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Eca's English Letters

Part of the From the Portuguese series
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England in the 1880s: the aristocracy stoically endures the tedium of country-bound weeks in winter, when fashion forbids their showing themselves in London.

Lord Beaconsfield's death is mourned - and a national myth is buried.

The Times remains the watchdog of the English conscience.

Abroad, John Bull is sweetly reasonable; Irish rebels must not be allowed to incommode English landlords; Egyptian rebels must by taught to respect their established rulers (and of course, British interests must be safeguarded).

Meanwhile, in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, an obscure young Portuguese consul, Eca de Queiros, writes regular letters to his Brazilian readers, giving a dry, gently amused, if not wholly impartial, account of these and other English activities.

If his facts are sometimes a shade garbled, ad his irony occasionally cruel, his descriptions of peole, places and events are always lively and vigorous. He shows a propoensity for blowing raspberries at our more venerable institutions - the Times he finds incessently amusing - but, read as a corrective to the British propoganda of the period, "Letter from England" provide a vivid glimpse of late-Victorian Britain as an eminently civilized European would have seen it.

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£14.95
Product Details
Carcanet Press Ltd
1857545001 / 9781857545005
Paperback / softback
869.6
26/10/2000
United Kingdom
English
xxiv, 184p.
22 cm
general /undergraduate Learn More