1825.16: Difference between revisions

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<p>Submitted by Bill Wagner 6/4/2006 and by David Ball 6/4/2006.  David explains further: "The title character is first introduced as a cricketer, 'Jack Hatch  the best cricketer in the parish, in the county, in the country!' The narrator hears tell of this wonder, who turns out to be a paragon of all the skills but is never able to meet him in person, finally hearing that he has died.  Mitford treats cricket (with tongue admittedly somewhat in cheek) as an epic contest in which the honor of two communities is at stake.  In the opening, very loosely connected section, on the other hand, baseball is described as a child's game, to be put away early in life."</p>
<p>Submitted by Bill Wagner 6/4/2006 and by David Ball 6/4/2006.  David explains further: "The title character is first introduced as a cricketer, 'Jack Hatch  the best cricketer in the parish, in the county, in the country!' The narrator hears tell of this wonder, who turns out to be a paragon of all the skills but is never able to meet him in person, finally hearing that he has died.  Mitford treats cricket (with tongue admittedly somewhat in cheek) as an epic contest in which the honor of two communities is at stake.  In the opening, very loosely connected section, on the other hand, baseball is described as a child's game, to be put away early in life."</p>
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Revision as of 17:41, 6 September 2012

Chronologies
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Mitford Story Centers on Cricket, Touches on Juvenile Baseball

Salience Noteworthy
Tags Females, Fiction, Famous
Text

"Then comes a sun burnt gipsy of six . . . . her longing eyes fixed on a game of baseball at the corner of the green till she reaches the cottage door . . . . So the world wags until ten; then the little damsel gets admission to the charity school, her thoughts now fixed on button-holes and spelling-books those ensigns of promotion; despising dirt and baseball, and all their joys."

From "Jack Hatch," taken from the Village Sketches of Mary Russell Mitford, The Albion: A Journal of News, Politics, and Literature September 9 1828, volume 7, page 65.

Submitted by Bill Wagner 6/4/2006 and by David Ball 6/4/2006. David explains further: "The title character is first introduced as a cricketer, 'Jack Hatch the best cricketer in the parish, in the county, in the country!' The narrator hears tell of this wonder, who turns out to be a paragon of all the skills but is never able to meet him in person, finally hearing that he has died. Mitford treats cricket (with tongue admittedly somewhat in cheek) as an epic contest in which the honor of two communities is at stake. In the opening, very loosely connected section, on the other hand, baseball is described as a child's game, to be put away early in life."

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