Victorian literature: an anthology
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
---|---|
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Chichester [u.a.]
Wiley-Blackwell
2015
|
Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
Schriftenreihe: | Wiley Blackwell anthologies
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Klappentext |
Beschreibung: | LII, 950 S. Ill. |
ISBN: | 9781405188654 9781405188746 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents
This anthology includes extensive additional material on an accompanying website at
www.wiley.com/go/victorianliterature. The table of contents lists items that appear in
the book as well as those which are available online. All online materials are marked with
the web icon: <S
List of Plates and Illustrations
xlii
Preface
xlv
Abbreviations
li
List of Web Plates
anã
Illustrations
xlii
Preface
xliii
Abbreviations
xlix
Introduction
1
Victorian Representations and Misrepresentations
ι
The Terrific Burning
2,
The Battle of the Styles
3
The Best of Times, the Worst of Times
4
Demographics and Underlying Fears
5
Power, Industry, and the High Cost of Bread and Beer
3
The Classes and the Masses
7
The Dynamics of Gender
8
Religion and the Churches
9
Political Structures
11
Empire
12
Genres and Literary Hierarchies
12
The Fine Arts and Popular Entertainment
13
Revolutions in Mass Media and the Expansion of Print Culture
17
Part One Contexts
The Condition of England
Introduction
i. The Victorian Social Formation
Edward Bulwer-Lytton
(1803-73):
Pelham
(1828)
From Chapter
1
19
21
2T
27
27
William Cobbett
(1763-1835):
From Rural Rides
(1830)
Victoria (1819-1901): From Letters
(20
June,
1837)
[ I am Queen }
3
4
Thomas Carlyle
(1795-1881):
Chartism
(1840)
From Chapter
1:
Condition-of-England Question
Thomas Carlyle
(1795-1881):
Past and Present
(1843)
From Book I, Chapter
1:
Midas
Benjamin Disraeli
(1804-81):
Sybil
(1845)
From Book
2,
Chapter
5
[The Two Nations]
29
29
30
ЗО
32
32
Friedrich
Engels
(1820-95):
The Condition of the Working-Class
in England in
1844 (1845)
From Chapter
2:
The Great Towns [Manchester slums]
Elizabeth Gaskell
(1810-65):
Mary Barton
(1848):
Preface
Henry Mayhew
(1812-87):
London Labour and the London Poor (1851)
From Volume
1:
Statement of a Prostitute
Walter Bagehot
(1826-77):
The English Constitution
(1867)
From Chapter
2:
The Pre-Requisites of Cabinet Government
From Chapter
3:
The Monarchy
6
6
8
9
9
II
II
II
George Cruikshank (1792-1878): The British Bee Hive. Process
engraving
(1867)
Matthew Arnold
(1822-88):
Culture and Anarchy
(1869)
From III [Chapter
3:
Barbarians, Philistines, Populace ]
2,.
Education and Mass Literacy
34
35
35
Ada Nield Chew (1870-1945)
:
A Living
Wage for Factory Girls at
Crewe (i894)
12
j
Eliza Davis Aria
(1866-1931):
My Ladv
s Evening in London
in Living London
(1901-3)
14
У7
Statistical Society of London: Newspapers and Other Publications
in Coffee, Public, and Eating Houses
(1839)
Illustrated
London
News
(1842):
From Our Address
Illustrated London News
(1843):
Dedicatory Sonnet
Arthur Penrhyn Stanley (1815-81): Life and Correspondence of
Thomas Arnold,
D.D. (1844)
From Letter of Inquiry for a Master by Thomas Arnold (1795-1842)
From Letter to a Master on his Appointment
William Wordsworth
(1770—1850):
Illustrated Books and
Newspapers
(1846)
Anon. [Thomas Peckett
Prest
(?) (1810-59)]:
The String of Pearls:
A Romance
(1846-47)
From Chapter
38
[Sweeney Todd]
From Chapter
39
The Society for Promoting Working Men s Associations:
Lectures for April,
1853
Charles Dickens
(1812—70):
Hard Times
(1854)
Chapter
1:
The One Thing Needful
37
39
39
39
40
4O
41
4*
42
43
44
44
IX
co
С
О
О
Thomas Hughes
(1822-96):
Тот
Brown s Schooldays
(1857)
ту
From Part
1,
Chapter
8:
A War of Independence
17
Elizabeth Rigby, Lady Eastlake
(1809-93):
From The Englishwoman at
School (July
1878)
45
3.
Progress, Industrialization, and Reform
18
Thomas Babington Macaulay
(1800-59):
From [Review of]
Sir Thomas More; or Colloquies on the Progress and Prospects
of Society
(1830) 18
Ebenezer Elliott (1781-1849): Song [ Child, is thy father dead? ] (1831)
20
John Grimshaw (dates unknown): The Hand-Loom
Weaver s Lament
(1835?) 21
[Anon.] The Factory Workers Song
(1842) 22
Charles Dickens
(1812-1870):
Dombey and Son
(1848) 24
From Chapter
6
Paul s Second Deprivation
[The Coming of the Railroad]
24
Albert, Prince Consort
(1819-61):
From Speech at the Lord
Mayor s Banquet
(1850)
[On the Great Exhibition]
7.6
Charlotte
Brontë
(1816-55):
Three Letters on the Great Exhibition (1851)
28
To Patrick
Brontë
(30
May).
28
To Patrick Bronte
(7
June)
28
Tö
Miss Wooler
(14
July)
29
Edward Sloan
(1830-74):
The Weaver s Triumph
(1854) 29
Charles Kingsley
(1819-75):
From Cheap Clothes and Nasty
(1850) 31
Ford Madox Brown
(1821-93):
From The Exhibition of Work,
and other Paintings by Ford Madox Brown
(1865) 32
Sonnet
33
John Ruskin
(1819-1900):
The Crown of Wild Olive
(1866) 36
From Traffic
36
Thomas Carlyle
(1795-1881):
From Shooting Niagara: and After?
(1867)
Ъ7
Coventry Patmore
(1823-96):
From
1867 (1877) 38
George Eliot
(1819-80):
From Address to Working Men, by Felix Holt
(1868) 39
Matthew Arnold
(1822-88):
Culture ana Anarchy
40
From [ Conclusion ]
40
Thomas Given
(1850-1917):
The Weaver Question
([1878?] 1900 41
Joseph Skipsey
(1832—1903) 43
Get Up!
43
Mother Wept
43
Willy to Jinny
44
C. Duncan Lucas (dates unknown): From Scenes from Factory
London in Living London
(1901—3) 44
4.
Working-Class Voices
Marcus : The Book of Murder!
(1838)
From To the Reader of the Following Diabolical Work
John
Smithson (fl.
1830s): Working
Mens
Rhymes
—
No.
1 (1838)
T. B.
Smith
(fl. 1830S-1840S):
The Wish
(1839)
Charles Davlin (C.1804-C.1860): On a Cliff which O erhung
(1839)
National Charter Association Membership Card (c.1843)
Ernest Jones
(1819-69):
Our Trust
(1848)
Charles Fleming
(1804-57):
Difficulties of Appearing in Print
(1850)
William Billington
(1825-84):
Gerald Massey (1861)
Thomas Cooper
(1805-92):
The Life of Thomas Cooper Written
by Himself
(1872,)
From Chapter
24
Thomas Cooper
(1805-92):
Chartist Song
(1877)
45
45
45
48
49
50
53
54
55
57
57
57
59
5.
Pollution, Protection, and Preservation
61
Robert Southey (1774-1843): Sir Thomas More; or, Colloquies on the Progress
and Prospects of Society
(1829) 61
From Colloquy
7,
Part
2 61
Thomas Babington Macaulay
(1800-59):
From [Review of]
Si? Thomas More; or Colloquies on the Progress and Prospects
of Society
(1830) 63
William Youatt (1776-1847): The Obligation and Extent of Humanity
to Brutes
(1839) 64
From The Repositories
64
John Stuart Mill
(1806-73):
The Principles of Political Economy
(1848) 65
From Book
4,
Chapter
6 65
Marion Bernstein (1846-1906)
66
A Song of Glasgow Town
(1876)
Manly Sports
(1876)
Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell
(1857—
1941): Pigsticking
or Hoghunting
(1889)
From Chapter
1
Pigsticking Is Introduced
From Chapter
5
Comparisons [of pigsticking and fox-hunting]
From Chapter
11
Powers of the Pig
66
67
68
68
69
69
Gender, Women, and Sexuality
Introduction
1.
Constructing Genders
Kenelm Digby
(1800—80):
The Broad Stone of Honour: or,
the True Sense and Practice of Chivalry
([1822] 1877)
From Part
1,
Section
14:
Godefridus
Sarah Stickney Ellis (1799-1872): The Daughters of England
(1842,)
From Chapter
1:
Important Inquiries
From Chapter
9:
Friendship and Flirtation
49
49
56
56
56
57
57
Sarah Stickney Ellis
(1799—1872):
The Mothers of England
(1843)
From Chapter
10:
On the Training of Boys
From Chapter
11:
On the Training of Girls
70
70
7T
Marion Kirkland Reid (c.
1839-89):
From A Plea for Woman
(1843)
Richard Pilling (1799-1874): From Defence at his Trial
(1843)
59
61
Anne Brontë
(1820-49):
The Tenant of
Wildfell Hall (1848)
From Chapter
33:
Two Evenings
72
72
Isabella Beeton
(1836—65):
The Book of Household Management
(1859-61)
From Chapter r: The Mistress
Eliza Lynn Linton
(1822-98):
From The Girl of the Period in the
Saturday Review
(14
Mar.
1868)
Rudyard
Kipling (1865-1936). If
—
(1910)
62
6?,
Harriet Martineau
(1802-76):
From
Middle-Class Education
in England: Boys
(1864)
73
Harriet Martineau
(1802—76):
From
Middle-Class Education
in England: Girls
(1864)
75
John
Ruskin
(1819—1900):
Sesame and
Lilies
(1862)
77
From Of Queen s Gardens
77
65
67
.5)
CU
2.
The Woman Question
Sarah Stickney Ellis (1799-1872,): The Women of England
(1838)
From Chapter
2:
The Influence of the Women of England
Harriet Taylor
(1807-58):
From The Enfranchisement of Women
in Westminster Review (July
1851)
Caroline Norton
(1808-77):
From A Letter to the Queen on
Lord Chancellor Cranworth
s
Marriage and Divorce Bill
(1855)
Harriet Martineau
(1802-76),
Florence Nightingale
(1820-1910),
Josephine Butler
(182,8-1906),
and others: Manifesto of
The Ladies National Association for the Repeal of the Contagious
Diseases Acts in Daily News
(31
Dec.
1869)
68
68
68
70
71
74
Margaret
Oliphant
(182.8-97):
From [Review of] Mill s Subjection of
Women
(1869) 79
[Anon.] The Woman of the Future: A Lay of the Oxford Victory
(1884) 81
Sarah Grand (1854-1943): From The New Aspect of the Woman Question
in North American Review (Mar.
1894) 76
Sydney Grundy
(1848-1914):
The New Woman
(1894) 78
From Act
r
78
Ouida [Marie Louise
de la Ramée] (1839-1908):
From
The New Woman
(1894)
82
3.
Sex and Sexuality
84
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
(1806-61)
and Robert Browning
(1812-89):
From The Letters of Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barrett Browning
(1898) 84
Letters of
1845—46 84
William Rathbone Greg
(1809-81):
From Prostitution
(1850) 87
Hannah Cullwick (1833-1909): From Diaries
(1863-73) 89
Arthur Joseph Munby (1828-1910): From Diaries
(1873) 93
Thomas Hardy
(1840-1928):
Desperate Remedies (1871)
96
From Volume
1,
Chapter
6:
The Events of Twelve Hours
96
[Anon.] The Pearl:
Ajournai
of Facetice and Voluptuous Reading
(1879) 98
An Apology for our Title
98
W. T. Stead (1849-1912): From Maiden Tribute of Modern Babylon
(1885) 99
A Child of Thirteen Bought for
£5 99
Henry
Labouchère
(1831-1912.):
Amendment to the Criminal
Law Amendment Act
1885 102
John Addington Symonds
(1840-93):
A Problem in Modern Ethics (1891)
103
From Chapter
10:
Suggestions on the Subject of Sexual Inversion
in Relation to Law and Education
103
Henry
Havelock
Ellis (1859—1939): Man and Woman: A Study of Human
Secondary Sexual Characters
(1894) 105
From Chapter
18:
Conclusion
105
Lord Alfred Douglas (i
870-1945):
From The Chameleon
107
Two Loves
(1894)
107
In Praise of Shame
(1894)
109
The Trials of Oscar Wilde
(1895)
no
The Libel Trial
no
The First Criminal Trial
113
The Second Criminal Trial
115
Literature and the Arts
81
Introduction
8
1
i. Debates about Literature
87
Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin
(1812-52):
Contrasts
(1836) 87
From Chapter
1:
On the Feelings which Produced the Great Edifices
of the Middle Ages
87
Charles Dickens (1819—
1870):
Oliver Twist
(1838) 116
From Chapter
XLV:
Fatal Consequences [Bill Sikes murders Nancy]
116
George Eliot
(1819-80):
From Silly Novels by Lady Novelists in
Westminster Review (Oct.
1856)
89
Margaret
Oliphant
(1828—1897):
From Sensation Novels
(1862)
119
Mary Elizabeth Braddon (1835-1915): Lady Audley s Secret
(1862)
From Chapter
1:
Lucy
From Chapter
37:
Buried Alive
Colin Henry Hazlewood
(1820-75):
Lady Audley s Secret
(1863)
From Act V
91
91
93
94
94
George Meredith (1828-1909): From On the Idea of Comedy and the
Uses of the Comic Spirit
(1877)
121
Henry James (1843-1916): From The Art of Fiction in
Longman s Magazine (Sept.
1884)
96
George Moore
(1852—1933):
From Literature at Nurse, or, Circulating
Morals
(1885)
Bennett George Johns
(1820/21-1900):
From The Literature
of the Streets
(1887)
123
126
XIV
W)
e
UJ
■+->
CI
о
О
2.
Pre-Raphaelitism, Aestheticism,
and Decadence
William Michael
Rossetti
(1829-1919):
TÄď
Germ: Or Thoughts
Toward Nature in Poetry, Literature, and Art
(1850)
From Introduction
Charles Dickens
(1812-70):
From Old Lamps for New Ones
in Household Words
(15
June
1850)
Christina
Rossetti
(1830-94):
Two Poems on the Pre-Raphaelite
Brotherhood
[1853]
The P.R.B. [I]
The P.R.B.
[11]
John
Ruskin (1819-1900):
The Prse-Raphaelites Letter to The Times
(25
May
1854)
Walter Pater
(1839-94):
From The Poems of William Morris 5
[ ^Esthetic Poetry ] in Westminster Review (Oct. r868)
98
98
98
100
102
102
103
103
Г05
Robert Williams Buchanan
(Г841-1901):
From The Fleshly School
of Poetry: Mr. D. G.
Rossetti (1871)
Dante Gabriel
Rossetti
(1828-82):
From The Stealthy School
of Criticism (1871)
Algernon Charles Swinburne
(1837-1909):
From Under the
Microscope
(1872)
128
131
133
James Abbott McNeill Whistler (1834-1903): From Mr. Whistler s
Ten O clock
(20
Feb.
1885)
109
Arthur Symons
(1865-1945):
From The Decadent Movement in
Literature
(1893)
134
Richard
Le
Galłienne (1866-1947)
Ä
Ballad of London
(1895)
137
W
В.
Yeats
(1865—1939):
From The Symbolism of Poetry
(1900)
139
í
139
III
140
Olive Custance, Lady Douglas
(1874—1944)
141
A Mood
(1896)
141
The White Statue
(1896)
142
Peacocks: A Mood
(1902)
143
3.
Literature and New Technologies
144
3.
r
Book Publishing
144
Charles Dickens
(1812-70):
From Address
(1847)
[Prospectus
for the Cheap Edition]
144
Charles Knight (1791-1873): The Old Printer and the Modern Press
(1854) 146
From Chapter
6 146
XV
Mason
Jackson
(1819—1903):
The Pictorial Press: Its Origin and Progress
(1885) 147
From Chapter
1 147
William Morris
(1834-96):
From A Note by William Morns on His Aims
in Founding the Kelmscott Press
(1898) 148
John Southward (1840-1902): Progress in Printing and the Graphic
Arts During the Victorian Era
(1897) 149
From Chapter
1 149
From Chapter
2 150
From Chapter
3 151
From Chapter
12 151
3.2
Aural Culture
152
[Anon.] The Edison Phonograph in Illustrated London News
(1888) 152
Recordings of Victorian Voices and Sounds
154
George
Frideric
Handel
(1685-1759):
Israel in Egypt
(1739;
recorded
1888) 154
Arthur Sullivan (1842-1900): The Lost Chord (piano and cornet)
(1888) 155
Arthur Sullivan (1842-1900):
After-Dinner
Toast
(1888) 155
Thomas
Alva
Edison (1847-1931): Around the World on
the Phonograph
(1888) 156
William Ewart Gladstone (1809-1898): The Phonograph s Salutation
(1888) 156
Robert Browning (1812-1889): How They Brought the Good
News from Ghent to Abe
(1889) 157
Alfred Tennyson
(1809-1892):
The Charge of the Light Brigade
(1890) 158
Big Ben : Sounding the Hours at the Palace of Westminster
(1890) 158
Florence Nightingale (1820-1910): Speech in Support of the
Balaclava Relief Fund
(1890) 158
Martin Leonard
Landfried (1834-1902):
Charge
(1890) 158
P. T. Barnum (1810-1891): Address to the Future
(17
Feb.
1890) 159
Oscar Wilde
[?]
(1854-1900): From The Ballad of Reading Gaol
(1900?) 159
Enrico Caruso (1873-1921): The Lost Chord
(1912) 160
Rudyard
Kipling (1865-1936): France (1921)
160
W
В.
Yeats (1865-1939): The Lake Isle of Innisfree
(1932) 160
3.3
Photography and Cinema
William Henry Fox
Talbot (1800-1877):
The Pencil of Nature
(1844-46)
From Introductory Remarks
[Anon.] Photography in Illustrated London News
(1853)
Lewis Carroll [Charles Lutwidge Dodgson] (1832-1898): From
Hiawatha s Photographing in The Train
(1857)
Victorian Photographers and Photographs
Th imas
Annan
(1829—87)
Francis Bedford
(1816-94)
Julia Margaret Cameron
(1815-79)
Lewis Carroll [Charles Lutwidge Dodgson]
(1832-98)
Peter Henry Emerson (1856-1936)
Frederick H. Evans
(1853-1943)
Roger Fenton
(г8
19-69)
Francis Frith
(1822-98)
161
164
164
165
167
170
170
170
170
171
172
172
172
173
XVI
-t-J
ST
σ
о
David
Octavius
Hill (1802-70)
and Robert
Adamson
(182,1-48)
174
Robert Howlett
(1831-58)
175
William J. Johnson (fl.
1850-60)
and William Henderson
(fl.
1850-60)
175
William Edward Kilburn (1818-91)
175
John Dillwyn Llewelyn
(1810-82)
i?6
Eadweard Muybridge (1830-1904)
176
Oscar
Gustave
Rejlander
(1813-75
176
Henry Peach Robinson (1830-1901)
177
William Lewis Henry Skeen (1847-1903)
177
William Henry Fox
Talbot
(1800-77)
I78
John Thomson (1837-1921)
178
Benjamin Brecknell Turner
(1815—94)
179
Victorian Cinema
179
Films from c.1890 to 1910
179
The Funeral of Queen Victoria
(190г)
179
Religion and Science
Introduction
1.
Geology and Evolution
113
113
122
Charles Lyell (1797-1875): Principles of Geology
(1830-33)
From Book
1,
Chapter
1 (1830)
From Book
3,
Chapter
26 (1833)
180
180
181
Robert Chambers
(1802-71):
Vestiges of the Natural History of
Creation
(1844) 12.2
From Chapter
12:
General Considerations Respecting the Origin
of the Animated Tribes
122
Hugh Miller
(1802-56):
The Foot-Prints of the Creator: or, the Asterolepis
of Stromness
(1849) 124
From Stromness and its Asterolepis. The Lake of
Stennis
Г24
Philip Henry
Gosse
(1810-88):
Omphalos: An Attempt to Untie
the Geological Knot
(1857) 125
From Chapter
12:
The Conclusion
125
Alfred
Russel
Wallace
(Г823-Г913):
From On the Tendency of Varieties
to Depart Indefinitely from the Original Type
(20
Aug.
1858) 127
Charles Darwin
(1809-82):
On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural
Selection, or The Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life
(1859) 130
From Introduction
130
From Chapter
3:
Struggle for Existence
133
From Chapter
4:
Natural Selection
133
From Chapter
15:
Recapitulation and Conclusion
136
The Oxford Debate
(30
June
i860):
From Leonard Huxley,
The Life and Letters of Thomas Henry Huxley
(1900)
Alfred
Russel
Wallace
(1823-1913):
From The Origin of Human
Races and the Antiquity of Man Deduced from the Theory
of Natural Selection
(1864)
Samuel
Kinns (182,6-1903):
From Moses and Geology: Or, the Harmony
of the Bible with Science
(1882)
From Chapter
1:
The Word is Truth
May Kendall (1861-1943): The Lay of the
Trilobite
(1885)
Agnes Mary Frances Robinson
(1857-1944)
Darwinism
182
188
191
191
193
140
140
2.
Religious Faith and Uncertainty
196
Henry Francis
Lyte
(1793-1847):
Abide with me! (i847)
196
W
J.
Conybeare
(1815-1857):
From Church Parties
(1853) 197
John
Ruskin (1819-1900):
Letter to The Times
(1854)
[on Hunt s Light
of the World]
202
Thomas Hughes (1822-1896): Tom Brown s Schooldays
(1857) 204
From Part
2,
Chapter
9:
Finis
204
Benjaminjowett
(1817-1893):
From On the Interpretation
of Scripture in Essays and Reviews
(i860) 206
John William Burgon (1813—
1888):
Inspiration and Interpretation (1861)
210
From Sermon
3.
[On the literal inspiration of the Bible]
210
Sabine
Baring-Gould (1834-1924): Onward Christian Soldiers
(1864) 214
John Henry Newman
(1801-90);
Apologia Pro
Vita Sua
216
From Part V History of My Religious Opinions
[from
1839
to
1841] 216
Mrs Humphrey Ward [Mary Augusta Arnold Ward]
(1851-1920):
Robert Elsmere
(1888) 220
From Book
4,
Chapter
26:
Crisis
220
Empire
Introduction
1.
Celebration and Criticism
Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881): From Occasional Discourse on the
N^gro Question in
Fras
er
s
Magazine (Dec.
1849)
John Stuart Mill
(1806-73):
From The Negro Question in
Eraser s Magazine (Jan.
1850)
John
Ruskin (1819—
1900):
From Inaugural Lecture
(1870)
George William Hunt (c.1839-1904):
MacDermotťs
War Song
[ By Jingo ]
(1877)
J. R.
Seeley
(1834-95):
The Expansion of England
(1883)
142
142
14s
148
150
151
153
154
From Course II, Lecture I: History and Politics
154
LO
Ч—
»
εζ
CD
Walter Crane (1845-1915): Imperial Federation Map of the World
Showing the Extent of the British Empire in
1886 (1886)
223
Alfred Tennyson
(1809-92):
Opening of the Indian and Colonial
Exhibition
(1886)
Alfred Tennyson
(1809-92):
Carmen
Sœculare:
An Ode in Honour
of the Jubilee of Queen Victoria
(1887)
156
157
Mrs Ernest Ames [Mary Frances Ames] (1853-1929): An ABC for
Baby Patriots
(1899)
2,2.6
Henry
Labouchère
[?] (1831-1912):
The Brown Man s Burden
(1899) 160
J. A. Hobson (1858-1940): Imperialism: A Study
(1902) 162
From Part
2,
Chapter
4:
Imperialism and the Lower Races
162
Arthur Christopher Benson (1862-1925): Land of Hope and Glory
(1902) 163
Wilfrid Scawen Blunt (1840-1922): From My Diaries: Being a Personal
Narrative of Events,
1888-1914 (1919) 165
2.
Governing the Colonies
166
2.1
India
166
Thomas Babington Macaulay
(1800-59):
From Minute on Indian Education
(1835) 166
Proclamation by the Queen in Council, to the Princes, Chiefs,
and People of India
(1858) 169
G. A. Henty (1832-1902): With
Clive
in India: Or, The Beginnings
of an Empire
(1884) 171
From Preface
171
Flora Annie Steel (1847-1929) and Grace Gardiner (d.
1919):
The Complete
Indian Housekeeper and Cook
(1888) 172
From Preface to the First Edition
172
From Chapter
1:
The Duties of the Mistress
173
2.2
White Colonies and Dependencies
229
Introduction
229
John George Lambton, first Earl of Durham
(1792 -1840):
From
Report on the Affairs of British North America
(1839)
230
James Anthony Froude
(1818—1894):
The English and the
West Indies, or, The Bow of Ulysses
(1888)
232
From Chapter
17
232
2.3
Ireland
2-34
Introduction
234
Jane Francesca Agnes
[ Speranza ], Lady
Wilde
(1821—96):
The Famine Year
(1847)
235
XIX
Charles Trevelyan
(1807—86);
From The Irish Crisis
(1848)
Presbyterian Prayer on the Irish in Toronto
(£.1850)
Dion Boucicault
(1820-90):
From The Colleen Bawn, or The Brides
of Garryowen
(i860)
Matthew Arnold
(1822-88):
On the Study of Celtic Literature
(1867)
From Lecture
4
2.4
Africa
Introduction
The Rudd Concession
(30
October
1888):
From Lewis Mitchell,
The Life of the Rt. Hon.
Cecil john
Rhodes,
1853-1902
(1910)
Lobengula
Khumalo (1845-1894): From a Letter to Queen Victoria
(23
Aug.
1893)
Henry Morton Stanley
(1841-1904):
In Darkest Africa: Or, the Quest,
Rescue, and Retreat of
Emin,
Governor of Equatoria
(1890)
From Chapter IX: Ugarrowwa s to Kilonga-Longa s
William Booth
(1829-1912):
In Darkest England and the
Way Out
(1890)
Part
1.
The Darkness. Chapter
1:
Why Darkest England ?
237
240
240
243
243
245
245
247
248
249
249
252
252
СГ
CD
О
о
3·
Imperial Travellers
254
Elizabeth Rigby (Lady) Eastlake (1809-1893): From Lady Travellers
(1845) 254
Francis Galton
(1822—
1911): The Art of Travel: Shifts and Contrivances
Available in Wild Countries
(1855) 257
William Howard Russell (1821-1907): From The Cavalry Action at
Balaklava in The Times
(14
Nov.
1854) 258
Isabella Bird (1831-1904): Journeys in Persia and Kurdistan
(2
vols, 1891)
261
From Vol.
1,
Letter
11; 26
March
1880 261
Behramji Malabari (1853-1912): The Indian Eye on English Life,
or Rambles of a Pilgrim Reformer
(18 93 ) 176
From Chapter
2:
In and About London
176
Mar} Kingsley
(1862—1900):
Travels in West Africa
(1897)
From Chapter
VIII
From Ncovi to Esoon
262
262
Hí
m
Mukasa (1870-1956): Uganda s Katikiro in England
(1904)
?rom Chapter
5
From Chapter
6
178
178
179
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869-1948): An Autobiography, or,
The Story of My Experiments with Truth
(1927) 263
From Chapter
15:
Playing the English Gentleman
263
XX
Part Two Authors
181
ISI
+->
| Walter Savage Landor
(1775-1864) 183
о
О То
Robert Browning
183
You smiled, you spoke, and I believed
184
Dying Speech of an Old Philosopher
184
I entreat you, Alfred Tennyson
184
Charlotte Elliott
(1789-1871) 185
Him That Cometh to Me I Will in No Wise Cast Out. Qust As I Am]
185
John
Keble
(1792-1866) 186
From National Apostasy Considered
187
Felicia Hemans
(1793-1835) 190
Casablanca
191
The Indian Woman s Death-Song
192
The Indian With His Dead Child
194
The Rock of Cader-Idris
195
The Last Song of Sappho
196
Janet Hamilton
(1795-1873) 198
A Lay of the Tambour Frame
198
Thomas Carlyle
(1795-1881) 200
Sartor Resartus
269
From Symbols [bk.
3.
ch.
3] 269
From Natural
Superna
turalism [bk.
3.
ch.
8] 273
Past and Present
201
Hero-Worship
202
Captains of Industry
205
Past and Present
277
From The Gospel of Mammonism [bk.
3.
ch.
2] 277
Maria Smith Abdy
(1797-1867) 210
A Governess Wanted
211
Mary Howïtt
(1799-1888) 212
The Spider and the Fly
213
The Fossil Elephant
214
Thomas Hood
(1799-1845) 216
The Song of the Shirt
216
The Bridge of Sighs
219
Sarah Stickney Ellis
(1799-1872) 222
From Pictures of Private Life
222
An Apology for Fiction
222,
Thomas Babington Macaulay
(1800-59) 225
Lays of Ancient Rome
280
From
Horatius
280
The History of England from the Accession of James the Second
(1848-61) 225
From Chapter
1:
Before the Restoration
226
[Introduction]
226
From Chapter
3:
The State of England in
1685 228
[The Clergy]
228
James Dawson Burn (1801?—
слбЅс)
283
From Autobiography of a Beggar Boy
284
John Henry Newman
(1801-90) 230
The Idea of a University Defined and Illustrated
231
From Discourse V: Knowledge Its Own End
233
From Discourse
VII:
Knowledge Viewed in Relation
to Professional Skill
237
William Barnes
(1801-86) 239
My Orchet in Linden Lea
240
Childhood
240
The Wife a-Lost
241
Zummer An Winter
242
xxii
From Old Bardic Poetry [Two Translations from the Welsh]
-5^
in Macmillan s Magazine (Aug.
1867). 243
¿J I
Cynddyl an s Hall
243
о
II An Englyn on a Yellow Greyhound
244
Harriet Martineau
(1802-76) 244
Society in America
(1837) 245
From Chapter
3:
Morals of Politics
245
Section VI: Citizenship of People of Colour
245
Section
VII:
Political Non-Existence of Women
246
L. E. L.
[Letitia Elizabeth Landon]
(1802-38) 248
Sappho s Song
248
Revenge
249
Stanzas on the Death of Mrs. Heraans
250
The Factory
253
The Princess Victoria [I]
255
The Princess Victoria [II]
257
Elizabeth Duncan Campbell
(1804-78) 258
The Windmill of
Sebastopol
258
The Crimean War
261
The Schoolmaster
263
The Death of Willie, My Second Son
264
From The Life of My Childhood
287
William Dodd
(1804-е.
1850) 291
From A Narrative of the Experiences and Sufferings of William Dodd,
A Factory CHpple, Written by Himself
291
Mary Jane
Seacole
(1805-81)
295
The Wonderful Adventures of Mrs.
Seacole in Many Lands
296
From
Chapter
8:
I Long to Join the British Army Before
Sebastopol
296
From
Chapter
13:
My Work in
the Crimea
299
Elizabeth
Barrett
Browning (1806-61)
Stanzas Addressed to Miss Landon,
L. E. L. s Last Question
A Musical Instrument
John Stuart
(1806-73)
On Liberty
From Introductory
The Subjection of Women
From Chapter
ι
Caroline Norton
(1808-77)
From A Voice from the Factories
The Picture of Sappho
Charles Darwin
(1809-82)
From Autobiography
Edward FitzGerald
(1809-83)
The
Rubáiyát
of Omar Khayyam, The Astronomer-
Po et
of Persia
266
2.66
2б8
The Cry of the Children
301
Sonnets from the Portuguese
306
I I thought once how Theocritus had sung
306
II But only three in all God s universe
307
III Unlike are we, unlike,
О
princely Heart!
307
V I lift my heavy heart up solemnly
307
XII
Indeed this very love which is my boast
308
XIII
And wilt thou have me fashion into speech
308
XIV
If thou must love me, let it be for naught
309
XXII
When our two souls stand up erect and strong
309
XXVIII
My letters! all dead paper,
..
mute and white!
310
XXIX
I think of
thee!
—
my thoughts do twine and
buď
310
XLIII
How do I love
thee?
Let me count the ways
310
XLIV
Beloved, thou hast brought me many flowers
311
The Runaway Slave at Pilgrim s Point
311
270
272
273
274
280
280
Autobiography
320
From Chapter
1:
Childhood and Early Education
320
From Chapter
5:
A Crisis in My Mental History. One Stage Onward
324
285
290
293
294
301
302
XXIII
OJ
-M
о
XXIV
IS)
ч->
с:
OJ
ј
о
о
Alfred
Tennyson
(1809-92)
Mariana
The
Kraken
The Lady of Shalott
The Lotos-Eaters
Chorie Song
Ulysses
[ Break, break, break ]
In
Memoriam A. H. H.
The Eagle
The Charge of the Light Brigade
The Higher Pantheism
To Virgil
Frater
Ave
atque Vale
Crossing the Bar
Robert Browning
(1812-89)
Porphyria s Lover
From
Pippa
Passes
Song
My Last Duchess
Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister
The Bishop Orders His Tomb at Saint Praxed s Church
Meeting at Night
318
319
321
321
330
331
326
328
Locksley Hall
335
Songs from The Princess
341
[ O Swallow, Swallow, flying, flying South]
341
[ Tears, idle tears ]
342
[ Now sleeps the crimson petal, now the white ]
343
[ Come down,
О
maid ]
343
[ Sweet and low, sweet and low ]
344
[ The splendour falls on castle walls ]
345
329
415
416
345
418
419
420
420
421
423
423
423
424
427
431
xxv
Parting
at Morning
Love Among the Ruins
Fra Lippo
Lippi
431
1
ì
431
С
CD
-t-1
434
С
О
о
Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came
346
Andrea del
Sarto
444
Caliban Upon Setebos
354
From
Asolando
450
Epilogue
450
Edward Lear
(1812-88) 451
From A Book of Nonsense
452.
The Owl and the Pussy-Cat
453
How Pleasant to Know Mr. Lear
454
Samuel Smiles
(1812-1904) 455
SelfHelp: With Illustrations of Character and Conduct
455
From Chapter
1:
Self-Help: National and Individual
455
From Chapter
2:
Leaders of Industry
—
Inventors and Producers Qames Watt]
456
Charlotte Brontë
(1816-55) 457
The Missionary
458
My feet they are sore, and my limbs they
are weary
462
Eventide [ The house was still, the room was still ]
463
Dec
24 [1848]
[On the Death of Emily
Brontë]
463
June
211849
[On the Death of
Anne Brontë]
464
Grace Aguilar
(1816-47) 464
The Vision of Jerusalem
465
Edwin Waugh
(1817-90) 467
Come Whoam to Thy Childer an Me
467
Eawr Folk
468
xxvi
Emily Jane
Brontë
(1818-48) 470
^ Remembrance
470
-1-1
o Song
[ The Linnet in the rocky dells ]
471
To Imagination
472
Plead for Me
473
The Old Stoic
474
Shall earth no more inspire
thee?
475
Ay
—
there it is! it wakes to-night
476
No coward soul is mine
477
Eliza Cook
(1818-89) 477
The Old Arm-Chair
478
Arthur Hugh
Clough
(1819-61) 479
Qui Laborat,
Orat
480
Duty
—
that s to say complying
480
The Latest Decalogue
482
The Struggle
482
Ah! Yet Consider it Again!
483
Epi-strauss-ium
483
John
Ruskin
(1819-1900) 484
Modern Painters
485
Of Ideas of Beauty
361
From Of Water, as Painted by Turner
487
From Of Pathetic Fallacy
490
The Stones of Venice
493
From St. Mark s
364
From The Nature of Gothic
495
Queen Victoria
(1819-1901) 506
Speech to Parliament
8
August 1851
506
From Leaves from the Journal of Our Life in the Highlands
from
1848
to
1861 508 42
Love for Balmoral
508 £
Visits to the Old Women
508
σ
о
George Eliot
(1819-80) 509
О
May I Join the Choir Invisible
510
Anne Brontë
(1820-49) 511
Appeal
512
The Captive Dove
512
O, they have robbed me of the hope
513
Domestic Peace
513
[Last Lines] I hoped that I was brave and strong
514
Jean Ingelow
(1820-97) 516
Remonstrance
516
Like a Laverock in the Lift
517
On the Borders of Cannock Chase
517
Florence Nightingale
(1820-1910) 518
Notes on Nursing: What It Is, and What It Is Not
519
Preface
519
[Introduction]
519
Note Upon Some Errors in Novels
522
From Cassandra
524
Dion Boucicault
(1820-90) 366
The Octoroon; or Life in Louisiana. A Play in Four Acts
367
From Act
3
[The Auction]
368
From Act
4
[The Trial]
371
Bill the Navvy (b.
1820?) 375
From Autobiography of a Navvy
375
Dora Greenwelf
(1821-82) 529
A Scherzo
529
To Elizabeth Barrett Browning in 1851
530
XXVIII
00
-t-1
zz
ω
с
о
о
io
rmzaoetn
jöarreu
crowmiig
ш
iöoi
531
То
Christina
Rossetti
531
Matthew Arnold
(1822-88)
532
The Forsaken Merman
532
Memorial Verses
536
[Isolation] To Marguerite
538
To Marguerite, in Returning a Volume of the Letters of Ortis
539
The Buried Life
540
Lines Written in Kensington Gardens
542
Philomela
544
Requiescat
545
Stanzas from the Grande Chartreuse
545
East London
551
West London
552
Dover Beach
552
Growing Old
553
Rugby Chapel
379
Preface to Poems
(1853)
554
From The Function of Criticism at the Present Time
Culture and Anarchy
From [Chapter i: Sweetness and Light ]
From [Chapter
2:
Doing as One Likes ]
From [Chapter
4:
Hebraism and Hellenism ]
384
391
391
395
398
Coventry Patmore
(1823-96) 564
From The Angel in the House
565
Book I: The Prologue
565
III Honoria: The Accompaniments
568
1
The Lover
568
Book II: The Espousals
570
X The Epitaph: The Accompaniments
570
3
The Foreign Land
570
XI The Departure: The Accompaniments
570
1
Womanhood
570
Idyl XI: The Departure
571
The Epilogue
572
Sydney Dobell (1824-74)
To the Authoress of Aurora Leigh
Two Sonnets on the Death of Prince Albert
William Topaz McGonagall
(1825-1902)
The
Тау
Bridge Disaster
The Death of the Queen
Thomas Henry Huxley
(1825-1895)
From On a Piece of Chalk. A Lecture to Working Men
Adelaide Anne Procter
(1825-64)
Envy
A Woman s Question
A Woman s Answer
A Lost Cord
A Woman s Last Word
Eliza Harriet Keary
(1827-1918)
Disenchanted
Renunciation
A Mother s Call
Old Age
A Portrait
Samuel Laycock
(1826-93)
To My Owd Friend, Thomas Kenworthy
John Bull an His Tricks!
Emily
Pfeiffer (1827-90)
Peace to the Odalisque [I]
[Peace to the Odalisque II]
Any Husband to Many a Wife
Studies from the Antique
Kassandra I
Kassandra II
Klytemnestra I
Klytemnestra II
572
573
573
574
575
577
578
579
583
583
584
585
586
587
588
588
589
589
590
590
591
59г
592,
594
595
595
596
596
596
597
597
598
XXIX
CD
о
о
xxx
l/l
CD
-M
О
о
Ellen Johnston (c.1827-74)
The Working Man
The Last
Sark
Nelly s Lament for the Pirnhouse Cat
Wanted, a Man
The Last Lay of The Factory Girl
From Autobiography of Ellen Johnston, The Factory
Girľ
George Meredith
(1828-1909)
Lucifer in Starlight
Dante Gabriel
Rossetti
(1828-82)
Songs of One Household. No. i. My Sister s Sleep
The Girlhood of Mary Virgin
The Blessed Damozel
The Woodspurge
Jenny
The Ballad of Dead Ladies
598
599
599
600
бої
боз
399
605
Modern Love
402
Sonnets I-VI
403
Sonnet
XVII
405
Sonnet
XXXIII
406
Sonnets XLIX-L
406
605
606
407
607
608
614
614
623
The House of Life: A Sonnet Sequence
409
A Sonnet is a moment s
monument
—
[Introductory Sonnet]
409
VI Nuptial Sleep
410
IX The Portrait
410
ХШ
Love-Sweetness
411
XVI
Life-in-Love
411
XIX
Silent Noon
412
XXIV-XXVII Willowwood
412
XXVIII
Stillborn Love
414
XXXI
The Landmark
414
XXXII
The Hill Summit
415
XLVII A
Superscription
415
L
The One Hope
416
LXII
The Soul s Sphere
416
LXIX
Autumn Idleness
416
LXXIV,
LXXV, LXXVI
Old and New Art
417
I LXXIV Saint Luke the Painter
417
II
LXXV
Not as These
417
III
LXXVI
The Husbandman
418
LXXVII
Soul s Beauty
418
LXXVIII
Body s Beauty
419
CO
-t—
>
CD
-1—1
о
О
Sunset Wings
625
Found
626
Spheral Change
626
Proserpina
627
Gerald Massey
(1828-1907) 628
The Cry of the Unemployed
62.8
The Red Banner
629
The Awakening of the People
630
Elizabeth Siddal
(1829-62) 631
Dead Love
632
Love and Hate
632
Lord, May I Come?
633
Christina
Rossetti
(1830-94) 634
Sappho
635
Goblin Market
635
A Birthday
649
Remember
649
After Death
650
An Apple Gathering
650
Echo
651
My Secret
652
No, Thank You, John
653
Song
654
Up-Hill
654
XXXII
A Better Resurrection
655
c L. E. L.
655
cu
-l—
>
§
From
Sing-Song
656
о
Monna Innominata: A
Sonnet of Sonnets
658
A Life s Parallels
667
For Thine Own Sake,
О
My God
667
Birchington Churchyard
668
Cobwebs
668
In an Artist s Studio
669
An Echo from Willow-Wood
669
Sleeping at Last
670
«S?
Charles Stuart Calverley
(1831-84) 419
The Cock and the Bull
420
Lewis Carroll
(1832-98) 671
From Alice s Adventures in Wonderland
672
[Prefatory Poem] All in the golden afternoon
672
From Through the Looking-Glass
673
[Prefatory Poem] Child of the pure unclouded brow
673
Jabberwocky
674
The Walrus and the Carpenter
676
[Concluding Poem] A boat, beneath a sunny sky
678
William Morris
(1834-96) 679
Riding Together
680
The Defence of Guenevere
682
The Haystack in the Floods
693
In Prison
697
From The Earthly Paradise: An Apology
698
From How I became a Socialist
421
James Thomson CB. V.]
(1834-82) 700
The City of Dreadful Night
700
Proem
701
I The City is of Night; perchance of Death
703
7O4
704
СП
ч—
>
СП
j
об
CD
-4->
707
С!
О
7θ8
О
709
712
713
715
7іб
XXXIII
II Because he seemed to walk with an intent
VI I sat forlornly by the river-side
VII Some
say that phantoms haunt those shadowy streets
IX It is full strange to him who hears and feels
XIII
Of all things human which are strange and wild
XIV
Large glooms were gathered in the mighty fane
XVI
Our shadowy congregation rested still
XIX
The mighty river flowing dark and deep
XX I sat me weary on a pillar s base
XXI
Anear
the centre of that northern crest
E. B. B.
719
William Schwenck Gilbert
(1836-1911) 720
From Patience
720
Bunthorne s Recitative and Song [ Am I alone, and unobserved? ]
720
Bunthorne and Grosvenor s Duet [ When I go out of door ]
722.
From Iolanthe
72,4
Lord Mountararat s Solo [ When Britain really ruled the waves ]
724
From The Gondoliers
723
Quartet [ Then one of us will be a Queen ]
72,5
Giuseppe s Solo [ Rising early in the morning ]
727
Augusta Webster
(1837-94) 729
A Castaway
730
Algernon Charles Swinburne
(1837-1909) 746
From
Atalanta
in Calydon
747
Chorus [ When the hounds of spring are on winter s traces ]
747
Chorus [ Before the beginning of years ]
749
Hymn to Proserpine
425
The Leper
731
Before the Mirror
75y
The Higher Pantheism in a Nutshell
429
Nephelidia
757
From A Sequence of Sonnets on the Death of Robert Browning
759
Walter Horatio Pater
(1839-94) 759
Studies in the History of the Renaissance
760
XXXIV
Preface
762
LD
aj
■H-J
О
О
From Leonardo
da Vinci 430
From The School of Giorgione
433
Conclusion
766
Thomas Hardy
(1840-1928) 769
Hap
769
Neutral Tones
770
Nature s Questioning
770
A Christmas Ghost-Story
771
The Dead Drummer [Drummer Hodge]
772
The Darkling Thrush
773
The Ruined Maid
774
De Profundis
[In
Tenebris]
I
775
De
Profundis [In
Tenebris]
II
776
Mathilde
Blind
(1841-96) 776
Winter
777
The Dead
777
Manchester by Night
778
The Red Sunsets,
1883
[I]
778
The Red Sunsets,
1883
[II]
779
Violet Fane
(1843-1905) 779
Lancelot and Guinevere
780
Gerard Maniey Hopkins
(1844-89) 783
The Wreck of the
Deutschland 784
God s Grandeur
796
The Starlight Night
796
Spring
797
The Windhover
797
Pied Beauty
798
Hurrahing in Harvest
798
Binsey Poplars
799
xxxv
Duns Scotus s Oxford
800
_!_1
Felix Randal
800
QJ
Spring and Fall:
801
о
о
rAs kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw
fláme
801
[Carrion Comfort]
802
Tom s Garland
803
Harry Ploughman
804
That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire and of the Comfort
of the Resurrection
805
[ Thou art indeed just, Lord ]
805
Louisa Sarah Bevington
(1845-95) 806
Morning
806
Afternoon
807
Twilight
808
Midnight
809
Marion Bernstein
(1846-1906) 810
Woman s Rights and Wrongs 8ro
A Rule to Work Both Ways
811
Wanted A Husband
812
Human Rights
813
A Dream
813
Married and Settled
814
Michael Field [Katharine Harris Bradley
(1846-1914)
and Edith Cooper
(1862-1913)] 81.5
An /Eolian Harp
816
XIV
[My Darling]
817
XXXV
[ Come,
Gorgo,
put the rug in place ]
818
[ O free me, for I take the leap ]
818
Praise of Thanatos
819
In
Memoriam
820
Mona Lisa
—
Leonardo da Vinci (The Louvre)
820
To Correggio s Holy Sebastian (Dresden)
821
Cupid s Visit [ I lay sick in a foreign land ]
821
XXXVI
,
,
r
The Birth or Venus
822
00
[ Sometimes I do dispatch my heart ]
823
CD
-t—J
g
[ Ah, Eros doth not always smite ]
823
Cyclamens
824
[ Already to mine eyelids shore ]
824
[ A Girl ]
824
[ I sing
thee
with a stock-dove s
throať ]
825
Unbosoming
825
[ It was deep April ]
826
[ Solitary Death, make me thine own ]
826
Walter Pater
827
Constancy
827
To Christina
Rossetti
828
Penetration
828
To the Winter Aphrodite
829
I love you with my life
829
A Palimpsest
829
Beloved, my glory in
thee
is not ceased
830
Lo,
my loved is dying
830
Alice Meynell
(1847-1922) 830
Renouncement
831
Unlinked
831
Parentage
832
Maternity
832
Lucy Luck (1848-1922)
437
From A Little of My Life
437
William Hurrell
Mallock (1849-1923) 833
Christmas Thoughts, by a Modern Thinker
833
William Ernest Henley
(1849-1903) 836
From In Hospital
836
I Enter Patient
836
II Waiting
837
XXXVII
XIV Ave,
Caesar!
837
IV
To R. T. H. B. [Invictus]
838
|=
-I—
>
We Shall Surely Die
838
g
When You Are Old
839
Double Ballade of Life and Fate
839
Remonstrance
841
Pro
Rege
Nostro
841
Robert Louis Stevenson
(1850-94) 843
From Treasure Island
843
To the Hesitating Purchaser
843
A Child s Garden of Verses
844
[From the first section]
844
I Bed in Summer
844
V Whole Duty of Children
84.5
XXVIII
Foreign Children
845
From Underwoods
846
XXI
Requiem
846
A Plea for Gas Lamps
846
Arthur Clement Hilton
(1851-77) 849
Octopus
849
Oscar Wilde
(1854-1900) 850
Requiescat
851
Impression
du
Matin
852,
Helas!
852
Impressions
833
I
Le Jardin
853
II
La Mer
853
Symphony in Yellow
854
The
Harloťs
House
854
A Preface to The Picture of Dorian Gray
855
The Importance of Being Earnest
440
XXXVIII
¿o
John Davidson
(1857-1909) 857
с
В
Thirty Bob a Week
857
о
о
A Northern Suburb
860
Battle
861
Constance
Naden
(1858-89) 861
The Lady Doctor
862
Love Versus Learning
864
To Amy, On Receiving Her Photograph
866
The New Orthodoxy
866
Natural Selection
868
A. E. Housman
(1859-1936) 869
A Shropshire Lad
870
1
1887 870
II Loveliest of trees, the cherry now
871
XIII
When I was one-and-twenty
872
XIX
To an Athlete Dying Young
872
XXVII
Is my team ploughing?
873
XXX
Others, I am not the first
874
XXXI
On Wenlock Edge the wood s in trouble
875
XXXV
On the idle hill of summer
875
XLV
If by chance your eye offend you
876
LIV
With rue my heart is laden
876
LXII
Terence, this is stupid stuff
877
Additional Poems
879
XVIII
Oh who is that young sinner with the handcuffs
on his wrists?
879
Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930)
482
A Scandal in Bohemia
483
Francis Thompson
(1859-1907) 880
The Hound of Heaven
880
Rosamund Marriott Watson
(1860-1911) 885
Scythe Song
886
Triolet
887
Omar Khayyam
887
XXXIX
Dead Poets
888
In the Rain
889
c:
-I—
>
A Summer Night
890 §
о
Chimsera
891
Mary Elizabeth Coleridge
(1861-1907) 892
Gone
893
The Other Side of a Mirror
893
Mortal Combat
894
The Witch
894
Marriage
895
The White Women
895
Death and the Lady
897
Amy Levy
(1861-89) 897
Felo
De Se
898
Magdalen
899
A Wallflower
901
The First Extra
901
At a Dinner Party
902
A Ballad of Religion and Marriage
902
Henry Newbolt
(1862-1938) 903
Vitai
Lampada
904
He Fell Among Thieves
905
The Dictionary of National Biography
906
The Vigil
907
Clifton Chapel
908
Arthur Symons
(1865-1945) 909
Pistei
910
The Absinthe Drinker
910
Javanese Dancers
911
Hallucination
912
White Heliotrope
913
Bianca
913
vi
William
Butler
Yeats
(1865-1939) 914
£
The Stolen Child
915
о
The Lake Isle of Innisfree
916
о
An Old Song Re-Sung [Down by the Salley Gardens]
917
When You Are Old
917
Rudyard
Kipling
(1865-1936) 918
Gunga Din
918
The Widow at Windsor
921
Mandalay
922
Recessional
92.3
The White Man s Burden: An Address to the United States
924
Lionel Johnson
(1867-1902) 926
The Dark Angel
927
The Destroyer of a Soul
928
A Decadent s Lyric
929
Ernest Dowson
(1867-1900) 929
Non
Sum Qualis
Eram
Bonae
Sub Regno
Cynarae
930
Nuns of the Perpetual Adoration
931
Vitae
Summa Brevis
Spem Non
Vetat Incohare Longam
932
Benedictio
Domini
932
Spleen
933
Villanelle
of the Poet s Road
934
Charlotte
Mew
(1869 1928) 934
VR.I.
935
I [January 22nd, 1901]
933
II [February
2nd,
1901]
935
To a Little Child in Death
935
At the Convent Gate
936
Song [ Oh! Sorrow ]
дуу
Not for that City
Requiescat
The Farmer s Bride
937
938
939
Appendix
1 :
Money and Banking
Appendix
2:
Nineteenth-Century British Timelines
503
504
Further Reading
505
Index of Authors and Titles
514
xii
-t-J
CD
О
О
Index of Authors and Titles
94.1
e
Victorian
Literature is
а
comprehensive and fully annotated anthology with a flexibl
design that allows teachers and students to pursue traditional or innovative lines of
enquiry. Included in this collection are ninety-five of the period s prose, poetry, drama,
and non-fiction writers, including such canonical authors as Tennyson, Arnold, the
Brownings, Carlyle,
Ruskin,
the Rossettis, Wilde, Eliot, and the Brontes. Forty of the
authors are women.
In addition to selections from the major authors of the period, the volume promotes
an ideologically and culturally varied view of Victorian society by including women,
working-class, colonial, gay and lesbian writers, and dialect poets, These selections offer
readers the opportunity to study new voices beyond the canon. There are five contextual
sections covering the Condition of England; Gender, Women, and Sexuality; Literature
and the Arts; Religion and Science; and Empire. These contexts are interdisciplinary
in nature and examine the social, cultural, artistic, and historical factors at play during
the period. They also contain unexpected subsections on topics of recent scholarship,
such as environmentalism and animal rights; mass literacy and mass media; sex and
sexuality; melodrama and comedy; the Irish question; ruling India and the Indian Mutiny;
innovations in print culture.
The coverage is further expanded with an extensive website for teachers and students that
presents additional contextual readings (each with new subsections, such as ecclesiastical
parties, literature and new technologies, law and the sexual subject), visual materials,
audio recordings, maps, and chronologies. These are fully integrated with the text and
include detailed annotations about names, places, events, allusions, and leading ideas.
From the canon to its extensions to its contexts, this website is a fresh and exciting
introduction to the diversity of the Victorian age.
For further resources please visit www.wiley.com/go/victorianliterature
j
|
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discipline | Anglistik / Amerikanistik |
edition | 1. publ. |
era | Geschichte 1830-1901 gnd |
era_facet | Geschichte 1830-1901 |
format | Book |
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genre_facet | Anthologie |
id | DE-604.BV042158983 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T01:14:10Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781405188654 9781405188746 |
language | English |
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physical | LII, 950 S. Ill. |
publishDate | 2015 |
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publisher | Wiley-Blackwell |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Wiley Blackwell anthologies |
spelling | Victorian literature an anthology ed. by Victor Shea ... 1. publ. Chichester [u.a.] Wiley-Blackwell 2015 LII, 950 S. Ill. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Wiley Blackwell anthologies Geschichte 1830-1901 gnd rswk-swf Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd rswk-swf Literatur (DE-588)4035964-5 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4002214-6 Anthologie gnd-content Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 s Literatur (DE-588)4035964-5 s Geschichte 1830-1901 z DE-604 Shea, Victor 1960- Sonstige (DE-588)1069142697 oth Digitalisierung UB Passau - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027598676&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Passau - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027598676&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext |
spellingShingle | Victorian literature an anthology Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd Literatur (DE-588)4035964-5 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4014777-0 (DE-588)4035964-5 (DE-588)4002214-6 |
title | Victorian literature an anthology |
title_auth | Victorian literature an anthology |
title_exact_search | Victorian literature an anthology |
title_full | Victorian literature an anthology ed. by Victor Shea ... |
title_fullStr | Victorian literature an anthology ed. by Victor Shea ... |
title_full_unstemmed | Victorian literature an anthology ed. by Victor Shea ... |
title_short | Victorian literature |
title_sort | victorian literature an anthology |
title_sub | an anthology |
topic | Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd Literatur (DE-588)4035964-5 gnd |
topic_facet | Englisch Literatur Anthologie |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027598676&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027598676&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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