THE FRIENDLY FOG
Surprising .'though it may be, some people like fog, states a writer in the "Children's Newspaper." .We know someone who enjoys the isolation it gives; and someone else who declares that there _is nothing ,in the world; which makes him more thankful for his own home than a thick'fog, which 'always gives him the impression that the whole earth has vanished, leaving his- one house alone in the Universe. Charles Darwin wrote of the grandeur of the smoky London fogs which, he said, made him glory in the thought of remaining in town' all the winter through. Even Mazzini, born under Italian skies, loved the English fogs, for years after his return to his own sunny land he wrote of the way in' which they laid the cities under a spell.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXXV, Issue 48, 26 February 1938, Page 20
Word Count
134THE FRIENDLY FOG Evening Post, Volume CXXV, Issue 48, 26 February 1938, Page 20
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