James
Arbuckle
The
Irish born poet and essayist's significance to golf is more by
accident than design when he recorded an early golf scene in his
poem, "Glotta" which was first published in 1721 and
easily one of the earliest pieces of literature with an Irish
connection although the reference to goff in the Montgomery Manuscripts
was in 1606. The following appeared on an Ebay Auction site when
a very rare copy of the "Glotta" went up for sale.
THE
BEGINNING OF GOLF LITERATURE:
A LEGENDARY RARITY
ARBUCKLE, James, Student in the University
of Glasgow. Glotta, a Poem, humbly inscribed to the Right Honourable
the Marquess of Carnarvon ... Glasgow, Printed by William Duncan,
and are to be sold in his Shop in the Salt-Mercat, M. DCC. XXI
[1721].
8vo, pp. 22, a few superficial tears to the title-leaf neatly
restored, no text affected; disbound, a very good copy.
First edition of Arbuckles best-known poem, in praise of
the Glasgow countryside, the valley of the Clyde (Glotta)
and university life; it is often cited as Glotta, or the
Clyde, a Poem, but that is merely the unauthorized title
attached to it by a reprint of 1810. Born in Belfast, Arbuckle
was crippled from childhood, and cruelly ridiculed for that in
Wit upon Crutches (1725), sometime attributed to Swift, whom he
effectively satirized thereafter--but the two were reconciled
in 1737. He flourished as an undergraduate and divinity trainee
at the University of Glasgow in 1716-24; later he returned to
Dublin, where he became a leading newspaper journalist, political
essayist, Shaftesburian philosopher, and writer of some
witty and ingenious pieces in the poetical way. He died
in 1742.
According to golf bibliographers Cecil Hopkinson (Collecting Golf
Books, 1938) and Donovan/Murdoch (revised ed., 1987), this poem
constitutes the first important contribution to the literature
of golf. It precedes, by no less than twenty-two years,
the unprocurable first edition of Thomas Mathisons more
celebrated heroi-comical poem The Goff (1743: a copy
of the third edition of 1793 made $70,000 at auction twelve years
ago!), and is preceded only by bare references in
a few seventeenth-century moral, legal, and poetical texts, none
of them specifically descriptive. The relevant passage of twenty-two
lines evokes, far more adroitly (I think) than anything in Mathisons
mock-epic, the sportive War, in which youths of Glasgow,
armd with Lead, their jointed Clubs prepare; / The
Timber Curve to Leathern Orbs apply, / Compact, Elastic, to pervade
the Sky. These to the distant Hole direct they drive,
Arbuckle explains, for they claim the Stakes who thither
first arrive. Every modern golfing cliché is addressed,
from the golfers jittery adjusting stance (his Muscles
strains, and various Postures tries), to the stroke dischargd
obliquely, the winding trajectory of the ball
as it sings in Air, the successful descent applauded
by the wondring Crowds for the Gamesters
skill, and--if a wayward shot comes up short--subjected
to the scoff of the fickle spectators, while the golf-club
itself is cursd in vain by the luckless loser.
Here is the whole passage:
In Winter too, when hoary Frosts oerspread,
The verdant Turf, and naked lay the Mead,
*The vigrous Youth commence their sportive War, [*The Game of
Golf]
And armd with Lead, their jointed Clubs prepare;
The Timber Curve to Leathern Orbs apply,
Compact, Elastic, to pervade the Sky:
These to the distant Hole direct they drive;
They claim the Stakes who thither first arrive.
Intent his Ball the eager Gamester eyes,
His Muscles strains, and various Postures tries,
Thimpelling Blow to strike with greater Force,
And shape the motive Orbs projectile Course.
If with due Strength the weighty Engine fall,
Dischargd obliquely, and impinge the Ball,
It winding mounts aloft, and sings in Air;
And wondring Crowds the Gamesters Skill declate.
But when some luckless wayward Stroke descends,
Whose Force the Ball in running quickly spends,
The Foes triumph, the Club is cursd in vain;
Spectators scoff, and evn Allies complain.
Thus still Success is followd with Applause;
But ah! how few espouse a vanquishd Cause!
The rarity of Glotta is legendary among golf-book enthusiasts:
Richard Donovan in 1987 admits to hav[ing] not, to this
day, seen a copy of it, and none has appeared in auction
records since 1985 (£5500). ESTC records just ten copies
in nine institutions (in Great Britain and Ireland the British
Library, Bodleian, Brotherton (Leeds), National Library of Scotland
(2), National Library of Wales, and the Royal Irish Academy; in
North America Harvard, Notre Dame, and McGill (Montreal)). This
hitherto unrecorded copy stems from the collection of Douglas
Grant (1921-1969), the first Professor of American Literature
in the UK, and Chair of the department at the University of Leeds,
dispersed--unnamed in a large miscellaneous lot, in an all-but-uncatalogued
sale at Leyburn, North Yorkshire--in 2010. Foxon A 281, Donovan
and Murdoch, The Game of Golf and the Printed Word (1987), no.
160.
Source:
Ebay Auction 19 January 13:48:40 PST Sold $50,400 (7 bidders)
(63 bids) (10 days duration) Start $500 By end of day nine bid
stood at $20,400 - the last 26 seconds saw the bid moving from
$20,400 to $50,400 with three different bidders slugging it out.
Reading
Sources:
Click
here
for full text of Glotta or The Clyde, a Poem (the 1810
Edition)
Princess
Grace Irish Library: James
Arbuckle
Holmes, Richard. "James
Arbuckle". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published
07 December 2007