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Jean-Jacques Rousseau

rousseau.jpg Mr. Alderman Abell and Richard Kilvert, the two maine Projectors for Wine, 1641ThumbnailsSamuel RichardsonMr. Alderman Abell and Richard Kilvert, the two maine Projectors for Wine, 1641ThumbnailsSamuel RichardsonMr. Alderman Abell and Richard Kilvert, the two maine Projectors for Wine, 1641ThumbnailsSamuel RichardsonMr. Alderman Abell and Richard Kilvert, the two maine Projectors for Wine, 1641ThumbnailsSamuel RichardsonMr. Alderman Abell and Richard Kilvert, the two maine Projectors for Wine, 1641ThumbnailsSamuel RichardsonMr. Alderman Abell and Richard Kilvert, the two maine Projectors for Wine, 1641ThumbnailsSamuel RichardsonMr. Alderman Abell and Richard Kilvert, the two maine Projectors for Wine, 1641ThumbnailsSamuel Richardson
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Rousseau was the son of a watchmaker, in a day when superiority of intellect in a man of low birth won him either neglect or the most insufferable patronage. His mother died in bearing him, and his father, although he made a second marriage, never mentioned her without tears. He seems to have been a very simple-hearted man, and found such pleasure in romances that he would sit up all night reading them to his little son, going ashamedly to bed in the morning when the swallows began to call in the eaves.

Author
A History of Story-telling
Studies in the development of narrative
By Arthur Ransome
Illustrator: J. Gavin
Published 1909
Available from gutenberg.org
Dimensions
600*933
Keywords
Torso
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