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Romantic Women Poets Volume I

Romantic Women Poets Volume I

Romantic Women Poets Volume I


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Zusammenfassung

Although long overshadowed by their male contemporaries, the women Romantic poets of the 18th and 19th centuries made a lasting contribution to Romanticism. This revised anthology presents 200 works from 40 poets, reflecting the female poetic activity from around 1770 to 1838.

Romantic Women Poets Volume I Zusammenfassung

The right and the recession considers the ways in which conservative activists, groupings, parties and interests in the US and Britain responded to the financial crisis and the 'Great Recession' that followed in its wake. The book looks at the tensions and stresses between different ideas, interests and institutions and the ways in which they shaped the character of political outcomes. In Britain, these processes opened the way for leading Conservatives to redefine their commitment to fiscal retrenchment and austerity. Whereas public expenditure reductions had been portrayed as a necessary response to earlier overspending they were increasingly represented as a way of securing a permanently 'leaner' state. The book assesses the character of this shift in thinking as well as the viability of these efforts to shrink the state and the parallel attempts in the US to cut federal government spending through mechanisms such as the budget sequester.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Part 1 Anna Seward, (1742-1809): sonnet - By Derwent's rapid stream as oft I strayed,, An Evening in November, Autumn, To Colebrooke Dale. Part 2 Anna Laetitia Barbauld (nee Aikin) (1743-1825): from Corsica; Ode to spring; A Summer Evening's Meditation; Autumn. A Fragment. Part 3 Hannah More, (1745-1833): from The Search after Happiness; from The Search after Happiness. Part 4 Mary Hays, (1760-1843): An Invocation to the Nightingale; The Consolation; sonnet - Ah! let not hope fallacious, airy, wild,. Part 5 Charlotte Smith (nee Turner) (1749-1806): sonnet - To a Nightingale, To The South Downs, On the Departure of the Nightingale, Composed during a Walk on the Downs. Part 6 Eliza Knipe (later Cobbold) (1767-1824): On the Lake of Windermere; Keswick. Part 7 Anne Hunter (nee Home) (1742-1821): November, 1784; To the Nightingale. Part 8 Helen Maria Williams, (1762-1827): sonnet - To Twilight, To Expression; An Address to Poetry; sonnet - To Hope. Part 9 Mary Hunt, (1764-1834): Written on visiting the Ruins of Dunkeswell Abbey ..... Part 10 Ann Yearsley (nee Cromartie) (1752-1806): To Mr. ***, an Unlettered poet, on Genius Unimproved; Anarchy; Peace; Dedicated to Louis XIV. Part 11 Mary O'Brien, (fl. 1785-1790): Ode to Milton. Part 12 Joanna Baillie, (1762-1851): from A Winter Day; from A Summer Day; from Thunder; from Wind. Part 13 Anna Maria Jones, (nee Shipley) (1748-1829): Sonnet to Echo; stanzas - Marie Antoinette's Complaint in Prison; Ode to Fancy; Adieu to India. Part 14 Mary Robinson, (nee Darby) (1758-1800): Ode to the Nightingale; stanzas - Written between Dover and Calais, Written after Successive Nights of Melancholy Dreams; Ode to my Beloved Daughter. Part 15 Ann Radcliffe (nee Ward) (1764-1823): To the visions of Fancy; Song of a Spirit; Morning, on the Sea Shore; Rondeau. Part 16 Amelia Alderson, (later Opie) (1769-1853): To Twilight; Ode to Borrowdale; Ode on the Present Times, 27th January 1795; Stanzas Written under Aeolus's Harp. Part 17 Jane West (nee Iliffe) (1758-1852): Ode to Imaginations; sonnet - 'Her hair disheveled, and her robe untied,', To May. Part 18 Anna Maria Porter (1780-1832)?: Address to poetry, sonnet to a Sea-Gull. Part 19 Mary Tighe (nee Blachford) (1772-1810): Written at Scarborough; sonnet - For me would Fancy now her chaplet twine, Ye dear associates of my gayer hours; from Psyche - The Island of Pleasure. Part 20 Barbara Hoole (nee Wreaks, later Hofland) (1770-1844): Cumberland Rocks; sonnet - Composed on the Banks of Ulswater; Composed in a cell, (commonly called the Giant's Cave); Lines composed while Climbing some Rocks in Derbyshire. Part 21 Jane Taylor, (1783-1824): A Town; from A pair; from The World in the House. Part 22 Felicia Dorothea Hemans (nee Browne) (1793-1835): The Voice of Spring; The Treasures of the. (Part contents)..

Zusätzliche Informationen

GOR004245023
9780719053085
0719053080
Romantic Women Poets Volume I: 1770-1838, an Anthology
Gebraucht - Sehr Gut
Broschiert
Manchester University Press
19971113
352
N/A
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