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Updated: June 26, 2025
Like the man in the parable, she set out a banquet of which the bidden guests refused to partake. No scholars were sent to her. Therefore, at the end of a few months, she was glad to move to Newington Green, where better prospects seemed to await her. There she had relatives and influential friends, and the encouragement she received from them induced her to begin work on a large scale.
My friend had provided me something as remote from Massachusetts as South Carolina in colonial interest, and we were presently speeding to New River, which Sir Hugh Myddleton taught to flow through the meadows of Stoke Newington to all the streets of London, and so originated her modern water-supply.
Here is a great deal about myself, and nothing about those whom I have seen in London, and of whom we have all heard in the country. I will make a report upon them in my next letter. God bless you. Yours sincerely, Robert Southey." Letter from Robert Southey, to Amos Cottle, Magdalen College, Cambridge. "London, Feb. 28, 1797. 20, Prospect Place, Newington Butts.
IRELAND: "NEWINGTON, January 29th, 1777. "Thanks be to God, and to my dear friend, for favours upon favours, for undeserved love and the most endearing tokens of it! "I have received your obliging letters, full of kind offers; and your jar, full of excellent grapes. May God open to you the book of life, and seal upon your heart all the offers and promises it contains!
"Why not, sir if you prefer it?" he rejoined. "Pray proceed." The Prophet's face was flushed, either by the "creaming foam," or by irritation, or by both. "Surely," he began, in a choking voice, "surely the stars are the same whether they are looked at from Berkeley Square or from from or from" he sought passionately for a violent contrast "from Newington Butts," he concluded triumphantly.
Comrade Quelch, in an eloquent speech at Newington Butts, had pointed, amidst enthusiasm, to the republics of South America, where the system worked admirably. Scotland, too, disapproved of the army, because it was professional. Mr. Smith wrote several trenchant letters to Mr. C. J. B. Marriott on the subject.
So lead on, master. The garden of the "Windmill Inn," at Salt Hill. MISS BURSAL, MRS. NEWINGTON, SALLY, the Chambermaid. Miss Bursal. Where am I? Where am I? Landlady. At the "Windmill," at Salt Hill, young lady; and ill or well, you can't be better. Sally. Do you find yourself better since coming into the air, miss? Miss B. Better! Oh, I shall never be better! Landlady.
Charles Morton sought to include in his teaching at Newington Green a training in such knowledge of current history as would show his boys the origin and meaning of the controversies of the day in which, as men, they might hereafter take their part. He took pains, also, to train them in the use of English.
But his course of life goes to show that he had wonderfully easy trustees, as he immediately bought himself off the grocery business, and made a long tour of the Continent for the benefit of his health. Returning to England, he dropped into the little village of Stoke Newington, a mere hamlet, where he had some possessions.
It was not until the accused man had indignantly denied all knowledge of Droop's property that the crestfallen Yankee recollected that he had left the apparatus in question in the deserted mansion of Newington, where he had stored it for greater safety after Bacon's first unexpected visit. Without hesitation, he determined to return to 1598 and reclaim his own.
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