The Rodiad is a pornographic poem on the subject of flagellation published by John Camden Hotten in 1871, although falsely dated to 1810. It was falsely ascribed when printed to George Colman the Younger. [1] Its author was Richard Monckton Milnes. [2] [3] [4] Henderson places it in The Library Illustrative of Social Progress published around 1872 (falsely dated 1777) [5] but it is not in the list of Henry Spencer Ashbee. [6]
The Betuliad, a manuscript in the British Library from Ashbee's bequest, [7] is identical to The Rodiad. [8] It was known under this title to Sir Richard Burton [4] who wrote to Milne on 22 January 1860 praising it. [9] [10]
The Canadian author John Glassco repeated the false attribution to Colman and augmented it with an equally fictitious attribution of his own poem Squire Hardman printed in 1967. [11]
The Rodiad is a pornographic poem on the subject of flagellation published by John Camden Hotten in 1871, although falsely dated to 1810. It was falsely ascribed when printed to George Colman the Younger. [1] Its author was Richard Monckton Milnes. [2] [3] [4] Henderson places it in The Library Illustrative of Social Progress published around 1872 (falsely dated 1777) [5] but it is not in the list of Henry Spencer Ashbee. [6]
The Betuliad, a manuscript in the British Library from Ashbee's bequest, [7] is identical to The Rodiad. [8] It was known under this title to Sir Richard Burton [4] who wrote to Milne on 22 January 1860 praising it. [9] [10]
The Canadian author John Glassco repeated the false attribution to Colman and augmented it with an equally fictitious attribution of his own poem Squire Hardman printed in 1967. [11]