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The Pilgrimage of Pure Devotion by Desiderius Erasmus

D >> Desiderius Erasmus >> The Pilgrimage of Pure Devotion

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God saue the kynge

FINIS.


* * * * *

[Corrected Errors:
_v_ = verso (back of page)

[+] iiij.
the pryuate iudgmegt of certayne
_was_ iudgmegt

[+] v.
cosolacyo of his gracys faythfull and true comens
_was_ ofh is

[+] v. _v_
prudently
_was_ prudenly, but catchword has _prudently_

[+] vi.
but also (to theyr greate laude and prayse)
_was_ prayse(

[+] vi. _v_
Desiderius Erasmus
_was_ Dsiderius Erasmus

B
Whan he lokythe to the West
_was_ te West

D iij. _v_
to the company of the wykyd sowdyeres
_was_ compauy

D v.
Frome thens we returnyd in to the quere
_was_ returuyd

E ij. _v_
Me semede he was a man bothe vertuous and wyse
word _a_ printed only as catchword

E viij.
I haue saylede ouer a ryuer to hell
_was_ ot


Additional Problems:

[+] iiij.
to use theme as goddes
_u_ printed for _v_
whervpon thes brotherhoddes and systerhoodes
_v_ printed for _u_
A Good morow Ogygyus. / Good morow to you Menedemus.
change of speaker not marked

C v.
_Ogy._ No veryly. What lettythe thaym? _Ogy._ That is
a name of dygnyte and nat of relygyo.
change of speaker not marked

E ij. _v_
What do I here? the vilest part and worst was golde,
change of speaker unclear






Pages:
1 | 2
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Fidel and Che: a revolutionary friendship
Articles published by guardian.co.uk Books

Despite red faces over its fictional content, the Holocaust memoir that impressed Oprah Winfrey is still to be published
When Argentinian doctor Che Guevara and Cuban lawyer Fidel Castro met in Mexico City, it was the beginning of a friendship that would change the world. Simon Reid-Henry talks about the contrasting personalities of the leading men in his groundbreaking dual biography, Fidel and Che

Obituary: Donald Westlake

The disputed Holocaust memoir, written by Herman Rosenblat, which was dropped from Penguin Group's publication schedule at the end of December is now set to appear as a work of fiction.

Rosenblat's memoir - which Oprah Winfrey called "the single greatest love story" she had heard in two decades in television - recounted how as a teenage boy in a Nazi concentration camp, he was kept alive by the food which was thrown to him by a young girl, Roma Radzicky. Penguin's US imprint Berkley Books had planned to publish the story, which sees Rosenblat reunited with Radzicky on a blind date years later, as Angel at the Fence: the True Story of a Love That Survived, next month.

But a Holocaust historian said it would have been impossible to approach the fence in the Schlieben concentration camp to throw food over it, concluding that this part of the story was made-up. Berkley initially defended the book, saying it was a work of memory, but then decided to cancel its planned publication, and demanded the return of the advance it had made to Rosenblat. A $25m film based on the book, to be called The Flower of the Fence, is still going ahead, with production due to start this year.

Publisher York House Press based in White Plains, New York, has entered into a tentative agreement with the film production company to publish a novel based on the film script early this spring. It said the book would be "grounded in fact", and would rise "to the proper levels of artistic value, ethical conduct and social responsibility".

A spokesperson for York House Press condemned the attacks which were made on the 80-year-old Rosenblat after the veracity of his story was questioned, describing them as a "savage" response to what was otherwise "a credible, heart-wrenching, and verifiable account" of his time in the concentration camp.

"No deliberate untruth is permissible, but beneath any fabrication is motivation and intent. We believe Mr. Rosenblat's motivations were very human, understandable and forgivable," the spokesperson said. "It is beyond our expertise to know how Holocaust survivors cope with their trauma. Do they deny, try to forget, rationalise or fantasise and promote fiction along with truth? Perhaps the coping mechanisms are as individual as the survivors themselves."

The president of the company producing the film, Harris Salomon from Atlantic Overseas Productions, said the book, "regardless of its shortcomings", would "challenge, educate and enlighten" readers about the horrors of the Holocaust. "The documented fact, acknowledged by his critics, is that Herman is a survivor of concentration camps," he said.

But Rosenblat's agent, Andrea Hurst, said that neither she nor Rosenblat were involved with this version of his story. "Usually book rights from films come out after the movie is released," she told guardian.co.uk. "I think the timing on this is very insensitive."

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