In the middle of the 1800s, Mrs Favell Lee Mortimer set out to write an ambitious guide to all the nations on Earth. There were just three problems: She had never set foot outside Shropshire. She was horribly misinformed about virtually every topic she turned her attention to. And she was prejudiced against foreigners. The result was an unintentionally hilarious masterpiece: 'The French like being smart but are not very clean.' 'The Japanese are very polite people - much politer than the Chinese - but very proud.' 'The Scotch will not take much trouble to please strangers.' In The Clumsiest People in Europe, Todd Pruzan has gathered together a selection of Mrs Mortimer's finest moments, celebrating the woman who turned ignorance into an art form.
Favell Lee Mortimer Boeken
14 juli 1802 – 22 augustus 1878
Mrs. Favell Lee Mortimer was een vrouw van diepe vroomheid, maar ook van diepgewortelde vooroordelen. Ze wijdde zich aan de religieuze ontwikkeling van kinderen, waarbij ze de deugden van het protestantisme prees. Tegelijkertijd veroordeelde ze elke andere geloofsovertuiging en praktijk als corrupt of slecht.


The Clumsiest People in Europe
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In the mid-1800s, Mrs Favell Lee Mortimer set out to write an ambitious guide to all the nations on Earth. But she had never set foot outside Shropshire, she was misinformed about virtually every topic she wrote about, & she was prejudiced against foreigners. This text contains a selection of Mrs Mortimer's finest moments.