Occasional Form: Henry Fielding and the Chains of Circumstance |
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Page 98
... Virtue ! ( said [ Lady Booby ] recovering after a Silence of two Minutes ) I shall never survive it . Your Virtue ! Intolerable Confidence ! Have you the Assurance to pretend , that when a Lady demeans herself to throw aside the Rules ...
... Virtue ! ( said [ Lady Booby ] recovering after a Silence of two Minutes ) I shall never survive it . Your Virtue ! Intolerable Confidence ! Have you the Assurance to pretend , that when a Lady demeans herself to throw aside the Rules ...
Page 100
... Virtue against all Trials ; and I beg you earnestly to pray , I may be en- abled to preserve mine ; for truly , it is very severely attacked by more than one ; but I hope I shall copy your Example , and that of Joseph , my Names's ...
... Virtue against all Trials ; and I beg you earnestly to pray , I may be en- abled to preserve mine ; for truly , it is very severely attacked by more than one ; but I hope I shall copy your Example , and that of Joseph , my Names's ...
Page 197
... virtue follow the traditional pattern of virtue successfully defended because the temptations were imposed and not sought . Amelia can withstand the trials not because she is perfect , but because she gets all sorts of divine aids - Mrs ...
... virtue follow the traditional pattern of virtue successfully defended because the temptations were imposed and not sought . Amelia can withstand the trials not because she is perfect , but because she gets all sorts of divine aids - Mrs ...
Contents
Fielding among the Giants | 22 |
Fieldings Reflexive Plays and the Rhetoric of Discovery | 48 |
Historical Registers for the Year 1740 | 76 |
Copyright | |
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action allusion Allworthy Amelia artistic attack audience Augustan Author's Farce Blifil century characters Chubb Cibber Colley Cibber comedy comic commitments consciousness context criticism cultural dramatic Dunciad early eighteenth eighteenth-century emphasis English epic epistemology ethical example expectations experience FĂ©nelon fiction Fielding's Fielding's contemporaries Fielding's plays FUSTIAN Henry Fielding hero human Ian Watt ideal imitation implications insists involves irony Jonathan Wild Jones Joseph Andrews journey Lady Booby later less literary London Lord Hervey meaning metaphor mode models modern moral narrative narrator novel Pamela parody Parson Adams philosophical play-within plot political Pope Pope's Press prose questions Ralph Cohen readers rehearsal plays responses rhetoric Richardson Ronald Paulson satire scene Scriblerus seems sense sexual Shakespeare Shakespearean Shamela social Sophia strategy suggest Swift theater theatrical things tion Tom Jones Tom Thumb Tom's tone tradition Tragedy of Tragedies TRAPWIT ultimately Univ values virtue Walpole Whitefield Wilson writers