Author:  Daniel Defoe
Viewed: 22 - Published at: 8 years ago

It is for this reason that I have so largely set down the particulars of the caresses I was treated with by the jeweller, and also by this prince; not to make the story an incentive to the vice, which I am now such a sorrowful penitent for being guilty of {God forbid any should make so vile a use of so good a design}, but to draw the just picture of a man enslaved to the rage of his vicious appetite; how he defaces the image of God in his soul, dethrones his reason, causes conscience to abdicate the possession, and exalts sense into the vacant throne; how he deposes the man and exalts the brute.

( Daniel Defoe )
[ The Fortunate Mistress (Parts ]
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