George Ogle (translator)

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George Ogle (1704–1746) was an English author, known as a translator.

Life

He was the second son of Samuel Ogle (1659–1719), Member of Parliament for Berwick, and commissioner of the revenue for Ireland, by his second wife, Ursula, daughter of Sir Robert Markham, 2nd Baronet, and widow of Altham Annesley, 1st Baron Altham. Samuel Ogle the colonial governor of Maryland was his elder brother.[1][2]

Ogle died on 20 October 1746.[1]

Works

Ogle's translations from Anacreon appeared as an appendix to James Sterling's Loves of Hero and Leander (1728, from the Greek of Musæus). The volume was dedicated to Ogle, who went on to publish other translations:[1]

  • Basia; or the Kisses, 1731.
  • Epistles of Horace imitated, 1735.
  • The Legacy Hunter. The fifth satire of the second book of Horace imitated, 1737.
  • The Miser's Feast. The eighth satire of the second book of Horace imitated, a dialogue between the author and the poet-laureate,’ 1737.

Other works were:[1]

  • Antiquities explained. Being a Collection of figured Gems, illustrated by similar descriptions taken from the Classics (1737), dedicated to the Duke of Dorset, and based on volume I of a similar collection published in Paris in 1732, Recueil de pierres gravées antiques by Michel Philippe Lévesque de Gravelle.[3]
  • Gualtherus and Griselda, or the clerk of Oxford's Tale (1739).
  • Contributions to Tales of Chaucer modernised by several hands (1741); Ogle covered the prologues and seven of the Canterbury Tales. He also supplied a continuation of the squire's tale from the fourth book of Edmund Spenser's Faerie Queene, later issued separately as Cambuscan, or the Squire's Tale (1785).

Family

Ogle married the daughter and coheiress of Sir Thomas Twysden, 4th Baronet. Their only child was George Ogle the politician.[1][4]

Notes

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Attribution

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