An Invocation
- (An invocation is a call to a god for help with something.)
- The narrator invents two whole new Muses for his invocation.
- (What, the original nine aren't enough for him?)
- The first one is the Muse of Fame.
- The narrator wants "future praise" (13.1.1), even from people he will never know or meet.
- The second new goddess the narrator addresses is the Muse of Gold.
- This "muse" is the one who inspires all of the cheap, money-grubbing writers who suck up to their patrons and who don't worry about substance.
- The narrator would like to make some cash off this book.
- Now that he has called upon Fame and Fortune to make him write in the first place, what comes next?
- Who should guide the content of his writing?
- (a) The narrator wants Genius to help him see through the false appearances that sometimes trick others into admiring people who don't deserve it.
- (b) The narrator also wants Humanity to fill his novel.
- He wants his work to be tender and filled with compassion.
- (c) Third on the list of influences is Learning. The narrator wants to keep going back to the classics to inspire his own writing.
- (d) Last but not least: Experience should be part of his writing.
- The narrator wants to use his experiences with all kinds of people, from up and down the social ladder, to illustrate "the manners of mankind" (13.1.7).
- With the help of all of these things, he hopes to finish up his novel successfully.