An Essay on Criticism

audiobook

An Essay on Criticism

by Mr. (John) Oldmixon

EN·~3 hours·10 chapters

Chapters

10 total
1

The Augustan Reprint Society - John Oldmixon - AN ESSAY ON CRITICISM - (1728) - INTRODUCTION BY R. J. MADDEN, C.S.B.

0:14
2

INTRODUCTION

3:27:03
3

NOTES TO THE INTRODUCTION

0:51
4

AN - ESSAY - ON - CRITICISM

0:02
5

Design, Thought, and Expression,

0:03
6

By the AUTHOR of the Critical History of England.

0:03
7

LONDON:

0:10
8

AN - ESSAY - ON - CRITICISM;

0:02
9

FINIS.

0:00
10

Transcriber's Notes

4:52

Description

Set against the heated literary quarrels of early eighteenth‑century England, this study examines John Oldmixon’s Essay on Criticism and the circumstances of its emergence. Tracing the essay from Oldmixon’s earlier Critical History of England through his public disputes with Dr. Zachary Grey and Alexander Pope, the introduction shows how the work was meant both as a practical guide to “right thinking” and as a Whig‑leaned rebuttal to rival writers. Oldmixon deliberately avoids abstract theory, preferring concrete examples to teach readers while furthering his own agenda.

The analysis follows Oldmixon’s choice of examples—praise for Pope’s Homer, criticism of Clarendon and Laurence Echard—to illustrate how the essay acts as a mirror of contemporary taste and a vehicle for personal disputes. It also places him within the French tradition of Bouhours and Longinus, revealing the cross‑national exchange that shaped early modern criticism. Listeners gain a clearer picture of how a modest pamphlet could both reflect and fuel the fierce rivalries of the Augustan literary world.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (204K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Tor Martin Kristiansen, Karl Hagen, Joseph Cooper and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2011-02-04

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the author

Mr. (John) Oldmixon

Mr. (John) Oldmixon

1673–1742

A sharp-tongued Whig writer from the early 1700s, known for turning politics and history into lively, argumentative prose. He wrote poems, plays, pamphlets, and ambitious historical works, including books on England and Britain’s American colonies.

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