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Pub Quiz thread

Discussion in 'Watford' started by colognehornet, Jun 26, 2013.

  1. hornethologist a.k.a. theo

    hornethologist a.k.a. theo Well-Known Member

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    Right gender, Cologne...hence the small print run...2000 copies...publishers being men, paper being expensive, and retained copyright meaning the author took most of the risk.
     
    #9841
  2. hornethologist a.k.a. theo

    hornethologist a.k.a. theo Well-Known Member

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    posted after Emily Bronte and before Defoe
     
    #9842
  3. colognehornet

    colognehornet Well-Known Member

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    Jane Austen ? Maybe Northanger Abbey ?
     
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  4. colognehornet

    colognehornet Well-Known Member

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    Or, more likely, Pride and Prejudice, as it was one of her early novels ?
     
    #9844
  5. hornethologist a.k.a. theo

    hornethologist a.k.a. theo Well-Known Member

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    Right author, Cologne, though the novel in question was 'Emma'. Interesting how little her work was known during her own lifetime. She made only a few hundred pounds from her writing overall.

    Over to you...
     
    #9845
  6. colognehornet

    colognehornet Well-Known Member

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    I know that her popularity grew over the course of time - inversely to that of Sir Walter Scott who was more widely read then than now. I've never got anywhere with her novels I admit. Will come up with a question soon.
     
    #9846
  7. colognehornet

    colognehornet Well-Known Member

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    Cheers Theo. Who was so bored working in a bookshop as a young man that he spent his time translating passages of the Bible into English, French and German ?
     
    #9847
  8. yorkshirehornet

    yorkshirehornet Well-Known Member

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    need some help here..... were they british?
     
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  9. colognehornet

    colognehornet Well-Known Member

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    I'd nearly forgotten about this Yorkie. Actually the question implies that he was translating into English, French and German from a fourth language - which may have been his own. Also he obviously had an interest in religious matters, but this is not what he became famous for.
     
    #9849
  10. colognehornet

    colognehornet Well-Known Member

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    Having implied in the last post that he was not British, he did actually live in Stockwell for a while. He also spent time as a Protestant missionary, but this is not what he became famous for. Altogether he lived in 4 countries - often financially supported by his younger brother.
     
    #9850

  11. yorkshirehornet

    yorkshirehornet Well-Known Member

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  12. colognehornet

    colognehornet Well-Known Member

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    Moving in the right direction Yorkie.
     
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  13. yorkshirehornet

    yorkshirehornet Well-Known Member

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    sculptor... or composer/musician?

    or do i stick with art?
     
    #9853
  14. colognehornet

    colognehornet Well-Known Member

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    Time for more clues - better to stick with art. His artistic career only began aged 30 - up to that time his activities were mostly of a religious nature as a kind of Protestant missionary, though believing that it was incumbent on himself to live in poverty (like the people he was trying to help) the Church, predictably, didn't think much of him.
     
    #9854
  15. yorkshirehornet

    yorkshirehornet Well-Known Member

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    Van Gogh?

    If so he also lived in Isleworth near where i used to live
     
    #9855
  16. colognehornet

    colognehornet Well-Known Member

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    Over to you Yorkie. Unbelievably Van Gogh didn't touch a paintbrush until he was 30 ! Despite his brother Theo being an art dealer. He had dreamt of being a Protestant missionary - and worked in that capacity amongst the miners in the south of Belgium. However, he was too revolutionary in that capacity and the church didn't like it. The bookshop where he was so bored was in Dordrecht (which is not the most exciting place in the World). Take it away.
     
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  17. yorkshirehornet

    yorkshirehornet Well-Known Member

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    I thought it was him all along... but Stockwell threw me initially....

    Where does margaret connect two parts of the same?
     
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  18. yorkshirehornet

    yorkshirehornet Well-Known Member

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    Think Geography
     
    #9858
  19. colognehornet

    colognehornet Well-Known Member

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    Did you learn this on your holidays Yorkie ? <laugh> The Margid hid - or Margaret Bridge connects Buda with Pest.
     
    #9859
  20. yorkshirehornet

    yorkshirehornet Well-Known Member

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    Yes you got it! We actually stayed in the Grand Budapest Hotel on the Island... Nothing quite like the film.. Very rlaxing Island though..
    Over to you

    Sent from my F8331 using Tapatalk
     
    #9860

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