LITTLE BRITAIN.
<span style="color:grey"> I e is most true . . . . . I te foortients ( of cy h me.
IN tre of t City of London lies a small neiging of a cluster of narroreets and courts, of very venerable and debilitated tLE BRItAIN. C C.
Bartal bound it on t; Smite Street, like an arm of t from tern part of ty; reet separates it from Butce. Over ttle territory, ted, t dome of St. Pauls, servening ernoster Roection.
ter derives its appellation from times, ttany. As London increased, o t, and trade, creeping on at took possession of ted abodes. For some time Little Britain became t mart of learning, and ed it, and, emigrating beyond t strait of Nee Street, settled doernoster Ro. Pauls Cinue to increase and multiply even at t day.
But, to decline, Little Britain still bears traces of its former splendor. to tumble dos of uralist to classify. te Street, certain remains of o several tenements. en be found tty tradesman, s trumpery furniture, burroiquated ?nery in great rambling time-stained apartments ted ceilings, gilded cornices, and enormous marble ?replaces. ts also contain many smaller on so grand a scale, but, like your small ancient gentry, sturdily maintaining to equal antiquity.
to treet, great bo in lead, grotesque carvings, and low arched doorways.*
* It is evident t teresting communication itle of Little Britain, man of ttle lanes and courts t belong immediately to Cloth Fair.
In t venerable and sered little nes