Medical historian
Roy Porter called
The Anatomy of Melancholy "that omniumgatherum of anecdotes of insanity whose burden was that mankind — including the author himself — was quite out of its mind." Despite its origins as a medical treatise, studies of
Anatomy over the last 400 years have almost entirely focused on its value as literature. Burton's numerous anecdotes, which tackle melancholy with both sobriety and humour, as well as the overarching influence of his personal sadness on the book, are often cited as making
Anatomy his "one truly great work". In the 18th and 19th centuries, melancholy became somewhat fashionable for the upper classes – owing in part to the popularity of works like
The Sorrows of Young Werther by
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, the
Gothic genre, and
Romanticism. This so-called "Age of Melancholy" resulted in a rediscovery of Burton's
Anatomy, which had seen a dwindling audience over the previous century and had been out of print since 1676.
Charles Lamb's push for a 9th edition in 1800 revitalized interest in the book, and it became a "literary phenomenon".
Samuel Taylor Coleridge regularly annotated his copy of
Anatomy.
Jorge Luis Borges used a line from Burton as an epigraph to his story "
The Library of Babel", and
Washington Irving quotes from it on the title page of
The Sketch Book.
Holbrook Jackson based the style and presentation of his
Anatomy of Bibliomania on
The Anatomy of Melancholy. The book "lurks behind the writing" of
Samuel Beckett's novel
Murphy,
John Milton English poet
John Milton used
Anatomy as the basis for his poem about melancholy, "
Il Penseroso" ("the thinker"). It was most likely composed around ten years after the first edition was published.
Thomas Warton described Milton as "an attentive reader of Burton's book". as well as descriptions of
demons and theories of
predestination. Milton scholar George Wesley Whiting writes that "in addition to agreeing upon the fundamental points of theology, demonology, cosmography and morality, Burton and Milton condemn war and military glory". "Il Penseroso" (and its companion poem "
L'Allegro") contrasts melancholy with
mirth in a similar way to Burton's distinction between "bad" melancholy and "good" melancholy.
Samuel Johnson Writer
Samuel Johnson called
Anatomy "a valuable work", saying "there is a great spirit and great power in what Burton says". Johnson suffered from bouts of "horrible melancholia" and, at one point, "strongly entertained thoughts of suicide", according to his biographer
James Boswell. Like many of his contemporaries, he believed that writers such as himself were especially predisposed to melancholy. Most of his attempted remedies for his own depression came from treatments prescribed by the
Anatomy of Melancholy. Chief among these was "constant occupation of mind"; Johnson found that staying busy helped ward off melancholy, which was a significant reason his writing was so prolific.
Laurence Sterne In 1798,
John Ferriar published the paper
Illustrations of Sterne, which pointed out that
Laurence Sterne's 1759 novel
The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman used passages from
Anatomy almost word for word. Sterne also took sections from
Of Death by
Francis Bacon and several other books. Keats was a Romanticist with poetic views of the human body and emotions, as well as a surgeon trained in medicine and physiology.
Literary scholar Robert White argues that this duality made Keats unique among Burton's 19th-century audience: "Keats was the only one to have a professional foot in both fields and could read it as both a poet, and as a doctor professionally aware of its historical medical context." During his highly productive period of 1819, Keats read and reread Burton's
Anatomy. He owned a copy of the 11th edition (1813), which he heavily annotated. He put
exclamation marks next to passages about solutions for heartache and underlined the phrase "The last and best Cure of Love-Melancholy, is to let them have their Desire." The final book Keats published during his lifetime,
Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St Agnes and Other Poems (1820), is influenced throughout by
Anatomy, which was "the book which has been his companion during 1819".
Philip Pullman In April 2005, English author
Philip Pullman published an essay in
The Telegraph about his love for Burton's
Anatomy. He argues that the 400-year-old book is worth looking past its convoluted nature: Pullman has cited it as his favorite book on other occasions and lives near Burton's hometown of
Oxford. He claims that "Burton's humanity blows like a gale", saying "his very language sparkles" as he describes medical treatments and scenes from history. It's listed among the books that influenced his own writing, such as his trilogy
His Dark Materials. == Notes ==