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A. W. Kinglake |
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| Author
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Rev. W. Tcikwell
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| Category
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Biography
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| Language
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English
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| Published
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1902
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| Extract
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European life; {6} longed with all his soul for the excitement and stir of
soldiership, from which his shortsightedness debarred him; {7} rushed off again
and again into foreign travel; set out immediately on leaving Cambridge, in
1834, for his first Eastern tour, "to fortify himself for the business
of life." Methley joined him at Hamburg, and they travelled by Berlin,
Dresden, Prague, Vienna, to Semlin, where his book begins. Lord Pollington's
health broke down, and he remained to winter at Corfu, while Kinglake pursued
his way alone, returning to England in October, 1835. {8} On his return he read
for the Chancery Bar along with his friend Eliot Warburton, under Bryan Procter,
a Commissioner of Lunacy, better known by his poet-name, Barry Cornwall; his
acquaintance with both husband and wife ripening into life-long friendship.
Mrs. Procter is the "Lady of Bitterness," cited in the "Eothen"
Preface. As Anne Skepper, before her marriage, she was much admired by Carlyle;
"a brisk witty prettyish clear eye
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