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306:(1748, 3 vols.) was ‘to preserve to the public those poetical performances, which seemed to merit a longer remembrance than what would probably be secured to them by the Manner wherein they were originally published’ (Collection of Poems, 1748, vol. 1.iii–iv). Given his literary circle, he was able to fill three volumes of poetry by the time of the first edition on 15 January 1748. By March 1755 it had entered four editions and he added a fourth volume, and in 1758 volumes five and six, hence the change in titles.
911:
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127:, where his father was master of the free school. He is said to have been apprenticed to a stocking-weaver in Mansfield, from whom he ran away, going into service as a footman. Profits and fame from his early literary works enabled Dodsley to establish himself with the help of his friends (
275:
appeared in 1750, a collection of moral precepts attributed to ancient authors in India and China, set out in a King James
Version style of English attributed to an anonymous translator.
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392:(3 vols., 1764–1769) was brought out as a memorial after Shenstone's sudden death, and was very selectively edited so as to show that writer at his best.
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In 1745 he published a collection of his dramatic works, and some poems which had been issued separately in one volume under the modest title of
343:(1758) had a long run at Covent Garden, 2000 copies being sold on the day of publication, and it passed through four editions within the year.
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388:(1761), which remained in print in various editions for many decades, for which he and some of his friends wrote additional fables. The
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Dodsley is, however, best known as the editor of two collections, one of plays, and one of poems. The first was the
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852:
Dickens, Charles. "The Muse in Livery" in "Household Words, A Weekly
Journal" Vol. 11, No. 13, Whole No. 266, 1855
243:, 1735), in which the toymaker indulges in moral observations on his wares, a hint which was probably taken from
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in 1738. He published many of
Johnson's works, and he suggested and helped to finance Johnson's
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containing a general course of education (1748, 2 vols.), with an introduction by Dr
Johnson;
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271:(1740), rewriting English history in the style of the King James Version of the Pentateuch.
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He soon became one of the foremost publishers of the day. One of his first publications was
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267:, a farce, appeared in 1738. Dodsley displayed his egalitarian leanings with the anonymous
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He produced and published more successful works towards the end of his life.
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In 1759, Dodsley retired, leaving the conduct of the business to his brother
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and led to
Dodsley's imprisonment for a brief period. Dodsley published for
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The
Triumph of Peace, a Masque occasioned by the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle
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842:, 2nd series. Edited by Austin Dobson. London: Chatto and Windus, 1907.
797:. Vol. 8 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 373.
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A Select
Collection of Old Plays (Robert Dodsley) - Book Series List
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This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
325:(1753), originally intended as part of a longer work to be titled
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lent him £100) as a bookseller at the sign of Tully's Head in
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Carbondale, Ill.: Southern
Illinois University Press, 1996.
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The
Chronicle of the Kings of England by "Nathan ben Saddi"
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The Rise of Robert
Dodsley: Creating the New Age of Print.
111:, publisher, poet, playwright, and miscellaneous writer.
645:
A Collection of Poems in Four Volumes by Several Hands
333:(acted at Drury Lane 1739, printed 1741); and an ode,
302:, 1874–1876, 15 vols). Dodsley's collection of poems,
107:(13 February 1703 – 23 September 1764) was an English
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A Collection of Poems in Six Volumes by Several Hands
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802:Tierney, James E. "Dodsley, Robert (1704–1764)".
744:, publishinghistory.com. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
346:Dodsley also founded several literary periodicals:
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708:List of 18th-century British working-class writers
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263:, and received with much applause; the sequel,
849:. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995.
229:A Muse in Livery, or the Footman's Miscellany
808:(online ed.). Oxford University Press.
671:(5th ed.). London: R. & J. Dodsley.
647:(4th ed.). London: R. & J. Dodsley.
223:, with a preface and postscript ascribed to
294:(12 vols., 1744; 2nd edition with notes by
219:In 1729, Dodsley published his first work,
560:(4th ed.). London: Reeves and Turner.
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499:
31:
509:(3rd ed.). London: Septimus Prowett.
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898:Eighteenth-Century Poetry Archive (ECPA)
859:. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1983.
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557:A Select Collection of Old English Plays
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16:English publisher and writer (1703–1764)
998:English male dramatists and playwrights
805:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
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409:(1st ed.). London: Robert Dodsley.
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632:A Collection of Poems by Several Hands
381:, Burke and others were contributors.
304:A collection of Poems by Several Hands
221:Servitude: a Poem written by a Footman
207:while he was on a visit to his friend
196:, the innovative Birmingham printer.
937:The King and the Miller of Mansfield
729:The Correspondence of Robert Dodsley
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184:. He was also publisher to the Rev.
993:18th-century English businesspeople
857:The Oxford Companion to the Theatre
634:(1st ed.). London: R. Dodsley.
458:(2nd ed.). London: J. Dodsley.
369:as editor. To these various works,
282:Title page of the first edition of
227:; and a collection of short poems,
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968:English dramatists and playwrights
847:The Cambridge Guide to the Theatre
298:, 12 vols., 1780; 4th edition, by
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331:The Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green
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912:Works by or about Robert Dodsley
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703:Book trade in the United Kingdom
506:A Select Collection of Old Plays
456:A Select Collection of Old Plays
407:A Select Collection of Old Plays
284:A Select Collection of Old Plays
253:King and the Miller of Mansfield
978:Publishers (people) from London
833:Shadows of the Old Booksellers.
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735:
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292:Select Collection of Old Plays
1:
835:London: Bell and Daldy, 1865.
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840:Eighteenth Century Vignettes
822:UK public library membership
164:was voted scandalous by the
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927:(public domain audiobooks)
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390:Works of William Shenstone
358:(1753–1756, 4 vols.); and
273:The Oeconomy of Human Life
176:, and in 1751 brought out
386:The Select Fables of Esop
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317:(1749); his three-canto
265:Sir John Cockle at Court
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192:, and collaborated with
921:Works by Robert Dodsley
903:Works by Robert Dodsley
794:Encyclopædia Britannica
365:, founded in 1758 with
337:(1751). His tragedy of
313:. This was followed by
255:, a "dramatic tale" of
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838:"At Tully's Head." In
396:List of selected works
350:(1746–1767, 3 vols.);
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146:for which he paid ten
119:Dodsley was born near
983:People from Mansfield
814:10.1093/ref:odnb/7755
622:. London: R. Dodsley.
300:William Carew Hazlitt
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988:Bookshops in London
973:English booksellers
855:Hartnoll, Phyllis.
501:Collier, John Payne
1003:English male poets
862:Solomon, Harry M.
726:Exact birth date:
377:, Lord Lyttelton,
288:
259:, was produced at
907:Project Gutenberg
820:(Subscription or
554:, ed. (1874–76).
552:Hazlitt, W. Carew
503:, ed. (1825–27).
379:Lord Chesterfield
133:Pall Mall, London
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64:23 September 1764
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787:, ed. (1911). "
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251:. In 1737 his
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562:15 Volumes:
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375:Soame Jenyns
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367:Edmund Burke
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92:Notable work
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66:(1764-09-23)
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963:1764 deaths
958:1703 births
636:3 Volumes.
452:Reed, Isaac
323:Agriculture
321:georgic on
319:blank verse
178:Thomas Gray
135:, in 1735.
37:Dodsley by
952:Categories
824:required.)
714:References
348:The Museum
296:Isaac Reed
261:Drury Lane
153:Dictionary
109:bookseller
356:The World
335:Melpomene
121:Mansfield
925:LibriVox
697:See also
616:(1745).
39:Reynolds
941:at the
914:at the
896:at the
782::
732:, p. 4.
619:Trifles
311:Trifles
235:called
162:Manners
148:guineas
81:England
54:England
939:(1737)
818:
776:
340:Cleone
286:(1744)
205:Durham
144:London
97:Cleone
77:Durham
41:, 1760
233:farce
215:Works
201:James
182:Elegy
360:The
188:and
172:and
115:Life
61:Died
47:Born
923:at
905:at
810:doi
791:".
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