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Being An Attempted Solution Of The Mystery Based On Dickens'
Manuscript And Memoranda.
Being An Attempted Solution Of The Mystery Based On Dickens'
Manuscript And Memoranda.
In chapter two of The Pickwick Papers we get a further glimpse of
the inn, centring in a more exhilarating and epoch-making incident.
The Pickwickians were to start on their memorable peregrinations
from the "Golden Cross" for Rochester by the famous "Commodore"
coach; and Mr. Pickwick having hired a cabriolet in the
neighbourhood of his lodgings in Goswell Street arrived at the
hotel in order to meet his friends for the purpose.
In chapter two of The Pickwick Papers we get a further glimpse of
the inn, centring in a more exhilarating and epoch-making incident.
The Pickwickians were to start on their memorable peregrinations
from the "Golden Cross" for Rochester by the famous "Commodore"
coach; and Mr. Pickwick having hired a cabriolet in the
neighbourhood of his lodgings in Goswell Street arrived at the
hotel in order to meet his friends for the purpose.
This curious literary artifact is a travelogue of sorts, a
guidebook to the real inns and taverns mentioned in Charles
Dickens' first novel, The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club,
or, more familiarly, The Pickwick Papers. The 1836-7 comic serial
was a phenomenon in its day, and was, in the mind of Dickens
scholar BERTRAM WALDROM MATZ (1865-1925), "England's classic book
of humor." Here, with a singular dedication and a hearty charm,
Matz-one of the founders of the Dickens Fellowship and the first
editor of its journal, The Dickensian, which first appeared in 1905
and is still published today-takes us on a tour of such locations
as the Blue Lion in Muggleton, the Marquis of Granby in Dorking,
the Magpie and Stump in Whitechapel, the Saracen's Head in
Towcester, and other places that will be familiar to Pickwick fans.
This replica of the 1922 second edition is a delightful document of
literary fandom.
In chapter two of The Pickwick Papers we get a further glimpse of
the inn, centring in a more exhilarating and epoch-making incident.
The Pickwickians were to start on their memorable peregrinations
from the "Golden Cross" for Rochester by the famous "Commodore"
coach; and Mr. Pickwick having hired a cabriolet in the
neighbourhood of his lodgings in Goswell Street arrived at the
hotel in order to meet his friends for the purpose.
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