Generally known as
The Worms, this was probably ‘the most popular poem (at least in his own day) that Pope is supposed to have written’ (Ault and Butt, 163). It appeared almost forty times by 1750 in collections, pamphlets, and newspapers. Pope never acknowledged it as his composition, but it appeared in the
Miscellaniesthat he edited in 1727. The poem first appeared among his works in the Warburton edition of 1751. It continued to figure in collections of both Swift and Pope in the second half of the century.
In all likelihood, the poet leaked it deliberately to the notorious bookseller Edmund Curll. On 1 May 1716, Curll announced the publication of ‘The Worms, a Satyr; written by Mr. Pope’. It was printed on two sides of a single sheet, under the title To the Ingenious Mr.
1316 words
Citation: Rogers, Pat. "The Worms". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 14 October 2020 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=39359, accessed 23 November 2024.]