The London Merchant


Book Description

Mrs. Millwood is beautiful, intelligent, and ambitious, but London gives her no means of support except to seduce men. Love for her leads eighteen-year-old Barnwell to deceit, theft, and murder. "What are your laws," Mrs. Millwood asks, "but the fool?s wisdom and the coward?s valor, the instrument and screen of all your villainies by which you punish in others what you act out yourselves, had you been in their circumstances? The judge who condemns the poor man for being a thief had been a thief himself, had he been poor. Thus you go on deceiving and being deceived, harassing, plaguing, and destroying one another, but women are your universal prey." First performed in 1731, The London Merchant became on of the most popular plays of the century. A chronicler of the age, Theophilus Cibber called it "almost a new species of tragedy."




Land and Society in Britain, 1700-1914


Book Description

Ten essays by scholars who have been influenced by the specialist in the history of British landed society, who retired in 1990. The topics include the rivalry between landed and other gentry, the Servants Tax of 1777, attitudes toward foreign farming, agricultural laborers and the third Reform Act in Suffolk, the political economy of death duties, the political extremism of Willoughby de Broke and Walter Long, golf and Edwardian politics, and mobility after the horse. Distributed in the US by St. Martin's Press. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR