DJ Paul started his career in the late 1980s as a DJ and released a number of solo tapes, as well as three collaboration albums with Lord Infamous as The Serial Killaz. After meeting Juicy J, the three founded the group Three 6 Mafia, going on to achieve national success in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Their 2000 album, When the Smoke Clears: Sixty 6, Sixty 1, debuted at number six on the Billboard 200 chart and was certified platinum. Later followed by Da Unbreakables in 2003 and Most Known Unknown in 2005, both of which were commercially successful. In 2006, DJ Paul, Juicy J, and Crunchy Black won an Academy Award for Best Original Song for "It's Hard out Here for a Pimp" from the film Hustle & Flow. Paul has also released three solo albums, and created soundtracks to two movies. He and the rest of Three 6 Mafia are known as the originators of the crunk style of music.
Charles Dickens' works are especially associated with London which is the setting for many of his novels. These works do not just use London as a backdrop but are about the city and its character.
Dickens described London as a Magic lantern, a popular entertainment of the Victorian era, which projected images from slides. Of all Dickens' characters 'none played as important a role in his work as that of London itself', it fired his imagination and made him write. In a letter to John Forster, in 1846, Dickens wrote 'a day in London sets me up and starts me', but outside of the city, 'the toil and labour of writing, day after day, without that magic lantern is IMMENSE!!'
However, of the identifiable London locations that Dickens used in his work, scholar Clare Pettitt notes that many no longer exist, and, while 'you can track Dickens' London, and see where things were, but they aren't necessarily still there'.
In addition to his later novels and short stories, Dickens' descriptions of London, published in various newspapers in the 1830s, were released as a collected edition Sketches by Boz in 1836.
London is a poem by Samuel Johnson, produced shortly after he moved to London. Written in 1738, it was his first major published work. The poem in 263 lines imitates Juvenal's Third Satire, expressed by the character of Thales as he decides to leave London for Wales. Johnson imitated Juvenal because of his fondness for the Roman poet and he was following a popular 18th-century trend of Augustan poets headed by Alexander Pope that favoured imitations of classical poets, especially for young poets in their first ventures into published verse.
London was published anonymously and in multiple editions during 1738. It quickly received critical praise, notably from Pope. This would be the second time that Pope praised one of Johnson's poems; the first being for Messiah, Johnson's Latin translation of Pope's poem. Part of that praise comes from the political basis of the poem. From a modern view, the poem is outshined by Johnson's later poem, The Vanity of Human Wishes as well as works like his A Dictionary of the English Language, his Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets, and his periodical essays for The Rambler, The Idler, and The Adventurer.
Armageddon is a Scottishbeer introduced on 3 November 2012. Ingredients include crystal malt, wheat, flaked oats and Scottish spring water. It is labelled as the world's 2nd strongest beer as of October 2013, after Brewmeister's Snake Venom was released, with an ABV rating of 65%.
Armageddon is the seventh album by Australian singer-songwriter Guy Sebastian. It was released in digital and CD format on 12 October 2012. A deluxe edition featuring a DVD of a concert from Sebastian's Armageddon Tour was also available. The album reached number one and double platinum certification in Australia, and number 20 in New Zealand. It is Sebastian's seventh top ten album in Australia, and his second to achieve a number one peak. It was the ninth highest selling album in Australia in 2012, the second highest selling album by an Australian act.
Four top ten singles were released from the album, including "Don't Worry Be Happy", and "Battle Scars" which features Lupe Fiasco. "Don't Worry Be Happy" peaked at number five and gained 4× platinum certification, with "Battle Scars" reaching number one and 9× platinum. "Battle Scars" is Sebastian's sixth number one single in Australia and Fiasco's first. "Battle Scars" also reached number two and double platinum certification in New Zealand, number 71 and platinum certification in the US, and number two in Norway.
"Armageddon 2001" was a 1991crossover event storyline published by DC Comics. It ran through a self-titled, two issue limited series and most of the annuals DC published that year from May through October (Legion of Super-Heroes Annual #2 did not tie-in to the storyline). After the event, there were two limited series, Armageddon: The Alien Agenda (which was a direct sequel) and Armageddon: Inferno (which was only tangentially related).
Each participating annual explored potential possible futures for its main characters, much in the manner of Marvel Comics' What If?. The guiding hands behind the series were editor and writer Dennis O'Neil, writer Archie Goodwin and artist Dan Jurgens.
Plot synopsis
Monarch
Monarch was an oppressive tyrant from a bleak, dystopian Earth fifty years in the future. The people were unhappy with his rule, particularly a scientist named Matthew Ryder, an expert on temporal studies, who was convinced he could use his technology to travel back in time and prevent the maniacal ruler from ever coming to power. He learned that in the late 20th century one of Earth's superheroes had become evil. In the year 2001 this hero had killed all of his comrades, assumed the identity of Monarch, and began his rise to global domination. Because Monarch always appeared in a suit of full body armor his prior identity was unknown.
Charles Dickens's London with Simon Callow - the Guardian
On the 200th anniversary of Charles Dickens's birth, actor Simon Callow - author of a new biography of Dickens - walks us through some of the London locations that were important to him, from the Strand -- where Dickens's parents married -- to the site of the blacking factory near Hungerford Bridge where he worked aged 12
Subscribe to The Guardian on YouTube ► http://bit.ly/subscribegdn
The Guardian publishes independent journalism, made possible by supporters. Contribute to The Guardian today ► https://bit.ly/3biVfwh
Sign up to the Guardian's free new daily newsletter, First Edition ► http://theguardian.com/first-edition
Website ► https://www.theguardian.com
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published: 08 Feb 2012
Charles Dickens' London (with interactive video comprehension activity)
based on the material of Prime Time 5 by Express Publishing and Assassin's Creed Syndicate by Ubisoft
(the video is used only for the purpose of education, teaching, non-commercial distance learning)
* video comprehension activity: https://www.liveworksheets.com/yy3016497ck
published: 12 Apr 2022
Dickens of London part 01
13 part serial from 1976
published: 23 Jan 2022
Charles Dickens Home - [Room by Room Tour] of Dickens Museum London
Charles Dickens wrote Pickwick Papers and Oliver Twist in this impressive London home. Join our room by room tour and find out what life was like in Charles Dickens Home.
The Dickens Museum has dressed the Georgian House for Christmas, like some something out of A Christmas Carol. It is a superb!
Dickens lived here for 3 short years and the home was saved from demolition in the 1920's. Since them the Dickens fellowship has lovingly looked after the museum full of his personal belongings, portraits and original manuscripts. The highlight for us was seeing the very desk he wrote much of his later works on, like Great Expectations and A Tale of two Cities and his final unfinished work, The Mystery of Edwin Drood.
If you are a lover of Charles Dickens novels and interested in his life, then ...
published: 19 Dec 2020
Non Touristy Things to Do In London - Dickens Museum and Foundlings
This is a very interesting area and a lovely place to visit for non touristy things to do in London like the Charles Dickens Museum and Foundling Museum, just a stone's throw from Lambs Conduit Street.
Dickens and his wife moved here in 1837 and he wrote Oliver Twist and Pickwick Papers here. They’ve got a bunch of his writing materials, paintings furniture and much more….
In Long Yard is where the original conduit was. William Lamb 1577 paid £1500 to renovate a conduit house in Snow Hill and water was fed off to here from a tributary of River Fleet, which people said tasted ok compared to the later New River which opened.
The Lamb Pub - from 1720 in named after William Lamb. It still has snob screens from Victorian times so you could drink without being observed by the bar staff.
Lamb...
published: 26 May 2019
About the Charles Dickens Museum, London
Welcome to the Charles Dickens Museum. If you are curious about the Museum or simply want to remember your last visit, watch this short film about Dickens's only remaining London home. The Charles Dickens Museum gives you the opportunity to step back in time as if Dickens himself had just stepped out the door.
With thanks to Chocolate Films, Miriam Margolyes and Simon Callow.
www.dickensmuseum.com
Exploring Dickens's London w/ Lucinda Dickens-Hawksley, Dickens's great-great-great granddaughter
published: 17 Jan 2020
The Murder Case That Inspired Charles Dickens | Murder Maps | Real Crime
In 1849, a man suddenly disappeared in Bermondsey. The discovery that he had been brutally murdered enraptured the press and the public. Even Charles Dickens was totally engrossed in the story of the sinister Marie Manning.
Join this channel to get access to perks:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1s9576cQFdQq3QTtTxocmA/join
Make sure you subscribe to get your regular crime fix: youtube.com/c/RealCrime
From "Murder Maps"
Content licensed from 3DD to Little Dot Studios.
Any queries, please contact us at:
[email protected]
published: 02 Jun 2021
Charles Dickens life
Exploring London and walking in the footsteps of Charles Dickens was exactly like walking back in time to the Victorian Era. Join us as we explore the places that the famous author lived and worked in London, England.
Charles Dickens Museum: https://walkwithhistory.net/museums/
Intro: 0:00
Charles Dickens Office: 0:50
The Old Curiosity Shop: 2:12
Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese: 4:11
Charles Dickens Museum: 7:05
Enjoy this video?
☕️ Donate a cup of coffee: https://withkoji.com/@Walk_with_History
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Gift Shop: https://walkwithhistorygiftshop.com
Episode Travel Guides: https://walkwithhistory.net/guides
*********Want a more in-depth look? ***********
🎙Talk With Hist...
On the 200th anniversary of Charles Dickens's birth, actor Simon Callow - author of a new biography of Dickens - walks us through some of the London locations t...
On the 200th anniversary of Charles Dickens's birth, actor Simon Callow - author of a new biography of Dickens - walks us through some of the London locations that were important to him, from the Strand -- where Dickens's parents married -- to the site of the blacking factory near Hungerford Bridge where he worked aged 12
Subscribe to The Guardian on YouTube ► http://bit.ly/subscribegdn
The Guardian publishes independent journalism, made possible by supporters. Contribute to The Guardian today ► https://bit.ly/3biVfwh
Sign up to the Guardian's free new daily newsletter, First Edition ► http://theguardian.com/first-edition
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Twitter ► https://twitter.com/guardian
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The Guardian on YouTube:
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Guardian Sport ► https://bit.ly/gdnsportsubs
Guardian Live ► https://bit.ly/guardianlivesubs
#charlesdickens #dickens #simoncallow #london
On the 200th anniversary of Charles Dickens's birth, actor Simon Callow - author of a new biography of Dickens - walks us through some of the London locations that were important to him, from the Strand -- where Dickens's parents married -- to the site of the blacking factory near Hungerford Bridge where he worked aged 12
Subscribe to The Guardian on YouTube ► http://bit.ly/subscribegdn
The Guardian publishes independent journalism, made possible by supporters. Contribute to The Guardian today ► https://bit.ly/3biVfwh
Sign up to the Guardian's free new daily newsletter, First Edition ► http://theguardian.com/first-edition
Website ► https://www.theguardian.com
Facebook ► https://www.facebook.com/theguardian
Twitter ► https://twitter.com/guardian
Instagram ► https://www.instagram.com/guardian
The Guardian on YouTube:
Guardian News ► https://bit.ly/guardiannewssubs
Guardian Australia ► https://bit.ly/guardianaussubs
Guardian Football ► https://bit.ly/gdnfootballsubs
Guardian Sport ► https://bit.ly/gdnsportsubs
Guardian Live ► https://bit.ly/guardianlivesubs
#charlesdickens #dickens #simoncallow #london
based on the material of Prime Time 5 by Express Publishing and Assassin's Creed Syndicate by Ubisoft
(the video is used only for the purpose of education, tea...
based on the material of Prime Time 5 by Express Publishing and Assassin's Creed Syndicate by Ubisoft
(the video is used only for the purpose of education, teaching, non-commercial distance learning)
* video comprehension activity: https://www.liveworksheets.com/yy3016497ck
based on the material of Prime Time 5 by Express Publishing and Assassin's Creed Syndicate by Ubisoft
(the video is used only for the purpose of education, teaching, non-commercial distance learning)
* video comprehension activity: https://www.liveworksheets.com/yy3016497ck
Charles Dickens wrote Pickwick Papers and Oliver Twist in this impressive London home. Join our room by room tour and find out what life was like in Charles Dic...
Charles Dickens wrote Pickwick Papers and Oliver Twist in this impressive London home. Join our room by room tour and find out what life was like in Charles Dickens Home.
The Dickens Museum has dressed the Georgian House for Christmas, like some something out of A Christmas Carol. It is a superb!
Dickens lived here for 3 short years and the home was saved from demolition in the 1920's. Since them the Dickens fellowship has lovingly looked after the museum full of his personal belongings, portraits and original manuscripts. The highlight for us was seeing the very desk he wrote much of his later works on, like Great Expectations and A Tale of two Cities and his final unfinished work, The Mystery of Edwin Drood.
If you are a lover of Charles Dickens novels and interested in his life, then this museum is well worth a visit. You can find out full details and booking information at:-
www.dickensmuseum.com
Timestamps:-
0:00 Intro
0:45 49 Doughty St
1:08 48 Doughty St
1:29 Kitchen
2:58 Preparation Room
4:04 Wine Cellar
4:22 WashHouse
4:55 Grand Hallway
5:23 Dining Room
7:05 Morning Room
8:09 First Floor Staircase
8:35 Technicolor Dickens Exhibition
9:15 Drawing Room
10:25 Reading Desk
10:56 Study
11:33 Famous Writing Desk
12:21 Second Floor Staircase
12:34 Dressing Room
13:08 Dickens Bedroom
14:09 Mary Hogarth Room
14:38 Dickens Death Artifacts
15:01 Nursery
15:38 Early Life
16:15 Servants Quarters
16:34 Charles Dickens
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With thanks to www.google.com and google earth for use of images
#CharlesDickens #AChristmasCarol #OliverTwist
Charles Dickens wrote Pickwick Papers and Oliver Twist in this impressive London home. Join our room by room tour and find out what life was like in Charles Dickens Home.
The Dickens Museum has dressed the Georgian House for Christmas, like some something out of A Christmas Carol. It is a superb!
Dickens lived here for 3 short years and the home was saved from demolition in the 1920's. Since them the Dickens fellowship has lovingly looked after the museum full of his personal belongings, portraits and original manuscripts. The highlight for us was seeing the very desk he wrote much of his later works on, like Great Expectations and A Tale of two Cities and his final unfinished work, The Mystery of Edwin Drood.
If you are a lover of Charles Dickens novels and interested in his life, then this museum is well worth a visit. You can find out full details and booking information at:-
www.dickensmuseum.com
Timestamps:-
0:00 Intro
0:45 49 Doughty St
1:08 48 Doughty St
1:29 Kitchen
2:58 Preparation Room
4:04 Wine Cellar
4:22 WashHouse
4:55 Grand Hallway
5:23 Dining Room
7:05 Morning Room
8:09 First Floor Staircase
8:35 Technicolor Dickens Exhibition
9:15 Drawing Room
10:25 Reading Desk
10:56 Study
11:33 Famous Writing Desk
12:21 Second Floor Staircase
12:34 Dressing Room
13:08 Dickens Bedroom
14:09 Mary Hogarth Room
14:38 Dickens Death Artifacts
15:01 Nursery
15:38 Early Life
16:15 Servants Quarters
16:34 Charles Dickens
❤ Please support our channel in one of the following ways:
1. Subscribe and click the notifications bell.
Subscribe to channel https://www.youtube.com/memoryseekers?sub_confirmation=1
2. Buys us a coffee https://ko-fi.com/memoryseekers
3. You can also make a one-off support donation through Paypal:
https://paypal.me/memoryseekers
⚑ Follow our travel adventures on social:
Instagram: MemorySeekers
Facebook: MemorySeekersUK
Pinterest: Memoryseekersuk
Twitter: Memoryseekers
Tiktok: Memoryseekers
🗺 Web: www.memoryseekers.net Head over to our website for more photos and information about our travels.
🎹 Like the music we use?
We get it from these 2 sites below:-
Artlist.io - Get FREE additional months subscription using our link https://artlist.io/Simon-312477
Epidemic Sound - Get 30 days FREE use of Epidemic Sounds using our link https://www.epidemicsound.com/referral/6a40j0/
We receive 1 free month of access for any referrals.
📷 If you'd like to know what equipment we use, see and buy our latest top kit for YouTubing and Travel Essentials in our Amazon shop:- https://www.amazon.co.uk/shop/memoryseekers
If you buy from these links we will receive a small commission but you won't pay a penny extra.
With thanks to www.google.com and google earth for use of images
#CharlesDickens #AChristmasCarol #OliverTwist
This is a very interesting area and a lovely place to visit for non touristy things to do in London like the Charles Dickens Museum and Foundling Museum, just a...
This is a very interesting area and a lovely place to visit for non touristy things to do in London like the Charles Dickens Museum and Foundling Museum, just a stone's throw from Lambs Conduit Street.
Dickens and his wife moved here in 1837 and he wrote Oliver Twist and Pickwick Papers here. They’ve got a bunch of his writing materials, paintings furniture and much more….
In Long Yard is where the original conduit was. William Lamb 1577 paid £1500 to renovate a conduit house in Snow Hill and water was fed off to here from a tributary of River Fleet, which people said tasted ok compared to the later New River which opened.
The Lamb Pub - from 1720 in named after William Lamb. It still has snob screens from Victorian times so you could drink without being observed by the bar staff.
Lambs Conduit Street itself is mostly independent shops cafe, wine bars. No chains. Partially pedestrianised and even the supermarket is run by the community.
Great Ormond Street Hospital originally only had 10 beds (1852) 1st UK hospital dedicated to children.
in 1929 JM Barrie gave all rights of his plays and books to fund the hospital’s research.
The Foundling Museum in Brunswick Square (Coram Fields) - In 1739 Thomas Coram, master mariner was appalled at the amount of children abandoned by their parents so he campaigned for 17 years until George II granted a royal charter for the Foundling Hospital.
Hogarth and Handel helped. Hogarth got people to donate art and Handal performed the Messiah in the chapel.
It became first public art gallery in UK and it’s now the Foundling museum.
Music by Terry St. Clair
Subscribe on Youtube ➜ https://www.youtube.com/joolzguides
Joolz Guides website to book a private tour ➜ http://joolzguides.com
Hire Joolzy Productions to make a film ➜ https://joolzguides.com/contact-us/
SUPPORT MY CHANNEL ON PATREON ➜ https://www.patreon.com/joolzguides
DONATE TO MY CHANNEL WITH PAYPAL ➜ https://www.paypal.me/julianmcdonnell
This is a very interesting area and a lovely place to visit for non touristy things to do in London like the Charles Dickens Museum and Foundling Museum, just a stone's throw from Lambs Conduit Street.
Dickens and his wife moved here in 1837 and he wrote Oliver Twist and Pickwick Papers here. They’ve got a bunch of his writing materials, paintings furniture and much more….
In Long Yard is where the original conduit was. William Lamb 1577 paid £1500 to renovate a conduit house in Snow Hill and water was fed off to here from a tributary of River Fleet, which people said tasted ok compared to the later New River which opened.
The Lamb Pub - from 1720 in named after William Lamb. It still has snob screens from Victorian times so you could drink without being observed by the bar staff.
Lambs Conduit Street itself is mostly independent shops cafe, wine bars. No chains. Partially pedestrianised and even the supermarket is run by the community.
Great Ormond Street Hospital originally only had 10 beds (1852) 1st UK hospital dedicated to children.
in 1929 JM Barrie gave all rights of his plays and books to fund the hospital’s research.
The Foundling Museum in Brunswick Square (Coram Fields) - In 1739 Thomas Coram, master mariner was appalled at the amount of children abandoned by their parents so he campaigned for 17 years until George II granted a royal charter for the Foundling Hospital.
Hogarth and Handel helped. Hogarth got people to donate art and Handal performed the Messiah in the chapel.
It became first public art gallery in UK and it’s now the Foundling museum.
Music by Terry St. Clair
Subscribe on Youtube ➜ https://www.youtube.com/joolzguides
Joolz Guides website to book a private tour ➜ http://joolzguides.com
Hire Joolzy Productions to make a film ➜ https://joolzguides.com/contact-us/
SUPPORT MY CHANNEL ON PATREON ➜ https://www.patreon.com/joolzguides
DONATE TO MY CHANNEL WITH PAYPAL ➜ https://www.paypal.me/julianmcdonnell
Welcome to the Charles Dickens Museum. If you are curious about the Museum or simply want to remember your last visit, watch this short film about Dickens's on...
Welcome to the Charles Dickens Museum. If you are curious about the Museum or simply want to remember your last visit, watch this short film about Dickens's only remaining London home. The Charles Dickens Museum gives you the opportunity to step back in time as if Dickens himself had just stepped out the door.
With thanks to Chocolate Films, Miriam Margolyes and Simon Callow.
www.dickensmuseum.com
Welcome to the Charles Dickens Museum. If you are curious about the Museum or simply want to remember your last visit, watch this short film about Dickens's only remaining London home. The Charles Dickens Museum gives you the opportunity to step back in time as if Dickens himself had just stepped out the door.
With thanks to Chocolate Films, Miriam Margolyes and Simon Callow.
www.dickensmuseum.com
Daniel Tyler, editor of The Uncommercial Traveller, explores the different ways in which Dickens brought the city of London and its inhabitants vividly to life....
In 1849, a man suddenly disappeared in Bermondsey. The discovery that he had been brutally murdered enraptured the press and the public. Even Charles Dickens wa...
In 1849, a man suddenly disappeared in Bermondsey. The discovery that he had been brutally murdered enraptured the press and the public. Even Charles Dickens was totally engrossed in the story of the sinister Marie Manning.
Join this channel to get access to perks:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1s9576cQFdQq3QTtTxocmA/join
Make sure you subscribe to get your regular crime fix: youtube.com/c/RealCrime
From "Murder Maps"
Content licensed from 3DD to Little Dot Studios.
Any queries, please contact us at:
[email protected]
In 1849, a man suddenly disappeared in Bermondsey. The discovery that he had been brutally murdered enraptured the press and the public. Even Charles Dickens was totally engrossed in the story of the sinister Marie Manning.
Join this channel to get access to perks:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1s9576cQFdQq3QTtTxocmA/join
Make sure you subscribe to get your regular crime fix: youtube.com/c/RealCrime
From "Murder Maps"
Content licensed from 3DD to Little Dot Studios.
Any queries, please contact us at:
[email protected]
Exploring London and walking in the footsteps of Charles Dickens was exactly like walking back in time to the Victorian Era. Join us as we explore the places th...
Exploring London and walking in the footsteps of Charles Dickens was exactly like walking back in time to the Victorian Era. Join us as we explore the places that the famous author lived and worked in London, England.
Charles Dickens Museum: https://walkwithhistory.net/museums/
Intro: 0:00
Charles Dickens Office: 0:50
The Old Curiosity Shop: 2:12
Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese: 4:11
Charles Dickens Museum: 7:05
Enjoy this video?
☕️ Donate a cup of coffee: https://withkoji.com/@Walk_with_History
🙌🏻 We appreciate every little bit of support 🙏🏻
Website: https://walkwithhistory.net
Patreon: https://patreon.com/walkwithhistory
Gift Shop: https://walkwithhistorygiftshop.com
Episode Travel Guides: https://walkwithhistory.net/guides
*********Want a more in-depth look? ***********
🎙Talk With History Podcast🎙
https://podfollow.com/1586236141
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🎁 Walk with History Gift Shop
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🛠 YouTube Channel management tool we use
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Music from Uppbeat (free for Creators!):
https://uppbeat.io/t/hey-pluto/the-parade/?as=walkwithhistory
(some of the above links may be affiliate links. won't cost you more, but it may buy us a coffee so we can keep editing these history videos!)
#history #historyeducation
Exploring London and walking in the footsteps of Charles Dickens was exactly like walking back in time to the Victorian Era. Join us as we explore the places that the famous author lived and worked in London, England.
Charles Dickens Museum: https://walkwithhistory.net/museums/
Intro: 0:00
Charles Dickens Office: 0:50
The Old Curiosity Shop: 2:12
Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese: 4:11
Charles Dickens Museum: 7:05
Enjoy this video?
☕️ Donate a cup of coffee: https://withkoji.com/@Walk_with_History
🙌🏻 We appreciate every little bit of support 🙏🏻
Website: https://walkwithhistory.net
Patreon: https://patreon.com/walkwithhistory
Gift Shop: https://walkwithhistorygiftshop.com
Episode Travel Guides: https://walkwithhistory.net/guides
*********Want a more in-depth look? ***********
🎙Talk With History Podcast🎙
https://podfollow.com/1586236141
****************************************************
🎁 Walk with History Gift Shop
https://walkwithhistorygiftshop.com
🎶MUSIC USED FOR VIDEOS
https://uppbeat.io/?as=walkwithhistory
🎥GEAR USED FOR VIDEOS
https://kit.co/WalkWithHistory/walk-with-history-vlog-kit
🛠 YouTube Channel management tool we use
https://www.tubebuddy.com/history
Music from Uppbeat (free for Creators!):
https://uppbeat.io/t/hey-pluto/the-parade/?as=walkwithhistory
(some of the above links may be affiliate links. won't cost you more, but it may buy us a coffee so we can keep editing these history videos!)
#history #historyeducation
London: A poem :
London is a poem by Samuel Johnson, produced shortly after he moved to London. Written in 1738, it was his first major published work.[1] The poem in 263 lines imitates Juvenal's Third Satire, expressed by the character of Thales as he decides to leave London for Wales. Johnson imitated Juvenal because of his fondness for the Roman poet and he was following a popular 18th-century trend of Augustan poets headed by Alexander Pope that favoured imitations of classical poets, especially for young poets in their first ventures into published verse.
London was published anonymously and in multiple editions during 1738. It quickly received critical praise, notably from Pope. This would be the second time that Pope praised one of Johnson's poems; the first being for Messiah, John...
published: 24 Jul 2024
London by Samuel Johnson| Part I | Complete Analysis
published: 23 Jul 2023
London by Samuel Johnson | Structure, Summary, Analysis
Samuel Johnson’s first major published work was the poem titled London which was published in May 1738. Johnson published the poem anonymously and the writer of the poem remained unknown for at least 15 years. However, the poem attained a huge fame and fan following. Alexander Pope liked the poem too much and tried everything to know about the actual writer of the poem but failed to know about him. Samuel Johnson imitated the Roman poet Juvenal’s third satire for this poem partly because he liked Juvenal and partly because he was following the trend of imitating Augustan poets during that period. Samuel Johnson criticizes the corruption, crimes, and poverty of the city of London in this poem. He uses the main character Thales to do so as Thales leaves for Wales to escape the problems of Lo...
published: 17 May 2023
London by Samuel Johnson Full Poem Analysis with Background and Scenes and Setting of The Poem
In this video i have discussed the poem London by Samuel Johnson.I have discussed the background of the poem. The scene and setting of the poem.Along with iut i have compared it with the life of Samuel Johnson . I have also discussed Robert Walpole government and how it was actually a govt of corruption and flattery loving.
published: 22 Apr 2020
Discussion of Dr. Samuel Johnson's poem 'London' (Part 1: Lines 1-34)
published: 10 Apr 2020
London || By Dr. Vinay Bharat ||A Detailed Summary|| 5% Hindi||
Dedicated to Juvenal , this 263 line-poem very assertively vent out against the mercantilism , the licensing Act,1737 and Excise Bill, 1733 - all anti-poor move by the then Walpolian Government , when London broke the hearts of a common Londoner.
Students , you are requested to quote the important quotations that I have pulled out for you. Be confident, if you do so, you shall definitely score high.
All the best.
Thanks
published: 28 May 2020
Paper 8 British Literature 18th Century Semester-4 DU Poem Poetry London by Samuel Johnson
Playlist to prepare
DU SEMESTER 4 Paper VIII 8 : British Literature–18th Century DU SOL REGULAR NCWEB
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLKLgUCQQmkm6BCBc_Va1f142IA6kup2UC
Syllabus
William Congreve : The Way of the World
Jonathan Swift : Gulliver's Travels
Unit-3
(a) Samuel Johnson, “London”
(b) Thomas Gray, “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard”
Unit-4
Henry Fielding : Joseph Andrews
“The Complete English Tradesman” (Letter XXII)
“The Great Law of Subordination Considered” (Letter IV)
“The Complete English Gentleman”
Daniel Defoe
William Hay, Deformity: An Essay
Olaudah Equiano, “The Middle Passage”
Video Lectures by Poonam Dua
published: 15 May 2023
london by dr.samuel johnson summary and analysis || easy summary note of London
|| ENGLISH NOTES || #englitmail #london #samueljohnson
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published: 19 Jun 2021
Samuel Johnson- London (Lecture 1)
Semester IV ( CC 8)Samuel Johnson- London
Presented by-
Prachi Poli Tigga
Assistant Professor
Department of English
Nirmala College Ranchi
London: A poem :
London is a poem by Samuel Johnson, produced shortly after he moved to London. Written in 1738, it was his first major published work.[1] The p...
London: A poem :
London is a poem by Samuel Johnson, produced shortly after he moved to London. Written in 1738, it was his first major published work.[1] The poem in 263 lines imitates Juvenal's Third Satire, expressed by the character of Thales as he decides to leave London for Wales. Johnson imitated Juvenal because of his fondness for the Roman poet and he was following a popular 18th-century trend of Augustan poets headed by Alexander Pope that favoured imitations of classical poets, especially for young poets in their first ventures into published verse.
London was published anonymously and in multiple editions during 1738. It quickly received critical praise, notably from Pope. This would be the second time that Pope praised one of Johnson's poems; the first being for Messiah, Johnson's Latin translation of Pope's poem. Part of that praise comes from the political basis of the poem. From a modern view, the poem is outshined by Johnson's later poem The Vanity of Human Wishes, as well as works like his A Dictionary of the English Language, his Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets, and his periodical essays for The Rambler, The Idler and The Adventurer.
London: A poem :
London is a poem by Samuel Johnson, produced shortly after he moved to London. Written in 1738, it was his first major published work.[1] The poem in 263 lines imitates Juvenal's Third Satire, expressed by the character of Thales as he decides to leave London for Wales. Johnson imitated Juvenal because of his fondness for the Roman poet and he was following a popular 18th-century trend of Augustan poets headed by Alexander Pope that favoured imitations of classical poets, especially for young poets in their first ventures into published verse.
London was published anonymously and in multiple editions during 1738. It quickly received critical praise, notably from Pope. This would be the second time that Pope praised one of Johnson's poems; the first being for Messiah, Johnson's Latin translation of Pope's poem. Part of that praise comes from the political basis of the poem. From a modern view, the poem is outshined by Johnson's later poem The Vanity of Human Wishes, as well as works like his A Dictionary of the English Language, his Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets, and his periodical essays for The Rambler, The Idler and The Adventurer.
Samuel Johnson’s first major published work was the poem titled London which was published in May 1738. Johnson published the poem anonymously and the writer of...
Samuel Johnson’s first major published work was the poem titled London which was published in May 1738. Johnson published the poem anonymously and the writer of the poem remained unknown for at least 15 years. However, the poem attained a huge fame and fan following. Alexander Pope liked the poem too much and tried everything to know about the actual writer of the poem but failed to know about him. Samuel Johnson imitated the Roman poet Juvenal’s third satire for this poem partly because he liked Juvenal and partly because he was following the trend of imitating Augustan poets during that period. Samuel Johnson criticizes the corruption, crimes, and poverty of the city of London in this poem. He uses the main character Thales to do so as Thales leaves for Wales to escape the problems of London. The poem had political connotations, criticizing the Whigs government headed by Sir Robert Walpole.
It is an imitation of the Third satire of the Roman poet Juvenal in which Juvenal’s hero Umricius leaves Rome because of corruption and hypocrisy. Samuel Johnson’s hero is Thales who leaves London for Wales because of corruption, crime, and poverty. Johnson’s friend Richard Savage also left England and settled in Wales but Johnson made it clear that it was just a coincidence and the hero of the poem London imitates Juvenal’s Umricius. Furthermore, Johnson’s hero is named after the great Greek mathematician, astronomer, and philosopher from Miletus, Thales. It is a rather long poem with 263 lines. The first 34 lines are spoken by the narrator who remains anonymous while the other 229 lines are solely spoken by Thales, the hero of Samuel Johnson’s poem.
.
.
.
So this is it for today. We will continue to discuss the History of English Literature as we strive to offer a complete course for the preparation of UGC NET English literature, NTA NET English literature, PGTRB English,, SET English literature, TGT PGT English, GATE English Literature, and other exams, please stay connected with the Discourse, Thanks, and Regards!
Samuel Johnson’s first major published work was the poem titled London which was published in May 1738. Johnson published the poem anonymously and the writer of the poem remained unknown for at least 15 years. However, the poem attained a huge fame and fan following. Alexander Pope liked the poem too much and tried everything to know about the actual writer of the poem but failed to know about him. Samuel Johnson imitated the Roman poet Juvenal’s third satire for this poem partly because he liked Juvenal and partly because he was following the trend of imitating Augustan poets during that period. Samuel Johnson criticizes the corruption, crimes, and poverty of the city of London in this poem. He uses the main character Thales to do so as Thales leaves for Wales to escape the problems of London. The poem had political connotations, criticizing the Whigs government headed by Sir Robert Walpole.
It is an imitation of the Third satire of the Roman poet Juvenal in which Juvenal’s hero Umricius leaves Rome because of corruption and hypocrisy. Samuel Johnson’s hero is Thales who leaves London for Wales because of corruption, crime, and poverty. Johnson’s friend Richard Savage also left England and settled in Wales but Johnson made it clear that it was just a coincidence and the hero of the poem London imitates Juvenal’s Umricius. Furthermore, Johnson’s hero is named after the great Greek mathematician, astronomer, and philosopher from Miletus, Thales. It is a rather long poem with 263 lines. The first 34 lines are spoken by the narrator who remains anonymous while the other 229 lines are solely spoken by Thales, the hero of Samuel Johnson’s poem.
.
.
.
So this is it for today. We will continue to discuss the History of English Literature as we strive to offer a complete course for the preparation of UGC NET English literature, NTA NET English literature, PGTRB English,, SET English literature, TGT PGT English, GATE English Literature, and other exams, please stay connected with the Discourse, Thanks, and Regards!
In this video i have discussed the poem London by Samuel Johnson.I have discussed the background of the poem. The scene and setting of the poem.Along with iut ...
In this video i have discussed the poem London by Samuel Johnson.I have discussed the background of the poem. The scene and setting of the poem.Along with iut i have compared it with the life of Samuel Johnson . I have also discussed Robert Walpole government and how it was actually a govt of corruption and flattery loving.
In this video i have discussed the poem London by Samuel Johnson.I have discussed the background of the poem. The scene and setting of the poem.Along with iut i have compared it with the life of Samuel Johnson . I have also discussed Robert Walpole government and how it was actually a govt of corruption and flattery loving.
Dedicated to Juvenal , this 263 line-poem very assertively vent out against the mercantilism , the licensing Act,1737 and Excise Bill, 1733 - all anti-poor move...
Dedicated to Juvenal , this 263 line-poem very assertively vent out against the mercantilism , the licensing Act,1737 and Excise Bill, 1733 - all anti-poor move by the then Walpolian Government , when London broke the hearts of a common Londoner.
Students , you are requested to quote the important quotations that I have pulled out for you. Be confident, if you do so, you shall definitely score high.
All the best.
Thanks
Dedicated to Juvenal , this 263 line-poem very assertively vent out against the mercantilism , the licensing Act,1737 and Excise Bill, 1733 - all anti-poor move by the then Walpolian Government , when London broke the hearts of a common Londoner.
Students , you are requested to quote the important quotations that I have pulled out for you. Be confident, if you do so, you shall definitely score high.
All the best.
Thanks
Playlist to prepare
DU SEMESTER 4 Paper VIII 8 : British Literature–18th Century DU SOL REGULAR NCWEB
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLKLgUCQQmkm6BCBc_Va...
Playlist to prepare
DU SEMESTER 4 Paper VIII 8 : British Literature–18th Century DU SOL REGULAR NCWEB
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLKLgUCQQmkm6BCBc_Va1f142IA6kup2UC
Syllabus
William Congreve : The Way of the World
Jonathan Swift : Gulliver's Travels
Unit-3
(a) Samuel Johnson, “London”
(b) Thomas Gray, “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard”
Unit-4
Henry Fielding : Joseph Andrews
“The Complete English Tradesman” (Letter XXII)
“The Great Law of Subordination Considered” (Letter IV)
“The Complete English Gentleman”
Daniel Defoe
William Hay, Deformity: An Essay
Olaudah Equiano, “The Middle Passage”
Video Lectures by Poonam Dua
Playlist to prepare
DU SEMESTER 4 Paper VIII 8 : British Literature–18th Century DU SOL REGULAR NCWEB
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLKLgUCQQmkm6BCBc_Va1f142IA6kup2UC
Syllabus
William Congreve : The Way of the World
Jonathan Swift : Gulliver's Travels
Unit-3
(a) Samuel Johnson, “London”
(b) Thomas Gray, “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard”
Unit-4
Henry Fielding : Joseph Andrews
“The Complete English Tradesman” (Letter XXII)
“The Great Law of Subordination Considered” (Letter IV)
“The Complete English Gentleman”
Daniel Defoe
William Hay, Deformity: An Essay
Olaudah Equiano, “The Middle Passage”
Video Lectures by Poonam Dua
|| ENGLISH NOTES || #englitmail #london #samueljohnson
Visit my Website : https://easyenglishnotes.com/
This Channel of mine is beneficial for UG and PG stude...
|| ENGLISH NOTES || #englitmail #london #samueljohnson
Visit my Website : https://easyenglishnotes.com/
This Channel of mine is beneficial for UG and PG students of English literature. It is beneficial for those also who want easy English literature notes.
If you like my channel ENGLISH NOTES videos please like, subscribe, comment and share.
Thank you
blogger: https://englishnotes2019.blogspot.com/?m=1
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whatsapp me for urgent notes
Mobile : +918544222061
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|| ENGLISH NOTES || #englitmail #london #samueljohnson
Visit my Website : https://easyenglishnotes.com/
This Channel of mine is beneficial for UG and PG students of English literature. It is beneficial for those also who want easy English literature notes.
If you like my channel ENGLISH NOTES videos please like, subscribe, comment and share.
Thank you
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On the 200th anniversary of Charles Dickens's birth, actor Simon Callow - author of a new biography of Dickens - walks us through some of the London locations that were important to him, from the Strand -- where Dickens's parents married -- to the site of the blacking factory near Hungerford Bridge where he worked aged 12
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#charlesdickens #dickens #simoncallow #london
based on the material of Prime Time 5 by Express Publishing and Assassin's Creed Syndicate by Ubisoft
(the video is used only for the purpose of education, teaching, non-commercial distance learning)
* video comprehension activity: https://www.liveworksheets.com/yy3016497ck
Charles Dickens wrote Pickwick Papers and Oliver Twist in this impressive London home. Join our room by room tour and find out what life was like in Charles Dickens Home.
The Dickens Museum has dressed the Georgian House for Christmas, like some something out of A Christmas Carol. It is a superb!
Dickens lived here for 3 short years and the home was saved from demolition in the 1920's. Since them the Dickens fellowship has lovingly looked after the museum full of his personal belongings, portraits and original manuscripts. The highlight for us was seeing the very desk he wrote much of his later works on, like Great Expectations and A Tale of two Cities and his final unfinished work, The Mystery of Edwin Drood.
If you are a lover of Charles Dickens novels and interested in his life, then this museum is well worth a visit. You can find out full details and booking information at:-
www.dickensmuseum.com
Timestamps:-
0:00 Intro
0:45 49 Doughty St
1:08 48 Doughty St
1:29 Kitchen
2:58 Preparation Room
4:04 Wine Cellar
4:22 WashHouse
4:55 Grand Hallway
5:23 Dining Room
7:05 Morning Room
8:09 First Floor Staircase
8:35 Technicolor Dickens Exhibition
9:15 Drawing Room
10:25 Reading Desk
10:56 Study
11:33 Famous Writing Desk
12:21 Second Floor Staircase
12:34 Dressing Room
13:08 Dickens Bedroom
14:09 Mary Hogarth Room
14:38 Dickens Death Artifacts
15:01 Nursery
15:38 Early Life
16:15 Servants Quarters
16:34 Charles Dickens
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#CharlesDickens #AChristmasCarol #OliverTwist
This is a very interesting area and a lovely place to visit for non touristy things to do in London like the Charles Dickens Museum and Foundling Museum, just a stone's throw from Lambs Conduit Street.
Dickens and his wife moved here in 1837 and he wrote Oliver Twist and Pickwick Papers here. They’ve got a bunch of his writing materials, paintings furniture and much more….
In Long Yard is where the original conduit was. William Lamb 1577 paid £1500 to renovate a conduit house in Snow Hill and water was fed off to here from a tributary of River Fleet, which people said tasted ok compared to the later New River which opened.
The Lamb Pub - from 1720 in named after William Lamb. It still has snob screens from Victorian times so you could drink without being observed by the bar staff.
Lambs Conduit Street itself is mostly independent shops cafe, wine bars. No chains. Partially pedestrianised and even the supermarket is run by the community.
Great Ormond Street Hospital originally only had 10 beds (1852) 1st UK hospital dedicated to children.
in 1929 JM Barrie gave all rights of his plays and books to fund the hospital’s research.
The Foundling Museum in Brunswick Square (Coram Fields) - In 1739 Thomas Coram, master mariner was appalled at the amount of children abandoned by their parents so he campaigned for 17 years until George II granted a royal charter for the Foundling Hospital.
Hogarth and Handel helped. Hogarth got people to donate art and Handal performed the Messiah in the chapel.
It became first public art gallery in UK and it’s now the Foundling museum.
Music by Terry St. Clair
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Welcome to the Charles Dickens Museum. If you are curious about the Museum or simply want to remember your last visit, watch this short film about Dickens's only remaining London home. The Charles Dickens Museum gives you the opportunity to step back in time as if Dickens himself had just stepped out the door.
With thanks to Chocolate Films, Miriam Margolyes and Simon Callow.
www.dickensmuseum.com
In 1849, a man suddenly disappeared in Bermondsey. The discovery that he had been brutally murdered enraptured the press and the public. Even Charles Dickens was totally engrossed in the story of the sinister Marie Manning.
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Exploring London and walking in the footsteps of Charles Dickens was exactly like walking back in time to the Victorian Era. Join us as we explore the places that the famous author lived and worked in London, England.
Charles Dickens Museum: https://walkwithhistory.net/museums/
Intro: 0:00
Charles Dickens Office: 0:50
The Old Curiosity Shop: 2:12
Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese: 4:11
Charles Dickens Museum: 7:05
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DJ Paul started his career in the late 1980s as a DJ and released a number of solo tapes, as well as three collaboration albums with Lord Infamous as The Serial Killaz. After meeting Juicy J, the three founded the group Three 6 Mafia, going on to achieve national success in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Their 2000 album, When the Smoke Clears: Sixty 6, Sixty 1, debuted at number six on the Billboard 200 chart and was certified platinum. Later followed by Da Unbreakables in 2003 and Most Known Unknown in 2005, both of which were commercially successful. In 2006, DJ Paul, Juicy J, and Crunchy Black won an Academy Award for Best Original Song for "It's Hard out Here for a Pimp" from the film Hustle & Flow. Paul has also released three solo albums, and created soundtracks to two movies. He and the rest of Three 6 Mafia are known as the originators of the crunk style of music.
London: A poem :
London is a poem by Samuel Johnson, produced shortly after he moved to London. Written in 1738, it was his first major published work.[1] The poem in 263 lines imitates Juvenal's Third Satire, expressed by the character of Thales as he decides to leave London for Wales. Johnson imitated Juvenal because of his fondness for the Roman poet and he was following a popular 18th-century trend of Augustan poets headed by Alexander Pope that favoured imitations of classical poets, especially for young poets in their first ventures into published verse.
London was published anonymously and in multiple editions during 1738. It quickly received critical praise, notably from Pope. This would be the second time that Pope praised one of Johnson's poems; the first being for Messiah, Johnson's Latin translation of Pope's poem. Part of that praise comes from the political basis of the poem. From a modern view, the poem is outshined by Johnson's later poem The Vanity of Human Wishes, as well as works like his A Dictionary of the English Language, his Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets, and his periodical essays for The Rambler, The Idler and The Adventurer.
Samuel Johnson’s first major published work was the poem titled London which was published in May 1738. Johnson published the poem anonymously and the writer of the poem remained unknown for at least 15 years. However, the poem attained a huge fame and fan following. Alexander Pope liked the poem too much and tried everything to know about the actual writer of the poem but failed to know about him. Samuel Johnson imitated the Roman poet Juvenal’s third satire for this poem partly because he liked Juvenal and partly because he was following the trend of imitating Augustan poets during that period. Samuel Johnson criticizes the corruption, crimes, and poverty of the city of London in this poem. He uses the main character Thales to do so as Thales leaves for Wales to escape the problems of London. The poem had political connotations, criticizing the Whigs government headed by Sir Robert Walpole.
It is an imitation of the Third satire of the Roman poet Juvenal in which Juvenal’s hero Umricius leaves Rome because of corruption and hypocrisy. Samuel Johnson’s hero is Thales who leaves London for Wales because of corruption, crime, and poverty. Johnson’s friend Richard Savage also left England and settled in Wales but Johnson made it clear that it was just a coincidence and the hero of the poem London imitates Juvenal’s Umricius. Furthermore, Johnson’s hero is named after the great Greek mathematician, astronomer, and philosopher from Miletus, Thales. It is a rather long poem with 263 lines. The first 34 lines are spoken by the narrator who remains anonymous while the other 229 lines are solely spoken by Thales, the hero of Samuel Johnson’s poem.
.
.
.
So this is it for today. We will continue to discuss the History of English Literature as we strive to offer a complete course for the preparation of UGC NET English literature, NTA NET English literature, PGTRB English,, SET English literature, TGT PGT English, GATE English Literature, and other exams, please stay connected with the Discourse, Thanks, and Regards!
In this video i have discussed the poem London by Samuel Johnson.I have discussed the background of the poem. The scene and setting of the poem.Along with iut i have compared it with the life of Samuel Johnson . I have also discussed Robert Walpole government and how it was actually a govt of corruption and flattery loving.
Dedicated to Juvenal , this 263 line-poem very assertively vent out against the mercantilism , the licensing Act,1737 and Excise Bill, 1733 - all anti-poor move by the then Walpolian Government , when London broke the hearts of a common Londoner.
Students , you are requested to quote the important quotations that I have pulled out for you. Be confident, if you do so, you shall definitely score high.
All the best.
Thanks
Playlist to prepare
DU SEMESTER 4 Paper VIII 8 : British Literature–18th Century DU SOL REGULAR NCWEB
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLKLgUCQQmkm6BCBc_Va1f142IA6kup2UC
Syllabus
William Congreve : The Way of the World
Jonathan Swift : Gulliver's Travels
Unit-3
(a) Samuel Johnson, “London”
(b) Thomas Gray, “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard”
Unit-4
Henry Fielding : Joseph Andrews
“The Complete English Tradesman” (Letter XXII)
“The Great Law of Subordination Considered” (Letter IV)
“The Complete English Gentleman”
Daniel Defoe
William Hay, Deformity: An Essay
Olaudah Equiano, “The Middle Passage”
Video Lectures by Poonam Dua
|| ENGLISH NOTES || #englitmail #london #samueljohnson
Visit my Website : https://easyenglishnotes.com/
This Channel of mine is beneficial for UG and PG students of English literature. It is beneficial for those also who want easy English literature notes.
If you like my channel ENGLISH NOTES videos please like, subscribe, comment and share.
Thank you
blogger: https://englishnotes2019.blogspot.com/?m=1
Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCu2TNJ2Z004Y94pr7iRhojw
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/englishnotes24/
#englitmail
#english_notes
#englishnoteschannel
#english_notes_channel
whatsapp me for urgent notes
Mobile : +918544222061
paytm no. : 8544222061
@ENGLISH NOTES
I feed them pussy like she stole something Neva let her hold something Put this dick off in her mouth claiming that she owe something Off the waam I told you hoe but you ain't nothing but shit to me A good dick suck to me A fuck to me But now you history You get my dick harder than most And I have been from coast to coast I love the way you massage my balls And stick my dick clean down your throat She lived to take it up the ass Sometimes even comes off in it And when I'm about to nut She takes it out swallows never spits She rubs her on clit while you hit Rubs her on titts A bisexual on top of that can beat it with a stick The type of girl you prayed for The type of girl I'd paid for But done uped out the pocket The knockin she's a groupie hoe And that's what I'm loving That's what I'm liking A fan of DJ Paul is with some fucking and some diking And I'll never diss you on a song That there girl you can trust But if you bullshit me hoe I'm make your ass famous [Chorus: Repeat 4X] Still getting my dick, still getting my dick Still getting my still getting my dick sucked from the hoe that love to fuck Good The chewin that you be doing I can't deny You's a pro on the dick did I say good I mean you figh Loves to fuck in the car Cheap motelers It's whatever She aint got no preference But I could showll be a reference Never danced in the clubs She claim she too shy But that's a lie If I ever heard a fucking lie That bitch ain't Cleo but she got some real good conversation That's how she hold it down cause conversation rule the nation Come meet you anywhere Plane, trains, or automobiles She from out of town but I dammly think I met her on Beal She be in all the spots Love to hang in ATL She got a Rolex watch But that junk is fake as hell A nigga in the feds maine they think she missing But she aint missing She just been hanging with some pimping She got a blow habit That's what I'm really loving She come on herself and her pussy be bout hard as an oven [Chorus: Repeat 2x] Still getting my dick, still getting my dick Still getting my still getting my dick sucked