722/1479
[ stop the slideshow ]

Samuel Richardson

richardson.jpg Alain René Le SageThumbnailsJean-Jacques RousseauAlain René Le SageThumbnailsJean-Jacques RousseauAlain René Le SageThumbnailsJean-Jacques RousseauAlain René Le SageThumbnailsJean-Jacques RousseauAlain René Le SageThumbnailsJean-Jacques RousseauAlain René Le SageThumbnailsJean-Jacques Rousseau

Richardson was an author of a kind quite new to English letters—neither a great gentleman like Sidney, nor a roisterer like Greene, nor a fanatic preacher like Bunyan, nor a journalist like Defoe; just a quiet, conscientious, little business man, who, after a duteous apprenticeship, had married his master's daughter like a proper Whittington, and, when she died, had married again, with admirable judgment in each case.