Clay Lane

Posts in The Copybook credited to ‘Clay Lane’

283
Wilfrid Israel Clay Lane

Wilfrid Israel used his Berlin department store as cover for smuggling thousands of Jewish children to safety in Britain.

Wilfrid Israel (1899-1943) was a wealthy German retailer, who used his business as a cover to bring thousands of Jewish children to Britain in the run-up to the Second World War, saving them from ‘deportation, extermination and annihilation’ - words thought too melodramatic at the time, but only too accurate.

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284
The Legend of Pollard’s Lands Clay Lane

An enterprising knight rids the Bishop of Durham of a troublesome boar, but the price comes as a shock to his lordship.

The Pollards were gentry with land near Auckland Castle, seat of the Bishops of Durham. By tradition, each new Bishop of Durham was presented by the Pollards with a handsome falchion (a kind of sword), accompanied by a speech recalling how an ancestor ‘slew of old a mighty boar, and by performing this service we hold our lands.’

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285
Sir Walter Raleigh Clay Lane

Sir Walter’s dizzy life brought him fame and fortune in dangerous places, the most dangerous of which was Court.

Walter Raleigh was, by his own admission, ‘a man full of all vanity, having been a soldier, a captain, a sea captain, and a courtier, which are all places of wickedness and vice.’ But it was all on such a grand scale that he has become one of the most popular figures of England’s stylish Tudor Age.

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286
Heracles and the Erymanthian Boar Clay Lane

Snaring a wild boar turns out to be much less dangerous than keeping centaurs away from their wine.

Heracles is performing a series of ‘Labours’ for King Eurystheus, who regards his cousin as a rival and would not be sorry to see him dead. But ever since Heracles came back wearing the pelt of the Nemean Lion, Eurystheus’s nerves have been jangling and he now keeps a capacious wine-jar, half buried in the ground, as a place of refuge.

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287
The Legend of King Leir Clay Lane

An early British king discovers what he is really worth to his daughters.

Geoffrey of Monmouth devotes several chapters of his History of Britain to the entirely legendary Leir, telling a tale that captured the imagination of William Shakespeare, and deservedly so.

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288
Daniel and the Priests of Bel Clay Lane

An apparent miracle is revealed as sleight-of-hand.

In 587 BC, the Babylonians (from modern Iraq) conquered Judah, and brought many of the nobility of Jerusalem to their own capital. Then in 539 Babylon fell to the Persians, and Daniel found himself serving the Persian King, Cyrus the Great.

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