According to sitwell, what are 'the best years of life' ? For 10 marks
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Osbert Sitwell, eldest of a well-known lite-
rary family, has come to distinguish him-
self as the prose Sitvvell, yet he is neither
prosy nor prosaic. With a full share of
mental unconventionality, he writes In an
idiosyncratic style, which befits the essayist,
and, without irritating, gives pleasure to his
readers. The very title, "Penny Foolish," of
his new book of "Tirades and Panegyrics," is
a challenge to orthodoxy, for he objects to
just those minor things which everyone else
accepts as inherent In the social system, or as
morally beneficial if sometimes inconvenient,
to the common assumptions and beliefs of
his fellow-countrymen. Thus, he denies
that the best years of life are in youth, that
rary family, has come to distinguish him-
self as the prose Sitvvell, yet he is neither
prosy nor prosaic. With a full share of
mental unconventionality, he writes In an
idiosyncratic style, which befits the essayist,
and, without irritating, gives pleasure to his
readers. The very title, "Penny Foolish," of
his new book of "Tirades and Panegyrics," is
a challenge to orthodoxy, for he objects to
just those minor things which everyone else
accepts as inherent In the social system, or as
morally beneficial if sometimes inconvenient,
to the common assumptions and beliefs of
his fellow-countrymen. Thus, he denies
that the best years of life are in youth, that
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Answer:
Describe Obsert Sitwell's experience of life before he met the old friend who confided that Seventy is the best years of life
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