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9780321105783

Longman Anthology of British Literature, Volume 1B, The: The Early Modern Period

by ; ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780321105783

  • ISBN10:

    0321105788

  • Edition: 2nd
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2003-01-01
  • Publisher: Longman
  • View Upgraded Edition
  • Purchase Benefits
List Price: $55.20

Summary

Volume 1B: The Early Modern Period of The Longman Anthology of British Literature is a comprehensive and thoughtfully arranged anthology that offers a rich selection of major British authors throughout the Early Modern Period. The book includes Perspectives, Companion Readings, and "and Its Time" sections which show how major literary writings interrelate with and respond to various social, historical, and cultural events of Great Britain in the Early Modern period. With a generous representation of fiction, drama, and poetry, the second edition includes major additions of important works and an expanded illustration program. Fresh and up-to-date introductions and notes are written by an editorial team whose members are all actively engaged in teaching and in current scholarship, and illustrations show both artistic and cultural developments of the Early Modern Period. For those interested in British Literature of the Early Modern Period.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
xix
Preface xxi
Acknowledgments xxvi
Bibliography xxix
The Early Modern Period 640(116)
John Skelton
663(6)
Womanhod, Wanton
663(1)
Lullay
664(1)
Knolege, Aquayntance
665(1)
Manerly Margery Mylk and Ale
666(1)
Garland of Laurel
667(2)
To Maystres Jane Blennerhasset
667(1)
To Maystres Isabell Pennell
667(1)
To Maystres Margaret Hussey
668(1)
Sir Thomas Wyatt
669(10)
The Long Love, That in My Thought Doth Harbor
670(1)
Companion Reading
Petrarch, Sonnet 140
670(1)
Whoso List to Hunt
671(1)
Companion Reading
Petrarch, Sonnet 190
671(1)
My Galley
672(1)
They Flee from Me
672(1)
Some Time I Fled the Fire
673(1)
My Lute, Awake!
673(1)
Tagus, Farewell
674(1)
Forget Not Yet
674(1)
Blame Not My Lute
675(1)
Lucks, My Fair Falcon, and Your Fellows All
676(1)
Stand Whoso List
676(1)
Mine Own John Poyns
676(3)
Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey
679(7)
Love That Doth Reign and Live within My Thought
679(1)
Th'Assyrians' King, in Peace with Foul Desire
680(1)
Set Me Whereas the Sun Doth Parch the Green
680(1)
The Soote Season
680(1)
Alas, So All Things Now Do Hold Their Peace
681(1)
Companion Reading
Petrarch, Sonnet 164
681(1)
So Cruel Prison
682(1)
London, Hast Thou Accused Me
683(2)
Wyatt Resteth Here
685(1)
My Radcliffe, When Thy Reckless Youth Offends
686(1)
Sir Thomas More
686(70)
Utopia
687(69)
PERSPECTIVES Government and Self Government 756(245)
William Tyndale
757(1)
from The Obedience of a Christian Man
757(1)
Juan Luis Vives
758(1)
from Instruction of a Christian Woman
758(1)
Sir Thomas Elyot
759(3)
from The Book Named the Governor
760(1)
from The Defence of Good Women
761(1)
John Ponet
762(2)
from A Short Treatise of Political Power
762(2)
John Foxe
764(3)
from The Book of Martyrs
765(2)
Richard Hooker
767(2)
from The Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity
767(2)
James I (James VI of Scotland)
769(2)
from The True Law of Free Monarchies
770(1)
Baldassare Castiglione
771(2)
from The Book of the Courtier
772(1)
Roger Ascham
773(2)
from The Schoolmaster
773(2)
Richard Mulcaster
775(2)
from The First Part of the Elementary
775(2)
George Gascoigne
777(7)
Seven Sonnets to Alexander Neville
777(3)
Woodmanship
780(4)
Edmund Spenser
784(183)
The Shepheardes Calender
785(4)
October
785(4)
The Faerie Queene
789(1)
A Letter of the Authors
790(3)
The First Booke of the Faerie Queene
793(141)
The Second Booke of the Faerie Queene
934(20)
Canto 12
934(20)
Amoretti
954(3)
1 (``Happy ye leaves when as those lilly hands'')
954(1)
4 (``New yeare forth looking out of Janus gate'')
954(1)
13 (``In that proud port, which her so goodly graceth'')
954(1)
22 (``This holy season fit to fast and pray'')
955(1)
62 (``The weary yeare his race now having run'')
955(1)
65 (``The doubt which ye misdeeme, fayre love, is vaine'')
956(1)
66 (``To all those happy blessings which ye have'')
956(1)
68 (``Most glorious Lord of lyfe that on this day'')
956(1)
75 (``One day I wrote her name upon the strand'')
957(1)
Epithalamion
957(10)
Sir Philip Sidney
967(34)
The Apology for Poetry
969(32)
``The Apology'' and Its Time The Art of Poetry 1001(211)
from The School of Abuse
1002(1)
Stephen Gosson
The Art of English Poesie
1003(3)
George Puttenham
Certain Notes of Instruction
1006(2)
George Gascoigne
A Defense of Rhyme
1008(1)
Samuel Daniel
The Arcadia
1009(34)
Book 1
1009(34)
Astrophil and Stella
1043(8)
1 (``Loving in truth, and fain in verse my love to show'')
1043(1)
7 (``When Nature made her chiefe worke, Stellas eyes'')
1043(1)
9 (``Queene Vertues court, which some call Stellas face'')
1044(1)
31 (``With how sad steps, O Moon, thou climb'st the skies'')
1044(1)
39 (``Come sleep, O sleep, the certain knot of peace'')
1044(1)
45 (``Stella oft sees the very face of woe'')
1045(1)
60 (``When my good Angel guides me to the place'')
1045(1)
71 (``Who will in fairest book of Nature know'')
1045(1)
Fourth song (``Only joy, now here you are'')
1046(1)
Eighth song (``In a grove most rich of shade'')
1047(3)
106 (``O absent presence, Stella is not here'')
1050(1)
108 (``When sorrow (using mine own fire's might)'')
1050(1)
Isabella Whitney
1051(16)
I.W. To Her Unconstant Lover
1051(4)
The Admonition by the Author
1055(3)
A Careful Complaint by the Unfortunate Author
1058(1)
The Manner of Her Will
1059(8)
Mary Herbert, Countess of Pembroke
1067(11)
Even Now That Care
1067(3)
To Thee Pure Sprite
1070(2)
Psalm 71: In Te Domini Speravi (``On thee my trust is grounded'')
1072(3)
Companion Reading
Miles Coverdale: Psalm 71
1075(1)
Psalm 121: Levavi Oculos (``Unto the hills, I now will bend'')
1075(1)
The Doleful Lay of Clorinda
1076(2)
Elizabeth I
1078(15)
Written with a Diamond on Her Window at Woodstock
1080(1)
Written on a Wall at Woodstock
1080(1)
The Doubt of Future Foes
1081(1)
On Monsieur's Departure
1081(1)
Psalm 13 (``Fools that true faith yet never had'')
1082(1)
The Metres of Boethius's Consolation of Philosophy
1082(2)
Book 1, No. 2 (``O in how headlong depth the drowned mind is dim'')
1082(1)
Book 1, No. 7 (``Dim clouds'')
1083(1)
Book 2, No. 3 (``In pool when Phoebus with reddy wain'')
1084(1)
Speeches
1084(1)
On Marriage
1084(1)
On Mary, Queen of Scots
1085(3)
On Mary's Execution
1088(2)
To the English Troops at Tilbury, Facing the Spanish Armada
1090(1)
The Golden Speech
1091(2)
Aemilia Lanyer
1093(10)
The Description of Cookham
1093(5)
Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum
1098(5)
To the Doubtful Reader
1098(1)
To the Virtuous Reader
1098(1)
[Invocation]
1099(1)
[Against Beauty Without Virtue]
1100(1)
[Pilate's Wife Apologizes for Eve]
1101(2)
Richard Barnfield
1103(20)
The Affectionate Shepherd
1104(16)
Sonnets from Cynthia
1120(3)
1 (``Sporting at fancy, setting light by love'')
1120(1)
5 (``It is reported of fair Thetis' son'')
1120(1)
9 (``Diana (on a time) walking the wood'')
1121(1)
11 (``Sighing, and sadly sitting by my love'')
1121(1)
13 (``Speak, Echo, tell; how may I call my love?'')
1121(1)
19 (``Ah no; nor I myself: though my pure love'')
1122(1)
Christopher Marlowe
1123(68)
The Passionate Shepherd to His Love
1124(1)
Companion Reading
The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd
1124(1)
Sir Walter Raleigh
Hero and Leander
1125(18)
The Tragical History of Dr. Faustus
1143(48)
Sir Walter Raleigh
1191(21)
Nature That Washed Her Hands in Milk
1192(1)
To the Queen
1193(1)
On the Life of Man
1194(1)
The Author's Epitaph, Made by Himself
1194(1)
As You Came from the Holy Land
1195(1)
from The 21st and Last Book of the Ocean to Cynthia
1196(5)
The Discovery of the Large, Rich and Beautiful Empire of Guiana
1201(11)
from Epistle Dedicatory
1201(2)
To the Reader
1203(3)
[The Amazons]
1206(1)
[The Orinoco]
1206(2)
[The King of Aromaia]
1208(1)
[The New World of Guiana]
1209(3)
``The Discovery'' and Its Time Voyage Literature 1212(142)
The First Voyage Made to the Coasts of America
1212(5)
Arthur Barlow
A Brief and True Report of the Newfound Land of Virginia
1217(3)
Thomas Hariot
A Notable History Containing Four Voyages Made to Florida
1220(2)
Rene Laudonniere
William Shakespeare
1222(132)
Sonnets
1225(1)
1 (``From fairest creatures we desire increase'')
1225(1)
12 (``When I do count the clock that tells the time'')
1226(1)
15 (``When I consider every thing that grows'')
1226(1)
18 (``Shall I compare thee to a summer's day'')
1226(1)
20 (``A woman's face with Nature's own hand painted'')
1227(1)
29 (``When, in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes'')
1227(1)
30 (``When to the sessions of sweet silent thought'')
1228(1)
31 (``Thy bosom is endeared with all hearts'')
1228(1)
33 (``Full many a glorious morning have I seen'')
1228(1)
35 (``No more be grieved at that which thou hast done'')
1229(1)
55 (``Not marble nor the gilded monuments'')
1229(1)
60 (``Like as the waves make towards the pebbled shore'')
1229(1)
71 (``No longer mourn for me when I am dead'')
1230(1)
73 (``That time of year thou mayst in me behold'')
1230(1)
80 (``O, how I faint when I of you do write'')
1230(1)
86 (``Was it the proud full sail of his great verse'')
1231(1)
87 (``Farewell! Thou art too dear for my possessing'')
1231(1)
93 (``So shall I live, supposing thou art true'')
1232(1)
94 (``They that have pow'r to hurt, and will do none'')
1232(1)
104 (``To me, fair friend, you never can be old'')
1232(1)
10C (``When in the chronicle of wasted time'')
1233(1)
107 (``Not mine own fears nor the prophetic soul'')
1233(1)
116 (``Let me not to the marriage of true minds'')
1233(1)
123 (``No, Time, thou shalt not boast that I do change'')
1234(1)
124 (``If my dear love were but the child of state'')
1234(1)
126 (``O thou, my lovely boy, who in thy power'')
1235(1)
128 (``How oft, when thou my music play'st'')
1235(1)
129 (``The expense of spirit in a waste of shame'')
1235(1)
130 (``My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun'')
1236(1)
138 (``When my love swears that she is made of truth'')
1236(1)
144 (``Two loves I have, of comfort and despair'')
1237(1)
152 (``In loving thee thou know'st I am forsworn'')
1237(1)
Twelfth Night; or, What You Will
1237(55)
The Tempest
1292(62)
Companion Readings
from A True Reportory of the Wrack and Redemption of Sir Thomas Gates, Knight, upon and from the Islands of the Bermudas
1345(8)
William Strachey
from Of Cannibals
1353(1)
Michel de Montaigne
PERSPECTIVES England in the New World 1354(123)
Michael Drayton
1355(2)
To the Virginian Voyage
1355(2)
John Smith
1357(6)
from General History of Virginia and the Summer Isles
1357(6)
Richard Ffrethorne
1363(4)
Letter to His Father and Mother (March 20, April 2 and 3, 1623)
1363(4)
John Donne
1367(4)
from A Sermon Preached to the Honorable Company of the Virginia Plantation
1307(64)
William Bradford
1371(10)
from Of plymouth Plantation
1372(9)
Mary Rowlandson
1381(16)
from A Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson
1381(16)
The Bay Psalm Book
1397(3)
Psalm 71
1398(2)
Psalm 121
1400(1)
James Revel
1400(6)
from The Poor Unhappy Transported Felon's Sorrowful Account of His Fourteen Years Transportation at Virginia in America
1401(5)
Thomas Dekker and Thomas Middleton
1406(71)
The Roaring Girl; or, Moll Cut-Purse
1409(68)
``The Roaring Girl'' and Its Time City Life 1477(19)
My Lady's Looking Glass
1480(1)
Barnabe Riche
A Notable Discovery of Cosenage
1481(1)
Robert Greene
Lantern and Candlelight
1482(3)
Thomas Dekker
Thomas of Reading
1485(6)
Thomas Deloney
Pierce Penniless
1491(3)
Thomas Nashe
A Counterblast to Tobacco
1494(2)
King James I
PERSPECTIVES Tracts on Women and Gender 1496(203)
Desiderius Erasmus
1497(2)
from In Laude and Praise of Matrimony
1498(1)
Barnabe Riche
1499(1)
from My Lady's Looking Glass
1499(1)
Margaret Tyler
1500(2)
from Preface to The First Part of the Mirror of Princely Deeds
1501(1)
Joseph Swetnam
1502(3)
from The Arraignment of Lewd, Idle, Froward, and Unconstant Women
1503(2)
Rachel Speght
1505(6)
from A Muzzle for Melastomus
1506(5)
Ester Sowernam
1511(3)
from Ester Hath Hanged Haman
1511(3)
Hic Mulier and Haec-Vir
1514(8)
from Hic Mulier; or, The Man-Woman
1515(2)
from Haec-Vir; or, The Womanish-Man
1517(5)
Thomas Campion
1522(3)
My sweetest Lesbia, let us live and love
1523(1)
There is a garden in her face
1524(1)
Rose-cheeked Laura, come
1524(1)
When thou must home to shades of underground
1524(1)
Never weather-beaten sail more willing bent to shore
1525(1)
Michael Drayton
1525(3)
To the Reader
1526(1)
Sonnet 12 (``To nothing fitter can I thee compare'')
1527(1)
Sonnet 61 (``Since there's no help, come let us kiss and part'')
1527(1)
To His Coy Love, a Canzonet
1527(1)
Ben Jonson
1528(119)
The Alchemist
1530(98)
On Something, That Walks Somewhere
1628(1)
On My First Daughter
1628(1)
To John Donne
1629(1)
On My First Son
1629(1)
Inviting a Friend to Supper
1629(1)
To Penshurst
1630(2)
Song to Celia
1632(1)
Queen and Huntress
1633(1)
To the Memory of My Beloved, the Author, Mr. William Shakespeare, and What He Hath Left Us
1633(2)
To the Immortal Memory, and Friendship of that Noble Pair, Sir Lucius Cary and Sir H. Morison
1635(3)
Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue
1638(9)
John Donne
1647(21)
The Good Morrow
1648(1)
Song (``Go, and catch a falling star'')
1649(1)
The Undertaking
1650(1)
The Sun Rising
1650(1)
The Indifferent
1651(1)
The Canonization
1652(1)
Air and Angels
1653(1)
Break of Day
1653(1)
A Valediction: of Weeping
1654(1)
Love's Alchemy
1655(1)
The Flea
1655(1)
The Bait
1656(1)
The Apparition
1656(1)
A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning
1657(1)
The Ecstasy
1658(2)
The Funeral
1660(1)
The Relic
1660(1)
Elegy 19: To His Mistress Going to Bed
1661(1)
Holy Sonnets
1662(1)
1 (``As due by many titles I resign'')
1662(1)
2 (``Oh my black soul! Now thou art summoned'')
1663(1)
3 (``This is my play's last scene, here heavens appoint'')
1663(1)
4 (``At the round earth's imagined corners, blow'')
1663(1)
5 (``If poisonous minerals, and if that tree'')
1664(1)
6 (``Death be not proud, though some have called thee'')
1664(1)
7 (``Spit in my face ye Jews, and pierce my side'')
1664(1)
8 (``Why are we by all creatures waited on?'')
1665(1)
9 (``What if this present were the world's last night?'')
1665(1)
10 (``Batter my heart, three-personed God; for, you'')
1666(1)
11 (``Wilt thou love God, as he thee? Then digest'')
1666(1)
12 (``Father, part of his double interest'')
1666(1)
Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions
1667(1)
[``For whom the bell tolls'']
1667(1)
Lady Mary Wroth
1668(6)
Pamphilia to Amphilanthus
1669(5)
1 (``When night's black mantle could most darkness prove'')
1669(1)
16 (``Am I thus conquered? Have I lost the powers'')
1669(1)
17 (``Truly poor Night thou welcome art to me'')
1670(1)
26 (``When everyone to pleasing pastime hies'')
1670(1)
28. Song (``Sweetest love, return again'')
1670(1)
39 (``Take heed mine eyes, how you your looks do cast'')
1671(1)
40 (``False hope which feeds but to destroy, and spill'')
1671(1)
48 (``If ever Love had force in human breast?'')
1672(1)
68 (``My pain, still smothered in my grieved breast'')
1672(1)
74. Song (``Love a child is ever crying'')
1672(1)
A Crown of Sonnets Dedicated to Love
1673(1)
77 (``In this strange labyrinth how shall I turn?'')
1673(1)
83 (``How blessed be they then, who his favors prove'')
1673(1)
103 (``My muse now happy, lay thyself to rest'')
1674(1)
Robert Herrick
1674(11)
Hesperides
1675(1)
The Argument of His Book
1675(1)
To His Book
1675(1)
Another (``To read my book the virgin shy'')
1675(1)
Another (``Who with thy leaves shall wipe at need'')
1676(1)
To the Sour Reader
1676(1)
When He Would Have His Verses Read
1676(1)
Delight in Disorder
1676(1)
Corinna's Going A-Maying
1677(1)
To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time
1678(1)
The Hock-Cart, or Harvest Home
1679(1)
His Prayer to Ben Jonson
1680(1)
Upon Julia's Clothes
1680(1)
Upon His Spaniel Tracie
1680(1)
The Dream (``Me thought (last night) Love in an anger came'')
1681(1)
The Dream (``By dream I saw one of the three'')
1681(1)
The Vine
1681(1)
The Vision
1682(1)
Discontents in Devon
1682(1)
To Dean-Bourne, a Rude River in Devon
1682(1)
Upon Scobble: Epigram
1683(1)
The Christian Militant
1683(1)
To His Tomb-Maker
1683(1)
Upon Himself Being Buried
1683(1)
His Last Request to Julia
1683(1)
The Pillar of Fame
1684(1)
His Noble Numbers
1684(1)
His Prayer for Absolution
1684(1)
To His Sweet Saviour
1684(1)
To God, on His Sickness
1685(1)
George Herbert
1685(14)
The Altar
1686(1)
Redemption
1686(1)
Easter
1687(1)
Easter Wings
1688(1)
Affliction (1)
1688(2)
Prayer (1)
1690(1)
Jordan (1)
1690(1)
Church Monuments
1691(1)
The Windows
1691(1)
Denial
1692(1)
Virtue
1692(1)
Man
1693(1)
Jordan (2)
1694(1)
Time
1694(1)
The Collar
1695(1)
The Pulley
1696(1)
The Forerunners
1696(1)
Love (3)
1697(2)
PERSPECTIVES Emblem, Style, and Metaphor 1699(48)
Geoffrey Whitney
1701(1)
The Phoenix
1701(1)
Ben Jonson
1702(4)
from Timber, or Discoveries
1702(4)
Giordano Bruno
1706(1)
from On the Composition of Images, Signs, and Ideas
1706(1)
Conte Emmanuele Tesauro
1707(2)
from Through the Lens of Aristotle
1708(1)
Richard Crashaw
1709(2)
To the Noblest and Best of Ladies, the Countess of Denbigh
1710(1)
Richard Lovelace
1711(5)
To Lucasta, Going to the Wars
1712(1)
The Grasshopper
1712(2)
To Althea, from Prison
1714(1)
Love Made in the First Age: To Chloris
1714(2)
Henry Vaughan
1716(8)
Regeneration
1717(2)
The Retreat
1719(1)
Silence, and Stealth of Days
1720(1)
The World
1720(2)
They Are All Gone into the World of Light!
1722(1)
The Night
1723(1)
Andrew Marvell
1724(14)
The Coronet
1726(1)
Bermudas
1726(1)
The Nymph Complaining for the Death of Her Fawn
1727(3)
To His Coy Mistress
1730(1)
The Definition of Love
1731(1)
The Mower Against Gardens
1732(1)
The Mower's Song
1733(1)
The Garden
1733(2)
An Horatian Ode Upon Cromwell's Return from Ireland
1735(3)
Katherine Philips
1738(9)
Friendship in Emblem, or the Seal
1739(2)
Upon the Double Murder of King Charles
1741(1)
On the Third of September, 1651
1742(1)
To the Truly Noble, and Obliging Mrs. Anne Owen
1743(1)
To Mrs. Mary Awbrey at Parting
1743(2)
To My Excellent Lucasia, on Our Friendship
1745(1)
The World
1745(2)
The Development of English Prose 1747(32)
Francis Bacon
1748(7)
Of Truth
1749(1)
Of Marriage and Single Life
1750(1)
Of Superstition
1751(1)
Of Plantations
1752(2)
Of Studies [version of 1597]
1754(1)
Of Studies [version of 1625]
1754(1)
The King James Bible
1755(3)
Genesis 2-3
1756(2)
Lady Mary Wroth
1758(4)
from The Countess of Montgomery's Urania
1759(3)
Thomas Hobbes
1762(4)
Leviathan
1763(3)
Chapter 13. Of the Natural Condition of Mankind as Concerning their Felicity, and Misery
1763(3)
Sir Thomas Browne
1766(4)
Religio Medici
1767(3)
from Part 1
1767(3)
Robert Burton
1770(9)
The Anatomy of Melancholy
1771(8)
[The Utopia of Democritus]
1771(6)
Division of the Body, Humors, Spirits
1777(2)
PERSPECTIVES The Civil War, or The Wars of Three Kingdoms 1779(250)
John Gauden
1781(3)
from Eikon Basilike
1782(2)
John Milton
1784(7)
from Eikonoklastes
1785(6)
The Petition of Gentlewomen and Tradesmen's Wives
1791(4)
John Lilburne
1795(3)
from England's New Chains Discovered
1796(2)
Oliver Cromwell
1798(5)
from Letters from Ireland
1799(4)
John O'dwyer of the Glenn
1803(1)
The Story of Alexander Agnew; or, Jock of Broad Scotland
1804(2)
Edward Hyde, Earl of Clarendon
1806(4)
from True Historical Narrative of the Rebellion
1807(3)
John Milton
1810(219)
L'Allegro
1812(3)
II Penseroso
1815(4)
Lycidas
1819(5)
How Soon Hath Time
1824(1)
On the New Forcers of Conscience Under the Long Parliament
1824(1)
To the Lord General Cromwell
1825(1)
On the Late Massacre in Piedmont
1825(1)
When I Consider How My Light Is Spent
1826(1)
Methought I Saw My Late Espoused Saint
1826(1)
from Areopagitica
1827(9)
Paradise Lost
1836(1)
Book 1
1837(19)
Book 2
1856(24)
from Book 3
1880(13)
from Book 4
1893(19)
from Book 5
1912(10)
from Book 6
1922(1)
from Book 7
1922(2)
from Book 8
1924(10)
Book 9
1934(25)
from Book 10
1959(19)
from Book 11
1978(1)
from Book 12
1979(6)
Samson Agonistes
1985(44)
PERSPECTIVES Spiritual Self-Reckonings 2029(32)
The Lady Falkland: Her Life
2029(8)
from The Lady Falkland: Her Life, by one of Her Daughters
2030(7)
Anna Trapnel
2037(7)
from Anna Trapnel's Report and Plea
2037(7)
Alice Thornton
2044(4)
from Book of Remembrances
2044(4)
Ralph Josselin
2048(1)
from Diary
2048(1)
Daniel Defoe
2049(2)
from The Life and Strange and Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, of York, Mariner
2050(1)
John Bunyan
2051(10)
from The Pilgrim's Progress
2051(10)
Political and Religious Orders 2061(6)
Money, Weights, and Measures 2067(2)
Literary and Cultural Terms 2069(24)
Credits 2093(2)
Index 2095

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