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 167
... manufacturing districts were higher than they had ever been . Yorkshire woolcombers were earning five shillings a day , coalminers almost as much . Every- one with ambition was borrowing to launch out in new ways ; even humble Samuel ...
... manufacturing districts were higher than they had ever been . Yorkshire woolcombers were earning five shillings a day , coalminers almost as much . Every- one with ambition was borrowing to launch out in new ways ; even humble Samuel ...
Page 194
... manufacturing districts vice and destitution lived , not in juxtaposition with respectability and splendour , but far removed from them . Most of the steam - factory towns were situated on wild heaths and moors in scantily populated ...
... manufacturing districts vice and destitution lived , not in juxtaposition with respectability and splendour , but far removed from them . Most of the steam - factory towns were situated on wild heaths and moors in scantily populated ...
Page 198
... manufacturing districts , where the controlling forces of custom , Church and ancient neighbourhood were lacking ... manufacture of tools and the transport of goods , were creating a life of a kind hitherto unknown , where craftsmen and ...
... manufacturing districts , where the controlling forces of custom , Church and ancient neighbourhood were lacking ... manufacture of tools and the transport of goods , were creating a life of a kind hitherto unknown , where craftsmen and ...
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