Pierce Egan  

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Pierce Egan (1772–1849) was an early British journalist, sportswriter, and writer on popular culture.

Egan was born in the London suburbs, where he spent his life. By 1812 he had established himself as the country's leading 'reporter of sporting events', which at the time meant mainly prize-fights and horse-races. The result of these reports, which won him a countrywide reputation for wit and sporting knowledge, appeared in the four volumes of Boxiana, or, Sketches of Modern Pugilism, which appeared, lavishly illustrated, between 1818-24. It was Egan who first defined boxing as the sweet science.

So successful was Boxiana that Egan turned to his other interest, the world of London clubmen, themselves devotees of the Turf and the Ring. In 1821 he announced the publication of a regular journal: Life in London, appearing monthly at a shilling a time. It was to be illustrated by George Cruikshank (1792-1878), who had succeeded the illustrators Hogarth and Rowlandson as London's leading satirist of urban life. The journal was dedicated to the King, George IV, who at one time had received Egan at court. The first edition of Life in London or, the Day and Night Scenes of Jerry Hawthorn, esq., and his elegant friend, Corinthian Tom, accompanied by Bob Logic, the Oxonian, in their rambles and Sprees through the Metropolis appeared on 15 July, 1821. Egan's creation was an enormous, instant success, with its circulation mounting every month. Pirate versions appeared, featuring such figures as 'Bob Tallyho', 'Dick Wildfire' and the like. Print-makers speedily knocked off cuts featuring the various 'stars' and the real-life public flocked to the 'sporting' addresses that Egan had his heroes frequent. There was a translation into French. At least six plays were based on Egan's characters, contributing to yet more sales. One of these was exported to America, launching the 'Tom and Jerry' craze there. The version created by William Moncrieff (1794-1857) - one of contemporary London's most successful dramatists and theatrical managers and a man whose knowledge of London and of its slang equalled Egan's - was praised, not without justification, as 'The Beggar's Opera of its day'. Moncrieff's production of Tom and Jerry, or, Life in London ran continuously at the Adelphi Theatre for two seasons and it was the dramatist's work as much as the author's that did so much to popularize the book's trademark use of fashionable slang.

Life in London appeared until 1828, when Egan closed it down. The publisher (and slang lexicographer) John Camden Hotten brought out a reprint in 1869, but the work had already established itself as a literary influence. The rip-roaring world it portrayed undoubtedly prefigures that of Dickens' Pickwick Papers (published just eight years ater Tom and Jerry); Cruikshank's illustrations, of course, helped both men with their success. Nor did 'Tom and Jerry' vanish with Egan: the celebrated duo have been perpetuated in Warner Brothers' cartoon cat and mouse and as the male protagonists of BBC television's Seventies' sitcom The Good Life.

But the success of his best-seller by no means ended Egan's writing. He published his report of the trial of John Thurtell and Joseph Hunt, whose murder of William Weare provided Regency England with one of its juiciest courtroom melodramas; sales, not to mention the author's ego, were boosted when Thurtell allegedly mentioned, just seven hours before his execution, that among his final wishes was a desire to read Egan's coverage of a recent prizefight. He provided regular reportage of the major capital trials, as well as such satirical legal pieces as The Fancy Tog's Man versus Young Sadboy, the Milling Quaker. In 1824 he launched a new journal, Pierce Egan's Life in London and Sporting Guide, a weekly newspaper priced at eightpence-halfpenny. Other works included sporting anecdotes, theatrical autobiographies, guide-books, and 'fancy ditties'. Among his later efforts, in 1838, was a series of pieces on the delights to be found on and immediately adjacent to the Thames. It was dedicated, with permission, to the young Queen Victoria and featured the illustrative work of his son, also Pierce Egan (1814-80)

In 1823 Egan produced an edition of Francis Grose's Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue (1785 et seq.) 'Egan's Grose', as it is generally known, is by no means an original work, but it does embellish its predecessor with the inclusion of a variety of mainly sporting Regency slang. He also cuts the coarse and broad expressions' which Grose had allowed and notes the way that some slang terminology, typically rum - once a positive term, but by 1820 generally the reverse - had altered. Egan must have found it an enjoyable task: his had always been a slangy style. As the writer Don Atyeo has explained in his study of Violence in Sport (1979), ' Boxiana is riddled with "Fancy" slang: '"Ogles" were blackened, "peepers" plunged into darkness, "tripe-shops" received "staggerers", "ivories" were cracked, "domino boxes" shattered, and "claret" flowed in a steady stream.' And as his own character Corinthian Tom explains in Life in London , 'A kind of cant phraseology is current from one end of the Metropolis to the other, and you will scarcely be able to move a single step, my dear JERRY, without consulting a Slang Dictionary, or having some friend at your elbow to explain the strange expressions which, at every turn, will assail your ear.' Such a dictionary is what Egan offers, hoping in sum that his efforts work 'to improve, and not to degrade mankind; to remove ignorance , and put the UNWARY on their guard; to rouse the sleepy, and to keep them AWAKE; to render those persons who are a little UP , more FLY: and to cause every one to be down to those tricks, manoeuvres and impositions practised in life, which daily cross the paths of both young and old.'

Pierce Egan was one of the narrators of George MacDonald Fraser's book Black Ajax, about Tom Molineaux and his quest for the heavyweight championship of England. One chapter of the book also featured schoolboy versions of Egan's characters from Life in London.

Publications

Journals:

Books:

  • Life in London (1821)
  • Sporting Anecdotes (1823)
  • Finish to the Adventures of Tom and Jerry (1829)
  • Pierce Egan's Book of Sports And Mirror of Life: Embracing the turf, the chase, the ring, and the stage (1836)

Adaptations:

Pierce Egan the Younger

His son, also Pierce Egan (1814-80) and usually referred to as 'the younger', began his professional career as an illustrator of his father's books and himself wrote around fifty romances. A good artist but a lesser writer, his blood-and-thunder romances included The Snake in the Grass (1858), Love Me, Leave Me Not (1859) and My Love Kate, or the Dreadful Secret (1869).He was also the sports editor of Bell's newspapers for some years, and briefly editor of The Weekly Times. From 1860 until his death twenty years later he edited The London Journal. His son, a third Pierce Egan, then became editor until his death in 1890.

The current descendants of Pierce Egan are the Cousins family, Essex.

References

  • John Sutherland (1989) The Longman Companion to Victorian Literature, Longman/Stanford University Press (US) as The Stanford Companion to Victorian Literature
  • "Egan, Pierce James", Dictionary of Nineteenth-Century Journalism, ed. Laurel Brake and Marysa Demoor, British Library/ Academia, 2008, p. 195




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Pierce Egan" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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