Yes, but it's really cumbersome to us foreigners.
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This is something we would have been asked to read and analyze in grade 8
I would have understood Michaelmas as the feast day of Saint Michael. My studies of hagiography are too limited to say which day that is or why he got sainted. Nor did I know that British people used (maybe still use) that term to refer to an entire season.
I can get a pretty decent picture of the scene excepting that the writer names these places by name and I don't know what they actually look like so the layout is entirely being generated by my imagination. It's wet. It's muddy. It's miserable and cold. And It's in London, a long time ago so everyone's dressed like Harry Potter characters and covered in shit ala Monty Python's Holy Grail.
Yes, i started drifting away twice and had to think a moment a couple more times but im not a native english speaker so im fine with that.
Fed up people are struggling to walk, slipping and bumping into each other in a gloomy, wet, grey, smokey, dreary, sunless, muddy street in November in Dickensian London. Everything is caked in filth. Then someone swallowed a Thesaurus, ate a couple of mushrooms and tried to describe the scene.
Yes, although slowly. It might be bad because I don't speak English natively.
Also yes.
Yes.
Yes. Read it out loud quickly. It helps me with comprehension.
Yes, but I spent a lot of my childhood reading things like Sherlock Holmes, Jules Verne, count of Monte cristo, Oliver twist, etc.
I would argue Sherlock Holmes, Verne, and Monte Cristo (which I really like) read nothing like the slob OP posted. (I've never read Oliver Twist though).
I would argue that passages like this (Monte cristo) train you to understand OP's slob: “I was then almost assured that the inheritance had neither profited the Borgias nor the family, but had remained unpossessed like the treasures of the Arabian Nights, which slept in the bosom of the earth under the eyes of the genie.”
Also, Oliver twist is by the same author as op.