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[BURRIDGE ( Richard )]. Hell in an uproar : occasion'd by a scuffle that happen'd between the lawyer

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:300.00 - 400.00 EUR
[BURRIDGE ( Richard )]. Hell in an uproar : occasion'd by a scuffle that happen'd between the lawyer

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
[BURRIDGE ( Richard )]. Hell in an uproar : occasion'd by a scuffle that happen'd between the lawyers and the physicians, for superiority. A satyr. [Dublin :] Printed in the Year 1725FIRST IRISH EDITION, pages 15, (1, blank), 12mo, recent paper wrapper : light traces of wrinkling from damp, but still a very good copy. A Slanging-Match Foxon B586. First published at London in 1700. All printings of this poem are very rare. Of the original edition, Wing B5977A, ESTC locates three copies : L ; CLU-C and ICU, along with three copies of this Dublin printing : L ; CtY & IU, and a single copy of a London edition of 1750 : DNLM. A very lively and amusing dream vision in verse, in which the author describes a kind of slanging match between various lawyers and doctors, all of whom are consigned to Hell. Some of those who appear are named only by initials, but a number can be identified, such as the physician Sir George Wakefield, who was accused by Titus Oates in 1679 of having been offered a huge bribe to poison Charles II ; Wakefield was acquitted in a remarkable trial heard by Lord Chief Justice Scroggs, who also appears here (as "S----s") in defence of the legal profession. Burridge was born in 1670, and in 1700 he first appeared on the literary scene with four folio poems, two of them signed, on the King of Poland and the Duke of Gloucester, and two of them, including this one, anonymous, in the manner of Ned Ward. In subsequent years he issued a couple of other congratulatory poems, along with a survey of London, and a pamphlet in which he describes himself as a converted atheist. In 1712 he was tried, along with two boon companions, a butcher and a peruque-maker, for drinking a toast to the devil. What happened to him afterwards is not clear.ENGLISH PRE 1801; DUBLIN PRINTED; ENGLISH LITERATURE; VERSE; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;