“Exodus from Houndsditch,”

“Exodus from Houndsditch,” the contemplated title of a work which Carlyle would fain have written, but found it impossible in his time. “Out of Houndsditch indeed!” he exclaims. “Ah, were we but out, and had our own along with us” (our inheritance from the past, he means). “But they that have come hitherto have come in a state of brutal nakedness, scandalous mutilation” (having cast their inheritance from the past away), “and impartial bystanders say sorrowfully, 'Return rather; it is better even to return!'” Houndsditch was a Jew's quarter, and old clothesmarket in London, and was to Carlyle the symbol of the alarming traffic at the time in spiritualities fallen extinct. Had he given a list of these, as he has already in part done, without labelling them so, he would only, he believed, have given offence both to the old-rag worshippers and those that had cast the rags off, and were all, unwittingly to themselves, going about naked; considerate he in this of preserving what of worth was in the past.

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Exodus * Exogens
[wait for the fun]
Ewald, Johannes
Ewige Jude
Excalibur
Excommunication
Exelmans, Remy Joseph Isodore, Comte
Exeter
Exeter Hall
Exmoor
Exmouth
Exodus
“Exodus from Houndsditch,”
Exogens
Exorcism
Exoteric
Externality
Extreme Unction
Eyck, Jan van
Eylau
Eyre, Edward John
Eyre, Jane
Ezekiel