The Poetical Works ... With Memoir and Critical Dissertations
Author: Edmund Spenser
Publisher:
Published: 1868
Total Pages: 340
ISBN-13:
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Author: Edmund Spenser
Publisher:
Published: 1868
Total Pages: 340
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Alexander Pope
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
Published: 2024-04-11
Total Pages: 590
ISBN-13: 3387328478
DOWNLOAD EBOOKReproduction of the original. The publishing house Megali specialises in reproducing historical works in large print to make reading easier for people with impaired vision.
Author: John Poet Armstrong
Publisher:
Published: 1868
Total Pages: 320
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Newberry Library
Publisher:
Published: 1918
Total Pages: 320
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor:
Publisher:
Published: 1914
Total Pages: 550
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Clayton Carlyle Tarr
Publisher: Univ of South Carolina Press
Published: 2009
Total Pages: 498
ISBN-13: 9781570038297
DOWNLOAD EBOOK"The G. Ross Roy Collection of Robert Burns includes fourteen color and fifty-eight black-and-white illustrations as well as an introduction by G. Ross Roy on the history of the collection. In text and images, the catalogue documents a monumental research collection that serves as an open invitation for further investigations into the life, works, and legacy of Scotland's bard."--BOOK JACKET.
Author: Richard Garnett
Publisher: London : W. Scott
Published: 1890
Total Pages: 264
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKOriginally published in 1890 as part of the "Great Writers" series. Richard Garnett (1835-1906) was Keeper of Printed Books at the British Museum and also wrote biographies of Carlyle, Emerson, Gibbon and Coleridge.
Author: William Lisle Bowles
Publisher:
Published: 1855
Total Pages: 364
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Paddy Bullard
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 2019-07-30
Total Pages: 753
ISBN-13: 0191043710
DOWNLOAD EBOOKEighteenth-century Britain thought of itself as a polite, sentimental, enlightened place, but often its literature belied this self-image. This was an age of satire, and the century's novels, poems, plays, and prints resound with mockery and laughter, with cruelty and wit. The street-level invective of Grub Street pamphleteers is full of satire, and the same accents of raillery echo through the high scepticism of the period's philosophers and poets, many of whom were part-time pamphleteers themselves. The novel, a genre that emerged during the eighteenth-century, was from the beginning shot through with satirical colours borrowed from popular romances and scandal sheets. This Handbook is a guide to the different kinds of satire written in English during the 'long' eighteenth-century. It focuses on texts that appeared between the restoration of the Stuart monarchy in 1660 and the outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789. Outlier chapters extend the story back to the first decade of the seventeenth-century, and forward to the second decade of the nineteenth. The scope of the volume is not confined by genre, however. So prevalent was the satirical mode in writing of the age that this book serves as a broad and characteristic survey of its literature. The Oxford Handbook of Eighteenth-Century Satire reflects developments in historical criticism of eighteenth-century writing over the last two decades, and provides a forum in which the widening diversity of literary, intellectual, and socio-historical approaches to the period's texts can come together.