You can copy this item for personal use, share it, and post it on a blog or website. It cannot be used commercially without permission. Please ensure the following credit accompanies it:
Western Mail (Cardiff)
http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/dbworkshop/index.php/Detail/objects/95774
Accessed on 2022/05/27 02:33:32
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE TEI PUBLIC "customisation-tei/tei_readingExp.dtd" "">
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0">
<teiHeader>
<fileDesc>
<titleStmt>
<author>
<persName>
<forename>Daniel</forename>
<surname>Defoe</surname>
</persName>
</author>
<title>Robinson Crusoe</title>
</titleStmt>
<sourceDesc>
<biblStruct>
<monogr>
<author>
<persName>
<forename/>
<surname/>
</persName>
</author>
<title>Western Mail (Cardiff)</title>
<imprint>
<pubPlace>Cardiff</pubPlace>
<date>07-Jun-00</date>
</imprint>
<availability/>
<biblScope/>
</monogr>
</biblStruct>
</sourceDesc>
<notesStmt>
<note>xml/ukred-31363.xml</note>
</notesStmt>
</fileDesc>
<profileDesc>
<correspDesc>
<correspAction type="sending">
<persName>
<forename/>
<surname/>
</persName>
</correspAction>
<correspAction type="receiving">
<persName>
<forename/>
<surname/>
</persName>
</correspAction>
</correspDesc>
<langUsage/>
</profileDesc>
<experienceDesc>
<experience ref="ukred-31363">
<respStmt resp="submitter">
<resp>submitted by</resp>
<persName>
<forename>Bob</forename>
<surname>Owens</surname>
</persName>
<address>
<address_line/>
</address>
<email>w.r.owens@open.ac.uk</email>
</respStmt>
<respStmt resp="editor"/>
<date from="1899-07-15" to="2016-07-15"> 1899 - 1900</date>
<time/>
<reader>
<persName>
<forename/>
<surname/>
</persName>
<sex/>
<age>Adult (18-100+)</age>
<education scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/education"/>
<birth/>
<country>Wales</country>
<readerStatus scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/reader_status"/>
</reader>
<listener/>
<place>
<location>
<country>Wales</country>
<district/>
</location>
</place>
<textRead>
<author>
<persName>
<forename>Daniel</forename>
<surname>Defoe</surname>
</persName>
</author>
<title>Robinson Crusoe</title>
<genre scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/genre" ref="GEN3">Fiction</genre>
<textProvenance ref="TPR215" scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/text_provenance">Unknown</textProvenance>
<textStatus ref="TST4" scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/text_status">Unknown</textStatus>
<textForm scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/text_form" ref="TFO02">Book</textForm>
<origLanguage>
<language/>
</origLanguage>
<textStatus scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/text_status"/>
</textRead>
<readingExp>
<posture scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/posture"/>
<lighting scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/lighting"/>
<environment scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/environment"/>
<intensity scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/intensity"/>
<emotion scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/emotion"/>
<testimony scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/testimony"/>
<sourceReliability scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/source_reliability"/>
<expFrequency scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/experience_frequency" ref="EXF3">Unknown</expFrequency>
<note>This evidence comes from an article entitled 'Bad Training for Children', printed in the Western Mail (Cardiff), 7 June 1900.</note>
</readingExp>
</experience>
</experienceDesc>
</teiHeader>
<text>
<body>
<p>
<ptr target="ukred-31363">"One young man, a collier . . . was seen reading the war news to a group of men just up out of the pit. The newspaper had been passed on by a friend in the incoming shift. [The reader was then interviewed, and explained how he had learned to read after leaving school] My father was gone on papers and books, and his eyesight failed him. So he thought, as I had been those years in school, I ought to read a bit to him &mdash; and I couldn"t . . . But somehow, by trying to read to him, I came across little bits which made me interested, and I took to the newspapers in the end. The more I got on the more interested I was, and I got hold of an old "Robinson Crusoe" &mdash; I was nineteen when I read "Robinson Crusoe".</ptr>
</p>
</body>
</text>
</TEI>
You can copy this item for personal use, share it, and post it on a blog or website. It cannot be used commercially without permission. Please ensure the following credit accompanies it:
Western Mail (Cardiff)
http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/dbworkshop/index.php/Detail/objects/95774
Accessed on 2022/05/27 02:33:32
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE TEI PUBLIC "customisation-tei/tei_readingExp.dtd" "">
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0">
<teiHeader>
<fileDesc>
<titleStmt>
<author>
<persName>
<forename>Daniel</forename>
<surname>Defoe</surname>
</persName>
</author>
<title>Robinson Crusoe</title>
</titleStmt>
<sourceDesc>
<biblStruct>
<monogr>
<author>
<persName>
<forename/>
<surname/>
</persName>
</author>
<title>Western Mail (Cardiff)</title>
<imprint>
<pubPlace>Cardiff</pubPlace>
<date>07-Jun-00</date>
</imprint>
<availability/>
<biblScope/>
</monogr>
</biblStruct>
</sourceDesc>
<notesStmt>
<note>xml/ukred-31363.xml</note>
</notesStmt>
</fileDesc>
<profileDesc>
<correspDesc>
<correspAction type="sending">
<persName>
<forename/>
<surname/>
</persName>
</correspAction>
<correspAction type="receiving">
<persName>
<forename/>
<surname/>
</persName>
</correspAction>
</correspDesc>
<langUsage/>
</profileDesc>
<experienceDesc>
<experience ref="ukred-31363">
<respStmt resp="submitter">
<resp>submitted by</resp>
<persName>
<forename>Bob</forename>
<surname>Owens</surname>
</persName>
<address>
<address_line/>
</address>
<email>w.r.owens@open.ac.uk</email>
</respStmt>
<respStmt resp="editor"/>
<date from="1899-07-15" to="2016-07-15"> 1899 - 1900</date>
<time/>
<reader>
<persName>
<forename/>
<surname/>
</persName>
<sex/>
<age>Adult (18-100+)</age>
<education scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/education"/>
<birth/>
<country>Wales</country>
<readerStatus scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/reader_status"/>
</reader>
<listener/>
<place>
<location>
<country>Wales</country>
<district/>
</location>
</place>
<textRead>
<author>
<persName>
<forename>Daniel</forename>
<surname>Defoe</surname>
</persName>
</author>
<title>Robinson Crusoe</title>
<genre scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/genre" ref="GEN3">Fiction</genre>
<textProvenance ref="TPR215" scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/text_provenance">Unknown</textProvenance>
<textStatus ref="TST4" scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/text_status">Unknown</textStatus>
<textForm scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/text_form" ref="TFO02">Book</textForm>
<origLanguage>
<language/>
</origLanguage>
<textStatus scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/text_status"/>
</textRead>
<readingExp>
<posture scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/posture"/>
<lighting scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/lighting"/>
<environment scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/environment"/>
<intensity scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/intensity"/>
<emotion scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/emotion"/>
<testimony scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/testimony"/>
<sourceReliability scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/source_reliability"/>
<expFrequency scheme="http://eured.univ-lemans.fr/thesaurus/experience_frequency" ref="EXF3">Unknown</expFrequency>
<note>This evidence comes from an article entitled 'Bad Training for Children', printed in the Western Mail (Cardiff), 7 June 1900.</note>
</readingExp>
</experience>
</experienceDesc>
</teiHeader>
<text>
<body>
<p>
<ptr target="ukred-31363">"One young man, a collier . . . was seen reading the war news to a group of men just up out of the pit. The newspaper had been passed on by a friend in the incoming shift. [The reader was then interviewed, and explained how he had learned to read after leaving school] My father was gone on papers and books, and his eyesight failed him. So he thought, as I had been those years in school, I ought to read a bit to him &mdash; and I couldn"t . . . But somehow, by trying to read to him, I came across little bits which made me interested, and I took to the newspapers in the end. The more I got on the more interested I was, and I got hold of an old "Robinson Crusoe" &mdash; I was nineteen when I read "Robinson Crusoe".</ptr>
</p>
</body>
</text>
</TEI>