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Digital file of Longman Anthology of British Literature, Volumes 1A, 1B, and 1C, The, 4th Edition for sale
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Category : Higher Education
Table of Contents
*** denotes selection is new to this edition.
THE MIDDLE AGES
Before the Norman Conquest
BEOWULF***
Response
John Gardner: from Grendel
THE TÁIN***
EARLY IRISH VERSE
To Crinog
Pangur the Cat
Writing in the Wood
The Viking Terror
The Old Woman of Beare
Findabair Remembers Fróech
A Grave Marked with Ogam
from The Voyage of Máel Dúin
JUDITH
THE DREAM OF THE ROOD
PERSPECTIVES: ETHNIC AND RELIGIOUS ENCOUNTERS
Bede
from An Ecclesiastical History of the English People
Bishop asser
from The Life of King Alfred
King alfred
Preface to Saint Gregory’s Pastoral Care
Ohthere’s journeys
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
Stamford Bridge and Hastings
TALIESIN
Urien Yrechwydd
The Battle of Argoed Llwyfain
The War-Band’s Return
Lament for Owain Son of Urien
THE WANDERER
WULF AND EADWACER AND THE WIFE’S LAMENT
RIDDLES
Three Anglo-Latin Riddles by Aldhelm
Five Old English Riddles
After the Norman Conquest
PERSPECTIVES: ARTHURIAN MYTH IN THE HISTORY OF BRITAIN
Geoffrey of Monmouth
from History of the Kings of Britain
Gerald of Wales
from The Instruction of Princes
Edward I
Letter sent to the Papal Court of Rome
Response
A Report to Edward I
Arthurian Romance
MARIE DE FRANCE
Lais
Prologue
Lanval
Chevrefoil (The Honeysuckle)
SIR GAWAIN AND THE GREEN KNIGHT***
SIR THOMAS MALORY
Morte Darthur
from Caxton’s Prologue
The Miracle of Galahad
The Poisoned Apple
The Day of Destiny
Responses
Marion Zimmer Bradley: from The Mists of Avalon
Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, and Michael Palin: scene from Monty Python and the Holy Grail
GEOFFREY CHAUCER
The Canterbury Tales
The General Prologue (Middle English and modern translation)
The Miller’s Tale
The Introduction
The Tale
The Wife of Bath’s Prologue
The Wife of Bath’s Tale
The Prologue
The Tale
The Pardoner’s Prologue
The Pardoner’s Tale
The Nun’s Priest’s Tale
The Parson’s Tale
The Introduction
[The Remedy for the Sin of Lechery]
Chaucer’s Retraction
To His Scribe Adam
Complaint to His Purse
WILLIAM LANGLAND
Piers Plowman
Prologue
Passus 2
from Passus 6
Passus 8
Passus 20
“Piers Plowman” and Its Time
The Rising of 1381
from The Anonimalle Chronicle [Wat Tyler’s Demands to Richard II, and His Death]
Three Poems on the Rising of 1381: John Ball’s First Letter • John Ball’s Second Letter • The Course of Revolt
John Gower: from The Voice of One Crying
Mystical Writings
JULIAN OF NORWICH
A Book of Showings
[Three Graces. Illness. The First Revelation]
[Laughing at the Devil]
[Christ Draws Julian in through His Wound]
[The Necessity of Sin, and of Hating Sin]
[God as Father, Mother, Husband]
[The Soul as Christ’s Citadel]
[The Meaning of the Visions Is Love]
Companion Readings
Richard Rolle: from The Fire of Love
from The Cloud of Unknowing
Response
Rebecca Jackson: The Dream of Washing Quilts
Medieval Biblical Drama
THE SECOND PLAY OF THE SHEPHERDS
THE YORK PLAY OF THE CRUCIFIXION
MARGERY KEMPE
The Book of Margery Kempe
The Preface
[Early Life and Temptations, Revelation, Desire for Foreign Pilgrimage]
[Meeting with Bishop of Lincoln and Archbishop of Canterbury]
[Visit with Julian of Norwich]
[Pilgrimage to Jerusalem]
[Arrest by Duke of Bedford’s Men; Meeting with Archbishop of York]
MIDDLE ENGLISH LYRICS
The Cuckoo Song (“Sumer is icumen in”)
Spring (“Lenten is come with love to toune”)
Alisoun (“Bitwene Mersh and Averil”)
I Have a Noble Cock
My Lefe Is Faren in a Lond
Fowls in the Frith
Abuse of Women (“In every place ye may well see”)
The Irish Dancer (“Gode sire, pray ich thee”)
A Forsaken Maiden’s Lament (“I lovede a child of this cuntree”)
The Wily Clerk (“This enther day I mete a clerke”)
Jolly Jankin (“As I went on YoI Day in our procession”)
Adam Lay Ibounden
I Sing of a Maiden
In Praise of Mary (“Edi be thu, Hevene Quene”)
Mary Is with Child (“Under a tree”)
Sweet Jesus, King of Bliss
Now Goeth Sun under Wood
Jesus, My Sweet Lover (“Jesu Christ, my lemmon swete”)
Contempt of the World (“Where beth they biforen us weren?”)
DAFYDD AP GWILYM
Aubade
One Saving Place
Tale of a Wayside Inn
The Winter
The Ruin
Middle Scots Poets
WILLIAM DUNBAR
Lament for the Makars
Done Is a Battell
In Secreit Place This Hyndir Nycht
ROBERT HENRYSON
Robene and Makyne
Late Medieval Allegory
CHARLES D’ORLEANS
Ballade 26
Ballade 61
Roundel 94
MANKIND
(acting edition by Peter Meredith)
CHRISTINE DE PIZAN
from Book of the City of Ladies
(trans. by Earl Jeffrey Richards)
THE EARLY MODERN PERIOD
JOHN SKELTON***
The Bowge of Courte***
PERSPECTIVES: THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY SONNET***
Sir Thomas Wyatt
The Long Love, That in My Thought Doth Harbor
Companion Reading
Petrarch: Sonnet 140
Whoso List to Hunt
Companion Reading
Petrarch: Sonnet 190
My Galley
Some Time I Fled the Fire
Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey
Love That Doth Reign and Live within My Thought
Th’Assyrians’ King, in Peace with Foul Desire
Set Me Whereas the Sun Doth Parch the Green
The Soote Season
Alas, So All Things Now Do Hold Their Peace
Companion Reading
Petrarch: Sonnet 164
George Gascoigne
Seven Sonnets to Alexander Neville
Edmund Spenser
Amoretti
1 (“Happy ye leaves when as those lilly hands”)
4 (“New yeare forth looking out of Janus gate”)
13 (“In that proud port, which her so goodly graceth”)
22 (“This holy season fit to fast and pray”)
62 (“The weary yeare his race now having run”)
65 (“The doubt which ye misdeeme, fayre love, is vaine”)
66 (“To all those happy blessings which ye have”)
68 (“Most glorious Lord of lyfe that on this day”)
75 (“One day I wrote her name upon the strand”)
Sir Philip Sidney
Astrophil and Stella
1 (“Loving in truth, and fain in verse my love to show”)
3 (“Let dainty wits cry on the sisters nine”)
7 (“When Nature made her chief work, Stella’s eyes”)
9 (“Queen Virtue’s court, which some call Stella’s face”)
10 (“Reason, in faith thou art well served, that still”)
14 (“Alas, have I not pain enough, my friend”)
15 (“You that do search for every purling spring”)
23 (“The curious wits, seeing dull pensiveness”)
24 (“Rich fool there be whose base and filthy heart”)
31 (“With how sad steps, O Moon, thou climb’st the skies”)
37 (“My mouth doth water and my breast doth swell”)
39 (“Come sleep, O sleep, the certain knot of peace”)
45 (“Stella oft sees the very face of woe”)
47 (“What, have I thus betrayed my liberty?”)
52 (“A strife is grown between Virtue and Love”)
60 (“When my good Angel guides me to the place”)
63 (“O grammar-rules, O now your virtues show”)
64 (“No more, my dear, no more these counsels try”)
68 (“Stella, the only planet of my light”)
71 (“Who will in fairest book of Nature know”)
Second song (“Have I caught my heavenly jewel”)
74 (“I never drank of Aganippe well”)
Fourth song (“Only joy, now here you are”)
86 (“Alas, whence came this change of looks? If I...”)
Eighth song (“In a grove most rich of shade”)
Ninth song (“Go, my flock, go get you hence”)
89 (“Now that, of absence, the most irksome night”)
90 (“Stella, think not that I by verse seek fame”)
91 (“Stella, while now by honor’s cruel might”)
97 (“Dian, that fain would cheer her friend the Night”)
104 (“Envious wits, what hath been mine offense”)
106 (“O absent presence, Stella is not here”)
107 (“Stella, since thou so right a princess art”)
108 (“When sorrow (using mine own fire’s might)”)
Richard Barnfield
Sonnets from Cynthia
1 (“Sporting at fancy, setting light by love”)
5 (“It is reported of fair Thetis’ son”)
9 (“Diana (on a time) walking the wood”)
11 (“Sighing, and sadly sitting by my love”)
13 (“Speak, Echo, tell; how may I call my love?”)
19 (“Ah no; nor I myself: though my pure love”)
Michael Drayton
Sonnet 12 (“To nothing fitter can I thee compare”)
Sonnet 61 (“Since there’s no help, come let us kiss and part”)
SIR THOMAS WYATT
They Flee from Me
My Lute, Awake!
Tagus, Farewell
Forget Not Yet
Blame Not My Lute
Lucks, My Fair Falcon, and Your Fellows All
Stand Whoso List
Mine Own John Poyns
HENRY HOWARD, EARL OF SURREY
So Cruel Prison
London, Hast Thou Accused Me
Wyatt Resteth Here
My Radcliffe, When Thy Reckless Youth Offends
SIR THOMAS MORE
Utopia
Response***
Sir Francis Bacon: from New Atlantis***
WILLIAM BALDWIN***
Beware the Cat ***
EDMUND SPENSER***
The Faerie Queene ***
The Sixthe Booke of the Faerie Queene ***
The Two Cantos of Mutabilitie***
SIR PHILIP SIDNEY
The Apology for Poetry
ISABELLA WHITNEY
The Admonition by the Author
A Careful Complaint by the Unfortunate Author
The Manner of Her Will
MARY HERBERT, COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE
Psalm 71: In Te Domini Speravi (“On thee my trust is grounded”)
Psalm 121: Levavi Oculos (“Unto the hills, I now will bend”)
The Doleful Lay of Clorinda
PERSPECTIVES: EARLY MODERN BOOKS***
Ranulf Higden
from Polychronicon
John Foxe***
from Actes and Monuments of These Latter and Perilous Days***
The Geneva Bible
Thomas Hariot***
from The True Pictures and Fashions of the People in That Part of America Now Called Virginia**
John Gerard
from The Herball or Generall historie of plantes
Geoffrey Whitney
The Phoenix
Robert Fludd
from Utriusque cosmic, maioris scilicet et minoris, metaphysica atque technica historia
Francis Bacon
from Advancement of Learning
English Handwriting Samples**
Frontispiece to A Certain Relation of the Hog-faced Gentlewoman
ELIZABETH I
Written with a Diamond on Her Window at Woodstock
Written on a Wall at Woodstock
The Doubt of Future Foes
On Monsieur’s Departure
Speeches
On Marriage
On Mary, Queen of Scots
On Mary’s Execution
To the English Troops at Tilbury, Facing the Spanish Armada
The Golden Speech
AEMILIA LANYER
The Description of Cookham
CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE
Hero and Leander
The Tragical History of Dr. Faustus
Response
C.S. Lewis: from The Screwtape Letters
SIR WALTER RALEIGH
Nature That Washed Her Hands in Milk
To the Queen
On the Life of Man
The Author’s Epitaph, Made by Himself
As You Came from the Holy Land
from The 21st and Last Book of the Ocean to Cynthia
PERSPECTIVES: ENGLAND, BRITAIN, AND THE WORLD***
Fynes Moryson***
from An Itenerary, Obseravations on the Ottomon Empire***
Fynes Moryson***
from An Itenerary, Obeservations of Italy and Ireland***
Edmund Spenser***
from A View of the State of Ireland***
Thomas Hariot
from A Brief and True Report of the Newfound Land of Virginia
John Smith
from General History of Virginia and the Summer Isles
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
Sonnets
1 (“From fairest creatures we desire increase”)
12 (“When I do count the clock that tells the time”)
15 (“When I consider every thing that grows”)
18 (“Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day”)
20 (“A woman’s face with Nature’s own hand painted”)
29 (“When, in disgrace with fortune and men’s eyes”)
30 (“When to the sessions of sweet silent thought”)
31 (“Thy bosom is endearèd with all hearts”)
33 (“Full many a glorious morning have I seen”)
35 (“No more be grieved at that which thou hast done”)
55 (“Not marble nor the gilded monuments”)
60 (“Like as the waves make towards the pebbled shore”)
71 (“No longer mourn for me when I am dead”)
73 (“That time of year thou mayst in me behold”)
80 (“O, how I faint when I of you do write”)
86 (“Was it the proud full sail of his great verse”)
87 (“Farewell! Thou art too dear for my possessing”)
93 (“So shall I live, supposing thou art true”)
94 (“They that have pow’r to hurt, and will do none”)
104 (“To me, fair friend, you never can be old”)
106 (“When in the chronicle of wasted time”)
107 (“Not mine own fears nor the prophetic soul”)
116 (“Let me not to the marriage of true minds”)
123 (“No, Time, thou shalt not boast that I do change”)
124 (“If my dear love were but the child of state”)
126 (“O thou, my lovely boy, who in thy power”)
128 (“How oft, when thou my music play’st”)
129 (“The expense of spirit in a waste of shame”)
130 (“My mistress’ eyes are nothing like the sun”)
138 (“When my love swears that she is made of truth”)
144 (“Two loves I have, of comfort and despair”)
152 (“In loving thee thou know’st I am forsworn”)
Twelfth Night; or, What You Will
Othello***
King Lear***
PERSPECTIVES: TRACTS ON WOMEN AND GENDER
Joseph Swetnam
from The Arraignment of Lewd, Idle, Froward, and Unconstant Women
Rachel Speght
from A Muzzle for Melastomus
Ester Sowernam
from Ester Hath Hanged Haman
Hic Mulier and Haec-Vir
from Hic Mulier; or, The Man-Woman
from Haec-Vir; or, The Womanish-Man
BEN JONSON
The Alchemist
On Something, That Walks Somewhere
On My First Daughter
To John Donne
On My First Son
Inviting a Friend to Supper
To Penshurst
Song to Celia
Queen and Huntress
To the Memory of My Beloved, the Author, Mr. William Shakespeare, and What He Hath Left Us
To the Immortal Memory, and Friendship of that Noble Pair, Sir Lucius Cary and Sir H. Morison
Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue
JOHN DONNE
The Good Morrow
Song (“Go, and catch a falling star”)
The Undertaking
The Sun Rising
The Indifferent
The Canonization
Air and Angels
Break of Day
A Valediction: of Weeping
Love’s Alchemy
The Flea
The Bait
The Apparition
A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning
The Ecstasy
The Funeral
The Relic
Elegy 19: To His Mistress Going to Bed
Holy Sonnets
1 (“As due by many titles I resign”)
2 (“Oh my black soul! Now thou art summoned”)
3 (“This is my play’s last scene, here heavens appoint”)
4 (“At the round earth’s imagined corners, blow”)
5 (“If poisonous minerals, and if that tree”)
6 (“Death be not proud, though some have called thee”)
7 (“Spit in my face ye Jews, and pierce my side”)
8 (“Why are we by all creatures waited on?”)
9 (“What if this present were the world’s last night?”)
10 (“Batter my heart, three-personed God; for, you”)
11 (“Wilt thou love God, as he thee? Then digest”)
12 (“Father, part of his double interest”)
Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions
[“For whom the bell tolls”]
LADY MARY WROTH
Pamphilia to Amphilanthus
1 (“When night’s black mantle could most darkness prove”)
5 (“Can pleasing sight misfortune ever bring?”)
16 (“Am I thus conquered? Have I lost the powers”)
17 (“Truly poor Night thou welcome art to me”)
25 (“Like to the Indians, scorched with the sun”)
26 (“When everyone to pleasing pastime hies”)
28 Song (“Sweetest love, return again”)
39 (“Take heed mine eyes, how you your looks do cast”)
40 (“False hope which feeds but to destroy, and spill”)
48 (“If ever Love had force in human breast?”)
55 (“How like a fire does love increase in me”)
68 (“My pain, still smothered in my grièved breast”)
74 Song (“Love a child is ever crying”)
A Crown of Sonnets Dedicated to Love
77 (“In this strange labyrinth how shall I turn?”)
82 (“He may our profit and our tutor prove”)
83 (“How blessed be they then, who his favors prove”)
84 (“ He that shuns love does love himself the less”)
103 (“My muse now happy, lay thyself to rest”)
ROBERT HERRICK
Hesperides
The Argument of His Book
To His Book
Another (“To read my book the virgin shy”)
Another (“Who with thy leaves shall wipe at need”)
To the Sour Reader
When He Would Have His Verses Read
Delight in Disorder
Corinna’s Going A-Maying
To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time
The Hock-Cart, or Harvest Home
His Prayer to Ben Jonson
Upon Julia’s Clothes
Upon His Spaniel Tracie
The Dream (“Me thought (last night) Love in an anger came”)
The Dream (“By dream I saw one of the three”)
The Vine
The Vision
Discontents in Devon
To Dean-Bourn, a Rude River in Devon
Upon Scobble: Epigram
The Christian Militant
To His Tomb-Maker
Upon Himself Being Buried
His Last Request to Julia
The Pillar of Fame
His Noble Numbers
His Prayer for Absolution
To His Sweet Saviour
To God, on His Sickness
GEORGE HERBERT
The Altar
Redemption
Easter
Easter Wings
Affliction (1)
Prayer (1)
Jordan (1)
Church Monuments
The Windows
Denial
Virtue
Man
Jordan (2)
Time
The Collar
The Pulley
The Forerunners
Love (3)
RICHARD LOVELACE
To Lucasta, Going to the Wars
The Grasshopper
To Althea, from Prison
Love Made in the First Age: To Chloris
HENRY VAUGHAN
Regeneration
The Retreat
Silence, and Stealth of Days
The World
They Are All Gone into the World of Light!
The Night
ANDREW MARVELL
The Coronet
Bermudas
The Nymph Complaining for the Death of Her Fawn
To His Coy Mistress
The Definition of Love
The Mower Against Gardens
The Mower’s Song
The Garden
An Horatian Ode Upon Cromwell’s Return from Ireland
KATHERINE PHILIPS
Friendship in Emblem, or the Seal
Upon the Double Murder of King Charles
On the Third of September, 1651
To the Truly Noble, and Obliging Mrs. Anne Owen
To Mrs. Mary Awbrey at Parting
To My Excellent Lucasia, on Our Friendship
The World
PERSPECTIVES: THE CIVIL WAR, OR THE WARS OF THREE KINGDOMS
John Gauden
from Eikon Basilike
John Milton
from Eikonoklastes
Oliver Cromwell
from Letters from Ireland
John O’Dwyer of the Glenn
The Story of Alexander Agnew; or, Jock of Broad Scotland
JOHN MILTON
L’Allegro
Il Penseroso
Lycidas
How Soon Hath Time
On the New Forcers of Conscience Under the Long Parliament
To the Lord General Cromwell
On the Late Massacre in Piedmont
When I Consider How My Light Is Spent
Methought I Saw My Late Espoused Saint
from Areopagitica
Paradise Lost
Book 1
Book 2
Book 3
Book 4
Book 5
Book 6
Book 7
Book 8
Book 9
Book 10
Book 11
Book 12
Responses
Mary Wollstonecraft: from A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
William Blake: A Poison Tree
THE RESTORATION AND THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
SAMUEL PEPYS
The Diary
[First Entries]
[The Coronation of Charles II]
[The Plague Year]
[The Fire of London]
Pepys’s Diary and Its Time
John Evelyn from Kalendarium
Response
Robert Louis Stevenson: from Samuel Pepys
PERSPECTIVES: THE ROYAL SOCIETY AND THE NEW SCIENCE
Thomas Sprat
from The History of the Royal Society of London
Philosophical Transactions
from Philosophical Transactions
Robert Hooke
from Micrographia
John Aubrey
from Brief Lives
MARGARET CAVENDISH, DUCHESS OF NEWCASTLE
Poems and Fancies
The Poetress’s Hasty Resolution
The Poetress’s Petition
An Apology for Writing So Much upon This Book
The Hunting of the Hare
from A True Relation of My Birth, Breeding, and Life
Observations upon Experimental Philosophy
Of Micrography, and of Magnifying and Multiplying Glasses
The Description of a New Blazing World
from To the Reader
[Creating Worlds]
[Empress, Duchess, Duke]
Epilogue
JOHN DRYDEN
Absalom and Achitophel: A Poem
Mac Flecknoe
To the Memory of Mr. Oldham
Alexander’s Feast
Fables Ancient and Modern
from Preface
The Secular Masque
APHRA BEHN
The Disappointment
To Lysander, on Some Verses He Writ
To Lysander at the Music-Meeting
A Letter to Mr. Creech at Oxford
To the Fair Clarinda, Who Made Love to Me, Imagined More than Woman
Oroonoko
Response
Thomas Southerne: from Oroonoko: A Tragedy
PERSPECTIVES: COTERIE WRITING
Mary, Lady Chudleigh
To the Ladies
To Almystrea
Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea
The Introduction
Friendship Between Ephelia and Ardelia
A Nocturnal Reverie
A Ballad to Mrs. Catherine Fleming in London from Malshanger Farm in Hampshire
Mary Leapor
The Headache. To Aurelia
Mira To Octavia
An Epistle to Artemisia. On Fame
Advice to Sophronia
The Epistle of Deborah Dough
JOHN WILMOT, EART OF ROCHESTER
Against Constancy
The Disabled Debauchee
Song (“Love a woman? You’re an ass!”)
The Imperfect Enjoyment
Upon Nothing
A Satyr Against Reason and Mankind
WILLIAM WYCHERLEY
The Country Wife
MARY ASTELL
from Some Reflections upon Marriage
DANIEL DEFOE
A True Relation of the Apparition of One Mrs. Veal
A Journal of the Plague Year
[At the Burial Pit]
[Encounter with a Waterman]
PERSPECTIVES: READING PAPERS
News and Comment
from Mercurius Publicus [Anniversary of the Regicide]
from The London Gazette [The Fire of London]
from The Daily Courant No. 1 [Editorial Policy]
Daniel Defoe: from A Review of the State of the British Nation, Vol. 4, No. 21 [The New Union]
Periodical Personae
Richard Steele: from Tatler No. 1 [Introducing Mr. Bickerstaff]
Joseph Addison: from Spectator No. 1 [Introducing Mr. Spectator]
from Female Spectator, Vol. 1, No. 1 [The Author’s Intent]
Richard Steele: from Tatler No. 18 [The News Writers in Danger]
Joseph Addison: from Tatler No. 155 [The Political Upholsterer]
Joseph Addison: from Spectator No. 10 [The Spectator and Its Readers]
Getting, Spending, Speculating
Joseph Addison: Spectator No. 69 [Royal Exchange]
Richard Steele: Spectator No. 11 [Inkle and Yarico]
Daniel Defoe: from A Review of the State of the British Nation, Vol. 1, No. 43 [Weak Foundations]
Advertisements from the Spectator
JONATHAN SWIFT
A Description of the Morning
A Description of a City Shower
Stella’s Birthday, 1719
Stella’s Birthday, 1727
The Lady’s Dressing Room
Response
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu: The Reasons that induced Dr. S. to write a Poem called The Lady’s Dressing Room
Verses on the Death of Dr. Swift, D.S.P.D.
Journal to Stella
from Letter 10
Gulliver’s Travels
from Part 3. A Voyage to Laputa
Part 4. A Voyage to the Country of the Houyhnhnms
“Gulliver’s Travels” and Its Time
from Letters on Gulliver’s Travels Jonathan Swift to Alexander Pope • Alexander Pope to Jonathan Swift • John Gay to Jonathan Swift • Jonathan Swift to Alexander Pope • “The Prince of Lilliput” to Stella
A Modest Proposal
“A Modest Proposal” and Its Time
William Petty from Political Arithmetic
ALEXANDER POPE
An Essay on Criticism
Windsor-Forest
The Rape of the Lock
The Iliad
from Book 12 [Sarpedon’s Speech]
Eloisa to Abelard
from An Essay on Man
Epistle 1
To the Reader
The Design
Argument
An Epistle from Mr. Pope, to Dr. Arbuthnot
An Epistle To a Lady: Of the Characters of Women
Epistle 2. To a Lady: Of the Characters of Women
Response
Mary Leapor: An Essay on Woman
from The Dunciad
from Book the Fourth
[The Goddess Coming in Her Majesty]
[The Geniuses of the Schools]
[Young Gentlemen Returned from Travel]
[The Minute Philosophers and the Consummation of All]
LADY MARY WORTLEY MONTAGU
from The Turkish Embassy Letters
To Lady—[On the Turkish Baths]
To Lady Mar [On Turkish Dress]
Letter to Lady Bute [On Her Granddaughter]
Epistle from Mrs. Yonge to Her Husband
The Lover: A Ballad
JOHN GAY
The Beggar’s Opera
WILLIAM HOGARTH
A Rake’s Progress
PERSPECTIVES: MIND AND GOD
Isaac Newton
from Letter to Richard Bentley
John Locke
from An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
Isaac Watts
A Prospect of Heaven Makes Death Easy
The Hurry of the Spirits, in a Fever and Nervous Disorders
Against Idleness and Mischief
Man Frail, and God Eternal
Miracles Attending Israel’s Journey
Joseph Addison
Spectator No. 465
George Berkeley
from Three Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous
David Hume
from A Treatise of Human Nature
from An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding
Christopher Smart
from Jubilate Agno
William Cowper
Light Shining out of Darkness
from The Task
The Cast-away
JAMES THOMSON
from Winter. A Poem
[Autumn Evening and Night]
[Winter Night]
from The Seasons
from Autumn
Rule, Britannia
“The Seasons” and Its Time
Poems of Nightfall and Night
Edward Young from The Complaint
William Collins Ode to Evening • Ode Occasioned by the Death of Mr. Thomson
William Cowper from The Task
THOMAS GRAY
Sonnet on the Death of Mr. Richard West
Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College
Ode on the Death of a Favorite Cat, Drowned in a Tub of Gold Fishes
Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard
SAMUEL JOHNSON
The Vanity of Human Wishes
A Short Song of Congratulation
On the Death of Dr. Robert Levet
The Rambler
No. 4 [On Fiction]
No. 5 [On Spring]
No. 60 [On Biography]
No. 170 [On Misella, a Prostitute]
No. 171 [Misella Continues]
No. 207 [Beginnings, Middles, and Ends]
The Idler
No. 31 [On Idleness]
No. 32 [On Sleep]
No. 84 [On Autobiography]
No. 97 [On Travel Writing]
A Dictionary of the English Language
from Preface
[Some Entries]
from The History of Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia
Chapter 8. The History of Imlac
Chapter 9. The History of Imlac Continued
Chapter 10. Imlac’s History Continued. A Dissertation upon Poetry
Chapter 11. Imlac’s Narrative Continued. A Hint on Pilgrimage
Chapter 12. The Story of Imlac Continued
from The Plays of William Shakespeare
Preface
[“Just Representations of General Nature”]
[Faults; The Unities]
[Selected Notes on Othello]
Lives of the Poets
from The Life of Milton
from The Life of Pope
Letters
To Lord Chesterfield (7 February 1755)
To Hester Thrale (19 June 1783)
To Hester Thrale Piozzi (2 July 1784)
To Hester Thrale Piozzi (8 July 1784)
JAMES BOSWELL
from London Journal
[A Scot in London]
[Louisa]
[First Meeting with Johnson]
An Account of My Last Interview with David Hume, Esq.
from The Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D.
[Introduction; Boswell’s Method]
[Conversations about Hume]
[Dinner with Wilkes]
[Conversations at Streatham and the Club]
OLIVER GOLDSMITH
The Deserted Village
Responses
George Crabbe: from The Village
George Crabbe: from The Parish Register
PERSPECTIVES: NOVEL GUISES
Daniel Defoe
from The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe
Eliza Haywood
Fantomina: Or, Love in a Maze
Samuel Richardson
from Clarissa. Or, The History of a Young Lady
from The History of Sir Charles Grandison, Baronet
Henry Fielding
from An Apology for the Life of Mrs. Shamela Andrews
Laurence Sterne
from The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman
Frances Burney
from The Early Journals
from Evelina; or, the History of a Young Lady’s Entrance into the World Evelina to the Reverend Mr. Villars
Credits
Index
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