Hudibras

Hudibras
Author: Samuel Butler
Publisher:
Total Pages: 298
Release: 1885
Genre:
ISBN:

HUDIBRAS.

HUDIBRAS.
Author: Samuel Butler
Publisher:
Total Pages: 274
Release: 1710
Genre:
ISBN:

The Gate of Angels

The Gate of Angels
Author: Penelope Fitzgerald
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Total Pages: 180
Release: 1998
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780395848388

In 1912, rational Fred Fairly, one of Cambridge's best and brightest, crashes his bike and wakes up in bed with a stranger--fellow casualty Daisy Saunders, a charming, pretty, working-class nurse. So begins a series of complications--not only of the heart but also of the head--as Fred and Daisy take up each other's education and turn each other's philosophies upside-down.

Prose Observations

Prose Observations
Author: Samuel Butler
Publisher: Oxford : Clarendon Press
Total Pages: 504
Release: 1979-02-28
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN:

A scholarly edition of Samuel Butler: Prose Observations by Helen Darbishire. The edition presents an authoritative text, together with an introduction, commentary notes, and scholarly apparatus.

The Brink of All We Hate

The Brink of All We Hate
Author: Felicity A. Nussbaum
Publisher: University Press of Kentucky
Total Pages: 201
Release: 2014-07-15
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0813164079

"Is it not monstrous, that our Seducers should be our Accusers? Will they not employ Fraud, nay often Force to gain us? What various Arts, what Stratagems, what Wiles will they use for our Destruction? But that once accomplished, every opprobrious Term with which our Language so plentifully abounds, shall be bestowed on us, even by the very Villains who have wronged us"—Laetitia Pilkington, Memoirs (1748). In her scandalous Memoirs, Laetitia Pilkington spoke out against the English satires of the Restoration and eighteenth century, which employed "every opprobrious term" to chastise women. In The Brink of All We Hate, Felicity Nussbaum documents and groups those opprobrious terms in order to identify the conventions of the satires, to demonstrate how those conventions create a myth, to provide critical readings of poetic texts in the antifeminist tradition, and to draw some conclusions about the basic nature of satire. Nussbaum finds that the English tradition of antifeminist satire draws on a background that includes Hesiod, Horace, Ovid, and Juvenal, as well as the more modern French tradition of La Bruyere and Boileau and the late seventeenth-century English pamphlets by Gould, Fige, and Ames. The tradition was employed by the major figures of the golden age of satire—Samuel Butler, Dryden, Swift, Addison, and Pope. Examining the elements of the tradition of antifeminist satire and exploring its uses, from the most routine to the most artful, by the various poets, Nussbaum reveals a clearer context in which many poems of the Restoration and eighteenth century will be read anew.