No writer can be fully convicted of imitation except there is a concurrence of more resemblance than can be imagined to have happened by chance; as where the same ideas are conjoined without any natural series or necessary coherence, or where not only the thought but the words are copied.


The Rambler.... (ed. 1763)


No writer can be fully convicted of imitation except there is a concurrence of more resemblance than can be imagined to have happened by chance; as...

No writer can be fully convicted of imitation except there is a concurrence of more resemblance than can be imagined to have happened by chance; as...

No writer can be fully convicted of imitation except there is a concurrence of more resemblance than can be imagined to have happened by chance; as...

No writer can be fully convicted of imitation except there is a concurrence of more resemblance than can be imagined to have happened by chance; as...