Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Charing Cross to St. Paul's
Guilty of an absurd scepticism which ought to be instantly confuted by the citation of over whelming evidence from history, I hasten to explain that I am not really sceptical in that sense. I have not the smallest doubt about the existence of the Roman London; I only mean to say that I cannot believe in it in the sense of realising it and understanding what it would be to live in it. I have a friend who only cares about romances and novels which tell of the time with which he is familiar; he will not condescend to read even the finest story of the chivalric age. I don't believe in a man in armour, he says. Now my friend is, apart from this curious self accepted limitation to his reading, a well-read man he is perfectly well aware that in olden days knights went to battle encased in steel I have no doubt he could, if need were, favour any company with a dissertation on the various kinds of armour in which men of different chivalric orders and ages bedizened and defended themselves. But his imagina tion does not realise the mail-clad hero as.
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