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The Charliad, An Unpublished Mock-Epic

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 December 2020

Austin Wright
Affiliation:
Haverford College

Extract

AT THE death of Joseph Spence, the companion and intended biographer of Pope, Spence's executors discovered certain manuscripts relating to a burlesque poem, The Charliad. Although the work was apparently ready for the press, the author had taken no steps toward publication, and for sundry reasons the executors decided upon suppression of the poem as the proper course to follow—at least for a time. After more than a century and a half, The Charliad still remains undisturbed in manuscript form, known only to scholars and to them chiefly by name. Because of its intimate connection with The Dunciad, however, as well as because of lesser considerations, Spence's peculiar production deserves some belated attention.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Modern Language Association of America, 1932

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References

1 British Museum, Additional MSS. 25,897.

2 John Underhill, Spence's “Anecdotes, Observations, and Characters of Books and Men,” (London, 1890), p. xxx.

3 The Dunciad [Spence's note.]

4 N.B. The reason of Mr. Dennis's not writing the Notes himself, was his being Piqued at Mr. Tibbald's being comended in the Entrance of the Poem; without his being taken notice of there himself. See Canto 1. v: 18. [Spence's note.]