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" The two men to be guarded against, as to their revenge. One, whom I openly hold in some serious animosity, whom I am at the pains to wound and defy, and whom I estimate as worth wounding and defying; — the other, whom I treat as a sort of insect, and... "
Watched by the Dead: A Loving Study of Dickens' Half-told Tale - Page 21
by Richard Anthony Proctor - 1887 - 166 pages
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The Life of Charles Dickens, Volume 3

John Forster - Authors, English - 1874 - 656 pages
...against, as to their revenge. One, Danger not "whom I openly hold in some serious animosity, face.° "whom I am at the pains to wound and defy, "and whom...dangerous man; and, " when I expect the blow from the other, it comes "from him" We have the master hand in the following bit of dialogue, which takes wider...
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1852-1870

John Forster - Novelists, English - 1874 - 616 pages
...openly hold in some serious animosity, whom I am at the pains to wound and defy, and whom I'estimate as worth wounding and defying; — the other, whom...dangerous man ; and, when I expect the blow from the other, it comes from him." We have the master hand in the following bit of dialogue, which takes wider...
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The Life of Charles Dickens: 1852-1870

John Forster - Novelists, English - 1874 - 802 pages
...making use of: but the opportunity never came. "The two men to be guarded against, as to their revenge. One, whom I openly hold in some serious animosity,...dangerous man ; and, when I expect the blow from the other, it comes from him." We have the master hand in the following bit of dialogue, which takes wider...
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The Life of Charles Dickens: 1852-1870

John Forster - Novelists, English - 1874 - 616 pages
...making use of: but the opportunity never came. "The two men to be guarded against, as to their revenge. One, whom I openly hold in some serious animosity,...dangerous man ; and, when I expect the blow from the other, it comes from him.11 We have the master hand in the following bit of dialogue, which takes wider...
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The Life of Charles Dickens, Volume 3

John Forster - Authors, English - 1874 - 586 pages
...at the pains to wound and f ace . ' defy, and whom I estimate as worth wounding and defy' ing;—the other, whom I treat as a sort of insect, and ' contemptuously...But, it turns out to be the latter who is the really dan' gerous man; and, when I expect the blow from the other, ' it comes from him.' ..IT 4. ii. •...
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The Cornhill Magazine, Volume 53

William Makepeace Thackeray - Electronic journals - 1886 - 684 pages
...than once bent upon using ; but the opportunity never came.' ' Two men to be guarded against ' — the words are Dickens's own now — ' one whom I openly...dangerous man ; and when I expect the blow from the other — it comes from him.' In a sort this idea was worked out in ' The Mystery of Edwin Drood.'...
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The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, Volume 43

American literature - 1886 - 892 pages
...than once bent upon using ; but the opportunity never came." "Two men to be guarded against " — the words are Dickens's own now — " one whom I openly...dangerous man ; and when I expect the blow from the other — it comes from him." In a sort this idea was worked out in " The Mystery of Edwin Drood."...
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Eclectic Magazine, and Monthly Edition of the Living Age, Volume 43; Volume 106

John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - American periodicals - 1886 - 898 pages
...than once bent upon using ; but the opportunity never came." "Two men to be guarded against " — the words are Dickens's own now — " one whom I openly...dangerous man ; and when I expect the blow from the other — it comes from him." In a sort this idea was worked out in " The Mystery of Edwin Drood."...
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The Library Magazine, Volume 7

Periodicals - 1886 - 406 pages
...other whom I treat as a sort of insect, and contemptuously and pleasantly rlick aside with my giove. But it turns out to be the latter who is the really...dangerous man ; and when I expect the blow from the other — it comes from him.'1 In a sort .this idea was worked out in The Mystery of Edwin Drood. Here...
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Watched by the Dead: A Loving Study of Dickens' Half-told Tale

Richard Anthony Proctor - 1887 - 234 pages
...than once bent upon using ; but the opportunity never came." " Two men to be guarded against " — the words are Dickens's own now — " one whom I openly...dangerous man ; and when I expect the blow from the other — it comes from him." This idea (in a somewhat strengthened form) was worked out in " The Mystery...
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