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A History of the County of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely
… Map 1/50,000, solid and drift, sheet 188 (1974 edn.). S. Macaulay, Archaeological watching brief on development of … p. 8. V.C.H. Cambs. vii. 1; Proc. C.A.S. xlvii. 2537. Macaulay, Archaeological watching brief. Based on fieldwork. …
A History of the County of Middlesex
… 1883), who earned it a high reputation and was visited by Macaulay, Charles Kingsley, and the French statesman François …
Old and New London
… or else Soho Fields, and this name had been known, as Lord Macaulay points out, at least a year before Sedgemoor, and, … his memory which included all the then members." Lord Macaulay was very desirous to hold the dinnernot at the …
Old and New London
… apart from the rest of the locality. Here the late Lord Macaulay might be seen trudging home with a second-hand book, …
Old and New London
… The Puritans' aversion to the sport, however, as Macaulay remarks, arose not so much from pity for the bull or …
Old and New London
… at Canterbury, by reciting tales to shorten the way. Macaulay says, "It was a national as well as religious …
Old and New London
… proud and vain of being so intimately acquainted with her. Macaulay commends her as "one of those clever, kind-hearted, …
A History of the County of Middlesex
… walked for two hours in the garden at Hampton Court. 721 Macaulay writes of this time that 'the whole kingdom, … of Marlborough (ed. 1742), 115; Evelyn, Diary, Mar. 1689. Macaulay, Hist. Engl. chap. xiv, quoting Atbenian Mercury, 16 … of 1688. He was killed at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690; Macaulay, Hist. of Engl. chap. x; Luttrell, Relation of …
Old and New London
… to the leaders of fashion. "St. James's Square," says Macaulay, "in 1685 was a receptacle for all the offal and … mob that showed but slight respect for the law of nations. Macaulay tells us in his "History" that though an excited …
Old and New London
… above incident occurred, we are not left in the dark by Macaulay. He writes:"When the evening closed in, the … flown with insolence and wine.'" "There were," writes Macaulay, "at the end of Charles II.'s reign, houses near St. … Sheridan, Lord Byron, Sir James Mackintosh, Thomas Moore, Macaulay, Sharp, and almost all the other literary …
Displaying 181 - 190 of 244