"England Living and England Dead."

Continuing an account begun in "A Cotswold Day," Bates complains about towns bearing the "stench of the arty-and-crafty disease which has begun to attack the north limb of Cotswold," while praising the outlying countryside and Stow-on-the-Wold as "the most memorable of all Cotswold towns, simple, dignified, honest-to-God." With two photographs. In The New Clarion (September 10, 1932, i, 14, 319).

ID: 
c6
Title: 
"England Living and England Dead."
Genre: 
Essay
Page Count: 
1
Word Count: 
ca. 900
Publisher: 
New Clarion
Year of Publication: 
1932
Topic: 
Rural Living
Document Type: 
Full-text Online
Nature Writing
AttachmentSize
c6.pdf1.1 MB