Tom Jones

Front Cover
Collector's Library, 2007 - Fiction - 924 pages
This is a humorous, scandalous and picaresque tale of a young lad, reared by a magnanimous benefactor who becomes entangled in the life of an amorous 'Lady'. Tom Jones really loves Sophia but finds it hard to gain the happiness he desires.
 

Contents

II
25
III
27
IV
29
VI
32
VIII
35
IX
37
XI
41
XII
45
CXXXV
460
CXXXVI
464
CXXXVII
469
CXXXIX
475
CXL
477
CXLI
483
CXLII
488
CXLIII
491

XIV
48
XV
50
XVII
54
XVIII
58
XIX
61
XX
65
XXI
67
XXIII
69
XXIV
73
XXV
78
XXVI
83
XXIX
89
XXXI
93
XXXII
95
XXXIII
101
XXXIV
103
XXXV
108
XXXVI
111
XXXVII
114
XXXIX
119
XL
122
XLI
124
XLII
126
XLIII
129
XLIV
133
XLV
136
XLVI
139
XLVIII
142
XLIX
145
L
150
LIV
156
LV
161
LVI
164
LVIII
168
LX
173
LXI
176
LXIII
179
LXIV
185
LXV
189
LXVII
194
LXVIII
196
LXIX
199
LXX
207
LXXII
213
LXXIII
218
LXXIV
223
LXXVI
228
LXXVII
231
LXXIX
235
LXXX
241
LXXXI
244
LXXXII
250
LXXXIII
254
LXXXIV
256
LXXXV
261
LXXXVI
264
LXXXVII
268
LXXXVIII
270
LXXXIX
275
XC
279
XCI
281
XCII
286
XCIV
290
XCV
293
XCVI
297
XCVII
299
XCVIII
304
XCIX
306
C
309
CI
315
CII
319
CIII
323
CIV
327
CV
332
CVI
336
CVII
343
CVIII
348
CIX
355
CX
359
CXI
366
CXII
369
CXIII
372
CXV
375
CXVI
380
CXVII
384
CXVIII
387
CXXI
392
CXXV
398
CXXVI
406
CXXVII
415
CXXVIII
420
CXXIX
427
CXXX
434
CXXXI
441
CXXXII
446
CXXXIII
450
CXXXIV
456
CXLIV
496
CXLVI
500
CXLVII
504
CXLVIII
508
CXLIX
517
CL
521
CLI
528
CLII
530
CLIII
536
CLIV
540
CLV
544
CLVI
551
CLVII
558
CLVIII
562
CLIX
567
CLX
569
CLXI
573
CLXII
578
CLXIII
582
CLXIV
586
CLXV
589
CLXVI
594
CLXVII
598
CLXVIII
602
CLXIX
607
CLXX
609
CLXXIII
618
CLXXIV
622
CLXXV
627
CLXXVI
630
CLXXVII
635
CLXXVIII
638
CLXXIX
641
CLXXXI
646
CLXXXII
652
CLXXXIII
657
CLXXXIV
662
CLXXXV
666
CLXXXVI
668
CLXXXVII
675
CLXXXVIII
679
CLXXXIX
682
CXC
687
CXCI
691
CXCII
695
CXCIII
699
CXCIV
704
CXCV
709
CXCVI
716
CXCVII
719
CXCVIII
721
CXCIX
722
CC
727
CCI
731
CCII
732
CCIII
739
CCIV
743
CCV
750
CCVI
752
CCVII
758
CCVIII
763
CCIX
765
CCX
769
CCXI
771
CCXII
778
CCXIII
781
CCXIV
786
CCXV
793
CCXVI
796
CCXVII
798
CCXVIII
802
CCXIX
807
CCXX
811
CCXXI
812
CCXXII
816
CCXXIII
823
CCXXIV
827
CCXXV
831
CCXXVI
834
CCXXVII
837
CCXXVIII
843
CCXXIX
849
CCXXX
850
CCXXXI
855
CCXXXII
860
CCXXXIII
864
CCXXXIV
869
CCXXXV
873
CCXXXVI
877
CCXXXVII
886
CCXXXVIII
892
CCXXXIX
898
CCXL
904
CCXLI
910
CCXLII
917
CCXLIII
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About the author (2007)

Henry Fielding, 1707 - 1754 A succcessful playwright in his twenties, Henry Fielding turned to the study of law and then to journalism, fiction, and a judgeship after his Historical Register, a political satire on the Walpole government, contributed to the censorship of plays that put him out of business. As an impoverished member of the upper classes, he knew the country squires and the town nobility; as a successful young playwright, the London jet set; as a judge at the center of London, the city's thieves, swindlers, petty officials, shopkeepers, and vagabonds. As a political journalist (editor-author of The Champion, 1739-1741; The True Patriot, 1745-1746; The Jacobite's Journal, 1747-1748; The Covent-Garden Journal, 1752), he participated in argument and intrigue over everything from London elections to national policy. He knowledgeably attacked and defended a range of politicians, from ward heelers to the Prince of Wales. When Fielding undertook writing prose fiction to ridicule the simple morality of Pamela by Samuel Richardson, he first wrote the hilarious burlesque Shamela (1741). However, he soon found himself considering all the forces working on humans, and in Joseph Andrews (1742) (centering on his invented brother of Pamela), he played with the patterns of Homer, the Bible, and Cervantes to create what he called "a comic epic poem in prose." His preface describing this new art form is one of the major documents in literary criticism of the novel. Jonathan Wild, a fictional rogue biography of a year later, plays heavily with ironic techniques that leave unsettled Fielding's great and recurring theme: the difficulty of uniting goodness, or an outflowing love of others, with prudence in a world where corrupted institutions support divisive pride rather than harmony and self-fulfillment. In his masterpiece Tom Jones (1749), Fielding not only faces this issue persuasively but also shows for the first time the possibility of bringing a whole world into an artistic unity, as his model Homer had done in verse. Fielding develops a coherent and centered sequence of events-something Congreve had done casually on a small scale in Incognita 60 years before. In addition he also relates the plot organically to character and theme, by which he gives us a vision of the archetypal good person (Tom) on a journey toward understanding. Every act by every character in the book reflects the special and typical psychology of that character and the proper moral response. In Tom Jones, Fielding affirms the existence of an order under the surface of chaos. In his last novel, Amelia (1751), which realistically examines the misery of London, he can find nothing reliable except the prudent good heart, and that only if its possessor escapes into the country. Fielding based the title character on his second wife, with whom he was deeply in love. However, ill himself, still saddened by the deaths of his intensely loved first wife and daughter, and depressed by a London magistrate's endless toil against corruption, Fielding saw little hope for goodness in that novel or in his informal Journal of a Voyage to Lisbon (1755). Shortly after traveling to Lisbon for his health, Fielding died at the age of 47, having proved to his contemporaries and successors that the lowly novel was capable of the richest achievements of art.

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