The Copybook

Short passages for reading, drawn from history, legend, poetry and fiction.

1243
A Selfish Liberty Frederick Douglass

American anti-slavery campaigner Frederick Douglass contrasts two kinds of ‘nationalist’.

American anti-slavery campaigner Frederick Douglass visited Ireland in 1845, and loved it. But in time he came to realise that there are two kinds of nationalist: those who want freedom everywhere, and those who want it only for themselves, and will enslave any other land or people in order to get it.

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1244
Well Out Of It Jane Austen

Anne Elliot is mortified to hear Frederick Wentworth’s opinion of her, but manages to find comfort in his words.

Anne Elliot and Captain Frederick Wentworth meet again seven years after Anne rejected Frederick’s proposal of marriage, under pressure from a trusted friend. A chance remark by the Captain, repeated by Anne’s sister Mary, leads them both to convince themselves that love is dead – and that they are happier that way.

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1245
Max Woosnam Clay Lane

Max fully deserves his reputation as England’s greatest all-round sportsman.

Maxwell (Max) Woosnam was born in Liverpool, but brought up in Aberhafesp, Mid Wales. His father, a senior clergyman in the Church of England, sent him to the prestigious school Winchester College, where young Max embarked on an extraordinary sporting career.

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1246
The Grand Embassy Clay Lane

A young Peter the Great of Russia toured Europe seeking help for his diplomatic, military and architectural plans.

Tsar Peter the Great’s attempt to bring Russia into the modern world of the West began with a ‘Grand Embassy’, touring the capitals of Europe to drum up support for his country, and acquire scientific and artistic knowledge. The tour included four hectic months in England.

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1247
Douglass in Britain Clay Lane

Frederick Douglass, the American runaway slave turned Abolitionist, spent some of his happiest days in Britain.

Frederick Douglass escaped slavery in Maryland, and became one of America’s leading Abolitionists. Gently forgiving but firm of purpose, Douglass was a champion not only of Abolition but of freedom everywhere, suspicious of communism, committed to national sovereignty and free markets. And in 1845, he instantly fell in love with the British.

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1248
The School of Difficulty Samuel Smiles

It is not educational institutions and methods that advance science or the arts, but people.

Holding a degree or some other officially-recognised paper qualification is not really a guarantee of very much; as Samuel Smiles repeatedly observed, there is no substitute for hands-on experience, the quirks of an interesting personality, and sheer determination.

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