Sports, pastimes, and customs of London1847 |
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Términos y frases comunes
afterwards Aldermen amongst amusements ancient anniversary annual archery Artillery Ground attended ball barons bear bear-baiting Bishop bore's head boys Bull-bait Candlemas Candlemas-day celebrated century ceremony character Charles chase Christ's Hospital Christmas citizens cock-fighting commemoration commencement court cricket custom customary dancing dinner Duke Easter Monday England exercise Fair Fairlop feast festival fields Fitz-Stephen formerly gardens Garland gentlemen Greenwich Guy Fawkes hall hawking Henry VIII holidays honour horseback horses House hung hunting inhabitants jousts King ladies lance Lord Mayor Lord Mayor's Day Maunday May-day May-games May-pole merry metropolis Michaelmas morning night nobility noble observes Strutt occasion origin pageants performed played practice preached present procession Queen Elizabeth quintain reign ring Roman royal Saxon season sermon Sheriffs shooting shovelboard Shrove Shrove Tuesday singing Smithfield solemn sports and pastimes Stow streets Sunday Survey of London Thames tion tournaments Tuesday valentine Westminster whipping the cock young youth
Pasajes populares
Página 43 - From camp to camp, through the foul womb of night, The hum of either army stilly sounds, That the fix'd sentinels almost receive The secret whispers of each other's watch : Fire answers fire ; and through their paly flames Each battle sees the other's umber'd face...
Página 45 - Come, bring with a noise, My merry, merry boys, The Christmas log to the firing ; While my good dame, she Bids ye all be free, And drink to your hearts
Página 12 - ... having of May games, Whitsun ales, and morris dances, and the setting up of maypoles and other sports therewith used: so as the same be had in due and convenient time, without impediment or neglect of divine service...
Página 7 - On the north are cornfields, pastures, and delightful meadows, intermixed with pleasant streams, on which stands many a mill, whose clack is so grateful to the ear. Beyond them an immense forest extends itself, beautified with woods and groves, and full of the lairs and coverts of beasts and game, stags, bucks, boars, and wild bulls.
Página 51 - ... and balladines to win their bread with: but the exercises that I would have you to use, although but moderately, not making a craft of them, are, running, leaping, wrestling, fencing, dancing, and playing at the caitch, or tennise, archerie, palle-malle, and such like other fair and pleasant field-games.
Página 22 - Last Valentine, the day when birds of kind Their paramours with mutual chirpings find, I early rose, just at the break of day, Before the sun had chased the stars away; Afield I went, amid the morning dew, To milk my kine (for so should huswives do): Thee first I spied, and the first swain we see, In spite of fortune, shall our true love be.
Página 56 - a staff or spear was fixed in the earth, and a shield being hung upon it, was the mark to strike at : the dexterity of the performer consisted in smiting the shield in such a manner as to break the ligatures and bear it to the ground. In process of time...
Página 42 - European, an Egyptian, and a Persian, were personated. On Lord Mayor's Day, 1671, the King, Queen, and Duke of York, and most of the nobility, being present, there were 'sundry shows, shapes, scenes, speeches, and songs in parts;' and the like in 1672 and 1673, when the King again 'graced the triumphs.
Página 50 - Hall, he continued daily to amuse himself in archery, casting of the bar, wrestling, or dancing, and frequently in tilting, tourneying, fighting at the barriers with swords and battle-axes, and such like martial recreations.
Página 40 - Two priests in surplices, with two golden crosses. " Lastly, the Pope, in a lofty, glorious pageant, representing a chair of state, covered with scarlet, richly embroidered and fringed, and bedecked with golden balls and crosses...