The Works of Lord Byron, Vol. 1. Poetry
Contents

 

 

 Bibliographical Note to English Bards and Scotch Reviewers

 The MS. (

MS. M.

) of the first draft of Byron's 

Satire

 (see Letter to Pigot, October 26, 1807) is now in Mr. Murray's possession. It is written on folio sheets paged 6-25, 28-41, and numbers 360 lines. Mutilations on pages 12, 13, 34, 35 account for the absence of ten additional lines.

 

 After the publication of the January number of 

The Edinburgh Review

 for 1808 (containing the critique on 

Hours of Idleness

), which was delayed till the end of February, Byron added a beginning and an ending to the original draft. The MSS. of these additions, which number ninety lines, are written on quarto sheets, and have been bound up with the folios. (Lines 1-16 are missing.) The poem, which with these and other additions had run up to 560 lines, was printed in book form (probably by Ridge of Newark), under the title of 

British Bards, A Satire

.  

CONTENTS

  A date, 1808, is affixed to the last line. Only one copy is extant, that which was purchased, in 1867, from the executors of R.C. Dallas, by the Trustees of the British Museum. Even this copy has been mutilated. Pages 17, 18, which must have contained the first version of the attack on Jeffrey (see 


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