. Old England : a pictorial museum of regal, ecclesiastical, baronial, municipal, and popular antiquities . 1683.—House in Charlcote 1886.—Interior of Old English Cottage. 1684.— Shottery Cottage. Q3 i)4 OLD ENGLAND. | Book V. what he beholds, than from an apprehension of disturbing by his approach the quietness beneath him. Besen in- Stoke Church, and the several buildings, monuments,&c, connected with the career of William Shakspere, for mention ecclesiastical notices with a few wo for it elsewhere, we close our ecclesiastical notices with a few words on Chelsea Church (Fig. 1620)
. Old England : a pictorial museum of regal, ecclesiastical, baronial, municipal, and popular antiquities . 1683.—House in Charlcote 1886.—Interior of Old English Cottage. 1684.— Shottery Cottage. Q3 i)4 OLD ENGLAND. | Book V. what he beholds, than from an apprehension of disturbing by his approach the quietness beneath him. Besen in- Stoke Church, and the several buildings, monuments,&c, connected with the career of William Shakspere, for mention ecclesiastical notices with a few wo for it elsewhere, we close our ecclesiastical notices with a few words on Chelsea Church (Fig. 1620) ; not on account of its beauty,is very much the reverse, but on account of the deep interest thatattaches to the man whose supposed mausoleum it is—Sir ThomasMore. We say supposed, for there is good reason to doubt thestatements of Weever and Anthony Wood, that his daughter Mar-garet buried the body here soon after the executioner had performedhis bloody office on it. She is known to have removed the body ofBishop Fisher, Mores friend and fellow-sufferer, from the placewhere it was deposited, to St. Peters church in the Tower,
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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, booksubjecthistoricbuildings