Joseph Andrews
eBook - ePub

Joseph Andrews

Or, The History of the Adventures of Joseph Andrews and His Friend Mr Abraham Adams

,
  1. 439 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Joseph Andrews

Or, The History of the Adventures of Joseph Andrews and His Friend Mr Abraham Adams

,

About this book

Originally published in 1742, Henry Fielding's comic romp Joseph Andrews was one of the first novels written in English. It follows the adventures of a domestic servant, Joseph Andrews, and his friend and advisor, Abraham Adams, as the duo makes a long, ill-fated journey to visit Joseph's beloved, a sweet girl named Fanny.

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Information

Table of contents

  1. JOSEPH ANDREWS
  2. Contents
  3. General Introduction
  4. Author's Preface
  5. BOOK I
  6. Chapter I - Of Writing Lives in General, and Particularly of Pamela; with a Word by the Bye of Colley Cibber and Others
  7. Chapter II - Of Mr Joseph Andrews, His Birth, Parentage, Education, and Great Endowments; with a Word or Two Concerning Ancestors
  8. Chapter III - Of Mr Abraham Adams the Curate, Mrs Slipslop the Chambermaid, and Others
  9. Chapter IV - What Happened After Their Journey to London
  10. Chapter V - The Death of Sir Thomas Booby, with the Affectionate and Mournful Behaviour of His Widow, and the Great Purity of Joseph Andrews
  11. Chapter VI - How Joseph Andrews Writ a Letter to His Sister Pamela
  12. Chapter VII - Sayings of Wise Men. A Dialogue Between the Lady and Her Maid; and a Panegyric, or Rather Satire, on the Passion of Love, in the Sublime Style
  13. Chapter VIII - In Which, After Some Very Fine Writing, the History Goes on, and Relates the Interview Between the Lady and Joseph; Where the Latter Hath Set an Example Which We Despair of Seeing Followed by His Sex in this Vicious Age
  14. Chapter IX - What Passed Between the Lady and Mrs Slipslop; in Which We Prophesy there Are Some Strokes Which Every One Will Not Truly Comprehend at the First Reading
  15. Chapter X - Joseph Writes Another Letter: His Transactions with Mr Peter Pounce, &c., with His Departure from Lady Booby
  16. Chapter XI - Of Several New Matters Not Expected
  17. Chapter XII - Containing Many Surprizing Adventures Which Joseph Andrews Met with on the Road, Scarce Credible to Those Who Have Never Travelled in a Stage-Coach
  18. Chapter XIII - What Happened to Joseph During His Sickness at the Inn, with the Curious Discourse Between Him and Mr Barnabas, the Parson of the Parish
  19. Chapter XIV - Being Very Full of Adventures Which Succeeded Each Other at the Inn
  20. Chapter XV - Showing How Mrs Tow-Wouse was a Little Mollified; and How Officious Mr Barnabas and the Surgeon Were to Prosecute the Thief: With a Dissertation Accounting for Their Zeal, and that of Many Other Persons Not Mentioned in this History
  21. Chapter XVI - The Escape of the Thief. Mr Adams's Disappointment. The Arrival of Two Very Extraordinary Personages, and the Introduction of Parson Adams to Parson Barnabas
  22. Chapter XVII - A Pleasant Discourse Between the Two Parsons and the Bookseller, Which was Broke Off by an Unlucky Accident Happening in the Inn, Which Produced a Dialogue Between Mrs Tow-Wouse and Her Maid of No Gentle Kind
  23. Chapter XVIII - The History of Betty the Chambermaid, and an Account of What Occasioned the Violent Scene in the Preceding Chapter
  24. BOOK II
  25. Chapter I - Of Divisions in Authors
  26. Chapter II - A Surprizing Instance of Mr Adams's Short Memory, with the Unfortunate Consequences Which it Brought on Joseph
  27. Chapter III - The Opinion of Two Lawyers Concerning the Same Gentleman, with Mr Adams's Inquiry into the Religion of His Host
  28. Chapter IV - The History of Leonora, or the Unfortunate Jilt
  29. Chapter V - A Dreadful Quarrel Which Happened at the Inn Where the Company Dined, with its Bloody Consequences to Mr Adams
  30. Chapter VI - Conclusion of the Unfortunate Jilt
  31. Chapter VII - A Very Short Chapter, in Which Parson Adams Went a Great Way
  32. Chapter VIII - A Notable Dissertation by Mr Abraham Adams; Wherein that Gentleman Appears in a Political Light
  33. Chapter IX - In Which the Gentleman Discants on Bravery and Heroic Virtue, till an Unlucky Accident Puts an End to the Discourse
  34. Chapter X - Giving an Account of the Strange Catastrophe of the Preceding Adventure, Which Drew Poor Adams into Fresh Calamities; and Who the Woman was Who Owed the Preservation of Her Chastity to His Victorious Arm
  35. Chapter XI - What Happened to Them While Before the Justice. A Chapter Very Full of Learning
  36. Chapter XII - A Very Delightful Adventure, as Well to the Persons Concerned as to the Good-Natured Reader
  37. Chapter XIII - A Dissertation Concerning High People and Low People, with Mrs Slipslop's Departure in No Very Good Temper of Mind, and the Evil Plight in Which She Left Adams and His Company
  38. Chapter XIV - An Interview Between Parson Adams and Parson Trulliber
  39. Chapter XV - An Adventure, the Consequence of a New Instance Which Parson Adams Gave of His Forgetfulness
  40. Chapter XVI - A Very Curious Adventure, in Which Mr Adams Gave a Much Greater Instance of the Honest Simplicity of His Heart, than of His Experience in the Ways of this World
  41. Chapter XVII - A Dialogue Between Mr Abraham Adams and His Host, Which, by the Disagreement in Their Opinions, Seemed to Threaten an Unlucky Catastrophe, Had it Not Been Timely Prevented by the Return of the Lovers
  42. BOOK III
  43. Chapter I - Matter Prefatory in Praise of Biography
  44. Chapter II - A Night Scene, Wherein Several Wonderful Adventures Befel Adams and His Fellow-Travellers
  45. Chapter III - In Which the Gentleman Relates the History of His Life
  46. Chapter IV - A Description of Mr Wilson's Way of Living. The Tragical Adventure of the Dog, and Other Grave Matters
  47. Chapter V - A Disputation on Schools Held on the Road Between Mr Abraham Adams and Joseph; and a Discovery Not Unwelcome to Them Both
  48. Chapter VI - Moral Reflections by Joseph Andrews; with the Hunting Adventure, and Parson Adams's Miraculous Escape
  49. Chapter VII - A Scene of Roasting, Very Nicely Adapted to the Present Taste and Times
  50. Chapter VIII - Which Some Readers Will Think Too Short and Others Too Long
  51. Chapter IX - Containing as Surprizing and Bloody Adventures as Can Be Found in this or Perhaps Any Other Authentic History
  52. Chapter X - A Discourse Between the Poet and the Player; of No Other Use in this History but to Divert the Reader
  53. Chapter XI - Containing the Exhortations of Parson Adams to His Friend in Affliction; Calculated for the Instruction and Improvement of the Reader
  54. Chapter XII - More Adventures, Which We Hope Will as Much Please as Surprize the Reader
  55. Chapter XIII - A Curious Dialogue Which Passed Between Mr Abraham Adams and Mr Peter Pounce, Better Worth Reading than All the Works of Colley Cibber and Many Others
  56. BOOK IV
  57. Chapter I - The Arrival of Lady Booby and the Rest at Booby-Hall
  58. Chapter II - A Dialogue Between Mr Abraham Adams and the Lady Booby
  59. Chapter III - What Passed Between the Lady and Lawyer Scout
  60. Chapter IV - A Short Chapter, but Very Full of Matter; Particularly the Arrival of Mr Booby and His Lady
  61. Chapter V - Containing Justice Business; Curious Precedents of Depositions, and Other Matters Necessary to Be Perused by All Justices of the Peace and Their Clerks
  62. Chapter VI - Of Which You Are Desired to Read No More than You Like
  63. Chapter VII - Philosophical Reflections, the Like Not to Be Found in Any Light French Romance. Mr Booby's Grave Advice to Joseph, and Fanny's Encounter with a Beau
  64. Chapter VIII - A Discourse Which Happened Between Mr Adams, Mrs Adams, Joseph, and Fanny; with Some Behaviour of Mr Adams Which Will Be Called by Some Few Readers Very Low, Absurd, and Unnatural
  65. Chapter IX - A Visit Which the Polite Lady Booby and Her Polite Friend Paid to the Parson
  66. Chapter X - The History of Two Friends, Which May Afford an Useful Lesson to All Those Persons Who Happen to Take up Their Residence in Married Families
  67. Chapter XI - In Which the History is Continued
  68. Chapter XII - Where the Good-Natured Reader Will See Something Which Will Give Him No Great Pleasure
  69. Chapter XIII - The History, Returning to the Lady Booby, Gives Some Account of the Terrible Conflict in Her Breast Between Love and Pride; with What Happened on the Present Discovery
  70. Chapter XIV - Containing Several Curious Night-Adventures, in Which Mr Adams Fell into Many Hair-Breadth 'Scapes, Partly Owing to His Goodness, and Partly to His Inadvertency
  71. Chapter XV - The Arrival of Gaffar and Gammar Andrews, with Another Person Not Much Expected; and a Perfect Solution of the Difficulties Raised by the Pedlar
  72. Chapter XVI - Being the Last in Which this True History is Brought to a Happy Conclusion
  73. Endnotes