- [ ] Wakefield, The Battle of, [ 35]
- Walton, Izaak, [ 69]
- Warham, Archbishop, [ 38], [ 39], [ 42]
- Warwick, The Earl of, [ 36]
- White, Lord Mayor, [ 46]
- White Friars, Church of the, [ 13]
- Whitsun Festivals, [ 32]
- Wilkins, Bishop, [ 71]
- William I., [ 3]
- Winchelsey, Archbishop, [ 30]
- Wolsey, Cardinal, [ 39], [ 40], [ 41]
- Wren, Sir Christopher, [ 8], [ 71], [ 75]
- Wyclif, John, [ 31], [ 33], [ 34]
- Wykeham, William of, [ 5], [ 33]
- Wyngaerde's drawing of London, [ 8]
FOOTNOTES, CHAPTER [ I]
[ [Footnote 1: ] On the site of this old tower, Archbishop Kilwardby afterwards built the house of the Dominicans, or "Black Friars.">[
[ [Footnote 2: ] [ Hence ] old Fuller's racy witticism: "S. Paul's is truly the mother church, having one babe in her body, S. Faith, and another in her arms, S. Gregory.">[
[ [Footnote 3: ] [ A ] pommel was a ball made of metal, from Lat., pomum: "an apple." It was not uncommon to surmount church spires with hollow vessels and to take note of their capability of holding. Sometimes they were made in form of a ship, especially near ports where corn was imported.]
FOOTNOTES, CHAPTER [ II]
[ [Footnote 1: ] In old times the name Ludgate Hill was given to that part which ran up from the Fleet to the City Gate. Inside the Gate the street was called "Bowyer Row," from the trade carried on in it. But it was also frequently called "Paul's." Ludgate was pulled down in 1760, and then Ludgate Hill became the name of the whole street.]