Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,  TransPre|       humorous creation in all fiction. He was proud, too, of the
 2   I,  TransPre| imaginative sort that liars in fiction commonly indulge in; like
 3   I,  TransPre| creation in the whole range of fiction. That unsmiling gravity
 4   I,       XXX|       invent and concoct it in fiction, I doubt if there be any
 5   I,    XXXIII|    though this may be a poetic fiction it contains a moral lesson
 6   I,     XLVII|      of the kind write them as fiction, and therefore are not bound
 7   I,     XLVII|      truth, I would reply that fiction is all the better the more
 8   I,     XLVII|    there is about it. Plots in fiction should be wedded to the
 9   I,    XLVIII|        if the play is based on fiction and historical facts are
10   I,      XLIX|        the medley of truth and fiction Don Quixote uttered, and
11  II,         I|         I suspect it to be all fiction, fable, and falsehood, and
12  II,        VI|    knights-errant is fable and fiction; and their histories, if
13  II,       XVI|      of the knights-errant are fiction or not."~ ~"Why, is there
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