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*** 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 Table of Contents
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