Template:RQ:De Quincey Works
Appearance
1853–1860, Thomas De Quincey, De Quincey’s Works, London: James Hogg & Sons, →OCLC:
- The following documentation is located at Template:RQ:De Quincey Works/documentation. [edit]
- Useful links: subpage list • links • redirects • transclusions • errors (parser/module) • sandbox
Usage
[edit]This template may be used in Wiktionary entries to format quotations from a collection of Thomas De Quincey's works entitled De Quincey's Works (1st edition, 1853–1860, 14 volumes); some volumes were also published under the title Selections Grave and Gay. It can be used to create a link to online versions of the work at Google Books:
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Title | First page number |
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Volume II | |
Laxton | page 7 |
The Priory | page 64 |
Early Memorials of Grasmere (September 1839) | page 109 |
Samuel Taylor Coleridge (September–November 1834; January 1835) | page 146 |
William Wordsworth (January, February, April 1839) | page 231 |
William Wordsworth and Robert Southey (July 1839) | page 319 |
Volume III | |
The Spanish Military Nun | page 3 |
The Last Days of Immanuel Kant | page 99 |
System of the Heavens as Revealed by Lord Rosse’s Telescopes | page 167 |
Joan of Arc. In Reference to M. Michelet’s History of France. | page 206 |
The Casuistry of Roman Meals | page 246 |
Modern Superstition | page 287 |
Volume IV | |
Explanatory Notices | page v |
On Murder, Considered as One of the Fine Arts | page 1 |
Revolt of the Tartars; or, Flight of the Kalmuck Khan and His People from the Russian Territories to the Frontiers of China | page 111 |
Dialogues of Three Templars on Political Economy, Chiefly in Relation to the Principles of Mr [David] Ricardo | page 176 |
On War | page 258 |
The English Mail-coach (October and December 1849) | page 287 |
Volume VI | |
Preface | page i |
Percy Bysshe Shelley | page 1 |
Whiggism in Its Relations to Literature (June 1831) | page 30 |
Oliver Goldsmith | page 194 |
On Wordsworth’s Poetry | page 234 |
John Keats (April 1846) | page 269 |
Homer and the Homeridæ (October 1841) | page 289 |
Volume IX | |
Prefatory Notice | page vii |
Alexander Pope | page 1 |
Theory of Greek Tragedy (February 1840) | page 54 |
Language | page 76 |
French and English Manners | page 98 |
Charles Lamb | page 108 |
Philosophy of Herodotus | page 161 |
Plato’s Republic | page 212 |
Sortilege and Astrology | page 260 |
Notes on Walter Savage Landor (February 1847) | page 260 |
Volume XI | |
Prefatory Memoranda | page v |
The Incognito; or, Count Fitz-Hum (1823) | page 1 |
Rhetoric (December 1828) | page 21 |
Life of Milton (1830–1831) | page 79 |
The Revolution of Greece | page 99 |
Style (1840) | page 158 |
The Dice | page 293 |
Volume XII | |
Prefatory Note | page v |
Ceylon (November 1843) | page 1 |
The King of Hayti. From the German. (By F. Laun [pseudonym]) | page 39 |
Coleridge and Opium-eating (January 1845) | page 71 |
Toilette of the Hebrew Lady. Exhibited in Six Scenes. | page 112 |
National Temperance Movements | page 146 |
Milton versus Southey and Landor | page 176 |
The Fatal Marksman | page 199 |
On Christianity as an Organ of Political Movement | page 234 |
Notes on Gilfillan’s Literary Portraits. Godwin—Foster—Hazlitt. | page 280 |
Falsification of English History | page 313 |
Volume XIV | |
Note by the Publishers | page 7 |
Letters to a Young Man whose Education has been Neglected | page 9 |
Orthographic Mutineers. With a Special Reference to the Works of Walter Savage Landor. | page 95 |
John Paul Frederick Richter | page 113 |
Conversation | page 150 |
Presence of Mind: A Fragment | page 180 |
On the Knocking at the Gate in Macbeth | page 192 |
The Antigone of Sophocles as Represented on the Edinburgh Stage | page 199 |
Traditions of the Rabbins | page 234 |
Modern Greece | page 288 |
Where a specific quotation template exists (for example, {{RQ:De Quincey Opium-Eater}}
), use it instead of this template.
Parameters
[edit]The template takes the following parameters:
|1=
or|volume=
– mandatory: the volume number quoted from in uppercase Roman numerals, from|volume=I
to|volume=XIV
.|2=
or|chapter=
, and/or|chaptername=
–- If specifying the page number causes the template to indicate the title quoted from, use
|2=
or|chapter=
to specify the chapter number quoted from in uppercase Roman numerals, and/or|chaptername=
to specify the name of the chapter. - Otherwise, use
|2=
or|chapter=
to specify the title quoted from.
- If specifying the page number causes the template to indicate the title quoted from, use
|letter=
– if quoting from "Letters to a Young Man whose Education has been Neglected" in volume XIV, the letter number quoted from in uppercase Roman numerals.|subchapter=
– the name of the subchapter quoted from, if any.|section=
– a section number quoted from in uppercase Roman numerals, followed by the name of the section in parentheses.|3=
or|page=
, or|pages=
– mandatory: the page number(s) quoted from in Arabic or lowercase Roman numerals, as the case may be. If quoting a range of pages, note the following:- Separate the first and last page number of the range with an en dash, like this:
|pages=10–11
or|pages=x–xi
. - You must also use
|pageref=
to indicate the page to be linked to (usually the page on which the Wiktionary entry appears).
- Separate the first and last page number of the range with an en dash, like this:
- This parameter must be specified to have the template determine the name of the chapter quoted from in some cases, and to link to an online version of the work.
|4=
,|text=
, or|passage=
– the passage to be quoted.|footer=
– a comment on the passage quoted.|brackets=
– use|brackets=on
to surround a quotation with brackets. This indicates that the quotation either contains a mere mention of a term (for example, “some people find the word manoeuvre hard to spell”) rather than an actual use of it (for example, “we need to manoeuvre carefully to avoid causing upset”), or does not provide an actual instance of a term but provides information about related terms.
Examples
[edit]- Wikitext:
{{RQ:De Quincey Works|volume=I|chapter=The Female Infidel|section=footnote *|page=131|passage=[A] married couple, when celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of their marriage-day, are said to keep their ''golden'' '''jubilee''', but on the 25th anniversary they have credit only for a ''silver'' '''jubilee'''.}}
; or{{RQ:De Quincey Works|I|The Female Infidel|section=footnote *|131|[A] married couple, when celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of their marriage-day, are said to keep their ''golden'' '''jubilee''', but on the 25th anniversary they have credit only for a ''silver'' '''jubilee'''.}}
- Result:
- 1853, Thomas De Quincey, “The Female Infidel”, in Autobiographic Sketches (De Quincey’s Works; I), London: James Hogg & Sons, →OCLC, footnote *, page 131:
- [A] married couple, when celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of their marriage-day, are said to keep their golden jubilee, but on the 25th anniversary they have credit only for a silver jubilee.
- Wikitext:
{{RQ:De Quincey Works|volume=IX|pages=312–313|pageref=312|passage=[{{w|Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi}} was] pelted with buckets of water by firemen, and, finally, currycombed and rubbed down by two grooms, keeping a sharp '''''susurrus''''' between them, so as to soothe his wounded feelings; {{...}}}}
- Result:
- 1847 February, Thomas De Quincey, “Notes on Walter Savage Landor”, in Leaders in Literature with a Notice of Traditional Errors Affecting Them (De Quincey’s Works; IX), London: James Hogg & Sons, →OCLC, pages 312–313:
- [Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi was] pelted with buckets of water by firemen, and, finally, currycombed and rubbed down by two grooms, keeping a sharp susurrus between them, so as to soothe his wounded feelings; […]
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