The Court and City Vagaries, or Intrigues, of Both Sexes. Written by one of the Fair Sex (London: J. Baker, [1711]). (Q219137): Difference between revisions

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(‎Added qualifier: Inventory position (P10): *EC/A100.711c7, #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1610119215702)
(‎Removed claim: <Digest in English> (P75): Preface by an anonymous male voice addresses and criticises the Author "Idalia" who did not tell what she was up to (and who could have spared some of the moral sentiments)Fife short narrations. The Author stating again and again that everything happened in her vicinity. The first narration ends with the promise to be continued as soon as new information reaches the author. Stylistically non professional - tenses change continuously. (1.) Amind...)
 
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Property / Date of publicationProperty / Date of publication
1711
Timestamp+1711-00-00T00:00:00Z
Timezone+00:00
CalendarGregorian
Precision1 year
Before0
After0
22 December 1711Gregorian
Timestamp+1711-12-22T00:00:00Z
Timezone+00:00
CalendarGregorian
Precision1 day
Before0
After0
Property / Date of publication: 22 December 1711Gregorian / qualifier
 
Note: Advertised in Spectator, 255, (22 Dec. 1711).
Property / Place of publication (without fictitious information)
 
Property / Place of publication (without fictitious information): London / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / FactGrid research area
 
Property / FactGrid research area: Prose fiction / rank
 
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Property / Originality of the item
 
Property / Originality of the item: Another edition / rank
 
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Property / Title aspects
 
Property / Title aspects: Two part title in the fashion of the exemplary novel / rank
 
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Property / Title page transcript
 
THE| Court and City| VAGARIES,| OR| INTRIGUES,| OF| BOTH SEXES.| [rule]| Written by one of the fair Sex.| [rule]| LONDON,| Printed: And Sold by J. Baker, at the| Black Boy in Pater-Noster-Row.| Price Six-Pence.
Property / Title page transcript: THE| Court and City| VAGARIES,| OR| INTRIGUES,| OF| BOTH SEXES.| [rule]| Written by one of the fair Sex.| [rule]| LONDON,| Printed: And Sold by J. Baker, at the| Black Boy in Pater-Noster-Row.| Price Six-Pence. / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / ESTC-ID
 
Property / ESTC-ID: N004154 / rank
 
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Property / Digest
 
Preface by an anonymous male voice addresses and criticises the Author "Idalia" who did not tell what she was up to (and who could have spared some of the moral sentiments)Fife short narrations. The Author stating again and again that everything happened in her vicinity. The first narration ends with the promise to be continued as soon as new information reaches the author. Stylistically non professional - tenses change continuously. (1.) Aminda and Ciladira on a walk through London: a man treats the ladies with ice cream and expects a physical recompensation. (2.) An Afternoon (of the narrator) with lady Tuneal, witty sketch of the elderly spinster's character. (3.) With irony: a flirt of the virtuous narrator (from window to window across the street) with a man - who does not answer the narrator's feelings - feelings the narrator herself vainly denies. (4.) Two frustrated married women at a tavern: gallant Newlove brings them into trouble. (5) An old member of parliament falls in love with a girl passing by. The love letter he sends her reaches an old seamstress, which brings our man into a peculiar situation. (English)
Property / Digest: Preface by an anonymous male voice addresses and criticises the Author "Idalia" who did not tell what she was up to (and who could have spared some of the moral sentiments)Fife short narrations. The Author stating again and again that everything happened in her vicinity. The first narration ends with the promise to be continued as soon as new information reaches the author. Stylistically non professional - tenses change continuously. (1.) Aminda and Ciladira on a walk through London: a man treats the ladies with ice cream and expects a physical recompensation. (2.) An Afternoon (of the narrator) with lady Tuneal, witty sketch of the elderly spinster's character. (3.) With irony: a flirt of the virtuous narrator (from window to window across the street) with a man - who does not answer the narrator's feelings - feelings the narrator herself vainly denies. (4.) Two frustrated married women at a tavern: gallant Newlove brings them into trouble. (5) An old member of parliament falls in love with a girl passing by. The love letter he sends her reaches an old seamstress, which brings our man into a peculiar situation. (English) / rank
 
Normal rank

Latest revision as of 10:36, 12 April 2022

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English
The Court and City Vagaries, or Intrigues, of Both Sexes. Written by one of the Fair Sex (London: J. Baker, [1711]).
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    Statements

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    22 December 1711Gregorian
    Advertised in Spectator, 255, (22 Dec. 1711).
    0 references
    THE| Court and City| VAGARIES,| OR| INTRIGUES,| OF| BOTH SEXES.| [rule]| Written by one of the fair Sex.| [rule]| LONDON,| Printed: And Sold by J. Baker, at the| Black Boy in Pater-Noster-Row.| Price Six-Pence.
    0 references
    Preface by an anonymous male voice addresses and criticises the Author "Idalia" who did not tell what she was up to (and who could have spared some of the moral sentiments)Fife short narrations. The Author stating again and again that everything happened in her vicinity. The first narration ends with the promise to be continued as soon as new information reaches the author. Stylistically non professional - tenses change continuously. (1.) Aminda and Ciladira on a walk through London: a man treats the ladies with ice cream and expects a physical recompensation. (2.) An Afternoon (of the narrator) with lady Tuneal, witty sketch of the elderly spinster's character. (3.) With irony: a flirt of the virtuous narrator (from window to window across the street) with a man - who does not answer the narrator's feelings - feelings the narrator herself vainly denies. (4.) Two frustrated married women at a tavern: gallant Newlove brings them into trouble. (5) An old member of parliament falls in love with a girl passing by. The love letter he sends her reaches an old seamstress, which brings our man into a peculiar situation. (English)
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references