Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Masters of British Literature, Volume [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 1459 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x162 mm, kaal: 1093 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Feb-2007
  • Kirjastus: Pearson
  • ISBN-10: 0321333993
  • ISBN-13: 9780321333995
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Pehme köide
  • Hind: 78,84 €*
  • * saadame teile pakkumise kasutatud raamatule, mille hind võib erineda kodulehel olevast hinnast
  • See raamat on trükist otsas, kuid me saadame teile pakkumise kasutatud raamatule.
  • Kogus:
  • Lisa ostukorvi
  • Tasuta tarne
  • Lisa soovinimekirja
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 1459 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x162 mm, kaal: 1093 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Feb-2007
  • Kirjastus: Pearson
  • ISBN-10: 0321333993
  • ISBN-13: 9780321333995
Teised raamatud teemal:

Written by an editorial team whose members are all actively engaged in teaching and in current scholarship, Masters of British Literature is a concise, yet comprehensive survey of the key writers whose classic works have shaped British literature. Featuring major works by the most influential authors in the British literary tradition–Chaucer, Spenser, Shakespeare, Sidney, Donne, Milton, Behn, Swift, Pope, Johnson–this compact anthology offers comprehensive coverage of the enduring works of the British literary tradition from the Middle Ages through the Restoration and the eighteenth century. Core texts are complemented by contextual materials that help students understand the literary, historical, and cultural environments out which these texts arose, and within which they find their richest meaning.

Muu info

Written by an editorial team whose members are all actively engaged in teaching and in current scholarship, Masters of British Literature is a concise, yet comprehensive survey of the key writers whose classic works have shaped British literature.  Featuring major works by the most influential authors in the British literary traditionChaucer, Spenser, Shakespeare, Sidney, Donne, Milton, Behn, Swift, Pope, Johnsonthis compact anthology offers comprehensive coverage of the enduring works of the British literary tradition from the Middle Ages through the Restoration and the eighteenth century. Core texts are complemented by contextual materials that help students understand the literary, historical, and cultural environments out which these texts arose, and within which they find their richest meaning.
List of Illustrations
xix
Preface xxiii
Acknowledgments xxx
The Middle Ages
3(24)
Before the Norman Conquest
27(97)
Beowulf
27(70)
Response
John Gardner: from Grendel
93(4)
Early Irish Narrative
97(4)
The Labour Pains of the Ulaid
97(1)
The Birth of Cu Chulainn
98(1)
The Naming of Cu Chulainn
99(2)
Early Irish Verse
101(9)
To Crinog
102(1)
Pangur the Cat
103(1)
Writing in the Wood
104(1)
The Viking Terror
104(1)
The Old Woman of Beare
104(3)
Findabair Remembers Froech
107(1)
A Grave Marked with Ogam
108(1)
from The Voyage of Mael Duin
109(1)
The Dream of the Rood
110(5)
The Wanderer
115(3)
Wulf and Eadwacer and the Wife's Lament
118(3)
Riddles
121(3)
Three Anglo-Latin Riddles by Aldhelm
121(1)
Five Old English Riddles
122(2)
Arthurian Romance
124(229)
Marie de France
124(20)
Lais
126(18)
Prologue
126(2)
Lanval
128(13)
Chevrefoil (The Honeysuckle)
141(3)
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
144(58)
J.R.R. Tolkien
Sir Thomas Malory
202(11)
Morte Darthur
204(1)
from Caxton's Prologue
204(1)
The Miracle of Galahad
205(8)
Geoffrey Chaucer
213(115)
The Canterbury Tales
218(2)
The General Prologue (Middle English and modern translation)
220(40)
The Miller's Tale
260(17)
The Introduction
260(2)
The Tale
262(15)
The Wife of Bath's Prologue
277(19)
The Wife of Bath's Tale
296(10)
The Nun's Priest's Tale
306(16)
The Parson's Tale
322(5)
The Introduction
322(2)
[ The Remedy for the Sin of Lechery]
324(2)
Chaucer's Retraction
326(1)
To His Scribe Adam
327(1)
Complaint to His Purse
328(1)
William Langland
328(25)
Piers Plowman
331(22)
Prologue
331(2)
Passus 2
333(2)
from Passus 6
335(2)
Passus 8
337(9)
``Piers Plowman'' and Its Time
The Rising of 1381
346(1)
Three Poems on the Rising of 1381: John Ball's First Letter
347(1)
John Ball's Second Letter
348(1)
The Course of Revolt
348(2)
John Gower: from The Voice of One Crying
350(3)
Medieval Biblical Drama
353(58)
The Second Play of the Shepherds
353(20)
Vernacular Religion
373(5)
The Wycliffite Bible
376(1)
John 10.11--18
376(1)
from A Wycliffite Sermon on John 10.11--18
376(2)
Margery Kempe
378(7)
The Book of Margery Kempe
379(6)
The Preface
379(1)
[ Meeting with Bishop of Lincoln and Archbishop of Canterbury]
380(3)
[ Visit with Julian of Norwich]
383(2)
Middle English Lyrics
385(10)
The Cuckoo Song (``Sumer is icumen in'')
386(1)
Alisoun (``Bitwene Mersh and Averil'')
387(1)
I Have a Noble Cock
388(1)
Abuse of Women (``In every place ye may well see'')
388(2)
Adam Lay Ibounden
390(1)
I Sing of a Maiden
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)
William Dunbar
395(6)
Lament for the Makars
395(3)
Done Is a Battell
398(1)
In Secreit Place This Hyndir Nycht
399(2)
Christine de Pizan
401(10)
from Book of the City of Ladies
402(9)
Earl Jeffrey Richards
The Early Modern Period
411(432)
John Skelton
431(6)
Womanhod, Wanton
431(1)
Lullay
432(1)
Knolege, Aquayntance
433(1)
Manerly Margery Mylk and Ale
434(1)
Garland of Laurel
435(2)
To Maystres Jane Blennerhasset
435(1)
To Maystres Isabell Pennell
436(1)
To Maystres Margaret Hussey
436(1)
Sir Thomas Wyatt
437(11)
The Long Love, That in My Thought Doth Harbor
438(2)
Companion Reading
Petrarch: Sonnet 140
439(1)
Whoso List to Hunt
440(1)
Companion Reading
Petrarch: Sonnet 190
440(1)
My Galley
441(1)
They Flee from Me
441(1)
Some Time I Fled the Fire
441(1)
My Lute, Awake!
442(1)
Tagus, Farewell
442(1)
Forget Not Yet
442(1)
Blame Not My Lute
442(1)
Lucks, My Fair Falcon, and Your Fellows All
443(1)
Stand Whoso List
443(1)
Mine Own John Poyns
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)
The Soote Season
449(1)
Alas, So All Things Now Do Hold Their Peace
450(1)
Companion Reading
Petrarch: Sonnet 164
450(1)
So Cruel Prison
450(1)
London, Hast Thou Accused Me
450(4)
Wyatt Resteth Here
454(1)
My Radcliffe, When Thy Reckless Youth Offends
455(1)
Edmund Spenser
456(157)
The Faerie Queene
458(1)
A Letter of the Authors
458(4)
The First Booke of the Faerie Queene
462(147)
Amoretti
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)
Sir Philip Sidney
613(42)
The Apology for Poetry
615(33)
Astrophil and Stella
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)
Isabella Whitney
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)
Even Now That Care
661(3)
To Thee Pure Sprite
664(2)
Psalm 71: In Te Domini Speravi (``On thee my trust is grounded'')
666(4)
Companion Reading
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)
Elizabeth I
673(17)
Written with a Diamond on Her Window at Woodstock
675(1)
Written on a Wall at Woodstock
675(1)
The Doubt of Future Foes
675(1)
On Monsieur's Departure
676(1)
Speeches
676(1)
On Marriage
677(1)
On Mary, Queen of Scots
678(3)
On Mary's Execution
681(2)
To the English Troops at Tilbury, Facing the Spanish Armada
683(1)
The Golden Speech
683(7)
Response
Sir Walter Raleigh: from The 21st and Last Book of the Ocean to Cynthia
685(5)
Aemilia Lanyer
690(11)
The Description of Cookham
691(5)
Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum
696(5)
To the Doubtful Reader
696(1)
To the Virtuous Reader
696(1)
[ Invocation]
697(1)
[ Against Beauty Without Virtue]
697(2)
[ Pilate's Wife Apologizes for Eve]
699(2)
Christopher Marlowe
701(53)
The Passionate Shepherd to His Love
702(1)
Response
Sir Walter Raleigh: The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd
703(1)
The Tragical History of Dr. Faustus
703(51)
Sir Walter Raleigh
754(16)
Nature That Washed Her Hands in Milk
755(1)
To the Queen
756(1)
On the Life of Man
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)
from Epistle Dedicatory
758(2)
To the Reader
760(4)
[ The Amazons]
764(1)
[ The Orinoco]
764(1)
[ The King of Aromaia]
765(2)
[ The New World of Guiana]
767(3)
William Shakespeare
770(73)
Sonnets
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)
The Tempest
781(62)
Response
Aime Cesaire: from A Tempest
835(8)
Perspectives Tracts on Women and Gender
843(174)
Desiderius Erasmus
844(2)
from In Laude and Praise of Matrimony
845(1)
Barnabe Riche
846(1)
from My Lady's Looking Glass
846(1)
Margaret Tyler
847(2)
from Preface to The First Part of the Mirror of Princely Deeds
848(1)
Joseph Swetnam
849(3)
from The Arraignment of Lewd, Idle, Froward, and Unconstant Women
850(2)
Rachel Speght
852(6)
from A Muzzle for Melastomus
853(5)
Ester Sowernam
858(3)
from Ester Hath Hanged Haman
858(3)
Hic Mulier and Haec-Vir
861(8)
from Hic Mulier; or, The Man-Woman
862(3)
from Haec-Vir; or, The Womanish-Man
865(4)
Thomas Campion
869(3)
My sweetest Lesbia, let us live and love
870(1)
There is a garden in her face
871(1)
Rose-cheeked Laura, come
871(1)
When thou must home to shades of underground
872(1)
Never weather-beaten sail more willing bent to shore
872(1)
Ben Jonson
872(10)
On Something, That Walks Somewhere
874(1)
On My First Daughter
874(1)
To John Donne
875(1)
On My First Son
875(1)
Inviting a Friend to Supper
875(1)
To Penshurst
876(3)
Song to Celia
879(1)
Queen and Huntress
879(1)
To the Memory of My Beloved, the Author, Mr. William Shakespeare, and What He Hath Left Us
880(2)
John Donne
882(16)
The Good Morrow
883(1)
Song (``Go, and catch a falling star'')
884(1)
The Sun Rising
885(1)
The Canonization
885(2)
A Valediction: of Weeping
887(1)
Love's Alchemy
887(1)
The Flea
888(1)
A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning
889(1)
The Ecstasy
890(2)
The Funeral
892(1)
The Relic
892(1)
Elegy 19: To His Mistress Going to Bed
893(1)
Holy Sonnets
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)
Lady Mary Wroth
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)
Robert Herrick
905(5)
Hesperides
906(1)
The Argument of His Book
906(1)
To His Book
906(1)
Corinna's Going A-Maying
907(1)
To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time
908(1)
His Prayer to Ben Jonson
909(1)
Upon Julia's Clothes
909(1)
The Christian Militant
909(1)
To His Tomb-Maker
910(1)
Upon Himself Being Buried
910(1)
His Last Request to Julia
910(1)
George Herbert
910(9)
The Altar
910(2)
Redemption
912(1)
Easter
912(1)
Easter Wings
913(1)
Man
913(2)
Jordan (2)
915(1)
Time
915(1)
The Collar
916(1)
The Pulley
917(1)
The Forerunners
917(1)
Love (3)
918(1)
Andrew Marvell
919(8)
The Coronet
920(1)
Bermudas
921(1)
To His Coy Mistress
922(1)
The Definition of Love
923(1)
An Horatian Ode Upon Cromwell's Return from Ireland
924(3)
Katherine Philips
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)
John Milton
935(82)
Lycidas
937(5)
How Soon Hath Time
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)
Paradise Lost
946(1)
Book 1
946(20)
Book 2
966(14)
Book 9
980(27)
Book 12
1007(10)
The Restoration and the Eighteenth Century
1017(154)
Samuel Pepys
1040(11)
from The Diary
1042(9)
[ First Entries]
1042(1)
[ The Coronation of Charles II]
1043(3)
[ The Fire of London]
1046(5)
Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle
1051(5)
Poems and Fancies
1051(1)
The Poetress's Hasty Resolution
1051(1)
The Poetress's Petition
1052(1)
An Apology for Writing So Much upon This Book
1052(1)
from The Description of a New Blazing World
1053(3)
from To the Reader
1053(1)
[ Creating Worlds]
1054(1)
[ Empress, Duchess, Duke]
1054(1)
Epilogue
1055(1)
John Dryden
1056(14)
Mac Flecknoe
1058(6)
To the Memory of Mr. Oldham
1064(1)
Alexander's Feast
1065(5)
Aphra Behn
1070(10)
The Disappointment
1071(4)
To Lysander, on Some Verses He Writ
1075(1)
To Lysander at the Music-Meeting
1076(1)
A Letter to Mr. Creech at Oxford
1077(3)
To the Fair Clarinda, Who Made Love to Me, Imagined More than Woman
1080(1)
John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester
1080(11)
Against Constancy
1081(1)
The Disabled Debauchee
1082(1)
Song (``Love a woman? You're an ass!'')
1083(1)
The Imperfect Enjoyment
1083(2)
Upon Nothing
1085(1)
A Satyr Against Reason and Mankind
1086(5)
William Wycherley
1091(71)
The Country Wife
1093(69)
Daniel Defoe
1162(9)
A Journal of the Plague Year
1164(7)
[ At the Burial Pit]
1164(4)
[ Encounter with a Waterman]
1168(3)
Perspectives Reading Papers
1171(318)
News and Comment
1172(8)
from Mercurius Publicus [ Anniversary of the Regicide]
1172(1)
from The London Gazette [ The Fire of London]
1173(1)
from The Daily Courant No. 1 [ Editorial Policy]
1174(1)
Daniel Defoe: from A Review of the State of the British Nation, Vol. 4, No. 21 [ The New Union]
1175(2)
from The Craftsman No. 307 [ Nampires in Britain]
1177(3)
Periodical Personae
1180(12)
Richard Steele: from Tatler No. 1 [ Introducing Mr. Bickerstaff]
1181(3)
Joseph Addison: from Spectator No. 1 [ Introducing Mr. Spectator]
1184(2)
from Female Spectator, Vol. 1, No. 1 [ The Author's Intent]
1186(2)
Richard Steele: from Tatler No. 18 [ The News Writers in Danger]
1188(1)
Joseph Addison: from Tatler No. 155 [ The Political Upholsterer]
1189(1)
Joseph Addison: from Spectator No. 10 [ The Spectator and Its Readers]
1190(2)
Getting, Spending, Speculating
1192(9)
Joseph Addison: Spectator No. 69 [ Royal Exchange]
1194(3)
Richard Steele: Spectator No. 11 [ Inkle and Yarico]
1197(3)
Daniel Defoe: from A Review of the State of the British Nation, Vol. 1, No. 43 [ Weak Foundations]
1200(1)
Advertisements from the Spectator
1201(1)
Women and Men, Manners and Marriage
1201(15)
Richard Steele: from Tatler No. 25 [ Duellists]
1202(2)
Daniel Defoe: from A Review of the State of the British Nation, Vol. 9, No. 34 [ A Duellist's Conscience]
1204(2)
from The Athenian Mercury
1206(2)
Richard Steele: from Tatler No. 104 [ Jenny Distaff Newly Married]
1208(2)
Joseph Addison: Spectator No. 128 [ Variety of Temper]
1210(2)
Eliza Haywood: from The Female Spectator, Vol. 1, No. 1 [ Seomanthe's Elopement]
1212(2)
Eliza Haywood: from The Female Spectator, Vol. 2, No. 10 [ Women's Education]
1214(2)
Jonathan Swift
1216(79)
A Description of the Morning
1218(1)
A Description of a City Shower
1219(3)
Stella's Birthday, 1719
1222(1)
Stella's Birthday, 1727
1222(3)
The Lady's Dressing Room
1225(6)
Response
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu: The Reasons that induced Dr. S. to write a Poem called The Lady's Dressing Room
1228(3)
Gulliver's Travels
1231(56)
from Part
3. A Voyage to Laputa
1232(9)
Part
4. A Voyage to the Country of the Houyhnhnms
1241(46)
A Modest Proposal
1287(8)
``A Modest Proposal'' and Its Time
1294(1)
William Petty: from Political Arithmetic
1294(1)
Alexander Pope
1295(58)
An Essay on Criticism
1297(18)
The Rape of the Lock
1315(21)
The Iliad
1336(3)
from Preface [ On Translation]
1336(2)
from Book 12 [ Sarpedon's Speech]
1338(1)
from An Essay on Man
1339(9)
Epistle 1
1339(1)
To the Reader
1339(1)
The Design
1340(1)
Argument
1341(7)
from The Dunciad
1348(5)
from Book the Fourth
1348(1)
[ The Goddess Coming in Her Majesty]
1349(1)
[ The Geniuses of the Schools]
1350(1)
[ Young Gentlemen Returned from Travel]
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)
The Lover: A Ballad
1363(1)
John Gay
1364(48)
The Beggar's Opera
1366(46)
James Thomson
1412(7)
from The Seasons
1413(5)
from Autumn
1413(5)
Rule, Britannia
1418(1)
Thomas Gray
1419(5)
Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard
1420(4)
Samuel Johnson
1424(21)
The Vanity of Human Wishes
1427(9)
The Rambler
1436(1)
No. 4 [ On Fiction]
1436(3)
No. 5 [ On Spring]
1439(3)
The Idler
1442(1)
No. 31 [ On Idleness]
1442(1)
No. 84 [ On Autobiography]
1443(2)
James Boswell
1445(13)
from London Journal
1447(3)
[ A Scot in London]
1447(3)
[ First Meeting with Johnson]
1450(1)
from The Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D.
1450(8)
[ Introduction; Boswell's Method]
1450(2)
[ Dinner with Wilkes]
1452(6)
Oliver Goldsmith
1458(12)
The Deserted Village
1459(11)
Eliza Haywood
1470(19)
Fantomina: Or, Love in a Maze
1470(19)
Credits 1489(2)
Index 1491


David Damrosch is a lecturer at Columbia University.