my Studies, that there are very
                    few celebrated Books, either in the Learned or the Modern Tongues, which I am
                    not acquainted with.</p>
                <p>Upon the Death of my Father I was resolved to travel into Foreign Countries, and
                    therefore left the University, with the Character of an odd unaccountable
                    Fellow, that had a great deal of Learning, if I would but show it. An insatiable
                    Thirst after Knowledge carried me into all the Countries of Europe, in which
                    there was any thing new or strange to be seen; nay, to such a Degree was my
                    curiosity raised, that having read the controversies of some great Men
                    concerning the Antiquities of <hi rend="italic">Egypt</hi>, I made a Voyage to
                        <hi rend="italic">Grand Cairo</hi>, on purpose to take the Measure of a
                    Pyramid; and, as soon as I had set my self right in that Particular, returned to
                    my Native Country with great Satisfaction.</p>
                <p>I have passed my latter Years in this City, where I am frequently seen in most
                    publick Places, tho there are not above half a dozen of my select Friends that
                    know me; of whom my next Paper shall give a more particular Account. There is no
                    place of general Resort wherein I do not often make my appearance; sometimes I
                    am seen thrusting my Head into a Round of Politicians at <ref target="wills_" corresp="wills">
                        <hi rend="italic">Wills</hi>
                    </ref>
                    <note xml:id="wills" target="wills_">Wills was a popular coffee shop. Coffee-drinking was
                        comparatively new to England, havinug arrived as a practice, probably from
                        Turkey, a few decades before. But coffee shops were everywhere in London in
                        the early eighteenth century, becoming popular places for men (and they were
                        almost-always male dominated domains) to socialize while they satisfied
                        their cravings for caffeine and (since smoking pipes was also popular)
                        nicotine. Over the next few lines, Mr. Spectator names several of the most
                        popular coffee shops in central London at the time.</note>, and listening
                    with great Attention to the Narratives that are made in those little Circular
                    Audiences. Sometimes I smoak a Pipe at <hi rend="italic">Childs</hi>; and, while
                    I seem attentive to nothing but the <ref target="post-man_" corresp="post-man">
                        <hi rend="italic">Post-man</hi>
                    </ref>
                    <note xml:id="post-man" target="post-man_">one of the daily newspapers in London at that
                    time</note>, over-hear the Conversation of every Table in the Room. I appear on
                        <hi rend="italic">Sunday</hi> nights at <hi rend="italic">St. James's
                        Coffee</hi> House, and sometimes join the little Committee of Politicks in
                    the Inner-Room, as one who comes there to hear and improve. My Face is likewise
                    very well known at the <hi rend="italic">Grecian</hi>, the <hi rend="italic">Cocoa-Tree</hi>, and in the <ref target="theatres_" corresp="theatres">Theaters both of <hi rend="italic">Drury Lane and the
                        Hay-Market</hi>
                    </ref>
                    <note xml:id="theatres" target="theatres_">The theaters
                        on Drury Lane and the Hay-Market were the two state-licensed playhouses in
                        central London. As Mr. Spectator implies here, theaters were as much places
                        to be seen by others as to see a play; they were intensely social spaces,
                        where theatergoers enjoyed the spectacle of other audience members almost as
                        much--and sometimes more--than they enjoyed the performances on the
                        stage.</note>. I have been taken for a Merchant <pb n="Verso" facs="https://lic-assets-staging.s3.amazonaws.com/addison-steele-spectator/1v.jpg"/>upon the <hi rend="italic">Exchange</hi> for above these ten Years, and sometimes pass for a <hi rend="italic">Jew</hi> in the Assembly of <ref target="stock-jobbers_" corresp="stock-jobbers">Stock-Jobbers</ref>
                    <note xml:id="stock-jobbers" target="stock-jobbers_">stockbrokers, but the sense here is more pejorative
                        than the word is today; selling stock in private companies was comparatively
                        new, and looked at with suspicion by some</note> at <hi rend="italic">Jonathans</hi>. In short, where-ever I see a Cluster of People, I always
                    mix with them, tho I never open my Lips but in my own Club.</p>
                <p>Thus I live in the World, rather as a Spectator of Mankind, than as one of the
                    Species; by which means I have made my self a Speculative Statesman, Soldier,
                    Merchant, and Artizan, without ever medling with any Practical Part in Life. I
                    am very well versed in the Theory of an Husband, or a Father, and can discern
                    the Errors in the Oeconomy, Business, and Diversion of others, better than those
                    who are engaged in them; as Standers-by discover <ref target="blots_" corresp="blots">Blots</ref>
                    <note xml:id="blots" target="blots_">Exposed
                        pieces in a game like backgammon, checkers, or chess. Source: Oxford English
                        Dictionary</note>, which are apt to escape those who are in the Game. I
                    never espoused any Party with Violence, and am resolved to observe an exact
                    Neutrality between the <ref target="politics_" corresp="politics">Whigs and
                        Tories</ref>
                    <note xml:id="politics" target="politics_">The Whigs and the
                        Tories were the two main political factions of the day. The <hi rend="italic">Spectator</hi> positioned itself as a neutral journal, and
                        part of the reason why Addison and Steele tried to stay anonymous was to
                        keep up that pretense, since they were both well known to be Whigs.</note>,
                    unless I shall be forcd to declare myself by the Hostilities of either side. In
                    short, I have acted in all the parts of my Life as a Looker-on, which is the
                        <ref target="character_" corresp="character">Character</ref>
                    <note xml:id="character" target="character_">Addison is punning here on the sense
                        of character as personal identity and character as a printed mark on a
                        page.</note> I intend to preserve in this Paper.</p>
                <p>I have given the Reader just so much of my History and Character, as to let him
                    see I am not altogether unqualified for the Business I have undertaken. As for
                    other Particulars in my Life and Adventures, I shall insert them in following
                    Papers, as I shall see occasion. In the mean time, when I consider how much I
                    have seen, read, and heard, I begin to blame my own <ref target="taciturnity_" corresp="taciturnity">Taciturnity</ref>
                    <note xml:id="taciturnity" target="taciturnity_">silence</note>; and since I have neither Time nor
                    Inclination to communicate the Fulness of my Heart in Speech, I am resolved to
                    do it in Writing; and to Print my self out, if possible, before I Die. I have
                    been often told by my Friends that it is Pity so many useful Discoveries which I
                    have made, should be in the possession of a Silent Man. For this Reason
                    therefore, I shall publish a Sheet full of Thoughts every Morning, for the
                    Benefit of my Contemporaries; and if I can any way contribute to the Diversion
                    or Improvement of the Country in which I live, I shall leave it, when I am
                    summoned out of it, with the secret Satisfaction of thinking that I have not
                    Lived in vain.</p>
                <p>There are three very material Points which I have not spoken to in this Paper,
                    and which, for several important Reasons, I must keep to my self; at least for
                    some Time: I mean, an Account of my Name, my Age, and my Lodgings. I must
                    confess I would gratify my Reader in any thing that is reasonable; but as for
                    these three Particulars, though I am sensible they might tend very much to the
                    Embellishment of my Paper, I cannot yet come to a Resolution of communicating
                    them to the Publick. They would indeed draw me out of that Obscurity which I
                    have enjoyed for many Years, and expose me in Publick Places to several Salutes
                    and Civilities, which have been always very disagreeable to me; for the greatest
                    pain I can suffer, is the being talked to, and being stared at. It is for this
                    Reason likewise, that I keep my Complexion and Dress, as very great Secrets; tho
                    it is not impossible, but I may make Discoveries of both in the Progress of the
                    Work I have undertaken.</p>
                <p>After having been thus particular upon my self; I shall in tomorrows Paper give
                    an Account of those Gentlemen who are concerned with me in this Work. For, as I
                    have before <ref target="intimated_" corresp="intimated">intimated</ref>
                    <note xml:id="intimated" target="intimated_">shared confidentially</note>, a Plan
                    of it is laid and <ref target="concerted_" corresp="concerted">concerted</ref>
                    <note xml:id="concerted" target="concerted_">arranged or
                        contrived by two or more people working "in consert"</note> (as all other
                    Matters of Importance are) in a Club. However, as my Friends have engaged me to
                    stand in the Front, those who have a mind to correspond with me, may direct
                    their Letters <hi rend="italic">To the Spectator</hi>, at <ref target="Buckleys_" corresp="Buckleys">Mr. <hi rend="italic">Buckleys</hi>, in <hi rend="italic">Little Britain</hi>
                    </ref>.<note xml:id="Buckleys" target="Buckleys_">Samuel Buckley was the printer and publisher of the new journal. His print-shop was on Little Britain, a street in London where a number of printers congregated at this time.</note> For I must further
                    acquaint the Reader, that tho' our Club meets only on <hi rend="italic">Tuesdays</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Thursdays</hi>, we have appointed a
                    Committee to sit every Night, for the Inspection of all such Papers as may
                    contribute to the Advancement of the Public <ref target="weal_" corresp="weal">Weal</ref>
                    <note xml:id="weal" target="weal_">welfare and happiness
                    </note>.</p>
                <lb/>
                <p>
                    <ref target="clio_" corresp="clio">C.</ref>
                    <note xml:id="clio" target="clio_" resp="editors.xml#JOB" type="gloss">Addison identified the essays that he wrote with the letters C, L, I, or O,
                        which collectively spell out Clio, the muse of history. </note>
                </p>
                <lb/>
                <lb/>
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