机读格式显示(MARC)
- 000 03477cam a2200433 i 4500
- 008 230404t20232023nju ob 001 0beng
- 020 __ |a 9781118957233 |c CNY437.90
- 035 __ |a (OCoLC)1388322159
- 040 __ |a DLC |b eng |c DLC |e rda |d OCLCF |d YDX |d OCLCQ
- 050 04 |a PR3726 |b .L595 2023
- 082 00 |a 828/.5209 |a B |2 23/eng/20230627
- 093 __ |a K835.615.6 |2 5
- 100 1_ |a Lockwood, Thomas F., |e author
- 245 14 |a The life of Jonathan Swift : |b a critical biography / |c Thomas Lockwood
- 264 _1 |a Hoboken, NJ : |b John Wiley & Sons, Inc., |c 2023
- 300 __ |a xiv, 461 pages ; |c 23 cm
- 336 __ |a text |b txt |2 rdacontent
- 337 __ |a unmediated |b n |2 rdamedia
- 338 __ |a volume |b nc |2 rdacarrier
- 490 1_ |a Blackwell critical biographies
- 504 __ |a Includes bibliographical references and index
- 505 0_ |a Brought over to Ireland in a band-box 1667-1689 -- Moor Park 1689-1692 -- Into the church, without being driven 1692-1698 -- Laracor and London 1698-1704 -- A tale of a tub 1704 -- Arguments about Christianity 1704-1709 -- Writing for power 1709-1712 -- The life of a spider 1711-1712 -- Journal to Stella 1710-1713 -- Preferment, barely 1712-1714 -- But why obscurely here alone? 1713-1714 -- Living out of the world 1714-1718 -- Second wind 1719-1723 -- Mr. Drapier 1723-1725 -- Several remote nations 1721-1726 -- Poor floating Isle 1726-1729 -- Market hill -- A kind of knack at rhyme 1730-1733 -- We are all slaves and knaves and fools 1732-1735 -- Drawing room and back stairs 1735-1736 -- Silence 1737-1745
- 506 __ |a Available to OhioLINK libraries
- 520 __ |a "What we know directly of Swift's family history and childhood comes mostly from an unfinished ten-page manuscript account he wrote in later life called "Family of Swift," an eccentric and undependable document which nevertheless tells a story worth following. Swift's cousin once removed, Deane Swift, first printed this paper in 1755, along with his own additions and notes, saying that Swift wrote it sometime in the late 1720s, though more likely it was ten years later, when Swift was about 71. The narrative is characteristically detached in its third-person form but stuck in with shards of opinion, also characteristic: "a good deal of the Shrew in her Countenance." The first half of the account is devoted to his forebears on the Swift side, particularly his admired grandfather Thomas, who died some years before Swift was born, and his own part of the story cuts off when he is little more than thirty. Some of the details are wrong, as if he had worked purely from memory-always bad and getting worse by the time of this writing--though deliberate misrepresentation has been suggested too, unpersuasively if in some ways understandably: Swift did have a history of talking nonsense about his origins, in ways perhaps not always quite intended to be seen as he had been born in England, apparently because Swift told him so"-- |c Provided by publisher
- 650 _0 |a Authors, Irish |y 18th century |v Biography.
- 650 _0 |a Satirists, Irish |y 18th century |v Biography.
- 600 10 |a Swift, Jonathan, |d 1667-1745.
- 710 2_ |a Ohio Library and Information Network.
- 830 _0 |a Blackwell critical biographies.