GoGuides Verified Text
CURLL
SHA-256 integrity check: match
Source
Encyclopaedia Britannica (1911) / britannica_1911
License
public_domain
Chunk ID
1911:curll:b1936a6ea005
Section
Hash Algorithm
sha256
Stored Hash
28076c58c07086ecc7b39cc78cf9f69d868fce92e732de7beade45daae1f0c06
Computed Hash
28076c58c07086ecc7b39cc78cf9f69d868fce92e732de7beade45daae1f0c06
Normalizer
ggnorm 1.0
Observed
2026-02-08 18:43:03
Source URL
Verified Text
curll, edmund (1675-1747), english bookseller, was born in 1675 in the west of england. his parents were in humble circumstances. after being apprenticed to an exeter bookseller he came to london and started business on his own account, advertising himself by a system of newspaper quarrels. his connexion with the anonymously-published _court poems_ in 1716 led to the long quarrel with pope, who took his revenge by immortalizing curll in the _dunciad_. curll became notorious for his indecent publications, so much so that "curlicism" was regarded as a synonym for literary indecency. in 1716 and again in 1721 he had to appear at the bar of the house of lords for publishing matter concerning its members. in 1725 he was convicted of publishing obscene books, and fined in 1728 for publishing _the nun in her smock_ and _de usu flagrorum_, while his _memories of john ker of kersland_ cost him an hour in the pillory. when curll in 1735 announced the forthcoming publication of "_mr pope's literary correspondence_," his stock, at pope's instigation, was seized. it has since been proved that the publication was really instigated by pope, who wanted an excuse to print his letters, as he actually did (1737-1741). in his forty years of business curll published a great variety of books, of which a very large number, fortunately, were quite free from "curlicisms." a list of his publications contains, indeed, 167 standard works. he died on the 11th of december 1747. for curll's relations with pope, see the _life of pope_, by sir leslie stephen in the english men of letters series.