Parodies of the Romantic Age

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This volume collects together a wealth of material ranging from verse parodies originally published in pamphlet form, to longer works such as P.G. Patmore's parodies of the works of Byron, Lamb and Hazlitt.

Author(s): Graeme Stones
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 1998

Language: English
Pages: 1798
City: London

Volume Cover
Volume 1
Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
CONTENTS
Acknowledgements
General Introduction
Introduction
Table of Attributions
Abbreviations
Introductory note
Prospectus
Introductory note to Issue I
Issue I Introduction
Inscription for the Apartment in Chepstow Castle, where Henry Marten, the Regicide, was imprisoned thirty years
Inscription for the Door of the Cell in Newgate, where Mrs. Browning, the Prentice-cide, was confined previous to her execution
Introductory note to Issue II
Issue II The Friend of Humanity and the Knife-Grinder
Introductory note to Issue III
Issue III The Invasion; or the British War Song
Introductory note to Issue IV
Issue IV La Sainte Guillotine: a New Song, attempted from the French
Meeting of the Friends of Freedom
Introductory note to Issue V
Issue V The Soldier's Friend
Sonnet to Liberty
Introductory note to Issue VI
Issue VI Quintessence of all the Dactylics that ever were, or ever will be published
Latin Verses, written immediately after the Revolution of the Fourth of September
Letter from a Lady
Introductory note to Issue VII
Issue VII Translation of the Latin Verses in Issue VI
Introductory note to Issue VIII
Issue VIII The Choice; imitated from "the Battle of Sabla", in Carlyle's Specimens of Arabian Poetry
Issue VIII The Duke and the Taxing Man
Issue VIII Epigram on the Paris Loan, called the Loan upon England
Introductory note to Issue IX
Issue IX Ode to Anarchy
Song, recommended to be sung at all convivial Meetings, convened for the purpose of opposing the Assessed Tax Bill
Introductory note to Issue X
Issue X Lines written at the close of the year 1797
Translation of the New Song of the "Army of England"
Introductory note to Issue XI
Issue XI To the Author of the "Epistle to the Editors of The Anti-Jacobin"
Ode to Lord Moira
Introductory note to Issue XII
Issue XII A Bit of an Ode to Mr. Fox
Mr. Fox's Birth-Day
Introductory note to Issue XIII
Issue XIII Acme and Septimius; or the Happy Union
Introductory note to Issue XIV
Issue XIV To the Author of The Anti-Jacobin
Lines, written under the Bust of Charles Fox at the Crown and Anchor
Lines written by a Traveller at Czarco-zelo, under the Bust of a certain Orator, once placed between those of Demosthenes and Cicero
Introductory note to Issue XV
Issue XV The Progress of Man. A Didactic Poem
Introductory note to Issue XVI
Issue XVI The Progress of Man, continued
Introductory note to Issue XVII
Issue XVII Imitation of Bion. Written at St. Ann's Hill
The New Coalition
Introductory note to Issue XVIII
Issue XVIII Imitation of Horace, Lib. 3. Carm. 25
Introductory note to Issue XIX
Issue XIX Chevy Chase
Introductory note to Issue XX
Issue XX Ode to Jacobinism
Introductory note to Issue XXI
Issue XXI The Progress of Man, continued
Introductory note to Issue XXII
Issue XXII The Jacobin
To the Editor of The Anti-Jacobin
Introductory note to Issue XXIII
Issue XXIII The Loves of the Triangles. A Mathematical and Philosophical Poem
Introductory note to Issue XXIV
Issue XXIV The Loves of the Triangles. A Mathematical
and Philosophical Poem
Introductory note to Issue XXV
Issue XXV Brissot's Ghost
Introductory note to Issue XXVI
Issue XXVI The Loves of the Triangles
Introductory note to Issue XXVII
Issue XXVII A Consolatory Address to his Gun-Boats. By Citizen Muskein
Elegy on the Death of Jean Bon St. André
Introductory note to Issue XXVIII
Issue XXVIII Ode to my Country MDCCXCVIII
Introductory note to Issue XXIX
Issue XXIX Ode to the Director Merlin
Introductory note to Issue XXX
Issue XXX The Rovers; or the Double Arrangement
Introductory note to Issue XXXI
Issue XXXI The Rovers; or the Double Arrangement
Introductory note to Issue XXXII
Issue XXXII An affectionate Effusion of Citizen Muskein, to Havre-de-Grace
Introductory note to Issue XXXIII
Issue XXXIII Translation of a Letter from Bawba-dara-adul-phoola, to Neek-awl-aretchid-kooez
Introductory note to Issue XXXIV
Issue XXXIV Ode to a Jacobin
To the Editor of The Anti-Jacobin
[Translation]
Introductory note to Issue XXXV
Issue XXXV Ballynahinch; a New Song
De Navali Laude Britanniae
[Translation]
Introductory note to Issue XXXVI
Issue XXXVI New Morality
Notes
Volume 2
Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
CONTENTS
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Introductory note
From Probationary Odes for the Laureateship (1785)
Introductory note
Bozzy and Piozzi, or, the British Biographers, A Town Eclogue (1786)
Introductory note
From The Baviad (1791)
Introductory note
'Sonnets Attempted in the Manner of Contemporary Writers' (1797)
Introductory note
From 'The Amatory Poems of Abel Shufflebottom' (1799)
Introductory note
From The Port Folio (1804)
Introductory note
From Rejected Addresses, or the New Theatrum Poetarum (1812)
Introductory note
From 'The Lady of the Wreck' (1812)
Introductory note
'Verses supposed to be written by the Editor of the Examiner, whilst in Prison' (n. d.)
Introductory note
From The Poetic Mirror; or The Living Bards qf Britain (1816)
Introductory note
From Prospectus and Specimen of an Intended National Work of Stow-Market, in Suffolk, Harness and Collar-Makers. Intended to comprise the most Interesting Particulars relating to King Arthur and his Round Table (1817)
Introductory note
From Beppo (1818)
Introductory note
'There is a fever of the spirit' (1818)
Peter Bell. A Lyrical Ballad (1819)
Introductory note
From Peter Bell the Third (1819)
Introductory note
Benjamin the Waggoner, a Ryghte merrie and conceitede Tale in Verse. A Fragment (1819)
Introductory note
The Political House that Jack Built (1819)
Introductory note
'Don Juan Unread' (1819)
Introductory note
'Evening' (1820)
Introductory note
'The Nose-Drop: A Physiological Ballad' (1821)
Introductory note
'Elegy on my Tom Cat' (1821)
Introductory note
From Paper Money Lyrics (1825)
Introductory note
From Odes and Addresses to Great People (1825)
Introductory note
'The London University or, Stinkomalee Triumphans' (1828)
Introductory note
'Cabbages' (n. d.)
Introductory note
'Fragment in imitation of Wordsworth' (n. d.)
Introductory note
From The Fudges in England (1835)
Introductory note
'On Reading Wordsworth's "Excursion'" (n.d.)
Introductory note
'Fish have their Times to Bite' (1861)
Introductory note
'The Ancient Philosopher. By a Literary Medium' (1868)
Introductory note
'The Power of Science' (1880)
Silent Corrections
Notes
Volume 3
Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
CONTENTS
Introduction
Introductory note
From Gulliver Revived, Anon, 1799 and 1801
Introductory note to The Miller Correspondence
From The Miller Correspondence, Anon, 1833
Introductory note to Love and Freindship
From Love and Freindship, Jane Austen, 1922
Introductory note to Azemia
From Azemia, William Beckford, 1797
Introductory note to Blackwood's Magazine
'Translation of an ancient Chaldee Manuscript' from Blackwood's Magazine, James Hogg, 1817
Introductory note to The Microcosm
From The Microcosm, George Canning and John Hookham Frere, 1786
Introductory note to Alice Through the Looking Glass
From Alice Through the Looking Glass, Lewis Carroll (Charles Dodgson), 1855
Introductory note to Biographia Literaria
From Biographia Literaria, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 1817
Introductory note to Sensation Novels Condensed
'Miss Mix', from Sensation Novels Condensed, F. Bret Harte, 1875
Introductory note to The Spy
From The Spy, James Hogg, 1810
Introductory note to The Three Trials of William Hone
From 'The First Trial', from The Three Trials of William Hone, William Tegg, 1876
Introductory note to Letter to Coleridge
Letter to Coleridge, Charles Lamb, 1798
Introductory note to The Castle Spectre
From The Castle Spectre, Matthew Gregory Lewis, 1798
Introductory note to Melincourt
From Melincourt, Thomas Love Peacock, 1817
Introductory note to The Betrothed
From 'Introduction' to The Betrothed, Walter Scott, 1825
Introductory note to Rejected Addresses
'The Hampshire Farmer', from Rejected Addresses, Horace and James Smith, 1812
Introductory note to The Inquirer
'Critical Remarks on Epicoelegiac Poetry', from The Inquirer, William Squibb, 1814
Introductory note to Edwin the Fair
From Edwin the Fair, Henry Taylor, 1845
Notes
Volume 4
Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
CONTENTS
Introduction
Note on the text
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations and Short titles
Warreniana
Original contents list
Silent Corrections
Volume 5
Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
CONTENTS
Introduction
Note on the text
Preface
Contents
Introductory note to An Unsentimental Journey
An Unsentimental Journey
Introductory note to Rich and Poor
Rich and Poor
Introductory note to To-morrow; a Gaiety and Gravity
To-morrow; a Gaiery and Graviry
Introductory note to Review of Tremaine
Review of Tremaine
Introductory note to Letters on Shakespeare
Letters on Shakespeare
Introductory note to Grimm's Ghost
Grimm's Ghost
Introductory note to The Spirit of the Age
The Spirit of the Age
Introductory note to London Letters to Country Cousins
London Letters to Country Cousins
Introductory note to Brother Jonathan
Brother Jonathan
Introductory note to Boccaccio and Fiametta
Boccaccio and Fiametta
Appendix to Rejected Articles
Introductory note to Appendix
Demoniacals
Dining Out
Silent Corrections
Index