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Satire - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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List of satirists and satires - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Below is a list of writers, cartoonists and others known for their involvement in satire - humorous social criticism. They are grouped by era and listed by year of birth. Also included is a list of ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_satirists_and_satires |
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Satire - Definition of Satire at Dictionary.com a free online dictionary with pronunciation, synonyms, and translation of Satire. Word of the Day and Crossword Puzzles. ... the use of irony, sarcasm, ridicule, or the like, in exposing, denouncing, or deriding vice, folly, etc. ... a literary composition, in verse or prose,
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A project of the; Anne S. K. Brown; Military Collection; Box A; Brown University Library; Providence, RI 02912; Tel.: (401) 863-2414; ASKB@Brown.edu ... Developed & hosted by; Center for; Digital Initiatives; Box A; ... Please use this collection's navigation buttons instead of your browser's back button while browsing.
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Welcome to the complete on-line, hyper-text edition of Satires of Circumstance, Thomas Hardy's 1914 book of poems. The text presented is that of the first edition. There are several notable differences between this version and Hardy's later revisions: changes in order, syntax, and selection.
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It seems to me a contradiction in terms to say, as some have (see, for example, Clark 498-505), that satire need have no moral lesson or An object is criticized because it falls short of some standard which the critic desires that it should reach. ... The best satire does not seek to do harm or damage by its ridicule,
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satire n. A literary work in which human vice or folly is attacked through irony, derision, or wit ... Its tone may vary from tolerant amusement, as in the verse satires of the Roman poet Horace, to bitter indignation, as in the verse of Juvenal and the prose of Jonathan Swift (see Juvenalian).
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Nikki's 2nd satire...
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the Satires, which he wrote on public men and public affairs in the reign of Charles II; the News-letters, which he regularly addressed to his constituents in Hull after his election as M.P. for the borough in 1659, and which extend from 1660 to the time of his death in 1678;
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