709/1479
[ stop the slideshow ]

Daniel Defoe

defoe.jpg Fanny BurneyThumbnailsSir Philip SidneyFanny BurneyThumbnailsSir Philip SidneyFanny BurneyThumbnailsSir Philip SidneyFanny BurneyThumbnailsSir Philip SidneyFanny BurneyThumbnailsSir Philip SidneyFanny BurneyThumbnailsSir Philip Sidney

With an imagination scarcely less opulent than Bunyan's, Defoe, if he had described a dream, would have managed somehow to make it as short-winded and inconsequent as a real one. He was in love with verisimilitude, and delighted in facts for their own sakes. 'To read Defoe,' wrote Charles Lamb, 'is like hearing evidence in a Court of Justice.' No compliment could have pleased him better.