Robert Bage | |
---|---|
Born |
Darley Abbey, Derbyshire |
11 March 1730
Died | 1 November 1801 | (aged 71)
Nationality | English |
Occupation | businessman, novelist |
Notable work | Hermsprong (1796) |
Robert Bage (11 March 1730 – 1 September 1801) was an English businessman and novelist.
Born in Darley Abbey, near Derby, Bage was the son of a paper-maker and was himself a papier. Bage's father had four wives, the first of whom was Bage's mother. She died soon after his birth. Bage received his early education at a common school in Derby, where he was an excellent student. He attained a working knowledge of Latin by the age of 7. He was given his training as a papier while he was an apprentice to his father. At the age of 23 Bage married a beautiful and wealthy young woman. With the boost in his finances he set up a paper manufacturing business in Elford, Staffordshire, which he continued until his death.
He was a skilled businessman, and his smooth running of his business allowed him time for intellectual pursuits. He learned the French language on his own through books, and studied mathematics. In 1765 he entered into a partnership in an iron foundry with three other men including Erasmus Darwin. After 14 years in business the partnership was terminated, leaving Bage with a loss of over 1000 pounds. This was a considerable loss, and Bage decided to begin his career in literature partly to make up for it. He published his first novel, Mount Henneth, in 1781.
Bage left Elford eight years before his death in 1801, and resided nearby in Tamworth. He was survived by his wife and two of his sons. His other son John had died as a young man, a great affliction to Bage. His oldest son Charles settled in Shrewsbury where he was a cotton manufacturer, and his youngest son Edward became a surgeon.
It was not until he was 53 that he took to literature; but in the 15 years following he produced six novels, of which Sir Walter Scott said that "strong mind, playful fancy, and extensive knowledge are everywhere apparent." Scott included Mount Henneth (1781), Barham Downs (1784), and James Wallace (1792) in his series of Ballantyne novels. Bage was brought up as a Quaker, but he became a philosophical and religious radical after the French Revolution. He advocated democracy and equality (the abolition of the peerage), as well as the abolition of institutional religion. A member of the Derby Philosophical Society, he was also associated with the Lunar Society of Birmingham.