eBooks - Literature - Classics - James Fenimore Cooper - The Monikins
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| My ancestor in the male line hesitated to reply, for, hitherto, his ideas had been confined to the profits; never having dared to lift his thoughts as high as that source from which he could not but see they flowed in a very ample stream; but thrown upon himself by so unexpected a question, and being quick at figures, after adding ten per cent. to the sum which he knew the last year had given as the net avail of their joint ingenuity, he named the amount, in answered to the interrogatory. | |||||
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This is a classic novel by one of America's most admired writers. This is just one of hundreds of classic, inspirational, and reference works publishing by Packard Technologies. We are publishing dozens of new ebooks for the Mobipocket Reader every week. So, check back often to see what's new. Check out these other great works (hundreds of volumes): |
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| Described in the introduction as a manuscript sent to the author in Geneva, Switzerland, by a Viscount Householder in gratitude for the author's having saved the Viscount's beautiful wife from accidental death, this novel uses the framework of a south-polar voyage to two unknown countries, Leaphigh [markedly similar in its institutions to England] and Leaplow [singularly like the United States in its principles and practices], to satirize the social, political, and judicial systems of the two Western countries. The "voyage" appears to have been imaginary, the product of the manuscript writer's delirium during an illness in Paris, but the points made are indelible ones. The first-person narrative device [in the voice of John Goldencalf, Viscount of Householder] adds verisimilitude to the account. | |||||
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eBooks - Titles - Authors - Literature - Classics - James Fenimore Cooper - The Monikins