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999 _c9322
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008 200208s1962 us |||g |||| 00| f eng d
040 _aBMVLl
_bspa
041 _aspa
082 _a828.82
_bD1I
100 _92900
_aDickens, Charles
_d1812-1870
245 1 0 _aDavid Copperfield :
_bThe younger of Blunderstone Rookery (which he never meant to be published on any account)
_cCharles Dickens ; with an afterword by Edgar Johnson
260 3 _aNew York :
_bThe New American Library,
_c1962.
300 _a880 p. ;
_c18 cm.
490 _a(A Signet Classic ;
_vCO397)
505 2 _aChapter I. Iam born - Chapter II. Observe - Chapter III. I have a change - Chapter IV. I fall into disgrace - Chapter V. I am sent away from home - VI. I enlarge my circle of acquaintance - VII. My "First half" at Salem House - Chapter VIII. My holidays, especially one happy afternoon - Chapter XIX. I have a memorable birthday - Chapter X. I become neglected, and am provided for - Chapter XI. I begin life on My own accounty, and don´t like it - Chapter XII. Liking life on myown account no better, I forme a great resolution - Chapter XIII. The sequel of my resolution - Chapter XIV. My aunt makes up her mind aboout me - Chapter XV. I make another begining - Chapter XVI. I am a new boy in more senses than one - Chapter. XVII. Somebody turns up - Chapter XVIII. A retrospect - Chapter XIX. I look about me, and make a discovery - Chapter XX. Steerforth´s home - Chapter XXI. little Em´ly - Chapter XXII. Some old scenes, and some new people - Chapter XXIII. I corroborate Mr. Dick, and choose a profesion - Chapter XXIV. My first dissipation - Chapter XXV. Good and bad angels - Chapter XXVI. I fall into captivity - Chapter XXVII. Tommy Traddles - Chapter XXVIII. Mr. Micawber´s gauntlet - Chapter XXIX. Chapter. I visit steerforth at his home again - Chapter XXX. A loss - XXXI. A greater loss - Chapter XXXII. The begining of a long journey - Chapter XXXIII. Blissful - Chapter XXXIV. My aunt Astonishes me - Chapter XXXV. Depression - Chapter XXXVI. Enthusiasm - Chapter XXXVII. A little cold water - Chapter XXXVIII. A dissolution of partnership - Chapter XXXIX. Wckfield and heep - Chapter XL. The wanderer - Chapter XLI. Dora´s aunts - Chapter XLII. Mischief - Chapter XLIII. Another restrospect - Chapter XLIV. Our housekeeping - Chapter XLV. Mr. Dick fulfils my aunt´s predictions - Chapter XLVI. Intelligence - Chapter XLVII. Martha - Chapter XLVIII. Domestic - Chapter XLIX I am involved in mystery - Chapter L. Mr. Peggotty´s drean comes true - Chapter LI. The begining of a lounger journey - Chapter LII. I assist at an explosion - Chapter LIII. Another restrospect - Chapter. LIV. Mr. Micawber´s transactions - Chapter LV. Tempest - Chapter LVI. The new wound, and teh old - Chapter LVII. The emigrants - Chapter LVIII. Absence - Chapter LIX. Return - Chapter LX. Agnes - Chapter LXI. I am shown two interesting penitents - Chapter LXII. A light shines on my way - Chapter LXIII. A visitor - Chpater LXIV. A last restrospect.
520 3 _a"The year befores he died Charles Dickens wrote of David Copperfield, "Of all my books, I like this the best". The story of the abandoned waif who develops a "disciplined heart" though challenging encounters with distress and msifortune is a supreme example of Dickens skill as a novelist. In this great work plots and counterplots aare interwoven into one intricate, grand design... and a huge gallery of individual characters comes alive. the malignantly treacherous Uriah Heep, the jovial nurse Peggottly, the foolishly innocent Dora, the improvident Mr. Micawber, the egotistic and charmin Steerforth - these stand among literatures´s most remembered people. "Dickens excelled in character; in the creation of characters of greater intensity than human beongs." - T.S. Eliot.
648 4 _92245
_aSiglo XIX
650 1 4 _92875
_aLiteratura inglesa
650 1 4 _92157
_aNovelas
700 1 _99584
_aJohnson, Edgar,
_ewith and afterword by
900 _c03/03/2017
_eDonación
_gMiguel Giusti
910 _afsh
_c08/02/2020
942 _2ddc
_cLIBRO