LONDON:
HURST AND BLACKETT, PUBLISHERS,
13, GREAT MARLBOROUGH STREET.
1878.
All rights reserved.
CONTENTS
OF
THE FIRST VOLUME.
| PRELIMINARY OBSERVATIONS. | |
|---|---|
| Subjective Character of the Ludicrous—The Subject little | |
| Studied—Obstacles to the Investigation—Evanescence—Mental | |
| Character of the Ludicrous—Distinction between | |
| Humour and the Ludicrous | [1] |
| INTRODUCTION. | |
| PART I. | |
| ORIGIN OF HUMOUR. | |
| Pleasure in Humour—What is Laughter?—Sympathy—First | |
| Phases—Gradual Development—Emotional Phase—Laughter of | |
| Pleasure—Hostile Laughter—Is there any sense of the | |
| Ludicrous in the Lower Animals?—Samson—David—Solomon | |
| —Proverbs—Fables | [13] |
| PART II. | |
| GREEK HUMOUR. | |
| Birth of Humour—Personalities—Story of Hippocleides—Origin | |
| of Comedy—Archilochus—Hipponax—Democritus, | |
| the Laughing Philosopher—Aristophanes—Humour | |
| of the Senses—Indelicacy—Enfeeblement of the Drama—Humorous | |
| Games—Parasites, their Position and Jests—Philoxenus—Diogenes—Court | |
| of Humour—Riddles—Silli | [52] |
| PART III. | |
| ROMAN HUMOUR. | |
| Roman Comedy—Plautus—Acerbity—Terence—Satire—Lucilius | |
| —Horace—Humour of the Cæsar Family—Cicero—Augustus—Persius | |
| —Petronius—Juvenal—Martial—Epigrammatist—Lucian—Apuleius | |
| —Julian the Apostate—The Misopogon—Symposius' Enigmas | |
| —Macrobius—Hierocles and Philagrius | [99] |
| ENGLISH HUMOUR. | |
| CHAPTER I. | |
| MIDDLE AGES. | |
| Relapse of Civilization in the Middle Ages—Stagnation of | |
| Mind—Scarcity of Books—Character of reviving Literature—Religious | |
| Writings—Fantastic Legends—Influence | |
| of the Crusades—Romances—Sir Bevis of Hamptoun—Prominence | |
| of the Lower Animals—Allegories | [161] |
| CHAPTER II. | |
| Anglo-Saxon Humour—Rhyme—Satires against the Church—The | |
| Brunellus—Walter Mapes—Goliardi—Piers the | |
| Ploughman—Letters of Obscure Men—Erasmus—The | |
| Praise of Folly—Skelton—The Ship of Fools—Doctour | |
| Doubble Ale—The Sak full of Nuez—Church Ornamentation—Representations | |
| of the Devil | [179] |
| CHAPTER III. | |
| Origin of Modern Comedy—Ecclesiastical Buffoonery—Jougleurs | |
| and Minstrels—Court Fools—Monks' Stories—The | |
| "Tournament of Tottenham"—Chaucer—Heywood—Roister | |
| Doister—Gammer Gurton | [211] |
| CHAPTER IV. | |
| Robert Greene—Friar Bacon's Demons—The "Looking | |
| Glasse"—Nash and Harvey | [231] |
| CHAPTER V. | |
| Donne—Hall—Fuller | [243] |
| CHAPTER VI. | |
| Shakespeare—Ben Jonson—Beaumont and Fletcher—The | |
| Wise Men of Gotham | [250] |
| CHAPTER VII. | |
| Jesters—Court of Queen Elizabeth—James I.—The | |
| "Counterblasts to Tobacco"—Puritans—Charles II. | |
| —Rochester—Buckingham—Dryden—Butler | [271] |
| CHAPTER VIII. | |
| Comic Drama of the Restoration—Etheridge—Wycherley | [303] |
| CHAPTER IX. | |
| Tom Brown—His Prose Works—Poetry—Sir Richard | |
| Blackmore—D'Urfey—Female Humorists—Carey | [312] |
| CHAPTER X. | |
| Vanbrugh—Colley Cibber—Farquhar | [340] |
| CHAPTER XI. | |
| Congreve—Lord Dorset | [355] |