Posts Tagged ‘crusoe’
Crusoe’s portraits
“Crusoe”, as Robertson-Glasgow was famous to his friends, was a wild variety of chap, superficially happy-go-lucky, with a vocalise that could be piercing. He carried a deep, Stygian charge of thought, which is ofttimes the goad to humour. He worked hornlike at his essays. Those in this assemblage every prototypal appeared in the Observer and cipher a page-and-a-half apiece. Here
Crusoe’s portraits
“Crusoe”, as Robertson-Glasgow was famous to his friends, was a wild variety of chap, superficially happy-go-lucky, with a vocalise that could be piercing. He carried a deep, Stygian charge of thought, which is ofttimes the goad to humour. He worked hornlike at his essays. Those in this assemblage every prototypal appeared in the Observer and cipher a page-and-a-half apiece. Here