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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
From Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift
>
Pope
> The new
Dunciad
and Colley Cibber
Other Satires
Influence of Warburton
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume IX. From Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift.
III.
Pope
.
§ 21. The new
Dunciad
and Colley Cibber.
The new
Dunciad
(1742) embodied materials on the misapplication of learning, science and wit originally designed for another poem. Its appearance seems due to Popes irritation against the university of Oxford for declining to offer Warburton the degree of D.D. While gratifying many personal grudges, as in the notorious lines on Bentley,
24
the satire was, to a large extent, general, falling on the Italian opera, the abuses of education at school and college, antiquaries, naturalists and freethinkers. The lines describing the final consummation of the power of dulness have won deserved praise; those on the fashionable tour, though less elevated, are almost equally brilliant.
36
Pope had frequently directed his satire at Colley Cibber. His most offensive line was in the
Epistle to Arbuthnot
(l. 97). In the new
Dunciad,
Cibber was introduced as Dulnesss Laureate Son. Cibber, in reply, published a letter in which he suggested that, if Sawney had been substituted for Cibber in the
Epistle,
the satire would have been equally just. To prove this, he told how, having met Pope in very doubtful company in years gone by, he would take credit for Homer in having saved his translator from serious harm. Cibbers good-humoured patronage was sufficiently exasperating, and, to Pope, who was ambitious of fame as a moralist, this full-flavoured anecdote, with the derisive engravings which it occasioned, must have been particularly galling. In revenge, he installed Cibber in Theobalds place as hero of
The Dunciad
in the new edition which incorporated the fourth book (1743). Pope has been reproached for allowing his rancour to inflict irreparable injury on his original design. Certainly, the change of the opening is ludicrously inapposite, but the heros personality is little to the fore in the later books. Cibber was no dullard, but neither were many of the other dunces; and he undoubtedly had much of the bad taste and folly that is apt to attend on cleverness. A man of his character was not so hopelessly unsuited for the throne.
37
Note 24
. Ll. 203274.
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CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Other Satires
Influence of Warburton
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