"Things One Would Rather Have Expressed Differently" by George du Maurier (original) (raw)
Things One Would Rather Have Expressed Differently. George du Maurier. From Punch (1 March 1890): 102.
Jones (nervously conscious that he is interrupting a pleasant tête-à-tête). —“A — I'm sorry to say I've been told to Take you in to Supper, Miss Belsize!”
Unlucky Speeches, Ill-Considered Utterances, and Things One Could Wish to Have Expressed Otherwise
- "Those Infelicitious Speeches"
- "Taking One Too Much at One's Word"
- "Neighbourly Compliments"
- "Unlucky Speeches"
- "An Unappreciated Compliment"
- "Things One Could Wish to Have Expressed Otherwise"
- "Things One Would Have Expressed Differently"
- "Things One Would Have Expressed Differently" (2)
- "Things One Would Have Expressed Differently" (4)
- "Ill-Considered Utterances"
- "An Equivocal Compliment"
- "Too Kind by Half"
- "An Infelicitious Speech"
- "Speeches One Has to Live Down"
- "Too Considerate"
- "Consolation"
- "Infelicitious Queries"
Scanned image and text by George P. Landow[You may use this image without prior permission for any scholarly or educational purpose as long as you (1) credit the person who scanned the image and (2) link your document to this URL in a web document or cite the Victorian Web in a print one.]
Bibliography
English Society. Sketched by George du Maurier. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1897.
Created 1 July 2001
Last modified 2 May 2020
