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         Goldsmith Oliver:     more books (81)
  1. Goody Two-Shoes; a facsimile reproduction of the edition of 1766 by Oliver, 1730?-1774 Goldsmith, 2009-10-26
  2. Works Volume 1 by Oliver, 1730?-1774 Goldsmith, 2009-10-26
  3. Works Volume 3 by Oliver, 1730?-1774 Goldsmith, 2009-10-26
  4. The history of little Goody Two-Shoes : otherwise called Mrs Margery Two-Shoes : with the means by which she acquired her learning and wisdom, and, in consequence thereof, her estate ... : see the original manuscript in the Vatican at Rome, and the cuts by Michael Angelo : illustrated with the comments of our great modern critics by Oliver, 1730?-1774 Goldsmith, 2009-10-26
  5. Oliver Goldsmith's Traveller and Deserted village, also Thomas Gray's Elegy in a country churchyard; by Oliver Goldsmith 1730?-1774 Gray Thomas 1716-1771 Gregory Warren Fenno [from old catalog] ed, 1909-12-31
  6. Le village abandonn??, d'Oliver Goldsmith by Oliver Goldsmith 1730?-1774 Chevallier Eug?¿ne tr. [from old catalog], 1877-12-31
  7. The Art of Oliver Goldsmith by Andrew Swarbrick, 1984-06
  8. Oliver Goldsmith by Stephen Gwynn, 1974-06
  9. Oliver Goldsmith Revisited (Twayne's English Authors Series) by Peter Dixon, 1991-07
  10. Oliver Goldsmith, a Reference Guide (A Reference Guide to Literature) by Samuel H., Jr. Woods, 1982-10
  11. Oliver Goldsmith; Essays Towards an Interpretation (Biography Index Reprint Series) by Robert Wyse Jackson, 1951-06
  12. Oliver Goldsmith: A Georgian Study (Masters of World Literature series) by Ricardo Quintana, 1967-11
  13. Oliver Goldsmith and Richard Brinsley Sheridan (World Dramatists) by Marlies K. Danziger, 1978-05
  14. Goldsmith's The traveller and The deserted village; by Oliver Goldsmith 1730?-1774 Tupper Frederick 1871-1950 ed, 1900-12-31

81. ThisDayThatYear.com - Birthdays Of Personalities On November 10
1730 Oliver Goldsmith, Ireland, novelist/dramatist (She Stoops to Conquer)1759 Frederich von Schiller, Germany, poet/lyricist (Ode to Joy)
http://www.thisdaythatyear.com/nov/people10.htm
@import url(/img/styles.css);
January Febuary March April May June July August September October November December Birthdays of Personalities on November 10
: Charles of Charolais, the Bold, Duke of Burgundy/polyglot
: Charles of Egmond, duke of Gelre/earl of Zutphen [or Nov 9]
: Martin Luther, Eisleben Germany, founded Protestantism
: Robert Devereux 2nd earl of Essex/cousin/lover of Elizabeth I
: Jacob Cats, [Father Cats], Dutch grand pensionary/poet (Houwelyck)
: George II [August], king of England (1727-60)
: William Hogarth, England, satiric painter/engraver (Rake's Progress)
: Oliver Goldsmith, Ireland, novelist/dramatist (She Stoops to Conquer)
: Frederich von Schiller, Germany, poet/lyricist (Ode to Joy)
: Jared Kirtland, US, physician/naturalist/reformed penitentiaries : Cyrus West Field, financier/success of 1st transatlantic cable : Alfred Howe Terry, Major General (Union volunteers), died in 1890 : Albert Gallatin Jenkins, Brig General (Confederate Army), died in 1864 : Jos‚ Hernandez, Argentina poet (Mart¡n Fierro) : Wager Swayne, Major General (Union volunteers), died in 1902

82. The New York Times > Travel > Dublin Guide > Sight Details
On the lawn in front of the inner facade stand statues of two alumni, oratorEdmund Burke (172997) and dramatist Oliver Goldsmith (1730-74).
http://travel2.nytimes.com/top/features/travel/destinations/europe/ireland/dubli

83. LIBUK: Le Recensioni Della Stampa
meraviglioso Vicario di Wakefield (1766) di Oliver Goldsmith (1730-74).
http://www.libuk.com/classifiche/rec_stampa_libro.asp?idebook=21&idrec=952

84. Writing Rural England: Texts & Issues
Stephen Duck, from The Thresher s Labour (1730) Mary Collier, from The Woman sLabour (1739) Oliver Goldsmith, The History of a Poet s Garden (1773)
http://www.soton.ac.uk/~sdb2/issue267.html
Writing Rural England 1500-1800
Some general points: Week 1 Introductory Week 2 Feudalism and Beyond: The Anxiety of Change Week 3 The Discovery of Landscape Week 4 The Country House Week 5 Merry England: Property, Pastoral and Rural Pleasures Week 6 The Georgic Imperative: Labour, Thrift, Improvement Week 7 Property and Oppression: Voices from the Margins Week 8 Gardens: Public Landscapes and Private Possessions Week 9 Travel and the Search for Nature Week 10 Conclusions Week 11 Consultation Week 12 Consultation
Feudalism and Beyond: The Anxiety of Change
Texts

Thomas More, [from[ Utopia
Robert Crowley, ‘Of Rent Raisers’ (1550)
Anon., A Lantern for Landlords (c. 1630)
Philip Massinger, [from] A New Way to Pay Old Debts
Richard Gough, [from] The History of Myddle
Oliver Goldsmith, The Deserted Village
George Crabbe [from], The Village , Book I (1783)
Some additional texts: Joseph Hall, Virgidemiarum , V, 3 (1598) Sir Richard Steele, [from] The Tatler, no. 169, May 9, 1710 ... The Farmer's Boy Issues In this section of the course we'll be thinking about one of the broadest narratives of change in the period 1500-1800: the notion of a change in social structure brought about by a gradual shift from a 'feudal' social order to the new structures entailed by capitalism. One of the dominant concerns here is the issue of enclosure and the ways in which it reshaped pre-existent structures of rural society and economy. It was most controversial when it led to depopulation, and while this was in fact rare, it's important to recognize that enclosure created this possibility by encoding new concepts of absolute property.

85. Syllabus: British Romantic Landscape Poetry And Art
The Dark Side of the Landscape The Rural Poor in English Painting, 17301840 . and Winter from The Seasons; Oliver Goldsmith The Deserted Village
http://prometheus.cc.emory.edu/RC/er/Syllabus.html
Liz Rackley
email: erack01@emory.edu
mailbox: English Dept., 3rd floor North Callaway
British Romantic Landscapes
Course Overview:
In the eighteenth century, British poets and artists searched the countryside for the following: beautiful and perfectly ordered natural objects, picturesque unity in a variety of landscape elements, and sublimity in the vastness of the land. One can attribute this cult of nature to, among other causes, reverberations of Lorrain and Poussin's artwork, the success of Thomson's The Seasons , as well as to the popularity of travel in this period. This course will look at this cultural background for Romantic landscape art and poetry to discover that the pictorial landscapes are not purely topographical representations and that the literary landscapes are not purely literal descriptions; rather, both represent particular views of nature shaped by ideology as well as the artist's or poet's education in the pastoral myth. We will ask such questions of landscape art and poetry as: "What is the relationship between landscape and autobiography in this period?"; "How are the rural poor depicted?; "What does it mean to 'moralize' the landscape?," etc.
Required Texts:
  • Heffernan, James A. W.

86. The History Of Tom Jones, A Foundling
It was first played in 1730, and was intended to ridicule the bombastic and and no doubt furnished Oliver Goldsmith with a hint for his Dr. Primrose,
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-new2?id=FieTomJ.xml&images=images/mo

87. Bibliotheca Augustana
Thomas Percy (17281811) Edmund Burke (1729-97) Oliver Goldsmith (1730?-74)William Cowper (1731-1800) George Coleman (1732-94) James Macpherson (1736-1796)
http://www.fh-augsburg.de/~harsch/anglica/Chronology/e_saec18.html
B I B L I O T H E C A A U G U S T A N A
Bibliotheca Anglica
Modern English Literature
18th Century
Act of Settlement (1701)
Septennial Act (1716)
Daniel Defoe (1660-1731)
Matthew Prior (1664-1721)
Jonathan Swift

Bernard Mandeville (1670-1733)
Anthony Ashley Cooper, Earl of Shaftesbury (1671-1713) Joseph Addison (1672-1719) Richard Steele (1672-1729) Nicholas Rowe (1674-1718) Edward Young (1683-1765) John Gay (1685-1732) Alexander Pope (1688-1744) Samuel Richardson (1689-1761) George Lillo (1693?-1739) Eliza Haywood (1693?-1756) Philip Dormer Stanhope, Earl of Chesterfield (1694-1773) James Thomson (1700-1748) John Wesley (1703-1791) Benjamin Franklin (1706-90) Henry Fielding (1707-54) Samuel Johnson (1709-84) David Hume (1711-76) Laurence Sterne (1713-68) Thomas Gray (1716-71) David Garrick (1717-79) Horace Walpole (1717-97) William Collins (1721-59) Tobias George Smollett (1721-71) Adam Smith Thomas Percy (1728-1811) Edmund Burke (1729-97) Oliver Goldsmith (1730?-74) William Cowper (1731-1800) George Coleman (1732-94) James Macpherson (1736-1796) Edward Gibbon (1737-94) Thomas Paine (1737-1809) James Boswell (1740-95) Robert Fergusson (1750-74) Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816) Thomas Chatterton (1752-1800) Frances (Fanny) Burney (1752-1840) George Crabbe William Godwin (1756-1836) William Blake (1757-1827) Robert Burns (1759-96) Mary Wollstonecraft Ann Radcliffe (1764-1823)

88. Elinor Wyllys By Susan Fenimore Cooper EBook By BookRags
{ Goldsmith” = Oliver Goldsmith (17301775), British author; “Temple Gardens” =in London on the Thames River, next to The Temple (an ancient English school
http://www.bookrags.com/ebooks/1927/63.html
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Hazlehurst laughed. A walk was proposed, and soon after the young people, accompanied by Bruno, set out together. CHAPTER X. Cowper Miss mother was more unwell than usual; and after breakfast the following morning, Elinor prepared a little basket of particularly fine peaches, which she proposed carrying to Mrs. Hubbard, herself. Harry offered to accompany her, and Jane was persuaded to join them; although in general, she disliked every kind of motion except dancing. The travellers had already seen Miss Patsey and her youngest sister, and they were now so fortunate as to find Charlie at home. He had come from New York, the evening before, and, of course, was much pleased to see his young friends; indeed, he showed so much emotion at the meeting, as to change colour when he first saw the three cousins enter the little gate. About Customer Service Report an Error Tests ... Argos

89. The Sublime, Beautiful, And Picturesque In Eighteenth-Century England (Syllabus,
Oliver Goldsmith, The Traveller ; The Deserted Village (in HO Packet) of the Landscape The Rural Poor in English Painting 17301840 (On Reserve)
http://www.users.muohio.edu/mandellc/eng495/495syll.htm
English 495N.B, Spring 1998 Professor Laura Mandell TR 12:30-1:45 370 Bachelor Hall; 9-5276 Havighurst Lab (Bachelor 260) Office Hours: TR 2:00-3:00 9 Irvin Hall Hours in Library: TR 11:00-12:00
The Sublime, Beautiful, and Picturesque
in Eighteenth-Century England
[Henry the 8th ]
The History of England (written at age 16) In this course, we will pull together ideas from the fields of philosophy, literature, and art history. We will read aesthetic treatises by Edmund Burke, William Gilpin, and others on the sublime, beautiful, and picturesque, and then will examine eighteenth-century art, poetry, and landscape informed by the principles put forward in those treatises. But we will also be trying to put these ideas into action in a new way made possible with new technologies. We will build on the MOO (a M ulti-user-dimension O bjects O Students enrolled in this Capstone course will be grouped together in pairs. Each pair will create a bibliography of works on country houses and bibliographies on painting and music of the period. Each pair will present their understanding of these subjects in class, and we will search together for sources of them on the Internet. Each pair will then be asked to design their country house and furnish it with artworks and music based on their research and on what we find on the Internet. The house will be built out of words describing it, floor-plans, artwork scanned in and retrieved from the Internet.

90. British & Irish Authors On The Web
Thomas Percy (17281811); Clara Reeve (1729-1807); Oliver Goldsmith (1730?-74).theatrehistory.com The Oliver Goldsmith Page Project Gutenberg
http://www.lang.nagoya-u.ac.jp/~matsuoka/UK-authors.html
B ritish and I rish A uthors on the W eb c.600-1300
19th C. British and Irish Authors
Victorian Web Sites Hyper-Concordance This page has been accessed times since the counter was put in on 1 July 1996. Last updated: 15 April 2004.

91. College Literature: Disciplining Satire: The Censorship Of Satiric Comedy On The
he debated whether or not to produce Oliver Goldsmith s She Stoops to Conquer . The second chapter takes up the 1730 s, which witnessed a revival of
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3709/is_200401/ai_n9469547
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Afterimage American Drama American Music Teacher ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports Disciplining Satire: The Censorship of Satiric Comedy on the Eighteenth Century London Stage College Literature Winter 2004 by Caywood, Cynthia L
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. Kinservik, Matthew J. 2002. Disciplining Satire: The Censorship of Satiric Comedy on the Eighteenth Century London Stage. Lewisburg: Bucknell University Press. $38.50 hc. 301 pp. I recently saw a production of April De Angelis's new play A Laughing Matter at the Royal National Theatre. It merrily dramatizes the choice between financial concerns and artistic instinct that David Garrick faced as he debated whether or not to produce Oliver Goldsmith's She Stoops to Conquer. De Angelis's play chronicles the hazards of eighteenth-century theatrical life, as actors, writers, and managers navigated the treacherous shoals of fickle public taste, censorship, personal ambition and aesthetic sensibilities.

92. Ackerman To Hutchinson
1730. £2750. Small 4to. (235 x 165mm.), 3 parts bound in two volumes, 89 Goldsmith, Oliver. The History of England, from the Earliest Times to the Death
http://www.sotherans.co.uk/Catalogues/Antiquarian/Ackerman-Hutchinson.html
Home
An Antiquarian Miscellany
1-Ackerman to 102-Hutchinson 1 [ACKERMANN, R.]. [WESTMINSTER SCHOOL]. The Westminster School section only from The History of the Colleges of Winchester, Eton and Westminster ... [R. Ackermann].
    4to. Recent quarter dark blue calf, spine lettered in gilt, marbled board sides; pp. 27; 4 hand-coloured aquatint plates; light offsetting from the plates, but a nice copy, with a specially made cloth-covered slipcase.This volume contains the complete Westminster School section from Ackermann's larger work on schools and colleges, The History of the Colleges of Winchester, Eton and Westminster ... , 1816. The four plates are 'Westminster Scholar', 'Hall of Westminster School', 'Westminster School Room', and 'Dormitory of Westminster School', the last three after drawings by A. Pugin. See Abbey, Scenery, 438.
2 [ACKERMANN, R.]. [ETON COLLEGE]. The Eton College section only from The History of the Colleges of Winchester, Eton and Westminster ... [R. Ackermann].

93. Historical Survey Of Children's Literature In The British Library
of three hundred animals, 1730, The storyis often ascribed to Oliver Goldsmith, or more probably to Newbery himself.......His first book was A
http://www.bl.uk/collections/britirish/chilhist.html
document.write(''); Home Collections Modern British print ... Modern Irish Collections
Historical survey of children's literature in the British Library
This description of the British Library's holdings of books for children is necessarily brief and selective. In the discussion of the earlier period the emphasis is on rare works. The description of the later period focuses on the publications of the more influential authors. Further details about all the works discussed and the wealth of our holdings of children's literature can be traced in the Integrated Catalogue 17th century works
18th century works

19th century works
...
Gallery of images from historic children's books
17th century works
In the seventeenth century, books for children were educational or moral, aimed at driving out original sin. The only surviving copy of an early text book is John Owen's The Primer, or an easie way to teach children the true reading of English. With a necessary catechisme to instruct youth... 1652 (British Library shelfmark: C.143.a.22). The only recorded copy of the earliest known English illustrated alphabet is The Childes first tutor: or, The master and mistris. Teaching children an easie and delightful way to learn the twenty four letters...

94. Bookbindings 1500-1920 Exhibit In The W.D. Jordan Library (Queen's University, K
17301750, in gold-tooled, diced russia leather; Oliver Goldsmith s, Shestoops to conquer, (a 1912 London edition) is bound in gold-blocked leather
http://library.queensu.ca/webmus/sc/exhibitsarch3.html
Special Collections Mainpage Jordan Library Exhibits
29 January to 12 March 2003
Leather and Vellum Bookbindings,
1500 to 1920
An exhibition curated by Margaret Lock of Locks' Press Kingston, illustrating the history of bookbinding with examples from the Jordan Library collections.
Public Lecture : by LEE OLDFORD,
MA student, Dept. of Art
"Economy and Beauty : Foreign Ideals? -
An investigation into 19th century publishers' bindings"
Wednesday 5 February at 1:15 p.m.
W.D. Jordan Library,
2nd floor of the Douglas Library building
The exhibition is arranged chronologically, covering the history of leather bookbinding from about 1500 to 1925. The quality of bindings ranges from fine, expensive leather with spectacular hand-tooling to the more mundane and less costly typical of each period. Following are the various categories, with selected images from the exhibition ... Fine and Utilitarian Binding, 1500-1740 In this early period, books were sold unbound and each customer would decide on the binding style he could afford. 18th Century Small bindery businesses operated separately from booksellers who acted also as publishers.

95. British & Irish AuthorsiƒCƒMƒŠƒX‚̍ì‰
Thomas Percy (17281811); Clara Reeve (1729-1807); Oliver Goldsmith (1730?-74).The Oliver Goldsmith Page Project Gutenberg UTORONTO Bartleby
http://www.kochi-wu.ac.jp/~aoki/UK-authors.html
B ritish and I rish A uthors on the W eb Last updated: 23 August 1999. c.600-1300
19th C. British and Irish Authors

It would be greatly appreciated if you could let me know any Web sites related to the following authors or other British and Irish authors. Please forward the URL to me: matsuoka@lang.nagoya-u.ac.jp This page has been accessed times since the counter was put in on 1 July 1996. W hat's N ew

96. The History Of The Dog In Britain
1730 Sir Robert Walpole tries unsuccessfully to establish the post of Master c1770 Oliver Goldsmith , Irish author of Animated Nature , says that Irish
http://www.countrysportsandcountrylife.com/sections/pedigree_dog/history_of_dog/
History of British Dog Classification Linnaeus Buffon ... Stonehenge History of the British Dog
It is estimated that the dog Canis Familiaris was first domesticated in 10,000BC. The Oldest European dog remains from Star Carr Yorkshire are dated at c 7538 BC.
These records and the history of the domestic dog in Britain are well chronicled in an excellent book " The British Dog - Its History from Ealiest Times by Dr Cameron i.A. Ritchie published by Robert Hale Lte, London in 1981.
Ritchie in " a Short Chonology of the British Dog" lgives a very comprehensive listing of the references to dogs in British literature and history including:
Click image to enlarge 63-21 BC Strabo mentions the export of Hunting dogs from Britain
c50 AD The sons of Uisnech flee from Ulster to Scotland taking 150 hounds with them
c80-120 AD Occupation of Corbridge Roman Station in Northumberland by a garrison whose dogs have been identified as 'bassets' and 'small greyhounds'
161-180 AD Oppian describes a British dog called the agassaeus - probably a terrier
727 or 730 AD
c800 AD
Pictess huntress with hounds portrayed coursing deer on the Hilton of Cadboll Slab, Scotland

97. Descendant Lists
married 1919 Margaret F Nolan; Clarence Oliver Eldridge 18831948 FrancesGoldsmith; William Eldridge 1825- married 1847 Ann Chilton
http://www2.hunterlink.net.au/~ddrge/genealogy/descend.html
Descendant Lists
Home
Genealogy

Eldridge Migration

Surname Index

Match Any word All words Exact phrase
Use sound-alike matching The contents of these Descendent Lists are a work in progress and all details are under constant revision . Some of the detail is based on assumptions and much of the early English family detail is speculative. Years shown are the date of the event or the year the event was registered. Descendants are limited to the list surname, spouses and children with a mother or step mother of the list surname and are in birth order where known. The Surname Index has links to each list. Each page heading links to the following table and links within each list are to other lists. The Eldridge Migration to Australia page lists in date order the known migration by families and individuals, including females with an Eldridge maiden surname, to Australia.
Related ELDRIDGE families from 1545
with connecting links Other ELDRIDGE families
with Australian descendants

98. Research Interests - Gail Dodd
DODD, Leamington, WAR, ENG, pre 1839. ELLIOT, Hawick, ROX, SCT, pre 1730. FARREL,Newlyn East, CON, ENG, pre 1820 Goldsmith, London, MDX, ENG, pre 1780
http://members.iinet.net.au/~perthdps/research/dod01.html
Gail DODD
Research Interests - February 2000
The list below details the surnames I am researching. Please allow for alternative spellings. My whole database on our direct line ancestors' and their siblings can be found at "Our Ancestors" on my home page http://www.iinet.net.au/~dodd/gail/ and stories about the first families to Australia are on-line at http://www.firstfamilies2001.net.au You're welcome to use the information in your own research, but please contact me if you find a connection. Happy hunting! Gail Dodd (nee McGlashan)
gaildodd@iinet.net.au
Locality KEY ABBOTT Gilmorton LEI ENG pre 1815 ARKIN Newtownbarry WEX IRL pre 1850 ATKINS
Mark Hone
Sutton KEN ENG AYERS YKS ENG pre 1750 BARTILL Constantine CON ENG BAWDEN St Breock CON ENG pre 1580 BECKINGHAM Eastbury
Hungerford
Lambourn BKS ENG BEG Foveran ABD SCT pre 1800 BEGG Brisbane QLD AUS aft 1874 BEGG Belhelvie ABD SCT BELL Kirkbean KKD SCT BENNIE Glasgow LNK SCT pre 1820 BLACKMAN Darenth KEN ENG pre 1850 BROWN Lambourn BKS ENG pre 1773 BROWN
Anne Nailstone LEI ENG pre 1807 BROWN ?Ramsgate KEN ENG pre 1851 BROWN Adelaide SA AUS BURDETT Gilmorton LEI ENG pre 1820 BURGESS YKS ENG pre 1820 BURNET Leith MDL SCT pre 1820 BUTCHER Swanscombe KEN ENG pre 1800 CAMPBELL Strachur ARL SCT pre 1820 CHALMERS Foveran ABD SCT pre 1850 CHAMPION Mt Barker
Kadina SA AUS CHAMPION Lambourn BKS ENG CHAPMAN Verdon LEI ENG pre 1650 CHISOLM ROX SCT pre 1630 CHOLWELL Morwenstow CON ENG pre 1600 CLELAND Glasgow LNK SCT pre 1850 COCK Paul CON ENG COUTS Craithie ABD SCT pre 1820 COUTTS Craithie ABD SCT pre 1850 COWLEY Lambourn BKS ENG

99. Nov 10 - Author Anniversaries
1483 Martin LUTHER 1615 Ninon(=Anne) de L ENCLOS 1730 Oliver GOLDSMITH1759 (Johann Christoph) Friedrich von SCHILLER 1792 Francis Carnac BROWN 1796
http://www.kingkong.demon.co.uk/aa/nov10.htm
Author Anniversaries for Nov 10
If you find a person's date of birth or death on this page and want to find that person's date of death or birth, or other information, try looking them up in the New General Catalog of Old Books and Authors pages. Born: nee nee nee ? 1906: Ruth (Louisa) COHEN 1907: (Terence) Alan (Martyn) BISHOP 1907: Lisette(=Elise Felic Amelie) MODEL, nee nee nee ? 1942: Daniel (Edward) KILEY 1944: Prof, Larry TRASK 1944: Prof, Robert Lawrence TRASK, aka Larry TRASK Died: nee ne nee nee ?, 1:Mrs ? 2003: Francis William SIMPSON 2003: Irv KUPCINET 2003: Margaret ARMEN 2003: ZW Pres, Canaan Sodindo BANANA 2004: Erna ROSENSTEIN, Mrs SANDAUER 2004: Prof, Harry SCHWARTZ Return to the Author Anniversaries page. Return to the kingkong home page.

100. Stage Review: PICT Stretches To Present Comedy 'She Stoops'
I m sure there s some fancy name for this psychosexual maladjustment, but OliverGoldsmith (1730-74) is determined to treat it with indulgent comedy.
http://www.post-gazette.com/ae/20020717stoops0717fnp6.asp
Pittsburgh, PA
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Stage Review: PICT stretches to present comedy 'She Stoops' Wednesday, July 17, 2002 By Christopher Rawson, Post-Gazette Drama Critic The comedy is aptly named. In "She Stoops to Conquer," the spirited Kate masquerades as a servant in order to bypass the social/sexual inhibitions of the eligible Mr. Marlow and liberate him from his inability to relate to "nice" women. "She Stoops to Conquer" Where: When: Through July 27; 8 p.m. Wednesdays through Saturdays; 2 p.m. Sundays and July 27. Tickets: I'm sure there's some fancy name for this psycho-sexual maladjustment, but Oliver Goldsmith (1730-74) is determined to treat it with indulgent comedy. So he gives Kate the powers of a Shakespearean comic heroine though she masquerades as only a maid, not a man and brings about a cure. There's enough transformation left over to free the second young couple and booby squire from the booby's booby mother. Her oddity also has a bit of a sexual tinge, but Goldsmith is too nice to harp on that.

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