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         Pope Alexander:     more books (100)
  1. The Poetical Works of Alexander Pope. Edited with Notes and Introductory Memoir by Adolphus William Ward. by Alexander (1688-1744). POPE, 1871
  2. The Works of Alexander Pope Esq. In Six Volumes Complete. With His Last Corrections, Additions and Improvements;... Together with the Commentaries and Notes of Mr. Warburton by Alexander (1688-1744). Commentaries and Notes by Warburton Pope, 1788-01-01
  3. The poetical works of Alexander Pope with memoir, explanatory notes, etc by Alexander, 1688-1744 Pope, 2009-10-26
  4. The ILIAD Of HOMER.Translated by Mr. Pope. by Alexander [1688 - 1744] - Translator. Homer.Pope, 1720
  5. A catalogue of the first editions of the works of Alexander Pope (1688-1744) together with a collection of the engraved portraits of the poet and of his friends by The Grolier Club,
  6. Alexander Pope (1688-1744): Images of the poet : an exhibition in the British Library to mark the tercentenary of the birth of the poet Alexander Pope, ... 1988 (British Library exhibition notes) by M. J. J, 1988
  7. Wasp in amber (Alexander Pope, 1688-1744) (Quaderni di poesia) by Mary Flora Lindsley, 1977
  8. Alexander Pope (1688-1744): Catalogue of the Pope Collection (Local history note) by Richmond upon Thames (England), 1989
  9. An ESSAY On MAN In Four Epistles to H. St. John, Lord Bolingbroke.To Which is Added, The Universal Prayer. by Alexander [1688-1744]. Pope, 1815
  10. The rape of the lock, and other poems. Edited with notes and introd. by Elizabeth M. King by Alexander, 1688-1744 Pope, 2009-10-26
  11. The ODYSSEY Of HOMER.Translated from the Greek. by Alexander [1688 - 1744] - Translator. Homer.Pope, 1726
  12. Poetical works. With memoir, a critical dissertation, and explanatory notes Volume 1 by Alexander, 1688-1744 Pope, 2009-10-26
  13. Complete poetical works. [Edited by Henry W. Boynton] by Alexander, 1688-1744 Pope, 2009-10-26
  14. Poetical works. Edited, with a critical memoir by Alexander, 1688-1744 Pope, 2009-10-26

41. Project Gutenberg Author Record
Project Gutenberg Author record. Pope, Alexander, 16881744. Titles. Essay OnMan, An. To the main listings page. Main Project Gutenberg Web page (online).
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/authors/pope__alexander__1688-174.html
Project Gutenberg Author record
Pope, Alexander, 1688-1744
Titles
Essay On Man, An
To the main listings page
Main Project Gutenberg Web page (online)

42. Project Gutenberg Author Index
Polidori, John William, 17951821. Polly, Jean Armour. Pope, Alexander, 1688-1744.Porter, Eleanor H. (Eleanor Hodgman), 1868-1920. Porter, Jane, 1776-1850.
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/authors/author_index_P.html
Project Gutenberg
Author Index "P"
Packard, Frank L. (Frank Lucius), 1877-1942 Page, Thomas Nelson, 1853-1922 Paine, Albert Bigelow, 1861-1937 Paine, Ralph Delahaye, 1871-1925 ... Pérez Galdós, Benito, 1843-1920
To the main listings page
Main Project Gutenberg Web page (online)

43. Alexander Pope (1688-1744) Epistle II, To A Lady On The Characters Of Women
Alexander Pope (16881744). EPISTLES TO SEVERAL PERSONS EPISTLE II, TO A LADYON THE CHARACTERS OF WOMEN. Original Text Alexander Pope, Works (1735).
http://www.sogang.ac.kr/~anthony/PopeLady.htm
ALEXANDER POPE (1688-1744)
EPISTLES TO SEVERAL PERSONS: EPISTLE II, TO A LADY ON THE CHARACTERS OF WOMEN
  • Original Text: Alexander Pope, Works (1735). E-10 3938 Fisher Rare Book Library (Toronto). First Publication Date : Feb. 1735. Representative Poetry On-line : Editor, I. Lancashire; Publisher, Web Development Group, Inf. Tech. Services, Univ. of Toronto Lib. Edition
In-text Notes (by D. F. Theall) are keyed to line numbers. Nothing so true as what you once let fall,
2 "Most Women have no Characters at all."
3 Matter too soft a lasting mark to bear,
4 And best distinguish'd by black, brown, or fair. 5 How many pictures of one nymph we view,
6 All how unlike each other, all how true!
Arcadia's Countess, here, in ermin'd pride,
8 Is, there, Pastora by a fountain side.
9 Here Fannia, leering on her own good man,
10 And there, a naked Leda with a Swan.
11 Let then the Fair one beautifully cry,
12 In Magdalen's loose hair and lifted eye, 13 Or dress'd in smiles of sweet Cecilia shine, 14 With simp'ring angels, palms, and harps divine;

44. The San Antonio College LitWeb Alexander Pope Page
From San Antonio College LitWeb, includes links to selected verse on-line.Category Arts Literature Authors P Pope, Alexander......The Alexander Pope Page. ( 16881744 ) Major Works An Essay on Criticism ( 1711). On Line The Rape of the Lock ( 1712 ). On Line with Supplementary Material.
http://www.accd.edu/sac/english/bailey/pope.htm
The Alexander Pope Page
Major Works

An Essay on Criticism On Line
The Rape of the Lock On Line with Supplementary Material.
Windsor Forest
Homer's Iliad
Poems on Several Occasions
The Works of Shakespeare Collated and Corrected
Homer's Odyssey
The Dunciad: An Heroic Poem
An Essay on Man
On Line
An Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot Imitations of Horace Correspondence . Edited by George Sherburn. Oxford, 1956. Poems . Edited by John Butt. Methuen, 1963. About Pope Maynard Mack, Alexander Pope: A Life . Norton, 1985. Geoffrey Tillotson, On the Poetry of Pope . Oxford, 1938; 1950. A Brief Biography with Illustrations. Alexander Pope from Bartleby. Pope Criticism from Internet Public Library. Back to Restoration and 18th Century Literature

45. ALEXANDER POPE (1688-1744)
Alexander Pope (16881744) AN ESSAY ON MAN IN FOUR EPISTLES EPISTLE 1 http//www.library.utoronto.ca/utel/rp/poems/Pope10.html .To Henry St.
http://staff.bcc.edu/dbuck/pope1.htm
ALEXANDER POPE (1688-1744) To Henry St. John, Lord Bolingbroke Awake, my St. John! leave all meaner things
2 To low ambition, and the pride of kings.
3 Let us (since life can little more supply
4 Than just to look about us and to die)
5 Expatiate free o'er all this scene of man;
A mighty maze! but not without a plan;
7 A wild, where weeds and flow'rs promiscuous shoot;
Or garden, tempting with forbidden fruit.
9 Together let us beat this ample field,
Try what the open, what the covert yield;
The latent tracts, the giddy heights explore 12 Of all who blindly creep, or sightless soar; 13 Eye Nature's walks, shoot folly as it flies, And catch the manners living as they rise; Laugh where we must, be candid where we can; But vindicate the ways of God to man. I. Say first, of God above, or man below, 18 What can we reason, but from what we know? 19 Of man what see we, but his station here, 20 From which to reason, or to which refer? 21 Through worlds unnumber'd though the God be known, 22 'Tis ours to trace him only in our own.

46. Island Of Freedom - Alexander Pope
Alexander Pope. 16881744. Fools! who into the notion fall, That viceor virtue there is none at all. If white and black blend, soften
http://www.island-of-freedom.com/POPE.HTM
Alexander Pope
Fools! who into the notion fall,
That vice or virtue there is none at all.
If white and black blend, soften, and unite
A thousand ways, is there no black or white?

The Rape of the Lock Home Page

An Essay on Man

The Rape of the Lock

Elegy to the Memory of an Unfortunate Lady
...
Bounce to Fop

Alexander Pope was an English poet who, modeling himself after the great poets of classical antiquity, wrote highly polished verse, often in a didactic or satirical vein. In verse translations, moral and critical essays, and satires that made him the foremost poet of his age, he brought the heroic couplet, which had been refined by John Dryden , to ultimate perfection. Pope was the son of a London cloth merchant. His parents were Roman Catholics, which automatically barred him from England's Protestant universities. Until he was 12 years old, he was educated largely by priests; primarily self-taught afterward, he read widely in English letters, as well as in French, Italian, Latin, and Greek. A devastating illness, probably tuberculosis of the spine, struck him in childhood, leaving him deformed. He never grew taller than 4 ft 6 in and was subject to violent headaches. Perhaps as a result of this condition, he was hypersensitive and exceptionally irritable all his life.
In 1717 Pope moved to a villa in Twickenham, west of London on the Thames River, where he lived for the rest of his life. The most celebrated personages of the day came to visit him there. He was a bitterly quarrelsome man and attacked his literary contemporaries viciously and often without provocation. To some, however, he was warm and affectionate; he had a long and close friendship with the English writers Jonathan Swift and John Gay.

47. QuoteWorld.org - Home To 14,254 Quotations And Growing!
Some people will never learn anything, for this reason, because they understandeverything too soon. Alexander Pope (16881744), English writer known for
http://www.quoteworld.org/author.php?thetext=Alexander Pope

48. Britannia | Britain
Translate this page Pope, Alexander (1688-1744). Englischer Dichter und Schriftsteller,einer der profiliertesten Lyriker seiner Epoche. Pope, Sohn eines
http://www.robert-morten.de/baseportal/Redaktionssytem/britannia_mini_detail&Id=
Pope, Alexander (1688-1744) Englischer Dichter und Schriftsteller, einer der profiliertesten Lyriker seiner Epoche. Pope , Sohn eines Londoner Tuchhändlers, erwarb bereits in früher Jugend eine umfangreiche literarische Bildung. Eine schwere Wirbelsäulenkrankheit führte zu Zwergwuchs und anderen physischen Anomalien und beeinträchtigte lebenslang seine Gesundheit. 1717 übersiedelte Pope nach Twickenham westlich von London , und seine Villa wurde zu einem Zentrum des zeitgenössischen literarischen Lebens. Mit den Schriftstellern Jonathan Swift und John Gay war er lange freundschaftlich verbunden.
Popes literarische Laufbahn begann 1704, als der Bühnenschriftsteller William Wycherley ihn in einen geselligen literarischen Zirkel in London einführte. Öffentliches Interesse erregte er erstmals 1709 mit seinen Hirtengedichten. 1711 erschien sein "Essay on Criticism" , eine Auseinandersetzung mit den aktuellen Regeln des literarischen Geschmacks. Seine berühmteste Dichtung, das Versepos "The Rape of the Lock" (erstmals 1712; revidierte Fassung 1714;

49. Pope Alexander VI
Pope Alexander VI. Alexander VI The Borgia Pope. Alexander Pope 16881744. AlexanderPope 1688-1744. Pope and the country life. Participated in literary salons.
http://departments.mwc.edu/~gcampbel/03/pope power point/
Pope Alexander VI
Click here to start
Table of Contents
English 381 Pope Alexander VI Alexander VI: The Borgia Pope Alexander Pope 1688-1744 ... The death of the Liberal Arts Author: Walter H. Peterson

50. Alexander Pope 1688-1744
First Previous Next Last Index Text. Slide 4 of 34.
http://departments.mwc.edu/~gcampbel/03/pope power point/sld004.htm

51. POPE, Alexander
Alexander Pope (1688-1744) his spinal
http://www.bautz.de/bbkl/p/pope_a.shtml
Verlag Traugott Bautz www.bautz.de/bbkl Bestellmöglichkeiten des Biographisch-Bibliographischen Kirchenlexikons Zur Hauptseite des Biographisch-Bibliographischen Kirchenlexikons Abkürzungsverzeichnis des Biographisch-Bibliographischen Kirchenlexikons Bibliographische Angaben für das Zitieren ... NEU: Unser E-News Service
Wir informieren Sie regelmäßig über Neuigkeiten und Änderungen per E-Mail. Helfen Sie uns, das BBKL aktuell zu halten! Band XXI (2003) Spalten 1203-1216 Autor: Ronny Baier POPE, Alexander; maßgeblicher Autor des englischen Klassizismus ( English Augustan or Neoclassical Period ), geprägt durch Maß, Klarheit, Vernunft, Tradition und optimistischer Fortschrittsgläubigkeit. Seine Essays sind ausgezeichnete didaktische und satirische Dichtungen. Seine bekanntesten Gedichte sind: An Essay on Criticism The Rape of the Lock The Dunciad (1728), und An Essay on Man (1733-34). * 21. Mai 1688 in London; 30. Mai 1744 in Twickenham nahe London. - Pope´s Vater, ein Leintuch-Händler, gab just im Geburtsjahr seines Sohnes sein Londoner Geschäft auf und verließ schließlich 1700 mit seiner Familie die Hauptstadt, um seinen Ruhestand in Binfield im Windsor Forest zu verleben. Sicher trieb Pope die nach der Glorreichen Revolution stärker werdende antikatholische Stimmung in der Hauptstadt hinaus aufs Land. Die Popes waren nämlich fromme Katholiken und gerieten als solche schnell in Verdacht mit der jakobitischen Bewegung in Verbindung zu stehen. Die Poles machten in Binfield Bekanntschaft mit verschiedenen katholischen Familien, die im Leben des Dichters noch eine bedeutende Rolle spielen sollten. Pope´s Konfession sorgte aufgrund des Zusammenhaltes der kleinen katholischen Gemeinschaft für lebenslange Freundschaften, z.B. zum wohlhabenden Squire John Caryll (der überredete den Dichter zum Schreiben von

52. Alexander Pope: Eloisa To Abélard
Translate this page Alexander Pope (1688-1744) Eloisa To Abelard. Alexander Pope lebteund dichtete im England des späten Barock und Rokoko, getragen
http://www.abaelard.de/abaelard/080007pope.htm
Alexander Pope (1688-1744): Eloisa To Abelard
Alexander Pope Alexander Pope Enlightment ; seine ersten Gedichte verfasste er schon mit 12 Jahren. Pope wurde in London Pope Bonfield im Windsor Forest um; Pope London Pope An Essay On Criticism im Jahre 1711. Er fand Zutritt zu literarischen Zirkeln aus der oppositionellen Whig-Partei, trat dann aber 1713 den Tories bei und wurde Mitglied im Scriblerus Club , wo er auch Swift Gay Congreve und Robert Harley Pope eine Erstversion von The Rape of the Lock Pope bewunderte Horaz und Vergil Ilias und der Odyssee von Homer Twickenham Pope In Twickenham begeisterte sich Pope Mary Wortley Montagu Martha Blount . In Twickenham empfing er auch viele Besuche, unter anderem von Jonathan Swift Gulliver's Reisen half. Essay on Man Moral Essays Pope William Shakespeare angegriffen wurde, antwortete er mit dem Spottgedicht The Dunciad Pope Pope Martha Blount
Eloisa to Abelard (1717)
Originaltext aus: Alexander Pope, Works, London, 1717 Zu Popes und Abaelard Ch. Hofmann von Hofmannswaldau In these deep solitudes and awful cells,
Where heav'nly-pensive, contemplation dwells

53. Alexander Pope
Alexander Pope (16881744). Adams Anthology Main Points traditionof Horace and Boileau; advice mainly for critics; follow nature
http://mockingbird.creighton.edu/english/fajardo/teaching/ENG600/pope.htm
Alexander Pope (1688-1744)
Adams Anthology Main Points:
  • tradition of Horace and Boileau
  • advice mainly for critics
  • "follow nature"
  • rules: "nature methodized"
  • to imitate Homer is to imitate nature
  • author cannot accomplish more than he intends
  • critique of narrow application of rules, slavery to fashion
An Essay on Criticism (1711)
Part I
"Be sure yourself and your own reach to know,/How far your genius, taste, and learning go" "First follow nature" "The winged courser, like a gen'rous horse,/Shows most true mettle when you check his course" "nature methodized" "the gen'rous critic fanned the poet's fire" "criticism the Muse's handmaid proved"; but some critics "Against the poets their own arms they turned,/Sure to hate most the men from whom they learned" nature and Homer, the same music resembles poetry license in a rule; "Pegasus ... /May boldly deviate from the common track"; but "if you must offend/Against the precept, ne'er transgress its end" "due distance reconciles to form and grace" [cf. Horace, ut pictura]

54. ART3442C Intaglio
Pope, Alexander, 16881744. The rape of the lock an heroi-comical poem in five canto's / written by Mr. Pope. Pope, Alexander, 1688-1744.
http://web.uflib.ufl.edu/spec/rarebook/art3442c/art3442c.htm
ART 3442C: INTAGLIO
From: The Complete Dictionary of Arts and Sciences
Materials from the Rare Book Collection Contact: Jeffrey Barr , Curator of Rare Books Copperplate
Engravings
State of Plates Mezzotints ...
Engravings
COPPERPLATE ENGRAVINGS Guicciardini, Lodovico, 1521-1589.
Amversa, Appresso C. Plantino, stampatore regio, 1581.
DH33 .G9 1581 Oversize Le Moyne, Pierre, 1602-1671.
The gallery of heroick women / written in French by Peter Le Moyne ; translated into English by the Marquesse of Winchester.
London : Printed by R. Norton for Henry Seile, 1652.
CT3201 .L42 Oversize Blome, Richard, d. 1705.
A geographical description of the four parts of the world taken from the notes and workes of the famous Monsieur Sanson, geographer to the French king, and other eminent travellers and authors. To which are added the commodities, coyns, weights, and measures of the chief places of traffick in the world; compared with those of England, (or London) as to the trade thereof. Also, a treatise of travel, and another of traffick. The whole illustrated with variety of useful and delightful mapps and figures. By Richard Blome.
London, Printed by T. N. for R. Blome, and are also sold by N. Brooks, E. Brewster, and T. Basset, 1670.

55. Encyclopædia Britannica
Alexander Pope (16881744) Brief information on this Enflish poet, essayist,critic, and satirist, who was known for his work An Essay On Criticism .
http://search.britannica.com/search?miid=1221935&query=Pope, Alexander (Eng. au.

56. The Greatest Literature Of All Time - Authors P
the links below. Pope, Alexander Pope, Alexander (16881744) Clickon underscored titles for further commentaries. Alexander Pope
http://www.editoreric.com/greatlit/info/authorsP.html
Authors
P
Support this site by buying books from the U.S. or Canada through the links below. Pope, Alexander
Pope, Alexander

Click on underscored titles for further commentaries Alexander Pope is one of those old literary guys you've heard of, but you've never read, right? You certainly don't know any of his poetry. Or do you? Ever heard the expression "a little learning is a dangerous thing"? That's from Pope. How about "fools rush in where angels fear to tread". No, it's not Elvis Presley. Or "To err is human, to forgive divine"? Pope again. Or "Woman's at best, a contradiction still"? That hoary old chauvinist is Alexander Pope. Read Pope and you continually come across bits you already know, quotations you thought were from Shakespeare or Anonymous. For Alexander Pope in his day was the master of the one-liner. Or two-liner actually, since much of his work is in rhyming couplets. For example, that famous passage about forgiveness is half of: Good nature and good sense must ever join

57. ThinkQuest Library Of Entries
Drury Lane Theatre. Pope, Alexander 16881744 Alexander Pope was bornin England to a father who was a linen draper. In a Protestant
http://library.advanced.org/17500/data/bio/rest.html
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Students Monica Fort Nelson Secondary School
Canada Kelly West Hempstead High School
NY, United States

58. Seminar Presentation Schedule
Eileen Keast. SELECTED POETRY AND PROSE OF Alexander Pope (16881744). The AlexanderPope Page. Michael Loncaric John Dryden An Essay of Dramatic Poesy .
http://www.sfu.ca/~mlinley/English364/364.seminar.presentation.htm
History and Principles of Literary Criticism
Presentation Schedule Week 1, Sept 4-6 Introduction
Ong, selections from Orality and Literacy (hand out) Week 2: Representation–Simulation and Mimesis Sept 11 Plato, The Republic , Book X and The Ion Sept 13 Baudrillard, “Simulacra and Simulations” Steve Kerschbaum: Project Baudrillard Baudrillard in The Matrix Week 3: Imitation and Poetry Sept 18 Aristotle, The Poetics Sept 20 Horace, The Art of Poetry
J. P. Fulford Shifting Paradigms Ut Pictura Poesis illustration Sidney, An Apology for Poetry
Tony Hoile
http://www.upregon.edu/~rbear/defence.html

http://www.dsu-edu~laflinj/litcrit/gsidney.html
http://www.web.uvic.ca/shakespeare.-slt-noframes/literature/sidney.html
Week 4: Defining the Author and Critic Sept 25 Foucault, “What is an Author?” Rose, “The Question of Literary Property” Sept 27 Dryden, An Essay of Dramatic Poesy Michael Loncaric John Dryden "An Essay of Dramatic Poesy" Pope, An Essay on Criticism Eileen Keast SELECTED POETRY AND PROSE OF ALEXANDER POPE (1688-1744) The Alexander Pope Page Michael Loncaric John Dryden "An Essay of Dramatic Poesy" Pope

59. LBruT - Local History Notes - Alexander Pope
Welcome to Richmond upon Thames Libraries. From the Richmond uponThames Local Studies Collections. Alexander Pope 16881744. Samuel
http://www.richmond.gov.uk/depts/opps/eal/leisure/libraries/history/notes/16.htm
Home Search Text Index Useful Links ... Events
Welcome to Richmond upon Thames Libraries
From the Richmond upon Thames Local Studies Collections
Alexander Pope
Samuel Johnson’s Lives of the English Poets records a statement, attributed to Lady Bolingbroke, to the effect that Pope could "hardly drink tea without a stratagem". Pope’s career was, indeed, an almost relentless story of intrigues, quarrels and deceptions conducted against his enemies in the literary world and leading society of his age. He was born in Lombard Street, London on 21 st May 1688, the son of a linen draper. By 1700, his family had moved to Binfield in Windsor Forest. A precocious child, he began to study Latin and Greek at the age of eight. When he was twelve, he developed a severe illness as a result of which his constitution was greatly weakened and his figure permanently deformed – he never, apparently, grew above the height of 4ft. 6inches. After attending schools in Twyford (near Winchester) and London, he returned to his father’s house where most of his time was spent in reading or writing. He managed to become acquainted with the influential wits of his time, including Sir William Turnbull, William Walsh the critic and William Wycherley the dramatist.

60. Literature Online, Full Text
Full text. Pope, Alexander, 16881744 from The Works (1736) VOL. II. Pope, Alexander,1688-1744 EPISTLE I. TO Sir Richard Temple, Lord Viscount Cobham.
http://publish.uwo.ca/~shroyer/authors/Pope/texts/pope_lion_cobham.html
dictionaries C.O.D. Webster's combined
Full text
Pope, Alexander, 1688-1744: [from The Works (1736)]
VOL. II. Containing his EPISTLES and SATIRES.
Pope, Alexander, 1688-1744:
ETHIC EPISTLES, THE SECOND BOOK. [from The Works (1736)] Pope, Alexander, 1688-1744:
EPISTLE I. TO Sir Richard Temple , Lord Viscount Cobham . [from The Works (1736)]
Pope, Alexander, 1688-1744: EPISTLE I. TO Sir Richard Temple , Lord Viscount Cobham . [from The Works (1736)]
[Footnote: 1Kb] Yes , you despise the Man to books confin'd,
Who from his Study rails at human kind;
Tho' what he learns he speaks, and may advance
Some gen'ral maxims, or be right by chance.
The coxcomb bird, so talkative and grave,
That from his cage cries cuckold, whore, and knave,
Tho' many a passenger he rightly call,
You hold him no Philosopher at all.
And yet the fate of all Extremes is such, [Footnote: 1Kb] Men may be read, as well as books, too much, [Page 2] To observations which ourselves we make, We grow more partial for th'Observer's sake; To written wisdom, as another's, less:

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