An edition of Our hearts were young and gay (1942)

Our hearts were young and gay

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Last edited by MARC Bot
February 14, 2020 | History
An edition of Our hearts were young and gay (1942)

Our hearts were young and gay

  • 5.00 ·
  • 1 Rating
  • 21 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 2 Have read

"Cornelia Otis Skinner and Emily Kimbrough went abroad together. This was in the early twenties, and they were not quite in theirs.

"'Emily,' Cornelia said, 'attracts trouble the way blue serge attracts lint.' But it was, after all Cornelia who came down with measles and a great many complications. Emily did nearly drown a man, but her intention was only to be helpful; and when she hit an English nobleman in the face, it was unpremeditated and in sport. Certainly the shipwreck was not the fault of either of them, though Cornelia has always averred that the mere fact of Emily's being there helped bring it about.

"They were young and foolish, and their hearts were gay. They laughed at nearly everything, but they cried, too, at England, and the sight of France, the Eiffel Tower and Joan of Arc. They had been brought up to know about such places, and sure enough they were true, and Cornelia and Emily were there, to see them.

"They met some famous people, but were not particularly noticed by them, except when Emily, overawed, at tea, ate the baby ribbon around a sandwich, and the celebrity watched her as one hypnotized.

"Their clothes were dreadful and unpredictable. Cornelia dressed in a variety of roles, swooping from the fresh, wholesome American girl, to a sultry Theda Bara 'vamp,' leaving her family dazed but proud.

"They were earnest, too, about 'doing things really worthwhile,' and 'getting the most out of everything.' So they studied at the Sorbonne, and with teachers at the Comedie Francaise, but they learned other things they'd never dreamed of, and swallowed them, round-eyed and gulping.

"They were every young American girl on her first trip abroad. They discovered and they owned Europe, or such part of it as they awkwardly cantered over, and they adored almost everything they encountered. Such things as they did not adore, they hated. They would not have known enough nor how to be bored. They longed to be considered worldly, but they were not of the world; they were on top of it."

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
247

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Our hearts were young and gay
Cover of: Our hearts were young and gay
Cover of: Our hearts were young and gay
Our hearts were young and gay
1954, Globe Book Co.
in English - A school edition, by Frederick Houk Law.
Cover of: Our hearts were young and gay
Our hearts were young and gay
copyright 1942, Dodd, Mead & Company Grosset and Dunlap
Hardback w/cover sheet in English
Cover of: Our hearts were young and gay
Our hearts were young and gay
1942, Dodd, Mead & company
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Published in
New York

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
817.5
Library of Congress
PS3537.K533 O8, PS3537.K533 O8 1942

The Physical Object

Pagination
4 p., l., 247 p.
Number of pages
247

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL6443869M
Internet Archive
ourheartswereyou00skinrich
LCCN
42036388
Library Thing
93875

Work Description

Two ingenues "do the Continent" pre-WWII. Skinner takes us from the innocence of youth in the 1920s to the dawn of WWII, replete with all the faux pas and fiascoes you would expect from youth taking Europe on their own in the early part of the twentieth century when innocence still existed and innuendo was unheard of. A great read.

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History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON
February 14, 2020 Edited by MARC Bot remove fake subjects
January 28, 2017 Edited by weslee d. hancock Edited without comment.
September 23, 2016 Edited by Haylee Jane Ougribe Description
December 13, 2012 Edited by Laura Cain Edited without comment.
December 10, 2009 Created by WorkBot add works page