I had fallen into no unconscious repetitions, I read ' David Copperfield ' again the other day, and was affected by it to a degree you would hardly believe. Dickens - Page 163by Sir Adolphus William Ward - 1882 - 224 pagesFull view - About this book
| John Forster - 1874 - 616 pages
...encouraged me. To be quite sure I had fallen into no unconscious repetitions, I read David Cofperficld again the other day, and was affected by it to a degree you would hardly believe." It may be doubted if Dickens could better have established his right to the front rank among novelists... | |
| John Forster - 1874 - 616 pages
...conception that first encouraged me. To be quite sure I had fallen into no unconscious repe^ titions, I read David Copperfield again the other day, and...affected by it to a degree you would hardly believe." It may be doubted if Dickens could better have established his right to the fronlt rank among novelists... | |
| John Forster - 1874 - 586 pages
...had fallen into no unconboy-chil>B ' scious repetitions, I read David Copperfield again the Beading 'other day, and was affected by it to a degree you would again!'"' ' hardly believe.' LONDON : perfectly distinct the two stories of a boy's childhood, both... | |
| Sir Adolphus William Ward - 1882 - 244 pages
...world of a child's mind. " To be quite sure," he wrote to Forster, " I had fallen into no unconscious repetitions, I read David Copperfield again the other...description, nothing in Dickens surpasses the earlier chapters of Great Expectations; and equally excellent is the narrative of Pip's disloyalty of heart... | |
| Austin Dobson - 1905 - 700 pages
...unconscious repetitions, I read David Copperfleld again the other day, and was affected by it to •, degree you would hardly believe." His fears were unnecessary...description, nothing in Dickens surpasses the earlier chapters of (/;•(••// Expectations ; and equally excellent is the narrative of Pip's disloyalty... | |
| Charles Dickens - 1895 - 708 pages
...encouraged me. To l,e quite sure I had fallen into no unconscious repetitions, I read David Col,perfield again the other day, and was affected by it to a degree you would hardly believe." INTRODUCTION. XV nineteen, in the fifth volume, the 3d of August, 18(51. The history of the book during... | |
| Charles Dickens - 1899 - 602 pages
...encouraged me. To be quite sure I had fallen into no uncon' scious repetitions, I read David Copperfidd again the other day, ' and was affected by it to a degree you would hardly believe.' It may be doubted if Dickens could better have established his right to the front rank among novelists... | |
| Charles Dickens - 1904 - 674 pages
...tragi-comic conception that first encouraged me. To be quite sure I had fallen into no unconscious repetitions, I read David Copperfield again the other...affected by it to a degree you would hardly believe." The first instalment of Great Expectations appeared in number eighty -four in the fourth volume of... | |
| Sir Frank Thomas Marzials - 1908 - 600 pages
...world of a child's mind. " To be quite sure," he wrote to Forster, " I had fallen into no unconscious repetitions, I read ' David Copperfield ' again the...description, nothing in Dickens surpasses the earlier chapters of " Great Expectations " ; and equally excellent is the narrative of Pip's disloyalty of... | |
| Robert Farquharson Sharp - 1900 - 566 pages
...be quite sure he had fallen into no unconscious repetition, he had been re-reading David Copperfidd, and " was affected by it to a degree you would hardly believe". The next seven or eight years of his life were without much incident save such as came in the course... | |
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