Home
The Woman's Labour: An Epistle to Mr Stephen Duck; Published Here With The Thresher's Labour by Stephen Duck and Other Poems by Mary Collier
Barnes and Noble
The Woman's Labour: An Epistle to Mr Stephen Duck; Published Here With The Thresher's Labour by Stephen Duck and Other Poems by Mary Collier
Current price: $9.99


Barnes and Noble
The Woman's Labour: An Epistle to Mr Stephen Duck; Published Here With The Thresher's Labour by Stephen Duck and Other Poems by Mary Collier
Current price: $9.99
Size: OS
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
Eighteenth-century poetry was dominated by men of education and wealth, and bookcases sagged under the weight of volumes by Swift, Johnson and Pope. When Stephen Duck's
The Thresher's Labour
was published in 1730, however, it was a sensation - highlighting the plight of the working class in verse was hereto simply unthought of. Duck's poem came to the attention of Mary Collier, a washerwoman working in Hampshire, who was astounded to read Duck's dismissal of women as work-shy layabouts who indulged in 'noisy prattle', and she penned a stinging riposte,
The Woman's Labour
, which reframed Duck's relation of harvest-time toil from a woman's perspective. This edition of
seeks to give a wider view of the conversation, and includes
, 'The Three Wise Sentences' (which Collier included in the first publication of her reply), 'An Epistolary Answer to an Exciseman Who Doubted Her Being the Author' and the elegy she wrote for Stephen Duck after he died. 'Collier's writing... represents an instance of resistance to oppression both gendered and class-based.' - Donna Landry,
The Muses of Resistance
The Thresher's Labour
was published in 1730, however, it was a sensation - highlighting the plight of the working class in verse was hereto simply unthought of. Duck's poem came to the attention of Mary Collier, a washerwoman working in Hampshire, who was astounded to read Duck's dismissal of women as work-shy layabouts who indulged in 'noisy prattle', and she penned a stinging riposte,
The Woman's Labour
, which reframed Duck's relation of harvest-time toil from a woman's perspective. This edition of
seeks to give a wider view of the conversation, and includes
, 'The Three Wise Sentences' (which Collier included in the first publication of her reply), 'An Epistolary Answer to an Exciseman Who Doubted Her Being the Author' and the elegy she wrote for Stephen Duck after he died. 'Collier's writing... represents an instance of resistance to oppression both gendered and class-based.' - Donna Landry,
The Muses of Resistance