ABSTRACT
This set offers a representitive collection of the verse satire of the Romantic period, published between the mid-1780s and the mid-1830s. As well as two single-author volumes, from William Gifford and Thomas Moore, there is also a wealth of rare, unedited material.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |17 pages
From Epistles, Odes, and Other Poems (1806)
chapter |8 pages
‘Epistle VI. To the Lord Viscount Forbes’
chapter |10 pages
‘Epistle VII. To Thomas Hume, Esq. MD’
chapter |28 pages
Corruption and Intolerance (1808)
chapter |11 pages
The Sceptic: A Philosophical Satire (1809)
part |7 pages
From The Examiner (1812)
chapter |7 pages
‘Letter from ——— to ———’ [‘Parody of a Celebrated Letter’]
part |12 pages
From The Morning Chronicle (1812)
chapter |4 pages
‘Anacreontic: To a Plumassier’
chapter |2 pages
‘Extracts from the Diary of a Fashionable Politician’
chapter |3 pages
‘The Insurrection of the Papers. A Dream’
chapter |3 pages
‘The Sale of the Tools’
chapter |30 pages
Intercepted Letters; or, The Twopenny Post-Bag (1813)
part |5 pages
From The Morning Chronicle (1813)
chapter |3 pages
‘LAW on our side’
chapter |2 pages
‘Reinforcements for Lord Wellington’
part |4 pages
From The Morning Chronicle (1814)
chapter |4 pages
‘The Two Veterans’
part |3 pages
From The Morning Chronicle (1815)
chapter |3 pages
‘Epistle from Tom Crib to Big Ben’
part |3 pages
From The Morning Chronicle (1816)
chapter |3 pages
‘Fum and Hum, the two Birds of Royalty’
chapter |59 pages
The Fudge Family in Paris (1818)
part |3 pages
From The Journal of Thomas Moore (composed 1818; published 1983)
chapter |3 pages
‘Beware, ye bards of each degree’
chapter |45 pages
Tom Crib's Memorial to Congress (1819)
chapter |33 pages
Fables for the Holy Alliance (1823)
part |31 pages
From The Times (1826)
chapter |3 pages
‘An Amatory Colloquy Between Bank and Government’
chapter |3 pages
‘The Sinking Fund Cried’
chapter |3 pages
‘All in the Family Way. A New Pastoral Ballad’
chapter |4 pages
‘Ode to Sir T—s L—thb—ge’
chapter |3 pages
‘The Millenium’
chapter |3 pages
‘The Three Doctors’
chapter |3 pages
‘A Vision. By the Author of Christabel’
chapter |3 pages
‘A Dream of Turtle. By Sir W. Curtis’1
chapter |3 pages
‘Corn and Catholics’
chapter |3 pages
‘Literary Advertisement’
part |9 pages
From The Times (1827)
part |9 pages
From The Times (1828)
chapter |2 pages
‘The “Living Dog” and the “Dead Lion”’
chapter |4 pages
‘Dante Redividus’
chapter |3 pages
‘The Brunswick Club’
part |5 pages
From The Times (1830)
chapter |2 pages
‘Advertisement’
part |2 pages
From Memoirs, Journal, and Correspondence of Thomas Moore (1835–56)
chapter |2 pages
‘Thoughts on Editors’ (1831)
part |9 pages
From The Times (1832)
chapter |3 pages
‘Tory Pledges’
chapter |6 pages
‘Song of the Departing Spirit of the Tithe’
part |5 pages
From The Times (1833)
chapter |2 pages
‘Paddy's Metamorphosis’
chapter |3 pages
‘Love Song’
part |4 pages
From The Irish Melodies, No. 10 (1834)
chapter |4 pages
‘The Dream of Those Days’
chapter |44 pages
The Fudges in England (1835)
part |8 pages
From The Morning Chronicle (1836)
chapter |4 pages
‘The Boy Statesman’1
part |4 pages
From The Monthly Chronicle: A National Journal of Politics, Literature, Science, and Art (1838)
part |14 pages
From The Morning Chronicle (1838)
chapter |4 pages
‘Grand Dinner of Type & Co.’
chapter |3 pages
‘Songs of the Church. No. I. “Leave Us Alone”’
chapter |3 pages
‘Songs of the Church. No. II’
part |5 pages
From Bentley's Miscellany (1839)
chapter |5 pages
‘Thoughts on Patrons, Puffs, and Other Matters’
part |4 pages
From The Morning Chronicle (1839)
chapter |4 pages
‘New Hospital for Sick Literati’
part |5 pages
From The Morning Chronicle (1840)