Political Pamphlets by George Saintsbury
page 28 of 242 (11%)
page 28 of 242 (11%)
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they are upon more equal terms, and, for that very reason, it is
fitter for them now to be reconciled. Our disunion is not only a reproach, but a danger to us. Those who believe in modern miracles have more right, or at least more excuse, to neglect all secular caution; but for us, it is as justifiable to have no religion as wilfully to throw away the human means of preserving it.--I am, Dear Sir, your most affectionate humble Servant, T.W. II.--'THE SHORTEST WAY WITH THE DISSENTERS' BY DANIEL DEFOE (_Defoe wrote an enormous number of pamphlets; for great part of his life he might almost have been described as a pamphleteer pure and simple. In the vast lists of publications which his biographers and bibliographers have compiled, partly by industry and partly by imagination, by far the larger number of entries is of the pamphlet kind. Indeed, as most people know, Defoe did not take to the composition of the fiction which has made his name famous till very late in life. Born in the year 1661, he began pamphleteering when he was scarcely of age, and continued in that way (with occasional excursions into work larger in scale, but not very different in style or matter) for nearly forty years before the publication of _Robinson Crusoe_. His two most famous and most effective pamphlets were the so-called _Legion Letter_ and _The Shortest Way with the Dissenters_ (given here), to which may perhaps be added the _Reasons against War |
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