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rochester
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Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1974) 35 (4): 426–428.
Published: 01 December 1974
... .oo.
When David Vieth published The Complete Poems of John Wilmot, Earl
of Rochester (New Haven, 1968) after years of research into tlie Rochester
canon, lie prefaced a tew brilliantly penetrating coniinents on the poetry
with an invitation and a warning:
The purpose...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1988) 49 (1): 19–37.
Published: 01 March 1988
.... THE FRAGMENTED SELF
IN THREE OF ROCHESTER’S POEMS*
By JAMES E. GILL
These supple variations and contradictions that are seen in us
have made some imagine that we have two souls, and others that
two powers accompany and drive us, each in its own...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1941) 2 (2): 326–328.
Published: 01 June 1941
... the extremes of life in the second half of the seventeenth
century. He was a wit, playboy, courtier, statesman, and poet.
As the roistering Lord Buckhurst he is known as the intimate of
Charles 11, Rochester, Etherege, and Sedley. As the Earl of Dor-
set he is best remembered for the sober later...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1986) 47 (2): 108–129.
Published: 01 June 1986
... T. Hillhouse, ed. Robert C. Rathburn and Martin Steinmann, Jr.
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1958), pp. 123, 129.
114 JANE EYRE
conflicts of the novel” romantically resolved when Jane is at last
married to Rochester...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1948) 9 (1): 3–9.
Published: 01 March 1948
... is, however, almost a certainty.
The knowledge that Spenser was secretary to Dr. John Young,
bishop of Rochester, in 1578, gives us this assurance. Piers was
Young’s immediate predecessor at Rochester, having been conse-
crated bishop of Rochester by Archbishop Grindal on April 15, 1576...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2004) 65 (2): 195–220.
Published: 01 June 2004
... by the latter” (96). The brand of sen-
sualism associated with Pepys is not, of course, the same as the cos-
mopolitan libertinism of the Restoration court (contrast Rochester); it
4 James Turner, “Pepys and the Private Parts of Monarchy,” in Culture and Society
in the Stuart Restoration: Literature...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1990) 51 (1): 82–87.
Published: 01 March 1990
...: in effect, retextualizing them for commercial gain.
Chapter 3, “The Aesthetics of Revolution/Restoration: Byron and
Wordsworth,” essentially argues that for both Rochester (yes, this chap-
ter too is digressive) and Byron, the monarch (represented by the king’s
two bodies) had become...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1991) 52 (4): 423–453.
Published: 01 December 1991
...
Certainly Jane and her narrative are “full of strange contrasts,” to
borrow Rochester’s phrase; and it is not difficult to locate causes for
these in BrontE’s life or Victorian society (JE,p. 340). The difficulties
lie elsewhere: first, in defining the range of possible causes for a plainly...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2016) 77 (2): 255–258.
Published: 01 June 2016
... on Johnson (and Swift)”; “Cooling to a Gypsy’s Lust: Johnson, Shakespeare and Cleopatra”; “Gibbon, Swift and Irony”; and “‘The Amorous Effect of Brass’: Showing, Telling and Money in Emma .” Part 3 is aptly titled “Three Occasional Pieces,” and includes essays on the Earl of Rochester, William Congreve...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1995) 56 (1): 77–98.
Published: 01 March 1995
...Anita Levy Copyright © 1995 by Duke University Press 1995 Anita Levy is an assistant professor of English at the University of Rochester. She is the author of Other Women: The Writing of Class, Race, and Gender; 1832–1898 , and essays on Emily Brontë, modernism and professionalism...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1941) 2 (2): 328–329.
Published: 01 June 1941
...-
known reformation of character (a change which took place in 1685
when he was forty-two years old) as an isolated phenomenon. But
there is an interesting coincideme to be noted here : a similar change
had already taken place in Dorsct’s two friends, Rochester and
Sedley. In 1679...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2016) 77 (2): 268–271.
Published: 01 June 2016
... by way of Jane’s choice of bodily allegiance to Rochester over the appeal of St. John’s missionary zeal. “St John,” says Staten, “performs ‘an act of duty,’ a moral act involving self-denial; but pragmatic Jane sees it as the physical working out of a physiological energy, with a corresponding moral...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1987) 48 (3): 254–278.
Published: 01 September 1987
... by women as Jane Eyre
and Rochester, Aurora and Romney Leigh, and Caroline Helstone and Robert Moore.
258 BRONTE’S SHIRLEY
strates. In the preface to her enormously popular how-to book,
Notes on Nursing, Florence Nightingale wrote that “every woman...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1945) 6 (1): 21–27.
Published: 01 March 1945
... by John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester, ante
1680;26The Election of a Poet Laureate in 1719 by John Sheffield,
Duke of Buckinghamshire (1648-1721) ; and The Feast of the Poets,
by James Henry Leigh Hunt (1748-1859), published in 1811, with a
postscript added in 1859. All three of these are in heroic...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1974) 35 (4): 423–426.
Published: 01 December 1974
...: University of Califoi-niit Press, 1973. siii + 3 17
pp. sj; 1 1 .oo.
When David Vieth published The Complete Poems of John Wilmot, Earl
of Rochester (New Haven, 1968) after years of research into tlie Rochester
canon, lie prefaced a tew brilliantly penetrating coniinents on the poetry...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1995) 56 (4): 511–513.
Published: 01 December 1995
... delivers. And he
never divulges how his “concern” and his “intention” will manifest them-
selves rhetorically or how they will effect any sort of critical synthesis. The
individual chapters-on Rochester, Oldham, Swift and Pope, Byron and
Shelley, Burke, Addison and Steele, Richardson, Boswell...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1978) 39 (4): 411–413.
Published: 01 December 1978
... Howard’s malice toward
Dryden. All this fills in the background of Dryden’s literary feuds, not only
the one with Howard himself, but also those with Rochester and the Buck-
inghamites. It also tends to locate Dryden in the milieu of Restoration in-
trigue and politics. His enemies were self...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1953) 14 (2): 139–148.
Published: 01 June 1953
... of acquainting me
with it, he was pleased to make use of my name in the very forehead
of it6
Despite Hammond’s comment, Uizum Necessariuwz had at least one
appreciative reader-the diarist, John Evelyn.? But the opposition
was formidable. John Warner, Bishop of Rochester, wrote two letters...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2013) 74 (3): 331–362.
Published: 01 September 2013
...) that the majority presumably
consisted of the “middling sort,” plus a sprinkling of gentry and nobil-
ity. Even so, assuming uniformity of values would be a highly peculiar
thing to do: John Evelyn, Samuel Pepys, and the Earl of Rochester see
the world differently.
Fourth, settings in these plays...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1989) 50 (1): 58–63.
Published: 01 March 1989
... the exercise of the historical imagination, but as
a justifiable strategy and rewarding experience in itself. It is good to
be able to acknowledge, without looking over one’s shoulder, how
wise Jane is when, reflecting on her taunting of Rochester with a
mixture of reserve and wit, she inwardly (how...
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