| 000 | 00713camuuu200229 a 4500 | |
| 001 | 000000425776 | |
| 005 | 19961120011525.0 | |
| 008 | s1971 enk 001 eng | |
| 020 | ▼a 0415134250 | |
| 040 | ▼a 211009 ▼c 211009 | |
| 049 | 1 | ▼l 111068032 |
| 082 | 0 4 | ▼a 823/.6 ▼2 19 |
| 090 | ▼a 823.6 ▼b S839Yh | |
| 245 | 0 0 | ▼a Laurence Sterne : ▼b the critical heritage / ▼c edited by Alan B. Howes. |
| 260 | ▼a London ; ▼a New York : ▼b Routledge, ▼c 1971. | |
| 300 | ▼a xxiv, 488 p. ; ▼c 23 cm. | |
| 490 | 0 | ▼a The Critical heritage series ; ▼v 28 |
| 500 | ▼a Includes index. | |
| 504 | ▼a Bibliography: p. 474-475. | |
| 600 | 1 0 | ▼a Sterne, Laurence, ▼d 1713-1768 ▼x Criticism and interpretation. |
| 700 | 1 0 | ▼a Howes, Alan B. |
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Contents information
Book Introduction
The Critical Heritage gathers together a large body of critical sources on major figures in literature. Each volume presents contemporary responses to a writer's work, enabling student and researcher to read the material themselves.
The Critical Heritage gathers together a large body of critical sources on major figures in literature. Each volume presents contemporary responses to a writer's work, enabling student and researcher to read the material themselves.
Information Provided By: :
Table of Contents
CONTENTS
PREFACE = xxi
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS = xxiii
INTRODUCTION = 1
NOTE ON THE TEXT = 37
Tristram Shandy, vols Ⅰ, Ⅱ(1760)
1 STERNE on the composition of Tristram Shandy, vols Ⅰ, Ⅱ, 1759 = 39
(a) Letter to Dodsley, May 1759 = 39
(b) Letter, summer 1759 = 39
(c) Letter to Dodsley, ? October 1759 = 40
2 STERNE to his readers, 1759-60 = 41
(a) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅰ = 41
(b) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅰ = 42
(c) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅰ = 42
(d) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅱ = 44
(e) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅱ = 44
(f) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅱ = 45
3 STERNE promotes his book, January 1760 = 45
4 WILLIAM KENRICK, the first review of Tristram Shandy, January 1760 = 46
5 STERNE defends Tristram Shandy, January 1760 = 48
6 Reviews in the magazines, January-February 1760 = 52
(a) Notice, Critical Review, January 1760 = 52
(b) Notice, London Magazine, February 1760 = 52
(c) Notice, Royal Female Magazine, February 1760 = 53
7 LORD BATHURST praises Sterne, spring 1760 = 53
8 HORACE WALPOLE on Tristram Shandy, April 1760 = 55
9 The design of Tristram Shandy, March-April 1760 = 56
(a) DR THOMAS NEWTON, March 1760 = 56
(b) Letter, April 1760 = 57
10 The serious attacks, spring 1760 = 61
(a) MARY GRANVILLE DELANY, letters to Anne Granville Dewes, April, May 1760 = 61
(b) Review, Critical Review, April 1760 = 62
(c) Letter, The Universal Magazine of Knowledge and Pleasure, April 1760 = 62
11 The bantering attacks, spring 1760 = 64
(a) Letter, Grand Magazine, April 1760 = 64
(b) Explanatory Remarks on the Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy by Jeremiah Kunastrokius, April 1760 = 66
(c) The Clockmakers Outcry Against the Author of The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, May 1760 = 67
(d) Tristram Shandy's Bon Mots, Repartees, odd Adventures, and Humorous Stories... and a New Dialogue of the Dead, between Dean Swift, and Henry Fielding, Esq, June 1760 = 71
12 The first biography of Sterne, May 1760 = 73
13 The Sermons of Mr. Yorick, vols Ⅰ, Ⅱ, spring and summer 1760 = 75
(a) STERNE, preface to The Sermons of Mr. Yorick, May 1760 = 75
(b) Review, Critical Review, May 1760 = 76
(c) Review, Monthly Review, May 1760 = 77
(d) Review, Royal Female Magazine, May 1760 = 78
(e) REVEREND HENRY VENN, letter to Mrs Knipe, June 1760 = 79
(f) GEORGINA, COUNTESS COWPER, letter to Anne Granville Dewes, September 1760 = 79
14 BOSWELL on Sterne, spring 1760 = 80
15 Sterne as Juvenilian satirist, June 1760 = 85
16 Sterne and BISHOP WARBURTON, June 1760 = 86
(a) WARBURTON, letter to Sterne = 87
(b) STERNE, letter to Warburton = 88
(c) WARBURTON, letter to Sterne = 88
17 THOMAS GRAY on Sterne, June 1760 = 89
18 LADY BRADSHAIGH on Sterne, June 1760 = 90
19 GOLDSMITH attacks Sterne, June 1760 = 91
20 Sterne and the Monthly reviewers, June 1760 = 95
21 Attack on Sterne and the Methodists, July 1760 = 100
22 Sterne and an appreciative reader, summer 1760 = 102
(a) REVEREND ROBERT BROWN, letter to John Hall-Stevenson, July 1760 = 102
(b) STERNE, letter to Brown, September 1760 = 103
23 HORACE MANN on Sterne's 'humbugging,' November 1760 = 104
24 Tristram Shandy as satire, 1760 = 105
25 EDMUND BURKE on Tristram Shandy, 1760 = 106
Tristram Shandy, vols Ⅲ, Ⅳ(1761)
26 The composition of Tristram Shandy, vols Ⅲ, Ⅳ, 1760 = 108
(a) STERNE, letter to Mrs Fenton, August 1760 = 108
(b) STERNE, letter to Stephen Croft, December 1760 = 108
27 Sterne to his critics and readers, Tristram Shandy, vols Ⅲ, Ⅳ, 1760-1 = 109
(a) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅲ = 109
(b) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅲ = 110
(c) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅲ = 111
(d) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅳ = 115
(e) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅳ = 115
(f) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅳ = 116
(g) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅳ = 117
(h) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅳ = 117
(i) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅳ = 118
(j) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅳ = 118
28 Reviews of Tristram Shandy, vols Ⅲ, Ⅳ, February-April 1761 = 119
(a) OWEN RUFFHEAD, review, Monthly Review, February 1761 = 119
(b) Notice, British Magazine, February 1761 = 124
(c) Review, Critical Review, April 1761 = 125
29 SAMUEL RICHARDSON on Sterne ; January-February 1761 = 128
30 Some private opinions, February-June 1761 = 130
(a) DR THOMAS NEWTON, February 1761 = 130
(b) RICHARD HURD, March 1761 = 130
(c) MARK HILDESLEY, April 1761 = 131
(d) DR JAMES GRAINGER, June 1761 = 131
31 A mock funeral discourse, October 1761 = 132
Tristram Shandy, vols Ⅴ, Ⅵ(1761)
32 The composition of Tristram Shandy, vols Ⅴ, Ⅵ, summer 1761 = 135
(a) STERNE, letter to John Hall-Stevenson, June 1761 = 135
(b) STERNE, letter to Lady Anna Dacre(?), September 1761 = 135
33 Sterne to his readers, 1761 = 136
(a) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅴ = 136
(b) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅴ = 136
(c) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅵ = 136
(d) Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅵ = 137
34 Assessments of Tristram Shandy, vols Ⅴ, Ⅵ, 1761-2 = 138
(a) REVEREND BAPTIST NOEL TURNER in New Monthly Magazine, report of conversation, 1765(?) = 138
(b) Notice, British Magazine, January 1762 = 138
(c) Review, Critical Review, January 1762 = 138
(d) Review by JOHN LANGHORNE in Monthly Review, January 1762 = 140
35 RICHARD GRIFFITH : Sterne's appeal to pit, box, and gallery, 1761-2 = 142
36 A poetic tribute, February 1762 = 144
37 Sterne and the great humorists, May 1762 = 145
38 Sterne's bad example, June 1762 = 146
39 DAVID HUME on Sterne, November 1762, January 1773 = 147
40 Sterne's nonsense, December 1762 = 148
41 CHARLES JOHNSTONE : Sterne in the character of a wit, 1762 = 149
42 Sterne's Rabelaisian caricatures, 1762 = 151
43 CHARLES CHURCHILL on Sterne, 1762 = 152
44 A poetic tribute to Tristram Shandy, July 1763 = 153
45 Sterne's upstart book, 1764 = 154
46 Sterne no fit ambassador from hell, 1764 = 155
Tristram Shandy, vols Ⅶ, Ⅷ(1765)
47 The composition of Tristram Shandy, vols Ⅶ, Ⅷ, 1762-5 = 157
(a) STERNE, letter to Robert Foley, November 1762 = 157
(b) STERNE, letter to Mrs Elizabeth Montagu(?), June 1764 = 157
(c) STERNE, letter to Robert Foley, November 1764 = 158
(d) STERNE, Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅷ = 158
48 Reviews of Tristram Shandy, vols Ⅶ, Ⅷ, January-April 1765 = 159
(a) Notice, Universal Museum and Complete Magazine of Knowledge and Pleasure, January 1765 = 159
(b) Notice, Critical Review, January 1765 = 159
(c) Review by RALPH GRIFFITHS in Monthly Review, February 1765 = 161
(d) Notice by JEAN BAPTISTE SUARD in Gazette Litt e ´ raire de l'Europe, as translated in London Chronicle, 1765 = 168
49 MRS MONTAGU on Sterne, April 1765 = 169
(a) Letter to Mrs Sarah Scott = 169
(b) Letter to Mrs Sarah Scott = 170
50 Sermons of Mr. Yorick, vols Ⅲ, Ⅳ, 1765-6 = 171
(a) STERNE, letter to Thomas Hesilrige, July 1765 = 171
(b) Review, Critical Review, January, February 1766 = 171
(c) WILLIAM ROSE, review, Monthly Review, March 1766 = 172
(d) WILLIAM COWPER, letter to Joseph Hill, April 1766 = 172
51 Sterne and a Black admirer, July 1766, June 1778 = 174
(a) IGNATIUS SANCHO, letter to Sterne, July 1766 = 174
(b) STERNE, letter to Sancho, July 1766 = 175
(c) IGNATIUS SANCHO, letter, June 1778 = 176
Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅸ(1767)
52 Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅸ, January-March 1767 = 178
(a) STERNE, Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅸ = 178
(b) Notice, Critical Review, February 1767 = 179
(c) Notice, Gentleman's Magazine, February 1767 = 180
(d) RALPH GRIFFITHS, review, Monthly Review, February 1767 = 181
(e) Letter, Lloyd's Evening Post, March 1767 = 183
(f) Gentleman's Magazine, March 1767 = 184
53 The composition of A Sentimental Journey, 1767-8 = 184
(a) STERNE, letter to Lydia Sterne, February 1767 = 184
(b) STERNE, letter to Thomas Becket, September 1767 = 184
(c) STERNE, letter to Sir William Stanhope(?), September 1767 = 185
(d) RICHARD GRIFFITH, A Series of Genuine Letters between Henry and Frances, 1770 = 185
(e) STERNE, letter to Mrs William James, November 1767 = 187
(f) STERNE, letter, November 1767 = 188
(g) STERNE, letter, November 1767 = 188
(h) STERNE, letter to Sir George Macartney, December 1767 = 189
(i) STERNE, letter, February 1768 = 189
(j) STERNE, A Sentimental Journey = 189
(k) STERNE, A Sentimental Journey = 191
54 JOHN HALL-STEVENSON on Sterne, January 1768 = 193
55 Sterne and an American admirer, 1767-8 = 195
(a) DR JOHN EUSTACE, letter to Sterne, undated = 195
(b) STERNE, letter to Eustace, February 1768 = 196
A Sentimental Journey(1768)
56 Reviews of the Sentimental Journey, spring 1768 = 197
(a) Review, Critical Review, March 1768 = 197
(b) Notice, London Magazine, March 1768 = 198
(c) RALPH GRIFFITHS, review, Monthly Review, March, April 1768 = 199
(d) Notice, Political Register, May 1768 = 201
57 Some private opinions of the Sentimental Journey, spring 1768 = 202
(a) HORACE WALPOLE, letter to Thomas Gray, March 1768 = 202
(b) HORACE WALPOLE, letter to George Montagu, March 1768 = 202
(c) JOSEPH COCKFIELD, letter to the Reverend Weeden Butler, March 1768 = 202
(d) ELIZABETH CARTER, letter to Mrs Elizabeth Vesey, April 1768 = 203
(e) MRS ELIZABETH BURNEY and MRS FANNY GREVILLE on the Sentimental Journey, spring 1768 = 204
58 Comments and tributes on Sterne's death, 1768 = 204
(a) London Magazine, June 1768 = 204
(b) WILLIAM WARBURTON, letter to Charles Yorke, April 1768 = 205
(c) Gentleman's Magazine, April 1768 = 206
(d) 'The Fig Leaf,' April 1768 = 206
(e) 'Occasional Verses on the Death of Mr. Sterne,' August 1768 = 206
(f) MRS ELIZABETH MONTAGU, letter, 1768? = 207
(g) DAVID GARRICK, 1768 = 208
59 Sterne's headstone, 1769 = 209
60 JOHN TRUMBULL on Sterne, 1769, 1773 = 210
(a) 'On the Philanthropy of the Author of Tristram Shandy. 1769' = 210
(b) The Progress of Dulness, 1773 = 210
The 1770s : praise and blame
61 RICHARD GRIFFITH and Sterne's 'posthumous works,' 1770, 1772 = 212
(a) GRIFFITH in The Posthumous Works of a Late Celebrated Genius, 1770 = 212
(b) GRIFFITH in The Posthumous Works of a Late Celebrated Genius, 1770 = 213
(c) GRIFFITH in Something New, 1772 = 214
62 THOMAS JEFFERSON on Sterne, 1771, 1787 = 215
(a) Letter to Robert Skipwith, August 1771 = 215
(b) Letter to Peter Carr, August 1787 = 216
63 RICHARD CUMBERLAND on Sterne, 1771, 1806 = 216
(a) The West Indian, 1771 = 216
(b) Memoirs of Richard Cumberland, 1806 = 217
64 SAMUEL JOHNSON on Sterne, 1773, 1776, 1781 = 218
(a) Conversation with Goldsmith, April 1773 = 218
(b) Conversation with Boswell, March 1776 = 219
(c) Conversation with Mary Monckton, May 1781 = 219
65 GEORGE COLMAN the Elder on Sterne, July 1775 = 220
66 Sterne's Letters, 1775 = 221
(a) Review, Gentleman's Magazine, April 1775 = 221
(b) Review, London Review, June 1775 = 221
(c) RALPH GRIFFITHS, review, Monthly Review, November 1775 = 222
(d) HENRY MACKENZIE, letter to Elizabeth Rose, November 1775 = 223
67 COURTNEY MELMOTH on Sterne, 1775, 1776 = 224
(a) 'The Tears of Genius,' 1775 = 224
(b) Observations on the Night Thoughts of Dr. Young, 1776 = 225
68 BOSWELL on Sterne in The Hypochondriack, 1778, 1780 = 227
(a) 'On Conscience,' April 1778 = 227
(b) 'On Imitation,' August 1780 = 227
69 JOHN CLELAND on Sterne, 1779 = 228
70 Some attacks during the 1770s = 229
(a) JOHN WESLEY, February 1772 = 229
(b) JACOB DUCH E ´ , letter, September 1772 = 229
(c) Anonymous Joineriana : or the Book of Scraps, 1772 = 230
(d) THOMAS O'BRIEN MACMAHON, 1774 = 232
(e) PERCIVAL STOCKDALE, 1778 = 232
(f) REVEREND PHILIP PARSONS, 1779 = 233
71 Some neutral critics of the 1770s = 235
(a) ROBERT LLOYD, 1774 = 235
(b) WILLIAM WELLER PEPYS, letter to William Franks, 1776? = 235
(c) JOHN NOORTHOUCK, 1776 = 236
72 Some tributes of the 1770s = 237
(a) CHARLES JENNER, 1770 = 237
(b) Anonymous Letters Concerning the Present State of England, 1772 = 237
(c) Westminster Magazine, November 1774 = 238
(d) JOHN OGILVIE, 1774 = 240
(e) JOSEPH CRADOCK, 1774 = 241
(f) Westminster Magazine, January 1775 = 241
(g) Anonymous Yorick's Skull ; or, College Oscitations, 1777 = 243
73 JOHN HENDERSON reads from Sterne, 1770-85 = 244
The 1780s : anthologies and complete works
74 Sterne's Complete Works, 1780 = 246
75 Sterne's imitators, 1781 = 248
76 Sterne a wit, not a genius, 1781 = 249
77 VICESIMUS KNOX on Sterne, 1782, 1788? = 251
(a) Essays Moral and Literary, 1782 = 251
(b) Essays Moral and Literary, 1782 = 252
(c) Essays Moral and Literary, 1782 = 254
(d) Winter Evenings, 1788? = 255
(e) Winter Evenings, 1788? = 255
78 Sterne anthologized, 1782, 1787 = 256
(a) The Beauties of Sterne, 1782 = 256
(b) The Beauties of Sterne, 1787 = 257
79 HANNAH MORE on Sterne, 1782, 1808 = 259
(a) 'Sensibility,' 1782 = 259
(b) Coelebs in Search of a Wife, 1808 = 259
80 ROBERT BURNS on Sterne, 1783, 1787, 1788 = 260
(a) Letter to John Murdoch, January 1783 = 260
(b) Letter to Mrs Dunlop, April 1787 = 261
(c) Letter to Dr John Moore, August 1787 = 261
(d) Letter to Mrs Dunlop, December 1788 = 261
81 CLARA REEVE on Sterne, 1785 = 262
82 MRS PIOZZI on Sterne, 1786, 1791 = 263
(a) Anecdotes of the Late Samuel Johnson, LL.D., 1786 = 263
(b) Diary, October 1791 = 264
83 GEORGE GREGORY on Sterne, 1787, 1788, 1809 = 265
(a) A translator's note, 1787 = 265
(b) Sermons, 1787 = 266
(c) Essays Historical and Moral, 1788 = 266
(d) Letters on Literature, Taste, and Composition, 1809 = 266
84 ANNA SEWARD defends Sterne, 1787, 1788 = 268
(a) Letter to the Reverend George Gregory, December 1787 = 268
(b) Letter to Gregory, October 1788 = 269
85 Johnson's biographer on Sterne, 1787 = 272
86 HENRY MACKENZIE on Sterne, 1788, c. 1825-31 = 273
(a) 'Account of the German Theatre,' April 1788 = 273
(b) Quotation in The Anecdotes and Egotisms of Henry Mackenzie, c. 1825-31 = 274
87 Sterne and the first American novel, 1789 = 274
88 Some attacks and defenses of the 1780s = 276
(a) LEONARD MACNALLY, 1781 = 276
(b) WILLIAM CREECH, August 1783 = 277
(c) JAMES BEATTIE, 1783 = 277
(d) Anonymous Unfortunate Sensibility, 1784 = 278
(e) Westminster Magazine, November 1785 = 278
(f) ELY BATES, 1786 = 279
(g) JOHN HOWE, letter to the Reverend Thomas Crampton, October 1788 = 280
The 1790s : plagiarism
89 CHARLES DIBDIN on Sterne and Johnson, 1790 = 281
90 JOHN FERRIAR and Sterne's plagiarism, 1791, 1798, 1812 = 283
(a) 'Comments on Sterne,' January 1791 = 283
(b) Illustrations of Sterne, 1798 = 287
(c) Illustrations of Sterne, 1812 = 292
91 JOSEPH DENNIE on Sterne, 1792, 1796 = 293
(a) Letter to Mr and Mrs Joseph Dennie Sr, April 1792 = 293
(b) The Lay Preacher, 1796 = 294
92 ISAAC D'ISRAELI on Sterne, 1795, 1796, 1840 = 294
(a) An Essay on the Manners and Genius of the Literary Character, 1795 = 294
(b) Miscellanies ; or Literary Recreations, 1796 = 295
(c) Miscellanies of Literature, May 1840 = 295
93 JEREMIAH NEWMAN on Sterne, 1796, 1805 = 297
(a) The Lounger's Common-Place Book, 1796 = 297
(b) The Lounger's Common-Place Book, 1805 = 299
94 WILLIAM GODWIN on Sterne, 1797 = 300
95 WILLIAM WILBERFORCE on Sterne, 1797 = 301
96 The Encyclopaedia Britannica on Sterne, 1797 = 303
97 NATHAN DRAKE : Sterne and the pathetic, Literary Hours, 1798, 1804 = 304
98 Walpoliana : 'a dead ass and a living mother,' 1799 = 305
99 ROBERT SOUTHEY on Sterne, 1799, 1834 = 306
(a) Letter to C. W. William Wynn, April 1799 = 306
(b) The Doctor, 1834 = 306
100 American attacks of the 1790s on Sterne's morality = 307
(a) Massachussetts Magazine, June 1790 = 307
(b) American Museum, August 1791 = 308
(c) REVEREND JOHN BENNETT, Letters to a Young Lady, 1791 = 309
(d) HANNAH WEBSTER FOSTER, The Boarding School, 1798 = 309
101 Some tributes of the 1790s = 311
(a) GEORGE MOUTARD WOODWARD, Eccentric Excursions, 1796 = 311
(b) JENKIN JONES, Hobby Horses, 1797 = 311
(c) WILLIAM COMBE, Fragments : in the Manner of Sterne, 1797 = 313
102 Some comments of the 1790s on Sterne's plagiarism = 313
(a) 'EBORACENSIS', letter, Gentleman's Magazine, May 1794 = 313
(b) 'R. F.,' letter, Gentleman's Magazine, June 1798 = 314
(c) 'M.N.,' letter, Gentleman's Magazine, August 1798 = 314
(d) WILLIAM JACKSON, The Four Ages, 1798 = 315
(e) Review, Critical Review, June 1799 = 315
103 Some comments of the 1790s on Sterne's style and substance = 316
(a) European Magazine, October 1790 = 316
(b) JOHN NOORTHOUCK, review, Monthly Review, July 1791 = 317
(c) HENRY JAMES PYE, A Commentary Illustrating the Poetic of Aristotle, 1792 = 317
(d) DUGALD STEWART, Elements of the Philosophy of the Human Mind, 1792 = 318
(e) THOMAS WALLACE, 'An Essay on the Variations of English Prose,' June 1796 = 319
(f) MARY BERRY, 1798 = 320
(g) THOMAS J. MATHIAS, The Pursuits of Literature, 1798 = 320
(h) D. WHYTE, The Fallacy of French Freedom, and Dangerous Tendency of Sterne's Writings, 1799 = 321
1800-15 : strains old and new
104 CHARLES LAMB on Sterne, 1801, 1822 = 323
(a) Letter to Wordsworth, January 1801 = 323
(b) 'Detached Thoughts on Books and Reading,' July 1822 = 323
105 Some American views : Sterne the libertine, 1802, 1803, 1822 = 324
(a) New England Quarterly Magazine, 1802 = 324
(b) SAMUEL MILLER, A Brief Retrospect of the Eighteenth Century, 1803 = 324
(c) JOHN RANDOLPH, letter to Theodore Dudley, February 1822 = 325
106 Sterne's sentimental works, 1805 = 326
107 Applause and censure, 1807 = 328
108 PRISCILLA PARLANTE defends Sterne, 1810 = 331
109 MRS BARBAULD on Sterne, 1810 = 332
110 The Port Folio on Sterne, 1810, 1811 = 333
(a) MATTHEW CAREY, 'Remarks on the Charge of Plagiarism Alleged Against Sterne,' October 1810 = 333
(b) Anonymous 'Critical Comments on Sterne, Smollett, and Fielding,' November 1811 = 337
111 WILLIAM MUDFORD on Sterne, 1811 = 341
112 FRANCIS JEFFREY On Sterne in the Edinburgh, 1813, 1823 = 344
(a) Review of Mme de Sta e ·· l's De la Litt e ´ rature consid e ´ r e ´ e dans ses rapport savec les institutions sociales, February 1813 = 344
(b) Review of Scottish novels, October 1823 = 345
113 BYRON : 'that dog Sterne,' December 1813 = 346
114 JOHN AIKIN on Sterne, 1814 = 347
115 Sterne's characters : goblins and portraits, 1814 = 348
1815-39 : the Romantics' reassessment
116 COLERIDGE on Sterne, 1818, 1825, 1828, 1833, undated = 353
(a) 'Wit and Humour,' February 1818 = 353
(b) Aids to Reflection, 1825 = 357
(c) Letter, 1828 = 357
(d) Table Talk, August 1833 = 357
(e) Marginalia in copy of Shakespeare, undated = 358
117 HAZLITT on Sterne, 1819, 1826 = 359
(a) Lectures on the English Comic Writers, 1819 = 359
(b) Plain Speaker, 1826 = 361
(c) Notes of a Journey Through France and Italy, 1826 = 363
118 JOHN KEATS on the Shandean, January 1820 = 364
119 SIR THOMAS NOON TALFOURD on Sterne and Mackenzie, 1820 = 365
120 Sterne and Johnson : 'genius' and 'judgment,' 1820 = 366
121 THOMAS HOOD : a burlesque of Sterne, 1821 = 367
122 DE QUINCEY on Sterne and Richter, December 1821 = 369
123 SCOTT on Sterne, 1823 = 371
(a) Miscellaneous Prose Works = 371
(b) Miscellaneous Prose Works = 375
124 Sterne, in the Gentleman's Magazine, 1827-8 = 376
125 CARLYLE on Sterne, 1827, 1838 = 379
(a) Review, Edinburgh Review, 1827 = 379
(b) Lecture, June 1838 = 381
France
126 Reviews of Tristram Shandy, Journal Encyclop e ´ dique, 1760-7 = 382
(a) Review of Tristram Shandy, vols Ⅰ, Ⅱ, April 1760 = 382
(b) Review of Tristram Shandy, vols Ⅲ, Ⅳ, May 1761 = 382
(c) Review of Tristram Shandy, vols Ⅴ, Ⅵ, March 1762 = 383
(d) Review of Tristram Shandy, vols Ⅶ, Ⅷ, January 1766 = 384
(c) Review of Tristram Shandy, vol. Ⅸ, March 1767 = 384
127 DENIS DIDEROT on Sterne, October 1762 = 385
128 DEYVERDUN on Sterne's originality, 1769 = 386
129 Fr e ´ nais's translation of the Sentimental Journey, 1769, 1786 = 387
(a) FR E ´ NAIS, translator's preface to the Sentimental Journey, 1769 = 387
(b) Review, Journal Encyclop e ´ dique, July 1769 = 388
(c) Review, Mercure de France, August 1769 = 388
(d) Review, L'Ann e ´ e Litt e ´ raire, 1786 = 389
130 VOLTAIRE on Sterne, 1771, 1777 = 390
(a) Dictionnaire Philosophique, 1771 = 390
(b) Review of Tristram Shandy in Journal de Politique et de Litt e ´ rature, April 1777 = 392
131 Fr e ´ nais's translation of Tristram Shandy, 1776, 1777 = 394
(a) FR E ´ NAIS, preface to Tristram Shandy, vols Ⅰ-Ⅳ, 1776 = 394
(b) Review, L'Ann e ´ e Litt e ´ raire, 1776 = 395
(c) Review, Mercure de France, January 1777 = 396
(d) Review, Journal Encyclop e ´ dique, January 1777 = 396
132 Continuations of Fr e ´ nais's Tristram Shandy, 1785, 1786 = 398
(a) Review, Journal Encyclop e ´ dique, May 1785 = 398
(b) Review, L'Ann e ´ e Litt e ´ raire, 1785 = 399
(c) Review, Journal Encyclop e ´ dique, January 1786 = 399
(d) Review, Journal Encyclop e ´ dique, March 1786 = 400
133 Two views of the 1780s = 400
(a) MALLET DU PAN, review, Mercure, November 1785 = 400
(b) Anonymous essay, Journal Encyclop e ´ dique, August 1786 = 401
134 MADAME SUARD on Sterne, June 1786 = 402
135 Comments at the turn of the century = 405
(a) FRAN \cedilC OIS ANDRIEUX, review, D e ´ cade Philosophique, 1796 = 405
(b) PIERRE BLANCHARD, Le Reveur sentimental, 1796 = 405
(c) PIERRE-SIMON BALLANCHE fils, Du Sentiment consid e ´ r e ´ dans ses rapports avec la litt e ´ rature et les arts, 1801 = 406
136 MADAME DE STAEL on Sterne, 1800, 1810 = 407
(a) De la Litt e ´ rature consid e ´ r e ´ e dans ses rapports avec les institutions sociales, 1800 = 407
(b) De l'Allemagne, 1810 = 408
137 GARAT on Sterne, 1820 = 409
138 Sterne in the standard reference works, 1830, 1836 = 415
(a) WALCKENAER, Vies de plusieurs personnages c e ´ l e ` bres des temps anciens et modernes, 1830 = 415
(b) Dictionnaire historique ou biographic universelle, 1836 = 417
139 CHARLES NODIER on Sterne, 1830 = 418
(a) Histoire du Roi de Boh e ` me et de ses sept chateaux, 1830 = 418
(b) 'Miscellan e ´ es, vari e ´ t e ´ s de philosophie, d'histoire et de litt e ´ rature,' 1830 = 419
Germany
140 The first German translation of Tristram Shandy, 1765 = 422
141 WIELAND on Sterne, 1767, 1774 = 423
(a) Letter to J. G. Zimmermann, November 1767 = 423
(b) Review, Der teutsche Merkur, 1774 = 424
142 HERDER on Sterne, November 1768 = 426
143 A Sentimental Journey in German, 1768 = 427
144 The Lorenzo cult, April 1769 = 429
145 GOETHE on Sterne, 1772, 1820-2, 1826, 1828, 1829, 1830 = 431
(a) Review, Frankfurter Gelehrte Anzeigen, March 1772 = 431
(b) Campagne in Frankreich 1792, 1820-2 = 432
(c) U ·· ber Kunst und Alterthum. Lorenz Sterne, January 1826 = 432
(d) Aus Makariens Archiv, Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre, 1828 = 433
(e) Journal, December 1829 = 434
(f) Letter to C. F. Zelter, December 1829 = 434
(g) Journal, October 1830 = 435
(h) Letter to C. F. Zelter, October 1830 = 435
146 VON BLANCKENBURG : Sterne as humorist, 1774 = 436
147 The extremes of sentimentality, 1780, 1781 = 438
(a) L. F. G. GOECKINGK, 'Der Empfindsame,' 1780 = 438
(b) CHRISTIAN FRIEDRICH TIMME, Der Empfindsame, 1781 = 439
148 TIECK on Sterne, 1795 = 440
149 LICHTENBERG on Sterne, 1772-5, 1799, 1800 = 441
(a) Aphorisms, 1772-5 = 441
(b) Beobachtungen u ·· ber den Menschen, 1799 = 441
(c) A ·· sthetische Bemerkungen, 1800 = 442
150 NOVALIS on Sterne, 1799-1801 = 444
151 FRIEDRICH SCHLEGEL on Sterne, 1800 = 445
152 JEAN PAUL RICHTER on Sterne, 1804 = 447
153 HEGEL on Sterne, 1818-26 = 448
154 HEINE on Sterne and Jean Paul, 1830s = 449
The Netherlands
155 The Dutch translation of Tristram Shandy, 1777 = 451
156 OCKERSE on Sterne, c. 1782, 1788, 1819 = 452
(a) Comment, c. 1782 = 452
(b) Ontwerp tot een Algemeene Characterkunde, 1788 = 452
(c) 'Leibnitz en Sterne', 1819 = 453
157 DE PERPONCHER on Sterne, 1788 = 453
158 WILLEM KIST on Sterne, 1823 = 454
159 OTTO GERHARD HELDRING on Sterne, 1831-3 = 455
Russia
160 The Russian Sterne : KARAMZIN, 1790, 1792 = 456
(a) Letters of a Russian Traveler, June, July 1790 = 456
(b) Editorial note, Moscow Journal, February 1792 = 458
161 Two enthusiasts of the 1790s = 458
(a) Remarks by MICHAIL N. MURAVIEV, 1790s = 458
(b) GAVRIIL PETROVICH KAMENEV, Muza, 1796 = 459
162 Sterne satirized, 1805 = 459
163 PUSHKIN on Sterne, 1822, 1827, undated = 462
(a) Letter to Peter Andreevich Vyazemsky, January 1822 = 462
(b) 'Fragments from Letters, Thoughts, and Notes,' 1827 = 463
(c) Remarks, reported by A. O. Smirnova = 463
Italy
164 FOSCOLO : Sterne's Italian translator, 1805 = 464
165 Sterne's sentimental side, 1822 = 466
(a) GIOVANNI FERRI DI S. COSTANTE, 'Sterne and Marivaux,' 1822 = 466
(b) GIOVANNI FERRI DI S. COSTANTE, 'Sterne's Humor,' 1822 = 466
(c) GIOVANNI FERRI DI S. COSTANTE, 'Sterne's Tomb,' 1822 = 467
166 Sterne, the Italian, 1829 = 468
APPENDIX : EDITIONS OF STERNE'S WORK, 1760-1830 = 469
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY = 474
INDEX = 476
