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[KING ( Wm. )]. The Toast. An heroic poem in four books, written originally in Latin

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:1,500.00 - 1,800.00 EUR
[KING ( Wm. )]. The Toast. An heroic poem in four books, written originally in Latin

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
[KING ( Wm. )]. The Toast. An heroic poem in four books, written originally in Latin, by Frederick Scheffer : now done into English. And illustrated with notes and observations by Peregrine O Donald Esq; Dublin : Printed, London : Reprinted in the Year 1747 [1736]With engraved frontispiece, title-page printed in red and black, pp lxvi, (2), 88, *89 - *104, 89 - 118, *113 - *118, 119 - 232 and leaf of music, 4to, contemporary calf-backed marbled boards, with green label, gilt : a large (22.5 by 27.5 cms) and very good to nice copy.Foxon K83 (with press-figures). Teerink 1314. An attack on the Countess of Newburgh with whom King was engaged in a bitter lawsuit. The piece came to Swift's notice and he was so impressed with it that he said that if he had read it when he was twenty he would never have written a satire, adding that it was very malicious and worth reading." This present edition is dedicated to Swift in the person of Cadenus and there are many references to him in the text and the notes. It was printed in 1736 but King made a second issue in 1747 altering the date on the title-page in manuscript to 1747 and inserting nine additional leaves as cancellands. The book was never published, the author "presented a few copies to some friends, on giving me their honour that they would not suffer the book to go out of their hands without my consent". This caution was, perhaps, justified because a contemporary called it the most infamous of all books and said that it had a dirty subject which it did not become King to spend so much time raking into. In later years King became ashamed of it, remarking that "there are some parts which my riper judgment condemns, and which I wish were expunged : particularly the description of Myra's (the Countess of Newburgh) person in the third book is fulsome and unsuitable to the polite manners of the present age."ENGLISH LITERATURE; VERSE; ENGLISH PRE 1801; SWIFT; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;