Set in a Silver SeaDoubleday, 1968 - 359 pages A social history of England from the days of the first Stuart king, James, when England was largely an agricultural and rural country, through the reign of Queen Victoria, when England had become the world's foremost industrial and Imperial giant. |
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Page 27
... four horses , and the hay loft will hold four loads of hay . There is bins for oats . They say they are very honest and civil people ; Judge Atkins's coach has stood there this fourteen years . Now there is another at the ' Red Harp ...
... four horses , and the hay loft will hold four loads of hay . There is bins for oats . They say they are very honest and civil people ; Judge Atkins's coach has stood there this fourteen years . Now there is another at the ' Red Harp ...
Page 28
... four days a third of the city perished , including the cathedral , the Guildhall , and eighty- four churches . For nearly a generation after the Fire a man could stand in Cheapside and gaze through bare ruins at the boats on the river ...
... four days a third of the city perished , including the cathedral , the Guildhall , and eighty- four churches . For nearly a generation after the Fire a man could stand in Cheapside and gaze through bare ruins at the boats on the river ...
Page 172
... four or five to ten and even twelve miles an hour . The cost of such travel remained heavy ; an inside ticket from London to Liverpool cost four guineas with- out tips and meals . But the gain to traders and men of money was ...
... four or five to ten and even twelve miles an hour . The cost of such travel remained heavy ; an inside ticket from London to Liverpool cost four guineas with- out tips and meals . But the gain to traders and men of money was ...
Contents
The Breach with Rome | 7 |
Approach to the Capital 15 12 253 | 15 |
Pepyss London | 22 |
Copyright | |
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ancient Bamford boys Britain British Buckinghamshire capital capitalist century Charles Lamb Church cloth coaches Cobbett common Corn Laws cottage cotton Court Cranbourn Chase Creevey crowded Crown doors Duke England English peasant factory Farington farm farmers father fields foreign gardens gentlemen gentry Government green Gronow half horses houses Howitt industrial Jane Austen John Byng labour Lady Shelley laissez-faire Lancashire land lanes Lavengro Leigh Hunt liberty lived London Lord Manchester manufacturing Mary Mitford ment merchant miles million Mitford neighbours never night numbers parish Park parliament Pepys Pierce Egan poor population reform revolution rich river road Romany Rye rough round royal rustic Samuel Bamford seemed ships shire Simond social society Sorbière squire streets Sunday thousand town trade Trade Union trees village wages wealth weavers West women workers wrote young