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The Mill on the Floss still does it for me.
Now she decided to settle down and lose herself in The Mill on the Floss.
"The Mill on the Floss" is a wonderful book with a maddening, melodramatic ending.
True to her spirit, this "Mill on the Floss" is an exquisitely told and deeply emotional tale.
I love The Mill on the Floss: I was rather pleased to hear it.
The Mill on the Floss (1937)
He hates "The Mill On the Floss," too, he tells his teacher.
It based on the novel The Mill on the Floss by George Eliot.
"I am reading The Mill on the Floss, by a bloke called George Eliot."
Have you not noticed there is too much rambling in "Anna Karenina" and "Mill on the Floss"?
It was used as the location for a film of George Eliot's The Mill on the Floss in 1996.
'And we don't want to read The Mill on the Floss,' added Pollux.
May 16-June 10: "Mill on the Floss," Shared Experience Theater Company.
This dreamlike opening is not typical of the new "Mill on the Floss," which is realistic, largely faithful and greatly captivating.
"The Mill On The Floss" by George Eliot - Maggie reads it.
If you're really keen on George Eliot, why not get The Mill on the Floss in a cheap edition and read it?
Something similar was accomplished several years ago onstage in London with the Shared Experience company's dramatization of "The Mill on the Floss."
Mostly they argue about the "The Mill on the Floss": did George Eliot ruin the book with that flagrantly unhappy ending?
The story was adapted as a film, The Mill on the Floss, in 1937, and as a TV mini-series in 1978.
In George Eliot's Mill on the Floss the derivative adjective Rhadamanthine is used.
Amongst the biggest productions include Peter Pan, Ash Girl, and The Mill on the Floss.
The Mill on the Floss - Bob Jakin (Episode Eight, 1979)
On the floor beside Banks lay a copy of George Eliot's The Mill on the Floss.
It's what you say when caught red-handed with "Beyond the Valley of the Dolls" by someone who is rereading "The Mill on the Floss."
One of the packages included the 1860 novel The Mill on the Floss, by English novelist George Eliot, a woman who wrote under an assumed identity.