401 Bus Time Schedule & Line Route

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

401 Bus Time Schedule & Line Route 401 bus time schedule & line map 401 Huntingdon - Leighton Bromswold - Huntingdon View In Website Mode The 401 bus line (Huntingdon - Leighton Bromswold - Huntingdon) has 4 routes. For regular weekdays, their operation hours are: (1) Huntingdon: 1:38 PM (2) Huntingdon: 9:30 AM (3) Leighton Bromswold: 12:30 PM (4) Leighton Bromswold: 9:00 AM Use the Moovit App to ƒnd the closest 401 bus station near you and ƒnd out when is the next 401 bus arriving. Direction: Huntingdon 401 bus Time Schedule 7 stops Huntingdon Route Timetable: VIEW LINE SCHEDULE Sunday Not Operational Monday 1:38 PM Staunch Hill, Leighton Bromswold Tuesday 1:38 PM Orchard Lane, Brampton Wednesday 1:38 PM Church Road, Brampton Thursday 1:38 PM Bromholme Lane, Brampton Friday 1:38 PM Playing Field, Hinchingbrooke Park Saturday Not Operational Millƒeld Park, Huntingdon 3 Brampton Road, Huntingdon Bus Station, Huntingdon 401 bus Info Princes Street, Huntingdon Direction: Huntingdon Stops: 7 Trip Duration: 17 min Line Summary: Staunch Hill, Leighton Bromswold, Orchard Lane, Brampton, Church Road, Brampton, Bromholme Lane, Brampton, Playing Field, Hinchingbrooke Park, Millƒeld Park, Huntingdon, Bus Station, Huntingdon Direction: Huntingdon 401 bus Time Schedule 22 stops Huntingdon Route Timetable: VIEW LINE SCHEDULE Sunday Not Operational Monday 9:30 AM Staunch Hill, Leighton Bromswold Tuesday 9:30 AM Brington Road, Old Weston Wednesday 9:30 AM Telephone Exchange, Winwick Thursday 9:30 AM Fox & Hounds Ph, Great Gidding Friday 9:30 AM Little Gidding Turn, Little Gidding Saturday Not Operational Steeple Gidding Turn, Steeple Gidding Hamerton Zoo Park, Hamerton 401 bus Info School Lane, Hamerton Direction: Huntingdon Stops: 22 Main Street, Hamerton And Steeple Gidding Civil Parish Trip Duration: 62 min Line Summary: Staunch Hill, Leighton Bromswold, Green Lane, Upton Brington Road, Old Weston, Telephone Exchange, Winwick, Fox & Hounds Ph, Great Gidding, Little Hill Top Cottages, Alconbury Hill Gidding Turn, Little Gidding, Steeple Gidding Turn, Steeple Gidding, Hamerton Zoo Park, Hamerton, Hamerton Road, Alconbury Weston School Lane, Hamerton, Green Lane, Upton, Hill Top Vinegar Hill, Alconbury Weston Civil Parish Cottages, Alconbury Hill, Hamerton Road, Alconbury Weston, Buckworth Road, Alconbury Weston, Church Buckworth Road, Alconbury Weston Road, Buckworth, St Giles's Church, Barham, The Grange, Barham, Ellington Road, Woolley, Orchard Church Road, Buckworth Lane, Brampton, Church Road, Brampton, Bromholme Lane, Brampton, Playing Field, St Giles's Church, Barham Hinchingbrooke Park, Millƒeld Park, Huntingdon, Bus Station, Huntingdon The Grange, Barham Ellington Road, Woolley Orchard Lane, Brampton Church Road, Brampton Bromholme Lane, Brampton Playing Field, Hinchingbrooke Park Millƒeld Park, Huntingdon 3 Brampton Road, Huntingdon Bus Station, Huntingdon Princes Street, Huntingdon Direction: Leighton Bromswold 401 bus Time Schedule 23 stops Leighton Bromswold Route Timetable: VIEW LINE SCHEDULE Sunday Not Operational Monday 12:30 PM Bus Station, Huntingdon Princes Street, Huntingdon Tuesday 12:30 PM Millƒeld Park, Huntingdon Wednesday 12:30 PM 3 Brampton Road, Huntingdon Thursday 12:30 PM Railway Station, Huntingdon Friday 12:30 PM Playing Field, Hinchingbrooke Park Saturday Not Operational Scholars Avenue, Huntingdon Bromholme Lane, Brampton Church Road, Brampton 401 bus Info Direction: Leighton Bromswold Orchard Lane, Brampton Stops: 23 Trip Duration: 63 min Ellington Road, Woolley Line Summary: Bus Station, Huntingdon, Millƒeld Park, Huntingdon, Railway Station, Huntingdon, The Grange, Barham Playing Field, Hinchingbrooke Park, Bromholme Lane, Brampton, Church Road, Brampton, Orchard St Giles's Church, Barham Lane, Brampton, Ellington Road, Woolley, The Grange, Barham, St Giles's Church, Barham, Church Church Road, Buckworth Road, Buckworth, Buckworth Road, Alconbury Weston, Hamerton Road, Alconbury Weston, Hill Top Cottages, Alconbury Hill, Green Lane, Upton, School Buckworth Road, Alconbury Weston Lane, Hamerton, Hamerton Zoo Park, Hamerton, Steeple Gidding Turn, Steeple Gidding, Little Gidding Hamerton Road, Alconbury Weston Turn, Little Gidding, Fox & Hounds Ph, Great Gidding, Vinegar Hill, Alconbury Weston Civil Parish Telephone Exchange, Winwick, Brington Road, Old Weston, Staunch Hill, Leighton Bromswold Hill Top Cottages, Alconbury Hill Green Lane, Upton School Lane, Hamerton Main Street, Hamerton And Steeple Gidding Civil Parish Hamerton Zoo Park, Hamerton Steeple Gidding Turn, Steeple Gidding Little Gidding Turn, Little Gidding Fox & Hounds Ph, Great Gidding Telephone Exchange, Winwick Main Street, Winwick Civil Parish Brington Road, Old Weston Staunch Hill, Leighton Bromswold Direction: Leighton Bromswold 401 bus Time Schedule 9 stops Leighton Bromswold Route Timetable: VIEW LINE SCHEDULE Sunday Not Operational Monday 9:00 AM Bus Station, Huntingdon Princes Street, Huntingdon Tuesday 9:00 AM Millƒeld Park, Huntingdon Wednesday 9:00 AM 3 Brampton Road, Huntingdon Thursday 9:00 AM Railway Station, Huntingdon Friday 9:00 AM Playing Field, Hinchingbrooke Park Saturday Not Operational Scholars Avenue, Huntingdon Bromholme Lane, Brampton Church Road, Brampton 401 bus Info Direction: Leighton Bromswold Orchard Lane, Brampton Stops: 9 Trip Duration: 25 min Blacksmiths Lane, Ellington Line Summary: Bus Station, Huntingdon, Millƒeld Park, Huntingdon, Railway Station, Huntingdon, Staunch Hill, Leighton Bromswold Playing Field, Hinchingbrooke Park, Bromholme Lane, Brampton, Church Road, Brampton, Orchard Lane, Brampton, Blacksmiths Lane, Ellington, Staunch Hill, Leighton Bromswold 401 bus time schedules and route maps are available in an o«ine PDF at moovitapp.com. Use the Moovit App to see live bus times, train schedule or subway schedule, and step-by-step directions for all public transit in East Anglia. Check Live Arrival Times About Moovit MaaS Solutions Supported Countries Mooviter Community © 2021 Moovit - All Rights Reserved.
Recommended publications
  • The Ferrar Family of Little Gidding C.1625-1637
    THE GOOD OLD WAY REVISITED: The Ferrar Family of Little Gidding c.1625-1637 Kate E. Riley, BA (Hons) This thesis is presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy of The University of Western Australia, School of Humanities, Discipline of History, 2007. ABSTRACT The Good Old Way Revisited: The Ferrar Family of Little Gidding c.1625-1637 The Ferrars are remembered as exemplars of Anglican piety. The London merchant family quit the city in 1625 and moved to the isolated manor of Little Gidding in Huntingdonshire. There they pursued a life of corporate devotion, supervised by the head of the household, Nicholas Ferrar, until he died in December 1637. To date, the life of the pious deacon Nicholas Ferrar has been the focus of histories of Little Gidding, which are conventionally hagiographical and give little consideration to the experiences of other members of the family, not least the many women in the household. Further, customary representations of the Ferrars have tended to remove them from their seventeenth-century context. Countering the biographical trend that has obscured many details of their communal life, this thesis provides a new, critical reading of the family’s years at Little Gidding while Nicholas Ferrar was alive. It examines the Ferrars in terms of their own time, as far as possible using contemporary documents instead of later accounts and confessional mythology. It shows that, while certain aspects of life at Little Gidding were unusual, on the whole the family was less exceptional than traditional histories have implied; certainly the family was not so unified and unworldly as the idealised images have suggested.
    [Show full text]
  • Cambridgeshire Tydd St
    C D To Long Sutton To Sutton Bridge 55 Cambridgeshire Tydd St. Mary 24 24 50 50 Foul Anchor 55 Tydd Passenger Transport Map 2011 Tydd St. Giles Gote 24 50 Newton 1 55 1 24 50 To Kings Lynn Fitton End 55 To Kings Lynn 46 Gorefield 24 010 LINCOLNSHIRE 63 308.X1 24 WHF To Holbeach Drove 390 24 390 Leverington WHF See separate map WHF WHF for service detail in this area Throckenholt 24 Wisbech Parson 24 390.WHF Drove 24 46 WHF 24 390 Bellamys Bridge 24 46 Wisbech 3 64 To Terrington 390 24. St. Mary A B Elm Emneth E 390 Murrow 3 24 308 010 60 X1 56 64 7 Friday Bridge 65 Thorney 46 380 308 X1 To Grantham X1 NORFOLK and the North 390 308 Outwell 308 Thorney X1 7 Toll Guyhirn Coldham Upwell For details of bus services To in this area see Peterborough City Council Ring’s End 60 Stamford and 7 publicity or call: 01733 747474 60 2 46 3 64 Leicester Eye www.travelchoice.org 010 2 X1 65 390 56 60.64 3.15.24.31.33.46 To 308 7 380 Three Holes Stamford 203.205.206.390.405 33 46 407.415.701.X1.X4 Chainbridge To Downham Market 33 65 65 181 X4 Peterborough 206 701 24 Lot’s Bridge Wansford 308 350 Coates See separate map Iron Bridge To Leicester for service detail Whittlesey 33 701 in this area X4 Eastrea March Christchurch 65 181 206 701 33 24 15 31 46 Tips End 203 65 F Chesterton Hampton 205 Farcet X4 350 9 405 3 31 35 010 Welney 115 To Elton 24 206 X4 407 56 Kings Lynn 430 415 7 56 Gold Hill Haddon 203.205 X8 X4 350.405 Black Horse 24.181 407.430 Yaxley 3.7.430 Wimblington Boots Drove To Oundle 430 Pondersbridge 206.X4 Morborne Bridge 129 430 56 Doddington Hundred Foot Bank 15 115 203 56 46.
    [Show full text]
  • Friends of Little Gidding Newsletter
    A VIEW FROM LITTLE GIDDING Tom Gillum shares a personal view on Christian gentleness. FRIENDS OF Since my earliest memories, I have been reminded of my father’s school motto: ‘Manners maketh man’ – at the heart of being a ‘gentleman’. In a nation which LITTLE GIDDING has taken pride in this, it is a bit illogical I think, that in an attempt to help us NEWSLETTER identify more easily with him, some preachers have wanted to emphasise that he is not: gentle Jesus meek and mild. I understand why. May 2009 ‘Gentleness is a quality hard to fi nd in a society which admires toughness and roughness. We are encouraged to get things done fast, even when people get SPRING AND SUMMER AT LITTLE GIDDING hurt in the process. Success, accomplishment and productivity count. Gentle is the one who is attentive to the strengths and weaknesses of the other and enjoys being together more than accomplishing something. A gentle person treads carefully, looks tenderly and touches with reverence. A gentle person knows that true growth requires nurture, not force.’ (Henri Nouwen, Bread for the Journey, 6 February) Would it not be very good if English Christians could again be known for their gentleness? It is part of the risky way of relating in the way of Jesus. St Paul knew gentleness to be a primary characteristic of the Master (2 Corinthians 10.1). Easily hurt, humans cannot be vulnerable with one whose hands are not gentle. It may well be preferable to bottle up pain and guilt unless words of forgiveness are heard spoken with gentleness.
    [Show full text]
  • Ferrar House, Little Gidding, Huntingdon, PE28 5RJ Tel: 01832 293 383 - Email: [email protected]
    Ferrar House, Little Gidding, Huntingdon, PE28 5RJ tel: 01832 293 383 - email: [email protected] - www.ferrarhouse.co.uk Booking Form for Individuals for Quiet Days Name(s): ...................................................................................... Address: ................................................................................... ........................................................................... Telephone: ............................................................................... Email: ....................................................................................... Date you would like to come to Ferrar House: ............................ Time arriving ……………. Time leaving…………….. (Normally 10 am – 4 pm) Type of lunch: Light lunch/Two course lunch (Please delete as appropriate) Please indicate any special needs: ............................................ Are there any special dietary requirements? No meat ....... No fish ...... Gluten free ....... Other ...... Where did you find out about Ferrar House? ….. Please return this form to the above address, with a cheque payable to Little Gidding Trust. Cancellation Policy Deposit for group day bookings: £50 (non-refundable) Deposit for residential bookings: £20 per person (non-refundable) Deposit for individual Quiet Day booking £10 per person (non refundable) Your booking will not be confirmed until we have received your deposit. As these deposits are non-refundable, we strongly recommend that you take out cancellation insurance. Late cancellations
    [Show full text]
  • Rowan Williams
    where is the Pilgrimage? LITTLE GIDDING The Pilgrimage begins at Leighton Bromswold, which is just north of Junction 17 of the A14 between Kettering and Huntingdon. Satnav users: enter pe28 5ax. PILGRIMAGE Peterborough Saturday 30 May a1 north with Leighton Kettering Bromswold Rowan Williams 10.30 am Eucharist at Leighton Bromswold a14 west Huntingdon 1 pm Pilgrimage Walk Wellingborough a45 to Little Gidding Northampton a14 east 4.30 pm Evensong St Neots a1 south Cambridge All are welcome at the Pilgrimage. It will greatly help if you are able to let us know you are coming and how many are in your group, either by email to <[email protected]>, by phone or text (07910 424236), or by completing and returning the form below. For more information see www.littlegidding.org.uk/pilgrimage or facebook.com/littlegidding. .. ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Please print your details in block capitals. Name ………………………………………………………………………… Contact phone or address …………………………………………………… I plan to be at the Little Gidding Pilgrimage on Saturday 30 May. There is a total of …………………………… people in my group. Please provide: ………Lunch(es) at Leighton Bromswold and ………Tea(s) at Little Gidding. I understand there will be a charge for this. I have listed any dietary needs: Please detach this section and send to: Simon Kershaw, 5 Sharp Close, St Ives, Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire pe27 6un Organized by the Friends of Little Gidding www.littlegidding.org.uk/pilgrimage LIttle GIDDIng PIlgRIMAGE 10.30 am: Pilgrimage Communion Saturday 30 May 2015 at Leighton Bromswold Church whose restoration was funded by George what is it? Herbert and directed by the Ferrars.
    [Show full text]
  • Little Gidding Way
    Little Gidding Way Responsibility We are responsible to God for everything we do. In The Companions of Little Gidding You are here to kneel….. our work each of us has a particular responsibility The Companions are an integral part of the Society of but each is responsible to someone else. the Friends of Little Gidding. The Friends were Listening founded in 1946 by Alan Maycock, with T.S. Eliot as Little Gidding is a place where people have listened Wealth vice-president. The Society was reconstituted in 2003 to God’s call. Our calling is to follow them in this. Everything we possess we receive from God. We learn and seeks to celebrate the life and memory of to discover which possessions we can share with Nicholas Ferrar, his family and those who in the 17th Rhythm others. century formed the first Little Gidding Community, When we have become still we shall find less making it a holy place; to help maintain the fabric of difficulty in alternating between times of activity and Christ Little Gidding Church; to assist Ferrar House; and to times of quiet. Christ is present with us all the time and He brings us celebrate the connection between Eliot and Little out of our contempt for ourselves and each other into Gidding. Work and Worship the glorious liberty of His pardon and power. Companions are therefore invited to join the Friends Part of the rhythm is the alternation between worship and work: breathing in and breathing out. Spiritual Company (£15 p.a. subscription). Membership forms are available in the Church and Ferrar House.
    [Show full text]
  • Conversion of Barn to Form Dwelling (Including New Vehicular Access)
    DEVELOPMENT MANAGEMENT PANEL 15th September 2014 Case No: 1401125FUL (FULL PLANNING APPLICATION) Proposal: CONVERSION OF BARN TO FORM DWELLING (INCLUDING NEW VEHICULAR ACCESS) Location: HORSESHOE COTTAGE HAMERTON ROAD Applicant: MR G POPELEY Grid Ref: 510554 280801 Date of Registration: 01.07.2014 Parish: WINWICK RECOMMENDATION - APPROVAL 1. DESCRIPTION OF SITE AND APPLICATION 1.1 Horseshoe Cottage is situated to the south of Hamerton Road (a classified road); access to the site is gained from the north west. The rear curtilage of the site is enclosed and this proposal seeks to convert part of the existing outbuildings associated with Horseshoe Cottage to form a separate dwelling. A new access is proposed to the eastern section of the site. The site is set at a higher level than the adjoining Hamerton Road. 1.2 To the north / north east of the site beyond the highway lies a Scheduled Ancient Monument, a Moated site and shrunken medieval village at Winwick. 1.3 This application follows on from planning application 1301570FUL 'Conversion of barn to form dwelling including access' which was refused for the following reasons: 1. The proposed development would be detrimental to highway safety as the site access does not provide for adequate visibility. 2. The application has failed to incorporate adequate provision for refuse (appropriate coloured waste storage containers - wheeled bins) by virtue of the omission of a unilateral undertaking, contrary to the requirements of the Developer Contributions Supplementary Planning Document 2011 and Policy LP 2 of the Draft Huntingdonshire Local Plan to 2036: Stage 3. This application is attached as a Green Paper for reference.
    [Show full text]
  • Brief Memoirs of Nicholas Ferrar : Founder of a Protestant Religious
    FROM-THE- LIBRARY-OF TRINITYCOLLEGETORDNTO BRIEF MEMOIRS OF NICHOLAS FERRAR, M.A. FOUNDER OF A PROTESTANT RELIGIOUS ESTABLISHMENT AT LITTLE GIDDING, HUNTINGDONSHIRE. ) * CS es~*^>^^'<2^7^ i^--~<^ collected from a Harrattoe THE RIGHT REV. DR. TURNER, FORMERLY LORD BISHOP OF ELY ; 3lnti no to cttttetJ, tottf; UtTDittons, BY THE REV. T. M. MACDONOGH VICAR OF BOVINGDON. EDITION. LONDON: JAMES NISBET AND CO. BERNERS STREET, 1837. LONDON : PRINTED BY ROBSON, LEVEY, AND FRANKLTK, 46 St. Martin's Lane. 784-59 JUN2U 1968 TO THE HONOURABLE GRANVILLE DUDLEY RYDER. THE first edition of this little volume was dedicated to my mother it was a surprise to her. The second edition I venture to dedicate to you, to whom also it will be a surprise. Pray pardon the liberty, and accept the poor offering as it is meant. The first edition was published anonymously. To the second I affix my name, because I care not how publicly I acknowledge myself Your grateful And affectionate servant, T. M. MACDONOGH. Bovingdon Vicarage, June 1837. PREFACE. DR. FRANCIS TURNER, formerly Bishop of Nicholas Ely,, the biographer of Mr. Ferrar, " was of opinion, that his life was not only ad mirable but imitable by the gentry especially or by his fellow-citizens, who gain plentiful 3 estates, and then retire into the country/ He adds, in a preface intended to have " been published with the Life of Ferrar : If some things in this Life are rather to be ad mired than followed, I confess I had two ends in writing it : first, and especially, as an ex Christian se emplary pattern of economics ; condly, as an illustrious example of a more illuminate man in the Church of England than any, I believe, they can shew us in the Church of Rome, if they will tell us nothing but the 3 honest truth or other sect whatever/ ; any The Editor thinks, also, that the contem plation of so holy and self-denying a character VI PREFACE.
    [Show full text]
  • Huntingdonshire Cycle Route 5
    Introduction Old Weston (B) The somewhat scattered village stands mainly on the Distance 18m/29km or as little as 9m/15km north side of the stream, but the church is detached from the village and is on the south-west side of it. The village Start Point Sawtry is said to have extended south of the church but was OS Map Landranger 142 Peterborough burnt down. The church has a north doorway from about 1200, and a sundial on one of the buttresses. Inside are There is nothing really wild about the countryside on this 14th century wall paintings of St. Margaret, St. Catherine ride - it is just gently undulating and free of motor traffic. and John the Baptist. But it does take us to the Hamerton Wildlife Park and past a nature reserve, which may offer a break from riding. Leighton Bromswold (C) At Leighton Bromswold, you can see the fascinating gateway To the rear of the church is a 15th century moated to a castle which was never built. There is also a Hundred gatehouse, with a tower at each corner. It is now a stone - a meeting point in medieval times for the collection private residence. A castle was to have been built, but of taxes and the dispensation of justice. Huntingdonshire had only the gatehouse was constructed. four ”Hundreds” or groups of parishes, and three of the Hundred stones survive, all featured in these rides. In front of the church is a Hundred stone, thought to be 1,000 years old. It was a seat of judgement and of tax A number of short cuts are described, but all of the lanes collection.
    [Show full text]
  • The Death of the Elements: Logism and Negative Symbolism in Eliot's
    TCNJ JOURNAL OF STUDENT SCHOLARSHIP VOLUME XIII APRIL, 2011 THE DEATH OF THE ELEMENTS: LOGISM AND NEGATIVE SYMBOLISM IN ELIOT’S “LITTLE GIDDING” Author: Adam Engel Faculty Sponsor: David Venturo Department of English ABSTRACT Maximus the Confessor claims that divinity is the ultimate language: “The language, the grammar of the heart ... is that very Logos who came down to us as Christ” (Maximus in Parker 179). For T. S. Eliot, poetry‟s function is to facilitate the reader‟s experience of reality. Eliot, a convert to Anglicanism, maintains that reality is divinity. This presents a problem: if nothing material can perfectly represent divinity, how then can language, a material set of symbols, perform this function? Blanford Parker describes writers‟ attempts to solve this problem as logism (Triumph 178). Eliot is a logist: to prepare the reader to experience divinity, he develops the symbolic significance of air, earth, fire, and water. These material symbols play important roles throughout The Waste Land and Four Quartets, but in “Little Gidding,” the last of the Quartets, Eliot negates them. By invoking, developing, and negating these material symbols, Eliot leads the reader to understand reality as the darkness left in the wake of the world: the “darkness of God” (“East Coker”). For Eliot, poetry serves its function through its final negation, and humanity reaches reality only through material suffering and death. By personifying each element as it dies in “Little Gidding,” Eliot argues that the end of the elements is the end of humanity, but also the beginning of an experience of reality: “In my end is my beginning” (“East Coker”).
    [Show full text]
  • The Tailors, Drapers, and Mercers of London and the London Commissary and Husting Court Wills, 1374-1485
    The Tailors, Drapers, and Mercers of London and the London Commissary and Husting Court Wills, 1374-1485 by Eileen Kim A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Centre for Medieval Studies University of Toronto © Copyright by Eileen Kim 2015 ii The Tailors, Drapers, and Mercers of London and the London Commissary and Husting Court Wills, 1374-1485 Eileen Kim Doctor of Philosophy Centre for Medieval Studies University of Toronto 2015 Abstract Scholarly interest in the intimate lives of individuals in late medieval England has been particularly strong over the past thirty years. This interest can be linked to heightened scrutiny of wills and the nature and extent of their utility as access points into testators’ lives, their most intimate relationships, and their varied desires and concerns, particularly in the context of the family and the household. Some scholars have argued that wills present a limited view of testators in a specific moment, rather than encompassing the entirety of the individuals’ legacies. The heavily formulaic nature of the wills enrolled in late medieval English courts have also been considered characteristics that hamper the ability of the documents to reveal testators’ individual personalities and concerns. Others, however, have noted that testators’ adherence to formulaic structure in wills in fact constitutes a community founded on participation in shared traditions, and that the conventions of will-making still allowed testators a certain degree of flexibility to assert their own desires and address their individual concerns. This thesis presents evidence from wills enrolled from 1374 to 1485 in London’s Husting and Commissary Courts.
    [Show full text]
  • George Herbert, Leighton Bromswold and Thomas Bentley's Monument
    This is an Open Access document downloaded from ORCA, Cardiff University's institutional repository: http://orca.cf.ac.uk/80053/ This is the author’s version of a work that was submitted to / accepted for publication. Citation for final published version: Sullivan, Ceri 2016. George Herbert’s building works. Essays in Criticism 66 (2) , pp. 168-197. 10.1093/escrit/cgw007 file Publishers page: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/escrit/cgw007 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/escrit/cgw007> Please note: Changes made as a result of publishing processes such as copy-editing, formatting and page numbers may not be reflected in this version. For the definitive version of this publication, please refer to the published source. You are advised to consult the publisher’s version if you wish to cite this paper. This version is being made available in accordance with publisher policies. See http://orca.cf.ac.uk/policies.html for usage policies. Copyright and moral rights for publications made available in ORCA are retained by the copyright holders. Cement, Summers, Pulleys, Plummets, Pipes, Timber, and Screws: George Herbert’s Building Works Ceri Sullivan, Cardiff University For most of his adult life, Herbert needed to know the concrete details of contemporary construction techniques. It is usual to read The Temple as a celebration of the biblical image of the divine architect. No one has yet looked at the poems in terms of Herbert’s rueful use of his own expertise in building works, acquired in the course of the lengthy and expensive church and rectory repairs he undertook.
    [Show full text]