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Arthur Douglas Crease Letters, Diaries and Scrapbooks

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compare with it.  The Dean of Norwich is a great authority on Shakespeare + is no doubt a learned man + I am sure that his sermon, which he read, would meet with the approval of Church dignitaries + would look well in print.
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compare with it.  The Dean of Norwich is a great authority on Shakespeare & is no doubt a learned man & I am sure that his sermon, which he read, would meet with the approval of Church dignitaries & would look well in print.
  
 
But to the ordinary working would-be Christian it was barren.  You will see from the leaflet I enclose that Perowne was to preach the following Sunday.  I must write to Marjorie by the way but I am not sure of her husband's name.
 
But to the ordinary working would-be Christian it was barren.  You will see from the leaflet I enclose that Perowne was to preach the following Sunday.  I must write to Marjorie by the way but I am not sure of her husband's name.
  
We are billeted in a new country amongst a very friendly class of people + for that reason shall look back on our stay here with pleasure.  The weather is broken but today has been all fine + the night is bright moon-light - good for air raids but not good for land raids.
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We are billeted in a new country amongst a very friendly class of people  
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& for that reason shall look back on our stay here with pleasure.  The weather is broken but today has been all fine & the night is bright moon-light - good for air raids but not good for land raids.
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BC Archives, MS-0055 Box 15 File 3 / CREASE FAMILY / Letters from Arthur Douglas Crease to his brother, Lindley Crease, 1917.

Revision as of Nov 19, 2015, 1:13:03 PM

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compare with it. The Dean of Norwich is a great authority on Shakespeare & is no doubt a learned man & I am sure that his sermon, which he read, would meet with the approval of Church dignitaries & would look well in print.

But to the ordinary working would-be Christian it was barren. You will see from the leaflet I enclose that Perowne was to preach the following Sunday. I must write to Marjorie by the way but I am not sure of her husband's name.

We are billeted in a new country amongst a very friendly class of people & for that reason shall look back on our stay here with pleasure. The weather is broken but today has been all fine & the night is bright moon-light - good for air raids but not good for land raids.

BC Archives, MS-0055 Box 15 File 3 / CREASE FAMILY / Letters from Arthur Douglas Crease to his brother, Lindley Crease, 1917.