Paul Whitehead,
The State Dunces. Inscribed to Mr. Pope. Together with The State Dunces. Inscribed to Mr. Pope. Part II. Being the last.
London: Printed for W. Dickenson in Witch-Street. 1733.
$350.00
Here in the scarce first editions of both parts. Part I with 24 lines not present in later editions. In very good to fine condition, disbound.
The volume(s) measure about cm. by cm. by cm.
Each leaf measures about 336 mm. by 230 mm.
- Main description
- Condition
- Biography / Bibliography
Main description
The full titles read as follows:
The State Dunces. Inscribed to Mr. Pope. London: Printed for W. Dickenson in Witch-Street. 1733. (Price One Shilling.)
The State Dunces. Inscribed to Mr. Pope. Part II. Being the last. London: Printed for W. Dickenson in Witch-Street. 1733. [Price One Shilling.]
The first volume collates as follows: (A, title), B-E2, F1
The first volume paginates as follows: (2) 3 – 18 p,
The second volume collates as follows: (A)2, B – E2
The second volume paginates as follows: 19 (1) p.
Part I, ascertained by Foxon as the first of five editions dated 1733. Foxon W426 and W431.
As usual in Part I, ‘E—e’ on page 11 has been corrected in manuscript to ‘E—-x’, and the following word (‘and’) has been crossed out; the ornament on the title-page is inverted.
Condition
The Volume is in Very Good Condition. Dis-bound, with some faint toning at the edges, The final leaf in Part II has some pencil math scribblings on the blank back of page 19.
Please Take the Time Necessary To Review The Photographs On Our Website In Order To Gain The Fullest Possible Understanding Of The Content And Condition Of This Volume.
Biography / Bibliography
Written in heroic couplets and Indebted to Pope’s “The Dunciad”, Whitehead’s first notable satire, The State Dunces, was inscribed to Pope, and commanded some attention, going through five editions in 1733. Whitehead raises his sights to include politicians and church members and above all else Walpole. In many ways he anticipates the new Dunciad of 1742.
Part II was not printed in the collected edition of Whitehead’s verse published in 1777, and is widely assumed to have been written by someone else; Foxon notes that ‘his authorship must be regarded as questionable’.
Per Wikipedia:
“Paul Whitehead (1710–1774) was a British satirist and a secretary to the infamous Hellfire Club.
While in prison Whitehead is said to have made his first literary efforts in the shape of political squibs. His first more elaborate production, “State Dunces”, a satire in heroic couplets, was published in 1733. It was inscribed to Pope, the first of whose ‘Imitations of Horace’ dates from the same year, and whose Dunciad had appeared in 1728. Pope’s rhythm, together with certain other characteristics of his satirical verse, is perhaps as successfully reproduced by Whitehead as by any contemporary writer; but he is altogether lacking in concentration and in anything like seriousness of purpose. The chief “State Dunce” is Walpole (Appius); others are Francis Hare, bishop of Chichester, and the Whig historian James Ralph.
The poem, which provoked an answer under the title of A Friendly Epistle, was sold to Robert Dodsley for £10.
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