Back to Search
ISBN 9780511700859 is currently unpriced. Please contact us for pricing.
Available options are listed below:

Sketches from Cambridge by a Don

AUTHOR Stephen, Leslie
PUBLISHER Cambridge University Press (06/01/2011)
PRODUCT TYPE eBook (Open Ebook)

Description
Reprinted from the Pall Mall Gazette and published anonymously in 1865, Leslie Stephen's Sketches From Cambridge provides an affectionately sarcastic glimpse of student life at Cambridge University and its colleges. The wickedly funny prose explores the manners and customs of a variety of student stereotypes of the day. Profiled in these caricatures are athletes - with one chapter filled with typically light-hearted venom devoted specifically to rowers; and mathematicians, philosophers, and those poor wandering souls that pursue the social sciences. The collection is intended to provide a complete natural history of that curious specimen the Cambridge student, and it is brilliantly written by Stephen, a former member of the species. While the Cambridge student's fondness for whist, whiskey and billiards is examined, the distinction between him and the even lower, sub-human student form that belongs at Oxford and other institutions is definitively drawn.
Show More
Product Format
Product Details
ISBN-13: 9780511700859
ISBN-10: 0511700857
Content Language: English
More Product Details
Carton Quantity: 0
Feature Codes: Price on Product
Country of Origin: US
Subject Information
BISAC Categories
Literary Criticism | English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
Dewey Decimal: 828.809
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
publisher marketing
Reprinted from the Pall Mall Gazette and published anonymously in 1865, Leslie Stephen's Sketches From Cambridge provides an affectionately sarcastic glimpse of student life at Cambridge University and its colleges. The wickedly funny prose explores the manners and customs of a variety of student stereotypes of the day. Profiled in these caricatures are athletes - with one chapter filled with typically light-hearted venom devoted specifically to rowers; and mathematicians, philosophers, and those poor wandering souls that pursue the social sciences. The collection is intended to provide a complete natural history of that curious specimen the Cambridge student, and it is brilliantly written by Stephen, a former member of the species. While the Cambridge student's fondness for whist, whiskey and billiards is examined, the distinction between him and the even lower, sub-human student form that belongs at Oxford and other institutions is definitively drawn.
Show More
eBook
Warning - this is a non-refundable eBook!