Category Archives: London

Plant of the Month: November 2016

I was parking my car outside a friend’s house in leafy western Cambridge when something squidged from above on to the bonnet and disintegrated most messily. I opened the car door and was assailed by a most appalling smell of … Continue reading

Posted in Botany, Cambridge, Exploration, Gardens, London, Natural history | Tagged , , , , , | 18 Comments

Bambini

Anyone who spends any time mooching around art galleries cannot fail to be struck by the quite remarkable ugliness of many infant Jesuses. I’m not talking about the extreme stylisation – derived from the Byzantine tradition – of Virgin and … Continue reading

Posted in Art, Cambridge, History, London, Museums and Galleries, Venice | Tagged , , , , , | 10 Comments

A History of Gardening in England

The author of this work, Alicia Amherst, was subject more than most to changes of nomenclature. Her father was William Amhurst Tyssen-Amherst (1835–1909). His father was William George Daniel-Tyssen, but in 1852 both father and son had taken the name … Continue reading

Posted in Bibliography, Botany, Gardens, London, Natural history | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

The King’s Faithful Servant

Rustat Road in Cambridge is where, in a former century, one used to go and pay one’s water rates to the Cambridge Water Company. I haven’t been able to find a picture of the building online, but I have a … Continue reading

Posted in Biography, Cambridge, History, London, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , | 10 Comments

Hazelnuts

To the Curtain Theatre at Shoreditch, where we watched the play, Every Man in His Humour, by Mr Ben Jonson, with Mr William Shakespeare among the actors. Well, we almost did, the only minor problem being that we visited the … Continue reading

Posted in Archaeology, History, Literature, London | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

Unlit Candles

What I know about the Tractarian controversy of the nineteenth century could be written on the head of a very tiny pin and is mostly drawn from the fiction of Antony Trollope (though I have no reason to believe he’s … Continue reading

Posted in Art, Classics, History, London, Music | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

The Lord Mayor’s Show

Him Indoors was let out today (14 November) because he has a ticket for the Lord Mayor’s Show. For us non-Londoners, this is an event which falls sometime between Guy Fawkes and Advent, stops all the traffic in London, and … Continue reading

Posted in History, London | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Printing With Muscles

Some months ago, I saw advertised – on Twitter, I think – a one-day course on printing on a wooden press (of the type Gutenberg would have used, it is thought), run by the Dürer Press Group, at the St … Continue reading

Posted in Bibliography, History, Literature, London, Printing and Publishing | Tagged , , , , , | 12 Comments

Object of the Month: August

This month’s object is a painting from the Museum of Cambridge: it depicts the famous carrier Thomas Hobson, whose method of business brought the expression ‘Hobson’s Choice’ into the language, and who was a great benefactor of the town of … Continue reading

Posted in Cambridge, History, Literature, London, Museums and Galleries | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

A Man and a Brother?

Hindsight is inevitably a snare for the serious historian – how much more so for the dabbling amateur? How could so many normal people (and not just Germans) support the Nazi party? How could so many people (and not just … Continue reading

Posted in History, London | Tagged , , , , , | 5 Comments