6 research outputs found
Erasmus Darwin, Thomas Beddoes, and âThe Golden Ageâ of the 1790s
An anonymous poetic parody entitled âThe Golden Age, A Poetical Epistle from Erasmus Dâân, M.D. to Thomas Beddoes, M.D.â appeared in England in 1794 and has often been attributed to Erasmus Darwin since then. This article explores how the parody presents half-truths and surprising facts about 1790s radicalism(s) and the sexual revolution that grew out of early botanical studies to convince generations of readers that the slanderous sentiments leveled at Darwin and Beddoes were Darwin's own. The article demonstrates further that this apparently silly mockery makes such clever use of the traditional features of poetic parody that it may be considered to be a model of the literary form. In these ways, the poet of âThe Golden Ageâ engages in an ideological battle to silence the radical scientist-poets by identifying them with unnaturalness, or perversion