
FRANKLIN SQUARE - ENGLISH MEN OF LETTERS. - EDITED BY JOHN MORLEY.
PREFACE.
W.M. - CHAPTER I. - DEFOE'S YOUTH AND EARLY PURSUITS.
CHAPTER II. - KING WILLIAM'S ADJUTANT.
CHAPTER III. - A MARTYR TO DISSENT?
CHAPTER IV. - THE REVIEW OF THE AFFAIRS OF FRANCE.
CHAPTER V. - THE ADVOCATE OF PEACE AND UNION.
CHAPTER VI. - DR. SACHEVERELL, AND THE CHANGE OF GOVERNMENT.
CHAPTER VII. - DIFFICULTIES IN RE-CHANGING SIDES.
CHAPTER VIII. - LATER JOURNALISTIC LABOURS.
A vivid portrait emerges of the man behind the legendary castaway, revealing Daniel Defoe as far more than a novelist. The narrative follows his restless youth in 17th‑century London, his early forays into trade, and the political turbulence that drove him into pamphleteering and secret service work. Through these episodes the reader sees a figure whose energy matched the daring of his fictional heroes, shaping a life marked by rebellion, bankruptcy, and relentless reinvention.
The author weaves together Defoe’s own scattered autobiographical hints with meticulous research, navigating the tangled web of pseudonymous publications that cloud his legacy. By grounding the story in contemporary documents and the surviving corpus of his unmistakable works, the biography offers a clear view of his convictions, literary habits, and the social circles that influenced him. It invites listeners to explore the formative years of a writer whose adventures on paper were only a fraction of his real‑world exploits.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (292K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-02-03
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects
1845–1893
A sharp Scottish critic and teacher, he moved easily between journalism, literary history, and the novel. His work helped Victorian readers make sense of English prose, poetry, and some of the major writers of the period.
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