{"product_id":"gouge-william","title":"GOUGE, William.","description":"Rare first edition of this popular and influential conduct book.  William Gouge s  Of Domesticall Duties  is one of the most sophisticated post-Reformation conduct books written in English and the first substantial Puritan analysis of household duties. The book is a weighty tome both in topic and physical size. The first edition of 1622 ran to 693 pages and this was supplemented by 23 pages of family prayers by the third edition of 1634. This is a large book to digest, to be sure. Yet William Gouge (1575 1653), a famous Puritan preacher in London, intended his work not as a philosophical text on which high-minded readers would ruminate at their leisure. Rather, Gouge designed the book as a daily guide to family life. Books such as this on the family engaged with some of the most pressing public and political matters of the time. The late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries were characterized by demographic and economic change which had further divided the rich and poor in England. This generated social disorder, or fear of that disorder, and long-held views that the family was central to social and political order meant that attention became focused acutely on the family and the maintenance of its government.  Harvey, Karen.  Love and Order: William Gouge, Of Domesticall Duties. \r  The work is divided into eight treatises, starting with the examination of Bible passages that give authority to his ideas of domestic duty, followed by a consideration of marriage and the mutual duties between husband and wife, and six further treatises on the specific duties of wives, husbands, children, parents, servants and masters.Gouge s work embraces patriarchy, placing the husband at the head of the household. He says a wife should show  obedience  to her husband s authority and  come when he calls  her. She should refrain from  ambition  and abandon any idea that  wives are their husbands equals . This was not an unusual view for the time, although Gouge did note that when he preached on female subservience in church he often observed discontented murmurings from the women in his congregation. At the same time, Gouge emphasises the need for  fellowship  between married men and women. A husband should be ruled by  wisdome and love  and avoid  too much strictnesse . In Shakespeare s day, it was legal for husbands to beat their wives, but Gouge argues strongly against it, seeing  buffets, blowes, strokes \u0026amp; stripes  as unjustified  cruelty . He asks if it is reasonable that a man s  bed-fellow , the  joynt governour of the family, should be beaten at his hands  and risk losing the respect of her  children or servants  (p. 391). Instead, he suggests that, if she needs to be disciplined, she could be  restrained  or  denied  the things she most enjoys (p. 392). It is only if a husband is  set upon by his wife , that he might beat her in self-defence (p. 393).  BL\r The autograph on the title  Edward Kynaston  is possibly that of the celebrated English actor (c. 1640   January 1706), one of the last Restoration \"boy players\", young male actors who played women's roles. Samuel Pepys called him \"the loveliest lady that ever I saw in my life\" after seeing him in a production of John Fletcher's The Loyal Subject at the Cockpit-in-Court, \"only her voice [is] not very good\". He also played the title role in Ben Jonson's Epicoene. Pepys had dinner with Kynaston after this production on 18 August 1660. Simultaneously, Kynaston played male roles as well. cf. Elizabeth Howe,  The First English Actresses: Women and Drama, 1660 1700. ","brand":"GOUGE, William.","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":57859635937615,"sku":"L3600","price":4950.0,"currency_code":"GBP","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/1016\/2425\/0703\/files\/1-15.jpg?v=1781793778","url":"https:\/\/sokol-books-ltd.myshopify.com\/products\/gouge-william","provider":"Sokol Books Ltd","version":"1.0","type":"link"}