Irish Literature: The Eighteenth CenturyAlexander Norman Jeffares, Peter Van de Kamp Irish Academic Press, 2006 - 402 pages Irish Literature Eighteenth Century illustrates not only the impressive achievement of the great writers-Swift, Berkeley, Burke, Goldsmith and Sheridan-but also shows the varied accomplishment of others, providing unexpected, entertaining examples from the pens of the less well known. Here are examples of the witty comic dramas so successfully written by Susannah Centlivre, Congreve, Steele, Farquhar and Macklin. There are serious and humorous essayists represented, including Steele, Lord Orrery, Thomas Sheridan and Richard Lovell Edgeworth. Beginning with Gulliver's Travels, fiction includes John Amory's strange imaginings, Sterne's stream of consciousness, Frances Sheridan's insights, Henry Brooke's sentimentalities and Goldsmith's charm. Poetry ranges from the classical to the innovative. Graceful lyrics, anonymous jeux d'esprit, descriptive pieces, savage satires and personal poems are written by very different poets, among them learned witty women, clergymen and drunken ne'er-do-wells. Politicians, notably Grattan and Curran, produced eloquent speeches; effective essays and pamphlets accompanied political activity. Personal letters and diaries-such as the exuberant Dorothea Herbert's Recollections-convey the changing ethos of this century's literature, based on the classics and moving to an increasing interest in the translation of Irish literature. This book conveys its fascinating liveliness and rich variety. |
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Page 184
... received all his nourishment . So , when he came down , he happened to alight among dry sands and rocks , where there was not a bit to eat nor a drop of water to drink ; and so there he lay faint and tired , and unable to rise , gasping ...
... received all his nourishment . So , when he came down , he happened to alight among dry sands and rocks , where there was not a bit to eat nor a drop of water to drink ; and so there he lay faint and tired , and unable to rise , gasping ...
Page 291
... received religion , and was , therefore , forced to preserve an outward show of it ; but it is very probable , from the discourses he frequently held with his friends , that in his heart he despised and laughed at their monstrous ...
... received religion , and was , therefore , forced to preserve an outward show of it ; but it is very probable , from the discourses he frequently held with his friends , that in his heart he despised and laughed at their monstrous ...
Page 358
... received me the evening before . On leaving him I found an altar completely prepared in the King's apartment . The commissaries had executed to the letter all that I had required of them ; they had even done more than I had asked ; for ...
... received me the evening before . On leaving him I found an altar completely prepared in the King's apartment . The commissaries had executed to the letter all that I had required of them ; they had even done more than I had asked ; for ...
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
Sir Richard Steele | 12 |
The Rediscovery of the Gaelic Tradition | 19 |
Copyright | |
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Irish Literature: The Eighteenth Century Alexander Norman Jeffares,Peter Van de Kamp No preview available - 2006 |
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