
E-text prepared by Chris Curnow, Stephanie Eason, Joseph Cooper,
The Augustan Reprint Society
This scholarly treatise offers a clear‑headed look at how eighteenth‑century critics understood satire, using Alexander Pope’s celebrated mock‑epic as a focal point. It traces two long‑standing ways of judging satirical work: one that emphasizes its coarse, confrontational roots in Elizabethan tradition, and another that aligns it with the higher, more polished standards set by classical models. By laying out these opposing lenses, the essay invites listeners to see how the genre’s reputation shifted over time.
The author also shares a personal dimension, recounting his own indebtedness to Pope and the mentorship that shaped his critical voice. Alongside this, the text explains why reviving the work matters today, highlighting its rarity in modern editions and its potential to deepen appreciation of Pope’s influence. Listeners will come away with a richer sense of satire’s evolving status and the scholarly conversation that still surrounds one of its most famous examples.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (61K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2009-06-25
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1709–1774
An Oxford scholar with a talent for crossing genres, this eighteenth-century writer moved from poetry and history to practical writing on farming. His career also linked him to figures such as Alexander Pope and to the academic world of Oxford and Windsor.
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