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The first extended critical, biographical and historiographical account of Thomas Pringle’s work


‘Improvisations of Empire’ offers the first extended critical, biographical and historiographical account of the work of Thomas Pringle, a poet and writer who occupies a central place in the cultural imaginary of English-speaking, white South Africans. However, there has been, to date, no single study which attempts to encompass all the aspects of Pringle’s life and work, and, particularly, to examine his poetry in the ‘thick’ context of its different national locations and his importance as a transnational and not merely a local or colonial writer.


Using the methods of close reading, and combining these with an examination of the historical record (much of it archival material unknown to, or ignored by, previous scholarship), ‘Improvisations of Empire’ seeks to understand Pringle’s writing, particularly the poetry, within the layered histories of his Scottish Enlightenment background and his early literary exposure to both Scottish and English Romanticisms. It then traces how these formative influences are refracted, and fractured, by his colonial experiences in the Cape Colony, before undergoing yet another modification during his period of residence in London (1826–1834). It was during this final stage of Pringle’s career that most of his writing was published for the first time, and very little critical attention has been paid either to the retrospective character of these writings, or to how they are inflected by Pringle’s metropolitan status as a prominent abolitionist, secretary of the Anti-Slavery Society, an increasingly fervid evangelical and a prominent editorial figure in the world of the literary annuals so popular at the time. Matthew Shum additionally argues that, quite apart from his crucial importance to South African literature, Pringle can also be understood as a figure working at a revealing tangent to metropolitan paradigms. The study explores Pringle’s ‘improvisations’ of his imperial identity in various locations and suggests that his writing offers a limit case for mainstream literary paradigms as they press up against unfamiliar and often disturbing colonial conditions.


Introduction; 1. Scotland: 1789–1820; 2. The Eastern Cape Frontier: 1820–1822; 3. Cape Town and Beyond: 1822–1825; 4. London: 1826–1834; Conclusion; Bibliography; Index.

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30 avril 2020

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1

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9781785273803

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English

Improvisations of Empire
Improvisations of Empire
Thomas Pringle in Scotland, the Cape Colony and London, 1789–1834
Matthew Shum
Anthem Press
An imprint of Wimbledon Publishing Company
www.anthempress.com
This edition first published in UK and USA 2020
by ANTHEM PRESS
75–76 Blackfriars Road, London SE1 8HA, UK
or PO Box 9779, London SW19 7ZG, UK
and
244 Madison Ave #116, New York, NY 10016, USA
Copyright © Matthew Shum 2020
The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
ISBN-13: 978-1-78527-378-0 (Hbk)
ISBN-10: 1-78527-378-7 (Hbk)
This title is also available as an e-book.
CONTENTS
Introduction
1. Scotland: 1789–1820
2. The Eastern Cape Frontier: 1820–22
3. Cape Town and Beyond: 1822–25
4. London: 1826–34
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
INTRODUCTION
In the canon of South African literature in English, Thomas Pringle has occupied a privileged place, both as the producer of the first substantial body of literary, journalistic and reportorial work about this country, and as an exemplary figure for the liberal values of press freedom and racial tolerance. In this combination of the ethical and the aesthetic, Pringle is commonly considered a crucial writer around whom “the core foundational myths of South African liberalism have been constructed” (Dubow 2006 , 27). Yet scant critical attention has been paid to the diffractions of circumstance that attended the production of Pringle’s work or the motivations for his public actions. Pringle’s life and writings, particularly his poetry, are the product of a complex conjoining of different contexts. As the title of this study indicates, Pringle must be located within, and among, three national or geographical spaces, all of which exerted an intermingled influence on his imagination. Although Pringle may be regarded as central to the lineages of South African liberalism, it should also be recognized that he was a person in transit between different national spaces and also between different sets of formative influences. This mutability registers in the poetry, in particular, which moves from an absorption in the Scottish antiquarian revival and Scottish and English Romanticisms to a poetry of public address that draws retrospectively on eighteenth-century models. Pringle’s Narrative of a Residenc e in South Africa , published for the first time in African Sketches ( 1834 ), a volume that brought together the poetry and a significant section of Pringle’s prose, exhibits a similarly diverse range of concerns and motivations, particularly in its final chapters that are heavily invested in the surge of political events that lead to the abolition of colonial slavery in 1833–34. A considerable proportion of Pringle’s South African writing was produced when he lived in London (1826–34), where his public profile was, paradoxically, more substantial than it ever had been in Scotland or South Africa. Even so, Pringle wrote from within a kind of double expatriation, and these mixed junctures give his work an intriguing angularity that sets him apart from his metropolitan counterparts.
Despite Pringle’s South African status, there presently exists only a single monograph devoted to the most significant and durable aspect of his literary production: the poetry. However, John Robert Doyle’s Thomas Pringle , published in 1972, is understandably dated and also disappointing. Described by the Scottish critic Angus Calder as “not very penetrating in literary or biographical judgment” ( 1982 , 11), Doyle’s book contains some useful analysis, but it is limited by a formalism that fails to engage the often charged, and always changing, contexts out of which Pringle wrote. The biographical field has yielded richer results, which may stand as an indication of how the life is considered to exceed the work. Short biographical studies were attached to early editions of Pringle’s poetry and prose in the nineteenth century (Pringle 1838 , 1966 ), and the first full treatment was Jane Meiring’s Thomas Pringle: His Life and Times ( 1968 ). Meiring’s book is loosely anecdotal and contains no referencing, rendering it of little scholarly use. Randolph Vigne’s Thomas Pringle: South African Pioneer, Poet and Abolitionist ( 2012 ), is a far more comprehensive and richly sourced biographical account but does little to engage the literary and intellectual contexts out of which Pringle wrote, preferring instead to concentrate on his politics, which are viewed as unfailingly emancipatory. His edition of The South African Letters of Thomas Pringle ( 2011 ) is a very valuable, and long overdue, addition to the scholarship. However, Vigne’s enthusiasm for his subject sometimes overwhelms the evenness of his judgment and, at times, the adducement of his evidence. The study to which I have most frequently turned is Patricia Morris’s unpublished doctoral dissertation “A Documentary Account of the Life of Thomas Pringle, 1789–1834” ( 1982 ), which offers a substantially detailed biographical account and, in my view, a more discerning understanding of her subject than that which is found in the Vigne biography.
While my own study unfolds along a chronological axis, and follows Pringle’s writing through the three distinct phases of Scotland, the Cape Colony and London, it does not construct a line of successive development but considers these phases as intertwined and recursive. Within this larger approach, my analysis relies on an extended interlocution with Pringle’s texts, particularly the poetry, in which I attempt to allow the writing to speak to the contemporary reader in the full range of its complexity. In adopting this approach, which is underpinned by close reading, I have deliberately sought to avoid the conceptual vocabulary of the postcolonial, with its tendency to subordinate the intricacies of the colonial text to the mandates of the theoretical. This is not to say that theory is shunned (I remain indebted to postcolonial studies in a variety of ways) but that its use is conditioned by its ability to gain traction on the texts under consideration rather than write them into a subset of another discourse altogether. A strongly adjacent critical presence is that of Romanticism and the critical literature it has generated, particularly as it engages those aesthetic categories central to the Romantic repertoire: the sublime, the beautiful and the picturesque. Pringle’s lifetime (1789–1834) corresponds almost exactly with an established periodization of Romanticism, and no discussion of his work is complete without a consideration of this influence. In creating a “thick” description of Pringle’s contexts I have drawn on the work of historians, particularly historians of South African colonial history and historians of slavery and empire, as well as extensive archival research.
The first chapter considers Pringle’s Scottish writing and its informing influences, in particular his deference toward English literary models. An examination of the Scottish writing is productive for understanding Pringle’s later output, since this early work already engages a disparity between elective models and local particularity. Pringle’s landscape poetry of this period, for example, reveals a disjuncture between the Scottish natural environment and those desiderata of locodescriptive poetry that derive from English paradigms. While this gap between the formal and the topographical might become more distinct in the South African writing, the fact that Pringle has already encountered it has implications for our understanding of him as a colonial or derivative poet. If we turn to Pringle’s journalism, the key area of engagement is with the presence of the gypsies in Scotland, the subject of a three-part article published in 1817. In these articles, Pringle is affronted by the gypsy’s refusal to be assimilated into the social and cultural improvement of a modernizing Scotland and their imperviousness to the landscapes they have long inhabited. In attempting to resolve the problem of gypsy archaism and intractability, Pringle resorts to a figural solution: the gypsies become a resource for picturesque representation. I argue that the “wild” picturesque of the gypsy character will form one of the baselines for Pringle’s representations of South African indigenous peoples. These and other concerns—such as the conceptual paradigm of four stages theory, which shaped Pringle’s understanding of the evolution of a colonial society—form the basis for the opening chapter, whose general argument, necessarily anticipatory, is that the Scottish writings act as an indispensable template for understanding the South African writing to come.
The second chapter covers the difficult, initial phase of Pringle’s residence in South Africa: the two-year period he spent in a remote area of the Eastern Frontier of the Cape Colony as head of a party of Scottish agriculturalists. During this time, Pringle’s experience of

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