History and music double major investigated ‘Swift-Pope Miscellanies’ with James Woolley, Smith Professor of English
Getting to the bottom of a literary question more than 250 years old, history and music double major Sean Gough ’09 (North Plainfield, N.J) and James Woolley, Frank Lee and Edna M. Smith Professor of English, asked whether  differences between two editions of a 1742 poetry collection were caused  by the editor or by the typesetter.
The research focused on Volume 4 of the “Swift-Pope Miscellanies,” an  11-volume anthology published in London from 1742 to 1746. The  Miscellanies are believed to be the work of Irish satirist Jonathan  Swift and possibly edited by fellow satirist Alexander Pope.
“Over 50 of Swift’s poems are reprinted in Volume 4,” Woolley says.  “We know that Pope revised Swift’s work in other publications. So, one  of our research questions was whether Pope – or anyone else – revised  Swift’s poems for Volume 4 of the Miscellanies.”
As for Woolley and Gough’s results, the differences between printings  of Swift’s work turned out to be the changes a typesetter would make,  not something a fellow writer would make during a revision.
“This finding is a negative one but, for the SPP, it is still  valuable,” Woolley says. “Volume 4 helped spread the fame of Swift’s  poems in the mid-18th century, but we discovered that it includes no new  versions of the poems it reprints and that Pope was not, at least in  this book, active as a collaborator or reviser of Swift.”
To further their work on the Swift Poems Project (SPP), Gough and  Woolley used electronic transcriptions and software developed by SPP,  comparing the first two editions of Volume 4 with the volumes’ sources.  SPP is a long-term effort in which Woolley, John Irwin Fischer of  Louisiana State University, and Stephen Karian of Marquette University  are developing an electronic archive to support editorial work on  Swift’s poems. Gough has had an appointment as an SPP editorial  assistant, and his research will be credited in publications that are  produced using SPP resources.
“I have had an abiding love for English literature since grammar  school, and because of that, waited as long as possible to make the sad  decision to narrow my focus to my two current fields of study,” Gough  says. “I never would have gotten to know Professor Woolley if it hadn’t  been for a 10-12 student Literary Questions class in the spring of 2006.  So, plain and simple, it’s the first-rate faculty and small class sizes  that make such interactions between students and faculty possible, and  no other department is stronger in this respect than the English  department.”
Gough says he’s grateful for everything he’s learned about textual  transmission and has been happy to help Woolley in the process. He  believes this experience will add to his post graduate studies.
When he’s not elbow-deep in 18th century poetry, Gough performs in  the school’s Jazz Combo and the Ojespa Jazz Project, playing jazz piano  at the Cosmic Cup, the Lafayette Bar, and Witch Brew, among other local  venues.
Woolley and Gough collaborated through Lafayette’s distinctive EXCEL  Scholars program, where students conduct research with faculty while  earning a stipend. The program has helped make Lafayette a national  leader in undergraduate research.
- English
 
- EXCEL/Undergraduate Research