Londoner's Post: Letters to Gog and MagogHutchinson, 1952 - 174 pages |
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Page 18
... described was real that all his " affections and passions got twined and knotted up in it " . " I am in regular , ferocious excitement . . fierce to finish in a spirit bearing some affinity to those of truth and mercy , and to shame the ...
... described was real that all his " affections and passions got twined and knotted up in it " . " I am in regular , ferocious excitement . . fierce to finish in a spirit bearing some affinity to those of truth and mercy , and to shame the ...
Page 19
... described the Cratchits ' goose and plum pudding he became what Dickens only has been in our literature , the perfect writer of Christmas Books . The truth is that Dickens loved Christmas . He loved the noise and feasting , the ...
... described the Cratchits ' goose and plum pudding he became what Dickens only has been in our literature , the perfect writer of Christmas Books . The truth is that Dickens loved Christmas . He loved the noise and feasting , the ...
Page 58
... described so many of his naughti- nesses suggests that he thought only of entertaining his old age privately with ancient secrets . At any rate , Pepys was the great diarist ; although he pictured much of his age he concentrated upon ...
... described so many of his naughti- nesses suggests that he thought only of entertaining his old age privately with ancient secrets . At any rate , Pepys was the great diarist ; although he pictured much of his age he concentrated upon ...
Contents
WHY READ THE CLASSICS? Page | 9 |
DICKENS AND THACKERAY AT CHRISTMAS | 15 |
MARY RUSSELL MITFORD | 21 |
Copyright | |
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A. E. W. Mason admire American amusing Arnold Bennett asked became born Boswell Butler Byron called character Christmas classics Coleridge conversation critical Defoe delightful diary Dickens E. V. Lucas England English everything eyes fact familiar essay fashion father feel friends genius George Saintsbury gift go-cart H. M. TOMLINSON Hazlitt heart Hume Nisbet humour intellectual J. M. Barrie James Northcote Jane Austen Jerry Owen Johnson Journal knew known Lady Lamb language laugh learned letter-writers letters literary literature lived look Mary Mitford matter mind Mitford modern never novel novelist once perhaps person poems poetry poets political published re-read readers Robinson romance Saintsbury Scott sense slippers sometimes story style sure Sydney Smith talk tell Thackeray thing thought told Tomlinson true truth Turgenev Victorians Walpole William Hazlitt wish words Wordsworth write written wrote young author