Clay Lane

The Copy Book

A Library of History and Literature in English

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787

Much Cry but Little Wool

Joseph Addison complains that the famous Cries of London are a lot of fuss about nothing.

‘The Cries of London’, the various musical and not-so-musical calls of street vendors in Queen Anne’s capital, were widely regarded with affection and pride. But the endless drumming of tins and kettles left Joseph Addison’s nerves raw, and the medley of slogans and doggerel verses was if anything worse.

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Picture: By Paul Sandby (1731-1809), via Wikimedia Commons. Licence: Public domain.. Source.

788

The Best and Worst of Britain

A Portuguese merchant assesses Great Britain’s market under the Hanoverians.

Manoel Gonzales tells us that he was a native of Lisbon, educated by the Jesuits. His mother pulled him from the school on suspicion that the priests were after his inheritance, so Manoel set himself to expand his father’s business instead. On April 23rd, 1730 – St George’s Day, as he noted — Gonzales set out for Falmouth, intending to reconnoitre his chosen market.

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Picture: © Rob Farrow, Geograph. Licence: CC BY-SA 2.0.. Source.

789

A Country Squire in London

Lord Macaulay describes the toils of a typical country gentleman visiting London in the time of Charles II.

Macaulay’s influential history of England, which first appeared in 1848, was a paean to Progress and especially to progress in Britain. By his day, London was truly England’s capital, a cosmopolitan railway hub; back in the 1660s, however, it was an island entire of itself, and any rural squire who struggled in over the dirty and rutted roads found himself in a foreign land.

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Picture: By Ferdinand van Kessel (1648-1696), via Wikimedia Commons. Licence: Public domain.. Source.

790

Eternal Lines

William Shakespeare immortalised his lover in verse, as if holding back for ever the ravages of Time.

Without question, William Shakespeare’s Sonnet 18 is one of the best known and most beloved poems in the English language. William immortalises his lover in verse, saying that though beauty must pass away all too soon, she and her loveliness will live on in his lines as long as there are men to read them.

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Picture: © Bob Harvey, Geograph. Licence: CC-BY-SA 2.0.. Source.

791

A Tiger By Morning

When Raffles Haw comes to sleepy Tamfield, his breathtaking generosity starts turning heads at once, and one belongs to Laura McIntyre.

The first visit of the McIntyres’ new neighbour, free-spending, blue-sky-thinking Raffles Haw, has impressed Laura deeply. He has been upstairs to her brother’s studio and bought two paintings, and even offered to move an unsightly hill for her convenience. Laura’s fiancé Hector, away at sea, is quite forgotten.

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Picture: © Vadim Smalkov, Wikimedia Commons. Licence: CC BY-SA 4.0.. Source.

792

A Universal Truth

From the very first lines, Jane Austen’s classic novel ‘Pride and Prejudice’ pokes affectionate fun at Georgian England.

The opening lines of Jane Austen’s ‘Pride and Prejudice’ (1813) are arguably the best-loved in all English fiction. In the drawing-room of Longbourn, a gentleman’s residence near the Hertfordshire village of Meryton, pretty but empty-headed Mrs Bennet is all of a flutter because there is a new neighbour in Netherfield Park.

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Picture: © Mike Searle, Geograph. Licence: CC-BY-SA 2.0.. Source.