Full Description
At her death in 1825, Anna Letitia Barbauld was considered one of the great writers of her time. Distinguished as a poet and essayist, she was also in innovator in children's literature, an eloquent supporter of liberal politics, and a literary critic of stature. This edition includes a generous selection of her poetry and the first comprehensive body of her prose in more than a century, with essays—some never before reprinted—on literature, religion, education, prejudice, women's fashions, and class conflict.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Anna Letitia Barbauld: A Brief Chronology
Abbreviations of Titles Cited in the Notes
A Note on the Text
An Address to the Deity
To Mrs. P[riestley], with some Drawings of Birds and InsectsThe Invitation: To Miss B*****
To Dr. Aikin on his Complaining that she neglected him, October 2Oth 1768
Corsica
On the Death of Mrs. Jennings
On the Backwardness of the Spring 1771
The Mouse's Petition
An Inventory of the Furniture in Dr. Priestley's Study
Song I
Song V
To Wisdom
Hymn II
Hymn V
The Groans of the Tankard
Verses written in an Alcove
Hymn to Content
Ode to Spring
To a Lady, with some painted Flowers
Verses on Mrs. Rowe
A Summer Evening's Meditation
Hymn VI
To Mr. Barbauld, November 14,1778
Love and Time
Lines to be spoken by Thomas Denman, on the Christmasbefore his Birthday, when he was four Years oldWritten on a Marble
A School Eclogue
Autumn: A Fragment
To the Baron de Stonne, who had wished at the next Transitof Mercury to find Himself again between Mrs. Labordeand Mrs. B[arbauld]
Epistle to Dr. Enfield, on his Revisiting Warringtonin 1789
Epistle to William Wilberforce, Esq. on the Rejection of theBill for Abolishing the Slave Trade
The Apology of the Bishops, in Answer to "Bonner's Ghost"
The Rights of Woman
Hymn VII
To a Great Nation
To Dr. Priestley. Dec. 29, 1792
Hymn: "Ye are the salt of the earth"
To the Poor
Inscription for an Ice-House
To Mr. S. T. Coleridge
Washing-Day
To a Little Invisible Being who is expected soon to become Visible
On the Death of Mrs. Martineau
[Lines for Anne Wakefield on her Wedding to CharlesRochemont Aikin, with a Pair of Chimney Ornamentsin the Figures of two Females seated with openBooks]
West End Fair
The Pilgrim
Dirge: Written November 1808
On the King's Illness
Eighteen Hundred and Eleven, a Poem
Life
A Thought on Death
The First Fire
The Caterpillar
On the Death of the Princess Charlotte
The Baby-House
Lines written at the Close of the Year
Against Inconsistency in our Expectations
An Enquiry into those Kinds of Distress which Excite agreeable Sensations
Thoughts on the Devotional Taste, on Sects, and on Establishments
Hymns in Prose for Children
An Address to the Opposers of the Repeal of the Corporationand Test Acts
Fashion, a Vision
Pieces from Evenings at Home
The Young Mouse. A Fable
Things by their Right Names
The Four Sisters
Sins of Government, Sins of the Nation; or, a Discourse for theFast, Appointed on April 19,1793
What Is Education?
On Prejudice
Thoughts on the Inequality of Conditions
Letter from Grimalkin to Selima
From "Life of Samuel Richardson, with Remarks on his Writings"
From The British Novelists
On the Origin and Progress of Novel-Writing
From Fielding
Johnson
Mrs. Inchbald
Mrs. Charlotte Smith
Miss Burney
Mrs. Radcliife
[Letter to the Gentleman's Magazine in Defense of Maria Edgeworth's Tale, "The Dun"]
Dialogue in the Shades
On Female StudiesAppendix A: From Elizabeth Carter, All the Works of Epictetus
Appendix B: The Debate on Repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts, 1787-1790
Appendix C: The Royal Proclamation of a Fast in April 1793
Appendix D: The British Novelists: Predecessors, Contents, Allusions
Sources of the Texts
Bibliography