| James John Hissey - 1889 - 472 psl.
...flower show was being held in the town, so that when we drove in to the ample courtyard of the Angel we 291 discovered it to be full of carriages, coachmen,...Manifestly the landlord was in earnest when he made his u 2 remark, and how could we doubt the circumstance of Mr. Pickwick's individuality and his former... | |
| Percy Fitzgerald - 1891 - 392 psl.
...indignant reply, " Fve the very earring linife and fork he ute>l irhen he wat here : ivory mounted they are ; they go with the hotel, and were handed to me when I took it." No other known work of fiction has imparted this extraordinary feeling of reality. «* -. v c. Street... | |
| Bertram Waldrom Matz - 1918 - 414 psl.
...Supposed ! This, sir, is the very inn where he stopped. I've the very carving knife that Mr. Pickwick used when he was here, ivory-mounted they are ; they...the hotel, and were handed to me when I took it." Could Dickens, asks Mr. Hissey, ever have imagined this ? Unfortunately, it did not occur to him to... | |
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