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دانلود کتاب British Satire, 1785-1840, 5-Volume Set

دانلود کتاب طنز بریتانیایی، 1785-1840، مجموعه 5 جلدی

British Satire, 1785-1840, 5-Volume Set

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British Satire, 1785-1840, 5-Volume Set

ویرایش:  
نویسندگان:   
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ISBN (شابک) : 9781851967292, 9780429348143 
ناشر: Routledge 
سال نشر: 2022 
تعداد صفحات: 2177 
زبان: English 
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) 
حجم فایل: 58 مگابایت 

قیمت کتاب (تومان) : 40,000



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توجه داشته باشید کتاب طنز بریتانیایی، 1785-1840، مجموعه 5 جلدی نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.


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Main Cover
Volume 1
	Cover
	Half Title
	Title
	Copyright
	Contents
	List of illustrations
	Acknowledgements
	General Introduction
	Editorial Principles
	Introduction
	‘The Holy Fair’ (1786)
	‘A Specimen of Modern Female Education’ (1788)
	‘The Lady and the Doctor; An Anecdote’ (1788)
	‘Sweet Meat Has Sour Sauce’ (1788)
	‘Pity for the Poor Africans’ (1788)
	‘A Poem, On the Supposition of an Advertisement Appearing in a Morning Paper, of the Publication of a Volume of Poems, by a Servant Maid’ (1789)
	‘A Poem, On the Supposition of the Book Having Been Published and Read’ (1789)
	‘Song, by Mr. Paine’ (1791)
	‘Ode to Burke’ (1792)
	‘Burke’s Address to the “Swinish Multitude”’ (1793)
	‘King Chaunticlere; or, The Fate of Tyranny’ (1793)
	The Pernicious Effects of the Art of Printing Upon Society, Exposed (c. 1793–94)
	‘Wonderful Exhibition. Signor Gulielmo Pittachio’ (1794)
	‘No. II. More Wonderful Wonders!!!’ (1794)
	‘Wonderful Exhibition!!! Positively the Last Season of His Performing’ (1795)
	‘Fire, Famine, and Slaughter: A War Eclogue’ (1798)
	‘The Laird o’ Cockpen’ (c. 1798)
	‘When Klopstock England Defied’ (c. 1797–1800)
	‘The Mistletoe, A Christmas Tale’ (1799)
	‘The Confessor, A Sanctified Tale’ (1800)
	‘A Poet’s Epitaph’ (1800)
	‘To Matthew Dodsworth, Esq. On a Noble Captain’s Declaring that his Finger was Broken by a Gate’ (1802)
	‘Badinage. On Recovering from a Bad Fit of Sickness at Bath’ (1802)
	‘Ambubaiarum Collegia, Pharmocopolæ’ (1803)
	‘A Farce in One Act, Called THE INVASION OF ENGLAND’ (1804)
	‘An Ensorian Essay on Something, Meaning Any Thing, and Proving Nothing’ (1812)
	Eighteen Hundred and Eleven, A Poem (1812)
	‘The Triumph of the Whale’ (1812)
	‘Recreation’ (1816)
	‘Nebuchadnezzar’s Dream’ (1817)
	‘To Belinda’ (1818)
	‘Rights of Women. Answer to Florio’ (1818)
	‘An Ode to the Ladies on their Alledged Rights’ (1818)
	‘A Scene from the New Tragi-Comedy entitled the “Undebauched Royalists”, or, The Reformers Routed’ (1819)
	‘The Peterloo Man’ (1819)
	‘Sonnet: England in 1819’ (1819)
	‘A New National Anthem’ (1819)
	‘Non Mi Ricordo!’ (1820)
	‘The Irish Avatar’ (1821)
	‘The Magic Lay of the One-Horse Chay’ (1824)
	‘Specimens of a Patent Pocket Dictionary’ (1824–25)
	‘Ode to Mr. Graham, The Aeronaut’ (1825)
	‘An Address to the Very Reverend John Ireland, D.D. Charles Fynes Clinton, LL.D. Thomas Causton, D.D. Howel Holland Edwards, M.A. The Bishop of Exeter. Wm. H. Edward Bentinck, M.A. James Webber, B.D. William Short, D.D. James Tournay, D.D. Andrew Bell, D.D. George Holcombe, D.D The Dean and Chapter of Westminster’ (1825
	‘Discovery of Another Poet’ (1825)
	‘The March of Intellect: A New Song (1825)
	From The March of Intellect: Fashionable, Mechanical, Philosophical, Philanthropical, Professional, Political (1829)
	‘Song: Child, is thy father dead?’
	‘Burns, from the Dead’
	‘The Jacobin’s Prayer’ (1830)
	The March of Intellect, A Comic Poem (1830)
	‘A Notabil Ballad of ye Downefall of Kynges’ (1831)
	‘A New Song, to be Sung by All Loyal and True Subjects’ (1832)
	‘My Very Particular Friend’ (1834)
	‘A Governess Wanted’ (1838)
	‘The Wonderful Pill’ (1837)
	‘The Fine Old English Gentleman. New Version. To be Said or Sung at All Conservative Dinners’ (1841)
	Explanatory Notes
Volume 2
	Cover
	Half Title
	Title
	Copyright
	Contents
	List of Short Titles
	Acknowledgements
	Introduction
	From Criticisms on the Rolliad (1784–85)
	From The Pursuits of Literature (1794–97; 1798)
	The Unsex’d Females (1798)
	From All the Talents; A Satirical Poem (1807)
	From The Epics of the Ton (1807)
	From The Simpliciad (1808)
	From English Bards and Scotch Reviewers (1809)
	From The Modern Dunciad, A Satire (1814)
	From Sir Proteus: A Satirical Ballad (1814)
	From Christabess (1816)
	From Oedipus Tyrannus, or, Swellfoot the Tyrant (1820)
	From Peter Bell the Third (1819)
	From Letters to Julia, in Rhyme (1820; 1822)
	From The Cap and Bells, or The Jealousies (1819)
	From Don Juan (1819–24)
	From Khouli Khan (1820)
	The Vision of Judgment (1821)
	From The Tour of Doctor Syntax in Search of a Wife (1821)
	From The Mohawks: A Satirical Poem with Notes (1822)
	From The Age Reviewed (1827)
	Explanatory Notes
Volume 3
	Cover
	Half Title
	Title
	Copyright
	Contents
	List of short titles
	Acknowledgements
	Introduction
	‘The Lousiad, an Heroi-Comic Poem’ (1794–96)
	‘Epistles from Bath; or Q.’s Letters to His Yorkshire Relations’ (1817)
	‘The Queen’s Matrimonial Ladder, A National Toy, with Fourteen Step Scenes; and Illustrations in Verse, with Eighteen Other Cuts’ (1820)
	‘The Press, or Literary Chit-Chat. A Satire’ (1822)
	‘The Illiberal! Verse and Prose from the North!!’ (1822)
	Explanatory Notes
Volume 4
	Cover
	Half Title
	Title
	Copyright
	Original Title
	Contents
	Dedication
	List of Short Titles
	Acknowledgements
	Introduction
	A Note on the Text
	Biographical Directory
	The Satires of William Gifford
		The Baviad; A Paraphrastic Imitation of the First Satire of Persius (1791)
		The Mæviad (1795)
		‘Imitation. Dactylics. Quintessence of all the Dactylics that ever were, or ever will be written’ (1797)
		‘Imitation of Bion. Written at St. Ann’s Hill’ (1798)
		‘Epistle to Peter Pindar’ (1800)
	Satires on William Gifford
		Modern Manners: A Poem. In Two Cantos (1793)
		Out at Last (1801)
		‘Lines on “The Baviad” and “The Pursuits of Literature”’ (1797; 1806)
		Ultra-Crepidarius: A Satire on William Gifford (1823)
	‘The Heroes  and Heroines of the Baviad’: An Anthology of Della Cruscan Verse
		‘Dedication’ and ‘Preface’ to The Florence Miscellany (1785)
		‘Madness’ (1785)
		‘To Wm. Parsons Esq.’ (1785)
		‘To Mrs Piozzi, in Reply, Written on the Anniversary of her Wedding 25 July 1785’ (1785)
		‘To May’ (1787)
		‘To Melissa’s Lips’ (1787)
		‘Address to Benedict’ (1787)
		‘The Adieu and Recall to Love’ (1787)
		‘To Della Crusca: The Pen’ (1787)
		‘To Anna Matilda’ (1787)
		‘To Della Crusca’ (1787)
		‘To Anna Matilda’ (1787)
		‘Elegy, Written on the Plain of Fontenoy’ (1787)
		‘Stanzas to Della Crusca’ (1787)
		‘To Anna Matilda’ (1787)
		‘To Della Crusca’ (1787)
		‘To Anna Matilda’ (1788)
		‘Sonnet. On an Air Balloon’ (1788)
		‘The Slaves. An Elegy’ (1788)
		‘The African Boy’ (1788)
		‘The Interview’ (1789)
		‘To Leonardo’ (1789)
		‘To Her Whom I Saw Weep’ (1789)
		‘To the Nightingale’ (1789)
		The Laurel of Liberty: A Poem (1790)
		Ainsi va le Monde (1790)
		‘To Laura’ (1790)
		‘The Voice we Love’ (1790)
		‘The Invitation. To Delia’ (1790)
		‘Henry Deceived’ (1790)
		‘To Emma’ (1790)
		from The New Cosmetic, or the Triumph of Beauty, A Comedy (1791)
		‘Epilogue, Written by Miles Peter Andrews, Esq. and spoken by Mrs Mattocks’ (1791)
		Ode for the fourteenth of July, 1791, the day consecrated to freedom: being the anniversary of the revolution in France (1791)
		‘Ode To Della Crusca’ (1791)
		‘Rinaldo to Laura Maria’ (1791)
		‘To the Muse of Poetry’ (1791)
		‘Echo to Him Who Complains’ (1791)
		‘Epilogue’ to The Rage (1795)
		‘Epilogue’ (1797)
	Appendices
		1. ‘Proceedings of the Trial of Robert Faulder, Bookseller, (one of FORTY against whom Actions were brought for selling the Baviad), for publishing a Libel on John Williams, alias Anthony Pasquin, Esq.’ (1800)
		2. A Letter to William Gifford, Esq. From William Hazlitt, Esq. (1819)
	Explanatory Notes
Volume 5
	Cover
	Half Title
	Title
	Copyright
	Contents
	List of Short Titles
	Acknowledgements
	A Note on the Text
	Introduction
	From Epistles, Odes, and Other Poems (1806)
		‘Epistle VI. To the Lord Viscount Forbes’
		‘Epistle VII. To Thomas Hume, Esq. MD’
	Corruption and Intolerance: Two Poems. With Notes, Addressed to an Englishman by an Irishman (1808)
	The Sceptic: A Philosophical Satire. By the Author of Corruption and Intolerance (1809)
	From The Examiner (1812)
		‘Letter from ——— to ———’ [‘Parody of a Celebrated Letter’]
	From The Morning Chronicle (1812)
		‘Anacreontic: To a Plumasier’
		‘Extracts from the Diary of a Fashionable Politician’
		‘The Insurrection of the Papers. A Dream’
		‘The Sale of the Tools’
	Intercepted Letters; or, The Twopenny Post-Bag. To which are added, Trifles Reprinted. By Thomas Brown, the Younger (1813)
	From The Morning Chronicle (1813)
		‘LAW on our side’
		‘Reinforcements for Lord Wellington’
	From The Morning Chronicle (1814)
		‘The Two Veterans’
	From The Morning Chronicle (1815)
		‘Epistle from Tom Crib to Big Ben’
	From The Morning Chronicle (1816)
		‘Fum and Hum, the two Birds of Royalty’
	The Fudge Family in Paris. Edited by Thomas Brown, the Younger (1818)
	From The Journal of Thomas Moore (1983)
		‘Beware, ye bards of each degree’ (1818)
	Tom Crib’s Memorial to Congress. With a Preface, Notes, and Appendix. By One of the Fancy (1819)
	Fables for the Holy Alliance (1823)
	From The Times (1826)
		‘An Amatory Colloquy Between Bank and Government’
		‘The Sinking Fund Cried’
		‘All in the Family Way. A New Pastoral Ballad’
		‘Ode to Sir T——s L—thb——ge’
		‘The Millenium’
		‘The Three Doctors’
		‘A Vision. By the Author of Christabel’
		‘A Dream of Turtle. By Sir W. Curtis’
		‘Corn and Catholics’
		‘Literary Advertisement’
	From The Times (1827)
		‘The Slave’
		‘A Pastoral Ballad’
		‘Wo! Wo!’
	From The Times (1828)
		‘The “Living Dog” and the “Dead Lion”’
		‘Dante Redividus’
		‘The Brunswick Club’
	From The Times (1830)
		‘Alarming Intelligence—Revolution in the Dictionary—One Galt at the head of it’
		‘Advertisement’
	From Memoirs, Journal, and Correspondence of Thomas Moore (1835–56) ‘Thoughts on Editors’ (1831)
	From The Times (1832)
		‘Tory Pledges’
		‘Song of the Departing Spirit of the Tithe’
	From The Times (1833)
		‘Paddy’s Metamorphosis’
		‘Love Song’
	From The Irish Melodies, No. 10 (1834)
		‘The Dream of Those Days’
	The Fudges in England: being a sequel to the ‘Fudge Family in Paris’ . By Thomas Brown, the Younger, Author of the Twopenny Post-Bag’, etc., etc. (1835)
	From The Morning Chronicle (1836)
		‘The Boy Statesman. By a Tory’
		‘Anticipated Meeting of the British Association in the Year 2836’
	From The Monthly Chronicle (1838)
		‘Announcement of a new grand Acceleration Company for the promotion of the Speed of Literature’
	From The Morning Chronicle (1838)
		‘Grand Dinner of Type & Co.’
		‘Some Account of a New Genus of Church-man, called the Phill-Pot’
		‘Songs of the Church. No. I. “Leave Us Alone”’
		‘Songs of the Chuch. No. II’
	From Bentley’s Miscellany (1839)
		‘Thoughts on Patrons, Puffs, and Other Matters’
	From The Morning Chronicle (1839)
		‘New Hospital for Sick Literati’
	From The Morning Chronicle (1840)
		‘An Episcopal Address on Socialism’
		‘Latest Accounts from Olympus’
	Explanatory Notes
	Index




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