Clay Lane

The Copy Book

A Library of History and Literature in English

← Page 1

1111

The Glorious First of June

Admiral Lord Howe battered a French fleet far out in the Atlantic, and helped prevent the spread of bloody revolution.

As soon as power had been secured after the Revolution of 1789, France’s new government began invading neighbouring countries in Europe, and seeking to evangelize the world with revolutionary fervour. Happily, the seed of republicanism fell on very stony ground on this side of the Channel.

Read

Picture: Via Wikimedia Commons. Licence: Public domain.. Source.

1112

Kanguru!

James Cook describes his first sight of a beloved Australian icon.

James Cook captained ‘Endeavour’ on a round trip to New Zealand and Australia from 1768 to 1771. Between June and August 1770, the ship lay at the mouth of the Endeavour (Wabalumbaal) River in north Queensland, undergoing repairs. Cook kept a meticulous journal, in which he described some of the animals he saw.

Read

Picture: © Fir0002/Flagstaffotos, via Wikimedia Commons. Licence: GFDL v1.2.. Source.

1113

Heracles and the Cattle of Geryon

Heracles must get the better of a three-bodied giant and steal his cattle.

Heracles’s Tenth Labour sees him travel to southern Spain, his cousin Eurystheus once again hoping the hero will not return. As with the Amazons the tale is more involved than the earlier labours, since the ancient story-tellers tie our hero into the geography of the Mediterranean.

Read

Picture: © Hansvandervliet, via Wikimedia Commons. Licence: Public domain.. Source.

1114

Pure Selfishness

The brilliant but dangerously obsessive Dr Griffin decides that the end justifies the means.

The stories of H.G. Wells repeatedly warn that scientific research can be dangerously obsessive. In the case of Dr Griffin, however, the obsessive had become the psychopathic, as he revealed when telling an old college acquaintance about his own all-consuming project – to turn a man invisible.

Read

Picture: © Dave Croker, Geograph. Licence: CC-BY-SA 2.0.. Source.

1115

Arthur MacPherson

MacPherson’s tireless efforts to promote Russian sport earned him a unique Imperial honour, and the enmity of the Communists.

Arthur Davidovitch MacPherson (1870-1919) was born in St Petersburg. He played a key part in establishing both Association football and tennis in his native land, helping Tsar Nicholas II to send a clear signal that Imperial Russia was becoming a modern and liberal society – the last thing the Communists wanted to see.

Read

Picture: Via Wikimedia Commons. Licence: Public domain.. Source.

1116

The Aspden Cup

British factory workers started a historic three-cornered league in the Russian city of St Petersburg.

In the 19th century, Russia’s Tsars began to recognise the link between freedom, trade and prosperity. Merchants from Britain and other European neighbours were encouraged to relocate industries such as shipping, steel and textiles to Imperial Russia’s increasingly open society, and none was more important than Association football.

Read

Picture: Via Wikimedia Commons. Licence: Public domain.. Source.