Produced by Al Haines
[Frontispiece: NO. 1. AN OLD RIVER-WALL OR EMBANKMENT (CHELSEA) _See page_ 9]
STORIES OF
LONDON
BY
E. L. HOSKYN, B.A. (LOND.)
AUTHOR OF "PICTURES OF BRITISH HISTORY," ETC.
WITH A PREFACE BY
SOPHIE BRYANT, D.Sc., LITT.D.
[Illustration: Title page logo]
LONDON
ADAM AND CHARLES BLACK
1914
{3}
PREFACE
There are many kinds of ignorance which, for lack of time and opportunity, we may rightly tolerate in ourselves. Ignorance of the stories that cling around and beautify the home-place is not one of these. A place, indeed, is not a home unless human life has woven a thread of story through and through it. Happy are those who dwell as children in a place well clad with racy memories and legendary lore. The city-home of the London child is just such a place. Here we have a city with an old old history losing itself in the mists of time, and preserving itself in the memorials of its ancient sites and the tales that grow like ivy round its odd place-names. Of all this the careless city-dweller takes no note, but the London child should be a different kind of being. London stories are racy of London; they reflect its life in every age; and the London child is heir to them all.
The stories of London in this little book are interesting to everybody, whether young or old; they cannot fail to be so, because London is interesting, more or less, to everybody in the world. But the book is written more particularly for the children of London, so that they may not be careless city-dwellers, as so many are, but may grow up into real citizens of this great London, loving their old city in all its nooks and corners for its own dear sake, feeling it in all the twists and turns of its varied history, as if their life and its life were bound up in one.
But this is not all that the study of London's stories may {4} do for the London child. The natural beginning of interest in history--including the literature that collects around it--arises out of interest in the story of the place in which we live. We walk about the place and picture the events of which we read as happening within it. The place is transfigured, is filled with life; and the story is transfigured too as seen against the background to which it really belongs. In the case of London, moreover, there is a good deal of useful work for the imagination to do in sufficiently restoring that background to its primitive simplicity. So the London child who knows the London stories thoroughly--so thoroughly as to be able to see them in their real setting, as they happened in that city by the river on the marshes in the olden time--has learnt to know how every other story, including the history proper of any other town or country, should be known. Thus, the study of the home story is for each of us the true beginning of our education in that exercise of historical imagination on which our appreciation of history largely depends.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: Stories of London by E. L. Hoskyn
- 2: Whittington setting the king free from his great debt13
- 3: Which ran from the Highgate Woods southward to the Thames
- 4: This stronghold may have been the beginning of London
- 5: One of them was called Goemagot
- 6: Arthur himself was proclaimed King in London
- 7: Who pointed towards Thorney and said
- 8: And Edward had grown up in Normandy
- 9: Pulled down Edward the Confessor's Abbey
- 10: Old pensioners and schoolboys in the charter house
- 11: Sir Thomas Sutton and Sir Walter Manny
- 12: Rahere began to build his hospital
- 13: The idle companion of the foolish young nobles of Assisi
- 14: And they were called Franciscans
- 15: And Sir Richard Gresham had more to do with it
- 16: Nearly two hundred years after Whittington died
- 17: Whose name was Hugh Fitzwarren
- 18: That Richard Whittington became a London merchant
- 19: Appointed Whittington to take his place
- 20: She told Drake to bring the Pelican round to Deptford
- 21: This was the year of the Invincible Armada
- 22: And I think he thought and dreamed much about Manoa
- 23: If you go down the river to Greenwich
- 24: And Mellitus was made Archbishop of Canterbury
- 25: And above all of the Cathedral
- 26: Pictures of british historymore pictures of british history
