Francis Bacon S New Atlantis
Francis Bacon S New Atlantis
Francis Bacon S New Atlantis
founding editors
Stephen Copley and Jeff Wallace
advisory editors
Lynda Nead, Birbeck College, London
Gillian Beer, Girton College, Cambridge
Roy Porter, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine
Anne Janowitz, University of Warwick
already published
Charles Darwin’s The Origin of Species
David Amigoni, Jeff Wallace (eds)
Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations
Stephen Copley, Kathryn Sutherland (eds)
Niccolò Machiavelli’s The Prince
Martin Coyle (ed.)
Simone de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex
Ruth Evans (ed.)
Sigmund Freud’s Interpretation of Dreams
Laura Marcus (ed.)
The Great Exhibition of 1851
Louise Purbrick (ed.)
Edmund Burke’s Reflections on the Revolution in France
John Whale (ed.)
BRONWEN PRICE
editor
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1 Introduction 1
paul salzman
2 Narrative contexts for Bacon’s New Atlantis 28
sarah hutton
3 Persuasions to science: Baconian rhetoric and
the New Atlantis 48
david colclough
4 Ethics and politics in the New Atlantis 60
richard serjeantson
5 Natural knowledge in the New Atlantis 82
jerry weinberger
6 On the miracles in Bacon’s New Atlantis 106
claire jowitt
7 ’Books will speak plain’? Colonialism, Jewishness
and politics in Bacon’s New Atlantis 129
kate aughterson
8 ‘Strange things so probably told’: gender, sexual
difference and knowledge in Bacon’s New Atlantis 156
simon wortham
9 Censorship and the institution of knowledge in
Bacon’s New Atlantis 180
Series introduction
will raise questions about the texts they examine more by the perceived
disparities of approach that they encompass than by any interpretative
consensus that they demonstrate.
All essays are specially commissioned for the series and are designed to
be approachable to non-specialist as well as specialist readers: substantial
editorial introductions provide a framework for the debates conducted
in each volume, and highlight the issues involved.
We would, finally, like to dedicate the series to the memory of our
colleague Stephen Copley, whose insight and energy started it all.
I would like to thank all of the contributors to this volume for their
patience, efficiency and hard work.
My thanks also go to the following people for their advice and
support: Jeff Wallace, Martin Coyle, Jon and Jocelyn Donlon, Stephen
Copley (in memoriam), my colleagues from the English and History
department at Portsmouth, especially to Robbie Gray, who sadly died
before this project was completed, Sue Harper and Simon Wortham. I
am also very grateful for the administrative assistance of Lyn Kerr and
the help of our librarian, David Francis. I am particularly indebted to
Tom Cooper, for his tender loving care, and to my dog, Chloe, who slept
faithfully and soundly during much of the process of putting this
volume together.
This book is dedicated to my father, Israel Price (1929–78).
Details of Bacon’s life and works are indebted to Brian Vickers (ed.),
Francis Bacon: A Critical Edition of the Major Works and Jerry Wein-
berger (ed.), New Atlantis and The Great Instauration.
1
Introduction
BRONWEN PRICE
I
The narrative begins with a standard literary device. Lost in a
remote part of the Pacific Ocean, a European crew arrive at the
unknown, reclusive island of New Atlantis, or Bensalem, ‘(for so
they call it in their language)’ (463). The narrator, a crew mem-
ber, describes how they are greeted with a scroll in different
languages inscribed with the sign of the cross. Before disembark-
ing they must affirm their adherence to the Christian faith; they
are then placed in ‘the Strangers’ House’ (459) where they are
treated humanely and their sick are cured. At the end of their
quarantine period the visitors’ movements are still restricted and
they later learn that there are ‘laws of secrecy’ governing travel-
lers and that strangers are rarely permitted entry into Bensalem
(463). They also find Bensalem to be an orderly, hierarchical and
largely patriarchal society whose inhabitants profess to be happy
and contented.
The Governor of the Strangers’ House, who is ‘a Christian
priest’ (462), offers the mariners his services and invites a group
of them to ask him questions. They request to know how New
Atlantis converted to Christianity and are told that it was
brought about by ‘a true Miracle’ (464), which was confirmed by
one of the Fellows of Salomon’s House.
In response to further enquiry, the governor explains why
Bensalem knows and yet is unknown to the rest of the world.
Relating Bensalem’s ancient history, he describes how the island
lost contact with the outside world following a ‘deluge or inun-
dation’ of great Atlantis, a form of ‘Divine Revenge’ wrought on
II
This troubled relationship between part and whole, outside and
inside, is a key feature of the text and can be identified further
within the texture of the New Atlantis. The island lies at the edge
of the rest of the world, ‘beyond both the old world and the new’
(461), in a place which is ‘utterly unknown’ (457). Its apparently
enlightened society resides ‘in the midst of the greatest wilderness
of waters’ and is covered by ‘thick cloud’ in a land ‘full of boscage’
crew to advise them ‘to behave ourselves’, he finds that they are
all in agreement, ‘Our company with one voice thanked me for
my good admonition’ (462).
Shortly, however, the mariners are broken up into different
types of knowers. The Governor of the Strangers’ House speaks
only ‘with some few of us: whereupon six of us only stayed’ to
have their questions answered (462); two of the crew alone are
invited to the Feast of the Family. By the time the narrator meets
Joabin and learns about Bensalem’s marriage customs, the pro-
noun ‘we’ that dominates the first part of the narrative gives way
to ‘I’. The narrator’s discussions with the Father of Salomon’s
House are still more intimate. They take place ‘in a fair chamber’
in ‘private conference’, where, after instruction, he has been
selected by one of the mariners to hear ‘the greatest jewel’ of
information the Father has chosen to ‘impart unto thee’ (479–80).
By the end of the meeting the narrator has surely become a
special knower with the implication that he has indeed been
taken ‘into their bosom’ (472), fast transforming from being a
stranger to becoming a member of Bensalemite society.
However, this impression of the privileged disclosure of
exclusive Bensalemite knowledge mutates to one of general, in-
clusive understanding when the Father concludes by giving the
narrator ‘leave to publish’ this relation ‘for the good of other
nations’ (488). Presumably the text before us signals the narra-
tor’s attempts to do just this. The insider information he has
apparently received has indeed been disseminated outside the
clandestine boundaries of Bensalem, as well as beyond the limits
of individual knowledge. Precisely why the Father permits the
narrator to do this, however, given that Salomon’s House lies at
the heart of Bensalem’s codes of secrecy, remains unclear.
III
At this point we may wish to consider how the New Atlantis
positions its reader. Initially, there is a sense of inclusion with the
mariners as a result of being party to ‘so strange things so
probably told’ (472). Like the crew, we begin in the position of
strangers, our viewpoint and understanding gradually identified
with the narrator’s as we gain more privileged access to the inner
after great fear and physical danger.17 The point, however, is not
so much whether the narrator is right or wrong in his interpreta-
tions, but that he presents events from a very particular
perspective which is continually foregrounded for the reader.
Information is delivered after which a gloss is frequently placed
upon it, usually punctuated by phrases that underline the pro-
cess of interpretation: ‘it seemed to us’, ‘we thought’, ‘we found
[it] wonderful strange’, ‘it was a thing we could not tell what to
make of’ (465–6). While noting that they are ‘cloistered’ in the
Strangers’ House, the narrator chooses to focus on the ‘courtesy’,
‘piety and humanity’ of their captors, and concerns himself with
suppressing the ‘vices and unworthiness’ his companions may
possibly possess when he suspects they are under the surveil-
lance of the Bensalemite authorities (461). The narrator reports,
but does not question, why thirteen of the previous visitors left
Bensalem, nor the governor of the Stranger’s House’s ambiguous
hypothesis that their accounts of New Atlantis would be taken
‘but for a dream’ in their native lands (470). Perhaps Bensalem is
not quite as able to contain its societal boundaries as it appears.
In various ways, then, the reader is made aware of a gap
between information and interpretation, and the narrator’s view-
point of events does not investigate fully all aspects of what he
observes and is told. Indeed, the potential for the narrator to mis-
read what he is shown is highlighted at the end of the narrative
by the Father of Salomon’s House, who decides not to recount the
‘excellent works’ of Bensalem’s inventors, for ‘in the right
understanding of those descriptions you might easily err’ (487).18
The very term ‘descriptions’ is worth attention, for in depic-
ting the activities of Salomon’s House, as in other aspects of
Bensalemite society, the narrator relies primarily on discursive
information for his understanding, rather than immediate obser-
vation or empirical evidence. For all the experimental, inductive
method that Salomon’s House seems to uphold in its quest for
‘Light’, its activities are ‘revealed’ to the narrator in a largely
conversational, rather than practical, form. Apart from the medi-
cine and nourishment the mariners receive at the outset, they
hardly experience the products of Salomon’s House directly.
Moreover, the Father of Salomon’s House invites the narrator to
turn what he tells him into further discourse by publishing what
IV
Not surprisingly, the New Atlantis’s contradictions, gaps and
ambivalences have allowed it to be read for different meanings
and different interests. The history of the text’s reception makes this
manifest. The New Atlantis was appended to all of the seventeenth-
century volumes of Sylva Sylvarum and together they ran into
more editions than any other of Bacon’s works, being printed at
least fifteen times during the course of the century, besides
appearing in French and Latin.21 In particular, Bacon’s imagina-
tive concept of Bensalem was invoked in practical terms as a
model for a collaborative, scientific research community across
the political, religious and social spectrum. In the 1640s and early
1650s the puritan reformer Samuel Hartlib and his circle drew
upon the utilitarian, utopian and religious register of the New
Atlantis to provide an image of the ‘redeeming power of science’
and its capacity to produce ‘earthly salvation’.22 Charles Webster
notes that ‘the medical reform tracts of the Puritan Revolution
carried a marked imprint of the utopian ideals of New Atlantis.’23
This was also apparent in works such as Gabriel Plattes’ Macaria
(1641), which coincided with the opening of the Long Parliament
and advocated ‘a Colledge of experience’ that would support ‘the
health or wealth of men’, and Gerard Winstanley’s Law of Free-
dom (1652), which proposed that its communes’ citizens should
reap the rewards of experimental philosophy.24
Writing in 1657 from a different political perspective, the
royalist Walter Charleton identified the more socially conservative
V
This volume is informed by and develops recent critical reas-
sessments of Bacon’s work. The essays reflect a concern to locate
the New Atlantis in reference to Bacon’s oeuvre specifically, and
to the broader cultural and historical context in which it
Notes
1 Francis Bacon, Proem to Of the Interpretation of Nature (De Interpretatione
Naturae), The Works of Francis Bacon, ed. James Spedding, Robert Leslie
Ellis and Douglas Denon Heath, 14 vols (London, Longman, 1857–74), vol.
X, p. 84.
2 Most critics agree that the New Atlantis was written at around this date
(see Brian Vickers (ed.), Francis Bacon: A Critical Edition of the Major
Works (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1996), pp. 786–7). However,
some suggest that an initial draft exists from as early as 1614 (see Ian Box,
The Social Thought of Francis Bacon: Studies in the History of Philosophy,
vol. 10 (Lewiston, The Edwin Mellen Press, 1989), p. 126). J. C. Davis
follows Joseph Anthony Mazzeo (Renaissance and Revolution: The Remaking
of European Thought (London, Pantheon Books, 1965), p. 221) in arguing
‘that Bacon first drafted the work in the period 1614–17 and revised it for
publication in, or about, 1623’ (Utopia and the Ideal Society: A Study of
English Utopian Writing 1516–1700 (Cambridge, Cambridge University
Press, 1981), p. 122). The initial appearance of the New Atlantis is also a
moot point. Some commentators suggest that it first came out in 1626. This
volume follows the British Library Catalogue in proposing a publication
date of 1627.
3 For a recent authoritative account of Bacon’s life see Lisa Jardine and Alan
Stewart, Hostage to Fortune: The Troubled Life of Francis Bacon (London,
Victor Gollancz, 1998).
4 Vickers, for example, suggests that ‘this work sums up a lifetime’s concern
with the reformation of natural philosophy’ (Francis Bacon, p. 787), while
John E. Leary establishes more general links between the New Atlantis and
Bacon’s other writings, especially its conception ‘of scientific inquiry as a
collective, collaborative, and social enterprise’ (Francis Bacon and the
Politics of Science (Ames, Iowa State University Press, 1994), pp. 231–8,
258). Bacon’s own attempts to gain patronage from James I for a scientific
institute were unsuccessful (see Perez Zagorin, Francis Bacon (Princeton,
NJ, Princeton University Press, 1998), p. 124).
5 See Jerry Weinberger, Science, Faith, and Politics: Francis Bacon and the
Utopian Roots of the Modern Age (Ithaca and London, Cornell University
Press, 1985), pp. 28, 32–4; and Howard B. White, Peace Among the Willows:
The Political Philosophy of Francis Bacon (The Hague, Martinus Nijhoff,
1968), pp. 112–34. Plato’s Timaeus and Critias provide the first description
of the ideal, mythical society of Atlantis before it was destroyed in a natural
disaster. For a comparative account of More’s Utopia and the New Atlantis
see Susan Bruce, ‘Virgins of the world and feasts of the family: sex and the
social order in two renaissance utopias’, in Neil Rhodes (ed.), English Renais-
sance Prose: History, Language and Politics (Tempe, MRTS, 1997), pp. 125–46.
6 Vickers (ed.), Francis Bacon, p. 785. All further references to the New
Atlantis come from this edition and are given in parentheses in the text.
7 See, for example, Jerry Weinberger’s ‘Introduction’ to his edition of
Francis Bacon, which suggests that ‘the New Atlantis may only appear to
be incomplete and thus impossible to grasp in its entirety’ because of
Bacon’s view that political science is ‘“secret and retired”’ and ‘can be
discerned only with difficulty’ (New Atlantis and The Great Instauration
(Wheeling, Illinois, Harlan Davidson, 1980, revised edn 1989), pp. xii–
xiii). Writing from a different perspective, Davis argues that Bacon’s
failure to believe in human perfectibility means that he is unable to present
a complete and unambiguous vision of a utopian society (Utopia, pp. 106–
37 and esp. pp. 118ff.). Robert K. Faulkner, by contrast, regards the New
Atlantis’s ‘apparent incompleteness’ as being ‘a literary device’ which
enables Bacon to ‘conclude with an exhortation to world-wide scientific
enlightenment’ (Francis Bacon and the Project of Progress (Maryland,
Rowman and Littlefield, 1993), p. 234).
8 Utopia, pp. 106–18.
9 Amy Boesky describes the New Atlantis as ‘a collection of broken or
incomplete prose kinds – aphorisms, dialogues, experiments, fables’
(‘Bacon’s New Atlantis and the laboratory of prose’, in Elizabeth Fowler
and Roland Greene (eds), The Project of Prose in Early Modern Europe and
the New World (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1997), p. 143).
10 See ibid., pp. 147–8 and also Chapter 8 of this volume.
11 Box points out the ‘ahistoric quality’ of Bensalemite society, which
appears to exist ‘in a seemingly timeless present’ without appearing to be
‘oriented to the future’ (The Social Thought, p. 128). Box links this temporal
quality to the relative inactivity of Bensalem’s citizens, who seem to want
for nothing and so do not need to work for a better future (pp. 129–33).
12 See Sharon Achinstein, ‘How to be a progressive without looking like one:
history and knowledge in Bacon’s New Atlantis’, CLIO, 17:3 (Spring 1988),
249–64. Achinstein argues that Bacon locates his ideas in this traditional
Biblical source in order to de-radicalise them, ‘relying on a myth of the
past for his scheme of historical progress’ (p. 257). See also Chapter 4 of this
volume which provides a different reading of Bacon’s use of past texts.
13 See Box, who argues that instead of presenting ‘an authentic community of
science’, Bensalemite society is ‘divided between those who know and
those who don’t’ (The Social Thought, p. 147). Box also rightly notes that
Bensalem’s ‘idea that knowledge must be kept secret is at odds with
Bacon’s scientific programme’ where ‘the co-operative aspect of inquiry
imposes an important democratic aspect on the instauration’ (pp. 133–4).
14 See Weinberger, ‘Introduction’ to New Atlantis, pp. xiii–xxxiii and note 6
above. See also Davis, Utopia, pp. 117–37; David C. Innes, ‘Bacon’s New
Atlantis: the Christian hope and the modern hope’, Interpretation, 22:1
(Autumn 1994), 3–37; Leary, Francis Bacon, p. 256; Weinberger, Science,
Faith, and Politics, 32–5. Leary departs from the other critics listed in this
note in choosing not to read the New Atlantis’s silences as being filled with
extra meaning. Instead, he suggests that the text ‘conforms to what we
already know of [Bacon’s] views on organised science’ (pp. 231, 256–8).
Faulkner suggests that in spite of its ‘secretive handling of matters of
government’, the politics of the New Atlantis is more comprehensive than
is often acknowledged (Francis Bacon, pp. 234–5 and Chapter 11).
15 See Innes, ‘Bacon’s New Atlantis’, p. 13. See also Faulkner, Francis Bacon,
pp. 245–9.
16 See White, Peace, for a detailed analysis of the significance of number and
colour in the New Atlantis (Chapter 10).
17 See Innes, who takes the unreliability of the narrator and his companions
even further, suggesting that ‘They mistake provision of necessities and
comforts for kindness, and they mistake kindness for godliness’ (‘Bacon’s
New Atlantis’, p. 8).
18 Susan Bruce also notes the discrepancy between the narrator’s and reader’s
perspectives in her introduction to S. Bruce (ed.), Three Early Modern
Utopias: Utopia, New Atlantis, The Isle of Pines (Oxford and New York,
Oxford University Press, 1999), pp. xxxiv–v.
19 Vickers (ed.), Francis Bacon, p. 139.
20 Weinberger (ed.), ‘Introduction’ to New Atlantis, pp. 15, 23.
21 R. W. Gibson, Francis Bacon: A Bibliography of his Works and of Baconiana
to the Year 1750 (Oxford, The Scrivener Press, 1950), pp. xv, 147–58, 184–
7. See also Vickers (ed.), Francis Bacon, p. 789.
22 Antonio Pérez-Ramos, ‘Bacon’s legacy’, in Markku Peltonen (ed.), The
Cambridge Companion to Bacon (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press,
1996), p. 315. See also Rose-Mary Sargent, ‘Bacon as an advocate for
cooperative scientific research’, in the same volume, pp. 164–5. Stephen
Clucas importantly notes that, while Bacon’s ideas are significant to the
Hartlib circle, their sources of influence are more disparate than is gener-
ally acknowledged (‘In search of “The True Logick”: methodological eclec-
ticism among the “Baconian reformers”’, in Mark Greengrass, Michael
Leslie and Timothy Raylor (eds), Samuel Hartlib and Universal Reformation:
Studies in Intellectual Communication (Cambridge, Cambridge University
Press, 1994), pp. 51–74).
23 Charles Webster, The Great Instauration: Science, Medicine and Reform
1626–1660 (London, Duckworth and Co., 1975), p. 250.
42 Paolo Rossi, Francis Bacon: From Magic to Science (1957), trans. Sacha
Rabinovitch (London, Routledge and Paul Kegan, 1968), p. xiii.
43 Brian Vickers, Francis Bacon (Harlow, Longman, 1978), pp. 28–9.
44 Zagorin, Francis Bacon, pp. 170, 173.
45 Ibid., p. 44. Cf. Weinberger, who suggests that this feature of the New Atlantis
retains ‘the ancients’ “enigmatical method”’ found in classical utopianism
(Science, Faith, and Politics, p. 35). See also Box, The Social Thought, pp. 134–5.
46 Zagorin, Francis Bacon, pp. 173, 45.
47 John Channing Briggs, ‘Bacon’s science and religion’, in Peltonen (ed.),
The Cambridge Companion, p. 192.
48 Zagorin, Francis Bacon, p. 225.
49 Ibid.
50 Achinstein, ‘How to be a progressive’, pp. 249–64. See also Leary, who
emphasises the way in which ceremony is used throughout the narrative to
support the social order (Francis Bacon, pp. 238–47).
51 Box, The Social Thought, pp. 125, 127. Weinberger also notes that Salomon’s
House ‘seems to have no place for the study of politics’ so that ‘neither the
scientific elite nor the political establishment can claim comprehensive
wisdom about policy and government’ (‘Introduction’ to New Atlantis, pp.
xxx–i).
52 Box, The Social Thought, pp. 128–9.
53 Innes, ‘Bacon’s New Atlantis’, pp. 3–37 and David Renaker, ‘A miracle of
engineering: the conversion of Bensalem in Francis Bacon’s New Atlantis’,
Studies in Philology, 87:2 (Spring 1990), 181–93. See also Briggs, ‘Bacon’s
science’, p. 193 and Weinberger (ed.), ‘Introduction’ to New Atlantis, pp.
xviii–ix.
54 See, for example, Carolyn Merchant, The Death of Nature: Women, Ecology and
the Scientific Revolution (San Francisco, Harper and Row, 1980), pp. 180–90.
55 Charles C. Whitney, ‘Merchants of light: science as colonization in the New
Atlantis’, in William A. Sessions (ed.), Francis Bacon’s Legacy of Texts: ‘The
Art of Discovery Grows with Discovery’ (New York, AMS Press, 1990), pp.
256–7. See also Boesky, who also indicates the close alliance between
Bacon’s scientific and imperial goals, but shows how his fable complicates
a straightforward colonialist reading by inverting the conventional
relationship between the European explorers and the native island they
discover (‘Bacon’s New Atlantis’, pp. 138–53).
56 Bruce, ‘Virgins of the world’, p. 146 and pp. 139–46.
57 Weinberger (ed.), ‘Introduction’ to New Atlantis, pp. xiii–xxxiii.
58 Innes, ‘Bacon’s New Atlantis’, p. 13 and pp. 3–37. See also Faulkner,
Francis Bacon, pp. 248–9.
59 Box, The Social Thought, pp. 143, 158.
60 Faulkner, Francis Bacon, pp. 229, 244, 230, and Chapter 11.
2
Narrative contexts for
Bacon’s New Atlantis
PAUL SALZMAN
When Bacon wrote the New Atlantis, he clearly had More’s Utopia
in mind as a model, offering a small homage to it in a comment
made by the ‘good Jew’: ‘I have read in a book of one of your
men, of a Feigned Commonwealth, where the married couple are
permitted, before they contract, to see one another naked’.1 With
great acuity, Susan Bruce has pointed out the significance of the
family, and of desire, as a link between the two utopias.2 Bruce
argues that in Bacon’s utopia of Bensalem, More’s male gaze of
desire is replaced by a scientific elaboration of the value of male
potency and procreation as a kind of state enterprise (in Bensalem
a friend of each party views the naked potential partner). Bacon’s
vision does seem to me to be a deliberate counter to More’s, in so
far as it offers a world in which scientific knowledge structures
society, as opposed to More’s vision of a society structured by
humanist ethics. I will argue later in this essay that Bruce’s read-
ing is particularly suggestive if we take into account the way that
a later writer, Margaret Cavendish, unsettles the hierarchy of the
patriarchal family in a utopia that, like Bacon’s, is presented to
the reader as an afterpiece following a scientific treatise. As a
whole, this essay points to the way that the New Atlantis is richly
allusive at the level of genre, gathering together, as it does, a
range of reference to a wide variety of narrative possibilities.
If Bacon saw the New Atlantis as belonging to a fictional
genre, it is not enough to say that the acknowledgement of More’s
Utopia means that this genre is ‘the utopia’.3 While the date of
The reference to ‘a new Atlantis’ did not appear until the 1628
edition of Anatomy of Melancholy; in 1621 Burton began only by
evoking Utopia as the poetical commonwealth. In the year
following the publication of the New Atlantis, Burton, as was his
habit, engaged in the process of accretion which characterised
each successive edition of The Anatomy of Melancholy. The New
Atlantis therefore forms a kind of pivot around which the notion
of utopia shifts, in Burton’s revision, from being a concept to
something more approaching a genre. As Burton goes on, he
evokes other precedents for his speculations: ‘For the site, if you
will needs urge me to it, I am not fully resolved, it may be in
Terra Australis Incognita, there is roome enough (for of my
knowledge neither that hungry Spaniard, nor Mercurius Brit-
tanicus, have yet discovered halfe of it).’8 In this sentence Burton
points to the significant intersection of the utopian tradition and
the travel narrative (both ‘imaginary’ and ‘real’), which further
complicates the generic context for the New Atlantis. Pedro
Fernandez de Quiros’ Terra Australis Incognita is his account of a
Portuguese voyage which reached Vanuatu, but Quiros was con-
vinced that he had reached the Great South Land and cam-
paigned constantly for a colonising expedition. Terra Australis
Incognita was translated from Latin into English (and French) in
1617. Mercurius Britannicus is the purported author/protagonist
of Bishop Joseph Hall’s Mundus Alter et Idem (‘A World Different
and Yet the Same’), published in Latin in 1605 and in an English
translation in 1609. I will return to Hall’s work in detail below; it
is important to note here that Mundus Alter et Idem is fiercely
satirical, rather in the manner of Gulliver’s Travels, and is quite
different from the musings of Burton about an idealised world
which will contrast with the diseased world of reality. Burton
sees himself as creating his utopia, not discovering it: ‘I will chuse
a site.’9
Burton’s utopia is essentially a purged and reformed version
of his own society: it will be orderly and regulated but not
radically different, simply purified. Burton particularly favours
hierarchy: ‘Utopian parity is a kinde of government, to be wished
for, rather than effected, Respub. Christianopolitana, Capanella’s
city of the Sun, and that new Atlantis, witty fictions, but meere
Chimera’s, and Platoes community in many things is impious,
Europe, while very much in the picaresque mode, evoke the travel
narratives discussed above and also the accounts by individual
travellers through Europe, the most famous in England being
Coryate’s Crudities (1611), Thomas Coryate’s account of a journey
(mostly on foot) from England to Venice and back.
Barclay’s editor, David Fleming, points out the significance
of Barclay’s use of allegorical references to current events and
people in Satyricon: a technique that was taken up by other writers
during the seventeenth century.38 These direct references are a
change from the way some forms of fiction, such as Philip Sidney’s
Arcadia, may have offered glancing portraits of contemporary
situations or general political commentary. They point towards a
growing sense that prose fiction is an appropriate medium for
social and political commentary and thus provide a further con-
text for the New Atlantis, gathering up elements from an increas-
ingly varied mixture of genres and modes.39 In particular, Bacon
uses the combination of voyage/utopia to encapsulate an account
of England’s social failings as well as a picture of the ideal society
to which it might aspire. In Satyricon, Barclay offers a portrait of
England (Scolimorrhodia = thistle/rose, a compliment to James
for uniting Scotland and England) which is both admiring and
critical: ‘I was in wonder at this happy region … But the people
(as happens often) were fattened by excessive fortune and had
replaced the resourceful initiative that results from poverty by a
proud laziness.’40 But the aristocratic inhabitants (according to
Euphormio) are another matter: ‘When I considered the conver-
sation of the great men and the good-breeding of their daughters,
they somehow seemed to me more blessed than heaven itself.’41
At this point the narrative ends rather abruptly with a poem in
praise of James, and we don’t receive many details about Scoli-
morrhodia, but we do glimpse a (politically astute) comparison
between an idealised England and a satirised Europe.
Barclay’s second major prose work was a political romance
called Argenis, first published in Latin in 1621. James asked Ben
Jonson to translate it into English, but after his translation was
apparently lost in the infamous fire of 1623, Kingesmill Long
published an English translation in 1625, followed by another by
Robert Le Grys in 1628.42 (Argenis was also translated into a num-
ber of European languages and was widely reprinted in Latin
Notes
1 Brian Vickers (ed.), Francis Bacon: A Critical Edition of the Major Works
(Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1996), p. 478. All further references to
New Atlantis are from this edition. More’s Utopia was first published in
Latin in 1516, followed by many other editions and an English translation
by Raphe Robinson in 1551.
2 Susan Bruce, ‘Virgins of the world and feasts of the family: sex and the social
order in two renaissance utopias’, in Neil Rhodes (ed.), English Renaissance
Prose: History, Language and Politics (Tempe, MRTS, 1997), pp. 139–46.
3 J. C. Davis argues that, during this period, ‘utopian thought itself is not a
tradition’, Utopia and the Ideal Society (Cambridge, Cambridge University
Press, 1981), p. 3.
4 Robert Burton, The Anatomy of Melancholy, ed. Thomas Faulkner et al.
(Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1989), vol. I, p. 80; the copytext is the greatly
augmented 1632 edition; in this instance the quotation is in the 1621
edition. For the actual Utopia quotation see Complete Works of St Thomas
More, ed. Edward Surtz and J. H. Hexter (New Haven, Yale University
Press, 1965), vol. IV, p. 70.
5 Burton, Anatomy, pp. 36–7.
6 Ibid., p. 85.
7 Ibid.
8 Ibid., p. 86.
9 Ibid.
10 Ibid., p. 89.
11 For a good account see Frank and Fritzie Manuel, Utopian Thought in the
Western World (Cambridge, Mass., Bellknap Press, 1979), Chapter 11.
12 See Davis, Utopia, pp. 97–8.
13 Anatomy, p. 91.
14 Ibid., p. 92.
15 Ibid., p. 109.
16 Richard Hakluyt, Principal Navigations, Voyages Traffiques and Discoveries
(Glasgow, Glasgow University Press, 1904), vol. X, pp. 348–9.
17 Ibid., p. 382.
18 John Gillies, Shakespeare and the Geography of Difference (Cambridge,
Cambridge University Press, 1994), p. 223.
19 Francis Bacon, The New Organon, ed. Fulton Anderson (New York, Liberal
Arts Press, 1960), p. 81.
20 Gillies, Shakespeare, p. 223, n. 98.
21 Another World and Yet the Same: Bishop Joseph Hall’s Mundus Alter et
Idem, trans. John Miller Wands (New Haven, Yale University Press, 1981),
p. 3.
22 Richard A. McCabe, Joseph Hall: A Study in Satire and Meditation (Oxford,
Clarendon Press, 1982), p. 76.
23 Complete Prose Works of John Milton, ed. Don M. Wolfe (New Haven, Yale
University Press, 1953), vol. I, p. 881. I should note here that this is from
‘An Apology Against a Pamphlet’ (1642), a direct attack on Hall. The editor
points out that Milton offers a quite different view of Utopias in
Areopagitica, where he writes ‘To sequester out of the world into Atlantick
and Eutopian polities, which never can be drawn into use, will not mend
our condition; but to ordain wisely as in this world of evill, in the midd’st
whereof God hath placed us unavoidably,’ Complete Prose Works, ed.
Ernest Sirluck (New Haven, Yale University Press, 1959), vol. II, p. 526.
24 Peter Heylyn, Microcosmus (Oxford, 1621), p. 11.
25 Robert Ralston Cawley, Unpathed Waters: Studies in the Influence of the
Voyagers on Elizabethan Literature (1940, rpt. New York, Octagon, 1967),
pp. 44–7.
26 ‘William Adams his Voyage by the Magellan Straights to Japon’, in Samuel
Purchas, Hakluytus Posthumous or Purchas his Pilgrims (Glasgow, Glasgow
University Press, 1905), vol. II, p. 327; Adams’ account was published by
Purchas in 1625.
27 Ibid., p. 332.
28 Cawley concludes that Bacon’s knowledge of Adams can only be
conjectural, because Adams’ account was published after the likely
composition date of New Atlantis. See Cawley, Unpathed Waters, pp. 44–5.
29 Purchas, Hakluytus, p. 339.
30 Ferdinand de Quiros, Terra Australis Incognita (1617), p. 27.
31 Purchas, Hakluytus, p. 327.
32 Annabel Patterson, Censorship and Interpretation: The Conditions of
Writing and Reading in Early Modern England (Madison, University of
Wisconsin Press, 1984).
3
Persuasions to science: Baconian
rhetoric and the New Atlantis
SARAH HUTTON
For all his strictures on the use of language for rhetorical effect,
it is now well established that Francis Bacon was thoroughly
grounded in the Renaissance art of rhetoric and that he consciously
drew on his rhetorical skill in his writings, adapting his style as
occasion demanded. The nature and extent of Bacon’s use of
rhetoric has been extensively, though not exhaustively, explored.1
Gone are the days when Bacon was regarded as a dysfunctional
writer, or a ‘dissociated sensibility’, in T. S. Eliot’s phrase. Never-
theless, Bacon’s impatience with stylistic affectation is well known
from his own comments: ‘eloquence and copie of speech’ is, he
writes in The Advancement of Learning, ‘the first distemper of
learning, when men study words and not matter’.2 In conjunction
with this repudiation of ornamental excess, Bacon’s preference
for an unadorned style of writing for the communication of natural
philosophy, in particular his recommendation of the aphorism
for the purpose, apparently confirms his antipathy to fictional
flights of fancy. His one excursus into narrative fiction employs a
genre, the utopia, where fiction is presented as fact. So successful
was Bacon’s use of the genre in the New Atlantis that the tale has
come to be interpreted as a simple allegory or a thinly disguised
blueprint for a society where science flourishes under state con-
trol.3 The New Atlantis is, then, not just a curiosity as a Baconian
fiction, but an interpretative paradox: the only excursion into
narrative fiction by a writer who repudiated the charms of
language; a work of imagination that is read as a virtually factual
Notes
1 See, especially, L. Jardine, Discovery and the Art of Discourse (Cambridge,
Cambridge University Press, 1974); B. Vickers, ‘Bacon and rhetoric’, in M.
Peltonen (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Francis Bacon (Cambridge,
Cambridge University Press, 1996), pp. 200–31; K. R. Wallace, Francis
Bacon on Communication and Rhetoric (Chapel Hill, NC, University of North
Carolina Press, 1943); M. Cogan, ‘Rhetoric and action in Francis Bacon’,
Philosophy and Rhetoric 14 (1981), 212–33.
4
Ethics and politics in
the New Atlantis
DAVID COLCLOUGH
God forbid that we should give out a dream of our own imagination
for a pattern of the world; rather may he graciously grant to us to
write an apocalypse or true vision of the footsteps of the Creator
imprinted on his creatures.1
I
The New Atlantis is a text about natural philosophy which seems
to offer connections at almost every point with moral and poli-
tical philosophy. The celebrated description of Salomon’s House
raises the question of the place of the scientist in society and the
allusion to Plato’s Critias and Timaeus in the work’s title sug-
gests an engagement with that philosopher’s description of the
ideal state.2 Furthermore, a reference to More’s Utopia, together
with the recognisably ‘utopian’ framework of the narrative, pro-
mises responses to other ‘best state’ exercises, perhaps including
Andreae’s Christianopolis (1619) and Campanella’s Civitas Solis
(1623).3 Bacon’s own political activities are well known, and in
successive editions of the Essays, as well as in his speeches and
pieces of advice, he had shown himself willing and able to treat
what he considered the most pressing issues of political and ethical
theory and practical negotiation. Nor was this engagement
halted by Bacon’s disgrace in 1621: in the years after his fall from
office, he wrote a series of works which could be read as attempts
to regain favour and political influence; the New Atlantis could
the time of the text’s composition are glossed over, if not ignored.
The islanders exist in a vaguely outlined but allegedly desirable
state of peace, political contentment, and Christian–Hebraic
virtue, which fosters or is fostered by the natural philosophical
researches of Salomon’s House. The ‘Fathers’ of this research
institution are venerated and appear in magnificent procession,
but their specific place in the social hierarchy and the precise
extent of their authority remains unclear.
If we consider the ground rules for a best-state exercise laid
down in Book VII of Aristotle’s Politics, the problems become
even clearer. Aristotle writes that ‘he who would duly inquire
about the best form of a state ought first to determine which is
the most eligible life.’9 At a pinch, the New Atlantis could be
regarded as an attempt to describe this life as it might be lived,
rather than to list the component virtues of which it should con-
sist. But this begs the further question of how to decide whether
such a hazily described life as that of the people of Bensalem can
properly be assessed as conducive or otherwise to eudaimonia,
which Aristotle has deemed in the Ethics to be the aim of life.10
I would suggest, in contrast, that to attempt to read the New
Atlantis as a utopia in the Morean mould and to search the text
for a system of, or even a series of sententiae about, ethics or
politics, is misguided. Bacon’s response to the textual tradition of
Aristotle, Plato and More consists here in a manipulation of certain
formal features to very different ends from theirs. Expectations
are raised in the reader, and deliberately, I would argue, disap-
pointed. Bacon seems to be aware of the kinds of questions readers
might ask about this imaginary society and to half-answer each
of them. The end result might be – although this has singularly
failed to happen in many scholarly interpretations of the text –
that the reader becomes aware that they are asking the wrong
questions of the work. Ian Box, who is also puzzled by the
absence from the New Atlantis of the kind of political and ethical
thought which makes up the Essays, ascribes this gap to a funda-
mental contradiction between Bacon’s identities as a ‘scientist’
and a ‘statesman’.11 It is certainly clear from several of his works
that Bacon found a degree of incommensurability between ethical
(specifically Christian) and civic values,12 and that many of the
conditions praised in his natural philosophy are condemned
II
Bensalem, the island whose name means ‘son of peace’, conforms,
as it soon becomes clear in the New Atlantis, to virtually all of
Bacon’s social and political criteria for the reform of knowledge.16
Its peacefulness is unrivalled, the only military encounter men-
tioned being the ancient attack by the Coyans (Peruvians), which
was foiled by the Bensalemite King Altabin. Even his victory was
a peaceful one: ‘after they were at his mercy, contenting himself
only with their oath that they should no more bear arms against
him, [he] dismissed them all in safety’ (468). The conditions of the
sailors’ landing similarly suggest the peacefulness of the society:
they are asked to swear that they ‘are no pirates’ and that they
have not ‘shed blood lawfully or unlawfully within forty days
past’ (459). The island itself is Christian (the sailors’ first question
to the Governor of the Strangers’ House is how the conversion
took place), but free of the confessional division that rent con-
temporary Europe. Moreover, freedom of worship is extended to
the Jews, who were expelled from England in 1290 (though the
narrator is careful to point out that the Jews of Bensalem ‘are of a
far differing disposition from the Jews in other parts’ (475–6)).17
In the first part of the text there is a striking preponderance of
Biblical references, from the providential arrival of the sailors at
Bensalem to their frequent invocation of Scriptural passages,
specifically the psalms. For example, in a reference to Psalm
III
It is not only the description of the Merchants of Light that may
be read as a model of reading and of the proper use of knowledge.
The text as a whole is susceptible to such an interpretation, and, I
would hazard, makes much more sense if read in this way than if
we treat it as a transparent description of a model society. There
is a distinct lack of individuals through whom ethical questions
may be pursued because the text is concerned with problems of
thought and of knowledge rather than with the description of the
individuals who might do the thinking. As Michèle Le Doeuff
has written, both personal identity and the knowing subject are
absent from the text.28 In this way, it goes beyond that eradica-
tion of the private sphere, which J. C. Davis has described as a
crucial component of utopian texts in this period.29
Bensalem, as I have suggested, may be interpreted as a repre-
sentation of the Baconian future, in a fruitful ‘trading’ relationship
with the textual past. This makes even more sense if we consider
Bensalem as at least in part the model of the ideal Baconian mind,
and as exemplifying certain precepts expressed in other Baconian
texts concerning the encounter with the new philosophy. The
reformation of the subject necessary for the pursuit of this new
philosophy consists, for Bacon, in the eradication of mental
IV
The politics and the ethics to be found in the New Atlantis thus
return, as do many of Bacon’s heuristic and propaedeutic writings,
to a basic set of propositions concerning the necessity of a reform
of attitudes towards and practices of thinking and reading about
natural philosophy. As Brian Vickers has pointed out, one of
Bacon’s main achievements was to ‘take the vita activa tradition,
with its goals of open communication, exchange, knowledge to
be used for the benefit of man, and to appropriate it for science’;
the New Atlantis is a prime example of this appropriation in
action.48 In its gesturing towards a possible but highly uncertain
future, however, the text goes beyond the general reflections on
the ethics of reading which I have sketched here. It offers a
reflection on the possible reception of Bacon’s own texts and
their future fortunes, a subject by which he was considerably
exercised. The proleptic gesture is present almost everywhere in
his writings. For example, in the Novum Organum he writes: ‘[I]
hold it enough if in the intermediate business [before the sixth
part of the Instauratio] I bear myself soberly and profitably, sow-
ing in the meantime for future ages the seeds of a purer truth, and
performing my part towards the commencement of the great
undertaking’, while in his will he (rather more bitterly) bequeathed
his ‘name and memory’ to ‘men’s charitable speeches, and to
foreign nations, and the next ages’.49
Though Bacon’s status as a thinker ‘ahead of his time’ has
often been asserted,50 it is important to recognise his conviction
that in fact the time was ripe for his ideas and the reforms they
Notes
I am very grateful to Markku Peltonen, Lucinda Platt and Quentin Skinner for
their comments on this chapter.
1 Francis Bacon, ‘The Plan of the Work’, in The Works of Francis Bacon, ed.
James Spedding, Robert Leslie Ellis and Douglas Denon Heath, 14 vols
(London, Longman, 1857–74), vol. IV, p. 32, trans. Spedding.
2 On the Atlantis myth, see Plato, Timaeus and Critias, trans. H. D. P. Lee
(Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1971); Timaeus, 24–5, pp. 37–8; Critias, passim.
3 The reference to More’s Utopia (1516) (‘a book of one of your men, of a
Feigned Commonwealth’) is at p. 478. On the possible influence of Andreae
and Campanella, see Eleanor Dickinson Blodgett, ‘Bacon’s New Atlantis
and Campanella’s Civitas Solis: A study in relationships’, Publications of
the Modern Language Association of America, 46:3 (September 1931) 763–
80; Michèle Le Doeuff, ‘Introduction’ to Francis Bacon, La Nouvelle Atlan-
tide, trans. Michèle Le Doeuff and Margaret Llasera (Paris, GF Flammarion,
1995), pp. 21–2.
4 See Gabriel Plattes, A Description of the Famous Kingdome of Macaria
(London, 1641), facsimile reproduction in Charles Webster, Utopian
Planning and the Puritan Revolution. Gabriel Plattes, Samuel Hartlib and
MACARIA (Oxford, Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine, 1979).
Plattes seems to have been especially influenced by the New Atlantis in his
description of a ‘College of Experience’, which bears a close resemblance to
Salomon’s House (sig. B). On Bacon’s reception by the Hartlib circle, see
Stephen Clucas, ‘In search of “The True Logick”: methodological eclecti-
cism among the “Baconian reformers”’, in Mark Greengrass, Michael Leslie
and Timothy Raylor (eds), Samuel Hartlib and Universal Reformation:
Studies in Intellectual Communication (Cambridge, Cambridge University
Press, 1994), pp. 51–74.
5 On Bacon’s followers in the mid- and late seventeenth century, see Christo-
pher Hill, Intellectual Origins of the English Revolution (Oxford, Clarendon
Press, 1965), Chapter III, ‘Bacon and the Parliamentarians’, pp. 85–130;
Charles Webster, The Great Instauration: Science, Medicine and Reform
1626–1660 (London, Duckworth, 1975); Antonio Pérez-Ramos, Francis
Bacon’s Idea of Science and the Maker’s Knowledge Tradition (Oxford,
Clarendon Press, 1988), p. 16.
6 Quoted in Brian Vickers (ed.), Francis Bacon: A Critical Edition of the Major
Works (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1996), p. 785. References to the
New Atlantis will be to the edition contained in this volume, pp. 457–89,
and will be given parenthetically in the text.
7 See Paolo Rossi, ‘Bacon’s idea of science’, in Markku Peltonen (ed.), The
Cambridge Companion to Bacon (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press,
1996), pp. 25–46 (p. 34). I am grateful to Markku Peltonen for this point.
8 Even the title New Atlantis invites comparison with Utopia; cf. More’s De
optimo reipublicae statu deque nova insula Utopia libellus vere aureus, nec
minus salutaris quam festivus (my emphases).
9 Aristotle, The Politics, ed. Stephen Everson (Cambridge, Cambridge Uni-
versity Press, 1988) VII.1 (1323a), p. 156.
10 See ibid., VII.1–2 (1323a–1323b), pp. 156–7; Aristotle, Ethics, trans. H.
Rackham (London, Heinemann, 1934) I.iv.1–3 (1095a 14 ff.), pp. 10–11.
11 See Ian Box, ‘Politics and philosophy: Bacon on the values of peace and
war’, The Seventeenth Century, VII:2 (Autumn 1992) 113–27; 121, 115.
12 See, for example, the essay ‘Of Simulation and Dissimulation’, in Vickers
(ed.), Francis Bacon, pp. 349–51.
13 Specifically the pursuit of greatness, or grandezza; see Markku Peltonen,
‘Politics and science: Francis Bacon and the true greatness of states’,
Historical Journal, 35:2 (1992) 279–305; Peltonen, Classical Humanism and
Republicanism in English Political Thought 1570–1640 (Cambridge,
Cambridge University Press, 1995), Chapter 4, ‘Francis Bacon, Thomas
Hedley and the true greatness of Britain’, pp. 190–228; p. 195.
14 See Peltonen, ‘Politics and Science’, pp. 279–82; David Colclough, ‘“Of the
alleadging of authors”: the construction and reception of textual authority
in English prose, c. 1600–1630’ (unpublished D.Phil. dissertation, Univer-
sity of Oxford, 1996), pp. 53–4.
5
Natural knowledge in
the New Atlantis
RICHARD SERJEANTSON
Natural magic
The ‘works’ of nature, then, were studied in the Renaissance in
many different ways and for many different purposes. But there
is one tradition of natural knowledge that the New Atlantis
perhaps owes more to than any other: natural magic. It is impor-
tant to realise that what was called natural magic in the Renais-
sance is a long way from what might now be understood as
magic. The modern understanding of magic is closer to what in
the Renaissance was called spiritual and demonic magic. This
kind of magic invoked spirits to perform feats – often nefarious
ones – that were ‘against nature’.21 Natural magic was quite
different. As its name suggests, it was concerned exclusively
with natural, not with supernatural effects. Its proponents often
described it as the ‘active’ part of natural knowledge, because it
performed marvellous effects that could not be explained by
human reason. They could not be explained because they were
hidden or, in early modern terms, ‘occult’. Natural magic had
Notes
I am most grateful to Kristine Haugen, Heikki Mikkeli, Graham Rees, Nancy
Siraisi, Andrew Sparling, the participants of the 25. Internationaler Wolfen-
bütteler Sommerkursus on ‘Learned Medicine in the Late Renaissance’ for their
various helpful contributions to this essay.
1 Francis Bacon, New Atlantis, in Brian Vickers (ed.), Francis Bacon: A Critical
Edition of the Major Works (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1996), pp.
457–89 (pp. 480, 481). All subsequent references to the New Atlantis are to
this edition and are given in parentheses in the text.
2 On Bacon’s posthumous reception, see Antonio Pérez-Ramos, ‘Bacon’s
legacy’, in Markku Peltonen (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Bacon
(Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1996), pp. 311–34.
3 Andrew Cunningham and Perry Williams, ‘De-centring the “big picture”:
The Origins of Modern Science and the modern origins of science’, British
Journal for the History of Science, 26 (1993), 407–32.
4 Denise Albanese, ‘The New Atlantis and the uses of utopia’, English
Literary History, 57 (1990), 503–28 (p. 506).
5 David Renaker, ‘A miracle of engineering: the conversion of Bensalem in
Francis Bacon’s New Atlantis’, Studies in Philology, 87 (1990), 181–93 (p.
182). See also Anthony F. C. Wallace, The Social Context of Innovation:
Bureaucrats, Families and Heroes in the Early Industrial Revolution, as
Foreseen in Bacon’s ‘New Atlantis’ (Princeton, Princeton University Press,
1982); Robert K. Faulkner, Francis Bacon and the Project of Progress
(Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 1993).
6 Rosalie L. Colie, ‘Some paradoxes in the language of things’, in J. A. Mazzeo
(ed.), Reason and the Imagination: Studies in the History of Ideas 1600–1800
(New York, Columbia University Press, 1962), pp. 93–128 (pp. 94–5).
7 Antonio Pérez-Ramos, Francis Bacon’s Idea of Science and the Maker’s
Knowledge Tradition (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1988).
8 See further Nicholas Jardine, ‘Epistemology of the sciences’, in Charles B.
Schmitt, Quentin Skinner, Eckhard Kessler, Jill Kraye (eds), The Cambridge
19 Andrew Cunningham, ‘Getting the game right: some plain words on the
identity and invention of science’, Studies in History and Philosophy of
Science, 19 (1988), 365–89.
20 For Bacon’s views on this point, see Novum Organum, in Works, I, 365 (2. 52).
21 For the distinction between demonic and natural magic, see Giovan
Battista della Porta, Magiae naturalis libri viginti (Frankfurt, Apud
Andreae Wecheli heredes, 1591), p. 2 (1. 2), and further D. P. Walker,
Spiritual and Demonic Magic from Ficino to Campanella (London, Warburg
Insitute, 1958).
22 Francis Bacon, The Advancement of Learning [1605], Michael Kiernan (ed.),
The Oxford Francis Bacon IV (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 2000), p. 89.
23 See Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa, De incertitudine & vanitate scientiarum &
artium atque excellentia verbi Dei declamatio (Antwerp, Joannes Grapheus,
1530), sig. N4r; della Porta, Magia naturalis, pp. 2–3 (1. 2). See further
Wayne Shumaker, Natural Magic and Modern Science: Four treatises 1590–
1657 (Binghamton, NY, Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies, 1989), p.
17; Brian P. Copenhaver, ‘Natural magic, hermeticism, and occultism in
early modern science’, in David C. Lindburg and Robert S. Westman (eds),
Reappraisals of the Scientific Revolution (Cambridge, Cambridge University
Press, 1990), pp. 261–302 (pp. 280–1).
24 On the importance of della Porta for the Sylva, see Robert Leslie Ellis,
‘Preface to the Sylva Sylvarum’, in Bacon, Works, II, 326, 328; Rees, ‘An
unpublished manuscript’, pp. 389, 408, who notes that sixty-two experi-
ments in the Sylva are taken from the Magia naturalis, which Bacon read
the Frankfurt edition of 1591; Rees, ‘Bacon’s Sylva Sylvarum: prelude to
remarks on the influence of the Magia naturalis’, in E. Garin (ed.), Giovan
Battista della Porta nell’Europa del suo tempo (Naples, Guida, 1991), pp.
261–72.
25 An exception is the excellent study by Paolo Rossi, Francis Bacon: From
Magic to Science, trans. Sacha Rabinovitch (London, Routledge and Kegan
Paul, 1968), Chapter 1, although Rossi ultimately separates Bacon sharply
from the Renaissance magical tradition.
26 Bacon, Sylva, in Works, II, 378 (§93), and compare ibid. II, 663 (§969). See
further Rees, ‘Bacon’s Sylva Sylvarum’, p. 270.
27 Lorraine Daston and Katherine Park, Wonders and the Order of Nature
1150–1750 (New York, Zone, 1998).
28 Meric Casaubon, Generall Learning: A Seventeenth-Century Treatise on the
Formation of the General Scholar, ed. Richard Serjeantson (Cambridge,
RTM, 1999), p. 181. See also Zetterberg, ‘Echoes’, p. 191.
29 On this point see also Renaker, ‘A miracle’, p. 191.
30 But see Ian Box, ‘Medicine and medical imagery in Bacon’s Great Instaura-
tion’, Historical Reflections/Réflexions historiques, 16 (1989), 351–65.
31 On this and further suggestive parallels between Bensalem and Venice, see
Michèle Le Doeuff, ‘Introduction’, to Francis Bacon, La Nouvelle Atlantide,
42 Their food and drink are not, then, just tokens of Bensalemite ‘consumer-
ism’, as is argued by Robert P. Adams, ‘The social responsibilities of
science in the Utopia, New Atlantis and after’, Journal of the History of
Ideas, 10 (1949), 374–98 (p. 387).
43 See Historia vitae, especially at Works, II, 157–8 (trans. V, 265–6).
44 Bacon, ‘The Grains of Youth’, in Works, III, 827–9. Methusalah, the oldest
person in the Bible, lived to 969.
45 Francis Bacon, ‘De vijs mortis’, in Philosophical Studies c.1611–c.1619, pp.
269–359.
46 Bacon, Advancement, pp. 99–102; Bacon De augmentis, in Works, I, 586–
602 (trans. IV, 379–94).
47 Bacon, De augmentis scientiarum, in Works, I, 598–602 (4. 2): ‘nova est, et
desideratur; estque omnium nobilissima’ (p. 598). On this passage see
Mikkeli, Hygiene, p. 79, and further on Bacon’s theories of prolongation,
Rees, ‘Introduction’, to Bacon, Philosophical Studies c.1611–c.1619, pp.
lxv–lxix.
48 Nancy G. Siraisi, The Clock and the Mirror: Girolamo Cardano and Renais-
sance Medicine (Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1997), p. 78;
Michela Pereira, ‘Un tesoro inestimabile: elixir e “prolongatio vitae” nel
l’alchimia del ’300’, Micrologus, 1 (1993), 161–87.
49 Palmer, ‘Health’, p. 88. Bacon, Historia vitae, in Works, II, 157; Bacon, De
augmentis, in Works, I, 599 (trans. IV, 391).
50 Laurent Joubert, Popular Errors [1578], trans. Gregory David de Rocher
(Tuscaloosa, University of Alabama Press, 1989), p. 41. Thomas S. Hall,
‘Life, death and the radical moisture’, Clio medica, 6 (1971), 3–23 (esp.
p. 15). Bacon, Historia vitae, in Works, II, 105–6, 158. Later commentators
took issue with Bacon on this: see Bacon, Historia vitae et mortis cum
annotationibus Barthol[omei] Moseri (Dillingen, Typis academiae, 1645),
pp. 7–9.
51 Palmer, ‘Health’, pp. 87–91; Mikkeli, Hygiene, pp. 73–9.
52 Marsilio Ficino, Three Books on Life, ed. and trans. Carol V. Kaske and John
R. Clark (Tempe, AZ, Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies, 1998), pp.
196–9 (2. 11): ‘volentis, inquam, adolescentis, sani, laeti, temperati, cui
sanguis quidem sit optimus, sed forte nimius’ (a youth, I say, who is
willing, healthy, happy, and temperate, whose blood is of the best but
perhaps too abundant). Bacon, Sylva, in Works, II, 625 (§859); Historia
vitae, in Works, II, 199 (trans. V, 307).
53 Bacon, Sylva, in Works, II, 555 (§692).
54 Bacon, Historia vitae, in Works, II, 195 (trans. V, 302); ibid., II, 109, 153
(trans. V, 221, 261); ibid. II, 224: ‘Curatio morborum temporariis eget medi-
cinis; at longaevitas vitae expectenda est a diaetis’; ibid., II, 159 (qualifies
Cornaro). On Cornaro, see Palmer, ‘Health’, pp. 90–5; Mikkeli, Hygiene,
pp. 86–92.
55 Bacon, De augmentis, in Works, I, 602 (trans. IV, 394).
56 Bacon, Historia vitae, in Works, II, 154 (trans. V, 262); ibid., II, 149 (trans.
V, 257); ibid., II, 135, 142, 159, 175 (trans. V, 246, 251, 266, 283); ibid., II,
154, 172 (trans. V, 263, 280).
57 Bacon, Historia vitae, in Works, II, 109, 115–16 (trans. V, 222, 227–8).
58 Rees, ‘An unpublished manuscript’, p. 402: (‘preseruat. of Herbs’ and
‘Trialls for the Conseruatory of Snowe’); Bacon, Sylva, in Works, II, 445–50
(§§312–26); Bacon, Historia vitae, in Works, II, 116–18 (trans. V, 228–9).
Lisa Jardine and Alan Stewart, Hostage to Fortune: The Troubled Life of
Francis Bacon (London, Gollancz, 1998), pp. 502–3.
59 Bacon, Historia vitae, in Works, II, 221 (trans. V, 330); ibid., II, 185 (trans.
V, 292–3). See further Bacon, Sylva, in Works, II, 555 (§692).
60 Bacon, Sylva, in Works, II, 555 (§692). Compare Bacon, Historia vitae, in
Works, II, 186 (trans. V, 293).
61 Graham Rees, ‘Atomism and “subtlety” in Francis Bacon’s philosophy’,
Annals of Science, 37 (1980), 549–71.
62 Compare Tommaso Campanella, La Città del sole: dialogo poetico / The City
of the Sun: A poetical dialogue [1623], trans. Daniel J. Donno (Berkeley,
University of California Press, 1981), esp. pp. 92–7; Johann Valentin
Andreae, Christianopolis, trans. Edward H. Thompson (Dordrecht, Kluwer,
1999), esp. pp. 186–257; and see further Michèle Le Doeuff, ‘Utopias:
scholarly’, Social Research, 49 (1982), 441–66.
63 As Brian Vickers’ note on the ‘Compilers’ suggests (800). Compare with
Julian Martin, Francis Bacon, the State and the Reform of Natural Philo-
sophy (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1992), pp. 168–9; Wallace,
Social Context of Innovation, pp. 16–18.
64 Bacon, De augmentis, in Works, I, 622–33 (5. 2) (trans. IV, 413–21).
65 Bacon, Novum Organum, in Works, I, 236 (2. 10): ‘Historia … Naturalis et
Experimentalis’, ‘Tabulae et Coordinationes Instantiarum’.
66 Bacon, Novum Organum, in Works, I, 268 (2. 21): ‘Dicemus itaque … de
Deductione ad Praxin, sive de eo quod est in ordine ad Hominem’.
67 Bacon, Novum Organum, in Works, I, 235 (2. 10): ‘deducendis aut
derivandis experimentis novis ab axiomatibus’.
68 See further Lisa Jardine, Francis Bacon: Discovery and the Art of Discourse
(Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1974); Jean Marie Pousseur, ‘De
l’interpretation: une logique pour l’invention’, La revue internationale de
philosophie, 40 (1986), 378–98.
69 Bacon, Valerius Terminus of the Interpretation of Nature, in Works, III, 199–
252; De interpretatione naturae proœmium, in Works, III, 518–20; Delineatio
et argumentum, in Works, III, 547–57; De interpretatione naturae sententiae
xii, in Works, III, 783–8; Novum Organum, sive indicia vera de interpre-
tatione naturae, in Works, I, 70–365.
70 Bacon, Novum Organum, in Works, I, 159 (1. 10); cf. the final stage of
interpretation in ibid., I, 268 (2. 21).
6
On the miracles in
Bacon’s New Atlantis
JERRY WEINBERGER
and presence of God. While at first the sailors are suspicious and
afraid of their extraordinary hosts, and not without apparent
reasons, they soon come to see their hosts as benevolent and
humane. They do so in large part because of the overt displays of
religion, in particular Christianity, in their hosts’ initial behaviour
and in so many aspects of Bensalemite life and society. The
Bensalemites’ first communication with the sailors is in the form
of a document, presented by an officer, warning them not to land
but festooned with a cross and cherubim’s wings. While finding
the warning disturbing, the sailors were comforted by the sign of
the cross, which they found ‘a certain presage of good’. When
approached soon after by a high-ranking Bensalemite, the first
question asked by him of the sailors is whether they were
Christians, after which they are asked to swear, by the Saviour
Jesus and his merits, that they are not pirates. In Bensalem,
Christian priests serve as officers of the state (38–9, 44).
There are some apparently good reasons for thinking that
Bacon believed human beings could not live by technology alone
and, rather, need religion as much as they need the conquest of
nature. The first is a matter of general impression: there is just
something unsettling and even creepy about the Bensalemites.
They refuse well-meaning tips. They show gushing, teary-eyed
hospitality and tenderness toward strangers. Their military
history involves no killing. The people are always standing in
orderly rows. The name of the one Bensalemite city mentioned,
Renfusa, means ‘sheep natured’. The chief festival, the Feast of
the Family, honours primarily the father of the family called the
Tirsan, a name derived from the Persian word for ‘timid’. At this
festival they declare in unison ‘happy are the people of Ben-
salem’. Everything has its complicated ritual. Indeed, the sailors
say that they have come to a ‘land of angels’ (39–41, 42–3, 45–7,
60–4). In short, the Bensalemites appear to have been denatured.
Their happiness seems that of contented cows (or, to speak more
accurately, sheep), their orderliness lobotomised. On the one
hand, we wonder how much more like zombies they would be
without the spiritualising effects of their religiosity. On the other
hand, perhaps these super-flat souls need even more softening,
by Christianity, for them safely to possess the extraordinary
powers of technology.
Other reasons are more concrete and reveal much that is fishy
about the Bensalemites’ exceeding niceness and humanity. Two
examples will suffice. Since the Bensalemites secretly spy on the
rest of the world but are themselves undiscovered, and since
they can control the weather, it is entirely possible that the sailors’
happening on the island was no accident. It is possible, in other
words, that the Bensalemites, for their own ends, forced the sailors
to the island. The narrator of the story reports that the sailors
were first unnerved by their confinement by the Bensalemites.
Not convinced of their hosts’ declarations of hospitality, the
sailors feared unwelcome surveillance and worried that they
should mind their behaviour lest some harm befall them. Later,
the sailors are told that they may anticipate a long and enjoyable
stay because their quarters – called the Strangers’ House – is well
stocked since it has been thirty-seven years since anyone has
visited the island. When still later the Bensalemite ‘laws of
secrecy’, restricting travel in and out of the island, are explained,
the sailors are told that no strangers have been detained against
their will, that no visiting ship has ever chosen to leave, that but
thirteen individuals have left in Bensalemite ships, and the
sailors ‘must think’ that whatever those few who returned
reported would have been ‘taken where they came from but for a
dream’. That the sailors ‘must think’ this latter fact does not
make it true. Moreover, according to the account of the laws of
secrecy, King Solamona, who promulgated these laws, ordained
the kindly treatment of visitors because it was ‘against policy’
that strangers should return and ‘discover their knowledge’ of
Bensalem. Contrary to what the sailors are told they must think,
the fact is that the laws of secrecy, intended to protect the island
from foreign moral corruption, presume the credulousness of
non-Bensalemites. If Bensalemite laws and policy were consistent,
strangers unwilling to stay – or judged unfit to stay – would
have to be restrained by force or killed. The sailors’ initial trepid-
ation was not without warrant (42–6, 51–9, 72).
Towards the end of the story the sailor–narrator converses
with a Bensalemite Jew, described as a wise man and ‘learned and
of great policy and excellently seen in the laws and customs’ of
Bensalem. The narrator asks for clarification of an extraordinary
Bensalemite ceremony – the Feast of the Tirsan – that honours
Surely accuracy calls for the male to be judged from the woman’s
point of view, and vice versa, and what is to prevent the agent,
moved by inflamed desire, from falsely reporting and pursuing
for himself or herself the object of desire? And what is to prevent
the coveting of one’s friend’s spouse after such familiar know-
ledge? As described, the Bensalemite practice of pre-nuptial
review appears so poorly contrived as to produce the opposite of
its intended effect.
Moreover, only a blockhead could miss the following: the
character who describes the bizarre institution is named Joabin –
after the vicious Joab who, among other perfidies, helped King
David murder Uriah the Hittite. As every schoolboy knows,
David saw Uriah’s wife Bathsheeba bathing naked. David was
moved by the sight to kill Uriah and marry Bathsheeba, a sin that
evoked the momentous prophecy of Nathan. The Bensalemite
institution of the Adam and Eve’s pools is modelled on the
circumstances of David’s temptation and related by the namesake
of the agent of David’s sin. Are we to conclude that Bensalem,
with its science and technology, has turned Joab into an angel
and solved the problem of unruly human desire? Or does Bacon
wish rather to say that the human soul is always crooked wood
that cannot be straightened by technology?
The Bensalemites’ general creepiness, the ominous threat
suggested by Bensalem’s laws of secrecy, and the moral ambigu-
ity of Joabin’s account of the Adam and Eve’s pools, all suggest a
decidedly mixed Baconian message about the technological
future: that the conquest of nature may just as likely be for ill as
for good. Bensalem seems haunted by the problems of the soul
debased by materialism, bad means used for good ends, and the
lawless use of technological power. The New Atlantis suggests
the problem, as much as the promise, of technology and the story
raises questions about the ways and means of the scientific
project, the ends and the limits of the conquest of nature, and the
implications of science and technology for human life and values.
Nothing in the New Atlantis tells us where the guiding principles
of the technological project come from, with the exception of the
Christianity that so pervades Bensalem.
Moreover, modern science needs Christianity for more than
just its moral compass. We learn in the story that while natural
explains why the miracle of the pillar of light is, in addition to its
other features, a miracle of original revelation (it disclosed books
of the New Testament that had not yet been written) and the gift of
tongues. It is possible that Bensalemite scientists were present
when Jesus performed his miracles and was resurrected. But so
far as we know, or the Bensalemites admit, there were none
present. There certainly were none present when Moses received
the tablets of the law from God at Sinai. But in Bensalem, the
narration of these at-the-time unverified events is supplied by a
scientifically verified miracle, which is enough to establish their
bona fides. Assume that Moses and Jesus were both frauds and
that the parting of the Red Sea was but a timely, if rare, natural
occurrence. If the representation of them as genuine miracles is
itself a genuine miracle, that fact is by itself enough to establish
that we should live as if they were genuine and that they could
have been genuine miracles. The miracle that transpires in
Bensalem is not just an adjunct to the miracles it discloses. It is,
ultimately, the epistemic foundation of those prior miracles.
The problem is that it is impossible for science demonstrably
to establish the reality of miracles. That there is no scientifically
known cause for an apparent miracle does not establish that it is
in fact a miracle, rather than just something we cannot yet explain
by recourse to nature (including psychology). In order to prove
scientifically and demonstrably that an event is supernatural, it
would be necessary to have disclosed every single law and pheno-
menon of nature, every hidden cause and possibility. The Bensalem-
ite scientist themselves, it seems, do not think such complete
knowledge possible. For in his prayer the wise man of Salomon’s
House declares that God has given the scientists the power to
know the works of divine creation and to discern between
miracles and works of nature, art, and imposture and illusion ‘as
far as it appertaineth to the generations of men’. To this it could
be objected that Bacon himself disagrees with this Bensalemite
modesty. In The Advancement of Learning, Bacon says that Solo-
mon’s comment that man ‘cannot … find out the work which
God worketh from the beginning to the end’ refers not to the
mind’s capacity to grasp nature, but only to ‘the impediments, as of
shortness of life, ill conjunction of labours, ill tradition of know-
ledge over from hand to hand, and many other inconveniences
paid to them by the gods and by their own worth and the rest
will be paid by Aeneas and Ascanius. There are three kinds of
rewards: divine, virtue’s being its own reward, and rewards
provided by men. According to Virgil, the divine rewards and
virtue’s being its own reward are the same – both are first and
best. Now if virtue is good in itself and therefore its own reward,
then divine rewards, whatever they may be, cannot be the same.
They are add-ons. But what does it mean if virtue as its own
reward and the divine add-ons are the same or, at least, are
commensurable? In this world, it would mean that some sum of
add-ons could surpass some sum of virtue-as-good-in-itself.
Assuming the add-ons to be such things as happiness, pleasure,
good reputation, all the good things in life, then it is entirely
possible that virtue as its own reward could be outweighed by
some combination of these add-on rewards, achieved by any
means, and especially so if virtue required the sacrifice of life
itself. In this case, then, Machiavelli wins: it is better to seem to
be virtuous than actually to be so. Moreover, the only difference
between the afterlife and this life – between worldly add-ons and
add-ons as divine reward – is that in the afterlife the rewards are
supposedly guaranteed to those who have been virtuous in life,
and presumably are eternal and, perhaps, more intensely
experienced in some way. However, even as divine rewards they
would still be add-ons, and virtue would be a means to them.
Machiavelli would win in principle, in that virtue would be a
means rather than an end and good in itself, except that he would
have erred in not taking divine providence into account.
Perhaps we could say that in heaven the add-ons are mere
extras and that just being in heaven is utterly different from
them and consists of the eternal experience of being virtuous as
good in itself and thus of having it as its own reward. Here, I
think, we reach the heart of the matter. How, we ask, does
heavenly virtue differ from a perfect virtue in this world? In this
world, the quintessence of virtue as good in itself is the sacrifice
of one’s all for another or for some noble end. In heaven, such
virtue would consist in the eternal awareness of having sacrificed
one’s all in the world of mortal life. But if so, then the virtue in
question cannot consist of pure self-sacrifice, either on earth or in
heaven. It cannot be so on earth because of what awaits in
In the fifth and sixth pieces of advice for refuting the evil
arts, Bacon warns the ambitious that fortune is like a woman and,
for that reason, that we should seek the kingdom of God before
and as a means to all other good things. These principles are surely
not the first maxims of the Bensalemites, for whom the conquest
of nature is the project of their kingdom. Moreover, the reference
to Machiavelli, in the context of a refutation of the Machiavellian
evil arts, is impossible to miss. Bacon obviously means for us to
recall that, for Machiavelli, if fortune is a woman then ‘it is
necessary, if one wants to hold her down, to beat her and strike
her down. And one sees that she lets herself be won more by the
impetuous than by those who proceed coldly. And so always,
like a woman, she is the friend of the young, because they are less
cautious, more ferocious, and command her with more audacity.’19
This praise of youthful impetuosity and manly violence does
not well suit the Bensalemites, who revere the old and seem
overly sedate and orderly. For the Bensalemites, fortune is not
the changeable political world and the mercurial ebb and flow of
individual and group ambition. It is, rather, the hostile opposi-
tion of material nature to the basic human desire for long and
commodious living. When the enemy is material nature rather
than other human beings, the proper response is still something
like the rape Machiavelli describes. For Bacon, the key to under-
standing and controlling nature is to put it on the rack. But for
those who actually engage in it, the Bensalemite scientists, the
assault on nature proceeds by an organised, methodical, dis-
passionate, and relatively anonymous process. Likewise for the
non-scientific Bensalemites. While they probably do not under-
stand or know much about natural science, they are not for that
reason unaffected by it. As consumers of technological bounty,
they are happy and contented. Bensalemite science – indeed the
Baconian project for the conquest of nature – apparently over-
comes the two main sources of political conflict: the material
difference between haves and have-nots, and the psychological
conflict between the strong and the weak. Thus, at least in
principle, Bensalemite science and technology put an end to all
questions of justice. What the strong want – the freedom and the
means to understand and conquer nature – and what the weak
want – the satisfaction of their material needs – go hand in hand.
Notes
1 New Atlantis and The Great Instauration, ed. Jerry Weinberger (Wheeling,
Illinois, Harlan Davidson, Inc., 1980, revised edn 1989), pp. 37–9, 56–8, 71.
All further references to New Atlantis come from this edition and will be
cited in parentheses in the main body of my essay.
2 Thomas More, Utopia, eds George M. Logan and Robert M. Adams
(Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1989), pp. 81–4; Plato Laws
771e, trans. Thomas L. Pangle (New York, Basic Books, Inc., 1980), p. 159.
3 The Advancement of Learning, in The Works of Francis Bacon, ed. James
Spedding, Robert Leslie Ellis, and Douglas Denon Heath, 14 vols. (London,
Longman, 1857–74) vol. III, pp. 349–50, 352–9.
4 The Advancement of Learning, p. 265.
5 Novum Organum 1: 3, Bacon, Works, vol. IV, p. 47.
6 De sapientia veterum (‘Of the Wisdom of the Ancients’) XI, Bacon, Works,
vol. VI, pp. 646, 721.
7 Bacon, Works, vol. VI, pp. 413–15.
8 Of Superstition, in Bacon, Works, vol. VI, pp. 415–16. Contemporary
America comes to mind. In America full-bore materialism consists with
widespread but mild religiosity and an abundance of religious novelty and
other forms of spiritualism, including pantheism.
9 Nietzsche’s chilling description of the Last Man and Heidegger’s account
of nihilism and technology come to mind. See, for example Nietzsche, Thus
Spoke Zarathustra, The Portable Nietzsche, trans. Walter Kaufmann (New
York, Vintage, 1954), pp. 128–31; and Martin Heidegger, The Question Con-
cerning Technology in The Question Concerning Technology and Other Essays,
trans. William Lovitt (New York, Harper and Row, 1971), pp. 3–35.
10 The Advancement of Learning, pp. 349–51.
11 De augmentis, 3:2, Bacon, Works, vol. IV, p. 341.
12 The Advancement of Learning, pp. 478–9.
13 Ibid., pp. 471–2.
14 Ibid., pp. 472–3.
15 Aeneid 9: 252. Quae vobis, quae digna, viri, pro laudibus istis/praemia
posse rear solvi? pulcherrima primum/di moresque dabunt vestri. ‘What’s
worthy, you men, what prize for such laudable deeds? How can we pay
you? Gods must give you the finest reward first – and your own
character.’ Slightly altered from Virgil, Aeneid, trans. Edward McCrorie
(Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press, 1995), p. 196.
7
‘Books will speak plain’?
Colonialism, Jewishness and politics
in Bacon’s New Atlantis
CLAIRE JOWITT
Notes
For helpful critical readings of earlier drafts of this essay I would like to thank
the following: Eliane Glaser, Andrew Hadfield, Paulina Kewes, Sarah Prescott,
and Diane Watt.
1 Brian Vickers (ed.), Francis Bacon: A Critical Edition of the Major Works
(Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1996), pp. 457–89 (p. 382). All
subsequent references to Bacon’s The Advancement of Learning, Essays,
and New Atlantis are to this edition. Page references to New Atlantis will
follow quotation in brackets.
2 The Advancement of Learning, p. 122.
3 Essays, p. 407.
4 On the dating of this text see Lisa Jardine and Alan Stewart, Hostage to
12 On de Gomara’s text see William Brandon, New Worlds for Old: Reports
from the New World and their Effect on the Development of Social Thought in
Europe, 1500–1800 (Athens, Ohio, Ohio University Press, 1986), pp. 40–3.
13 See John Bakeless, America as Seen by its First Explorers (New York, Dover
Publications, 1989), pp. 9–225.
14 See Leo Bagrow and R. A. Skelton, History of Cartography, 2nd edn (London,
C. A. Watts, 1964), p. 193; Simon Berthon and Andrew Robinson, The
Shape of the World (London, George Philip, 1991), pp. 81–100; John Goss,
The Mapping of North America: Three Centuries of Map-Making 1500–1860
(Secaucus, New Jersey, Wellfleet Press, 1990).
15 See Jerry Brotton, Trading Territories: Mapping the Early Modern World
(London, Reaktion Books, 1997).
16 See Ruddolf Wittkower, ‘Marvels of the East: a study in the history of
monsters’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, 5 (1942), 159–
97; Campbell, The Witness and the Other World, pp. 47–86; Robert Ralston
Cawley, Unpathed Waters: Studies in the Influence of the Voyages on
Elizabethan Literature (London, Frank Cass & Co. Ltd, 1967), p. 104.
17 Bacon, Instauratio Magna (London, 1620), frontispiece.
18 See John Steadman, ‘Beyond Hercules: Francis Bacon and the scientist as
hero’, in Studies in the Literary Imagination, 4 (1971), 3–47; Claire Jowitt,
‘Old worlds and new worlds’, pp. 87–106.
19 Davis, Utopia and the Ideal Society, pp. 47–8.
20 Jerome Turler, The Traveiller, ed. D. E. Baughan (Gainseville, Florida,
Scholars Fascimiles and Reprints, 1951), sig A3v.
21 More, Utopia, p. 84. For a similar reading, see Mary W. Helms, Ulysses’
Sail: An Ethnographic Odyssey of Power, Knowledge and Geographical
Distance (Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1988), p. 66.
22 See Wayne Franklin, Discoverers, Explorers, Settlers? The Diligent Writers
of Early America (Chicago, Chicago University Press, 1979), p. 12.
23 See Anthony Pagden (ed.), The Languages of Political Theory in Early Modern
Europe, (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1987), pp. 79–98.
24 See Jeffrey Knapp, An Empire Nowhere: England, America, and Literature
from Utopia to The Tempest (Berkeley, University of California Press, 1992);
Andrew Hadfield, Literature, Travel and Colonial Writing in the English
Renaissance (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1999), pp. 69–133.
25 See J. H. Elliot, The Old World and the New 1492–1650 (Cambridge,
Cambridge University Press, 1991), pp. 30–1, 58–62.
26 Vickers (ed.), Francis Bacon, p. 786.
27 See Smith, The Reign of James VI and I, pp. 15–8; Simon L. Adams, ‘The
Protestant cause: religious alliance with the European Calvinist
communities as a political issue in England, 1585–1630’, unpublished D.
Phil, Oxford, 1972.
28 See Dietz, ‘England’s overseas trade’, p. 118.
29 Ibid., p. 111.
30 See Astrid Friis, Alderman Cockaygne’s Project and the Cloth Trade (Copen-
hagen, Levin & Munksgaard, 1927), p. 145.
31 See Jardine and Stewart, Hostage to Fortune, pp. 444–72.
32 Cited by Jardine and Stewart, Hostage to Fortune, p. 448. Other writers of
the time also connected James I with Solomon: see, for example, John
Carpenter, Schelomoncham or King Solomon His Solace (London, John
Windes, 1606), sigs A6r, B3v.
33 See Howard B. White, Peace Among the Willows: The Political Philosophy of
Francis Bacon (The Hague, Martinus Nijhoff, 1968), pp. 45–57.
34 Bacon, History of the Reign of King Henry VII, ed. Brian Vickers
(Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1998), pp. 156–8.
35 See Lewis Feuer, ‘Francis Bacon and the Jews’, Transactions of the Jewish
Historical Society of England, 29 (1982–6), 1–25.
36 See David Katz, The Jews in the History of England, 1485–1850 (Oxford,
Clarendon, 1996), pp. 1–106.
37 For further details see James Shapiro, Shakespeare and the Jews (New York,
Columbia University Press, 1996).
38 See Christopher Hill, ‘Till the conversion of the Jews’, Collected Essays, 2
vols, (Amherst, University of Massachusetts Press, 1965), vol. II, pp. 269–
300.
39 2 Samuel 3: 29; 1 Kings 2: 33.
40 The Works of Francis Bacon, ed. J. Spedding, R. L. Heath and Douglas
Denon Ellis, 14 vols, (London, Longman, 1857–74), vol. VIII, p. 278.
41 Bacon, Works, vol. VIII, p. 278.
42 On Lopez see Katz, The Jews, pp. 49–106.
43 Bacon, Works, vol. VIII, p. 278.
44 See Katz, The Jews, p. 91.
45 Bacon, Works, vol. VIII, pp. 286–7.
46 Bacon, History of the Reign, p. 97.
47 See Ian Arthurson, The Perkin Warbeck Conspiracy 1491–1499 (Stroud,
Alan Sutton, 1994), pp. 25–42.
48 Bacon, History of the Reign, p. 97.
49 Ibid., p. 97.
50 Ibid., p. 102.
51 Ibid., p. 96. See also Galit Hasan-Rokem and Alan Dundes, The Wandering
Jew: Essays in the Interpretation of a Christian Legend (Bloomington,
University of Indiana Press, 1986).
52 Bacon, History of the Reign, p. 99.
53 Ibid., p. 96.
54 Ibid., p. 108.
55 Bacon, Essays, pp. 379, 422.
56 Ibid., p. 422.
57 Ibid., pp. 422–3.
58 Ibid., p. 421. See also Thomas Pie, Usuries Spright Conjured (London,
Melchisech Bradwood, 1604), sig D2r; and see Shapiro, Shakespeare and the
Jews, p. 98–100.
59 Bacon, Essays, p. 353.
60 Ibid., p. 353.
61 See James Shapiro, Shakespeare and the Jews, pp. 117–21; Daniel Boyarin,
A Radical Jew: Paul and the Politics of Identity (Berkeley, University of
California Press, 1994), pp. 1–38.
62 John Donne, ‘A Sermon Preached at Saint Dunstan’s Upon New-Year’s
Day, 1624’, Sermons, eds George R. Potter and Evelyn M. Simpson, 10 vols.
(Berkeley, University of California Press, 1953–1962), vol. VI, pp. 190–2.
63 Bacon, Essays, p. 353.
8
‘Strange things so probably told’:
gender, sexual difference and
knowledge in Bacon’s New Atlantis
KATE AUGHTERSON
I
Let us establish a chaste and lawful marriage between mind and
nature, with the divine mercy as bridewoman.1
I am come in very truth leading to you Nature with all her children
to bind her to your service and make her your slave … so may I
succeed in my only earthly wish, namely to stretch the deplorably
narrow limits of man’s dominion over the universe to their
promised bounds.2
The human mind in studying nature becomes big under the impact
of things, and brings forth a teeming brood of errors.3
Man, being the servant and interpreter of nature can do and under-
stand so much and so much only as he has observed in fact or in
thought of the course of nature … nature to be commanded must
be obeyed.4
II
There are two discernible and interlinking tripartite structures to
the fable: the sequential linear narrative structure and the
thematic content. The linear structure moves us gradually closer
to the centre of the island’s meaning:13 the travellers’ arrival told
through the narrator’s eyes; the island’s history and relationship
with the outside world narrated by the Governor; finally, the
island’s customs, narrated directly through the narrator’s experi-
ence, conversations with Joabin, and the words of the Father of
Salomon’s House. The tripartite thematic structure displays the
relations between the island and the outside world; the marital,
familial and sexual habits and structures of the island; and an
account of Salomon’s House and the new science. Linear and
thematic structures are carefully ordered to manipulate and
initiate the reader. The reading time of the fable traces the
reader’s and narrator’s gradual movement from exclusion to
inclusion in the new world. The narrator, men and reader are
first confined in the liminal position of the Strangers’ House and
access knowledge only through the narration of past history,
before being permitted to move into present experience and future
possibilities. Grammatical tenses mimic this movement through
time, from past historic, through the present tense to the future.
The thematic structure moves on a parallel axis: from an
understanding of the island and the outside world; to knowledge
of familial structures, including those of gender and sexual differ-
ence; and, finally, to knowledge of the work of Salomon’s House.
Bacon’s discussion of gender and sexual difference is signi-
ficantly placed. It follows the readers’ initiation; it precedes an
account of the scientific praxis; and it acts as a metonymic
signifier for the whole social and political organisation of Ben-
salem’s civic society. Why does Bacon structure our encounter
with gender thus? A close reading of the opening section will
provide some answers.
When the travellers first reach the island events are re-
counted through the eyes of the narrator in a straightforward
and lucid style, which nevertheless belies the strange contents.
The events and people described are inversions of both European
habits and of travellers’ tales of the new world, intermixed with
the standard motifs of early travel writing. Utopian otherness is
not portrayed simply as an inverted world: it combines inversions
of generic conventions (of travel writing, scientific discovery,
and political philosophy) with conventions signifying in an
expected way. This juxtaposition of the unexpected with the
expected, the unknown with the known, is a rhetorical ploy
typical of the first part of the fable’s tripartite structure. There
are eight reversals in the opening section, each of which restruc-
ture our view on the world. The first four inversions are: the
‘wilderness’ which provides ‘salvation’,14 a reversal with both
Biblical and travelogue precedent; the discovered land being a
‘fair city’, rather than uninhabited and undeveloped, an inversion
recognised by readers familiar with More’s Utopia; the initial
absence of an ascribed gender to the ‘undiscovered’ land, which
conventionally would be identified as female;15 the description of
the islanders, who are dressed in European style and speak
Greek, Latin, Spanish and Hebrew (458), and thus inverts the
conventional travelogue’s depiction of native peoples.
Bacon uses a consistent rhetorical technique for these inver-
sions: travelogue narrative conventions, followed by a shift of
perspective through purportive new eye-witness evidence. The
reader becomes a participant in changes of perception and
taxonomy. The third and fourth inversions act as a commentary
on the first two: they displace the ‘othering’ of the new world,
not by assimilating its description to European conceptions and
conventions, or asserting an imperial and epistemological hier-
archy,16 but by placing the visitors (and hence readers) in the
subordinated position. We are estranged from our habitual hier-
archical taxonomy of and in the new world. It is not ‘nature’ that
provides salvation, as it does in the travelogues, but ‘culture’.
However, this is a culture displaced from time, European history
and conventions. Two of these inversions are topoi found in
More’s Utopia and Plato’s Timaeus, but the unnamed and un-
gendered land is Bacon’s innovation, read in juxtaposition to the
III
The second part of the fable names the island, its mission and its
history, and uses images and metaphors with connotations of gender
and sexual difference. These narrations continue the utopian and
generic reversals of the first part of the fable, re-emphasising Euro-
pean practices as inverted reference points. Gendered and sexual
metaphors are explicit in the name of the island, the articulation
of an epistemology and the description of the Governor.
The name of the island is a double departure from convention.
It is named by the inhabitants rather than the Europeans, and the
name is not feminine: Bensalem signifies ‘the perfect son’. By
masculinising what is usually female (the land), Bacon continues
to displace the Euro-centric construction of the relationship of
man to land, and additionally asserts the island’s impenetrable
status. Furthermore, the masculine island bears a typological
relationship to Christ, the other perfect son. Through the direct
revelation of Christianity, Bacon posits an unmediated and un-
broken genealogical connection between God, fathers and sons.
The image of the birthing God and father, source of all knowledge
and production, is an enduring myth in Western philosophy and
culture. It is also one which defines masculinity by excluding the
significance of female procreativity and power.18 However, this
initial gendering of the island and its productive capacities as
solely masculine is qualified and challenged in the third part of
the fable, to which I shall turn later.
Bacon explicitly confirms the articulation of a non-Western,
but nonetheless hierarchical epistemology: the subject knower is
Bensalem, the object of knowledge is the rest of the world: ‘we
know well … the … world, and are ourselves unknown’ (463).
The College of the Six Days’ Works, which symbolises the island’s
IV
In the last part of the fable the narrator describes three experi-
ences at length: his attendance at ‘the feast of the family’; a
V
This dialogue acts as both a direct and an indirect interpretation
of the festival: directly, in response to the narrator’s request for
elucidation, and indirectly, because Joabin’s comments on Euro-
pean marriage and familial customs are a counterpoint to the utopian
inversions of the feast. The narrator asks for Joabin’s views:
I had never heard of a solemnity wherein nature did so much
preside. And because propagation of families proceedeth from the
nuptial copulation, I desired to know of him what laws and
customs they had concerning marriage; and whether they kept
marriage well; and whether they were tied to one wife? (476)
Joabin’s answer reads:
You shall understand that there is not under the heavens so chaste
a nation as this of Bensalem; nor so free from all pollution or
foulness. It is the virgin of the world … the Spirit of Chastity … For
there is nothing amongst mortal men more fair and admirable than
the chaste minds of this people. Know therefore, that with them
there are no stews, no dissolute houses, no courtesans, nor anything
Notes
1 Francis Bacon, The Refutation of Philosophies, in B. Farrington (ed.) The
Philosophy of Francis Bacon (Chicago, Chicago University Press, 1966), p. 131.
2 Francis Bacon, The Masculine Birth of Time, in Farrington (ed.), The Philo-
sophy, p. 62.
3 Ibid. p. 70.
4 Francis Bacon, Novum Organum, aphorisms I and III, in The Works of
Francis Bacon, ed. James Spedding, Robert Leslie Ellis and Douglas Denon
Heath, 14 volumes (London, Longman, 1857–74), vol. IV, p. 47.
5 For example, Mark Breitenberg, Anxious Masculinity in Early Modern
England (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1996), pp. 69–96; Carolyn
Merchant, The Death of Nature: Women, Ecology and the Scientific Revolu-
tion (San Francisco, Harper and Row, 1980), pp. 164–90; Maria Mies and
Vandana Shiva, Ecofeminism (London and New York, Zed Books, 1993),
pp. 13–20; Valerie Plumwood, Feminisms and the Mastery of Nature (London,
Routledge, 1993); Londa Schiebinger, The Mind has No Sex?: Women in the
Origins of Modern Science (Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press,
1989), pp. 119–59. In solitary contrast, Iddo Landau, ‘Feminist criticisms of
metaphors in Bacon’s philosophy of science’, Philosophy, 73 (1998), 47–61,
demonstrates how critics cite Bacon selectively, and argues that his
philosophy is not a hierarchical sexist epistemology.
6 See Susan Bordo, ‘The Cartesian masculinization of science’, Signs, 11 (1986),
439–56; Brian Easlea, Science and Sexual Oppression: Patriarchy’s Confron-
tation with Women and Nature (London, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1981);
Evelyn Fox Keller, Feminism and Science (Oxford, Oxford University Press,
1996), pp. 1–40; Genevieve Lloyd, The Man of Reason: ‘Male’ and ‘Female’
in Western Philosophy (London, Routledge, 1994), pp. 1–15; and Merchant,
The Death, Chapter 5.
7 Merchant, The Death, p. xx; Mies and Shiva, Ecofeminism, p. 18.
8 See J. C. Davis, Utopia and the Ideal Society (Cambridge, Cambridge Uni-
versity Press, 1979), pp. 1–10, 36–40, 106–37.
9 Frederic Jameson, ‘Of islands and trenches: naturalisation and the
production of utopian discourse’, Diacritics, 7 (1977), 2–21. See also Denise
Albanese, ‘The New Atlantis and the uses of utopia’, English Literary
History, 57 (1990), 503–28.
10 See Charles Whitney, Francis Bacon and Modernity (New Haven, Yale Uni-
versity Press, 1986); Jerry Weinberger, ‘Science and rule in Bacon’s utopia:
an introduction to the reading of New Atlantis’, American Political Science
Review, 70 (1976), 865–85, and Science, Faith and Politics: Bacon and the
Utopian Roots of the Modern Age (Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 1985).
11 See, Joan Wallach Scott, Gender and the Politics of History (New York,
Columbia University Press, 1988), pp. 42–5; S. Amussen, An Ordered Society:
Gender and Class in Early Modern England (Oxford, Basil Blackwell, 1988);
P. Stallybrass, ‘Patriarchal territories: the body enclosed’, in M. Ferguson,
M. Quilligan and Nancy J. Vickers (eds), Re-Writing the Renaissance (Chicago,
Chicago University Press, 1986), pp. 127–42); and David Underdown,
Revel, Riot and Rebellion: Popular Politics and Culture in England 1603–
1660 (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1985).
12 See notes 5 and 6.
13 This is an elaboration of Davis, Utopia, p. 107.
14 Francis Bacon, in Brian Vickers (ed.), Francis Bacon: A Critical Edition of
the Major Works (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1996), pp. 457–89 (pp.
457, 463). All subsequent references to New Atlantis come from this
edition and are given in parenthesis in the text.
15 Newly discovered land was graced with a feminised European name:
America, Virginia, Guiana. The ideology behind such naming is clear in
Ralegh’s plea to Queen Elizabeth to fund his exploration of Guiana:
‘Guiana is a country that hath yet her maidenhead: never sacked, turned,
nor wrought; the face of the earth hath not been torn, nor the virtue and
salt of the soil spent by manurance; the graves have not been opened for
gold; the mines not broken with sledges; nor the images pulled down out
of their temples’ (The Discovery of … Guiana, London, 1595, fo.99). New
World land usually signified an invitation to possession: gender is used
both to convey and justify this signification, and to justify a gendered,
racial and epistemological hierarchy. See Richard Burt and J. Archer (eds),
Enclosure Acts: Sexuality, Property and Culture in Early Modern England
(Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 1993); Annette Kolodny, The Lay of the
Land: Metaphor as Experience and History in American Life and Letters
(Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1975); Peter Mason,
Deconstructing America: Representations of the Other (London, Routledge,
1990), Chapter 1); and Adrian Louis Montrose, ‘The work of gender in the
discourse of discovery’, Representations, 33 (1991), 1–41.
16 These were the two available discursive conventions, see J. H. Elliot, The
Old World and the New (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1970) ; S.
Greenblatt, Marvellous Possessions: The Wonder of the New World (Oxford,
Oxford University Press, 1991); P. Hulme, ‘Hurricanes in the Caribees: the
constitution of the discourse of English colonialism’, in Francis Barker et
al. (eds), 1642: Literature and Power in the Seventeenth Century, Proceedings
of the Essex Conference on the Sociology of Literature July 1980 (Colchester,
Hewitt Photo-Lith, 1981); W. E. Washburn, ‘The meaning of “discovery”
in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries’, American Historical Review, 68
(1962), 1–21.
17 For example, Thomas Harriot’s A Brief and True Report of the New Found
Land of Virginia (London, 1588); Robert Gray’s A Good Speed to Virginia
(London, 1608); Walter Ralegh’s The Discovery of the Large, Beautiful and
Rich Empire of Guiana (London, 1596).
18 See Breitenburg, Anxious Masculinity, pp. 76–96 and Merchant, The Death,
Chapter 5. Feminist critiques of male parturition fantasies include, Renate
Blumenfeld-Kosinski, Not of Woman Born: Representations of Caesarean
Birth in Medieval and Renaissance Culture (Ithaca, Cornell University Press,
1990); Terry Castle, ‘La’bring bards: birth topoi and English poetics’, Journal
of English and Germanic Philology, 78 (1979), 193–208; Susan Friedman,
‘Creativity and the childbirth metaphor: gender difference in literary dis-
course’, Feminist Studies, 13 (1987), 49–82; Adrienne Rich, Of Woman Born:
Motherhood as Experience and Institution (London, Virago, 1977), pp. 56–83.
19 See Stanley Fish, ’”Georgics of the mind”: the experience of reading
Bacon’s Essays’, in Self-Consuming Artefacts: The Experience of Seventeenth-
Century Literature (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1972), pp. 28–
155; Charles Whitney, Francis Bacon and Modernity (New Haven, Yale
University Press, 1986); see also Kate Aughterson, ‘”The waking vision”:
reference in the New Atlantis’, Renaissance Quarterly, 45 (1992), 119–39.
20 For example, H. B. White, Peace Among the Willows: The Political Philo-
sophy of Francis Bacon (The Hague, Elsevier, 1968), pp. 166–89; Merchant,
The Death, pp. 180–6.
21 Davis, Utopia, p. 113.
22 See Gordon Schochet, Patriarchalism in Political Thought (Oxford, Basil
Blackwell, 1976), Chapter 1.
23 Merchant, The Death, pp. 180–4.
24 See ibid., Chapters 1 and 2; White, Peace, pp. 166–89.
25 See Patricia Crawford, ‘The construction and experience of maternity in
seventeenth-century England’, in Valerie Fildes (ed.), Women as Mothers
in Pre-industrial England (London, Routledge, 1990), pp. 3–38 and David
Cressy, Birth, Marriage and Death: Ritual, religion and the Life-Cycle in Tudor
and Stuart England (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1997), pp. 197–230.
26 See Kathleen Davies, ‘Continuity and change in literary advice on marriage’,
in R. Outhwaite (ed.), Marriage and Society: Studies in the Social History of
Marriage (New York, St. Martin’s Press, 1981), pp. 58–80; Margaret Ezell,
The Patriarch’s Wife: Literary Evidence and the History of the Family
(Chapel Hill, University of Carolina Press, 1987); C. H. and K. George, The
Protestant Mind of the English Reformation (Princeton, N. J, Princeton
University Press, 1961), pp. 260–84; Linda Fitz, ‘What says the married
woman? Marriage theory and feminism in the English renaissance’,
Mosaic, 13 (1980), 1–22; Lawrence Stone, The Family, Sex and Marriage
1500–1800 (London, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1977), pp. 217–41.
27 See David Leverenz, The Language of Puritan Feeling: An Exploration in
Literature, Psychology and Social History (New Brunswick, N. J., Rutgers
University Press, 1980) and Deborah Shuger, ‘Nursing Fathers: Patriarchy
as a Cultural Ideal’, in Deborah Shugar (ed.), Habits of Thought in the English
Renaissance (Berkeley, University of California Press, 1990), pp. 218–49.
28 The Works of Lancelot Andrewes, ed. J. P. Wilson and James Bliss, 11 vols,
Library of Anglo-Catholic Theology (Oxford, Oxford University Press,
9
Censorship and the institution of
knowledge in Bacon’s New Atlantis
SIMON WORTHAM
I
Critical readers of Bacon’s New Atlantis have often drawn atten-
tion to the complex relationship between, on the one hand, the
production and dissemination of enlightened scientific know-
ledge in Bensalem – and, indeed, the forms of social community
for which it implicitly provides a model – and, on the other, the
secret or concealed conditions of this very same process of pro-
duction. For example, Robert K. Faulkner in Francis Bacon and
the Project of Progress notes that, while ‘every official performs
his function [and] everyone does what he is ordered,’ never-
theless ‘all this order is the more remarkable since the relation of
king, city, nation, state, and scientist is not clarified. The order
that orders … is hidden.’1 Jerry Weinberger, meanwhile, argues
that Bensalemite ‘science is shrouded in secrecy, denying the
possibility of full enlightenment.’ Such secrecy surrounding the
activities which contribute to the production of scientific know-
ledge Weinberger reads in terms of, as he sees it, Bacon’s idea
that ‘the politics of science must be secret and retired because
only the most resolute souls will be willing to embrace such a
world with full knowledge of its moral risks and dangers.’2 What
these critics would appear to suggest, then, is that the production
of various sorts of ground-breaking scientific knowledge and
enlightened social relationships remain dependent, at bottom, upon
a supplementary dose of censorship that simply cannot be dispensed
II
According to Rawley, Bacon’s secretary, the ‘fable’ of the New
Atlantis18 was devised by its author so as to ‘exhibit therein a
model or description of a college instituted for the interpreting of
nature and the producing of great and marvellous works for the
benefit of men, under the name of Salomon’s House’ (36). Salomon’s
House exemplifies in ideal terms the advancement of learning, in
the context both of academic principle and institutional practice.
As B. H. G. Wormald has put it, as well as providing ‘a frame-
work of directing axioms conducive to learning’s advancement’,
the New Atlantis is Bacon’s ‘vision of an institution established
by government for furthering natural philosophy/science’.19 As a
source of enlightenment, discovery and invention, Salomon’s
House is, to borrow Burt’s phrase, licensed by authority: it is
created and officially sanctioned by royal act (58); and the Father
of Salomon’s House, who imparts to the European visitors ‘the
true state’ – the foundations, instruments, functions and ordin-
ances – of the institution, is himself described as arriving, almost
regally, ‘in state’ (69). The close connections between the state
and the academy are underlined, then, through reference to the
authority of the House of Salomon’s officials; but also the
authority of the institution is reflected in the orderliness that
everywhere characterises its activities. As a research institute, it
supports the study of, among other things, the natural sciences,
mathematics and geometry, philosophy, medicine, the mechanical
arts, and optics and acoustics. The description offered by the
Father of the means and ends of these pursuits is given in terms
of an extremely lengthy and well-ordered identificatory and
classificatory grouping and listing of the various faculties and
functions within the academy, bordering on the facile, so that the
almost legalistic monologism of the Father’s speech can be taken
to reflect the legality as well as the orderliness of the institution.
Indeed, since it tells us so little that might really be interesting
III
The problem of enlightenment in the New Atlantis rests, then, on
whether truth is or can be divined in a prior relation to knowledge,
House itself (78–80). We can only conclude from this irony that,
as Faulkner puts it, ‘Bacon thinks divinations but artificial light,
imaginings like all suppositions of divinity.’34 Thus, it is not that
Salomon’s House provides an exemplary, model college in which
natural or divine phenomena might be discovered and exhibited;
rather, revelation is, in Bourdieu’s terms, ‘the very structure of
the field’ in which the ‘rational management of invented illusion’
can take place so as to ‘satisfy real desire’, either that of the Ben-
salemites or the Europeans. And, of course, ‘the very structure of
the field in which discourse is produced and circulated’ con-
stitutes Bourdieu’s definition of censorship. Here, however, we
are alerted by the fact that it simultaneously constitutes a
definition of enlightenment.
IV
Since, as Faulkner puts it, divination in fact represents the
‘rational management of invented illusion’,35 it follows that
censorship, as the ‘structure of the field’ in which it takes place,
is enacted non-repressively, as it were, on disclosures that have
no primordial unity or transcendental grounding. The revelation
of the ‘Book’ that accompanies the miraculous ‘light’ of Christ-
ianity is, however, presented as being instantaneously and
transcendentally complete. It contains not only the portions of
the Bible written by ad 20 but also ‘some other books which
were not at that time written’, yet which are ‘nevertheless in the
Book’ (49). In Faulkner’s terms, the productive process – the
labour and temporality of writing – once again appears to have
been concealed or repressed, within the fetishised spectacle of a
spontaneous text, both unique and fully finished. From this kind
of perspective, the wholeness of the Book is itself a product of
repressive exclusions.
As if to confirm the unity of the Book, its reception is charac-
terised by the absence of interlinearity, since by ‘a great miracle’
similar to ‘that of the Apostles in the original Gift of Tongues’ the
various peoples of Bensalem – ‘Hebrews, Persians and Indians,
besides the natives’ – are all able to read the Book and Letter ‘as if
they had been written in his own language’ (49). This constitutes
a kind of reverse Babel-effect in which cultural, religious and
Notes
1 Robert K. Faulkner, Francis Bacon and the Project of Progress (Maryland,
Rowman and Littlefield, 1993), p. 248.
2 Jerry Weinberger, ‘Introduction’ to Francis Bacon, New Atlantis and The
Great Instauration, ed. Jerry Weinberger (Wheeling, Illinois, Harlan David-
son, 1980, revised edn, 1989), p. xxxii.
3 Richard Burt, Licensed by Authority: Ben Jonson and the Discourses of
Censorship (Ithaca and London, Cornell University Press, 1993).
4 Ibid., p. 152.
5 Robert Young, White Mythologies: Writing, History and the West (London,
Routledge, 1990), p. 89.
6 Burt, Licensed by Authority, pp. 152–3.
7 Jonathan Dollimore and Alan Sinfield, ‘Foreword’, in Jonathan Dollimore
and Alan Sinfield (eds), Political Shakespeare: New Essays in Cultural
Materialism (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 1985).
8 Margot Heinemann, ‘How Brecht read Shakespeare’, in Political Shakes-
peare, p. 203.
he waxes evangelical, and is called away; we are later told of devices for
transmitting sounds in pipes and lines’ (249).
27 Lyotard writes: ‘Scientific knowledge cannot know and make known that
it is the true knowledge without resorting to the other, narrative, kind of
knowledge, which from its point of view is no knowledge at all. Without
such recourse it would be in the position of presupposing its own validity
and would be stooping to what it condemns: begging the question, pro-
ceeding on prejudice’ (The Postmodern Condition (Manchester, Manchester
University Press, 1984), p. 29). Yet it is in relation to this passage that
Bennington discusses Lyotard’s concept of a shift from premodern to modern
forms of scientific legitimation which allow for consensual discussion among
experts leading to improvements in the rules for speaking the truth, ‘pro-
jected into a future under the sign of progress’ (Bennington, Lyotard, p. 115).
28 Weinberger, ‘Introduction’, p. xvi.
29 See Paul de Man, ‘The resistance to theory’, in The Resistance to Theory
(Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press, 1986), pp. 10–11.
30 Christopher Pye, ‘The sovereign, the theater, and the kingdome of dark-
nesse: Hobbes and the spectacle of power’, in Stephen Greenblatt (ed.),
Representing the English Renaissance (California, University of California
Press, 1988), p. 295.
31 Pye’s article touches upon the solar imagery of early modern power, but
for a fuller discussion of this in relation to the literature of James I’s
accession, see Simon Wortham, ‘Sovereign counterfeits: the trial of the
pyx’, Renaissance Quarterly, 49.2 (Summer 1996) 334–59.
32 Faulkner, Francis Bacon, p. 237.
33 Ibid., p. 243.
34 Ibid., p. 239.
35 Ibid., p. 237.
36 The New Atlantis is indeed open-ended and, as it were, unfinished at both
ends, since the text commences by joining the Europeans in mid-voyage.
Kate Aughterson, in ‘“The waking vision”: reference in the New Atlantis’,
Renaissance Quarterly, 45.1 (Spring 1992) 119–39, argues that the opening
passage, beginning, ‘We sailed from Peru, (where we had continued by the
space of one whole year)’, comprises ‘simple vocabulary’, ‘accurate geogra-
phical directions’ and a straightforward fit between syntactic and temporal
sequence, which epitomises an ‘apparently closed system of determining
referents’ (122). Aughterson thereby suggests that, apparently, ‘no
reference is unfixed or floating’ (122), yet the irony of this metaphorical
representation of reference as ‘unfloating’ is that the opening sequence of
the New Atlantis is about a voyage at sea! Moreover, the description of the
Europeans as having ‘continued’ awhile in Peru carries the sense of
ongoingness, impermanence, flux. Thus, Aughterson concludes that
‘metaphoric “open-endedness”’ arises out of the seemingly ‘closed system’
(122): to some extent, this parallels my argument about the inseparable
relation of censorship and freedom or enlightenment in the New Atlantis.
Notes on contributors
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87, 88, 89, 93, 96, 97, 99, 106, technology, 17–18, 21–2, 85, 97–9,
110–12, 113, 115–17, 118, 119, 106–7, 110–11, 114–16, 118,
125, 132, 133–4, 135–6, 139, 125–6, 157, 169–70, 173, 174,
140, 156–7, 159, 161, 172, 175, 175; see also science
176, 180, 184, 186–7, 189, 192; travel, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 11, 20, 22, 30, 31–
see also experimental science; 8, 39–40, 43, 52–4, 64–6, 69–
natural history; natural 70, 71, 74, 97, 99, 108, 131–9,
philosophy; technology 145, 147–8, 151, 159, 160–2,
secrecy, 3, 5, 7, 8, 9, 11, 17, 19, 22–3, 187–8, 192; see also foreign
33, 37–8, 64–5, 73, 108, 110, policy; genre; Merchants of
112, 117, 135–6, 151, 162, 169, Light, the
180, 186–9, 196; see also Turler, Jerome, The Traveiller, 135
censorship; foreign policy; Tymme, Thomas, A Dialogue
laws; Merchants of Light, the; Philosophicall, 86
politics; surveillance
Serjeantson, Richard, 21 utopianism, 2, 14–15, 20, 28–32, 34–
sexual customs, 4, 5, 7, 9, 13, 17, 18– 5, 37, 38–40, 44, 48, 52, 53, 57,
19, 28, 44, 87, 108–10, 148–50, 60, 61, 62, 67, 70–1, 74–5, 96,
159, 163–73, 195; see also 109, 129, 130, 131–2, 135–6,
desire; Feast of the Family, 138, 140, 141–2, 148, 157–8,
the; gender; laws 160–1, 162, 164, 170, 172, 175,
Shakespeare, William, 182 186, 188; see also genre; More,
The Winter’s Tale, 169 Thomas
Sharpe, Kevin, 183
Sidney, Philip, 50 Venner, Tobias, Via recta ad vitam
Arcadia, 40 longam, 92, 98
Solamona, King, 4, 6, 33, 61, 64, 106, verisimilitude, 10–11, 34, 35, 36, 37–
108, 111, 130, 135, 138, 139– 8, 50, 132; see also genre
42, 143 Vickers, Brian, 17, 42, 72
Solomon, King of the Jews, 6, 34, 64, Virgil, Aeneid, 121–2
111, 113, 139, 141, 144, 145
Spain, 32, 37, 39, 133, 139, 142, 143, Warbeck, Perkin, 145–7, 150
145 Webster, Charles, 14
Spenser, Edmund, The Faerie Queene, Weinberger, Jerry, 18–19, 21–2, 180,
171 186, 188, 189–90
Sprat, Thomas, 15 West Indies, the, see Indies, the
Stewart, Alan, 42 Whewell, William, 83
supernatural, the, 11, 87–8, 106–7, Whitney, Charles C., 18, 64–5
111–19, 146, 169, 191–3; see Winstanley, Gerard, Law of Freedom,
also natural magic 14, 57
surveillance, 7, 12, 65, 108, 136, 169, Wood, Paul, B., 15
189, 191–2; see also foreign Wormald, B. H. G., 185
policy; Merchants of Light, Wortham, Simon, 22–3
the; politics, of Bensalem;
secrecy Young, Robert M., 181, 182, 184
Swift, Jonathan, Gulliver’s Travels,
30 Zagorin, Perez, 17
Zetterberg, J. Peter, 86