A History of Solitude. David Vincent
his discussion of religious fanaticism, Zimmermann drew a distinction between continental Europe and its outlying nation, where the monasteries had not recovered from the Reformation. ‘An Englishman,’ he wrote, ‘when melancholy, shoots himself; a melancholy Frenchman used to turn Carthusian.’60 In a country where the only visible hermits were those employed to inhabit grottos for the entertainment of visitors to newly landscaped country estates, monastic seclusion did not appear an immediate threat to the good ordering of religious practice.61 However, in Britain as elsewhere, Enlightenment rationalism was at odds in the eighteenth century with forms of religious enthusiasm that foregrounded a direct encounter with God by the impassioned believer. Anglican and nonconformist evangelicalism had yet to generate new institutional contexts for such personal communication, but the tradition of the desert fathers remained alive and towards the end of the eighteenth century was stimulating interest amongst theologians. While Solitude Considered was going through successive English editions in the 1790s, the Reverend James Milner began publishing his influential History of the Church of Christ, which sought to educate the clergy and laity in the lives and work of the early Christians. He argued for greater, though not uncritical, respect for the monastic tradition: ‘We often hear it said, How ridiculous to think of pleasing God by austerities and solitude! Far be it from me to vindicate the superstitions of monks, and particularly the vows of celibacy. But the error is very natural, has been reprehended much too severely and the profaneness of men of the world is abundantly more dangerous.’62 Alongside this cautious defence of religious solitude, popular interest in the ‘superstitions’ of the Catholic churches was heightened by the outbreak of war in 1793 with Britain’s nearest Catholic neighbour. The outcome was the publication in 1796 of a novel still more sensational than Zimmermann’s treatise.
Matthew Lewis’s The Monk created a template for a category of vigorous, sometimes salacious attacks on enclosed religious institutions that was to flourish throughout much of the succeeding century in both fiction and non-fiction. The novel was written when its precocious author was still only nineteen, following a stay in Weimar to learn German.63 Lewis met and translated Goethe, but there is no evidence that he encountered the Hanover-based Zimmermann either in person or in his writings. Although Lewis was widely accused of plagiarism, the sources were generally held to be the fertile German tradition of Schauerromane (shudder stories) together with home-grown gothic novels, particularly Horace Walpole’s Castle of Otranto of 1764, and, more immediately, Ann Radcliffe’s Mysteries of Udolpho of 1794.64 His attack on the perversions inherent in monasteries and nunneries reflected a wider Enlightenment sensibility of which Zimmermann was merely a representative figure. Denis Diderot’s La Religieuse, written in 1760 but not published until 1796, described in vivid detail the sufferings of a reluctant nun, confined to ‘a little dark underground chamber, where I was thrown on to a mat half-rotten with damp’, when she attempts to leave her convent.65 Lewis’s story soon took off into realms of gothic fantasy that were entirely at odds with the ordered universe of the Swiss doctor. But early in the novel he wrote a speech which exactly captured Zimmermann’s objection to eremitical living. The eponymous Monk, Ambrosio, addresses a young man, Rosario (soon to be revealed as the cross-dressing sorceress Matilda, the Monk’s fatal nemesis), who has taken up residence in a hermitage in the monastery grounds:
Disgusted at the guilt or absurdity of Mankind, the Misanthrope flies from it; He resolves to become an Hermit, and buries himself in the Cavern of some gloomy Rock. While Hate inflames his bosom, possibly He may feel contented with his situation: But when his passions begin to cool; when Time has mellowed his sorrows, and healed those wounds which He bore with him to his solitude, think you that Content becomes his Companion? Ah! no Rosario. No longer sustained by the violence of his passions, He feels all the monotony of his way of living, and his heart becomes the prey of Ennui and weariness. He looks around and finds himself alone in the Universe: The love of society revives in his bosom, and He pants to return to that world which He has abandoned. Nature loses all her charms in his eyes: No one is near him to point out her beauties, or share in his admiration of her excellence and variety. Propped upon the fragment of some Rock He gazes upon the tumbling water-fall with a vacant eye. He views without emotion the glory of the setting Sun. He returns to his Cell at Evening, for no one there is anxious for his arrival; He has no comfort in his solitary unsavoury meal: He throws himself upon his couch of Moss despondent and dissatisfied, and wakes only to pass a day as joyless, as monotonous as the former.66
There was no sense of the youthful hermit being sustained by an unmediated encounter with God in the silence of his cell. Bereft of society, he is incapable of preventing a collapse of spirit.
The Monk himself enjoys a reputation as a fashionable preacher, but is portrayed as ‘virtuous from vanity, not principle’.67 Having sought to rescue the young hermit from the dangers of solitude, he himself falls into every kind of corruption, including rape and murder. The instant success of the novel both created and destroyed the reputation of its youthful author.68 Criticism of the novel did nothing to harm sales, however, and as with other popular successes in print or on the stage in the Georgian era, it was rapidly translated into diverse cultural forms, including plays and chapbooks, which ensured that its message reached an audience well beyond the novel-reading public.69 The issue of ‘religious fanaticism’ became one of a range of arguments about the merits and demerits of solitude that were given a new focus by the late-eighteenth-century debate but in no sense brought to a conclusion. As we shall see in Chapters 4 and 6 in particular, the function of solitary spiritual observance remained an area of controversy, innovation and experiment in areas such as penal policy, revived monasticism and evolving forms of private observance.
Zimmermann viewed solitude much as a doctor might consider the human body. If health was the central objective, it was the business of the medical practitioner to engage with the frequent threats to wellbeing and, where necessary, take action to prevent the outbreak of personal illness or wider epidemics. There was always a need for disciplined exercise by the individual to ensure moral and intellectual fitness, particularly for those with highly tuned minds. Forms of personal relaxation needed to be monitored in case they undermined the patient’s constitution. In 1760, Zimmermann’s colleague Tissot had diagnosed a particular category of solitary behaviour in a text which framed the debate on the subject until the twentieth century. Those who committed the vice of onanism, he wrote, ‘are all affected with hypochondriac or hysterical complaints, and are overcome with the accidents that accompany those grievous disorders, melancholy, sighing, tears, palpitations, suffocations, and faintings’.70 The sequence of events was a function of a more general withdrawal from company. Once the individual began to obsess about a particular desire and ceased to participate in the affairs of others, disaster beckoned. ‘Nothing is more pernicious’, Zimmermann insisted, ‘to people inclinable to be devoted to a single idea, than idleness and inactivity; this is particularly pernicious to our patients, and they cannot too assiduously avoid laziness and solitude. Rural exercise and agriculture are more particularly diverting than any others.’71
Two aspects in particular of Zimmermann’s approach to his chosen topic were relevant to the history of solitude as the modern world took shape. The first was his conception of solitude as an event. The mere fact of physical isolation was of little interest. It was not whether but why a person was alone. What determined the impact of solitude both on the individual and on society was the state of mind that caused the retirement from company.72 There was all the difference between the withdrawal to the closet or the countryside for the purpose of self-collection, and the retreat to the same spaces because of emotional defeat or misguided passion. As Zimmermann wrote,
If the heart be pure, the disposition cheerful, and the understanding cultivated, temporary sequestrations from general or even private intercourse, will improve the virtues of the mind and conduce to happiness; but when the soul is corrupted, and myriads of depraved images and wishes swarm in the tainted imagination, Solitude only serves to confirm and aggravate the evil; and by keeping the mind free to brood over its rank and noxious conceptions, becomes the midwife