Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- General Editors’ Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Chronology
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- A Meditation Upon a Broom-Stick
- A Tritical Essay Upon the Faculties of the Mind
- Predictions for the Year 1708
- The Accomplishment of the First of Mr. Bickerstaff ’s Predictions
- A Vindication of Isaac Bickerstaff Esq.
- A Famous Prediction of Merlin, the British Wizard
- Tatler no. 230
- Harrison’s Tatler no. 5
- Harrison’s Tatler no. 20
- A Proposal for Correcting, Improving and Ascertaining the English Tongue
- A Modest Defence of Punning
- Hints towards an Essay on Conversation
- On Good-Manners and Good-Breeding
- Hints on Good Manners
- The Last Speech and Dying Words of Ebenezor Ellison
- Of the Education of Ladies
- A History of Poetry
- A Discourse to Prove the Antiquity of the English Tongue
- On Barbarous Denominations in Ireland
- Polite Conversation
- Directions to Servants
- Associated Materials
- I April Fool’s Joke, 1709
- II Specimens of Irish English
- III Laws for the Dean’s Servants
- IV The Duty of Servants at Inns
- V Notes for Polite Conversation
- VI Fragment of a Preface for Directions to Servants
- Appendices
- A A Dialogue in the Castilian Language
- B The Dying Speech of Tom Ashe
- C To My Lord High Admirall. The Humble Petition of the Doctor, and the Gentlemen of Ireland
- D ’Squire Bickerstaff Detected
- E An Answer to Bickerstaff
- F The Publisher to the Reader (1711)
- G The Attribution to Swift of Further Tatlers and Spectators
- H The Attribution to Swift of A Letter of Advice to a Young Poet
- I The Last Farewell of Ebenezor Elliston to This Transitory World
- J A Consultation of Four Physicians Upon a Lord That Was Dying
- K A Certificate to a Discarded Servant
- General Textual Introduction and Texual Accounts of Individual Works
- 1 General Textual Introduction
- 2 Textual Accounts of Individual Works
- Bibliography
- Index
A Famous Prediction of Merlin, the British Wizard
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- General Editors’ Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Chronology
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- A Meditation Upon a Broom-Stick
- A Tritical Essay Upon the Faculties of the Mind
- Predictions for the Year 1708
- The Accomplishment of the First of Mr. Bickerstaff ’s Predictions
- A Vindication of Isaac Bickerstaff Esq.
- A Famous Prediction of Merlin, the British Wizard
- Tatler no. 230
- Harrison’s Tatler no. 5
- Harrison’s Tatler no. 20
- A Proposal for Correcting, Improving and Ascertaining the English Tongue
- A Modest Defence of Punning
- Hints towards an Essay on Conversation
- On Good-Manners and Good-Breeding
- Hints on Good Manners
- The Last Speech and Dying Words of Ebenezor Ellison
- Of the Education of Ladies
- A History of Poetry
- A Discourse to Prove the Antiquity of the English Tongue
- On Barbarous Denominations in Ireland
- Polite Conversation
- Directions to Servants
- Associated Materials
- I April Fool’s Joke, 1709
- II Specimens of Irish English
- III Laws for the Dean’s Servants
- IV The Duty of Servants at Inns
- V Notes for Polite Conversation
- VI Fragment of a Preface for Directions to Servants
- Appendices
- A A Dialogue in the Castilian Language
- B The Dying Speech of Tom Ashe
- C To My Lord High Admirall. The Humble Petition of the Doctor, and the Gentlemen of Ireland
- D ’Squire Bickerstaff Detected
- E An Answer to Bickerstaff
- F The Publisher to the Reader (1711)
- G The Attribution to Swift of Further Tatlers and Spectators
- H The Attribution to Swift of A Letter of Advice to a Young Poet
- I The Last Farewell of Ebenezor Elliston to This Transitory World
- J A Consultation of Four Physicians Upon a Lord That Was Dying
- K A Certificate to a Discarded Servant
- General Textual Introduction and Texual Accounts of Individual Works
- 1 General Textual Introduction
- 2 Textual Accounts of Individual Works
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Headnote
Published 1709; copy text 1709 (see Textual Account).
A Famous Prediction of Merlin, the BritishWizard; Written above a Thousand Years Ago, and Relating to this Present Year. With Explanatory Notes. By T. N. Philomath was published in February 1709, in the popular format of a single sheet headed with a woodcut portrait (see Textual Account). Like Predictions in the previous year, it prompted unauthorised reprints, identifiable in part by their imperfect attempts to copy the woodcut. The piece consists of what is alleged to be a prophecy by Merlin, with commentary by one T.N. Philomath: the prediction, in verse, is set in black letter while the ‘Explanatory Notes’ are in roman. T. N.'s declared purpose is to support Partridge against Bickerstaff, and the piece presents significant connections with the print culture of the late seventeenth-century crises in which Partridge's career had taken shape.
The woodcut block (originally including some features excised before its use by Swift) had been used by Partridge in two attacks on his high-church Tory adversary John Gadbury (1627–1704): the anonymously published Gadburies Propheticall Sayings: or; The Fool Judged out of the Knave's Mouth (1690), and Nebulo Anglicanus: or, The First Part of the Black Life of John Gadbury (1693) which Partridge published under his own name. Like Swift's Famous Prediction, Gadburies Propheticall Sayings carried a Baldwin imprint: it exemplifies the crude but visually striking Whig propaganda that was Richard Baldwin's stock-in-trade. The caption to the portrait reads ‘Multi multa Sciunt, sed ego nihil’ (Many people know many things, but I know nothing: Gadbury, in his joy at the birth of an heir to James II, had signally failed to foresee the Revolution). Partridge, intent on convicting Gadbury of covert Roman Catholicism, ridicules his claims to be a loyal member of the Church of England (which he in any case habitually vilified as papist); and the portrait seems calculated to accuse Gadbury of trying to hide his treachery under a hat, bands, and clean-shaven visage suggestive of Protestant innocence and humility. In this original form of the woodcut, however, the beads and cross around his neck are supplemented by a large cross in the space to the right of the image, and the insinuation thatGadbury is awolf in sheep's clothing is underlined by a speechscroll in which he declares himself ‘a special Protestant’.
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- Information
- Parodies, Hoaxes, Mock TreatisesPolite Conversation, Directions to Servants and Other Works, pp. 77 - 88Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2013