Wednesday, 25 December 2024

The City Night Piece – Oliver Goldsmith

 

The City Night Piece – Oliver Goldsmith

Oliver Goldsmith, an Anglo-Irish writer, essayist, poet, novelist, and playwright. The essay “The City Night Piece” is from his collected work The Citizen of the World’. He speaks through a Chinese traveler. The Chinese traveler going around the city at two o’clock mid-night witnesses wicked and terrible happenings. In this essay he records all the details of London city during mid-night. The ugly side of mid-night is revealed by him in a realistic way.

The candle lights have gone off and the night watchman on duty is found sleeping. The labourers are sleeping after their hard work. He finds only four classes of people who are awake at mid-night are the meditative, the guilty, the revelers and the desperate. The ever changing excessive pride of the riches that showed its manifestations during the day time is now found sleeping like a wayward child. Gloom hangs all around the city. The dead silent atmosphere is terrible for the traveler. On the way, he finds a dilapidated senate house where poisonous reptiles live. At some distance, he also finds the destroyed temples and drama theatres in a heap of ruins. He comes to the conclusion that all those past glory might have fallen for luxury and the greed of the then rulers.

The traveler’s eyes fall on the homeless wretches who sleep in the open streets. They are too humble to seek any remedy to overcome their poverty. There are a few to show mercy on them. The poor people have no proper covering on their body and some of them are very thin and afflicted with diseases or others. Most of them are almost naked and suffering from hunger. He notices the pathetic condition of females who were once flattered for their beauty by rich men are lying at the doors of their betrayers. The wretched villains are insensible to the distress of the women. It is clear that no relief will be provided to the destitute. The poor are born to bear the tyranny and suppression of the rich, says the philosophical author.

Finally the author reveals his own sensitive nature. His tender heartfelt much more wretched when it comes to understand that it has no capacity to relieve the poor from their sufferings. The author’s condition was also similar to the poor people of London when he wrote the essay. The autobiographical element runs throughout the essay.

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