They suddenly saw the tremendous cathedral looming up before them (Page 70) | Frontispiece |
| FACING PAGE |
“Oh, what’s this place? I am sure I have seen pictures of it!” | 12 |
“Do you remember those quaint little verses about ‘Bow Bells’?” | 16 |
“I only wish i could be a Guard and ride a horse like one of those!” | 20 |
“There’s the Abbey right ahead of us” | 26 |
“What’s the use of having so many doors?” | 40 |
“This seems to speak of peace, happiness, and safety” | 44 |
“I want to see who those fellows in the funny red uniforms are” | 50 |
“The king cannot proceed into the ‘City’ without being first received at Temple Bar by the Lord Mayor” | 68 |
“I’d feel like ‘Little Lord Fauntleroy’ going around with those clothes on!” | 84 |
“You remember, don’t you, having the guide point out London Bridge?” | 88 |
The moss-grown Saxon porch | 96 |
John Milton lived there after he fled from London | 106 |
“Oh, here’s the old Coronation Chair, isn’t it?” | 114 |
“Every time I visit this palace I marvel at the amount of history with which it is connected” | 136 |
“Why, I didn’t suppose it was as big as that!” | 140 |
“Did Anne truly live here?” | 164 |
“They know how important they are, and that this garden wouldn’t be complete without them” | 184 |
“It still seems alive with memories of the fair Dorothy Vernon” | 218 |
“There still remains the question of how these tremendous stones were brought here” | 236 |
One of plaster and thatch, overgrown with roses | 240 |
“You’ll find nothing at all like this strange little Clovelly” | 250 |
“William of Sens, in 1184, finished the building which we now see” | 264 |
Old gentlemen, stout ladies, young people, and small children, all ride in England | 286 |