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Paul Clifford

Paul Clifford

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Number of Chapters: 43

Length: 18 hours and 49 minutes

Language: English

Most men who with some earnestness of mind examine into the mysteries of our social state will perhaps pass through that stage of self-education in which this Novel was composed. The contrast between conventional frauds, received as component parts of the great system of civilization, and the less deceptive invasions of the laws which discriminate the meum from the tuum, is tempting to a satire that is not without its justice. The tragic truths which lie hid in what I may call the Philosophy of Circumstance strike through our philanthropy upon our imagination. We see masses of our fellow-creatures the victims of circumstances over which they had no control,—contaminated in infancy by the example of parents, their intelligence either extinguished or turned against them, according as the conscience is stifled in ignorance or perverted to apologies for vice. A child who is cradled in ignominy, whose schoolmaster is the felon, whose academy is the House of Correction,—who breathes an atmosphere in which virtue is poisoned, to which religion does not pierce,—becomes less a responsible and reasoning human being than a wild beast which we suffer to range in the wilderness, till it prowls near our homes, and we kill it in self-defence.

In this respect the Novel of “Paul Clifford” is a loud cry to society to amend the circumstance,—to redeem the victim. It is an appeal from Humanity to Law. And in this, if it could not pretend to influence or guide the temper of the times, it was at least a foresign of a coming change. Between the literature of imagination, and the practical interests of a people, there is a harmony as complete as it is mysterious. The heart of an author is the mirror of his age. The shadow of the sun is cast on the still surface of literature long before the light penetrates to law; but it is ever from the sun that the shadow falls, and the moment we see the shadow we may be certain of the light. ( Adapted from the Preface)

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Chapter I (Jim Locke)
Chapter II (Jim Locke)
Chapter III (Jim Locke)
Chapter IV (Jim Locke)
Chapter V (Jim Locke)
Chapter VI (Jim Locke)
Chapter VII (Jim Locke)
Chapter VIII (Jim Locke)
Chapter IX, part 1 (Jim Locke)
Chapter IX, part 2 (Jim Locke)
Chapter X (Jim Locke)
Chapter XI, part 1 (Jim Locke)
Chapter XI, part 2 (Jim Locke)
Chapter XII (Jim Locke)
Chapter XIII (Jim Locke)
Chapter XIV (Jim Locke)
Chapter XV, part 1 (Jim Locke)
Chapter XV, part 2 (Jim Locke)
Chapter XVI (Jim Locke)
Chapter XVII (Jim Locke)
Chapter XVIII, part 1 (Jim Locke)
Chapter XVIII, part 2 (Jim Locke)
Chapter XIX (Jim Locke)
Chapter XX (Jim Locke)
Chapter XXI (Jim Locke)
Chapter XXII (Jim Locke)
Chapter XXIII (Jim Locke)
Chapter XXIV (Jim Locke)
Chapter XXV (Jim Locke)
Chapter XXVI, Chapter XXVII (Jim Locke)
Chapter XXVIII (Jim Locke)
Chapter XXIX (Jim Locke)
Chapter XXX (Jim Locke)
Chapter XXXI (Jim Locke)
Chapter XXXII, part 1 (Jim Locke)
Chapter XXXII, part 2 (Jim Locke)
Chapter XXXIII (Jim Locke)
Chapter XXXIV (Jim Locke)
Chapter XXXV, part 1 (Jim Locke)
Chapter XXXV, part 2 (Jim Locke)
Chapter XXXVI (Jim Locke)
Tomlinsoniana, part 1 (Jim Locke)
Tomlinsoniana, part 2 (Jim Locke)
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