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Daniel Defoe

defoe.jpg ThumbnailsThéophile GautierThumbnailsThéophile GautierThumbnailsThéophile GautierThumbnailsThéophile GautierThumbnailsThéophile GautierThumbnailsThéophile Gautier

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.