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         Steele Richard:     more books (33)
  1. Richard Steele / edited with an introduction and notes, by G.A. Aitken by Richard, Sir (1672-1729) Steele, 1894
  2. The Sir Roger de Coverley papers from the Spectator; by Joseph Addison 1672-1719 Steele Richard Sir 1672-1729 Budgell Eustace 1686-1737 Abbott Herbert Vaughan 1865-1929 ed, 1905-12-31
  3. Addison's Sir Roger de Coverley papers by Joseph Addison 1672-1719 Steele Richard Sir 1672-1729 Budgell Eustace 1686-1737. [from old catalog] Twombly Alexander Stevenson 1832-1907 [from old catalog] ed, 1897-12-31
  4. The Sir Roger de Coverley papers; from the Spectator: by Joseph Addison 1672-1719 Steele Richard Sir 1672-1729 Budgell Eustace 1686-1737 Hudson William Henry 1862-1918 ed, 1899-12-31
  5. The Sir Roger de Coverley papers, from the Spectator; by Joseph Addison 1672-1719 Steele Richard Sir 1672-1729 Budgell Eustace 1686-1737 Hale Edward Everett 1863-1932 ed, 1904-12-31
  6. Sir Roger de Coverley papers in the Spectator by Joseph Addison 1672-1719 Steele Richard Sir 1672-1729 Budgell Eustace 1686-1737 Turpin Edna Henry Lee 1867- ed Beare Cornelia, 1906-12-31
  7. Sir Roger de Coverley by Joseph Addison 1672-1719 Steele Richard Sir 1672-1729 Budgell Eustace 1686-1737 Wills William Henry 1810-1880 ed, 1852-12-31
  8. The Sir Roger de Coverley papers, from the Spectator; by Joseph] [Addison 1672-1719 Steele Richard Sir 1672-1729 Budgell Eustace 1686-1737. [from old catalog] Metcalf John Clavin [from old catalog] ed, 1910-12-31
  9. The Sir Roger de Coverley papers from the Spectator by Joseph Addison 1672-1719 Steele Richard Sir 1672-1729 Budgell Eustace 1686-1737 Bliss Frederick Leroy Post Myra McPherson, 1902-12-31
  10. The Sir Roger de Coverley papers, from the Spectator by Joseph Addison 1672-1719 Steele Richard Sir 1672-1729 Budgett Eustace 1686-1737 Underwood Homer Krepps 1878- ed, 1911-12-31
  11. Sir Roger de Coverley papers by Joseph Addison 1672-1719 Steele Richard Sir 1672-1729 joint author, 1917-12-31
  12. The Guardian - [Complete in 2 volumes] by Richard, Sir (1672-1729). Addison, Joseph (1672-1719) Steele, 1747-01-01
  13. THE CHRISTIAN HERO: An Argument Proving that no Principles but those of Religion are Sufficient to make a Great Man. by Richard, Sir (1672-1729) Steele, 1727-01-01
  14. Essays And Tales; With An Introd. By Henry Morley by Morley Henry 1822-1894, 2010-10-15

81. [Good & Evil] [Good Breeding] [Good Humor] [Good Nature] [Good Will]
occasions. = Sir Richard Steele (1672 1729) English essayist. 9547. equal.= Sir Richard Steele (1672 - 1729) English essayist. 9548.
http://www.madwed.com/Quotations/Quotations/Transfer__2/_Fear___Feasting___Feeli
To contact Sid Madwed Email SMPOETPRO@aol.com or call: (203) 372-6484 Link To Sid's Main Page Back To The Welcome Page Why We Should Read Quotations Link To Business Main Page ... Link To Sid's Prosody Site Link To Sid's Original Poetry Site Ancient Wisdom Ancient Wisdom #1 Ancient Wisdom #2 Ancient Wisdom #3
    The good die young because they see it's no use living if you've got to be good. = When it was seen that many of the wicked seemed quite untroubled by evil consciences - the idea of future suffering was advanced. = Lewis Browne The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. = The word good has many meanings. For example, if a man were to shoot his grandmother at a range of five hundred yards, I should call him a good shot, but not necessarily a good man. = There ain't any news in being good. You might write the doings of all the convents of the world on the back of a postage stamp, and have room to spare. = Only a coward or a madman would give good for evil. =

82. Caxton Would Never Believe This!
Joseph Addison (1672 1719) and Sir Richard Steele(1672 - 1729) co-editors ofthe Spectator, the essays of which have subsequently passed into literature.
http://www.garfnet.org.uk/new_millenium/bull.htm
Return To Index
Caxton would Never Believe This!
by
John Bull
When I was a cub reporter in the fifties, new technology meant a high-speed printing press, everything else had been around for at least a century. Caxton might have marvelled at the high-speed press, and Addison and Steele would have been impressed by the linotype machine and the typewriter, but all else was much the same as in their day. I go so far as to say that all three today would be quick to pick up the essentials of web-offset cold printing and the ubiquitous Mac and PC. But what would stretch their eyes is the New Millennium. A circular metal disk really doesn't bear much relation to the printed word on paper. We really have come a long way - very suddenly!
I was gently introduced to the so-called New Technology in the eighties at the Sunday Mirror . They had been talked into installing a huge mainframe computer which controlled and stored everything. It was wonderful to be able to call up a news story on screen, and at a stroke so to speak, to sub-edit and set it for printing, at the same time. I remember the shock when I first saw the paper with my headline and story there exactly as I had prepared it. Even the glaring literal in the second paragraph was all my own work: Biy instead of boy , as I recall. Chastisements were duly received and deserved.

83. Oxford Information - The Scholar's Guide To Oxford, UK. Tourist Information For
Home. Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body. Sir Richard Steele(1672 1729). Top Recommendations for this Month. Oxford English. Insight Guide.
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Home Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body Sir Richard Steele (1672 - 1729) Top Recommendations for this Month Oxford English Insight Guide Oxford Dictionary Colourful and informative guide from this popular travel series. Historical guide to Oxford, set in a cultural and literary context. The World's foremost authority on the English Language.

84. BritSurvSched
Digression . . . 2023 from Gulliver's Travels, Houyhnhnms 2136Sir Richard Steele (16721729) from The Tatler, Dueling 2190.
http://www.dac.neu.edu/english/kakelly/courses/survsched.html
Schedule Always read the headnotes (introductory material) to each author and/or text. All responses due at the beginning of class on Monday (Tuesday, if there is a holiday).
On-line responders: remember that I can see the time that you post.
Click on the week, or scroll down for overview
for the entire course:
Week 1 Thursday, 23 September

Week 2 27 September - 1 October

Week 3 4 - 8 October

Week 4 11 - 15 October
...
Exam

Week 1 23 September
Thursday
Introduction Week 2 27/28/30 September Monday The Anglo-Saxons: The self in/and the world, the 7th century through the first millennium Intro, 1-5, 14 "Cædmon's Hymn" [c. 660-80], in the Ecclesiastical History [731], Bede (673-735) 17 "The Dream of the Rood" [in the Vercelli MS., late 10th-century; composed ?] 19 "The Wanderer" [in the Exeter Book, c. 970-90; composed earlier] 68 Tuesday Anglo-Saxons con't Beowulf [composed early 8th c.?; written down c. 1000?] 21 Thursday Love and Romance in the Middle Ages: A few of Chaucer's narratives Intro, 5-15

85. San Antonio College LitWeb Restoration And Eighteenth Century Literature Index
Links to information on and online texts for several authors. Compiled by Roger Blackwell Bailey Category Arts Literature Drama 17th Century Restoration...... Bernard Mandeville ( 1670 1733 ). Joseph Addison ( 1672-1719 ). Sir RichardSteele ( 1672-1729 ). John Gay ( 1685-1732 ). Alexander Pope ( 1688-1744 ).
http://www.accd.edu/sac/english/bailey/18thcent.htm
Restoration and Eighteenth Century English Literature Index
By Roger Blackwell Bailey, Ph.D.
Maintained by pmcquien@accd.edu
The Assembly Room at Bath By Thomas Rowlandson
The Restoration, 1660-1702

Samuel Butler

John Evelyn

John Bunyan

John Dryden
...
Sir Isaac Newton

John Pomfret ( 1667 - 1702 ). "The Choice" ( 1700 ). Local HTML Text On Line . A composition that enjoyed phenomenal popularity during the Eighteenth Century.
William Congreve
Isaac Watts The Eighteenth Century From the Accession of Queen Anne until the Death of Johnson, 1702-1784 Daniel Defoe Jonathan Swift Bernard Mandeville Joseph Addison ... Alexander Pope ( 1688-1744 ). The premier poet of his age. Samuel Richardson Philip Stanhope, Earl of Chesterfield James Thomson John Wesley ... Samuel Johnson ( 1709-1784 ). The ultimate man of letters of the 18th Century, The Great Cham of Literature. David Hume Laurence Sterne Thomas Gray Horace Walpole ... Ann Radcliffe About Restoration and Eighteen Century Literature A Dictionary of Sensibility . From Virginia. Eighteenth Century Chronology . From Jack Lynch at Rutgers. Crosses disciplines. Eighteenth Century Resources More from Jack Lynch.

86. The Correspondence Of Richard Steele (in MARION)
The correspondence of Richard Steele. Title The correspondenceof Richard Steele, edited by Rae Blanchard. Author
http://vax.vmi.edu/MARION/AAC-3368
The correspondence of Richard Steele
Title:
Author:
Published:
  • London, Oxford University Press, H. Milford, 1941.
Material:
  • xxviii, 562 p. illus. 23 cm.
System ID no:
  • AAC-3368
Holdings:
LOCATION: MAIN CALL NUMBER: PR3706 .A5 1941
    • c.1 Not Checked Out
  • Back to Start

    87. OSB MSS FILE
    1864. expand/contract this heading, JEBB, Richard, Sir, 17291787.expand/contract this heading, NORTON, CAROLINE SHERIDAN, 1808-1877.
    http://webtext.library.yale.edu/xml2html/beinecke.osbfl44.nav.html
    OSB MSS FILE
    OSBORN MANUSCRIPT FILES (#17326-17974)
    Click text below to navigate Finding Aid
    PROVENANCE
    CITE AS RESTRICTIONS ON ACCESS PROCESSING NOTES ... DESCRIPTION OF THE FILES Collection Series Osborn File List COBDEN, RICHARD, 1804-1865 ABINGTON, FRANCES (BARTON), 1737-1815 GOSS, JOHN, SIR, 1800-1880 ... BURNEY, CHARLES, 1726-1814

    88. The Devereux
    documented that Oliver Goldsmith (playwright and novelist 1730 74, left) and SirRichard Steele (essayist, playwright and statesman 1672-1729) frequented the
    http://www.historiclondonpubs.co.uk/devereux.html
    Historic London Pubs
    Home

    Pubs Page 1
    Location Grecian Coffee House ...
    The Devereux Today

    Essex Court,
    Off Temple,
    he pub is named after Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex ( see Cheshire Cheese) whose family had a splendid mansion that covered the majority of the area now known as Devereux Court. Devereux inherited the house and land from his stepfather, Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester ( see Cheshire Cheese) in 1588; Dudley ( right ) was very close to Elizabeth I, who had courteously declined his offer of marriage, many years earlier, she supposedly replied:
    'I have already joined myself in marriage to a husband, namely the kingdom of England'
    Essex House was demolished just after Nicholas Barbon, (a modern day property developer) bought it along with the gardens and land in 1674. A small section survived, housing the Cotton Library until this was also demolished in 1777 to make way for Essex Street amongst others.
    The Grecian Coffee House As the Devereux is situated so close to Fleet Street it is inevitable that the pub has literary connections, the spot the pub now occupies was in its time one of the most celebrated coffee-houses in London (the other being the Rainbow in Inner Temple). It catered mainly for lawyers and was known as the '

    89. Recommended Reading
    Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body. (Sir Richard Steele1672–1729). Owner Christopher Harvie is a registered tour
    http://www.rissington.co.za/reading.htm

    90. Reading
    Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body. . Sir RichardSteele (16721729) English Essayist and Playwright. Evergreen
    http://www.evc.edu/language_arts/reading.htm
    Language Arts
    Reading
    Reading Home Page Reading Courses Contact Phone: 274-7900 Ext. 6607 English ESL Reading Language Arts Center Honors Classes
    "Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body." Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729)
    English Essayist and Playwright

    EVC Home
    Schedule of Classes Academic Programs Student Services ... Web Manager
    Last Update: March 14, 2002

    91. GIGA Chronological Author List "1650 To 1699"
    1731) Edmund Neale Smith , English poet and dramatist (1672 1710) Sir RichardSteele , Irish essayist, dramatist and politician (1672 - 1729) John Oldmixon
    http://www.giga-usa.com/gigaweb1/quotes2/quay1650.htm
    Home Biographical List Reading List Internet Links ...
    Quote Links
    CHRONOLOGICAL AUTHOR LIST 1650 to 1699
    Sir Richard Blackmore
    English physician and poet (c. 1650 - 1729)
    William de Britaine
    English author of "The Human Prudence of William de Britane" (fl. about 1680)
    Jeremy Collier
    English bishop, theologian and Jacobite (1650 - 1726)
    Thomas Durfee (or D'Urfey)
    English dramatist and humorist (1653 - 1723)
    Francois Maximilien Mission
    French descriptive writer (1650? - 1722)
    William III (William of Orange)
    Dutch Prince of Orange and King of England (1650 - 1702)
    Richard Baxter
    English theologian (1651 - 1691)
    Francois de Salignac Fenelon
    French theologian and author (1651 - 1715)
    Louis Ferrier
    French poet (1652 - 1721) William Lowndes English treasury secretary under William III and George I (1652 - 1724) Thomas Otway English dramatist and poet (1652 - 1685) Nahum Tate Irish poet and dramatist (1652 - 1715) Nahum Tate and Nicholas Brady Irish poets, authors and dramatists (1652 - 1715 / 1659 - 1726) Thomas Ward English poet (1652 - 1708) Andrew Fletcher of Saltoun (2) Scottish patriot, writer and orator (1653 - 1716)

    92. ˜ÛŒ¿ŠiŒ¾
    The summary for this Japanese page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
    http://homepage3.nifty.com/honnomushi/sayings/list6.html
    Reading is to the mind
    what exercise is to the body.
    Sir Richard Steele @@“Ǐ‘‚Ɛ¸_‚ÌŠÖŒW‚͉^“®‚Æ“÷‘Ì‚ÌŠÖŒW‚É“¯‚¶ByƒW[ƒjƒAƒX‰p˜a‘厫“Tz
    Sir Richard Steele Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729 )s Irish-born English writer of plays and essays who founded and edited The Tatler (1709-1711) and, with Joseph Addison, The Spectator (1711-1712).tyThe American Heritage Dictionary of The English Languagez ƒgƒbƒvƒy[ƒW‚Ö‚à‚Ç‚é

    93. l–¼ƒŠƒXƒg‰p‚p`‚s
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    http://www1.kcn.ne.jp/~hiromi-k/namedic/Ename_04.htm
    NAME LIST@i‰pj
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    Quarles[ƒNƒEƒH[ƒ‹ƒY]FsFFrancis `(1592-1644)‰pŽl
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    Raeburn[ƒŒ[ƒo[ƒ“]FsFSir Henry `(1756-1823)Sc.Ñ‘œ‰æ‰Æ
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    Rankine[ƒ‰ƒ“ƒLƒ“]FsFW. J. M. `(d.1872)Sc.‹ZŽtE•¨—ŠwŽÒ
    Rattigan[ƒ‰ƒeƒBƒKƒ“]FsFSir Terence Mervyn `(d.1977)‰pŒ€ì‰Æ
    Read[ƒŠ[ƒh]FsFSir Herbert `(1893-1968)‰p”á•]‰Æ Redmond[ƒŒƒhƒ‚ƒ“ƒh]FsFJohn Edward `(1856-1918)Ir.­Ž¡‰Æ Reed[ƒŠ[ƒh]FsF‰p•Ä Reg[ƒŒƒO]CReggieC-gy[ƒŒƒW[]FReginald(OE)‚̈¤Ì @@@@@@@@ˆ¤ÌRegCReggieCReggyCRexFIt.‚Å‚ÍRinaldo[ƒŠƒiƒ‹ƒh] Reid[ƒŠ[ƒh]Fm,sFOE=redF©‚̓XƒRƒbƒgƒ‰ƒ“ƒh‚É‘½‚¢H Reynold[ƒŒƒmƒ‹ƒh]FmF¨Reginald(OE) Reynolds[ƒŒƒmƒ‹ƒY]FsF‰p Ricard[ƒŠƒJ[ƒh]FsFDavid `(1772-1823)‰pŒoÏŠwŽÒ Ridley[ƒŠƒhƒŠ[]FsFNicholas `(1500?-55)‰p@‹³‰üŠvŽÒ Riley[ƒ‰ƒCƒŠ[]FsF‰p•Ä Ross[ƒƒX]Fm,sFWelsh?=hillFSc.A‰pA•Ä

    94. APexpository.html
    Expository Prose
    http://www.westonka.k12.mn.us/mwhs/media/APexpository.html
    Expository Prose Joseph Addison (1672-1719)
    Joseph Addison on Material Sublimity and the Aesthetics of Bigness
    Gloria Anzaldua (1942- )
    Discussion on Gloria Anzaldua
    ... James Baldwin (1924-1987)
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    FicBAL, The Norton Anthology of African American Literature SC AFR James Boswell (1740-1795)
    Boswell's Life of Johnson
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    An Overview of Thomas Carlyle
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    95. 12 ÌÀÐÒÀ
    The summary for this Russian page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
    http://postcard.sem40.ru/calendar/0312.htm
    1626 John Aubrey, àíãëèéñêèé àíòèêâàð è àâòîð Brief Lives
    1672 Ðè÷àðä ÑÒÈË (Richard STEELE)(1672-1729), àíãëèéñêèé ïèñàòåëü, æóðíàëèñò. Èðëàíäåö ïî ïðîèñõîæäåíèþ. Ïîëó÷èë îáðàçîâàíèå â Îêñôîðäå. Ïî ñâîèì ïîëèòè÷åñêèì âçãëÿäàì áûë ñòîðîííèêîì ïàðòèè âèãîâ. Íà÷àë ñâîþ òâîð÷åñêóþ äåÿòåëüíîñòü êàê äðàìàòóðã - àâòîð êîìåäèé "Ïîõîðîíû" (1701), "Ëæåö-ëþáîâíèê" (1703), "Íåæíûé ìóæ" (1705) è äð., íðàâîó÷èòåëüíàÿ ðèòîðèêà êîòîðûõ áûëà íàïðàâëåíà ïðîòèâ áåçíðàâñòâåííîñòè è ëåãêîìûñëåííîñòè, ïðèñóùèõ êîìåäèÿì ýïîõè Ðåñòàâðàöèè. Èçâåñòíîñòü ïðèíåñëè Ñòèëþ èçäàâàåìûå èì ñîâìåñòíî ñ Äæîçåôîì Àääèñîíîì ñàòèðè÷åñêèå æóðíàëû "Áîëòóí" (1709-1711), "Çðèòåëü" (1711-1714) è "Îïåêóí" (1713). Ïå÷àòàâøèåñÿ â ýòèõ æóðíàëàõ íåáîëüøèå ýññå Ñòèëÿ, íîñèâøèå õàðàêòåð áûòîâûõ î÷åðêîâ, íðàâîîïèñàòåëüíûõ çàðèñîâîê, èìåëè îãðîìíûé óñïåõ ó ÷èòàòåëåé-ñîâðåìåííèêîâ. Îíè îêàçàëè íåñîìíåííîå âëèÿíèå íà ðàçâèòèå àíãëèéñêîé ðåàëèñòè÷åñêîé ïðîçû XVIII âåêà.
    Ñî÷. : "Ñïåêòåéòîð" /Ïåð. Å.Ñ.Ëàãóòèíà //Èç èñòîðèè àíãëèéñêîé ýñòåòè÷åñêîé ìûñëè XVIII âåêà. Ì., 1982. Ñ. 145-149, 170-173.

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