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John Stuart Mill: Victorian Firebrand

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John Stuart Mill: Victorian Firebrand

Richard Reeves

Nonfiction | Biography | Adult | Published in 2007

Plot Summary
John Stuart Mill: Victorian Firebrand is a biography by Richard V. Reeves. First published in 2007, and nominated for the 2007 James Tait Black Memorial Prize, it’s the biography of John Stuart Mill, one of the greatest thinkers of the Victorian era. Few historians have covered Mill’s life and background, and critics praise Reeves for exploring this eminent philosopher. Reeves is a British writer, historian, and scholar. He’s a former European Business Speaker of the Year, and he once served as the Director of Strategy to Nick Clegg, the ex-Deputy Prime Minister of the UK.

In the biography, Reeves aims to dispel myths surrounding Mill. Mill’s remembered as being an introverted, dry, humorless man who thought about nothing other than politics and philosophy. The reality, Reeves claims, is that Mill was a passionate man driven by very intense principles, and that he loved and enjoyed life as well as any man.

If Mill strikes people as being odd and difficult to understand, it’s because he suffered from a severely restrictive upbringing, Reeves argues. Mill’s father didn’t let him have any fun. From infancy, Mill spent all day learning languages, studying history, and writing essays. Mill wrote his first essay, concerning Roman history, when he was only six years old, and he spoke Greek by age seven.



Although Mill was obviously talented, Reeves notes, his parents expected too much from him. These lofty expectations stayed with Mill into adulthood. More than anything, Mill craved love, affection, and passion. His parents were typically cold, distant Victorian parents, and he spent his adolescent years searching for a woman who loved him completely. Reeves explains that, when Mill eventually found this woman, it’s unsurprising that he loved her obsessively.

Mill fell in love with a woman called Harriet Taylor. Although Harriet loved Mill and admired his talents, she was already married. Harriet was a clever woman who craved intellectual stimulation, and she wanted more than her husband could give her. She decided to pursue Mill, even if having an affair is morally wrong.

Mill identifies a way for the pair to be together. He doesn’t believe in marriage because he thinks it’s overly restrictive. Because marriage is wrong, so is the monogamy associated with it. Victorians married young, and people change with age. For Mill, we can’t find the right person when we’re too young to know what we want. Reeves explains that Mill uses this logic to convince Harriet that she’s trapped in a loveless marriage. Reeves doesn’t pass judgment on Mill’s ethics—he remains impartial and objective.



At heart, Reeves explains, Mill was a liberally minded man. It’s unsurprising that he turned to socialism in later life. Arguably, he reformed Victorian ideas of marriage and morality. Harriet didn’t run away with him or leave her husband. Instead, her husband paid for her to live independently. She ran her own home and she refused to let Mill stay with her. Harriet was fiercely independent, and with Mill’s help, she found a way to make everyone happy—including her husband, who felt free to do as he pleased.

In the biography, Reeves covers Mill’s political and social activism in detail. Mill identified problems with Victorian London, and he wanted to fix them. He was driven to make Victorian London a better place with less poverty, less overcrowding, and more prosperity. For example, he actively campaigned for contraception, and he was arrested for distributing “obscene” pamphlets around working-class slums and brothels.

He promoted contraception, however, for a good reason. He found an abandoned baby under a tree, and he couldn’t find a home for it. There were so many impoverished families in London that they couldn’t take in another child. Families often left babies outside churches and other public places. For Mill, this was a travesty, and the only solution was contraception. Although his methods were questionable, he was driven by good intentions.



Reeves explains that Mill wasn’t just a reformer, or a campaigner. He was a highly motivated firebrand who wouldn’t stop until he succeeded. He didn’t sit back and complain about poverty, land reform, and inequality. Instead, he railed against it and encouraged others to do the same. Reeves presents Mill as an inspirational, self-disciplined character who we will never fully understand.

John Stuart Mill: Victorian Firebrand covers Mill’s more radical activities. For example, he wrote weekly damning articles about Irish land reform during 1846, and he fought to protect free speech and public protests. He engaged in public demonstrations and made speeches until his dying day.

Society rewarded Mill for his passion and intelligence. He was a politician who later worked as a high-ranking official in the East India Company. He attracted the attention of his contemporaries, who recognized his brilliant mind, even if they didn’t agree with his political leanings. Economists, scholars, and political writers of the day engaged with his work and questioned it. Whether these writers agreed with Mill or not, it’s undeniable that he influenced them. Mill, Reeves concludes, is the most influential thinker of the Victorian era.

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