'Farewel, too little and too lately known,' Dryden wrote in a pompous, self-serving poem prefixed to John Oldham's Remains in Verse and Prose (1684). Oldham had died of smallpox the previous December, at the age of 30, at the house of the Earl of Kingston, a young nobleman who had recently become his patron. He left behind a large body of work, now available in full for the first time in a magisterial edition by Harold Brooks, begun over fifty years ago. This includes the fierce 'Juvenalian' satires for which he is mainly remembered, but also much else: imitations (sometimes brilliant) of Horace, Ovid and other Latin poets, as well as of Greek poets, and Boileau and Voiture; 'Pindarique' odes of elaborate stanzaic architecture; and poems of Rochesterian obscenity.
LRB 5 January 1989 | PDF Download
Quantity