{"id":97734,"date":"2016-05-05T13:00:18","date_gmt":"2016-05-05T17:00:18","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/?p=97734"},"modified":"2016-05-05T13:47:06","modified_gmt":"2016-05-05T17:47:06","slug":"overdrafts-of-pleasure","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2016\/05\/05\/overdrafts-of-pleasure\/","title":{"rendered":"Overdrafts of Pleasure"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><em>John Cleland wrote his (very) erotic novel,\u00a0<\/em>Fanny Hill<em>,<\/em>\u00a0<em>in\u00a0prison. What did he mean by it?<\/em><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/fanny_hill.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter wp-image-97752\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/fanny_hill.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"600\" height=\"383\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/fanny_hill.jpg 1440w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/fanny_hill-300x191.jpg 300w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/fanny_hill-768x490.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/fanny_hill-1024x654.jpg 1024w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p><em>Max Nelson is writing <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/category\/books-2\/prison-lit\/\" target=\"_blank\">a series<\/a> on prison literature. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2016\/03\/23\/branded-man\/\" target=\"_blank\">Read the previous entry, on Merle Haggard and the long tradition of the outlaw poet,<\/a><\/em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2016\/03\/23\/branded-man\/\" target=\"_blank\"><em>\u00a0here<\/em><\/a><em>.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>John Cleland\u2019s sentences often resemble the sexual encounters he imagined in his best-known book\u2014a two-volume novel called <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.gutenberg.org\/files\/25305\/25305-h\/25305-h.htm\" target=\"_blank\">Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure<\/a><\/em>, or <em>Fanny<\/em> <em>Hill<\/em>,<em>\u00a0<\/em>published when he was in debtor\u2019s prison between 1748 and 1749, reissued in a censored edition the following year, and presented in both cases as an autobiographical letter by a former courtesan named Fanny Hill. A typical Cleland sentence goes on past any moderate end point, \u201cwedging [itself] up to the utmost extremity.\u201d It makes unexpected, spasmodic, sometimes baffling detours, \u201cexalted by the charm of their novelty and surprise.\u201d It drifts so far into the ridiculous that sometimes it seems \u201cthat on earth\u201d\u2014as Cleland\u2019s heroine comments in one passage about the \u201cwomen of quality\u201d she and her colleagues once wanted to resemble\u2014\u201cthere cannot subsist anything more silly, more flat, more insipid and worthless.\u201d But then it keeps going, escalating until it seems to have been \u201cdriven forcibly out of the power of using any art.\u201d\u00a0<!--more--><\/p>\n<p>These sentences tend to catalog their objects too thoroughly, to leave too little to the imagination. They are full of leering superlatives and puzzling similes. Cleland, a fervid, unhinged writer, conceived of Fanny as a hyperactive observer of bodies. No detail is too insignificant to mention, especially where it pertains to a body that\u2019s prone, aroused, or drowsily available. About one of Fanny\u2019s fellow courtesans during a ceremonial public lovemaking competition, for instance, we read that<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>Her posteriors, plump, smooth, and prominent, formed luxurious tracts of animated snow that splendidly filled the eye, till it was commanded by the parting or separation of those exquisitely white cliffs, by their narrow vale, and was there stopped, and then attracted by the embowered bottom-cavity, that terminated this delightful vista and stood moderately gaping from the influence of her bended posture, so that the agreeable interior red of the sides of the orifice came into view, and with respect to the white that dazzled round it, gave somewhat the idea of a pink flash in the glossiest white satin.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>Fanny tends to describe women with relaxed, comradely admiration. She relishes them; they hardly ever threaten or surprise her. When, in the book\u2019s early pages, the fifteen-year-old Fanny inadvertently finds herself rooming in a brothel, her poor Liverpool parents having been swiftly dispatched by smallpox, her sexual initiation comes playfully from one of the house\u2019s experienced female boarders.<\/p>\n<p>Men, in contrast, can be traumatic presences, like the debauched elderly caller \u201cwith a yellow cadaverous hue\u201d that Fanny\u2019s landlady duplicitously assigns her as her first customer. They can also, Fanny soon decides, be sources of strange and varied pleasures. Where she catalogs other women\u2019s charms easily and causally, she treats those of male figures like her first love\u2014the handsome son of a civil servant\u2014with a kind of eager awe:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>Nor did his shirt hinder me from observing that symmetry of his limbs, that exactness of shape, in the fall of it towards the loins, where the waist ends and the rounding swell of the hips commences; where the skin, sleek, smooth, and dazzling white, burnishes on the stretch over firm, plump, ripe flesh, that crimp\u2019d and ran into dimples at the least pressure, or that the touch could not rest upon, but slid over as on the surface of the most polished ivory.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>She is particularly drawn, in her descriptions of men, to a part of the body Cleland turns stylistic somersaults not to name. It begins as a \u201cwonderful machine,\u201d then, fifteen pages later, becomes an \u201cengine of love-assaults,\u201d then a \u201cstiff staring truncheon.\u201d One such truncheon later in the book is a \u201csensitive plant\u201d with a head \u201cnot unlike a common sheep\u2019s heart\u201d and a \u201cbroad back\u201d along which \u201cyou might have trolled dice securely.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Reading passages like this, one\u2019s first impression is that Cleland\u2019s main concern in <em>Fanny Hill<\/em> was solving a technical problem. Can secondhand descriptions of pleasure, however elaborate or detailed, give a novelist enough energy to sustain\u00a0a book? Much of the novel can be read as an illustration of Fanny\u2019s claim near the end of the second volume that, if she should apologize \u201cfor having too much affected the figurative style,\u201d it is because sexual pleasure \u201cis poetry itself, pregnant with every flower of imagination and loving metaphors, even where not the natural expressions, for respects of fashion and sound naturally forbid it.\u201d On closer inspection, however, the book comes off as something more complicated than a flowering of one eccentric and filthy man\u2019s erotic imagination. Its elaborate descriptions of pleasure given and taken start to seem like scrims for a moral argument about what sorts of sexual behaviors should be \u201cforbid\u201d and which should be encouraged\u2014an argument refined in prison by an author deeply occupied with thoughts of punishment, dissipation, and sin.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_97748\" style=\"width: 610px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/img_00108.jpg\" rel=\"attachment wp-att-97748\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-97748\" class=\"wp-image-97748\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/img_00108.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"600\" height=\"886\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/img_00108.jpg 928w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/img_00108-203x300.jpg 203w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/img_00108-768x1134.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/img_00108-694x1024.jpg 694w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><\/a><p id=\"caption-attachment-97748\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">This illustration, and the three below, come from a 1907 reprint by the Kamashastra Society of a rare 1749 edition of <i>Fanny Hill<\/i>. It contained eleven plates, ten of them colored by hand.<\/p><\/div>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">*<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/img_00128.jpg\" rel=\"attachment wp-att-97745\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter wp-image-97745\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/img_00128.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"600\" height=\"871\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/img_00128.jpg 940w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/img_00128-207x300.jpg 207w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/img_00128-768x1115.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/img_00128-705x1024.jpg 705w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Cleland\u2019s biography is patchy. There are stretches in his eighty-year life during which, for up to a decade at a time, the surviving record loses track of him or gives only vague and puzzling data. He was born in 1710 to a former military officer by then settled in Kingston, a large town in greater London. No signs remain of why he left the prestigious Westminster school at age thirteen, but the record finds him again in 1728, a teenage recruit to the East India Company logged on a ship for Bombay. He lived in India as a civil servant for twelve years, during which period he probably began a draft of <em>Fanny Hill<\/em>. Despite owning several slaves himself, he had to defend himself midway through his service in Bombay against charges that he\u2019d either taken in or \u201cabducted\u201d a woman enslaved to another man\u2014the wording varies with the account\u2014to protect her from her master\u2019s abuse. (As the scholar Hal Gladfelder pointed out in his illuminating 2012 book <em><a href=\"https:\/\/jhupbooks.press.jhu.edu\/content\/fanny-hill-bombay\" target=\"_blank\">Fanny Hill in Bombay<\/a><\/em>, the defense Cleland gave at his trial contains similar language to his later writings accusing brothel masters in London of keeping their women \u201cin a state of Slavery.\u201d)<\/p>\n<p>Cleland\u2019s departure from Bombay in 1740\u2014he requested a temporary leave but never returned\u2014seems to have initiated ten years of mostly undocumented drifting. There was an ambitious attempt to launch another colonial project with the Portuguese monarchy, which seems to have come to little, followed by a return to London, where Cleland is presumed to have met and befriended the author Thomas Cannon. The details and extent of their friendship are unclear, but it decidedly did not last beyond February 1748, when Cleland was arrested and sentenced to what became thirteen months\u2019 confinement in Fleet prison for failing to pay Cannon a debt of eight hundred pounds. By that point, he is thought to have drafted an early version of <em>Fanny Hill<\/em>. He spent much of his time in prison revising the text, expanding it and preparing it for publication. Early in 1749, just\u00a0before the second volume of <em>Fanny Hill<\/em> appeared, Cannon\u2019s servant found a note sealed to her master\u2019s door in Cleland\u2019s handwriting*:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>Here lives that execrable white-faced, rotten catamite, who joined with his own mother to consummate the murder of an unfortunate gentleman who had saved his life, and whom, in return, he poisoned five times with common arsenic, which, it is probable, he will never recover the bloody effects of. Enquire for further particulars of his Mother in Delahaye Street. His name is Molly Cannon.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>In <em>Fanny Hill<\/em>, white complexions are almost always marks of youth and lively unspoiledness (e.g., \u201cthe dewy lustre of the whitest skin imaginable\u201d), especially when contrasted with the \u201cvermillion\u201d regions of the body where blood tends to rush. (Cleland loved this word. It appears at least nine times in <em>Fanny Hill<\/em>, once as a verb, in reference to a \u201cred-centered cleft of flesh\u201d with \u201clips vermillioning inwards.\u201d) Venal or ugly characters tend to be yellower-skinned, sallow, warmed over. But for Cleland to call Cannon \u201cwhite-faced\u201d here was to cast doubt on his sexual normalcy and health. It was another image in service of Cleland\u2019s unambiguous insistences (\u201ccatamite,\u201d \u201cMolly Cannon\u201d) that Cannon was secretly gay.<\/p>\n<p>Cleland renewed the accusation when he was again arrested at the end of 1749, this time for obscenity charges. (The authorities, it seemed, considered phrases like \u201cstiff staring truncheon\u201d no less explicit than the \u201cnatural expressions\u201d they matched.) Vindictively, the novelist informed one of the Duke of Newcastle\u2019s subordinates that Cannon had just published a pamphlet called <em>Ancient and Modern Pederasty Investigated and Exemplify\u2019d<\/em>, in which he had written \u201cin defense of sodomy.\u201d The Duke\u2019s authorities followed his lead. Cleland would be arrested once more on the basis of <em>Fanny Hill<\/em>, in 1750, but his cheerful heterosexual obscenities seem never to have brought him to trial. \u201cBuggery,\u201d on the other hand, was a capital crime. Cannon fled the city for several years. His publisher, whom he had assured \u201cthat the whole Pamphlet throughout was so far from encouraging the Vice, that it was Design\u2019d to expose the Crime and make it hatefull to all Mankind,\u201d was jailed and may have been pilloried.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/fannyhill.jpg\" rel=\"attachment wp-att-97747\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter  wp-image-97747\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/fannyhill.jpg\" alt=\"fannyhill\" width=\"600\" height=\"868\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/fannyhill.jpg 937w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/fannyhill-207x300.jpg 207w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/fannyhill-768x1111.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/fannyhill-708x1024.jpg 708w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">*<\/p>\n<p>Why wasn\u2019t Cleland prosecuted for <em>Fanny Hill<\/em>? In the book\u2019s second volume, he had escalated his provocations, as if worried that his readers would lose interest otherwise. Fanny, surrounded by her coworkers, happily couples with one of her customers atop the same divan on which she\u2019s just watched them satisfying theirs; on \u201ca gust of fancy for trying a new experiment,\u201d she agrees to see a wealthy client who can only be satisfied by repeated bouts of mutual whipping; in a queasy sequence, she helps a friend seduce a stammering, mentally disabled flower seller who, when aroused, moves from startled confusion to \u201ca raging ungovernable impetuosity\u201d that leaves Fanny\u2019s partner \u201ctorn, split, wounded\u201d and \u201cpleased to her utmost capacity of being so.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>One might have thought that passages like this would have earned Cleland more jail time. And yet the London authorities might have had reason to consider him less transgressive than he seemed.\u00a0What Cleland managed in <em>Fanny Hill<\/em> was to wed a celebration of pleasure (\u201cpoetry itself\u201d) with a defense of the precise virtues\u2014temperance, purity, refinement\u2014to which the extravagant pleasures he described would seem most opposed. The book\u2019s healthy, red-blooded characters are also the ones who choose their \u201cadventures\u201d carefully, who use taste and discernment and refuse to sell themselves cheap. With the exception of a one-night fling with a handsome sailor, Fanny strenuously avoids any encounter that could threaten her ability to stay, in her words, \u201cserved at the top of the market,\u201d and she wrinkles her noses at men who strike her as worn out \u201cby constant repeated overdrafts of pleasure.\u201d Vice has the same low status in Fanny\u2019s imagination that it had in that of Cleland\u2019s censors, precisely because it saddles a person with \u201clanguid powers\u201d and \u201cthe least employment for the sex.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Cleland litters both volumes of <em>Fanny Hill<\/em> with hints and anticipations of an argument Fanny makes in the book\u2019s last pages. By this point, she\u2019s been left a comfortable fortune on the death of one of her wealthy keepers and happily reunited, by a chance encounter at an inn, with her teenage first love. \u201cI could not help pitying,\u201d she tells her correspondent, \u201ceven in point of taste, those who, immersed in a gross sensuality, are insensible to the so delicate charms of Virtue, than which even Pleasure has not a greater friend, nor than Vice a greater enemy.\u201d She anticipates that one might \u201claugh perhaps at this tail-piece of morality.\u201d But how unfair to virtue, she argues, to suggest that \u201cit can have no foundation but in the falsest of fears, that its pleasures cannot stand in comparison with those of vice\u201d! Better to <em>show<\/em> \u201chow spurious, how low of taste, how comparatively inferior\u201d vice\u2019s pleasures seem \u201cto those which virtue gives sanction to.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Those virtuous pleasures are the ones that occur between young, healthy men and women who stably cohabit. Fanny reserves her most violent denouncements for the one case she comes across of sexual love between men. Staying at a roadside \u201cpublic-house,\u201d she spies through a high peephole on the two guests in the adjoining room: \u201ca tall comely young man\u201d and \u201ca sweet pretty stripling,\u201d neither older than twenty. Cleland has to justify the ensuing detailed account of this couple\u2019s lovemaking, which was cut from the book\u2019s 1750 printing, by having Fanny insist that she watched \u201cso criminal a scene \u2026 to the end, purely that I might gather more facts, and truly in my full design to do their deserts instant justice.\u201d She falls from her perch with a clatter before she can summon the authorities.<\/p>\n<p>It is an open question whether Cleland uses this inconvenient fall to ridicule Fanny\u2019s outrage, or whether he simply couldn\u2019t have his heroine getting people arrested and hanged. But the argument Fanny\u2019s madame Mrs. Cole makes on the following page about the \u201cinfamous passion\u201d\u2014that \u201camong numbers of that stamp whom she had known \u2026 she could not name an exception hardly of one of them whose character was not in all other respects the most worthless and despicable that could be\u201d\u2014looks much like Fanny\u2019s own insistences that vice is a kind of degenerative illness, a \u201cplague-spot,\u201d in Mrs. Cole\u2019s words, \u201cvisibly imprinted on all who are tainted with it.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter  wp-image-97746\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/img_00117.jpg\" alt=\"img_00117\" width=\"600\" height=\"889\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/img_00117.jpg 917w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/img_00117-203x300.jpg 203w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/img_00117-768x1137.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/img_00117-691x1024.jpg 691w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Cleland never recaptured the success of <em>Fanny Hill<\/em>. He lived under constant financial strain, firing off articles, reviews, and hackwork for booksellers who are often said to have taken advantage of him. <em><a href=\"https:\/\/books.google.com\/books?id=gQZMAAAAcAAJ&amp;printsec=frontcover&amp;source=gbs_ge_summary_r&amp;cad=0#v=onepage&amp;q&amp;f=false\" target=\"_blank\">Memoirs of a Coxcomb<\/a><\/em>, the novel with which he followed <em>Fanny Hill<\/em>, failed to get as much attention. He wrote a commentary on his translation from the Italian of\u2014in Gladfelder\u2019s words\u2014\u201ca medical treatise on a lesbian cross-dresser and adventurer,\u201d translated a French dictionary of love phrases, and wrote three books of linguistic theory in which he argued, dubiously, that our modern languages had originated from a single ideal \u201cCeltic\u201d source. In the mid-1760s he wrote a series of strange political columns under the anonymous attribution A Briton, in which he argued that the country deserved to return to a similar kind of ideal original unity. (Responding to the tumult over the Stamp Act in colonial America, he insisted that \u201call the British Dominions however divided, by Situation, form nevertheless one great and indivisible political body.\u201d) He never married. When Boswell visited Cleland in 1778, he \u201cfound him in an old house in the Savoy \u2026 his room, filled with books in confusion and dust.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>He publicly regretted having published <em>Fanny Hill<\/em>, but he also maintained that the book was a hymn to virtue disguised as a catalogue of vice. He did admit, however, in a review of Tobias Smollett\u2019s <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gutenberg.org\/files\/4084\/4084-h\/4084-h.htm\" target=\"_blank\"><em>The Adventures of\u00a0<\/em><em>Peregrine Pickle<\/em><\/a>, that this strategy could produce as many dangers as benefits.<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>There are, it is true, some worthy and well-meaning Persons who disapprove this Way of handling of Vice, and who think \u2026 that even the End aimed at in presenting the Situations of it, does not atone for the Indecency of the Means; that it is holding the Light too near the Magazine; that in short they corrupt oftner than they instruct.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>In his life, as in his most famous book, Cleland held the light dangerously close to the magazine. It hardly mattered whether or not his flirtations with deviance were meant, as he insisted, to show how superior virtue\u2019s pleasures turned out to be. He managed to avoid prosecution, but not poverty and suspicion.\u00a0Early in his book, Gladfelder quotes another, unnamed visitor to the ramshackle Savoy house where Cleland spent much of his later life: \u201cit is no Wonder, in this Age, that he lost his Place or Pension \u2026 or that he should pass under the censure of being a Sodomite, as he now does.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><small>*How, since he was still imprisoned, did he get the note on the door? Gladfelder doesn\u2019t say.<\/small><\/p>\n<p><em><em>Max Nelson\u2019s\u00a0writings\u00a0on film and literature\u00a0have appeared in <\/em><\/em>The Threepenny Review<em><em>,\u00a0<\/em><\/em>n+1<em><em>, <\/em><\/em>Film Comment<em><em>, and<\/em><\/em>\u00a0Boston Review<em><em>, among other publications.\u00a0He lives in New York.<\/em>\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Previous entries in <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/category\/prison-lit\/\" target=\"_blank\">Prison Lit<\/a>:<\/em><\/p>\n<ul>\n<li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2016\/03\/23\/branded-man\/\" target=\"_blank\">Fran\u00e7ois Villon,\u00a0<em>The Testament<\/em>; Paul Verlaine,\u00a0<em>Romances sans paroles\u00a0<\/em>and\u00a0<em>Sagesse<\/em>; Gregory Corso,\u00a0<em>Gasoline<\/em> and\u00a0<em>The Vestal Lady on Brattle<\/em>; Merle Haggard, \u201cMama Tried\u201d<\/a><\/li>\n<li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2016\/02\/25\/haunted-convict\/\" target=\"_blank\">Austin Reed,\u00a0<em>The Life and the Adventures of a Haunted Convict<\/em><\/a><\/li>\n<li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2016\/01\/21\/kicked-towards-saintliness\/\" target=\"_blank\">Jean Genet,\u00a0<em>Our Lady of the Flowers<\/em><\/a><\/li>\n<li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2016\/01\/05\/in-the-madhouse\/\" target=\"_blank\">Christopher Smart,\u00a0\u201cJubilate Agno\u201d; John Clare, \u201cChild Harold\u201d<\/a><\/li>\n<li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2015\/12\/07\/extreme-remedies\/\" target=\"_blank\">George Jackson,\u00a0<em>Soledad Brother<\/em><\/a><\/li>\n<li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2015\/11\/17\/unseen-even-of-herself\/\" target=\"_blank\">Madame Roland,\u00a0<em>The Private Memoirs<\/em><\/a><\/li>\n<li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2015\/10\/30\/great-waves-of-vigilance\/\" target=\"_blank\">Abdellatif La\u00e2bi,<em> The Reign of Barbarism <\/em>and\u00a0<em>Le livre impr\u00e9vu<\/em><\/a><\/li>\n<li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2015\/10\/13\/suffering-is-one-very-long-moment\/\" target=\"_blank\">Oscar Wilde,\u00a0<em>De Profundis<\/em><\/a><\/li>\n<li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2015\/10\/02\/sick-souls\/\" target=\"_blank\">John Bunyan,\u00a0<em>Grace Abounding<\/em>; Eldridge Cleaver,\u00a0<em>Soul on Ice<\/em><\/a><\/li>\n<li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2015\/09\/15\/notes-from-a-dead-house\/\" target=\"_blank\">Fyodor Dostoyevsky,\u00a0<em>Notes from a Dead House<\/em><\/a><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>John Cleland wrote his (very) erotic novel,\u00a0Fanny Hill,\u00a0in\u00a0prison. What did he mean by it? Max Nelson is writing a series on prison literature. Read the previous entry, on Merle Haggard and the long tradition of the outlaw poet,\u00a0here. John Cleland\u2019s sentences often resemble the sexual encounters he imagined in his best-known book\u2014a two-volume novel called [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":851,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[19434],"tags":[13606,4846,22212,15236,22208,16690,17096,8558,22206,22211,19436,22205,22207,12856,8902,19435,19694,179,22210,22209],"class_list":["post-97734","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-prison-lit","tag-boswell","tag-britain","tag-british-novels","tag-brothels","tag-debtors-prison","tag-eighteenth-century-novels","tag-erotic-novels","tag-ethics","tag-fanny-hill","tag-hal-gladfelder","tag-incarceration","tag-john-cleland","tag-memoirs-of-a-woman-of-pleasure","tag-morality","tag-prison","tag-prison-literature","tag-prostitution","tag-sex","tag-thomas-cannon","tag-tobias-smollett"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v25.4 (Yoast SEO v25.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>John Cleland\u2019s \u201cFanny Hill\u201d: An Erotic Novel with Morals<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Max Nelson on Cleland\u2019s scandalous, pornographic 1748 novel and its unlikely intentions.\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2016\/05\/05\/overdrafts-of-pleasure\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Overdrafts of Pleasure by Max Nelson\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"May 5, 2016 \u2013 John Cleland wrote his (very) erotic novel,\u00a0Fanny Hill,\u00a0in\u00a0prison. 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