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Arthur Morrison - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Morrison, Arthur. Morrison, Arthur. Information about Morrison, Arthur in the Hutchinson encyclopedia. ... Morrison Remick Waite; Morrison Remick Waite; Morrison Research Initiative; Morrison Road; Morrison Road, Perth; Morrison shelter; Morrison shelter; Morrison shelters;
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A child of the Jago - Morrison, Arthur, 1863-1945; The metadata below describe the original scanning. ... The red triangle, being some further chronicles of Martin Hewitt, investigator - Morrison, Arthur, 1863-1945; The metadata below describe the original scanning.
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Encyclopedia article about Morrison, Arthur. Information about Morrison, Arthur in the Columbia Encyclopedia, Computer Desktop Encyclopedia, computing dictionary. ... Morrison, Arthur, 1863–1945, English novelist. A journalist, he worked on the National Observer for William Ernest Henley.
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Arthur Morrison was born in London. As a youth he became a clerk, then a journalist. Not much of his life is known. In later life he became interested in Japanese prints and began to deal in them professionally. He did well and died a rich man.
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In his introduction to the 1969 edition of A Child of the Jago, P. J. Keating points out that little is known of Arthur Morrison's life before the beginning of his career as an author in the early 1890s and that little is known of his years following his retirement from writing in 1911. The scant facts are that he was...
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It is evidently time that we revised our judgment of Mr. Arthur Morrison. Whilst we have been persistently classing him as a grim and sombre realist, he has been developing into one of the most delightfully irresponsible of humorists.
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Description; Richard Todd delivers a thoroughly winning performance as Peter Marshall, the Scottish-born But as a young man he experiences a profound awakening which leaves him with the unwavering conviction that he has been called upon to do the Lord's work. ... A compelling speaker who believes religion should be fun,
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There was a man who, wishing to engage a coachman, took the applicants for that position to a road bordering a cliff, so that each might show how near he could drive to the edge with safety. One competitor brought the wheels of his vehicle within a ... III.. BY ARTHUR MORRISON, AUTHOR OF "TALES OF MEAN STREETS," ETC.
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