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The protagonist, Tom Jones, is introduced to the reader as a ward of a liberal Somerset squire, appearing a generous but slightly wild and reckless boy. Misfortune, followed by many spirited adventures as he travels to London to seek his fortune, teach Tom wisdom to go with his good-heartedness.
The Second Edition of this Norton Critical Edition of Fielding’s great novel reprints the definitive fourth edition text (1749, dated 1750), "Carefully revis’d and corrected/By Henry Fielding, Esq;", the last in his lifetime.
The novel is fully annotated for undergraduate readers and is accompanied by a Textual Appendix and a map depicting Tom’s route to London.
As in the previous edition, "Contemporary Reactions" by such noteworthy commentators as Samuel Richardson, Samuel Johnson, and the Hill sisters provide rich historical context.
"Criticism" is a collection of fourteen interpretations of the novel spanning the years 1826–1990 by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, William Forsyth, Kenneth Rexroth, R. S. Crane, John Preston, William Empson, Wayne C. Booth, Martin Battestin, Maaja A. Stewart, Eleanor N. Hutchens, Sean Shesgreen, Frederick W. Hilles, and Sheridan Baker.
Preface
The Text of Tom Jones
Textual Appendix
Map of Tom's Route to London
Contemporary Reactions
Captain Lewis Thomas · [A Very Amazing Entertainment]
Astraea and Minerva Hill · [A Double Merit]
Samuel Richardson · [A Very Bad Tendency]
"Orbilius" · An Examen of The History of Tom Jones, A Foundling
Anonymous · [Review of Pierre Antoine de la Place, Histoire de Tom Jones, ou L'Enfant Trouve]
Anonymous · An Essay on the New Species of Writing Founded by Mr. Fielding
Samuel Johnson · [Remarks on Fielding]
Criticism
Samuel Taylor Coleridge · Notes on Tom Jones
· [A Master of Composition]
William Forsyth · Tom Jones, A Favorite of the Ladies
Kenneth Rexroth · Tom Jones
R. S. Crane · The Plot of Tom Jones
John Preston · Plot as Irony: The Reader's Role in Tom Jones
William Empson · Tom Jones
Wayne C. Booth · "Fielding" in Tom Jones
Martin C. Battestin · Fielding's Definition of Wisdom: Some Functions of Ambiguity and Emblem inTom Jones
Maaia A. Stewart · Ingratitude in Tom Jones
Eleanor N. Hutchens · O Attic Shape! The Cornering of Square
Sean Shesgreen · The Moral Function of Thwackum, Square, and Allworthy
Sheridan Baker · Bridget Allworthy: The Creative Pressures of Fielding's Plot
Frederick W. Hilles · Art and Artifice in Tom Jones
Henry Fielding · A Chronology
Selected Bibliography