875

GULLIVER, Martin

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:600.00 - 800.00 EUR
GULLIVER, Martin

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
GULLIVER, Martin, pseud. The Censoriad: a poem. Written originally by Martin Gulliver. The second edition. Illustrated with sundry curious annotations of divers learned commentators, scholiasts and criticks. [Dublin :] London : Printed, and Dublin re-printed, and sold by James Hoey and George Faulkner, at the Pamphlet-Shop in Skinner-Row, opposite to the Tholsel, 1730FIRST EDITION, pages 22, (1), 12mo : cut a little close in the lower margin barely touching the last line of the imprint, and one line of text, all fully legible, otherwise a very good copy in recent paper wrapper. An unrecorded variant of the earliest printing recorded. No earlier Dublin mprint has been found and Foxon (cf G313-4) presumes there was none. The suggestion of a prior London edition is clearly false, though there is a London reprint from the third Dublin edition. Together the ESTC and Foxon report three copies of a "second edition," but these all consists of 17 pages only. The present copy has 22 pages, followed by a final leaf with an "advertisement" on recto, promising "a curious collection of notes" to be inserted in the next printing. This corresponds to the collation for the "third" edition, also 1730, Foxon G314 (Dt only) and a "fourth" edition of the same year (not in Foxon : L only). One of a series of Irish poems written under the pseudonym "Martin Gulliver". Most are satires on Hugh Graffan, a local public figure who was a persistent object of ridicule in Trinity College circles, but whose transgressions are now obscure. Foxon suggests that these poems may have been written by a small coterie of Dublin writers : O'Donoghue suggests the Rev. Walter Chamberlaine, the clever brother of Frances Sheridan and thus Richard Brinsley Sheridan's uncle, but he provides no evidence. The text is amply furnished with footnotes, in the Scriblerian mode, signed with such names as Vossius, Heinsius, and Bentleius, in the manner of the Dunciad Variorum.ENGLISH PRE 1801; DUBLIN PRINTED; ENGLISH LITERATURE; VERSE; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;