Now we were very keen to hear the thoughts of some of the Orwell Award nominees, but our offers were largely declined. |
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Imagine George Orwell, only with slightly different political opinions and in a really bad mood. |
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Many journalists now are no more than channelers and echoers of what Orwell called the official truth. |
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It's likely that Orwell saw him as a true continuation of the violent, caricatural, humorous art found in English nineteenth-century writers. |
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Orwell joined the militias and went to the front where he was seriously wounded. |
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Orwell was, in fact, a maverick on the Left and his ideas were a curious mixture of anarchism and Labour Party reformism. |
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Orwell argued that in a time of universal deceit the only revolutionary act is to tell the truth. |
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In 1949 George Orwell warned the Foreign Office not to trust 38 people if what it wanted was anti-communist propagandists. |
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As English as an aspidistra in the bay window of a bungalow, Orwell grew to love and loathe his heritage in equal measure. |
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George Orwell wasn't wrong about much but he was way off beam with his famously jaundiced view of sport. |
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Acclaimed author Margaret Atwood writes of the influence George Orwell had on her and her writing, to mark the centenary of his birth. |
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In a kind of masquerade of toughness, Orwell practiced excruciating self-deprivation and tested his physical limits constantly. |
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Yet for all his roughshod opinions, Orwell was a gentle man who could be as fustily English as tea and crumpets. |
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The pride of their Coastguard is the former River-class patrol vessel HMS Orwell, now the Essequibo. |
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What Orwell offers by way of contrast to all this is a meliorist localism in politics and economics. |
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George Orwell buried a time capsule at Southwold, Suffolk seventy years ago. |
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Most human beings are conflicted creatures and, to paraphrase George Orwell, some are more conflicted than others. |
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George Orwell argues that the passive voice can be a tool for political abuse. |
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Orwell feared that one day a ruthless, omnipotent state would train cameras on its citizens, surveilling them into obedience. |
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Auden was stressing a moral difficulty of war, which is exactly what Orwell, in a fit of mulishness, claimed he had failed to do. |
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Orwell shows how words become their opposite in the hands of the perpetually braying party line. |
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Only one paragraph before he tells us this, he claims that Orwell had lapsed from socialism into an apolitical brand of liberalism. |
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Did not George Orwell once describe authors as the most egoistical of human beings? |
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Orwell adapts the literary forms of the allegory and beast fable for his own purposes. |
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But to deify Orwell, as many disciples were inclined to do, does him an injustice. |
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So here was Orwell, famous for being a flinty man of integrity, in effect throwing in the towel. |
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George Orwell once described England as a protean creature, stretching ceaselessly into the past, forever changing, forever the same. |
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This is not entirely paradoxical, since Orwell saw socialism as all about preserving traditional decencies. |
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It is not surprising that the two greatest literary dystopians, Huxley and Orwell, were English. |
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I would suspect that the program divided most of those who watched it, into two groups, one identifying with Orwell and one with Churchill. |
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Orwell argued that Stalinist and Hitlerian police state propaganda and ruthless control of the media would be the dominant process. |
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One may jib, like George Orwell, at Greene's belief that a brutally stupid gangster is capable of intellectual subtlety. |
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Then there was your courageous expose of local government in Washington, DC, worthy of comparison with the writings of your hero, Orwell, when he was down and out in Paris. |
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Thompson was no fan of Orwell, perhaps in part because he saw in him an image of his own romantic emotivism and self-conscious idiosyncratic bluffness. |
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Not for nothing did George Orwell use the BBC as his model for the Ministry of Truth in his novel 1984, a dark tale dominated by an all-seeing, all-knowing Big Brother. |
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The CBS network has now been switched off for millions of viewers, and the propaganda war would make George Orwell dizzy. |
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Orwell was indeed unsociable, anti-feminist and homophobic, but only ambiguously anti-Semitic, and by no means such a dewy-eyed idealiser of the plebs as some have imagined. |
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But 70 years after Orwell wrote those words, doublethink seems to be winning. |
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But Orwell went to Spain for the express purpose of killing fascists, as he makes clear in the book Brand is quoting from. |
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The ghost of George Orwell may be conjured too readily and too often, these days, but this truly is Orwellian. |
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But further back there was an earl, and the family had a heraldic crest and some silver, bits of which Orwell pawned to raise money to fight in Spain. |
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Still, when all around were dining on quails' eggs, Orwell was roughing it in the kitchens of swanky hotels, dossing down in flea pits and blundering in the Spanish Civil war. |
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Orwell saw the merit of the English judges as lying in their interpretation of the law according to the books and in their doing so incorruptibly. |
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When he was a schoolboy at an insufferable snob establishment on the south coast of England, George Orwell developed a strong aversion to all things Scottish. |
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While I admire Orwell as a writer greatly, I tire of the way his writing is fetishised by others, as if he were the definitive authority on matters moral and political. |
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For decades now writers and journalists have been chipping away at the myth of Orwell to reveal some of the truth. |
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Unlike Orwell, he has no one definitive book, no Animal Farm, nineteen eighty-four, or Homage to Catalonia. |
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Postman prefers Huxley to Orwell and argues that there is no need for Big Brother to conceal anything from citizens whom technological diversion has largely narcotized. |
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The Orwell we encounter at the beginning of this book is Eric Blair, the Old Etonian drop-out and insecure drifter, more or less on his beam ends. |
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If George Orwell was writing today, he wouldn't need to invent newspeak. |
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My sense is that Orwell had a head full of poems, most of them accumulated in schoolboy days and soon afterwards when he must have done prodigious reading. |
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Morally, Orwell must surely have had to weigh up whether the potential damage he could cause to those individuals was worse than the harm they might do. |
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In 2008, the British Orwell Prize embarrassed itself by awarding its honor to Johann Hari. |
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That story alone would appear to refute the accusations of those who have denounced Sonia as a gold-digger, capitalising on the vulnerability of Orwell when he was dying. |
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Despite their political differences, Waugh came to admire George Orwell, because of their shared patriotism and sense of morality. |
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In 1949, George Orwell compiled a list of suspected communist sympathisers for British intelligence. |
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Later in 1869, he switched to Edinburgh Collegiate School, and then in 1871 to Orwell House, a preparatory school in Warwickshire. |
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Some 2,000 men were ordered to gather at Orwell to repel any invasion, but only 55 appear to have actually arrived. |
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During his time at Bwlch Ocyn, Koestler would become a close friend of fellow writer George Orwell. |
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Amongst his heroes were writers Aldous Huxley, W H Auden and George Orwell. |
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Two other books are set in Suffolk and Essex around the River Orwell, though one involves a trip across the North Sea to Holland. |
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A Surveillance State that would have boggled the mind of Orwell was born. |
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The world's library deserves Gertrude Stein in Amharic, George Orwell in Kirundi, Adonis in Burmese, Ngugi wa Thiong'o in Isthmus Zapotec. |
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It means Paine, Thoreau, Emerson, Chesterton, Mencken, Orwell. |
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Experts were monitoring the Northern Bottlenose whale after it was spotted in the River Orwell near Ipswich, Suffolk, earlier yesterday. |
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I want to read Keats and Wordsworth, Hemingway, George Orwell. |
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My first book was my undergraduate essay on Waugh, Orwell, and Huxley. |
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George Orwell named him as one of the writers he most admired, despite disagreeing with him on almost every moral and political issue. |
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The important point here is not so much that the British treated him forbearingly as that he was always able to command publicity, Orwell wrote. |
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Orwell wrote literary criticism, poetry, fiction, and polemical journalism. |
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Orwell was now working on Keep the Aspidistra Flying, and also tried unsuccessfully to write a serial for the News Chronicle. |
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At this time, Victor Gollancz suggested Orwell spend a short time investigating social conditions in economically depressed northern England. |
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On 31 January 1936, Orwell set out by public transport and on foot, reaching Manchester via Coventry, Stafford, the Potteries and Macclesfield. |
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One of these, the trade union official Frank Meade, suggested Wigan, where Orwell spent February staying in dirty lodgings over a tripe shop. |
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Gollancz feared the second half would offend readers and added a disculpatory preface to the book while Orwell was in Spain. |
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Shortly afterwards, the political crisis began in Spain and Orwell followed developments there closely. |
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Orwell set out for Spain on about 23 December 1936, dining with Henry Miller in Paris on the way. |
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There was very little military action, and Orwell was shocked by the lack of munitions, food, and firewood, and other extreme deprivations. |
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Orwell had to spend some days in hospital with a poisoned hand and had most of his possessions stolen by the staff. |
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Orwell expressed surprise that they should still want him, because according to the Communist press he was a fascist. |
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Orwell and his wife were under threat and had to lie low, although they broke cover to try to help Kopp. |
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Orwell returned to England in June 1937, and stayed at the O'Shaughnessy home at Greenwich. |
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Orwell returned to Wallington, which he found in disarray after his absence. |
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In the latter part of his stay at the clinic Orwell was able to go for walks in the countryside and study nature. |
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Myers secretly funded a trip to French Morocco for half a year for Orwell to avoid the English winter and recover his health. |
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They rented a villa on the road to Casablanca and during that time Orwell wrote Coming Up for Air. |
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Orwell spent time in Wallington and Southwold working on a Dickens essay and it was in July 1939 that Orwell's father, Richard Blair, died. |
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Orwell also submitted his name to the Central Register for war work, but nothing transpired. |
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Wells which degenerated into a row because Wells had taken offence at observations Orwell made about him in a Horizon article. |
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In October Orwell had a bout of bronchitis and the illness recurred frequently. |
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In September 1943, Orwell resigned from the BBC post that he had occupied for two years. |
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In November 1943, Orwell was appointed literary editor at Tribune, where his assistant was his old friend Jon Kimche. |
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By February 1945 David Astor had invited Orwell to become a war correspondent for the Observer. |
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She had not given Orwell much notice about this operation because of worries about the cost and because she expected to make a speedy recovery. |
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Orwell suffered a tubercular haemorrhage in February 1946 but disguised his illness. |
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His sister Marjorie died of kidney disease in May and shortly after, on 22 May 1946, Orwell set off to live on the Isle of Jura. |
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Conditions at the farmhouse were primitive but the natural history and the challenge of improving the place appealed to Orwell. |
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Orwell returned to London in late 1946 and picked up his literary journalism again. |
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On the evening of 20 January 1950, Potts visited Orwell and slipped away on finding him asleep. |
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Orwell had requested to be buried in accordance with the Anglican rite in the graveyard of the closest church to wherever he happened to die. |
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David Astor lived in Sutton Courtenay, Oxfordshire, and arranged for Orwell to be interred in All Saints' Churchyard there. |
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George Woodcock suggested that the last two sentences characterised Orwell as much as his subject. |
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The American scholar Scott Lucas has described Orwell as an enemy of the Left. |
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In 2014 it was announced that Orwell's birthplace, a bungalow in Motihari, Bihar, in India would become the world's first Orwell museum. |
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In 2014 a play written by playwright Joe Sutton titled Orwell in America was first performed. |
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When Orwell was in the sanatorium in Kent, his wife's friend Lydia Jackson visited. |
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Orwell had an affair with his secretary at Tribune which caused Eileen much distress, and others have been mooted. |
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Orwell had met her when she was assistant to Cyril Connolly, at Horizon literary magazine. |
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Orwell was an atheist who identified himself with the humanist outlook on life. |
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Orwell liked to provoke arguments by challenging the status quo, but he was also a traditionalist with a love of old English values. |
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In 1928, Orwell began his career as a professional writer in Paris at a journal owned by the French Communist Henri Barbusse. |
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Special Branch, the intelligence division of the Metropolitan Police, maintained a file on Orwell for more than 20 years of his life. |
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When sharing a flat with Orwell, Heppenstall came home late one night in an advanced stage of loud inebriation. |
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When he complained, Orwell hit him across the legs with a shooting stick and Heppenstall then had to defend himself with a chair. |
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Orwell was openly homophobic, at a time when such prejudice was not uncommon. |
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After Sonia Brownell's death, other works on Orwell were published in the 1980s, with 1984 being a particularly fruitful year for Orwelliana. |
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Shelden speculated that Orwell possessed an obsessive belief in his failure and inadequacy. |
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Peter Davison's publication of the Complete Works of George Orwell, completed in 2000, made most of the Orwell Archive accessible to the public. |
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The River Orwell flows through Ipswich and has its mouth, along with the River Stour at Felixstowe. |
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In his classic essay on the topic George Orwell distinguishes nationalism from patriotism, which he defines as devotion to a particular place. |
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The rise of totalitarian states is the subject of British writer George Orwell. |
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The rock-bottom foundation on which my tradition stands is George Orwell. |
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Chesterton, and George Orwell praised his realism, comic voice, prose fluency, and satiric caricature, as well as his passionate advocacy on behalf of children and the poor. |
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My favourite writers are Orwell for his political perspective, Irvine Welsh for his disgusting characters and Erich Maria Remarque for his unbiased portrayal of war. |
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Relativism asserts the equality of the world's cultures but, in the great tradition of Orwell, claims that some cultures are more equal than others. |
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In doing so, this interpretation allows us to square the sensibility of the conservative antisocialist interpretation with the fact that Orwell was a socialist. |
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George Orwell in his essay Some Thoughts on the Common Toad described the emergence of the common toad from hibernation as one of the most moving signs of spring. |
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Orwell received more streptomycin treatment and improved slightly. |
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One biography of Orwell accused him of having had an authoritarian streak. |
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In October 2015 Finlay Publisher, for the Orwell Society, published George Orwell 'The Complete Poetry', compiled and presented by Dione Venables. |
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Orwell wrote a critique of George Bernard Shaw's play Arms and the Man. |
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Throughout his life Orwell continually supported himself as a book reviewer, writing works so long and sophisticated they have had an influence on literary criticism. |
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He maintains a public profile as patron of the Orwell Society. |
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Tuberculosis was diagnosed and the request for permission to import streptomycin to treat Orwell went as far as Aneurin Bevan, then Minister of Health. |
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A fan of Orwell since school days, he found the reality very different, with Orwell hostile and disagreeable probably because of Holbrook's membership of the Communist Party. |
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David Astor was instrumental in arranging a place for Orwell on Jura. |
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Orwell returned home for a while and then went back to Europe. |
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Orwell had been looking for the opportunity throughout the war, but his failed medical reports prevented him from being allowed anywhere near action. |
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Orwell had to scrabble around in the rubble for his collection of books, which he had finally managed to transfer from Wallington, carting them away in a wheelbarrow. |
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Sergeant Orwell managed to recruit Frederic Warburg to his unit. |
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On the arrival of a British ILP Contingent about three weeks later, Orwell and the other English militiaman, Williams, were sent with them to Monte Oscuro. |
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Orwell stepped into a complex political situation in Catalonia. |
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The relationship was sometimes awkward and Orwell and Heppenstall even came to blows, though they remained friends and later worked together on BBC broadcasts. |
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Their reason is George Orwell newspeak, in short, meaningless. |
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