Smollett, Tobias (George) - Ronald Paulson (essay date 1967)
Ronald Paulson (essay date 1967)
SOURCE: "Smollett: The Satirist As a Character Type," in his Satire and the Novel in Eighteenth-Century England, Yale University Press, 1967, pp. 186-208.
[In the following excerpt, Paulson focuses on Smollett's later novels, arguing that while earlier works like Roderick Random define what it is to be a satirist, later novels, such as Ferdinand Count Fathom and, ultimately, Humphry Clinker, represent Smollett's greatest maturity as a writer and contain his most realistic character portrayals.]
The Search for a Satirist
After Peregrine Pickle each of Smollett's novels is to some extent a search for a satirist, an exploration into the function and meaning of the satirist, just as each contains a solution of some kind to the problem of a satiric form. Roderick, Peregrine, and Crabtree [a character in Peregrine Pickle] offer three solutions to the problem of...
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