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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were the vagrants, naturally; the labourers; the co agers; and the common soldiers and seamen. Between them these categories account for some 2,800,000 people, as against the residue of 2,700,000 augmenting the national income.
were the vagrants, naturally; the labourers; the co agers; and the common soldiers and seamen. Between them these categories account for some 2,800,000 people, as against the residue of 2,700,000 augmenting the national income.
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But if there was a threat to the natural hegemony of land from this quarter, there were few others to the dominance of the great territorial magnates. It was in truth a good moment to enter the purple. Pope's friends Granville and ...
But if there was a threat to the natural hegemony of land from this quarter, there were few others to the dominance of the great territorial magnates. It was in truth a good moment to enter the purple. Pope's friends Granville and ...
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... the natural disasters of agrarian life or to undertake improvements that would otherwise have been beyond their means, and how the widespread use of stricter marriage se lements gave greater protection to estates from generation to ...
... the natural disasters of agrarian life or to undertake improvements that would otherwise have been beyond their means, and how the widespread use of stricter marriage se lements gave greater protection to estates from generation to ...
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It was an era in the natural sciences when men thought it as important to regularize what was known as to make fresh discoveries. Moreover, the hugely admired Newton seemed to prove, in cosmology and in optics, that nature itself ...
It was an era in the natural sciences when men thought it as important to regularize what was known as to make fresh discoveries. Moreover, the hugely admired Newton seemed to prove, in cosmology and in optics, that nature itself ...
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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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