The Norton anthology of English literature: 2
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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2012
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Ausgabe: | 9. ed. |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a The Norton anthology of English literature |n 2 |c M. H. Abrams, general ed. |
250 | |a 9. ed. | ||
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adam_text | Contents
PREFACE
TO THE NINTH EDITION
xxxiii
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
xliii
The Romantic Period
(1785-1832)
INTRODUCTION
3
TIMELINE
28
Balladry and Ballad Revivals
зі
Lord Randall
32
Bonny Barbara Allan
33
The Wife of Usher s Well
34
The Three Ravens
35
Sir Patrick Spens
36
The Dasmon-lover
37
Anna Letitia Barbauld (1743-1825)
39
The Mouse s Petition
40
An Inventory of the Furniture in Dr. Priestley s Study
42
A Summer Evening s Meditation
43
Epistle to William Wilberforce, Esq., on the Rejection of the Bill for
Abolishing the Slave Trade
46
The Rights of Woman
48
To a Little Invisible Being Who Is Expected Soon to Become Visible
49
Washing-Day
50
The Caterpillar
52
Charlotte Smith (1749-1806)
53
Elegiac Sonnets
54
Written at the Close of Spring
54
To Sleep
54
To Night
55
Written in the Church-Yard at Middleton in Sussex
55
*
To explore the table of contents of the Supplemental Ebook, visit wwnorton.com/nael.
vii
viii
I CONTENTS
On Being Cautioned against Walking on an Headland
Overlooking the Sea, Because It Was Frequented by
a Lunatic
56
The Sea View
56
The Swallow
57
BeachyHead
59
Mary Robinson
(^у^-ібоо) п
January,
1795 79
London s Summer Morning
80
The Poor Singing Dame
81
The Haunted Beach
83
The Poet s Garret
84
To the Poet Coleridge
86
THE SLAVE TRADE AND THE LITERATURE
OF ABOLITION
88
JOHN NEWTON: Faith s Review and Expectation (Amazing Grace)
90
THOMAS
CLARKSON:
Essay on the Slavery and Commerce of
the Human Species
91
From Part III, Chapter
1
( Imaginary conversation with
an African )
91
From Part III, Chapter
3
( The dimensions of a slave vessel and
the
Zong
Incident)
93
WILLIAM COWPER: The Negro s Complaint
95
OLAUDAH EQUIANO: The Interesting Narrative of the Life of
Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus
Vassa,
the African
98
From Chapter
3
[From Virginia to England]
99
From Chapter
4
[Sold Again]
102
From Chapter
5
[Cruelty of the West Indian Planters]
104
HANNAH MORE AND EAGLESFIELD SMITH: From The
Sorrows of Yamba
105
SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE: From On the Slave Trade
108
WILLIAM COBBETT: From Slave Trade
110
William Blake (1757-1827)
112
All Religions Are One
116
There Is No Natural Religion [a]
116
There Is No Natural Religion [b]
117
Songs of Innocence and of Experience
118
Songs of Innocence
118
Introduction
118
The Ecchoing Green
119
The Lamb
120
The Little Black Boy
120
CONTENTS
I
ix
The Chimney Sweeper
121
The Divine Image
122
Holy Thursday
122
Nurse s Song
123
Infant Joy
123
On Anothers Sorrow
124
Songs of Experience
125
Introduction
125
Earth s Answer
125
The Clod
&
the Pebble
127
Holy Thursday
127
The Chimney Sweeper
128
Nurse s Song
128
The Sick Rose
128
The Fly
129
The
Tyger
129
My Pretty Rose Tree
131
Ah! Sun-flower
131
The Garden of Love
131
London
132
The Human Abstract
133
Infant Sorrow
134
A Poison Tree
134
ToTirzah
134
A Divine Image
135
TheBookofThel
135
Visions of the Daughters of Albion
140
The Marriage of Heaven and Hell
148
A Song of Liberty
159
Blake s Notebook
160
Mock on, Mock on, Voltaire, Rousseau
160
Never pain to tell thy love
161
I
askèd a
thief
161
And did those feet
161
Two Letters on Sight and Vision
162
Robert Burns (1759-1796) i65
Green grow the rashes
167
Holy Willie s Prayer
168
To a Mouse
171
To a Louse
172
Auld Lang Syne
173
Tam o Shanter:
A Tale
174
Such a parcel of rogues in a nation
179
Robert
Bruces
March to Bannockburn
180
A Red, Red Rose
181
Song: For a that and a that
181
χ Ι
CONTENTS
THE REVOLUTION CONTROVERSY AND THE
SPIRIT OF THE AGE
183
RICHARD PRICE: From A Discourse on the Love of Our Country
184
EDMUND BURKE: From Reflections on the Revolution in France
187
MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT: From A Vindication of the Rights of Men
194
THOMAS PAINE: From Rights of Man
199
JAMES GILLRAY: Prints and Propaganda
203
Smelling out a Rat
204
French Liberty, British Slavery
205
Zenith of French Glory
206
The British Butcher
207
Mary Wollstonecraft
(1759—1797)
208
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
211
Front The Dedication to
M. Talleyrand-Périgord
211
Introduction
213
Chapter
2.
The Prevailing Opinion of a Sexual Character
Discussed
217
From Chapter
4.
Observations on the State of Degradation
. . . 232
Letters Written during a Short Residence in Sweden, Norway,
and Denmark
239
Advertisement
240
Letter
1 240
From Letter
5 246
Maria Edgeworth (1768-1849)
253
The Irish Incognito
254
William Wordsworth
(1770—1850) 270
Lyrical Ballads
272
Goody Blake and Harry Gill
272
Simon Lee
275
We Are Seven
278
Lines Written in Early Spring
280
Expostulation and Reply
280
The Tables Turned
281
The Thorn
282
Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey
288
Preface to Lyrical Ballads
(1802) 292
[The Subject and Language of Poetry]
293
[ What Is a Poet? ]
299
[ Emotion Recollected in Tranquillity ]
303
Strange fits of passion have I known
305
She dwelt among the untrodden ways
305
Three years she grew
306
CONTENTS
I
xl
A slumber did my spirit seal
307
1
travelled among unknown men
307
Nutting
308
The Ruined Cottage
309
Michael
320
Resolution and Independence
330
I wandered lonely as a cloud
334
My heart leaps up
335
Ode: Intimations of Immortality
335
The Solitary Reaper
342
Elegiac Stanzas
343
Sonnets
344
Composed upon Westminster Bridge, September
3, 1802 344
It is a beauteous evening
345
To
Toussaint
l Ouverture
345
September
1st, 1802 346
London,
1802 346
The world is too much with us
347
Surprised by joy
347
Mutability
348
Steamboats, Viaducts, and Railways
348
The Prelude
349
THE VERSIONS OF THE PRELUDE
351
The Crossing of the Alps
352
From
1805.
Book Sixth
352
From
1850.
Book Sixth
353
The Climbing of Snowdon
354
From
1805.
Book Thirteenth
354
From
1850.
Book Fourteenth
355
THE
1805
PRELUDE
Book First. Introduction: Childhood and School-time
356
From Book Second. School-time (continued)
370
[Boyhood Adventures; Blest the Infant Babe ]
370
[Address to Coleridge]
378
From Book Fifth. Books
378
[The Dream of the Arab]
378
[The Boy of Winander; The Drowned Man]
381
From Book Sixth. Cambridge and the Alps
384
[ Human Nature Seeming Born Again ]
384
[Crossing
Simplon
Pass]
384
From Book Seventh. Residence in London
388
[The Blind Beggar; Bartholomew Fair]
388
From Book Tenth. Residence in France and French Revolution
391
[Reign of Terror]
391
[Retrospect: First Impression of the Revolution; The Outbreak
of War Between France and Britain]
392
[Crisis, Breakdown, and Recovery]
394
xii
I CONTENTS
From Book Eleventh. Imagination, How Impaired and Restored
395
[Spots of Time]
395
From Book Thirteenth. Conclusion
398
[Vision on Mount Snowdon]
398
[Final Prophecy]
402
Dorothy Wordsworth (1771-1855)
402
From The Alfoxden Journal
404
From The Grasmere Journals
406
Grasmere
—
A Fragment
415
Thoughts on My Sick-Bed
417
Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832)
418
The Lay of the Last Minstrel
420
Introduction
420
Proud
Maisie
423
Redgauntlet
424
Wandering Willie s Tale
424
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
(1772—1834) 437
The Eolian Harp
439
This Lime-Tree Bower My Prison
441
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
443
Kubla Khan
459
Cliristabel
462
Frost at Midnight
477
Dejection: An Ode
479
The Pains of Sleep
483
To William Wordsworth
484
Epitaph
487
Hiographia
Literaria
488
Chapter
4 488
[Mr. Wordsworth s earlier poems]
488
[On fancy and imagination
—
the investigation of the distinction
important to the fine arts]
490
Chapter
13
[On the imagination, or esemplastic power]
491
Chapter
14.
Occasion of the Lyrical Ballads, and the objects origi¬
nally proposed
—
preface to the second edition
—
the ensuing
controversy, its causes and acrimony
—
philosophic definitions of
a poem and poetry with scholia.
491
Chapter
17 496
[Examination of the tenets peculiar to Mr. Wordsworth]
496
[Rustic life (above all, low and rustic life) especially unfavorable to
the formation of a human diction
—
the best parts of language
the products of philosophers, not clowns or shepherds]
497
CONTENTS
I
xiii
[The language of Milton as much the language of real life, yea,
incomparably more so than that of the cottager]
498
Lectures on Shakespeare
499
[Fancy and Imagination in Shakespeare s Poetry]
499
[Mechanic vs. Organic Form]
501
The Statesman s Manual
502
[On Symbol and Allegory]
502
[The Satanic Hero]
504
Specimens of the Table Talk of Samuel Taylor Coleridge
505
Materialism
505
Difference between Stories of Dreams and Ghosts
505
Hamlet. Principles and Maxims. Love
507
Painting
507
Thelwall
508
Poetry
508
Mr. Coleridge s System of Philosophy
508
Charles Lamb (1775-1834)
509
From On the Tragedies of Shakespeare, Considered with Reference to
Their Fitness for Stage Representation
511
Detached Thoughts on Rooks and Reading
514
Old China
519
Jane Austen (1775-1817)
523
Love and Friendship: A Novel in a Series of Letters
525
Plan of a Novel, According to Hints from Various Quarters
544
William Hazlitt (1778-1830)
546
Characters of Shakespeare s Plays
548
Coriolanus
548
My First Acquaintance with Poets
551
Thomas De
Quincey (1785-1859)
565
Confessions of an English Opium-Eater
567
Preliminary Confessions [The Prostitute Ann]
567
Introduction to the Pains of Opium [The Malay]
569
The Pains of Opium [Opium Reveries and Dreams]
571
On the Knocking at the Gate in Macbeth
580
THE GOTHIC AND THE DEVELOPMENT
OF A MASS READERSHIP
584
HORACE WALPOLE: From The Castle of Otranto
586
ANNA LETITIA AIKIN (later BARBAULD) and JOHN AIKIN
On the Pleasure Derived from Objects of Terror; with Sir Rertrand, a
Fragment
589
xiv
I CONTENTS
WILLIAM
BECKFORD:
From Vathek
594
ANN RADCLIFFE 598
From The Romance of the Forest
599
From The Mysteries of Udolpho
601
MATTHEW GREGORY LEWIS: From The Monk
602
SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE
608
From Review of The Monk by Matthew Lewis
608
From
Biographie
Literaria
611
George Gordon, Lord Byron (1788-1824) 612
Written after Swimming from Sestos to Abydos
616
She walks in beauty
617
Darkness
618
So, we ll go no more a roving
620
Childe Harold s Pilgrimage
620
Canto
1 620
[ Sin s Long Labyrinth ]
620
Canto
3 622
[ Once More upon the Waters ]
622
[Waterloo]
626
[Napoleon]
627
[Switzerland]
631
Manfred
638
Donjuan
672
Fragment
673
Canto
1 673
[Juan and Donna Julia]
673
Canto
2 704
[The Shipwreck]
704
[Juan and Haidee]
711
From The Vision of Judgment
726
On This Day I Complete My Thirty-Sixth Year
742
Letters
744
To Thomas Moore (Jan.
28, 1817) 744
To Douglas Kinnaird (Oct.
26, 1819) 746
To Percy Bysshe Shelley (Apr.
26, 1821) 747
Percy Bysshe Shelley
(1792—1822) 748
Mutability
751
To Wordsworth
752
Alastor; or, The Spirit of Solitude
752
Mont Blanc
770
Hymn to Intellectual Beauty
773
Ozymandias
776
CONTENTS
I
xv
On Love
776
Stan/as Written in Dejection
—
December
1818,
near Naples
778
The Mask of Anarchy
779
England in
1819 790
To Sidmouth and Castlereagh
790
Ode to the West Wind
791
Prometheus Unbound
793
Preface
794
Act
1 797
Act
2 819
Scene
4 819
Scene
5 824
Act
3 826
Scene
1 826
From Scene
4 828
From Act
4 831
The Cloud
832
To a Sky-Lark
834
To Night
836
To
------
[Music, when soft voices die]
837
0
World,
О
Life,
О
Time
838
Chorus from Hellas
838
The world s great age
838
Adonais
839
When the lamp is shattered
854
To Jane (The keen stars were twinkling)
855
Front A Defence of Poetry
856
John Clare (1793-1864)
869
The Nightingale s Nest
870
Pastoral Poesy
872
[The Lament of Swordy Well]
875
[Mouse s Nest]
880
A Vision
880
1 Am
881
An Invite to Eternity
881
Clock a Clay
882
The Peasant Poet
883
Felicia Dorothea Hemans (1793-1835)
884
England s Dead
885
Casabianca
886
The Homes of England
888
Corinne
at the Capitol
889
Properzia Rossi
890
Indian Woman s Death Song
894
A Spirit s Return
895
xvi
I CONTENTS
John Keats
(1795—
1821)
901
On First Looking into Chapman s Homer
904
Sleep and Poetry
904
[ O for Ten Years ]
904
On Seeing the Elgin Marbles
906
Endymion: A Poetic Romance
906
Preface
906
Book
1 907
[ A Thing of Beauty ]
907
[The Pleasure Thermometer ]
908
On Sitting Down to Read King Lear Once Again
910
When I have fears that I may cease to be
911
To Homer
911
The Eve of St. Agnes
912
Why did I laugh tonight? No voice will tell
922
Bright star, would I were stedfast as thou art
922
La Belle
Dame sans Merci: A
Ballad
923
On Fame
925
Sonnet to Sleep
925
Ode to Psyche
925
Ode to a Nightingale
927
Ode on a Grecian Urn
930
Ode on Melancholy
931
Ode on Indolence
933
Lamia
935
To Autumn
951
The Fall of Hyperion: A Dream
952
This living hand, now warm and capable
964
Letters
965
To Benjamin Bailey (Nov.
22, 1817)
[ The authenticity of the Imagination ]
965
To George and Thomas Keats (Dec.
21, 27 [?], 1817)
[ Negative Capability ]
967
To John Hamilton Reynolds (Feb.
3, 1818)
[Wordsworth s Poetry]
968
To John Taylor (Feb.
27, 1818)
[Keats s Axioms in Poetry]
969
To John Hamilton Reynolds (May
3, 1818)
[Milton, Wordsworth, and the Chambers of Human Life]
970
To Richard Woodhouse (Oct.
27, 1818)
[ A Poet Has No Identity ]
972
To George and
Georgiana
Keats (Feb. 14-May
3, 1819)
[ The vale of Soul-making ]
974
To Fanny Brawne (July
25, 1819)
[Fanny Brawne as Keats s Fair Star ]
978
To Percy Bysshe Shelley (Aug.
16, 1820)
[ Load Every Rift with Ore ]
979
CONTENTS
I
xvii
To Charles Brown (Nov.
30, 1820)
[Keats s Last Letter]
980
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
(1797—
1851) 98i
The Last Man
983
Introduction
983
The Mortal Immortal
986
Letitia Elizabeth Landon
(1802—1838) 996
Love s Last Lesson
997
Lines of Life
1000
The Fairy of the Fountains
1002
The Victorian Age
(1830-1901)
INTRODUCTION
1017
TIMELINE
1042
Thomas Carlyle
(1795—
1881)
1044
Sartor Resartus
1047
The Everlasting No
1048
Centre of Indifference
1053
The Everlasting Yea
1060
Past and Present
1067
Democracy
1067
Captains of Industry
1072
John Henry Cardinal Newman (1801-1890)
Ю76
The Idea of a University
1078
From Discourse
5.
Knowledge Its Own End
1078
From Discourse
7.
Knowledge Viewed in Relation to
Professional Skill
1080
From Discourse
8.
Knowledge Viewed in Relation to
Religion
1084
John Stuart Mill (1806-1873) 1086
What Is Poetry?
1088
On Liberty
1095
From Chapter
3.
Of Individuality as One of the Elements of
Well-Being
1095
The Subjection of Women
1104
From Chapter
1 1105
Autobiography
1115
From Chapter
5.
A Crisis in ¡Vly Mental History. One Stage
Onward
1115
xviii
I CONTENTS
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
(1806-1861) 1123
The Cry of the Children
1124
To George Sand: A Desire
1128
To George Sand: A Recognition
1128
Sonnets from the Portuguese
1129
21
( Say over again, and yet once over again )
1129
22
( When our two souls stand up erect and strong )
1129
32
( The first time that the sun rose on thine oath )
1130
43
( How do I love
thee?
Let me count the ways )
1130
The Runaway Slave at Pilgrim s Point
1130
Aurora Leigh
1138
Book
1 1138
[The Education of Aurora Leigh]
1138
Book
2 1144
[Aurora s Aspirations]
1144
[Aurora s Rejection of Romney]
1146
Book
5 1150
[Poets and the Present Age]
1150
Mother and Poet
1152
Alfred, Lord Tennyson (1809-1892) H56
Mariana
1159
The Lady of Shalott
1161
The Lotos-Eaters
1166
Ulysses
1170
Tithonus
1172
Break, Break, Break
1174
The Epic
[Morte d Arthur]
1175
LocksleyHall
1177
The Princess
1183
Tears, Idle Tears
1183
Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal
1184
[ The woman s cause is man s ]
1184
From In
Memoriam
A. H. H.
1186
The Charge of the Light Brigade
1235
Idylls of the King
1236
The Coming of Arthur
1237
The Passing of Arthur
1248
Crossing the Bar
1259
Elizabeth Gaskell (1810-1865) 1259
The Old Nurse s Story
1260
Robert Browning (1812-1889) 1275
Porphyria s Lover
1278
Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister
1280
My Last Duchess
1282
CONTENTS I
xix
The Lost Leader
1283
How They Brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix
1284
The Bishop Orders His Tomb at Saint Praxed s Church
1286
A Toccata of Galuppi s
1290
Love among the Ruins
1292
Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came
1294
Fra Lippo
Lippi
1300
Andrea del
Sarto
1309
Caliban upon
Setebos
1315
Rabbi Ben Ezra
1322
Emily
Brontë
(1818—
1848) 1328
I m happiest when most away
1329
The Night-Wind
1329
Remembrance
1330
Stars
1331
The Prisoner. A Fragment
1332
No coward soul is mine
1334
John
Ruskin (1819—
1900) 1335
Modern Painters
1338
[A Definition of Greatness in Art]
1338
[ The Slave Ship ]
1339
From Of the Pathetic Fallacy
1340
The Stones of Venice
1342
[The Savageness of Gothic Architecture]
1342
George Eliot (1819-1880)
1353
Margaret Fuller and Mary Wollstonecraft
1355
From Silly Novels by Lady Novelists
1361
Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)
1369
Isolation. To Marguerite
1373
To Marguerite
—
Continued
1374
The Buried Life
1375
Memorial Verses
1377
Lines Written in Kensington Gardens
1379
The Scholar Gypsy
1380
Dover Beach
1387
Stanzas from the Grande Chartreuse
1388
Preface to Poems
(1853) 1394
From The Function of Criticism at the Present Time
1404
Culture and Anarchy
1418
From Chapter
1.
Sweetness and Light
1418
From Chapter
2.
Doing As One Likes
1420
From Chapter
5.
Porro
Umím
Est
Necessarium
1423
From The Study of Poetry
1425
Literature and Science
1436
xx
I CONTENTS
Thomas Henry Huxley
(1825—1895) 1449
Science and Culture
1451
[The Values of Education in the Sciences]
1451
Agnosticism and Christianity
1458
[Agnosticism Defined]
1458
PRE-RAPHAELITISM
1463
CHARLES DICKENS: From Old Lamps for New Ones
1465
JOHN
RUSKIN
1466
[ The Awakening Conscience ]
1466
From Pre-Raphaelitism
1468
WILLIAM MICHAEL
ROSSETTI:
[The Pre-Raphaelite Manifesto]
1470
Dante Gabriel
Rossetti (1828-1882)
1471
The Blessed Damozel
1472
My Sister s Sleep
1476
Jenny
1478
The House of Life
1487
The Sonnet
1487
Nuptial Sleep
1487
19.
Silent Noon
1488
77.
Soul s Beauty
1488
78.
Body s Beauty
1488
Christina
Rossetti (1830-1894)
1489
Song ( She sat and sang alway )
1490
Song ( When I am dead, my dearest )
1490
After Death
1491
Dead before Death
1491
Cobwebs
1492
A Triad
1492
In an Artist s Studio
1493
A Birthday
1493
An Apple-Gathering
1494
Winter: My Secret
1494
Up-Hill
1495
Goblin Market
1496
No, Thank You, John
1508
Promises Like Pie-Crust
1509
In Progress
1510
A Life s Parallels
1510
Later Life
1510
17
( Something this foggy day, a something which )
1510
Cardinal Newman
1511
Sleeping at Last
1511
CONTENTS
I
xxi
William Morris
(1834-1896)
isu
The Defence of Guenevere IS
13
How I Became a Socialist 1S22
Algernon Charles Swinburne
(1837—1909)
isas
Hymn to Proserpine
1526
Hermaphroditus
1530
Ave
atque Vale
1531
Walter
Pater (1839-1894) 1537
Studies in the History of the Renaissance
1538
Preface
1538
[ La Gioconda ]
1542
Conclusion
1543
Gerard Manley
Hopkins (1844-1889) 1546
God s Grandeur
1548
The Starlight Night
1549
As Kingfishers Catch Fire
1549
Spring
1550
The Windhover
1550
Pied Beauty
1551
Hurrahing in Harvest IS51
Binsey Poplars
1552
Duns Scotus s Oxford
1552
Felix Randal
1553
Spring and Fall: to a young child
1553
[Carrion Comfort]
1554
No worst, there is none
1555
I wake and feel the fell of dark, not day
1555
That Nature Is a Heraclitean Fire and of the Comfort
of the Resurrection
1556
Thou art indeed just, Lord
1556
From Journal
1557
Victorian Issues i560
EVOLUTION
1560
Charles Darwin: The Origin of Species
1560
From Chapter
3.
Struggle for Existence
1561
From Chapter
15.
Recapitulation and Conclusion
1565
Charles Darwin: The Descent of Man
1569
[Natural Selection and Sexual Selection]
1569
Leonard Huxley: The Life and Letters of Thomas Henry Huxley
1573
[The Huxley-Wilberforce Debate at Oxford]
1573
Sir Edmund
Gosse:
From Father and Son
1577
xxii
I CONTENTS
INDUSTRIALISM: PROGRESS OR DECLINE?
1580
Thomas Babington Macaulay: A Review of Southey s Colloquies
1582
[Evidence of Progress]
1582
The Children s Employment Commission: From First Report
1587
[Child Mine-Worker in Yorkshire]
1588
Friedrich Engels:
From The Great Towns
1589
Charles Kingsley: Alton Locke
1597
[A London Slum]
1597
Charles Dickens: Hard Times
1599
[Coketown]
1599
Anonymous: Poverty Knock
1600
Henry Mayhew: London Labour and the London Poor
1601
[Boy Inmate of the Casual Wards]
1602
Annie Besant: The White Slavery of London Match Workers
1603
Ada Nield Chew: A Living Wage for Factory Girls at Crewe
1606
THE WOMAN QUESTION : THE VICTORIAN DERATE ABOUT
GENDER
1607
Sarah Stickney Ellis: The Women of England: Their Social Duties and
Domestic Habits
1610
[Disinterested Kindness]
1610
Coventry Patmore: The Angel in the House
1613
The Paragon
1613
John
Ruskin:
From Of Queens Gardens
1614
Harriet Martineau: From Autobiography
1616
Anonymous: The Great Social Evil
1620
Dinah Maria Mulock: A Woman s Thoughts about Women
1624
[Something to Do]
1624
Florence Nightingale: Cassandra
1626
[Nothing to Do]
1626
Mona Caird:
From Marriage
1630
Walter Besant: The Queen s Reign
1634
[The Transformation of Women s Status between
1837
and
1897] 1634
EMPIRE AND NATIONAL IDENTITY I636
Thomas Babington Macaulay: Minute on Indian Education
1640
William Howard Russell: From My Diary in India
1642
Anonymous: [Proclamation of an Irish Republic]
1646
Matthew Arnold: From On the Study of Celtic Literature
1647
James Anthony Froude: From The English in the West Indies
1649
John Jacob Thomas: Froudacity
1652
From Social Revolution
1652
Alfred, Lord Tennyson: Opening of the Indian and Colonial Exhibition
by the Queen
1654
T.
N.
Mukharji: A Visit to Europe
1655
[The Indian and Colonial Exhibition]
1656
CONTENTS
I
xxiii
William
Ernest Henley: Invictus
1659
Sir Henry John Newbolt:
Vitai
Lampada
1661
Joseph Chamberlain: From The True Conception of Empire
1662
J. A. Hobson: Imperialism: A Study
1665
[The Political Significance of Imperialism]
1665
Late Victorians
1668
Michael Field I67i
(Katharine Bradley:
1846-1914;
and Edith Cooper:
1862-1913)
[Maids, not to you my mind doth change]
1672
[A girl]
1672
Unbosoming
1673
[It was deep April, and the morn]
1673
To Christina
Rossetti
1674
Nests in Elms
1674
Eros
1675
Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894) i675
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
1677
Oscar
Wilde (1854-1900) 1720
Impression du
Matin
1722
The Harlot s House
1722
The Critic as Artist
1723
[Criticism Itself an Art]
1723
Preface to The Picture of Dorian Gray
1732
The Importance of Being Earnest
1733
From
De Profundis 1777
Bernard
Shaw (1856-1950)
i780
Mrs Warren s Profession
1783
Sir Arthur Conan
Doyle (1859-1930)
і8зо
The Speckled Band
1831
Mary Elizabeth Coleridge (1861-1907) i849
The Other Side of a Mirror
1849
The Witch
1850
Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)
i85i
The Man Who Would Be King
1853
Danny Deever
1877
The Widow at Windsor
1878
Recessional
1879
The White Man s Burden
1880
If—
1882
xxiv
I CONTENTS
Ernest Dowson
(1867—1900)
188З
Cynara
1883
They Are Not Long
1884
The Twentieth Century and After
introduction
1887
timeline
1911
Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)
1914
On the Western Circuit
1916
Hap
1932
Neutral Tones
1932
Drummer Hodge
1933
The Darkling Thrush
1933
The Ruined Maid
1934
A Trampwoman s Tragedy
1935
One We Knew
1938
Channel Firing
1939
The Convergence of the Twain
1940
Ah, Are You Digging on My Grave?
1942
Under the Waterfall
1943
The Walk
1944
The Voice
1944
During Wind and Rain
1945
In Time of The Breaking of Nations
1946
He Never Expected Much
1946
Joseph Conrad
(1857—1924) 1947
Preface to The Nigger of the Narcissus
1949
[The Task of the Artist]
1949
Heart of Darkness
1951
A. E. Housman (1859-1936)
2011
Loveliest of Trees
2012
When I Was One-and-Twenty
2012
To an Athlete Dying Young
2013
Terence, This Is Stupid Stuff
2014
Epitaph on an Army of Mercenaries
2015
VOICES FROM WORLD WAR I
2016
RUPERT BROOKE
2018
The Soldier
2019
EDWARD THOMAS
2019
Adlestrop
2020
CONTENTS
I
xxv
The Owl
2020
Rain
2021
The Cherry Trees
2021
As the Team s Head Brass
2022
SIEGFRIED SASSOON
2023
They
2023
The Rear-Guard
2024
The General
2024
Glory of Women
2025
Everyone Sang
2025
On Passing the New Menin Gate
2026
Memoirs of an Infantry Officer
2026
[The Opening of the Battle of the
Somme]
2026
IVOR GURNEY
2028
To His Love
2028
The Silent One
2029
ISAAC ROSENBERG
2029
Break of Day in the Trenches
2030
Louse Hunting
2031
Returning, We Hear the Larks
2031
Dead Man s Dump
2032
WILFRED OWEN
2034
Anthem for Doomed Youth
2034
Apologia Pro Poemate
Meo
2035
Miners
2036
Dulce
Et
Decorum
Est
2037
Strange Meeting
2038
Futility
2039
Disabled
2039
From Owen s Letters to His Mother
2041
Preface
2042
MAY WEDDERBURN CANNAN
2043
Rouen
2043
ROBERT GRAVES
2045
Goodbye to All That
2045
[The Attack on High Wood]
2045
Recalling War
2048
DAVID JONES
2049
In Parenthesis
2050
From Preface
2050
From Part
7:
The Five Unmistakable Marks
2052
MODERNIST MANIFESTOS
2056
T. E.
HULME:
From Romanticism and Classicism (w.
1911-12) 2058
F. S. FLINT AND EZRA POUND: Imagisme
(1913) 2064
A Few Don ts by an
Imagiste
(1913) 2065
xxvi
I CONTENTS
AN
IMAGIST
CLUSTER
2068
T. E.
Hulme:
Autumn
2069
Ezra Pound: In a Station of the Metro
2069
H.D.: Oread
2069
Sea Rose
2070
BLAST (1914)
2070
Long Live the Vortex!
2072
Blast
6 2074
MINA LOY
2077
Feminist Manifesto (w.
1914) 2078
Songs to Joannes
2081
I
2081
III
2081
XIV 2081
XXVI 2082
William Butler Yeats
(1865—1939)
2082
The Stolen Child
2085
Down by the Salley Gardens
2086
The Rose of the World
2087
The Lake Isle of Innisfree
2087
The Sorrow of Love
2088
When You Are Old
2088
Who Goes with Fergus?
2089
The Man Who Dreamed of Faeryland
2089
Adam s Curse
2090
No Second Troy
2091
The Fascination of What s Difficult
2092
A Coat
2092
September
1913 2092
Easter,
1916 2093
The Wild Swans at
Coole 2095
In Memory of Major Robert Gregory
2096
The Second Coming
2099
A Prayer for My Daughter
2100
Leda
and the Swan
2102
Sailing to Byzantium
2102
Among School Children
2103
A Dialogue of Self and Soul
2105
Byzantium
2107
Crazy Jane Talks with the Bishop
2108
Lapis Lazuli
2109
Under Ben Bulben
2110
Man and the Echo
2113
The Circus Animals Desertion
2114
From Introduction [A General Introduction for My Work]
2115
CONTENTS
I
xxvii
Ε. Μ.
Forster (1879-1970) 2121
The Other Boat
2122
Virginia
Woolf
(1882—
1941)
2143
The Mark on the Wall
2145
Modern Fiction
2150
Mrs. Dalloway
2155
A Room of One s Own
2264
[Shakespeare s Sister]
2264
Professions for Women
2272
James Joyce
(1882—
1941)
2276
Araby
2278
The Dead
2282
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
2313
Ulysses
2472
[From Penelope]
2474
D. H. Lawrence (1885-1930) 248i
Odour of Chrysanthemums
2483
The Horse Dealer s Daughter
2496
Why the Novel Matters
2507
Love on the Farm
2512
Piano
2513
Bavarian Gentians
2514
Snake
2514
How Beastly the Bourgeois Is
2516
The Ship of Death
2517
T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)
2521
The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock
2524
Sweeney among the Nightingales
2527
The Waste Land
2529
The Hollow Men
2543
Journey of the Magi
2546
Four Quartets
2547
Little Gidding
2547
Tradition and the Individual Talent
2554
The Metaphysical Poets
2560
Katherine
Mansfield (1888-1923)
2567
The Daughters of the Late Colonel
2568
The Garden Party
2581
Jean Rhys (1890-1979)
2591
The Day They Burned the Books
2592
On Not Shooting Sitting Birds
2596
xxviii
I CONTENTS
Stevie Smith (1902-1971)
2598
Sunt
Leones
2599
Our Bog Is
Dood
2600
Not Waving but Drowning
2601
Thoughts About the Person from Porlock
2602
Pretty
2603
George Orwell (1903-1950) 2604
Shooting an Elephant
2605
Politics and the English Language
2610
Samuel Beckett (1906-1989)
2619
Waiting for Godot
2621
W. H. AUDEN (1907-1973)
2677
Petition
2678
On This Island
2679
Lullaby
2679
Spain
2680
As I Walked Out One Evening
2683
Musée des
Beaux Arts
2685
In Memory of W. B. Yeats
2685
The Unknown Citizen
2688
September
1, 1939 2688
In Praise of Limestone
2691
The Shield of Achilles
2693
[Poetry as Memorable Speech]
2695
Dylan
Thomas (1914-1953)
2697
The Force That Through the Green Fuse Drives the Flower
2698
The Hunchback in the Park
2699
Poem in October
2700
Fern Hill
2702
Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night
2703
VOICES FROM WORLD WAR II
2704
VIRGINIA
WOOLF
2706
Three Guineas
2706
[As a Woman I Have No Country]
2706
PARLO
PICASSO
2711
Guernica
2712
EDITH SITWELL
2713
Still Falls the Rain
2713
HENRY REED
2714
Lessons of the War
2715
1.
Naming of Parts
2715
CONTENTS
I
xxix
KEITH DOUGLAS
2716
Vergissmeinnicht
2716
Aristocrats
2717
NATION, RACE, AND LANGUAGE
2718
CLAUDE MCKAY
2721
Old England
2722
If We Must Die
2723
LOUISE BENNETT
2723
Jamaica Language
2724
Dry-Foot Bwoy
2725
Colonization in Reverse
2726
Jamaica Oman
2727
KAMAU BRATHWAITE
2729
[Nation Language]
2729
Calypso
2734
WOLE SOYINKA
2735
Telephone Conversation
2736
NGUGI WA THIONG o
2737
Decolonising the Mind
2737
From The Language of African Literature
2737
M. NOURBESE PHILIP
2741
Discourse on the Logic of Language
2742
SALMAN RUSHDIE
2745
[The British Indian Writer and a Dream-England]
2746
[English Is an Indian Literary Language]
2749
GRACE NICHOLS
2751
Epilogue
2751
The Fat Black Woman Goes Shopping
2751
Wherever I Hang
2752
HANIF KUREISHI
2754
[You Will Always Be
a Paki]
2754
Doris
Lessing
(b. 1919)
2758
To Room Nineteen
2759
Philip Larkin
(1922—1985) 2781
Church Going
2782
MCMXIV
2783
Talking in Bed
2784
Ambulances
2784
High Windows
2785
Sad Steps
2786
xxx
I CONTENTS
Homage to a Government
2786
The Explosion
2787
This Be The Verse
2788
Aubade
2788
Nadine
Gordimer
(b.
1923) 2789
The Moment before the Gun Went Off
2790
A. K. RaMANUJAN
(1929 —1993) 2794
Self-Portrait
2794
Elements of Composition
2794
ТНОМ
GUNN
(1929-2004) 2796
Black Jackets
2797
My Sad Captains
2798
From the Wave
2798
Still Life
2799
The Missing
2799
Derek Walcott (b.
1930)
2800
A Far Cry from Africa
2801
The Schooner Flight
2802
1
Adios,
Carénage
2802
The Season of Phantasmal Peace
2804
Omeros
2805
1.3.3
[ Mais qui ça qui rivait- ous, Philoctete? ]
2805
6.49.1-2
[ She bathed him in the brew of the root. The basin ]
2806
Ted Hughes (1930-1998)
28O8
Wind
2808
Relic
2809
Pike
2810
Out
2811
Theology
2812
Crow s Last Stand
2813
Daffodils
2813
Harold Pinter
(1930-2008)
28i5
The Dumb Waiter
2816
ChINUA ACHEBE (b.
1930) 2836
Civil Peace
2838
Alice Munro
(b. 1931)
2842
Walker Brothers Cowboy
2843
CONTENTS
I
xxxi
Geoffrey Hill
(b.
1932)
2853
In Memory
of Jane Fraser
2853
Requiem
for the
Plantagenet
Kings
2854
September Song
2854
V. S.
NaIPAUL
(b.
1932) 2855
One Out of Many
2856
Tom Stoppard (b. 1937) 2879
Arcadia
2880
Les
Murray
(b.
1938) 2948
Morse
2949
Comiche
2950
The Kitchen Grammars
2950
SeAMUS HeANEY (b.
1939) 2951
Digging
2953
The Forge
2953
The
Grauballe Man 2954
Punishment
2955
Casualty
2957
The Skunk
2959
Station Island
2960
12
( Like a convalescent, I took the hand )
2960
Clearances
2962
The Sharping Stone
2965
Anything Can Happen
2967
Margaret Atwood (b.
1939) 2967
Death by Landscape
2969
Miss July Grows Older
2981
J. M. COETZEE (b.
1940) 2982
From Waiting for the Barbarians
2984
EaVAN BOLAND (b.
1944) 2997
Fond Memory
2997
The Dolls Museum in Dublin
2998
The Lost Land
2999
Salman Rushdie (b.
1947)
зооо
The Prophet s Hair
3002
Ian McEwan (b.
1948) 3012
From Enduring Love
3013
xxxii
I CONTENTS
Paul Muldoon (b. 1951)
зо2б
Anseo
3027
Meeting the British
3028
7,
Middagh Street
3029
[And were Yeats living at this hour]
3029
Milkweed and Monarch
3030
The Loaf
3031
Turtles
3032
Hanif Kureishi (b.
1954)
З032
My Son the Fanatic
3034
Carol Ann Duffy (b.
1955) 3041
Warming Her Pearls
3042
Valentine
3043
Medusa
3043
Mrs Lazarus
3044
KlRAN DeSAI (b. I971)
3046
The Sermon in the Guava Tree
3047
Zadie Smith (b.
1975)
3057
The Waiter s Wife
3058
Appendixes
ai
General Bibliography
A3
Literary Terminology
AIO
Geographic Nomenclature A31
map: London in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries A33
British Money A34
The British Baronage A39
The Royal Lines of England and Great Britain A42
Religions in England A45
PERMISSIONS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS A49
INDEX A55
|
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publisher | Norton |
record_format | marc |
spelling | The Norton anthology of English literature 2 M. H. Abrams, general ed. 9. ed. New York [u.a.] Norton 2012 Getr. Zählung Ill., Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Greenblatt, Stephen 1943- Sonstige (DE-588)119517744 oth Abrams, M. H. 1912-2015 (DE-588)122365461 edt (DE-604)BV009650849 2 Digitalisierung UB Bamberg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=024968231&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | The Norton anthology of English literature |
title | The Norton anthology of English literature |
title_auth | The Norton anthology of English literature |
title_exact_search | The Norton anthology of English literature |
title_full | The Norton anthology of English literature 2 M. H. Abrams, general ed. |
title_fullStr | The Norton anthology of English literature 2 M. H. Abrams, general ed. |
title_full_unstemmed | The Norton anthology of English literature 2 M. H. Abrams, general ed. |
title_short | The Norton anthology of English literature |
title_sort | the norton anthology of english literature |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=024968231&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV009650849 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT greenblattstephen thenortonanthologyofenglishliterature2 AT abramsmh thenortonanthologyofenglishliterature2 |