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59:, since Dick Whittington found when he went to London that the streets were in fact grimy and poverty stricken. The second irony was that with persistence, belief, and luck, Whittington was able to become successful.
161:"The Universal Songster, Or, Museum of Mirth: Forming the Most Complete, Extensive, and Valuable Collection of Ancient and Modern Songs in the English Language, with a Copious and Classified Index ..."
190:"Revelation 21:21 And the twelve gates were twelve pearls, with each gate consisting of a single pearl. The main street of the city was pure gold, as pure as transparent glass"
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is described: "The twelve gates were twelve pearls, and each gate was made of a single pearl. The street of the city was made of pure gold, as clear as glass." (
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no more can now be told / That London streets are paved with gold; / For, wishing their tales e'en to
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Slum dwellers queueing for water, 1863. Poverty, squalor and disease were more likely to be found in
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Miller, William Haig; Macaulay, James; Stevens, William (17 August 1866).
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143:"PAVED WITH GOLD | meaning in the Cambridge English Dictionary"
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Dick
Whittington heads for London, from a 1850s publication.
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Jones and
Company. 17 August 1826 – via Google Books.
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