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 41
... gave its incumbents an assured place in society . And in the cathedral towns comfortable and dignified colonies of the higher clergy made themselves as much at home as the rooks in the elms above the prebendal houses they inhabited . At ...
... gave its incumbents an assured place in society . And in the cathedral towns comfortable and dignified colonies of the higher clergy made themselves as much at home as the rooks in the elms above the prebendal houses they inhabited . At ...
Page 128
... gave men plenty to eat and drink . In this he spoke for his country . The English ate as though eating were an act of grace ; the very sick were prescribed beefsteaks and port . They ate more than any people because they grew more . A ...
... gave men plenty to eat and drink . In this he spoke for his country . The English ate as though eating were an act of grace ; the very sick were prescribed beefsteaks and port . They ate more than any people because they grew more . A ...
Page 260
... gave birth to Jack Cade ? Was it not that the people were writhing under oppressions which they were not able to bear ? It was because the Government refused to redress their grievances that the people took the law into their own hands ...
... gave birth to Jack Cade ? Was it not that the people were writhing under oppressions which they were not able to bear ? It was because the Government refused to redress their grievances that the people took the law into their own hands ...
Contents
The Breach with Rome 7 | 7 |
Approach to the Capital | 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 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 parish Park parliament Pepys Pierce Egan poor population reform revolution rich river road Romany Rye rough round royal rustic Samuel Bamford seemed shire Simond social society Sorbière squire streets Sunday thousand town trade Trade Union trees village wages wealth weavers West women workers wrote young