Rural Rides, Band 2Cosimo, Inc., 01.01.2005 - 328 Seiten I found the working people of Frome very intelligent; very well informed as to the cause of their misery; not at all humbuggered by the canters, whether about religion or loyalty. -from "Salisbury to Highworth, Saturday, 2 September" Son of an innkeeper, former soldier, champion of the working class, early anticorporate activist, and future Member of Parliament-Will Cobbett's unique eye offers us a perspective on 19th-century England we won't find anywhere else. Cobbett roamed Southern England on horseback in the years between 1821 and 1832, gathering his "economical and political observations relative to matters applicable to, and illustrated by, the state of" that charming part of the world, one in the throes of massive change in the wake of the Industrial Revolution. This is an extraordinary record of a world long gone, one very little documented when it existed, by a voice who was far ahead of his time. British journalist and radical WILLIAM COBBETT (1762-1835) is also the author of The Progress of a Ploughboy to a Seat in Parliament (1830). |
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... leave the hands and the feet ; so that this squire has had pretty good luck . From Trotten we came to Midhurst , and , having baited our horses , went into Cowdry Park to see the ruins of that once noble mansion , from which the ...
... leave the hands and the feet ; so that this squire has had pretty good luck . From Trotten we came to Midhurst , and , having baited our horses , went into Cowdry Park to see the ruins of that once noble mansion , from which the ...
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... leaving the last year's growth to be cut off , leaving the top of the pole three quarters of an inch through . There is nothing that we have ever heard of , of the timber kind , equal to this in point of quickness of growth . In parts ...
... leaving the last year's growth to be cut off , leaving the top of the pole three quarters of an inch through . There is nothing that we have ever heard of , of the timber kind , equal to this in point of quickness of growth . In parts ...
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... leaves of his journal book . But upon looking at it , he said , " I don't want this , because , you know , I have nothing to do but to divide by twelve . " That is right , said I , you are a clever fellow , Dick ; and I shut up the book ...
... leaves of his journal book . But upon looking at it , he said , " I don't want this , because , you know , I have nothing to do but to divide by twelve . " That is right , said I , you are a clever fellow , Dick ; and I shut up the book ...
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... leave behind the wretched cotton lords and wretched Jews and jobbers to go to the workhouse or to Botany Bay . The whole of the loans are said to amount to about twenty - one or twenty - two millions . It is supposed that twelve ...
... leave behind the wretched cotton lords and wretched Jews and jobbers to go to the workhouse or to Botany Bay . The whole of the loans are said to amount to about twenty - one or twenty - two millions . It is supposed that twelve ...
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Inhalt
ii | |
Down the Vale of the Avon in Wiltshire | 34 |
From Salisbury to Warminster from Warminster to Frome from | 58 |
From Highworth to Cricklade and thence to Malmsbury | 80 |
From Malmsbury in Wiltshire through Gloucestershire Hereford | 100 |
From Ryall in Worcestershire to Berghclere in Hampshire | 120 |
From Berghclere to Lyndhurst in the New Forest | 143 |
From Lyndhurst to Beaulieu Abbey thence to Southampton | 167 |
From Weston near Southampton to Kensington | 181 |
To Tring in Hertfordshire | 206 |
Northern Tour | 216 |
Midland Tour | 260 |
Tour in the West | 276 |
Notes | 299 |
323 | |
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abbey acres amongst appears Appleshaw Avon beautiful believe bill Bishopstrow Botley bread Burghclere Butser Hill called cattle Chiddingfold church corn Cotswold crop dare say debt Devizes England farm farmers fellow Forest gentlemen give Gloucestershire grass ground half Hampshire heard Herefordshire Hexham Heytesbury Highworth hill horses hundred labourers land Lincolnshire live locust look Lord Malmsbury meadows means meat miles miserable morning nearly never o'clock paper-money parish parliament parsonage-houses persons Petersfield plantation poor poor-rates population pounds pretty produce Reigate rich ride river road rotten borough ruin Salisbury Scotch seen sheep shillings side Sir James Graham sort spot suffered suppose Sussex tax-eaters taxes things thousand Thursley tithes told town trees turnips vale valley village Warminster wheat whole Wiltshire woods