The Satiric Fiction of Thomas Love PeacockStanford University, 1952 - 238 pages |
Contents
INTRODUCTION AND A GENERAL DEFINITION OF SATIRE | 7 |
Peacocks Place in the Satiric Tradition | 22 |
II | 37 |
5 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
absurd action Anthelia argument Aristophanes Asterias belief Biographical Introduction Bracknell Brett-Smith and Jones burlesque Byron classical comic condemnation contemporary Cranium Crotchet Castle Cypress dialogue discussion Doren Edinburgh Review embodied opinion Epicurean Escot essay evil examine fiction of ideas Flosky Flosky's follies Folliott Gothic literature Gryll Grange guests Hall and Nightmare Headlong Hall house-party form house-party satires human humor Ibid intellectual Jenkison literature London Literary Gazette Lucian Mayoux melancholy Melincourt method that Peacock mind misanthropy Miss Cephalis moral Nightmare Abbey novel Old Comedy parody Peacock added Peacock apparently Peacock shows Peacock's caricatures Peacock's characters Peacock's criticism Peacock's fictions Peacock's form Peacock's house-party Peacock's method Peacock's satire Percy Bysshe Shelley philosophers phrenology physical appeal physical nature plot praise Priestley Rabelais realistic reality Repton ridicule romantic satiric effect satiric fiction satiric point satirist scene Scythrop seen skull social criticism special method summarizes supra theory Thomas Love Peacock truth vols Voltaire