書誌事項

The Victorian era

general editors, Joseph Black ... [et al.]

(The Broadview anthology of British literature / general editors, Joseph Black ... [et al.], v. 5)

Broadview Press, c2012

2nd ed

  • : pbk

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注記

Includes indexes

内容説明・目次

内容説明

In all six of its volumes The Broadview Anthology of British Literature presents British literature in a truly distinctive light. Fully grounded in sound literary and historical scholarship, the anthology takes a fresh approach to many canonical authors, and includes a wide selection of work by lesser-known writers. The anthology also provides wide-ranging coverage of the worldwide connections of British literature, and it pays attention throughout to issues of race, gender, class, and sexual orientation. It includes comprehensive introductions to each period, providing in each case an overview of the historical and cultural as well as the literary background. It features accessible and engaging headnotes for all authors, extensive explanatory annotations, and an unparalleled number of illustrations and contextual materials. Innovative, authoritative and comprehensive, The Broadview Anthology of British Literature has established itself as a leader in the field. The full anthology comprises six bound volumes, together with an extensive website component; the latter has been edited, annotated, and designed according to the same high standards as the bound book component of the anthology, and is accessible by using the passcode obtained with the purchase of one or more of the bound volumes. For the second edition of this volume a number of changes have been made. Elizabeth Gaskell's "Our Society at Cranford" has been added, as has Anthony Trollope's "A Turkish Bath." Charles Dickens is now represented with a number of short selections. The selection of poems by D.G. Rossetti has been expanded considerably (the entire 1870 House of Life sequence is included), as has that by Michael Field. A selection of poems by two key figures who also appear in the anthology's twentieth century volume (Thomas Hardy and W.B. Yeats) is also now included. Several of the Contexts sections in the volume have been expanded-notably "The Place of Women in Society," which now includes material concerning the Contagious Diseases Acts) and "Britain, Empire, and a Wider World," which now includes a section on the Great Exhibition of 1851. The volume will also include additional visual material-including four more pages of full color illustrations. Inevitably, some selections have been dropped from the bound book; these will all remain available, however, on the anthology's website component. The most significant change in that direction is Dickens's A Christmas Carol. As well as remaining available on the website, that work-like Hard Times, Great Expectations, and approximately 100 other titles from the Victorian period, is available as a stand-alone volume in the Broadview Editions series, and may be added (at little or no additional cost to the student) in a shrink-wrapped combination package.

目次

  • Preface Acknowledgments THE VICTORIAN ERA INTRODUCTION TO THE VICTORIAN ERA A Growing Power Grinding Mills, Grinding Poverty Corn Laws, Potato Famine "The Two Nations" The Politics of Gender Empire Faith and Doubt Victorian Domesticity Cultural Trends Technology Cultural Identities Realism The Victorian Novel Poetry Drama Prose Non-Fiction and Print Culture The English Language in the Victorian Era HISTORY OF THE LANGUAGE AND PRINT CULTURE THOMAS CARLYLE from Sartor Resartus from Book 1 (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Chapter 11: Prospective from Book 2 Chapter 6: Sorrows of Teufelsdroeckh Chapter 7: The Everlasting No (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Chapter 8: Centre of Indifference (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from Book 3 Chapter 8: Natural Supernaturalism from The French Revolution (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Volume 1, Book 6, Chapter 6: The Fourth Estate Volume 2, Book 3, Chapter 7: Death of Mirabella Volume 3, Book 4, Chapter 7: Marie-Antoinette Volume 3, Book 7, Chapter 8: Finis from Past and Present from Book 1 Chapter 1: Midas Chapter 6: Hero-Worship from Book 3 Chapter 1: Phenomena Chapter 2: Gospel of Mammonism Chapter 11: Labour Chapter 13: Democracy from Book 4 Chapter 4: Captains of Industry THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY from The History of England from Chapter 3: State of England in 1685 from Milton (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) CONTEXTS: WORK AND POVERTY Anonymous, "The Steam Loom Weaver" from Elizabeth Bentley, Testimony before the 1832 Committee on the Labour of Children in Factories from Andrew Ure, The Philosophy of Manufactures from William Dodd, A Narrative of the Experience and Sufferings of William Dodd, a Factory Cripple, Written by Himself from Joseph Adshead, Distress in Manchester, Chapter 3: Narratives of Suffering Thomas Hood, "Song of the Shirt" from Friedrich Engels, The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844, Chapter 3: The Great Towns from Reverend Sidney Godolphin Osborne, Letters of S.G.O. from Elizabeth Gaskell, Mary Barton, Chapter 6 from Charles Dickens, Hard Times, Chapter 5: The Key-Note from Henry Morley, "Ground in the Mill," Household Words No. 213 [22 April 1854] from Henry Mayhew, London Labour and the London Poor, "Boy Crossing-Sweepers and Tumblers" HARRIET MARTINEAU (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from Cousin Marshall from Prison Discipline from Society in America from How to Observe Manners and Morals from Retrospect of Western Travel from Household Education from Autobiography JOHN HENRY CARDINAL NEWMAN (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from The Idea of a University SUSANNA MOODIE (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from Roughing It in the Bush Introduction Chapter 15: The Wilderness, and our Indian Friends from Chapter 22: The Fire IN CONTEXT: Sample of Susanna Moodie's 1839 Correspondence A "Crossed" Letter from Life in the Clearings versus the Bush Chapter 1: Belleville Chapter 7: Camp Meetings Chapter 8: Wearing Mourning for the Dead MARY SEACOLE (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands Chapter 1: My Birth and Parentage Chapter 8: I Long to Join the British Army Before Sebastopol Chapter 9: Voyage to Constantinople from Chapter 13: My Work in the Crimea JOHN STUART MILL What is Poetry? from The Subjection of Women Chapter 1 from On Liberty (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from Chapter 2: Of the Liberty of Thought and Discussion Chapter 3: Of Individuality, as One of the Elements of Well-Being CONTEXTS: THE PLACE OF WOMEN IN SOCIETY from Sarah Stickney Ellis, The Daughters of England: Their Position in Society, Character and Responsibilities from Anonymous, "Hints on the Modern Governess System," Fraser's Magazine (November 1844) from Harriet Taylor, The Enfranchisement of Women from Coventry Patmore, The Angel in the House from William Rathbone Greg, "Why Are Women Redundant?" from Frances Power Cobbe, "What Shall We Do with Our Old Maids?" from Eliza Lynn Linton, "The Girl of the Period," Saturday Review (March 1868) from Frances Power Cobbe, "Criminals, Idiots, Women, and Minors," Fraser's Magazine (December 1868) May Probyn, "The Model" (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from "Between School and Marriage," The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. 7 (4 September 1886) from Emma Brewer, "Our Friends the Servants," The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. 14 (25 March 1893) from Grant Allen, "Plain Words on the Woman Question," Fortnightly Review 46 (October 1889) from Sarah Grand, "The New Aspect of the Woman Question," North American Review 158 (March 1894) from Mona Caird, "Does Marriage Hinder a Woman's Self-Development?" Lady's Realm (March 1899) Prostitution and the Contagious Diseases Act (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Thomas Hood, "The Bridge of Sighs" from Henry Mayhew, "Labour and the Poor: The Metropolitan Districts," The Morning Chronicle (1849) from W.R. Greg, "Prostitution," Westminster Review (January 1850) from The Contagious Diseases Act from Harriet Martineau, "The Contagious Diseases Acts - II," Daily News (29 December 1869) from Josephine Butler, Personal Reminiscences of a Great Crusade from Josephine Butler, Some Thoughts on the Present Aspect of the Crusade Against the State Regulation of Vice from Sarah Grand, The Beth Book ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING The Cry of the Children To George Sand: A Desire To George Sand: A Recognition A Year's Spinning The Runaway Slave at Pilgrim's Point from Sonnets from the Portuguese 1 ("I thought once how Theocritus had sung") 7 ("The face of all the world is changed, I think") 13 ("And wilt thou have me fasten into speech") 21 ("Say over again, and yet once over again") 22 ("When our two souls stand up erect and strong") 24 ("Let the world's sharpness, like a clasping knife") 26 ("I lived with visions for my company") 28 ("My letters! all dead paper, mute and white!") 43 ("How do I love thee? Let me count the ways") from Aurora Leigh Book 1 from Book 2 from Book 5 A Curse for a Nation A Musical Instrument IN CONTEXT: Books on Womanhood (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from Catherine Napier, Woman's Rights and Duties IN CONTEXT: Children in the Mines (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from Richard Hengist Horne, Report of the Children's Employment Commission IN CONTEXT: The Origin of "the Finest Sonnets" (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from Edmund Gosse, Critical Kit-Kats IN CONTEXT: Images of George Sand (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON Mariana The Palace of Art The Lady of Shalott The Lotos-Eaters Ulysses The Epic [Morte d'Arthur] Morte d'Arthur [Break, break, break] Locksley Hall from The Princess [Sweet and Low] [The Splendour Falls] [Tears, Idle Tears] [Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal] [Come Down, O Maid] [The Woman's Cause Is Man's] Maud (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) In Memoriam A.H.H. The Eagle The Charge of the Light Brigade from Idylls of the King (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) The Holy Grail [Flower in the Crannied Wall] Vastness Crossing the Bar IN CONTEXT: Images of Tennyson from Thomas Carlyle, Letter to Ralph Waldo Emerson (5 August 1844) IN CONTEXT: Victorian Images of Arthurian Legend IN CONTEXT: Crimea and the Camera Roger Fenton, Selected Photographs CHARLES DARWIN from The Voyage of the Beagle from Chapter 10: Tierra del Fuego from Chapter 17: Galapagos Archipelago IN CONTEXT: Images from The Beagle from On the Origin of Species Introduction from Chapter 3: Struggle for Existence from Chapter 14: Recapitulation and Conclusion from The Descent of Man from Chapter 19: Secondary Sexual Characters of Man from Chapter 21: General Summary and Conclusion IN CONTEXT: Defending and Attacking Darwin from Thomas Huxley, "Criticisms on The Origin of Species" from Thomas Huxley, "Mr. Darwin's Critics" from Punch IN CONTEXT: Darwin and Human Societies from Herbert Spencer, Social Statics: or, the Conditions Essential to Human Happiness Specified, and the First of Them Developed ELIZABETH GASKELL Libbie Marsh's Three Eras (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Our Society at Cranford IN CONTEXT: Charles Dickens and the Publication History of "Our Society at Cranford" from Charles Dickens, Letter to Elizabeth Gaskell (31 January 1850) from Charles Dickens, Letter to Elizabeth Gaskell (5 December 1851) from Charles Dickens, Letter to Elizabeth Gaskell (21 December 1851) The Old Nurse's Story (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) ROBERT BROWNING Porphyria's Lover Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister My Last Duchess Home-Thoughts, from Abroad The Bishop Orders His Tomb at Saint Praxed's Church Meeting at Night Parting at Morning How It Strikes a Contemporary Memorabilia Love Among the Ruins "Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came" Fra Lippo Lippi The Last Ride Together Andrea del Sarto A Woman's Last Word Two in the Campagna (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Essay on Shelley Caliban upon Setebos (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from The Ring and the Book (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from Book 12 IN CONTEXT: A Parody of The Ring and the Book (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Charles Stuart Calverley, The Cock and the Bull Bishop Blougram's Apology (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) CHARLES DICKENS from Sketches by Boz (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Chapter 25: A Visit to Newgate A Christmas Carol (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Preface Stave 1: Marley's Ghost Stave 2: The First of the Three Spirits Stave 3: The Second of the Three Spirits Stave 4: The Last of the Spirits Stave 5: The End of It IN CONTEXT: A Victorian Christmas (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from Charles Dickens, Sketches by Boz Chapter 2: A Christmas Dinner IN CONTEXT:The Workhouse (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Charles Dickens, "A Walk in the Workhouse," from Household Words The Quiet Poor (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins, The Perils of Certain English Prisoners (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Night Walks (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) The Story of Little Dombey Sikes and Nancy IN CONTEXT: The Readings of Charles Dickens (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) EDWARD LEAR (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) The Owl and the Pussy-cat How pleasant to know Mr. Lear! Selected Limericks The Dong and the Luminous Nose CONTEXTS: CHILDHOOD AND CHILDREN'S LITERATURE (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from Charlotte Mary Yonge, "A Scene in the Early Life of the May Family" from Thomas Hughes, "After the Match," Tom Brown's Schooldays from Charles Kingsley, "Tom's Life as a Water Baby" from Thomas Hood, "London Street Boys: Being a Word About Arabia Anglicana," The Boy's Own Volume of Facts, Fiction, History, and Adventure from Austin Q. Hagerman, "Never Sulk," The Child's Own Magazine from Charles Darwin, A Biographical Sketch of an Infant from Walter Pater, The Child in the House from Hilaire Belloc, The Bad Child's Book of Beasts Introduction The Big Baboon The Frog Beatrix Potter, The Tale of Peter Rabbit from Rudyard Kipling, "How the Camel Got His Hump," Just So Stories for Little Children from Lucy Maud Montgomery, Anne of Green Gables Chapter 3: Marilla Cuthbert is Surprised from Kenneth Grahame, The Wind in the Willows Chapter 1: The River Bank ANTHONY TROLLOPE A Ride Across Palestine The Turkish Bath (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) The Spotted Dog (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from An Autobiography (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Chapter 12: On English Novels and the Art of Writing Them GRACE AGUILAR Past, Present, and Future: A Sketch The Hebrew's Appeal The Wanderers EMILY BRONTE Remembrance Plead for Me The Old Stoic My Comforter [Loud without the wind was roaring] [A little while, a little while] [Shall Earth no more inspire thee] [No coward soul is mine] Stanzas [The night is darkening round me] [I'm happiest when most away] [If grief for grief can touch thee] CONTEXTS: THE NEW ART OF PHOTOGRAPHY Roger Fenton, "Proposal for the Formation of a Photographic Society" from Charles Dickens, "Photography," Household Words, Vol. 7 (1853) Photography and Immortality from Elizabeth Barrett, Letter to Mary Russell Mitford from Sir Frederick Pollock, "Presidential Address," Photographic Society Selected Photographs ARTHUR HENRY CLOUGH (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Epi-strauss-ium To spend uncounted years of pain from Amours de Voyage Canto 1 The Latest Decalogue "There is no God," the Wicked Saith Qui Laborat, Orat Is it true, ye gods, who treat us In the Great Metropolis That there are powers above us I admit Seven Sonnets on the Thought of Death Duty-that's to say complying Easter Day Easter Day II Jacob Recent English Poetry IN CONTEXT: Letters from Arthur Clough and Matthew Arnold GEORGE ELIOT (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) O, May I Join the Choir Invisible from Brother and Sister Sonnets 11 ("School parted us
  • we never found again") from Adam Bede Chapter 17: In Which the Story Pauses a Little Silly Novels by Lady Novelists from The Natural History of German Life (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Margaret Fuller and Mary Wollstonecraft (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) THE SPASMODIC POETS (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Alexander Smith from A Life-Drama Sydney Dobell from Balder William Edmonstoune Aytoun from Firmillian: or The Student of Badajoz. A Spasmodic Tragedy JOHN RUSKIN from Modern Painters A Definition of Greatness in Art Of Truth of Water from The Stones of Venice The Nature of Gothic from Modern Manufacture and Design (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Fiction Fair and Foul (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) The Storm-Cloud of the Nineteenth Century (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Cassandra DION BOUCICAULT (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) The Octoroon IN CONTEXT: The Octoroon's Alternative Ending MATTHEW ARNOLD The Forsaken Merman Isolation. To Marguerite To Marguerite-Continued The Buried Life The Scholar-Gipsy Stanzas from The Grande Chartreuse Dover Beach East London West London Preface to the First Edition of Poems from The Function of Criticism at the Present Time from Culture and Anarchy from Chapter 1: Sweetness and Light MARY ANN SHADD (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) A Plea for Emigration IN CONTEXT: A Plea for Emigration from Harriet Martineau, Society in America from Frederick Douglass, Life of an American Slave from William H. Smith, Smith's Canadian Gazetteer from The Fugitive Slave Act (1850) from The Provincial Freeman, 24 March 1854 CONTEXTS: RELIGION AND SOCIETY (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre from Chapter 4 from Elizabeth Gaskell, Mary Barton from Chapter 37 from Anthony Trollope, The Warden from Chapter 3 from Chapter 5 from George Eliot, "Evangelical Teaching: Dr. Cumming" (Westminster Review, October 1855) from Anthony Trollope, Doctor Thorne from Chapter 32: Mr. Oriel from Thomas Hughes, Tom Brown at Oxford from Chapter 11: Muscular Christianity from Arthur Hugh Clough, Dipsychus "There is No God," the Wicked Saith from John Henry Newman, Apologia pro vita sua from Chapter 5: The Position of My Mind Since 1845 from Samuel Smiles, Character from Chapter 7: Duty-Truthfulness from Anthony Trollope, The Way We Live Now from Chapter 22: Lord Nidderdale's Morality from Chapter 60: Miss Longestaffe's Lover from Goldwin Smith, "Can Jews Be Patriots?" (The Nineteenth Century, May 1878) from Amy Levy, Reuben Sachs from Chapter 7 from Chapter 8 from Thomas Huxley, "Agnosticism and Christianity" from Thomas Hardy, Jude the Obscure from Part 3, Chapter 4 WILKIE COLLINS (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) The Diary of Anne Rodway ADELAIDE PROCTER (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) A Woman's Question The Cradle-Song of the Poor A Legend of Bregenz The Lesson of the War, 1855 Thankfulness A Lost Chord A Woman's Answer A Woman's Last Word An Appeal The Jubilee of 1850 A Desire The Church in 1849 The Homeless Poor GEORGE MEREDITH Modern Love Ode to the Spirit of Earth in Autumn The Lark Ascending DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI The Blessed Damozel The Woodspurge Jenny My Sister's Sleep Sibylla Palmifera Lady Lilith Mary Magdalene at the Door of Simon the Pharisee from Sonnets and Songs, Towards a Work to Be Called "The House of Life" 1: Bridal Birth 2: Love's Redemption 3: Lovesight 4: The Kiss 5: Nuptial Sleep 6: Supreme Surrender 7: Love's Lovers 8: Passion and Worship 9: The Portrait 10: The Love-Letter 11: The Birth-Bond 12: A Day of Love 13: Love-Sweetness 14: Love's Baubles 15: Winged Hours 16: Life-in-Love 17: The Love-Moon 18: The Morrow's Message 19: Sleepless Dreams 20: Secret Parting 21: Parted Love 22: Broken Music 23: Death-in-Love 24
  • 25
  • 26
  • 27: Willowwood 28: Stillborn Love 29: Inclusiveness 30: Known in Vain 31: The Landmark 32: A Dark Day 33: The Hill Summit 34: Barren Spring 35
  • 36
  • 37: The Choice 38: Hoarded Joy 39: Vain Virtues 40: Lost Days 41: Death's Songsters 42: "Retro Me, Sathana!" 43: Lost on Both Sides 44: The Sun's Shame 45: The Vase of Life 46: A Superscription 47: He and I 48
  • 49: Newborn Death 50: The One Hope Song 1: Love-Lily Song 2: First Love Remembered Song 3: Plighted Promise Song 4: Sudden Light Song 5: A Little While Song 6: The Song of the Bower Song 7: Penumbra Song 8: The Woodspurge Song 9: The Honeysuckle Song 10: A Young Fir-Wood Song 11: The Sea-Limits Silent Noon [A Sonnet is a moment's monument] The Burden of Nineveh (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Hand and Soul (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) The Orchard Pit (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) IN CONTEXT: The Pre-Raphaelites (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from William Michael Rossetti, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, His Family Letters, with a Memoir by William Michael Rossetti from Chapter 13: The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood from John G. Millais, The Life and Letters of Sir John Everett Millais Charles Dickens, "Old Lamps for New Ones" from Reviews of the Royal Academy Show, The Times, 3 May, 7 May 1851 from John Ruskin, Letters to The Times, 13 May, 26 May 1851 IN CONTEXT: The "Fleshly School" Controversy from Robert Buchanan, "The Fleshly School of Poetry: Mr. D.G. Rossetti" from Dante Gabriel Rossetti, The Stealthy School of Criticism CHRISTINA ROSSETTI Goblin Market IN CONTEXT: Illustrating Goblin Market A Triad Remember A Birthday After Death An Apple-Gathering Echo Winter: My Secret "No, Thank You, John" A Pause of Thought Song ("She sat and sang alway") Song ("When I am dead, my dearest") Dead Before Death Monna Innominata Cobwebs In an Artist's Studio Promises like Pie-Crust In Progress Sleeping at Last LEWIS CARROLL Verses Recited by Humpty Dumpty Jabberwocky IN CONTEXT: "Jabberwocky" from Lewis Carroll, Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There from Chapter 1: Looking-Glass House from Chapter 6: Humpty Dumpty IN CONTEXT: The Photographs of Lewis Carroll JAMES THOMPSON (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) The City of Dreadful Night WILLIAM MORRIS The Defence of Guenevere The Haystack in the Floods from Hopes and Fears for Art. Five Lectures The Beauty of Life from News from Nowhere Chapter 1: Discussion and Bed Chapter 2: A Morning Bath Chapter 17: How the Change Came (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) How I Became a Socialist IN CONTEXT: William Morris and Edward Burne-Jones W.S. GILBERT (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from H.M.S. Pinafore
  • or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor Song ("When I was a Lad") from Patience Song ("If You're Anxious for to Shine") AUGUSTA WEBSTER A Castaway By the Looking Glass (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) The Happiest Girl in the World (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from Mother and Daughter: An Uncompleted Sonnet Sequence (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) 1 ("Young Laughters, and My Music! Aye Till Now") 8 ("A little child she, half defiant came") 9 ("Oh weary hearts! Poor mothers that look back!") 15 ("That same day Death who has us all for jest") 19 ("Life on the wane: yes sudden that news breaks") 20 ("There's one I miss. A little questioning maid") 27 ("Since first my little one lay on my breast") ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE The Triumph of Time Itylus Hymn to Proserpine The Leper A Forsaken Garden Anactoria Laus Veneris (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Faustine (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Dolores (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) The Garden of Proserpine (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Hertha (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) A Nympholept (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from William Blake (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) WALTER PATER from The Renaissance: Studies in Art and Poetry Preface Conclusion from Appreciations (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Aesthetic Poetry THOMAS HARDY The Son's Veto In a Wood A Tramp Woman's Tragedy IN CONTEXT: Hardy's Notebooks and Memoranda An Imaginative Woman (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) IN CONTEXT: Illustrations to "An Imaginative Woman" (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) MATHILDE BLIND The Russian Student's Tale A Mother's Dream GERALD MANLEY HOPKINS God's Grandeur The Wreck of the Deutschland The Windhover: To Christ Our Lord Pied Beauty Felix Randal Spring and Fall: To a Young Child [As kingfishers catch fire] [No worst, there is none] [I wake and feel the fell of dark, not day] [Not, I'll not, carrion comfort] That Nature Is a Heraclitean Fire and of the Comfort of the Resurrection [Thou art indeed just, Lord ] IN CONTEXT: The Growth of "The Windhover" from Journal 1870-74 ["Inscape" and "Instress"] from Letter to Robert Bridges (25 February 1879) Author's Preface "MICHAEL FIELD" - KATHARINE BRADLEY AND EDITH COOPER Maids, Not to You My Mind Doth Change The Magdalen Saint Sebastian La Gioconda A girl It was deep April, and the morn Beloved xxii Broadview Anthology of British Literature[Sometimes I do despatch my heart] [She mingled me rue and roses] [Our myrtle is in flower] Cyclamens Unbosoming [When I grow old] To Christina Rossetti Nests in Elms The Mummy Invokes His Soul Old Ivories Ebbtide at Sundown Power in Silence Where the Blessed Feet Have Trod WILLIAM HURRELL MALLOCK (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Every Man His Own Poet
  • or, The Inspired Singer's Recipe Book ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON Requiem from A Child's Garden of Verses Whole Duty of Children Looking Forward The Land of Nod Good and Bad Children Foreign Children The Pavilion on the Links (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) OSCAR WILDE Helas! Impression du Matin E Tenebris To Milton (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from The Critic as Artist from The Decay of Lying Preface to The Picture of Dorian Gray The Young King (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) The Importance of Being Earnest IN CONTEXT: Wilde and "The Public" Interview with Oscar Wilde, St. James Gazette (January 1895) IN CONTEXT: The First Wilde Trial (1895) from The Transcripts of the Trial BERNARD SHAW (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Widowers' Houses OLIVE SCHREINER from The Story of an African Farm from Part 2, Chapter 1: Times and Seasons VERNON LEE (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) The Virgin of the Seven Daggers Prince Alberic and the Snake Lady from The Handling of Words Chapter 3: Aesthetics of the Novel from Chapter 5 Section C: Carlyle and the Present Tense from Chapter 6 Section A: Meredith Section B: Kipling Section C: Stevenson Section D: Hardy Chapter 8: Can Writing Be Taught? CONSTANCE CAROLINE WOODHILL NADEN (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) The Lady Doctor The Sister of Mercy Love Versus Learning Scientific Wooing The New Orthodoxy Natural Selection Solomon Redivivus, 1886 SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE The Adventure of the Speckled Band AMY LEVY Xantippe Magdalen To Lallie A London Plane-Tree London in July "Ballade of an Omnibus" London Poets: (In Memoriam) The Old House The Last Judgment Cambridge in the Long To Vernon Lee SIR HENRY NEWBOLT (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Vitai Lampada He Fell Among Thieves RUDYARD KIPLING The Man Who Would Be King Gunga Din The Widow at Windsor Recessional The White Man's Burden If- The Story of Muhammad Din The Mark of the Beast Mrs. Bathurst (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) England and the English (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) IN CONTEXT: Victoria and Albert IN CONTEXT: The "White Man's Burden" in the Philippines Platform of the American Anti-Imperialist League CONTEXTS: BRITAIN, EMPIRE, AND A WIDER WORLD Thomas Pringle, "Afar in the Desert" from Frances Trollope, Domestic Manners of the Americans from Chapter 1: Entrance of the Mississippi from Chapter 3: Company on Board the Steam Boat from Chapter 34: Return to New York-Conclusion from Thomas Babington Macaulay, "Minute on Indian Education" from Report of a Speech by William Charles Wentworth, Australian Legislative Council from William H. Smith, Smith's Canadian Gazetteer Carlyle, Mill, and "The Negro Question" from Thomas Carlyle, "Occasional Discourse on the Negro Question," Fraser's Magazine (1849) from John Stuart Mill, "The Negro Question," Fraser's Magazine (1850) To the Editor of Fraser's Magazine The Great Exhibition of 1851 Prince Albert, Speech Delivered at the Lord Mayor's Banquet, London, 1849 from The Art Journal Illustrated Catalogue of the Great Exhibition of The Industry of All Nations from Henry Mayhew, London Labour and the London Poor "Hindo Beggars" Dickens and Thackeray on the Race Question from Charles Dickens, "The Noble Savage," Household Words (1853) from William Makepeace Thackeray, Letters to Mrs. Carmichael-Smyth Conservatives, Liberals, and Empire from William Gladstone, "Our Colonies" from Benjamin Disraeli, "Conservative and Liberal Principles" from Cecil Rhodes, Speech Delivered in Cape Town (18 July 1899) from David Livingstone, "Cambridge Lecture Number 1" Eliza M., "Account of Cape Town," King William's Town Gazette (1863) from Agnes Macdonald, "By Car and Cowcatcher," Murray's Magazine (1887) Henry Lawson, "The Drover's Wife" from John Ruskin, "Inaugural Lecture," Slade Lectures (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from Henry M. Stanley, In Darkest Africa (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from William Booth, "Why 'Darkest England'?" (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from Sara Jeannette Duncan, "The Flippancy of Anglo-India" (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from Mary Kingsley, Travels in West Africa (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) from W.S. Caine, "Picturesque India: A Handbook for European Travellers" (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Victor Daley, "When London Calls" (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS Ephemera The Lake Isle of Innisfree Into the Twilight The Secret Rose He Remembers Forgotten Beauty The Travail of Passion THE AESTHETIC MOVEMENT "Michael Field" From Baudelaire The Poet John Davidson A Northern Suburb Constance Naden Illusions Ernest Dowson Nuns of the Perpetual Adoration To One in Bedlam Spleen Lionel Johnson Plato in London The Dark Angel The Darkness CHARLOTTE MEW The Farmer's Bride Madeleine in Church Passed APPENDICES Reading Poetry Maps Monarchs and Prime Ministers of Great Britain Glossary of Terms Texts and Contexts: Chronological Chart (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Bibliography (sites.broadviewpress.com/bablonline) Permissions Acknowledgments Index of First Lines Index of Authors and Titles

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詳細情報

  • NII書誌ID(NCID)
    BB1068170X
  • ISBN
    • 9781554810734
  • 出版国コード
    cn
  • タイトル言語コード
    eng
  • 本文言語コード
    eng
  • 出版地
    Peterborough, Ont.
  • ページ数/冊数
    lxxxiv, 979 p., [12] p. of plates
  • 大きさ
    24 cm
  • 分類
  • 件名
  • 親書誌ID
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