isons, or to
any other conclusion equally reasonable and unimportant. These things
have no colour of the great man's character. But on the subject of the
English Sunday he does stand for his own philosophy. He stands for a
particular view, remote at present both from Liberals and Conservatives.
He was, in a conscious sense, the first of its spokesmen. He was in
every sense the last.
In his appeal for the pleasures of the people, Dickens has remained
alone. The pleasures of the people have now no defender, Radical or
Tory. The Tories despise the people. The Radicals despise the pleasures.
THE END
+--------------------------------------------------------------+
| Transcriber's Notes and Errata |
| |
| The Illustrations have been moved to between chapters. |
| |
| The following typographical errors have been corrected: |
| |
| |Error |Correction | |
| |a dupe and who was |a dupe who was | |
| |pyschology |psychology | |
| |Similiarly |Smilarly | |
| |
| The following words were found in both hyphenated and |
| un-hyphenated forms in the text. The numbers in parentheses |
| show the number of times each form occurred. |
| |
| |framework (3) |frame-work (1) | |
| |cocksure (2) |cock-sure (2) | |
| |Ironmaster (1) |Iron-master (2) | |
| |footprints (1) |foot-prints (1) | |
| |goodwill (1) |good-will (1) | |
| |
+--------------------------------------------------------------+
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Appreciations and Criticisms of the
Works of Charles Dickens, by G. K. Chesterton
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