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James Arbuckle - Selected Works (Hardcover)
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James Arbuckle - Selected Works (Hardcover)
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James Arbuckle (c.1700-1742), poet and essayist, was born in
Belfast to a Presbyterian merchant family of Scottish origin and
educated at Glasgow University (1717-1723). In Glasgow, his poetry,
influenced by Pope and the Latin classics, won praise from leading
members of Scotland's literary and political establishment,
including Allan Ramsay. In 1723 he moved to Dublin, producing under
the name "Hibernicus" Ireland's first literary journal, in
collaboration with a group of young Whig intellectuals forming the
"Molesworth circle". He aimed at first to avoid politics, but in
the highly politicized Dublin of Dean Swift that proved impossible.
He was satirized by members of Swift's circle and responded with
the ironic Panegyric on the Rev Dean Swift. His later work,
especially The Tribune, developed a radical and anticlerical
critique of contemporary Ireland, in which Swift was represented
more as Church Tory than Irish patriot. Arbuckle was well-known in
his day, but his work has not been published since the end of the
eighteenth century. He has often been discussed in modern scholarly
work across a range of disciplines: on Swift and Pope; Scottish
poetry and especially Allan Ramsay; Francis Hutcheson and the early
Scottish Enlightenment; the background to the United Irishmen of
1798; the history of Irish presbyterians. Arbuckle himself has not
been the focus of detailed scholarly inquiry until now. This
edition presents an annotated selection of Arbuckle's work in
poetry and prose. It begins with a substantial introduction dealing
with his biography and political and literary context. It is then
divided into three parts. The first, on his Scottish period,
includes the annotated texts of his two principal poems, Snuff and
Glotta. The second presents a selection of the "Hibernicus" essays,
grouped by four themes: literary (which will include a selection of
his Horace translations); philosophical (responding principally to
Francis Hutcheson); political (placing him in the contemporary
varieties of Whiggism, and especially the dispute between Walpole
and "Opposition" Whigs); religious (the focus here is on his
writing on toleration). The final section deals with his response
to Swift's Irish writing, as demonstrated in selected essays from
The Tribune and in A Panegyric.
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