| Samuel Johnson - 1968 - 400 pages
...be drawn; nor of a narrative, that the train of events is agreeable to observation and experience, for that observation which is called knowledge of...hazard; to teach the means of avoiding the snares which are laid by Treachery for Innocence, without infusing any wish for that superiority with which the... | |
| Bergen Evans - 1968 - 2142 pages
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| 1970 - 970 pages
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| John Walker - 1971 - 384 pages
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| Samuel Johnson - 1973 - 492 pages
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| Samuel Johnson - 1974 - 312 pages
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| John Halperin - 1974 - 422 pages
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