Old London: Papers Read at the London Congress, July, 1866J. Murray, 1867 - 376 pages |
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Page x
... beautiful Corpora- tion Chapel attached to Guildhall was still standing ; all knew how much of Westminster Palace and of St. Stephen's Chapel , which have now perished , was revealed after the great fire of 1834 ; while the re ...
... beautiful Corpora- tion Chapel attached to Guildhall was still standing ; all knew how much of Westminster Palace and of St. Stephen's Chapel , which have now perished , was revealed after the great fire of 1834 ; while the re ...
Page 8
... , which is the special duty and delight of the modern antiquarian , is also the best check to exaggerated and partial veneration . To appre- ciate the truly grand and the truly beautiful in art 8 HISTORY OF OLD LONDON .
... , which is the special duty and delight of the modern antiquarian , is also the best check to exaggerated and partial veneration . To appre- ciate the truly grand and the truly beautiful in art 8 HISTORY OF OLD LONDON .
Page 9
... beautiful in art or in sentiment - to condense within the same view the beginning and end of great institutions and edifices has an effect not narrowing or depressing , but widening and elevating in a high degree . A reverent admiration ...
... beautiful in art or in sentiment - to condense within the same view the beginning and end of great institutions and edifices has an effect not narrowing or depressing , but widening and elevating in a high degree . A reverent admiration ...
Page 143
... beautiful works as a structure perfect in itself , of a purely English type as to its plan and outline , and as carrying out the principle of window tracery in a fuller and grander degree than any part of the church ; and it is a happy ...
... beautiful works as a structure perfect in itself , of a purely English type as to its plan and outline , and as carrying out the principle of window tracery in a fuller and grander degree than any part of the church ; and it is a happy ...
Page 147
... beautiful . One of them is remarkably well preserved , and quite a gem of foliated carving . The paving of the walk which had been so long closed still shows the effects of the monks ' feet as they entered in double file . The inner ...
... beautiful . One of them is remarkably well preserved , and quite a gem of foliated carving . The paving of the walk which had been so long closed still shows the effects of the monks ' feet as they entered in double file . The inner ...
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Abbey ancient angles appears arch architecture beautiful Bishop buildings Byward Catalogue century chamber chapel chapter-house church coloured contained Crown curtain decoration ditch door doubt Duke Earl east Edward Edward III effigy Elizabeth England English Etem a table Exchequer Exhibition exterior Fcap figures floor fortress Gallery gate Gothic Hampton Court Palace Henry III Henry VIII History Holbein Illustrations inner ward Inventory James James's John Julius Cæsar Kensington King Charles King's Lady lodged London loops Lord Mantua Mantua piece Mary ment monument mural Norman opening original outer ward painted picture Pipe Rolls Portrait Post 8vo present Prince probably Queen Raphael recess records reign Richard Richard II royal Salt tower sculpture Second Edition side stone Thames tion Titian tomb turret vaulted Vols Wakefield tower wall well-stair Westminster Abbey Westminster Hall Whitehall Whitehall Palace Windsor Castle Woodcuts
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Page vii - Then goes he on along by that more beauteous strand, Expressing both the wealth and bravery of the land. (So many sumptuous bowers, within so little space, The all-beholding Sun scarce sees in all his race.) And on by London leads, which like a crescent lies, Whose...
Page 278 - ... of the popular assent in the election of a king; but it marks the progress of English independence under Henry that London now claimed of itself the right of election. Undismayed by the absence of the hereditary counsellors of the crown, its "Aldermen and wise folk gathered together the folkmoot, and these providing at their own will for the good of the realm, unanimously resolved to choose a king.
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Page 273 - Wyclif, the Reformation, the Puritan enthusiasm, and the mission work of the Wesleys. Everywhere in town and country men banded themselves together for prayer: hermits flocked to the woods: noble and churl welcomed the austere Cistercians, a reformed offshoot of the Benedictine order, as they spread over the moors and forests of the North.
Page 224 - Whereupon the King, after alluding to his having dismissed his son, Edward Prince of Wales, from his house for nearly half a year for some outrage towards the King's officers, ordered that William de Brewes, with his body ungirt, his head uncovered, and his coif laid aside, should go from 'the King's Bench at Westminster through the middle of the Hall, when the Court was full, to the Exchequer, and there ask Roger de Hegham's pardon and apologise for his offence to him; and that for the contempt...