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         Fielding Henry:     more books (100)
  1. The Life of Henry Fielding (Blackwell Critical Biographies) by Ronald Paulson, 2000-04-14
  2. Tom Jones (Modern Library Classics) by Henry Fielding, 2002-09-10
  3. Henry Fielding: An Annotated Bibliography (Scarecrow Author Bibliography) by Henry George Hahn, 1979-06
  4. The Correspondence of Henry and Sarah Fielding by Henry and Sarah Fielding, 1993-06-24
  5. Contributions to The Champion, and Related Writings (The Wesleyan Edition of the Works of Henry Fielding) by Henry Fielding, 2003-05-22
  6. Tom Jones (Norton Critical Editions) by Henry Fielding, 1994-11-17
  7. Henry Fielding At Work: Magistrate, Buisnessman, Writer by Lance Bertelsen, 2000-10-06
  8. Henry Fielding: A Literary Life (Literary Lives) by Harold Pagliaro, 1998-06-15
  9. Honest Sins: Georgian Libertinism and the Plays and Novels of Henry Fielding by Tiffany Potter, 1999-02
  10. Henry Fielding's Novels and the Classical Tradition by Nancy A. Mace, 1996-05
  11. Critical Essays on Henry Fielding (Critical Essays on British Literature) by Albert J. Rivero, 1998-01-16
  12. The Author's Inheritance: Henry Fielding, Jane Austen, and the Establishment of the Novel by Jo Alyson Parker, 1998-07
  13. Tom Jones (Oxford World's Classics) by Henry Fielding, 2008-10-15
  14. A Henry Fielding Companion by Martin C. Battestin, 2000-06-30

41. Henry Fielding
go back, Henry Fielding. Henry Feilding Fielding (17071754). HenryFielding was born at Wedmore, England on 22 April 1707, the first
http://fp.rydehistory.f9.co.uk/biography/fielding.htm

42. The Works Of Henry Fielding, Volume Six: Miscellanies
Fielding, Henry, 17071754. The Works of Henry Fielding, Volume SixMiscellanies Electronic Text Center, University of Virginia
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/FieMisc.html
Fielding, Henry, 1707-1754. The Works of Henry Fielding, Volume Six: Miscellanies
Electronic Text Center, University of Virginia Library
The entire work
KB Table of Contents for this work All on-line databases Etext Center Homepage
  • Header ...
  • Introduction INTRODUCTION
  • Story 1 A JOURNEY FROM THIS WORLD TO THE NEXT ETC., ETC.
  • Story 2 THE JOURNAL OF A VOYAGE TO LISBON
  • 43. Browse Top Level > Texts > Project Gutenberg > Authors > F
    Field, Edward Salisbury, 18781936; Field, Ellen Robena; Field, Eugene, 1850-1895;Fielding, Henry, 1707-1754. Fielding, Sarah, 1710-1768; Filson, John, Ca.
    http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Au

    44. Browse Top Level > Texts > Project Gutenberg > Titles > J
    text. Author Fielding, Henry, 17071754 Keywords Authors F Fielding,Henry, 1707-1754; Titles J ; Subject English Literature.
    http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Ti

    45. 18th Century
    Henry Fielding (17071754) Henry Fielding The Works of Henry Fielding Henr FeildingHenry Fielding Page Henry Fielding LitWeb Henry Fielding Page Tom Jones by
    http://home.teleport.com/~mgroves/LitResources/18thCentury.htm
    18th Century Home Index Internet Resources
    [ Revised: January 29, 2002 [Hints: (1) Use the "Find" command of your browser to locate the author quickly. (2) If your click on an author's name is unsuccessful, reload the "18th Century" page and let it download completely before clicking again. (3) Ctrl-Home or Home will take you to the top of the page.] AUTHORS
    Pierre Augustin Caron de Beamarchais

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    ... Mary Wollstonecraft (Godwin) (1759-1797) William Wycherley INTERNET RESOURCES 18th Century English Novel Research Guide The Age of Style1660-1800 BCMSV Database17th and 18th-century Bibliography of Resources ... Eighteenth Century Resources INTERNET RESOURCES Eighteenth Century Studies Literature in Great Britain1700 to the Present Oxford Book of English Verse1250-1900 Restoration Drama Homepage ... World of London Theatre1660-1800 Pierre Augustin Caron de Beamarchais Beaumarchais (1732-1799) James Boswell Boswell's Life of Johnson James Boswell James Boswell (1740-1795) James Boswell Visits Ferney Robert Burns IndexBurns Country Robert Burns (Yahoo) Robert Burns Robert Burns Tribute ... Romantic ChronologyRobert Burns Giacomo Girolamo Casanova Casanova, Giacomo Girolamo (1725-1798)

    46. LitSearch: An Online Literary Database
    Fielding, Henry (17071754) Works by this author From This World To The Next Volume 2 Journal Of A Voyage To Lisbon Volume 1. Copyright 2001 Keith Ito.
    http://daily.stanford.edu/litsearch/servlet/DescribeAuthor?name=Fielding, Henry

    47. Fielding, Henry
    Fielding, Henry (17071754). English novelist, playwright, and barrister, who, withhis contemporary Samuel Richardson, established the English novel tradition.
    http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/F/fieldinghenry/
    Fielding, Henry
    English novelist, playwright, and barrister, who, with his contemporary Samuel Richardson, established the English novel tradition.
    Fielding was born at Sharpham Park, Somerset, and educated at Eton College and in law at the Leiden University. From 1729 to 1737 he was a theatrical manager and playwright in London. Of his 25 plays, the most popular was the farce Tom Thumb (1730). In 1740 he was called to the bar; as justice of the peace for Westminster from 1748 and for Middlesex from 1749, he worked hard to reduce crime in London.
    Two volumes of political journalism, The True Patriot (1745) and The Jacobite's Journal (1747), preceded publication of The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling (1749). Tom Jones, regarded by critics as one of the great English novels, is in the picaresque tradition, involving the adventures and misadventures of a roguish hero. It tells in rich, realistic detail the many adventures that befall Tom, an engaging young libertine, in his efforts to gain his rightful inheritance. (It was made into a successful motion picture, Tom Jones, in 1962.) Amelia (1751), a study of justice and the penal system in England, is the most serious of Fielding's fiction and his last novel.
    In 1752 he returned to political writing as publisher of the periodical The Covent Garden Journal. Illness forced him to relinquish his post as magistrate in 1753, but he had achieved a reputation for honesty and fearlessness in fighting crime in the city of London. His journey to Portugal in 1754 is the subject of Journal of a Voyage to Lisbon (1755), a posthumously published, warm and touching family chronicle. Fielding is highly regarded for his innovations in the development of the modern novel. Although he was not the first novelist, he was the first writer to break away from the epistolary method. Fielding devised a new structure and theory that laid the foundation for the works of Charles Dickens, William Makepeace Thackeray, and the Victorian domestic novelists.

    48. A Biography Of Henry Fielding
    Henry Fielding (17071754) Playwright and novelist, born at SharphamPark, Glastonbury, Somerset, SW England, UK. He studied at
    http://www.ourcivilisation.com/smartboard/shop/fldgh/about.htm
    Henry Fielding Playwright and novelist, born at Sharpham Park, Glastonbury, Somerset, SW England, UK. He studied at Leyden, and began to write theatrical comedies, becoming author/manager of the Little Theatre in the Haymarket (1736). However, the sharpness of his burlesques led to the Licensing Act (1737), which closed his theatre. In search of an alternative career, he was called to the bar (1740), but his interests lay in journalism and fiction. On Richardson's publication of Pamela (1740), he wrote his famous parody, Joseph Andrews (1742). Several other works followed, notably The History of Tom Jones, A Foundling (1749). which established his reputation as a founder of the English novel. As a reward for his government journalism, he was made justice of the peace to Westminster, where he helped to form the Bow Street Runners within the police force. Of Love Biographies Library

    49. Primis -- Library Of The Future: Henry Fielding -- Updated 6/29/2001
    Henry Fielding. (17071754) — An English novelist and dramatist,he was also an attorney and London’s first police magistrate.
    http://www.mhhe.com/primis/catalog/pcatalog/F2033436.htm
    Authors
    English

    Your Complimentary Custom Book
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    50. Henry Fielding
    Henry Feilding Fielding (17071754). Henry Fielding was born at Wedmore,England on 22 April 1707, the first child of Edmund Fielding1
    http://mural.uv.es/pacasis/biogra.html
    Henry "Feilding" Fielding
    Henry Fielding was born at Wedmore, England on 22 April 1707, the first child of Edmund Fielding and Sarah Gould Fielding. Their marriage had been highly disapproved of by Sarah's parents on the grounds that Edmund was too poor and couldn't even manage what little money he did have but Sarah would listen to none of that. They had seven children before Sarah died . When Henry was twelve, his father remarried, an Italian woman who was rumored to be a Catholic who kept an eating-house . Henry had been raised (by his father, ironically enough) to really dislike Catholics, so you can imagine the atmosphere around that house. Henry's maternal grandmother eventually sued for custody of Henry and his siblings, and won. Surrounded by females and one much younger brother, Henry grew up wild and willful, not to mention prone to brawling At 21, Henry went to the continent to attend the University of Leiden in Holland, because it was much cheaper than any of the London schools. Eventually, though, he couldn't even afford Leiden and had to go back to London with all kinds of unpaid debts behind him . London was good to him, though...between the ages of 22 and 30, Henry managed to make quite a good living as a writer of farces and comedies

    51. HENRY FIELDING
    Henry Fielding. (17071754). Henry Fielding, an early and contemptuosdetractor of Pamela, found himlek so overhelmed by Clarissa
    http://mural.uv.es/pagamo/henrybio.html
    HENRY FIELDING Henry Fielding, an early and contemptuos detractor of Pamela , found himlek so overhelmed by Clarissa that he was obliged to write to Richardson in 1749 to expres his enthusiasm for its fifth volume. 'Let the overflows of a Heart which you have filled brimful speak for me', he gushed without a hint of his customary irony, 'my compassion is often moved; but I think my admiration more.' In sharp contrast to the said, bourgeois Richardson's, the gentlemanly Fielding's literary carrer had begun in the theatre with Love in Several Masques of 1728, had continued with two adaptations from Molièr ( The Mock Doctor and The Miser ) and with a sucessful series of sharp comedies, notably The Author's Farce , which satirically depicts the mouldy world of hacks and booksekkers, and the sensationally titled Rape upon Rape; or, the Justice Caught in his own Trap (both 1730). His exuberant burlesque Tom Thumb: A Tragedy (1730) (a revised version of which appeared as The Tragedy of Tragedies in 1731) plays ingeniously with the effects of parody, literary allusion, irregualr blank verse, bathos, and the mannerisms of academic editing. Fielding's flirtation with the theatre came to an abrupt end in 1737 when his political satires Pasquin and The Historical Register for 1736 provoked Walpole's Government into passing a Licensing Act which introduced official censorship and restricted London performances to two approved theatres.

    52. BBC - Radio 4 - This Sceptred Isle - Window Taxes & Highway Robbery
    Henry Fielding (17071754) Magistrate, dramatist and novelist and popularlyremembered as the author of The History Of Tom Jones, A Foundling and The
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/history/sceptred_isle/page/120.shtml?question=120

    53. The Wordwizard Word Portal - Fiction Links
    theory. Felske, Coerte VW. Fielding, Henry (17071754) Henry Feilding Fielding - biographical sketch of the author. Henry Fielding
    http://www.wordwizard.com/fictionlinksf.htm
    Links - Fiction - F Falkner, J. Meade (1858-1932) Fast, Howard - complete bibliography as well as full-text articles and jacket blurbs. Faulkner, William (1897-1962)

    54. Records For Picaresque Literature. (in MARION)
    Holdings at other locations See the additional holdings for thistitle. Fielding, Henry, 17071754. Fielding, Henry, 1707-1754.
    http://www.ccpl.org/MARION/@PICARESQUE LITERATURE/009e1000a000/0
    Picaresque literature.
    Records 1 to 25 of 34

    55. Necessary To Be Had In All Families: The Life & Works Of Henry Fielding, Esq.
    Henry Fielding 17071754. The early 19th century engraving above isbased on a engraving by William Hogarth that was made several
    http://www.geocities.com/SunsetStrip/Mezzanine/8874/fielding.html
    Henry Fielding
    The early 19th century engraving above is based on a engraving by William Hogarth that was made several years after Fielding's death for use as the frontispiece in the 1762 edition of Fielding's complete works (which was not, in fact, particularly complete). Hogarth is also credited with two of the three surviving likenesses of Fielding taken from life. Many later engravings based on the same source as this one exaggerate Fielding's nose in a most unflattering way (an exaggeration HF could ill afford, anyway); this one is reasonably close to both Hogarth's original and the aforementioned life portraits. Central Works of Fielding: Plays: Love In Several Masques (1728)
    The Author's Farce (1730)
    The Life And Death Of Tom Thumb The Great (1730)
    The Tragedy Of Tragedies (1731, an expanded a version of Tom Thumb, with hilarious "scholarly" footnotes)
    The Grub-Street Opera (1731)
    The Modern Husband (1732)
    Don Quixote in England (1734)
    Pasquin
    Historical Register For The Year 1736 (1737) Novels and miscellanies: An Apology For The Life Of Mrs.

    56. Hlf's Jones01 Page
    Henry Fielding Henry Fielding (1707-1754) Henry Fielding the 18th century novelist,grew up at East Stour near Blandford. Henry Fielding (1707-1754)
    http://www.geocities.com/Athens/2588/jones01.html
    The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling
    by Henry Fielding
    An Amateur’s Comments
    Nobody but a blockhead would ever write anything down that he isn't getting paid for.
    So was the opinion of Henry Fielding in his novel, Tom Jones . Not much has been said in detail about this work, in comparison with other books of its stature. Whatever the reason, this one can boast being the inspiration for a 1963 Academy Award-winning movie. The movie has a lot of fun portraying the sexual encounters the hero of this book seems to keep running into. Tom Jones is born a bastard. Unfortunately, the people of this small country estate neighborhood in Somersetshire, England, in the mid-1700's, made a big issue out of how bad a thing that was. Tom was discovered as an abandoned baby, and he was raised in the home of, Mr. Allworthy, the judge, in the most elegant traditions of a gentleman and scholar of letters and morals. Jones was born a very handsome lad, and he was possessed of a good heart, good sense, and vigorous animal spirits.
    The characters of Messrs. Square and Thwackum enlighten us on the atmosphere of the tutored home life of Tom and Master Blifil, the brat 14-year-old son of Mrs. Bridget Blifil, widow of the late Captain Blifil. Miss Bridget married one of Allworthy’s houseguests after Allworthy gave her the boy to raise. Tom's mother, Jenny, was sentenced out of town by the judge. He told Jenny that he would raise the child in his own house.

    57. LitWeb.net
    Henry Fielding 17071754 search biblion. British writer, playwright andjournalist, founder of the English Realistic School in literature
    http://www.biblion.com/litweb/biogs/fielding_henry.html
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    British writer, playwright and journalist, founder of the English Realistic School in literature with Samuel Richardson. Fielding's career as a dramatist has been eclipsed by his career as a novelist. "When I'm not thanked at all, I'm thanked enough;
    I've done my duty, and I've done no more."

    (from Tom Thumb the Great, 1730) Fielding was born at Sharpham Park, Somerset. He was by birth a gentleman, close allied to the aristocracy. His father was a nephew of the 3rd Earl of Denbigha, and mother was from a prominent family of lawyers. Fielding grew up on his parent's farm at East Stour, Dotset. His mother died when Fielding was eleven, and when his father remarried, Henry was sent to Eton. He studied at Eton College (1719-1724), where he learned to love ancient Greek and Roman literature. Encouraged by his cousin, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, Fielding started his career as a writer in London. In 1728 he wrote two plays, of which LOVE IN SEVERAL MASQUES was successfully performed at Drury Lane. In the same year he went to the University of Leiden in the Netherlands, enlarging his knowledge of classical literature. After returning to England, he devoted himself to writing for the stage. Fielding also became a manager of the Little Theatre in the Haymarket. In 1730 he had four plays produced, among them TOM THUMB, which is his most famous and popular drama. In 1736 Fielding took over the management of the New Theatre, writing for it among others the satirical comedy PASQUIN. For several years Fielding's life was happy and prosperous.

    58. Fielding
    Henry Fielding, English (17071754). Tom Jones.
    http://www.hugeprint.com/authors/F/Fielding.htm
    Henry Fielding English (1707-1754) Tom Jones

    59. Swann Collection: Subjects: 19
    Fictitious characters19401960. Fictitious characters1950. Fielding, Henry,1707-1754.Historyof Tom Jones. Fig leaf1930-1940. Fig trees1930-1940.
    http://memory.loc.gov/pp/swannSubjects19.html
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    60. Henry Fielding Homepage And Biography On Bibliomania.com
    To advertise here contact bibliomania@paneris.co.uk. Henry Fielding. Introduction.(17071754).— Novelist, was born at Sharpham Park, near Glastonbury.
    http://www.bibliomania.com/0/0/22
    To advertise here contact bibliomania@paneris.co.uk. Henry Fielding Joseph Andrews Tom Jones Introduction
    Novelist, was born Tom Thumb Pasquin, a Dramatic Satire on the Times , and The Historical Register for 1736, in which Walpole was satirised. This enterprise was brought to an end by the passing of the Licensing Act, 1737, making the imprimatur Pamela , which inspired F. with the idea of a parody, thus giving rise to his first novel, Joseph Andrews . As, however, the characters, especially Parson Adams, developed in his hands, the original idea was laid aside, and the work assumed the form of a regular novel. It was published in 1742, and though sharing largely in the same qualities as its great successor, Tom Jones , its reception, though encouraging, was not phenomenally cordial. Immediately after this a heavy blow fell on F. in the death of his wife. The next few years were occupied with writing his Miscellanies , which contained, along with some essays and poems, two important works, A Journey from this World to the Next , and The History of Jonathan Wild the Great , a grave satire; and he also conducted two papers in support of the Government

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