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Mitzi Waggoner's avatar

My god, I love you Stephen, I do. Why? Because you make me laugh – heartily. Because you make me think – broadly. Because you make me look up definitions (note to self: twazzock has been added to the vocabulary.)

We share an era (actually you are a mere month older than I) and I recall that “springy thump that is heard no more in the world” with nostalgia and a half smile. It goes hand-in-page with the excitement of finally being old enough to be allowed access to the “adult side” of the library along with the smell of oak tables and book binding glue.

I am an American with a body and head in the Colonies and a heart and sense of humor resident in the Green and Pleasant Land. I loved England the first time I spied the patchwork quilt of hedge rows through the plane window as it lowered itself into Heathrow. Well, really, my love affair began with the English language, British accent and self-deprecating wit that was piped into my Chicago childhood home via PBS (Public Broadcasting System) and, yes, rabbit ears! So smitten was I that I enrolled, at 42, as a mental health nursing student at the University of Nottingham (sans Robin Hood). Alas, plans didn’t work as I’d imagined and I returned to the States, but spent the next 25 years crossing The Pond as often as I could to visit, absorb and enjoy.

I haven’t been to England since 2020 at the height of Covid. I miss it, but I don’t miss getting there. For me, you evoke so many of the things I enjoy most about England. Best of all, I don’t have to fly or put up with twazzocks while I’m enjoying. I look forward to our next merry meeting.

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Ian B.'s avatar

Wonderful stuff, once again, and this time with a cliffhanger! I can’t help but think back to the infamous dinner where Wilde and Conan Doyle agreed to write pieces for an American magazine and the subsequent books that came out of that dinner: The Portrait of Dorian Gray and The Sign of Four respectively. It would seem Conan Doyle gifted Holmes with some Bohemian qualities that seem sure to have been inspired by Wilde, but I wonder if the slightly Gothic horror of Dorian Gray was inspired in part by the fog, gaslights, and hansom cabs of Holmes. We’ll probably never know but it seems to me that there was some cross pollination between the authors out of mutual respect and admiration. Certainly that dinner produced literary magic.

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