ing of things not in accord with some social code, nor the lubricity, but, presumably, the touch of coyness and experimentationthe various reflections of a desire not to be offensivewith which the English of the period refer to sexual or scatological matters, while reminding us that we are bearers ourselves of large, unclean, smelly bodies with all their parts and secretions and discharges. The lightest hint sophisticates. The eighteenth-century writers want to play with our embarrassment, make us know that we are known. That knowingness, that introduction of the public gaze in works of sexuality, would not seem so very surprising if women alone were the objects. But men are included as well as women. We know that women are objects of the male "gaze," but eighteenth-century literature makes everyone the object of the public gaze. And the sense of public gaze is present whether or not the subject or object is erotic.
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In works as diverse as the poetry of Pope and the fiction of Samuel Richardsonnovelist and printerthe image of the Enlightenment is naturally enough the sun, which in the eighteenth century gets a different meaning from its Platonic one. The Enlightenment sun is busy glaring, ferreting out, strongly lighting up, putting into print. A certain testiness about the sun becomes evident in later Augustan poetry. When Milton's Satan grimly protests against the sun, in Paradise Lost IV, he just seems splendidly perverse. But moments of doubt, tones of doubt about the sun and its beams, are scattered throughout eighteenth century literature. There is a sense of the oppressiveness, the too-muchness of the great waves of light that come rolling irresistibly over one, that make everything visible until the tired eyes lose the power of seeing or discerning, as in James Thomson's "Summer":
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| | 'Tis raging Noon; and, vertical, the Sun Darts on the Head direct his forceful Rays O'er Heaven and Earth, far as the ranging Eye Can sweep, a dazling Deluge reigns; and all From Pole to Pole is undistinguish'd Blaze. In vain the Sight, dejected to the Ground, Stoops for Relief; thence hot ascending Steams And keen Reflection pain.
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Thomson, one of the chief Whig propagandists of the time, was one of the most enthusiastic exponents of Newtonian physics, of the commer-
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