SwiftHarvester Press, 1986 - 153 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 67
... perhaps religious ) with his own kith and kind ( XI : 289-90 ) . This train of political analogising obviously breaks down . Swift's Country Toryism expresses itself in wider terms than in a political allegory , where each satirical ...
... perhaps religious ) with his own kith and kind ( XI : 289-90 ) . This train of political analogising obviously breaks down . Swift's Country Toryism expresses itself in wider terms than in a political allegory , where each satirical ...
Page 73
... perhaps not without Justice , accused ' ( XI : 94 ) . Gulliver is , after all , an artist . The reader cannot receive the unvarnished ' truth ' of his first draft at all . We acknowledge the same sense of erasure if we turn to the ...
... perhaps not without Justice , accused ' ( XI : 94 ) . Gulliver is , after all , an artist . The reader cannot receive the unvarnished ' truth ' of his first draft at all . We acknowledge the same sense of erasure if we turn to the ...
Page 98
... perhaps ' this land of slaves / Where all are fools , and all are knaves ' ( Ireland [ 1727 ] , 11. 1-2 , p . 330 ) was not worth it . Swift's private misgivings eroded his public professions constantly ; the intensity with which this ...
... perhaps ' this land of slaves / Where all are fools , and all are knaves ' ( Ireland [ 1727 ] , 11. 1-2 , p . 330 ) was not worth it . Swift's private misgivings eroded his public professions constantly ; the intensity with which this ...
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