394 examples of whitehall in sentences

THE RICH AND THE POOR Chapel Royal, Whitehall, 1871.

There's calm in the City, A hush in Whitehall A thousand fair typists Have answered the call.

During the strife and heat of the controversy on Home Rule, Lady Russell received the following letter from Mr. Gladstone: 10, DOWNING STREET, WHITEHALL, June 10, 1886

Dial, curious one at Whitehall, described, 345.

Whitehall, Curious Dial at, 345.

Whitehall, Paintings at the Banquetting House, 436.

Even a Brigadier-General with red tabs, on his way to Whitehall, looks pathetically humble waggling his cane at a 'bus.

Always the plaited threads of traffic will wind about the reel of London; always as you go up Regent Street from Pall Mall and look back, Westminster will rise with you like a dim sun over the horizon of Whitehall.

* * BANQUETTING HOUSE, WHITEHALL.

This splendid pile which is at present under repair, was erected in the time of James I. Whitehall being in a most ruinous state, he determined to rebuild it in a very princely manner, and worthy of the residence of the monarchs of the British empire.

He had been brought in the morning of his death, from St. James's across the Park, and from thence to Whitehall, where ascending the great staircase, he passed through the long gallery to his bed-chamber, the place allotted to him to pass the little time before he received the fatal blow.

It is one of the lesser rooms marked with the letter A in the old plan of Whitehall.

The present improvements at Whitehall make one exclaim with the poet, Pope "I see, I see, where two fair cities bend Their ample brow, a new Whitehall ascend.

The present improvements at Whitehall make one exclaim with the poet, Pope "I see, I see, where two fair cities bend Their ample brow, a new Whitehall ascend.

"He likewise confessed that he had thirty pounds for his pains, all paid him in half-crowns, within an hour after the blow was given; and that he had an orange stuck full of cloves, and a handkircher out of the king's pocket, so soon as he was carried off from the scaffold, for which orange he was proffered twenty shillings by a gentleman in Whitehall, but refused the same, and afterwards sold it for ten shillings in Rosemary-lane.

Inigo Jones first discovered the virtues of Portland stone and built Whitehall with it.

Amen.' SERMON X. RELIGIOUS DANGERS (Preached at the Chapel Royal, Whitehall, 1861, for the London Diocesan Board of Education.) St. Mark viii.

"this party walkin' down Whitehall casual-like, as if the place belonged to 'im instead of to us.

He was glad when he woke up to find himself in his own room in his own Government office at Whitehall, with the afternoon sun streaming deliciously through the windows.

With the air of one who had been born and brought up in Whitehall Gardens, he replied, "Stupid decisions are not made by the Board of Trade.

The second, which was 'The Empress of Morocco,' was acted for a month together; and was in such high esteem both with the court and town that it was acted at Whitehall before the king by the gentlemen and ladies of the court; and the prologue, which was spoken by the Lady Betty Howard, was writ by the famous Lord Rochester.

Whitehall Treasury Chambers May the 6th 1684 To our very Loving friend S'r Robert Rochester howard Kn't

This tradition is thus critically examined, and proved by Mr. Malone: "From a letter written by King James to the Prince of Orange, June 15, 1685, it appears, that though the Duke of Monmouth landed at Lyme, in Dorsetshire, on Thursday evening, June 11th, an account of his landing did not reach the King at Whitehall till Saturday morning the 13th.

Having voted and drawn up an Address to his Majesty, desiring him to take care of his royal person, they adjourned to four o'clock; in which interval they went to Whitehall, presented their Address, and then met again.

*** "Whitehall Wakes Up," says The Evening News.

394 examples of  whitehall  in sentences