Contents |
A note in defense of satire, by L.I. Bredvold.--The beggar's opera, by B.H. Bronson.--The authenticity of Anna Seward's published correspondence, by J.I. Clifford.--Suggestions toward a genealogy of The man of feeling, by R.S. Crane.--The nature of Dr. Johnsons's rationalism, by J.H. Hagstrum.--Thomas Warton and the eighteenth century dilemma, by R.D. Havens.--The purpose of Dryden's Annus mirabilis, by E.N. Hooker.--The originality of Absalom and Achitophel by R.F. Jones.--The influence of Bernard Mandeville, by F.B. Kaye.--Jonathan Swift, by L.A. Landa.--Epistolary technique in Richardson's novels, by A. McKillop.--The muse of satire, by M. Mack.--The search for English literary documents,by J.M. Osborn.--Situational satire; a commentary on the method of Swift, by R. Quintana.--Fielding's Amelia, by G. Sherburn.--Rules and English critics of the epic, 1650-1800, by H.T. Swedenberg, Jr.--One relation of rhyme to reason; Alexander Pope, by W.K. Wimsatt, Jr.--The artcollection of a virtuoso in eighteenth century England, by H.B. Wright and H.C. Montgomery. |