MJ Maccardini (trailerfullofpix)'s photos with the keyword: st george the martyr
IMG 0914-001-St George's Gardens
15 Feb 2024 |
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Gardens created from the former burial grounds of St George's Bloomsbury and St George the Martyr. View large for the details.
IMG 0917-001-Was a Wall
15 Feb 2024 |
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These fragments of grave stones mark the location of the former wall that separated the burial grounds of St George's Bloomsbury and St George the Martyr. (See explanatory sign in previous photo.)
IMG 0920-001-Orbell Fountain
15 Feb 2024 |
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Inscription on the fountain reads "Presented by Emily Bessie Orbell, July 1885." St George's Gardens, Bloomsbury. More info here: www.londonremembers.com/memorials/orbell-fountain-st-george-s-gardens
Angel Place
06 Nov 2009 |
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Dickens Walk in Southwark. www.walksoflondon.co.uk/31/index.shtml
Angel Place, called Angel Court in Dickens's time, is just off Borough High Street, next to the John Harvard Library.
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Pupil of the Marshalsea
06 Nov 2009 |
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Dickens Walk in Southwark. www.walksoflondon.co.uk/31/index.shtml
These pages of Little Dorrit are in Angle Place, near the one remaining wall of the Marshalsea Prison.
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Father & Child of the Marshalsea
06 Nov 2009 |
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Dickens Walk in Southwark. www.walksoflondon.co.uk/31/index.shtml
These pages of Little Dorrit are in Angle Place, near the one remaining wall of the Marshalsea Prison.
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Marshalsea Prison Wall 1
06 Nov 2009 |
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Dickens Walk in Southwark. www.walksoflondon.co.uk/31/index.shtml
Dickens was haunted by Marshalsea Prison. It dominates Little Dorrit, the heroine of which is a debtor’s daughter, born and raised within its confines. And Dickens was speaking from personal experience when he wrote about ‘the games of the prison children as they whooped and ran, and played at hide-and-seek, and made the iron bars of the inner gateway “Home”’. He wrote in the same novel that the Marshalsea ‘is gone now, and the world is none the worse without it’. But, as he neared the book’s completion, spurred on by letters from readers of the serialization enquiring what had become of it, he returned to look upon what remained.
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Marshalsea Prison
06 Nov 2009 |
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Dickens Walk in Southwark. www.walksoflondon.co.uk/31/index.shtml
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Marshalsea Prison Wall 2
06 Nov 2009 |
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Dickens Walk in Southwark. www.walksoflondon.co.uk/31/index.shtml
It was here that John Dickens was incarcerated for debt in 1824. Before being taken, he turned to his 12-year-old son and told him tearfully, ‘the sun was set on him for ever’. ‘I really believed at the time,’ Dickens later told John Forster, that these words ‘had broken my heart.’ Dickens recalled how, when he first visited his father here he ‘was waiting for me in the lodge… and [we] cried very much… And he told me, I remember… that if a man had twenty pounds a year, and spent nineteen pounds nineteen shillings and sixpence, he would be happy; but that a shilling spent the other way would make him wretched.’ Mr Micawber would later give the same advice to David Copperfield in the most autobiographical of all Dickens’s novels.
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Little Dorrit's Church
06 Nov 2009 |
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Dickens Walk in Southwark. www.walksoflondon.co.uk/31/index.shtml
I really wanted to have a look inside to see Little Dorrit herself depicted in one of the stained glass windows, but the church was locked (unlike the night that Amy Dorrit was locked out of the Marshalsea but was able to enter the church and sleep in the vestry).
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St George the Martyr
06 Nov 2009 |
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Dickens Walk in Southwark. www.walksoflondon.co.uk/31/index.shtml
Built between 1734 and 1736. Little Dorrit was christened and married here.
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