|
|
#1 | |
|
Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 1
|
deeply interested in lime
Could someone explain what "lime" is being talked about at the end of chapter 12?
fruit, lime-light or other? Quote:
|
|
|
|
|
| Word from our Sponsor: |
|
|
|
|
#2 |
|
Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 2
|
This would be lime as in the group of minerals mostly inclusive of carbonates and oxides of calcium. The lime "industry" is a very old one, and these minerals can be extracted from limestone or chalk, which are crushed and "burned" in a lime-kiln. (The Limehouse oft referenced in Our Mutual Friend is such a facility, and a famous/notorious one.) The hydrated lime that is carried up the river in the mentioned barges will probably find its use in concrete, and what starts as Lightwood's comment on the rather unsavory character of Riderhood (who lives in "Lime'us Hole") is here parried with the typical mildly sarcastic remark from Wrayburn.
|
|
|
|
|
|
#3 |
|
Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 2
|
Alternatively, lime was also used as a fertilizer (it speeds up the process of bio-degradation). Wrayburn is asserting that, without "fertilizer", no barrister can be successful. This is another of Dickens's jabs at the law and at the courts. Put in modern American terms, no lawyer has any hope of advancing in his career unless he's capable of slinging a lot of "bull".
I suspect Dickens's original readers would have read the first paragraph with memories of large quantities of lime having been dumped in the Thames to hasten the breakdown of the human feces in the water -- contact with "bad company" indeed! |
|
|
|
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Thread Tools | |
| Rate This Thread | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Anyone interested in Andre Gide? | Gibran | General Literature | 3 | 02-15-2007 09:53 AM |
| Twin Cities - interested in organizing a classic literature class | Apple | General Literature | 12 | 06-22-2005 01:04 PM |
| I was deeply moved | Nhu Phan | The Hunchback of Notre Dame | 0 | 05-24-2005 07:07 PM |