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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion _annotations/9b984fb4-1f4c-4570-9c94-16b9a67f5ed9.json
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Expand Up @@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ order: 11
{
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"chars": "<p dir=\"ltr\"><em>LD.X.R4</em></p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\"><strong>Pave the way for a change in Mr Merdle&rsquo;s manner&nbsp;</strong></p>\n<p>&nbsp;</p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">&ldquo;Pave the way&rdquo; indicates Dickens&rsquo;s use of the Notes to consider how one number prepares for future events. &ldquo;Pave the way,&rdquo; or a similar instruction using the verb &ldquo;pave,&rdquo; appears seven times in the Notes for this novel, indicating Dickens&rsquo;s attention to careful future-oriented plotting (other examples are found in the Notes for numbers V, VII, XII, XVI, and XVII. See LD.XII.L2 for more on his use of this phrase).&nbsp;</p>\n<p>&nbsp;</p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">Dickens will activate this note at the end of the chapter, with a long passage considering Merdle&rsquo;s &ldquo;oppressed soul&rdquo; as he wanders around his house and avoids his butler (LD 390).</p>"
"chars": "<p dir=\"ltr\"><em>LD.X.R4</em></p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\"><strong>Pave the way for a change in Mr Merdle&rsquo;s manner&nbsp;</strong></p>\n<p>&nbsp;</p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">&ldquo;Pave the way&rdquo; indicates Dickens&rsquo;s use of the Notes to consider how one number prepares for future events. &ldquo;Pave the way,&rdquo; or a similar instruction using the verb &ldquo;pave,&rdquo; appears eight times in the Notes for this novel, indicating Dickens&rsquo;s attention to careful future-oriented plotting (other examples are found in the Notes for numbers V, VII, XII, XVI, and XVII. See LD.XII.L2 for more on his use of this phrase).&nbsp;</p>\n<p>&nbsp;</p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">Dickens will activate this note at the end of the chapter, with a long passage considering Merdle&rsquo;s &ldquo;oppressed soul&rdquo; as he wanders around his house and avoids his butler (LD 390).</p>"
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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion _annotations/fb2800ad-28f6-4e5a-81ca-a512e6df054a.json
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Expand Up @@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ order: 4
"resource": [
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"chars": "<p dir=\"ltr\"><em>LD.XI.L3</em></p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\"><strong>The Great St Bernard? Yes</strong></p>\n<p><span id=\"docs-internal-guid-16263fff-7fff-0c5d-b02e-9d50d868d5f5\"><br />Here Dickens finally returns to an idea he had toyed with in a very early reference to the novel in a 1854 letter to Forster: &ldquo;I have visions of living for half a year or so, in all sorts of inaccessible places, and opening a new book therein. A floating idea of going up above the snow-line in Switzerland, and living in some astonishing convent, hovers about me&rdquo; (Forster 2.196-7). On January 20, 1856, Dickens would again write to Forster as he was at work on No. V: &ldquo;Again I am beset by my former notions of a book whereof the whole story shall be on the top of the Great St. Bernard. As I accept and reject ideas for <em>Little Dorrit</em>, it perpetually comes back to me. Two or three years hence, perhaps you&rsquo;ll find me living with the Monks and the Dogs a whole winter&ndash;among the blinding snows that fall about that monastery. I have a serious idea that I shall do it, if I live&rdquo; (2.197). He told Lavinia Watson on October 7, 1856 that the source for the Great St. Bernard episode was a visit to the Hospice twenty years earlier (Letters 8.201; see note 3). Sucksmith offers a helpful list of the many references to his own experience from Pictures of Italy that Dickens likely drew upon for the Italy portions of Book II (xxxii, fn4). </span></p>",
"chars": "<p dir=\"ltr\"><em>LD.XI.L3</em></p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\"><strong>The Great St Bernard? Yes</strong></p>\n<p><span id=\"docs-internal-guid-16263fff-7fff-0c5d-b02e-9d50d868d5f5\"><br />Here Dickens finally returns to an idea he had toyed with in a very early reference to the novel in a 1854 letter to Forster: &ldquo;I have visions of living for half a year or so, in all sorts of inaccessible places, and opening a new book therein. A floating idea of going up above the snow-line in Switzerland, and living in some astonishing convent, hovers about me&rdquo; (Forster 2.196-7). On January 20, 1856, Dickens would again write to Forster as he was at work on No. V: &ldquo;Again I am beset by my former notions of a book whereof the whole story shall be on the top of the Great St. Bernard. As I accept and reject ideas for <em>Little Dorrit</em>, it perpetually comes back to me. Two or three years hence, perhaps you&rsquo;ll find me living with the Monks and the Dogs a whole winter&ndash;among the blinding snows that fall about that monastery. I have a serious idea that I shall do it, if I live&rdquo; (2.197). He told Lavinia Watson on October 7, 1856 that the source for the Great St. Bernard episode was a visit to the Hospice a decade earlier (Letters 8.201; see note 3). Sucksmith offers a helpful list of the many references to his own experience from Pictures of Italy that Dickens likely drew upon for the Italy portions of Book II (xxxii, fn4). </span></p>",
"format": "text/html"
}
],
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