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Various

"Notes and Queries, Number 14, February 2, 1850"

141., that the modern maps present no trace of the
locality of "_Dick Shoare_," mentioned in the Pepysian _Diary_. In one
of Smith's maps, now before me, of the date of 1806, I find "Duke Shore
Stairs," not far from the great turn of the river southward, opposite to
the Isle of Dogs. Whether the proper spelling to be Dick, Dyke, Dock,
Dog, or Duke, I leave to your readers to determine; but I presume there
can be no doubt as to the identity of the place. As the origin of the
name of "Isle of Doggs," according to the Pepysian orthography, is said
to be still underdetermined; may it not be connected with the modern
term DOCKS? We are daily familiarised to worse corruptions. _Docks_ are
excavations, large or small, formed by the operation of digging, in
Dutch called _Doken_.
J.I.
[DICK'S SHORE, _Fore Street_, _Limehouse_, and DICK'S SHORE
ALLEY, _by Dick's Shore_, are both mentioned in _London and its
Environs_, vol. ii. p. 233.]

_Travelling in England._--Mr. Steven's quotation (No. 11., p. 167.) of
Bernard Calvert's rapid journey, as from _an anonymous History of
England written in the early part of the reign of George I.


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