The Angel and the Author, and Others
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By Jerome K. Jerome 9 Jan, 2020
There is plenty of humour and plenty of good sense in this volume, Mr. Jerome can make fun in a pleasant fashion of oddities among others and among our- selves. Sometimes he can sound a sterner note. "One lady of my acquaintance," he writes, "is a Po ... Read more
There is plenty of humour and plenty of good sense in this volume, Mr. Jerome can make fun in a pleasant fashion of oddities among others and among our- selves. Sometimes he can sound a sterner note. "One lady of my acquaintance," he writes, "is a Poor Law Guardian and secretary to a labour bureau. But then she runs a house with two servants, four children and a husband, and appears to be so used to bothers that she would feel herself lost without them. You can do this kind of work apparently even when you are bothered with a home. It is the skirt dancing and the poker work that cannot brook rivalry." On the other hand, we have some pleasant laughter about German red-tape. The traveller wants to register a letter in a post-office as big as the Bank of England. He sees " Registration " over a wicket and thinks he has found the right place among a dozen. "Name and address ?" asks the official. He is a little confused. "Name of mother ? " He cannot remember. She has been dead twenty years. "When did it die ? " "What die ? " he asks. "The child." "What child ? " He explains that he wants to register a letter. And the wicket is sharply shut. A very readable volume. Less
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  • Print pages
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  • ISBN
  • 123.3 KB
  • 270
  • Public Domain Book
  • English
  • 978-0469507081
Jerome Klapka Jerome (2 May 1859 – 14 June 1927) was an English writer and humorist, best known for the comic travelogue Three Men in a Boat (1889). Other works include the essay collections Idle...
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