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" I am apt to think, it was to supply such defects as these, that satire was first introduced into the world ; whereby those whom neither religion, nor natural virtue, nor fear of punishment, were able to keep within the bounds of their duty, might be withheld... "
The Works of Dr Jonathan Swift, Dean of St Patrick's, Dublin. In Thirteen ... - Page 113
by Jonathan Swift - 1774
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La Satire en Angleterre de 1588 à 1603

Louis Lecocq (docteur ès lettres.) - English literature - 1969 - 556 pages
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The Augustan Defence of Satire

Peter Kingsley Elkin - Humor - 1973 - 248 pages
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Fiktionalität und Wirklichkeitsbezug: Studien zur satirischen Schreibweise ...

Johann N. Schmidt - 1974 - 300 pages
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Swift's Poetic Worlds

Louise K. Barnett - Literary Criticism - 1981 - 232 pages
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Swift Vs. Mainwaring: The Examiner and the Medley

Frank Hale Ellis - History - 1985 - 610 pages
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Literature and Crime in Augustan England

Ian A. Bell - Crime - 1991 - 250 pages
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New Approaches to the Literary Art of Anne Brontë

Julie Nash, Barbara A. Suess, Barbara Ann Suess - Literary Criticism - 2001 - 272 pages
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The Secret History of Domesticity: Public, Private, and the Division of ...

Michael McKeon - History - 2005 - 1864 pages
...introduced into the World; whereby those whom neither Religion, nor natural Virtue, nor fear of Punishment, were able to keep within the Bounds of their Duty, might be with-held by the Shame of having their Crimes exposed to open View in the strongest of Colours, and themselves rendered...
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John Gay's The Beggar's Opera, 1728-2004: adaptations and re-writings

Uwe Böker, Ines Detmers, Anna-Christina Giovanopoulos - Literary Criticism - 2006 - 349 pages
...Lücken auszufüllen whereby those whom neither Religion, nor natural Virtue, nor fear of Punishment, were able to keep within the Bounds of their Duty, might be withheld by the Shame of having their Crimes expos'd to open View in the strengest Colours, and themselves rendered...
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The Works of D. Jonathan Swift: In Nine Volumes, Volume 5

Jonathan Swift - 1752 - 326 pages
...to think, it was to fupply fuch defects as tb»fe, that fatire was firft introduced into the world : whereby thofe whom neither religion, nor natural virtue,...of having their crimes expofed to open view in the ftiongeft colours, and thuufelves rendered odious to mankind. Perhaps all this may belittle regarded...
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