|
|
xix | |
Preface |
|
xxiii | |
Acknowledgments |
|
xxx | |
|
|
3 | (24) |
|
Before the Norman Conquest |
|
|
27 | (97) |
|
|
27 | (70) |
|
|
|
John Gardner: from Grendel |
|
|
93 | (4) |
|
|
97 | (4) |
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The Labour Pains of the Ulaid |
|
|
97 | (1) |
|
|
98 | (1) |
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The Naming of Cu Chulainn |
|
|
99 | (2) |
|
|
101 | (9) |
|
|
102 | (1) |
|
|
103 | (1) |
|
|
104 | (1) |
|
|
104 | (1) |
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|
104 | (3) |
|
Findabair Remembers Froech |
|
|
107 | (1) |
|
|
108 | (1) |
|
from The Voyage of Mael Duin |
|
|
109 | (1) |
|
|
110 | (5) |
|
|
115 | (3) |
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Wulf and Eadwacer and the Wife's Lament |
|
|
118 | (3) |
|
|
121 | (3) |
|
Three Anglo-Latin Riddles by Aldhelm |
|
|
121 | (1) |
|
|
122 | (2) |
|
|
124 | (229) |
|
|
124 | (20) |
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126 | (18) |
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|
126 | (2) |
|
|
128 | (13) |
|
Chevrefoil (The Honeysuckle) |
|
|
141 | (3) |
|
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight |
|
|
144 | (58) |
|
|
|
202 | (11) |
|
|
204 | (1) |
|
|
204 | (1) |
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|
205 | (8) |
|
|
213 | (115) |
|
|
218 | (2) |
|
The General Prologue (Middle English and modern translation) |
|
|
220 | (40) |
|
|
260 | (17) |
|
|
260 | (2) |
|
|
262 | (15) |
|
The Wife of Bath's Prologue |
|
|
277 | (19) |
|
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296 | (10) |
|
|
306 | (16) |
|
|
322 | (5) |
|
|
322 | (2) |
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[ The Remedy for the Sin of Lechery] |
|
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324 | (2) |
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|
326 | (1) |
|
|
327 | (1) |
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328 | (1) |
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|
328 | (25) |
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|
331 | (22) |
|
|
331 | (2) |
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|
333 | (2) |
|
|
335 | (2) |
|
|
337 | (9) |
|
``Piers Plowman'' and Its Time |
|
|
|
|
346 | (1) |
|
Three Poems on the Rising of 1381: John Ball's First Letter |
|
|
347 | (1) |
|
John Ball's Second Letter |
|
|
348 | (1) |
|
|
348 | (2) |
|
John Gower: from The Voice of One Crying |
|
|
350 | (3) |
|
|
353 | (58) |
|
The Second Play of the Shepherds |
|
|
353 | (20) |
|
|
373 | (5) |
|
|
376 | (1) |
|
|
376 | (1) |
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from A Wycliffite Sermon on John 10.11--18 |
|
|
376 | (2) |
|
|
378 | (7) |
|
The Book of Margery Kempe |
|
|
379 | (6) |
|
|
379 | (1) |
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[ Meeting with Bishop of Lincoln and Archbishop of Canterbury] |
|
|
380 | (3) |
|
[ Visit with Julian of Norwich] |
|
|
383 | (2) |
|
|
385 | (10) |
|
The Cuckoo Song (``Sumer is icumen in'') |
|
|
386 | (1) |
|
Alisoun (``Bitwene Mersh and Averil'') |
|
|
387 | (1) |
|
|
388 | (1) |
|
Abuse of Women (``In every place ye may well see'') |
|
|
388 | (2) |
|
|
390 | (1) |
|
|
390 | (1) |
|
In Praise of Mary (``Edi be thu, Hevene Quene'') |
|
|
391 | (1) |
|
Mary Is with Child (``Under a tree'') |
|
|
392 | (1) |
|
Jesus, My Sweet Lover (``Jesu Christ, my lemmon swete'') |
|
|
393 | (1) |
|
Contempt of the World (``Where beth they biforen us weren?'') |
|
|
394 | (1) |
|
|
395 | (6) |
|
|
395 | (3) |
|
|
398 | (1) |
|
In Secreit Place This Hyndir Nycht |
|
|
399 | (2) |
|
|
401 | (10) |
|
from Book of the City of Ladies |
|
|
402 | (9) |
|
|
|
411 | (432) |
|
|
431 | (6) |
|
|
431 | (1) |
|
|
432 | (1) |
|
|
433 | (1) |
|
Manerly Margery Mylk and Ale |
|
|
434 | (1) |
|
|
435 | (2) |
|
To Maystres Jane Blennerhasset |
|
|
435 | (1) |
|
To Maystres Isabell Pennell |
|
|
436 | (1) |
|
To Maystres Margaret Hussey |
|
|
436 | (1) |
|
|
437 | (11) |
|
The Long Love, That in My Thought Doth Harbor |
|
|
438 | (2) |
|
|
|
|
439 | (1) |
|
|
440 | (1) |
|
|
|
|
440 | (1) |
|
|
441 | (1) |
|
|
441 | (1) |
|
Some Time I Fled the Fire |
|
|
441 | (1) |
|
|
442 | (1) |
|
|
442 | (1) |
|
|
442 | (1) |
|
|
442 | (1) |
|
Lucks, My Fair Falcon, and Your Fellows All |
|
|
443 | (1) |
|
|
443 | (1) |
|
|
443 | (5) |
|
Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey |
|
|
448 | (8) |
|
Love That Doth Reign and Live within My Thought |
|
|
448 | (1) |
|
Th `Assyrians' King, in Peace with Foul Desire |
|
|
449 | (1) |
|
Set Me Whereas the Sun Doth Parch the Green |
|
|
449 | (1) |
|
|
449 | (1) |
|
Alas, So All Things Now Do Hold Their Peace |
|
|
450 | (1) |
|
|
|
|
450 | (1) |
|
|
450 | (1) |
|
London, Hast Thou Accused Me |
|
|
450 | (4) |
|
|
454 | (1) |
|
My Radcliffe, When Thy Reckless Youth Offends |
|
|
455 | (1) |
|
|
456 | (157) |
|
|
458 | (1) |
|
|
458 | (4) |
|
The First Booke of the Faerie Queene |
|
|
462 | (147) |
|
|
609 | (4) |
|
1 (``Happy ye leaves when as those lilly hands'') |
|
|
609 | (1) |
|
4 (``New yeare forth looking out of Janus gate'') |
|
|
610 | (1) |
|
13 (``In that proud port, which her so goodly graceth'') |
|
|
610 | (1) |
|
22 (``This holy season fit to fast and pray'') |
|
|
611 | (1) |
|
62 (``The weary yeare his race now having run'') |
|
|
611 | (1) |
|
65 (``The doubt which ye misdeeme, fayre love, is vaine'') |
|
|
611 | (1) |
|
66 (``To all those happy blessings which ye have'') |
|
|
612 | (1) |
|
68 (``Most glorious Lord of lyfe that on this day'') |
|
|
612 | (1) |
|
75 (``One day I wrote her name upon the strand'') |
|
|
613 | (1) |
|
|
613 | (42) |
|
|
615 | (33) |
|
|
648 | (7) |
|
1 (``Loving in truth, and fain in verse my love to show'') |
|
|
648 | (1) |
|
3 (``Let dainty wits cry on the sisters nine'') |
|
|
648 | (1) |
|
7 (``When Nature made her chief work, Stella's eyes'') |
|
|
648 | (1) |
|
24 (``Rich fool there be whose base and filthy heart'') |
|
|
649 | (1) |
|
31 (``With how sad steps, O Moon, thou climb'st the skies'') |
|
|
649 | (1) |
|
45 (``Stella off sees the very face of woe'') |
|
|
650 | (1) |
|
52 (`` A strife is grown between Virtue and Love'') |
|
|
650 | (1) |
|
60 (``When my good Angel guides me to the place'') |
|
|
650 | (1) |
|
63 (``O grammar-rules, O now your virtues show'') |
|
|
651 | (1) |
|
68 (``Stella, the only planet of my light'') |
|
|
651 | (1) |
|
71 (``Who will in fairest book of Nature know'') |
|
|
652 | (1) |
|
Second song (``Have I caught my heavenly jewel'') |
|
|
652 | (1) |
|
74 (``I never drank of Aganippe well'') |
|
|
653 | (1) |
|
89 (``Now that, of absence, the most irksome night'') |
|
|
653 | (1) |
|
90 (``Stella, think not that I by verse seek fame'') |
|
|
653 | (1) |
|
104 (``Envious wits, what hath been mine offense'') |
|
|
654 | (1) |
|
106 (``O absent presence, Stella is not here'') |
|
|
654 | (1) |
|
107 (``Stella, since thou so right a princess art'') |
|
|
655 | (1) |
|
108 (``When sorrow (using mine own fire's might)'') |
|
|
655 | (1) |
|
|
655 | (6) |
|
The Admonition by the Author |
|
|
656 | (3) |
|
A Careful Complaint by the Unfortunate Author |
|
|
659 | (2) |
|
Mary Herbert, Countess of Pembroke |
|
|
661 | (12) |
|
|
661 | (3) |
|
|
664 | (2) |
|
Psalm 71: In Te Domini Speravi (``On thee my trust is grounded'') |
|
|
666 | (4) |
|
|
|
Miles Coverdale: Psalm 71 |
|
|
669 | (1) |
|
Psalm 121: Levavi Oculos (``Unto the hills, I now will bend'') |
|
|
670 | (1) |
|
The Doleful Lay of Clorinda |
|
|
670 | (3) |
|
|
673 | (17) |
|
Written with a Diamond on Her Window at Woodstock |
|
|
675 | (1) |
|
Written on a Wall at Woodstock |
|
|
675 | (1) |
|
|
675 | (1) |
|
|
676 | (1) |
|
|
676 | (1) |
|
|
677 | (1) |
|
|
678 | (3) |
|
|
681 | (2) |
|
To the English Troops at Tilbury, Facing the Spanish Armada |
|
|
683 | (1) |
|
|
683 | (7) |
|
|
|
Sir Walter Raleigh: from The 21st and Last Book of the Ocean to Cynthia |
|
|
685 | (5) |
|
|
690 | (11) |
|
The Description of Cookham |
|
|
691 | (5) |
|
|
696 | (5) |
|
|
696 | (1) |
|
|
696 | (1) |
|
|
697 | (1) |
|
[ Against Beauty Without Virtue] |
|
|
697 | (2) |
|
[ Pilate's Wife Apologizes for Eve] |
|
|
699 | (2) |
|
|
701 | (53) |
|
The Passionate Shepherd to His Love |
|
|
702 | (1) |
|
|
|
Sir Walter Raleigh: The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd |
|
|
703 | (1) |
|
The Tragical History of Dr. Faustus |
|
|
703 | (51) |
|
|
754 | (16) |
|
Nature That Washed Her Hands in Milk |
|
|
755 | (1) |
|
|
756 | (1) |
|
|
757 | (1) |
|
The Author's Epitaph, Made by Himself |
|
|
757 | (1) |
|
As You Came from the Holy Land |
|
|
757 | (1) |
|
The Discovery of the Large, Rich and Beautiful Empire of Guiana |
|
|
758 | (12) |
|
|
758 | (2) |
|
|
760 | (4) |
|
|
764 | (1) |
|
|
764 | (1) |
|
|
765 | (2) |
|
[ The New World of Guiana] |
|
|
767 | (3) |
|
|
770 | (73) |
|
|
773 | (1) |
|
1 (``From fairest creatures we desire increase'') |
|
|
773 | (1) |
|
18 (``Shall I compare thee to a summer's day'') |
|
|
773 | (1) |
|
20 (``A woman's face with Nature's own hand painted'') |
|
|
774 | (1) |
|
29 (``When, in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes'') |
|
|
774 | (1) |
|
30 (``When to the sessions of sweet silent thought'') |
|
|
775 | (1) |
|
33 (``Full many a glorious morning have I seen'') |
|
|
775 | (1) |
|
55 (``Not marble nor the gilded monuments'') |
|
|
775 | (1) |
|
60 (``Like as the waves make towards the pebbled shore'') |
|
|
776 | (1) |
|
71 (``No longer mourn for me when I am dead'') |
|
|
776 | (1) |
|
73 (``That time of year thou mayst in me behold'') |
|
|
776 | (1) |
|
87 (``Farewell! Thou art too dear for my possessing'') |
|
|
777 | (1) |
|
94 (``They that have pow'r to hurt, and will do none'') |
|
|
777 | (1) |
|
104 (``To me, fair friend, you never can be old'') |
|
|
778 | (1) |
|
116 (``Let me not to the marriage of true minds'') |
|
|
778 | (1) |
|
126 (``O thou, my lovely boy, who in thy power'') |
|
|
778 | (1) |
|
129 (``The expense of spirit in a waste of shame'') |
|
|
779 | (1) |
|
130 (``My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun'') |
|
|
779 | (1) |
|
138 (``When my love swears that she is made of truth'') |
|
|
780 | (1) |
|
144 (``Two loves I have, of comfort and despair'') |
|
|
780 | (1) |
|
152 (``In loving thee thou know'st I am forsworn'') |
|
|
780 | (1) |
|
|
781 | (62) |
|
|
|
Aime Cesaire: from A Tempest |
|
|
835 | (8) |
|
Perspectives Tracts on Women and Gender |
|
|
843 | (174) |
|
|
844 | (2) |
|
from In Laude and Praise of Matrimony |
|
|
845 | (1) |
|
|
846 | (1) |
|
from My Lady's Looking Glass |
|
|
846 | (1) |
|
|
847 | (2) |
|
from Preface to The First Part of the Mirror of Princely Deeds |
|
|
848 | (1) |
|
|
849 | (3) |
|
from The Arraignment of Lewd, Idle, Froward, and Unconstant Women |
|
|
850 | (2) |
|
|
852 | (6) |
|
from A Muzzle for Melastomus |
|
|
853 | (5) |
|
|
858 | (3) |
|
from Ester Hath Hanged Haman |
|
|
858 | (3) |
|
|
861 | (8) |
|
from Hic Mulier; or, The Man-Woman |
|
|
862 | (3) |
|
from Haec-Vir; or, The Womanish-Man |
|
|
865 | (4) |
|
|
869 | (3) |
|
My sweetest Lesbia, let us live and love |
|
|
870 | (1) |
|
There is a garden in her face |
|
|
871 | (1) |
|
|
871 | (1) |
|
When thou must home to shades of underground |
|
|
872 | (1) |
|
Never weather-beaten sail more willing bent to shore |
|
|
872 | (1) |
|
|
872 | (10) |
|
On Something, That Walks Somewhere |
|
|
874 | (1) |
|
|
874 | (1) |
|
|
875 | (1) |
|
|
875 | (1) |
|
Inviting a Friend to Supper |
|
|
875 | (1) |
|
|
876 | (3) |
|
|
879 | (1) |
|
|
879 | (1) |
|
To the Memory of My Beloved, the Author, Mr. William Shakespeare, and What He Hath Left Us |
|
|
880 | (2) |
|
|
882 | (16) |
|
|
883 | (1) |
|
Song (``Go, and catch a falling star'') |
|
|
884 | (1) |
|
|
885 | (1) |
|
|
885 | (2) |
|
A Valediction: of Weeping |
|
|
887 | (1) |
|
|
887 | (1) |
|
|
888 | (1) |
|
A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning |
|
|
889 | (1) |
|
|
890 | (2) |
|
|
892 | (1) |
|
|
892 | (1) |
|
Elegy 19: To His Mistress Going to Bed |
|
|
893 | (1) |
|
|
894 | (1) |
|
1 (``As due by many titles I resign'') |
|
|
894 | (1) |
|
2 (``Oh my black soul! Now thou art summoned'') |
|
|
895 | (1) |
|
3 (``This is my play's last scene, here heavens appoint'') |
|
|
895 | (1) |
|
4 (``At the round earth's imagined corners, blow'') |
|
|
895 | (1) |
|
5 (``If poisonous minerals, and if that tree'') |
|
|
896 | (1) |
|
6 (``Death be not proud, though some have called thee'') |
|
|
896 | (1) |
|
10 (``Batter my heart, three-personed God; for, you'') |
|
|
897 | (1) |
|
Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions |
|
|
897 | (1) |
|
[ ``For whom the bell tolls''] |
|
|
897 | (1) |
|
|
898 | (7) |
|
Pamphilia to Amphilanthus |
|
|
900 | (2) |
|
1 (``When night's black mantle could most darkness prove'') |
|
|
900 | (1) |
|
5 (``Can pleasing sight misfortune ever bring?'') |
|
|
900 | (1) |
|
16 (``Am I thus conquered? Have I lost the powers'') |
|
|
900 | (1) |
|
55 (``How like a fire does love increase in me'') |
|
|
901 | (1) |
|
68 (``My pain, still smothered in my grieved breast'') |
|
|
901 | (1) |
|
from The Countess of Montgomery's Urania |
|
|
902 | (3) |
|
|
905 | (5) |
|
|
906 | (1) |
|
|
906 | (1) |
|
|
906 | (1) |
|
|
907 | (1) |
|
To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time |
|
|
908 | (1) |
|
|
909 | (1) |
|
|
909 | (1) |
|
|
909 | (1) |
|
|
910 | (1) |
|
Upon Himself Being Buried |
|
|
910 | (1) |
|
His Last Request to Julia |
|
|
910 | (1) |
|
|
910 | (9) |
|
|
910 | (2) |
|
|
912 | (1) |
|
|
912 | (1) |
|
|
913 | (1) |
|
|
913 | (2) |
|
|
915 | (1) |
|
|
915 | (1) |
|
|
916 | (1) |
|
|
917 | (1) |
|
|
917 | (1) |
|
|
918 | (1) |
|
|
919 | (8) |
|
|
920 | (1) |
|
|
921 | (1) |
|
|
922 | (1) |
|
|
923 | (1) |
|
An Horatian Ode Upon Cromwell's Return from Ireland |
|
|
924 | (3) |
|
|
927 | (8) |
|
Friendship in Emblem, or the Seal |
|
|
928 | (2) |
|
Upon the Double Murder of King Charles |
|
|
930 | (1) |
|
On the Third of September, 1651 |
|
|
931 | (1) |
|
To the Truly Noble, and Obliging Mrs. Anne Owen |
|
|
931 | (1) |
|
To Mrs. Mary Awbrey at Parting |
|
|
932 | (2) |
|
To My Excellent Lucasia, on Our Friendship |
|
|
934 | (1) |
|
|
935 | (82) |
|
|
937 | (5) |
|
|
942 | (1) |
|
On the New Forcers of Conscience Under the Long Parliament |
|
|
942 | (1) |
|
To the Lord General Cromwell |
|
|
943 | (1) |
|
On the Late Massacre in Piedmont |
|
|
944 | (1) |
|
When I Consider How My Light Is Spent |
|
|
944 | (1) |
|
Methought I Saw My Late Espoused Saint |
|
|
944 | (2) |
|
|
946 | (1) |
|
|
946 | (20) |
|
|
966 | (14) |
|
|
980 | (27) |
|
|
1007 | (10) |
|
The Restoration and the Eighteenth Century |
|
|
1017 | (154) |
|
|
1040 | (11) |
|
|
1042 | (9) |
|
|
1042 | (1) |
|
[ The Coronation of Charles II] |
|
|
1043 | (3) |
|
|
1046 | (5) |
|
Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle |
|
|
1051 | (5) |
|
|
1051 | (1) |
|
The Poetress's Hasty Resolution |
|
|
1051 | (1) |
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1052 | (1) |
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An Apology for Writing So Much upon This Book |
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1052 | (1) |
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from The Description of a New Blazing World |
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1053 | (3) |
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1053 | (1) |
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1054 | (1) |
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[ Empress, Duchess, Duke] |
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1054 | (1) |
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1055 | (1) |
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1056 | (14) |
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1058 | (6) |
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To the Memory of Mr. Oldham |
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1064 | (1) |
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1065 | (5) |
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1070 | (10) |
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1071 | (4) |
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To Lysander, on Some Verses He Writ |
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1075 | (1) |
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To Lysander at the Music-Meeting |
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1076 | (1) |
|
A Letter to Mr. Creech at Oxford |
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1077 | (3) |
|
To the Fair Clarinda, Who Made Love to Me, Imagined More than Woman |
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1080 | (1) |
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John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester |
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|
1080 | (11) |
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1081 | (1) |
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1082 | (1) |
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Song (``Love a woman? You're an ass!'') |
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1083 | (1) |
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1083 | (2) |
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|
1085 | (1) |
|
A Satyr Against Reason and Mankind |
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|
1086 | (5) |
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|
1091 | (71) |
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|
1093 | (69) |
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|
1162 | (9) |
|
A Journal of the Plague Year |
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1164 | (7) |
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|
1164 | (4) |
|
[ Encounter with a Waterman] |
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|
1168 | (3) |
|
Perspectives Reading Papers |
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1171 | (318) |
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|
1172 | (8) |
|
from Mercurius Publicus [ Anniversary of the Regicide] |
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|
1172 | (1) |
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from The London Gazette [ The Fire of London] |
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1173 | (1) |
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from The Daily Courant No. 1 [ Editorial Policy] |
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|
1174 | (1) |
|
Daniel Defoe: from A Review of the State of the British Nation, Vol. 4, No. 21 [ The New Union] |
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1175 | (2) |
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from The Craftsman No. 307 [ Nampires in Britain] |
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1177 | (3) |
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1180 | (12) |
|
Richard Steele: from Tatler No. 1 [ Introducing Mr. Bickerstaff] |
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1181 | (3) |
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Joseph Addison: from Spectator No. 1 [ Introducing Mr. Spectator] |
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|
1184 | (2) |
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from Female Spectator, Vol. 1, No. 1 [ The Author's Intent] |
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|
1186 | (2) |
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Richard Steele: from Tatler No. 18 [ The News Writers in Danger] |
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|
1188 | (1) |
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Joseph Addison: from Tatler No. 155 [ The Political Upholsterer] |
|
|
1189 | (1) |
|
Joseph Addison: from Spectator No. 10 [ The Spectator and Its Readers] |
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|
1190 | (2) |
|
Getting, Spending, Speculating |
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|
1192 | (9) |
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Joseph Addison: Spectator No. 69 [ Royal Exchange] |
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1194 | (3) |
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Richard Steele: Spectator No. 11 [ Inkle and Yarico] |
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|
1197 | (3) |
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Daniel Defoe: from A Review of the State of the British Nation, Vol. 1, No. 43 [ Weak Foundations] |
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|
1200 | (1) |
|
Advertisements from the Spectator |
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|
1201 | (1) |
|
Women and Men, Manners and Marriage |
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|
1201 | (15) |
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Richard Steele: from Tatler No. 25 [ Duellists] |
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1202 | (2) |
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Daniel Defoe: from A Review of the State of the British Nation, Vol. 9, No. 34 [ A Duellist's Conscience] |
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1204 | (2) |
|
from The Athenian Mercury |
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1206 | (2) |
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Richard Steele: from Tatler No. 104 [ Jenny Distaff Newly Married] |
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1208 | (2) |
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Joseph Addison: Spectator No. 128 [ Variety of Temper] |
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1210 | (2) |
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Eliza Haywood: from The Female Spectator, Vol. 1, No. 1 [ Seomanthe's Elopement] |
|
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1212 | (2) |
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Eliza Haywood: from The Female Spectator, Vol. 2, No. 10 [ Women's Education] |
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|
1214 | (2) |
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1216 | (79) |
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A Description of the Morning |
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|
1218 | (1) |
|
A Description of a City Shower |
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1219 | (3) |
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1222 | (1) |
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1222 | (3) |
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1225 | (6) |
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|
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Lady Mary Wortley Montagu: The Reasons that induced Dr. S. to write a Poem called The Lady's Dressing Room |
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1228 | (3) |
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1231 | (56) |
|
from Part 3. A Voyage to Laputa |
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1232 | (9) |
|
Part 4. A Voyage to the Country of the Houyhnhnms |
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|
1241 | (46) |
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1287 | (8) |
|
``A Modest Proposal'' and Its Time |
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1294 | (1) |
|
William Petty: from Political Arithmetic |
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|
1294 | (1) |
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1295 | (58) |
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1297 | (18) |
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1315 | (21) |
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|
1336 | (3) |
|
from Preface [ On Translation] |
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|
1336 | (2) |
|
from Book 12 [ Sarpedon's Speech] |
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|
1338 | (1) |
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|
1339 | (9) |
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|
1339 | (1) |
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|
1339 | (1) |
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|
1340 | (1) |
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|
1341 | (7) |
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|
1348 | (5) |
|
|
1348 | (1) |
|
[ The Goddess Coming in Her Majesty] |
|
|
1349 | (1) |
|
[ The Geniuses of the Schools] |
|
|
1350 | (1) |
|
[ Young Gentlemen Returned from Travel] |
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|
1351 | (2) |
|
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu |
|
|
1353 | (11) |
|
from The Turkish Embassy Letters |
|
|
1354 | (4) |
|
To Lady---[ On the Turkish Baths] |
|
|
1354 | (2) |
|
To Lady Mar [ On Turkish Dress] |
|
|
1356 | (2) |
|
Letter to Lady Bute [ On Her Granddaughter] |
|
|
1358 | (3) |
|
Epistle from Mrs. Yonge to Her Husband |
|
|
1361 | (2) |
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|
1363 | (1) |
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|
1364 | (48) |
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|
1366 | (46) |
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|
1412 | (7) |
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|
1413 | (5) |
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|
1413 | (5) |
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|
1418 | (1) |
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|
1419 | (5) |
|
Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard |
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|
1420 | (4) |
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|
1424 | (21) |
|
The Vanity of Human Wishes |
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|
1427 | (9) |
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|
1436 | (1) |
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|
1436 | (3) |
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|
1439 | (3) |
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|
1442 | (1) |
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|
1442 | (1) |
|
No. 84 [ On Autobiography] |
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|
1443 | (2) |
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|
1445 | (13) |
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|
1447 | (3) |
|
|
1447 | (3) |
|
[ First Meeting with Johnson] |
|
|
1450 | (1) |
|
from The Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. |
|
|
1450 | (8) |
|
[ Introduction; Boswell's Method] |
|
|
1450 | (2) |
|
|
1452 | (6) |
|
|
1458 | (12) |
|
|
1459 | (11) |
|
|
1470 | (19) |
|
Fantomina: Or, Love in a Maze |
|
|
1470 | (19) |
Credits |
|
1489 | (2) |
Index |
|
1491 | |