Title: A Satire Anthology
Compiler: Carolyn Wells
Release date: December 4, 2014 [eBook #47528]
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Chris Curnow, Emmy and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
produced from images generously made available by The
Internet Archive)
Acknowledgment is hereby gratefully made to the publishers of the various poems included in this compilation.
Those by Oliver Wendell Holmes, James Russell Lowell, John G. Saxe, Edward Rowland Sill, John Hay, Bayard Taylor and Edith Thomas are published by permission of Messrs. Houghton, Mifflin & Co.
The poems by Anthony Deane and Owen Seaman are used by arrangement with John Lane.
Through the courtesy of Small, Maynard & Co., are included poems by Bliss Carman, Charlotte Perkins Stetson-Gilman, Stephen Crane, and Frederic Ridgely Torrence.
Poems by Sam Walter Foss are published by permission of Lothrop, Lee & Shepherd Co.
The Century Co. are the publishers of poems by Richard Watson Gilder and Mary Mapes Dodge.
Frederich A. Stokes Company give permission for poems by Gelett Burgess and Stephen Crane.
“The Buntling Ball,” by Edgar Fawcett is published by permission of Funk and Wagnalls Company; “Hoch der Kaiser” by Rodney Blake, by the courtesy of the New Amsterdam Book Co. The poems by James Jeffrey Roche by permission of E. H. Bacon & Co.; and “The Font in the Forest” by Herman Knickerbocker Vielé, by permission of Brentano’s.
“The Evolution of a Name,” by Charles Battell Loomis, is quoted from “Just Rhymes,” Copyright, 1899, by R. H. Russell.
“He and She,” by Eugene Fitch Ware, is published by permission of G. P. Putnam’s Sons.
Page | ||
Chorus of Women |
Aristophanes |
3 |
A Would-Be Literary Bore |
Horace |
4 |
The Wish for Length of Life |
Juvenal |
6 |
The Ass’s Legacy |
Ruteboeuf |
7 |
A Ballade of Old-Time Ladies (Translated by John Payne). |
François Villon |
11 |
A Carman’s Account of a Lawsuit |
Sir David Lyndsay |
12 |
The Soul’s Errand |
Sir Walter Raleigh |
13 |
Of a Certain Man |
Sir John Harrington |
16 |
A Precise Tailor |
Sir John Harrington |
16 |
The Will |
John Donne |
18 |
From “King Henry IV” |
William Shakespeare |
20 |
From “Love’s Labour’s Lost” |
William Shakespeare |
21 |
From “As You Like It” |
William Shakespeare |
22 |
Horace Concocting An Ode |
Thomas Dekker |
23 |
On Don Surly |
Ben Jonson |
24 |
The Scholar and His Dog |
John Marston |
25 |
The Manly Heart |
George Wither |
26 |
The Constant Lover |
Sir John Suckling |
27 |
The Remonstrance |
Sir John Suckling |
28 |
Saintship versus Conscience |
Samuel Butler |
29 |
Description of Holland |
Samuel Butler |
30 |
The Religion of Hudibras |
Samuel Butler |
31 |
Satire on the Scots |
John Cleiveland |
32 |
Song |
Richard Lovelace |
34 |
The Character of Holland |
Andrew Marvell |
35 |
The Duke of Buckingham |
John Dryden |
37 |
On Shadwell |
John Dryden |
38 |
Satire on Edward Howard |
Charles Sackville, Earl of Dorset |
39 |
St. Anthony’s Sermon to the Fishes |
Abraham á Sancta Clara |
39 |
Introduction to the True-Born Englishman |
Daniel Defoe |
41[x] |
An Epitaph |
Matthew Prior |
43 |
The Remedy Worse than the Disease |
Matthew Prior |
45 |
Twelve Articles |
Jonathan Swift |
46 |
The Furniture of a Woman’s Mind |
Jonathan Swift |
48 |
From “The Love of Fame” |
Edward Young |
50 |
Dr. Delany’s Villa |
Thomas Sheridan |
52 |
The Quidnunckis |
John Gay |
54 |
The Sick Man and the Angel |
John Gay |
55 |
Sandys’ Ghost |
Alexander Pope |
57 |
From “The Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot” |
Alexander Pope |
60 |
The Three Black Crows |
John Byrom |
63 |
An Epitaph |
George John Cayley |
64 |
An Epistle to Sir Robert Walpole |
Henry Fielding |
65 |
The Public Breakfast |
Christopher Anstey |
67 |
An Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog |
Oliver Goldsmith |
72 |
On Smollett |
Charles Churchill |
73 |
The Uncertain Man |
William Cowper |
74 |
A Faithful Picture of Ordinary Society |
William Cowper |
74 |
On Johnson |
John Wolcott (Peter Pindar) |
75 |
To Boswell |
John Wolcott (Peter Pindar) |
76 |
The Hen |
Matt. Claudius |
77 |
Let Us All be Unhappy Together |
Charles Dibdin |
78 |
The Friar of Orders Gray |
John O’Keefe |
79 |
The Country Squire |
Tomas Yriarte |
80 |
The Eggs |
Tomas Yriarte |
82 |
The Literary Lady |
Richard Brinsley Sheridan |
84[xi] |
Sly Lawyers |
George Crabbe |
85 |
Reporters |
George Crabbe |
85 |
Address to the Unco Guid, or the Rigidly Righteous |
Robert Burns |
86 |
Holy Willie’s Prayer |
Robert Burns |
88 |
Kitty of Coleraine |
Edward Lysaght |
91 |
The Friend of Humanity and the Knife-Grinder |
George Canning |
92 |
Nora’s Vow |
Sir Walter Scott |
94 |
Job |
Samuel T. Coleridge |
95 |
Cologne |
Samuel T. Coleridge |
96 |
Giles’s Hope |
Samuel T. Coleridge |
96 |
The Battle of Blenheim |
Robert Southey |
97 |
The Well of St. Keyne |
Robert Southey |
99 |
The Poet of Fashion |
James Smith |
101 |
Christmas Out of Town |
James Smith |
103 |
Eternal London |
Thomas Moore |
105 |
The Modern Puffing System |
Thomas Moore |
106 |
Lying |
Thomas Moore |
108 |
The King of Yvetot (Version of W. M. Thackeray) |
Pierre Jean de Béranger |
109 |
Sympathy |
Reginald Heber |
111 |
A Modest Wit |
Selleck Osborn |
112 |
The Philosopher’s Scales |
Jane Taylor |
114 |
From “The Feast of the Poets” |
James Henry Leigh Hunt |
116 |
Rich and Poor; or, Saint and Sinner |
Thomas L. Peacock |
117 |
Mr. Barney Maguire’s Account of the Coronation |
Richard Harris Barham |
119 |
From “The Devil’s Drive” |
Lord Byron |
123 |
From “English Bards and Scotch Reviewers” |
Lord Byron |
125 |
To Woman |
Lord Byron |
126 |
A Country House Party |
Lord Byron |
127[xii] |
Greediness Punished |
Friedrich Rückert |
130 |
Woman |
Fitz-Greene Halleck |
132 |
The Rich and the Poor Man (From the Russian of Kremnitzer) |
Sir John Bowring |
132 |
Ozymandias |
Percy Bysshe Shelley |
134 |
Cui Bono |
Thomas Carlyle |
135 |
Father-Land and Mother Tongue |
Samuel Lover |
135 |
Father Molloy |
Samuel Lover |
136 |
Gaffer Gray (From “Hugh Trevor”) |
Thomas Holcroft |
139 |
Cockle v. Cackle |
Thomas Hood |
140 |
Our Village |
Thomas Hood |
145 |
The Devil at Home (From “The Devil’s Progress”) |
Thomas Kibble Hervey |
149 |
How to Make a Novel |
Lord Charles Neaves |
150 |
Two Characters |
Henry Taylor |
151 |
The Sailor’s Consolation |
William Pitt |
152 |
Verses on seeing the Speaker asleep in his Chair during One of the Debates of the First Reformed Parliament |
Winthrop M. Praed |
154 |
Pelters of Pyramids |
Richard Hengist Horne |
155 |
The Annuity |
George Outram |
156 |
Malbrouck |
Translated by Father Prout |
161 |
A Man’s Requirements |
Elizabeth Barrett Browning |
163 |
Critics |
Elizabeth Barrett Browning |
164 |
The Miser |
Edward Fitzgerald |
166 |
Cacoëthes Scribendi |
Oliver Wendell Holmes |
166 |
A Familiar Letter to Several Correspondents |
Oliver Wendell Holmes |
167 |
Contentment |
Oliver Wendell Holmes |
171[xiii] |
How to Make a Man of Consequence |
Mark Lemon |
173 |
The Widow Malone |
Charles Lever |
173 |
The Pauper’s Drive |
T. Noel |
175 |
On Lytton |
Alfred Tennyson |
177 |
Sorrows of Werther |
William Makepeace Thackeray |
178 |
Mr. Molony’s Account of the Ball Given to the Nepaulese Ambassador by the Peninsular and Oriental Company |
William Makepeace Thackeray |
179 |
Damages, Two Hundred Pounds |
William Makepeace Thackeray |
182 |
The Lost Leader |
Robert Browning |
186 |
The Pope and the Net |
Robert Browning |
188 |
Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister |
Robert Browning |
190 |
Cynical Ode to an Ultra-Cynical Public |
Charles Mackay |
192 |
The Great Critics |
Charles Mackay |
193 |
The Laureate |
William E. Aytoun |
194 |
Woman’s Will |
John Godfrey Saxe |
196 |
The Mourner á la Mode |
John Godfrey Saxe |
197 |
There is no God |
Arthur Hugh Clough |
199 |
The Latest Decalogue |
Arthur Hugh Clough |
200 |
From “A Fable for Critics” |
James Russell Lowell |
201 |
The Pious Editor’s Creed |
James Russell Lowell |
206 |
Revelry in India |
Bartholomew Dowling |
210 |
A Fragment |
Grace Greenwood |
212 |
Nothing to Wear |
William Allen Butler |
213 |
A Review (The Inn Album, By Robert Browning) |
Bayard Taylor |
221 |
The Positivists |
Mortimer Collins |
224 |
Sky-Making |
Mortimer Collins |
226 |
My Lord Tomnoddy |
Robert Barnabas Brough |
227 |
Hiding the Skeleton |
George Meredith |
229[xiv] |
Midges |
Robert Bulwer Lytton |
230 |
The Schoolmaster Abroad with his Son |
Charles Stuart Calverley |
233 |
Of Propriety |
Charles Stuart Calverley |
235 |
Peace. A Study |
Charles Stuart Calverley |
236 |
All Saints |
Edmund Yates |
237 |
Fame’s Penny Trumpet |
Lewis Carroll |
238 |
The Diamond Wedding |
Edmund Clarence Stedman |
240 |
True to Poll |
Frank C. Burnand |
247 |
Sleep On |
W. S. Gilbert |
249 |
To the Terrestrial Globe, By a Miserable Wretch |
W. S. Gilbert |
250 |
The Ape and the Lady |
W. S. Gilbert |
250 |
Anglicised Utopia |
W. S. Gilbert |
252 |
Etiquette |
W. S. Gilbert |
254 |
The Æsthete |
W. S. Gilbert |
260 |
Too Late |
Fitz-Hugh Ludlow |
261 |
Life in Laconics |
Mary Mapes Dodge |
263 |
Distiches |
John Hay |
264 |
The Poet and the Critics |
Austin Dobson |
265 |
The Love Letter |
Austin Dobson |
267 |
Fame |
James Herbert Morse |
269 |
Five Lives |
Edward Rowland Sill |
270 |
He and She |
Eugene Fitch Ware |
272 |
What Will We Do? |
Robert J. Burdette |
272 |
The Tool |
Richard Watson Gilder |
273 |
Give Me a Theme |
Richard Watson Gilder |
274 |
The Poem, To the Critic |
Richard Watson Gilder |
274 |
Ballade of Literary Fame |
A. Lang |
274 |
Chorus of Anglomaniacs (From The Buntling Ball) |
Edgar Fawcett |
275 |
The Net of Law |
James Jeffrey Roche |
277 |
A Boston Lullaby |
James Jeffrey Roche |
277 |
The V-A-S-E |
James Jeffrey Roche |
278 |
Thursday |
Frederick E. Weatherly |
280 |
A Bird in the Hand |
Frederick E. Weatherly |
281[xv] |
An Advanced Thinker |
Brander Matthews |
282 |
A Thought |
J. K. Stephen |
283 |
A Sonnet |
J. K. Stephen |
284 |
They Said |
Edith M. Thomas |
284 |
To R. K. |
J. K. Stephen |
286 |
To Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra |
R. K. Munkittrick |
287 |
What’s in a Name |
R. K. Munkittrick |
288 |
Wed |
H. C. Bunner |
289 |
Atlantic City |
H. C. Bunner |
290 |
The Font in the Forest |
Herman Knickerbocker Vielé |
294 |
The Origin of Sin |
Samuel Walter Foss |
294 |
A Philosopher |
Samuel Walter Foss |
295 |
The Fate of Pious Dan |
Samuel Walter Foss |
298 |
The Meeting of the Clabberhuses |
Samuel Walter Foss |
300 |
Wedded Bliss |
Charlotte Perkins (Stetson) Gilman |
303 |
A Conservative |
Charlotte Perkins (Stetson) Gilman |
304 |
Same Old Story |
Harry B. Smith |
306 |
Hem and Haw |
Bliss Carman |
307 |
The Sceptics |
Bliss Carman |
308 |
The Evolution of a “Name” |
Charles Battell Loomis |
310 |
“The Hurt that Honour Feels” |
Owen Seaman |
310 |
John Jenkins |
Anthony C. Deane |
313 |
A Certain Cure |
Anthony C. Deane |
316 |
The Beauties of Nature (A Fragment from an Unpublished Epic) |
Anthony C. Deane |
317 |
Paradise. A Hindoo Legend |
George Birdseye |
319 |
Hoch! der Kaiser |
Rodney Blake |
320 |
On a Magazine Sonnet |
Russell Hilliard Loines |
321 |
Earth |
Oliver Herford |
321[xvi] |
A Butterfly of Fashion |
Oliver Herford |
322 |
General Summary |
Rudyard Kipling |
324 |
The Conundrum of the Workshops |
Rudyard Kipling |
326 |
Extracts from the Rubaiyat of Omar Cayenne |
Gelett Burgess |
328 |
Ballade of Expansion |
Hilda Johnson |
331 |
Friday Afternoon at the Boston Symphony Hall |
Faulkner Armytage |
332 |
War is Kind |
Stephen Crane |
336 |
Lines |
Stephen Crane |
337 |
From “The House of a Hundred Lights” |
Frederic Ridgely Torrence |
340 |
The British Visitor |
From The Troliopiad |
343 |
A Match |
Punch |
343 |
Wanted a Governess |
Anonymous |
346 |
Lines by an Old Fogy |
Anonymous |
348 |
SATIRE, though a form of literature familiar to everyone, is difficult to define. Partaking variously of sarcasm, irony, ridicule, and burlesque, it is exactly synonymous with no one of these.
Satire is primarily dependent on the motive of its writer. Unless meant for satire, it is not the real thing; unconscious satire is a contradiction of terms, or a mere figure of speech.
Secondarily, satire depends on the reader. What seems to us satire to-day, may not seem so to-morrow. Or, what seems satire to a pessimistic mind, may seem merely good-natured chaff to an optimist.
This, of course, refers to the subtler forms of satire. Many classic satires are direct lampoons or broadsides which admit of only one interpretation.
Literature numbers many satirists among its most honoured names; and the best satires show intellect, education, and a keen appreciation of human nature.
Nor is satire necessarily vindictive or spiteful. Often its best examples show a kindly tolerance for[xx] the vice or folly in question, and even hint a tacit acceptance of the conditions condemned. Again, in the hands of a carping and unsympathetic critic, satire is used with vitriolic effects on sins for which the writer has no mercy.
This lashing form of satire was doubtless the earliest type. The Greeks show sardonic examples of it, but the Romans allowed a broader sense of humour to soften the satirical sting.
Following and outstripping Lucilius, Horace is the acknowledged father of satire, and was himself followed, and, in the opinion of some, outstripped by Juvenal.
But the works of the ancient satirists are of interest mainly to scholars, and cannot be included in a collection destined for a popular audience. The present volume, therefore, is largely made up from the products of more recent centuries.
From the times of Horace and Juvenal, down through the mediæval ages to the present day, satires may be divided into the two classes founded by the two great masters: the work of Horace’s followers marked by humour and tolerance, that of Juvenal’s imitators by bitter invective. On the one side, the years have arrayed such names as Chaucer, Swift, Goldsmith, and Thackeray; on the other, Langland, Dryden, Pope, and Burns.
A scholarly gentleman of our own day classifies[xxi] satires in three main divisions: those directed at society, those which ridicule political conditions, and those aimed at individual characters.
These variations of the art of satire form a fascinating study, and to one interested in the subject, this small collection of representative satires can be merely a series of guide-posts.
It is the compiler’s regret that a great mass of material is necessarily omitted for lack of space; other selections are discarded because of their present untimeliness, which deprives them of their intrinsic interest. But an endeavour has been made to represent the greatest and best satiric writers, and also to include at least extracts from the masterpieces of satire.
It is often asked why we have no satire at the present day. Many answers have been given, but one reason is doubtless to be found in the acceleration of the pace of life; fads and foibles follow one another so quickly, that we have time neither to write nor read satiric disquisitions upon them.
Another reason lies in the fact that we have achieved a broader and more tolerant human outlook.
Again, the true satirist must be possessed of earnestness and sincerity. And it is a question whether the mental atmosphere of the twentieth century tends to stimulate and foster those qualities.
These explanations, however, seem to apply to American writers more especially than to English.
The leisurely thinking Briton, with his more personal viewpoint, has produced, and is even now producing, satires marked by strength, honesty, and literary value.
But America is not entirely unrepresented. The work of James Russell Lowell cannot suffer by comparison with that of any contemporary English author; and, though now forgotten because dependent on local and timely interest, many political satires written by Americans during the early part of the nineteenth century show clever and ingenious work founded on a comprehensive knowledge of the truth.
Yet, though the immediate present is not producing masterpieces of satire, the lack is partially made up by the large quantity of really meritorious work that is being done in a satirical vein. In this country and in England are young and middle-aged writers who show evidences of satiric power, which, though it does not make for fame and glory, is yet not without its value.
(From the “Thesmophoriazusæ.”)
OR A PROPER NEW BALLAD OF THE NEW OVID’S METAMORPHOSES, AS IT WAS INTENDED TO BE TRANSLATED BY PERSONS OF QUALITY
FRIEND OF HUMANITY
[A] Version of W. M. Thackeray.
(From “Hugh Trevor.”)
“MAN WANTS BUT LITTLE HERE BELOW”
GIVEN TO THE NEPAULESE AMBASSADOR BY THE PENINSULAR AND ORIENTAL COMPANY
I
II
THE INN ALBUM, BY ROBERT BROWNING.
TO PROFESSOR TYNDALL
Affectionately dedicated to all “original researchers” who pant for “endowment.”
BY A MISERABLE WRETCH
“Ah! si la jeunesse savait,—si la vieillesse pouvait!”
“J’ai vu les mœurs de mon temps, et j’ai publié cette lettre.”—La Nouvelle Héloise.
“All these for fourpence.”
SUGGESTED BY THE ATTITUDE OF THE FRENCH PRESS ON THE FASHODA QUESTION
A FRAGMENT FROM AN UNPUBLISHED EPIC
A HINDOO LEGEND
1899
PAGE | ||
Address to the Unco Guid, or the Rigidly Righteous |
Robert Burns |
86 |
Advanced Thinker, An |
Brander Matthews |
282 |
Æsthete, The |
W. S. Gilbert |
260 |
All-Saints |
Edmund Yates |
237 |
Anglicised Utopia |
W. S. Gilbert |
252 |
Annuity, The |
George Outram |
156 |
Ape and the Lady, The |
W. S. Gilbert |
250 |
Ass’s Legacy, The |
Rutebœuf |
7 |
Atlantic City |
H. C. Bunner |
290 |
Ballade of Expansion |
Hilda Johnson |
331 |
Ballade of Literary Fame |
Andrew Lang |
274 |
Ballade of Old-Time Ladies, A (Translated by John Payne) |
François Villon |
11 |
Battle of Blenheim, The |
Robert Southey |
97 |
Beauties of Nature, The |
Anthony C. Deane |
317 |
Bird in the Hand, A |
Frederick E. Weatherly |
281 |
Boston Lullaby, A |
James Jeffrey Roche |
277 |
British Visitor, The |
From the Trollopiad |
343 |
Butterfly of Fashion, A |
Oliver Herford |
322 |
Cacoëthes Scribendi |
Oliver Wendell Holmes |
166 |
Carman’s Account of a Lawsuit, A |
Sir David Lyndsay |
12 |
Certain Cure, A |
Anthony C. Deane |
316 |
Character of Holland, The |
Andrew Marvell |
35 |
Chorus of Anglomaniacs (From “The Buntling Ball”) |
Edgar Fawcett |
275 |
Chorus of Women |
Aristophanes |
3 |
Christmas Out of Town |
James Smith |
103 |
Cockle v. Cackle |
Thomas Hood |
140 |
Cologne |
Samuel T. Coleridge |
96[352] |
Conservative, A |
Charlotte Perkins (Stetson) Gilman |
304 |
Constant Lover, The |
Sir John Suckling |
27 |
Contentment |
Oliver Wendell Holmes |
171 |
Conundrum of the Workshops, The |
Rudyard Kipling |
326 |
Country House Party, A |
Lord Byron |
127 |
Country Squire, The |
Tomas Yriarte |
80 |
Critics |
Elizabeth Barrett Browning |
164 |
Cui Bono? |
Thomas Carlyle |
135 |
Cynical Ode to an Ultra-Cynical Public |
Charles Mackay |
192 |
Damages, Two Hundred Pounds |
William Makepeace Thackeray |
182 |
Description of Holland |
Samuel Butler |
30 |
Devil at Home, The |
Thomas Kibble Hervey |
149 |
Diamond Wedding, The |
Edmund Clarence Stedman |
240 |
Distiches |
John Hay |
264 |
Dr. Delany’s Villa |
Thomas Sheridan |
52 |
Duke of Buckingham, The |
John Dryden |
37 |
Earth |
Oliver Herford |
321 |
Eggs, The |
Tomas Yriarte |
83 |
Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog, An |
Oliver Goldsmith |
72 |
Epistle to Sir Robert Walpole, An |
Henry Fielding |
65 |
Epitaph, An |
George John Cayley |
64 |
Epitaph, An |
Matthew Prior |
43 |
Eternal London |
Thomas Moore |
105 |
Etiquette |
W. S. Gilbert |
254 |
Evolution of a “Name,” The |
Charles Battell Loomis |
310 |
Extracts from the Rubaiyat of Omar Cayenne |
Gelett Burgess |
328 |
Faithful Picture of Ordinary Society, A |
William Cowper |
74 |
Fame |
James Herbert Morse |
269[353] |
Fame’s Penny Trumpet |
Lewis Carroll |
238 |
Familiar Letter to Several Correspondents, A |
Oliver Wendell Holmes |
167 |
Fate of Pious Dan, The |
Samuel Walter Foss |
298 |
Father-Land and Mother-Tongue |
Samuel Lover |
135 |
Father Molloy |
Samuel Lover |
136 |
Five Lives |
Edward Rowland Sill |
270 |
Font in the Forest, The |
Herman Knickerbocker Vielé |
294 |
Fragment, A |
Grace Greenwood |
212 |
Friar of Orders Gray, The |
John O’Keefe |
79 |
Friday Afternoon at the Boston Symphony Hall |
Faulkner Armytage |
332 |
Friend of Humanity and the Knife-Grinder, The |
George Canning |
92 |
From “A Fable for Critics” |
James Russell Lowell |
201 |
From “As You Like It” |
Shakespeare |
22 |
From “English Bards and Scotch Reviewers” |
Lord Byron |
125 |
From “King Henry IV.” |
Shakespeare |
20 |
From “Love’s Labour’s Lost” |
Shakespeare |
21 |
From “The Devil’s Drive” |
Lord Byron |
123 |
From “The Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot” |
Alexander Pope |
60 |
From “The Feast of the Poets” |
James Henry Leigh Hunt |
116 |
From “The House of a Hundred Lights” |
Frederic Ridgely Torrence |
340 |
From “The Love of Fame” |
Edward Young |
50 |
Furniture of a Woman’s Mind, The |
Jonathan Swift |
48 |
Gaffer Gray (From “Hugh Trevor”) |
Thomas Holcroft |
139 |
General Summary |
Rudyard Kipling |
324 |
Giles’ Hope |
Samuel T. Coleridge |
96 |
Give Me a Theme |
Richard Watson Gilder |
274 |
Great Critics, The |
Charles Mackay |
193 |
Greediness Punished |
Friedrich Rückert |
130 |
He and She |
Eugene Fitch Ware |
272 |
Hem and Haw |
Bliss Carman |
307[354] |
Hen, The |
Matthew Claudius |
77 |
Hiding the Skeleton |
George Meredith |
229 |
Hoch! der Kaiser |
Rodney Blake |
320 |
Holy Willie’s Prayer |
Robert Burns |
88 |
Horace Concocting an Ode |
Thomas Dekker |
23 |
How to Make a Man of Consequence |
Mark Lemon |
173 |
How To Make a Novel |
Lord Charles Neaves |
150 |
“Hurt that Honour Feels, The” |
Owen Seaman |
310 |
Introduction to the True-Born Englishman |
Daniel Defoe |
41 |
Job |
Samuel T. Coleridge |
95 |
John Jenkins |
Anthony C. Deane |
313 |
King of Yvetot, The (Version of W. M. Thackeray) |
Pierre Jean De Béranger |
109 |
Kitty of Coleraine |
Edward Lysaght |
91 |
Latest Decalogue, The |
Arthur Hugh Clough |
200 |
Laureate, The |
William E. Aytoun |
194 |
Let Us All Be Unhappy Together |
Charles Dibdin |
78 |
Life in Laconics |
Mary Mapes Dodge |
263 |
Lines |
Stephen Crane |
337 |
Lines by an Old Fogy |
Anonymous |
348 |
Literary Lady, The |
Richard Brinsley Sheridan |
84 |
Lost Leader, The |
Robert Browning |
186 |
Love-Letter, The |
Austin Dobson |
267 |
Lying |
Thomas Moore |
108 |
Malbrouck |
Translated by Father Prout |
161 |
Manly Heart, The |
George Wither |
26 |
Man’s Requirements, A |
Elizabeth Barrett Browning |
163 |
Match, A |
Punch |
343 |
Meeting of the Clabberhuses, The |
Samuel Walter Foss |
300[355] |
Midges |
Robert Bulwer Lytton |
230 |
Miser, The |
Edward Fitzgerald |
166 |
Modern Puffing System, The |
Thomas Moore |
106 |
Modest Wit, A |
Selleck Osborn |
112 |
Mourner à la Mode, The |
John Godfrey Saxe |
197 |
Mr. Barney Maguire’s Account of the Coronation |
Richard Harris Barham |
119 |
Mr. Molony’s Account of the Ball Given to the Nepaulese Ambassador by the Peninsular and Oriental Company |
William Makepeace Thackeray |
179 |
My Lord Tomnoddy |
Robert Barnabas Brough |
227 |
Net of Law, The |
James Jeffrey Roche |
277 |
Nora’s Vow |
Sir Walter Scott |
94 |
Nothing to Wear |
William Allen Butler |
213 |
Of a Certain Man |
Sir John Harrington |
16 |
Of Propriety |
Charles Stuart Calverley |
235 |
On a Magazine Sonnet |
Russell Hilliard Loines |
321 |
On Don Surly |
Ben Jonson |
24 |
On Johnson |
John Wolcott (Peter Pindar) |
75 |
On Lytton |
Alfred Tennyson |
177 |
On Shadwell |
John Dryden |
38 |
On Smollett |
Charles Churchill |
73 |
Origin of Sin, The |
Samuel Walter Foss |
294 |
Our Village |
Thomas Hood |
145 |
Ozymandias |
Percy Bysshe Shelley |
134 |
Paradise. A Hindoo Legend |
George Birdseye |
319 |
Pauper’s Drive, The |
Thomas Noel |
175 |
Peace: A Study |
Charles Stuart Calverley |
236 |
Pelters of Pyramids |
Richard Hengist Horne |
155 |
Philosopher, A |
Samuel Walter Foss |
295 |
Philosopher’s Scales, The |
Jane Taylor |
114 |
Pious Editor’s Creed, The |
James Russell Lowell |
206 |
Poem to the Critic, The |
Richard Watson Gilder |
274 |
Poet and the Critics, The |
Austin Dobson |
265 |
Poet of Fashion, The |
James Smith |
101 |
Pope and the Net, The |
Robert Browning |
188 |
Positivists, The |
Mortimer Collins |
225[356] |
Precise Tailor, A |
Sir John Harrington |
16 |
Public Breakfast, The |
Christopher Anstey |
67 |
Quidnunckis, The |
John Gay |
54 |
Religion of Hudibras, The |
Samuel Butler |
31 |
Remedy Worse Than the Disease, The |
Matthew Prior |
45 |
Remonstrance, The |
Sir John Suckling |
28 |
Reporters |
George Crabbe |
85 |
Revelry in India |
Bartholomew Dowling |
210 |
Review, A |
Bayard Taylor |
221 |
Rich and Poor; or, Saint and Sinner |
Thomas L. Peacock |
117 |
Rich and the Poor Man, The (From the Russian of Kremnitzer) |
Sir John Bowring |
132 |
Sailor’s Consolation, The |
William Pitt |
152 |
Saintship versus Conscience |
Samuel Butler |
29 |
Same Old Story |
Harry B. Smith |
306 |
Sandys’ Ghost |
Alexander Pope |
57 |
Satire on Edward Howard |
Charles Sackville, Earl of Dorset |
39 |
Satire on the Scots |
John Cleiveland |
32 |
Sceptics, The |
Bliss Carman |
308 |
Scholar and His Dog, The |
John Marston |
25 |
Schoolmaster Abroad with His Son, The |
Charles Stuart Calverley |
233 |
Sick Man and the Angel, The |
John Gay |
55 |
Sky-Making |
Mortimer Collins |
226 |
Sleep On |
W. S. Gilbert |
249 |
Sly Lawyers |
George Crabbe |
85 |
Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister |
Robert Browning |
190 |
Song |
Richard Lovelace |
34 |
Sonnet, A |
J. K. Stephen |
284 |
Sorrows of Werther |
William Makepeace Thackeray |
178 |
Soul’s Errand, The |
Sir Walter Raleigh |
13 |
St. Anthony’s Sermon to the Fishes |
Abraham á Sancta-Clara |
39 |
Sympathy |
Reginald Heber |
111 |
There Is No God |
Arthur Hugh Clough |
199[357] |
They Said |
Edith M. Thomas |
284 |
Thought, A |
J. K. Stephen |
283 |
Three Black Crows |
John Byrom |
63 |
Thursday |
Frederick Edward Weatherly |
280 |
To Boswell |
John Wolcott (Peter Pindar) |
76 |
To Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra |
Richard Kendall Munkittrick |
287 |
To R. K. |
J. K. Stephen |
286 |
To the Terrestrial Globe |
W. S. Gilbert |
240 |
To Woman |
Lord Byron |
126 |
Too Late |
Fitz-Hugh Ludlow |
261 |
Tool, The |
Richard Watson Gilder |
273 |
True to Poll |
Frank C. Burnand |
247 |
Twelve Articles |
Jonathan Swift |
46 |
Two Characters |
Henry Taylor |
151 |
Uncertain Man, The |
William Cowper |
74 |
V-a-s-e, The |
James Jeffrey Roche |
278 |
Verses on Seeing the Speaker Asleep in His Chair During One of the Debates of the First Reformed Parliament |
Winthrop M. Praed |
154 |
Wanted—A Governess |
Anonymous |
346 |
War Is Kind |
Stephen Crane |
336 |
Wed |
H. C. Bunner |
289 |
Wedded Bliss |
Charlotte Perkins (Stetson) Gilman |
303 |
Well of St. Keyne, The |
Robert Southey |
99 |
What Will We Do? |
Robert J. Burdette |
272 |
What’s In a Name? |
Richard Kendall Munkittrick |
288 |
Widow Malone, The |
Charles Lever |
173 |
Will, The |
John Donne |
18 |
Wish for Length of Life, The |
Juvenal |
6 |
Woman |
Fitz-Greene Halleck |
132 |
Woman’s Will |
John Godfrey Saxe |
196 |
Would-be Literary Bore, A |
Horace |
4 |
Anonymous | PAGE |
Lines by an Old Fogy |
348 |
Wanted—A Governess |
346 |
Anstey, Christopher | |
The Public Breakfast |
67 |
Aristophanes | |
Chorus of Women |
3 |
Armytage, Faulkner | |
Friday Afternoon at the Boston Symphony Hall |
332 |
Aytoun, William E. | |
The Laureate |
194 |
Barham, Richard Harris | |
Mr. Barney Maguire’s Account of the Coronation |
119 |
Birdseye, George | |
Paradise. A Hindoo Legend |
319 |
Blake, Rodney | |
Hoch! der Kaiser |
320 |
Bowring, Sir John | |
The Rich and the Poor Man (From the Russian of Kremnitzer) |
132 |
Brough, Robert Barnabas | |
My Lord Tomnoddy |
227 |
Browning, Elizabeth Barrett | |
Critics |
164 |
A Man’s Requirements |
163 |
Browning, Robert | |
The Lost Leader |
186 |
The Pope and the Net |
188 |
Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister |
190 |
Bunner, H. C. | |
Atlantic City |
290 |
[362] Wed |
289 |
Burdette, Robert J. | |
What Will We Do? |
272 |
Burgess, Gelett | |
Extracts from the Rubaiyat of Omar Cayenne |
328 |
Burnand, Frank C. | |
True to Poll |
247 |
Burns, Robert | |
Address to the Unco Guid, or the Rigidly Righteous |
86 |
Holy Willie’s Prayer |
88 |
Butler, William Allen | |
Nothing to Wear |
213 |
Butler, Samuel | |
Description of Holland |
30 |
The Religion of Hudibras |
31 |
Saintship versus Conscience |
29 |
Byrom, John | |
The Three Black Crows |
63 |
Byron, Lord | |
A Country House Party |
127 |
From “English Bards and Scotch Reviewers” |
125 |
From “The Devil’s Drive” |
123 |
To Woman |
126 |
Calverley, Charles Stuart | |
Of Propriety |
235 |
Peace: A Study |
236 |
The Schoolmaster Abroad with His Son |
233 |
Canning, George | |
The Friend of Humanity and the Knife-Grinder |
92 |
Carlyle, Thomas | |
Cui Bono? |
135 |
Carman, Bliss | |
Hem and Haw |
307 |
The Sceptics |
308 |
Carroll, Lewis | |
Fame’s Penny Trumpet |
238 |
Cayley, George John | |
An Epitaph |
64 |
Churchill, Charles | |
On Smollett |
73 |
Claudius, Matthew | |
The Hen |
77 |
Cleiveland, John | |
Satire on the Scots |
32[363] |
Clough, Arthur Hugh | |
The Latest Decalogue |
200 |
There Is No God |
199 |
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor | |
Cologne |
96 |
Giles’ Hope |
96 |
Job |
95 |
Collins, Mortimer | |
The Positivists |
225 |
Sky-Making |
226 |
Cowper, William | |
A Faithful Picture of Ordinary Society |
74 |
The Uncertain Man |
74 |
Crabbe, George | |
Reporters |
85 |
Sly Lawyers |
85 |
Crane, Stephen | |
Lines |
337 |
War Is Kind |
336 |
Deane, Anthony C. | |
The Beauties of Nature |
317 |
A Certain Cure |
316 |
John Jenkins |
313 |
De Béranger, Pierre Jean | |
The King of Yvetot (Version of W. M. Thackeray) |
109 |
Defoe, Daniel | |
Introduction to the True-Born Englishman |
41 |
Dibdin, Charles | |
Let Us All be Unhappy Together |
78 |
Dekker, Thomas | |
Horace Concocting an Ode |
23 |
Dobson, Austin | |
The Love-Letter |
267 |
The Poet and the Critics |
265 |
Dodge, Mary Mapes | |
Life in Laconics |
263 |
Donne, John | |
The Will |
18 |
Dowling, Bartholomew | |
Revelry in India |
210 |
Dryden, John | |
The Duke of Buckingham |
37 |
[364] On Shadwell |
38 |
Fawcett, Edgar | |
Chorus of Anglomaniacs (From “The Buntling Ball”) |
275 |
Fielding, Henry | |
An Epistle to Sir Robert Walpole |
65 |
Fitzgerald, Edward | |
The Miser |
166 |
Foss, Samuel Walter | |
The Fate of Pious Dan |
298 |
The Meeting of the Clabberhuses |
300 |
The Origin of Sin |
294 |
A Philosopher |
295 |
Gay, John | |
The Quidnunckis |
54 |
The Sick Man and the Angel |
55 |
Gilbert, W. S. | |
The Æsthete |
260 |
Anglicised Utopia |
252 |
The Ape and the Lady |
250 |
Etiquette |
254 |
Sleep On |
249 |
To the Terrestrial Globe |
240 |
Gilder, Richard Watson | |
Give Me a Theme |
274 |
The Poem, to the Critic |
274 |
The Tool |
273 |
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins (Stetson) | |
A Conservative |
304 |
Wedded Bliss |
303 |
Goldsmith, Oliver | |
An Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog |
72 |
Greenwood, Grace | |
A Fragment |
212 |
Halleck, Fitz-Greene | |
Woman |
132 |
Harrington, Sir John | |
Of a Certain Man |
16 |
A Precise Tailor |
16 |
Hay, John | |
Distiches |
264 |
Heber, Reginald | |
[365] Sympathy |
111 |
Herford, Oliver | |
A Butterfly of Fashion |
322 |
Earth |
321 |
Hervey, Thomas Kibble | |
The Devil at Home |
149 |
Holcroft, Thomas | |
Gaffer Gray (From “Hugh Trevor”) |
139 |
Holmes, Oliver Wendell | |
Cacoëthes Scribendi |
166 |
Contentment |
171 |
A Familiar Letter to Several Correspondents |
167 |
Hood, Thomas | |
Cockle v. Cackle |
140 |
Our Village |
145 |
Horace, Quintus Horatius Flaccus | |
A Would-Be Literary Bore |
4 |
Horne, Richard Hengist | |
Pelters of Pyramids |
155 |
Hunt, James Henry Leigh | |
From “The Feast of the Poets” |
116 |
Johnson, Hilda | |
Ballade of Expansion |
331 |
Jonson, Ben | |
On Don Surly |
24 |
Juvenal | |
The Wish for Length of Life |
6 |
Kipling, Rudyard | |
The Conundrum of the Workshops |
326 |
General Summary |
324 |
Lang, Andrew | |
Ballade of Literary Fame |
274 |
Lemon, Mark | |
How to Make a Man of Consequence |
173 |
Lever, Charles | |
The Widow Malone |
173 |
Loines, Russell Hilliard | |
On a Magazine Sonnet |
321 |
Loomis, Charles Battell | |
[366] The Evolution of a “Name” |
310 |
Lover, Samuel | |
Father-Land and Mother-Tongue |
135 |
Father Molloy |
136 |
Lovelace, Richard | |
Song |
34 |
Lowell, James Russell | |
From “A Fable for Critics” |
201 |
The Pious Editor’s Creed |
206 |
Ludlow, Fitz-Hugh | |
Too Late |
261 |
Lyndsay, Sir David | |
A Carman’s Account of a Lawsuit |
12 |
Lysaght, Edward | |
Kitty of Coleraine |
91 |
Lytton, Robert Bulwer | |
Midges |
230 |
Mackay, Charles | |
Cynical Ode to an Ultra-Cynical Public |
192 |
The Great Critics |
193 |
Marston, John | |
The Scholar and His Dog |
25 |
Marvell, Andrew | |
The Character of Holland |
35 |
Matthews, Brander | |
An Advanced Thinker |
282 |
Meredith, George | |
Hiding the Skeleton |
229 |
Moore, Thomas | |
Eternal London |
105 |
Lying |
108 |
The Modern Puffing System |
106 |
Morse, James Herbert | |
Fame |
269 |
Munkittrick, Richard Kendall | |
To Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra |
287 |
What’s in a Name? |
288 |
Neaves, Lord Charles | |
How to Make a Novel |
150 |
Noel, Thomas | |
[367] The Pauper’s Drive |
175 |
O’Keefe, John | |
The Friar of Orders Gray |
79 |
Osborn, Selleck | |
A Modest Wit |
112 |
Outram, George | |
The Annuity |
156 |
Peacock, Thomas L. | |
Rich and Poor; or, Saint and Sinner |
117 |
Pitt, William | |
The Sailor’s Consolation |
152 |
Pope, Alexander | |
From “The Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot” |
60 |
Sandys’ Ghost |
57 |
Praed, Winthrop M. | |
Verses on Seeing the Speaker Asleep in His Chair During one of the Debates of the First Reformed Parliament |
154 |
Prior, Matthew | |
An Epitaph |
43 |
The Remedy Worse Than the Disease |
45 |
Prout, Father | |
Malbrouck |
161 |
Punch | |
A Match |
343 |
Raleigh, Sir Walter | |
The Soul’s Errand |
13 |
Roche, James Jeffrey | |
A Boston Lullaby |
277 |
The V-A-S-E |
278 |
The Net of Law |
277 |
Rückert, Friedrich | |
Greediness Punished |
130 |
Rutebœuf | |
The Ass’s Legacy |
7 |
Sackville, Charles, Earl of Dorset | |
Satire on Edward Howard |
39 |
Sancta-Clara, Abraham á | |
[368] St. Anthony’s Sermon to the Fishes |
39 |
Saxe, John Godfrey | |
The Mourner à la Mode |
197 |
Woman’s Will |
196 |
Scott, Sir Walter | |
Nora’s Vow |
94 |
Seaman, Owen | |
“The Hurt that Honour Feels” |
310 |
Shakespeare, William | |
From “As You Like It” |
22 |
From “Love’s Labour’s Lost” |
21 |
From “King Henry IV.” |
20 |
Shelley, Percy Bysshe | |
Ozymandias |
134 |
Sheridan, Richard Brinsley | |
The Literary Lady |
84 |
Sheridan, Thomas | |
Dr. Delany’s Villa |
52 |
Sill, Edward Rowland | |
Five Lives |
270 |
Smith, Harry B. | |
Same Old Story |
306 |
Smith, James | |
Christmas Out of Town |
103 |
The Poet of Fashion |
101 |
Southey, Robert | |
The Battle of Blenheim |
97 |
The Well of St. Keyne |
99 |
Stedman, Edmund Clarence | |
The Diamond Wedding |
240 |
Stephen, J. K. | |
To R. K. |
286 |
A Sonnet |
284 |
A Thought |
283 |
Suckling, Sir John | |
The Constant Lover |
27 |
The Remonstrance |
28 |
Swift, Jonathan | |
The Furniture of a Woman’s Mind |
48 |
Twelve Articles |
46 |
Taylor, Bayard | |
A Review |
221 |
Taylor, Henry | |
Two Characters |
151[369] |
Taylor, Jane | |
The Philosopher’s Scales |
114 |
Tennyson, Alfred | |
On Lytton |
177 |
Thackeray, William Makepeace | |
Damages, Two Hundred Pounds |
182 |
Mr. Molony’s Account of the Ball Given to the Nepaulese Ambassador by the Peninsular and Oriental Company |
179 |
Sorrows of Werther |
178 |
Thomas, Edith M. | |
They Said |
284 |
Torrence, Frederic Ridgely | |
From “The House of a Hundred Lights” |
340 |
Trollopiad, From the | |
The British Visitor |
343 |
Vielé, Herman Knickerbocker | |
The Font in the Forest |
294 |
Villon, François | |
A Ballade of Old-Time Ladies (Translated by John Payne) |
11 |
Ware, Eugene Fitch | |
He and She |
272 |
Weatherly, Frederick Edward | |
A Bird in the Hand |
281 |
Thursday |
280 |
Wither, George | |
The Manly Heart |
26 |
Wolcott, John (Peter Pindar) | |
On Johnson |
75 |
To Boswell |
76 |
Yates, Edmund | |
All-Saints |
237 |
Young, Edward | |
From “The Love of Fame” |
50 |
Yriarte, Tomas | |
The Country Squire |
80 |
The Eggs |
83 |
Obvious punctuation errors repaired.
Page xiv, “Aethete” changed to “Æsthete” (The Æsthete)
Page 186, “o” changed to “to” (you’ve a right to)
Page 190, “Wate” changed to “Water” (Water your damned)
Page 190, “Wha ’s” changed to “What’s” (What’s the Greek)
Page 210, “hat” changed to “that” (the next that dies)
Page 246, “wo ds” changed to “words” (words were the power)
Page 259, “Somer” changed to “Somers” (and Somers takes the south)
Page 351, “Aethete” changed to “Æsthete” (Æsthete, The)
Page 364, “Aethete” changed to “Æsthet” (The Æsthete)