Aphra Behn was a British playwright, poet, translator and fiction writer from the Restoration era.
Background
Apra Behn was born in 1640 in Kent, England. There is not much information regarding her early life. While some speculate that she was born to a barber, John Amis and his wife Amy, others believe that she was born to a couple named Cooper. There is another version, according to which she was the daughter of Mr and Mrs John Johnson of Canterbury.
It is certain that in 1663, young Aphra accompanied the Johnson’s on their voyage to West Indies. During the journey, Johnson passed away. As such, the family settled down in Surinam. The sudden death and the eventual stay in Surinam left a deep impact on young Aphra.
Career
Aphra's visit to Surinam ended in 1664, as she returned to England the same year. The sudden death of her husband left Behn with absolutely no money to fall back on. Her wit and talent earned her the position of an intelligence gatherer or political spy for King Charles during the Second Anglo-Dutch War. She moved to Antwerp under the code name Astrea. Her main role as a spy was to establish intimacy with William Scot, son of a regicide Thomas Scot.
Her proceeds as a spy did not bring in much valuable information. Moreover, her expenses steeply increased due to the enhanced cost of living. Adding to the woes was the refusal on part of King Charles to pay the money. With no means to fall back to, she borrowed money for her journey back to England.
Despite repeated attempts and year-long petitioning, King Charles refused to pay Behn money for her work as a spy. Unable to pay the debt, she was forced into debtor’s prison. Though she was released shortly, circumstances that led to her release are unknown.
Behn started writing to support a living. She worked as a copyist for the King's Company and the Duke's Company. In 1670, she came up with her first work, a play ‘The Forc’d Marriage’ which was produced in London. It was followed by ‘The Amorous Prince’, in 1671.
Her third play was ‘The Dutch Lover’. Unlike her previous two attempts, Behn’s third play was not well received. Failing to make a mark, she took a break of three years. It is said that she resumed working as a spy during this time.
In 1676, she came up with her sole tragedy play, ‘Abdelazer’. However, right after ‘Abdelazer’ Behn turned to writing in her favourite and more commercially successful genre, comedy.
In 1677, she came up with the first part of ‘The Rover’. The play was super successful commercially. She followed it up with a second part in 1681. The play portrayed the adventures of a small group of English Cavaliers in Madrid and Naples during the exile of future Charles II. Mistress of Charles II, Nell Gwyn played a major role in the play.
Following the success of ‘The Rover’, she made her foray into novels and brought forth an equally popular work, ‘Love-Letters Between a Nobleman and His Sister’ (1684–87). In 1687, she came up with the play, ‘The Emperor of the Moon’ which served as a forerunner to modern-day pantomime.
In 1688, she released her best-known novel, ‘Oroonoko’. ‘Oroonoko’ dealt with the story of an enslaved African prince whom she claimed to have met in South America. The novel exploited the themes of slavery, race and gender. ‘Oroonoko’ was so well received that it established her reputation as a novelist.
In 1688, she came up with the work ‘A Discovery of New Worlds’, which was a translation of the French work titled, ‘Entretiens sur la pluralité des mondes’ by Bernard le Bovier de Fontenelle.
Behn wrote several poems in her lifetime, most of which were collected and published in ‘Poems upon Several Occasions, with A Voyage to the Island of Love’ and ‘Lycidus; or, The Lover in Fashion’. While the former was published in 1684 the latter was published in 1688.
Over her career, Behn wrote about nineteen plays, four novels and short stories. She was one of the most prolific and high-profile female writers. Her popularity was second only to Poet Laureate John Dryden.
Her last known work was translation of Abraham Cowley’s ‘Six Books of Plants’. She completed the work just a few days before her death. Behn faced severe health issues during the last four years of her life. However, despite the failing health, she did not stop writing and continued to pen novels, plays, poems and short stories.
Behn breathed her last on April 16 1689. She was buried in the East Cloister Westminster Abbey. Her tombstone bears the inscription, ‘Here lies a Proof that Wit can never be Defence enough against Mortality. ’
Posthumously, two of her plays, ‘The Widow Ranter’ and ‘The Younger Brother’ were performed in 1689 and 1696 respectively.
Quotations:
“That perfect tranquility of life, which is nowhere to be found but in retreat, a faithful friend and a good library.”
“There is no sinner like a young saint.”
“Money speaks sense in a language all nations understand.”
“Variety is the soul of pleasure.”
“A poet is a painter in his way, he draws to the life, but in another kind; we draw the nobler part, the soul and the mind; the pictures of the pen shall outlast those of the pencil, and even worlds themselves.”
“Where there is no novelty, there can be no curiosity.”
“Love, like reputation, once fled, never returns more.”
“Each moment of a happy love's hour is worth an age of dull and common life.”
“But time lessens all extremes, & reduces them to mediums & unconcern.”
“Possessed with a thousand thoughts of past joys.”
“Willmore: There is no sinner like a young saint.”
“As love is the most noble and divine passion of the soul, so is it that to which we may justly attribute all the real satisfactions of life, and without it, man is unfinished, and unhappy.”
Connections
Upon returning to England in 1664, she married Johan Behn, a Dutch merchant. Since then, she was known publically as Mrs Behn. Tragically, Johan died the following year, leaving Behn on her own.