The Glory and the Shame of England, المجلد 2Bentley, 1841 |
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الصفحة 6
... expressed a desire to know something of the history of his authorship , at the same time saying that , of course , I did not expect him to communicate to a stranger anything he would not freely make known to the world . " Oh , sir 6 ...
... expressed a desire to know something of the history of his authorship , at the same time saying that , of course , I did not expect him to communicate to a stranger anything he would not freely make known to the world . " Oh , sir 6 ...
الصفحة 11
... expressed by foreigners of your works , that we have so long cherished . No man has done so much to win from the European world respect for our literature as yourself ; and for it you deserve our gratitude . It is in the memory of many ...
... expressed by foreigners of your works , that we have so long cherished . No man has done so much to win from the European world respect for our literature as yourself ; and for it you deserve our gratitude . It is in the memory of many ...
الصفحة 13
... expression when he is engaged in an interest- ing conversation . There is something about his eyes at such times which cannot be copied . In person he is perhaps a little above the standard height ; but his bearing is noble , and he ...
... expression when he is engaged in an interest- ing conversation . There is something about his eyes at such times which cannot be copied . In person he is perhaps a little above the standard height ; but his bearing is noble , and he ...
الصفحة 14
... expression from every passing object ; and you can always see wit , half sleeping in ambush around them , when it is not shooting its wonted fires . Dickens has almost made us feel that " Wit is the pupil of the soul's clear eye , And ...
... expression from every passing object ; and you can always see wit , half sleeping in ambush around them , when it is not shooting its wonted fires . Dickens has almost made us feel that " Wit is the pupil of the soul's clear eye , And ...
الصفحة 15
... expressed , on leaving , the hope that little Nelly ( in whose fate I confessed I felt a deeper interest than in that of most real characters ) might , after all her wanderings , find a quiet and happy home . " The same hope , " he ...
... expressed , on leaving , the hope that little Nelly ( in whose fate I confessed I felt a deeper interest than in that of most real characters ) might , after all her wanderings , find a quiet and happy home . " The same hope , " he ...
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abolitionists Almack's American aristocracy beautiful better bless bread Britain British British empire British India Campbell character Charles Dickens Chartists cheerful Christian civilized conversation corn corn-laws cotton countrymen deep Dickens duty earth East India Company EDWARDS LESTER empire enemies England English English peasant enthusiasm eyes famine favour feel friends genius glorious grain grievance Hall hand hear heard heart Heaven honour human interest Ireland Irish labour land less liberty live London Lord Brougham manufactures meet ment millions mingled missionaries nation native ness never Nicholas Nickleby noble O'Connell Oliver Cromwell oppression Parliament passed persons Pickwick Papers poor present produce racter reform repeal Repeal Association scenes shillings slave slavery speak speech spirit starving suffering suppose tell thing thousands tion week wheat Whigs whole wild witnessed words wretched write