Jan-Maat's Reviews > Confessions of an English Opium Eater
Confessions of an English Opium Eater
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Jan-Maat's review
bookshelves: 19th-century, autobiography-memoir, british-and-irish-isles
Jan 08, 2012
bookshelves: 19th-century, autobiography-memoir, british-and-irish-isles
Read 2 times
Thomas de Quincey started taking opium in the form of laudanum - conveniently available over the counter from all good chemists in early 19th century Britain - as pain relief. At no time was he taking his opium directly either by smoking or even eating, the title is indicative of his interest in finding the right phrase or most striking turn of words rather than the most accurate description. The downside of this search of his for the best turn of phrase is that in the second edition of his book he freely expanded sections and in doing so crossed the line from the florid to the overwritten.
He attempts to set out the positives and the negatives of his experiences with laudanum. My lasting impression was that it was overall horrific, the positive side didn't really come over terribly well. The fact of his addiction has to speak for itself. De Quincey wrote that his opium dreams where full of vivid memories of what he had read, his classical education meant that gigantic and threatening Roman armies loomed up and marched unrelentingly through his imagination. He imagines the agricultural labourer, laudanum was not just widely available at the time but also cheap, being overwhelmed by dreams of cows. Worse to imagine the dreams of the industrial labourer with their daily grind magnified in their imaginations.
The oddity of the book for me is that the drug visions sit alongside the ideal of Victorian domesticity. As expressed by de Quincey as the wife serving tea to the gathered family from a silver teapot. This is a comfortable, manageable, middle class addiction. It's a long way from the world of The Corner.
He attempts to set out the positives and the negatives of his experiences with laudanum. My lasting impression was that it was overall horrific, the positive side didn't really come over terribly well. The fact of his addiction has to speak for itself. De Quincey wrote that his opium dreams where full of vivid memories of what he had read, his classical education meant that gigantic and threatening Roman armies loomed up and marched unrelentingly through his imagination. He imagines the agricultural labourer, laudanum was not just widely available at the time but also cheap, being overwhelmed by dreams of cows. Worse to imagine the dreams of the industrial labourer with their daily grind magnified in their imaginations.
The oddity of the book for me is that the drug visions sit alongside the ideal of Victorian domesticity. As expressed by de Quincey as the wife serving tea to the gathered family from a silver teapot. This is a comfortable, manageable, middle class addiction. It's a long way from the world of The Corner.
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January 8, 2012
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Excellent! Complementary reviews!


Ha! excellent, wrong book, wrong link - thanks for spotting that, I'll correct it.


I would say the main interest is the contrast between drug addiction and Victorian England, or maybe not the contrast but the way it sits quite comfortably in the middle of child prostitution, domesticity, middle class values and that classic overblown Victorian literary style.
It is the oddness of the functional addict. So it has real weirdness value!

It is the oddness of the functional addict. So it has real weirdness value! "
Kalliope, Jan-Maat has summed up very well the world of the Confessions, the issues you are confronted with when you read the book but here's a plus: you may actually grow to be quite fond of Tomas de Quincey while you are fighting your way through his amazing sentences, your arms rowing in front of you like a Kesselmayer; I felt I really liked de Quincey as a person when I reached the end but then, we do share a birthday....

15th of August?


seriously? Wow. I think constipation is one of the effect of opiates, still I wonder if you could get hold of it...
And, yes, florid and overwritten fit his style very well but I do like it all the same.