Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot

Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot

The "Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot" is a poem written by Alexander Pope and completed in the summer of 1734. Dr. John Arbuthnot was a physician and was known as a man of wit. He was a member of the Martinus Scriblerus Club, together with amongst others Pope, Jonathan Swift and John Gay. He was formerly the physician of Queen Anne.

Analysis

The poem is a conversation (although sometimes printed as a letter) between Pope and Arbuthnot, in which Pope gives his opinion about certain members of the 18th century society, for example Edmund Curll, who was a disreputable book seller.

"Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel?" is probably its most famous line.

References

*The Norton Anthology of English literature, volume 1

External links

* [http://ethnicity.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Texts/arbuthnot.html Annotated text of the poem]


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  • Pope, Alexander — born May 21, 1688, London, Eng. died May 30, 1744, Twickenham, near London English poet and satirist. A precocious boy precluded from formal education by his Roman Catholicism, Pope was mainly self educated. A deformity of the spine and other… …   Universalium

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  • Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel? — is a quotation – sometimes misquoted with on in place of upon – from Alexander Pope s Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot of January 1735. The line has entered common use and has become associated with more recent figures. It can be taken as referring to… …   Wikipedia

  • letter — letter, epistle, missive, note, message, dispatch, report, memorandum are comparable when they mean a communication sent or transmitted as distinct from one conveyed directly from source to recipient (as by oral utterance). Letter is the ordinary …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

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