The Preface to the Aeneis of Virgil (1718)

audiobook

The Preface to the Aeneis of Virgil (1718)

by Joseph Trapp

EN·~2 hours·6 chapters

Chapters

6 total

The Augustan Reprint Society - JOSEPH TRAPP - THE - PREFACE - TO - T H E Æ N E I S - OF - VIRGIL - (1718)

1:33

Introduction by - Malcolm Kelsall

1:06

INTRODUCTION

17:33

NOTES TO THE INTRODUCTION

1:12

BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

0:18

THE PREFACE.

2:07:32

Description

This edition brings listeners into the world of an early‑18th‑century translation of Virgil’s epic, focusing on the extensive preface written by its translator, Joseph Trapp. The preface was originally presented as a scholarly farewell from Trapp’s tenure as Oxford’s first Professor of Poetry, and it doubles as a bold appeal for patronage from the era’s most influential nobles and clergy.

Within its pages, Trapp sketches the literary standards of the Augustan age, offering a detailed critical appraisal of Virgil’s style and themes. He also reveals how his own career intertwined with the political and religious disputes of the time, from defending high‑church Tory figures to navigating the fallout of the Sacheverell and Atterbury controversies.

Accompanied by a concise introduction and careful editorial notes, the work serves as a vivid snapshot of the cultural currents that shaped early English reception of the Aeneid, making it an engaging listen for anyone curious about the crossroads of poetry, politics, and scholarship in the early 1700s.

Collections

Browse all

Details

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (143K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

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

Release date

2011-05-17

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Joseph Trapp

Joseph Trapp

1679–1747

An English clergyman, poet, and polemicist, he became Oxford’s first Professor of Poetry and built a career at the lively intersection of literature, religion, and public debate. His writing ranges from verse and drama to sermons, criticism, and sharp political pamphlets.

View all books

You may also like