Stoke Newington, a lecture

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Bell and Daldy, 1855 - Stoke Newington (London, England) - 54 pages
 

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Page 44 - He is a middlesized spare man, about forty years old, of a brown complexion, and dark brown coloured hair, but wears a wig ; a hooked nose, a sharp chin, grey eyes, and a large mole near his mouth...
Page 33 - For now the fragrant flowers do spring and sprout in seemly sort, The little birds do sit and sing, the lambs do make fine sport; And now the birchen-tree doth bud, that makes the schoolboy cry; The morris rings...
Page 33 - London, to thee I do present the merry month of May ; Let each true subject be content to hear me what I say: For from the top of Conduit-Head, as plainly may appear, I will both tell my name to you, and wherefore I came here. My name is Ralph, by due descent, though not ignoble I, Yet far inferior to the flock of gracious grocery : And by the common counsel of my fellows in the Strand...
Page 42 - Could but our ancestors retrieve their fate, And see their offspring thus degenerate ; How we contend for birth and names unknown, And build on their past actions, not our own ; They'd cancel records, and their tombs deface, And then disown the vile degenerate race ; For fame of families is all a cheat, 'TIS PERSONAL VIRTUE ONLY MAKES US GREAT...
Page 45 - But fate, that makes foot-balls of men, kicks some men up stairs, and some down ; some are advanced without honour, others suppressed without infamy ; some are raised without merit, some are crushed without crime ; and no man knows, by the beginning of things, whether his course shall issue in a peerage, or a pillory...
Page 34 - Hey for our town!' cried, March out, and shew your willing minds, By twenty and by twenty, To Hogsdon, or to Newington, Where ale and cakes are plenty; And let it ne'er be said for shame, That we the youths of London Lay thrumming of our caps at home, And left our custom undone.
Page 34 - The lords and ladies now abroad, for their disport and play, Do kiss sometimes upon the grass, and sometimes in the hay; Now butter with a leaf of sage is good to purge the blood ; Fly Venus and phlebotomy, for they are neither good ; Now little fish on tender stone begin...
Page 46 - ... cottages of the poor, and communicated equal delight to all ranks and classes of the community. As a work of amusement, it is one of the first books put into the hands of youth ; and there can be none more proper to insinuate instruction, whilst it administers delight. 'Robinson Crusoe,' says Marmontel,1 'is the first book I ever read with exquisite pleasure, - and I believe every boy in Europe might say the same thing.
Page 31 - The fears of the establishment were formally expressed in an ordinance, passed by the lord mayor and aldermen of the city of London in...
Page 25 - ... was the rendezvous of the discontented of every description, and when the princess herself was the hope of the Protestants, exasperated by persecution, she was brought by her friends to the secluded manorhouse, embosomed in trees, as to a secure asylum, where she might communicate with her friends, and be ready for any political emergency. They tell us that an ancient brick tower stood in the early part of the last century near the mansion, and that a staircase was remembered leading to the identical...

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