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
II - Specimens of Irish English
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
The two sets of notes printed here, ‘A Dialogue in Hybernian Stile between A, and B’ and ‘Irish Eloquence’, rework similar material. The text of ‘A Dialogue’ is taken from SwJ 399; that of ‘Irish Eloquence’ from SwJ 426. Both are described by Mayhew, and dated by him to c. 1732–4. Sheridan replied on 20 December 1733, underlining numerous examples of his own, to what Swift, in endorsing his letter, called ‘my eloquent Hybernicisms’, probably some version of the same material: the absence of explanation in the versions given below suggests an Irish rather than an English audience. For the present text, the layout and spacing of the first of these cramped and often indistinctmanuscripts has been adjusted to highlight the structure of the dialogue; adjustments to the manner of indicating the allocations to speakers A and B are not separately recorded.
The present account is indebted to the 1977 edition and commentary by Bliss, which supersedes Davis. The ‘Dialogue’ is also included in Crowley's The Politics of Language in Ireland. The present transcription differs in some details from that given by Bliss: Swift was evidently unsure how to spell some of the expressions he had noted, and his final decision is not always clear from these cramped private jottings. Bliss reviews Mayhew's dating of the manuscripts from watermark and other evidence, and while advocating slightly broader date ranges, broadly agrees that these two drafts should be placed in the mid 1730s; and he suggests that they may be seen in some sense as a counterpart to Polite Conversation, particularly in view of the experiment with dialogue form. He argues that the ‘Dialogue’, with its two speakers, was the first of the two versions, and that ‘Irish Eloquence’, apparently enlarged and recast in letter form, was the second, and that both ‘ridicule the non- Standard speech of a specific class of speakers, the Irish planters’: these settlers were obnoxious to Swift on religious and ideological grounds (note the point in the ‘Dialogue’ when A, whom Bliss identifies as a townsman, possibly a lawyer, asks B whether he is a ‘planter’, and B fails to register the specific force of the question).
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- Parodies, Hoaxes, Mock TreatisesPolite Conversation, Directions to Servants and Other Works, pp. 529 - 536Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2013