Goldsmith had been worrying about changes in the way agriculture was organised in Britain for some years before he wrote
The Deserted Village. He is probably the author of an essay entitled “The Revolution in Low Life” which appeared in
Lloyd’s Evening Post, 14-16 June 1762, which anticipates the themes of the poem, and he had commented on depopulation in the countryside in his poem
The Traveller(1764). His novel
The Vicar ofWakefield (1766) also gives a detailed picture of the vulnerability of rural life to power and money. From 1768 Goldsmith lived in a cottage at Edgeware, then in the countryside at some distance from London. He worked on
The Deserted Villagefor about two years before its publication, but had been collecting materials on country visits for some years before…
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Citation: Baines, Paul. "The Deserted Village". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 15 April 2003 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=1100, accessed 23 November 2024.]