Tip the coachy a crown.
Topics discussed in the papers that follow include many that will be familiar to scholars interested in eighteenth and nineteenth-century English, but the reader will find here increasing scope and refinement – a sign, we hope, of a maturing discipline. In this introduction we will sketch the early developments of work on Late Modern English and then preview the fifteen papers included in this volume, highlighting their main results and setting them against the earlier context. / It is probably accurate to say that work on Late Modern English (LModE) only took off in any serious way during the 1990s. There were of course prior studies of eighteenth and nineteenth-century English, but these were relatively thin on the ground compared with the great amounts of work done on the Old, Middle and Early Modern periods. […] In 1998, Mats Rydén, Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade and Merja Kytö published A Reader in Early Modern English, a collection of reprints of articles that had come out between 1944 and 1994. In the introduction they dealt with the question of the delimitation of the EModE period, and decided that it would cover the eighteenth century, too. The reasons for doing so were that the “late” stage of the language was “part of the near and the immediate past, including the period designated as Present-day English” (PDE) (1998: 2), and that the eighteenth century was still characterized by too much systemic variation to be called Late Modern English. An obvious consequence of this view would be that LModE would range from 1800 to the present day. The editors felt justified in their decision by the temporal division employed in the Cambridge History of the English Language. Clearly, by this time the beginnings of LModE as a distinct field were becoming evident. All that was needed was sorting out the dates and organising a couple of conferences. And this duly happened.
and certain lames of the pauldrons and tasses. The armour was generally more or less lined throughout, and in the place of the gambesons, acketons, etc., of the earlier Middle Ages, we have the arming-doublet […]
Mrs Kawdle, who had maintained a correspondence with her by letters, was no stranger to the former part of the connexion subsisting between those two lovers, and had always favoured the pretensions of our hero, without being acquainted with his person. She now observed with a smile, that as Aurelia esteemed the knight her guardian angel, and he adored her as a demideity, nature seemed to have intended them for each other; for such sublime ideas exalted them both above the sphere of ordinary mortals. She then ventured to intimate that he was in the house, impatient to pay his respects in person.
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