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St Martin-in-the-Fields
IT may not be the first name on their lips when people talk about famous places of worship, but St Martin-in-the-Fields is the most visible parish church in London, at the centre of the tourist route and a regular background feature for city inhabitants going about their daily business. It's fortunate that it is the prettiest church in the capital, easily holding its own against the larger buildings that have sprung up around since its first stone was laid 300 years ago this year.
My favourite painting Cecilia McDowall
Charlotte Mullins comments on Annunciation
Wild about you
A longtime source of inspiration for authors and artists, wild animals were once considered acceptable household pets and beloved companions, finds Jeremy Hobson
Called to the Bar: Lincoln's Inn, London WC2, part I The Honourable Society of Lincoln's Inn
This year, Lincoln's Inn celebrates a remarkable 600th anniversary. In the first of two articles, John Goodall examines the origins of this celebrated society of lawyers
Trees for life
The Woodland Trust was set up as a Nature-conservation charity specifically concerned with trees. Clive Aslet visits its south Devon birthplace of 50 years ago and remembers its far-sighted and altruistic founder
THE CAPITAL ACCORDING TO... Howard Jacobson
Booker Prize-winner Howard Jacobson talks to Harry McKinley about life in Soho and London's best bagel
Table for two, per favore
Emma Hughes presents the best international restaurants in London right now
Ghost town
Many out there believe that the capital's streets, pubs and even hospitals are home to myriad ghosts-a few friendly, some less so. On a walk through some of these supposedly haunted sites, Carla Passino tries to separate fact from fiction
A voyage of discovery
A cruise on the beautiful River Severn offers a unique way to discover the heart of England
The beautiful game
ILLUSTRATING a highly popular activity that paused for a few days earlier this month out of respect for the death of our late Queen Elizabeth II, L. S. Lowry's Going to the Match, painted in 1953, for an exhibition in honour of the Football Association's 90th anniversary, is set to kick-off a few ripples in the art market when it goes under the hammer next month.
My favourite painting Stella loannou
Where Do We Come From, What Are We, Where Are We Going? by Emma Talbot
Aerofilms Collection
by Claude Grahame-White and Francis Lewis Wills
A Cotswold capital
During the Civil War, Oxford briefly became Charles I's capital. Simon Thurley explains how the city was fortified and the university adapted to accommodate the Court
It's time we came back to earth
The excitement over space travel is overblown, says the (terrestrial) explorer Robin Hanbury-Tenison. Instead of reaching for the stars, we should be marvelling at and caring for what we already have on our own planet
In search of black magic
After years of decline, English truffle hunting is enjoying an exciting revival. Ben Lerwill heads to the Cotswolds to join the search for this highly prized fungus
Going with the flow
Once the most fertile land on a farm, water meadows are now increasingly valued for the huge diversity of life they sustain, as Natasha Goodfellow discovers on a tour of some of the Cotswolds's best examples
Faking it
Real or faux marble? Amelia Thorpe weighs the pros and cons of the two options
Pure enchantment
The lure of the Cotswolds never wavers, as these five new to the market properties show
Elizabeth the Steadfast
Elizabeth II, Britain's longest-serving monarch, embodied the traditional values of duty, fidelity and constancy throughout her glorious reign, yet always managed to move with the times. Matthew Dennison pays tribute
Rural business to receive helping hand
A NEW Government initiative to boost investment in the rural economy has been welcomed by countryside organisations. CLA president Mark Tufnell describes it as ‘the first steps towards delivering a robust and ambitious plan to create economic growth in the countryside’. Earlier this month,
Proof of a nation's love
IN the hours after the news from Balmoral, I walked through St James’s Park, joining little streams of others converging on Buckingham Palace. Reaching the road, we found many more coming down the Mall.
Athena Cultural Crusader Glasgow's magnificent temple to the Arts
A THENA recently had the good fortune to travel through Glasgow on her way to the Highlands. The city was bustling with life and bathed in sunshine. It was also overwhelmed with rubbish, a consequence of the bin strike, with great ziggurats of boxes, cups and bags stacked up on every street corner.
Elegy Written In A Country Churchyard
Thomas Gray
The majesty of slate
Silenced Welsh quarries evoke a vanishing world
Treasures from South Africa
Clusters of delicate flowers, often in muted colours, will bloom for several months, making tulbaghia an irresistible garden plant, writes John Hoyland
Testing boundaries
We are a nation of hedge lovers-and rightly so-but there are myriad traditional means of dividing land and containing livestock that are both charming and a boon to wildlife. Octavia Pollock reports
Each month of this 125th-anniversary year, COUNTRY LIFE illustrates a period in the development of the English great house. In the ninth of this 12-part series, John Goodall looks at developments during the Regency
ON October 5, 1826, Hermann, Prince of Pückler-Muskau, wrote from London to announce his safe arrival in England. The letter was one in a whole series written to his former wife over a period of three years that described a tour of England,
Neither beautiful nor useful
THE RHS has taken leave of its senses, telling us to share our gardens with slugs, wasps and vine weevils.This is bad news for plants-which are what the RHS is all about and it's not what gardeners want to hear.
Little frizzle and other spooky stories.
Now a thriving tourist spot, the Isle of Mull was once a perilous place to survive-particularly if you stumbled upon its multitude of myths and magic, believes Helen Fields
Sea fever
In the aftermath of civil war, one of the great painters of the New World developed a highly expressive and personal language to explore Man's connection with wild Nature, conflict and race