- George Burges
George Burges (1786−
January 11 ,1864 ), was an English classical scholar born inIndia .He was educated at
Charterhouse School andTrinity College, Cambridge , taking his degree in 1807, and obtaining one of the members' prizes both in 1808 and 1809. He stayed up at Cambridge and became a most successful coach. He had a great reputation as a Greek scholar, and was a somewhat acrimonious critic of rival scholars, especially Bishop Blomfield.Subsequently he fell into embarrassed circumstances through injudicious speculation, and in 1841 a civil list pension of £100 per annum was bestowed upon him. He died at
Ramsgate , on the 11th of January 1864. Burges was a man of great learning and industry, but too fond of introducing arbitrary emendations into the text of classical authors.His chief works are:
*Euripides ' "Troades" (1807) and "Phoenissae" (1809)
*Aeschylus ' "Supplices" (1821), "Eumenides" (1822) and "Prometheus" (1831)
*Sophocles ' "Philoctetes" (5833)
*EF Poppo's "Prolegomena toThucydides " (1837), an abridged translation with critical remarks
*"Hermesianactis Fragmenta" (1839)He also edited some of the dialogues ofPlato with English notes, and translated nearly the whole of that author and the Greek anthology for Bohn's Classical library.He was a frequent contributor to the "Classical Journal" and other periodicals, and dedicated to Byron a play called "The Son of Erin, or, The Cause of the Greeks" (1823).
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