Politeness and Poetry in the Age of PopeFairleigh Dickinson Univ Press, 1989 - 166 pages Interest in politeness in the eighteenth century is shown to reflect anxiety about social change and indicate a search for guidelines in a newly commercialized society. Evident is the dilemma of poets such as Parnell, Prior, Swift, Gay, and Pope. |
Contents
17 | |
This Potent School of Manners Politics the Poet and Mores | 30 |
Alike Fantastick If Too New or Old Politeness and the Dilemma of Traditionalist Poets | 43 |
Softest Manners Gentlest Arts The Polite Verse of Thomas Parnell | 55 |
A Grace a Manner a Decorum Matthew Priors Polite Mystique | 70 |
John Gays Due Civilities The Ironies of Politeness | 86 |
A Kind of Artificial Good Sense Swift and the Forms of Politeness | 102 |
To Form the Manners Pope and the Poetry of Mores | 116 |
Notes | 135 |
149 | |
161 | |
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Addison and Steele Alexander Pope amateur Arbuthnot aristocratic attitudes Beggar's Opera Ben Jonson birth bourgeois C. J. Rawson Century Christian cited Clarendon Press classical commercial convention corrupt court wits courtly Criticism cultural decorum demystified despite developments Dunciad E. P. Thompson Edited Edmund Waller Eighteenth elements elite England English epic Essays ethos example fashionable Gay's Gentleman gentry genuine ideal idleness imagery J. C. D. Clark John John Gay Jonson laureate poet leisure literary Literature London manners Matthew Prior McKeon mock-heroic mode modern politeness moral norms obviously occasional verse old ideology Oxford panegyrical Parnell's pastoral patronage period poem poet poet's Poetics polish polite sentiment praise present Prior Prose quasi-aristocratic religious Renaissance Restoration court revealing role satire scepticism Scriblerian secular sense social society sprezzatura status stylishness Swift Thomas Parnell tion tone true University Press upper-class virtue vols W. A. Speck Whig whole women write