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GULLIVER ( Martin ), pseud. The proctor's banquet : a pindarick ode. Dublin : Printed in the year 17

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:500.00 - 700.00 EUR
GULLIVER ( Martin ), pseud. The proctor's banquet : a pindarick ode. Dublin : Printed in the year 17

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
GULLIVER ( Martin ), pseud. The proctor's banquet : a pindarick ode. Dublin : Printed in the year 1731FIRST EDITION,8-pp,12mo,recent wraps:light old dampstain,but still a very good copy. "In Solemn Majesty of Fat" The only recarded edition. A rare item : ESTC locates five copies : L, Dp, Dt ; CSmH & IU. Foxon G318 adds CtY. Teerink 1246, citing only a copy in private hands. Another of the small series of poems published in Dublin under this Swiftian pseudonym, and again a satire on Hugh Graffan, who seems to have occupied an office of Censor at Trinity College, Dublin. At the feast burlesqued in this poem, the Censor is described as sitting "enthron'd in solemn majesty of fat," with someone referred to as "the amphibious Fanny" by his side. In the final strophe the Censor is aroused from a drunken stupor to survey a scene involving Swift, James Arbuckle, and others unnamed, all part of an earlier poem called The Censoriad (cf. Foxon G313-5) : "Hark! hark! the grumbling sound Has rais'd up his head, As awak'd from the dead, And amaz'd he stares around. Revenge, revenge, the Piper cries, See! Arbuckle arise See! the crutch that he rears, How revengeful he stares, And the fury that glows in his eyes! Behold! Jonathan stand With all the ghastly band Of heroes, who in the Censoriad were slain, And unpitied remain In Gulliver's strain." All this was no doubt fully intelligible to students of the day. Arbuckle was in fact crippled, and walked with the aid of crutches.ENGLISH PRE 1801; DUBLIN PRINTED; ENGLISH LITERATURE; IRISH LITERATURE; VERSE; ; ; ; ; ; ;