In all of these iconic works of art, the characters depicted have second toes longer than their big toe – a phenomenon sometimes called “Morton’s toe”. The feature is also seen in Botticelli’s The Birth of Venus and da Vinci’s famous Vitruvian Man.
It’s a quirk that’s been noted as far back as 1897, when a writer for the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal noted that in “early Greek art, where there is any attempt at careful modelling of the toes, the first toe is separated from the second, and in most instances the second toe is represented as somewhat longer than the first”.
Morton’s toe wasn’t really a “thing” in Ancient Egyptian art, though, Atlas Obscura added. That suggests it became a trend that stuck in the West.
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Why might “Morton’s toe” be so present in ancient art?
Hands up: the short answer is, we don’t know for sure. But theories abound.
“Morton’s toe” affects anywhere from 4-30% of the global population.
The condition is sometimes called “Greek foot”, because over time, it’s become associated with Greek people.
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That might explain its presence in predominantly Ancient Greek art – except that evolutionary geneticist Dr John H McDonald told USA Today, “I haven’t seen any evidence that so-called ‘Greek foot’ is more common in Greece than anywhere else”.
Another theory is that a longer second toe better fitted Greek ideals of beauty because it was more closely aligned with the mathematical rules of the Golden Ratio.
But not everyone thinks those numbers quite run, including in Da Vinci’s Vitruvian Man, where the famous fella’s second toe on his upper right leg extends to perfectly touch the curve of the surrounding circle.
Then, there’s the copycat theory
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There’s another option, too: simple repetition.
Whether some influential artists thought the feature was especially pleasing or just happened to use a model with Morton’s toe, there’s the chance that it was adopted by some of the greats and then endlessly aped.
“Many Roman statues have Greek feet, simply because the artists drew inspiration from one another,” Atlas Obscura posited.
A document from the US National Parks Service (NPS) seems to say the same thing: “As Roman statues sometimes are copies of the Greek originals, the Roman statues often have ‘Greek’ feet.”
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Indeed, the person who created the Statue of Liberty, whose second toe is longer than her first, was pretty open about his Ancient Greek, Egyptian, and Roman inspiration.
“On her Greek/Roman feet, open sandals… define [the Statue of Liberty’s] heritage from the earliest days of civilization – we see her Morton’s toes,” the NPS added.
The ‘No Boston No Party’ cone will be given to the city as a symbol of friendship as the World Cup comes to an official close.
A viral Tartan Army traffic cone is on its way to Boston. Andrew Dobbie and Danny Campbell are flying to the US from Edinburgh Airport with the now iconic cone, which shows the ‘friendship between the two cities’.
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Andrew decorated the ‘No Boston No Party‘ and placed it on the Duke of Wellington statue’s head in Glasgow. Since then, it’s been signed by the Chief Executive of Glasgow Chamber of Commerce, reports Edinburgh Live.
Once the cone arrives in America it will be signed by Governor of Massachusetts Maura Healey and Mayor of Boston Michelle Wu after they welcomed Scottish fans with open arms during the World Cup. The cone is to be given as a ‘gift to the city’.
Ms Wu said: “I’m being told that there is an official…. gift, repatriating the cone that is on the Duke of Wellington’s horse that says ‘Boston’ on it is being officially flown back as a gift to the city of Boston. So we will receive that very soon.”
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Andrew explained to his 13.6k Instagram followers that he and BBC Scotland’s Home of the Year presenter Danny Campbell were invited back Stateside for an adventure with the cone. He explained: “I can finally tell you the news that I’ve been dying to tell you all that both the Mayor of Boston and the Governor of Massachusetts have invited myself and Danny Campbell over with the Boston cone.
“We’ll be flying next week all the way over to Boston to visit you all, and we’re going to be taking the cone on a tour of all your favourite spots… tell us where we should take the cone!”
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On the Boston Cone website, Andrew and Danny said: “It all started with a bit of fun during the World Cup, with Andrew Dobbie, having the ultimate FOMO for not being there to party while everyone was having fun in Boston with the Scotland Tartan Army.
“So back in Scotland, he took a traffic cone and had it emblazoned with the word BOSTON on it, and along with some friends, placed it on the Duke of Wellington statue’s head in Glasgow to celebrate the twinning of our two cities.
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“Millions of views later, it’s ending with us flying to Boston with its successor: a hand-illustrated ‘No Boston No Party’ cone, covered in motifs from both cities by Glasgow artist Rob Johnson, already signed by the Chief Executive of Glasgow Chamber of Commerce, Stuart Patrick, and heading over to be signed by the Governor of Massachusetts and the Mayor of Boston.”
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The Mexican inspired restaurant well-known for its tortillas, burritos and quesadillas will be coming to 3 Albert Road in Darlington in the foreseeable future.
The official opening date has yet to be revealed but said the town should “get ready” for the new highly anticipated addition.
Taking to social media on Saturday (July 11), the company said: “Darlington, get ready.
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“The countdown is officially on.
“We’re getting ready to bring the Liv Más spirit to Darlington, and we can’t wait to welcome you through our doors.”
It comes after the chain was previously named a tenant at the Faverdale retail part as far back as July 2023 and was set to open a drive-thru restaurant.
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However, in February this year it was understood by The Northern Echo it was no longer opening there.
Developers Metcalf Harland Property Investment said the Californian-founded chain did not sign on a lease.
Darlington Borough Council’s planning committee initially deferred its decision in July 2023 over fears the development could lead to business closures and job losses elsewhere.
However, the plans were green-lit a month later, with Cockerton councillor Jan Cossins saying at the time: “If we had taken the decision to refuse last time, my daughter would have killed me because she loves Taco Bell.”
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But customers can now officially get excited as the restaurant will be giving behind the scenes updates, opening date announcements and exclusive competitions and giveaways on their Facebook page.
Since the announcement, many Darlington residents have shared their excitement about the new opening.
One person said: “I’ve always wanted to try Taco Bell, keep saying it and now it’s coming to our town which is even better.”
While another said: “I love Taco Bell, can’t wait for this to open.”
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The company has said customers should keep their eyes peeled on social media for further updates.
The match will kick-off from 8pm and be live on BBC One for all to enjoy, but if you want to feel every goal, tackle and near-miss alongside fellow fans, here are 10 of the best places across Teesside to soak up the World Cup atmosphere.
1. STACK, Middlesbrough
One of the biggest fan venues in Teesside, STACK Middlesbrough is hosting the semi-final with huge screens, live pre-match entertainment and plenty of food and drink vendors on site.
Tickets are £10 and are on sale now – entry is first-come, first-served, so get there early. Book via the STACK website.
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2. PLAY, Middlesbrough
PLAY on Corporation Road is screening every second of England vs Argentina across all five of its screens.
One of Middlesbrough’s best-known entertainment venues, it promises big sound, a packed crowd and a proper big-match atmosphere. Check PLAY’s social media for ticket details.
3. The Southfield, Middlesbrough
Social Pub & Kitchen’s The Southfield on Linthorpe Road has been the go-to England pub in Middlesbrough throughout the tournament, with HD screens across the venue.
Bookings are recommended to guarantee a good spot for the semi-final.
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4. The Bluebell Hotel, Middlesbrough
A firm fan favourite on Ormesby Road with screens throughout the pub, The Bluebell Hotel has been packing them in for every England game this summer.
It’s a proper community pub atmosphere. Booking ahead is advised.
5. The Empire, Middlesbrough
Middlesbrough’s biggest entertainment venue raised the flags early and has been running an England World Cup fan zone throughout the tournament, with 50% off tickets for England screenings.
Expect a lively crowd, big screens and plenty of football anthems before kick-off. Check The Empire’s website and social media for Wednesday’s details.
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6. The Boathouse, Stockton-on-Tees
The Boathouse on the Stockton waterfront has been showing every England match with £7 tickets including a free drink on arrival.
It’s a buzzing riverside setting that’s attracted big crowds all tournament. Check their Instagram for semi-final ticket information.
7. Sun Inn, Stockton-on-Tees
A Craft Union pub in the heart of Stockton, the Sun Inn has been showing every England World Cup game live on its large HD screens with great-value drinks deals.
No frills, no fuss – just a proper pub packed with fans cheering on the Three Lions.
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8. Eagle Inn, Eaglescliffe
A solid option for those local to Eaglescliffe and Yarm, The Eagle Inn has been a popular matchday destination throughout the World Cup.
It has big screens, matchday food and a fast bar service. Booking ahead is recommended.
You can book your spot via the Eagle Inn Pub website.
9. Hop & Grape, Redcar
For fans in Redcar, the Hop & Grape is the local Craft Union pub showing every World Cup match live, including the semi-final.
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With live sport on screens every day, it’s a reliable and welcoming spot to watch the game with fellow England supporters.
10. Ship Inn, Saltburn-by-the-Sea
Greene King’s Ship Inn in Saltburn is showing all the World Cup knockout matches including the semi-finals.
A great option for fans further along the coast who want to watch the match in a classic, characterful pub.
Andrew Castle is set to return to Wimbledon almost immediately after his final outing as BBC’s lead commentator
Andrew Castle is set to be at Wimbledon as a player this Wednesday following his last outing as BBC’s lead commentator. The men’s final between Jannik Sinner and Alexander Zverev was his last in the BBC booth but he will be back this week with the All England Club back to being available to private members.
“I’m back there on Wednesday playing anyway because it reverts to a private club, and it’s just an awesome place to be,” he revealed on GB News: “So not too sad, not too sad yet, just glad the last month’s over in the build up to saying bye bye.”
Having fronted the broadcaster’s coverage for 23 years, Castle was informed back in January of the BBC’s intention to replace him with Andrew Cotter as lead commentator.
He said: “Yes, I am a bit sad about it of course. I have fabulous memories, even working with John. And John is finishing as well, we’re being put out to grass, I mean that’s it. Booted.
“My kids were eight and 10 when I did my first Wimbledon final and they’re now married. One has children and there’s one expecting on the way so don’t tell me there’s nothing to do. (Turns to John) We’ll play golf next week yes?”.
With his time in the role now officially coming to an end, Castle also reflected on why he believes he has been replaced. He said: “I’ve come to know the BBC audience as a general audience of our population, and I love them and I miss them and they write to me, and that’s what I was trying to do over all these years.
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It’s perhaps a new direction Now there comes a time for everything, and I accept that. I still feel like there’s plenty to offer, and to be quite honest, that’s exactly what they said as well.
It was all very nice and very kind and very decently delivered, but the bottom line is I’m still sad, and this week is always a little bit funny for me anyway as I come down from the great show. But this year a little bit different because I won’t be back anyway.”
He said: “Andrew, I’ve got to head up to the studio now, but I want to take the opportunity to thank you so much for sharing the commentary box with you for so many years. You’ve been an absolute star, you’ve taught me so much, and I’ll miss you a lot, but what a great way to finish off.”
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Castle responded by saying: “I knew you when you were an annoying 14-year-old, and I’ve known you that whole time. Thanks for your company, and you, Andre (Agassi).”
Mr Adrian Forshaw submitted plans to alter the property at 55-59 Dobb Brow road, erecting a side garage and changing the Tudor-style frontage into modern red brick.
Town Councillor David Wilkinson said: “If anybody knows Dobb Brow they’ll know it’s Tudor style housing, and unfortunately they’re going to take all of that off.
“It’ll have basically have a brick skin, but they’re keeping the house.
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“The previous application which was building new ones at the back and knocking this one down as well.
“So, it’s staying, but it will look different from what it looks like currently.”
Despite this, Cllr Wilkinson voted to approve the application, as did the other members of Westhoughton Town Council.
The plans will change the character of the property.
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The Tudor frontage, with its white coat of paint and black painted contrast detailing, will be entirely removed.
Instead, the house front will consist of red brick.
The black-framed windows will also be removed and new windows will be installed.
The new design features a large, two-storey central glass window, flanked by two windows to the left and three windows to the right.
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The proposed rear of the property (Image: Bolton Council)
Rather than black-painted window frames, the new windows will be topped with sandstone.
A garage will also be appended to the front-left side of the property, which does not exist currently, and electric vehicle charging points will be installed.
Stainless steel external lights will be installed on either side of the central window.
The roof will be formed of interlocking concrete tiles with a dark grey colouration.
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Westhoughton Town Council approved the plans, but as an advisory body, they cannot grant to right to the developer to begin construction.
The plans will now have to be assessed by Bolton Council planning bosses before work can begin.
The 44-year-old, known for her roles in The Fall and Outlander, stars as Detective Monica Kennedy in The Dark, a new series based on Scottish crime writer G R Halliday’s novel From the Shadows.
Set in the Scottish wilderness, the series follows Kennedy as she investigates the staged killing of a young man.
As paranoia spreads, long-held secrets begin to surface and locals realise a serial killer may be hiding among them.
The six-part series also stars The Last Kingdom actor Mark Rowley and Friends actress Helen Baxendale.
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Donnelly said she found it interesting that the series focused on missing men, as women are more commonly portrayed as victims in crime dramas.
“Obviously, it’s far more common for the victims to be women, not that it doesn’t happen to men, but it is much more common with women,” she said.
“What I really liked about this first storyline was that we weren’t getting that familiar dynamic. In particular, I appreciated that it wasn’t accompanied by gratuitous violence and gore.
“We’ve seen women being hunted and killed on our screens so often over the years, and while that is, of course, the reality in many cases, it can also feel very gratuitous.”
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In the series, Detective Kennedy balances her demanding career with raising her daughter.
“I think what I really, really adored about this character, and about the first scripts I read, was how little being a mother impacts the way she does her job,” she said.
“It certainly affects her relationship with her child, there’s no question about that, but she doesn’t allow the fact that she’s a mum to affect the way she works.”
She added: “I love that motherhood doesn’t stop or hinder any aspect of what Monica does, whether she’s being reckless, putting her own life on the line, or throwing herself into a situation in a completely inadvisable way.
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“She doesn’t even think twice about the long hours she has to work. She simply relies on the fact that her mum has things under control and will look after Lucy while she gets on with the job she believes she was put on this earth to do.
“I think Monica feels she was put on this earth to solve these kinds of crimes, not to be a mother. That really appealed to me about this character.”
Laura Donnelly leads the cast of The Dark on ITV, which is an adaptation of GR Halliday’s novel From the Shadows (Image: ITV)
Rowley, 36, who plays Detective Conor Crawford, revealed that he spoke to a Highlands-based detective while researching the role, using those insights to help create an authentic portrayal of detective work.
“I ended up speaking to a superintendent who had previously been in charge of the Highlands in Inverness. It was really interesting talking to him,” said the Scottish actor.
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“It’s not something we’ve explored in great detail in our show because we’ve taken a different direction, but one thing he said they’re increasingly finding difficult is social media.
“When people post things online, there’s often an assumption that it’s evidence, when in reality it isn’t. The challenge is identifying the core evidence that can actually stand up in court and lead to a conviction. I found that fascinating.
“I suppose it all comes back to detectives hunting for the truth, and that can take you down many different paths.
“In the show, there are moments where we find one tiny piece of evidence, and that’s the key that unlocks everything.”
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Episode 2 of The Dark is on ITV tonight at 9pm and ITVX.
Carol Vorderman has revealed she was recently rushed to hospital in an ambulance after suffering a horror fall which left her unconscious.
The TV personality, 65, took to Instagram to share a health update after she tripped over a tree root outside her home and ‘smashed onto the tarmac path’ injuring herself.
The Countdown legend explained in a video: ‘I’ve got a bit of a story to tell you about my concussion, which might also explain why I was a bit offline in June.
‘So right at the very end of May, I was walking just outside my house on a public footpath, and I tripped over a tree root, which I didn’t see.
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‘And I went smash here on the tarmac path, and I was unconscious.
‘I can’t remember what happened then, but I do know that an ambulance came, and I was taken to the BRI, Bristol Royal Infirmary.
‘By the way, I also know that they were playing the final countdown in the ambulance on the way. It’s another story, but it did make me laugh.’
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Carol Vorderman has revealed she was recently rushed to hospital in an ambulance after suffering a horror fall which left her unconscious
Carol went into further detail, noting how she was ‘discharged the next day’ but experienced ‘massive vomiting… all the bad signs’.
She added: ‘Straight back into hospital, they were wonderful. The A&E did all the CT scans and everything. Out again. I had the biggest black eye or bruises all down my face for three or four weeks.
‘But what it did leave me with after about two or three weeks was dizziness. So I felt as though I was kind of walking on a moving ship, like sort of knocking into the wall a little bit.’
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The I’m A Celebrity star explained that she was left feeling like the room was spinning and thanked the ‘Epley technique’ and a lady called Sophie who introduced her to it for helping tackle it.
Carol urged: ‘I am not a doctor. I am not advising people about this, but I’m just telling you what’s happened to me.’
She went on to explain how it is BPPV, adding how ‘it’s all about the inner ear and this little sort of sack of crystals that gets dislodged, and she puts it back together again’.
After three sessions with physio Sophie doing the Epley technique, Carol says she has been discharged from the service and ‘couldn’t be happier’.
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It comes after Carol revealed she is hoping to go under the knife and have a facelift ‘in the next couple of years’.
The presenter has previously hit back at criticism she’s faced for having Botox to maintain her ageless appearance, and she doubled down on her plans for more surgery in a new interview.
Hitting back at critics of her tweakments, Carol declared she’ll ‘spend her money on what she likes’ and has ‘no issue’ with having surgery in the future.
The TV personality, 65, took to Instagram to share a health update after she tripped over a tree root outside her home and ‘smashed onto the tarmac path’ injuring herself
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Speaking to Daily Mail’s Richard Eden, she said: ‘I don’t look as good as I did in my 40s, but I don’t think I look bad for my age.
‘I have Botox and all of those things, and I’m probably going to have a facelift in the next couple of years.’
‘It’s my money, I’ve earned it, so I’ll spend it on what I like. I am accepting of myself, but I also want to look good, and those two things can go together.’
Carol has previously said she has a ‘no f***s given’ approach to ageing as she recounted the abuse she often gets over her appearance.
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She told The Sunday Times Magazine in 2024: ‘Everyone on telly has Botox. I look the way I do because it makes me happy.
‘But you get to a point in life where it’s no f***s given. I love what David Bowie said about ageing: “You become the person you always should have been.”
‘My sixties is the age I always should have been. The abuse I get is off the scale but I don’t give a monkey’s. Actually it spurs me on.’
She also told how she has actually never had a boob job but that she went up three cup sizes when she went through menopause.
“Netherfield Park is let at last!” go the famous opening words from Mrs Bennet in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. To her delight, the estate has been taken on by the eligible newcomer Mr Bingley – a “single man in possession of a good fortune” – who brings new marital opportunities for her five unmarried daughters.
In the beloved 1995 BBC television adaptation of Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, Edgcote House in Northamptonshire was chosen as the location for Netherfield Park. Edgcote is a stunning Georgian manor, built in the mid-18th century, in an elegant landscaped park. In summer 2026, the estate is up for sale – ready and waiting for its next eligible owner (though they’ll need a bit more cash than Bingley’s four or five thousand a year).
But what about the stories beneath the glossy costume-drama world?
In the middle of the 18th century, a young labouring-class woman, Mary Leapor, worked as a servant at Edgcote House. She was also – despite her humble background and lack of formal education – a poet.
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Her master at Edgcote House, Richard Chauncy, later recalled that “her fondness for writing verses… displayed itself by her sometimes taking up her pen while the jack [the spit] was standing still, and the meat scorching.” Perhaps unsurprisingly, Leapor was dismissed from Edgcote House in 1745.
Leapor’s poem Crumble-Hall is based on her time working at Edgcote House and was written just before she left. It takes us below stairs to see the hidden stories and secrets of the great English country house.
Edgcote House was the location of Netherfield in the 1995 adaptation of Pride and Prejudice. Ian Rob/Wikimedia
Leapor writes in the first person, in the guise of a servant called Mira, introducing us to a colourful cast of characters.
In the kitchen, the maid Ursula is doing the washing up, but crushing hard on the servant-boy Roger, who’s eaten too many leftovers and is snoring on the table.
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In the poem’s typically comic style, Ursula declares her passionate (unrequited) love for Roger, dedicating all her mundane chores to him.
“Ah! Roger, Ah!” the mournful Maiden cries: “Is wretched Urs’la then your Care no more, That, while I sigh, thus you can sleep and snore? Ingrateful Roger! wilt thou leave me know? For you these Furrows mark my fading Brow: For you my Pigs resign their Morning Due: My hungry Chickens lose their Meat for you: And, was it not, Ah! was it not for thee, No goodly Pottage would be dress’d by me. For thee these Hands wind up the whirling Jack, Or place the Spit across the sloping Rack. I baste the Mutton with a cheerful Heart, Because I know my Roger will have Part.
Her frustrated romantic thoughts, however, are rudely interrupted.
But now her Dish-kettle began To boil and blubber with the foaming Bran.
The kettle’s boiled, the water’s hot, and she has to get on with the dishes. The servant’s time is not her own. The above-stairs ladies of Jane Austen’s novels get to have their love affairs and romances – but servants can never be the main characters in their own stories.
Mary Leapor also takes us on a tour around the house. And, as the title Crumble-Hall suggests, this isn’t quite the glamorous world we might imagine. Instead, it’s disintergrating, dusty and decrepit. Leapor observes that “Safely the Mice through yon dark Passage run”. And, in the dimness, she says, “Along each Wall the Stranger blindly feels; / And (trembling) dreads a Spectre at his Heels.” Even the Library is full of “dusty volumes”, gathering cobwebs.
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In fact, during Mary Leapor’s time there, Edgcote House probably really was crumbling. The new manor house, which we know from the BBC Pride and Prejudice, was built around 1747 to 1752.
Mary Leapor is looking ahead to this major remodelling of Edgcote House and its estate when she takes us briefly, at the end of the poem, out into the grounds. She laments that ancient trees will be torn down “[t]o clear the way for Slopes, and modern Whims”. For Mary, this is a moment of sadness and loss: she foresees a “ravag’d” and “barren” future park: green and elegant, but emptied of the nature and memories she knows.
What paid for this ambitious rebuilding of Edgcote House? Richard Chauncy, its owner, made his vast fortune through the East India Company. This was the joint-stock company formed in 1600 to trade in the Indian Ocean region, which by the mid-18th century was already exercising military power, assuming administrative functions, and effectively forming the basis for the British Empire in India.
Poems Upon Several Occasions (1748) by Mary Leapor. Wikimedia, CC BY-SA
Leapor’s poem points us towards the hidden labour below stairs which underpins the English country house – but also the hidden labour, halfway across the world, which pays for it.
Mary Leapor died of measles in 1746 at the age of just 24. Her poetry wasn’t known beyond her hometown of Brackley, Northamptonshire, in her lifetime. When I wrote about Leapor in my book A History of England in 25 Poems, I couldn’t help wondering: what might she have gone on to write? What sort of poet would she have become?
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I like to think that this fearless, radical, witty young woman would have held her own in conversation with Jane Austen – or, even, in the Bingleys’ drawing room. She helps us listen beyond the familiar voices and to see the other, often invisible, stories, beneath the stately homes of England.
This article features references to books that have been included for editorial reasons, and may contain links to bookshop.org. If you click on one of the links and go on to buy something, The Conversation UK may earn a commission.
It is alleged a man drove nearly 300 miles from his home to Ann Widdecombe’s bungalow in Haytor, Devon, where the veteran politician and reality TV star was found dead
The murder of former British politician Ann Widdecombe is being investigated by Counter Terrorism Police with a suspect re-arrested on a terrorism offence, police said today.
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Authorities confirmed Counter Terrorism Police are leading the probe after the suspect, originally detained on suspicion of Miss Widdecombe’s murder, has been re-arrested on suspicion of commission, preparation or instigation of acts of terrorism. This gives police the powers under the Terrorism Act to detain a suspect without charge for up to 14 days.
Devon and Cornwall Police had previously faced a race against the clock to bring charges after the initial arrest. The head of UK counter-terrorism policing, Laurence Taylor, said: “Building on the progress made by our colleagues in Devon and Cornwall Police, we now have new information and evidence that means Counter Terrorism Policing is now leading the investigation.
“We are pursuing multiple lines of enquiry to establish the motivation for this attack. Our priority is progressing this investigation quickly, with all the capabilities we have available to us. If anyone has any information, please share it with the police.”
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Who are Counter Terrorism police?
Counter Terrorism Police work with the UK intelligence community to help protect the public and our national security. Officers from forces across the UK collaborate to prevent, deter and investige terrorist activity.
The unit says “choices have to constantly be made about resources” but they lead investigations on cases deemed to pose a threat to national security. It is unclear what the “new information and evidence” is on the Miss Widdecombe case but this has led to CTP taking the lead on this one.
Investigations have taken place in Devon and South Yorkshire (the latter where the latest arrest was made) with CTP’s team covering the whole of the UK. They generally become involved where there is suspected terrorism or offences under UK terrorism legislation. Now, the suspect has been re-arrested on suspicion of commission, preparation or instigation of acts of terrorism.
What happens next?
The re-arrest on alleged terrorism offences gives police the powers under the Terrorism Act to detain a suspect without charge for up to 14 days. Devon and Cornwall Police had initially said there was nothing to suggest the attack was terrorism-related, but investigations are ever evolving as new information comes to light.
But, like Devon and Cornwall Police said, Counter Terrorism Police has urged “anyone with any information” to share it with them online.
How significant is this?
Previously, the case was being led by Devon and Cornwall Police — because the offence happened in Devon. However, they received help from South Yorkshire Constabulary whose officers arrested the suspect on Saturday in Rotherham.
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This meant the case had already used resources from at least two constabularies. Counter Terrorism Police uses such collaboration, with officers from forces across the UK.
Crucially, while Devon and Cornwall Police faced a shorter period in which to bring charges against the suspect, the latest development gives Counter Terrorism Police much more time. They have powers to detain the man, from Rotherham, South Yorkshire, for up to 14 days while they continue to investigate.
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