The Humorous Poetry of the English Language; from Chaucer to Saxe
Rose Koven, Juliet Sutherland, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team.
Narratives, Satires, Enigmas, Burlesques, Parodies, Travesties, Epigrams, Epitaphs, Translations, Including the Most Celebrated Comic Poems of the Anti-Jacobin, Rejected Addresses, the Ingoldsby Legends, Blackwood's Magazine, Bentley's Miscellany, and Punch.
With More Than Two Hundred Epigrams, and the Choicest Humorous Poetry of Wolcott, Cowper, Lamb, Thackeray, Praed, Swift, Scott, Holmes, Aytoun, Gay, Burns, Southey, Saxe, Hood, Prior, Coleridge, Byron, Moore, Lowell, Etc.
The design of the projector of this volume was, that it should contain the Best of the shorter humorous poems in the literatures of England and the United States, except:
Poems so local or cotemporary in subject or allusion, as not to be readily understood by the modern American reader;
Poems which, from the freedom of expression allowed in the healthy ages, can not now be read aloud in a company of men and women;
Poems that have become perfectly familiar to every body, from their incessant reproduction in school-books and newspapers; and
Poems by living American authors, who have collected their humorous pieces from the periodicals in which most of them originally appeared, and given them to the world in their own names.
Holmes, Saxe, and Lowell are, therefore, only REPRESENTED in this collection. To have done more than fairly represent them, had been to infringe rights which are doubly sacred, because they are not protected by law. To have done less would have deprived the reader of a most convenient means of observing that, in a kind of composition confessed to be among the most difficult, our native wits are not excelled by foreign.
The editor expected to be embarrassed with a profusion of material for his purpose. But, on a survey of the poetical literature of the two countries, it was discovered that, of really excellent humorous poetry, of the kinds universally interesting, untainted by obscenity, not marred by coarseness of language, nor obscured by remote allusion, the quantity in existence is not great. It is thought that this volume contains a very large proportion of the best pieces that haveappeared.
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PREFACE.
INDEX.
MISCELLANEOUS.
PARODIES AND BURLESQUES
ECCENTRIC AND NONDESCRIPT.
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
MISCELLANEOUS.
SPRING.
NARRATIVE
SATIRICAL
PARODIES AND BURLESQUES
INSCRIPTION
LINES
EPIGRAMMATIC
EPIGRAMS OF BEN JONSON.
EPIGRAMATIC VERSES BY SAMUEL BUTLER.
EPIGRAMS OF EDMUND WALLEB.
EPIGRAMS OF MATTHEW PRIOR.
EPIGRAMS OF JOSEPH ADDISON. THE COUNTESS OF MANCHESTER.
EPIGRAMS OF ALEXANDER POPE.
EPIGRAMS OF DEAN SWIFT.
EPIGRAMS BY THOMAS SHERIDAN.
EPIGRAMS OF PETER PINDAR.
EPIGRAMS BY ROBERT BURNS.
EPIGRAMS FROM THE GERMAN OF LESSING.
EPIGRAMS S. T. COLERIDGE.
EPIGRAMS BY THOMAS MOORE.
EPIGRAMS OF LORD BYRON.
EPIGRAMS OF BARHAM.
EPIGRAMS BY THOMAS HOOD.
EPIGRAMS BY W. SAVAGE LANDOR
EPIGRAMS BY JOHN G. SAXE.
EPIGRAMS OF HALPIN
ECCENTRIC AND NONDESCRIPT.
A GENTLE ECHO ON WOMAN.
LETTER
A LETTER
A SUNNIT TO THE BIG OX.
ENIGMATIC