The Augustan VisionFirst published in 1974, The Augustan Vision looks at the entire spectacle of Augustan Society in an attempt to see English culture as a whole and thus gain greater insight into this critical period in English Literature. Later parts of the book explore poetry, drama, and aesthetics; that distinctive expression of the age, satire, where abuse is made into art, and the moral essay; and finally, the emerging novel, the crucial new form of this period. This is a must read for students and researchers of English literature. |
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... dying from the head downwards, with his very tide-page most perishable of all. In point of fact I think more highly of the work than does Mr Gross - if one substitutes the idea of fête champêtre for picnic, the mission does not look ...
... dying from the head downwards, with his very tide-page most perishable of all. In point of fact I think more highly of the work than does Mr Gross - if one substitutes the idea of fête champêtre for picnic, the mission does not look ...
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e emphasis lies instead on the interaction at a specific moment in English history of various entities: social facts and imaginative fictions, private men and public causes, temporal powers ...
e emphasis lies instead on the interaction at a specific moment in English history of various entities: social facts and imaginative fictions, private men and public causes, temporal powers ...
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... present at a riot and shout encouragement was a capital felony. In point of fact the full rigour of the law was not always exercised; between 1688 and 1718 only about half the capital convictions obtained were followed by execution.
... present at a riot and shout encouragement was a capital felony. In point of fact the full rigour of the law was not always exercised; between 1688 and 1718 only about half the capital convictions obtained were followed by execution.
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unreformed House had room for a constituency like Dunwi , represented by fairly distinguished men like the author Soame Jenyns, despite the fact that it had long been sliding into the sea. When Defoe came to the town in his Tour (1724) ...
unreformed House had room for a constituency like Dunwi , represented by fairly distinguished men like the author Soame Jenyns, despite the fact that it had long been sliding into the sea. When Defoe came to the town in his Tour (1724) ...
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base year 1688 - a dangerously tidy fact for our purposes.3 His estimates were founded on the hearth-tax returns, and so they work from what we might call today the head of the household.
base year 1688 - a dangerously tidy fact for our purposes.3 His estimates were founded on the hearth-tax returns, and so they work from what we might call today the head of the household.
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Pleasures of the Imagination | |
e Dress of ought | |
Communications | |
Drama | |
Satire and the Moral Essay | |
e Satiric Inheritance | |
Swi | |
Pope | |
Gay and Scriblerian Comedy | |
Dr Johnson | |
The Novel 21 Origins of an Art Form | |
Roles and Identities | |
Books and Readers | |
Men Women and | |
Undercurrents | |
Poetry Drama Letters 11 Turn of the Century | |
e Widening Vista | |
Sensibility | |
e LeerWriters | |
Defoe | |
Riardson | |
Fielding | |
Sterne and Smolle | |
Notes and References | |
Reading List | |
Index | |
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