The Scriblerus Club

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the Scriblerus Club. The 18th century Club included some of the most extraordinary and vivid satirists ever to have written in the English language. We are given giants and midgets, implausible unions with Siamese twins, diving competitions into the open sewer of Fleet-ditch, and Olympic-style pissing competitions: “Who best can send on high/The salient spout, far streaming to the sky”. But these exotic images were part of an attempt by Pope, Swift and their cadres to show a world in terrible decline: “Religion, blushing, veils her sacred fires,And unawares Morality expires.Nor public flame, nor private dares to shine;Nor human spark is left, nor glimpse divine!Lo! Thy dread empire, Chaos! Is restored:Light dies before thy uncreating word”.So wrote Alexander Pope in his great mock epic verse, The Dunciad. Who were the Scriblerans? And what in eighteenth century society had driven them to such disdain and despair?

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Guests

  • John Mullan 14 episodes
    Senior Lecturer in English
  • Judith Hawley 14 episodes
    Senior Lecturer in English
  • Marcus Walsh No other episodes
    Kenneth Allott Professor of English Literature

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Programme ID: p003k9cm

Episode page: bbc.co.uk/programmes/p003k9cm

Auto-category: 800 (Literature)

Hello (First sentence from this episode) Hello, the 18th century Scriblerus Club included some of the most extraordinary and vivid satirists ever to have written in the English language.