id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 27569 Braybrooke, Patrick Gilbert Keith Chesterton .txt text/plain 41077 1950 74 Chesterton does not think that Dickens was right Two Cities.' Chesterton does not think that Dickens really understood 'great fools,' because Chesterton will have us believe that a man can times I think Chesterton allows his genius to overcome his critical Thackeray.' A good motto for the book is, for Chesterton, that Chesterton feels that Thackeray at times falls into the trick common to Browning's mind, which, as Chesterton thinks, was the natural reaction Browning's prejudice was, Chesterton thinks, the type that hated a thing Chesterton is naturally aware that Browning wrote a great deal of bad cannot feel that this book is the best of Chesterton's works, not Chesterton's book is, I think, unfair on some points. It is, I think, well known that Chesterton has a great liking for may be the permanent place of Chesterton in the world of books. By his critical studies of Browning, Dickens, and Thackeray, Chesterton ./cache/27569.txt ./txt/27569.txt