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Where Love Illumines (Where There is Love Book 2) Page 22


  Grig—lighthearted child

  Gownsman—student at the university

  Havey-cavey—unsteady, helter-skelter

  Honored in the breach—alludes to “it is a custom / More honour’d in the breach than the observance.” (William Shakespeare, Hamlet)

  Horkey—harvest dinner

  Macaroni—member of a class of young Englishmen that affected foreign ways; dandy

  Marcher—an inhabitant of the border between Wales and England

  Mechlin—delicate bobbin lace made in Mechlin, Belgium

  Mere—lake

  Nicodemus chamber—“closet” in the countess’s chapel for bishops who did not wish to be seen at the service

  Nucthemeron—a calendar of hours

  Parterre—ornamental garden

  Peg tower—a statement used as a support or reason

  Postillion—one who rides as a guide to a coach

  Publican—innkeeper, keeper of a public house

  Squab—cushion

  Tabernacle—a chapel established in 1741 for the preaching of George Whitefield and others in Moorfields, London, near Wesley’s Foundery

  Tenterfield—field used for drying or stretching cloth

  To make a leg—to bow with the leg extended in front

  Tottenham Court Chapel—erected by George Whitefield in the west end of London in 1756

  Turnkey—one who has charge of a prison’s keys

  Waits—carolers

  Whipt syllabub—a frothy, sweet dessert made of cream and liquor

  TIME LINE FOR

  THE WHERE THERE IS LOVE SERIES

  UNITED STATES

  ENGLAND

  George Whitefield begins preaching

  1738

  John Wesley’s Aldergate experience

  French and Indian War

  1756

  1760

  George III crowned

  1760

  Lady Huntingdon opens chapel in Bath

  1766

  Stamp Act passed

  Boston Tea Party

  1773

  Rowland Hill ordained

  The Revolutionary War

  1776

  The American War

  1787

  Wilberforce begins antislavery campaign

  Constitution ratified

  1788

  George Washington elected President

  1789

  1799

  Church Missionary Society founded

  1805

  Lord Nelson wins Battle of Trafalgar

  1807

  Parliament bans slave trade

  War of 1812

  1812

  Charles Simeon begins Conversation Parties

  1815

  Waterloo

  Missouri Compromise

  1820

  George IV crowned

  John Quincy Adams elected President

  1825

  1830

  William IV crowned

  Temperance Union founded

  1835

  William Wilberforce dies

  Texas Independence

  1836

  Charles Simeon dies

  1837

  Queen Victoria crowned

  Susan B. Anthony Campaigns

  1848

  California Gold Rush

  1849

  1851

  Crystal Palace opens

  Uncle Tom’s Cabin published

  1852

  1854

  Florence Nightingale goes to Crimean War

  Abraham Lincoln elected President

  1860

  Emancipation Proclamation

  1863

  1865

  Hudson Taylor founds China Inland Mission

  Transcontinental Railroad completed

  1869

  1877

  D.L. Moody and Ira Sankey London revivals

  Thomas Edison invents light bulb

  1879

  1885

  Cambridge Seven join China Inland Mission

  Major References

  Charlesworth, V.J. Rowland Hill, His Life, Anecdotes, & Pulpit Sayings. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1877.

  Connely, Willard. Beau Nash, Monarch of Bath and Tunbridge Wells. London: Werner Laurie, 1955.

  Earl of Jersey. Osterley Park Isleworth, a guide for visitors. London: G. White, n. d.

  Hardy, John and Maurice Tomlin. Osterley Park House. London: The Victoria and Albert Museum, 1985.

  Hill, Rowland. “Glorious Displays of Gospel Grace,” in Missionary Sermons. London: T. Chapman, 1796.

  ____. The Sale of Curates by Public Auction. London: M. Jones.

  ____. Recommendatory Preface to Refuge for the Prisoner of Hope. London: M. Lewiss, 1772.

  ____. Unpublished letters to his sister, by permission of the Masters and Fellows of St. John’s College.

  Jones, William. Memoirs of the Life, Ministry, and Writings of the Rev. Rowland Hill, M A, Late Minister of Surrey Chapel. London: John Bennett, 1834.

  Kirby, Gilbert W. The Elect Lady. Trustees of the Countess of Huntingdon’s Connexion, 1972.

  Knight, Helen C. Lady Huntington [sic] and Her Friends: the Revival of the Work of God. New York: American Tract Society, 1853.

  Melville, Lewis. Bath Under Beau Nash. London: Eveleigh Nash, 1907.

  A Member of the Houses of Shirley and Hastings. The Life and Times of Selina, Countess of Huntingdon, Vols. 1, 2. London: William Edward Painter, 1833.

  Miller, Edward. Portrait of a College: A History of the College of Saint John the Evangelist in Cambridge. Cambridge University Press, 1961.

  Neale, R. S. Bath 1680-1850: A Social History, Or, A Valley of Pleasure, Yet A Sink of Iniquity. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1981.

  Penrose, John, Bridgette Mitchell, and Hubert Penrose, eds. Letters from Bath 1766-1767. Gloucester: Alan Sutton, 1983.

  Quilter, David Tudway. “The Cedars and the Tudways,” in Wells Cathedral School. Wells: Clare Son and Co., Ltd.

  Rodenhurst, T. A Description of Hawkstone, the Seat of Sir John Hill Bart. London: John Stockdale, 1811.

  Senior, Benjamin. A Hundred Years at Surrey Chapel. London: Passmore & Alabaster, 1892.

  Sidney, Edwin. The Life of the Rev. Rowland Hill, A. M. London: Cradock, 1834.

  Smith, E.A.L. Bath. London: B. T. Batsford, Ltd., 1944.

  Tytler, Sarah. The Countess of Huntingdon and Her Circle. London: Pitman & Sons, Ltd., 1907.

  Ward-Jackson, Peter. Guide to Osterley Park. London: Stationery Office, 1954.

  Memoirs of the Rev. Rowland Hill A.M. London: Thomas Ward & Co., 1853.

  Book of Common Prayer. Oxford: T. Wright and W. Gill, 1773.

  Read the complete Where There is Love Series:

  Where Love Begins

  Catherine Perronet’s world is shaken when she learns Charles Wesley is engaged to marry another. After all, Catherine’s initials were on the list John Wesley gave to his brother listing acceptable matrimonial candidates.

  And that’s not all that’s wrong in Catherine’s world. As teacher at a Methodist Society school in London, she sees her brother beaten while preaching in the open air, her favorite pupil forced to leave school because of his family’s poverty, and a prisoner receive his death sentence in Newgate Prison. Catherine undertakes the joys and hardships of a circuit-ride preaching tour to Canterbury where a French invasion threatens then must face the terrors of the Great London Earthquake before coming to an understanding of the gentle calling God has for her.

  Where Love Illumines

  Mary Tudway is forced to choose between two worlds: the pleasurable life of her high society friends Sarah Child, heiress of Osterley Park, and the Bishop of Raphoe and his dashing Nephew, Roger; or the life of faith and service represented by the Countess of Huntingdon, her lovely daughter Selina and the witty but devout Rowland Hill.

  The story moves through the fashionable worlds of London and Bath as the death of one friend, the elopement of another and
the startling unveiling of the Highwayman of Hampstead Heath play their parts in Mary’s finally making a choice of lasting value.

  Where Love Triumphs

  Brandley Hilliard, baronet’s son, brilliant classical scholar and cripple finds his carefully ordered world turned upside down by the delightful Elinor Silbert, daughter of the Master of Peterhouse, Cambridge. And his conflicts increase when Elinor’s head is turned by the debonair Marquess of Widkham.

  Brandley’s search takes a destructive turn until Charles Simeon, Fellow of King’s College, takes the young gownsman under his wing and shows him a life beyond any his academic pursuits had taught him.

  Where Love Restores

  The disapproval of Granville Ryder’s father the Earl of Harrowby leaves Granville believing he cannot be accepted by his heavenly Father or accomplish anything of worth. Even his special friendship with Georgiana, daughter of the Duke of Beaufort, is almost destroyed by Granville’s conflicts.

  In a story that moves from Cambridge to the Midlands, to London to Wales, the counsel of Charles Simeon, the example of William Wilberforce and the terrors of the Cato Street Rebellion (more dangerous than the notorious Guy Fawkes Plot) lead Granville to reconciliation and love. This is the most entirely historical of the series. Even the animals are a matter of record.

  Where Love Shines

  “Half a league, half a league/ Half a league onward, All in the valley of Death/ Rode the six hundred.” Lieutenant Richard Greyston seeks heroic glory in the Charge of the Light Brigade. Jennifer Neville goes to Scutari as one of Florence Nightingale’s nurses dreaming of wiping the brows of the wounded. Richard winds up blinded and Jennifer spends her days carrying slops as mice fall from the walls of the hospital.

  Back in London Jennifer throws herself into charity work under the leadership of the Earl of Shaftesbury. She is delighted to reconnect with the convalescing Richard until she learns that his family’s wealth is built on the potteries where children are subjected to unimaginable brutality. Richard eventually joins Shaftesbury’s fight for social justice but must find a way out of the darkness to deal with his feelings for Jennifer.

  Where Love Calls

  Hilda Beauchamp believes that God guides the life of every believer—and that it is her job to guide God. Hilda’s plans meet many complications, but at least one of her prayers gets answered when the winds of spiritual revival sweep England, stirred by the great evangelistic campaigns of D. L. Moody and Ira Sankey. Word of Hudson Taylor’s mission to China fires imaginations and missionary fervor within the Cambridge community.

  But Hilda and the charming Kynaston Studd—whom Hilda has slated to marry her sister—find their plans sidelined. Kynaston was the leader, the first within his circle to catch the vision of going to China. But God seems to be calling his friends there instead of him and Hilda is horrified to find herself falling in love with the man she had intended for her sister.

  About The Author

  Donna Fletcher Crow brings a lifetime love of English literature and history as well as intensive research to the Where There is Love series—her historical series on the work of the Evangelical Anglicans. She is the author of 45 books, mostly novels of British history. The award-winning Glastonbury, The Novel of Christian England, an Arthurian epic covering 15 centuries of English history, is her best-known work. She also authors The Lord Danvers Mysteries. A Tincture of Murder is her latest in these Victorian true-crime novels. The Elizabeth and Richard Mysteries are her literary suspense series of which A Jane Austen Encounter is the latest. An All-Consuming Fire is the fifth of Felicity and Antony’s adventures in the Monastery Murders. Donna and her husband of 50 years live in Boise, Idaho. They have 4 adult children and 14 grandchildren. She is an enthusiastic gardener.

  To read more about all of Donna’s books and see pictures from her garden and research trips go to: www.DonnaFletcherCrow.com

  You can follow her on Facebook at: Donna Fletcher Crow, Novelist of British History