Eighteenth-Century Poetry: An Annotated Anthology

دانلود کتاب Eighteenth-Century Poetry: An Annotated Anthology

33000 تومان موجود

کتاب شعر قرن هجدهم: گلچین مشروح نسخه زبان اصلی

دانلود کتاب شعر قرن هجدهم: گلچین مشروح بعد از پرداخت مقدور خواهد بود
توضیحات کتاب در بخش جزئیات آمده است و می توانید موارد را مشاهده فرمایید


این کتاب نسخه اصلی می باشد و به زبان فارسی نیست.


امتیاز شما به این کتاب (حداقل 1 و حداکثر 5):

امتیاز کاربران به این کتاب:        تعداد رای دهنده ها: 9


توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Eighteenth-Century Poetry: An Annotated Anthology

نام کتاب : Eighteenth-Century Poetry: An Annotated Anthology
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : شعر قرن هجدهم: گلچین مشروح
سری :
نویسندگان : ,
ناشر : Wiley-Blackwell
سال نشر : 2014
تعداد صفحات : 688
ISBN (شابک) : 9781118824757 , 111882475X
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 5 مگابایت



بعد از تکمیل فرایند پرداخت لینک دانلود کتاب ارائه خواهد شد. درصورت ثبت نام و ورود به حساب کاربری خود قادر خواهید بود لیست کتاب های خریداری شده را مشاهده فرمایید.


فهرست مطالب :


Cover\nBlackwell Annotated Anthologies\nTitle page\nCopyright page\nContents\nSelected Contents by Theme\nAlphabetical List of Authors\nChronology of Events and Poetic Landmarks\nIntroduction\nPreface to Third Edition\nPreface to Second Edition\nEditorial Procedures\nThe Text\nAcknowledgements\nJohn Pomfret (1667–1702)\n The Choice\nJohn Philips (1676–1709)\n The Splendid Shilling\nSarah Fyge Egerton (1670–1723)\n The Liberty\n On my leaving London, June the 29\n To One who said I must not Love\n The Emulation\nIsaac Watts (1674–1748)\n The Adventurous Muse\nAmbrose Philips (1674–1749)\n A Winter-Piece\nAnne Finch (1661–1720)\n The Spleen\n Upon the Hurricane\n A Nocturnal Rêverie\n The Tree\n To the Nightingale\n A Sigh\n To a Friend, in Praise of the Invention of Writing Letters\n Glass\n The Agreeable\n To Mr Pope, in answer to a Copy of Verses\nJohn Gay (1685–1732)\n The Shepherd’s Week\n Friday; or, The Dirge\n Bumkinet. Grubbinol.\n Trivia: Or, the Art of Walking the Streets of London\n Book II\n The Man and the Flea\nThomas Parnell (1679–1718)\n An Elegy, To an Old Beauty\n A Night-Piece on Death\n Oft have I read\nMatthew Prior (1664–1721)\n For His own Epitaph\n An Epitaph\n The Lady’s Looking-Glass\n Non Pareil\n On a Pretty Madwoman\n True Statesmen\nJonathan Swift (1667–1745)\n A Description of the Morning\n A Description of a City Shower\n Stella’s Birthday, 1719\n Stella’s Birthday, 1721\n Stella’s Birthday, 1727\n A Satirical Elegy On the Death of a late Famous General\n The Lady’s Dressing Room\n A Beautiful Young Nymph Going to Bed\n Strephon and Chloe\n Verses on the Death of Dr Swift, D.S.P.D.\n Occasioned by Reading a Maxim in Rochefoucault\nAlexander Pope (1688–1744)\n Windsor-Forest\n The Rape of the Lock\n Canto I\n Canto II\n Canto III\n Canto IV\n Canto V\n Eloisa to Abelard\n To Richard Boyle, Earl of Burlington. Of the Use of Riches\n An Epistle to a Lady Of the Characters of Women\n The First Satire of the Second Book of Horace Imitated\n An Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot\n An Essay on Man\n Epistle I\n The Dunciad, 1743\n Book I\nLady Mary Wortley Montagu (1689–1762)\n Saturday. The Small-Pox. Flavia.\n Epistle from Arthur Gray the Footman, after his Condemnation for attempting a Rape\n Epistle from Mrs Y[onge] to her Husband\n The Lover: A Ballad\n An Epistle to Lord Bathurst\n Verses Address’d to the Imitator of Horace\n The Dean’s Provocation for Writing the Lady’s Dressing-Room\n Verses on Self-Murder, address’d to —\n A Hymn to the Moon\nAaron Hill (1685–1750)\n Bellaria, at her spinnet\n Whitehall Stairs\n The Singing-Bird\n Alone, in an Inn, at Southampton. April the 25th, 1737\nRichard Savage (c.1697–1743)\n The Bastard\n Unconstant\nMartha Fowke (1689–1736)\n The Innocent Inconstant\n The Invitation from a Country Cottage\n On Lady Chudleigh\n Clio’s Picture\n On being charged with Writing incorrectly\n A Letter to my Love.—All alone, past 12, in the Dumps\nJames Thomson (1700–1748)\n The Seasons\n Winter. A Poem (1726)\n Spring\nJohn Dyer (1699–1757)\n Grongar Hill\n The Fleece\n Book III\nStephen Duck (1705?–1756)\n The Thresher’s Labour\nMary Collier (1688?–1762)\n The Woman’s Labour\nSarah Dixon (1671–1765)\n Strephon to the River\n The Return’d Heart\n To the Muse\n From a Sheet of Gilt Paper. To Cloe\n Lines Occasion’d by the Burning of some Letters\nMary Barber (c.1685–1755)\n To a Lady, who commanded me to send her an Account in Verse, how I succeeded in my Subscription\n Written for my Son, and Spoken by him at his first putting on Breeches\n The Conclusion of a Letter to the Rev. Mr C–\nMehetabel Wright (1697–1750)\n To an Infant Expiring the Second Day of its Birth\n Wedlock: A Satire\n Address to Her Husband\nAnne Ingram (c.1696–1764)\n An Epistle to Mr Pope. By a Lady. Occasioned by his Characters of Women\nSamuel Johnson (1709–1784)\n London\n The Vanity of Human Wishes\n On the Death of Dr Robert Levet\nMary Jones (1707–1778)\n An Epistle to Lady Bowyer\n Of Desire. An Epistle to the Hon. Miss Lovelace\n Elegy, On a favourite Dog, suppos’d to be poison’d\n After the Small Pox\nMary Leapor (1722–1746)\n Dorinda at Her Glass\n An Epistle to a Lady\n The Enquiry\n Man the Monarch\n An Epistle to Artemisia. On Fame\n Upon her Play being returned to her, stained with Claret\n Crumble-Hall\n Mira’s Picture\n Soto. A Character\nMark Akenside (1721–1770)\n The Pleasures of Imagination\n Book One\nThomas Gray (1716–1771)\n Ode on the Spring\n Sonnet on the Death of Richard West\n Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College\n Ode on the Death of a Favourite Cat, Drowned in a Tub of Gold Fishes\n Elegy Written in a Country Church Yard\n The Progress of Poesy. A Pindaric Ode\n The Bard. A Pindaric Ode\nWilliam Collins (1721–1759)\n A Song from Shakespeare’s Cymbeline\n Ode on the Poetical Character\n Ode to Fear\n Ode to Evening\n Ode to Liberty\n The Passions. An Ode for Music\n Ode on the Death of Mr Thomson\nJoseph Warton (1722–1800)\n The Enthusiast: Or The Lover of Nature\n Ode to Evening\n The Dying Indian\nThomas Warton (1728–1790)\n The Pleasures of Melancholy\n Ode written at Vale-Royal Abbey in Cheshire\n Sonnet: To the River Lodon\n Prologue on the Old Winchester Playhouse, over the butcher’s shambles\n Verses on Sir Joshua Reynolds’s Painted Window at New-College Oxford\nRobert Lloyd (1733–1764)\n The Cit’s Country Box\n Shakespeare: An Epistle to Mr Garrick\nCharles Churchill (1731–1764)\n Night. An Epistle to Robert Lloyd\nChristopher Smart (1722–1771)\n ‘My Cat Jeoffry’\n A Song to David\n On a Bed of Guernsey Lilies\nJames Macpherson (1736–1796)\n Fragment 7\n Fragment 8\nThomas Chatterton (1752–1770)\n Mynstrelles Songe\n ‘Stay, curyous traveller’\n An Excelente Balade of Charitie: As wroten bie the gode Prieste Thomas Rowley, 1464\nOliver Goldsmith (1730?–1774)\n The Deserted Village\nGeorge Crabbe (1754–1832)\n The Village\n Book I\nAnn Yearsley (1753–1806)\n To Stella; on a Visit to Mrs Montagu\n On Mrs Montagu\n Clifton Hill\n To Indifference\n To Mr * * * *, an Unlettered Poet, on Genius Unimproved\nRobert Burns (1759–1796)\n The Rigs o’ Barley\n To a Mouse\n To a Louse\n Holy Willie’s Prayer\n Tam o’ Shanter. A Tale\n A Man’s a Man for a’ That\nAnna Seward (1742–1809)\n Sonnet. To Honora Sneyd\n Sonnet. To the Poppy\n Colebrooke Dale\nAnna Laetitia Barbauld (1743–1825)\n Corsica\n The Mouse’s Petition\n A Summer Evening’s Meditation\n To Mr Barbauld\n The Rights of Woman\n To a little invisible Being who is expected soon to become visible\n Washing-Day\n To Mr Coleridge\nWilliam Cowper (1731–1800)\n ‘Hatred and Vengeance’\n The Poplar-Field\n Epitaph on a Hare\n The Task\n Book I: The Sofa\n The Negro’s Complaint\n Yardley Oak\n On the Ice-islands seen floating in the Germanic Ocean\n The Cast-away\nMary Robinson (1758–1800)\n London’s Summer Morning\n The Poet’s Garret\n The Birth-day\nBibliography\nIndex of Titles and First Lines\nEULA




پست ها تصادفی