The Eve of the Revolution
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ced many quotations; but I have also ventured to resort frequently to the literary device (this, I know, gives the whole thing away) of telling the story by means of a rather free paraphrase of what some imagined spectator or participant might have thought or said about the matter in hand. If the critic says that the product of such methods is not history, I am willing to call it by any name that is bett
tions in matters of detail; and I would gladly mention his name if it could be supposed that an historian of establ
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