Page:Satire in the Victorian novel (IA satireinvictoria00russrich).pdf/340



Morris, Corbyn: ''An Essay towards fixing the True Standards of Wit, Humour, Raillery, Satire, and Ridicule''. London, 1743.

Neff, T. L. ''La Satire des Femmes dans la Poesie Lyrique Francais du Moyen Age''. Paris, 1900.

Previté-Orton, C. W.: Political Satire in English Poetry. Cambridge University Press, 1910.

Schneegans, H.: Geschichte der Grotesken Satire. Strassburg, 1984.

Tucker, S. M.: Verse-Satire in England before the Renaissance. Columbia University Press, 1908.

Comments on satire of a more incidental and yet interesting nature are found in prefaces and translations, in essays on kindred topics, and in general histories of literature. (In some cases it is hard to decide to which group a given citation should be assigned. A few are practically interchangeable.)

Ball, A. P.: The Satire of Seneca. Columbia University Press, 1902.

Besant, Sir Walter: The French Humourists from the Twelfth to the Nineteenth Centuries. Bentley, 1873.

Boileau, Nicolas: A short prose treatise published with the Satires.

Bourne, Randolph: The Life of Irony. Atlantic Monthly, III, 357.

Cannan, Gilbert: Satire. (Short monograph.) Doran.

Chesterton, G. K.: Pope and the Art of Satire. In Varied Types. Dodd, Mead, 1908.

Fuess, C. M.: Lord Byron as a Satirist in Verse. Columbia University Press, 1912.

Headlam, Cecil: Selections from the British Satirists. Robinson, 1897.

Jackson, Thomas: The Use of Irony. Introductory Essay to A Narrative of the Fire of London, by Peter Maritzburg. London, 1869.

L'Estrange, A. G.: History of English Humour. London, 1877.