tailieunhanh - LUYỆN ĐỌC TIẾNG ANH QUA TÁC PHẨM VĂN HỌC-VANITY FAIR -WILLIAM MAKERPEACE THACKERAY -CHAPTER 45

VANITY FAIR WILLIAM MAKERPEACE THACKERAY CHAPTER 45 Đây là một tác phẩm anh ngữ nổi tiếng với những từ vựng quen thuộc. Nhằm giúp các em và các bạn yêu thich tiếng anh luyện tập và củng cố thêm kỹ năng đọc tiếng anh | VANITY FAIR WILLIAM MAKERPEACE THACKERAY CHAPTER 45 Between Hampshire and London Sir Pitt Crawley had done more than repair fences and restore dilapidated lodges on the Queen s Crawley estate. Like a wise man he had set to work to rebuild the injured popularity of his house and stop up the gaps and ruins in which his name had been left by his disreputable and thriftless old predecessor. He was elected for the borough speedily after his father s demise a magistrate a member of parliament a county magnate and representative of an ancient family he made it his duty to show himself before the Hampshire public subscribed handsomely to the county charities called assiduously upon all the county folk and laid himself out in a word to take that position in Hampshire and in the Empire afterwards to which he thought his prodigious talents justly entitled him. Lady Jane was instructed to be friendly with the Fuddlestones and the Wapshots and the other famous baronets their neighbours. Their carriages might frequently be seen in the Queen s Crawley avenue now they dined pretty frequently at the Hall where the cookery was so good that it was clear Lady Jane very seldom had a hand in it and in return Pitt and his wife most energetically dined out in all sorts of weather and at all sorts of distances. For though Pitt did not care for joviality being a frigid man of poor hearth and appetite yet he considered that to be hospitable and condescending was quite incumbent on-his station and every time that he got a headache from too long an afterdinner sitting he felt that he was a martyr to duty. He talked about crops corn-laws politics with the best country gentlemen. He who had been formerly inclined to be a sad free-thinker on these points entered into poaching and game preserving with ardour. He didn t hunt he wasn t a hunting man he was a man of books and peaceful habits but he thought that the breed of horses must be kept up in the country and that the breed of foxes must .

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