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inauthor: Edmund Curll from books.google.com
... Edmund Curll , in truth , the lowliest duties ; assisting his fellow - actors to pass whose ungentlemanly ... in author - set to work to ferret out these sonnets , and scrape them ship . Is it not here ? if the term of authorship ...
inauthor: Edmund Curll from books.google.com
... Edmund Curll , in truth , the lowliest duties ; assisting his fellow - actors to pass whose ungentlemanly ... in author- set to work to ferret out these sonnets , and scrape them ship . Is it not here ? if the term of authorship ...
inauthor: Edmund Curll from books.google.com
... Edmund Curll , who regularly squealed on authors and printers to protect himself . ) 52 For the most part , those in ... in Author / Publisher Relations During the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries , edited by Robin Myers and ...
inauthor: Edmund Curll from books.google.com
Shakespeare is both the world's most quoted author and a frequent quoter himself. This volume unites these creative practices.
inauthor: Edmund Curll from books.google.com
... in Author/Publisher Relations During the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries, ed. robin Myers and Michael ... Edmund curll and the circulation of Swift's writings,” in Reading Swift: Papers from the Fifth Münster Symposium on ...
inauthor: Edmund Curll from books.google.com
... Edmund Curll ] . London , 1731 . [ 253 ] p . 7 in . Giffard ( Henry ) ... author , 1740 . [ 14 ] , 346 p . 11 in . Betterton ( Thomas ) . The history ... in . author of A treatise on the passions , so far as A letter of compliment ...
inauthor: Edmund Curll from books.google.com
... in author- ship . Is it not here ? if the term of authorship can in- deed be applied to Shakspeare . Posterity ... Edmund Curll , in truth , whose ungentlemanly transgressions beyond the honour of the business greatly shocked the ...
inauthor: Edmund Curll from books.google.com
The present book is the first comprehensive survey of the field from a literary perspective to appear for forty years.
inauthor: Edmund Curll from books.google.com
Swift's savage satire view mankind in a distorted hall of mirrors as a diminished, magnified and finally bestial species, presenting us with an uncompromising reflection of ourselves."--Goodreads.com