The New Oxford Book of Eighteenth Century VerseRoger H. Lonsdale, Roger Lonsdale Oxford University Press, 1984 - 870 Seiten Anthologies of eighteenth-century verse have tended to confirm traditional notions of the period as one of untroubled elegance, urbanity, and decorum. Offering over 550 poems and extracts by more than 250 poets, The New Oxford Book of Eighteenth-Century Verse presents a truer picture of this age as a much less stable and decorous time. This extraordinarily comprehensive volume includes not only a generous selection of verse by such renowned poets as Swift, Pope, Johnson, Gray, Smart, Goldsmith, Cowper, Blake, and Burns, but also a large number of poems by lesser-known and previously ignored poets. Intermixing the familiar styles and preoccupations of "polite" taste with much less familiar verse from all social levels, it reveals the willingness of the century's poets to respond graphically, humorously, or unconventionally to all aspects of rural and urban life. Topics range from golf and hypnotism to amorous adventure and marital discord, from growing sensitivity to natural beauty to fear of the effects of the Industrial Revolution, and from the anguish of poverty and unemployment to animated political exchanges in the wake of the French Revolution. Taken together, these poems reveal that both unpredictability and familiarity played as significant a role as Augustan reason played in the world of eighteenth-century poetry. The anthology also includes a helpful introduction, notes, and a glossary. |
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... leave her . Would I were free from this restraint , Or else had hopes to win her ; Would she could make of me a saint , Or I of her a sinner . ( 1704 ) 22 Doris DORIS , a nymph of riper age , Has every grace and art A wise observer to ...
... leave her . Would I were free from this restraint , Or else had hopes to win her ; Would she could make of me a saint , Or I of her a sinner . ( 1704 ) 22 Doris DORIS , a nymph of riper age , Has every grace and art A wise observer to ...
Seite 336
... Leave , ah leave me not alone , Still support and comfort me . All my trust on thee is stayed , All my help from thee I bring ; Cover my defenceless head With the shadow of thy wing . Wilt thou not regard my call ? Wilt thou not accept ...
... Leave , ah leave me not alone , Still support and comfort me . All my trust on thee is stayed , All my help from thee I bring ; Cover my defenceless head With the shadow of thy wing . Wilt thou not regard my call ? Wilt thou not accept ...
Seite 542
... leave , Sermons and flimsy hymns to weave ; Barbers unreaped will leave the chin , To trim and shave the man within ; The waterman forgets his wherry , And opens a celestial ferry ; The brewer , bit by frenzy's grub , The mashing for ...
... leave , Sermons and flimsy hymns to weave ; Barbers unreaped will leave the chin , To trim and shave the man within ; The waterman forgets his wherry , And opens a celestial ferry ; The brewer , bit by frenzy's grub , The mashing for ...
Inhalt
JOHN POMFRET 16671702 | 1 |
THOMAS DURFEY 16531723 | 5 |
JOHN PHILIPS 16761709 | 6 |
Urheberrecht | |
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The New Oxford Book of Eighteenth-Century Verse: Reissue Roger Lonsdale Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2009 |
The New Oxford Book of Eighteenth-Century Verse: Reissue Roger Lonsdale Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2009 |
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