.dt The Newmarket, Bury, Thetford, and Cromer Road, by Charles G. Harper-A\
Project Gutenberg eBook
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THE NEWMARKET, BURY, THETFORD,|AND CROMER ROAD
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WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
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.hr 20%
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The Brighton Road: Old Times and New
on a Classic Highway.
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The Portsmouth Road, and its Tributaries:
To-day and in Days of Old.
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The Dover Road: Annals of an Ancient
Turnpike.
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The Bath Road: History, Fashion, and
Frivolity on an Old Highway.
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The Exeter Road: The Story of the West
of England Highway.
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The Great North Road: The Old Mail
Road to Scotland. Two Vols.
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The Norwich Road: An East Anglian
Highway.
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The Holyhead Road: The Mail Coach
Road to Dublin. Two Vols.
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The Cambridge, Ely, and King’s Lynn
Road: The Great Fenland Highway.
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Cycle Rides Round London.
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Stage-Coach and Mail in Days of Yore:
A Picturesque History of the Coaching
Age. Two Vols.
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The Ingoldsby Country: Literary Landmarks
of the Ingoldsby Legends.
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The Oxford, Gloucester, and Milford
Haven Road.[In the Press.
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THE NORWICH MAIL IN A THUNDERSTORM ON THETFORD HEATH.
From a print after J. Pollard.
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[Illustration: THE NORWICH MAIL IN A THUNDERSTORM ON THETFORD HEATH.
From a print after J. Pollard.]
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The Newmarket,
Bury, Thetford,
and Cromer Road
SPORT AND HISTORY ON AN EAST
ANGLIAN TURNPIKE
By Charles G. Harper
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Author of “The Brighton Road,” “The Portsmouth Road,”
“The Dover Road,” “The Bath Road,” “The Exeter Road,”
“The Great North Road,” “The Norwich Road,” “The
Holyhead Road,” “The Cambridge, Ely, and King’s Lynn
Road,” “Stage-Coach and Mail in Days of Yore,” and “The
Ingoldsby Country.”
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[Illustration: Publisher’s Logo]
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Illustrated by the Author, and from
Old-Time Prints and Pictures
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London: Chapman & Hall
LTD. 1904
[All rights reserved]
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PRINTED AND BOUND BY
HAZELL, WATSON AND VINEY, LD.,
LONDON AND AYLESBURY.
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TO
SIR WALTER GILBEY, Bart.,
AS SOME
ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF FAVOURS RECEIVED,
THESE RECORDS OF A ROAD
TO HIM
PECULIARLY INTIMATE.
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[Illustration]
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PREFACE.
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I\_\_TELL the Tale of the Road, with scraps of gossip and curious lore,
With a laugh, or a sigh, and a tear in the eye for the joys and sorrows of yore:
What were they like, those sorrows and joys, you ask, O Heir of the Ages:
Read, then, mark, learn, and perpend, an you will, from these gossipy pages.
Here, free o’er the shuddery heath, where the curlew calls shrill to his mate,
Wandered the Primitive Man, in his chilly and primitive state;
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Unkempt and shaggy, reckless of razor, of comb, or of soap:
Hunted, lived, loved, and died, in untutored and primitive hope.
For what did he hope, that picturesque heathen, hunter of fur and of feather?
For a Better Land, with weapons to hand, much quarry, and fine hunting weather.
Now white runs the devious road, o’er the trackless space that he trod,
Who hunted the heath, and died, and yielded his primitive soul unto God.
Briton and conquering Roman, Iceni, Saxon, piratical Dane,
Have marched where he joyously ranged, and peopled this desolate plain.
Dynasties, peoples, and laws have waxed, ruled, and faded, and gone,
But still spreads his primitive home, sombre, unfertile, and lone.
Here toiled the wallowing coach, where the highway goes winding away:
Here the highwayman lurked in the shadow, impatiently waiting his prey:
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There, where the turbulent river, unbridged, rolled fiercely in spate,
The wayfarer, seeking the deep-flooded ford, met a watery fate.
I can show you the suicide’s grave, where bracken and bryony twine,
By cross-roads on the heath, where the breath of the breeze is like wine;
And bees and butterflies flit in the sun, and life is joyous and sweet,
And takes no care for the tragedy there, where the suicide sleeps at your feet.
Dwellers in village and town, each contribute their tale to the store,
Peasants of valley and down, fishers by river and shore.
Thus I tell you the Tale of the Road, told with a laugh or a sigh;
Sought with a zest, told with a jest, wrought with a tear in the eye.
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.rj
CHARLES G. HARPER.
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Petersham,
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Surrey,
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February, 1904.
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THE ROAD TO NEWMARKET, THETFORD,|NORWICH, AND CROMER.
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London (General Post Office) to— |MILES
Shoreditch Church | 1½
Cambridge Heath | 2½
Hackney Church | 3½
Lower Clapton | 4
Lea Bridge
(Cross River Lea.) | 5½
Whip’s Cross | 6¾
Snaresbrook (“The Eagle”) | 8
Woodford (St. Mary’s Church) | 9
Woodford Green | 9¾
Woodford Wells (“Horse and Well” Inn) | 10¼
Buckhurst Hill (“Bald-faced Stag”) | 11
Loughton | 13
Wake Arms | 15
Epping | 18
Thornwood Common | 20¼
Potter Street | 2½
Harlow
(Cross River Stort: Stort Navigation,\
Harlow Wharf.) | 24½
Sawbridgeworth | 26¾
Spelbrook | 28½
Thorley Street
(Cross River Stort.) | 29½
Hockerill, Bishop Stortford | 30½
Stansted Mountfitchet | 33½
Ugley | 35½
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Quendon | 36½
Newport
(Cross Wicken Water.) | 39
Uttlesford Bridge, Audley End
\
(On right, Saffron Walden, 1½ mile; on left,\
½ mile, Wendens Ambo.) | 40¼
Littlebury | 42¼
Little Chesterford (Cross River Cam.) | 43¾
Great Chesterford | 44½
Stump Cross | 45¼
Pampisford Station, Bourn Bridge
\
(Cross Bourn Stream, or Linton River.) | 48½
Six Mile Bottom
\
Level Crossing, Six Mile Bottom Station.) | 54½
Devil’s Ditch | 58½
Newmarket (Clock Tower) | 60½
“Red Lodge” Inn
(Cross River Kennett.) | 65½
Barton Mills
(Cross River Lark, Mildenhall, on left, 1 mile.) | 69¾
Elveden | 77
Thetford
(Cross Rivers Little Ouse and Thet.) | 80¾
Larling Level Crossing | 85¾
Larlingford
(Cross River Thet.) | 88¾
Attleborough | 94¾
Morley St. Peter Post Office | 97
Wymondham | 100¾
Hethersett | 104¼
Cringleford
(Cross River Yare.) | 106¾
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Eaton | 107¼
Norwich (loop road)
(Cross River Wensum.) | 109¾
Upper Hellesdon | 110½
Mile Cross | 111
Horsham St. Faith | 114¼
Newton St. Faith | 115½
Stratton Strawless | 117½
Hevingham | 118
Marsham | 120
Aylsham (loop road)
(Cross River Bure.) | 121½
Ingworth | 123½
Erpingham | 125½
Hanworth Corner | 126¾
Roughton | 128½
Crossdale Street | 131
Cromer | 132
To Thetford, through Bury St. Edmunds.
Newmarket (Clock Tower) | 61¾
Kentford (Cross River Kennett.) | 66
Higham Station | 68½
Saxham White Horse | 71½
Risby | 73
Bury St. Edmunds | 75½
Fornham St. Martin | 77½
Ingham | 79¾
Seven Hills | 81¾
Barnham | 85½
Thetford | 87¾
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List of Illustrations
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[Illustration: List of Illustrations]
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SEPARATE PLATES
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| PAGE
The Norwich Mail in a Thunderstorm on Thetford\
Heath. (From a Print after J. Pollard) | #Frontispiece:frontis#
The Norwich Stage, about 1790. (From a Painting by\
an Artist unknown) | #5:i005#
The “Expedition,” Newmarket and Norwich Stage,\
about 1798. (From the Painting by Cordery) | #9:i009#
Rye House | #21:i021#
The “Eagle,” Snaresbrook: the Norwich Mail passing,\
1832. (From a Print after J. Pollard) | #41:i041#
The “White Hart,” Woodford. (From a Drawing by\
P. Palfrey) | #45:i045#
Birthplace of Cecil Rhodes | #59:i059#
Henry Gilbey | #63:i063#
The “Crown,” Hockerill, demolished 1903.
(From a\
Drawing by P. Palfrey) | #67:i067#
The “White Bear,” Stansted. (From a Drawing by\
P. Palfrey) | #71:i071#
The “Old Bell,” Stansted. (From a Drawing by P.\
Palfrey) | #75:i075#
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London Lane, Newport: where Charles the Second’s\
Route to Newmarket joined the Highway | #85:i085#
The Devil’s Ditch and Newmarket Heath, looking\
towards Ely | #125:i125#
Yard of the “White Hart,” Newmarket | #147:i147#
Newmarket: the “Rutland Arms” | #153:i153#
“Angel Hill,” Bury St. Edmunds | #181:i181#
Mildenhall | #195:i195#
Barton Mills | #199:i199#
The “Nuns’ Bridges” on the Icknield Way, Thetford | #217:i217#
The “Bell Inn,” Thetford, and St. Peter’s Church | #221:i221#
Castle Hill, Thetford, in 1848. (From an old Print) | #229:i229#
Wymondham | #279:i279#
The “Unicorn,” Norwich and Cromer Coach. (From\
a Print after J. Pollard, 1830) | #295:i295#
“St. Fay’s” | #311:i311#
Blickling Hall | #319:i319#
Cromer in 1830.(From a Print after T. Creswick, R.A.) | #343:i343#
Cromer | #349:i349#
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ILLUSTRATIONS IN TEXT
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| PAGE
Will Kemp and his Tabourer | #xvii#
Ambresbury Banks | #55:i055#
“Sapsworth” | #56:i056#
Windhill, Bishop’s Stortford | #62:i062#
Hockerill | #66:i066#
Ugley Church | #79:i079#
“Monks’ Barns” | #83:i083#
Ancient Carving at “Monks’ Barns” | #84:i084#
“Nell Gwynne’s House,” formerly the “Horns” Inn | #91:i091#
“Hospital Farm,” and “Newport Big Stone” | #93:i093#
Wendens Ambo | #96:i096#
Audley End | #99:i099#
Saffron Walden | #103:i103#
House formerly the “Sun” Inn | #105:i105#
Arms of Saffron Walden | #109:i109#
“Mag’s Mount” | #122:i122#
Barclay of Ury on his Walking Match | #134:i134#
The “Boy’s Grave” | #169:i169#
Little Saxham Church | #173:i173#
Marman’s Grave | #189:i189#
Avenue near Newmarket | #190:i190#
Elveden | #203:i203#
Elveden Gap | #207:i207#
Gateway, Thetford Priory | #213:i213#
Castle Hill, Thetford | #231:i231#
The “Old House,” Thetford | #243:i243#
“Bridgeham High Tree” | #245:i245#
The “Scutes,” Peddar’s Way | #249:i249#
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The Ruined Church of Roudham | #251:i251#
Larlingford | #253:i253#
Wilby Old Hall | #255:i255#
Attleborough | #258:i258#
Wymondham Church | #270:i270#
Hethersett Vane | #286:i286#
Cringleford | #288:i288#
Eaton “Red Lion” | #292:i292#
St. Peter Mancroft, and Yard of the “White Swan” | #298:i298#
Gateway, Strangers’ Hall | #302:i302#
The Strangers’ Hall | #303:i303#
Caricature in Stone, St. Andrew’s Hall | #306:i306#
Caricature in Stone, St. Andrew’s Hall | #307:i307#
Tombland Alley | #308:i308#
Stratton Strawless Lodges | #314:i314#
“Woodrow” Inn, and the Hobart Monument | #325:i325#
Ingworth | #327:i327#
Felbrigg Hall | #330:i330#
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The NEWMARKET, BURY, THETFORD, and CROMER ROAD
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[Illustration: The NEWMARKET, BURY, THETFORD, and CROMER ROAD]
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I
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The road to Newmarket, Thetford, Norwich, and
Cromer is 132 miles in length, if you go direct
from the old starting-points, Shoreditch or Whitechapel
churches. If, on the other hand, you elect
to follow the route of the old Thetford and Norwich
Mail, which turned off just outside Newmarket from
the direct road through Barton Mills, and went
instead by Bury St. Edmunds, it is exactly seven
miles longer to Thetford and all places beyond.
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There are few roads so wild and desolate, and
no other main road so lonely, in the southern half
of this country. There are even those who describe
it as “dreary,” but that is simply a description
due to extrinsic circumstances. Beyond question,
however, it must needs have been a terrible road
in the old coaching days, and every one who had
a choice of routes to Norwich did most emphatically
and determinedly elect to journey by way
of that more populated line of country leading
through Chelmsford, Colchester, and Ipswich.
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Taken nowadays, however, without the harassing
drawbacks of rain or snow, or without head-winds
to make the cyclist’s progression a misery, it is
a road of weirdly interesting scenery. It is not
recommended for night-riding to the solitary rider
of impressionable nature, for its general aloofness
from the haunts of man, and that concentrated
spell of sixteen miles of stark solitudes between
Great Chesterford and Newmarket, where you
have the bare chalk downs all to yourself, are apt
to give all such as he that unpleasant sensation
popularly called “the creeps.” By day, however,
these things lose their uncanny effect while they
keep their interest.
There are in all rather more than fifty miles of
chalk downs and furzy heaths along this road, and
they are all the hither side of Norwich. You bid
good-bye to the chalk downs when once Newmarket
is gained, and then reach the still wild,
but kindlier, country of the sandy heaths.
Cromer was not within the scheme of the
London coach-proprietors’ activities in the days
of the road. It was scarce more than a fishing
village, and the traveller who wished to reach it
merely booked to Norwich, and from thence found
a local coach to carry him forward. To Norwich
by this route it is exactly two miles shorter than
by way of Colchester and Ipswich. Let us see
how public needs were studied in those old days
by proprietors of stage-coach and mail.
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II
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The Newmarket and Thetford route was not a
favourite one with the earliest coachmasters. Its
lengthy stretches of unpopulated country rendered
it a poor speculation, and the exceptional dangers
to be apprehended from Highway-men kept it
unpopular with travellers. The Chelmsford, Colchester,
and Ipswich route on to Norwich was
always the favourite with travellers bound so far,
and on that road we have details of coaching so
early as 1696. Here, however, although there
were early conveyances, we only set foot upon
sure historic ground in 1769, when a coach set out
from the “Bull,” Bishopsgate, Mondays, Wednesdays,
and Fridays at 7 a.m., and conveyed passengers
to Norwich at £1 2s. each.
.pi
In that same year a “Flying Machine,” in one
day, is found going from the “Swan with Two
Necks” on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays in
summer at 12 o’clock noon. For this express
speed of Norwich in one day the fare was somewhat
higher; £1 8s. was the price put upon
travelling by the “Flying Machine”; but in
winter, when it set forth on Tuesdays, Thursdays,
and Fridays, at the unearthly hour of 5 a.m., the
price was 3s. lower.
In 1782 a Diligence went three times a week,
at 10 p.m., from the “White Horse,” Fetter Lane;
as also did a “Post Coach,” at 10 p.m., from the
“Swan with Two Necks,” the “Machine” at midnight,
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and “a coach,” name and description not
specified, from the “Bull,” Bishopsgate Street, at
10 p.m. There were thus at this time four coaches
to Norwich. In 1784 the “Machine” disappears
from the coach-lists of that useful old publication,
the Shopkeepers’ Assistant, and in its stead appears
for the first time the “Expedition” coach. This
new-comer started thrice a week—Sundays, Tuesdays,
and Thursdays—from the “Bull,” Bishopsgate
Street, at the hour of 9 p.m. Evidently there
were stout hearts on this route in those times, to
travel thus through the terrors of the darkling
roads.
In 1788 the “Expedition” is found starting
one hour earlier: in 1790, another two hours. In
1798 it set out from the “White Horse,” Fetter
Lane, so early as 3.45 p.m., and had begun to go
every day. Calling on the way at its original
starting-point, the “Bull,” it left that house at
4 p.m., and continued on its way without further
interruption.
What the “Expedition” was like at this period
we may judge from the very valuable evidence of
the accompanying illustration, drawn in facsimile
from a contemporary painting by Cordery. It was
one of the singular freaks that had then a limited
vogue, and is a “double-bodied” coach, designed
to suit the British taste for seclusion. How the
passengers in the hinder body entered or left the
coach is not readily seen, unless we may suppose
that the artist was guilty of a technical mistake,
and brought the hind wheels too far forward. The
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only alternative is to presume a communication
between fore and hind bodies.
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THE NORWICH STAGE, ABOUT 1790.
From a painting by an artist unknown.
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[Illustration:
THE NORWICH STAGE, ABOUT 1790.
From a painting by an artist unknown.]
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This illustration, so deeply interesting to
students of coaching history, was evidently, as
the long inscription underneath suggests, designed
in the first instance as a pictorial advertisement,
and doubtless hung in the booking-office of the
coach at the “Bull” in Bishopsgate Street. That
quaintly-mispelled programme shows its speed,
inclusive of stops for changing and supper, to
have been six miles an hour.
The difficulties in the way of the coaching
historian are gravely increased by the omissions
and inaccuracies that plentifully stud the reference
books of the past. Thus, although the Shopkeepers’
Assistant omits all notice of the “Expedition”
after 1801, we cannot admit it to have been
discontinued, for it is referred to in a Norwich
paper of 1816, in which we learn that it left
Norwich at 3 p.m. and arrived at London at
9 a.m., a performance slower by half an hour than
that of eighteen years earlier. From this notice
we also learn the fares, which were 35s. for insides
and 20s. out.
In 1821 it left London at 5.30 p.m., and in
1823 at 5 p.m. We have no record of its appearance
at this time, but the double-bodied coach had
probably by then been replaced by one of ordinary
build. The old-established concern seems, however,
to have lost some of its popularity, for on
April 10th, the following year, 1824, the proprietors
discontinued it, and started the “Magnet”—so
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named, probably, because they conceived such a
title would have great powers of attraction. If
the mere name could not have brought much
extra custom, at least the improved speed was
calculated to do so. The year 1824 was the
opening of the era of fast coaches all over the
country, and the “Magnet” was advertised to run
from the “White Swan” and “Rampant Horse,”
Norwich, at 4 p.m., and arrive at London 7 a.m.
These figures give a journey of fifteen hours, a
considerable improvement upon the performances
of the old “Expedition,” but the return journey
was one hour better. Leaving the “Bull,”
Bishopsgate Street, at 7 p.m., the coach was at
Norwich by 9 o’clock the next morning.
The “Magnet,” unfortunately, was no sooner
started than it met with a mishap. On the midnight
of May 15th the up coach, crossing the
bridge over the Cam at Great Chesterford, about
midnight, ran into a swamp, and the passengers
who did not wish to drown had to climb on to
the roof and remain there, while the water flowed
through the windows. Eventually the coach was
dragged out by cart-horses. The swamp is still
there, beside the road.
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This Coach from Norwich to LONDON\
by Newmarket every Day Convey 8 Insides 4 in Each Body & 6 Outsides\
in the most Pleasant And Agreeable Stile of any Coach\
yet offer’d to the Public it Travels 108^{MILES} in 17 hours & half Including\
half an hour for Supper & the time Of Changeing Horses on the Different\
Stages the Above Vehicle Is At Present drove by a Coachman who has\
drove this & others for the Above PROPRIETORS upwards of 19 Years\
without Overturning Or Any Material Accident happening to any Passengers or Himself.\
THE “EXPEDITION,” NEWMARKET AND NORWICH STAGE, ABOUT 1798.
From the painting by Cordery.
This was made, apparently, as an advertisement of the coach.
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[Illustration:
This Coach from Norwich to LONDON\
by Newmarket every Day Convey 8 Insides 4 in Each Body & 6 Outsides\
in the most Pleasant And Agreeable Stile of any Coach\
yet offer’d to the Public it Travels 108^{MILES} in 17 hours & half Including\
half an hour for Supper & the time Of Changeing Horses on the Different\
Stages the Above Vehicle Is At Present drove by a Coachman who has\
drove this & others for the Above PROPRIETORS upwards of 19 Years\
without Overturning Or Any Material Accident happening to any Passengers or Himself.\
THE “EXPEDITION,” NEWMARKET AND NORWICH STAGE, ABOUT 1798.
From the painting by Cordery.
This was made, apparently, as an advertisement of the coach.]
.if-
Meanwhile, the down coach came along, and
had only just crossed the bridge when the arch,
forced out by the swollen state of the river,
burst, with a tremendous crash. Another coach,
approaching, received warning from the guard
of the “Magnet” swinging his lantern. Had it
not been for his timely act, a very grave
// 029.png
.pn +1
// 030.png
.pn +1
// 031.png
.pn +1
disaster must have happened, and the passengers
of the coach very properly set afoot a subscription
for him.
Meanwhile the Royal Mail was going every
week-day night, at 7 p.m. from the “Golden
Cross,” Charing Cross, and from the “Flower
Pot,” Bishopsgate Street, an hour later. It
ran to the “King’s Head,” Norwich, and went
by Bury St. Edmunds, continuing that route
until January 6th, 1846, when—the last of
the coaches on this road—it ceased to be.
In 1821 the “Times” day coach left the
“Blue Boar,” Whitechapel, at 5.45 every
morning, going by Bury; the “Telegraph” day
coach, by Barton Mills and Elveden, started
from the “Cross Keys,” Wood Street, at 6.45
a.m., and got to Norwich in 13 hours; a coach
from the “Bull,” Bishopsgate Street, travelling
by Bury, left at 7 a.m.; from the “White
Horse,” Fetter Lane, a “Light Post” coach set
out, by Barton Mills and Elveden, at 5.30 p.m.,
arriving at the “White Swan,” Norwich, in 15½
hours, at 9 a.m.; and a coach by the same
route from the “Golden Cross,” Charing Cross,
at 6.30 a.m., arriving at 8 p.m.
In addition to these were the so-called
“single” coaches: i.e., those not running a
down and an up coach, but going down one
day and returning the next. These were the
conveyance from the “Bull,” Bishopsgate Street,
at 5.30 a.m., on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and
Saturdays, by Barton Mills and Elveden,
// 032.png
.pn +1
reaching the “White Swan,” Norwich, in 12½
hours (the best performance of all); and the
“Norwich Safety,” by Bury, on Mondays,
Wednesdays, and Fridays, from the “Bull and
Mouth” at 7.30 p.m.; a very slow, as well
as a self-styled “safe” coach, for it only
reached Norwich at 11 a.m.; thus lagging
15½ hours on the road.
The “Phenomenon,” or “Phenomena,” as it
was variously styled, left the “Boar and Castle,”
6, Oxford Street, where the Oxford Music Hall
now stands, at 5.30 a.m., and the “Bull,”
Whitechapel, at 6.30, and went a route of its
own, by Chelmsford, Braintree, Sible and Castle
Hedingham, Sudbury, Bury, and Scole, to Norwich.
To Bury, especially, went three coaches, two
of them daily, and one thrice a week.
The Norwich Mail, by Newmarket and Bury,
had in the meanwhile been abandoned by
Benjamin Worthy Horne, of the “Golden Cross,”
and had been taken over by Robert Nelson, of
the “Belle Sauvage.” It was the only mail he
had. He horsed it as far as Hockerill, and it
is eminently unlikely that he and his partners
down the road did much more than make both
ends meet. For Post Office purposes the Mail
was bound to go by Bury, which involved seven
miles more than by the direct route, and it
had to contend with the competition of the
“Telegraph” day coach, going direct, and at
an hour more convenient for travellers. So this
Mail never loaded well, and coachmasters were
// 033.png
.pn +1
not eager to contract for running it. The Post
Office, accustomed to pay the quite small
amounts of 2d. and 3d. a mile, paid 8d., and
then 9d., per mile for this, to induce any one to
work it at all, and it was contemplated to
entrust the mail-bags to stage-coaches along
this route, when the railway came and cut off
stage and mail alike.
This Norwich Mail was not without its
adventures. It was nearly wrecked in the early
morning of June 15th, 1817, when close to
Newmarket, by a plough and harrow, placed
in the middle of the road by some unknown
scoundrels. The horses were pitifully injured.
A year or so later it came into collision on the
Heath with a waggon laden with straw. A
lamp was broken by the force of the impact,
and straw and waggon set ablaze and destroyed.
Beside the coaches, there were many vans
and waggons plying along the road, and some
comparatively short-distance coaches. Thus there
was the “Old Stortford” coach, daily, between
London and Bishop’s Stortford, and the Saffron
Walden coach, twice daily, from the “Bull,”
Whitechapel; together with the Saffron Walden
“Telegraph,” from the “Belle Sauvage,” on
Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays. “Gilbey &
Co.” had a coach plying the twelve miles
between Bishop’s Stortford and Saffron Walden,
twice daily. Coaching between London and
Bishop’s Stortford ended when the “Northern
and Eastern Railway”—long since amalgamated
// 034.png
.pn +1
with the Great Eastern—was opened to that
point, in 1841. All coaches between London
and Norwich ceased to run early in 1846.
.sp 4
.h2
III
.sp 2
.ni
Although the road to Newmarket lay, as we
have seen, chiefly through Epping, Chesterford,
and Bishop’s Stortford from the earliest days of
coaching, this route was, in earlier times of
travel, but one of several. A favourite way was
along the Old North Road, through Enfield,
Ware, Puckeridge, and Royston, whence wayfarers
might branch off to the right, by way of
Whittlesford and Pampisford, or might go
through Melbourn, Harston, and Cambridge.
Travellers were shy of venturing into the glades
of Epping Forest, infested beyond the ordinary
run with dangerous characters, and rather braved
the rigours of the open downs than encounter
the terrors of the shrouded woodlands. James I.,
with his passion for the chase and his hunting-palace
at Royston, early established a fox-hunting
lodge at Newmarket, and had, with his
magnificent palace of Theobalds, at Cheshunt,
a series of reasons for travelling this route.
The road was bad, of course, in those times:
they all were. The only difference in them
was that when all were bad others were merely
// 035.png
.pn +1
worse. But when any particular road became
a kingly route, attempts were made to improve
it, and thus we read that so early as 1609 one
Thomas Norton, “way-maker” to his Majesty,
was at work on the problem of repairing “the
highewayes leadinge to and from the Citty of
London to the towns of Royston and Newmarkett,
for his Ma^{ties} better passage in goeing
and cominge to his recreations in those parts.”
No silly nonsense, you will observe, about public
benefit, nor anything in the way of excusing
the thing on the ground of the King’s business
demanding it. His Majesty’s amusements, we
are frankly allowed to see, were at stake, and
that was reason sufficient.
.pi
Mr. Thomas Norton was not, after all, paid
very much for his services. In 1609 he received
£29 10s., and a pittance continued afterwards
to be doled out to him.
The way to Newmarket, however, still continued
to be a matter of individual taste and fancy.
When James was visited there in February, 1615,
by Mr. Secretary Winwood on State business, he
journeyed by Epping, Chesterford, and Bishop’s
Stortford, returning the same way. He travelled
with a wondrous rapidity, too, when we consider
what travelling then was; and although he did
complain of “a sore journey, as the wayes are,”
did actually succeed in returning to London in
one day, by dint of having on his way down
made arrangements for coaches to be “laid for
him” at three several places. Two years later
// 036.png
.pn +1
the Swedish Ambassador travelled to Newmarket
to pay his respects to the King. He went by
Royston in two days, sleeping at Puckeridge the
first night, and returned by Cambridge, Newport
(where he stayed the night), and Waltham.
In 1632 the surveyor of highways is found
solemnly adjuring the parishes and the roadside
landowners to perform the duties laid upon them
by the General Highway Act of 1555, and to
repair the “noyous” ways by which Charles I.
was proposing to travel to Royston and Newmarket.
The malt traffic, which thirty years later
had grown so heavy on this road that toll-gates
became necessary to keep it in repair, appears
already to have been a great feature, for the
surveyor urged the restriction on this occasion of
the number of malt-carts, and prohibited waggons
drawn by more than five horses.
We gain from the pages of Samuel Pepys a
glimpse of what these royal journeys were like in
the time of Charles II. When you have read it
you will conclude that even a modern penny
tramway ride has more majesty, and certainly
seems to be safer. He notes in his diary, under
March 8th, 1669, that he went “to White Hall,
from whence the King and the Duke of York
went, by three in the morning and had the misfortune
to be overset with the Duke of York,
the Duke of Monmouth, and the Prince (Prince
Rupert) at the King’s Gate in Holborne, and the
King all dirty, but no hurt. How it came to
pass, I know not, but only it was darke, and the
// 037.png
.pn +1
torches did not, they say, light the coach as they
should do.”
It would puzzle most Londoners in these days
to tell where the King’s Gate was situated. The
last landmark that stood for it was swept away in
1902, when the east side of Southampton Row was
demolished, and with it the narrow thoroughfare
of Kingsgate Street, in the rear, to make way for
the new street from Holborn to the Strand. The
student of Dickens will recollect that Mrs. Gamp
lived in Kingsgate Street: “which her name is
well-beknown is S. Gamp, Midwife, Kingsgate
Street, High Holborn”; but in the time of
James I. and the Stuart kings it was a narrow,
and it would also seem, by Pepys’ account, a
muddy, lane leading from the pleasant country
road of Holborn to another and longer lane
called then as now, when it is a lane no more,
“Theobalds Road.” The lane was provided with
a barred gate, and was used exclusively by the
King and a few privileged others on the way to
Theobalds Palace and Newmarket.
The post went in those times from London
to Newmarket by way of Shoreditch, Kingsland,
Waltham, Ware, Royston, and Cambridge. In
1660 Cosmo III., Grand Duke of Tuscany, went
by Epping. Sleeping at Bishop’s Stortford overnight,
he was at Newmarket next day. In
October the following year Evelyn travelled by
Epping, with six horses, changing three times
only in the sixty-one miles—at Epping, Bishop’s
Stortford, and Chesterford.
// 038.png
.pn +1
Ogilby in 1675, when the first edition of
his Britannia was published, mapped out the
road to Newmarket as part of the Old North
Road as far as Puckeridge, and thence took it
to Barley, Whittlesford, and Pampisford; yet
Charles II. is not found travelling that way.
He occasionally went by Epping, but chiefly
through Waltham Cross and Hoddesdon, and
thence by an obscure route past the Rye House,
Hunsdon Street, Widford, Much Hadham, Hadham
Ford, Patmore Heath, Stocking Pelham, Berden,
Rickling Church End, and into Newport by a lane
still known locally as “London Lane.” A house
at Newport now known as “Nell Gwynne’s House,”
and once the “Horns” inn, was at that time a
halting-place often used by Nell, the Duke of
York, the Duke of Buckingham, and the Earl
of Rochester on their way to or from Newmarket
races.
The very remoteness and obscurity of this
route gave the conspirators of the Rye House
Plot of 1683 their opportunity. Those plotters
were not the thorough-paced scoundrels historians
would have us believe, but men who, with a
passionate hatred of Popish doctrines, and with
a keen recollection of the approximation to civil
and religious liberty enjoyed under the Commonwealth
of more than twenty years earlier, viewed
the growing absolutism of Charles’s rule and the
advances of Popery with fear and rage. The King
as a man, with his romantic story, his airy wit,
his genial cynicism and lack of affectation, has
// 039.png
.pn +1
always commanded affection, but as a ruler
deserved hatred and contempt. The original
conspiracy was comparatively harmless, and
cherished the idea of a constitutional revolution.
With dreamy eyes fixed upon the ideal of a
Utopian Republic, it included such visionaries
as Algernon Sidney, Lord William Russell, the
Earls of Essex and Shaftesbury, John Hampden
(grandson of the patriot), and Lord Howard of
Escrick.
But an inner circle of less distinguished but
more desperate men formed within this movement
had other, and secret, designs. It was their intention
to place the Protestant Duke of Monmouth,
Charles’s natural son, upon the throne, and, as
a preliminary, to “remove” the King. “No one
would kill me to make you king,” Charles had
once said to his brother James, Duke of York;
but the intention of the Rye House conspirators
was to assassinate both. These physical-force men
worked long and silently, without the knowledge
of the others. At their head was one Rumbold,
a maltster, a colonel in Cromwell’s army, and
with him Walcot, a brother officer in those old
times. Rumbold was the occupier of a farm,
the Rye House, an ancient building whose walls
ranged with the narrow lane, miscalled a road,
which ran—and still runs, as a lane—along the
sloppy valley of the river Lea. The house had
been built by a certain Andrew Ogard, who in
the reign of Henry VI. had been licensed to construct
a fortified dwelling here. The beautiful
// 040.png
.pn +1
Gatehouse, in red brick, with picturesquely twisted
chimneys and a fine oriel window, yet remains.
.if h
.il fn=i021.jpg w=600px id=i021
.ca
RYE HOUSE.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: RYE HOUSE.]
.sp 2
.if-
The best description of the place as it was
at that time is the following, extracted from the
trial of the conspirators in 1683:—
.pm letter-start
“The Rye House in Hertfordshire, about
eighteen miles from London, is so called from
the ‘Rye,’ a meadow near it. Just under it
there is a bye-road from Bishop’s Strafford to
Hoddesden, which was constantly used by the
King when he went to or from Newmarket; the
great road winding much about on the right
hand, by Stanstead. The House is an old
strong building and stands alone, encompassed
with a moat, and towards the garden has high
walls, so that twenty men might easily defend
it for some time against five hundred. From a
high tower in the House all that go or come may
be seen both ways, for nearly a mile’s distance.
As you come from Newmarket towards London,
when you are near the House, you pass the
meadow over a narrow causeway, at the end
of which is a toll-gate, which having entered,
you go through a yard and a little field, and
at the end of that, through another gate, you
pass into a narrow lane, where two coaches at
that time could not go abreast. This narrow
passage had on the left hand a thick hedge and
a ditch, and on the right a long range of buildings
used for corn-chambers and stables, with several
doors and windows looking into the road, and
before it a pale, which then made the passage so
// 041.png
.pn +1
// 042.png
.pn +1
// 043.png
.pn +1
narrow, but is since removed. When you are
past this long building, you go by the moat and
the garden wall, that is very strong, and has
divers holes in it, through which a great many
men might shoot. Along by the moat and wall,
the road continues to the Ware River, which runs
about twenty or thirty yards from the moat, and
is to be past by a bridge. A small distance from
thence, another bridge is to be past, over the
New River. In both which passes a few men
may oppose great numbers. In the outer courtyard,
which is behind the long building, a considerable
body of horse and foot might be drawn
up, unperceived from the road; whence they
might easily issue out at the same time into each
end of the narrow lane, which was also to be
stopt by overturning a cart.”
Here the conspirators, assembled to the
number of fifty, hoped to make short work of
the Royal brothers, in the darkness of night and
the confusion of the sudden stoppage, and would
in all probability have been successful had it
not been for the fire of March 22nd, which burnt
half the town of Newmarket and put the Court
there to such inconvenience that the King
hurriedly decided to return to London some days
before he was expected back. Rumbold and his
men were unprepared and the plot miscarried.
The unforeseen had happened, and all their
extensive armament was useless. We must spare
a little admiration for the thoroughness of their
equipment, which included six blunderbusses,
// 044.png
.pn +1
twenty muskets, and between twenty and thirty
pairs of pistols. These deadly articles were afterwards
found to be referred to in the conspirators’
correspondence under the innocent pseudonyms
of quills, goosequills, and crowquills. Powder
was “ink,” and bullets “sand.”
.pm letter-end
That inevitable feature of every plot, the
informer, was soon in evidence, and the greater
number of the conspirators, constitutional and
otherwise, were seized. After an unfair trial,
Sidney and Russell, among the constitutionalists,
were executed; Lord Howard of Escrick had
turned evidence and so escaped punishment, the
Earl of Essex committed suicide in prison, Shaftesbury
had prudently, at an early stage, fled abroad,
and Hampden was fined £44,000. The physical-force
men were hanged. Rumbold escaped for
awhile to Holland, but incautiously joined a later
insurrection under the Duke of Argyle in the
north, and was wounded and taken prisoner at
the same time as his leader. It was the desire
of the Government that, as one of the principals
of the plot, he should be brought to England for
execution, but it was feared that he would not
survive the journey, and he was executed, under
circumstances of revolting barbarity, at Edinburgh,
being hoisted up by a pulley and hanged awhile,
and then, still alive, let down, his heart torn
out and carried on the point of a bayonet by
the hangman.
Bishop Sprat, in his “True Account of the
Horrid Conspiracy,” says Rumbold made a statement
// 045.png
.pn +1
that he and some of his friends had resolved
to cut off the King and his brother on their way
to or from Newmarket, more than ten years
earlier, and had lain some time in ambush for
that purpose: “but his Majesty and his Royal
Brother went the other way through the Forest;
which, as the Wretch himself could not but
observe, they have seldom or never done, before
or since.”
We can find much subject for speculation in
considering what would have happened had the
Rye House Plot been successful and the King
and his brother slain under the fire of Rumbold’s
battery. There would still have been a James II.;
not the sour bigot who bore that title, but James,
Duke of Monmouth. And there would certainly
have been no William III., and no Georges,
and—but those historic Might Have Beens,
how they can run away with the imagination, to
be sure!
As for the Rye House; at the beginning of
the nineteenth century it had become a work-house,
and so continued until 1840, when, under
the Poor Law Amendment Act, it became necessary
to provide less make-shift accommodation.
To-day it is the resort of beanfeasters innumerable,
who are set down at the Rye House station,
and guzzle and swill at the gimcrack Rye House
inn, where the Great Bed of Ware is the staple
attraction; or take tea in the earwiggy arbours
of the genuine Rye House, where there is a
“Barons’ Hall” calculated to astonish any baron
// 046.png
.pn +1
who might chance to come back from the wrack
of centuries gone. There is, too, a would-be
fearsome “dungeon” affair, with stalactites dependent
from the roof, and looking, superficially,
at least a thousand years old; but a confidential
chat over a glass of ale with an informing stranger
reveals the man who made them, and he is not yet
even a centenarian
.sp 4
.h2
IV
.sp 2
.ni
It behoves us now, after tracing this truly Royal
route, to return and plod the plebeian path.
Let us start from whence the road of old was
measured, from busy Shoreditch.
.pi
Here the ordinary traffic of London streets is
complicated by that of the heavy railway vans
and trollies to and from the great neighbouring
goods station of Bishopsgate, and the din and
confusion are intensified by the stone setts that
here have not been replaced by wood paving.
Upon all this maze of traffic the church of
St. Leonard’s, Shoreditch, looks down with an
eighteenth-century gravity. It is not old, as
churches go, and looks, like all its fellows in the
classic Renaissance of a hundred and fifty years
ago, something alien and inhospitable. It marks
the extension of London at that time, past the old
bounds of Bishopsgate, Norton Folgate—whose
name is supposed to be a corruption of Norton
// 047.png
.pn +1
’Fore the-gate, outside the City—and the ancient
“Sordig,” “Sorditch,” or “Shordych,” an open
sewer outside the walls. Popular legend, in this
particular instance at fault, still ascribes the name
to Jane Shore, the fallen favourite of Edward IV.,
who, in the words of a doleful old ballad, is said
to have ended here:—
.pm verse-start
Thus, weary of my life at length,
I yielded up my vital strength
Within a ditch of loathsome scent,
Where carrion dogs did much frequent.
The which now since my dying day
Is Shoreditch call’d, as authors say;
Which is a witness of my sin
For being concubine to a king.
.pm verse-end
By the church the road turns acutely to the
right, along the Hackney Road, to Mare Street
and Cambridge Heath, where, at the junction of
the roads, the first turnpike from London stood.
The ’Ackney Road—for it is thus that the
inhabitants know it—is a broad artery athwart
those wilds of Bethnal Green and Haggerston,
where the Hooligans live—those sprightly hobbledehoys
who find life all too dull and tame, and so
spice it with the uncivilised frays that keep the
police so actively employed. Boot and buckled
strap play their part in the street-war between
Hooligan and Hooligan, a warfare varied by
unprovoked assaults upon unoffending citizens,
who find themselves unexpectedly floored and
their ears and noses being savaged off by the
Hooligan teeth.
// 048.png
.pn +1
It is no new thoroughfare, the Hackney Road,
and is merely the modern development of the
country lane that once upon a time led into the
fields immediately after Shoreditch church was
passed. It follows exactly the same route as
when Hackney was a pleasant country village,
when Cambridge Heath really was a heath, and
when the sheep grazed in the meadows of Hoxton.
But it was a dangerous as well as a pretty road in
those times, the scene during the long series of
years between 1718 and 1756 of so many robberies
and murders that the village residents of Hackney,
weary of being clubbed separately, at last
clubbed together and offered handsome rewards
for the arrest of any of those footpads and Highway-men
who rendered it unsafe to stir abroad.
That it was not in 1732 a desirable place for an evening
stroll may readily be gathered from the adventures
that befell a worthy tradesman who, returning
to London from Hackney about six o’clock in the
evening, was set upon by two fellows, who robbed
him of his money and pocket-book. He pleaded
earnestly for the book to be restored to him, and
happening to recognise one of the rogues, said,
“Honest friend, one good turn deserves another.
I was one of the jurymen who took compassion
upon you last sessions at the Old Bailey, when
you were tried for robbery and acquitted, although
we all believed you to be guilty.”
To this the thief ungratefully replied, “Curse
your eyes, you son of a bitch, learn to do justice
another time and be damned”; and, knocking
// 049.png
.pn +1
their unfortunate victim backwards into a slimy
ditch, they both decamped.
The papers of the time, reporting this little
incident, seem astonished at the violence of the
language, but we moderns feel inclined to ask,
“Is that all?” It is mildness itself compared
with the foul language, the damning and cursing
that may be heard to-day, without any provocation,
at every street-corner.
But if the foodpads who infested the Hackney
Road were the merest tyros in swearing, they
seem to have been proficients in assassination, for
many bodies, shot and stabbed, were continually
found beside the road, and it was not until about
1756 that any degree of safety could be obtained.
On January 15th, in that year, the way between
Shoreditch and Hackney was lighted with lamps
for the first time, and a military guard, with
muskets loaded and bayonets fixed, patrolled the
distance.
The original “pleasant village” of Hackney,
thought to have derived from “Hacon’s Ey,” the
island settlement of some Danish landowner on
the wide-spreading waters of the river Lea, has
disappeared under many millions of tons of brick
and stone. Of this Hacon we know nothing, and
his very existence is deduced, perhaps wrongly,
from the place-name. The same person is perhaps
commemorated in the name of that City church,
St. Nicholas Acon, in Lombard Street, whose origin
is unknown. Stow tells us it was sometimes
written Hacon, “for so I have read it in records”;
// 050.png
.pn +1
and there was ever much uncertainty in words
beginning with A or H.
Hackney is not a name of pleasant savour.
The word is associated with everything trite,
threadbare, flat, stale, and unprofitable. Hackneyed
subjects, hackney authors, hackney horses,
and hackney carriages occur at once to the mind;
but we must do Hackney the justice to acknowledge
that they have no connection with the place,
and that those who long ago sought to prove such
a connection were utterly wrong. “The village,”
says one, “being anciently celebrated for numerous
seats of the nobility and gentry, people of all kinds
resorted to it from the City, and so great a number
of horses were daily hired that they became known
as Hackney horses. Hence the term spread to
public conveyances.” Unfortunately for so neat
and four-square an origin, the word “haquenée,”
meaning a slow-paced nag, is as old as Chaucer,
whose typical young gentleman had a hackeney.
This, however, was not at all in the nature of
a cab-horse, for we are told in the next line, he
“loved wel to have a horse of prise.”
It is singular, in view of this mistaken idea of
derivation, that the chief street of Hackney should
be Mare Street, but any attempt to connect that
name with the supposed origin of Hackney would
only result in a mare’s nest for the too-ingenious.
That street, originally “Meare” Street, had
nothing to do with horses. Its name probably
marked the line of some forgotten boundary.
// 051.png
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2
V
.sp 2
.ni
The place is now a busy suburb, like every
other in most respects, and remarkable only for
the extraordinary number and variety of its places
of worship. Every brand of religion is represented
here, but all that remains of the old parish church
is the venerable mediæval tower, hard by where
the North London Railway crosses over the road.
The body of the old building was demolished, on
the plea that it was dangerous, in 1798: really,
the times were out of sympathy with Gothic
architecture, and any excuse was made to serve
for the building of the hideous, nondescript pagan
church that now stands close at hand. The old
tower keeps watch and ward, beside the thronged
modern street, over that great graveyard where
the dead of 900 years lie, and pious hands, with
the first year of the present century, have erected
a tall Celtic cross of Kilkenny marble, in memory
of “all who died in faith.”
.pi
It is a hard-working population that lives at
Hackney, whose by-streets and alleys are very
grey and mean; but somewhere in this very neighbourhood
the hero of Mr. Gus Elen’s song had his
“pretty little garden.” That was supposed to be
a comic song, but it was one with a certain amount
of pathos in it. It is not a pathos discernible by
the builder, who finds his greatest satisfaction in
pushing London still further out into the country,
but it is there all the same. That Hackney hero
// 052.png
.pn +1
was as fond of his backyard garden and of his
somewhat problematical neighbourhood to the
country as many an owner of vast estates, and
took a greater personal delight in them. Thus
went the refrain to one of the verses:—
.pm verse-start
It was a very pretty little garden,
And Epping from the ’ousetops might be seen,
With the aid of op’ra-glasses you could see to ’Ackney Marshes,
If it wasn’t for the ’ouses in between.
.pm verse-end
Ay! if it wasn’t for the houses in between:
there’s the tragedy of it! Do you not perceive the
broad basis of pathos beneath the fun: that pitiful
craving of the natural man for the country, and
his heart-sickness of the pavements, while the
fresh, green countryside is practically so remote,
and is growing still more distant?
Lower Clapton Road leads out of Hackney,
and in half a mile brings us, past the site of Lower
Clapton toll-gate, to the beginning of the Lea
Bridge Road, one of the very few routes by which
London and the Essex suburbs can join hands,
across the river Lea and its marshy fringes.
A favourite piece of advice of the late Lord
Salisbury to politicians weak at the knees with
apprehension of Russia’s advance in Asia was,
“Consult large maps.” We need not stop to
consider how far that overrated statesman, in
consulting maps too large, was the victim of his
own cynical advice; but we may apply it, frankly
and without any cynical meaning, here. Thus,
referring to a large map of London and its environs,
// 053.png
.pn +1
you will soon perceive this restricted choice of roads
between London and Essex. The Lea and the
broad marshes of West Ham, Stratford, Hackney,
Leyton, Walthamstow, and Tottenham have always
offered great obstacles to road-makers, and have
stemmed the tide of London’s expansion in this
direction until quite recent years. Large maps
of the London districts, scored with a dark tint
of streets, still show a long strip of white, indicating
ground still unbuilt upon, along the Lea
valley from Blackwall to Edmonton, where it
merges into the country, and in all those ten
miles there are but three high roads leading from
Middlesex into Essex. One is that which conducts
from Poplar to Plaistow, and so on to Barking and
Southend; another is the Norwich Road, from Bow
to Stratford and on to Norwich by way of Chelmsford
and Colchester; the third is our present route,
through Clapton to the crossing of the Lea at Lea
Bridge Road. Other crossings are few, without
exception obscure and bad, and generally lead
over roadways composed of clinkers, scrap-iron,
broken bottles, and tin-clippings to morasses, or
to the gates of soap factories, bone manure works,
sewage-beds, and other useful but objectionable
institutions of like nature. The Lea Bridge Road
itself, although broad and straight and leading
on to the country, has perhaps the worst surface
of any road in or near London, not excepting
even that monumentally bad roadway, the
Victoria Embankment. Before 1757, when the
predecessor of the present Lea Bridge was built
// 054.png
.pn +1
and a roadway made, to open up communication
between Middlesex, Epping Forest, and the Essex
villages, the Lea was spanned only by an ancient
and narrow bridge, and the roads leading up to it
were impossible for wheeled traffic. At that period
the best way to reach the Forest was by Stratford,
West Ham, and Leytonstone, and a road through
Hackney and Clapton is shown in maps so late as
1756 leading to the “World’s End,” which was
apparently the significant name of the track that
then wandered across the marshes to the Lea.
The present line of the Lea Bridge Road owes
its existence to the Lea Bridge Turnpike Road
Act of 1756, and is found duly set out on Rocque’s
map of 1763, where it is continued on to Walthamstow
as “Butterfield’s Lane”; but the first bridge
was not built until 1772. By that time the
coaches had begun to run—or, as the advertisement
of the time phrased it, to “set forth”—but
they, and the traffic to Newmarket generally, went
the Stratford and West Ham route until the early
’20’s
.sp 4
.h2
VI
.sp 2
.ni
The Lea Bridge Road, although a broad and
direct thoroughfare, makes a bad beginning, and
branches off narrowly and in an obscure manner
from the wide Lower Clapton Road. The present
bridge was built in 1821. The road itself is a
// 055.png
.pn +1
singular combination of picturesqueness and sordid
vulgarity. Badly founded on the marshes that
stretch, water-logged, on either side of the river
Lea, its two miles’ length of roadway is full of
ridges and depressions that no mere surface
repairs will ever remedy, and nothing less than
reconstruction from its foundations will ever cure
the unequal subsidences of what should be the
finest highway out of London into Essex.
.pi
The Lea Bridge Road is in some ways an
exceptional thoroughfare. Although of urban
character, it is largely a road without houses;
for the marshy fields through which it runs,
elevated in the manner of a causeway, have kept
the builder at a wholesome distance, and from
the Lea Bridge and other points one looks over
wide level tracts of green meadows to where
Upper Clapton, and Stamford Hill beyond, not
unpicturesquely crown the heights with villa
roofs and church spires, and seem with a superior
air of riches and high-class villadom to look down
across the valley of the Lea on to the thronged
wage-earning populations of clerkly and artizan
Walthamstow. You think, as you gaze from this
midway vantage-ground and consider these things,
of the “great gulf” set between Lazarus and
Dives—with the essential difference that here,
at any rate, Dives had the advantage.
A halt on the Lea Bridge Road is certainly
stimulating to the imagination. On any summer
midday that does not happen to be a Saturday,
a Sunday, or a Bank Holiday, the contemplative
// 056.png
.pn +1
man has it all to himself. Lazarus, from Walthamstow,
in his many thousands of clerks and
workmen, has departed, long ago, for the counting-houses
and workshops of the city; and Dives from
Clapton has, in more leisurely fashion, followed
them to his office, or meeting of directors.
The dirty, out-of-date tramcars that ply along
the road, and seem never to be washed, are no
longer crowded, and the traffic consists chiefly
of costermongers’ carts and harrows, on their
way to their daily house-to-house calls in the
countless streets of that sprawling Walthamstow
and that loose-limbed Leyton. The marshes, the
distant frontier of banked-up houses, and even
the long railway viaducts that stretch like monstrous
centipedes across the levels, look interesting,
and the water-loving willows and graceful clumps
of the bushy poplar are not wanting to add
something of beauty to the scene. There is, too,
if you do but choose to look for it, a kind of
skulking romance to be found on the Essex side
of the Lea, where the rustic cottages come down
to the fringe of the marsh; their faces away from,
their back gardens towards it. Quite humble
cottages, roofed with the old red pantiles, and
sometimes weatherboarded; the crazy wooden
palings of their gardens patched and mended
with the oddest timber salvage, from the unnecessary
sturdiness of an odd post from a four-poster
bedstead, to the blue-painted staves of
petroleum barrels and wrecked wheels of bygone
conveyances. The posts of clothes-lines are permanent
// 057.png
.pn +1
features of these gardens, and on good
“drying days” the most intimate articles of
underwear flaunt a defiant challenge across
the valley to the prim susceptibilities of Upper
Clapton and Stamford Hill—which put their
washing out. It is not, however, in the under-linen
and the stockings, very darny and limp,
and lacking the interest of a shapely leg, that
the skulking romance, already alluded to, lies.
No, not at all: in fact, otherwise. You may
perceive it in the varying lengths of those back
gardens, which in their yard or so of more or
less infallibly register the degree of courage or
impudence possessed by the original squatters
and their immediate descendants upon this land.
For the sites of these cottages and their little
pleasaunces were all originally stolen, cabbaged,
pinched, nicked—what you will—from the common
land of the marshes; and where you see a yard
or two of extra length, there may be observed,
set down in concrete form, the measure of that
courage possessed by those squatters in times gone
by. Such illegitimate intakes are no longer
possible, for publicity alone, even were it not
for the evidence of the Ordnance maps, would
forbid, and the romance of them is a fossil
survival, rather than a living thing.
The engine-houses, pumping water and filter-beds
of the East London Water Company are the
principal features of the Lea Bridge Road, and
one would not deny them under certain conditions,
and at a certain distance, a grandly impressive
// 058.png
.pn +1
quality. At a distance, assuredly, for viewed
close at hand, with the giant machinery seen
through the windows, slowly pulsing up and
down to the accompaniment of a warm scent of
oil, and with the lofty chimneys that in their
specious ornamentation look afar off almost like
Venetian campanili, seen really to be sooty smokestacks,
it is astonishing how commonplace they
become. And when you think of it, considering
the matter on the basis of a wide acquaintance
with waterworks, how singularly dry, husky,
coaly, and gritty, and void of any suggestion of
water these gigantic engine-houses of the great
water companies always are!
The Lea Bridge Road, and indeed Woodford
also, and Epping Forest generally, are to be
avoided by quiet folks on Saturdays, Sundays,
and at times of public holiday, when the costermonger
and his purple-faced “missus” drive
their cowhocked ponies and attendant traps
recklessly to the “Wake Arms,” to the “Robin
Hood,” or to the pubs of Chingford, and all the
waggonettes and all the beanfeasters in the East
End of London are making merry in elephantine
fashion.
The road finally leaves Walthamstow and the
valley of the Lea at Knott’s Green and Whip’s
Cross—at the present time an abject, down-at-heel
compromise between a striving unsuccessful suburb
and the open country. But in these latter days,
when the neighbourhood of London changes with
such startling rapidity, the true description of
// 059.png
.pn +1
to-day may very reasonably be the misleading record
of to-morrow, and that squalid air of failure
which belongs to those places at the present time
of writing may already, ere these lines attain the
dignity of print, have given place to an era of
substantial and prosperous expansion.
Nothing is more depressing than the unsuccessful
suburb, created out of nothing by the too
sanguine builder in one of his inflated moments.
It brings disaster, not only upon the author of its
being, who reaps the harvest of his rashness in
foreclosed mortgages and the Bankruptcy Court,
but upon those enterprising callow tradesfolk who,
embarking upon businesses of their own with insufficient
resources, cannot tide over the time of
no trade, and leave a record of their failure in
deserted shops still proclaiming the virtues of the
tea that no one ever bought and the advantages of
those “bargain sales” that failed to attract.
Whip’s Cross, as its name would imply, stands
at a junction of roads. It forms the entrance to
Epping Forest, and is said to have obtained the
first part of its name from being the place whence
the Forest deer-stealers were formerly whipped at
the cart’s tail; but such things are now quite put
out of sight and forgotten in these marchlands of
town and suburbs.
This is Leyton, twin sister of Walthamstow.
Vast populations are springing up, and interminable
streets of little houses, the meaner and
more pitiful because so pretentious. A little
while, and the cheaply-built “villas” develop
// 060.png
.pn +1
ominous cracks, the doors and windows warp and
refuse to shut, or when shut decline to be opened,
and the trivial brick gate-posts sink out of plumb.
It would not be surprising in a few years to find
that most of their slack-baked bricks had resolved
into their native mud and road-scrapings.
For what do these huge populations exist?
Life in the bulk must be very grey to them,
whose individualities are sunk in the mass, who
live in streets all precisely alike and in houses
more kin to one another than the proverbial two
peas. They exist, if you consider it, for truly
great altruistic purposes; to be the corpus vile
for governments, imperial or local, to experiment
upon; and to be not only the milch-cow that
supplies the funds for such governments, but the
poor, senseless voting machine for whose support
the candidates for Parliamentary and municipal
honours struggle and lie and cheat. On their
domestic and other needs thrive and wax fat the
great trading companies that in their innumerable
local branches are ousting the private shopkeeper
and sending him in his old age to the Bankruptcy
Court and the workhouse. For reasons such as
these the swarming hives of wage-earners that
ring round London and all the great cities make
me melancholy. Let us away to the greenwood
tree.
// 061.png
.pn +1
.if h
.il fn=i041.jpg w=600px id=i041
.ca
THE “EAGLE,” SNARESBROOK: THE NORWICH MAIL PASSING, 1832.
From a print after J. Pollard.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration:
THE “EAGLE,” SNARESBROOK: THE NORWICH MAIL PASSING, 1832.
From a print after J. Pollard.]
.if-
// 062.png
.pn +1
// 063.png
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2
VII
.sp 2
.ni
The entrance to Epping Forest, the greenwood
tree aforesaid, is by way of Snaresbrook, past
the Eagle Pond, a pleasant lake which takes its
name from that old coaching-house, the “Eagle,”
pictured here in the old print after Pollard. It
is more than seventy years since that Old Master
of coaching subjects painted this view of the
Norwich Mail passing by, but the old house still
stands, not so very greatly altered. Pollard has
made it and its surrounding trees look more of
the Noah’s Ark order of architecture than ever
they were.
.pi
Epping Forest is a glorious heritage, of which
any city might well feel proud, and the public-spirited
act of the Corporation of the City of
London, by which it was secured in 1882 as a
forest, for ever, for the free enjoyment of all, has
never been fully appreciated. These are the days
of popularly-elected bodies, dependent upon the
votes of the million, and every little thing they
perform at the public expense is trumpeted as
though it were a benevolence. The Corporation
of the City, however, is not elected by a popular
vote, and is accustomed to do things without an
eye upon the next election. It purchased Epping
Forest in a purely public spirit, and administers
it in precisely the same way. The thing was
done none too soon, for nerveless and conflicting
interests had long permitted squatters to settle in
// 064.png
.pn +1
the Forest lands, and already the suburban builder
had begun to make his mark. As we pass the
many Woodfords—Woodford, Woodford Green,
and Woodford Wells—and come to Buckhurst
Hill, the patches and snippets of common, village
greens, and wayside selvedges of grass, saved with
difficulty, show, outside the Forest proper, how
the rural character was going.
Beyond Woodford Wells the way divides, to
rejoin in less than three miles. To the right hand
it leads through Loughton, and to the left past
the more sylvan stretch by High Beech Green.
“Here,” one might say, with Longfellow, “here
is the Forest primeval”; and tangled glades,
marshy hollows, and secluded lawns are glimpsed
by the traveller in passing, between the massy
boles of immemorial trees. Not yet, fortunately,
has the floor of the Forest been levelled and
drained, and made like a London park, and it is
still possible to find places with uncanny names, in
an uncanny condition. Thus, Deadman’s Slade is
still as slippery a hollow as when it first obtained
that name. Essex rustics have now forgotten
many old words, and people who fall on ice or
grease now slip because it is slippery; but not so
long ago, throughout the whole of East Anglia,
folks “slumped” because it was “slade.”
.if h
.il fn=i045.jpg w=600px id=i045
.ca
THE “WHITE HART,” WOODFORD.
From a drawing by P. Palfrey.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration:
THE “WHITE HART,” WOODFORD.
From a drawing by P. Palfrey.]
.if-
It was most terrible, this woodland road in
the old times, and the nocturnal voices of the
Forest had heart-shaking significances. The pit-a-pat
of heavy dewdrops from leafy boughs on
to the dried leaves of last autumn sounded for
// 065.png
.pn +1
// 066.png
.pn +1
// 067.png
.pn +1
all the world like the stealthy footfalls of some
lurking footpad, and the rise of some couching
deer or the scuttle of a rabbit made the traveller
stand still and face about, lest the rushing
attack of the imaginary assassin should take
him in the rear. Even the hooting of the owls,
one against the other, were sounds of dread,
and for all the world like rallying calls of
midnight prowlers on their unholy errands
.sp 4
.h2
VIII
.sp 2
.ni
Highway-men early made their appearance on
this road, and from very remote times the great
Forest of Epping was dreaded by travellers on
their account. But it was not until Newmarket’s
fame as a racing and gambling centre arose, in
the time of James I., that these long miles
became so especially notorious. One of the very
worst periods would seem to have been that of
Charles II., under whose ardent patronage of
the Turf the Court was frequently, and for long
periods, in residence at Newmarket. Not the
Forest alone, but the road in general, together
with the several routes to this metropolis of
racing, were thus infested.
.pi
This scandalous condition of affairs attracted
attention so early as 1617, when travellers went
in fear, not only of the professional Highway-men,
// 068.png
.pn +1
but of the gentlemanly amateurs as well, who,
either for pure love of a roystering life, or from
being ruined by losses on the turf or at the
gaming-tables, lurked by the roadside, and,
with terrible menaces, robbed all classes of
wayfarers.
A satirist of that period, one William Fennor,
in the course of a pamphlet he published in
1617, called the “Competers’ Common-Wealth,”
tells us much about those reckless blades. A
“competer” was, of course, one who gambled
on the turf or at the tables. Fennor, describing
how ill-luck, sharpers, and money-lenders between
them plucked the gamesters clean, so that there
was nothing for them but to retrieve their
fortunes on the road, says that Newmarket
Heath, in especial, swarmed with such Highway-men,
who stooped to the meanness of robbing
even the rustics of their pence, and were such
keen gleaners of small change that scarce any
money was left in the neighbourhood. “Poor
Countrie people,” he says, “cannot passe quietly
to the Cottages, but some Gentlemen will borrow
all the money they have.” Fennor was a man
of a grimly humorous nature, and observed that
these doings caused Tyburn Tree and Wapping
Gibbets to have “many hangers-on.” A good
many, however, escaped; for they had a very
ingenious plan, when they had brought off
successful robberies, and the hue-and-cry grew too
hot, of posting to London, where they arranged
to be arrested and thrown into prison for a small
// 069.png
.pn +1
debt. By lying in such seclusion until the
matter cooled, they generally escaped, “for,”
concludes Fennor, “who would look in such a
place for such offenders?”
But such paltry robberies were altogether
thrown into the shade by that of 1622, when
a company of India and Muscovy merchants,
going to Newmarket to pay their respects to
James I., were robbed of their papers and a
bag containing £200.
To quote all the accounts of such affairs
would be to occupy many pages, but some
remarkable instances may be given. A London
paper of March, 1680, tells how “A Gentleman
with some of his family being in the coach with
six horses going to Newmarket, was set upon
by some Highway-men, and robbed of all his
Money, Watch, Rings, Stone Buttons, and a pair
of Lac’d Sleeves. And about four hours after,
two Coaches coming from Cambridge, the persons
in them were robb’d of several hundred pounds;
there were but five Highway-men, two of them
setting upon one coach, and three on the other;
but at their departure they were so noble as to
give the two coachmen two Half-crowns, to drink
their healths. The coaches were within a mile
of Newmarket when they were robb’d, at a
place called the Devil’s Ditch.”
A parlous place, this Devil’s Ditch. It was
the scene of a pitched battle between the Highway-men
and the exasperated country folk in
1682. According to the Domestic Intelligence of
// 070.png
.pn +1
August 24th, in that year, five Highway-men
robbed a coach on the Heath, and secured £59
and a very considerable booty in the way of gold
lace, silks, and linen. Before they could make off
with the plunder, the rustics had been roused, and
were stationed in a body in the cleft of that bank,
impracticable for horsemen, through which the
road runs. The Highway-men were thus shut in
by this stoppage of the only exit from the Heath.
Had they retreated, they would have been captured
in Newmarket town, and so they were
forced to make a desperate dash for liberty.
“Knowing themselves Dead Men by the Law,
if they were taken, they charged through the
Countrymen, and by Firing upon them Wounded
four, one of which we since understand is Dead of
his Wounds.” So these Knights of Industry got
clear away, and the liberal art of robbery upon
the highway continued to flourish; for, three
weeks later, two gentlemen were duly reported
to have been robbed of seven guineas and their
watches while riding over the Heath.
The professors of this art were so romantic in
the eyes of youth that many a stable-boy or ostler
“borrowed” a horse and took the road in
admiring imitation. Daniel Wilkinson, advertised
for in the London Gazette during March,
1683, was probably one of these. The advertisement
describes him as “a little short Man, about
26 years old, with short light brown Hair, a hairy
Mould near his Chin, in a grey Hat, and Leather
Breeches,” and goes on to state that he “Hired,
// 071.png
.pn +1
on the 4th Instant, at Newmarket, a bald Gelding,
Wall-Eyed, above 14 hands high, eight or nine
Years old, of a Chesnut colour, a short Mane and
short Tail, and some white about his Feet, with a
Hog-skin Saddle, and a white Cotton Saddle-Cloth,
to ride to Cambridge, but has not been
since heard of. Whosoever gives notice of the
Horse or Man at the Green Dragon in Bishop-Gate-street,
or to Thomas Gambeling, at Newmarket,
shall have 20s/-. and their Charges.”
I do not think the advertiser ever heard of
Daniel Wilkinson or of his wall-eyed horse again;
although it does not seem to have been a very
desirable animal.
Horses of good points were duly noticed by
the Highway-men of the Heath, and many an one
was taken by force from the groom exercising
them. An instance of this is found in an offer
of a reward, appearing in the London Gazette, of
March 15th, 1686, when a “Black Mare, 15 hands
high, about 4 Years old, having all her paces,”
was “taken away from a Gentleman’s Man upon
Newmarket Heath, by several Highway-men.”
Three guineas and expenses were offered as a
reward, but we may readily suppose that no one
ever qualified for it.
The dangers of the road became even
more acute twelve years later, in the reign of
William III., when the wars in which England
had been engaged were brought for the while to
a conclusion; and disbanded soldiers lacking civil
employment, and probably not wanting any while
// 072.png
.pn +1
“the Road,” as an institution, remained possible,
made every highway as dangerous to travellers as
an expedition into an enemy’s country would have
been. Epping Forest formed a most convenient
centre for such as these; for it was densely
wooded, contained caves and natural harbourages
for desperadoes, and commanded several roads.
Here a fraternity of freebooters, to the number of
thirty, sworn to stand by one another to the last
extremity, found a home in the leafy coverts in
the neighbourhood of High Beech and Waltham
Cross. Never, since the romantic days of Robin
Hood and Little John, in their refuge under the
greenwood trees of Sherwood Forest, had England
known the like. These brethren built huts and
storehouses, and came forth when they thought
fit, to plunder and to slay. The King, journeying
to Newmarket with distinguished company, was
safe only because well escorted; and others, not so
strongly guarded, were attacked, with loss of life,
soon after he had passed.
An armed force, cautiously advancing into these
wilds, did at last succeed in destroying the houses
of this gang of land buccaneers, but they soon
assembled again, and were strong enough, or
impudent enough, to send a written and signed
challenge to the Government, to come and
dislodge them; which the Government accordingly
did, in its own good time, in 1692, when,
by the heroic method of posting detachments of
Dragoons at a distance of ten miles from London
on all the great roads, and by forming a chain of
// 073.png
.pn +1
patrols, the Highway-men were in some instances
brought to battle, killed or captured, or driven
out of the business for a time, until such unusually
severe measures were withdrawn and the
Gentlemen of the Road were again suffered to
pursue their avocation in peace.
They flourished for many a long year after, and
the newspapers continually teemed with accounts
of coach and other robberies. On the morning
of December 28th, 1729, the “Norwich and St.
Edmund’s Bury coaches” were stripped by two
Highway-men half a mile on the London side of
Bishop’s Stortford, and they afterwards not only
robbed three gentlemen on horseback, but made
away with the bridles and drove the horses off.
Fortunate, indeed, for the dismounted trio that the
town was so near! Again, we read, under date of
April 25th, 1730: “The Earl of Godolphin’s gentleman
was robb’d last week in the Bury coach of
£50 and a gold watch”; while the detailed account
of another robbery, in 1731, affords some amusement:
“About three o’clock in the afternoon of
November 21st, the Norwich, Bury, and Cambridge
stage-coaches were robbed by two Highway-men
near the three-mile stump in Epping Forest. The
passengers were robbed to the extent of £30. In
the Norwich coach was a Clergyman and two
Tradesmen who had been at Sir Robert Walpole’s
house in Norfolk, to assist in the entertainment of
the Duke of Lorraine, and a lad who was coming
to town, to be put apprentice. The Clergyman
saved his portmanteau, with a great deal of gold
// 074.png
.pn +1
in it, by persuading the robbers that it contained
nothing but a few sermons, but they took away
the boy’s portmanteau, with all his clothes. While
the coaches were under examination, two horsemen
appeared near the wood, upon which the
Highway-men rode up and dismounting them,
forced them into the wood, and there bound them
with their own belts and gaiters, and then rode off.”
.sp 4
.h2
IX
.sp 2
.ni
The “Wake Arms” inn stands where the roads
by High Beech Green and Loughton join again.
In the old days it was a posting-house of some
celebrity, and a prize-fighting, cock-fighting, and
badger-drawing resort of a considerable notoriety.
Near it, on the right side of the road towards
Epping, are those prehistoric earthworks, largely
overgrown with ancient trees, called Ambresbury
Banks, and supposed to take their names from
Ambrosius Aurelius, a half-legendary Romanised
British chieftain who died about A.D. 500. This,
too, is one of the very many sites found for
Boadicea’s last battle.
.pi
Epping village, or townlet, is a particularly
long one, heralded by a gigantic water-tower, of
distinctly unlovely design, and neighboured by a
modern church, built to render religious exercises
easier than when the only place of worship was
the old parish church, two miles away.
// 075.png
.pn +1
The most striking note of Epping, apart from
the generous width of its street, is the extraordinary
number of inns and places for all kinds of
refreshment. Of these the “Thatched House” is
the most notable, but is now no more thatched
than is the “Thatched House Club” in London.
There is a baulking air of picturesqueness in the
long view down Epping street, but, taken in detail
and analysed, it is evasive, and certainly most
elusive when sought to be transferred to paper.
.if h
.il fn=i055.jpg w=600px id=i055
.ca
AMBRESBURY BANKS.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: AMBRESBURY BANKS.]
.sp 2
.if-
At Thornwood Common, some two miles
onward, we encounter the uttermost notice-board
of the City Corporation, and bid good-bye to the
Forest. Thence, crossing a high ridge of quiet
country, we come steeply down hill, past the “Sun
and Whalebone” inn, and across picturesque Potter
Street Common, with its avenues and modern
church, to the single-streeted hamlet of Potter
Street. This again gives place to the village of
Harlow, with a sprinkling of plastered and gabled
houses and an exceedingly ugly Union Workhouse.
// 076.png
.pn +1
Harlow is a village with a preposterously urban
air, and as much “side” as that of a hobbledehoy
who fancies himself a grown man. The reason of
this attitude is found, perhaps, in Harlow possessing,
not only a railway station, but a busy wharf
as well, on the Stort Navigation. That wharf is
nearly a mile away down the road, and all that
distance the highway is punctuated with the coal-droppings
from the carts that ply between that
waterway and the village.
.if h
.il fn=i056.jpg w=600px id=i056
.ca
“SAPSWORTH.”
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: “SAPSWORTH.”]
.sp 2
.if-
Beyond the wharf comes Sawbridgeworth, also
owing its sustained prosperity to the canalised
Stort, and still not only a busy townlet, but also
a very old-fashioned one. It is still essentially a
// 077.png
.pn +1
town of malt, and the old wooden and cowled malt-houses
remain to this day its chief characteristic.
Until quite recently known to its natives as
“Sapsworth,” Sawbridgeworth has at last lost
that archaic distinction. Now that every country
lad is taught to spell and read, and the yokel has
the evidence of the finger-posts, among other
things, to tell him that it is “Sawbridgeworth,”
it is of no use to tell him that his father and
mother called it otherwise. “I kin read, cawnt
I?” he asks, citing the finger-post as a witness.
It is quite certain that the stranger who should
nowadays ask for Sapsworth would be as little
understood as were the travellers of old who
enquired for Sawbridgeworth.
At Harlow wharf the road left Essex and
entered Hertfordshire, and so runs through Sawbridgeworth
and the hamlets of Spelbrook and
Thorley Street to Bishop’s Stortford. Just short
of that town there is a choice of ways. By bearing
to the left, Bishop’s Stortford is entered direct;
by keeping to the right, along what was once
known as “Queen Anne’s new road,” the coaches
bound for places beyond avoided Bishop’s Stortford
altogether, and set down passengers for it at the
suburb of Hockerill.
Hockerill is on the hill, Bishop’s Stortford is
in the hole, and, as its name would imply, beside
the river Stort, dividing the two counties of Essex
and Herts.
We will take the left-hand, and older, road,
for the excellent reason that along it, on the
// 078.png
.pn +1
uttermost outskirts of the town, there stands a
house even already historic, and in years to come
destined to be something of a shrine. No saint,
indeed, was born beneath its roof, but a man
whose memory is much more worshipful than
that of the majority in the hierarchy of the
Blessed. If you love your country, you cannot
choose but be interested in this house, and cannot
do aught but reverence that man who was born
here: the man who saved Central Africa for the
Empire. We are all Imperialists now, and
patriotism is cheap to-day, but it was a frame
of mind entertained by few when Rhodes first
became an expansionist. Those were the days
when Gladstone was the wet-nurse of sucking
alien ambitions, the friend of every country but
his own, and ready to surrender anything and
everything in the sacred cause of foreign nationalities.
If Rhodes was an expansionist, may we
not with justice apply the term “contractionist”
to the great demagogue, that great master of
phrases that sounded so full of meaning and
were really so empty, whose life was equally
divided by the making of speeches and the
explaining of them away?
In this house, then—a very commonplace
semi-detached stuccoed house—Cecil John Rhodes,
founder of Rhodesia, son of the Rev. F. W.
Rhodes, vicar of Stortford, was born, July 5th,
1853.
.if h
.il fn=i059.jpg w=463px id=i059
.ca
BIRTHPLACE OF CECIL RHODES.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: BIRTHPLACE OF CECIL RHODES.]
.sp 2
.if-
No sketch is needed here of a career whose
record is writ in the politics of his time, and
// 079.png
.pn +1
// 080.png
.pn +1
// 081.png
.pn +1
indelibly scored in the history of his country.
Like Moses, it was not given him actually to
enter that Promised Land of Empire he had
seen afar, but when he died, in 1902, the
fruition of the idea was at least assured. He
looked, like some Prophet, upon South and
Central Africa, and with the phrase, “English,
all English, that’s my dream!” made a comprehensive
span upon the map. A very pleasant
dream too. Conceive what a nightmare the
world would be if predominance were given the
brutal German, the frenzied Frenchman, or the
thinly veneered Russian savage! We are the
salt of the earth, and let us savour it as strongly
as we can. Thinking thus, it behoves us to
honour this great Empire-builder in the bulk,
even though we may criticise him in detail.
.sp 4
.h2
X
.sp 2
.ni
Bishop’s Stortford is a pleasant and an old-fashioned
market-town, with a great and fussy
air of business, a long High Street running in
the valley near, and parallel with, the Stort, and
a large parish church perched on the shoulder
of a precipitous street most picturesquely and
accurately named Windhill. Natives have long
since dropped the first half of the name and
know it as “Stortford,” except indeed when
they say “Strawford,” as very often they do.
// 082.png
.pn +1
.if h
.il fn=i062.jpg w=600px id=i062
.ca
WINDHILL, BISHOP’S STORTFORD.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: WINDHILL, BISHOP’S STORTFORD.]
.sp 2
.if-
.pi
There was, once upon a time, a fine strong
and damp castle in the Stort meadows, midway
between the town and its suburb of Hockerill,
a stronghold of the Bishops of London from the
time of William the Conqueror, but it has long
since disappeared and only a green, tree-covered
mound remains. Its name was Waytemore, a
name with a suspicion of grim humour about
it, traditions still tell how the zealous Bonner
// 083.png
.pn +1
// 084.png
.pn +1
// 085.png
.pn +1
imprisoned many a heretic here, before burning
them at the stake; but the martyrs suffered and
went to Heaven, and the Bishop to Hell, so
long since that it is difficult to probe the truth
of the stories.
.if h
.il fn=i063.jpg w=600px id=i063
.ca
HENRY GILBEY.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: HENRY GILBEY.]
.sp 2
.if-
There are old and quaint inns in the town;
the “Black Lion” the most ancient, and certainly
at this time the most picturesque of them, but
the “Boar’s Head,” on Windhill, is little less
so; and, moreover, grouping finely with that
parish church already named, makes a picture.
It is a great church and a fine one, even though
that tall spire be poor Gothic and its four
satellite pinnacles abjectly bad. Up to the
present the church contains no memorial to
Rhodes, but students of coaching history find
interest in the polished Aberdeen granite stone
in the churchyard, in memory of Henry Gilbey,
father of Sir Walter Gilbey, Bart. The inscription
runs:—
.pm quote-centered-start
HENRY GILBEY
OF THIS TOWN, MANY YEARS COACH PROPRIETOR,
DIED SEPTEMBER 29TH, 1842,
AGED 52 YEARS.
.pm quote-centered-end
There are even yet a few ancients in Bishop’s
Stortford who remember “old Harry Gilbey,”
as they call him, and speak of him as in partnership
with one William Low, of Saffron Walden,
in the coach running between that place, Bishop’s
Stortford, and London. This coach was taken
over by Henry Gilbey, as sole proprietor, shortly
// 086.png
.pn +1
after 1824. Besides this—the “Old Stortford
Coach,” as it was called—he had another, running
between the “George,” Bishop’s Stortford, and
London. Both called at the “Crown,” Hockerill,
a house demolished in 1903, and went to and returned
from the “Bull,” Aldgate, until 1841, when
the railway was opened to Bishop’s Stortford.
.if h
.il fn=i066.jpg w=600px id=i066
.ca
HOCKERILL.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: HOCKERILL.]
.sp 2
.if-
Henry Gilbey, who was son of Daniel Gilbey,
proprietor of the “White Bear,” Stansted, was
born January 29th, 1789. He married, at the
age of 25, in 1814. From 1829 he resided at
the house, still standing, called “The Links,”
on Windhill, where the future Sir Walter Gilbey
was born, in 1831.
// 087.png
.pn +1
.if h
.il fn=i067.jpg w=600px id=i067
.ca
THE “CROWN,” HOCKERILL. DEMOLISHED 1903.
From a drawing by P. Palfrey.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration:
THE “CROWN,” HOCKERILL. DEMOLISHED 1903.
From a drawing by P. Palfrey.]
.if-
// 088.png
.pn +1
// 089.png
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2
XI
.sp 2
.ni
Travellers by road who fleet from Hockerill
on to Newport, turning neither to the right nor
left, pass through Stansted Street and know
nothing of the ancient village of Stansted Mountfitchet,
of which it is an offshoot. It is a pity,
for that village is a distinctly interesting place.
Turning to the right hand at the cross-roads,
one arrives at the centre of the old settlement
in less than half a mile. It was originally built
in a deep hollow, under the heavy shadow of
the giant earthworks on whose shoulders the
Gernons or Montfichets in early Norman times
built a tremendous Giant Blunderbore of a castle.
Somewhere here, in very remote times, stood a
stone building, probably a ruined Roman villa,
whence the Saxon name of Stane Stead derived;
but its site and its history are alike unknown,
and the knightly deeds of the Montfichets are
equally forgotten. That Norman family obtained
its original name of Gernon from some ancestor
who especially distinguished himself by going
unshaven in times when (if we may believe the
evidence of the clean-shaven, or merely moustached,
effigies of Norman warriors) it was the
fashion to shave. His comrades, like the vulgar
boys of the present day, who shout “there’s
’air!” after any inordinately hairy person, gave
him the nickname of “Les Gernons,” which
means “Whiskers”; and, in a manner common
// 090.png
.pn +1
at that time, when family names derived from
individual peculiarities, it was as “Whiskers”
that his descendants became known, whether
they went whiskered or whiskerless. They are
found referred to as “Gernon” and “Grenon,”
but it was not very long before they dropped
the name for that of their castle, built on the
ancient mound that was here when they came,
and named by them “Mont Fiché,” or “firm
mount.”
.pi
.if h
.il fn=i071.jpg w=600px id=i071
.ca
THE “WHITE BEAR,” STANSTED.
From a drawing by P. Palfrey.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration:
THE “WHITE BEAR,” STANSTED.
From a drawing by P. Palfrey.]
.sp 2
.if-
It is many years since these ancient lords of
Stansted became extinct, and even the famous
family of De Veres, who succeeded to their property,
has followed them into oblivion. Their
stout castle, too, has gone the way of many another
sturdy fortalice, and only the great mounds and
fosses that girdle and seam the hillside are left.
“Only,” we say, but a word with so depreciatory
a sound is scarcely in order when used in connection
with these impressive earthworks that fire the
imagination of even the casual railway traveller.
For it is from the railway those castle mounds are
most impressively seen, just as it is from the railway
station that Stansted village looks its best.
In the hasty glance from the passing train, the
village roofs, rising one above the other up the
hillside, seem to be crowned by the dignified
tower of some benignant old church, richly pinnacled
and turreted in the South Devon manner,
and it is only on closer acquaintance one discovers
this to be no worshipful old building, but the
modern (1889) district church of St. John, built
// 091.png
.pn +1
// 092.png
.pn +1
// 093.png
.pn +1
to the joint honour and glory of God and one of
the Pulteney family. It is built of red brick, with
Bath stone enrichments—very rich and sugary, and
probably from the designs of a confectioner principally
engaged in the manufacture of ornamental
Twelfth-cakes. The exterior of the tower, prodigal
in pinnacles, crockets, and mediæval fandanglums
of all sorts, and stuck about with blank windows
that open upon nothing, is surely the last word in
the ready-made picturesque, and lacks the reposeful
dignity properly belonging to a church. The
interior, where there is less scope for riotous fancy,
is better.
The old church is over a mile distant from the
village, and stands in or beside Stansted Park. Its
situation, remote from the life of the place, but
closely adjoining the Hall, tells us that the ancient
lords of Stansted who built and maintained it held
the welfare of their own souls dear, and that of
the people’s immortal part altogether too cheap.
Indeed, rightly considered, the building and maintenance
of this and many another church of its
kind was in the nature of an insurance policy
against fire—the dreaded eternal fire.
It is a small Norman and Early English building,
restored in 1889 and rubbed up and carpeted
in rather a drawing-room style of comfort, so that
the monumental effigies look somewhat second-hand
and apologetic. The battered, crusading, or,
at any rate, cross-legged, effigy of one Roger de
Lancaster looks even tenth-hand, and, shoved into
a dimly lighted corner, with a bar of Windsor soap
// 094.png
.pn +1
in his mouth, a mop and a pail and other housewifely
things disposed negligently about his mailed
person, is the picture of ancient dignity in reduced
circumstances. The tomb, with recumbent effigy,
in the south wall of the chancel, is that of Sir
Thomas Middleton, 1631. With him lies his wife,
killed by a stag in Stansted Park.
The alabaster tomb, with life-sized and coloured
effigy of Esther Salusburye in the Lancaster Chapel,
is found unexpectedly by the stranger, behind the
organ. The full-length figure lying there, so
naturally coloured and dressed in the height of
fashion of that bygone year of 1604, when she
died, is so extraordinarily lifelike that one almost
shrieks with momentary fright; and indeed the
work is so perfect, it rather resembles a human
being masquerading as an effigy than a mere
carved and painted mass of stone. Her high-heeled
shoes, the black-painted Early Jacobean
skirt and bodice, with the deep lace cuffs, generous
ruff, and high-crowned hat, form a perfect picture
of an English lady’s costume in the days when
James I. was King.
.if h
.il fn=i075.jpg w=600px id=i075
.ca
THE “OLD BELL,” STANSTED.
From a drawing by P. Palfrey.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration:
THE “OLD BELL,” STANSTED.
From a drawing by P. Palfrey.]
.sp 2
.if-
Stansted Street, skirting the main road with
its old-fashioned but nondescript houses, has lost
much of its picturesqueness of late years. The
“White Bear,” kept in old times by Daniel
Gilbey, and the “Old Bell” have disappeared, and
it rejoices in a very new and ornate white brick
house, designed in the snoburban style of architecture.
A horse at full stretch is carved over the
door, together with the inscription, “Galloping
// 095.png
.pn +1
// 096.png
.pn +1
// 097.png
.pn +1
Villa.” If you ask any of the admiring villagers
for information about this astonishing house, and
why “Galloping,” they tell you “it belongs to
Mr. ——, of the roundabouts.” Immediately
opposite is a house and shop, whose builder or
owner appears to have been extraordinarily proud
of his building, for it bears not only the date of
the year, but even the day of the particular month
when it was finished: “L.S.T., July y^e 25, 1759.”
The very handsome old red-brick house, standing
high above the road on approaching Ugley,
and attracting attention by its fine wrought-iron
gates and general air of distinction, is Orford
House, built by Admiral Edward Russell, who
commanded the allied English and Dutch fleets
in their victory over the French at La Hague in
1692. The Admiral was created Earl of Orford
in 1727.
The country grows particularly pretty as we
approach Ugley, fields giving place to dense plantations,
with oak woods and almost impenetrable
coverts, presenting a vivid picture to the mind’s eye
of what the great Forest of Essex must have been
like in the long ago. “What’s in a name?” asks
Shakespeare. Not much here, if we take that of
Ugley by its sound; but a good deal if we make
due enquiry, for it is really “Oakley,” the “oak
meadow,” and, as Oakley, we do actually now find
certain upstart signposts and wayside parish marks
naming it. Again, if we leave the road and take
the footpath that leads across a meadow (? the
original “oak lea”) to the church, we shall find
// 098.png
.pn +1
in the little churchyard the tombstone of an
incumbent, dead not long since, who is described
as vicar of “Oakley.” He had probably been a
lifelong sufferer from the old rhymed pleasantry:—
.pm verse-start
Ugly church, ugly steeple,
Ugly parson, ugly people.
.pm verse-end
In short, only the handsomest of men with the
most amiable of natures can possibly afford to take
the living of Ugly, for should the parson be plain,
the obvious remarks as to his peculiar fitness for
the place would become a burden to him, and
unless of an angelic disposition, his “ugly temper”
might be commented upon. Fortunately Ugley is
among the smallest of places, and therefore the
Ugley girls with feelings to be scarified by such a
description are few. But, on the other hand, how
easy the way to a most ingratiating compliment, in
the exclamation of surprise:—
“You come from Ugley? Impossible!”
“Why impossible?”
“Because——”
But here you fill the hiatus to your own individual
taste in flattery.
The embarrassments of such a place-name are
many, and are not so easily surmounted as those
of the Scilly Islanders, who are “Scillonians,”
rather than Scilly people. Ugley, however, has a
near neighbour in misfortune, in the hamlet
of Nasty, to be found by the curious, scarce more
than ten miles away, between Great Munden and
Braughing, in Hertfordshire.
// 099.png
.pn +1
Ugley is said to have been the “Quercetum”
of the Romans, so named by them “from the
locality abounding in oaks.” In Domesday Book
it is “Uggheley,” and it is even found written
by some ancient vulgarian as “Huggele,” a really
h’odious variant.
.if h
.il fn=i079.jpg w=600px id=i079
.ca
UGLEY CHURCH.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: UGLEY CHURCH.]
.sp 2
.if-
Ugley church is situated, as I have here made
effort to show, in a very pretty setting of trees.
They are not oaks, as they should be; but that
would be to dot the “i’s” and cross the “t’s” of
// 100.png
.pn +1
allusion, and we must not expect such fitness and
completeness. It is a small church, placed just
outside a farmyard, but stands otherwise solitary
and unheeded by those who keep the main road.
It might be thought the Georgian red-brick
tower was built on to the ancient body by some
one concerned to make it fit the place-name—for
it is not beautiful—did we not know that Georgian
towers, and churches too, were commonly hideous,
and this, therefore, by no means exceptional.
But the kindly aid of Nature has done much here,
and “that rare old plant, the ivy green,” has
mantled the stark design to such purpose that it
now gives the ideal rustic effect presented by the
literary efforts of Gray’s “Elegy,” and the artistic
convention of Birket Foster’s drawings. Its note
is one with the Christmas cards of our youth,
when no one was ashamed of such pictures as
that of the old parish church in the snow, or
the Robin Redbreast on his spray of holly.
.sp 4
.h2
XII
.sp 2
.ni
Quendon, a scattered little village prettily
situated where the road broadens out and curves
slightly, with broad margins of grass, bears a
resemblance to Trumpington, on the Cambridge
Road. In advance of the cottages stands a
picturesque modern well-house and fountain, with
a beautifully designed horse-trough, “given to
// 101.png
.pn +1
Quendon and Pickling in memory of Caroline
Mary Cranmer-Byng,” as an inscription states.
Quite at the end of the village is the “Coach and
Horses” inn, a survival of posting and coaching
days, very much in its old condition. Beyond
it the open road leads into Newport.
.pi
Newport, whose name has nothing whatever
to do with a water port, derives that title from
its situation on a new road—a new gate, or door,
or portal—made at some unrecorded time through
the Forest of Essex. It is now nothing but a
village, as picturesque and delightful as any on
the road, but fallen from its ancient importance,
and overshadowed by Saffron Walden, only three
miles away. Time was—a very long while ago—when
Newport had a market and Saffron Walden
had none. At that time Newport was one of
the many manors belonging to Harold, and it
continued to be a Royal manor for some time
after the Conquest; coming afterwards into the
hands of the Magnavilles. There was a castle
at Newport in those days, and a lake, whence the
old name for this place of “Newport Pond.”
Tradition tells that the pond or lake was situated
where the railway station is now, but of it and of
that castle no traces have survived. The fortunes
of Newport fell, and those of Saffron Walden
began to rise, when the Empress Maud, somewhere
about 1142, authorised Geoffrey de Magnaville
to transfer the market to Walden, and although,
some sixty years later, in 1203, King John
granted Newport the right to hold an annual
// 102.png
.pn +1
fair, this stricken town never recovered from the
blow inflicted by the loss of its market privileges.
A century later the Manor of Newport belonged
to an historical character—that Piers Gaveston,
the favourite of Edward II., who was executed,
murdered, or done to death in 1310 on Blacklow
Hill, near Warwick, by insurgent Barons,
jealous of his influence over the King. The fate
of Gaveston seems to prove how dangerous was
the stinging gift of satire in the early part of
the fourteenth century. That unfortunate man,
raised by the King to the highest offices of State,
of course became hateful to others not so successful,
and his splendour, his arrogance, and, above
all, the wittily offensive nicknames he showered
upon that baronial crew, aggravated the original
offence beyond endurance, so that they finally
seized and beheaded him. It will be allowed that
this eminently practical retort was even more
stinging than the original satire, and certainly
forbade a rejoinder.
Later lords of the manor of Newport have
been more fortunate, or have been such comparatively
obscure persons that their misfortunes are
scarcely historic. Indeed, with the passing of
Gaveston, the annals of the place are purely
domestic, but none the less interesting; Newport
is, in fact, singularly full of interest. Prominent
in its broad street stands the beautiful old house
of timbered frame and brick nogging known
locally as “Monks’ Barns,” and said to have
once been used by the monastery of St. Martin-in-the-Fields
// 103.png
.pn +1
as a country sanatorium, but much
more likely to have been a Priest’s House at the
time when Newport church was under the joint
control of Westminster Abbey and St. Martin’s,
and served from them. However that may be,
this fine relic of the fifteenth century is now
in secular occupation, and divided into two
cottages. The interior is without interest; and
its most beautiful and interesting feature the
one most easily seen by the wayfarer—the fine
old oak-framed oriel window looking upon the
road and decorated with an elaborate and curious
carving of the Coronation of the Blessed Virgin
Mary.
.if h
.il fn=i083.jpg w=600px id=i083
.ca
“MONKS’ BARNS.”
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: “MONKS’ BARNS.”]
.sp 2
.if-
It was at Newport the route often taken
Charles II. to Newmarket, by way of
Rye House, passing Rickling Church End and
Wicken Bonant, fell into the existing highway.
// 104.png
.pn +1
It is still known as “London Lane”; the junction
of roads remaining the most old-world corner of
the village. The church, dominating the view
at this point, looks almost cathedral-like, and
its tower is strongly reminiscent of Great St.
Mary’s, Cambridge; but the interior proves less
imposing, and the bare nave and wide chancel,
built in the later and less refined style of Gothic,
disappointing.
.if h
.il fn=i084.jpg w=600px id=i084
.ca
ANCIENT CARVING AT “MONKS’ BARNS.”
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: ANCIENT CARVING AT “MONKS’ BARNS.”]
.sp 2
.if-
A memorial tablet on the chancel wall, plain
in design, but grotesquely ornate in the epitaph
of the person it praises, hands down to us the
memory of the many virtues of “Joseph Smith,
M.A., of Shortgrove Hall.” It appears that the
worthy Smith, who died in 1822, was private
secretary to William Pitt. It would be easier
to recount the few virtues he was not possessed of
than to recite a list of those that, according to
his executors, rendered him such a Phœnix. He—or
they for him—wholly lacked humility.
Tragical memories are revived by the memorial
window in the south aisle to the son of the vicar,
one of the 130 who perished in the destruction
// 105.png
.pn +1
// 106.png
.pn +1
// 107.png
.pn +1
by fire of the Theatre Royal, Exeter. An inscription
tells how “This window was erected by
loving friends in memory of Robert Morgan
Tamplin, B.A., of Keble College, Oxford, who
entered into his rest at Exeter, in the great fire,
Monday, September 5th, 1887, aged 23 years.”
.if h
.il fn=i085.jpg w=600px id=i085
.ca
LONDON LANE, NEWPORT: WHERE\
CHARLES THE SECOND’S ROUTE TO NEWMARKET\
JOINED THE HIGHWAY.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: LONDON LANE, NEWPORT: WHERE\
CHARLES THE SECOND’S ROUTE TO NEWMARKET\
JOINED THE HIGHWAY.]
.sp 2
.if-
The church has a treasure of sorts in the
musty, dusty old theological library, stored away
in the parvise chamber, over the porch. It is a
treasure not likely to be greatly coveted, nor are
its constituent volumes frequently read, consisting,
as they do, of dull black-letter discourses on just
those religious matters in which the learned are
of necessity as ignorant as the veriest clod. Not
even the best-equipped of those disputants could
pierce the veil that hides from us the other world,
and now they are gone hence and acquired that
knowledge, or just become extinct, they cannot
enlighten ourselves. All they could do was to
raise cloudy disputations, and the dust one bangs
out of their ponderous folios is typical of their
useless labours.
A more desirable treasure is the ancient
muniment-chest kept jealously under lock and
key in the vestry. It is a weighty affair, covered
with gilt lead, in perforated patterns, and secured
with five locks. Inside the heavy lid are barbarically
coloured paintings of the Crucifixion, the
Blessed Virgin Mary, St. John, St. Peter, and
St. Paul.
An early morning bell-ringing custom of
immemorial antiquity is still maintained at
// 108.png
.pn +1
Newport, but happily not with all its old-time
severity. It was not until 1875 that the local
revolt broke out, and the four o’clock-in-the-morning
bell-ringing during the winter was modified,
and replaced by an eight in the morning peal
in the months between Michaelmas and Lady
Day. Bell-ringing at Newport was wont to be
greatly favoured, for there was a nightly curfew,
followed by a number of strokes corresponding
with the day of the month. Then there was the
“gleaners’ bell,” at harvest-time, rung to tell the
poor the corn had been carried and they might go
into the fields and glean. But modern agricultural
machinery leaves nothing to be gathered up,
and so gleaning is a lost chance
.sp 4
.h2
XIII
.sp 2
.ni
Among the many points of interest in Newport,
the still-surviving “Newport Toll” is certainly
not least. In these latter days, when traffic fares
the road unhindered, all public roads are toll-free—except
the road through Newport. Pedestrians
and cyclists in general, and the whole of the
traffic from certain specified neighbouring villages
are exempt; but waggons from elsewhere pay 2d.
each, forwards and backwards; higglers’ horses,
½d. each; and sheep and all other cattle, 4d.
per score. The exempted places are: Newport,
// 109.png
.pn +1
Wicken, Saffron Walden, Great and Little
Chesterford, the Wendens, Quendon, and Widdington.
.pi
How comes it, then, that this one toll survives
when others have been abolished? That is a long
story, but one that may readily be summarised
here. It seems, then, up to some two hundred
years ago the little stream which even now runs
across the highway, and is known variously as
Wicken Water and the Granta, was unbridged,
and crossed only by a ford. Neither the county
nor the parish would be at the expense of building
a bridge, and at last the lord of the manor
obtained an Act of Parliament which conferred
upon him the right of building, and authorised
the levying of those tolls which are collected to
this day. The tolls are still vested in the lord of
the manor, but are not very strictly enforced, and
as the gate has not, for many years past, been
closed, and is, indeed, half buried in the ground
and nearly rotted away, a good many waggons
and many cattle must, especially at night, escape
paying. It was a Smith, of Shortgrove, who
obtained the Act and built the bridge, and,
although Shortgrove Park has been let, these
rights are still in the family. The toll has often
been disputed, and was once, indeed, some thirty
years since, the subject of a law-suit, when the
uncle of the present Smith asserted his rights,
and won.
Before railways had come, to clear the roads
of most of the cattle and the waggons, the income
// 110.png
.pn +1
of this toll-gate was considerable, but in these
days it is not worth the while of the owner of
these petty rights to collect the small gains, and
the toll-house has been let as an ordinary cottage,
but, in consideration of the tolls, at a rent slightly
above its value as a dwelling. The occupier is,
therefore, in a rather sporting position, and, by
strict attention to business and by keeping sleepless
vigils, might stand to gain quite a respectable
trifle of pocket-money out of sheep that pass in
the night, or from waggons that creak and rumble
by in the early hours of morn, before the day is
well aired. But it is an elderly occupant, and
many a fourpence and a twopence go unchallenged
into the darkness. Only the slow-going
vehicles and the flocks and herds of daytime
find themselves intercepted. One of the most
humorous things in connection with this quaint
survival was an incident that came under the
notice of the present writer, when a huge
furniture-removing van—one of the kind that
goes at a two-and-a-half miles an hour pace—was
stopped, and, much to the amazement of the
driver (who, in common with the world at large,
thought all tolls to be things of the past), made
to pay.
It is the most insignificant of streams that
causes all this pother, and the smallest of bridges,
but it can still be seen, where the road dips, how
awkward the old ford must have been.
Near by stands the starkly ugly old gaol, put
to other uses since the police business was transferred
// 111.png
.pn +1
to Saffron Walden, and now, on account of
the imitation fetters that still distinguish its
frontage, known as “the Links.”
Directly the bridge is crossed the road forks;
the old road going downward in a curve to the
right, along what must once have been a particularly
wet and marshy course, the newer route
continuing straight ahead, at a higher level.
Both unite again in little over a hundred yards.
Between the two, and at a higher level than
either, on road-bridges, arches, and embankments,
goes the railway; the rail-level somewhat above
the roofs of the very picturesque line of ancient
farms, inns, and cottages that front the older
route.
.if h
.il fn=i091.jpg w=600px id=i091
.ca
“NELL GWYNNE’S HOUSE,” FORMERLY THE “HORNS” INN.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: “NELL GWYNNE’S HOUSE,” FORMERLY THE “HORNS” INN.]
.sp 2
.if-
We have not even yet done with Newport, for
it is beside this old road that one of the most
interesting houses of the village stands. This
// 112.png
.pn +1
is the so-styled “Crown House,” formerly the
“Horns” inn, traditionally said to have been a
posting-house or halting-place on the road, used
by Charles II., Nell Gwynne, the dissolute George
Villiers, second Duke of Buckingham, and the
profligate Earl of Rochester. It displays an
elaborately decorated frontage of moulded plaster,
and takes its name from the crown in high relief
over the door. Criticism has sought to destroy
the tradition by pointing out that the date of
1692 over the doorway is five years later than the
death of Nell, who died, aged thirty-seven, in
1687, and three later than the death of Charles;
but traditions very often enshrine truths, and it
is permissible to suppose the date merely records
some old-time restorations or additions in honour
of that exalted patronage and those patrons then
so recently passed away. The “Crown House” is
not interesting within, and except the hall, paved
with black and white marble, it has no outstanding
features. The house has long been untenanted.
Attempts have recently been made to transfer
these traditions to the “Coach and Horses” inn,
near by; but although that is a very old house,
its appearance does not quite support the dignity
thus thrust upon it.
.if h
.il fn=i093.jpg w=600px id=i093
.ca
“HOSPITAL FARM,” AND “NEWPORT BIG STONE.”
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: “HOSPITAL FARM,” AND “NEWPORT BIG STONE.”]
.sp 2
.if-
The very last of Newport’s many notable
features is the picturesque old farmhouse standing
by itself, looking upon the road as one leaves
for Audley End. This is “Hospital Farm,” and
its isolated position is thoroughly warranted, for it
stands on the site of the ancient Leper Hospital
// 113.png
.pn +1
of Saints Mary and Leonard, founded here in the
reign of King John by Richard de Newport. The
garden wall still displays some fragments of stone
said to have come from the chapel. Let us look
on them with what veneration we may, even
though they might equally well have come from
the kitchen. It is with much more, and a very
genuine, respect one gazes upon the Big Stone
between that wall and the road. It is very properly
spelled with capital letters, for it is as
“Newport Big Stone” the Essex folk know it,
and besides, it has a history going back to many
uncounted centuries before Richard de Newport
and his lepers came here—a history no one can
narrate, because it opened in those abysmal voids
of time before history began to be. Passing farmhands
volunteer the information that it has been
here all their time, which is fairly obvious, for
// 114.png
.pn +1
it is, in fact, a glacial boulder, and was left here by
some expiring glacier in the beginning of things,
before the men of the Stone Age came upon the
scene; nay, even before the protoplasmal common
ancestral jelly-fish began to crawl in the lifeless
ooze. Whence it was brought on the shoulders
of that sliding ice-pack perhaps not even the most
cocksure geologist could say; but it is, of course,
wholly alien from Essex, which has no stone of
any kind. A ruddy sandstone, it might have come
from Devonshire, from Worcestershire, or from
Midland districts, where red sandstone is a native
formation; but it would be a matter of speculation
to attempt to fix its origin. It is very large,
must needs be enormously weighty, and must in
years past have been sorely tempting to road
surveyors hungering in this stoneless county for
road metal. But having escaped destruction in
those bygone years, we may suppose Newport
Big Stone is now pretty safe on that score. Its
presence here may, for all we know, have influenced
the founder of that thirteenth-century
hospital to place his buildings at this particular
spot; for in after-years it became known as the
“Leper Stone,” and was the rough-and-ready
table on which old-time passers-by deposited their
alms for the afflicted.
// 115.png
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2
XIV
.sp 2
.ni
Passing by Shortgrove Park and Uttlesford Bridge,
the dirty and dismal station of Audley End is
noticed, down the left-hand road we take, on the
way to discover what manner of place “Wendens
Ambo” may be. To the present historian nothing
is more attractive than a place with an odd name,
and he has gone unconscionable distances out of
his way, often to find the most unusual names
enshrining the most commonplace towns and
villages. But not always. Here, for example,
Wendens Ambo is a quaint, old-world place,
characteristically Essexian. In the churchyard
is a tombstone to William Nicholson, who died,
aged 104, in 1886. He had been midshipman
on Nelson’s Vanguard.
.pi
There are, or were, it seems, two Wendens—Great
and Little. Their name derives from that
Anglo-Saxon deity, Woden, who gives us the
name of our Wednesday, i.e., “Woden’s day.”
In 1662 the ruined church of Little Wenden was
cleared away and the two parishes united. Great
Wenden swallowed Little Wenden, and altered
its name to the present Latinised form, thus
proclaiming that the present church does for the
two: Wendens Ambo meaning, when properly
Englished, Both Wendens, and incorrectly written
“Wenden’s” in the possessive case, as though the
place were Ambo, belonging to some manorial
Wenden:—Wenden, his Ambo.
// 116.png
.pn +1
.if h
.il fn=i096.jpg w=600px id=i096
.ca
WENDENS AMBO.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: WENDENS AMBO.]
.sp 2
.if-
Audley End Station takes its name from that
great palace a mile distant, whose site was given
to Lord Chancellor Audley by Henry VIII. in
1538. The Abbey of Walden then stood here;
an ancient foundation built, like most monastic
establishments, in a pleasant vale, beside a fishful
stream. It was a noble piece of spoil, and probably
the richest of all the plundered monastic
tit-bits that came the artful Chancellor’s way.
He was thus a great receiver of stolen property,
but put a portion of his gains, at least, to good
use, for he founded Magdalene College, Cambridge,
as the epitaph on his tomb, in the course of surely
one of the most shockingly bad puns in existence,
tells us. The founder of “M—audley—n” College
// 117.png
.pn +1
lies, indeed, in the beautiful church of Saffron
Walden, within sight of Audley End, and there
you shall read how—
.pm verse-start
The stroke of Death’s inevitable dart
Hath now, alas! of lyfe beraft the hart
Of Syr Thomas Audeley, of the Garter Knight,
Late Chancellor of England under owr Prince of might
Henry Theight, wyrthy high renowne,
And made by him Lord Audeley of this towne.
.pm verse-end
The great pile of Audley End was not, however,
reared in his time, and although when it
arose it was given his name, which it still bears,
it speedily, for lack of heirs of his blood, came
into altogether alien hands. His daughter was
sole heiress. She married, at the age of fourteen,
Lord Henry Dudley, and when he died, became
wife of the widowed fourth Duke of Norfolk.
She died at the age of twenty-three, and the
Duke then married for the third time, became
for the third time a widower, and finally closed
his career in the approved way by dabbling in
conspiracy and getting beheaded for it. His son,
that Lord Thomas Howard who so signally helped
to destroy the Spanish Armada, was restored to
the estates, made Lord High Treasurer and created
successively Baron Howard de Walden and Earl of
Suffolk. It was he who built the vastly spacious
and vastly costly house of Audley End, of which
the existing building, large though it be, is only
a portion. In 1721, and again in 1749, great
ranges of it were taken down by the then owners,
// 118.png
.pn +1
unable to bear the enormous expense of maintaining
so huge a place. The building and furnishing
of Audley End are said to have cost the Lord High
Treasurer not less than £200,000. He began the
works in 1603, and not until thirteen years later
were they completed. Well might James I., who
visited the incomplete palace, declare, with sarcastic
meaning, that “it was too much for a
King, though it might do very well for a Lord
Treasurer.” It was not an ill-founded belief that
the treasury chests of the nation had been laid
under contribution for the benefit of my Lord’s
building extravagances. His wife, too, was
credited in public opinion with receiving bribes
from the Constable of Castile, and the saying thus
arose that “Audley End was built with Spanish
gold.” Whatever may be the truth of those
charges, certainly this magnificent man rather
overdid his magnificence, with the result that
his descendants could not live in the place, and
the third Earl sold it to Charles II. in 1666. At
that time the King, who had already become a
great patron of the Turf at Newmarket, had no
adequate lodging there, and was easily persuaded
to buy Audley End for £50,000. That easy-going
monarch probably purchased Lord Suffolk’s white
elephant more for the sake of relieving him of
the burden of it than for any liking himself had
taken to a place twenty miles away from Newmarket
Heath, and therefore not in those times
particularly convenient for seeing the races. Only
£30,000 of the purchase money was ever paid:
// 119.png
.pn +1
the rest remained on mortgage. For some few
occasions Audley End was used by the Court,
but chiefly by the more reputable section of it.
Here, while Charles was housed at Newmarket
with courtiers of an infamous stamp, the Queen
and her household led a country life so remarkable
for its dulness that on one occasion, in
October, 1670, to save themselves from dying of
ennui, they are found going in disguise to Saffron
Walden fair. A curious contemporary letter tells
of this interlude:—
.if h
.il fn=i099.jpg w=600px id=i099
.ca
AUDLEY END.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: AUDLEY END.]
.sp 2
.if-
“Last week there was a Faire neare Audley
End, the Queen, the Dutchess of Richmond and
the Dutchess of Buckingham had a frolick to
disguise themselves like country-lasses, in red
petticoates, wastcoates, etc., and soe goe see the
Faire. Sir Bernard Gascoign, on a cart-jade,
rode before the Queen, another stranger before
Dutchesse of Buckingham, and M^{r.} Roper before
Richmond. They all soe overdone it in their
// 120.png
.pn +1
disguise, which look’d soe much more like the
Antiques than Country volk, that as soon as
they came to the Faire the people began to goe
after them; but the Queen, going to a booth, to
buy a pair of yellow stockings for her sweet
hart, and Sir Bernard asking for a pair of gloves,
stitcht with blue, for his sweet hart, they were
soon, by their gebrish, found to be strangers,
which drew a bigger flock about them. One
amongst them had seen the Queen at dinner,
knew her, and was proud of her knowledge: this
soon brought all the Faire into a crowd, to stare
at the Queen. But thus discovered, they, as soon
as they could, got to their horses; but as many of
the Faire as had horses got up with their wives,
children, sweet harts, or neighbours behind them,
to get as much gape as they could till they
brought them to the Court gate. Thus, by ill
conduct, was a merry frolick turned into a
pennance.”
The Earl of Suffolk and his successors did
not do so badly over this incompleted purchase,
for to one of their kin was given the care of the
place, together with the salaried post of Housekeeper
and Keeper of the Wardrobe, and at last,
in 1701, when it became evident that no King
or Queen was ever likely to reside here, Audley
End was reconveyed to the fifth Earl of Suffolk,
on the easy terms of his undertaking to relinquish
his claims to the outstanding £20,000. The Earls
of Suffolk ended in 1745, when the tenth of that
title died and was illegally succeeded in the property
// 121.png
.pn +1
by his kinsman, the Earl of Effingham,
from whom the Countess of Portsmouth, one of
the two daughters and co-heiresses of Lord Griffin,
who were the true but dispossessed owners, bought
the house and estate. Her heir was her nephew,
John Griffin Whitwell, who in 1788 became Baron
Braybrooke. Again, on his death, childless, the
property changed hands, coming into possession
of the Nevilles, who still own it and the Braybrooke
title.
That account tells something of the quick
changes and varied fortunes of Audley End,
but only a lengthy disquisition could describe
its appearance and contents. Pepys in 1669
made something of an attempt, but the most
convincing part of his discourse is that where
he describes how the housekeeper “took us into
the cellar, where we drank most admirable
drink, a health to the King. Here I played on
my flageolet, there being an excellent echo.”
But the still more excellent echo seems to have
been that echo of the first drink with which
he refreshed himself after his flageolet-playing.
He was here again, and once more in the cellars
where it is not surprising that he found “much
good liquors. And indeed the cellars are fine;
and here my wife and I did sing, to my great
content. And then to the garden, and there did
eat many grapes, and took some with us.”
There is little use describing the contents of
Audley End at second-hand, which is the only
way it can be done, for the Braybrookes have
// 122.png
.pn +1
excluded the public. But there are exceptionally
fine views of the exterior from the high road,
and from the slip road into Saffron Walden.
From this last the fine bridge over the Cam
comes effectively into the picture, but seen from
the high road, the great house not only stands
nakedly disclosed, across bare pastures, with
never an intervening hedge or tree, but looks
coldly inhospitable and desolate, even although
the extensive stone front is designed in the rich
Jacobean style. The prominent, copper-covered
cupolas are a bright green.
But if Audley End does by no means look
homely, the scenery is delightful. The road
passes through an open common on the left,
planted with park-like clumps of trees, and with
the pretty feature of green alleys cut through
dense coppices. Ahead, down the road, the red-brick
gabled stables of the mansion, older than
the mansion itself, lend a ruddy and cheerful
tone. Beyond them the lodge-gates are passed:
modern additions, with the great stone bull’s
heads of the Nevilles’ crest surmounting the
piers, and on the roof-ridge of the lodge an
heraldic griffin ramped up on his hinder part
and holding two daggers in his paws. He is a
would-be impressive griffin, but his singularly
apologetic attitude, like that of a French poodle
on his hind legs, begging for biscuits and conscious
all the while that he is making a fool
of himself, is only laughable.
// 123.png
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2
XV
.sp 2
.if h
.il fn=i103.jpg w=600px id=i103
.ca
SAFFRON WALDEN.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: SAFFRON WALDEN.]
.if-
.ni
Saffron Walden lies a mile distant, on a ridge
overlooking a wide stretch of country, and is one
of the prettiest and neatest of rural corporate
towns. To the whole countryside it is merely
“Walden.” No local person would ever think
of saying “Saffron” Walden; and really, now
there is no longer any saffron grown here, why
should he? Prominent, far and near, is the
great Perpendicular church, bracketed with that
of Thaxted as the finest in Essex. Not a little
of its proud dominance over neighbouring hill
// 124.png
.pn +1
and dale is due to the tall, tapering crocketed
spire, added so late as 1831, and one of the
earliest and most successful efforts of the Gothic
revival. The very late Perpendicular clerestoried
nave, with noble timbered roof, is singularly like
the great Gothic Guildhall Library in London,
which would almost seem to have been designed
by its modern architect after this ancient model.
.pi
Walden is, and has always been, a great
stronghold of the Friends, and the Friends’
Schools are among the most prominent of the
public buildings in the town. It is a town of
old and new in just proportions, and with a
staid prosperity not pushful enough to be vulgar,
nor so allied to modernity that it must needs
sweep away its old relics. In Church Street,
indeed, is to be found one of the most curious
old plaster houses that any town or village can
boast. This is the old “Sun” inn, an inn no
longer, decorated with two gigantic armed figures
in plastiferous relief. For whom they may be
intended, only the designer of them could say,
and he cannot tell us, for if we may believe
the date of 1670 on the wall, he must have been
gathered to his fathers quite two centuries ago.
Another very old inn, the “Eight Bells,” still
looks prosperous, at the corner of Castle Street,
in which long thoroughfare the stranger, by dint
of earnest enquiry, may find the shy retiring
entrance to that delightful pleasaunce known as
“Fry’s Garden.” I do not know who Fry was,
but doubtless he was one of that famous Quaker
// 125.png
.pn +1
family, and certainly not only loved gardens, but
created one here that in all the quaint circumstances
of the formal walks, lawns, and terraces
fashionable in the gardener’s art of much more
than a century ago, has now become a treasure
to the people of Walden, to whom he gave it.
.if h
.il fn=i105.jpg w=600px id=i105
.ca
HOUSE FORMERLY THE “SUN” INN.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: HOUSE FORMERLY THE “SUN” INN.]
.sp 2
.if-
There is little left of the great castle of Walden,
the chief fortress of those Magnavilles, Earls of
Essex, of whom Geoffrey, lord of a hundred and
// 126.png
.pn +1
seventeen manors in the troublous reigns of the
Empress Maud and Stephen, was the third.
There is no more striking figure in the history
of these East Anglian districts than that of this
third Geoffrey. Not even Hereward, that earlier
hero of the Fens, made a deeper impression; but
while Hereward was a patriot, fighting the hopeless
cause of his people, Geoffrey de Magnaville
became a murderous bandit, whose hand was
against every man. Succeeding to the family
honours in 1130, he took up arms for the Empress
Maud when England was plunged into Civil War
between the rival claims of herself and Stephen,
at the death of Henry I., in 1135; but he was
arrested at St. Albans, his castles at Walden and
Pleshey seized, and his high office of Constable of
the Tower of London stripped from him.
Unfortunately for the welfare of this part of
the kingdom, the mild policy of Stephen aimed
at nothing more, and the broken Earl was set
free. Some men take their misfortunes with a
heroic calm, but Geoffrey de Magnaville was not
of that kind. We are told how he “burst forth
from the presence of the King like a riderless
horse, kicking and biting,” and so made for the
Fens, where during a series of years, to the ruin
of the realm, he made his armed support of Maud
an excuse for giving full rein to his native
ferocity. As robber and bandit, he was probably
as much feared by those with whom he sided as
by his opponents. The trembling clergy and
peasantry knew him well, and feared him with
// 127.png
.pn +1
a deathly fear, for murder and sacrilege were his
sport. By an easy twist of his name they came
to know him as “Man-devil,” which is in itself
a kind of backhanded and sinister testimonial to
his character, and long before he met his death he
was placed by the outraged Church outside the
pale of salvation. It was at Burwell, whose
church tower stands prominently in the view from
Newmarket Heath, his furrow came to an end, in
1144. It was time. He had for so long been the
scourge of these wilds that at length the King
made a determined effort to keep him in check
by building a castle at Burwell and holding it
in force. By this plan he hoped to keep that
strenuous evil-doer shut up in his chosen haunt
among the swamps of the Cam, where he might
mudlark at will, and it was in attacking this
castle, in an attempt to break through, he was
mortally wounded by a bolt in the head, and died
the next day at Mildenhall, eight miles distant,
whither his fellow-outlaws had carried him. He
died, in the language of that time, “excommunicate
and unabsolved, nor was the earth suffered to
give a grave to the sacrilegious offender.” For
twenty years, in fact, his body was unburied,
remaining meanwhile soldered in lead, in an
orchard belonging to the Templars in London.
At the end of that time, upon some flimsy proof
being given of his having in his last moments
made some expressions of repentance, his spirit
received absolution, and the body was buried
beside that of his fathers in the Temple Church.
// 128.png
.pn +1
There, on the pavement, in company with seven
others, his effigy may yet be seen, cross-legged
and mailed. He wears a more than usually dour
expression of countenance. His head is represented
encased in a helmet in shape something
midway between a saucepan and a frying-pan:
possibly a rendering in stone of that headgear he
wore at Burwell, and removed in the midst of
that fray, to get the air, when the missile struck
him.
This full-blooded scoundrel’s keep, or robber’s
hold, stood upon an eminence known as Bury Hill.
The massive walls, long since robbed of all architectural
features, still show how securely he built,
even though they are at this day only shapeless
lumps of rubble. In one corner the stocks and
pillory of Walden are still preserved.
It is a castle without a history. No one knows
who destroyed it, and no tale has ever been told of
those great earthworks, once connected with the
fortress, which now, emerald green with luxuriant
grass and spangled in springtime with wild flowers,
once defended his market-town of Walden against
surprise. These serried ranks of rampart and
ditch were probably, like the hill on which he
built his stronghold, much older than his time,
and merely strengthened for the occasion, but
they remain mystic to this day, and own a very
large selection of names, being “Battle,” “Repel,”
“Peddle,” “Pell,” and “Paigle” Ditches in the
mouths of the country folk.
Walden, which owned but that single style
// 129.png
.pn +1
before it became in the long ago the seat of saffron
culture, derives its name from “Weal-den,” the
wooded hollow, or perhaps “the hollow in the
woods,” and was anciently situated in the dense
glades of the great Forest of Essex. When Geoffrey
de Magnaville obtained the grant of a market for his
town it became “Chipping,” or Market Walden,
and it was not until the reign of Edward III.
that this style and title was changed for the name
it now bears. The seal of the borough, dating
from the time of Elizabeth, still alludes to that
much-prized plant, and perpetrates the lamentable
pun of three saffron flowers “walled in” by a
castle; while the badge of the mayor’s chain,
made in 1873, repeats that hoary play upon words.
.if h
.il fn=i109.jpg w=300px id=i109
.ca
ARMS OF SAFFRON WALDEN.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: ARMS OF SAFFRON WALDEN.]
.sp 2
.if-
Saffron, long since disappeared from local ken,
is said to have been introduced to England from
Palestine so early as the times of the Crusaders,
and to have been brought over, originally a single
bulb, hidden in a palmer’s staff. Its name is a
corruption of the Arabic “sahafaran,” but to
// 130.png
.pn +1
botanists it is Crocus sativus, the cultivated, as
opposed to Crocus agrestis, the wild crocus. It
was the supposed medicinal virtues of the plant
that made it so much in request and so largely
cultivated here in the latter part of the sixteenth
century, when Fuller, writing of the town, speaks
of it as one “which saffron may seem to have
coloured with the name thereof.” Those old
curative properties are now quite disregarded, but
they were once considered potent. The very least
of the benefits it conferred was the exhilaration of
the spirits, so that the old proverb for a merry
fellow was “He hath slept in a bag of saffron,”
and Gerard, in his herbal, says: “The moderate
use of it is good for the head, maketh the sences
more quicke and lively, shaketh off heavie and
drowsie sleepe, and maketh a man merrie.” But
other and more convivial things have long been
found to produce the same results. While it was
thought to relieve hysterical depression, it was
good also for the small-pox. Placed in bags under
the chins of sufferers from that fearful disease, it
was supposed to bring on the eruptions, and so
quickly relieve the patients. Fuller gives very
emphatic testimony to its virtues. “Under God,”
he says, “I owe my life, when sick of the small-pox,
to the efficacy thereof.”
So beneficent a plant, of course, commanded a
high price. In Fuller’s time saffron sold at £3
a pound, and in 1665, the year of the Great Plague
of London, it rose to £4 1s. 10d. Those were,
by consequence, the times of saffron adulteration.
// 131.png
.pn +1
“No precious drug,” he says, “is more adulterated
with cartamus, the inward pilling of
willow,” and suggests that dealers should look
carefully into the matter.
Of its high qualities he was, as we have seen,
fully convinced, but another proof he advances, is
not, to a sceptical modern world, altogether conclusive.
The Age of Faith is past, but it was
current in Fuller’s era. He, at any rate, had
the capacity for infinite belief, as we shall see.
“In a word,” he sums up, “the sovereign power
of genuine saffron is plainly proved, for the crocodile’s
tears are never true, save when he is forced
where saffron groweth (whence he hath his name
of ‘croco-deilos,’ or the saffron-fearer), knowing
himself to be all poison, and it all antidote.” The
logical conclusion of this belief would have been
that wholesale saffron-buyers should have kept a
staff of crocodiles as (so to speak) tasters, and by
their tears, or the want of them, have gauged the
purity of those purchases.
Hollingshead, writing of saffron cultivation,
calls the farmers of it “crokers.” It was a
culture that must then have earned many a
fortune, and so late as 1717 it was worth
£1 6s. 6d. a pound; but, what with that curse
of all industries, over-production, the carelessness of
the growers, and shameless adulteration, price and
quality declined. Then, too, the dependence of
medicine upon the old herbalists began to decay,
and the reputation of saffron fell off to such an
extent that by 1790 it was no longer cultivated
// 132.png
.pn +1
at Walden, and the “crokers” were in another
sense justified of their name.
Nowadays saffron is chiefly used as a colouring
material for aromatic confections, for liqueurs and
varnishes. Put in common cakes, that prove to
have been made of something suspiciously like
sawdust and paste, the yellow hue it gives produces
a specious and illusory richness only discovered
too late
.sp 4
.h2
XVI
.sp 2
.ni
We regain the high road at Littlebury, a rural
village whose church is said to be built within
the lines of a Roman encampment. It may be
so, but the Eye of Faith is required to perceive
any relics of it, although the natural hillock it
stands upon, overlooking the river Cam, must
be the “little bury” of the Saxon, once guarding
the passage of that stream, and whose title has
now crystallised into the place-name. Littlebury
was the birthplace of Winstanley, the cocksure
and unfortunate designer of the Eddystone Lighthouse,
who perished with the destruction of his
building. The house where he was born was
pulled down many years ago, and it is ill work
questing for the site of it. Your ordinary villager
is no hero-worshipper, and fails to understand
such a search as this. His mind is evenly divided
in speculating whether you be a fool or a rogue,
// 133.png
.pn +1
and all he has to say is, “I’ve lived here arl me
loife, and niver hard tell on’t. Pirraps they
knaws him at the Post Orfice.” But they don’t.
.pi
The only person whom the present writer met
at Littlebury who did know was stone deaf, and
questions had to be put by the slow and cumbrous
process of writing. The house stood on the right-hand
side of the cross-road that goes from the
church to the water-mill. Its site is now a little
elm-covered mound in a meadow.
Passing from here along the river-bordered
road, within sight of Little Chesterford, we leave
Essex and come into Cambridgeshire, where the
village of Great Chesterford is planted down on
the further side of the river Cam. A gaunt fork
of the roads here presents itself to the view,
with an ugly inn at the parting of the ways,
a shattered windmill to the left, on a hillside,
and the railway running on to Cambridge through
Great Chesterford station, with a forest of tall
signal-posts outlined against the sky, and the
puffings, snortings, and crashings of trains sounding
continually, far into the night.
We do not merely leave the modern county
of Essex and enter Cambridgeshire at this point,
but change our soil as well, coming at once into
a chalk country of bare and inhospitable downs,
completely altering the nature of the road and
keeping a forbidding solitude, without sign of
the habitations of men, and only the occasional
dull tinkle of a sheep-bell to hint even of farming
interests.
// 134.png
.pn +1
Mark well this road onwards from Great
Chesterford, for it is the line of the Icknield Way,
and here, at the crossing of the Cam, we enter
the one-time Icenian kingdom, the territory of
that great people whom Cæsar himself, in the
name “Cenimagni” he gave them, called great.
This country of the Iceni, comprising (to use
that favourite word of the auctioneers) what we
now know as Norfolk, Suffolk, Cambridgeshire, and
Huntingdonshire, was a country pre-eminently
distinguished from other parts of England by its
ancient inaccessibility. We hear much in our
own times of England’s “splendid isolation,” but
within this island of Britain there was then, in
this country of the Iceni, an isolation quite as
thorough, if not so splendid; the river Stour
and the oozy morasses spreading on its either banks
dividing it most thoroughly from what we now
call Essex, then a part of the nation of Trinobantes;
and the whole of the western and north-western
Icenian border was divided from the present
Northants and Lincolnshire by the Ouse and the
wide-spreading meres and morasses of the Fens.
Only along the ridges of chalk downs stretching
from Haverhill to Linton on the Essex border,
or from Great Chesterford on to those other chalk
downs of Royston was there any line of advance
dryshod, and long lengths of those ridges were
in those remote times covered with almost impenetrable
woods. Thus the Icknield Way was
the readiest, and almost only, route to or from
the country of the Iceni, for friend or foe. It
// 135.png
.pn +1
led, this “Icen hilde weg,” or Via Iceniana,
out of the south-western parts of England, from
the neighbourhood of Weymouth to Old Sarum,
Marlborough, the Berkshire White Horse, East
Ilsley, Dunstable, and Baldock, on to Royston
and Ickleton, hard by this village of Great
Chesterford we have now reached. It was never
a made road, and in places branches out into
several routes, but it was always the clearest of
trackways, and owes its preservation over many
miles to its course lying so greatly out of the
way of agricultural operations, along the crests
of the chalk hills, where the plough never comes
and the faint footsteps of prehistoric man are
undisturbed.
The existence of such a continuous track far
out of the bounds of the Icenian realm, and the
persistence among the peasantry of the different
shires and counties of its old name under the
transparent disguises of Hickling, Acheling,
Hackney Way, and other variants, point not
only to a considerable intercourse between the
several peoples of this island, but also to the
strong personality of the Iceni, who could thus
imperishably impress their name on the long
route, far from their own frontiers.
They were, however, at pains to protect themselves
and that part of the Way which formed
the entrance into their own country, and the
traveller still sees, as he journeys on to Newmarket,
the means they adopted to that end, in the various
ditches and ramparts athwart the road. This
// 136.png
.pn +1
was the weakest part of their frontier, and thus
it is that along these sixteen miles to Newmarket
we find the way to have been barred by three
strong earthworks, stretching on the one hand
to the primeval forests on the hill-tops and on
the other to the impassable fens. These are the
Brent, or Pampisford Ditch, over two miles in
length, between Abington Park and Pampisford;
the Fleam, or Balsham Dyke, from the heights
of Balsham to Fulbourn Fen and the Cam at
Fen Ditton, nine miles long as the crow flies,
but from its winding course some two miles
longer; and that most famous of them all, the
“Devil’s Ditch,” on Newmarket Heath, a seven
miles’ barrier stretching from Wood Ditton, or
“Ditch End,” to the fens at Reach.
The Icknield Way was thus well defended.
It ran from Great Chesterford, partly along the
course of the present road, to the neighbourhood
of Newmarket, and thence into the heart of
Suffolk and Norfolk to Norwich, the Venta
Icenorum of the Romans. From Norwich its
course is uncertain, but it is thought to have
made for Yarmouth. Newmarket had not in
those days come into existence, but the village
of Exning, two miles from that town, marks the
site of an ancient settlement. From Newmarket
the Way becomes more difficult to trace, but it
seems to have gone by Kentford, and to have
crossed the Lark at Lackford. Thence over
the high grounds of Icklingham Heath, by
Old Elveden Gap, to Thetford, it is readily
// 137.png
.pn +1
found, in a green track that may be followed
for miles.
Not every East Anglian village whose name
begins with Ick or Ix can claim to mark this
principal line of communication. There are the
twin villages of Icklingham St. James and
Icklingham All Saints, and there are Ickworth,
near Bury St. Edmunds, with Ixworth, Ixworth
Thorpe, and Ickburgh in other parts of Norfolk
and Suffolk, but they merely show those people
to have been widely settled in the land, and that
the Way, although their principal track, was by
no means the only one.
Here, at Great Chesterford, where the bare
swooping downs fall into the valley of the Cam—here,
or at the neighbouring village of Ickleton—the
Iceni would seem to have had a
frontier town, and when the Romans so masterfully
subjugated them, that conquering people
established beside this little river their fortified
post of Iciani, or, as some antiquaries would
have it, Camboritum.
Whichever of those two places it really was,
it is quite certain a post was established here.
The adjoining fields have, time and again, yielded
treasures in Roman coins and articles of bronze,
gold, and brass, and skeletons, perhaps those of
the owners of these finds, have been unearthed.
Great Chesterford, perhaps once really great, is
now quite a small place, but keeps its annual
July fair, even though its market, dating from
some time before Domesday Book, has long
// 138.png
.pn +1
since decayed. The only sign of modern life in
the village at this day is the new roller flour-mill
by the Cam, using the electric light. Along
the village street, a large, prominent red-brick
house with an imposing portico, now in private
occupation, is pointed out as the once important
“Crown” coaching-inn and posting-house, and
on the opposite side of the road another private
house, formerly the “Waggon and Horses,” is
shown by the villagers
.sp 4
.h2
XVII
.sp 2
.ni
It is a fine road that leads from Great Chesterford
to Newmarket, partly on the line of the
old Icknield Way. Ickleton and Hinxton, two
neighbouring villages, are seen down in the
distance, on the left hand, as the road climbs
steadily over the chalk downs: pleasant villages
in the valley of the Cam, with brilliantly whitewashed
cottages showing prominently from their
setting in green pastures.
.pi
This is a no mere track over the downs, but
a well-made highway, embanked in the hollow
and cut through the rises. Where it has finally
left the village of Great Chesterford and has
begun the climb, at the several branching roads
still known as “Stump Cross”—although that
stump of a wayside cross has long since disappeared—you
may look, on the left-hand road to
// 139.png
.pn +1
Cambridge by way of Sawston, for the Deserted
Railway. This is the abandoned line of the
Newmarket and Chesterford Railway Company,
incorporated in 1846 for the purpose of constructing
a railway in double track from the
Eastern Counties’ station at Great Chesterford
to Newmarket. The undertaking was purchased
and opened April 4th, 1848, by the Eastern
Counties (now the Great Eastern), but abandoned
in 1852, as between Great Chesterford and Six
Mile Bottom, on the opening of the existing line
from Six Mile Bottom to Cambridge. The result
is that the present railway journey between
Great Chesterford and Newmarket is necessarily
through Cambridge, and describes two sides of a
triangle, as you may readily discover by consulting
a railway map. The abandoned railway
forming the third side of the triangle, would
have gone direct, but it was discovered, somewhat
late in the day, that there was not sufficient
traffic to support both routes, and so the rails of
this particular one were torn up and the line
abandoned. Twelve miles of deserted track have
thus for over half a century borne witness to the
otherwise incredible folly of those early railway
projectors, who flung away close on £150,000
upon a line that was not wanted.
It begins at Great Chesterford as an embankment,
overgrown with brambles and undergrowth,
but presently sinks to the level at the crossing of
the road to Sawston and Cambridge, and in the
fields on either side has been ploughed out of
// 140.png
.pn +1
existence. Where the trains once went, turnips
and clover now grow; but the embankment rises
again in the distance and looks remarkably like
another, and an even more gigantic, earthwork of
unknown age. It is singular, indeed, that in this
district of prehistoric dykes a modern rival should
be thus added for the confusion of antiquaries
who may even yet, in the remote future, come
to speculate learnedly upon it, to discuss by what
tribe it was made or whose kingdom it divided.
It is quite as impressive as the Devil’s Ditch,
even although we know perfectly well that
navvies, and not the Devil, made it. Neighbouring
the road all the way to Six Mile Bottom,
it sometimes drops into deep cuttings, with the
bridges still spanning them, and again resumes
as a lofty embankment, often shrouded in the
fir plantations that in the course of half a century
have developed into dense woods. It ends at last
on the level at Six Mile Bottom
.sp 4
.h2
XVIII
.sp 2
.ni
That cyclist whose way lies in the eye of the
wind along these miles to or from Newmarket
is greatly to be pitied, for few sheltering plantations
break the force of the howling gales that
sweep the stark hillsides. But when the summer
sun of a still July afternoon shines mellow upon
this country of infinite distances—why, then the
// 141.png
.pn +1
way of the pilgrim is made easy, and he can better
appreciate a road whose bleakness, when overtaken
by rain or night, or struggling against adverse
winds, he remembers with horror.
.pi
Here we pass the Brent Ditch, going solitary
across the unfenced, uncultivated grassy downs,
and come to the equally solitary Cambridge and
Haverhill Railway that runs in single track in a
deep cutting across the road. You see Pampisford
station down below as you pass by, and a railway
inn, and that is all. If you linger on the bridge
and await the coming of a train, you will see
it stop, and the station-master and one porter,
awakened out of their slumber, like Sleeping
Beauties, come yawning on to the platform to
meet the passengers who do not alight and to
assist into the train those who do not put in an
appearance.
A little way beyond this lonely spot, at the
cross-roads by Bourn Bridge, where the Bourn,
or Linton River, flows across the highway, there
stood a once well-known posting-house and coaching-inn,
the “King’s Arms.” It was demolished,
for lack of business, many years since, and only a
row of cottages on the left hand, once forming
part of the stables, now remains, with the embankment
of the Deserted Railway, the cause of the
inn’s decay, and itself long ago abandoned, at
the rear.
.if h
.il fn=i122.jpg w=600px id=i122
.ca
“MAG’S MOUNT.”
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: “MAG’S MOUNT.”]
.sp 2
.if-
Still lonelier grows the road as we proceed,
attaining the height of detachment from the busy
world at a point near the forty-eighth mile from
// 142.png
.pn +1
London, where the road between Cambridge and
Little Abington crosses our route. This is the
Roman road known to antiquaries as the Via
Devana, a name coined by them for it, to describe its
course diagonally through England from Colchester
to Chester, the Deva of the Romans. It leads on
the left hand to Cambridge, six miles away, over
the Gog Magog Hills, the Cambridgeshire “mountains,”
on whose not remarkably high crest the
Roman camp of Vandlebury can still be traced.
Ancient roads are the merest commonplaces of
this route to Newmarket, and we have gone little
more than another mile when another is reached,
crossing again at right angles. This is a way,
much more ancient than the Romans, known as
“Worstead Street,” and thought to have been the
“War-stead,” or path, of some ancient people,
// 143.png
.pn +1
perhaps the Iceni. This also leads, as a made
road, on the left, to Cambridge; but its continuation
to the right hand is now nothing more
than a grassy track.
This junction of roads is peculiarly impressive,
and bites deeply into the imagination. A solitary
farmhouse on one side of the cross-roads, an
equally solitary cottage on the other, a long
length of old malt-houses topping the rise, and
the eerie bulk of “Mag’s Mount,” crowned with
spindly firs, and with a deep cutting of the
Deserted Railway scarring its chalky shoulder:
all these combine to fix the spot in the recollection,
although no story belongs to it and no
one knows who was “Mag” of the Mount that
bears his name.
In another two miles the Fleam Dyke, or
Balsham Ditch, is reached, almost as perfect now
as when first dug, but in places overgrown with
trees, especially to the left hand, where a prehistoric
tumulus called Matlow Hill commands it.
Ahead, along the rising and dipping road, the
paltry wayside settlement of Six Mile Bottom
comes in sight, distinguished by the very busy
and scandalously dangerous level crossing at the
railway station, where a frequent service of express
trains dashing through at high speed is a menace
to life and a hindrance to users of the highway.
Plantations in thick continuous fringes or belts
here begin to shield the road from the tempestuous
winds, and shut out the empty downs, whose inhospitable
nature seems to be reflected in the name
// 144.png
.pn +1
of Westley Waterless, a lonely village marked on
the map in their midst.
At last, passing by outlying trainers’ establishments,
the neighbourhood of Newmarket is
heralded by the great grassy bank, some thirty
feet in height, which looms before the wayfarer as
he climbs a rise. The road, and a road coming
from Cambridge, pass through a cleft in this great
barrier, and under the lee of the opening nestles
an old toll-house. To the left, across a breezy
open space stretching away for miles, goes this
grassy earthwork, rising and falling with the inequalities
of the ground, and with a yawning
ditch accompanying it into the dim perspective.
A grey church tower is seen in the middle distance,
and on the far horizon, gleaming white in
occasional sunbursts, or looming blackly under
cloud effects, is an architectural Something that
dominates the whole scene. We are, in short,
come to the Devil’s Ditch and Newmarket Heath.
That is Burwell church, showing greyly amid
surrounding clumps of trees, three miles away,
and that architectural city of dream on the
horizon, reflecting through the opalescent haze
of the Fens, across the intervening marshes of
Wicken and Soham, is St. Etheldreda’s own
refuge of Ely, whose giant cathedral, islanded
thirteen miles away amid the bogs and meres,
shines from afar, like a good deed in a naughty
world.
// 145.png
.pn +1
.if h
.il fn=i125.jpg w=600px id=i125
.ca
THE DEVIL’S DITCH AND NEWMARKET\
HEATH, LOOKING TOWARDS ELY.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: THE DEVIL’S DITCH AND NEWMARKET\
HEATH, LOOKING TOWARDS ELY.]
.sp 2
.if-
// 146.png
.pn +1
// 147.png
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2
XIX
.sp 2
.ni
The first mention of the Devil’s Ditch is found
in the Saxon Chronicle, in the year 905, when
this land of the East Angles was described as
laid waste by the northmen between the “Dyke”
and the Ouse. It was under the Saxons that it
was first imputed to the Father of Lies, whose
name it still bears, and to whose strenuous labour,
in the open-mouthed astonishment of those simple
people, amazed at the many such gigantic earthworks
they found in the land, they ascribed
almost every other such remarkable object. The
Normans, in a later age, not so credulous, knew
it as St. Edmund’s Dyke; the jurisdiction of
the Abbots of St. Edmundsbury extending thus
far westward.
.pi
But this famous line of defence—for such it
is—had really a less distinguished authorship.
The Iceni, who at the time of the Roman conquest
were a very much more civilised people
than the Saxons of five hundred years later,
constructed it as the rearward and strongest of
the several such ramparts and ditches they had
thrown across this only easy line of advance
of a possible enemy into their country. A
popular idea of the Iceni is that they were like
the Picts of North Britain, who painted themselves
a sky-blue, and considered that full dress.
But they were far more advanced than anything
so nearly allied to the ideals of the Garden of
// 148.png
.pn +1
Eden, and would no more have owned kin even
with such earlier inhabitants of their own East
Anglia as the neolithic men, than we would stoop
to call cousins with the gorillas. They had
advanced beyond the condition of patriarchal
communities and roving tribes, and had passed
the intermediate stage of barter, to enter the
more civilised one of a nation with a money
currency and coin of its own. Icenian coins, in
gold and silver, are well known to numismatists,
and although the design on them, said by experts
to be intended to represent a horse, is difficult
to be recognised, still they are coins.
This figure of a horse occurring so constantly
on these coins has sometimes led antiquaries to
the ingenious conclusion that the neighbourhood
of Newmarket, even thus early, was famous for
horses, but that is a long shot, and very much
in the dark.
A people of their calibre must have been quite
capable of such military works as these dykes.
This was their best effort and still speaks well
for their energy. The ditch, on the western side,
clearly showing that the work was a defence
from dangers expected from that quarter, is
twenty feet deep, and the bank, reared up in
an acute angle, thirty feet above the level of
the ground, thus presents a formidable climb, in
all, of fifty feet. Add to these difficulties offered
to an invader, the strong probability that the
crest of the rampart was defended by a timber
palisade, and we can clearly perceive that when
// 149.png
.pn +1
these defences were manned by a determined
people, the invasion of the Icenian country must
have been a hazardous enterprise.
For seven miles the Ditch runs, from the
waters of the Cam at Reach to the woods on
the chalk hills of Wood Ditton. It is possible
to walk along the summit of the bank most of
the way, for, although rough and uneven pedestrian
exercise, it is in general eighteen feet in breadth,
and remarkably like an abandoned railway embankment.
It is one of the many sites identified
as the scene of Boadicea’s defeat by Suetonius
Paulinus, but we are sceptical of this particular
one, although the ancient tumulus on the outer
face of the Ditch, still called the Two Captains,
points to some forgotten conflict in which two
leaders were slain and buried on the contested
field.
Little is now left of this once prominent
mound, once important enough to be marked on
Ordnance maps, but now ploughed nearly flat.
It stands in the third field from the road, on
the right hand, a field now under corn, but
until forty years ago a wood
.sp 4
.h2
XX
.sp 2
.ni
Newmarket Heath is a large place. It is easily
possible to ramble on it quite away from any sight
or sound of the races and the race crowds, and to
// 150.png
.pn +1
find a solitude in its midst while eight thousand
people are shouting themselves hoarse in cheering
a popular winner. While the October meetings
are in progress on one side of the Heath, the
July Course, on the other, under the shadow of
the “Devil’s Ditch,” is a voiceless solitude. You
would almost think that the Iceni, who dug the
Ditch, had planned the Course, and built the Stand
on it as well, so deserted of the world they look.
.pi
Nothing can be more dreary than the sight of
this simple race-stand. Built to hold a thousand
people, here it squats, an emptiness; the only
sounds those in the long sombre belt of firs,
whose branches sway with a sound of the sea in
the airs that sweep the breezy Heath.
Newmarket is first mentioned in 1227, when
it seems to have been established in consequence
of an epidemic raging at the mother-parish of
Exning, about two miles away. This “old
market” of Exning, now a village, owes its
name, say some, to the Iceni, but it is much
more likely to have derived from the Celtic word
“Exe,” for water, for the springs there are a
feature of the place. That phenomenally pious
lady, St. Etheldreda, one of the daughters of King
Anna, and foundress of Ely Cathedral, was born
at Exning, and there, we are asked to believe, was
anciently a great horse-fair, to which Newmarket
can trace its origin as Metropolis of the Turf.
But Newmarket did not come into prominence
until the reign of James I., who loved its wild
surroundings for the sake of the coursing they
// 151.png
.pn +1
gave. It was for hunting the hare and the bustard,
and for the sport of hawking, rather than for
horse-racing, that Newmarket first became
favoured. It was not long, however, before the
sportsmen who surrounded James discovered that
on the elastic turf of the Heath they had an ideal
running-ground for horses, far better than that
of the several places where matches were already
being made, and racing very soon occupied the
foremost place. King James was a frequent
visitor, and was the first to establish a palace here,
and here, in after-years, Charles I. was brought as
a prisoner.
Newmarket was under a cloud of neglect
during the Commonwealth, for under Puritan
rule horse-racing was forbidden, but with the
Restoration its fortunes grew bright. There was
never a more ardent turfite than Charles II., who
was continually visiting Newmarket, and maintained
here a dissolute Court that shocked even
some contemporaries.
Evelyn, the diarist, in 1671 “found the jolly
blades racing, dancing, feasting, and revelling,
more resembling a luxurious and abandoned rout
than a Christian Court. The Duke of Buckingham
was now in mighty favour, and had with him that
impudent woman, the Countess of Shrewsbury,
with his band of fiddlers.”
That was a very poor indictment. Much more
might have been said of a Court which included
Louise de la Quérouaille, afterwards created
Duchess of Portsmouth, Nell Gwynne, and
// 152.png
.pn +1
numerous others of their stamp. The wholesale
and unblushing—nay, boastful—immorality of
that Court is amazing; and still more amazing
is the historical condonation of viciousness that
has made Nell Gwynne a heroine. The origin
of Nell, whose name popular usage has spelt as
above, but which seems to have been originally
written “Gwyn,” is almost as vague as that of
Homer. Seven cities have claimed that old Greek
as a native. Nell, whose name speaks her Welsh
origin, was born in three places: Hereford, Oxford,
and the Coalyard, Drury Lane. Reared in the
foulest slums, and the common property of quite
a number of persons, she yet became the favourite
of a King, the mother of a Duke, and the grandmother
of a Bishop. One feels sorry for that
dignitary of the Church.
Charles, Lord Buckhurst, was the man who
made her over to Charles II. It was quite a
businesslike transaction, and his price was the step
in the Peerage that made him Earl of Dorset.
But that was not the first change of proprietors,
for an earlier love had been Charles Hart, an
actor. Her new protector, the King, she therefore
spoke of as her Charles the third. That is a well-known
story, how she procured a title for her
boy. “Come here, you little bastard!” she called
the child in presence of his father, the King.
Charles was shocked at the coarseness of the
expression, but she was prepared with a retort.
“That is the only name I have to give the poor
boy,” she said. As a result of this, the boy was
// 153.png
.pn +1
christened Charles Beauclerk, created Earl of
Burford in 1676, and Duke of St. Albans 1684.
Newmarket, with a licentious and idle Court
seeking only to be amused, was in the time of
Charles II. as distinguished for eccentric wagers
and sporting feats as Brighton in after-centuries
under the protection of the Prince Regent. Lord
Digby in 1670 staked £50 that he would walk
five miles in an hour, stark naked and bare-foot,
and had the mortification of losing by the narrow
margin of half a minute. Charles and a great
crowd of courtiers were present. They all had
“something on,” as well as clothes, but whether
they backed my Lord Digby or not we are not told.
Then there was Captain John Gibbs, a gambler
and racing-man of the same period, who laid a
wager of £500 that he would drive his light chaise
and four horses up and down the steepest part of the
Devil’s Ditch, and won it, “to the surprise of all
the spectators.” He performed the feat by making
a very light chaise with a jointed perch and without
any pole. The hero of that occasion lies buried
in Attleborough Church, with a long set of eulogistic
verses over him, which do not, however,
refer to any of his sporting exploits. He died,
it seems, October 22nd, 1695, forty-eight years
of age.
.if h
.il fn=i134.jpg w=300px id=i134
.ca
BARCLAY OF URY ON HIS WALKING MATCH.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: BARCLAY OF URY ON HIS WALKING MATCH.]
.sp 2
.if-
A sporting event of much later date and not
quite so extravagant a nature was Captain Robert
Barclay of Ury’s sixty-four-miles’ walk from
Suffolk Street, Pall Mall, to Newmarket, on a
hot July day in 1803. He accomplished that
// 154.png
.pn +1
feat in ten hours. This famous pedestrian, son of
another Robert Barclay, who once walked the
510 miles from London to Ury in ten days, was
the hero of many such sporting performances,
and in 1809 walked 1,000 miles on the Heath
in 1,000 consecutive hours. He was thirty
years of age at the time. On Wednesday,
May 31st, he began what was then regarded as
“the most remarkable feat ever recorded in the
annals of pedestrianism,” concluding it on Wednesday,
July 12th, at 3.37 p.m., in the presence
// 155.png
.pn +1
of 10,000 spectators, with twenty-three minutes
to spare. The wager (for no one in those
days did anything without wagering) was for
1,000 guineas a side. It was supposed that
not less than 100,000 guineas changed hands
among those 10,000 onlookers. His mile average
the first week was 14 min. 54 sec. During
the last week it fell to 21 min. 4 sec., and
his weight was reduced from 13 stone 4 lb. to
11 stone. This performance was undertaken
without any training, and so does not compare
on even terms with those of Edward Payson
Weston, the American pedestrian, who, at the
beginning of 1878, walked 1,000 miles in
398 hrs. 19 min., at the Cricket Ground, Newcastle-on-Tyne,
and out of those 398 hours rested
altogether 150 hrs. 38½ min. Weston, who
improved even on this by walking 1,977½ miles
in 1,000 hours along the roads, at the beginning
of 1879, trained continually.
Another famous sporting item of this period
was Abraham Wood’s forty miles running match
on Newmarket Heath, on April 16th, 1807. The
stake was 500 guineas, and the performance
was to be concluded in five hours. Wood, who
was a native of Mildrew, in Lancashire, and
considered, as an athlete, second only to Captain
Barclay, completed the forty miles in four minutes
under the five hours. He ran the first eight miles
in 48 minutes, and the first twenty in 2 hours
7 minutes.
The Palace built by James I., and rebuilt by
// 156.png
.pn +1
Charles II., long continued in use. James II.
was too busy striving to dragoon the nation into
Roman Catholicism, to take much interest in the
races, but William III. was often here.
That grim and silent monarch does not bulk
largely as a sportsman in the minds of most
people, yet he was a supporter of Newmarket, and
we actually find him in October, 1689, the year
after his accession, performing the extraordinarily
quick journey of Hampton Court to Newmarket
in one day, a feat then rightly considered surprising.
He figures on one occasion as a reckless,
unlucky, and infuriated plunger at cards. It was
in 1689 that he lost 4,000 guineas overnight at
basset, at one sitting. The next morning, still
chafing at the loss, he gave a gentleman a stroke
with his horsewhip for riding before him on the
race-ground. It was rather an unfortunate outburst
of temper, for from it arose the sarcasm that
it was the only blow he had struck for supremacy
in his kingdoms.
Anne and the first two Georges were familiar
with the place, but towards the close of
George III.’s reign the Palace was sold. The
Prince Regent, however, took a keen interest in
racing, and ran a rather crooked course on the
Turf, for he was practically warned off the Heath
by the Jockey Club, that autocratic body of racing
law-givers whose rules no one, from a jockey to a
king, dare transgress. In such a world as that
of racing, which it would be mere affectation to
contend is followed in the main for purely
// 157.png
.pn +1
sporting reasons, unmixed with the hope of gain,
stringent and inflexible laws and exemplary
punishments are necessary for the protection of
all concerned.
Like many another institution with small
beginnings and unexpected growth, the Jockey
Club emerges only in dim fashion from the past,
and historians can only say that it was established
somewhere in the reign of George II., between
1727 and 1760. Nowadays that body is all-powerful,
not alone at Newmarket, but in the
whole world of racing, whose events are conducted
under its rules. The Heath itself is the Club’s
unchallenged domain, for it is rented of the freeholder,
the Duke of Portland, and its gallops are
opened or closed just as the officials will it. The
revenue of the Club, too, is enormous, for every
jockey pays for a licence, and the fees exacted
from owners at every turn, and the money taken
for admission to the betting-rings and enclosures,
total an income more than princely. The headquarters
of the Club and Tattersall’s Rooms
combined face the High Street in no very imposing
manner, and the pavement in front of
them becomes on race-days the Rialto of owners
and trainers
.sp 4
.h2
XXI
.sp 2
.ni
The history of the Jockey Club and that of
“Tattersalls” are inseparable. Richard, the first
// 158.png
.pn +1
Tattersall, born in 1724, and originally stud-groom
to the Duke of Kingston, founded the well-known
business of horse-auctioneering in London in 1766,
and prospered from the beginning of that enterprise;
but his fortune was made rather in horse-breeding,
and “Old Tatt” had his first great
success in 1779, when he bought Highflyer,
Lord Bolingbroke’s famous racehorse, for £2,500,
and put him to the stud. It is a proof of his
tried and proved integrity that he purchased
Highflyer on credit.
.pi
But Highflyer himself demands a few
words here. He was a bay horse, foaled in 1774,
the property of Sir Charles Bunbury, who sold
him to Lord Bolingbroke. He won a long succession
of classic races at Newmarket in 1777-79,
and was in after-years the sire of many equally
famous horses. In fact, as in the case of
“Eclipse first, the rest nowhere,” of later times,
Highflyer stood for all that was fleetest and
finest, in his own day, and it was from him that
the stage-coach proprietors of old delighted to
name their conveyances. We find no “Highflyer”
coach, however, on this road, but a well-known
London and Edinburgh “Highflyer” coach ran
from 1788 to 1840, and at least five other local
coaches of the same name travelled the cross-roads
of Yorkshire, that shire most famous of all for the
love of horses.
Highflyer in thirteen years brought Tattersall
such prosperity that he was able to set up a
fine establishment at New Barns, or “Highflyer
// 159.png
.pn +1
Hall,” Ely, and to entertain the greatest in the
land with a baronial hospitality. The New Barns
port was said to be the best in England, and was
very potent. Richard Tattersall, grandson of
“Old Tatt,” who himself lived to be known as
“Old Dick,” used to tell how, in 1794, as a boy
of nine, he saw a post-chaise from his grandfather’s
place drive up to the “Palace” door at
Newmarket, with William Windham, the statesman,
riding a leader and Charles Fox awheel,
while the Prince of Wales, too greatly overcome
with New Barns port to take part in the frolic, or
even to sit on the seat, lay utterly helpless on the
floor of the chaise.
Tattersall was not only powerful at Newmarket,
but popular as well; and in those days, when Highway-men
infested all the roads leading into this
place where money flowed so freely, was the only
man who could with impunity go back and forth,
unattended and unarmed, with his pockets full of
gold. The Highway-men declared him “free of the
road.” On the one occasion when he actually
was stopped and relieved of his treasure, it was
the work of one who did not recognise him, and
restitution was made when his identity was discovered.
Not every one, although perhaps rejoiced
to share this highway franchise, would feel altogether
complimented by this more than fraternal
affection of those knights of the crape mask and
horse-pistol, for it argued a community of interests.
By the time the Jockey Club and Tattersall’s
came into existence, Newmarket had become too
// 160.png
.pn +1
firmly established as the headquarters of racing
for any greater or less measure of Royal favour
to affect its fortunes. Wealth, quite irrespective
of birth and rank, now counts. It is all one to
the town and the trainers who provides the funds,
whether it be a millionaire Austrian Jew banker, a
German Israelitish financier, a rack-renting peer-landlord,
a monarch of the licensed victualling
trade, or a wholesale furnisher from Tottenham
Court Road; and when the bacon-kings and the
sovereigns of soup, and all the other geniuses of the
factory and the Exchange, who pile up huge fortunes
out of the labour of others, come here to
spend a percentage of their hoards, they will be
all sure of the same welcome—as why should
they not?
There is little or no snobbery in Newmarket,
and it is perhaps the only place in the world
where the King can depend upon being let alone.
He can walk the High Street or the racecourse
like any other sportsman, or look into
the shop-windows without being mobbed. Here,
at any rate, Addresses are never presented, and
Royalty walks, for a change, upon pavements
and mother earth, without the usual intermediary
of red carpet. No one—at least none who are
conversant with the manners and customs of the
place—even takes off a hat to the Sovereign, who
is thereby relieved from his invariable courtesy
of returning the salute. In short, no one takes
the least notice of him.
// 161.png
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2
XXII
.sp 2
.ni
The cemetery at Newmarket is the traveller’s
melancholy introduction to this town of gay
memories. It acts the part of that oft-quoted
ancient Egyptian custom of seating a skeleton at
the feast; for those who go to and from the racecourse,
and the budding jockeys who daily exercise
the horses on the Bunbury or others of the Heath
gallops, can scarce fail to see it and its serried
ranks of grandiose white marble monuments. It
must inevitably be dispiriting to some, for it
emphasises the shortness of our course, enacts the
rôle of mentor, and seems to hint, “Why toil and
moil and live laborious days, and why in that
toiling stoop to petty meannesses, when at last—and
at no distant date—you too must lie with the
many racing celebrities of a bygone day, as forgotten
as they?” In some sort the roadside cemeteries
that now so dolefully are set in the gates of
every town may thus be a moral force—although
that is to be doubted—but certainly their suggestions
of the fleeting nature of life and the essential
futility of it are alien from public policy, as likely
to sap the energy of the race. The time must needs
come, and that soon, when cremation is made compulsory
and the wayside cities of the dead abolished.
.pi
The humble gravestone is scarcely to be found
in this enclosure. Nothing less than a marble
cross will serve the turn of the owners, the
trainers, and the jocks who are bedded down
// 162.png
.pn +1
here. Captain Machell, a Turf celebrity of later
years, lies nearest the gate of any: they say at
Newmarket he wished to lie close to the road,
near the wall on whose other side the horses go
on their morning gallops throughout the year.
So unfailingly does sentiment rule, even here!
A racing-man could take you through these
groves of ornate monuments and thoroughly
perform the part of a horsey “Who’s Who,”
but the majority of the names mean nothing to
the outside public. One, however, you may read
that means much to our generation; it is the
name of Archer. Even that section of the public
uninterested in horse-racing was familiar with
the name and fame of Archer in his life, and
in his death he still retains a hold upon the
popular imagination. Fred Archer in the early
’80’s was to the racing world what the Prime
Minister is in the world of English politics, the
Archbishop of Canterbury in matters ecclesiastical,
and the President of the Royal Academy in the
domain of Art: was, indeed, more to his world
than they to theirs, for he occupied his foremost
place by sheer merit, and it is not commonly
the ablest statesmen, the most pious divines, or
the most gifted of painters who are thus elevated
above their especial spheres of activity.
It was no shame, even to the most puritanical,
to know who Archer was. “Archer up!”
became a synonym for success at the time when
he flourished. And how he did flourish! He
was but twenty-nine years of age when he died,
// 163.png
.pn +1
but had long been world-famous. Born at
Cheltenham in 1857, the son of a jockey turned
publican, he scored his first win on Atholl Daisy,
at Chester, September 28th, 1870. In 1872 he
won the Cesarewitch, and in 1874 the Two
Thousand Guineas, on Lord Falmouth’s Atlantic.
From that time forth he was the foremost
jockey, and was so successful that he became
a superstition with backers. To his skilful and
daring riding fell such remarkable successes as
the Derby and St. Leger in 1877, and in 1885
the Derby, Oaks, Grand Prix, St. Leger, and Two
Thousand Guineas. In the whole of his career he
rode to victory no fewer than 2,748 winners; a
record no other jockey has approached. His riding
weight was 8 stone 10 lbs. In earnings and
presents he is said to have made over £60,000 in
those fourteen years that comprised his career.
Archer’s monument is a large white marble cross,
carved at the crossing with a spray of roses in high
relief, and on the plinth with a rose in full bloom,
represented as though having fallen from the
spray. It was originally erected by him to his
wife, as may be gathered from the inscription:—
.pm verse-start
“In Sacred Memory of Helen Rose, the
beloved wife of Frederick James Archer,
who passed away November 7th, 1884,
aged 23 years.”
.pm verse-end
.pm verse-start
For ever with the Lord,
Amen, so let it be:
Life from the dead is in that word,
’Tis immortality.
.pm verse-end
// 164.png
.pn +1
Also their infant son, William, January 9th, 1884.
.pm verse-start
In Sacred Memory of Frederick James Archer,
who passed away November 8th, 1886, aged
29 years.
.pm verse-end
.pm verse-start
“In the midst of life we are in death.”
.pm verse-end
From the gates of this melancholy place one
looks down along the whole length of Newmarket
High Street. Looking backward, you see the
Heath, with the long trail of the road, and the
gradually diminishing line of telegraph-poles
seen at so acute an angle that they give almost
the impression of a close-set palisade: no place
so excellent as this for the purpose of instructing
the young idea into the meaning of perspective.
The Heath comes up to the very doors of
the town, whose broad void street is stretched
out there as though it were some Sleepy Hollow
whose inhabitants were drowsing away an empty
life. But no greater mistake could possibly be
made: there are no more wide-awake people in
the world than here. Even at Doncaster, where
the St. Leger keeps the minds of the Yorkshire
tykes whetted to the keenest edge, there are
not sharper folks.
A race-day during the July or Houghton
Meeting makes a very different picture. Special
trains have by midday brought thousands of
sportsmen from London and elsewhere, and the
great mansions in the town, usually closed, are
filled with gay parties. Every public-house does
a roaring trade, and the street is thronged with
// 165.png
.pn +1
an astonishing number of cabs and every variety
of fly and victoria, whose drivers are all extravagantly
eager to drive you to the course.
Whence those vehicles come might form an
interesting subject of speculation. Stalls for the
sale of all manner of possible and impossible
things form a continuous line along that broad
thoroughfare. Even uncooked pork sausages are
offered for sale, but what the class of people
who flock into Newmarket for half a day are
supposed to want with them it is difficult to
conceive. The Newmarket sportsman is scarcely
the kind of person who might be expected to
carry a pound or so of pork sausages with him
on to the course, or on his lap, going home.
In addition to all these stalls and booths,
the sellers of “race cards” are much in
evidence, and a long procession of men with
that characteristic equipment of the racing-man,
the field-glasses slung over the shoulders, winds
slowly up the long way to the Stand. These
are devotees of the great goddess Chance, who,
like Justice, is blind. They do not hurry,
because they have often trod the same path:
they are neither joyful nor gloomy, but just
stolid and businesslike, because they have come
this way with such a succession of varied fortune
that they take gain or loss with unchanged
demeanour and equal fortitude, and when they
return you shall seek in vain to guess the luck
of the day from their unemotional countenances.
The racing is all done by 3.30 p.m., and in
// 166.png
.pn +1
another hour the course is clear, the town
empty of strangers. But the inns are filled
with stable-folk and the many nondescript
hangers-on of a great racing centre. As the
evening wears away even the inns clear, and
at ten o’clock all is quiet, except perhaps for a
painful orchestra of three itinerant musicians
playing injuriously outside the “Black Bear.”
A drizzly rain falls and the musicians disperse,
greatly to the relief of the ear that listens, not
so much because it would as because it must.
Newmarket’s race-day is done, and the cats
make love, undisturbed, in the porticoes. Only
within the mansions of the great is the excitement
of the day continued, and there they
play bridge until morning glints greyly through
the shutters
.sp 4
.h2
XXIII
.sp 2
.if h
.il fn=i147.jpg w=600px id=i147
.ca
YARD OF THE “WHITE HART,” NEWMARKET.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: YARD OF THE “WHITE HART,” NEWMARKET.]
.if-
.sp 2
.ni
The houses of this broad street are curiously
irregular. Great palatial mansions alternate with
humble taverns; the busy “White Hart” stands
next door to the Duke of Devonshire’s house, and
shops elbow other imposing residences of the great.
On the right hand, as you enter the town, is the
large red-brick pile of Queensberry House, built
a few years ago by Lord Wolverton, and at first
styled “Ugly House,” from a successful racehorse
of that name; and everywhere in the town its
// 167.png
.pn +1
// 168.png
.pn +1
// 169.png
.pn +1
turfy sympathies are declared in the villas
christened with titles that mean much to those
versed in turf history. The customary “Elms,”
“Limes,” and “Montserrats” of villadom here
give place to “Bend Or,” “St. Gatien,” and other
horsey mottoes.
.pi
But the town has every reason to regret the
past. In days before railways, a race-meeting
meant these great establishments being occupied
for days at a time; now it is easily possible to
return comfortably to London in the evening,
they are often in use only for a few hours, and
many have long been to let. Where the Palace
stood, a Congregational Chapel and a row of shops
front the street.
The churches—St. Mary’s on the Suffolk and
All Saints’ on the Cambridgeshire side—are, on
the other hand, quite humble buildings, and tucked
away out of sight in most apologetic fashion, as
though in this Metropolis of the Turf religion were
bidden take a back place. Cynic circumstance has
decreed that the best—and, indeed, almost the
only—view of St. Mary’s, the most important of
the two buildings, is that gained from the yard
of that eminently sporting and horsey inn, the
“White Hart.” From that point it certainly does
contribute to a fine picture, although its tapering
spire, with the clock-bell placed in a little hutch
on one side of the tower, is quaint, rather than
pretty or intrinsically striking. It stands in a
damp little churchyard, closely hemmed in by
narrow streets and lanes, with several very old
// 170.png
.pn +1
tombstones inserted in the buttresses; among
them one of a seventeenth-century actor of the
Theatre Royal, Newmarket, who in jaundiced
tones and the most gruesome spelling, tells us
that life is fleeting and we shall be as he, and
so forth. The old hunks! Sorry himself to leave
the stage of life, he made his exit with that
cheering reflection that the curtain must presently
be rung down on the whole company.
It is a dark church within, and with little to
reward the pilgrim; but a curious relic exhibited
in a frame on the north wall is interesting. It is
a small purse, found in 1857, during the rebuilding
of the south wall of the chancel. In the course of
those operations two debased windows and an Early
English piscina were found. On the top of the
piscina was the purse, of faded white silk, with
large tassels, and containing three Reichening
pfennigs or Nuremburg jettons, specimens of the
well-known counters or tokens made in the first
part of the sixteenth century by Hans Schultz,
of Nuremburg. They bear on one side the device
of the Reichs apple within a trefoil, and on the
reverse an heraldic rose, surrounded by crowns
and fleurs-de-lis. They and the purse all date
from about 1500. A purse of this character is
generally represented in sacred heraldry as the
receptacle of the thirty pieces of silver, the reward
of Judas’s betrayal. Maundy money was distributed
in purses of this pattern, so late as the reign
of Charles II.
Near by is a tablet to the memory of a Rector,
// 171.png
.pn +1
who died in his thirtieth year, in 1681. His
epitaph tells us, “Here lie the mortal remains
of R. Cooke, late Rector of this parish, whose
tongue or life I know not which was the most
eloquent.” He exerted himself so much while
preaching that he broke a blood-vessel, and died
in the pulpit. “Thus,” concludes the epitaph,
somewhat extravagantly, “he poured out his
life-blood for the Gospel.”
The Church of All Saints, at the other side
of the High Street, and in Cambridgeshire, was
wholly rebuilt, as a memorial to Colonel Lord
George John Manners, of Cheveley Park, in 1876.
It is interesting only because of the small black
marble tablet, about the size of a pocket-handkerchief,
to the memory of Tregonwell Frampton,
which was on the chancel wall of the old church,
but has been shouldered away in the new building
to the darkness of so high a position on the wall
of the tower that the inscription cannot be read
without the aid of a ladder. Frampton, who came
of a race of landed proprietors in Dorsetshire, was
“Father of the Turf,” and, as the inscription on
the tablet states, “Keeper of the Running Horses
to their Sacred Majesties, William the Third,
Anne, George the First and Second.” He died,
considerably over eighty years of age, in 1727,
and thus ended a remarkable career of bold and
eventful gambling in his youth, variegated by a
later course as trainer for those four monarchs.
For that is what the phrase, “Keeper of the
Running Horses,” means. Historians of racing
// 172.png
.pn +1
are even yet uncertain as to the truth of the grave
charge made against him of mutilating the famous
horse Dragon, in order to qualify him technically
for a particular race, the evidence against him
not being sufficiently convincing. The year of
this alleged offence was 1682. It seems scarce
credible that he would afterwards have occupied
that position of trust with William III.
and the three succeeding sovereigns had there
been any foundation for the charge
.sp 4
.h2
XXIV
.sp 2
.ni
Modern Newmarket is typified by that showy
giant barrack-hotel, the “Victoria,” not long since
completed, and in its glitter and electric light an
ostentatious sign of these thriving times of new-made
wealth and new-born social ambitions. The
older Newmarket, of days when wealth alone could
not purchase rank and the entrée to society, is
represented by the “Rutland Arms,” appropriately
staid and severe in its architectural style, and
perhaps, like the older order it embodies, a little
under the cloud of neglect. The great “Rutland
Arms” has, any time these one hundred and forty
years past, been the resort of the more aristocratic
patrons of Newmarket, and, looking back upon the
town from the Bury road, it is still the chief
feature of the place. Built around a courtyard, on
// 173.png
.pn +1
// 174.png
.pn +1
// 175.png
.pn +1
solid early Georgian lines, of dull red brick and
with high-pitched roof, it makes no pretensions to
beauty, and yet does succeed in giving an impression
of majesty and repose. Its noble rooms
are large enough to permit of walking exercise,
and instead of the exiguous cubicles, miscalled
bedrooms, of modern hotels, you have sleeping
apartments whose dimensions might almost be
expressed in the measurements of a surveyor
rather than in the less generous formula of the
foot-rule. The “Rutland Arms’” sign owes its
existence here to the fact that the manor of
Newmarket came into the Manners family in the
reign of George II., by the marriage of the daughter
of the sixth Duke of Somerset with John Marquis
of Granby in 1750. This was that famous “Markis
o’ Granby” who earned such military distinction
in Germany and such popularity at home that his
name became for many years one of the most
popular of inn signs. The Manners family until
recent years owned the property, together with
the neighbouring park of Cheveley, and their
coat-of-arms on a gigantic scale, blazoned in
blue and gold, still decorates the pediment of the
hotel in aggressive manner. There are some who
freely, very freely, translate the proud motto
Pour y Parvenir as “For the Parvenus”; but
the “Victoria” is the hotel for them, and that
legend really means “To attain,” or, as an American
might say, “To get there.” What the choice of
that determined sentiment originally meant, who
shall say? but as the Manners family long since
// 176.png
.pn +1
obtained a dukedom, they may be said to have duly
arrived, and it is difficult to see what else they
can want.
.pi
.if h
.il fn=i153.jpg w=600px id=i153
.ca
NEWMARKET: THE “RUTLAND ARMS.”
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: NEWMARKET: THE “RUTLAND ARMS.”]
.sp 2
.if-
Much might be written of the old-time visitors
to the town, but very little anecdotal matter exists.
For unconscious humour there is nothing so good
as the diary of our greatest entomologist, who was
here in 1797. On his tour he had found, with
delight, a golden bug basking in the sun on his
window-sill, but with less delight a something of
the same genus, “new to me,” on his stocking,
in a little country inn.
On the evening of July 3rd he and a friend
drove up to the “Ram” at Newmarket, as he duly
records:—
“Arrived at Newmarket 6 p.m., where the
“Ram,” wide-opening its ravenous maw, stood
to receive us. We regale ourselves, after an expeditious
journey, upon a comfortable cup of tea,
and then take a walk to the racecourse, as far as
the stands. By the way, we observe Centaurea
calcitrapa plentifully. At some distance we see
the Devil’s Dyke, and, terrified with the prospect,
retreat with hasty steps to supper. Soham cheese
very fine. July 4th.—On going into the quadrangle
of this magnificent inn I observed a
post-chaise with episcopal insignia; it belonged
to our worthy diocesan. On the panel of the
chaise door I took a new Empis.”
// 177.png
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2
XXV
.sp 2
.ni
The flat-racing season at Newmarket—and incidentally
the flat-catching season also—opens with
the Craven Meeting on Easter Monday, and ends
with the Houghton, or third October Meeting,
towards the close of that month. Between these
are the Second Spring, the two July, and the
First and Second October Meetings, making in
all eight annual events. But Newmarket does
by no means hibernate with the end of October
and merely come to life again in the spring.
When the flat-racing ends, the hurdle-racing
takes up the thread of sport, and allied with
these winter activities are the runs of the Drag
Hounds.
.pi
There are many courses on the Heath: the
Old Cambridgeshire, nearest the town, where the
historic Red Post, the Duke’s Stand, and some of
the old saddling-stables still remain; the long
four-miles’ Beacon Course, little used in its entirety,
now that a two miles’ contest is thought
a good race; the Rowley Mile, named after
Charles II., who was known among his familiars
as “Old Rowley,” either from his favourite riding-horse
being so named, or else because his sacred
Majesty, so grotesque of face, was thought to so
greatly resemble a frog—and frogs are still, in
country districts, known as “Anthony Rowleys”;
the Swaffham Course, and the Bunbury Mile.
There is no finer or more bracing race-ground in
// 178.png
.pn +1
the kingdom than this of Newmarket Heath, nor
one so open, or where every stage of every race
can be so well followed. It has no parallel elsewhere,
and is certainly the very antithesis of
Ascot, Goodwood, and Sandown, which are ladies’
opportunities for display, as much as they are the
sportsman’s occasions for betting. Here, when
the Cesarewitch and the Two Thousand Guineas
are being run off, it is a very serious and earnest
business, and toilettes only sparingly relieve the
Quaker grey of the sporting crowd.
“No Betting Allowed” is the notice that the
enquiring stranger sees repeated several times on
notice-boards over against the New Stand. To
bet legally you must pay your sovereign, half-sovereign,
or five shillings for entrance to the
various enclosures in the Stand: to lay or take
the odds in the open is an indictable offence. Yet
there is nothing else but quiet and earnest, but
unostentatious, betting going forward all the while
among the crowd assembled outside the rails. The
bookmakers in the various rings, sanctified and
immune from molestation at the hands of the
law, by reason of those entrance-fees, may be heard
shouting the odds like maniacs, but here the case
is indeed altered. Those notices might really,
with more appearance of common sense, be spelled
“No Betting Aloud,” for the very large amount
of betting that actually does go on, under the very
noses of the numerous foot and mounted police
stationed here to prevent it, is conducted in undertones.
Not whispers, by any means, but offers
// 179.png
.pn +1
made by bookmakers in conversational tones,
easily to be heard by the crowd at large, of so
many to one on the field; with money changing
hands, visibly and indubitably, for all the world
to see, and the same familiar faces of the bookmakers
at every race throughout the year.
Here, in fact, we see the failure of an attempt
to make the people moral by Act of Parliament—a
failure that in its failing creates a great deal
more immorality, and of a less venial kind, than
that it originally set out to suppress, for there is
nothing more certain than that the police, who do
not see these things with the official eye, do most
surely observe them with the merely physical eyes
of ordinary human beings, and not only refuse
to take proper cognisance of them, but “have a
bit on” of their own, and thus place themselves in
the Gilbertian position of rendering themselves
liable to be given into their own custody for
betting for ready money in a public place.
It behoves an innocent to be careful how he
has that “bit on,” for the Heath at race-time is
no place for the guileless stranger with a few odd
sovereigns to lose. There are those here whose
sole mission in life is to plunder the unwary, and
who have the keenest scent for what they elegantly
term a “mug.” Their method is a simple one, as
you who have the curiosity to test it may find.
You hang listlessly over the rails and assume the
virtuous air, even if you have it not, of being
unspotted from the world. If that, on the other
hand, be your usual wear—why, then so much the
// 180.png
.pn +1
better. The experimentalist in this sort will not
have long to wait before he gets a bite. Already,
while he is taking up his position and gazing
around with the air of one quite new to racing,
he has been singled out from the surrounding
crowds and marked down for attack by sharpers
who are past-masters in the little frailties of
human nature. Two men approach our innocent
in being, or in seeming, and one of them, under
his very nose, pays a little heap of glittering
sovereigns—or counters—into the other’s palm,
with the remark that if he, the payee, had only
sprung a little more on that dead cert, the winnings
would have been really worth winning. Poor
human nature swallows that bait as eagerly as
trout rise to May flies, and when those two practical
philosophers accidentally, as it were, take
their victim into their confidence, his gold is
already as good as gone. It seems the winner
owes his luck to his very good friend here who
is “in the know,” and, with an inexhaustible
series of good tips from the Ring, is willing—nay,
eager—to give, not only his friend, but the most
casual pick-up acquaintance of even less than five
minutes’ standing, the full benefit of that information
which, if applied in the way he presently
suggests, has the power of transmuting your silver
into gold, and of increasing your solitary sovereign
into tens and twenties.
No sport is more enjoyable than that of fooling
sharks of this description; it is its own exceeding
great reward. You can play them as the
// 181.png
.pn +1
fisherman does the salmon, and lead them on with
ingenuous innocences and artful idiotcies until
they who think they have the greatest simpleton
on earth to deal with, find themselves at length
fairly gaffed and landed.
The amateur simpleton receives the introduction
of “my friend from Tattersall’s” with an air
of eager credulity, and casually remarking that he
has never before seen a race nor ever made a bet
on one, raises the confederates’ hopes to the highest
pitch. The “friend from Tattersall’s” has another
“moral” for the next race, and recommends a
sovereign placed on the selection; whereupon you
consider it from this light and from that, and
discuss it in all its bearings until they are half-crazed
with anxiety. “Surely,” says one, “surely
you can afford to back a certainty?” “Of course,
if it is a certainty,” you say; and then, with the
conscience-stricken qualms of the good young man,
“Is it quite right to bet on a certainty?”
But the last touch of comedy comes when,
having had those scruples satisfied, you insert an
exploratory thumb and finger in your waistcoat
pocket, and—find, regretfully, that you have
come out without any money!
The effect of this is magical, and as you walk
up the course to have a quiet laugh, the bitter
curses of the disappointed sharps come after you,
in heartfelt undertones. The horse selected for a
winner comes in with the ruck, as, of course, these
fellows had foreseen.
// 182.png
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2
XXVI
.sp 2
.ni
Newmarket at other than race-times does by no
means proclaim its occupation to the chance traveller
along the road. He must rise betimes and fare
forth early who would see the sheeted racers going
to or returning from their morning gallops; but
such an early riser will find much to impress him.
Two thousand horses are in training at Newmarket,
but only he who in the brisk and racing early
hours of the day sees the long processions belonging
to the various owners filing at a walk along the
High Street can realise the fact. Many a poor
body is less warmly and comfortably clad than
a racehorse out for his morning constitutional.
Horse-cloths made with as much attention to individual
fit as given one’s own overcoat cover their
bodies and necks, and even clothe heads and ears,
and are all decorated with the owner’s monogram.
The trainer watches these morning gallops from the
back of his own serviceable nag, and notes their
“form” with the eye of a general officer inspecting
troops. But he does not, as an American writer
artlessly tells us, “amble by on his old-fashioned
Suffolk Punch.” This little quotation shows you
the danger of using terms not properly understood;
for a Suffolk Punch is a horse of the dray-horse
kind, and of the breed often used in ploughing;
furrow, if not thoroughbred, and a thought too
substantial for a saddle-horse.
.pi
The trainer keenly watches these trials, and
// 183.png
.pn +1
so also do certain knowing gentlemen to whom
the offensive name of “touts” is given. It is
the business of their kind to study that “form”
for the benefit of those who read the sporting
papers, and to telegraph the performances day by
day, so that the British working man, who so
largely supports the bookmakers and the half-penny
evening papers that thrive on the prognostications
of “Captain Coe” and “Old Joe,”
may study the “form” aforesaid. With their
heads filled with jargon of this kind, the working
men and others, whose knowledge of a horse does
not go far beyond the ability to distinguish his
head from his tail end, are firmly of opinion that
they can spot winners. That they are not often so
fortunate does not discourage them, and when the
tipsters fail, as in a very large proportion of cases
they do, they keep a faith that in this otherwise
sceptical world is as touching as it is uncommon.
The life of a tout is infinitely better than
once it was, in the days when they were severely
mauled by trainers unwilling that the doings of
their horses should thus be made public. But it
was long ago made clear that, even under the
worst conditions, information would by some
means be obtained, and so, furnished with field-glasses
of the best, they, unmolested, garner up
the lore of their craft day by day; and the trainer,
conscious of the fact that his stables at least can
be made to hold their secrets, if the gallops no
longer can, is found often in amicable intercourse
with these gleaners of useful knowledge.
// 184.png
.pn +1
It is a healthy life for all concerned, for the
country is a bracing one and the hours are early.
To each horse on these early morning trials is his
attendant lad: apprentices of the training-stable,
with everything possible to them in the way of
professional prizes. They may develop as jockeys
or as trainers on their own account, or may perhaps
go to the Devil in many of the easy ways that
racing affords. But there are few or no lads in
any profession you like to name smarter in personal
appearance or better disciplined than the
apprentices and stable-boys of Newmarket. The
modern trainer, with the consideration and income
of an ambassador, the authority of the headmaster
of a public school, and the domestic appointments
of a prince of commerce, is the benevolent
autocrat of his establishment. His lads have no
excuse for outside pleasures, for he provides them
with billiard-rooms, newspapers, and magazines,
and every imaginable comfort of a well-appointed
club, with the result that the well-known enthusiasm
for and belief in horses trained at Newmarket
in general becomes crystallised into an esprit de
corps for particular stables. The whole profession
has been revolutionised in every grade and in most
methods. The jockey who used to reduce the “too,
too solid flesh” that troubled even Hamlet—who
had not the jockey’s excuse for ridding himself
of it—by the heroic and uncomfortable course of
wearing two pairs of trousers, five or six waistcoats,
two or more coats, and then walking seven
or eight miles in all that clothing, now adopts
// 185.png
.pn +1
other methods—greatly to the sorrow of the local
tailors. Those old-time jocks who thus mortified
the flesh must surely command our retrospective
sympathy, for they did not merely so dress and so
walk, but, coming to some inn at the end of the
prescribed miles, took a seat by a roaring fire,
and, piling on more clothes, sweated away the
avoirdupois at a truly alarming rate until it was
time to tramp home-along. Turkish baths nowadays
perform the same office with little trouble,
and jockeys more than usually keen on reducing
weight take medicines in addition. It was through
the severity of this self-adopted course that Archer
brought himself into the low and feverish state in
which he committed suicide.
But who would not be a successful jockey in
these days of high retaining fees, special rewards,
and popular favour? From the worldly point of
view, judging things from the purely monetary
standpoint, such an one looks down from his
pinnacle upon the whole bench of Bishops, upon
the Army, the Navy, the Church, the Stage,
Literature, Art, and all the things that really
count. You may not like it, but—“there you
are,” and it is useless to point out that the old
verb “to jockey” means “to cheat, to trick,” and
must have derived from this profession. To one
who might so point out this derivation, an obvious
retort could be made that things have changed,
and that as actors have risen from being in the
eyes of the law mere roguish vagrants and
“players of interludes,” so jockeys may now be
// 186.png
.pn +1
honourable men. We cannot hark back to the
times when every jock was made keep his place,
and was paid less than his worth, instead of
absurdly more.
What were the rewards of the jockey in those
days? He received five guineas if he won and
three if he lost, and when a former Duke of
Grafton sent his jockey two five-pound notes after
winning both the One Thousand and the Two
Thousand Stakes, with the injunction to “take
care of them,” he was thought generous. In
these days no jockey of repute, with the winning
of classic races to his record, will get into the
saddle for a smaller fee than £1,000, win or lose
.sp 4
.h2
XXVII
.sp 2
.ni
The road on leaving Newmarket, at the crest of
the High Street, branches in many directions from
where a modern clock tower stands, like a policeman,
in the parting of the ways. The Clock Tower,
which, as a prominent and venerated landmark,
and one of the principal features of Newmarket,
it behoves us, in all humility, to spell with capital
letters, was erected by one “Charley” Blanton,
owner of Robert the Devil, in honour of Victoria
the Good. The Clock Tower is Blanton’s, but the
antithesis is our very own. Beyond this point
the roads are reduced to two: that on the left
// 187.png
.pn +1
leading direct to Thetford and Norwich; the right-hand
fork conducting to Thetford by the loop road
through Bury St. Edmunds. We will examine
this road in detail before taking the direct route.
.pi
This is the “Bury side” of the town mentioned
in the Jockey Club notices of the gallops available
for exercising the horses, and the triangular stretch
of common in the fork of the roads is the place
referred to on all such notices as “the Severals,”
a name here in direct contradiction to its general
meaning, which is an enclosed, as opposed to a
common, field.
A busy day on the Severals is a pretty sight,
for it is the place where the frisky yearlings are
trained to obedience. Here you see them, cantering
round and round, at the end of a rope, rejoicing
in their youth, young and silly, before they have
learnt their business in life, and, with their
manes and long flowing tails not yet docked, and
their limbs not grown to the lankiness of the full-grown
racer, the most beautiful of animals. Their
triumphs, and equally the anti-climax of their
after-careers as cab-horses, and their final conversion
into ha’porths of cats’ meat on skewers, are
mercifully hidden from them.
The road to Thetford through Bury is a lonely
and, on the whole, a dull route, but it begins in
lordly style, with lengthy rows of portentous
racing establishments in all the showy glory of
long gravelled drives and imposing gates. The
later history of domestic architecture is unrolled
before you, as you go along the Bury road, in
// 188.png
.pn +1
mid-Victorian grey brick and stucco, with gas-globes
like unto the lamps of the Metropolitan
Railway; in later Victorian white Suffolk brick
with string-courses of red brick set angle-wise
in a style alleged to be decorative; and in the
“Queen Anne” plus Victorian Renaissance composite
style of these latter days. The Edwardian
style is still to seek. We need not study to tell
who lives where, because the merest nonentities
invariably live in the most ornate houses, and,
with the varying fortunes of the Turf and them
that fleet their little day upon it, those who flaunt
so bravely this year are the next season gone no
man knoweth whither; and few, except their
creditors, care.
At last the houses end, and we are upon the
open road, with the roadside plantation of firs,
called the Long Belt, on the right, and the heaths
and downs on the left, stretching away until they
are lost in distance and in the harrs of the Fens.
This, for the cyclist, is an express route, but we
must not, for that reason, forget to pull up at the
cross-roads, where a sign-post points in one direction
to Chippenham and in the other to Moulton.
Halt awhile and notice the great grassy mound
beside that sign-post, for it is a spot known to the
villages round about, and in Newmarket, as the
“Boy’s Grave.” The boy thus handed down to
fame was, according to the traditions of the countryside,
a shepherd boy who lost a sheep from his
flock, and, afraid to go to his employer and
acknowledge it, hanged himself here—from the
// 189.png
.pn +1
sign-post, say some more credulous than their
fellows. A big boy, and even a giant, you,
looking at this mound, might think; but its
size is due to the care of the road-menders, who
not only keep it in order, but bank it up with
turf cut from the selvedges of the wayside.
.if h
.il fn=i169.jpg w=600px id=i169
.ca
THE “BOY’S GRAVE.”
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: THE “BOY’S GRAVE.”]
.sp 2
.if-
Legends are not rare in this neighbourhood.
Indeed, along the by-road in the direction of
Moulton one reaches Folly Hill, the crest of the
// 190.png
.pn +1
downs can be seen from here, with a fragment
of wall and a clump of beech-trees on its summit,
and a story of its own in the making. Here, in
fact, we are peculiarly fortunate, for on Folly Hill
it is possible to note the genesis of a legend and
to record it ere time has evolved a story, full-blown
and mysterious, out of very matter-of-fact
materials. A story of sorts is, indeed, already
current in Newmarket, where the enquiring
stranger after things in general can obtain some
finely inaccurate information as to what he may
expect to see on Folly Hill, or “God’s Evil,” as
it is alternatively known. With this he is prepared
to find a stone pillar in a wood, the sole relic of
a house built, at some time unspecified, by “a
man almost a millionaire,” unfortunately unnamed,
but with the blackest of reputations.
There is not really (it may at once be said)
any such pillar, but the gable-end of a ruined
old red-brick house stands up against the sky on
the hill-top, and is known to the farmer of Trinity
Hall Farm, on which it stands, as “the Pilgrim.”
The ploughmen know the beech clump on the hill
as “Cobbler’s Bush,” because, according to their
tale, “a ole cobbler what used to mend boots lived
there. There’s a ole tree there what nobody mustn’t
touch, because he planted it.”
“And what is that old building on the hill-top?”
“That’s a ole rewing they calls the Barks.
Nobody mustn’t touch it.”
“Not touch it; why not?”
// 191.png
.pn +1
“Because the soldiers come to look at it.”
At that explanation a flood of light is thrown
upon the name of “Barks.” It is the local pronunciation
of “Barracks,” and that name comes,
of course, from the “soldiers” who go to look at
it. Who are those soldiers? Merely those who
have at some time or other accompanied a surveying
party of the Ordnance Survey, for map-making
purposes. No doubt a fine gory embattled
legend will be built on this some day, probably
with Cromwell, that arch-villain of popular imagination,
as the moving figure in it.
Passing over the Kennett at Kentford, where
the ragged remnants of the old bridge even yet
stand in the water, beside the new, and where
the unusually good Flamboyant-traceried Gothic
windows of the church, looking down from a roadside
knoll, gladden the heart of the ecclesiologist,
the character of the road becomes, like the life of
a saint on earth—flat, featureless, dull, and uninteresting.
Just as the follies and vices of the
hardened sinner make the most readable biography,
so do those scenic accidents that give steep hills
and difficult roads make interest for the amateur
of the picturesque. Higham station, with the
spire of Barrow church peering over distant trees,
is not of itself either remarkable or romantic, and
in so far that it does not look its real age, the
toll-house standing at the cross-roads is like those
modern grandmothers whose jimp waists and
springtide tresses are the wonder of their grandchildren.
// 192.png
.pn +1
Few signs of life vary the monotony of the
flat fields, and when the roadside inn known as
“Saxham White Horse,” and inappropriately
endued with a coating of red wash, opens out
ahead in one of the long perspectives, it is as
though one had found an unexpected habitation
in an empty land. Risby village shows some
indications, off to the left hand, and, for so unpromising
a district, is remarkably picturesque,
with rugged dingles and ridges, and a round-towered
old church in a tree-embowered lane
looking as though it had been designed by
Morland. It is an Early English church, without
aisles, but with a lofty chancel arch on
whose either side are elaborate stone tabernacles.
A slip of brass on the chancel floor records that
.nf c
“Here lyeth the body of Mr. Edward Kirke,
Esq., 1613.”
.nf-
.if h
.il fn=i173.jpg w=557px id=i173
.ca
LITTLE SAXHAM CHURCH.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: LITTLE SAXHAM CHURCH.]
.sp 2
.if-
Returning to the road, a detour made on the
other side of it, to Little Saxham church, reveals
another, and finer, tower. A great deal of
mystery has been made of the round-towered
churches of East Anglia, and antiquaries of a
bygone age expended much unnecessary ingenuity
in seeking some out-of-the-way reason
of ritual or defence for their existence; but
the reason of their being is simple enough.
They are found, almost exclusively in England,
in these eastern counties, where building-stone
does not exist. Norfolk has no fewer than 125
of these round towers, and Suffolk 40. Essex
has 7, and Cambridgeshire only 2. The greatest
// 193.png
.pn +1
number are found where flint is plentiful, for
they are constructed chiefly of that material,
and the circular walls have that shape because
it is thus possible to dispense with the stone
quoins necessary for binding the angles of
square buildings. In a word, the round towers
are round for the same reason that compels a
// 194.png
.pn +1
man to wear a silver watch when he would like
a gold chronometer—they were less expensive.
Here, at Little Saxham, we have a particularly
fine example, of Norman date. It is probable
that in this case a desire existed, for some
reason now lost to us, to make a greater show
than customary, for the tower here is taller
than most. Its lower stages are in severely plain
flint-work, but the upper storey is quite elaborate
and wholly faced with stone.
An elaborate monument to Lord Crofts fills
one side of a chapel in Little Saxham church.
He was one of Charles II.’s merry companions,
but here is made to look sufficiently unhappy.
The effigies of himself and his wife are shown
in painful semi-reclining attitudes, as though
they would very much like to get up, but could
not. My lord’s expression, underneath his
Baron’s coronet, is particularly agonised.
The uneventful road on to Bury St. Edmunds
is brought to a conclusion by the barracks, the
first harbinger of the town, at the outer end of
the long wide street called Risby Gate
.sp 4
.h2
XXVIII
.sp 2
.ni
I have never been able to see Bury St. Edmunds
in the favourable light of Carlyle’s description
of the town. Listen to what he says of it:
“The Burg, Bury, or ‘Berry’ as they call it,
// 195.png
.pn +1
of St. Edmund is still a prosperous brisk Town;
beautifully diversifying, with its clear brick
houses, ancient clean streets, and 20,000 or
15,000 busy souls, the general grassy face of
Suffolk; looking out right pleasantly from
its hill-slope towards the rising sun: and on
the eastern edge of it still runs, long, black, and
massive, a range of monastic ruins.... Here
stranger or townsman, sauntering at his leisure
amid these vast grim venerable ruins, may persuade
himself that an Abbey of St. Edmundsbury
did once exist; nay, there is no doubt of it: see
here the ancient massive Gateway, of architecture
interesting to the eye of Dilettantism; and
farther on, that other ancient Gateway, now
about to tumble, unless Dilettantism, in these
very months, can subscribe money to cramp it
and prop it.”
.pi
That is the Carlylean picture of the place, and
a very desirable habitation of picturesqueness and
all the joys he paints it. But that is not quite
the real Bury. How it managed so to impress
him is a mystery, for the town itself is commonplace,
and the great churches and the ruins of
its still greater Abbey are quite distinct from it.
Even those Gothic remains are sad and grim,
and have not the usual inspiring quality of such
vestiges of the past. In fact, nothing in the
present condition of Bury in timber, brick, and
stone can serve to envisage its ancient story.
This is the tragedy of Bury, for that story is
one of the most gorgeous of romances.
// 196.png
.pn +1
We first hear of the place, as “Beodric’s
Weorth,” at the very remote period of A.D. 631.
Of Beodric we known nothing, and the spot is
mentioned thus early only because Sigebert,
King of East Anglia at that time, founded a
monastery here, a monastery in which he became
a monk, and whose cloisters he only
forsook to wage war with the heathen Penda.
Fighting for the Cross he died, and thus early
did the town secure the chance of honouring
a martyr.
But not to the earliest or most deserving
of those who have laid down their lives in the
cause did the highest honours accrue, and we
can scarce blink the fact that to St. Edmund,
King and Martyr, who suffered a hundred and
sixty years later, fell a great deal more than his
just share.
Edmund, who was crowned King of East
Anglia on Christmas Day, 856, reigned thirteen
years before the great invasion of the Danes in
869 broke up his kingdom and brought him to a
tragical end at Eglesdene, near Hoxne. Oakley
Park is supposed to be the site of “Eglesdene.”
Near by is a bridge over the Dove, known as
“Gold Bridge,” the successor of the one under
whose arch the fugitive King was hiding, according
to the legend, when a newly-married couple,
crossing the bridge by moonlight, caught the
glint of his golden spurs in the water and revealed
his lurking-place to the Danes.
If you consider it at all closely, the legend is
// 197.png
.pn +1
not at this point very convincing, for, in the
terrible wars of extermination then waged, when
not only the actual combatants, but the entire
people, went in fear, it is not very likely that
honeymooning couples would be wandering about
in the moonlight; but that is a detail. St.
Edmund was, after all, very human, as well as
very saintly, for he did what many an unregenerate
would have done—he cursed that couple who
revealed his presence. Nay, he did more; and
perpetrated a wickedness of which no mere son
of Belial or everyday child of ungodliness would
have been guilty. He cursed every couple who
in the future should cross that bridge to be
married. ’Twas not well done, St. Edmund!
The legend goes on to tell how the Danes
bound him to a tree and shot him to death with
arrows until he was stuck full of them, like St.
Sebastian. The very tree—an ancient oak—was
for ages pointed out, and it is a marvellous fact
that in 1849, when it fell, and was cut up, an
arrow-head was found in the heart of that hoary
trunk. This is not the place to tell of the many
marvels that followed; but in the year 903, after
the body had lain for thirty-three years in a
wooden chapel at Hoxne, it was removed to
Beodric’s Weorth, where it was placed in the
Church of St. Mary, and became the bone of
contention between the regular and the secular
canons, until the time came, in 1010, when the
Danes again overran the country, when they sank
their differences, and conveyed the precious body
// 198.png
.pn +1
of the Saint to London, for safety. It was escorted
back in 1013, working many incredible miracles
on the way, and replaced in the church, where it
remained until Aylwin’s great monastic church,
begun under Canute, in 1020, was completed.
Already the sainted King had become more
powerful than any other miracle-monger, but his
name had not yet been given to the town, which
retained its old style until the time of Edward
the Confessor, when it first became known as
St. Edmund’s Bury.
As everywhere else, the Norman Conquest
meant a great increase of ecclesiastical wealth and
power at Bury. The Monastery was rebuilt, and
its Abbot, mitred and all-powerful within the
wide-spreading Limits of St. Edmund, was little
less than a Bishop. The sanctity and potency
of St. Edmund were not less than those of St.
Thomas in after-years became. Pilgrims of every
estate in the realm flocked to his shrine. Even
kings entered into his courts with humility.
Edward the Confessor walked the last mile bare-foot.
Henry I., Henry II., and Richard I. were
frequently here. King John, however, was in
different sort. Jocelin of Brakelond, the old
monkish chronicler, who was born in that very
street of “Short Brakland” we may see in Bury
to this day, tells us how, in 1203, that King
stayed with the Abbot a whole fortnight, the said
Abbot and Monastery being at that time only
by way of recovering from much domestic mismanagement
of former Abbots, and ill-prepared
// 199.png
.pn +1
for the costs and charges of such entertaining.
Carlyle, with picturesque efforts at recovering
something of that visit beyond the mere dry and
innutritious bones of dates, pictures that monarch
“a blustering, dissipated human figure, with a
kind of blackguard quality air, in cramoisy velvet,
or other uncertain texture, uncertain cut, with
much plumage and fringing; amid numerous
other noisy figures of the like; riding abroad with
hawks; talking noisy nonsense; tearing out the
bowels of St. Edmundsbury Convent (its larders,
namely, and cellars) in the most ruinous way.”
And when at last he went his ways, and the
Abbot expected something kingly, he merely left
a handsome silk cloak for St. Edmund, or rather,
pretended to leave it, for one of his retinue
borrowed it, “and we,” says Jocelin, or Carlyle
for him, “never got sight of it again.” And all
else the King gave was “one shilling and one
penny, to say a mass for him; and so departed—like
a shabby Lackland as he was! Thirteen
pence sterling! this was what the Convent got
from Lackland, for all the victuals he and his had
made away with. We, of course, said our mass
for him, having covenanted to do it—but let
impartial posterity judge with what degree of
fervour!”
The memory of King John’s hungry hordes
and his shabby thirteen pence lingered at Bury,
and it must have been with a peculiar satisfaction
that the Abbot saw assembled at the high altar of
his church the representative concourse of Barons
// 200.png
.pn +1
who, on St. Edmund’s Day, 1214, swore to obtain
from the King that Magna Charta which they
did actually wring unwillingly from him in the
following year.
Royal visits continued until the time of
Henry VI., who held a Parliament here, but all
the glories of the place are gone, and are only
dimly perceived amid the mouldering ruins and
damp churchyard walks that alone are left. The
spot where the liberties of the English people
were sworn to be upheld is accurst by the memory
of how, three hundred years later, in the Marian
persecution, twelve martyrs suffered at the stake
for liberty of religious thought
.sp 4
.h2
XXIX
.sp 2
.ni
A great open space stretches outside the boundary
walls of the old Abbey precincts. Here, on “Angel
Hill,” as it is called, Bury fair was held in days
of old. It was no mere rustic saturnalia, but a
fashionable institution, and lasted a fortnight. A
one-day fair still held annually, on September 21st,
is the sole relic of this once important event,
famous not only for the business, but also for the
matrimonial matches concluded there.
.pi
The “Angel,” a dyspeptic and gloomy-looking
house of huge proportions and sad-coloured brick,
faces this wide, empty space, and adds a quite
// 201.png
.pn +1
// 202.png
.pn +1
// 203.png
.pn +1
unnecessary emphasis to its dulness. There was
an inn of the same name here so early as 1452,
neighboured by others, but in 1779 the whole of
the buildings on this side were removed and the
present row erected. No one would suspect from
the commonplace exterior of the “Angel” that
its great cellars are of mediæval date, and comprised
of groined crypts; but they do not redeem
the general aspect of the building, and we do not
look upon the “Angel” with interest because
it figures in the Pickwick Papers, but only in
surprise that Dickens should have thought it
worth mention. He did so mention it because
the “Angel” was the principal coaching-inn of
the town. There was—indeed, there still is—the
“Suffolk” hotel, but to and from the “Angel” came
and went the Norwich Mail and the best of the
post-chaise traffic. In the days when “every
gentleman visited London at least once in his
lifetime,” the house may by dint of much business
have worn a cheery look; but now that almost
every one comes up to town by rail many times
a year, the place has the air of a public institution
of the hospital or infirmary order. Looking
upon this scene, the proverbial slowness of the
Bury coaches recurs to the stranger, who remembers
that old story of a pedestrian walking
from Newmarket and overtaking—not being overtaken
by—the stage. The coachman offered him
a lift. “No, thank you,” said he; “I’m in a
hurry to-day,” and soon disappeared in advance
of the lumbering conveyance.
// 204.png
.pn +1
.if h
.il fn=i181.jpg w=600px id=i181
.ca
“ANGEL HILL,” BURY ST. EDMUNDS.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: “ANGEL HILL,” BURY ST. EDMUNDS.]
.sp 2
.if-
One never thoroughly realises the full meaning
of the word “respectable” until the acquaintance
of Bury St. Edmunds is made. Respectability
squats heavily upon the place and is incarnated
on every flat-faced house-front, twinkles from
every matutinally polished brass door-knocker, is
seen down every dull street vista, and dogs your
footsteps into the Abbey grounds, where the respectable
burgesses lie in their respectable graves,
in hopes of a Heaven planned on respectable and
exclusive lines. Even the old abbots and monks
are robbed of their historic glamour and are
respectable likewise—and by that same token
commonplace. It is a respectable landscape, too,
upon whose flat suave fields you look from the
higher streets of the town; flat and featureless,
good for the husbandman, but, lacking even the
dropsical, water-logged interest of the Fens, the
very negation of the picturesque. In Defoe’s
time it was equally respectable, as he naïvely
tells us. “The beauty of this town,” he says,
“consists in the number of gentry who dwell in
and near it, the polite conversation among them,
the affluence and plenty they live in, and the
pleasant country they have to go abroad in.”
How exquisitely fragrant of snobbishness!
.sp 4
.h2
XXX
.sp 2
.ni
The ditchwater-dull town of Bury comes to an
end with Northgate Street and its continuation of
// 205.png
.pn +1
“Out-Northgate”; past the curious railway station
built in the Jacobean style, and presenting an odd
likeness to some ancient mansion of the Hatfield
House type, through whose centre a railway has
been driven, leaving only the wings standing.
Everything is on the largest scale: broad roads,
with few people in them; great brick railway
bridge over them; tall cupola’d towers of the
station looking down upon them, and roomy
houses facing them. Resultant emptiness and
chilly vastness, infinitely uncomfortable and
unhomely.
.pi
At the end of Out-Northgate, looking upon
the footpath, are the shattered remains of St.
Saviour’s Hospital, very small and unobtrusive.
It is possible to stand here the livelong day and
challenge the passers-by with questions about this
old ruin, and to find when day is done that a
monumental ignorance prevails upon the subject.
Yet it is an historic place, for it was here
that, according to tradition, the good Duke
Humphrey of Gloucester was found strangled
in 1446.
At the “Toll-house” inn the road forks, continuing
on the right to Fornham St. Martin and
Thetford along the dullest of roads. Away to the
left hand is Fornham St. Geneviève, the scene of
the obscure Battle of Fornham, fought in 1173.
That was a short-lived rebellion crushed here in
that year at the passage of the little river Lark.
The aggrieved Earl of Leicester, striving against
Henry II. and flying the country, had returned
// 206.png
.pn +1
with an army of Flamand mercenaries, and, marching
across country, made for St. Edmundsbury.
He had come thus far when he was met by a
strong force opposing any further advance, and
completely routed near the church. It remained
for modern times to discover the bodies of the
many slain on this occasion. A hoary and decayed
ash-tree that from time immemorial had grown at
the crest of a great mound was being demolished,
when at its roots the awe-struck countrymen uncovered
a number of skeletons neatly arranged
in a circle, one above the other; and somewhere
about the same time a gold ring of antique
design, thought to have belonged to the Countess
of Leicester, was fished up from the river-bed,
together with relics of the pots and pans of that
overwhelmed host, and some Henry II. pennies
that those slaughtered men-at-arms had doubtless
hoped to expend in long drinks at Bury, after the
hoped-for victory was won. The ancient church
of Fornham St. Geneviève was burned down,
June 24th, 1782, through the extraordinary accident
of a man shooting at jackdaws and firing
into the thatched roof. The ruins stand in Fornham
Park, and fill the humble office of helping
to support a water-tank.
Ingham church, beside the road on to
Thetford, is highly uninteresting, and the few
wayside cottages commonplace. Away to the left,
out of sight, is Culford Park, seat of Earl
Cadogan, exploiter of Chelsea in these days and
recipient of fabulous sums of “unearned increment”
// 207.png
.pn +1
in the shape of ground-rents. Two miles
onward from Ingham, the dozen cottages of the
hamlet called Seven Hills dot the lonely road
at short intervals, and behind them is the long
line of the seven prehistoric sepulchral mounds
that stand sponsors for this modern settlement.
At Rymer Point, a little distance onward, we
touch upon the broad acres of the Duke of
Grafton’s estate of Euston, and presently come
into the village of Barnham. Beyond the village
the battered remains of the old “Franchise
Cross,” which once marked the boundary of the
Liberty of St. Edmund, stand by the way, and
still mark the limits of Thetford and Barnham
parishes. None is sufficiently humble to do that
cross reverence nowadays, but in the old times,
when it was protected by a specific proclamation
by the Abbot of Bury, that all who injured it
would be anathematised and cursed with the
fires of Hell, this old landmark was dealt
gently with.
It is from here at Barnham that the Icknield
Way can with little difficulty be reached and
traced into Thetford. To find it, we must turn
to the left in Barnham Street, and, passing
the little railway station, pursue the cross-road
that leads for a mile along open commons to
where the boundary of the Elveden estate is
marked by one of Lord Iveagh’s new lodges.
Just short of this lodge is the Icknield Way, a
green track crossing the road at right angles
on the skirts of a dark wood of fir-trees. Here
// 208.png
.pn +1
the boundaries of the two parishes of Barnham
and Elveden march together, the Way itself the
dividing line. It is still a very noticeable grassy
track, but has for centuries been disused as a
public road. It was used by the cattle-drovers,
who to the last favoured the prehistoric tracks
of the country, and thus avoided the payment
of tolls levied along the turnpikes. Their flocks
and herds were great features of old wayside
life, until the cattle-trucks of quick railway
transport in modern times destroyed the drovers’
business.
Very few of the country folk know this as the
Icknield Way, and not a great number have
ever heard of it as the drove-road, but the cross-roads
are known in all the neighbourhood by
the little turfy mound called “Marman’s Grave,”
traditionally the burial-place of a suicide in those
uncharitable old times when the midnight burial
without Christian rites, and with a stake driven
through the body, was the world’s last act of
injustice towards those poor despairing souls
whom cruel circumstance had tortured beyond
endurance. Who the unhappy “Marman” was,
and when or why he gladly left an existence so
hateful to him that he could even contemplate
with equanimity that post-mortem indignity of
a stake through his vitals, we shall never know,
and the little stone post cresting his grave tells
us nothing, for although it looks like some
simple memorial of him, its sole inscription, the
letters “B” and “E,” give no clue in his
// 209.png
.pn +1
direction, for they only mark the respective
bounds of Barnham and Elveden.
.if h
.il fn=i189.jpg w=600px id=i189
.ca
MARMAN’S GRAVE.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: MARMAN’S GRAVE.]
.sp 2
.if-
The Way reaches Thetford in another two
miles, across the heath. Its course lay athwart
the present road from Barnham, into the town,
just where the gasworks stand, in the outskirts.
But not only those far-off Icenians came
this way, where those unromantic gasometers
scent the heath and stop up the immemorial
track: for this portion of the Way remained
the chief, if, indeed, not the only, entrance into
Thetford until the close of the seventeenth
century, when the river Ouse was first bridged
along the line of the main road from Elveden.
// 210.png
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2
XXXI
.sp 2
.if h
.il fn=i190.jpg w=555px id=i190
.ca
AVENUE NEAR NEWMARKET.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: AVENUE NEAR NEWMARKET.]
.if-
.sp 2
.ni
Having now disposed of the loop road to Thetford
through Bury, we are free to take the main
route from Newmarket, by Barton Mills and
Elveden. It is a wilder and a lonelier, but yet
not a dull road, like that just traversed.
// 211.png
.pn +1
.pi
Once beyond the long line of trainers’ houses
and stables, fringing the road as far as the
entrance to Chippenham Park, the heaths that
surround Newmarket begin again and plunge the
explorer once more into unsheltered wilds. It
is after a sun-stricken, wind-swept, or rain-beaten
course of these that the mile-long elm
avenue leading to the Kennett stream, and the
Red Lodge beyond it, comes so welcome. There
is surely no more beautiful avenue in the
kingdom than this, whose trees interlace their
branches overhead in the shape of a true Gothic
arch, and really form that similitude to a
cathedral nave of which we often hear but in
avenues so very, very rarely see.
At the crossing of the little Kennett we
finally leave Cambridgeshire and come into
Suffolk. On the Suffolk side stands the “Red
Lodge” inn, a solitary old house on the heaths
that again resume, and continue until the chalk
is changed for a gravelly soil at the summit
of the rise called Chalk Hill. It is a lonelier
road now than ever it had been in all the
centuries between the Middle Ages and the dawn
of the railway era. Railways at one blow took
not only the passenger traffic, but the carriage
of goods and minerals; and the cattle and
sheep once driven in hundreds of thousands
along the highways and byways began to be
despatched in cattle-trucks.
We cannot fully realise this olden state of
the roads, but we can make an effort towards
// 212.png
.pn +1
it: can project ourselves into the seventeenth
century, and see and hear the droves of
turkeys, five hundred in each, come gobbling and
bubbling, in the manner peculiar to turkeys, all
the way from the farmyards to the London
markets. Can also watch in imagination the
waddling march of the thousands of geese bred
on these commons, and sent hissing and snapping
down this long course of a hundred miles to
celebrate the September feast of St. Michael on
many a metropolitan dinner-table. Alas, poor
Michaelmas geese! Alas, too, for the Christmas
geese! but they went more gloriously to
martyrdom, being carried all the way instead
of driven. The reason for this was that the
muddy roads of late autumn and early winter
were too soft and sticky for their feet, and so
they rode to town in the “goose-cart,” a four-storeyed
conveyance as Defoe tells us, “with
two horses abreast, like a coach, so quartering
the road for the ease of the gentry that thus ride.”
A neglected item of information, from a local
newspaper of the time, helps the imagination in
later, but still forgotten, things. Thus we read
of a village on the Ipswich route from London to
Norwich: “In the last droving season, 1845, the
landlord of the ‘Bird in Hand,’ Tasburgh, housed
9,300 beasts. He purchased for their consumption
and for horses, etc., fifty tons of hay; but in the
following year, owing to the opening of the
Norfolk Railway, only twelve beasts were taken
in, and only 8½ cwt. of hay was wanted.”
// 213.png
.pn +1
Flat lands, under cultivation, bring us from
this point to the river Lark, at Barton Mills,
whose church tower, with that of Mildenhall, a
mile away, now begins to puzzle the stranger.
The village of Barton Mills, lying directly on the
road, is a kind of preface to, or outpost of, Mildenhall,
a town placed on an out-of-the-way loop
road, and never seen by those who make straight
for Thetford. But we, at any rate, will see it,
coming to this backwater of life along a flat road
that doubles on itself and winds artfully amid a
maze of lazy rills and brimming ditches, covered
with an unbroken surface of duckweed. The
name of Mildenhall suggests mildew, and although
there be nothing in its origin to indicate anything
of the kind, it is indeed set down in a fine damp
situation, on the very edge of the sodden Fens.
Mildenhall’s characteristic trees are the black
poplar and the willow, both water-loving species.
Mildenhall suffices to itself, and it is well it can
so compass a full-orbed life, for if this solitary
little town were dependent in any way upon
outside existence for protection against ennui, that
would be a maimed existence its burgesses would
lead. It stands at the end of a branch line from
Cambridge, and on the Lark Navigation, and has
an air of enduring the railway as an interloping
enterprise, while regarding the canal with a
benevolent interest. The busy flour-mills, the
gas-works, and the oil-cake stores that cluster
round the canal wharf support this self-sufficing
aspect, and the grave majesty of the old houses
// 214.png
.pn +1
in and near the market place, overlooked by the
noble tower of the cathedral-like parish church,
supply the last touch of satisfied independence.
But the town takes a kindly interest in the
chance stranger whom good roads and a bicycle
do occasionally bring, in summer-time; and the
artist who sits down on the pavement to sketch
the picturesque grouping of the curious old
wooden market cross with the church tower is
sure of the courteous offer of a chair from some
polite shopkeeper.
Hard by is the old manor-house. The church,
whose great size has already been remarked, has
the tombs of Norths and Bunburys, who have
lived and died there, with that of a fifteenth-century
Lord Mayor of London, a native of
Barton Mills, and named from his birthplace,
Henry de Barton, who was the first to see that
London was lighted by night.
Mildenhall church is kindred in spirit with
the town. One of the finest Perpendicular buildings
in the county, it has a metropolitan aspect,
an air of over-lordship above the villages far and
near that is not a little striking.
.if h
.il fn=i195.jpg w=600px id=i195
.ca
MILDENHALL.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: MILDENHALL.]
.sp 2
.if-
Even here, at Mildenhall, the shadow of the
second Boer War has rested, for a brass tablet on
a wall in the church records simply how natives
of the town laid down their lives for England on
that alien soil. Thus on the bones of the English
is the Empire reared, and there be few among the
rural churches of this mother-land of ours that do
not record some such sacrifice, for the army of
// 215.png
.pn +1
// 216.png
.pn +1
// 217.png
.pn +1
250,000 men came from the highways and byways,
and few were the families, rich or poor, that had
not the keenest personal interest in the struggle
which newspaper lies and contradictions, and the
grossest political jealousies conspired to render
inglorious in report and speech. Those soldiers
were, perhaps, commonplace enough in their
everyday lives, but these simple records, and the
many other such throughout the country, elevate
them to the status of martyrs in a cause, beside
whom the little peddlers in votes seem mean and
sordid indeed. But we must return to Barton and
make for Thetford, and since we cannot reform
the politicians, may e’en leave them alone
.sp 4
.h2
XXXII
.sp 2
.ni
The sinuous road out of Barton Mills is one of
the chief beauty-spots of all these one hundred
and thirty miles to Cromer. Nowhere is a more
curving and undecided main road than this, at
the crossing of the little river Lark, and few
have so great a charm. Here, close by that old
roadside inn, the “Bull,” stand the flour-mills
that continue to give a meaning to the old
place-name, and past them flows that fishful
river, along a reach densely shaded by poplars
and willows. Graceful plantations line the road
and stud the marshy ground that presently gives
place again to mile upon mile of heath.
.pi
Over seven miles of heather and bracken lead
// 218.png
.pn +1
to Elveden, said by Fox, more than a century
ago, to have been the best-stocked sporting estate,
for its size, in the kingdom. The wayfarer of the
present day can honestly re-echo the opinion of
that statesman, for the pheasants swarm. Even
upon the highway, as the cyclist passes, instead of
scurrying away, they come out of the hedges and
stare after him, impudently, as though they alone
have a right here. To the pedestrian they are
rather embarrassing, following to heel like dogs.
They are so used to being handled that they take
every man-person for a keeper or food-distributer,
and with the inducement of a pocketful of maize,
judiciously distributed, they could no doubt be
induced to follow one into Thetford.
Those whose business it is to look after the
game at Elveden—or “Elden,” as the country
people call it—are legion. Elveden is, in fact,
maintained by Lord Iveagh, just as it has always
been, but now still more strictly, for sport, and
here along the white ribbon of the road, or across
the purple heaths, you may, in due season, see the
“sportsmen” and the beaters setting forth in the
morning to slay by wholesale, or in the evening
returning, their lust for death and destruction
sated for the day. It is undoubtedly a large
question, but to the present writer it seems that
the real sporting era was when the gunner spent
a long day tramping the coverts, the turnip-fields,
or the stubble, and sought his quarry with
the hunter’s skill, rather than waiting for it to
be driven to him.
// 219.png
.pn +1
.if h
.il fn=i199.jpg w=600px id=i199
.ca
BARTON MILLS.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: BARTON MILLS.]
.sp 2
.if-
// 220.png
.pn +1
// 221.png
.pn +1
Elveden has seen a good many changes in the
last hundred years or so. Admiral Viscount
Keppel, who purchased the property in 1768,
and died in 1786, left it to the fourth Earl of
Albemarle, and here was born in 1799, in the
old Hall, rebuilt, or rather, remodelled, in 1870,
that tough one of that tough and long-lived
race of Keppels, George Thomas, the sixth Earl,
who as a boy of sixteen fought at Waterloo, and
succeeding his elder brother in the title in 1851,
died in 1891. It was somewhere about the year
of Waterloo that difficulties of sorts befell the
Keppels, and Elveden then passed out of their
hands into those of the Newtons, an undistinguished
family, who held the estate until 1863,
when it was purchased by the Maharajah Duleep
Singh, and thus became associated with the
romance of that dispossessed ruler of Lahore.
Imperial interests in India, and in greater
measure the fears of the statesmen of that time,
dealt harshly with that Oriental prince; excluded
him from his ancestral honours, and made him
a life-long stranger to his own people, and to
the land of his birth. In exchange for his native
rule and glorious sunshine, he was to have an
annuity of “not less than £40,000 and not
more than £50,000,” for “himself, his family,
and dependents,” with domicile in our isle of
fogs and mists. How ill the Government kept
faith with him may be judged when it is stated
that he never at any time received more than
£25,000 a year.
// 222.png
.pn +1
Strange to say, he took kindly to our ways,
and settled down here as a country gentleman.
With the general reduction of rents, and the
heavy outlays he had made upon the reconstruction
of Elveden Hall, he eventually found
it necessary to have recourse to the India Office,
for immediate financial aid. As a result, his
income was reduced to an annual £12,000.
The Maharajah had early embraced Christianity,
and in 1864, in Egypt, had married Miss Bamba
Müller. In 1882, after he had vainly striven to
bring the Government to a performance of the
original compact, and had fruitlessly petitioned
Parliament to that end, he sailed for India, but
was refused permission to enter. At Aden, from
political motives, and also, we may suppose,
from indignation at the breach of faith he had
experienced, he abjured Christianity, and flung
himself into the arms of Russia. Thence he
retired to Paris. A few years later he re-embraced
the Christian religion, and made his peace
personally with Queen Victoria, at Grasse. He
died at Paris, in 1893, in his fifty-sixth year.
With that event, the Elveden estate again
changed hands, being purchased by Lord Iveagh,
then newly raised to the Peerage. He had been
disappointed in his earlier purchase of Savernake
from the Marquis of Ailesbury, the Courts setting
the bargain aside and refusing sanction for the
property being alienated from the Bruce family.
.if h
.il fn=i203.jpg w=600px id=i203
.ca
ELVEDEN.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: ELVEDEN.]
.sp 2
.if-
Since then, the village of Elveden has been
transformed. It is still a village, placed like a
// 223.png
.pn +1
settlement in a wild, uncultivated country, with
the primeval heath visible from every cottage
door, but the black flint cottages have given place
everywhere to red brick, and it now lives in the
memory of the passing motorist fleeting the lonely
road at an illegal thirty miles an hour as a red
streak on a brown plain of moorland. The red
brick is, no doubt, very smart, but it is distinctly
an alien material here, and altogether out of
place. It would, indeed, in any earlier period
than this of cheap transport facilities, have been
impossible, for red bricks are not a local manufacture
and the cost of bringing them here would
in other times have been altogether prohibitive.
The vanished black-flint buildings, constructed of
the material found locally, were instinct with the
spirit of the place, and looked as though they had
grown out of the soil, and were a part of the land.
// 224.png
.pn +1
To a less hurried passenger than a motorist
there is much food for reflection in the changed
aspect of the village; but reflection is all that
will be fed here, for to find a wayside hostelry
is a difficult quest, and the traveller who comes,
hungry and thirsty, perhaps wet through, from
the many miles of wild, inhospitable heath on
either side, is like to go on until he reaches
Barton Mills or Thetford before he obtains shelter
and refreshment, unless, indeed, he would be
content with an obscure beerhouse off the road.
To suggest a bottle of Guinness’s genuine Dublin
brew may, for all one knows, be petit treason
at Elveden, and the villagers must, possibly,
see to it, lest they grow stout—and allusive!
It is a handsome, although inhospitable village
that has grown up at the bidding of the master
of millions whose coroneted “I” stares you out of
countenance from every red-brick cottage. Architectural
taste is evident in the schools, the beautiful
estate office, the village hall, the post office,
and the village in general. All around, on the
warrens, the waterless hills are dotted with wells,
and the whole estate provided with the most exquisitely
steam-rolled roads, and cared for as no one
ever could have cared for it before. Yet it is not
unpleasing to one who has experienced the courtesy
of the Maharajah in years bygone to find that the
memory of the “Black Prince,” as he was here
affectionately known, is still cherished at Elveden,
even though it is now owned by the, as far as mere
lucre goes, more princely prince of black beer.
// 225.png
.pn +1
Elveden Park forms one side of the village
street, and through the trees the golden glitter
of pinnacles can be seen, leading the stranger to
think his eyes have rested on the Hall. But those
are merely the stables, where the horses are housed
in a manner that might almost have contented
Heliogabalus. The stables at Sandringham are
not so lavish, but then, of course, they belong
merely to the King. The Hall itself is not
externally so flamboyant, and is in essentials
the staid Italian Renaissance of some years ago.
But once within, it is a gorgeous display of wealth
rejoicing in itself and attempting feats resembling
the painting of the lily and the gilding of refined
gold. You pass from an oak-panelled entrance
hall, with doors barbarically sheathed in glittering
patterned metal and flanked by passages whose
coved ceilings are covered with Renaissance
designs in raised plaster, into a domed central
hall of pure white marble, designed in the Indian
style and most elaborately carved and fretted in
that extravagant Oriental taste. It is like coming
from the Hotel Metropole into a first-class mausoleum,
and when you enter you cannot help thinking
you are dead and buried and laid to rest in
an inferior copy of the Taj Mahal. This extravagant
feature, newly completed, is said to have
cost £10,000.
As one leaves the Park the lions of Lahore
are noticed, still decorating the stone gateways.
Near by is Elveden church, the only remaining
vestige of the old village: a humble little place,
// 226.png
.pn +1
with mural monument and medallion portrait of
Admiral Keppel and an east window to the memory
of the Maharajah Duleep Singh and Bamba, his
wife.
So we will leave Elveden, cut adrift, save in
this sole respect, from old times. Useless to look
for the “Hare and Hounds” posting-house, where
the post-chaises changed horses, and equally fruitless
to seek the old toll-house, the scene on October 25th,
1825, of an accident to the “Magnet” coach, on
its way from London to Norwich, when the leaders
shied as they were passing through the gate and
the coach was upset, with the result that an
outside passenger, a widow from Hargham, was
killed.
.sp 4
.h2
XXXIII
.sp 2
.ni
The 3¾ miles onwards to Thetford were known
and dreaded in the old days as “Thetford Heath.”
Elveden Gap, passed on the way, is the name of
a clump of firs, marking where the boundaries
of estates and parishes run. Beyond it stretches
the lonely heath. Pollard, in his terrifying print
of the “Norwich Mail in a Thunderstorm,” makes
this the scene of a very dramatic picture, with the
lightning horribly forky and the rain very slanty
and penetrating. Thetford Heath was an ill place
on such an occasion; but the elements were not
the chiefest of its dangers, which in any year from
mediæval times until modern were rather to be
expected at the hands of man.
// 227.png
.pn +1
.pi
.if h
.il fn=i207.jpg w=600px id=i207
.ca
ELVEDEN GAP.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: ELVEDEN GAP.]
.sp 2
.if-
There still exists in the old church of St. George
Colegate, Norwich, a tragical epitaph to the memory
of a traveller slain on these wild wastes in those
dangerous times. It is engraved on a ledger-stone
forming a part of the flooring at the west end of
the nave, and is hidden from the gaze of the casual
visitor only by the matting. A skull and cross-bones
are placed above the inscription, which
runs:—
.pm quote-centered-start
“Here Lyeth y^e Body of Mr. Bryant Lewis, who
was Barbarously Murdered upon y^e Heath,
near Thetford, Sep. y^e 13th, 1698.
Fifteen wide wounds this stone veils from thine eyes,
But Reader, Hark! their voice doth pierce the skyes.
Vengeance! cried Abel’s blood, ’gainst cursed Cain,
But better things spake Christ when He was Slayn
Both, both, cries Lewis ’gainst his bar’brous foe,
Blood, Lord, for Blood, but save his soul from woe.
Thou shalt do no murder (Exodus xx. 13).
Whoso sheddeth man’s blood, by man shall his blood be shed.
For in y^e image of God made He man (Genesis ix. 6).”
.pm quote-centered-end
// 228.png
.pn +1
The register of St. George’s, which records the
burial of the unfortunate Bryant Lewis on September
19th, six days following the murder, is at
curious variance with the epitaph, for it makes the
date 1697.
We do not hear anything of the circumstances
under which Bryant Lewis was killed, nor does it
appear that his murderers were ever caught.
Thetford must have been a welcome sight to
the timorous travellers of old, and surely no place
of pilgrimage was hailed with more delight than
that with which they first glimpsed the tower of
St. Mary’s and the outlying houses of the Suffolk
suburb of the town.
One comes downhill into Thetford: down into
the valley of the Thet and Lesser Ouse, which
divide the county of Suffolk and the land of the
Norfolk Dumplings. The flint-towered church
that thus heralds the town is the oldest of the
remaining three, and was severely handled in
Cromwellian times, when it was converted for a
while into a stable. It had, until 1850, a thatched
roof. Here the road from Bury St. Edmunds falls
in, a junction of roads still known by some of the
older generation as “Cockpit Corner,” a name that
marks the site of the cockpit which stood here in
those brutal days of yore and moved a letter-writer
of 1785 to say, “I believe most of the young Thetford
people are dissipated, simple, ignorant young
men (what a nice ‘derangement of epitaphs’!)
that mind nothing but the low and insipid sport
of cock-fighting.” From this point, into the town
// 229.png
.pn +1
across the Town Bridge, the road narrows amazingly,
and, arrived at the “Bell” inn, and St. Peter’s
Church, it wears almost the appearance of a
lane
.sp 4
.h2
XXXIV
.sp 2
.ni
The situation of Thetford and the history of the
roads by which it is approached make an interesting
subject of enquiry. All ancient accounts of
Thetford agree in describing it as from the earliest
times a place of great importance—a strongly
fortified post and a seat of government.
.pi
The first mention of Thetford takes us back to
the year 575, when Uffa, first King of the East
Angles, made this his capital city, and called it
“Theotford,” by that name describing the situation
of the place, lying secure against approach from
the Suffolk side, behind a network of difficult
fords across the marshes and many branches of
the confluent rivers we now call the Ouse and
Thet. Others had been here before him, but all
that earlier story of Thetford is purely speculative.
That it had an earlier history and was from very
remote times a fortified post, the great prehistoric
earthworks which guard the passage of the river
amply prove. By whom, or by what race they
were reared, who shall tell? But certainly Uffa
and his Saxons found them here. The Romans,
still earlier, had been astonished by them, but
made haste to adapt the huge mounds to their
own purposes. For the Romans were everywhere,
// 230.png
.pn +1
and to acknowledge their presence here it is not
necessary to identify this as the Sitomagus of the
“Itineraries.” Camden considered Thetford to be
identical with that Roman station, and thought
the name derived from Sit or Thet, and magus,
a great city; and many have been content to
follow him, “the common sun whereat our modern
writers have all lighted their little torches.” Thus
Bishop Nicholson, strong in satire upon Camden’s
copyists; but more modern writers have made
flambeaux of their very own, and by the light of
them have groped about to some sort of inconclusive
opinion that Sitomagus was probably at
Dunwich, on the Suffolk coast.
Thetford was at the very centre of the East
Anglian realm, and therefore a place of great
security. Thus it was that the Royal Mint was
early established here and so continued, through
the history of this one of the seven kingdoms.
For two hundred and sixty-three years East
Anglia and England in general remained under
Saxon rule. The kinglets were always at war with
one another, and their boundaries, and even the
numbers of their kingdoms, were ever changing,
but it was not until 838 that an alien danger
threatened them. It was in this year that the
Danes first invaded the country, and were defeated
at Rushford Heath. With that decisive result the
land was left in peace for twenty-seven years.
In the meanwhile that most famous and most
legendary East Anglian Christian king, the sainted
Edmund, had succeeded to the throne, and had
// 231.png
.pn +1
reigned ten years when the terrible invasion of
866 befell. Then was fought the battle of Snarehill,
which lasted for several days, and whose
bloody memories were so vivid, even a hundred and
fifty-four years later, that the Abbot of St.
Edmundsbury founded a monastery on the spot,
in honour of the thousands who fell on both
sides. This, the Battle Abbey of its era, was in
Henry VIII.’s time granted to Sir Richard Fulmerstone.
The “Place” farm, an ecclesiastical
building now used as a barn, and a training-stable
for horses now occupy the site of what
is locally called “The Nunnery.”
The Battle of Snarehill was not conclusive.
The invading Danes certainly occupied the town
for the winter, but they would appear to have
afterwards retired, and it was not until 870 that
the crowning disaster came. In the spring of
that year the Danes again returned, destroyed
Thetford, and utterly defeated the army Edmund
had drawn from every nook and corner of his
kingdom. Edmund himself did not fall in that
tremendous slaughter, but met with his martyrdom,
as we have already seen, at Hoxne, some twenty
miles away.
All over England the Danish invasion then
spread. In Wessex even, where the reign of
Alfred then began, that heroic king was for a
time overborne by the heathen hordes; while
Eastern England, with but few intervals, was
for many years subject to fire and sword. Only
the payment of a heavy tribute kept these pirates
// 232.png
.pn +1
away. When at length a number of Danish settlements
had been made and the two races at last
had begun to forget the bygone years, the mad
folly of that King of All England, whom men
called Ethelred “the Unready,” devised in 1002,
on November 14th, the feast of St. Brice, a
general massacre of those Danish settlers. It
was no worse measure than, time and again, those
Northern foes had meted out to the Saxon people;
but the folly was criminal, if the deed was not,
for from those shores of Denmark came avenging
hosts with Sweyn at their head. It was almost
two years before he came, but with his advent
the old miseries began to be re-enacted. Norwich
was burnt, and Thetford felt the full force of his
onslaught. But for the military genius of one
Ulfcytel, himself the owner of a Danish name,
but acting as the bulwark of East Anglia, Sweyn
would at once have marched through the land.
Ulfcytel, however, drove him back to his ships,
and it was not until 1010 that he returned, and,
defeating the still active Ulfcytel at the battle
of Ringmere, burnt Thetford again to the ground.
Elsewhere in England Sweyn was even more
successful, and penetrating to Winchester and
Bath, was proclaimed King in London in 1013.
That same year he died and was succeeded by that
Canute, who in the moral story of the flattering
courtiers and the advancing tide has been made
hateful in every elementary schoolroom. It was
in battle with Canute in 1016, at Ashingdon, in
South Essex, the valiant Ulfcytel at last fell.
// 233.png
.pn +1
With Canute’s accession, however, the early
blood-dyed history of Thetford reached its last
page, and when the Saxon line of kings was
restored with Edward the Confessor in 1041, the
oft-burned town numbered 944 burgesses.
.if h
.il fn=i213.jpg w=600px id=i213
.ca
GATEWAY, THETFORD PRIORY.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: GATEWAY, THETFORD PRIORY.]
.sp 2
.if-
From that time, with but one short period in
the reign of William the Conqueror, the town
rapidly grew in importance. It became the site
of the East Anglian bishopric in 1075, when the
see was removed from Elmham, and although that
much-moved Bishop’s chair was again removed, to
Norwich, nineteen years later, Thetford suffered
little from that circumstance. If it ceased to be
// 234.png
.pn +1
technically a city, it was a great town and a very
stronghold of the Church. Although it has now
but three churches, it owned twenty, so late as the
time of Edward III., and the ruins of many of
them can still be traced, proving the truth of
those old records that tell of them. Seven were on
the Suffolk side. These we might call suburban,
but of them only that of St. Mary-the-Less is now
extant. Its big sister, St. Mary-the-Great, stood
adjoining the Grammar School, but only fragmentary
walls remain. This was converted by Bishop
Arfast into the cathedral of those nineteen years.
Elsewhere in and around the town the shattered
and shapeless walls of old-time ecclesiastical
buildings abound, and the ploughman who drives
his furrow across fields that were once streets,
turns up mediæval tiles with the lack of interest
that comes of constant use, or fervently damns
the occasional abbot’s sarcophagus that dints his
ploughshare.
With the Crusades Thetford declined in population
and fortune. Why, we do not know. It is
not reasonable to suppose that the people went off
in a body to fight the Paynim in the Holy Land.
But the monasteries remained in being. Like
the clinging ivy that flourishes even when the
tree it has ruined is dead, they continued until
Henry swept them away. They were four: that
monastery, founded to commemorate the battle
of Snarehill, which afterwards became a Benedictine
nunnery; the Abbey, or Priory, founded by
Roger Bigod in 1104; the Monastery of the Holy
// 235.png
.pn +1
Sepulchre, Earl Warren’s foundation of five years
later; and the Friary of St. Augustine, established
by John o’ Gaunt in 1387. Besides these were
numerous hospitals, together with the Manor
House and the King’s Palace, used by sovereigns
from Henry I. to James I.
The only approach to Thetford in very distant
times was doubtless by the Icknield Way, and for
many centuries later that ancient track continued
to be the chief road into and through the town on
to Larlingford, where the existing highway from
Thetford to Norwich falls into it. If we take up
the line of the Icknield Way where, on page 189,
we left it, we shall find it pointing straight through
the Gasworks to the three bridges that now span
the parallel stream of the Thet, a nameless intermediate
rivulet, and the Little Ouse. These are
(doubtless from the immediate neighbourhood of
what is even now called “the Nunnery”) known
as the “Nuns’ Bridges,” but one of them was
formerly known as “Incelland” Bridge, and in
that name we may perhaps find a distorted echo
of “Icknield.”
It is a pretty spot, and made romantic by its
ancient story. You find it by tacking round the
Gasworks, for which we need not claim any
romance, and thence by a group of melancholy
pines, where—at a point which was a junction of
roads before this short two hundred yards’ stretch
of the Way was stopped up—a mound marks the
site of “Chunk Harvey’s Grave.” One cannot
look upon this more or less tragical spot with
// 236.png
.pn +1
reverence, for Harvey’s grotesque name and the
discarded boots and battered tin cans of the town
that decorate his legendary resting-place forbid.
“Legendary” is written advisedly, for not the
most diligent of delvers into the past shall succeed
in reducing Chunk Harvey to cold dates and exact
records. But his story has a distinctly moral
tone, and may be recounted as a warning to any
would-be pirates now trembling on the brink of a
lawless life under the Jolly Roger. According,
then, to the received legend, Chunk Harvey was a
sea-rover who, by strict attention to his piratical
profession and by a prudent and saving disposition,
managed early in life to secure a large fortune.
He retired to Thetford, and might have become a
churchwarden and died in every circumstance of
comfortable piety had it not been for a former
acquaintance who had cut many a throat with
him in bygone days on the high seas, but now,
reduced to his last stiver, came tramping through
Thetford. By a cursed (or fortunate) chance, just
according to how your sympathies lie, this broken-down
bandit met his old comrade, and in the result
blackmailed him long and successfully until his
victim could endure it no more. When at last he
refused to be bled any longer, the man betrayed
him, and—to cut the story short—Chunk Harvey
was convicted and hanged. He was buried here,
amid the rejoicings of a virtuous populace, who—if
you like to share the children’s belief—were
granted a Bank holiday and wound up the
festivities with a display of fireworks.
// 237.png
.pn +1
.if h
.il fn=i217.jpg w=600px id=i217
.ca
THE “NUNS’ BRIDGES” ON THE\
ICKNIELD WAY, THETFORD.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: THE “NUNS’ BRIDGES” ON THE\
ICKNIELD WAY, THETFORD.]
.sp 2
.if-
// 238.png
.pn +1
// 239.png
.pn +1
A little stretch of common land leads on to
the “Nuns’ Bridges.” Thetford town is hidden
as you approach, by the dense trees of the Spring
Walk and by others on either side, growing
luxuriant by favour of the water, and thus forming
the strongest and the most grateful of contrasts
with Thetford’s situation amid wild heaths, bare
and treeless, or planted only with the melancholy
pine, and dotted here and there with gnarled
hawthorns.
When this, now a side route into Thetford,
was supplemented by that of the present main
road over the “St. Christopher’s,” or Town Bridge,
must be a matter of conjecture. We must not
suppose, because that bridge was built only in
1697, there was no bridge or road up to the river
and into the town before that time. Morden’s
map of Norfolk in 1695 does not mark one; but
it is incredible that there should have been no
direct communication across a not very broad
stream between these Suffolk suburbs and the
chief part of the town. On the other hand, the
fact that a ducking-stool was erected on the “Nuns’
Bridge” in 1578 would seem to prove that this
was certainly then the chief approach, for the
practice was to make the head-over-ears ducking
of the scolds and shrews as public an exhibition
of their shame as possible.
// 240.png
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2
XXXV
.sp 2
.ni
The most prominent hostelry at Thetford in
coaching days was the “Bell,” and it still occupies
that geographical pre-eminence, even though
its commercial importance has decayed. The
“Bell,” in fact, has never recovered from the
blow dealt it in 1846, when the coaches ceased
to run, and overhangs the narrow street, its great
courtyard a world too large for the diminished
traffic.
Lord Albemarle has a good deal to say of the
“Bell” in his book of reminiscences. As a young
man, travelling about 1810 between London and
Elveden Hall, then in the possession of his
family, he sometimes, in common with the sporting
youngsters of that age, had the opportunity
of driving the Mail for a stage or two. It was
not always, indeed, an opportunity desired by
the passenger who shared the box-seat with the
coachman, for those who sought that glorious
elevation, paying rather heavily for the privilege
in the form of a tip to the yard-porter who reserved
the seat and in a series of drinks to the
successive Jehus who drove, were, much more
often than is generally supposed, quite content to
let the coachman do the driving. Comparatively
few were ever to be found skilled in the difficult
art of guiding four horses, and not every box-seat
passenger was eager to “take the ribbons.” The
coachmen, on any quiet stretch of road, were
// 241.png
.pn +1
// 242.png
.pn +1
// 243.png
.pn +1
generally more keen to make the offer of “taking
’em for a bit” than their passengers to accept, for
those professional occupants of the box were, in
the well-known etiquette of coaching, always sure
of half a sovereign as a tip from the sportsman
who “took ’em,” and when, from sheer timidity,
their offer was not accepted, they were indignant,
especially if some one who would have “taken
’em,” and tipped accordingly, was elsewhere on
the coach. Under such harrowing circumstances
a coachman generally felt himself to be defrauded.
“What are you ’ere for, then?” asked such an one
of his box-seat passenger who had declined the
honour and glory—and the danger; and when,
after a halt for refreshment, the passengers resumed
their places, this one who would not have
distinction thrust upon him found his place taken
by a dashing fellow who, a few miles down the
road, landed them all into a ditch and most of
them into hospital.
.if h
.il fn=i221.jpg w=600px id=i221
.ca
THE “BELL INN,” THETFORD, AND\
ST. PETER’S CHURCH.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: THE “BELL INN,” THETFORD, AND\
ST. PETER’S CHURCH.]
.sp 2
.if-
But to return to the youthful Keppel. “At
the ‘Bell,’” he says, “I used to sit down to a
most sumptuous breakfast of eggs, buttered toast,
fried ham, etc., and all for love, and not money.
I was a prime favourite with the landlady, Betty
Radcliffe, so much so that for the many years that,
as man and boy, I frequented her hostelry, she
would never accept a sixpence from me. Betty
wore a high cap, like that in which Mrs. Gamp is
seen in Dickens’s novel, and a flaxen wig which
she appeared to have outgrown, for it ill-concealed
her grey hairs. Being the sole proprietress of
// 244.png
.pn +1
post-horses into Norfolk, she assumed an independent
demeanour and language, to which every
one was compelled to submit.”
Betty Radcliffe is still a Thetford legend, and
the tale is yet told how, when the Duke of York
was paying for his post-horses, on one of his visits
to a neighbouring squire, she jingled the coins in
her hand with a humorous air of satisfaction, and
said, “I may as well take a little of your money,
for I have been paying your father’s taxes for
many a long day.”
The church of St. Peter, adjoining the “Bell,”
is locally known as the “Black Church,” from the
more than usually dark colour of the flints of
which its tower is built. It is not so old a tower
as it looks, for it was built so lately as 1789, in
imitation of the then almost forgotten Gothic
style. The imitation, making due allowances, is
not so bad. The footpath here is so narrow that
a projecting buttress has been cut back to give
room to pass.
The older one grows, and the nearer to occupancy
of the churchyard, the less does one care
to frequent such places; and besides, those of
Thetford are of no great interest. But the
historian’s duty compels a search for the farcical
rhymed epitaph stated, in many collections, to
be “at Thetford.” It is—but read it for
yourself:—
.pm verse-start
My grandfather was buried here,
My cousin Jane, and two uncles dear;
My father perished with a mortification in his thighs,
My sister dropped down dead in the Minories.
// 245.png
.pn +1
But the reason why I am here, according to my thinking,
Is owing to my good living and hard drinking;
Therefore, good Christians, if you’d wish to live long,
Beware of drinking brandy, gin, or anything strong.
.pm verse-end
Many a pilgrim in search of such mortuary
extravagances has sought this; all of them sent
on a fool’s errand by the original wag who
invented it, and by the copyists of other people’s
collections who have performed the easy task of
copying without verifying. Thetfordians disclaim
it altogether.
Every traveller come to Thetford has dwelt at
length upon its mazy streets, and how infallibly
those who are not Thetford born lose themselves
in them and walk in circles. It is indeed difficult
to find one’s way about Thetford. A far-off echo
of the desperate old times, sounding across the
void of a thousand years, was the old name of
what is now called Guildhall Street. Until fifty
years ago it was still, as it had always been,
“Heathenman Street,” a title alluding to the
march of the pagan Danes; and I would the name
were restored, for romance is evident in that
old name.
It is down Guildhall Street, behind the
recently rebuilt Guildhall, that the old Friends’
Meeting House stands, in Cage Lane. That name
marks where the old lock-up, or “cage,” once
stood. The Meeting House, now threatened with
destruction, was in use by the Quaker community
of the town until about 1865. It was built in
1696, seven years after the time of persecution
// 246.png
.pn +1
had been brought to a close by the Toleration Act
of 1689. Those were humble days, and, newly
freed from persecution and imprisonment for the
mere act of meeting together, those early Dissenters
were probably thankful enough even for
this little cottage of one room. It is built of a
mixture of flint, brick, and chalk, and heavily
thatched. In common with almost every other
building of any considerable age in Thetford,
there may be found among those varied materials
large pieces of freestone, the spoils of the ancient
religious houses of the town. The Quakers are
a hard-headed, rather than a sentimental, body;
else they would not have abandoned this historic
cottage, which has since 1865 been used successively
by the Plymouth Brethren and the Salvation
Army, and is now ruinous.
Past the Guildhall, a street leads directly to
what was the gaol in those days, still regretted in
the town, when the Assizes were held alternately
at Thetford and Norwich. The gaol is now
merely a police-station. Thetford lost its Assizes
in 1833, its Parliamentary representation in 1868,
and all its old fairs have decayed; so that the
only excitement in the lives of the worthy burgesses
is when an itinerant circus pitches its tents
in the neighbourhood. The road-life between
Thetford and Norwich had its own picturesqueness
before 1833, for prisoners were conveyed in
waggons to be tried here or at Norwich, and
Attleborough March Fair, from being generally
held while the Assizes were in progress, was
// 247.png
.pn +1
popularly known as “Rogues’ Fair.” There were
sometimes in those days “maiden” Assizes at
Thetford, but the term had a different signification
from that it now bears. In those times a
“maiden” Assize was one of those exceptional
occasions when no one was condemned to death.
Things were not at the last so bad as in earlier
times, when the Manor Courts, the Ecclesiastical
Courts, and the Mayor’s Court were competent
to inflict the death penalty, but it was still a
barbaric age in 1824, when twenty-six prisoners
were condemned to death, some for sheep-stealing.
Thetford Gaol still remains, an appropriately
grim building of black flint, with representations
of fetters over the doors, together with the town
arms and an inscription stating that “This Gaol
was enlarg’d in the Year 1816.” Opposite is a
great brewery of old standing. It would be
pleasing to the teetotal interest to establish a
connection between the building of the brewery
and the enlarging of the gaol as cause and effect,
but it cannot be done.
This is the quaintest corner of old Thetford,
and abounds with inns. Among these is the sign
of the “Good Woman.” It is at the rear of the
row of houses of which the “Good Woman”
forms part that the most interesting thing in
Thetford is to be seen. This is the giant earthwork,
to which a passing reference has already
been made, the earthwork known as “Castle
Mound,” or, in a manner better befitting the
dignity of it, “Castle Hill.” It is not the tallest
// 248.png
.pn +1
of the mysterious tumps England has to show, for
it is but 100 feet in height, and its bigger brother,
“Silbury Hill,” on the Bath Road, is 70 feet
taller, but it rises more abruptly from the level,
and looks all its height, while Silbury Hill is
spread over a wider base and ascends more gently.
No one knows what race of men raised this
tremendous heap of chalk. They heaped it up,
undoubtedly, for purposes of defence, and as the
pilgrim painfully climbs its steep and now grassy
sides, principally on hands and knees, he is fain
to acknowledge that an ancient enemy seeking to
storm this stronghold would have had an almost
impossible task.
The Castle Hill stands on a considerable space,
its circumference measuring 984 feet. Three deep
grassy trenches and two steep ramparts guard the
foot of it, and the defenders at the summit found
shelter in the deep cup-like depression, resembling
the crater of a volcano. A bygone generation
planted a clump of trees in this hollow, and they
have now grown to noble and striking proportions.
There was never at any time any building on this
defensible earthwork, which was itself the “Castle.”
The place stands in a beautiful spot on the
eastern outskirts of the town, in the midst of noble
trees and luxuriant turf. Unlike the great
majority of the prehistoric earthworks noticed in
guide-books and in the learned papers of archæological
societies, it is generally interesting, and
appeals to the eyes even of those uninstructed in
archæology.
// 249.png
.pn +1
.if h
.il fn=i229.jpg w=600px id=i229
.ca
CASTLE HILL, THETFORD, IN 1848.
From an old print.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration:
CASTLE HILL, THETFORD, IN 1848.
From an old print.]
.sp 2
.if-
// 250.png
.pn +1
// 251.png
.pn +1
.if h
.il fn=i231.jpg w=600px id=i231
.ca
CASTLE HILL, THETFORD.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: CASTLE HILL, THETFORD.]
.sp 2
.if-
That the Castle Hill was built for defence
there can be no doubt, and its height, its steep
sides, and the defensive earthworks that describe
a rude half-circle around it give the measure
of the fear its unknown builders had of their
unknown enemy. They who reared these works
were terribly scared. That enemy was evidently
expected to come out of the south, for the
great mound stands on the northern side of the
rivers and marshes which then spread over all
the neighbouring flat meadows; and the horns
of the semicircular ditches and ramparts at that
time touched those kindly frontier waters. The
Icknield Way, already traced to the “Nuns’
Bridges,” came across that watery waste and
pursued its course into Norfolk under the
shoulder of the mysterious mound.
// 252.png
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2
XXXVI
.sp 2
.ni
I am quite sure that if any old Thetfordian
were permitted to return to his native town,
he would find it, by contrast with other times,
astonishingly dull. No badgering of Quakers,
no cock-fighting, no scold-ducking, and no more
bribery and corruption at Parliamentary elections—or
at least it is not done in the old
approved style, when at every inn you could
call for what you liked, get riotously, hilariously,
and finally dead, drunk, and have the cost of
the debauch chalked up to the Duke of Grafton
down at Euston, whose pocket-borough Thetford
was. Alas! the borough representation went, a
whole generation ago, and the town is merged
into a mere county division. Dull, sir! Why,
damme, yes. Not even an Assize and the
spectacle of a hanging in these days, and the
coaches and the post-chaises that used to awaken
the echoes of the streets at night are all resolved
into firewood. As for Thetford ever having been
a fashionable resort, the world certainly has
forgotten all about it, and when you hint it
was so, looks incredulous. But the Spring
Walk remains as a voucher for that short-lived
fashionable patronage. Most delightful of all
the roads and paths in and near Thetford, the
Spring Walk owes its existence to that hope of
erecting the town into an East Anglian rival
of Tunbridge Wells, Bath, or Cheltenham, which
// 253.png
.pn +1
was a feature of local history from the early
part of the eighteenth century until the first
quarter of the nineteenth had almost run its
course. That was a time when every locality
fortunate enough to possess waters impregnated
with iron or sulphur to the requisite degree of
nastiness strove desperately to attain the position
of a Spa. Relics of that old-time eagerness to
secure a share of the fortunes of Bath and other
well-established resorts of this kind are plentiful
all over England, and at most places where,
owing to subterranean complications, with horrible
chemical results, the water is not fit to drink,
you shall now find the neglected and decaying
Pump Houses and Spa Rooms then hastily built,
with the hope of attracting the fashionable
invalids and hypochondriacs of the day. It was
in most cases a hope doomed to disappointment,
for invalided fashion is gregarious, and then,
even more than now, loved to herd together,
to discuss symptoms and exchange scandal. Even
had it been of other mood, there was not,
a century ago, sufficient fashion to fully furnish
a tithe of those forlorn hopes; so that many
Spas of even supreme nastiness which should
otherwise have secured success, failed to attract
visitors in sufficient numbers to make the enterprise
remunerative.
.pi
The chalybeate waters of Thetford were known
so early as 1714, and were slightly tinged with
iron and moderately tonic. Arising from springs
on the north bank of the Upper Ouse, they were
// 254.png
.pn +1
in local repute long before the necessity arose
for every medical man to have his pet curative
resort, and might have remained obscure had
it not been for one Professor Accum, who, as
an early nineteenth-century boomster, began to
send patients to Thetford, long before that century
was out of its teens.
Thetford rose to the occasion. In 1818 the
Mayor at his own expense constructed a river-side
path leading to the “Spring House,” and
planted it with those plane-trees which have
grown into the delightful avenue that now forms
his best monument. In August of that year the
spring was opened to the “free and unrestricted
use of the poor,” and the sick, and large numbers
of all classes flocked to it. Still larger numbers
were attracted in 1819, when Professor Accum
published a work on the virtues of the Thetford
waters. Success seemed assured. The water was
even bottled and sent, carefully packed, to all
parts, as a panacea for dyspepsia; but it was
when these springs failed to cure ophthalmia,
rheumatism and broken bones, and to work other
impossibilities, that failure came and fond hopes
withered and decayed. The public expected
miracles, but there has been nothing of a
miraculous nature in East Anglia since the
marvellous times of Edmund, King, Martyr,
and Saint, when credulity, faith, and the imagination
of the monks went hand in hand, and
produced astounding results; and so the Thetford
Spa presently ceased to be. Even those
// 255.png
.pn +1
dyspeptic patients who derived, or thought they
derived, benefit from the bottled waters fell
away when they found they had long been
humbugged by a number of practical humorists,
who, combining a hateful cynicism with an
abominable laziness, bottled off their healing
draughts from other and handier, but quite
ineffective, places.
Thetford at this day shows no prominent
signs of its old Spa. The “Bath,” or “Spring,”
house remains, but it is now a private residence,
and few know or care to enquire, the origin of
that beautiful plane-tree avenue leading beside
the river to the “Nuns’ Bridges.”
Thetford in these times of ours is a very sober
place indeed, has given up all attempts to attract
the fashionables, and relies for its prosperity
upon Burrell’s engineering works, where you
can buy a beautiful traction-engine any day,
and upon the Pulp Mills, which turn out unbreakable
domestic articles in a wholesale manner
calculated to make all interested in the manufacture
of china and glass wish they had chosen
some other trade.
There have been Thetfordians in the past to
do wonderful things and make some little stir in
their day. Let us begin with the smallest of
them. In 1782, “Robert Bartley, of Thetford,”
then in his sixty-third year, is recorded to have
walked the eighty-one miles to London in twenty-four
hours, and to have walked back the following
day. He died, aged sixty-six, in 1785.
// 256.png
.pn +1
There were some excellent walkers at that
time, for in 1813 the Thetford Volunteers performed
a remarkable feat of endurance. They
marched the fifty miles to Yarmouth in one day.
Fortunately, no enemy was there, else those
exhausted pedestrians might have fared ill.
But this is trifling with biography. Thetford’s
most famous—or at least most notorious—son is
Tom Paine
.sp 4
.h2
XXXVII
.sp 2
.ni
They still show you—if you are persistent enough
to at length find those who know or care anything
at all about it—the birthplace of Tom Paine, in
White Hart Street, but it must be confessed,
gladly or with regret—one is not quite sure which
emotion is pre-eminent—that Paine, that stormy
petrel of late eighteenth-century politics, has quite
faded out of popular recollection in this his native
town. Who, anywhere, knows nowadays much more
about Tom Paine than that he was the author of
a work, “The Rights of Man” which no one ever
reads nowadays and therefore is generally thought
to be much worse than it really is? For the rest,
there remains a vague impression that he was
a “wicked” person, and, above all, not “respectable,”
which last consideration, of course, sufficiently
deters the mass of people from seeking
to learn anything about him. Yet in his day he
was a most remarkable person, and exercised an
enormous influence.
// 257.png
.pn +1
.pi
Tom Paine—no one ever seems to have called
him “Thomas”—was born in 1737, the son of
a Quaker staymaker. They were quite humble
people, the Paines, and their household so dull
and cramped that Tom, early a rebel against
authority, ran away from home in his nineteenth
year and went for a sailor. He fought on board
the man-o’-war Terrible in 1756, but authority,
stalking rampant, so to speak, on the quarter-deck,
was, of course, not at all to his mind, and
he left the Navy. Turning then to his handicraft
of staymaking, he is found, a fleeting figure of
unrest, in London, Dover, and Sandwich. He
married in 1759, and his wife died in the following
year.
Staymaking seems then to have lost all attractions
for him, for in 1761 he succeeded in obtaining
the modest appointment of supernumerary officer
in the Excise, and was stationed in this his native
town. How very modest that post really was may
be sufficiently explained when it is said that the
pay was £50 a year, and find your own horse!
If that was an advance upon his earlier employment—why,
then, staymaking must have been a
poor thing. Paine does not seem to have taken
his duties very seriously. Could any one, at the
price? So, after he had been transferred to stations
at Grantham and Alford, he was at length, in 1765,
dismissed for neglect. The neglect was rather
serious, consisting as it did in filling up returns of
examinations he had not made.
Two years of wandering followed. Staymaking
// 258.png
.pn +1
at Diss and ushering in London filled in the time
until 1767, when by some strange chance he secured
another appointment in the Excise. This billet
would have taken him to Grampound, in Cornwall,
but that was too far West, and so he held off until
the following year, when a similar post offered at
Lewes. There he lodged with a tobacconist, who
died the following year, and two years later Paine
married his late landlord’s daughter. She and her
mother opened a small grocery business, and Paine
contributed his small share towards keeping up
the establishment. But it was not in the scheme
of life laid down by the Fates for Paine that he
should be allowed to jog comfortably on through
an obscure provincial existence of this humdrum
nature. He became a noted figure in local political
debates, and in 1772 the excisemen, who had long
chafed under a combination of arduous work and
small pay, found in Paine a champion who could
display their grievances to advantage. He wrote
and issued a pamphlet, setting forth their circumstances
and demands, and eventually found himself
dismissed from the service. He petitioned the
Board of Excise for reinstatement, but they had
no use for firebrands, and his appeals were disregarded.
Meanwhile, domestic differences had been at
work, and that lack of conjugal agreement it has
been left for modern times to gracefully term
“incompatability of temperament” had caused
a more or less amicable separation.
This general upheaval and ruination of Paine’s
// 259.png
.pn +1
little world sent him drifting to London, where he
met Dr. Franklin, who found him eager to try
his luck in what were then the North American
Colonies, and so gave him introductions to Philadelphia
folks who might be of use. At Philadelphia
he landed, accordingly, in 1774, and presently
found his way into an editorial chair, at a salary
of £50 a year, which we may perhaps look upon
as an advance, because he certainly had not to
support a horse, as well as himself, out of it, as in
old Excise days.
He had reached America at a critical juncture
of affairs. The Home Government had exasperated
the colonists to the last degree by seeking to tax
them in support of an Exchequer depleted by the
world-wide warfares not long before brought to
a conclusion. It mattered nothing that those
wars had been fought for the very existence of
England and her colonies alike: the New Englanders
were not patriotic when their pockets
were touched, and would not pay, and the Home
authorities tactlessly insisted that they should.
The result was armed rebellion, an inglorious war,
and the independence of the United States. In
all the many and involved political intrigues of
the rebellion and the setting up of the new nation
Paine had a part, and even did some service for
the revolted colonists in the field. But it was
as a negotiator, wire-puller, and general go-between
he shone. From his trivial editorial throne he
raised himself into the status of a personage by
pamphleteering, and conducted himself as an equal
// 260.png
.pn +1
with Washington and the other leaders. Nay, more;
it was he who, seeing how eager France was to aid
the colonies against England with men, munitions
of war, and in diplomatic ways, suggested and did
actually in most skilful manner, negotiate a loan
from the French Government to the States. For
these services he was granted a salary of $800,
equivalent to £160. Clearly negotiators were
cheap in America in those days! But although
he wrought such yeoman service to the cause, his
fellow-revolutionaries did not love their Paine.
He stood for negation in everything. Kingdoms,
principalities, and powers, aristocracies and religion
were as naught to him; while, for the most
part, the successful colonists had no quarrel with
anything but the British Government. They were
pious and God-fearing: he was an atheist. Washington
and his lieutenants were essentially of the
aristocratic class, and with the prejudices of their
order: Paine was—as modern slang would put it—“no
class,” and it is clear that although his
associates were glad of his lucid and pungent pen,
they were not desirous of close association with him.
Paine returned to England, in 1787, and made
acquaintance with Fox and others of those who,
had they not been blinded by political animosities,
must needs have looked upon him as what he
really was, a traitor to the land of his birth. By
this it will be seen that the “Pro-Boers” of modern
times are no novel phenomena: they have always
existed as “pro” something or other likely to be
injurious to their own country. It is rather a pity,
// 261.png
.pn +1
when you consider it, that Paine was not properly
hanged when he set foot again on these shores;
but he was not molested until the second part of
his atheistical book, “The Rights of Man,” was
published, in 1793. Then he had to flee the
country, a fugitive from the wrath of a nation
that could endure a traitor, but found it impossible
to forgive one who denied his God.
Where should such an one seek refuge but in
Paris? There he became “Citizen Paine,” and
consorted with Marat, Robespierre, and others;
publishing his “Age of Reason” in midst of that
hurly-burly of revolutionary jealousies. The
victory of one party and the downfall of another
brought him in that land of liberty an unexpected
introduction to a Parisian dungeon, where he lay
for ten months, and narrowly escaped the guillotine.
It was only through the strong attitude
taken up by his American friends, and by the false
claim of his being an American citizen, that he
became again a free man. The year 1798 found
him still in France, and hoping much from that
rising star, Bonaparte, in whose mind it is not
at all improbable he planted the first thought of
invading England. Bonaparte then stood for
freedom, and Paine looked forward to “proclaiming
liberty at Thetford” under his protection;
but, alas for that beautiful dream! Bonaparte,
the Republican general, became Napoleon the
Emperor and autocrat, and it grew evident at
last, even to Paine, that it was not by his aid
this land of slaves and helots was to be set free.
// 262.png
.pn +1
And what did Thetford think of it all? It
is rather grievous to acknowledge Thetford was
so sunk in slavery that it did not recognise the
fact, and desired to be let alone. It sat in chains
and misery, all unconscious! Thrice unhappy
Thetford!! Folk in the taverns and in the streets
even expressed a contempt and dislike of “Tum
Paine,” and loudly proclaimed their earnest desire
to duck him in the river that runs so handy,
through the town. But Tom never came back, and
so the community lost its projected sport. He
returned to America in 1802, and did not linger
to watch the fortunes of that flotilla Napoleon
was at last fitting out for the conquest of England.
Seven years later, in 1809, he died in New York,
and was buried at New Rochelle, but the unrest
of his life followed him beyond the grave; for
Cobbett, himself a reforming Radical, but on
slightly more suave lines than Paine, in 1819,
as a hero-worshipper, exhumed his bones and
brought them to Liverpool. Cobbett, twenty-three
years earlier, had denounced him as “base,
malignant, treacherous, unnatural, and blasphemous.”
There his stock of adjectives ran out,
and he brought the indictment to a conclusion.
How the satirical shade of Paine must have
chuckled at this right-about-face!
When the available property of Cobbett’s son
was seized for debt, in 1836, these poor relics
formed a part of his belongings. Thence they
passed into the hands of a Mr. Tilly, but since
1844 have not been heard of.
// 263.png
.pn +1
.if h
.il fn=i243.jpg w=600px id=i243
.ca
THE “OLD HOUSE,” THETFORD.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: THE “OLD HOUSE,” THETFORD.]
.sp 2
.if-
So much for Paine. The street of his birth,
the street that leads out of the town on the way
to Norwich, is still old-fashioned. There stands
yet the old “White Hart,” and a handsome house
of two pointed gables, once said to have been the
“Fleece.” Lower down, opposite the “Bell,” a
house now occupied by an ironmonger was once
the “George”; and midway is a pre-eminently
ancient building whose age is tacitly recognised
as transcendent, in the name of “the old house,”
given it locally. Its timbered frontage probably
belongs to the fourteenth century. Traces of an
// 264.png
.pn +1
old watchman’s box remain, and dark traditions
survive of a chain being stretched across the street
at night, from this to the opposite house. Something
more, perhaps, than tradition, for the staples
from which the chain hung are still pointed out.
No records remain to tell the why or wherefore
of that chain, but we have only to recall the misty
past again to find in the solitary position of Thetford,
surrounded by heaths—and those heaths
frequented, to put it mildly, by undesirables—much
virtue in chains, and comfort unspeakable
to the listening midnight ears of nightcapped
burgesses in the watchman’s resonant “Twelve
o’clock, and a starlight night! All’s well.”
.sp 4
.h2
XXXVIII
.sp 2
.ni
When the modern tourist leaves Thetford, he does
so without a thrill on the threshold, and the only
thing to give him pause is the rather bewildering
choice of roads on the barren-looking rise where
the town ends. Every way leads to open heath,
even now, but every turning does not, as of yore,
bring you butt against a highwayman. I, for one,
do not regret the disappearance of that feature of
the old days, and am content to forego all such
thrillful encounters.
.pi
Two miles out of Thetford one came in those
old days to the toll-house. The old relic stood
until 1902, and was something of a curiosity to
the instructed in local lore, for it stood on the
// 265.png
.pn +1
boundary of the parishes of Croxton and Kilverstone,
on those of the Hundreds of Grimshoe and
Shropham and the South-West and Mid Parliamentary
Divisions of Norfolk. In virtue of that
last distinction the occupier had a vote in both
divisions, and was a man greatly cherished and
cultivated by parties when election-time drew
nigh.
.if h
.il fn=i245.jpg w=600px id=i245
.ca
“BRIDGEHAM HIGH TREE.”
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: “BRIDGEHAM HIGH TREE.”]
.sp 2
.if-
In another two miles, nearing the fourth mile
from Thetford, there stands, prominent by reason of
its height and isolation on Roudham Heath, the tall
black poplar known as “Bridgeham High Tree.”
The village of Bridgeham lies far away to the
right, and nothing comes in view to distract the
attention from this landmark. For a landmark
it is, planted, according to the received local
traditions, by the packmen who fared this lonely
road in days before railways, and often lost their
// 266.png
.pn +1
way on these heaths in the trackless snows of
winter, when every road in these wind-swept
uplands disappeared and lay buried in that white
winding-sheet. The High Tree is of noble proportions,
and placed at the crest of an incline
slightly raised above the general level of the
heath. A number of scattered thorn-trees grow
near.
A little distance beyond it, a scarcely noticeable
track crossing the road and leading on the
left hand athwart Wretham Heath to a level
crossing, stands for that disused prehistoric road,
the Peddar’s Way. A woman who unlocks the
gates for the passing stranger dimly remembers
to have heard it spoken of as the “Pedlar’s
Way.”
From here the rough and stumbly track leads
for half a mile to the crest of the ridge, where
a deep hole, known as the “Thieves’ Pit,” is
the subject of a legend telling how, at some
period unspecified, Illington Hall was plundered
by a mounted gang who hid their booty here.
Looking backwards from this commanding view-point,
this is seen to be the most solitary of
all the many heaths surrounding Thetford, and
that despite the railway running through, with
Roudham Junction in its midst. The usual
picture of a junction is of a busy station, with
bustling porters and crowds of passengers, but
that of Roudham is a very different place. You
will not find it in the railway guides, because,
in fact, tickets are not issued to or from it, and
// 267.png
.pn +1
it is a little difficult to understand the existence
of a station, as well as the actual junction of
lines, in the heathland, off the road and away
from sight of houses. But there it stands, and
its signal-posts and station buildings are the
only alien features of this hoary heath, where
the relics of prehistoric man are found, where
the curlews whistle down the wind, and that
coastwise branch of the plover family, the ring-plovers,
breed.
For Wretham Heath is one of the seven
heaths in the neighbourhood, and in the only
district of England, where the ring-plovers visit
inland. They come here in spring, and are
doubtless in sympathy with the place. In common
with them, the black-headed gull loves
the heath, and students of natural history tell
us its sands, plants, beetles, and butterflies—and,
in fact, the whole of its flora and fauna—are
those of the coast. Away beyond that lonely
junction is Ringmere, the identical “Hringmar”
of the Heimskringla-saga, where the Battle of
Ringmere, the last of those many bloodthirsty
fights between Saxon and Dane, was fought, in
1010. Ringmere is a singular, nay mystic, pool,
sometimes measuring seven acres, at others reduced
to a puddle, and again in full flood and
stocked with fish. It is now again absolutely
dry. Other curious meres of this immediate
district, with similarly strange vicissitudes, are
those of Langmere, Fowlmere, and the “Devil’s
Punchbowl,” a smaller but deeper lake, whose
// 268.png
.pn +1
white evening coronal of mist the fearful folklore
of the rural folk has styled the “Devil’s
Nightcap.”
There were yet others before Wretham West
Mere, and Great Mere were drained, in 1851
and 1856.
The Padder’s, or Peddar’s Way, here plunges
through a long avenue of pines, on its way to
Watton. It is a solitary, and at times even an
eerie place, for great livid fungi grow in its
shade and curious tall toadstool things, shaped
like half-furled Japanese umbrellas, dot the
grass; while fairy rings are there for the beguilement
of mortal man rash enough to stand within
any one of their magic circles what time the
clock strikes the hour of midnight. Then—well,
then I don’t know what might happen,
and really am not courageous enough to make
the essay. Whether the little folk merely fool
you with fairy gold that, when the illusory
moonshine kingdom of Queen Mab is replaced
by matter-of-fact sunshine, turns to the sere and
sorry leaves of autumn past; whether they
addle your brains, or give you a tricksy wisdom
that is not of this world, I do not know; but if
the fairy rings were only potent enough to recall
the past, bid yesterday return, make unsaid the
lamentable word, undo the irrevocable deed—why
then, who would not brave the mystic
hour, and chance what might hap? Ah! then,
what a place of resort this would be, and what
crowds of clients the fairies would have! But
// 269.png
.pn +1
if all these things were possible, they would still
be beyond our reach, for I am quite sure the
company-promoters would get an option on
the fairies and float them as a company, under
the style of “Oblivion, Ltd.” Puck would, of
course, join the board after allotment. No one
under the financial status of a multi-millionaire
would be able to purchase the fairy boons
vended under these auspices, for such people
have much they would only too dearly like
revoked, and would outbid all others.
.if h
.il fn=i249.jpg w=600px id=i249
.ca
THE “SCUTES,” PEDDAR’S WAY.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: THE “SCUTES,” PEDDAR’S WAY.]
.sp 2
.if-
// 270.png
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2
XXXIX
.sp 2
.ni
Here the murmurous twilight course of the
Peddar’s Way through the avenue of pine-trees
known as Dale Row marks the boundaries of
the parishes of Roudham and East Wretham.
By the elder among the peasantry it is still
spoken of as “the Scutes”—i.e., the Skirts; but
it is quite certain they are ignorant why they
so call it. It is interesting to recall the fact
that feminine skirts are pronounced “skutes”
in New York and other towns of the New
England States of America, doubtless in a
survival of the old East Anglian speech taken
overseas in the early settlement of the North
American colonies.
.pi
This East Wretham is the parish of that
William Cratfield, “Rector of Wrotham, in
Norfolk,” who, as “a common and notorious thief
and lurker on the roads, and murderer and slayer,”
in unholy alliance with one “Thomas Tapyrtone,
farryer,” had in 1416 plied the trade of highwayman
on Newmarket Heath, and being charged
with robbing a Londoner of £12, was, with his
concubine, flung into Newgate, where he died.
What became of his improper companion, or
even of Tapperton, is unknown.
But the clergy around Thetford in times of
old included several queer characters. There
was Lowe, the curate of Rockland, who on
January 12th, 1608, aided by the rector’s wife,
// 271.png
.pn +1
murdered the Rev. Mr. James, the rector of
that place. Lowe was hanged at Thetford and
Mrs. James burnt at the stake. Again, in 1635,
the rector of Santon Downham was charged with
being “an alehouse haunter and swearer, being
distempered with liquor, keeping malignant company,
and calling the Puritans hypocrites.”
.if h
.il fn=i251.jpg w=600px id=i251
.ca
THE RUINED CHURCH OF ROUDHAM.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: THE RUINED CHURCH OF ROUDHAM.]
.sp 2
.if-
Nay, not merely the clergy of this district,
but of broad Norfolk, might be made to figure
in a chronique scandaleuse; and if we had a
mind to it, we could end in modern times with
that thirsty clerk who was found, very drunken,
beside the river at Stratton Strawless, declaring
he would drink that up before he left. He must
have been like to that wondrous toper created
by one of the loveliest slips ever made by a
// 272.png
.pn +1
reporter; who would strain at a gnat and swallow
a canal; which we must allow to be a more
heroic feat than swallowing the more usual
camel.
Roudham Heath owes its name to the parish
and village of Roudham. The village stood less
than half a mile to the right of the road, but has
in these latter days wholly disappeared, save for
fewer than half a dozen cottages and the gaunt
ruins of the great church. Roudham church owes
its ruinated condition to the fire that burnt it in
1736, a disaster caused by carelessness on the part
of plumbers at work on the leads of the tower.
Tradition says funds were collected for the repair
of the building, but the treasurer made off with
them. Roudham’s local industry was that of
malting; but the place is a scene of desolation,
punctuated and italicised by the two inhabited
cottages that neighbour the ruins and look on to
the almost impassable road. The place has now
no church, no chapel, no charities, no shop, no
pub, no anything; but it was formerly a large and
populous village, with two inns—the “Dolphin”
and “Three Hoops.” Foundations of vanished
buildings are still visible in some of the fields
.sp 4
.h2
XL
.sp 2
.ni
Larlingford, a tiny hamlet on the Thet, in a dip
of the road, long since became a misnamed place,
for the ford is replaced by a bridge, itself of a
// 273.png
.pn +1
respectable age. Two miles beyond the old ford
there existed in Ogilby’s time, in the second half
of the seventeenth century, a beacon on the right-hand
side of the road, duly pictured on his road
map as a cresset, or fire-basket, mounted on a post
and reached by ladders; a contrivance eloquently
witnessing to the wild state of the road in those
times.
.pi
.if h
.il fn=i253.jpg w=600px id=i253
.ca
LARLINGFORD.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: LARLINGFORD.]
.sp 2
.if-
A little way beyond the site of the old beacon,
at Hargham—or, as the country folk have it,
“Harfham”—cross-roads, stands a time-worn
stone shaft, reared on equally shapeless steps.
The country folk call this shattered stump of an
ancient wayside cross “Cockcrow Stone.”
// 274.png
.pn +1
It is only when exploring to right and left of
the road, along the byways, that the stranger
comes in touch with rural life. The great
highway goes lonely, for mile after mile the
country seems deserted; but, unknown to him
who does not turn aside from the beaten track,
villages cluster, like beads upon a string, continuously
along the lesser roads. A little way
back from these cross-roads of Hargham comes
Hargham village, and then the village of Wilby,
in whose church, recently restored, has been discovered,
under one of the old floor-boards, a
lady’s hawking gauntlet some three centuries old.
Framed and exhibited on the wall, it forms a
trivial yet intimate link with the past.
But to reach the church and village one must
pass Wilby Old Hall, a romantic building of red
brick, with corbie-stepped gables, that peer darkly
across the meadows. One cannot resist a closer
glance, and the old place well repays that attention.
It is now, and long has been, a farmhouse,
but was built as a mansion somewhere about the
beginning of the seventeenth century. It was
when Elizabeth reigned, or in the first years of
James I., that the hall first rose within the girdle
of its moat: that moat only in part now remaining,
but still plentifully stocked with fish. A
family of Lovells probably built it; but the place
soon passed from them into the hands of the
Wiltons, of whom Robert Wilton, a Royalist
colonel, had it at the time of the Civil War.
Scratched with a diamond on a pane of one of
// 275.png
.pn +1
the old casement windows of an upstairs bedroom
is the name “Elizabeth,” with the date 1649.
The surname is included, but is illegible. Perhaps
it was this Elizabeth who inscribed the Latin
lines on another window—lines that seemed to
hint at some heavy sorrow. “Alas!” they said,
when translated, “Alas! how can I tune my lute
to a broken heart!” We may seek in vain for
the personal sorrow that prompted this record; or
was it the outpouring of a loyal soul? for the year
1649, when the unknown Elizabeth inscribed her
name on the other casement, was the date of
the execution of Charles I.
.if h
.il fn=i255.jpg w=600px id=i255
.ca
WILBY OLD HALL.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: WILBY OLD HALL.]
.sp 2
.if-
Those lines, we say, seemed to hint, and they
are thus spoken of because quite recently, when
the house was the scene of a sale at auction and
pervaded by strangers, some unknown person
prized the inscribed pane out of its leaden setting
// 276.png
.pn +1
and made off with it. Invoking a murrain on all
such, we come into the ancient market-town of
Attleborough.
.sp 4
.h2
XLI
.sp 2
.ni
Attleborough, quiet enough on all other days
of the week, wakes up and does a considerable
business on market-day, although even that weekly
fixture does not command the trade of sixty years
ago, before the railway brought the better marketing
of Norwich within reach. But the trade of
the town is still large enough to support several
large inns, a Corn Hall, and a long street of shops.
It would be unprofitable to argue the origin of
the “Attle” in the place-name, for it has already
been discussed by Norfolk antiquaries without any
light being thrown on it, excepting the fact that
the name is shared with Attlebridge on the river
Wensum, fifteen miles away. Some topographers,
mindful of the fact that the youthful Etheling, or
Saxon noble, afterwards Edmund, King of East
Anglia, spent a year at this place in A.D. 856 in
pious preparation for his kingly and saintly career,
have thought the place to be named after him,
Etheling-borough; while others are of opinion it
enshrines the name of some otherwise unrecorded
chieftain whose stronghold was the burh or mound
that gives the “borough” termination. However
that may be, Attleborough is a place of greater
age than might be thought from a casual glance.
// 277.png
.pn +1
Nothing in it, except the great church, is of any
high antiquity, for the College of the Holy Cross,
founded by Sir Robert Mortimer late in the fourteenth
century, has disappeared, and the church
itself, a part of that religious establishment,
although still very large, has been reduced from
its original size. All this destruction took place
in the time of Henry VIII., when such things
were repeated at every monastery and religious
college in the land. At that time the Mortimers,
the ancient lords of the manor, had given place to
the Radcliffes, then newly created Earls of Sussex,
and Robert, the first Earl, who ruled at that
period, lent a willing hand. One might almost
suppose him to have been animated by a personal
hatred of his forbears, for it is still recorded in the
parish register how he busied himself in the work
of demolition and tore up many “fair marble
gravestones of his ancestors, with monuments of
brass upon them, and carried them, with other
fair good pavement, and laid them for floors in his
hall, kitchen, and larder-house.” He died in 1542,
and was buried in the City church of St. Lawrence
Pountney, London. In later years the bodies of
himself and his son, with those of their wives,
were removed to the church of Boreham, in Essex.
With the grandson, the line of Radcliffes, Earls
of Sussex, ended; and in that church their three
marble effigies lie side by side, on one elaborate
altar-tomb, fulfilling the threat, or prophecy, that
in the third generation of that spoiler of the
Church his race should become extinct.
// 278.png
.pn +1
.pi
These records of old time explain how it comes
that Attleborough church tower is so oddly situated
at the east end of the building. It was once at
the centre of the cruciform church, but the choir
being destroyed in that time of trouble, it is
now, of course, immediately over what is now
the chancel.
.if h
.il fn=i258.jpg w=600px id=i258
.ca
ATTLEBOROUGH.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: ATTLEBOROUGH.]
.sp 2
.if-
Standing beside the high road, the church is,
of course, a very prominent object. It has a
singularly beautiful north porch, containing an
ancient wooden poor’s-box. Under a slab in the
nave rests that Captain John Gibbs of Charles II.’s
time, who earned a kind of fame by his foolhardy
feat of driving his chaise and four horses over the
deepest part of the Devil’s Ditch, on Newmarket
Heath, for a wager of £500. The chancel is
Norman architecture, the nave and aisles Decorated
and Perpendicular. The pulpit is part of
the spoil of one of the City of London churches,
demolished in modern times, and the magnificent
// 279.png
.pn +1
rood-screen is now at the west end, painted
white, decorated with the arms of thirty dioceses,
and black-lettered with moral maxims from
the Proverbs, the work of the Rev. John Forbie,
vicar in the first half of the seventeenth century,
commentator in the parish registers upon
national and local events, and censor, in the safe
seclusion of those pages, of his parishioners’ characters.
His favourable opinion of James I. is seen
in the entry made when that monarch died:
“It might be truly said of him, as in the Gospell,
‘Never man spake as this man speaketh.’” John
Forbie evidently did not dislike Scots pawkiness.
His post-mortem, testimonial in 1625 to the
landlady of the “Cock” inn—a hostelry still
standing by the roadside at the entrance to the
town—is hearty. “August 11th,” he says, “there
was buried Mary, the wife of Gilbert Greene,
hostess of the ‘Cock,’ who knew how to gaine
more by her trade than any other, and a woman
free and kind for any one in sickness ... and for
answering (i.e., standing godmother) to any one’s
child, and readie to give to any one’s marriage.”
Surely, one thinks, it was ill sojourning at the
house of one so accomplished in gaining more
by her trade than any other. Did she accomplish
it by overcharging her guests or diluting
their drinks?
He records the death of one John Dowe, “an
unprofitable tradesman of great estate.” This, he
says severely, and moved to verse by indignation,
should have been his epitaph:—
// 280.png
.pn +1
.pm verse-start
Here lyeth the Dowe who ne’er in life did good,
Nor would have done, tho’ longer he had stood.
A wife he had, bothe beautiful and Wise,
But he ne’er would such goodness exercise.
Death was his friend, to bring him to his grave,
For he in Life Commendam none could have.
.pm verse-end
The situation of Attleborough, isolated on the
lonely flats, surrounded by commons, must have
been singularly aloof from the world in days of
old. Up to the very doors of the townsfolk came
the dangers of those far-off times, as we may
perceive in the road that now leads to the railway
station, but is marked on old maps as “Thieves’
Lane.” Where those thieves lurked, there now
stand the respectable red-brick villas of modern
times, with a “Peace Monument” of 1856 at the
cross-roads, celebrating the close of the Crimean
War, and at one and the same time recording the
victories of that strife and acting as lamp-post,
general gazetteer, and compendious milestone
.sp 4
.h2
XLII
.sp 2
.ni
To Wymondham is our next stage, a flat six miles.
.pi
In midst of this level tract of country, where
villages, and houses even, are few and far between,
the wayfarer’s eye lights upon a stone pillar on
the grassy selvedge of the road, a dilapidated
object that looks like a milestone. But as it
occurs only three-quarters of a mile after passing
the sixteenth stone from Thetford, it is clearly
// 281.png
.pn +1
something else, and inspection is rewarded by the
discovery of this inscription:—
.pi
“This Pillar | was erected by | the order of
the sessions of the | Peace of Norfolk | as a gratefull
| remembrance of | the Charity of | Sir Edwin
Rich Knt | who freely gave | y^e sume of Two
hundred | povnds towards y^e | repaire of y^e highway
betweene Wymondham | and Attleborough |
A.D. 1675.”
Who, then, was this Sir Edwin Rich, whose
charity was so necessary to the upkeep of these
six miles of road between Attleborough and
Wymondham? He was a distinguished lawyer,
a native of Thetford, born in 1594. His monument
in the church of Mulbarton, three miles
from Wymondham, rich in moral reflections,
surmounted by a large hour-glass, and further
adorned with eulogistic verse written by himself
on himself, quaintly tells us the circumstances
of his birth and breeding:—
.pm letter-start
Our Lyef is like an Hower Glasse, and our Riches are like
Sand in it, which runs with us but the time of our Continuance
here, and then must be turned up by another.
.pm letter-end
.pm verse-start
To speak to God, as if men heard you talk,
To live with men, as if God saw you walk.
When thou art young, to live well thou must strive;
When thou art old, to dye well then contryve;
Thetford gave me breath, and Norwich Breeding,
Trinity College in Cambridge Learning.
Lincoln’s Inne did teach me Law and Equity.
Reports I have made in the Courts of Chancery,
And though I cannot skill in Rhymes, yet know it,
In my Life I was my own Death’s Poet;
// 282.png
.pn +1
For he who leaves his work to other’s Trust
May be deceived when he lies in the Dust.
And, now I have travell’d thro’ all these ways,
Here I conclude the Story of my Days;
And here my Rhymes I end, then ask no more,
Here lies Sir Edwin Rich, who lov’d the poor.
.pm verse-end
He died in 1675, at the advanced age of eighty-one,
and not only left those £200 towards the
repair of the road, but made the curious bequest to
the poor of Thetford of the annual sum of £20, to be
distributed for five hundred years, on every 24th of
December, in bread or clothing. Why he should
have limited his charity to a mere five centuries
does not appear, nor does it seem to be clearly
understood what is then to become of the property
of Rose Hill Farm, Beccles, whence the income
is derived. Perhaps he thought the end of the
world will have come by that time.
It will be observed that Sir Edwin was a
prudent as well as a pious man. Desiring some
recognition of his excellent traits and achievements,
he judged it best to write the epitaph himself:
and a very curious mixture of humility and pride
it is. There were sufficient reasons for his leaving
a bequest for the maintenance of this road, which
was in his time an open track, going unfenced the
whole twenty-nine miles between Thetford and
Norwich, and plunged in the fourteen miles
between Larlingford and Wymondham into successive
bogs and water-logged flats. If we consult
a large map of Norfolk and scan this district well,
it will be seen that on descending from the uplands
of Thetford Heath to the Thet at Larlingford the
// 283.png
.pn +1
road traverses a considerable district, veined like
the leaf of a tree with the aimless wanderings
of many streams, and dotted here and there with
such meres, or marshy lakes, as those of Scoulton
and Hingham. It is even now an oozy plain, but
was then a veritable piece of fenland, where the
bitterns boomed among the reeds, the corncrakes
creaked, the great horned owls hooted, and the
gulls screamed in unstudied orchestration. The
last bittern—“bog-bumpers” the country-folks
called them—long years ago was gathered into
the natural history collections of rare birds, and
the bass-viol bellowings of his voice are no longer
heard after sundown. The great horned owls, too,
are no more; but lesser owls still tu-whoo in the
woods, and the screaming gulls of Scoulton yet
startle the stranger as they rise, voiceful, in their
many thousands from the mere.
In 1675, when Ogilby’s “Britannia,” that first,
and most magnificent, survey of the roads, was
published, this spot was pictured on his sketch-plan
of this road as “Attleburgh Meer,” and
was apparently something between a bog and
a lake. It stretched across the road, and to a
considerable distance on either side. This was
in the very year of Sir Edwin Rich’s death,
when his bequest became available, and we may
suppose that this hindrance to travellers was
abolished very shortly afterwards and the
monument to his liberality erected here, on the
very spot where that slough had once been.
From its old name of the “Portway,” it is
// 284.png
.pn +1
obvious this road must have been in existence
in very ancient times, but it is equally obvious
it was early discarded for other routes, for Ogilby
is the earliest map-maker to mark it, and Will
Kemp, who seventy-five years earlier danced his
nine days’ dance from London to Norwich, went
the less direct road to Norwich from Thetford
by way of Rockland, Hingham, and Barford
Bridge, which he would not have done had the
way through Attleborough and Wymondham been
passable.
Kemp, who was a low comedian, and, according
to his own showing, spent his life in “mad
Igges and merry iestes,” wagered he would dance
down all the way, and did so perform the
distance in nine days jigging, with intervals for
rest and entertainment in between: not a very
difficult performance, even for that time, and
even though it was winter when he did it. He
tells us fully in his “Nine Days’ Wonder” how,
accompanied by his tabourer, or drummer, he
skipped and joked the miles away, and gives
the route he took, over Bow Bridge to Romford,
Ingatestone, Widford, Braintree, Sudbury, Long
Melford, and Clare, to Bury St. Edmunds. It
was on a Saturday, at the close of his sixth
day’s dancing, that he entered Bury, and there,
“by reason of the great snow that then fell,”
he stayed until the following Friday morning,
February 29th. The distance between Bury and
Thetford is really twelve miles, and so Kemp
does not take full credit for this day’s performance
// 285.png
.pn +1
when he tells us that “Dauncing that
tenne mile in three houres,” and leaving Bury
shortly after seven in the morning, he was at
Thetford soon after ten o’clock: “So light was
my heeles that I counted the tenne mile no better
than a leape.”
Master Kemp jigged to some profitable purpose,
for as many people came to see him as
are attracted by the modern pedestrians who
wear out so much shoe-leather on the classic
miles of the Brighton Road; nor were the county
magnates above patronising this Merry Andrew.
Thus he reports, “At my entrance into Thetford
the people came in great numbers to see mee,
for there were many there, being Size time. The
noble gentleman, Sir Edwin Rich,[#] gaue mee
entertainment in such beautiful and liberal sort,
during my continuance there, Satterday &
Sunday, that I want fitte words to express the
least part of his worthy vsage of my unworthines;
and to conclude liberally as hee had begun and
continued, at my departure on Munday his
worship gaue mee fiue pound.”
On that Monday Kemp danced to Rockland
and Hingham. At Rockland his host at the
inn was a boon companion, but stood a little
upon his dignity, for he would not appear until
he had shifted from his working day’s suit;
when, valiantly arrayed, he entered, hat in
hand, with “Dear Master Kemp, you are even
as welcome as—as—as—” and so stammering
// 286.png
.pn +1
until he found a comparison—“as the Queen’s
best greyhound.”
.pm fn-start // A
Father of the Sir Edwin, the benefactor.
.pm fn-end
“After this dogged, yet well-meant salutation,”
says Kemp, weakly punning, “the Carrowses
were called in, and they drank long and deep.”
So merry did this convivial interlude make him
that, although he was an extravagantly fat man,
he insisted upon dancing off with Kemp; but
two fields sufficed him, and then, breathless,
bade his visitor “go—go, in God’s name.” So
they parted. From Thetford to Rockland, Kemp
had found “a foul way,” and onwards to
Hingham it was not only foul, but deep, and
no one knew the road. There were twenties
and forties, nay, sometimes a hundred people,
in groups, come to see him pass, but of the
way to Norwich they could tell him nothing.
“One cried, ‘The fayrest way was thorow their
Village,’ another, ‘This is the nearest and fayrest
way, when you have passed but a myle and a
half.’ Another sorte crie, ‘Turn on the left
hand,’ some, ‘On the right hand’”; but with it
all he did at last reach Hingham, and on the
next day through Barford Bridge reached
Norwich.
It was a roundabout way, and Kemp would
have found more publicity had he gone through
the towns of Attleborough and Wymondham.
But the people of Thetford had probably warned
him of the bad way through those places.
Sir Edwin Rich’s £200 probably did not
suffice for anything beyond filling up that
// 287.png
.pn +1
ambiguous stretch of watery mud called
Attleborough Mere, and thus we find, twenty-one
years later, an early Turnpike Act, the Act
of 1696, 7th and 8th of William and Mary,
passed for the repair of the highways between
Wymondham and Attleborough. This road is
thus claimed by Norfolk antiquaries as the first
turnpike road to be constructed in the kingdom,
but that is a slight error, for the Act was
passed merely for repair, and was antedated by
thirty-three years, in the first of Turnpike Acts,
that of 1663, which provided for the repair and
turnpiking of the road from London to Stilton—the
“Old North” and the “Great North”
roads of modern parlance. If, however, we
somewhat limit that claim, and declare this to
be the first turnpike road in Norfolk, we shall
probably be correct
.sp 4
.h2
XLIII
.sp 2
.ni
Wymondham town, to which we now come,
stands at the junction of many roads, and
was long a centre, both of religious and
trade activity. Strangers, uninstructed in
Norfolk usage, pronounce the name as spelled,
and thereby earn the contempt of those to the
manner born, who smile superior; but when
the East Anglian travels into Leicestershire
and, arriving at that Wymondham, calls it,
// 288.png
.pn +1
after his own use and wont, “Windham,” he
in turn is made to feel outside the pale, for
Leicestershire folk take full value out of every
letter in the name of their Wymondham. The
Windham family, of Felbrigg, near Cromer,
who settled at that place in 1461, came from
Wymondham and were possibly descendants of
the Saxon Wymund after whom the town was
named.
.pi
Wymondham is said to stand higher than
the surrounding country, but such a statement,
unilluminated by comparison, might be misleading.
You do not climb exhaustedly up into
it, nor in leaving drop sheer down into a corresponding
vale: the difference, in fact, between
the levels through which we have come and
the heights we now reach is merely one of
inches, and so slight that only a robust faith
can believe in it.
Wymondham was the child of that great
Benedictine Priory founded here in 1107, by
William d’Albini, chief butler to Henry I.,
whose son became first Earl of Arundel, and
was the hero of that very tall story which tells
how the Queen Dowager of France fell in love
with him when he was in Paris and offered him
marriage. He refused that very flattering offer,
because as a matter of fact he was engaged
already to another distinguished lady; no less
an one, indeed, than the widow of Henry I.
“Earth hath no rage like love to hatred turned,”
says the poet, and the rage of the rejected
// 289.png
.pn +1
Queen was really a right royal, consuming, and
devastating rage, quite worthy of the second
line in that poetic couplet, which says, “Nor
hell a fury like a woman scorned.” She planned
a visit to a lion’s den, conveniently handy to
the palace, and, when there, pretended to be
frightened of that fierce beast. D’Albini said
it was nothing, only women would be afraid;
whereupon she pushed him into the den and
came away, happy in the thought that if she
could not have him, at least the other woman
should not. But she mistook, for D’Albini,
wrapping up his hand in his cloak, put his hand
in the lion’s mouth and—pulled its tongue out!
He left it at the palace as a present for the
Queen, and then returned to England, became
known as William of the Strong Hand, married
the Dowager Queen of England, and lived happy
ever after. That breed of lion must early have
become extinct, for the exploit has never since
been repeated.
Wymondham Priory, or Abbey, was, of course,
brought to an end in the Eighth Harry’s time,
and is now a mass of ruins. The existing noble
church was even in early days parochial and
built on to the west end of the monastic church,
whose only important surviving fragment is the
great eastern tower, whose two octagonal upper
stages, with shattered windows, look so weird
and unaccountable beside the even greater
western tower. The “two towers to one church”
have indeed a gloomy and heavy nightmare-like
// 290.png
.pn +1
effect in certain lights, and it was not without
a grim sense of impressiveness that the revengeful
Government of 1549, at the close of the
peasants’ rebellion, hanged one of its leaders,
William Kett, higher than Haman, from the
summit of the western tower.
.if h
.il fn=i270.jpg w=600px id=i270
.ca
WYMONDHAM CHURCH.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: WYMONDHAM CHURCH.]
.sp 2
.if-
The nave of the great church, incomparably
the finest example of Norman architecture in
Norfolk, after the nave of Norwich Cathedral,
has a Perpendicular clerestory, is flanked by
Perpendicular aisles, and roofed with a noble
open-timbered roof of East Anglian character,
decorated with the usual serried ranks of angels
with outstretched wings.
But it is not of architecture, even though
ranking with the noblest, that we must talk
here, but rather of that strenuous flesh and
// 291.png
.pn +1
blood which, although long resolved into dust,
gives to Wymondham the interest of living,
breathing—aye, and hating and fighting—men,
who fought and failed and died the death for
their fellow-men in this fair land of East Anglia,
more than three hundred and fifty years ago.
That rebellion for which William Kett suffered
here, and his brother Robert from the battlements
of Norwich Castle, was the very natural revolt
of the Norfolk peasantry from the rapacity and
selfishness of the landowning class, who sought
to enclose the wide-spreading commons where the
peasants’ cattle and geese freely pastured. There
were other rural grievances, but of a minor kind.
No one of them was new when the trouble broke
out, but they had at length, after the smouldering
discontent of years past, come to such a pass that
but very slight excuse was needed to set Norfolk
in a blaze. Already, nine years earlier, a certain
John Walker, of Griston, had said, “It would be
a good thing if there were only as many gentlemen
in Norfolk as there were white bulls,” and this
remarkable expression of opinion was rendered the
more impressive by the favour it found among
the country folk, who passed it from mouth to
mouth with every sign of approval. Some
rhymester, too, had been at work, and produced
this prophetic verse:—
.pm verse-start
The country gnoffes, Hob, Dick, and Hick,
With clubs and clouted shoon,
Shall fill the vale of Dussin’s Dale
With slaughtered bodies soon.
.pm verse-end
// 292.png
.pn +1
Dussin’s Dale was, and is, outside Norwich, and
the picture of a rural revenge was thus presented
to the rustics, who had long suffered from manorial
encroachments.
The initial incidents of the outbreak happened
upon this very road from Wymondham into Norwich,
when the new fences erected by a local
landowner upon Attleborough Common were demolished
on June 20th, 1549. A fortnight later
new hedges at Morley and Hethersett were destroyed.
The destruction of those at Hethersett
brought about the rising. It seems that the
land-grabber of that place was one Serjeant
Flowerdew, between whom and the Ketts of
Wymondham there was a violent enmity. The
Ketts were substantial folks, engaged in tanning.
It cannot be said that they were blameless, for
they, too, had enclosed; but had set the crowd
on to destroy Flowerdew’s landmarks without
considering their own case. The Serjeant naturally
retorted by instigating the rustics in turn to level
and tear into fragments the hedges and palings
of the Ketts, who in the meanwhile seemed to
have found salvation, for they not only permitted
this work of vengeance on their own illegal
enclosures, but heartily joined in it themselves.
When this work was completed, and having thus
proved their sincerity, the two brothers headed
the mob back to Hethersett and destroyed what
remained of Flowerdew’s enclosures; marching on
to Cringleford and meeting the High Sheriff, who
had heard of these riotous proceedings, and now
// 293.png
.pn +1
admonished the people to return home. So far,
however, from doing so, they put the Sheriff to
flight, and, boldly setting forth upon an armed
movement for reform, laid waste an enclosure
beside the approach to Norwich, and, in defiance
of the Mayor, marched round the city, climbed
to the high ground of Hellesdon, and, reaching
Mousehold Heath, pitched their camp there
.sp 4
.h2
XLIV
.sp 2
.ni
Some years earlier a short-lived but significant
movement had been set afoot by one self-styled
“John Amend-all,” whose name is sufficient
earnest of there being wrongs grievously calling
for justice to be done. It had then been said
that three or four stout fellows, riding overnight
through the towns of Norfolk, with bell-ringing
and exhortations to rise, would by morning
have collected 10,000 men, and it was now
perceived that this had been no idle talk; for
16,000 peasants joined the camp on Mousehold
Heath, whence the Ketts and the leading spirits
despatched a very moderate and fair-minded
petition to the King for redress of their grievances.
.pi
Norwich, as the place of residence of many
landowners and, as a manufacturing centre,
quite out of sympathy with the country people,
was meanwhile practically invested by the rebels,
// 294.png
.pn +1
who from the commanding heights of Mousehold
intercepted everything going in or coming out.
There for more than a fortnight they lay, the
summer weather in alliance with them, and with
raiding parties looting cattle and provisions from
all quarters for the feeding of this rustic host,
which by this time had increased to 20,000.
Never did rebellion begin in more orderly
fashion, for the Ketts, with their chaplain, Conyers,
held open-air court on the Heath, and conducted
things decently and in order. Food they were
obliged to seize, but no violence and no robbery
were permitted, and had the Government returned
an answer showing any disposition to relieve the
peasants from the landlords’ exactions and aggressions,
all would have been well. But vague
promises, coupled with an offer of pardon for all
concerned if they would first disperse and return
to their homes, was all the satisfaction they received;
and Robert Kett very rightly retorted to
the herald who brought this message that “Kings
were wont to pardon wicked persons, not innocent
and just men.”
Norwich then prepared itself for attack. The
Bishop’s Bridge over the Wensum, and the gate
that then straddled across it, were put in a condition
for defence against the expected descent
from Mousehold, and pieces of cannon were
mounted on the quays. The next morning the
assault was delivered, and Kett’s men, although
many were slain by arrow-flights from the defenders,
swarmed across the river and seizing
// 295.png
.pn +1
the guns, which had refused to shoot, were soon
masters of the city. The Mayor, Mr. Alderman
Codd, and the principal citizens were made
prisoners and marched up to “Kett’s Castle” on
Mousehold, where they doubtless expected a
violent death, Robert Kett sending down a
message that any one coming to Mousehold should
have a Codd’s head for a penny. But that was
only his humour, with nothing tragical at the
back of it, for the worst that befell those prisoners
was the being made ridiculous in a mock-court
held on the Heath.
Norwich, in despair, welcomed the tardy
arrival of some 2,500 men, chiefly Italian
mercenaries, under the command of the Marquis
of Northampton, but they made little impression,
and one of the aliens, being captured, was stripped
of his armour and hanged. On August 1st
there was renewed fighting in the streets, and
Lord Sheffield was killed, at a spot still marked
by an inscribed stone. This first force sent
against the rebels was by this time defeated
with heavy loss, and Norwich remained in the
hands of the victorious peasants until August 23rd,
when a second expedition, cautiously feeling its
way through disaffected East Anglia, appeared
at the entrance of the city by St. Stephen’s
Gate.
It was not yet too late for the rebels to
lay down their poor arms of bows and arrows,
scythes, pikes, and bill-hooks, but, fired with
the successful bloodshed that had given them
// 296.png
.pn +1
possession of the city, they rejected all offers
made by the Earl of Warwick, commanding the
strong force that now sought entrance. Three
days’ fighting, in the city and on the slopes of
Mousehold, followed, with varying fortunes, and
had it not been for the reinforcements of
1,100 German mercenaries, the rebellion might
again have proved successful. As it was, however,
their arrival turned the scale. It was at
this juncture that, driven from the city, the
peasants, remembering the old prophetic verse,
moved to the hollow of Dussin’s Dale on Mousehold,
where they were to “fill the vale with
slaughtered bodies.” Here, they thought, if
there was any truth in prophecy, they would
achieve the final victory. It never occurred
to them that there were two ways of reading
that verse, and thus it was here they made their
last stand and were cut down in hundreds, grimly
fulfilling its words, if not its spirit. Three
thousand five hundred of these poor countrymen
were slain in this final struggle, and perhaps
an equal number had fallen in the almost two
months’ fighting and skirmishing of this fatal
rising. Thus it ended, but vengeance had yet to
take toll of their number. The chiefs of the
movement had held their court on Mousehold,
under an oak they called the Oak of Reformation,
and it was from its branches that nine of them
were now hanged. Robert Kett was hanged higher
still, three months later, when, after having been
sent to London and flung into the Tower, he
// 297.png
.pn +1
was brought back and suspended from a gallows
on the roof of Norwich Castle. Forty-five minor
leaders were hanged, drawn, and quartered in Norwich
Market place, and some 250 of the others
were plainly hanged, without these fiendish extras.
The others, a disheartened mob of 12,000, having
learned an unforgettable lesson, were bidden go
home, for even the bloodthirsty rage of the
victors might well be aghast at the prospect of
meting out a like penalty to such a number;
and moreover, counsels of prudence and expediency
had something to say. “What shall
we do, then?” asked the victorious Earl of
Warwick, himself a Norfolk landowner, anxious
how his lands should be kept tilled if they
thus made away with the tillers of them, “What
shall we do, then? Hold the plough ourselves,
play the carters, and labour the ground with our
own hands?” Good Heavens forefend such
disaster!
Thus ended the great agrarian uprising of
the mid-sixteenth century, and no man can with
certainty say that it had any result. It sprang
out of the void, and into nothingness it returned.
But none the less it behoves us to honour those
simple souls who laid down their lives for their
immemorial rights in their common and free
pasturages, who saw with a manly indignation
the preserving of fish in the rivers, and that
stopping up of public ways which even in the
fierce publicity of our own times requires all
the vigilance of a public society to keep in
// 298.png
.pn +1
check. Wymondham or Norwich should in
public memorial honour the men who by their
action said that these things should not be, if
they could help, and in laying down their lives
for the cause were as truly martyrs as any of
those who died for conscience’ sake in religion
.sp 4
.h2
XLV
.sp 2
.ni
There are modern epitaphs to Ketts in Wymondham
churchyard, whose fir-grown space admirably
sets off and embellishes the gaunt towers. It
is in the narrow lane leading to the church
that the most picturesque inn of the town is
to be found, in the sign of the “Green Dragon,”
a characteristic old English title and a very fine
specimen of old English woodwork.
.pi
Most of the ancient inns of Wymondham have
either disappeared, or have been rebuilt or otherwise
modernised, but it was once, in common
with most other mediæval towns clustered around
great priories, a town of much good cheer and
inordinate drinking. Piety and early purl went
hand in hand in those days, and often staggered
off to bed together in a very muzzy condition,
or fell into the gutter, wholly incapable. Those
were the days when the ascetic early use of
the religious was forgotten, and before the Puritan
rule of life had come into existence; and men
were not less devout because they were drunken.
// 299.png
.pn +1
.if h
.il fn=i279.jpg w=600px id=i279
.ca
WYMONDHAM.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: WYMONDHAM.]
.sp 2
.if-
// 300.png
.pn +1
// 301.png
.pn +1
But the Priory guest-houses are all gone,
and even the very pretty brew of “Weston’s
Nog,” once famous in all this countryside, is
no longer proclaimed over the old “Leather
Bottle” inn. The sign of the bottle that once
dangled over the door, and was inscribed with
the name of that potent tipple, has itself disappeared.
The chief secular feature of the town is the
Market House, an ancient building of timber
frame and plaster filling, raised high above the
level of the street, and entered by a lofty wooden
stair. It has ceased to serve any market purpose,
and now plays the part of a reading-room;
and a very much larger room it is found, on
inspection, to be than would from a casual glance
at its exterior be supposed.
Among the decorative carving that covers
the old woodwork of the Market House may be
seen rough representations of spoons, skewers,
tops, and spindles; allusions to the ancient staple
trade of the town in articles of wooden turnery.
It is a trade that has long wholly died out, but
another old local industry—that of horsehair
weaving—is still carried on. This trade was
established somewhere about a century ago,
and was once a great deal more important than
now. One can readily imagine that Wymondham
must have been particularly busy in the dreadful
era of horsehair upholstery of sofas and chairs.
The horsehaired chair or sofa belonged to the
period of the cut-glass lustres that used to serve
// 302.png
.pn +1
as “chimney ornaments,” and to the era of the
“ornaments for yer fire-stoves” once sold in
summer-time by itinerant vendors. Horsehair
upholstery was very chilly, very sombre and
severe, and afforded a particularly slippery and
uncomfortable seat. One, happily, rarely sees
those tomb-like sofas now, and the chairs are
not often met; but when horsehair coverings
disappeared from the household they found a
lasting favour with railway companies, and still
penitentially furnish many a waiting-room.
Thus the horsehair weavers at Wymondham
even now find in their occupation a living wage.
It is a cottage industry, and the old treadle looms
may even yet be seen in work by any one curious
enough to halt awhile and make due quest.
They are cumbersome affairs of heavy wooden
framing, rattle and clatter like the pots and
pans of a travelling tinker, and give the minimum
of output to the maximum of labour, the
weavers having to perform the treadling, and
at the same time to feed the shuttle with horsehair
at every revolution of the machine. The
local masters and the hair-cloth dealers of
Norwich supply the weavers with the raw
materials—so many pounds of hair—and it is
brought back as a manufactured article, weighed,
and paid for at the rate of 1¼d. per yard. The
fabric is black and white when it leaves the
looms, and is dyed in Norwich.
An ancient house, with handsome timbered
front, well cared for, and now in private
// 303.png
.pn +1
occupation, although said once to have been an
inn, is one of the last objects to catch the eye
in leaving the town. It bears the inscription,
in bold raised letters: “Nec mihi glis servus,
nec hospes hirudo,” which may be Englished,
“I have neither the fat dormouse as a servant,
nor the bloodsucker as a guest”: a bold and
cheering statement for such travellers of old as
could read Latin, and who might feel inclined
to test the smartness of the service and the
freedom of the bedrooms from fleas and bugs
.sp 4
.h2
XLVI
.sp 2
.ni
Hethersett, whose name means “Heather-heath,”
and is pronounced “Hathersett” in the
local speech, is heralded along the open road
by a solitary roadside inn with the sign of the
“Old Oak.” No ancient oak is within sight,
but the accustomed pilgrim of the roads has not
for years been exploring the highways and
byways without having long ago arrived at the
conclusion that there is a substantial reason for
most things, even the names of inns, and so
from that sign deduces an historic oak somewhere
in the immediate neighbourhood. And
surely enough, a short distance beyond the inn,
on the left-hand side of the road, opposite the
milestone that marks the twenty-second mile
from Thetford and the seventh from Norwich,
// 304.png
.pn +1
there stands the gnarled and weatherworn trunk
of what the country folk call “Kett’s Oak,”
one of the several ancient trees that own the
name, and traditionally said to have been one
of the meeting-places of Robert Kett and his
followers, and one of the scenes of his rough-and-ready
sylvan court. But although oaks grow
slowly, and although the tradition is an old
one, handed down, unbroken, through the
centuries, many will find it difficult to believe
that a tree which must have been a considerable
one when Kett and his followers foregathered
here would not now have a greater girth than this.
.pi
The village green of Hethersett was enclosed,
together with its large common, in 1800. The
parish at that time claimed, and was allowed,
a portion of the vast common of Wymondham,
on the curious plea that it had buried, at the
expense of the community, the body of a dead
man found there and refused interment by the
parish of Wymondham.
A local jape, which we may be sure will
not willingly be let die, makes a play upon
the name of Hethersett. It dates from many
years ago, when the railway through the village
to Norwich was new, and the train service
incredibly slow. “Hethersett,” cried the porters
at the station when a train stopped on one of
those weariful occasions. “Here they set,”
indignantly rejoined an old woman in one of
the third-class carriages; “yes, and here they’re
likely to set!”
// 305.png
.pn +1
The old church of this scattered village looks
down upon the road from its slightly elevated
situation at a point where the remains of the old
highway, re-modelled over two hundred years ago,
may yet be seen. The name of “highway” in a
descriptive sense is, however, wholly misleading,
for it plunges down between the church and the
present road in the likeness of a broad and deep
ditch. This hollow way, with its overhanging
banks, proclaims, more than anything else can
do, the dangers of bygone times, when travellers
“travailed,” and a journey was really and truly
what that word etymologically means, an expedition
made by day. In these hollow ways lurked
of old those outlaws who made even daylight
travel perilous, and we can readily believe it was
with dismay that benighted travellers saw the sun
go down, and, simultaneously with its disappearance
below the horizon, felt their courage ooze out
at their boots. Trees and bushes now grow in the
hollow where our forefathers of more than two
centuries ago went so fearfully. It is long since
it was used, and all who used it are gone, but
Romance lives there, immortal, with the mud of
years and the decaying leaves of autumn past.
The curious device of a dove and two serpents
forms the weather-vane of Hethersett church.
The living is in the gift of Caius College, Cambridge,
and the vane displays the crest of Dr.
John Caius, the re-founder of the College, officially
and fully styled “Gonville and Caius.”
It was in 1561 that the Heralds’ College found
// 306.png
.pn +1
a crest for that worthy man: “a clove argent,
bekyd and membred gewles, holding in his beke
by the stalke, flower gentle in proper colour,
stalked vert.” “Flower gentle” is the old
heraldic term for the wild amaranth, the “love
lies bleeding” of old-fashioned gardens. In
heraldic lore, it signified, as the grant of arms to
Caius states, “immortalite that shall never fade.”
The two serpents denote wisdom and grace.
.if h
.il fn=i286.jpg w=200px id=i286
.ca
HETHERSETT VANE.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: HETHERSETT VANE.]
.sp 2
.if-
An amusing record of old country superstition
survives in the proceedings arising out of the
theft of seven cheeses at Hethersett in 1797. A
Mrs. Wissen, whose cheeses had mysteriously
disappeared, instead of consulting a magistrate, a
lawyer, or even the parish constable, went to a
“cunning woman,” or white witch, who, after
much supernatural mystification, told her that the
missing cheeses had been stolen by a woman with
a prominent mark on her nose. Whether the
“cunning woman” really meant any particular
person or not does not appear, but there unfortunately
was a woman, a Mrs. Bailey, so nasally
// 307.png
.pn +1
decorated, living hard by. The owner of the
cheeses thus spirited away must have known the
owner of that carbuncly, or otherwise, marked
organ, but she seems to have been loth to act upon
her information, or to do more than talk about it.
At any rate, we do not hear any more of her; but
the affair was not ended at that, for one Chamberlain,
a local shoemaker, coming on one occasion
into violent dispute with the unfortunate Mrs.
Bailey, taxed her with the robbery, saying, “she
showed her guilt in her nose and couldn’t get it
off.” The owner of that compromising nose was
naturally indignant, and brought an action for
slander against the shoemaker at the Norwich
Assizes; but the jury of country folk, equally
susceptible to superstition, looked with suspicion
upon that organ, and brought in a verdict for the
defendant.
From Hethersett we make for Cringleford,
and down the winding, tree-shaded descent past
Cringleford church to the level where Cringleford
mill sits serenely beside the weedy river Yare.
Not only is the descent winding, but it is narrow
as well. Yet, not so very long ago, it was
narrower still, for a tablet in the wall at the foot
of the hill tells us, rather grandiloquently, that—
.pm quote-centered-start
This Road was Widen’d
13 Feet
Anno Domini 1823.
Garratt Taylor Knott,
Surveyor.
.pm quote-centered-end
// 308.png
.pn +1
Prodigious! Careful pacing discovers the fact
that it is only twenty-five feet wide even now.
By what careful driving, or special interposition
of Providence, did the Norwich Mail and the
stage-coaches succeed in escaping disaster at this
point, when the road measured only twelve feet in
breadth? One accident is, indeed, recorded to have
happened to a coach described as the “Newmarket
Mail” in 1846. It was an overturn at Cringleford
Gate, and was not very serious, the only results
being a general distribution of bruises, and a
broken arm and collar-bone.
.if h
.il fn=i288.jpg w=501px id=i288
.ca
CRINGLEFORD.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: CRINGLEFORD.]
.sp 2
.if-
// 309.png
.pn +1
The situation of Cringleford church is sufficiently
pretty, but examination proves it to be
uninteresting, and its churchyard deformed with
huge polished granite memorials to the undistinguished
rich. More satisfaction comes from a
lazy sojourn in the sunlight upon the old bridge
that spans the Yare. The subdued rumbling of
the mill, the leisured loading of a waggon with
sacks of flour, and the evolutions of a boat’s crew
among the weedy shallows of the Yare, induce a
laziness which the certainty that Norwich is only
two miles distant does much to intensify. It
increases one’s sense of the permanency of things
to learn that the floury miller, who comes out and
casts an approving eye upon his fat sacks, is but
the latest of a long line of his trade who have
been following the art of grinding corn, by
aid of the river Yare, for nine hundred years.
How do we know that? By the evidence of
Edward the Confessor’s Domesday Book, when
the mill was stated to be worth 20s. a year, and
by the Domesday Book of William the Conqueror,
when the annual value had risen to 40s.
By all means let the pilgrim linger here, for
he shall no sooner have climbed yonder rise,
through that steep and narrow street of Eaton
which is clearly visible from this point, than old
Romance flies, ashamed, before the terminus of
the electric tramways which reach out from
Norwich and serve the discreet suburbs that now
spread out from the city and threaten to absorb
and transform Eaton itself.
// 310.png
.pn +1
It is a pleasant strip of valley thus set between
the not very Alpine heights of Cringleford and
Eaton; but here, in East Anglia, we call those
hills which we should disregard in the precipitous
West. The valley broadens out on the right,
where it meets that of the Tase, and from that
confluence the combined streams, under the name
of the Yare, flow onward through a widening
valley that eventually loses itself in flat marshlands,
to Yarmouth.
This bridge that spans the Yare, and is continued
as a causeway over the flat, often flooded,
water-meadows, although of a considerable age, is
but the successor of a very ancient structure, once
in charge of a succession of hermits, licensed by
the Priors of Norwich to reside here and to solicit
alms of travellers crossing by it. A history of
these worthies would be a very desirable thing,
but it is not likely ever to be produced. They
have mostly gone their ways unchronicled; all,
indeed, save Roger de Brugge, whose memory
only lives because he was so robustious and
insistent a person. We have no means of learning
whence Roger came, or what his real name was,
“de Brugge” being merely “of the bridge.” He
flourished about 1390, and was a very troublesome
person, who does by no means realise for us the
usual picture of a hermit. Instead of living in
a damp cell, unwashed and uncombed, in the
verminous condition proper to all hermits of right
feeling, he appears to have obtained a commercially
good thing in his licensed wardenship
// 311.png
.pn +1
of the bridge, and to have employed toll-collectors
of his own, who were not content with soliciting
alms, but demanded money at the point of the
cudgel of all those whom it seemed safe to
threaten in that way. Unfortunately for one of
these eremitical under-strappers who did their
soliciting with the persuasive advocacy of a big
stick, he tried the method with a man who proved
to be a soldier, unused to taking treatment of that
kind quietly, and who punched him in the eye,
stole his money-pouch, and dropped him into the
river, where he was drowned, much to the consternation
of his companion, who, early in the
proceedings, had beaten a retreat to Eaton,
whence he saw all these developments. Roger
de Brugge, who was an absentee hermit, and lived
amid much evil company at Norwich, was deprived
of his post, which was given to another, and, let
us hope, more worthy person.
The name of Cringleford has puzzled many.
Blomefield thought it meant “Shingleford”; some
moderns think it derives from Kringel, said to be
Norse for a curve or loop, and point to the many-looped
windings of the Yare; but we can never
know.
The meaning of Eaton is, however, self-evident.
The place is first cousin to all the other
Eatons and Etons (sometimes, I am ashamed to
say, they are spelled Heaton, which is of course
a h’error) in this country: places that obtained
their name, as this does, from being situated
beside streams. Eatown, the “water town,” is the
// 312.png
.pn +1
signification of the name, and Eaton here dabbles
its feet in the overflow of the Yare, just as Eton
next Windsor does in that of the Thames, or the
Cheshire Eaton in the overrunnings of the Dee.
.if h
.il fn=i292.jpg w=600px id=i292
.ca
EATON “RED LION.”
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: EATON “RED LION.”]
.sp 2
.if-
Here, when once up the rise through Eaton
village street, past the Dutch-like “Red Lion,”
the old highway to all intents and purposes ends,
and it is only a suburban two miles, travelled by
electric trams, by which you enter the City of
Norwich. It is a noble road, bordered by young
avenues and lined with private residences, but
still suburban, and out of key with old road
romance. Along it we come to the junction of
roads opposite the fine Norfolk and Norwich
Hospital, where the road from London, through
Colchester and Ipswich, falls in, and both go
forward together down St. Stephen’s Street into
the City.
// 313.png
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2
XLVII
.sp 2
.ni
Distinguished travellers of old generally made
their entrance here, through the long-vanished
St. Stephen’s Gate in the equally vanished walls.
This way came, in 1600, on his public entry, that
dancing Will Kemp, of whom we have already
heard much. On the completion of his ninth
day’s jigging, from Hingham to Barford Bridge
and Norwich, he ended at St. Giles’s Gate, and
thence, to avoid the crowd, rode into the City.
Three days later, having duly advertised his
intentions, he danced in through St. Stephen’s
Gate. The City Waits assembled to do him
honour, huge crowds pressed forward to see him,
the Mayor entertained this caperer and gave
him £5 in Elizabethan angels, and altogether he
had a truly phenomenal reception.
.pi
The delightful old City of Norwich was ever
hearty and hospitable, and, although much else
be changed, it is so still. No merely ecclesiastic
settlement, the cold glories of its Cathedral are
but one phase of Norwich. Prosperous and self-sufficing
in the best sense; its citizens public-spirited,
its situation beautiful, its highways
imposing and byways quaint and curious,
Norwich stands by itself, in its likeness to no
other town or city in England. If one must seek
a parallel, it is to Exeter one must look, for there
is much in common between the two. Both are,
very distinctly, the capitals of their respective
// 314.png
.pn +1
provinces; Norwich still metropolitan to East
Anglia, and Exeter to the West of England. In
both, too, the streets are winding and without
plan, affording facilities, unparalleled elsewhere,
of immediately losing your way.
Unhappily—it is purely an antiquarian criticism—the
prosperity and business energy of
Norwich have swept away many landmarks of
absorbing interest to the student of the roads,
and much havoc has been wrought with the old
coaching-inns. While many of the more obscure
old taverns remain, the great coaching houses,
standing on prominent sites and occupying much
valuable ground, have, for the most part, been
destroyed. Only “Rampant Horse Street” now
remains to tell of the inn once bearing that name.
The “Maid’s Head,” a splendid specimen of an
old hostelry, remains, it is true, in Tombland, but
where is the “King’s Head,” to which the Newmarket,
Thetford, and Norwich Mail once came,
and where the “Coach Office, Lobster Lane,”
whence the Cromer Coach, the “Unicorn,” by
North Walsham, set out twice a day? What the
“Unicorn” was like we may see from Pollard’s
picture. It was something between an omnibus
and a hearse, and was drawn by a “unicorn”
team—i.e., three horses; whence the name of
the coach.
.if h
.il fn=i295.jpg w=600px id=i295
.ca
THE “UNICORN,” NORWICH AND CROMER COACH.
From a print after J. Pollard, 1830.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration:
THE “UNICORN,” NORWICH AND CROMER COACH.
From a print after J. Pollard, 1830.]
.sp 2
.if-
St. Peter’s, the narrow thoroughfare adjoining
Rampant Horse Street, behind the loop road,
and overshadowed by the great bulk of St. Peter
Mancroft, was a great rendezvous for the coaching
// 315.png
.pn +1
// 316.png
.pn +1
// 317.png
.pn +1
and carrying interests, and signs of that old-time
feature in its history still remain in the numerous
inns and houses that once were inns, now converted
to other uses. Of these the most important
by far was the “White Swan,” sometimes called,
for convenience, merely the “Swan.” Many years
have passed since it retired from public life, and
it is now occupied as a wholesale provision store,
for which the spacious old coach-yard and its
great ranges of buildings seem to render it
peculiarly suitable. Many might pass the house
unnoticed, for its red-brick front is severely plain.
The old coach-archway, however, is sufficient to
attract the attention of the observant, for although
the fine late seventeenth-century decorative carvings
of festooned fruit and flowers on its framing
are blunted by time and many successive coats of
paint, their excellence still proclaims itself to the
critical eye. A cursory glance shows that the
house was re-fronted with brick in the Georgian
period, and that beneath that commonplace skin
an ancient building, in parts dating back to the
fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, still exists. A
little fragment peeps interestingly from one corner
of the red brick; it is an ancient corner-post,
ornamented with the carving of an armed man.
Not even those Georgian builders had the heart to
destroy it.
.if h
.il fn=i298.jpg w=600px id=i298
.ca
ST. PETER MANCROFT, AND YARD OF\
THE “WHITE SWAN.”
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: ST. PETER MANCROFT, AND YARD\
OF THE “WHITE SWAN.”]
.sp 2
.if-
Among coaches frequenting the “White Swan”
were the “Light Post Coach,” the “Expedition,”
and its successor, the “Magnet,” referred to in
the earlier pages of this book. But long before
// 318.png
.pn +1
any coaches ran the “White Swan” was an
important house; the foremost in Norwich.
Traces of that ancient import are not far to seek,
and are stimulating to the imagination, even if
facts be wanting. Directly opposite the entrance,
across the very narrow street, is the great church
of St. Peter Mancroft, and in line with it are
the ancient Gothic vaulted cellars of the old inn.
Antiquaries, on their periodical visits to Norwich,
descend these depths, and, standing amid the
butter-tubs and the sacks of nuts and miscellaneous
groceries, speculate darkly on possible
secret communications between the mediæval inn
// 319.png
.pn +1
and the church, with little enlightenment ever
forthcoming.
A ramble over the premises discloses nothing
more of really ancient date, but does reveal
something unexpected, in the splendid long room
on the first floor of the buildings stretching
down the yard. It dates from about 1760, and
is, architecturally speaking, a noble room, of
moulded ceiling and panelled plaster walls,
with a raised platform at one end, surmounted
by a Chippendale shield with coat-of-arms
greatly resembling that of Caius College. It is
now degraded to the position of a stock-room,
piled with hams, sacks, and biscuit-boxes, but
keeps its distinction throughout adversity, and
is a reminder of times when the “White Swan”
was the centre of Norwich social life; when
balls and assemblies were held beneath its roof,
and the original “Theatre Royal,” nursery of
much dramatic talent, was established here. At
the “White Swan” those pioneer players, the
“Norwich Company of Comedians, servants to
his Grace the Duke of Norfolk,” as they humbly
styled themselves, began their performance. At
that time the play began at 7 p.m., but the doors
were opened at 5. An hour earlier than that, the
servants of the playgoers were sent to keep the
seats, which were not highly expensive. The
highest price was half a crown for a box; and
the pit, then fashionable, cost only two shillings.
When such prices ruled, the actor’s lot was not
exactly luxurious, and stage-furnishing was quite
// 320.png
.pn +1
a negligible quantity. But dramatic art was
never higher than then
.sp 4
.h2
XLVIII
.sp 2
.ni
It has been already remarked how winding
are the ways of Norwich, and it is indeed only
with difficulty those once in it can find their
way out. If it were required to turn a very
pretty compliment to Norwich, here we have
the most obvious foundation for one. But we
must on to the coast, and take the City only
incidentally, as its mazy streets are threaded on
the way to the Aylsham road. It is by no
means slighting Norwich so to do, for the City
has been described in a short impressionistic
sketch at the close of that companion volume
to this, the “Norwich Road.”
.pi
From St. Peter’s, across St. Giles’ Street, by
the back of the Guildhall, to Charing Cross is
the most interesting way. This Charing Cross
does not in the least resemble the place of the
same name in London, and obtains its title from
quite a different source. No “chère reine” gave
this name, which is a corruption of “Sherers’
Cross,” a wayside cross so styled from the
sheermen or cloth-cutters who once inhabited
this quarter. It was demolished in 1732.
.if h
.il fn=i302.jpg w=431px id=i302
.ca
GATEWAY, STRANGERS’ HALL.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: GATEWAY, STRANGERS’ HALL.]
.sp 2
.if-
Here, fronting on the narrow street, is the
so-called “Strangers’ Hall,” one of the most
// 321.png
.pn +1
deeply interesting places in Norwich; what, in
fact, is nothing less than a well-preserved specimen
of a mediæval merchant’s house. We do
not, in this England of ours, lack churches and
cathedrals, palaces, castles, and mansions of the
great, to show us how we worshipped, and how
kings and nobles housed, in days of old; but
we are very sadly lacking in remains of the
houses built for, and occupied by, the wealthy
traders of anything from five to two centuries
ago. We know comparatively little of the way
in which the Mayors of our great towns lived,
and thus the accidental preservation of this
house, built by a mayor of Norwich, and
inhabited by and added to by a long succession
of such worthies, is particularly instructive. The
oldest portion is the crypt, used anciently as
cellarage and store-room, built probably by
Roger Herdegrey, who was a Member of Parliament
in 1358, and Bailiff of Norwich two years
later. After passing through many hands, the
property came, about 1490, to Thomas Cawse,
mercer, twice Mayor, and twice the chosen
representative of the City in the Council of the
State. From him it came to Nicholas Sotherton,
mercer, who seems to have rebuilt the greater
portion. In 1610 his family sold it. Already
the house had acquired the name of the
“Strangers’ Hall,” for Sotherton, under the
patronage of the Duke of Norfolk, had warmly
welcomed the Flemings, refugees from Holland
under the Spanish domination, and had given
// 322.png
.pn +1
those strangers the use of his house. Although
they did not reside here, and probably did not
use it for any great length of time as the
central meeting-place of their community, it
// 323.png
.pn +1
has, singularly enough, retained the name under
many changes. Francis Cock, grocer, and
Mayor in 1627, resided here, and built the great
staircase in the Hall, together with the large
oak-framed oriel window; and another Mayor,
Sir Joseph Paine, followed him, and made
alterations for his own comfort and dignity in
1659. He was the last of that long line, and
when he died, in 1668, the history of the
old place becomes obscure. Early in the nineteenth
century, however, we obtain a glimpse
of it as the Judges’ Lodgings, but thenceforward
the old relic fell upon neglect, and would have
been recklessly destroyed for rebuilding had not
an enthusiastic and public-spirited citizen
// 324.png
.pn +1
purchased it in 1899. It still bears the misleading
name of the “Strangers’ Hall,” and no one
sufficiently impresses the visitors who pay their
sixpence a head for being shown over it that
the building is a rare and splendid specimen
of the domestic surroundings of the wealthy and
cultured traders who made Norwich prosperous
in old days.
.if h
.il fn=i303.jpg w=600px id=i303
.ca
THE STRANGERS’ HALL.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: THE STRANGERS’ HALL.]
.sp 2
.if-
Sotherton lies, with many another worthy
citizen, in St. John’s church, Maddermarket, or
other one of the many churches—“steeple-houses”
the Quakers would call them—set so thickly
about Norwich. Where Gibson lies, who in
those old days set up the neighbouring water-fountain,
I know not; but surely his spirit
must be unquiet since the ornamental portion
of it has been built into the wall of Bullard’s
brewery, and the water of which he was so
proud cut off. No longer can one drink here,
but Gibson’s very excusable little crow over
his work may yet be read:—
.pm verse-start
This water here cavght
In sorte as yowe see
From a spring is brovghte,
Thereskore foot and three
Gibson hath it sovghte
From Saynt Lawrens wel
And his charg this wrowghte
Who now here doe dwel
Thy ease was his coste not smal
Vouchsafid wel of those
Which thankful be his worke to see
And there can be no foes.
.pm verse-end
// 325.png
.pn +1
Near by, on our way to Cromer, is a building
notable above all others in the varied culture
of the good City of Norwich. This is St.
Andrew’s Hall, where the triennial Norfolk
and Norwich Musical Festivals are held. The
long, flint-built structure, of late Gothic design,
wears a strikingly ecclesiastical appearance, as
it has every right to do, for it really is a
church, and was built by the Dominicans, or
Black Friars, as the church of their monastery.
The City certainly acquired it at a bargain-price
when that establishment was dissolved,
under Henry VIII., but extraordinary bargains
of a precisely similar nature were on offer
throughout the kingdom at that time, and prices
ruled so low that in retired situations, where
the huge abbeys and priory buildings were far
away from any possible civic use, they were
given to the nearest local magnate, to do with
as he would. King Henry took £80 for this
particular example, and Norwich certainly had
full value for its money.
The building then was made to serve the
purpose of the City Grammar School, and so
continued for twelve years, until Edward VI.,
in 1548, granted the ancient Charnel House
Chapel—then usually called the Carnary—in
the Cathedral Close, for the School. A striking
change then came over the Dominicans’ old
church, for the citizens, who had found the
Guildhall too cramped, put this fine roomy building,
under the name of the New Hall, to use
// 326.png
.pn +1
as an assize-court, an exchange, a place of
assembly, a hall for City feasts, or as anything
that the public needs of the moment dictated.
On Sundays the large alien Dutch population
were permitted the use of the nave for their
services, and the Flemish refugees had the choir.
Perhaps the grandest of all the sumptuous feasts
and receptions given here was that at which
Charles II. and his Court were entertained, in
1671. It was on this occasion that he knighted
Sir Thomas Browne.
.if h
.il fn=i306.jpg w=600px id=i306
.ca
CARICATURE IN STONE, ST. ANDREW’S HALL.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: CARICATURE IN STONE, ST. ANDREW’S HALL.]
.sp 2
.if-
The eastern part of the building, anciently
the choir, is still divided from the nave, and
is known as Blackfriars Hall. It is in the
nave, or “St. Andrew’s Hall,” that the Musical
Festivals have long been held. Portraits of Norfolk
and Norwich worthies, pictures of historical
events, and naval trophies decorate the walls.
The good folk of Norwich are rightly proud
// 327.png
.pn +1
of their noble Hall, and the ways of its custodians
have always been keenly followed. Its restoration
and re-arrangement in 1863 were the cause
of a good deal of local searchings of heart and
contention, and a survival of that war of parties
may still be seen in the grotesque carvings that
form stops to the hood-mould of a door on the
south side of the Hall. They are carved in the
true mediæval style, one representing a pig
blowing a horn; the other showing a pig with
a very self-satisfied expression of countenance
playing an organ, while a number of grinning
demons blow the bellows. These were the
satirical efforts of the victorious party who thus
sealed their victory; the point of these satires
in stone being that the head of the defeated
faction was a Mr. Bacon—Richard Noverre
Bacon, editor and proprietor of the Norwich
Mercury, born 1798, died 1884.
.if h
.il fn=i307.jpg w=600px id=i307
.ca
CARICATURE IN STONE, ST. ANDREW’S HALL.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: CARICATURE IN STONE, ST. ANDREW’S HALL.]
.sp 2
.if-
// 328.png
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2
XLIX
.sp 2
.if h
.il fn=i308.jpg w=600px id=i308
.ca
TOMBLAND ALLEY.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: TOMBLAND ALLEY.]
.if-
.sp 2
.ni
By Prince’s Street we come to Tombland, the
open space by the Cathedral, where St. George’s
Church and Tombland Alley make so picturesque
a group; and thence across the Wensum at Fye
Bridge and along Magdalen Street. Bearing to
the left, by Botolph Street, and noticing the gable
end of the “King’s Arms” inn, with its ornamental
tie-rods “I.C. 1646,” on the gable-end, we finally
pass along St. Augustine Street, to come to the
// 329.png
.pn +1
long suburban rise of the Aylsham Road, through
Upper Hellesdon.
.pi
Here, just beyond the “One Mile” inn, is an
ancient cross, recently restored, looking like a
survival of some historic event, but a near glance
reveals that it only marks the boundary of the
City in this direction.
Horsham St. Faith’s village—generally called
in these parts merely “St. Faith’s,” or “St. Fay”—is
just over the hill-top, and is the usual small
Norfolk village with a large church. It stands
aloof from the centre of the place, up a by-lane,
and opposite a row of six old seventeenth-century
red-brick cottages, known as “Church Row,” all
very rural. A last touch in that sort is the sight
of a bird’s nest built into the delicately undercut
stonework of the upper part of a tabernacle on the
south parvise.
A general air of dilapidation and put-off-all-the-repairs-to-next-year
kind of aspect belongs to
the central spot of this village—the hub of St.
Fay’s. A very large, very rush-overgrown, and
excessively duckweedy pond occupies the best
part of the road, slyly lying in wait to receive into
its green and rank bosom the village tippler or
the incautious midnight roysterer from Norwich;
nay, even the unwary cyclist.
This out-at-elbows air reflects ill upon the
condition of the horsehair weaving, still the
staple trade of the village. It is “not what it
was,” say the natives, and although some thirty
to forty weavers are still employed, the trade is a
// 330.png
.pn +1
decaying one. Historically, St. Faith’s is interesting,
for it is bound up with the story of Katharine
Howard, who was daughter of Lord Edmund
Howard, niece of the Duke of Norfolk, and fifth
wife of that professional widower, Henry VIII.,
who wrought so greatly in all manner of affairs of
Church and State during his thirty-eight years’
reign that we meet him at almost every turn.
It seems that while still a child, not yet
thirteen years of age, in the house of her father’s
step-mother, the Duchess of Norfolk, at St. Faith’s,
she was debauched by one Henry Manox, perhaps
a music-master, described as “a scoundrelly
player on the virginals,” and that she had relations
of a more than questionable nature with
one Francis Derham. Loud as are the moralists
in denouncing the levity of our own times, we
have but to read the intimate accounts of the
household in whose vile society this forward girl
was brought up, to be convinced that we have
advanced since then. The fury of Henry knew
no bounds when these disclosures were made,
eighteen months after his wedding with her, and
she paid the penalty with her life, in the Tower,
in the twentieth year of her age.
.if h
.il fn=i311.jpg w=600px id=i311
.ca
“ST. FAY’S.”
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: “ST. FAY’S.”]
.sp 2
.if-
Of Newton St. Faith, scarce more than a mile
down the road, there is little to be said, but its
few houses are succeeded by the loveliest two
miles of highway in Norfolk. Enclosed fields,
trim with their neat hedges and long lines of
wheat and barley, or well-ordered in their infinite
perspectives of winter furrows, give place suddenly
// 331.png
.pn +1
// 332.png
.pn +1
// 333.png
.pn +1
to a land rich in the varied tints of bracken and
heather, and wooded, now in dense clumps, or
again in isolated trees. These are the fairy-like
woods of Stratton Strawless. The peculiar beauty
of these ferny glades is chiefly due to the large
numbers of silver birch—that airy and graceful
“lady of the forest”—intermingled with the dark
pines, the grey beeches, and the sturdy oaks that
all go to make up the ranks of the Stratton woods,
whose picturesque abandon is greatly added to by
their being open to the road. For this is common
land, and before Robert Marsham planted it in
1797, was a stretch of heath, barren of aught
save heather and bracken. It is, in fact, in the
existence of this ancient heath that Blomefield,
the historian of Norfolk, rightly or wrongly, found
the origin of the “Strawless” in the place-name,
for he points out that no corn could have been
grown here. His finding is probably wrong, for
Mr. Walter Rye, eminent in Norfolk archæology,
has found it was “Stratton Streles” in the time
of Henry III., and that the name almost certainly
is Danish, deriving from the village of Stroeden
Strelev in Denmark.
We need not hasten to acclaim the Marsham
who created these woods as a public benefactor,
because he did not aim at anything of the kind,
and merely wished to improve the outlook from
his hideous house, now confronted with these
glades, instead of by a monotonous flat. There is
no denying the ugliness of that square brick
mansion. A benefactor would have hidden it
// 334.png
.pn +1
from the public gaze, but it is, instead, rather
ostentatiously on view from the road, across a
wide, uninterrupted stretch of grassy meadow.
The lodges are far more endurable than the
mansion, and although built in the same dull
brick, in a manner fondly thought classic, the
brilliant coat of whitewash given them makes
their clumsiness almost picturesque.
.if h
.il fn=i314.jpg w=600px id=i314
.ca
STRATTON STRAWLESS LODGES.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: STRATTON STRAWLESS LODGES.]
.sp 2
.if-
The village lies nearly a mile away from the
road, past the reedy lakes that follow the course
of a little stream. In the church may yet be seen
the monuments of Marshams, from 1250 onwards;
together with a window filled with probably the
very worst stained glass on earth.
With regret we leave these lovely woods for
the cultivated and more prosaic lands towards
Hevingham, whose great church, overlooking the
// 335.png
.pn +1
road from its knoll, is a mile distant from the
village. It is a church with lofty nave, but no
aisles, and, restored with more thoroughness than
discretion, has been swept clean of any possible
interest. But its noble south porch, and the
gigantic sweet-chestnut tree in the churchyard,
give the spot an air of distinction.
Hevingham, with the three succeeding places,
is celebrated (or rather, made notorious) by a
rhyme whose inner meaning no local antiquary
has yet followed. Thus it runs:—
.pm verse-start
Blickling flats, Aylsham fliers,
Marsham peewits, and Hevingham liars.
.pm verse-end
Marsham, a mile distant, lies at the foot of a
hill. It is a scattered village, its Dutch-gabled
“White Hart” and the sign of the “Plough and
Shuttle” pointing to some bygone foregathering
of local agricultural and weaving interests; but
the church is its principal feature. Not imposing
without, its interior is particularly beautiful, with
clerestoried nave, fine open-timbered roof, and
splendid rood-screen. A feature that piques the
curiosity of enquiring minds, with no possibility of
that curiosity being satisfied, is the very ancient
slab on the floor, outside the chancel, with the
word “oblivio” repeated eight times, and a Latin
inscription to the effect that the person buried
here was of opinion that he would be forgotten as
soon as his heart ceased to beat. It would appear
as though he wished this oblivion, for the stone is
without name or date.
// 336.png
.pn +1
Marsham was the incumbency of the Reverend
Samuel Oates, father of the famous, or infamous,
Titus Oates, who figures so pitifully in the reign
of Charles II., and is described, with much justice,
in biographical dictionaries as “Perjurer.” But
Marsham escapes the odium of being his birthplace,
for he was born at Oakham, in Rutlandshire.
From Marsham an avenue of young oaks—young
as oaks go, for they are only some sixty
years old, and mere infants—leads on to Aylsham,
passing, on the right hand, an old toll-house, and
crossing the railway on the level at Aylsham
station.
Aylsham once manufactured linen and worsted,
and the “lineners” and worsted-weavers
contributed greatly to the building of its fine
church, a church packed away inconspicuously in
a corner off the Market Square; but those old
trades are dead now, and only the weekly market
keeps the little town alive. You enter the place
along a street once called “the straits,” and still
remarkably narrow, past the old coaching-inn, the
“Dog”; but the little town does not fully disclose
itself along this narrow way, for its central point
and focus is the Market Square, reached on the
left by a short and narrow street. Here stands
that curious old early seventeenth-century brick
inn, the “Black Boys,” remarkable for its coved
eaves, still bearing the old decorative design that
gave the house its name. This is a device of
foliage and fruit, painted and gilt, running the
two sides of the house, with three little black,
// 337.png
.pn +1
impish-looking figures in the centre of the side
facing the square and one at each corner, all
blowing gilded horns. They look like the “little
demons” of Ingoldsby’s “Truants,” who had
“broken loose from the National School below,”
but they are really only intended for representations
of Bacchus, and thus by a side-wind, as it
were, to hint to travellers of old of the good cheer
of the house.
.sp 4
.h2
L
.sp 2
.ni
The “Black Boys” owes its existence on this
scale to the near neighbourhood of Blickling Hall,
perhaps the most famous mansion in Norfolk, and
certainly the most beautiful and stately. Blickling
is scarce a mile distant, and is so small a
village that it must have been to Aylsham in
general, and to the “Black Boys” in particular,
the custom fell in those old days when the
Hobarts of Blickling Hall entertained so royally.
We cannot forbear visiting Blickling, for not
merely Hobarts, but Anne Boleyn herself, most
unhappy of queens, is associated with that noble
pile and has made it historic.
.pi
The first sight of Blickling Hall is one of the
greatest surprises that can possibly befall the
traveller in search of the picturesque. Every
one, in these days of broadcast photographs, is
in some sort familiar with the look of the Hall,
// 338.png
.pn +1
and most people can tell you it looks like another,
and a better, Hatfield House; but no one is prepared
on coming downhill past the church into
the village, to find the main front of this finest
of Jacobean mansions, this dream of architectural
beauty, actually looking upon the road, unobstructedly,
from behind its velvet lawns. No
theatrical manager, no scene-painter, cunning in
all the artful accessories of the stage, could devise
anything more dramatic, and you—Columbus of
the roads, who steer into unwonted byways in
search of the beautiful—cannot repress the involuntary
tribute of an admiratory O! at sight
of it. There it stands, like some proud conscious
beauty, isolated. No meaner building shoulders
it, and for all the stir you see or sound you hear,
it might be some enchanted palace, not waked to
life and love. It has, indeed, its modern tragedy,
for its owner, the young Marquis of Lothian, is
afflicted, and non-resident.
There is something of a village, a little way
removed; but only a few houses, themselves
picturesque, are to be found, together with an
inn, the “Buckinghamshire Arms,” displaying
the heraldic achievement of the Earls of Buckinghamshire
and their motto, Auctor pretiosa fecit
(“The giver makes them valuable”), one of those
delightfully bumptious and self-sufficient phrases
abounding in titled families.
.if h
.il fn=i319.jpg w=600px id=i319
.ca
BLICKLING HALL.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: BLICKLING HALL.]
.sp 2
.if-
Blickling is generally associated with the unhappy
Anne Boleyn, but her birthplace is quite
uncertain, and although her early years were
// 339.png
.pn +1
// 340.png
.pn +1
// 341.png
.pn +1
passed at this place, it was not Blickling Hall,
but the long-vanished Dagworth Manor, with
which she was familiar. The present stately
building was not commenced until 1619, eighty-three
years after her death. Dagworth Manor
stood nearly a mile distant from the present Hall,
and was built towards the close of the fourteenth
century by Sir Nicholas Dagworth, who was succeeded
by that Sir Thomas de Erpingham who
built the Erpingham Gate in the Cathedral Close
at Norwich, together with the tower and the
greater part of Erpingham church, and was that
stout old warrior who in his old age fought at
Agincourt, as we read in Shakespeare’s Henry V.,
where the King says:—
.pm verse-start
Good morrow, old Sir Thomas Erpingham:
A good soft pillow for that good white head
Were better than a churlish turf of France.
.pm verse-end
It was that brave old knight who led the onslaught
with the war-cry to his men, “Nestroke” (“Now
strike!”).
Erpingham was followed by Sir John Fastolfe,
who sold the property about 1459 to Sir Geoffrey
Boleyn, mercer and Lord Mayor of London, who was
son of Geoffrey Boleyn of Salle. The Boleyns are
thought to have derived their name from one of
their family who traded to Boulogne. Sir Geoffrey
was great-grandfather of Anne Boleyn, who became
Queen to Henry VIII. and mother of Queen
Elizabeth. Sir James Boleyn, uncle to Anne,
lived at Dagworth in reduced circumstances, and
// 342.png
.pn +1
finally sold the estate to Sir John Clere, of
Ormesby, whose spendthrift son alienated it to
Sir Henry Hobart, Lord Chief Justice, and grandson
of Henry VII.’s Attorney-General. It was this
Sir Henry who began to build Blickling Hall, in
1619. His son completed it in 1628. The Hobarts
in time became ennobled as Earls of Buckinghamshire,
and finally the property came by marriage
to the Kerrs, Marquises of Lothian.
The striking general resemblance of Blickling
Hall to Hatfield House is accounted for by the
belief that the same architectural draughtsman
designed both. Its interior is worthy of the lovely
outward view, and is still rich in magnificent old
furniture, in the famous Blickling library, and in
relics of unhappy Anne Boleyn. It is curious
to observe how the Hobarts, who had no family
connection with the Boleyns, and did not even
purchase the estate from them, preserved the
memory of their sometime ownership, in the
sculptured figures of rampant bulls that flank
the main entrance and make punning allusion
to Boleyn.
The church of Blickling was restored in 1874,
after the death of the eighth Marquis of Lothian,
to whose memory a most ornate altar-tomb, with
marble recumbent portrait effigy and marble angels
at head and foot, has been erected. The guide-books
tell with reverence how it cost £5,000, and
how it was sculptured by G. F. Watts, R.A.; but
we need not necessarily be impressed, save, indeed,
by such senseless squandering of money and by
// 343.png
.pn +1
the appalling marmoreal solidity of those angels,
who do by no means aid and abet the imagination
in its conception of angels as ethereal beings. In
short, if we resolutely refuse to be snobbishly
affected by the cost of this monument and by
the Royal Academical initials of its sculptor, we
shall have no difficulty in perceiving it to be a
gross failure. The last grotesque touch is in the
selection of a marble streaked with brown veins.
One such streak discolours one side of the effigy’s
face, and gives it the dreadful appearance of one
suffering from a loathsome skin disease.
Within this church are many pretty and
fanciful epitaphs. Here you may read the verses
on various members of the Hargraves, citizens of
London and members of the Companies of Joiners
and “Shoomakers,” and those of their children,
untimely dead. “Sleep, sweetly sleep,” says one:
.pm verse-start
Sleep, sweetly sleep, slumber this night away,
The world at last shall burn, and then it will be day;
.pm verse-end
and by the light of that conflagration the youthful
Hargrave is doubtless expected to rise, Phœnix-like,
and soar into the realms of eternal bliss!
Consalus Hargrave died in his second year,
1626:—
.pm verse-start
Had he lived to be a man,
This inch had growne but to a span.
Nowe he is past all feare and paine
’Twere sin to wish him here againe.
Veiwe but the way by which we come,
Thou’lt say his is best that’s first at home.
.pm verse-end
// 344.png
.pn +1
Here, too, are some Boleyn memorials, among
them a brass to an Anna Boleyn, who died in
childhood in 1476. She was aunt to the
historical Anne.
A very striking feature in this church is the
altar-tomb of the Cleres, whose armorial bearings,
with those of the distinguished families
with whom they claimed to be allied, are
gorgeously repeated very many times around the
four sides of the monument. It is a work of
the Jacobean period, and retrospectively includes
the old coats of alliances as far back as the
eleventh century. Modern research proves most
of these claims to be deliberately false.
.if h
.il fn=i325.jpg w=600px id=i325
.ca
“WOODROW INN” AND THE HOBART\
MONUMENT.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: “WOODROW INN” AND THE\
HOBART MONUMENT.]
.sp 2
.if-
Among the many Hobarts who lie in the
vaults beneath Blickling church is one who
met with a very tragical end. This is that Sir
Henry Hobart, Bart., who was knighted by
Charles II. in 1671, on that monarch’s progress
through Norfolk, after having been entertained
with princely magnificence at Blickling Hall.
Sir Henry was no thick-and-thin supporter of
the Stuarts, for he fought for King William
against James II. at the Battle of the Boyne,
and when Dutch William’s rule was established,
settled down here at his Norfolk home, where
he might have lived to a green old age, had it
not been for his overbearing temper. It was
in 1698, in a dispute over an election in which
he had borne a losing part, that Sir Henry
Hobart’s career was cut short. He resented some
expressions of opinion used by a neighbouring
// 345.png
.pn +1
gentleman, Mr. Oliver le Neve, and challenged
him to a duel. Hobart had the reputation of
being one of the most accomplished swordsmen
of his day, and doubtless expected to do Le Neve’s
business at that spot on Cawston Heath where
the meeting was arranged to take place.
Le Neve was notoriously a bad swordsman, and
probably made his will and went forth to that
encounter never hoping to return; but the conflict
had an unexpected result. Hobart drew
first blood, running his sword through his
adversary’s arm, but immediately afterwards fell,
mortally wounded, with a thrust in the stomach,
of which he died the next day, Sunday,
August 21st, 1698. He fell not so much from
// 346.png
.pn +1
any unwonted skill on Le Neve’s part as from
the circumstance that Le Neve was a left-handed
man and his sword-play difficult to follow.
Le Neve had to fly the country for a time;
not in fear of the law, which then countenanced
the duello, but from the threatened vengeance
of the powerful Hobart clan. The spot where
the duel was fought is some four miles from
Blickling. Cawston Heath has long been enclosed
and brought under cultivation, but the
place is marked by a rude stone pillar surmounted
by an urn and simply inscribed with the letters
“H.H.” This monument stands within a dense
strip of plantation beside the Norwich and Holt
road, close to where it is crossed by the road
between Aylsham and Cawston. Adjoining the
place is an old coaching hostelry—the “Woodrow”
inn—with a curious gallows sign spanning the
highway
.sp 4
.h2
LI
.sp 2
.ni
From Aylsham to Cromer is little more than
ten miles; downhill from Aylsham town to the
levels at Ingworth, whose name, meaning the
“meadow village,” illustrates that it is, in fact,
set down beside the water-meads bordering the
river Bure. Ingworth has a dilapidated church
picturesquely overlooking the road from a little
hillock, with only the lower part of its round
tower left.
// 347.png
.pn +1
.pi
Erpingham church is presently seen, away
to the left, standing lonely in the ploughlands,
without any village, and on the right hand an
avenue leads to Lord Suffield’s place, Gunton
Park. Hanworth is out of sight, but the toll-house
at Hanworth Corner, now converted into
a post office, argues its near neighbourhood. To
this succeeds Roughton, where a pond, a scrubby
piece of common, another round-towered church,
and a comfortable homely inn comprise the
salient features of the place.
.if h
.il fn=i327.jpg w=600px id=i327
.ca
INGWORTH.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: INGWORTH.]
.sp 2
.if-
The last miles into Cromer from Roughton
wear a wind-swept appearance. The hedgerow
trees that have hitherto stood boldly erect now
begin to cower and grow in contorted shapes,
all with one general inclination away from the
prevalent easterly gales of winter and bitter
// 348.png
.pn +1
spring. The physical aspect of the country also
changes. From the long levels and the gentle
undulations we come to the exposed table-land
of Roughton Common, the gorse and bracken-grown
land around Crossdale Street, and the
gravelly tumbled ups and downs of Felbrigg.
We seem to have exchanged the suavities of
Norfolk for the bold and picturesque ruggedness
of the Scottish littoral.
Felbrigg, whose name seems to have been
brought from Denmark by the early piratical
settlers from that country, in fond remembrance
of their own Felborg, lies on a slip road into
Cromer, beside the main highway, and is worth
notice, not merely on account of this heathy
picturesqueness, like that of a sublimated Hampstead
Heath, innocent of houses, Cockneys, and
County Council notice-boards, but by reason of
its ancient Hall and the Windhams who for
centuries owned the property. The Windhams
came originally from Wymondham in the fifteenth
century, and at first spelled their name in precisely
the same way as that of the town. They
replaced the ancient knightly family of De
Felbrigge, whose stately monuments in brass still
remain on the pavements of the church. There
is the brass to Simon de Felbrigge, 1351, and
the particularly fine one to a Sir Simon, who died
in 1443, and is represented here as a Knight of
the Garter and Standard-Bearer to Richard II.
The ancient home of the Felbrigges was rebuilt
by Windhams in a mixed Jacobean and Dutch
// 349.png
.pn +1
style, and is a stately residence deeply bowered
in a densely wooded Park. The pierced parapet
inscription, “Gloria Deo in Excelsis,” seen against
the sky, is earnest of the piety of the Windhams
of that time.
The Windhams—the real Windhams, for the
later ones were merely Lukins, who assumed the
name on inheriting the property—ended with
William Windham, the statesman, who, having
played an enlightened and patriotic part as
Secretary for War under Pitt from 1794 to 1801,
and as Secretary for War and the Colonies in
Lord Grenville’s Administration of 1806, died in
1810. With him ended the high reputation of
that family, and although romance of a kind
speedily made the name better known all over
England than ever it had been before, it was a
romance that conferred notoriety rather than
fame.
Felbrigg does not merely look romantic: every
circumstance of latter-day romance attaches to
that noble Hall, those green o’er-arching glades.
It is true that the story is of an ignoble and
sordid type, but what it lacks in sweetness and
good savour it fully makes up for in the matter
of human interest. It is the way of latter-day
romance to be unsavoury, and the story of Felbrigg
Hall and “Mad Windham,” the talk of
England in the early sixties, and still vividly
recollected in Norfolk, reeked with foulness
beyond the common run of public washings of
dirty linen.
// 350.png
.pn +1
.if h
.il fn=i330.jpg w=600px id=i330
.ca
FELBRIGG HALL.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: FELBRIGG HALL.]
.sp 2
.if-
It was a tale of family degeneracy, in which
the honoured name of Windham should, strictly
speaking, have had no part. When the famous
statesman died, the historic property went to his
nephew, William Howe Lukin, who assumed the
name of Windham, and married Lady Sophia
Hervey, sister of the Marquis of Bristol. In
November, 1854, the self-styled William Howe
“Windham” died, leaving a widow and an only
son, William Frederick, at that time fourteen
years of age, and already, at Eton and elsewhere,
an ill-disposed and uncontrollable buffoon and
vicious idiot. Among the guardians of this
promising heir to the name and lands of the
Windhams were his mother and his uncle, General
Windham, whose actions and motives were so
severely and unjustly criticised by the Radical
press and the lower orders in course of the notorious
“Windham Trial.”
// 351.png
.pn +1
William Frederick Windham would, in the
ordinary course, have come of age and succeeded
to his inheritance, without question, in 1861; but
his conduct as a boy and as a growing man was
so extraordinary and outrageous that it was reluctantly
decided by General Windham and others
to petition for a judicial inquiry into the state
of mind of this heir, who, they claimed—and after-events
fully supported that claim—could not be
safely entrusted with the management of his own
affairs.
The Commission “de Lunatico Inquirendo,”
popularly known as the “Windham Trial,” granted
to the petitioners, began on December 16th, 1861,
and lasted thirty-four days. Extraordinary interest
was taken in the proceedings, and even now the
pamphlets printed and sold by thousands, containing
the dreadful evidence taken in those
thirty-four days, may be occasionally met with in
the cottage homes of Norfolk.
According to the opening statement, the alleged
lunatic would, on coming of age, have been entitled
to Felbrigg Hall and rents of £3,100 per
annum, subject to the deductions of an annuity of
£1,500 for his mother and £350 for upkeep of
property. In all, he would have enjoyed an
income of about £1,300, to be increased by 1869
to between £4,000 and £5,000, on succession to
the neighbouring Hanworth estates. The object
of the petitioners seeking to have their ward
adjudged incapable of managing his own affairs
was not to deprive him of liberty, but merely to
// 352.png
.pn +1
procure legal sanction of their proposal for themselves
to be made guardians of the property during
his lifetime, in the interests of the lunatic himself,
who was not, and had never been, according to
their contention, a sane and reasoning human
being. To support that contention, they made,
by the opening statement of counsel, and in the
evidence of troops of witnesses, a long series of
allegations, showing that he had exhibited simple
imbecility in early childhood, and that with his
physical growth his mental powers had continually
decayed. The cold, dispassionate opening speech
of counsel for the petitioners, recounting Windham’s
idiotcies, still, even though the actors in
that drama are now all dead, makes the reader
shiver at its businesslike unfolding of a nature
scarce removed from that of a beast. Sent to
Eton, he was a buffoon there, and commonly
known as “Mad Windham.” His indescribable
habits led to his being early removed and placed
under the care of a long succession of tutors,
none of whom could make anything of him, and
threw up the impossible task, or were relieved of
it, one after another. Many testified in court
that he was incapable of reasoning, addicted to
low associates, filthy and profane language, and
wanton and capricious cruelty to animals. He
would gorge his food, feeding without the aid of
knife and fork, and, eating until he was sick,
would begin again, like a dog. This extraordinary
conduct was not caused by drink, for, among all
his failings, drunkenness was not one. His violent
// 353.png
.pn +1
and capricious temper had led to extraordinary
scenes. At an evening party he had rushed at
a gentleman whom he had never before seen and
to whom he had not spoken a word, and, shrieking
like a wild Indian, had pinned him to the wall
by his whiskers. He was exceptionally and consistently
rude and offensive to ladies, and
delighted to tear their clothes and make grimaces
at them. He could not follow out any train of
thought, and acted from one minute to another
without reference to previous actions, becoming
the laughing-stock of servants. He would throw
money away in the streets, and laugh when saner
people scrambled for it; would fondle a horse
one moment and thrash it unmercifully the next.
These actions, said counsel, could not be those of
a person enjoying reasonable use of his faculties,
but there was worse to come. It was only with
reluctance General Windham was obliged to bring
these painful affairs of his unhappy nephew into
the light of publicity; but there was no other
course, for his vile associates had persuaded him
that all the efforts being made to prevent his
moral, physical, and financial ruin were only
part of a scheme by his uncle to deprive him
of his liberty and property. That it was not
so might be at once explained by the statement
that, as a matter of fact, whichever way the
inquiry resulted, or whatever happened to his
nephew, in no case would General Windham be
the heir.
Witnesses were then called who bore out the
// 354.png
.pn +1
opening statement, and added a great deal more.
Some told how Windham would at times pretend
to be a fireman, and, dressing in character, go
about in a devastating manner with an axe and
chop down doors and smash windows. At other
times the fancy took him to act the part of a
railway guard. With uniform made for the
character, he would frequent railway platforms,
blow a whistle, and wave a flag. Once, performing
these pranks, he nearly caused a railway disaster.
At other times he would make off with passengers’
luggage. Altogether, it will be conceded, from
the public, as well as from the family, point of
view, he should have been put under restraint.
But the real compelling cause of the action
was the connection he had recently formed with a
woman whom he had picked up in London, during
Ascot week. Agnes Willoughby, alias Rogers, in
the words of counsel, “was not the chastest of the
chaste; her favours in love-affairs were not few;
she was known to the police.” On August 30th,
1861, having come of age on the 9th, he married
her and settled £800 a year on her, to be increased
in 1869 to £1,500. She had been, up to that
time, living with a man named Roberts, and after
the marriage the three lived together.
The action was defended by Windham and his
associates, who, in the event of his being declared
a lunatic, would have lost the rich harvest of
plunder they were reaping. A pitiful feature of
the case, and one tending to prejudice the public
against the petitioners, was that Windham’s
// 355.png
.pn +1
mother, naturally unwilling to see her son
branded as a madman, gave evidence for him.
“What,” asked Pilate, “what is truth?” Of
the more than 150 witnesses called during the
progress of the case, a number declared they had
never noticed any peculiarity about Windham,
save “perhaps he was exceedingly high-spirited.
He always behaved like a gentleman.” Yet his
career forbids us to believe anything of the kind.
It did not take the special jury of twenty-four
“good men and true” very long to deliberate
upon the concluding speeches of counsel. In
half an hour they returned, with the astonishing
verdict, “That Mr. Windham is of sound mind
and capable of taking care of himself and his
affairs.” This announcement was received with
cheers.
Both the verdict and its public reception
reflect the feeling of the time on questions of
lunacy. The terrible scandals and revelations of
sane persons having in the past been “put away”
by relatives for sake of gain were fresh in the
public mind, and no conceivable evidence short of
that of homicidal mania would have sufficed for a
jury at that period. Windham was left to his
own devices. The costs of the action, coming out
of his estate, amounted to £20,000, and with the
extravagance and robbery that went on, unchecked,
around him, speedily embarrassed the
unhappy creature. The vile parasites of the
woman he had married had sole control. They
even appeared at Felbrigg, and gave orders for
// 356.png
.pn +1
the valuable timber to be cut down and sold. His
wife, who had never made a secret of the fact that
she loathed him, went off with some one else; but
Windham, who in a lucid moment had brought
divorce proceedings against her, condoned the
offence, and she returned for just as long as there
was any plunder to be obtained from the wreck of
his fortunes. Later, she was living with a man
named Jack Abel, who then kept a public-house,
the “Lord Camden” (still standing) in Charing
Cross, Norwich. Abel was an unscrupulous, but
successful horse-dealer, who had, in earlier years,
been in league with a gang of smugglers trading
between Wells and Thetford, and supplied the
horses carrying their illicit merchandise.
Meanwhile, Windham was throwing away
money and property with both hands. A passing
mania for coaching led him to set up a Norwich
and Cromer coach, which became the terror of the
countryside. To travel in or on “Mad Windham’s”
coach, or to be on the road when it came
past, was equally hazardous, and a respected
Norfolk cleric still recalls his solitary encounter
with the maniac in a cloud of dust, with four
rearing horses, and a stentorian voice, yelling,
“Out of the way, d——n your eyes!”
There was every element of uncertainty about
“Mad Windham’s” coach. It was uncertain as
to whether he would not suddenly decide to go to
Yarmouth instead, and equally uncertain whether,
wherever it was, you would get there safely; but,
once there, certitude of a sort was reached, in your
// 357.png
.pn +1
unalterable determination not to return by him,
and, if needs were, to walk back.
The story of his financial expedients is a long
one, but it ended in July, 1864, with final and
irrevocable bankruptcy. He had completely dissipated
the residue of his extensive property, and
was dependent upon an allowance made by his
uncle, whose efforts to save him from himself had
met with such misrepresentation. To keep him
employed and out of mischief, he was induced to
accept a situation at £1 a week, to drive the
“Express,” Norwich and Cromer coach; and when
that enterprise failed—chiefly, we may suppose,
because he drove it, and because of an absurd
prejudice the passengers cherished against acquiring
broken necks—it was kept on the road solely
for the same purpose; until, indeed, he fell in
love for the hundredth time. On this occasion it
was a Norwich barmaid who had caught his fancy.
She thought coaching “low,” and he gave it up,
to please her.
The poor fool was drawing to his end. A few
weeks longer of a miserable existence at the
“Norfolk Hotel,” where he had one solitary room,
and it was all over. He died there, after a few
hours’ illness, February 2nd, 1866. A clot of blood
on the lung cut his career short, in his twenty-sixth
year. His body was removed to Cromer, and
thence to the family vault at Felbrigg, where it
lies among the real Windhams and the sham.
Tom Saul, an old coachman, together with a few
cronies of the Norfolk Tap, were the mourners.
// 358.png
.pn +1
Felbrigg had already passed out of the family,
and had been purchased by a man whose career
was itself a romance.
John Kitton, who bought the estate and the
Hall as they stood, including the furniture,
library, and the entire appointments of the house,
had been a grocer in a small way of business—one
may almost say he had owned a small chandler’s
shop—in Norwich. His rise dated from a small
speculation in wheat shipped from Russia on the
eve of the Crimean War. By the time it had
reached these shores the price of grain had become
enormously enhanced, and he netted a very handsome
profit. His next venture, of sending out a
heavy shipment of oil-cake to the Crimea, was
equally successful, and laid a solid basis for the
great fortune this clever man of business rapidly
acquired. The sum he is stated to have given,
in one cheque, for Felbrigg, “lock, stock, and
barrel,” when the estate was sold under “Mad
Windham’s” bankruptcy, was £137,000. He then
changed his name to Ketton, and set up as a
country squire. He died, aged sixty-one, in 1872.
When Augustus Hare visited Felbrigg in 1885,
he found Ketton’s daughters had adopted the
Windhams and all their heirlooms and traditions,
as though they were their very own. Nothing
whatever had been removed at the sale, and, as
a matter of fact, the ancient family portraits and
the statesman’s library are here, even now. Said
Miss Ketton: “Mr. Windham comes every night
to look after his favourite books in the library.
// 359.png
.pn +1
He goes straight to the shelves where they are:
we hear him moving the tables and the chairs
about; we never disturb him, though, for we
intend to be ghosts ourselves some day, and to
come about the old place, just as he does”—so
that Felbrigg Hall bids fair to become a congested
area, in the spookish sort
.sp 4
.h2
LII
.sp 2
.ni
There can be few more delightful woodlands than
those of Felbrigg, and no more romantic approach
to a seaside than that of the woodland road which
goes, as though tunnelled through the trees,
steeply down from Felbrigg’s height to Cromer’s
level. In the distance, down there, you see the
illimitable sea, Cromer’s great church tower
standing up against it, and the houses of the town
clustered around—a little group set in a vast
expanse of salt water and green fields. This is
the most delightful way into Cromer, but we may
not take it. Like Moses, permitted merely to look
upon the Promised Land, we must only gaze upon
that road and retrace our route to Roughton, there
to pick up the coach-road, by no means so delightful
and prepossessing an entrance to Cromer.
.pi
It is, however, only comparatively that this
entrance is to be despised. It is true it leads
past the railway station and a lengthy line of
suburbs, down a long gradient, with houses instead
// 360.png
.pn +1
of seascape in front of you; but if, indeed, everything
be newly created and baldly uninteresting,
at least there in nothing sordidly unprosperous in
view, and everything is spick-and-span, even to the
road-paving, which in every street in Cromer is
composed of asphalte. Almost every one of those
smart red-brick villas is of the boarding-house
order, and only when the very centre of the town
is reached, by the church, do the shops commence.
Cromer, until modern times a small fishing
village, but now grown to the proud estate of a
fashionable, expensive, and exclusive seaside resort,
was once a portion of the town of Shipden, and
lay quite half a mile distant from the sea.
“Shipedana” and “Seepedene,” the names by
which Shipden is referred to in the “Domesday
Book,” remind us that Shipden was not necessarily
merely a place of ships, but that the name
perhaps came originally from Anglo-Saxon words
meaning a sheep pasture. Vague accounts still
tell how Shipden was suddenly destroyed by a
violent storm and eruption of the sea in the reign
of Henry IV., and half a mile out to sea is still
visible, at exceptionally low tides, the mass of
flint walling called the “Church Rock,” said to
be the remains of Shipden church. A Yarmouth
excursion steamer was wrecked on it in the
summer of 1888.
Cromer was spoken of in 1374, and again in
1382, as “Crowmere.” Although it thus, by
the disappearance of Shipden, was thrust into the
foremost place, it never attained the size of that
// 361.png
.pn +1
unfortunate town. The sea was advancing too
surely for a repetition of Shipden’s fate to be
dared. In 1551, if we may judge from the petition
then presented to the Privy Council, Cromer
was in sore case:—
“It is situate and adjoining so near the sees
that of late in our memorye, by the rages and
surges of the same sees, the number of a grete
sort of houses knowen by us have been swallowed
uppe and drownded. The inhabitants hathe to
their grete and importunate charges defended the
same by making of grete peers, and dayle put to
insatiable charges scharse and onetheable to be
borne of the same inhabitants.”
This anxiety seems to have made havoc with
their literary composition. A direct result of this
petition was the grant, thirty years later, of a
licence to levy dues upon wheat, barley, and malt,
the revenue from them to be applied in defending
the town from the sea; but when Taylor, the
“Water Poet,” visited Cromer on his “Very
Merry—Wherry—Ferry Voyage” round the coast
in 1623, the sea was still encroaching, and he
describes the place in doleful strain:—
.pm verse-start
It is an ancient market-town that stands
Upon a lofty cliff of mould’ring sands;
The sea against the cliffs doth daily beat,
And every tide into the land doth eat.
The town is poor, unable by expense,
Against the raging seas to make defence,
And every day it eateth further in,
Still waiting, washing down the sand doth run.
// 362.png
.pn +1
A goodly church stands on these brittle grounds,
Not many fairer in Great Britain’s bounds;
And if the sea shall swallow it, as some fear,
’Tis not ten thousand pounds the like could rear.
.pm verse-end
Very true; but the encroaching ocean has not
made such great headway since then as might
have been expected from past history, and from
the soft nature of the cliffs on whose crest the
town stands. Those cliffs, 100 feet high, are composed
of sand, gravel, and clay, made rotten by
landsprings, and only saved from further decay in
front of the town by heavy concrete walls.
.if h
.il fn=i343.jpg w=600px id=i343
.ca
CROMER IN 1830.
From a print after T. Creswick, R.A.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration:
CROMER IN 1830.
From a print after T. Creswick, R.A.]
.sp 2
.if-
The church, of whose grandeur Taylor speaks
so highly, is the only building in Cromer of any
age, and is the town’s one land and sea mark.
There is no view of Cromer which does not include
its great tower, rising to a height of 159 feet, and
the very inevitableness of it is apt at last to change
the admiration of a first glimpse into the intolerable
boredom created by photographic views from every
conceivable and inconceivable point. This great
and beautiful building, in the lofty and airy Perpendicular
style, built shortly after Shipden was
destroyed, owes its present perfect state of repair
to the restoration, begun in 1863. Before that
work was undertaken, the chancel was a roofless
ruin, and had been in that condition ever since
1681, when it was purposely destroyed with gun-powder.
The discredit of this act of vandalism,
given by popular legend to Cromwell, is an injustice
to the Lord Protector. The real vandal
was the Rev. Thomas Gill, Rector of Ingworth,
// 363.png
.pn +1
// 364.png
.pn +1
// 365.png
.pn +1
lessee of the great tithes under the Bishop of Ely.
As lessee, an obligation was laid upon him to keep
the chancel in repair, and to save himself expense
he obtained permission to destroy it.
The church and its well-kept churchyard, in
the very centre of the little town, give the place
all the dignity of a cathedral city. Modern commercial
buildings, many-storeyed and lofty, are,
however, detracting something from the apparent
height and great bulk of the church. The old
rustic stones in the churchyard still remain, and
look strange in the unwonted urban modernity of
their surroundings: doubtless some “improving”
hand will shortly away with them. Among these
simple memorials one may see, prominently displayed,
that of five mariners, part of the crew of
the Trent, of North Shields, who were drowned
on Cromer beach in the great storm of February,
1836; while a memorial to one John Nurse, who
left the world without regret, says:—
.pm verse-start
Farewell, Vain World,
I’ve seen enough of the,
& careless I am what you
Can say or do to me.
I fear no threats from
An infernal crew;
My day is past, and I bid
The world “Adieu.”
.pm verse-end
// 366.png
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2
LIII
.sp 2
.ni
It was somewhere about the beginning of the
nineteenth century, contemporaneously with the
general rise of seaside resorts, that the invigorating
air of Cromer first began to attract attention, and
so early as 1806 an anonymous visitor, seeking
health here, published Cromer: a Descriptive
Poem, a wearisome production of several hundred
lines, in blank—very blank—verse. The reader
shall be spared his rhapsodies on the sea, but his
circuitous description of a taxed cart, typical of
his literary method, is not without its unconscious
humour:—
.pi
.pm verse-start
Quiet the steady Sociable proceeds,
No danger in its course, and in the rear
The humbler vehicle, that bears displayed,
In letters legible to ev’ry eye,
The stamp of fiscal avarice.
.pm verse-end
If brevity be, indeed, the soul of wit, how witless
this laboured effort!
If our poet could but return and his poem
were to do again, he would have to wrestle with
very changed conditions, and would probably give
us something like this:—
.pm verse-start
Noisy, th’ effluvious motor-car appears,
Throbbing and shaking like a jelly:
Smelling to Heaven in pestiferous clouds
Of ill-combusted petrol, blue and beastly.
// 367.png
.pn +1
Danger in its course of twenty miles
An hour, and in the rear a frightened horse
And battered trap. Wrecking the shops,
Frightening the old ladies, upsetting the Bath chairs,
Crumpling up the casual cyclist,
And, generally, playing the very deuce
With everything, it goes. Its licence plates
Boldly inscribed, designed by law to be
Legible to ev’ry eye, artfully obscured
With wraps and rugs. Give me my gun.
.pm verse-end
And so forth. There is room for lengthy eloquence
on the subject.
Cromer has in these later years become the
Motor Cad’s Paradise. Here are the gorgeous
“hotels” beloved of his little soul, and here the
good roads he can render dangerous to others with
little risk to himself.
A wide gulf separates the Cromer of that poet’s
time and ours, but the change that has taken
place is quite recent, and astonishingly sudden.
At the close of Georgian days a certain vogue
had been established, and a Bath House was built
under the cliff. This was washed away during
the storm and high tide in 1836, but the “Bath
Hotel” of that period, stuccoed, white-painted,
midway between cliff-top and sea, remains, together
with a few of the early Victorian
bay-windowed seaside lodging-houses, small but
comfortable, that line the narrow streets near the
cliffs’ edge. It was following this great storm
of 1836 that the first of Cromer’s defensive sea-walls
was built; but the greater storm of 1845
wrecked it and washed away the timber jetty,
// 368.png
.pn +1
built in 1822, at a cost of £1,400. What
Cromer was like at this period may be judged
from the illustration, which clearly shows how,
from the picturesque point of view, it has been
spoiled.
In those days before railways, sea-borne goods
came cheapest to Cromer, on whose sands the
cargo-boats of small burden were beached and
unloaded between tides. The few houses for the
accommodation of summer visitors had not overshadowed
the fisher-village, and the narrow
streets remained paved, as from time immemorial
they had been, with cobble-stones. The great
people, locally, of that period were the allied
families of Gurneys, Buxtons, and Hoares, of
whom the few petty shopkeepers stood so greatly
in awe that no visitors could count upon being able
to purchase anything until those tradesfolk had
made quite certain those grand seigneurs were
not likely to require the articles in demand.
The railway, which altered all this, was long
kept away by the exclusives, but it came at last,
and, backed by the sentimental gush of Mr.
Clement Scott’s writings on what he was pleased
to call “Poppyland,” spoiled Cromer. The
public read the articles on “Poppyland,” and fell
all over the place. There are those—and among
them the present writer—who are sick of the
name of “Poppyland,” and for whom Overstrand
is spoiled by that much-quoted poem, the “Garden
of Sleep,” on which the Great Eastern Railway
guide-book writers, and the manufacturers of
// 369.png
.pn +1
// 370.png
.pn +1
// 371.png
.pn +1
pictorial post-cards have traded, in and out of
season.
.if h
.il fn=i349.jpg w=600px id=i349
.ca
CROMER.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: CROMER.]
.sp 2
.if-
The evolution of Cromer from fisher-village
to fashionable resort was well on the way in
1892, when Sir Evelyn Baring, who in 1841
was born at the early nineteenth century mansion
called Cromer Hall, took the title of Cromer on
his being created a Viscount; and the process
was completed in the summer of 1901, when the
pleasure Pier, constructed at a cost of £43,000,
was opened. It replaced the wooden Jetty built
at a cost of £6,000, after the storm of 1845, and
battered to pieces in 1897. The new Pier,
ornamental, and rather alien in appearance, is
evidence of Cromer’s determination to be select
and to stand aloof from popular vulgarities.
Here those who seek the automatic machine
shall not find, and no stalls, and no advertisements
are permitted. At Cromer, in fact, the
higher vulgarity is cultivated, just as at Yarmouth
you plumb the depths of the lower variety.
The tripper, holiday-making at Yarmouth, who
comes over to see what Cromer is like, and finds
no whelk and oyster stalls, and no popular
entertainments on the sands, thinks it dull; and
the average man, wandering along the Lighthouse
cliffs in danger of having an eye knocked out
by the wealthy and selfish vulgarians who practise
golf there, is prone to consider Cromer a fine
place, except for the people who frequent it, and
for whose benefit the giant hotels facing the sea
have been built, and still are building.
// 372.png
.pn +1
Looking upwards from the Pier, you see a
long line of these great caravanserai, skirting
the cliff-top. The Hôtel de Paris, the Hôtel
Métropole, and others with titles equally English,
astonish the beholder, not only with their
appearance on what was until recently the rural
Norfolk coast, but also with the rashness that
reared such heavy loads of bricks on a seaboard
so notoriously storm-swept and on the crest of
crumbling cliffs. It does not need a prophet of
very great prescience to declare that either
disaster must overtake them or the cliffs
must, from time to time, be strengthened at
enormous cost, to bear the weight. Cromer has
been fortunate not to have suffered so much
as thought inevitable three hundred years
ago, but the cliffs on either side have been
eaten away, and have lately suffered, to such
an extent, that the land it stands upon will
soon be a promontory, in advance of the
general coast-line, and must accordingly be more
exposed.
Meanwhile, the many-towered steep, whose
sky-line is so picturesquely serrated with cupolas
and spires, is wonderfully effective when viewed
from the beach on some kindly day of hazy
effects, when the raw edges of those fire-new
hotels are softened down, and imagination is
given a chance. Then the sea-front of Cromer
is even more charming than it was in Creswick’s
time, and has something of the Arabian Nights
order of lordliness.
// 373.png
.pn +1
Such is Cromer, whose population is mounting
up to 4,000 souls. The beauty of its situation
is unquestionable, the purity and bracing qualities
of its air proverbial, and the hardiness of its
fishermen well known. But (to the great joy of
the Great Eastern Railway) it is no longer unspotted
from the world, and has become modish
and sophisticated. It is a very pretty mode
and a coquettish sophistication, and if indeed
you do very speedily exhaust Cromer itself—why,
then the magnificent hinterland of wild tumbled
hills and dark fir-woods is well-nigh inexhaustible.
But the solitude and the natural life of the
seaboard villages are extinct, even as are those
features of Cromer. Summer existence there is
like that of the midges and butterflies; gay,
without care.
In winter, however, when the holiday folk are
gone, its modern status lies heavy, like a shadow,
on one: for then the whole place, given over,
body and soul, to providing for visitors, is in
doleful dumps. This is the dark reverse of that
bright summer picture, and the fact that Cromer’s
season is only of eight or ten weeks’ duration
means many little domestic miseries. To stand
in the empty October streets and meet the last
bathing machine being drawn up from the deserted
beach to winter quarters; to see the
restaurants and tea-shops without customers, and
cards offering rooms to let in most of the houses,
is to realise that a fisher-village on an open coast,
without river or harbour, and consequently no
// 374.png
.pn +1
trade, cannot suddenly become a resort without
a tragical side to its comedy. I stand on the
cliff-top as night shuts down over the North Sea,
and I have the place wholly to myself. The
hotels have switched on their electric lights, but
those rooms, so gay and crowded in August, are
now for the most part empty. I am sorry for the
Cromer that was, and much more sorry for the
Cromer that is.
.if h
.il fn=i354.jpg w=600px
.ca
THE END.
.ca-
.if-
.if t
.sp 2
[Illustration: THE END.]
.if-
.sp 2
// 375.png
.pn +1
.pb
.sp 4
.h2
INDEX
.sp 2
.ix
Albemarle, 6th Earl of, #201#, #220#-#224#
Ambresbury Banks, #55#
Archer, Fred, #142#-#144#, #165#
Attleborough, #256#-#61#, #264#, #265#-#266#
—— Mere, #263#
Audley End, #92#, #96#-#102#
Aylsham, #315#, #316#, #326#
Balsham Ditch, #116#, #123#
Barnham, #187#-#189#
Barton Mills, #1#, #11#, #190#, #193#, #194#, #197#, #204#
Bishop’s Stortford, #13#, #14#, #15#, #17#, #20#, #57#-#66#
Blickling, #315#, #317#-#324#
—— Hall, #317#-#322#
Bourn Bridge, #121#
Boy’s Grave, The, #168#
Brent Ditch, #116#, #121#
Bridgeham, #245#
—— High Tree, #245#
Bure, River, #326#
Bury St. Edmunds, #1#, #11#, #12#, #167#, #174#-#186#, #264#
Cam, River, #8#, #102#, #113#, #114#, #116#, #117#, #118#
Cambridge Heath, #27#, #28#
Cawston Heath, #325#
Chunk Harvey’s Grave, #215#
Clapton, Lower, #32#, #34#
—— Upper, #35#, #37#
Coaches:—
Diligence (Norwich), #3#
Expedition (Norwich), #4#-#9:i009#, #297#
Express (Norwich and Cromer), #337#
Flying Machine (Norwich), #3#
Machine (Norwich), #3#
Magnet (Norwich), #7#-#11#, #206#, #297#
// 376.png
.pn +1
Norwich Mail (by Bury and Thetford), #11#, #12#, #43#, #183#, #294#
Old Stortford (Bishop’s Stortford and London), #13#, #65#
Phenomenon, or Phenomena (Norwich), #12#
Post Coach (Norwich), #3#, #297#
Safety (Norwich), #12#
Stortford (Bishop’s Stortford and London), #66#
Telegraph (Norwich), #11#, #12#
—— (Saffron Walden and London), #13#
Unicorn (Norwich and Cromer), #294#
Coaching, #12#-#14#, #34#, #53#, #138#, #183#, #206#, #220#-#223#, #288#, #294#-#297#, #336#
Coaching Notabilities:—
Gilbey, Henry, #65#
Horne, Benjamin Worthy, #12#
Low, William, #65#
Nelson, Robert, #12#
Cringleford, #272#, #287#-#291#
Cromer, #1#, #2#, #339#-#254#
Crossdale Street, #328#
Culford Park, #186#
Deadman’s Slade, #44#
“Deserted Railway,” The, #119#-#121#, #123#
Devil’s Ditch, #49#, #116#, #120#, #124#-#129#, #130#, #133#, #156#, #258#
Devil’s Punch Bowl, #247#
Duleep Singh, Maharajah of Lahore, #201#, #204#, #206#
East Wretham, #250#
Eaton, #291#
Edmund, Saint, #175#, #176#, #178#, #211#, #234#, #256#
// 377.png
.pn +1
Elveden, #11#, #187#, #188#, #189#, #190#, #198#-#206#
—— Gap, #206#, #207#
Epping, #14#, #15#, #18#, #54#
—— Forest, #14#, #34#, #38#, #39#, #43#-#48#, #52#-#55#
Erpingham, #321#, #327#
Euston, #187#
Exning, #116#, #130#
Felbrigg, #328#-#339#
Fleam Dyke, #116#, #123#
Folly Hill, #169#-#171#
Fornham St. Geneviève, #185#, #186#
—— —— Martin, #185#
Frampton, Tregonwell, #151#
Gibbs, Capt. John, #133#, #258#
Gilbey, Sir Walter, Bart., #65#, #66#
Great Chesterford, #2#, #8#, #14#, #15#, #17#, #113#, #116#, #117#-#119#
Gwynne, Nell, #18#, #91#, #131#
Hackney, #28#-#33#
—— Road, #27#-#29#
Hanworth, #327#
Hargham, #206#, #255#
Harlow, #55#
Hethersett, #272#, #283#-#287#
Hevingham, #315#
High Beech, #44#, #52#
“Highflyer,” the Racehorse, #138#
Highway Act of 1555, #16#
Highway-men, #14#, #28#, #47#-#54#, #139#, #207#, #244#, #250#, #260#
Hockerill, #12#, #57#, #66#-#69#
Horsham St. Faith, #309#-#311:i311#
Iceni, The, #114#, #123#, #127#-#129#, #130#
Iciani, Great Chesterford, #117#
Icknield Way, The, #114#-#118#, #187#-#189#, #215#, #231#
Ingham, #186#
Ingworth, #326#
Inns (mentioned at length):—
Angel, Bury St. Edmunds, #180#-#183#
Bell, Thetford, #208#, #220#-#224#
Belle Sauvage, Ludgate Hill, #12#
Black Boys, Aylsham, #316#
Blue Boar, Whitechapel, #11#
// 378.png
.pn +1
Boar and Castle, Oxford Street, #12#
Bull, Bishopsgate Street, #2#, #4#, #7#, #8#, #11#
—— Whitechapel, #12#, #66#
Bull and Mouth, St. Martin’s-le-Grand, #12#
Cock, Attleborough, #259#
Cross Keys, Wood Street, #11#
Crown, Great Chesterford, #118#
—— Hockerill, #66#
Eagle, Snaresbrook, #43#
Flower Pot, Bishopsgate Street, #11#
Golden Cross, Charing Cross, #11#, #12#
Green Dragon, Wymondham, #278#
Horns, Newport, #18#, #91#
King’s Arms, Bourn Bridge, #121#
King’s Head, Norwich, #11#, #294#
Maid’s Head, Norwich, #294#
Norfolk Hotel, Norwich, #337#
Rampant Horse, Norwich, #8#, #294#
Red Lion, Eaton, #292#
Rutland Arms, Newmarket, #152#-#155#
Sun, Saffron Walden, #104#
Swan-with-two-Necks, Lad Lane, #3#
Waggon and Horses, Great Chesterford, #118#
Wake Arms, Epping Forest, #38#, #54#
White Bear, Stansted Street, #66#, #71:i071#, #74#
—— Hart, Newmarket, #146#-#149#
—— Horse, Fetter Lane, #3#, #4#, #11#
—— —— Little Saxham, #172#
—— Swan, Norwich, #8#, #11#, #12#, #297#-#299#
Woodrow Inn, Cawston Heath, #325#
Jockey Club, #136#, #139#
Kennett, River, #171#, #191#
Kentford, #116#, #171#
Kett’s Rebellion, #271#-#278#, #284#
// 379.png
.pn +1
King’s Gate, Holborn, #16#
Knott’s Green, #38#
Lark, River, #116#, #185#, #193#, #197#
Larlingford, #252#, #262#
Lea, River, #19#, #32#, #38#
—— Bridge Road, #32#-#38#
Leyton, #33#, #36#, #39#
Leytonstone, #34#
Littlebury, #112#
Little Chesterford, #113#
Little Saxham, #172#-#174#
“London Lane,” #18#, #84#, #85:i085#
Loughton, #44#
Lower Clapton, #32#, #34#
“Mad Windham,” #329#-#339#
“Mag’s Mount,” #122#, #123#
Marman’s Grave, #188#
Marsham, #315#
Mildenhall, #107#, #193#-#197#
Morley St. Peter, #272#
Newmarket, #1#, #2#, #13#, #14#, #15#, #17#, #23#, #49#, #98#, #115#, #116#, #119#, #120#, #124#-#166#
—— Heath, #50#, #98#, #107#, #122#, #124#-#137#, #140#, #144#, #157#-#161#, #190#, #191#
Newport, #16#, #18#, #69#, #81#-#94#
Newton St. Faith, #310#
Norton, Thomas (“Waymaker” to James I.), #15#
—— Folgate, #26#
Norwich, #1#, #2#, #3#, #8#, #11#, #12#, #14#, #116#, #167#, #266#, #273#-#278#, #292#-#309#
Old-time Travellers:—
Charles II., #16#, #18#-#25#, #83#
Cosmo III., Grand Duke of Tuscany, #17#
Evelyn, John, #17#, #131#
John, King, #179#
Kemp, Will, #264#-#266#, #293#
Pepys, Samuel, #16#, #101#
Winwood, Mr. Secretary, #15#
Ouse, River, “Lesser,” “Little,” or “Upper,” #189#, #208#, #209#, #215#, #233#
Paine, Tom, #236#-#243#
Pampisford, #116#, #121#
—— Ditch, #116#, #121#
Peddar’s Way, #246#, #248#-#250#
// 380.png
.pn +1
Pedestrians:—
Barclay, Captain Robert, of Ury, #133#-#135#
Bartley, Robert, #235#
Digby, Lord, #133#
Wood, Abraham, #135#
Potter Street, #55#
Quendon, #80#
Railways, #13#, #66#, #191#, #192#, #284#
—— Great Eastern, #14#, #66#, #348#
—— Newmarket and Chesterford, #119#-#121#
—— Northern and Eastern, #13#
Red Lodge, #191#
Rhodes, Cecil, #58#-#61#, #65#
Rich, Sir Edwin, #261#, #263#, #266#
Ringmere, #247#
Risby, #172#
Road-repairing, #15#, #261#
Rockland, #250#, #265#, #266#
Roudham, #250#, #252#
—— Heath, #245#-#247#, #252#
Rye House, #18#-#25#
—— —— Plot, #18#-#26#
Saffron, #105#, #109#-#112#
—— Walden, #13#, #65#, #81#, #91#, #103#-#112#
Sawbridgeworth, #56#
Scoulton, Gulls of, #263#
“Seven Hills,” #187#
Shipden, #340#
Shoreditch, #1#, #26#
Six Mile Bottom, #119#, #120#, #123#
Snaresbrook, #43#
Spelbrook, #57#
Stamford Hill, #35#, #36#, #37#
Stansted Mountfitchet, #69#-#74#
—— Street, #69#, #74#-#77#
Stratton Strawless, #251#, #313#
Stump Cross, #118#
Tattersall, Richard, #137#-#139#
Theobald’s Road, #17#
Thet, River, #208#, #209#, #215#, #252#, #262#
Thetford, #116#, #167#, #186#, #189#, #193#, #204#, #208#-#245#
—— Heath, #206#, #251#, #261#, #262#
Thieves’ Lane, #260#
—— Pitt, #246#
Thorley Street, #57#
Thornwood Common, #55#
// 381.png
.pn +1
Turnpike Acts, #16#, #34#, #267#
—— Gates and Toll-houses, #27#, #32#, #88#-#90#, #185#, #206#, #244#, #288#, #291#, #316#, #327#
“Two Captains,” The, #129#
Ugley, #77#-#80#
Upper Clapton, #35#, #37#
—— Hellesdon, #309#
Via Devana, #132#
Walthamstow, #33#, #34#, #35#, #36#, #39#
Wendens Ambo, #95#
Whip’s Cross, #38#
Whitechapel, #1#, #11#, #13#
Wilby Old Hall, #254#-#256#
Windham Family, The, #268#, #328#-#339#
Woodford, #38#, #44#
“World’s End,” The, #34#
Worstead Street, #122#
Wretham Heath, #246#-#250#
Wymondham, #260#, #267#-#272#, #278#-#283#, #284#-#328#
Yare, River, #289#-#292#
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Printed and bound by Hazell, Watson & Viney, Ld., London and Aylesbury.
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.ul
.it Transcriber’s Notes:
.ul indent=1
.it Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
.it Typographical errors were silently corrected.
.it Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only when a\
predominant form was found in this book.
.if t
.it The character “^” is used to signify that the following character(s) are\
a superscript; as in “y^e”.
.it Text that was in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
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