Clay Lane

Posts in The Copybook credited to ‘Clay Lane’

115
George Pinto Clay Lane

An innovative English composer who did not live to fulfil his extraordinary promise.

George Pinto (1785-1806) was a promising talent on the violin and the piano, and an innovative composer exciting the admiration of some of the country’s most prominent musicians. His early death robbed England of a rare talent, leaving it to more famous names to rediscover some of his genius on their own.

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116
The Most Unkindest Cut of All Clay Lane

Greek revolutionary Nikitarás gives his ungrateful men a sharp reminder of what really matters.

In 1821, Greeks living under the irksome rule of the Ottoman Empire declared independence, and a bitter struggle ensued which excited the sympathy of many in Britain, such as poet Lord Byron and Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs George Canning. Irishman Richard Church (1784-1873) helped train many of the revolutionaries, among them Nikítas Stamatelópoulos (?1784-1849).

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117
Pandora’s Box Clay Lane

After being outwitted once too often, Zeus decides to spite Prometheus by ruining the race of men.

In everyday speech, a Pandora’s Box is any circumstance that risks releasing a series of unpredictable and harmful consequences. The original myth, however, as told by Homer’s contemporary Hesiod, is considerably more subtle than this, delighting to raise more questions than it even attempts to answer.

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118
Cuthbert’s Cordon Clay Lane

A man steals a mother sparrow from her chick, but St Cuthbert isn’t going to let him get away with it.

In 1165, a priest came all the way to Durham from Lixtune (possibly Lytham) on the west coast. He told Reginald of Durham a number of remarkable stories about miracles performed by St Cuthbert, patron saint of his church, and the bond with his beloved birds called ‘St Cuthbert’s Peace’.

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119
Cuthbert and the Wry Face Clay Lane

A man who seems to have everything loses his good looks to a dreadful disease.

In 1165, a priest came all the way to Durham from Lytham on the Lancashire coast, to give thanks at St Cuthbert’s shrine for several remarkable miracles experienced by members of his parish. He told the stories to Reginald of Durham, including this one about a man with a gruesome disfigurement.

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120
Cuthbert and the Iron Grip Clay Lane

A boy goes bird-nesting in Cuthbert’s church, and finds himself all in a heap.

In 1165, a priest came to Durham from Lytham, where his little parish had experienced a number of miracles at the hands of the patron saint, Cuthbert of Lindisfarne. Reginald wrote them down as he heard them, and one tale in particular stands out for the level of eye-witness detail.

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