-
Jerome, Jerome K.
- Arrowsmith, Quay Street london Simpkin, Marshall
- three months were up she was the rage of London —leastways
- folks forgot a bit, and they came back to London
- moustache, had walked into a branch of the London
- alter so much according to distance from London
-
Lawrence, David Herbert
- Lawrence London , Martin Secker Number five
- She had just come back from London , where
- “ London . So are you, I suppose.”
- “ London , Paris, Rome—heaven knows.
- In London they stayed one night.
-
Harraden, Beatrice .
- pass in the night by Beatrice Harraden London
- IN an old second-hand bookshop in London ,
- She lingered in London for some time, and
- I suppose you are from London ?"
- She knew London well, and she could tell
-
Yonge, Charlotte Mary
- And London —while Dr.
- 'What did they do with her in London ?'
- 'For London . I meant to hunt up Mat.
- May of going to London .
- ' London makes children pale.
-
Silberrad, Una Lucy .
- There are several Berwick Streets in London
- Captain Polkington had returned from London
- "But I can't go to London ," Julia said; "
- "I can take the daffodil to London with me
- Rawson-Clew was back in London .
-
Yonge, Charlotte Mary
- "the heirs of redclyffe" in two volumes London
- I wanted the Major to inquire in London ,
- Martin’s chambers in London .”
- The London doctor arrived, he met him and
- The London doctor was going away.
-
Phillpotts, Eden
- The concerns which he had ordered from London
- I be tokened to a furriner from London , an
- "No. 6 Melbury Gardens, London .
- You have but to enter the train for London
- He had come that day from London upon the
-
Shakespeare, William
- traitors are agreed , The King is set from London
- BOY Would I were in an alehouse in London
- wars to grace himself at his return into London
- him land , And solemnly see him set on to London
- forge and workinghouse of thought , How London
-
Shakespeare, William
- rich offerings , and traders riding to London
- this be the most villainous house in all London
- carrier , what time do you mean to come to London
- and I rob the thieves and go merrily to London
- FALSTAFF Though I could ’scape shot-free at London
-
Grossmith, George
- Arrowsmith, 11 Quay Street LONDON Simpkin
- London , June, 1892.
- his name stood good for any theatre in London
- Lyceum, but the best thing going on in London
- know, his name's good at any theatre in London
-
Yonge, Charlotte Mary
- Guy went to London .
- much better than London .
- Do you like to stay in London for the next
- He disliked a London life for Laura, and
- We would sleep in London , and go on by an
-
Wells, Herbert George
- Wells London William Heinemann MDCCCXCV NOTE
- Conceive the tale of London which a negro
- civilization; there is the Metropolitan Railway in London
- About London , for instance, perhaps half
- last there was a pit like the 'area' of a London
-
Broughton, Rhoda
- , more leisurely than in our breathless London
- In London there are so many posts in the
- He is in London !
- These are the London morning letters that
- Forth is going to London for the day, to
-
Shakespeare, William
- Ludlow the young prince be fet Hither to London
- BUCKINGHAM Welcome , sweet prince , to London
- RICHARD My lord , the Mayor of London comes
- lords at Pomfret , when they rode from London
- other of great name and worth ; And towards London
-
Lytton, Edward Bulwer
- A millionaire from the London Exchange, as
- “You have been in London , Frederic?”
- “I have too much to do in London .”
- His credit in London is so good.
- “In London .” “Ah! in London!”
-
Shakespeare, William
- and enter in the hurly-burly the Mayor of London
- laid’st a trap to take my life As well at London
- , and virtuous Henry , Pity the city of London
-
Shakespeare, William
- When they were ready to set out for London
- Enter Mayor of London , bearing the mace
- On each side her , the Bishops of London
- preferred from the King’s secretary , The other London
-
Eliot, George [pseud.]
- "Tell me what you saw in London ."
- Why can we not go to London ?
- If he had been in London or Paris at that
- Let us go to London .
- "I am going to London ," said Dorothea.
-
Eliot, George [pseud.]
- own gigs, or who, wanting to travel to London
- He desired her to travel to London , where
- Your father was a cloth-merchant in London
- "O—a London attorney.
- The man Christian is away in London with
-
Dickens, Charles
- and for exportation By Charles Dickens London
- `An't you the idlest vagabond in London ?
- `We have come to London now, my mother and
- `To London .´ `Have you any home to go to?
- ´ `By the north road out of London , deary