Popular Culture Review Vol. 3, No. 2, August 1992 | Page 10

The Popular Culture Review accidentally caught him at it, th a t" . . . I, a Master of the Universe, a young man still in the season of the rising sap, deserve more from time to time, when the spirit moves me," (13), and then again later, he rationalizes his infidelity by suggesting that "it had no moral dimension" (55). In a rather patronizing statement, R. Z. Sheppard has written that "