Doctor Syntax & Bookseller
Description:
Doctor Syntax and the bookseller occupy the center of the piece. Syntax gestures demonstratively at his travel journal while the bookseller looks upward. To the left, the bookseller’s wife is seated in a parlor, grasping a decanter in one hand and a cup in the other, both of which are full of wine. To the right, a portly gentleman stands on a stepladder, fumbling with books on a shelf above his head. Further to the right, the bookseller’s assistant grasps a large book in his right arm and moves to shield himself from the two books about to fall on his head. Two published works are labeled in the piece. In the right foreground, a book is titled “Sermons by Bishop Blaze,” with the phrase “waste paper” scrawled beneath the author’s name. In the pocket of Doctor Syntax is a rolled-up paper labeled “PROSPECTUS.”
Copyright:
Copyright 2009, Department of Special Collections, Memorial Library, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI
Accession Number:
Thordarson T 574
Height (in centimeters):
11
Width (in centimeters):
19
Provenance
Thomas Rowlandson (1757-1827)Printing Context
Dr. Syntax & Bookseller was first published in the inaugural issue of Poetical Magazine (1809), along with the rest of William Combe’s poem, under the title “The Schoolmaster’s Tour.” It was later bound in book form (May, 1812).Associated Events
Picturesque TourismSubject
This image depicts an exasperated bookseller initially refuses to publish Dr. Syntax's work. In creating this caricature, Thomas Rowlandson is not taking aim at picturesque tourists so much as he is mocking the picturesque tour-writer. As the popularity of picturesque tourism boomed, writers aimed to emulate the success of William Gilpin's Observations series by sketching their own picturesque scenes and expounding upon Gilpin's ideas. These travel journals eventually flooded the market for printed literature, frustrating readers and booksellers alike; this oversaturation is reflected by the bookseller’s dismissal of Syntax’s work. However, once Dr. Syntax reveals himself to be an “intellectual,” the bookseller quickly agrees to publish the work—Combe’s implication being that the guides written by “educated” persons were often as banal as their middle-class counterparts. The bookseller’s initial dismissal of the tour as being superfluous in an already-crowded field is reflected in his body language. His slouching posture, frustrated facial expression, and upturned eyes all indicate exasperation and disinterest. In the accompanying text he complains, "I've had enough of Tours and such-like flimsy stuff” (Combe 206). The bookseller, his wife, and the unidentified man on the ladder are comically overweight, likely serving as a visual reinforcement of the lavish lifestyle of those who profited from the booming market for literature and other printed media.Significance
This piece is representative of many of the central issues definitive of the Romantic age: the dissemination of print, the crowded market for tours, and a developing frustration with the public's addiction to manifestations of the picturesque. The audience for written works was increasing as literacy rates climbed, and readers were initially intrigued by the picturesque and the concept of picturesque tourism (and even domestic tourism, an uncommon practice at the time); in particular, the picturesque as presented by Gilpin's Observations series was remarkably popular. In the wake of Gilpin’s success, however, came a flood of writers who wished to find similar acclaim. These writers’ written tours flooded the market, and most picturesque tourists brought journals with them to record the happenings and sketch the sights of their vacation. Eventually tours became mundane, and booksellers began to dismiss tour journals as superfluous in an already-overcrowded genre. Combe’s poem (which accompanies Rowlandson’s caricature) helped usher in the fad of poking fun at stereotypically oblivious picturesque tourists and their laughable habits. The idea of the “intellectual” individual is lampooned as well, since Dr. Syntax’s previously worthless tour is considered fit for publication the moment Syntax mentions that he is such an individual. Such subtle mockery of the upper classes and implicit praise of the common man was fairly typical of the Romantic era, as evidenced by the poetry of Wordsworth, and, to some extent, Blake.Function
Caricature was a relatively cheap form of entertainment during the early nineteenth century, and served to report on daily news as well as to provide entertainment by poking fun at fads and figures of the day.Bibliography
Andrews, Malcom. “Gilpin, William (1724–1804).” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Ed. H. C. G. Matthew and Brian Harrison. Oxford: OUP, 2004. Online ed. Ed. Lawrence Goldman. Oct. 2005. 20 Apr. 2009.Long Title
The Tour of Doctor Syntax, In Search of the Picturesque. A Poem.Featured in Exhibit:
Illustrator:
Image Date:
1 May 1812
Publisher:
Rudolph Ackermann