Harvard Classics Checklist

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Harvard Classics Checklist Index to the Harvard Classics Series on MobileRead Volume Book Author I Autobiography Benjamin Franklin Journal John Woolman Fruits of Solitude William Penn II The Apology, Phædo and Crito Plato The Golden Sayings Epictetus The Meditations Marcus Aurelius III Essays, Civil and Moral Francis Bacon The New Atlantis Francis Bacon Areopagitica John Milton Areopagitica & Tractate on Education John Milton Religio Medici Sir Thomas Browne IV Complete Poems Written in English John Milton V Essays and English Traits Ralph Waldo Emerson VI Poems and Songs Robert Burns VII The Confessions of Saint Augustine Saint Augustine The Imitation of Christ Thomas Kempis VIII Agamemnon Aeschylus The Libation-Bearers Aeschylus The Furies Aeschylus Prometheus Bound Aeschylus Oedipus the King & Antigone of Sophocles Sophocles Hippolytus & The Bacchæ of Euripides Euripides The Frogs Aristophanes IX On Friendship Cicero On Old Age Cicero Letters Cicero Letters Pliny the Younger X Wealth of Nations Adam Smith XI The Origin of Species Charles Darwin XII Lives Plutarch XIII Æneid Vergil XIV Don Quixote, Part 1 Cervantes XV The Pilgrim’s Progress John Bunyan The Lives of Donne and Herbert Izaak Walton XVI Stories from the Thousand and One Nights Anonymous XVII Fables Æsop Household Tales Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm Tales Hans Christian Andersen XVIII All for Love John Dryden The School for Scandal Richard Brinsley Sheridan She Stoops to Conquer Oliver Goldsmith The Cenci Percy Bysshe Shelley A Blot in the ’Scutcheon Robert Browning Manfred Lord Byron XIX Faust, Part I J.W. von Goethe Egmont & Hermann and Dorothea J.W. von Goethe Dr. Faustus Christopher Marlowe XX The Divine Comedy Dante Alighieri XXI I Promessi Sposi Alessandro Manzoni XXII The Odyssey Homer XXIII Two Years before the Mast Richard Henry Dana, Jr. XXIV On Taste Edmund Burke On the Sublime and Beautiful Edmund Burke Reflections on the French Revolution Edmund Burke A Letter to a Noble Lord Edmund Burke XXV Autobiography John Stuart Mill On Liberty John Stuart Mill Characteristics Thomas Carlyle Inaugural Address at Edinburgh Thomas Carlyle Sir Walter Scott Thomas Carlyle XXVI Life Is a Dream Pedro Calderón de la Barca Polyeucte Pierre Corneille Phædra Jean Racine Tartuffe Molière Minna von Barnhelm Gotthold Ephraim Lessing Wilhelm Tell Friedrich von Schiller XXVII English Essays: Sidney to Macaulay Multiple XXVIII Essays: English and American Multiple XXIX The Voyage of the Beagle Charles Darwin XXX Scientific Papers Multiple XXXI Autobiography Benvenuto Cellini XXXII Literary and Philosophical Essays Multiple XXXIII Voyages and Travels: Ancient and Modern Multiple XXXIV Discourse on Method René Descartes Letters on the English Voltaire On the Inequality Among Mankind Jean Jacques Rousseau Profession of Faith of a Savoyard Vicar Jean Jacques Rousseau Of Man, Being the First Part of Leviathan Thomas Hobbes XXXV The Chronicles Jean Froissart The Holy Grail Sir Thomas Malory A Description of Elizabethan England William Harrison XXXVI The Prince Niccolo Machiavelli The Life of Sir Thomas More William Roper Utopia Sir Thomas More The Ninety-Five Thesis Martin Luther Address to the Christian Nobility Martin Luther Concerning Christian Liberty Martin Luther XXXVII Some Thoughts Concerning Education John Locke Three Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous in George Berkeley Opposition to Sceptics and Atheists An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding David Hume XXXVIII The Oath of Hippocrates Hippocrates Journeys in Diverse Places Ambroise Paré On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals William Harvey The Three Original Publications on Vaccination Against Edward Jenner Smallpox The Contagiousness of Puerperal Fever Oliver Wendell Holmes On the Antiseptic Principle of the Practice of Surgery Joseph Lister Scientific Papers Louis Pasteur Scientific Papers Charles Lyell XXXIX Prefaces and Prologues Multiple XL English Poetry I: Chaucer to Gray Multiple XLI English Poetry II: Collins to Fitzgerald Multiple XLII English Poetry III: Tennyson to Whitman Multiple XLIII American Historical Documents: 1000–1904 Multiple XLIV Confucian: The Sayings of Confucius Confucius Hebrew Job, Psalms & Ecclesiastes Christian I Luke & Acts XLV Christian II Corinthians I & II & Hymns Buddhist: Writings Buddhist: Writings Hindu The Bhagavad-Gita Mohammedan Chapters from the Koran XLVI Edward the Second Christopher Marlowe Hamlet, King Lear, Macbeth & The Tempest William Shakespeare XLVII The Shoemaker’s Holiday Thomas Dekker The Alchemist Ben Jonson Philaster Beaumont and Fletcher The Duchess of Malfi John Webster A New Way to Pay Old Debts Philip Massinger XLVIII Thoughts, Letters & Minor Works Blaise Pascal XLIX Epic & Saga: Beowulf, The Song of Roland, The Destruction Multiple of Dá Derga’s Hostel & The Story of the Volsungs and Niblungs.
Recommended publications
  • Having Ado with Lancelot
    Having Ado with Lancelot: A Chivalric Reassessment of Malory's Champion by Jesse Michael Brillinger Thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts (English) Acadia University Fall Convocation 2010 © Jesse Michael Brillinger 2010 This thesis by Jesse M. Brillinger was defended successfully in an oral examination on ___________. The examining committee for the thesis was: ________________________ Dr. Barb Anderson, Chair ________________________ Dr. Kathleen Cawsey, External Reader ________________________ Dr. Patricia Rigg, Internal Reader ________________________ Dr. K. S. Whetter, Supervisor _________________________ Dr. Herb Wyile, Acting Head This thesis is accepted in its present form by the Division of Research and Graduate Studies as satisfying the thesis requirements for the degree of Master of Arts (English). …………………………………………. ii I, Jesse M. Brillinger, grant permission to the University Librarian at Acadia University to reproduce, loan or distribute copies of my thesis in microform, paper or electronic formats on a non‐profit basis. I, however, retain the copyright in my thesis. ______________________________ Jesse M. Brillinger ______________________________ K.S. Whetter, Supervisor ______________________________ Sep. 19, 2010 iii Table of Contents Introduction: Malory, Chivalry and Lancelot ............................................................................... 1 Chapter 1: Medieval Chivalry in Literature and Life ............................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Prisons and Punishments in Late Medieval London
    Prisons and Punishments in Late Medieval London Christine Winter Thesis submitted for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the University of London Royal Holloway, University of London, 2012 2 Declaration I, Christine Winter, hereby declare that this thesis and the work presented in it is entirely my own. Where I have consulted the work of others, this is always clearly stated. Signed: Date: 3 Abstract In the history of crime and punishment the prisons of medieval London have generally been overlooked. This may have been because none of the prison records have survived for this period, yet there is enough information in civic and royal documents, and through archaeological evidence, to allow a reassessment of London’s prisons in the later middle ages. This thesis begins with an analysis of the purpose of imprisonment, which was not merely custodial and was undoubtedly punitive in the medieval period. Having established that incarceration was employed for a variety of purposes the physicality of prison buildings and the conditions in which prisoners were kept are considered. This research suggests that the periodic complaints that London’s medieval prisons, particularly Newgate, were ‘foul’ with ‘noxious air’ were the result of external, rather than internal, factors. Using both civic and royal sources the management of prisons and the abuses inflicted by some keepers have been analysed. This has revealed that there were very few differences in the way civic and royal prisons were administered; however, there were distinct advantages to being either the keeper or a prisoner of the Fleet prison. Because incarceration was not the only penalty available in the enforcement of law and order, this thesis also considers the offences that constituted a misdemeanour and the various punishments employed by the authorities.
    [Show full text]
  • Malory's Launcelot and Guinevere Abed Togydirs Betsy Taylor
    Malory's Launcelot and Guinevere abed togydirs Betsy Taylor In Malory's account of the ambush of Launcelot in Guinevere's chamber he obliquely denies the authority of his sources: For, as the Freynshhe booke seyth, the quene and sir Launcelot were k>gydirs. And whether they were abed other at other maner of disportis, me lyste nat thereof make no mencion, for love that tyme was nat as love ys nowadayes.1 · Both his sources put Launcelot and Guinevere abed,2 but Malory says he prefers not to discuss the matter ('me lyste nat thereof make no mencion'); instead he links the lovers' activities here with the love he anatomizes, however cumbersomely, at the beginning of 'The Knight of the Cart' episode: But the olde love was nat so. For men and women coude love togydirs seven yerys, and no lycoures lustis was betwyxte them, and than was love trouthe and faythefulnes. And so in lyke wyse was used such love in kynge Arthurs dayes. (p. 1120, II. 2...{1) The benefit of Malory's reticence is twofold: he places (or attempts to place) the lovers beyond contemporary criticism, 'for love that tyme was nat as love ys nowadayes'; and he ensures that the image of Launcelot which dominates in this episode is that of the 'noble knyght' who 'toke hys swerde undir hys arme, and so he walked in hys mantell ... and put hymselff in grete jouparte' (p. 1165, 11. 5-7). In Malory's version of the episode we pass from this image to 'Madame,' seyde sir Launcelot, 'ys there here ony armour within you that myght cover my body wythall?' (p.
    [Show full text]
  • A) “William Shakespeare: La Dialettica D'amore
    LETTERATURA INGLESE III^ Programma a.a. 2011- 12 (prof. Michele Goffredo) A) “William Shakespeare: la dialettica d’amore ” Testi: William Shakespeare, As You Like It (qualsiasi edizione inglese o con testo a fronte) William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet (qualsiasi edizione inglese o con testo a fronte) William Shakespeare, Sonnets (qualsiasi edizione inglese o con testo a fronte) William Shakespeare, Othello (qualsiasi edizione inglese o con testo a fronte) William Shakespeare, Antony and Cleopatra (qualsiasi edizione inglese o con testo a fronte) Testi critici: La bibliografia critica sarà indicata in seguito. I testi critici verranno, in massima parte, raccolti in una dispensa a cura del docente. B) Storia della letteratura inglese: “Dalle origini alla chiusura dei teatri del 1642” 1) Testo consigliato: Paolo Bertinetti (a cura di), Storia della letteratura inglese, Vol I° (pp.3- 206), Einaudi 2) Franco Marenco, La parola in scena, La comunicazione teatrale nell’età di Shakespeare, UTET, Torino 2004 3) Sei testi a scelta dello studente tra i seguenti. Tra i testi di uno stesso autore ne va scelto solo uno. Beowulf Sir Gawain and the Green Knight Pearl William Langland, Piers Plowman Geoffrey Chaucer, Canterbury Tales Thomas Malory, Le Morte Darthur Everyman Thomas More, Utopia Philip Sidney, Astrophil and Stella (1591) Philip Sidney, Countess of Pembroke’s Arcadia (Old Arcadia) Philip Sidney, New Arcadia Edmund Spenser, The Fairie Queene (1590-96) Thomas Nashe, The Unfortunate Traveller, or The Life of Jack Wilton (1594) Thomas Kyd,
    [Show full text]
  • 040 Harvard Classics
    THE HARVARD CLASSICS The Five-Foot Shelf of Books Mn. VVI LCI AM S1I .A. K- li- S 1^ -A. 1^. t/ S COMEDIES, HISTORICS, & TRAGED1E S. Pulliihid accorv LO 0 Priqtedty like laggard, aod Ed.Blount. 1 <5i}- Facsimile of the title-page of the First Folio Shakespeare, dated 1623 From the original in the New York Public Library, New York THE HARVARD CLASSICS EDITED BY CHARLES W. ELIOT, LL.D. English Poetry IN THREE VOLUMES VOLUME I From Chaucer to Gray W//A Introductions and Notes Volume 40 P. F. Collier & Son Corporation NEW YORK Copyright, 1910 BY P. F. COLLIER & SON MANUFACTURED IN U. S. A. CONTENTS GEOFFREY CHAUCER PAGE THE PROLOGUE TO THE CANTERBURY TALES n THE NUN'S PRIEST'S TALE 34 TRADITIONAL BALLADS THE DOUGLAS TRAGEDY 51 THE TWA SISTERS 54 EDWARD 5 6 BABYLON: OR, THE BONNIE BANKS O FORDIE 58 HIND HORN 59 LORD THOMAS AND FAIR ANNET 61 LOVE GREGOR 65 BONNY BARBARA ALLAN 68 THE GAY GOSS-HAWK 69 THE THREE RAVENS 73 THE TWA CORBIES 74 SIR PATRICK SPENCE 74 THOMAS RYMER AND THE QUEEN OF ELFLAND 76 SWEET WILLIAM'S GHOST 78 THE WIFE OF USHER'S WELL 80 HUGH OF LINCOLN 81 YOUNG BICHAM 84 GET UP AND BAR THE DOOR 87 THE BATTLE OF OTTERBURN 88 CHEVY CHASE 93 JOHNIE ARMSTRONG 101 CAPTAIN CAR 103 THE BONNY EARL OF MURRAY 107 KINMONT WILLIE ' 108 BONNIE GEORGE CAMPBELL 114 THE DOWY HOUMS O YARROW 115 MARY HAMILTON 117 THE BARON OF BRACKLEY 119 BEWICK AND GRAHAME 121 A GEST OF ROBYN HODE 128 1 2 CONTENTS ANONYMOUS PAG* BALOW 186 THE OLD CLOAK 188 JOLLY GOOD ALE AND OLD ..
    [Show full text]
  • The Arthurian Legend in British Women's Writing, 1775–1845
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Online Research @ Cardiff Avalon Recovered: The Arthurian Legend in British Women’s Writing, 1775–1845 Katie Louise Garner B.A. (Cardiff); M.A. (Cardiff) A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the award of Doctor of Philosophy School of English, Communication and Philosophy Cardiff University September 2012 Declaration This work has not been submitted in substance for any other degree or award at this or any other university or place of learning, nor is being submitted concurrently in candidature for any degree or other award. Signed ………………………………………… (candidate) Date ……………………… STATEMENT 1 This thesis is being submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of PhD. Signed ………………………………………… (candidate) Date ……………………… STATEMENT 2 This thesis is the result of my own independent work/investigation, except where otherwise stated. Other sources are acknowledged by explicit references. The views expressed are my own. Signed ………………………………………… (candidate) Date ……………………… STATEMENT 3 I hereby give consent for my thesis, if accepted, to be available for photocopying and for inter-library loan, and for the title and summary to be made available to outside organisations. Signed ………………………………………… (candidate) Date………………………… STATEMENT 4: PREVIOUSLY APPROVED BAR ON ACCESS I hereby give consent for my thesis, if accepted, to be available for photocopying and for inter-library loans after expiry of a bar on access previously approved by the Academic Standards & Quality Committee. Signed ………………………………………… (candidate) Date………………………… Acknowledgements First thanks are due to my supervisors, Jane Moore and Becky Munford, for their unceasing assistance, intellectual generosity, and support throughout my doctoral studies.
    [Show full text]
  • Power, Courtly Love, and a Lack of Heirs : Guinevere and Medieval Queens Jessica Grady [email protected]
    Marshall University Marshall Digital Scholar Theses, Dissertations and Capstones 1-1-2009 Power, Courtly Love, and a Lack of Heirs : Guinevere and Medieval Queens Jessica Grady [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://mds.marshall.edu/etd Part of the Other Classics Commons Recommended Citation Grady, Jessica, "Power, Courtly Love, and a Lack of Heirs : Guinevere and Medieval Queens" (2009). Theses, Dissertations and Capstones. Paper 69. This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by Marshall Digital Scholar. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses, Dissertations and Capstones by an authorized administrator of Marshall Digital Scholar. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Power, Courtly Love, and a Lack of Heirs: Guinevere and Medieval Queens Thesis submitted to the Graduate College of Marshall University In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History by Jessica Grady Dr. Laura Michele Diener, Ph.D., Committee Chairperson Dr. David Winter, Ph.D. Dr. William Palmer, Ph.D. Marshall University December 2009 ABSTRACT Power, Courtly Love, and a Lack of Heirs: Guinevere and Medieval Queens by Jessica Grady Authors have given Queen Guinevere of the Arthurian stories a wide variety of personalities; she has been varyingly portrayed as seductive, faithful, “fallen,” powerful, powerless, weak-willed, strong-willed, even as an inheritor of a matriarchal tradition. These personalities span eight centuries and are the products of their respective times and authors much more so than of any historical Guinevere. Despite this, however, threads of similarity run throughout many of the portrayals: she had power in some areas and none in others; she was involved in a courtly romance; and she did not produce an heir to the throne.
    [Show full text]
  • A History of English Literature MICHAEL ALEXANDER
    A History of English Literature MICHAEL ALEXANDER [p. iv] © Michael Alexander 2000 All rights reserved. No reproduction, copy or transmission of this publication may be made without written permission. No paragraph of this publication may be reproduced, copied or transmitted save with written permission or in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, or under the terms of any licence permitting limited copying issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency, 90 Tottenham Court Road, London W 1 P 0LP. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages. The author has asserted his right to be identified as the author of this work in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. First published 2000 by MACMILLAN PRESS LTD Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG21 6XS and London Companies and representatives throughout the world ISBN 0-333-91397-3 hardcover ISBN 0-333-67226-7 paperback A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 02 O1 00 Typeset by Footnote Graphics, Warminster, Wilts Printed in Great Britain by Antony Rowe Ltd, Chippenham, Wilts [p. v] Contents Acknowledgements The harvest of literacy Preface Further reading Abbreviations 2 Middle English Literature: 1066-1500 Introduction The new writing Literary history Handwriting
    [Show full text]
  • A New Way to Pay Old Debts
    ElizabethanDrama.org presents the Annotated Popular Edition of A NEW WAY TO PAY OLD DEBTS by Philip Massinger Before 1633 Featuring complete and easy-to-read annotations. Annotations and notes © Copyright ElizabethanDrama.org, 2018 This annotated play may be freely copied and distributed. 1 A NEW WAY TO PAY OLD DEBTS By Philip Massinger Before 1633 Dramatis Persons: INTRODUCTION TO THE PLAY Lord Lovell. A New Way to Pay Old Debts has proven to be Philip Tom Allworth, a Young Gentleman, Page to Lord Massinger's most popular and enduring play. This comedy's Lovell. reputation is due thanks to the presence of one of the era's Sir Giles Overreach, a Cruel Extortioner. more acclaimed villains outside the Shakespeare canon, the Margaret, Daughter of Sir Overreach. avaricious and occasionally vulgar Sir Giles Overreach. Marrall, a Term-Driver; a Creature of Sir Giles With just the right balance of drama and humour, A New Overreach. Way to Pay Old Debts deserves to be read and enjoyed by any lover of Elizabethan drama. Frank Wellborn, a Prodigal. Greedy, a Hungry Justice Of Peace. NOTES ON THE TEXT Lady Allworth, a rich Widow. The text of A New Way to Pay Old Debts is adapted from Order, Steward. Philip Massinger, Volume I, edited by Arthur Symons, Amble, Usher. cited at #3 below. Furnace, Cook. Watchall, Porter. NOTES ON THE ANNOTATIONS Wllldo, a Parson. Mention of Symons, Stronach, Deighton, Gifford and Sherman in the annotations refer to the notes provided by Tapwell, an Alehouse Keeper. each of these editors respectively in their editions of this Froth, Wife of Tapwell.
    [Show full text]
  • The Illustrated Book Cover Illustrations
    THE ILLUSTRATED BOOK COVER ILLUSTRATIONS: A collection of 18 pronouncements by Buddhist sages accompanied by their pictures. n.p., n.d. Manuscript scroll folded into 42 pages, written on leaves of the bodhi tree. Chinese text, beginning with the date wu-shu of Tao kuang [·i.e. 1838 ] Wooden covers. Picture of Buddhist sage Hsu tung on front cover, accompanied by text of his pronouncement on separate leaf on back cover: "A Buddhist priest asked Buddha, 'How did the Buddha attain the most superior way?' Buddha replied, 'Protect the heart from sins; as one shines a mirror by keeping off dust, one can attain enlightenment.'" --i~ ti_ Hsu tung THE ILLUSTRATED BOOK • An Exhibit: March-May 1991 • Compiled by Alice N. Loranth Cleveland Public Library Fine Arts and Special Collections Department PREFACE The Illustrated Book exhibit was assembled to present an overview of the history of book illustration for a general audience. The plan and scope of the exhibit were developed within the confines of available exhibit space on the third floor of Main Library. Materials were selected from the holdings of Special Collections, supplemented by a few titles chosen from the collections of Fine Arts. Selection of materials was further restrained by concern for the physical well-being of very brittle or valuable items. Many rare items were omitted from the exhibit in order to safeguard them from the detrimental effects of an extended exhibit period. Book illustration is a cooperation of word and picture. At the beginning, writing itself was pictorial, as words were expressed through pictorial representation.
    [Show full text]
  • HENRY ANSGAR KELLY: CURRICULUM VITAE (13 August 2019)
    HENRY ANSGAR KELLY: CURRICULUM VITAE (13 August 2019) Personal Born: 6 June 1934, Fonda, Iowa, U.S.A. Married: 18 June 1968, to Marea Tancred (Sydney, Australia) Children: Sarah, born 1970; Dominic, born 1972 Higher Education 1952-53: Creighton University 1953-61: St. Louis University A.B. 1959 (Classics/English/Philosophy) A. M. 1961 (English Literature) Ph.L. 1961 (Philosophy) 1961-1964: Harvard University Ph.D. 1965 (English Literature) 1964-66: Boston College: Weston College of Theology S.T.B. Program: Scripture, Theology, Canon Law) 1953-66: Jesuit Scholastic: Wisconsin Province of the Society of Jesus Employment 1967-69: Assistant Professor, UCLA 1969-72: Associate Professor, UCLA 1972-86: Professor, UCLA 1986-2004: Distinguished Professor, UCLA 2004-12: Distinguished Professor Emeritus, UCLA 2012- : Distinguished Research Professor, UCLA Awards and Honors 1964-67: Junior Fellow, Harvard University of Fellows (1966-67: Resident Scholar, American Academy in Rome) 1971-72: Fellow, John Simon Guggenheim Foundation 1980-81: Fellow, National Endowment for the Humanities (1980-81: Visiting Professor, University of Sydney) 1986: Fellow, Del Amo Endowment 1986- : Fellow, Medieval Academy of America 1986-88: Vice-President, Medieval Association of the Pacific 1987-90: Councillor, Medieval Academy of America 1988-90: President, Medieval Association of the Pacific 1996-97: Fellow, National Endowment for the Humanities 1996-97: UC President's Research Fellow in the Humanities 1998-2003: Director, Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, UCLA 2003: Festschrift: Chaucer and the Challenges of Medievalism: Studies in Honor of H. A. Kelly, ed. Donka Minkova and Theresa Tinkle (Frankfurt: Peter Lang, 2003), pp. xx + 403 2009-10: UCLA Dickson Emeritus Professorship Award 2018: University of California Constantine Panunzio Distinguished Emeritus Award University Activity since 2004 Service Editor of Viator: Medieval and Renaissance Studies (Brepols) 2003 to the present.
    [Show full text]
  • The Harvard Classics Eboxed
    HARVARD CLASSICS iHEFIVE-FCOT SHELFOFBOOKS ESSAYS ENOLJSH AND AMERICAN COLLIER BBBI i Diiai HJQI THE HARVARD CLASSICS The Five-Foot Shelf of Books t J-^ THE HARVARD CLASSICS EDITED BY CHARLES W. ELIOT, LL.D. Essays English and American W//^ Introductions and Notes Volume 28 P. F. Collier & Son Corporation NEW YORK Copyright, 1910 By p. F. Collier & Son Copyright, 1886 By James Russell Lowell By arrangement with Houghton Mifflin Company Copyright, 1889 By The Travelers Insurance Company of Hartford, Conn. Copyright, 1891 and 1899 By The Travelers Insurance Company manufacturkd in u. s. a. CONTENTS PAGE JONATHAN SWIFT 7 William Makepeace Thackeray THE IDEA OF A UNIVERSITY I. WHAT IS A UNIVERSITY? 31 II. SITE OF A UNIVERSITY 40 III. UNIVERSITY LIFE AT ATHENS 51 John Henry Newman THE STUDY OF POETRY 65 Matthew Arnold SESAME AND LILIES LECTURE I.—SESAME: OF KINGS' TREASURIES ... 93 LECTURE II.—LILIES: OF QUEENS' GARDENS . .135 John Ruskin JOHN MILTON 165 Walter Bagehot SCIENCE AND CULTURE 209 Thomas Henry Huxley RACE AND LANGUAGE 227 Edward Augustus Freeman TRUTH OF INTERCOURSE 277 SAMUEL PEPYS 285 Robert Louis Stevenson ON THE ELEVATION OF THE LABORING CLASSES . .311 William Ellery Channing 2 CONTENTS PACE THE POETIC PRINCIPLE 371 Edgar Allan Poe WALKING 395 Henry David Thoreau ABRAHAM LINCOLN -429 DEMOCRACY 451 James Russell Lowell JONATHAN SWIFT BY WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY INTRODUCTORY NOTE William Makepeace Thackeray, one of the greatest of English novel- ists, was born at Calcutta, India, on July i8, 1811, where his father held an administrative position. He was sent to England at six for his educa- tion, which he received at the Charterhouse and Cambridge, after which he began, but did not prosecute, the study of law.
    [Show full text]