SwiftHarvester Press, 1986 - 153 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 73
... truth ' of his first draft at all . We acknowledge the same sense of erasure if we turn to the Prefaces of Robinson Crusoe or Moll Flanders ( 1722 ) after reading the main text . For Crusoe we discover that the aim of the whole has not ...
... truth ' of his first draft at all . We acknowledge the same sense of erasure if we turn to the Prefaces of Robinson Crusoe or Moll Flanders ( 1722 ) after reading the main text . For Crusoe we discover that the aim of the whole has not ...
Page 74
... truth not uncovered it . Indeed , when Gulliver declares that ' nothing but an extreme Love of Truth ' led him to disclose such observations critical of European Life ( XI : 133 ) , the net effect is to increase the force of such ...
... truth not uncovered it . Indeed , when Gulliver declares that ' nothing but an extreme Love of Truth ' led him to disclose such observations critical of European Life ( XI : 133 ) , the net effect is to increase the force of such ...
Page 74
... truth not uncovered it . Indeed , when Gulliver declares that ' nothing but an extreme Love of Truth ' led him to disclose such observations critical of European Life ( XI : 133 ) , the net effect is to increase the force of such ...
... truth not uncovered it . Indeed , when Gulliver declares that ' nothing but an extreme Love of Truth ' led him to disclose such observations critical of European Life ( XI : 133 ) , the net effect is to increase the force of such ...
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