Social England : a record of the progress of the people in religion, laws, learning, arts, industry, commerce, science, literature and manners, from the earliest times to the present day . IIEXRY FIELDIXG (AFTER AV. HOGARTH). (.From Murphys edition of Fieldings irorls. ITVi.) But all are in their several ways true to it; and all expound itin a way which had been hitherto thought the province of thepoet alone. From our special point of view, moreover, there is an interest 346 AX Eli A OF XEW EErARTURES. (1742 Their jq these men and their work which is positivolv new. HiLhcrto Works * Keai


Social England : a record of the progress of the people in religion, laws, learning, arts, industry, commerce, science, literature and manners, from the earliest times to the present day . IIEXRY FIELDIXG (AFTER AV. HOGARTH). (.From Murphys edition of Fieldings irorls. ITVi.) But all are in their several ways true to it; and all expound itin a way which had been hitherto thought the province of thepoet alone. From our special point of view, moreover, there is an interest 346 AX Eli A OF XEW EErARTURES. (1742 Their jq these men and their work which is positivolv new. HiLhcrto Works * Keai Life, ^ve have had to construct the hfe and the men of the times In amore or less laborious process. The historian has not, up to thistime, condescended to give us more than scraps of information;the satirist, valuable in his way, is not so much suspected asconvicted of exaggeration: the dramatist not so much believedas known to be guilty of it likewise. That there is some ex-aggeration in Richardson and Fielding, nuich in Sterne andSmollett is, of course, not so much probable as certain. Youmight have had to go a long way {cir. 1750) before tinding anexact Squire AVestern or an e


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