Devon, Its Moorlands, Streams and Coasts by Northcote, Rosalind
Devon, Its Moorlands, Streams and Coasts by Northcote, Rosalind
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DEVON
DEVON 3
ITS MOORLANDS, STREAMS, & COASTS
LONDON—EXETER
CHATTO & WINDUS—JAMES G. COMMIN
M CM VIII
[Pg v]
[Pg vii]
Preface
The first and one of the greatest difficulties to confront a writer who attempts any sort of description of a place
or people is almost sure to be the answer to the question, How much must be left out? In the present case the
problem has reappeared in every chapter, for Devon is 'a fair province,' as Prince says in his 'Worthies of
Devon,' and 'the happy parent of ... a noble offspring.'
My position is that of a person who has been bidden to take from a great heap of precious stones as many as
are needed to make one chain; for however grasping that person may be, and however long the chain may be
The fact that I have been able to take only a small handful from the vast hoard that constitutes the history of
Devon will explain, I hope, the many omissions that must strike every reader who has any knowledge of the
county—omissions of which no one can be more conscious than myself. A separate volume might very well
be written about the bit of country touched on in each chapter.
This book does not pretend to include every district. I have merely passed through a great part of the county,
stopping here at an old church with interesting monuments, there at a small town whose share in local
history—in some instances, in the country's history—is apt to be forgotten, or at a manor-house[Pg viii] which
should be remembered for its association with one of the many 'worthies' who, as Prince says—with the true
impartiality of a West-countryman in regard to his own county—form 'an illustrious troop of heroes, as no
other county in the kingdom, no other kingdom (in so small a tract) in Europe, in all respects, is able to match,
much less excel.'
From the 'Tale of Two Swannes,' a view of the banks of the River Lea, published in 1590, I have ventured to
borrow the verses that close an address 'To the Reader':
Contents
Sonnet by Henry Newbolt page v
Preface vii
Chap. I. Exeter 1
II. The Exe 13
III. The Otter and the Axe 47
IV. Dartmoor 71
V. The Teign 89
VI. Torbay 106
VII. The Dart 119
VIII. Kingsbridge, Salcombe, and the South Hams 141
IX. The Three Towns 155
Preface 5
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Illustrations
The Guildhall, Exeter Frontispiece
Exeter from Exwick 2
Exeter Cathedral 5
The Exe: Tiverton 13
Topsham 41
Exmouth from Cockwood 45
Ottery St. Mary 47
Sidmouth 51
Branscombe 61
Beer Beach 65
Seaton Headland 67
The Windypost, or Beckamoor Cross 71
Yes Tor: Dartmoor 73
Lustleigh Cleave 75
Wistman's Wood 77
Widdecombe-in-the-Moor 81
Sheepstor 83
Lydford Bridge 84
Hey Tor 89
Fingle Bridge 91
Chudleigh Glen 101
Teignmouth and Shaldon 103[Pg xi]
Torquay from the Bay 106
Berry Head 113
Brixham Trawlers 115
Postbridge 119
Dartmeet Bridge 121
Holne Bridge 123
Fore Street, Totnes 129
Contents 6
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Illustrations 7
Devon
CHAPTER I
Exeter
'Richmond! When last I was at Exeter,
The mayor in courtesy show'd me the castle,
And call'd it Rougemont: at which name I started,
Because a bard of Ireland told me once,
I should not live long after I saw Richmond.'
King Richard III., Act IV, Sc. ii.
There are not many towns which stir the imagination as much as Exeter. To all West-Countrymen she is a
Mother City ... and there is not one among them, however long absent from the West, who does not feel, when
he sets foot in Exeter, that he is at home again, in touch with people of his own blood and kindred.... In Exeter
all the history of the West is bound up—its love of liberty, its independence, its passionate resistance to
foreign conquerors, its devotion to lost causes, its loyalty to the throne, its pride, its trade, its maritime
adventure—all these many strands are twined together in that bond which links West-Countrymen to Exeter.'
Mr Norway is a West-Countryman, and he sums up very justly the sentiment, more or less consciously
realized, of the people for whom he speaks, and especially the feeling of the citizens.
Not only the Cathedral, the Castle, and Guildhall, bear legends for those who know how to read them, but
here and again through all the streets an ancient house, a name, or a tower, will bring back the memory of one
of the stirring events that have happened. One royal pageant after another has clattered and glittered through
the streets, and the old carved gabled houses in the side-lanes must many a time have shaken to the heavy
tramp of armed men, gathered to defend the city or to march out against the enemy.
'Exeter,' says Professor Freeman, 'stands distinguished as the one great English city which has, in a more
marked way than[Pg 2] any other, kept its unbroken being and its unbroken position throughout all ages. It is
the one city in which we can feel sure that human habitation and city life have never ceased from the days of
the early Cæsars to our own.... The city on the Exe, Caerwisc, or Isca Damnoniorum, has had a history which
comes nearer than that of any other city of Britain to the history of the ancient local capitals of the kindred
land of Gaul.... To this day, both in feeling and in truth, Exeter is something more than an ordinary county
town.'
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Exeter from
Exwick
The city is very picturesquely placed, and before ruthless 'improvements' swept away the old gates and many
ancient buildings, the general effect must have been particularly delightful. 'This City is pleasantly seated
upon a Hill among Hills, saving towards the sea, where 'tis pendant in such sort as that the streets (be they
never so foul) yet with one shower of rain are again cleansed ...,' wrote Izacke, in his Antiquities of Exeter.
'Very beautiful is the same in building;' and he ends with some vagueness, 'for considerable Matters
matchable to most Cities in England.' The earliest history can only be guessed at from what is known of the
history of other places, and from the inferences to be drawn from a few scanty relics; but there is evidence that
Exeter existed as a British settlement before the Romans found their way so far West. It is not known when
they took the city, nor when they abandoned it, nor is there any date to mark the West Saxon occupation.
Professor Freeman, however, points out a very interesting characteristic proving that the conquest cannot have
taken place until after the Saxons had ceased to be heathens. 'It is the one great city of the Roman and the
Briton which did not pass into English hands till the strife of races had ceased to be a strife of creeds, till
English conquest had come to mean simply conquest, and no longer meant havoc and extermination. It is the
one city of the present England in which we can see within recorded times the Briton and Englishman living
side by side.' In the days of Athelstan, 'Exeter was not purely English; it was a city of two nations and two
tongues.... This shows that ... its British inhabitants obtained very favourable terms from the conquerors,[Pg 3]
and that, again, is much the same as saying that it was not taken till after the West Saxons had become
Christians.'
The earliest reliable records of the city begin about 876, when the Danes overwhelmed the city and were put
to flight by King Alfred. A few years later they again besieged Exeter, but this time it held out against them
until the King, for the second time, came to the rescue, and the enemy retreated. Alfred, careful of the city and
its means of defence, built a stronghold—very possibly in the interval between these two invasions—upon the
high ground that the Briton had chosen for his fastness, and on which the Castle rose in after-days. Rather
more than a hundred years later Athelstan strengthened the city by repairing the Roman walls. But it is with an
event of greater importance that Athelstan's name is usually associated, for it was he who made the city a
purely English one by driving out all the Britons into the country beyond the Tamar. It is probable that there
was already a monastery in Exeter in the seventh century, and that it was broken up during the storms that
raged later. In any case, Athelstan founded or refounded a monastery, and in 968 Edgar, who had married the
beautiful daughter of Ordgar, Earl of Devon, settled a colony of monks in Exeter. About thirty years
afterwards the Danes, under Pallig, sailed up the Exe and laid siege to the town, but were repulsed with great
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courage by the citizens. Beaten off the city, they fell upon the country round, and a frightful battle was fought
at Pinhoe. A curious memorial of it survives to this day. During the furious struggle the Saxons' ammunition
began to run low, and the priest of Pinhoe rode back to Exeter for a fresh supply of arrows. In recognition of
his service, the perpetual pension of a mark (13s. 4d.) was granted him, and this sum the Vicar of the parish
still receives. Two years later the Danes made a successful assault upon the city, and seized much plunder, but
made no stay.
Edward the Confessor visited Exeter, and assisted at the installation of Leofric as first Bishop of Exeter, when
the see was transferred from Crediton. The Queen also played a prominent part in the ceremony, for Exeter
and the royal revenues within it made part of her 'morning gift.' Leofric instituted several re[Pg 4]forms,
added to the wealth of his cathedral, and left it a legacy of lands and books. The most interesting of the
manuscripts is the celebrated Exeter Book, a large collection of Anglo-Saxon poems on very different
subjects. To give some idea of their variety, it may be mentioned that, amongst other poems of an entirely
distinct character, there are religious pieces, many riddles, the legends of two saints, the Scald's or Ancient
Minstrel's tale of his travels, and a poem on the 'Various Fortunes of Men.'
Seventeen years after King Edward's visit, William the Conqueror's messengers came before the chief men of
Exeter demanding their submission. But the citizens sent back the lofty answer that 'they would acknowledge
William as Emperor of Britain; they would not receive him as their immediate King. They would pay him the
tribute which they had been used to pay to Kings of the English, but that should be all. They would swear no
oaths to him; they would not receive him within their walls.' William naturally would not listen to conditions,
and arrived to direct the siege in person. For eighteen days the repeated attacks of the Normans were sturdily
resisted; then the enemy dug a mine, which caused the walls to crumble, and surrender was inevitable. 'The
Red Mount of Exeter had been the stronghold of Briton, Roman, and Englishman;' under the hands of the
Norman here rose the Castle of Rougemont, of which a tower, a gateway, and part of the walls, stand to this
day. In proportion to the size and strength of that castle, however, the remains are inconsiderable, but it fell
into decay very long ago, and as early as 1681 Izacke writes of 'the Fragments of the ancient Buildings
ruinated, whereon time ... hath too much Tyrannized.'
In the year after King Stephen began to reign, Baldwin de Redvers, Earl of Devon and keeper of the Castle,
declared for the Empress Maud, and held the Castle for three months against the citizens, headed by two
hundred knights who had been sent by the King. At the end of this time the wells ran dry, so that the besieged
were driven to use wine for their cookery, and even to throw over their 'engines,' set on fire by the enemy.
Henry II granted to the citizens of Exeter the first of their many[Pg 5] charters of privileges, and in the reigns
of King John and Henry III the municipal system was very much developed, and the city first had a Mayor.
Under Edward I a beginning was made towards the almost entire reconstruction of the Cathedral. Bishop
Warelwast, the nephew of William I, had raised the transeptal towers—a feature that no other English
cathedral possesses—and since his time the Lady Chapel had been added, but the design of the Cathedral as a
whole was evolved by Bishop Quivil. He planned what was practically a new church, and his intentions were
faithfully carried out. Before his day the towers were merely 'external castles,' but Bishop Quivil broke down
their inner walls, and filled the space with lofty arches, and the towers became transepts. Bishop Stapledon
spent huge sums in collecting materials, but before much progress with the work had been made he was
murdered by a London mob, in the troubled reign of Edward II; and the actual existence of much of the
building is due to Bishop Grandisson, who, sparing himself in no matter, lavished treasure and devotion on his
Cathedral. Writing to Pope John XXII, the Bishop said 'that if the church should be worthily completed, it
would be admired for its beauty above every other of its kind within the realms of England or France.'
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Exeter Cathedral
One of the most beautiful features of the Cathedral is the unbroken length of roof at the same height through
nave and choir, the effect intensified by the exquisite richness and grace of the vaulting. And the spreading
fans gain an added grace, springing as they do from that 'distinctive group of shafts' which, says Canon
Edmonds, 'makes the Exeter pillar the very type of the union of beauty and strength.' In the central bay of the
nave, on the north side, is the Minstrels' Gallery, one of the few to be found in England. It is delicately and
elaborately sculptured, and each of the twelve angels in the niches holds a musical instrument—a flageolet, a
trumpet and two wind instruments, a tambour, a violin, an organ, a harp, bagpipes, the cymbals, and guitars.
The choir is unusually long, and from the north and south aisles open chapels and chantries, in some of which
the carving[Pg 6] is very rich and fine. The Bishop's throne is elaborately carved, and more than sixty feet
high, and yet there is not one nail in it. During the Commonwealth a brick wall was built across the west end
of the choir, completely dividing the Cathedral. This was done to satisfy the Presbyterians and Independents,
each of whom wished to hold their services here, and the two churches formed by this division were called
Peter the East and Peter the West. The screen in the west front was added after the Cathedral was finished; it
is covered with statues in niches, figures of 'kings, warriors, saints, and apostles, guardians as it were of the
entrance to the sanctuary.' High above them, in the gable niche, is the statue of St Peter, to whom the
Cathedral is dedicated.
King Edward and Queen Eleanor kept Christmas at Exeter in 1285, and here the King held the Parliament
which passed the Statute of Coroners that is still law. During this visit the King gave leave to the Bishop and
Chapter to surround the close with a wall and gates, for at this time it was used to heap rubbish upon, and 'the
rendezvous of all the bad characters of the place.' Edward III granted his eldest son the Duchy of Cornwall—a
grant that carried with it the Castle of Exeter, and to the King's eldest son it has always since belonged.
Henry VI in 1482 visited the city in peace and splendour. Margaret, his Queen, came about eighteen years
later, while Warwick's plans were ripening, and the event is marked in the Receiver's accounts by the entry:
'Two bottles of wine given to John Fortescue, before the coming of Margaret, formerly Queen.' Not long
afterwards Warwick and the Duke of Clarence fled to Exeter, which had to stand a siege on their behalf; but
the effort to take the city was half-hearted, and in twelve days the attempt was abandoned. Edward IV arrived
in pursuit, but too late, for 'the byrdes were flown and gone away,' and a quaint farce was solemnly played
out. The city had just shown openly that its real sympathies were Lancastrian, but neither King nor citizens
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could afford to quarrel. 'Both sides put the best face on matters; the city was loyal; the King was gracious ...
the citizens gave him a full purse, and he gave them a sword, and all parted friends.'[Pg 7]
Richard III's visit was more eventful. The allegiance yielded him by the West was of the flimsiest character,
and in the autumn of 1483 a conspiracy was formed, and Henry, Earl of Richmond, was proclaimed King in
Exeter. Here Richard hastened at the head of a strong force, to find that nearly all the leaders had fled, and
there remained only his brother-in-law, Sir John St Leger, and Sir John's Esquire, Thomas Rame. So the King
'provided for himself a characteristic entertainment,' and both knight and squire were beheaded opposite the
Guildhall. Before he left, Richard went to look at the Castle, and asked its name. The Mayor answered,
'Rougemont'—a word misunderstood by the King, who became 'suddenly fallen into a great dump, and as it
were a man amazed.' Shakespeare's lines give the explanation of his discomfiture. 'It seems,' comments Fuller,
'Sathan either spoke this oracle low or lisping.'
The next siege of Exeter was when the followers of Perkin Warbeck surged in thousands round the city. Their
assault was vigorous and determined; they tried to undermine the walls, burned the north gate, and, repulsed at
this point, broke through the defences at the east gate. After a sharp struggle in the streets, the rebels were
thrust back, and were forced to march northwards, leaving Exeter triumphant. Three weeks later Henry VII
entered Exeter with Warbeck, as his prisoner. The King was very gracious to the city that had just given such
eminent proofs of its loyalty, and bestowed on the citizens a second sword of honour and a cap of
maintenance, and ordered that a sword-bearer should be appointed to carry the sword before the Mayor in
civic procession.
Henry VIII gave Exeter 'the highest privilege,' says Professor Freeman, 'that can be given to an English city or
borough.' He made it a county, 'with all the rights of a county under its own Sheriff.' An Act of Parliament
was also passed to undo the harm done by Isabel de Fortibus, representative of the Earls of Devon, when she
made a weir about the year 1280—still called Countess Weir—that blocked the free waterway to the sea. As
the tide naturally comes up the river a little way beyond Exeter, before[Pg 8] the weir was made ships had
been able to sail up to the watergate of the city. The first attempts to improve matters after this Act was passed
failed, but a canal was constructed with tolerable success in the reign of Elizabeth.
In 1549 came the siege of Exeter that followed the burning of Crediton barns. The Devonshire rebels had been
reinforced by a large number of Cornishmen, who resented the new Prayer-Book, and the law obliging them
to hear the services in English instead of Latin, more bitterly and with greater reason than the people of
Sampford Courtenay. For to them it was more than unwelcome change in the Liturgy; it meant also that their
services were read in an alien tongue. 'We,' the Cornish, 'whereof certain of us understand no English, utterly
refuse the new English,' was their protest. It is curious to think that more than half a century later English was
a foreign language in Cornwall. In James I's reign, 'John Norden ... constructing his Speculum, his
topographical description of this kingdom,' writes: 'Of late the Cornishmen have muche conformed
themselves to the use of the English tongue;' and adds that all but 'some obscure people' are able to 'convers
with a straunger' in English. The bitterness aroused by the religious question was intensified by a report which
was 'blazed abroad,' as Hooker says, 'a Gnat making an Elephant, that the gentlemen were altogether bent to
over-run, spoil, or destroy the people.' No one could have acted with greater loyalty and courage than the
Mayor, John Blackaller, and his powers were put to a hard trial before the end of the siege. Not only was there
an active and vigorous enemy without, but within the walls the majority secretly, and some persons openly,
sided with the enemy. The most unceasing vigilance and unfaltering resolution were needed to frustrate all
plots and plans. One great danger was averted by a certain John Newcomb, an ex-miner, who, suspicious of a
possible peril, watched diligently for its slightest sign. One day an anxious crowd looked at him 'crawling
about on the ground with a pan of water in his hand. Every now and again he would listen attentively, with his
ear in the dust, and, rising, place the pan on the spot. At last he has[Pg 9] it. Like the beating of a pulse, the
still water in the pan vibrates in harmony with the stroke of the pickaxe far underneath, and the old miner rises
exultant.' A counter-mine was hurriedly made, and through a tiny opening it was seen that barrels of
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gunpowder and pitch and piles of faggots were heaped beneath the west gate. Fortunately, this gate stood
below the steep slope on which the city lies, and on discovering the enemy's alarming preparations, every
householder was ordered, at a given signal, to empty a great tub of water into the kennel, and every tap in the
city was turned on. 'At which time also, by the Goodness of God, there fell a great Shower, as the like, for the
Time, had not been seen many years before.' A tremendous torrent rushed down the streets, and, being
concentrated upon the mine, completely flooded it.
There is no place here to speak of the straits to which the citizens were put before a sufficient number of
troops reached Lord Russell to enable him to march to the relief of the besieged. Nor is there room for an
account of the splendid resistance made by the rebels to the great force pitted against them, which included a
regiment of seasoned German Lanzknechts and three hundred Italian musketeers, besides English cavalry.
'Valiantly and stoutly they stood to their Tackle, and would not give over as long as Life and Limb lasted ...
and few or none were left alive.... Such was the Valour and stoutness of these men that the Lord Greie
reported himself, that he never, in all the Wars that he had been in, did know the like.'
In recognition of the loyalty shown by the citizens under this great trial, Queen Elizabeth 'complimented the
city with an augmentation of arms,' and 'of her own free will added the well-known motto, Semper Fidelis.'
Encouraged by the Queen's protection, commerce increased and prospered. Guilds had long flourished in
Exeter, and it is recorded that as early as 1477 there was a quarrel between the Mayor and citizens and the
Company of Taylors. A Guildhall existed even before there was a Mayor of Exeter, but the present building
dates from 1464. It has a fine common hall, with a lofty, vaulted roof and much panelling, and the panels are
set with little shields, the arms of the Mayors, of[Pg 10] various companies, and certain benefactors to the
city. Later was added the cinque-cento front that projects over the footway, and has become so essential a
characteristic in the eyes of those who care for Exeter. This front was built in 1593, and 'in its confusion of
styles—English windows between Italian columns—it has all the impress of that transitional age.'
Many of the trades that throve in Exeter formed guilds, and in looking casually at the names of a few of them,
one finds that the bakers had already a Master and Company in 1428-29, and that some years later the charter
of the Glovers and Skinners was renewed. In 1452 there was a dispute as to whether the Cordwainers or
Tuckers should take precedence in the Mayor's procession, and later again the Guild of Weavers, Sheremen,
and Tuckers came still more prominently before the public.
'Trafiquing' in wool and woollen goods was the most important trade, and though its zenith was passed in the
seventeenth century, it continued to do well till the later half of the eighteenth. Defoe speaks of the 'serge
manufacture of Devonshire' as 'a trade too great to be described in miniature,' and says he is told that at the
weekly market 'sixty to seventy to eighty, and sometimes a hundred, thousand pounds' value in serges is
sometimes sold.' Probably the account given him was a little exaggerated, but Lysons quotes the statement
that in the most prosperous days £50,000 or £60,000 worth of woollen goods had been sold in a week. Many
were the petitions sent up to Parliament in the reign of William and Mary, begging protection for the local
wool-trade, and that competition from unhappy Ireland might be discouraged. The great hall of the New Inn
was used as an exchange, and here were held yearly three great cloth-fairs, where merchants from London and
from all parts gathered, and stalls and shops in the inn were let to 'foreigners.' The Tuckers' Hall, built of
ruddy stone, still stands in Fore Street, and the hall has a fine cradle roof with plaster panels.
The most powerful of all the companies was incorporated later than many of the guilds, for the Merchant
Adventurers received their charter from Queen Elizabeth. Their power and wealth was[Pg 11] very
considerable; they cast their lines in all directions, and they secured a monopoly of trading with France. This
company supplied with money, and had a stake in, some of Sir Humphrey Gilbert's and Captain Davis's
enterprises, and Sir Francis Drake himself invited the 'gentilmen merchauntes' and others of the city to
'adventure with him in a voiage supportinge some speciall service ... for the defence of 'religion, Quene and
countrye.'' About Charles I's reign the importance of the company gradually declined, and the society was
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eventually dissolved.
During the Civil War, Exeter was twice besieged, but on neither occasion so rigorously as in 1549. When the
war broke out, the Earl of Bedford appointed the Mayor, the Sheriff, and five Aldermen, Commissioners for
the Parliament. The defences were put in order and arms collected, and amongst other expenses is recorded
'£300 for 17 packs of wool taken from Mr Robin's Cellars for the Barricadoes.' Nevertheless, zeal for the
Parliament must have been but lukewarm, for when Prince Maurice's troops surrounded the city, it was
surrendered at the end of fourteen days, and after the besieged had suffered no further inconvenience than 'the
being kept from taking the air without their own walls.' The next year Queen Henrietta Maria came to a city
which was considered a safer refuge than Oxford, and here Princess Henrietta was born, and was baptized in
the Cathedral with great pomp, 'a new font having been erected for the purpose, surmounted by a rich canopy
of state.' Charles II always showed the warmest affection for his sister, famed, as Duchess of Orleans, for her
beauty and charm, and a portrait of the Princess given by the King to the city hangs in the Guildhall. It is a
full-length portrait, and she is represented standing, one hand lightly gathering together the folds of her white
satin dress.
During the autumn and winter of 1645-46 Exeter was gradually hemmed in by bodies of Parliamentary troops
stationed at posts in the neighbourhood, and with the new year the siege became a closer one. It would seem,
however, that there was no very acute distress from lack of food; but Fuller, who was in the city at the time,
mentions with satisfaction the appearance[Pg 12] of 'an incredible number of Larks ... for multitude like
Quails in the Wildernesse, and as fat as plentifull ... which provided a feast for many poor people, who
otherwise had been pinched for provision.' As the spring advanced, the King's cause lapsed into a condition
too hopeless to be bettered by further resistance, and on April 9 Sir John Berkeley, for over two years the
faithful guardian of the city, signed the articles of its surrender, on honourable terms, to Sir Thomas Fairfax.
There is no space to speak of later dramatic incidents in Exeter—the trial and execution of Mr Penruddocke
and Mr Grove, leaders of a Royalist rising of Wiltshire gentlemen, whose speeches on the scaffold are given
at length by Izacke; nor of the joy that greeted the Restoration, when 'Tar-barrels and Bonefires capered aloft';
nor of Charles II's visit, nor the entrance of the Duke of Monmouth in 1680 with five thousand horsemen, and
nine hundred young men in white uniforms marching before him. One may not even pause before the
gorgeous spectacle of William III's arrival, heralded by a procession in which appeared two hundred negroes
in white-plumed, embroidered turbans, and a squadron of Swedish horsemen 'in bearskins taken from the
beasts they had slain, with black armour and broad flaming swords.'
It has been only possible to name the most outstanding points in the history of a city—once more to quote
Professor Freeman—'by the side of which most of the capitals of Europe are things of yesterday.... The city
alike of Briton, Roman, and Englishman, the one great prize of the Christian Saxon, the city where Jupiter
gave way to Christ, but where Christ never gave way to Woden—British Caerwisc, Roman Isca, West Saxon
Exeter, may well stand first on our roll-call of English cities. Others can boast of a fuller share of modern
greatness; none other can trace up a life so unbroken to so remote a past.'
[Pg 13]
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The Exe:
Tiverton
CHAPTER II
The Exe
'Goodly Ex, who from her full-fed spring
Her little Barlee hath, and Dunsbrook her to bring
From Exmore; when she hath scarcely found her course,
Then Creddy cometh in ...
... her sovereign to assist;
As Columb wins for Ex clear Wever and the Clist,
Contributing their streams their mistress' fame to raise.
As all assist the Ex, so Ex consumeth these;
Like some unthrifty youth, depending on the court,
To win an idle name, that keeps a needless port;
And raising his old rent, exacts his farmers' store
The landlord to enrich, the tenants wondrous poor:
Who having lent him theirs, he then consumes his own,
That with most vain expense upon the Prince is thrown:
So these, the lesser brooks unto the greater pay;
The greater, they again spend all upon the sea.'
Drayton: Poly-olbion.
The river Exe rises in a bog on Exmoor, beyond the borders of Somersetshire. 'Be now therefore pleased as
you stand upon Great Vinnicombe top ... to cast your eye westward, and you may see the first spring of the
river Exe, which welleth forth in a valley between Pinckerry and Woodborough,' says Westcote.
But our author has no feeling for the rolling hills, and noble lines, and hazy blue distances of Exmoor, and
without one word of praise continues: 'Let us for your more ease, and the sooner to be quit of this barren soil,
cold air, uneven ways, and untrodden paths, swim with the stream the better to hasten our speed.'
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The first little town that the Exe comes to in Devonshire is Bampton, nowadays best known, perhaps, for its
pony-fairs, when (so runs one account) 'Exmoor ponies throng the streets, flood the pavements, overflow the
houses, pervade the place. Wild as hawks, active and lissom as goats, cajoled from the moors, and[Pg 14]
tactfully manœuvred when penned, these indigenous quadrupeds will leap or escalade lofty barriers in a
standing jump or a cat-like scramble.' Cattle and sheep are less conspicuously for sale at this popular and
crowded fair, held on the last Thursday in October.
The first fact recorded of Bampton's history is of such ancient date that it may be hoped the vastness of the
achievement has been rounded and filled out during the flight of time; for the historian, with unconscious
irony, blandly remarks that here 'Cynegils, first Christian King of the West Saxons,' put twenty thousand (or
maybe more) Britons to the sword. He does not mention how Cynegils continued his propagation of the
Gospel.
The nave of the church at Bampton is built in the manner most common to this country—that is, early
Perpendicular, but the chancel is Decorated. In many of the churches there is some portion of Decorated work.
The screen and roof of the church are worth seeing, and in the churchyard are several unusually large and fine
old yew-trees, one or two girdled by stone benches. Leaving Bampton, one passes along a green and fertile
valley, the fields interrupted at intervals by copses, where thickets of undergrowth and multitudes of young
saplings are struggling for the mastery—a picture of prodigal wealth in plants, bushes, and trees.
Seven miles to the south is Tiverton. Tiverton is a small town, but its story is interesting, and incidents cluster
round the castle, church, the well-known school, and the former kersies and wool-market, and, besides, it is
filled with memories of the melancholy experiences it has passed through—fires, floods, the plague, and at
least one siege.
The borough was originally granted by Henry I to his cousin, Richard de Riparis (or de Redvers or Rivers),
Earl of Devon, whose descendants possessed it for nearly two centuries, when, the direct line failing, the
borough and title passed to a cousin, a Courtenay, in whose family the title still remains.
Richard de Redvers, 'the faithful and beloved counsellor' of Henry I, is supposed to have begun the Castle of
Tiverton, and he attached to it 'two parks for pleasure and large and rich demesne for hospitality.' His
grandson, William Rivers, was one of the[Pg 15] four Earls who carried the silken canopy at the second
coronation of King Richard I, after his return from Palestine. William's daughter, Mary, married Robert
Courtenay, Baron of Okehampton; and so it was that, when the House of Rivers became extinct in the male
line, their possessions passed to the Courtenays, and Mary's great-grandson became first Earl of Devon of the
line of the Courtenays.
It is not thought probable that the Castle as it stands contains work older than the fourteenth century. Part of
the building of that date remains unaltered, and part has been transformed into a modern house. The old walls
are in places covered with ivy, and on the southern side are pierced by one or two pointed windows whose
stonework is more or less broken. A round tower at the southeastern angle still looks very solid and
undisturbed. At a few yards' distance, on the south of the Castle, stand the ruins of the chapel; the walls of
three sides are still standing, although imperfect and partly fallen down, and almost smothered in ivy.
Originally this square tower at the south-west angle was joined to the Castle, and two more round towers
stood at the northern angles. Near the chapel is a low wall, and looking over it one sees a very steep slope to
the river, sixty feet beneath. A wide and deep moat surrounded the Castle on the other sides.
It is said that Tiverton suffered both in the Civil War of 1150 and also in the Wars of the Roses, and though
there is little evidence to support this assertion, there can be no doubt that indirectly the town must have been
disagreeably affected. For Baldwin de Redvers fortified his castle at Exeter, and it is very likely that retainers
from Tiverton were sent to strengthen the garrison; and when the Earl was driven from the country by King
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Stephen, his servants and their families were probably distressed by want, if not by the sword.
During the Wars of the Roses, three successive Earls of Devon lost their lives, and many of their followers
must have fallen too, leaving defenceless widows and children.
The Earls of Devon had many manors, but lived much in their Castle at Tiverton, and some were buried in the
adjoining church[Pg 16] of St Peter. To the third Earl, known as 'the Good' or 'the Blind' Earl, and his wife a
tomb was erected, 'having their effigies of alabaster, sometimes sumptuously gilded.' So writes Risdon, about
the year 1630, and adds regretfully, 'Time hath not so much defaced, as men have mangled that magnificent
monument.' It has now entirely disappeared. The epitaph it bore was this:
The most distinctive feature of the church is the very decorative 'Greenway' chapel. John Greenway was a rich
wool-merchant of Tiverton, and on the walls of the chapel was inscribed this couplet:
'To the honour of St. Christopher, St. Blaze, and St. Anne,
This chapel of John Greenwaye was began.'
It is interesting to note, of the three saints to whom the chapel was dedicated, that St Christopher was the
patron of mariners and one of the 'sea-saints,' St Blaze the special patron of wool-[Pg 17]combers; while St
Anne particularly presides over riches. An old distich runs:
'Saint Anne gives wealth and living great to such as love her most,
And is a perfite finder-out of things that have beene lost.'
So that the help of all three was peculiarly necessary to make John Greenway a prosperous man!
The chapel is late Perpendicular, and it is most elaborately carved and decorated. The roof is covered with
different kinds of ornamentation, and the cornice bears the arms of Greenway, of the Drapers' Company, and
other devices. Along the corbel line are carved scenes from the Bible, beneath is a sea of gentle ripples, with
several large ships in full sail upon it, and above and beside the windows is a multitude of different
designs—merchants' marks, animals, roses, anchors, horses and men; and a very delightful ape sits on a
projecting pedestal, close to the porch. The porch is extremely elaborate, both within and without. On the
frieze are six panels, each carved with a different Scriptural subject, separated from one another by single
figures. Over the porch are the arms of the Courtenays, and above them an emblem and more carving, besides
two large niches, now empty, at each side of the door. Inside the porch, over the door leading into the church,
is a carving of the Assumption, and the roof is richly carved with merchants' marks and other ciphers and
designs on little shields. The roof inside the chapel is also carved; and in the floor is a brass engraved with the
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figures of the merchant and his wife—he in a long fur-edged robe, and she wearing embroidered draperies and
jewels, and a pomander ball hanging on one of the long ends of her girdle.
It is interesting to hear that in this church Mendelssohn's Wedding March was first played at a wedding. The
'Midsummer Night's Dream' music had just been published as a pianoforte duet, when Mr Samuel Reay, of
Tiverton, made an arrangement of it for the organ, and the first marriage at which the march was played was
that of Mr Tom Daniel and Miss Dorothea Carew, in June, 1847.
Tiverton was famed in early days for its trade in wool. It is[Pg 18] supposed that woollen goods were first
manufactured here towards the end of the fourteenth century, and at the beginning of the sixteenth several
merchants of the town were making ventures far and wide. Baizes, plain cloths, and kerseys were the most
important of the manufactures, and there was some commerce in these with Spain. Traffic in woollen goods
was now very brisk in different parts of the country, and during the reign of Henry VIII special statutes were
enacted 'affecting cloths called white straits of Devon, and Devonshire kerseys called dozens.' In Elizabeth's
reign trade prospered here as elsewhere; but later friction arose on the question of imports. The manufacturers
on more than one occasion tried to introduce Irish worsted to weave into cloth, and this was met by the most
violent opposition from the wool-combers, who believed that it would take away their work, although it was
explained that their work depended on making serge for Dutch markets, for which the Irish worsted could not
be used. The wool-combers had at different times various causes for complaint, and these they vented in riots
so serious that (about 1749) the authorities asked for the protection of some troops, who were accordingly sent
to Tiverton, and, on a fresh uproar not long after their arrival, were called out to quell the mob. Towards the
latter half of the eighteenth century the woollen trade languished; but in the first quarter of the nineteenth
century a new business sprang up—that of producing machine-made lace and tulle.
Tiverton's merchants marked their prosperity in an admirable manner, for over ninety gifts in land, money,
and almshouses have been made. The gifts and bequests were usually intended to benefit the poor, but in a
few cases they were for the general good. In addition there remains the memory of about twenty
'benefactions,' many of which were 'absorbed in the tumult of the Civil War or generally dissipated by neglect
or mismanagement.' Greenway founded almshouses, as well as the aisle in the church, and although these
dwellings have been altered to some extent, the tiny chapel still attached to them is very picturesque. A
cornice contains twelve circles, within each a pierced quatrefoil, and in the centre of every quatrefoil a
shield,[Pg 19] bearing a coat of arms, a merchant's mark, or other design. The cornice is supported by several
rather grotesque animals, and below, in stone letters, this legend:
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The greatest gift by far was that of Peter Blundell, who built and endowed the well-known school that is
called after him, and founded six scholarships at Oxford and Cambridge as a further benefit to the scholars of
Blundell's. His will dictates most particular instructions regarding the salaries of the master and usher, and as
to the actual building, even directing that there should be 'in the kitchen one fair great chimney with an oven.'
In 1882 the school was transferred to Howden, but the building that Peter Blundell planned, beneath the steep
hill close to the Lowman, is long and rather low, the colour a warm, soft yellow, still more softened by stray
indefinite tints of cream and buff. The slate roof is high-pitched, the windows are square and mullioned, and
there are two porches, each with a window directly above the hooded doorway, and crowned by a gable. The
school-house stands back in a yard of plots of grass and pebbled paths, and shaded by great old lime-trees
surrounded by a high wall.[Pg 20]
Samuel Wesley was at one time head-master here, and was not universally popular, for his scathing wit
blighted the esteem earned by his high gifts and principles.
Many of Blundell's scholars have done good work in the world, but perhaps the most famous of them are the
late Archbishop of Canterbury (Dr. Temple) and R. D. Blackmore, the novelist, who were here in the 'thirties,
contemporaries and friends, both 'day-boys' and lodging in the same house in Cop's Court. Twenty years
before the Archbishop came to Blundell's, that celebrated sportsman 'Jack' Russell was here, embarked on a
stormy career, perpetually in scrapes due to his passion for sport, which even led him to the point of trying to
keep hounds while he was actually at school. Contemporaries of Blackmore's were two distinguished soldiers
and writers on military subjects, Sir Charles Chesney and his brother Sir George, the author of that account of
an imaginary German invasion which created so much excitement when, under the name of 'The Battle of
Dorking,' it appeared in 1871 in Blackwood's Magazine.
Fire has caused terrible loss and disaster here, for as many as seven big conflagrations have taken place in
Tiverton, and in one alone six hundred houses were destroyed, besides £200,000 worth of goods and
merchandise. In addition, at least eight smaller, but still considerable, fires took place at comparatively short
intervals, so that between the years 1598 and 1788 the townsfolk suffered from this cause no fewer than
fifteen times.
A curious account exists of the fire in 1598—'when,' says the chronicler, 'he which at one a clocke was
worth Five Thousand Pound, and as the Prophet saith [a footnote suggests the prophet Amos, vi. 5, 6] dranke
his Wine in bowles of fine silver plate, had not by two a Clocke so much as a wooden dish left to eate his
Meate in, nor a house to couer his sorrowfull head, neyther did thys happen to one man alone, but to many....
In a twinkling of an eye came that great griefe uppon them, which turn'd their wealth to miserable want, and
their riches to unlooktfor pouertie: and how was that? Mary, Sir, by Fyer.
'But no fier from heaven, no unquenchable fier such as worthily[Pg 21] fell on the sinfull Citie of Sodom and
Gomorra; but a sillie flash of fier, blazing forth of a frying pan ... and here was dwelling in a little lowe thatcht
house, a poore beggarly woman: who, with a companion, began to bake pancakes with strawe'—here
he becomes sarcastic—'for their abilitie and prouission was so good that there was no wood in the
house to doe it.... Sodenly, the fier got into the Pan.' Straw lying close by was ablaze in a moment, then the
roof, then, alas! by means of an 'extreame high wind,' a hay-house standing near, and 'in less than halfe an
hower the whole Toune was set on fier.'
A terrible picture is drawn of the rapidity and voracity of the flames—people crying for help in every
direction, 'insomuch that the people were so amazed that they knew not which way to turne, nor where the
most neede was'—and of the number of people who were burned and the desolation of the town.
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As to those saved, 'the residue of the woefull people remaining yet aliue, being overburdened with extream
sorrow, runs up and down the fieldes like distraught or franticke men.... Moreouer, they are so greatly distrest
for lacke of food, that they seeme to each mannes sighte more liker spirits and Ghostes, than living creatures.'
The account concludes with a moral pointed in many figures of speech, to the effect that this great trouble was
a judgment on the rich, who did not sufficiently consider their poor neighbours, and various cities are
exhorted to take warning thereby. 'O famous London ... Thou which art the chief Lady Cittie of this Land,
whose fame soundeth through al Christian Kingdoms, cast thy deere eyes on this ruinous Towne.... Consider
this thou faire citie of Exeter, thou which art next neighbour to this distressed Town ... pitie her heauie happe,
that knowes not what miserie hanges ouer thy owne head.'
An appeal to the public was made on behalf of these sufferers, and Queen Elizabeth responded with a grant of
£5,000.
In the fire of 1612 the destruction was even greater. 'No noyse thundered about the streets, but fire, fire, in
every place were heard the voyces of fire.... All the night long the towne seemed like unto a burning
mountaine, shooting forth fiery comets, with[Pg 22] streaming blazes, or like unto the Canopie of the World,
beset with thousands of night candles or bright burning Torches.'
When the Civil War broke out, Tiverton, though not unanimous, mainly sided with the Parliament. After the
Battle of Stratton, however, the triumphant Royalists suddenly descended on the town, turned out Colonel
Weare, who was in command of the Parliamentary forces, and took possession. Many skirmishes must have
taken place either in or about the town, for large bodies of the troops belonging to King or Parliament moved
backwards and forwards in the immediate neighbourhood during the course of the war.
Culpeper, the herbalist, to illustrate the powers of the plant moonwort, tells of a wonderful incident that
occurred to Lord Essex's horse, presumably when his army was here in 1644. Moonwort has (or perhaps had)
a miraculous effect on iron, with power to open locks or unshoe horses. 'Country people that I know, call it
Unshoe the Horse. Besides I have heard commanders say, that in White Down in Devonshire, near Tiverton,
there were found thirty horseshoes, pulled off from the feet of the Earl of Essex's horses, being there drawn up
in a body, many of them being but newly shod, and no reason known, which caused much admiration, and the
herb described usually grows upon heaths.' Probably almost all the neighbourhood thought witchcraft a better
explanation.
It is very difficult entirely to disentangle accounts that seem to contradict each other, but apparently Essex
moved away from Tiverton after a short stay, and certainly the King sent his army to Tiverton the same
autumn to halt there for a while on its way from Plymouth to Chard. And as this army was returning, reduced
and exhausted, from fighting and long, hard marches in Cornwall, it could not have been sent to a town in
possession of the enemy. The next year Fairfax sent General Massie to take Tiverton. The Governor, Sir
Gilbert Talbot, was in a far from happy position, for afterwards he wrote: 'My horse were mutinous, and I had
but two hundred foot in garrison, and some of my chief officers unfaithful.' In spite of his disadvantages, he
was able to repulse[Pg 23] the enemy in their first attack on church and castle, though unable to prevent their
gaining possession of the town. Two days later Fairfax himself arrived, and batteries, furnished with 'several
great Peeces,' were erected against the church and castle. The actual fighting lasted only a short time, for a
shot broke the chain of the drawbridge, and it fell; the Parliamentary soldiers rushed across it without even
waiting for the command, and the Royalists lost their heads and their courage and fled.
A copy of a letter that General Massie wrote from Tiverton to a Cheshire gentleman still exists, and in it he
refers to a pamphlet, sent with the letter, even the title-page of which throws light on Puritan methods of
influencing popular opinion against the Cavaliers. This startling page runs as follows:
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RELATION
of a
BOY,
Who was entertained by the Devill to be servant to him with the consent of his Father, about Crediton in the
West, and how the Devill carried him up in the aire, and shewed him the torments of Hell, and some of the
Cavaliers there, and what preparation there was made for Goring and Greenvile against they came.
Also how the Cavaliers went to rob a Carrier, and how the Carrier and his Horses turned themselves into
FLAMES OF FIRE.
Leaving Tiverton and following the Exe downstream, the wayfarer may ponder two proverbs referring to
Tiverton, neither of them especially flattering. It used to be, and no doubt is still, considered lucky to start off
running directly the cuckoo is heard for the first time in the year, and thirty or forty years ago, if a girl obeyed
this tradition, anyone near her would laugh and say: 'Run, run! and don't let no Tiverton man catch you!' The
other saying is cryptic: 'He must go to Tiverton and ask Mr Able.' An interpretation suggested is that this was
originally said to a questioner who asked for unattainable information, and that 'Mr Able' meant anyone able
to furnish it. It is not[Pg 24] exactly a satisfactory solution, and as to the reference to Tiverton, though it may
be complimentary, one doubts whether it does not carry more than a suspicion of sarcasm.
Four miles to the south of Tiverton is a pleasant well-wooded valley, in which stands Bickleigh. This village
was the birthplace of a rascal, who was such a brilliant and talented rascal that his adventures are very
interesting. Witty, courageous, and full of resource, he had, besides, two strong points in his favour. In spite of
a very rough and wandering life, his warm affection for his wife never failed, and—all dogs adored
him! Bampfylde Moore Carew belonged to a very old family in the West, and his father was rector of
Bickleigh. A happy-go-lucky career was foreshadowed at the very outset, for his two 'illustrious godfathers,'
Mr Hugh Bampfylde and Major Moore, disputed as to whose name should stand first, and, as they could not
agree, the matter was decided by spinning a coin. A few of the most interesting events in his career may be
quoted from a little biography first published anonymously in 1745, thirteen years before his death. Carew
was sent to Blundell's, where for a while he did well, although his tastes led him to be out with 'a cry' of
hounds that the scholars of Blundell's kept among them, whenever it was possible. On one occasion some
farmers complained to the head-master of the damage that had been done in hunting a deer over standing corn,
and the boy, to escape punishment, ran away from school and joined some gipsies. Carew took very kindly to
the life, but repeated accounts of his parents' unhappiness brought him home after a year and a half's
wanderings. Though overwhelmed with 'marks of festive joy,' the call 'of the wind on the heath,' was too
strong to be resisted, and in a short time he slipped away again and went back to his chosen people. He must
have been a very finished actor, with a genius for 'make-up,' to have imposed on half the people that he
befooled. Amongst his first rôles were those of a shipwrecked mariner; a poor Mad Tom, trying to eat live
coals; and a Kentish farmer, whose drowned farm in the Isle of Sheppey could no longer support his wife and
'seven helpless infants.' Carew's restless disposition took him to[Pg 25] Newfoundland, and on his return he
successfully played the parts of a nonjuring clergyman, dispossessed of his living for conscience' sake; a
Quaker—here is a good example of his wonderful gift—in an assembly of Quakers; a ruined
miller; a rat-catcher; and, having borrowed three children from a tinker, a grandmother. Carew once wheedled
a gentleman, who boasted that he could not be taken in by beggars, into giving him liberal alms twice in one
day—in the morning as an unfortunate blacksmith, whose all had been destroyed by fire; whilst in the
RELATION 21
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afternoon, on crutches, his face 'pale and sickly, his gestures very expressive of pain,' he pleaded as a disabled
tinner, who, from 'the damps and hardships he had suffered in the mines,' could not work to keep his family.
At the death of Clause Patch, the King of the Gipsies, Carew was elected King in his stead. Before he died,
the aged King, feeling his end approaching, bestowed a few last words of advice on his followers, well worth
quoting.
Of begging in the street and interrupting people who are talking, he said: 'If they are tradesmen, their
conversation will soon end, and may be well paid for by a halfpenny; if an inferior clings to the skirt of a
superior, he will give twopence rather than be pulled off; and when you are happy enough to meet a lover and
his mistress, never part with them under sixpence, for you may be sure they will never part from one another.'
This is followed by shrewd advice as to the choice of an appeal: 'Whatever people seem to want, give it them
largely in your address to them. Call the beau sweet Gentleman; bless even his coat or periwig; and tell him
they are happy ladies where he's going. If you meet with a schoolboy captain, such as our streets are full of,
call him noble general; and if the miser can be in any way got to strip himself of a farthing, it will be by the
name of charitable Sir.... If you meet a sorrowful countenance with a red coat, be sure the wearer is a
disbanded officer. Let a female always attack him, and tell him she is the widow of a poor marine, who had
served twelve years, and then broke his heart because he was turned out without a penny. If you meet a
homely but dressed-up lady, pray for her lovely face, and beg a penny.'[Pg 26]
After his election as King of the Gipsies, or King of the Beggars, as he is more often called, Carew was soon
involved in fresh adventures. But one day grey ill-luck looked his way; he was arrested and sent for trial to
Exeter. Courage and audacity never failed him, for when the Chairman of Quarter Sessions announced that the
prisoner was to be transported to a country which he pronounced Merryland, Carew calmly criticised his
pronunciation, and said he thought that Maryland would be more correct. To Maryland he was sent in charge
of a brutal sea-captain, and on his arrival, burdened with a heavy iron collar riveted round his neck, was set to
all sorts of drudgery. Before very long he contrived to escape into the forests, and after some danger from
wild beasts he reached a tribe of friendly Indians, who received him with great kindness. Later he stole a
canoe, and, returning to civilized regions, posed as a kidnapped Quaker, in which character he succeeded in
gaining the compassion of Whitefield, the great preacher, who gave him 'three or four pounds of that county
paper money.' By the help of several ingenious ruses he was able to get home again, and soon afterwards,
aided by a turban, a long, loose robe, and flowing beard, appeared as a destitute Greek, whose 'mute silence,
his dejected countenance, a sudden tear that now and then flowed down his cheek,' touched the hearts of the
benevolent. In an unlucky moment he was impressed for the navy; next travelled in Russia, Poland, Sweden,
and other countries, but, returning to England, was again seized, put in irons, and transported. With his usual
indomitable spirit and resource, he escaped once more into the forests, and after dangers and hardships
reached England. Finally, he ended his days in peace where he began them, and was buried at Bickleigh in
1758.
Five miles east of Tiverton is a village called Sampford Peverell, which in the early part of the nineteenth
century suddenly sprang into notice through the strange proceedings of a mysterious spirit, known as the
Sampford Ghost. This 'goblin sprite,' as one account calls it, declared itself in a manner well known to
psychical researchers, by violent knockings, and by causing a sword, a heavy book, and an iron candlestick to
fly about the room. Two maid-[Pg 27]servants received heavy blows while they were in bed, and there were
other strange and distressing phenomena. These manifestations were continued for more than three years.
Numberless visitors, drawn by curiosity from all parts of the country, came to investigate the matter, but no
explanation could be found, and though there were suspicions that the whole affair was a very elaborate hoax,
and a reward of £250 was offered for information that might throw light upon it, no single attempt was made
to claim the money.
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Sampford Peverell is a small place, and rather out of the way, but so long ago as in the reign of Edward I it is
recorded that John de Hillersdon held the manor on a tenure that reflects the unquiet state of the country. He
held it 'in fee, in serjeanty, by finding for our lord the King, in his army in Wales, and elsewhere in England,
whensoever war should happen, one man with a horse caparisoned or armed for war at his proper costs for
forty days to abide in the war aforesaid.' Hugh Peverell held the Manor of Sandford, near Crediton, on much
the same terms, but had to provide 'one armed horseman and two footmen.'
Following down Sampford stream for about three miles, one arrives at the point where the stream reaches an
opening into the Culm Valley, and empties itself in the Culm. A very short distance beyond is the little town
of Cullompton, of which the most interesting feature is a fine Perpendicular church. An old writer insists that
here was formerly 'the figure of Columbus, to which many pilgrims resorted, and which brought considerable
sums to the priests'; but of this statement I can find neither confirmation nor denial. The tower of the church is
high and decorated. Within, the roof, richly carved and gilded, rests on a carved wall-plate, supported by angel
corbels, and most exquisite is the carving of the rood-screen, which has also been gilded and coloured. A very
rare possession of this church is 'a portion of a Calvary, and above is an ornamental rood-beam, supported by
angels; the Golgotha, carved out of the butts of two trees, is now in the tower, and is hewn and carved to
represent rocks bestrewn with skulls and bones; the mortice holes for the crucifix[Pg 28] and attendant figures
remain.' Early fifteenth-century figures painted on the wall were discovered when the church was 'restored' in
1849, but they were covered with whitewash!
The making of woollen goods throve in earlier times in Cullompton, and a rich clothier, John Lane by name,
and his wife Thomasine, added a very beautiful aisle to the church about 1526. The roof of the 'Lane' aisle is
covered with exquisite fan-tracery, rich carvings, and figures of angels, and pendants droop from the centre.
The pillars, the buttresses, and parts of the outside walls are decorated by carvings of Lane's monogram, his
merchant's mark, and different symbols of his trade.
Three miles south-east of Cullompton is another church famed for its beautiful screen. The Plymtree screen is
probably unique in bearing on its panels the likenesses of Henry VII, his son Prince Arthur, and Cardinal
Morton. The upper part of the screen is a magnificent bit of carving. Graceful pillars rise like stems, and their
lines curve outwards into the lines of palm-leaves, overspreading one another, while the arches they form are
filled with most delicate tracery, supported on the slenderest shafts. Above are four rows of carving, each of
different design—one a vine, with clusters of grapes, and this is repeated more heavily on the capital of
a pillar in the nave. The screen must have been glorious in gold and vermilion, and gold lines cross each other,
making a sort of lattice-work, with ornaments at the points of intersection—a large double rose, a little
shield with the Bouchier knot, or the Stafford knot, or a very naturally carved spray of oak-leaves. Below, the
panels are painted with saints and angels and bishops. The King, Prince, and Cardinal appear in a
representation of the Adoration of the Three Kings, each one bringing his offering in a differently-shaped
vessel. Mr Mozley, a former Rector of Plymtree, has written a most interesting pamphlet on the subject,
tracing out the likeness of these portraits to other pictures or busts of the three. He points out that, whereas in
most paintings of the Three Kings each has a crown, that of the foremost usually laid on the ground, in this
group King Henry alone is crowned; the Cardinal has none; and the Prince, who is represented as very[Pg 29]
young, is wearing a boy's cap. Mr Mozley has searched carefully for a reason that would account for the group
in this little church, and has found what seems to be a perfectly sufficient connecting link. Lord Hastings, who
married the heiress of Lord Hungerford, and incidentally acquired the Manor of Plymtree, was the warm
friend and political ally of Cardinal Morton. The son and successor of Lord Hastings was a close personal
friend of Henry VI, and in consequence a colleague of the Cardinal, the King's chief counsellor. There is no
date on the screen, but from various deductions it is believed to have been painted about the end of the
fifteenth century, or a little later, and either during the lifetime or just after the death of the three subjects of
the group, and of Lord Hastings.
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Bradninch lies a short distance to the west of Plymtree, and this church contains a very fine screen and an old
and remarkable painting of the Crucifixion. It was originally placed in an aisle that was built in the reign of
Henry VII by the Fraternity of St John, or the Guild of Cordwainers.
The Culm runs past Bradninch, at a little distance to the east, and a few miles farther on the river passes under
the dark hills of Killerton Park, a heavily wooded and irregular ridge, rising at either extremity and ending in a
decided slope down to the flat space just around. The house is not an old one, although the Aclands have been
here since the reign of Queen Elizabeth, when Sir John Acland moved from the estate at Landkey, near
Barnstaple, where they were already settled in the reign of Henry II. He built a house at Culm John (quite
close to Killerton) that was garrisoned for the King during the Civil War, and held out when almost every
other place in Devonshire had surrendered. But it has since been pulled down.
There are many stories of different members of this family, but perhaps the most romance lies in that of Lady
Harriot Acland, who, with serene courage, followed her husband through the horrors and hardships of a
campaign.
In 1776 Major Acland was with the army that had been sent to crush the American struggle for Independence,
and his wife had[Pg 30] accompanied him. The following extract is taken from a statement by General
Burgoyne, the General commanding the troops in Canada: 'In the course of that campaign, she had traversed a
vast space of country in different extremities of seasons. She was restrained from offering herself to a share of
the hazard expected before Ticonderoga, by the positive injunction of her husband. The day after the conquest
of that place he was badly wounded, and she crossed the Lake Champlain to join him.'
When he was recovered, Lady Harriot continued to follow his fortunes through the campaign, and acquired a
'two-wheel tumbril, which had been constructed by the artillery.' Colonel Acland was with the most advanced
corps of the army, and they were often in so much danger of being surprised that they had to sleep in their
clothes. Once the Aclands' tent and all that was in it was burned, but this accident 'neither altered the
resolution nor the cheerfulness of Lady Harriot, and she continued her progress a partaker of the fatigues of
the advanced corps. The next call upon her fortitude was more distressful. On the march of the 19th, the
Grenadiers being liable to action at every step, she had been directed by Major Acland to follow the route of
the artillery and luggage which was not exposed. At the time the action began she found herself near a small
uninhabited hut, where she alighted. When it was found the action was becoming general and bloody, the
surgeons of the hospital took possession of the same place as the most convenient for the first care of the
wounded. Thus was this lady in hearing of one continued fire of cannon and musketry for some hours
together, with the presumption, from the post of her husband at the head of the Grenadiers, that he was in the
most exposed part of the action. She had three female companions—the Baroness of Reidesel, and the
wives of two British officers, Major Harnage and Lieutenant Reynell; but in the event their presence served
but little for comfort. Major Harnage was soon brought to the surgeons, very badly wounded; and a little while
after came intelligence that Lieutenant Reynell was shot dead. Imagination will want no help to figure the
state of the whole group.' Not long afterwards Lady Harriot passed through an even severer ordeal.[Pg 31]
During another engagement 'she was exposed to the hearing of the whole action, and at last received the shock
of her individual misfortune mixed with the intelligence of the general calamity; the troops were defeated, and
Major Ackland, desperately wounded, was a prisoner.
'The day of the 8th was passed by Lady Harriot and her companions in common anxiety; not a tent, not a shed
being standing except what belonged to the hospital, their refuge was among the wounded and dying.
'I soon received a message from Lady Harriot, submitting to my decision a proposal (and expressing an
earnest solicitude to execute it if not interfering with my designs) of passing to the camp of the enemy and
requesting General Gates's permission to attend her husband.... I was astonished at this proposal. After so long
an agitation of the spirits, exhausted not only for want of rest, but absolutely want of food, drenched in rains
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for twelve hours together, that a woman should be capable of such an undertaking as delivering herself to the
enemy, probably in the night, and uncertain of what hands she might fall into, appeared an effort above human
nature. The assistance I was enabled to give her was small indeed; I had not even a cup of wine to offer her;
but I was told she had found from some kind and fortunate hand a little rum and dirty water. All I could
furnish to her was an open boat and a few lines written upon dirty and wet paper, to General Gates,
recommending her to his protection.
'Mr Brudenell, the chaplain to the Artillery, ...readily undertook to accompany her, and with one female
servant, and the Major's valet-de-chambre (who had a ball, which he had received in the late action, then in
his shoulder), she rowed down the river to meet the enemy. But her distresses were not yet to end. The night
advanced before the boat reached the enemy's outposts, and the sentinel would not let it pass, nor even come
on shore. In vain Mr Brudenell offered the flag of truce.... The guard threatened to fire into the boat if they
stirred before daylight.' And for seven or eight dark and cold hours they were obliged to wait. Happily, when
at length she did reach the shore, Lady Harriot was[Pg 32] received with all courtesy by General Gates, and
had the joy of nursing her husband back to health.
A little to the south-west of Killerton Park lie the well-ordered park and beautiful grounds of Lord Poltimore.
John Bampfylde, his ancestor, was lord of this manor in the reign of Edward I, but the line of succession has
been threatened by an episode, told by Prince (in his 'Worthies of Devon'), that reads like a folk-story. At one
time the head of the family was a child, who, left an orphan very young, was given as a ward 'to some great
person in the East Country.' This gentleman carried the child away to his own home, and, although not going
quite so far as the wicked uncle in The Babes in the Wood, behaved very treacherously to his ward;
'concealing from him his quality and condition, and preventing what he could any discovery thereof, his
guardian bred him up as his servant, and at last made him his huntsman.'
To any who concerned themselves about the boy, the false guardian 'some years after gave it out, he was gone
to travel (or the like pretence), in-so-much his relations and friends, believing it to be true, looked no further
after him.' But Bampfylde's tenants were more faithful, and one of them, on his own responsibility, rose to the
tremendous effort and enterprise of starting off in search of him. His loyalty was rewarded with full success,
for he was able to find and identify the young man, and, biding his time, the tenant grasped an opportunity of
talking quietly to him, and 'acquainted him with his birth and fortunes, and finally arranged his escape.' And in
this way the true heir came to his own again.
In the spring of 1646 Poltimore House was chosen by Fairfax as the meeting-place of his commissioners and
those sent by Sir John Berkeley, and here they discussed the articles of the surrender of besieged Exeter, and
drew up the treaty that could be accepted by both sides.
Sir Coplestone Bampfylde, having 'a vigorous soul,' worked for the Restoration with so much zeal that
messengers were sent from the Parliament to arrest him, and he was forced to hide.
But 'his generous mind could not be affrighted from following[Pg 33] his duty and honour,' and as the citizens
of Exeter, by this time very dissatisfied with the Government, were beginning to arm, declaring for a free
Parliament, Sir Coplestone and other gentlemen composed an address, demanding the recall of the members
secluded in 1648, and 'all to be admitted without any oath or engagement previous to their entrance.' He next
took his way to London, to present 'an humble petition of right' on behalf of the county to General Monk, but
was seized by the Parliament and flung into the Tower. His imprisonment was brief, and Charles II rewarded
Bampfylde's energy by choosing him to be the first High Sheriff of the county of his reign, and later
appointing him to other posts of 'trust and honour.'
John Bampfylde, a descendant of Sir Coplestone's, was a poet, and among his verses occurs this charming
sonnet, on that not unknown event in Devon—a Wet Summer:
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'All ye who far from town in rural hall,
Like me, were wont to dwell near pleasant field,
Enjoying all the sunny day did yield—
With me the change lament, in irksome thrall,
By rains incessant held; for now no call
From early swain invites my hand to wield
The scythe. In parlour dim I sit concealed,
And mark the lessening sand from hour-glass fall;
Or 'neath my window view the wistful train
Of dripping poultry, whom the vine's broad leaves
Shelter no more. Mute is the mournful plain.
Silent the swallow sits beneath the thatch,
And vacant hind hangs pensive o'er his hatch,
Counting the frequent drip from reeded eaves.'
Poltimore is nearly two miles east of the Exe, and if a straight line across country were followed to the river,
the traveller would arrive almost at the point where the Culm flows into the larger stream. The valley here is
rather broad, and the river winds between pleasant, rich, green meadows and wooded hills, most of which rise
in gentle, easy slopes. Not quite two miles north of Exeter, the Exe turns due south, and is joined by the
Creedy, running south-west. Westcote, in flowery language, describes the scene, painting a picture which
would stand good to-day, but[Pg 34] that nearly all the mills are gone. Cowley Bridge, 'built of fair square
stone,' stands just above the junction, 'where Exe musters gloriously, being bordered on each side with
profitable mills, fat green marshes and meadows (enamelled with a variety of golden spangles of fragrant
flowers, and bordered with silver swans), makes a deep show, as if she would carry boats and barges home to
the city; but we are opposed by Exwick wear, and indeed wears have much impaired his lustre and portable
ability, which else might have brought his denominated city rich merchandise home to the very gates.'
Here one may leave the Exe to follow the Creedy upstream for five miles or so, till Crediton is reached.
'Creedy' comes from the Celtic word Crwydr, a hook or crook, a name that its tortuous way must have earned.
The river runs between crumbling banks of soft earth, and shifts its course a little after any great flood. It is
curious to notice the difference after heavy rains between the Exe and the Creedy, for while the former will be
still a comparatively clear brown, even when it comes down a great swirling flood, thundering over the weirs
and hurrying along honeycombs of foam, the Creedy will have turned to a surging, turbid volume of water, of
a deep red, terra-cotta colour, that leaves traces of red mud in the overhanging trees when the river has
subsided.
The valley is a narrow one, and on the hill-sides are copses and orchards, lovely as a sea of pink and white
blossoms, and very admirable on a bright day in September, when the bright crimson cider apples, and golden
ones with rosy cheeks, are showing among the leaves, and the hot sunshine, following a touch of frost, brings
out the clean, crisp, sweet scent of ripe apples till it floats across roads and hedges. Leland remarks that 'the
ground betwixt Excestre and Crideton exceeding fair Corn Greese and Wood. There is a praty market in
Kirton.' Kirton was the popular name for the town. Its origin is far to seek, for the saying runs:
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and confidence of Ina, King of the West Saxons, but feeling that his work lay in another country, he went to
Thuringia, to throw his strength into the conversion of the heathen. Combining 'learning, excellency of
memory, integrity of life, and vivacity of spirit, he was fit for great employment,' says an old writer, and he
was chosen Archbishop of Mentz, becoming the chief authority on all spiritual matters in Germany. In spite of
the heavy cares and toils entailed by his high office, St Boniface still laboured personally among the
recalcitrant heathen, and in his seventy-sixth year
The palace and park at Crediton remained in the possession of the Bishops till the Dissolution.[Pg 36]
The beautiful Church of St Cross stands either upon or close to the site of the original cathedral of the
Bishops, which, on the removal of the See to Exeter, was made a collegiate church, with precentor, treasurer,
dean, eighteen canons and as many vicars, besides singing-men or lay-vicars.
The present church is mainly Perpendicular, though the Lady Chapel is early Decorated, and there are portions
of still earlier work. The tower is central, square, and rather low. It is surmounted by four embattled turrets,
and battlements run round the roof of the church. The whole building is of a soft rose-red colour, but the walls
within were once whitewashed, and are now of a slightly cooler tint. The clustered pillars look as if, over a
warm, soft grey, a faint, transparent tinge of rose-colour had passed, leaving a very lovely effect; they are tall
and graceful, and delicate carving adorns the capitals. The nave is lofty and unusually long. On the south side
of the chancel are sedilia, once elaborately decorated and glorious in vermilion and gold; a design resembling
a very large but intricate network in gold spreads over the backs of the sedilia, and a little figure, with faint
traces of colour and gilding, stands at one end. On the north side of the chancel is the effigy, lying at full
length, of William Peryam; and close by is a monument to John Tuckfield, engraved with an epitaph full of
praise, in which occur these lines, in peculiar lettering and spelling:
In the south porch is a bit of early English work, a piscina and holy-water stoup side by side, under one arch,
with a very slender detached shaft between. The upper portion of the font is late Norman, and is dark, shallow,
and square. Behind the font a small door and tiny staircase lead up to the parvise, where is stored a library that
was given for the priest's use. The books include a 'Vinegar' Bible, an Eikon Basilike, and other treasures.
There is a curious account of a miracle that took place in this church on August 1, 1315, while Bishop
Stapeldon was celebrating Mass. Thomas Orey, a fuller by trade, of Keynsham, became suddenly blind one
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day in Easter week for no apparent reason. A vivid dream that, if he should visit the Church of Holy Cross at
Crediton, his sight would return, induced him to journey there with his wife, and several witnesses, afterwards
called by the Bishop to give evidence, solemnly asserted that when he arrived in the town he was totally blind.
Two days he spent in the church, and on the third, he being 'instant at prayer before the altar of St Nicholas,
suddenly recovered his sight.'
Crediton had for a long time a very important trade in woollen goods, which were made here as early as in the
thirteenth century. In the reign of Queen Elizabeth it was one of the principal centres of the manufacture in the
county, and, indeed, caused Exeter so much jealousy that weavers, tuckers, and others, petitioned the
authorities until it was ordained that the serge-market should be removed from here, and a weekly one set up
in Exeter, to the great and natural indignation of Crediton. 'Their market for kersies hath been very great,
especially of the finer sort,' says Westcote, 'for the aptness and diligent industry of the inhabitants ... did
purchase it a supereminent name above all other towns, whereby grew this common proverb—as fine
as Kirton spinning ... which spinning was very fine indeed, which to express, the better to gain your belief, it
is very true that 140 threads of woollen yarn spun in that town were drawn together through the eye of a
tailor's needle; which needle and threads were, for many years together, to be seen in Watling-street, in
London, in the shop of one Mr Dunscombe.'[Pg 38]
Crediton was once, for a brief but fateful moment, the focus of a very serious movement. During 1549
discontent showed itself in many parts of England, and very gravely in the West, where a rising of Devonshire
and Cornish men brought about the 'Affair of the Crediton Barns,' and culminated in the siege of Exeter. The
first definite outbreak was at Sampford Courtenay, on Whit Monday, June 10. On Sunday the Book of
Common Prayer was used for the first time, but the people were dissatisfied. They did not care to hear the
service in their own tongue instead of in Latin, and they resented all the other changes. And when on Monday
the priest was 'preparing himself to say the service as he had done the day before ... they said he should not do
so.... In the end, whether it were with his will or against his will, he ravisheth himself in his old Popish attire,
and sayeth Mass, and all such services as in Times past accustomed.'
The news of this incident spread; other villages followed suit, and the local magistrates unwillingly
recognized that the ferment of rebellion was working, and met together to try and reason the people into a
more submissive frame of mind. But the movement was too full of force to be arrested by such gentle
methods, and the justices, 'being afraid of their own shadows, ... departed without having done anything at all.'
Unfortunately, their reasoning had merely an irritating effect, so that, when a certain gentleman named
Helions tried mildly to enforce some of the remonstrances, a man struck him on the neck with a billhook and
killed him. This blow seems to have stirred the mob into taking a definite course of action, and they marched
on Crediton. News of the disturbance had, meanwhile, reached the King, and Sir Peter and Sir Gawen Carew
were sent down in haste to deal with the matter. From Exeter, they and several other gentlemen rode to confer
with the people; but the people, having had notice of the arrival of the knights, 'they intrench the highways,
and make a mighty rampire at the Town's End, and fortify the same' and 'also the Barns of both sides of the
way.' The walls were pierced with 'loops and holes for their shot,' and 'so complenished with men, well
appointed with bows and arrows and other weapons,[Pg 39] that there was no passage nor entry for them into
the town.' Nor would they listen to 'the Gentlemen,' but refused all conference.
The 'Warlike Knights' then tried force, but were driven back with loss, by a heavy volley. 'Whereupon some
one strong man of that company,' says Hooker (who must have admired decision), 'unawares of the
gentlemen, did set one of the barns on fire, and then the Commoners, seeing that, ran and fled away out of the
town.' This ended all the trouble in Crediton, though the smoking barns served as fuel to the growing spirit of
revolt, and the 'Barns of Crediton' became a party-cry.
Clarendon mentions briefly that Charles I came here on his way into Cornwall, and reviewed the troops under
Prince Maurice.
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About one hundred and fifty years later the distant echoes of war sounded faintly in Crediton, for French
prisoners of war on parole, Napoleon's soldiers, were allowed to live in this town. Vague rumours of them
may still be heard. The sexton remembers that his mother often told about them, and one of the first people he
buried was a man named Henry, 'though,' he explained, 'they spell it rather differently.' The melancholy fate
of this stranger throws a light on one of the disregarded tragedies in the train of war, for Henri was not a
soldier, but the son of a French prisoner. For some reason he never went home, and died in the workhouse.
Amongst the conditions that the prisoners on parole had to sign was: 'Not to withdraw one mile from the
boundaries prescribed there without leave for that purpose from the said Commissioners;' and on some roads a
stone was put up marking the limits. One of these stones, of grey limestone, and very like a milestone with no
inscription, is still to be seen jutting out from the bank of Shobrooke Park, on the Stockleigh Pomeroy road.
Another witness to the presence of the French prisoners lies in the name that clings to a bit of road running
behind the Vicarage, for it is still sometimes called the Belle Parade, and tradition says that here they used to
assemble on Sundays.
Returning along the river, one passes through the property of the late Sir Redvers Buller. Downes is a white
house standing[Pg 40] amongst green open lawns sloping to the river, and it has a background of great trees
and ample shrubberies. The Bullers at one time lived chiefly in Cornwall, and Downes was originally a
shooting-box. A hay-loft stood at one end, and when the house was enlarged the archway under which the
hay-waggons were driven was left standing, and now forms part of the drawing-room—a room with an
unusually high ceiling. A member of the family has been kind enough to send me notes of one or two
incidents in the history of the Bullers.
'The whole Buller family was at one time reduced to a single individual, John Francis Buller. He died of the
smallpox. His mother insisted on seeing him after death. It was in the days when air was considered highly
prejudicial to smallpox patients, who were covered with red cloth, and every window and cranny through
which air might enter was carefully closed. To minimize the risk to his mother, who would listen to no
dissuasion, all the windows and doors were opened, and a draught of air admitted, with the result that when
his mother entered the room the dead man rose from his bed and received her.' Mr Buller lived to marry
Rebecca, daughter of the Bishop Trelawney who was one of the seven Bishops sent to the Tower by James II.
His arrest created intense indignation in his own county; and he is the Trelawney referred to in the
well-known fragment, all that remains of a ballad written at the time to express Cornish feeling:
'I recollect hearing that at the time of the first Reform Bill (1830) the members of the House of Commons
were threatened with dire consequences if they could not give what the mob considered satisfactory answers
to their questions.
'Mr Buller of Downes was on his way to the House in his own[Pg 41] carriage, when a crowd stopped him,
demanding to know how he meant to vote. He took no notice of their request, but remained quietly seated,
when some of the men opened the carriage door with cries of, "Pull him out! Pull him out!" and were
proceeding to carry out their threat, when his servant, who was standing behind the carriage, sprang up to the
roof, and, waving his hat, shouted: "What! don't you know my master, Squire Buller? Why, he's always for
the people!" Whereupon the door was closed again with a bang, the coachman told to drive on, and "Squire
Buller" reached the House without further molestation.'
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Topsham
Two miles farther on the river passes the village of Newton St Cyres, or Syriak Newton, as some of the older
writers called it. The church has several interesting features, and escaped the ruthless 'restoration' that so many
village churches suffered from at the beginning of the nineteenth century. Alders and willows overhang the
stream, which winds its way to the south-west, and about two miles farther on one arrives again at Cowley
Bridge. The Valley of the Exe gets ever wider and flatter, and after Exeter has been passed the flatness on
either side of the banks increases as the river draws near the estuary.
Topsham stands at the head of the estuary, and is a pleasant little town, whose great days are gone by. It is
difficult to believe that in the reign of William III Topsham had more trade with Newfoundland than any other
port in the country excepting London. Presumably it was at this time that certain Dutch merchants came to
live here, and built themselves quaint narrow houses of small Dutch bricks, painted the colour of bath-bricks.
Rounded gable-ends are a feature of these houses, which may still be seen along the Strand. In many cases the
clerk's house, a smaller, humbler dwelling of exactly the same design, stands close to the merchant's,
separated by their respective gardens.
Till wooden ships were superseded, frigates for the navy were built here, but now, although some of the
largest ships stop and unload their cargoes for Exeter, there is little of the stir and bustle that the town must
once have rejoiced in.
Miss Celia Fiennes, who rode through England about 1695,[Pg 42] mentions Topsham in her diary as 'a little
market place and a very good Key; hither they convey on horses their serges and soe load their shipps wh
comes to this place, all for London.' She also speaks of Starcross, on the farther side of the river, 'where the
Great shipps ride, and there they build some shipps.'
In the end of the seventeenth century there sprang from Topsham a man of great resoluteness, pluck, and the
spirit to fight against tremendous odds in cold blood. Robert Lyde, mate of the Friend's Adventure, himself
wrote an account of his fortunes on board that vessel. Lyde's great bitterness against the French is explained
by the fact that he had already suffered intensely at their hands. Two years before he had been captured at sea
by a French privateer, and imprisoned at St Malo, 'where we were used with such inhumanity and cruelty that
if we had been taken by the Turks we could not have been used worse.' The prisoners were almost starved,
and their condition was wretched in every respect. 'These and their other barbarities made so great an
impression on me that I did resolve never to go a prisoner there again, and this resolution I did ever since
continue in.' But when he was for the second time made prisoner—this time on board the Friend's
Adventure—there seemed no escape from this evil fate. The crew were all removed from the ship,
excepting Lyde and one boy, who, under a prize-master and six men, were to help in sailing her to St Malo.
The idea of returning to the identical prison where he had endured such misery made Lyde desperate, and,
finding no easier expedient, he determined to pit himself against the seven as soon as he could persuade the
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boy to join him. The boy, not unnaturally, hung back from such a venture, and before he could screw his
courage to the sticking-place they had arrived off a small harbour near Brest, and the French had fired a
'patteroe' for a pilot. 'Whereupon, considering the inhuman usage I formerly had in France, and how near I
was to it again, struck me with such terror that I went down between decks and prayed God for a southerly
wind, to prevent her from going into that harbour, which God was most graciously pleased to grant me, for
which I returned my unfeigned thanks.'[Pg 43]
Lyde's anxiety to attack the French was now redoubled, and when they invited him to their breakfast, he was
so 'ready to faint with eagerness to encounter them' that he could not stay in the same cabin. He went up
'betwixt decks' to the boy, 'and did earnestly entreat him to go up presently to the cabin and stand behind me,
and knock down but one man, in case two laid on me, and I would kill and command all the rest presently.'
The boy, however, was timid, and when Lyde, to spur him into resistance, told all the horrible details of his
former captivity, he calmly replied: 'If I do find it as hard as you say when I am in France, I will go along with
them in a privateer.' 'These words,' writes Lyde, 'struck me to the heart, which made me say: "You dog! What!
will you go with them against your King and Country, and Father and Mother? Sirrah! I was a prisoner in
France four months, and my tongue cannot express what I endured there, yet I would not turn Papist and go
with them. If I should take my brother in a French privateer, after he had sailed willingly with them, I would
hang him immediately."' Perhaps at this point the boy began to fear opposing Lyde as much as attacking all
the Frenchmen, for he now consented to help, and was told that if he would knock down the man at the helm,
all the others should be Lyde's affair. The sang-froid of the ensuing conversation is remarkable. 'Saith the boy,
"If you be sure to overcome them, how many do you count to kill?" I answered that I intended to kill three of
them. Then the boy replied, "Why three, and no more?" I answered that I would kill three for three of our men
that died in Prison when I was there.' Lyde went on to express a hope that some day a 'Man-of-War or
Fireship' will try to avenge 'the Death of those four hundred men that died in the same Prison of Dinan.' But
the boy's fears found the present scheme too merciful, and he protested, 'Four alive would be too many for us.'
The attack was made when two Frenchmen were asleep in the cabin. 'I went softly aft into the cabin, and put
my back against the bulkhead, and took the iron crow and held it with both my hands in the middle of it, and
put my legs to shorten myself, because the cabin was very low. But he that being nighest to me,[Pg 44]
hearing me, opened his eyes, and perceiving my intent and upon what account I was coming, he endeavoured
to rise to make resistance against me, but I prevented him by a blow upon his forehead which mortally
wounded him.' The other man received a heavy blow as he was rising, 'very fiercely endeavouring to come
against me.... The master, lying in his cabin on my right hand, rose and sat in his cabin, and seeing what I had
done, he called me by most insulting names.' But 'having his eyes every way,' Lyde turned on him with a blow
which made him 'lie as still as if he had been dead.'
He then went to 'attack the two men who were at the pump, where they continued pumping without hearing or
knowing what I had done;' but one of the wounded men crawled out of the cabin, and when the men at the
pump 'saw his blood running out of the hole in his forehead, they came running aft to me, grinding their teeth
as if they would have eaten me; but I met them as they came within the steeridge door, and struck at them; but
the steeridge not being above four foot high, I could not have a full blow at them, whereupon they fended off
the blows, took hold of the crow with both their hands close to mine, striving to haul it from me; then the boy
might have knocked them down with much ease, but that his heart failed him.' The master was by this time so
far recovered that he was able to join the other two, so that Lyde fought for his life against the three. The boy
at one moment, thinking him overborne, 'cried out for fear. Then I said, "Do you cry, you villain, now I am in
such a condition? Come quickly and knock this man on the head that hath hold of my left arm." The boy took
some courage, but struck so faintly that he missed his blow, which greatly enraged me; and I, feeling the
Frenchman about my middle hang very heavy, said to the boy, "Go round the binikle and knock down that
man that hangeth on my back"; so the boy did strike him one blow on the head, and he went out on deck
staggering to and fro.' After a further tremendous effort, Lyde killed one of the three struggling with him, and
the two others then begged for quarter; and at last he set sail for Topsham, with five living prisoners under
FLAMES OF FIRE. 31
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hatches. But his[Pg 45] troubles were not yet all passed. Exhausted as he was, he dared not rest, and suffered
from want of sleep, bad weather, and, when he reached home, a cold welcome. Arrived at Topsham Bar, he
had no English colours to run up, and the pilot he signalled feared to come out. Lyde did not dare to bring in
the ship by himself at night, and was blown off the coast, so that he had the further labour of getting close to
the bar a second time. In the end he did succeed in getting safely home.
Exmouth from
Cockwood
Just beyond Topsham the little river Clyst joins the Exe. It has given names to a surprising number of villages
and manors, considering the shortness of its course—Clyst St Mary, Clyst St Laurence, Honiton Clyst,
and so on. At Clyst St George a small estate used to be held on the curious tenure of 'the annual tender of an
ivory bow.' About two miles east of the river the land begins to slope upwards to the moorland of Woodbury
Common, and on one part of the heath are the remains of an ancient entrenchment called Woodbury Castle.
'No castle at all, built with little cost,' says Westcote, 'without either lime or hewn stone: only a hasty
fortification made of mother-earth for the present to serve a turn for need, with plain ditches, the Saxons' usual
structure, who commonly lay sub dio, with no other shelter or coverture than the starry canopy.'
Woodbury and Lympstone—a village on the edge of the estuary—were once owned by the
family of De Albemarle, which name was gradually transformed into Damarel, and in this guise is not
uncommon in the West to-day.
Two and a half miles farther on is Exmouth—a town fortunate in the delightful views on every side.
The sea stretches away to the south; on the north-east the hills rise towards Woodbury Common; on the west
lie the broad, shining reaches of the river, and beyond them the beautiful heights of Haldon. Here 'Ex taketh
his last tribute with a wider channel and curled waves, shedding itself into the sea.'
Exmouth has a rather curious history. In the early part of the eighteenth century it was little more than a
hamlet, chiefly consisting of fishermen's cottages; but soon afterwards it became a[Pg 46] fashionable
watering-place—according to report, because one of the judges on circuit was charmed with the
sea-bathing here. The town continues to flourish and is greatly patronized by visitors. The strangeness of the
history lies in the fact that Exmouth should ever have been reduced to such a humble condition, for it inherited
great traditions. When the Danes descended on it in 1001, they found there a town and a castle, and being
'valiantly repelled by the guardians' of the latter, they revenged themselves by burning the town.
FLAMES OF FIRE. 32
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Devon, Its Moorlands, Streams and Coasts, by Rosalind Northcote
In the reign of King John, Exmouth was a port of some consequence, and when Edward III was at war with
France it was able to contribute no fewer than ten ships for an attack on Calais. Risdon says there was
'sometime a castle, but now the place hath no defence than a barred haven and the inhabitants' valour.' It is a
little puzzling that both he and Westcote, writing about the beginning of the seventeenth century, should
imply that the old fortress had no successor, for a very few years later Exmouth was garrisoned for the King.
Either a fort must have been erected in the short interval, or some building turned into a tolerable substitute,
for in the spring of 1646 'Fort Exmouth' was blockaded by Colonel Shapcote, and defended with great courage
by Colonel Arundell. It capitulated less than a month before the surrender of Exeter.
[Pg 47]
CHAPTER III 33
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The River Otter rises in Somerset, and runs nearly due south, bearing slightly westwards till it reaches
Honiton. Here it makes a curve still farther to the west, and from Ottery St Mary runs southwards to the sea.
In Westcote's day, when the derivations of names were taken in a light-hearted spirit, it was said: 'The river
Otter, or river of otters (water-dogs), taking name from the abundance of these animals (which we term otters)
sometime haunting and using it.' But the more serious authorities of to-day do not allow that the otters in this
river have anything to do with the matter, and say that the name comes from the Welsh y dwr, the water. It is a
rapid and very clear stream, flowing through green and fertile valleys.
Honiton filled Defoe with admiration when he came to it on his journey to the West. He describes it as 'a
pleasant, good town, that stands in the best and pleasantest part of the whole country ... and to the entrance
into Honiton the view of the country is the most beautiful landscape in the world, a mere picture, and I do not
remember the like in any one place in England.' Beyond this pleasantness there is nothing very remarkable in
the town;[Pg 48] perhaps its most uncommon feature being a stream of clear water that runs down the street,
with square dipping-places at intervals.
To the west the town looks over a space of comparatively flat country, but on the north-west it is
overshadowed by St. Cyres Hill, and farther north is the bold height of Dumpdon. On the top of this hill are
the remains of an oval camp, and a few miles away to the north-west is the better-known camp called
Hembury Fort. The fort stands very high, and looks south to the sea beyond the Vale of the Otter, and west to
Haldon and the fringes of Dartmoor over Exeter. Three ramparts surround the fort, which covers a large space
of ground, and it is 'divided into two parts by a double agger.... Several Roman coins, and an iron "lar"
representing a female figure three inches high, have been found here.'
A great Roman road passes by Honiton. The Fosseway ran from Caithness to Totnes (according to some
authorities, on into Cornwall), and crossed the country between Exeter or Seaton and Lincolnshire. It is
thought that the Romans, in making their famous roads, usually followed the line of still older British ways.
In coaching days Honiton was well known as a stage for changing horses. Gay, who was a Devonshire man, a
native of Barnstaple, says in his Journey to Exeter, 1716, from London:
About forty years later Fuller wrote a spirited defence of lace-making on economic grounds. It was then 'made
in and about Honyton, and weekly returned to London.' He says: 'Though private persons pay for it, it stands
the state in nothing.... Many lame in their limbs and impotent in their arms, if able in their fingers, gain a
livelyhood thereby, not to say that it saveth some thousand of pounds yearly, formerly sent over seas to fetch
Lace from Flanders.' At this time the lace trade flourished greatly, although there was always a difficulty in
competing with Belgium, because of the superiority of its silky flax, finer than any spun in England. Later the
workers fell on evil days, for during the American War there was little money to spend on luxuries; and,
besides, about this time the fashion of wearing much lace came to an end. In 1816 the introduction of
'machine net' supplanted the vrai réseau, the groundwork of the lace made by hand, and this took away work
from very many people, besides lowering prices, so that the workers became discouraged, and the quality as
well as the quantity of the lace suffered much in consequence. Queen Adelaide tried to stimulate the
dwindling trade by ordering a lace dress, every flower in which was to be copied from Nature. The initials of
the flowers chosen spelt her name:
• Amaranth,
• Daphne,
• Eglantine,
• Lilac,
• Auricula,
• Ivy,
• Dahlia,
• Eglantine.
[Pg 50]
Queen Victoria's wedding-dress was made at Beer, and of later years there has been a revival of lace-making,
especially in the neighbourhood of Honiton and of Beer; and considerable quantities are made by village
women living at home.
But lace is not the only thing that comes from Honiton. Cider is made there, and in the reign of George II
making it must have been a very profitable occupation. Defoe notes: 'They tell us they send twenty thousand
hogsheads of cider hence every year to London, and (which is still worse) that it is most of it bought there by
the merchants to mix with their wines—which, if true, is not much to the reputation of the London
vintners. But that by-the-bye.' As cider-making was then in such a prosperous condition, it is easy to
understand the tremendous outcry that arose a few years later, when Lord Bute imposed the enormous tax of
ten shillings per hogshead, to be paid by the first buyer. The storm provoked was so violent, the opposition of
country gentlemen of all shades of politics so unanimous, that the Prime Minister modified the tax to one of
four shillings on each hogshead, to be paid by the grower, who was thereby rendered liable to the domiciliary
visits of excisemen. This alteration was vehemently protested against, and Pitt championed the opposition on
the grounds that it was an Englishman's pride that every man's house was his castle, and denounced as
intolerable a Bill that allowed excisemen to invade the house of any gentleman who 'owned a few fruit-trees
and made a little cider.' The City of London sent petitions to the Commons, the Lords, and the Throne; and the
counties of Devon and Hereford, the cities of Exeter and Worcester, urged their respective Members to make
all possible resistance to the tax. Lord Bute's personal unpopularity increased enormously, and a shoal of
squibs, caricatures, and pamphlets appeared, in which he was held up to ridicule and contempt. One caricature
represented him as 'hung on the gallows over a fire, on which a jack-boot fed the flames, and a farmer was
throwing an excised cyder barrel into the conflagration. In rural districts he was burnt under the effigy of a
jack-boot, a rural allusion to his name.'
James Rodge of Honitonin ye County of Devonshire (Bonelace Siller)Hath given unto the Poore of Honinton35P'isheThe
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Devon, Its Moorlands, Streams and Coasts, by Rosalind Northcote
An amusing story is told of Lord North in connection with this[Pg 51] tax. Not long after it had been imposed,
he and Sir Robert Hamilton came to Ashe, near Axminster, on a visit—Lord North, then a Lord of the
Treasury, distinctly uneasy as to the risk of coming into Devonshire, for the county was still seething with
dissatisfaction against the Government. 'He was one day thrown into great alarm by a large party of reapers,
who, having finished cutting the wheat of the estate, approached the house with their hooks in their hands,
shouting the usual cry, "We have'n! we have'n!" The portentous words Lord North applied to himself, and,
pale with terror, considered himself a dead man. Sir Robert Hamilton seized a sword, and was sallying forth to
repulse the visitors, when, meeting a member of the household, an explanation took place, by which the fears
so unconsciously excited were removed.'
Sidmouth
It was a most ancient custom in the West—indeed, it is said to be a remnant of the pagan rite of
dedicating the first-fruits to Ceres—to set aside either the first armful of corn that was cut or else some
of the best ears, and bind them into a little sheaf, called a 'neck'. A fragment of the vivid description given by
Miss O'Neill in 'Devonshire Idyls' must be quoted: 'The men carried their reaping-hooks; the sheaf was borne
by the old man. Bareheaded he stood in the light of the moon. Strange shadows flecked the mossy sward on
sundown as he held the first-fruits aloft and waved his arms.
'"We ha'un!" cried he, and the cry was long and wailing. The strange intimation fell on the ear like an echo
from pagan days. One could fancy the fauns and weird beings of old had taught the cadence to the first reapers
of earth. "We ha'un!" cried he, and all the men in the circle bowed to the very ground.... "We ha'un!" cried
Jonas again, and again the reapers bowed and waved. Then the old men took up another strain, at once more
jubilant and more resonant, and with an indescribable drawling utterance sang out "Thee Neck!"—sang
it out three times, and twice the waving circle of bright steel flashed.'
On leaving Honiton, if the river is followed upstream for a short distance, the traveller will find himself close
to ruined[Pg 52] Ottery Mohun, the home of two celebrated families in succession. Unfortunately, it has been
entirely destroyed by fire. A farm now stands among the ruins, and two fine Perpendicular archways, and a
deeply moulded and hooded arch over the frontdoor, alone bear witness to its former state. In the spandril
above the outer archway is carved, 'amid elegant scroll-work and foliage, an arm, vested in an ermine maunch,
the hand grasping a golden fleur-de-lys'—the old coat-armour of the Mohuns; and on the other spandril
'three lions passant in pale,' the bearing of the Carews.
The Mohuns were a Norman family of distinction, but in later days were notorious rather than famous. The
old peerage having died out in the Middle Ages, a member of a cadet branch, by shameless and persevering
James Rodge of Honitonin ye County of Devonshire (Bonelace Siller)Hath given unto the Poore of Honinton36P'isheThe
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begging, induced Charles I to grant him a barony. This title only survived a few generations, and the fifth and
last bearer of it was known as 'the wicked' Lord Mohun. His life was short—he was barely over forty
when he died—but eventful, for he was twice tried before his peers, each time on the charge of being
accessory to a murder, and the story has often been told of the desperate duel in which Lord Mohun was killed
by the Duke of Hamilton, whom he had mortally wounded. Spectators burst upon the scene to discover the
two principals dying on the ground, and the two seconds fiercely fighting each other.
The history of the Carews is more interesting. Ottery Mohun came to them towards the end of the thirteenth
century, through the heiress of the elder branch of Mohuns, whom John Carew married. Their names were
eminent in camp, court, and council, in one reign after another; but it is only possible to speak here of two, Sir
Gawen, and his nephew Sir Peter, on whose death the branch that had been settled at Ottery Mohun for three
centuries became extinct in the direct line. There is not even space for the career of another of Sir Gawen's
nephews, to whom Queen Elizabeth wrote, with her own hand, in regard to his efforts in subduing the Irish:
'If ever more services of worth were performed in shorter space than you have done, we are deceived among
many witnesses.'
[Pg 53]
Sir Peter's youth was spent very strangely even for that age of hazards and chances. As a child he was sent to
school in Exeter, where he was so exceedingly naughty that complaints were made to his father, and Sir
William, who had remarkable ideas of discipline, came to Exeter, 'tied him on a line and delivered him to one
of his servants to be carried about the town as one of his hounds, and they led him home to Mohun's Ottery
like a dog.' Not long afterwards he was with his father in London, when, 'walking in Paul's,' they met a French
gentleman, an old acquaintance of Sir William's, who took a sudden fancy to the boy, and offered to bring him
up in France as if he were his own son. The offer seems to have been accepted offhand, but, unfortunately for
the boy, the sudden fancy drooped almost as quickly as it sprang up, and, after enjoying life for a brief
moment as an indulged page, he was turned out into the stables, 'there as a mulett to attend his master's mule.'
Here he remained till a Mr Carew, a kinsman, happened to come to the French Court, and near the Court gate
passed 'sundry lackeys and horseboys playing together, one of whom called to another, "Carew Anglois!
Carew Anglois!"' This attracted Mr Carew's attention. He called the boy and questioned him, and finding
'Carew Anglois' to be his cousin, Mr Carew took him under his protection, rebuked the fickle guardian, and
trained up Peter 'for a space ... in the court of France, like a gentleman.' Peter, still very young, but extremely
independent, was present at the siege of Pavia, and as his patron had just died, and he perceived 'fortune to
frown upon the French side,' he went over to the Emperor's camp, and entered into the service of the Prince of
Orange. Five or six years later he came home, bringing with him letters of highest commendation to the King,
Henry VIII, who received him with great favour.
Sir Gawen and Sir Peter together took a prominent part in 1549, in dealing with the insurrection of
Devonshire and Cornishmen against the Reformed religion. Sir Peter, indeed, was afterwards blamed for
being over-zealous, and thereby aggravating the trouble; but he was able to clear himself, and was 'well
allowed and commended for what he had done.'[Pg 54]
In Queen Mary's reign fresh trouble arose, from which he escaped less easily. Many fervent Protestants were
made uneasy by the symptoms of Romish rule that began to appear, and were still more disturbed by the news
of the Queen's projected marriage with Philip of Spain, which they felt boded ill for their liberties, spiritual
and temporal. The Carews were in the counsel of Sir Thomas Wyatt, the Duke of Suffolk, and others, who
planned risings to depose the Queen. In a simultaneous movement, the Carews were to raise the West under
the nominal leadership of Lord Courtenay, Sir Thomas Wyatt was to raise Kent, and the Duke the Midland
James Rodge of Honitonin ye County of Devonshire (Bonelace Siller)Hath given unto the Poore of Honinton37P'isheThe
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counties. But before the preparations were complete, suspicion fell on the Carews, and a letter was despatched
from the Council, directing the Sheriff of Devon to send Sir Peter and Sir Gawen to London.
Sir Gawen, who was in Exeter about this time, thought it best to return quietly to his own home, and because
his movements now attracted an undesirable amount of attention, he one night 'went out over the walles of the
said cytie yn his bowtes.' The account condescends to a touching detail that should appeal to all. Even the
agitation of flying from arrest on a charge of treason could not keep Sir Gawen from feeling footsore, and 'for
that his bowtes grieved hym he cutt them upon the waye.' Sir Gawen was arrested a few days later, and
suffered a long imprisonment.
Meanwhile Sir Peter, in answer to the summons to surrender himself, sent the reply that he had already started
for London. But meeting on the way the bearer of a message which assured him that two of his 'dearest
friends' here failed him, he turned aside and escaped in a little boat from Weymouth.
Those who interest themselves in dreams and visions may care to hear of Lady Carew's experience at this
moment. The night that Sir Peter sailed, Lady Carew dreamed very vividly 'that as he was going aboard his
bark, he should fall into the seas and be drowned'; and so great was her trouble on awaking, that she sent a
messenger to the seaside to make inquiries for Sir Peter. And when the messenger arrived at Weymouth, he
heard the startling news that getting 'out of the boat to enter into the[Pg 55] bark, his [Sir Peter's] foot slided
or slipped, and he therewith fell into the seas, and had been drowned if one standing by had not taken hold of
him.'
Notwithstanding several misfortunes on the way, Sir Peter arrived safely in France, where he lived an exciting
and adventurous life for several years, and was then treacherously seized and carried to England and the
Tower. Here the much-abused Philip proved himself a real friend, for in an admirable letter to the Queen he
intercedes for 'Pedro Caro' and his wife, and Sir Peter was eventually forgiven by Queen Mary, and honoured
by Queen Elizabeth.
Between Honiton and Sidmouth is an inn called The Hunter's Lodge (more recently The Hare and Hounds),
and opposite the house is a block of stone, over which hovers a gruesome mystery. It is said that in the dead of
night the stone used to stir in its place, and roll heavily down into the valley, to drink at the source of the Sid,
and, some say, to try to wash away its stain. Human blood has given it this power—the blood that
gushed upon it when the witches slew their victims, for it was once a witches' stone of sacrifice.
Five miles to the south-west of Honiton is Ottery St Mary, a pretty little town built on very steep slopes, and
full of interesting associations. It lies among 'fair meadows bathed in sunshine; with the Otter river winding
through them ... yonder are the red Devon steers grazing up to their dewlaps in buttercups: beyond them dusky
moors melt into purple haze.' By making a slight détour one passes the pleasant lawns and copses of Escot.
Once the property of the Alfords, Escot was bought in 1680 by Sir Walter Yonge (father of George II's
unpopular 'Secretary-at-War'), who built a new and large house and lavishly improved the grounds. But
prodigality was the bane of the Yonges, and not much more than one hundred years later it passed away from
Sir Walter's ruined grandson, and was bought by Sir John Kennaway.
The streets of Ottery are steep and sinuous, and both roadway and footwalk are paved with pebbles and
cobble-stones. The[Pg 56] Manor of Ottery was given by Edward the Confessor to the Dean and Chapter of
Rouen, and it continued in their possession during the reigns of nine Kings. Then the Dean, finding that the
task of collecting his rents and dues was 'chargeable, troublesome, and sometimes dangerous ... desired to sell
it, and met with a very fit chapman, John Grandisson, Lord Bishop of Exon.'
Ottery's greatest treasure is the beautiful church, a miniature of Exeter Cathedral, and it is to Bishop
Grandisson that its great beauty is due. He did not build the church; indeed, the shadow of a terrible scandal
James Rodge of Honitonin ye County of Devonshire (Bonelace Siller)Hath given unto the Poore of Honinton38P'isheThe
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had fallen upon it forty-five years before his rule began. For in the year 1282 'that discreet man, Mr Walter de
Lechelade,' the Precentor of Ottery, was waylaid coming from Exeter Cathedral in his canonical robes, and
murdered by 'certain sons of perdition full of fiendish ferocity.' 'Mr Walter de Lechelade' was probably
extremely unpopular locally, because he had obtained the lease for life of the Manor and Church of Ottery
from the authorities at Rouen, and was allowed to make all the profit he could out of the revenues. It is
interesting to note the ecclesiastical manner of dealing with such a difficulty at that date. Out of the
twenty-one persons convicted of being concerned in the murder, no fewer than eleven were clerics! The Vicar
of Ottery St Mary was among the number, and it is sad to say that suspicion fell even on the Dean of Exeter.
Bishop Grandisson found an early English church. He lengthened the nave, altered the chancel, added a
beautiful Lady Chapel, and raised towers on the already existing transepts. These transeptal towers are
peculiar to this church and the other on which he spent his enthusiasm, Exeter Cathedral. On one tower is a
steeple—there was one on the Cathedral—the lead scored by cross-slanted lines. The church is
of grey stone. The nave and towers are battlemented, and at intervals in the outer walls are niches, now bereft
of the figures they held. Very graceful stone tracery is in many windows, pinnacles and crosses rise from the
roof, and the whole effect is of an impressive building of rich and elaborate detail. The number of
consecration crosses is remarkable, for there are thirteen without and eight within the walls,[Pg 57] and each
marks a spot touched by the Bishop with holy oil. Every one is a square stone panel, carved with an angel
bearing a small cross. Some are much defaced, but a few are still perfect, and beneath several of them are the
remains of iron supports, showing where a light was burned before the 'cross' on great festivals.
The arches of the nave are supported by clustered columns with most delicately carved capitals; and in the
nave are two very elaborately decorated tombs—of the Bishop's brother, Sir Otho de Grandisson, and
of Beatrice, Sir Otho's wife—each under a monumental arch, with hanging tracery and a crocketed
ogee canopy.
The finely carved and pierced minstrels' gallery in the Lady Chapel is an exquisite piece of work; but amongst
all that is to be most admired is the exceedingly beautiful fan-tracery in the roof of the 'Dorset'
aisle—an aisle built by Cicely, heiress of Lord Bonville, and widow of the Marquis of Dorset, who died
in 1501.
Two short pleached alleys of limes stand within the churchyard wall, looking down over a little square into
which several streets open, and the old stocks still lie in the shadow of the trees.
Bishop Grandisson obtained a licence to establish here 'a monastery or collegiate church for a fixed number of
secular canons ... governed mainly by a Warden, a Minister, and Sacrist, and a Chanter or Precentor,' and he
drew up a most comprehensive set of statutes for their guidance. Occasionally he issued additional 'monitions,'
as, for example, when the Warden had allowed stage-plays to be performed in church during the Christmas
holidays. It is reasonable to suppose, however, that they were 'mystery plays' or 'moralities.'
Lord Coleridge says: 'The town was dominated by the College. The bridge by which you entered the town
from the West was the bridge of the Holy Saviour. In one of its recesses the sacred light was ever kept
burning, inviting those who passed to pray.' Henry VI and Henry VII both visited the College. The
Dissolution swept it away, but a part of its endowment was devoted to founding the King's Grammar
School.[Pg 58]
Many incidents befell Fairfax and his troops at Ottery. It was chosen for their winter-quarters in 1645, and
they arrived worn-out and exhausted and in great need of refreshment. Ill-fortune, however, awaited them, as
the Rev. Joshua Sprigg, General Fairfax's chaplain, tells us in Anglia Rediviva, his account of this army's
movements. A mysterious disease broke out, very fatal, so that there were 'dying of soldiers and inhabitants in
the town of Autree, seven, eight, and nine a day, for several weeks together.' A Colonel Pickering died of it,
James Rodge of Honitonin ye County of Devonshire (Bonelace Siller)Hath given unto the Poore of Honinton39P'isheThe
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on whom the chaplain wrote an elegy. One has heard of blank-verse that is merely 'prose cut into lengths,' but
his lines suggest that they must have been on the rack to bring them to the right measure. The author feared
that it was the lack of action that had proved fatal.
At Ottery, Sir Thomas Fairfax received and entertained two envoys from besieged Exeter, who came with a
view to discussing the possible terms of a general peace; but their mission was, of course, unsuccessful. A
pleasant event was the presentation to the General of a fair jewel, set with rich diamonds of great value, 'from
both Houses of Parliament, as a testimonial to his great services at Naseby.' The jewel was tied with 'a blue
ribbon and put about his neck.' Fairfax was staying in the old Chanter's House, now the property of Lord
Coleridge, and the ceremony took place in a long panelled room, with deep-set window, then called the Great
Parlour. Here also Fairfax held a deeply important conference with the 'Lord Generall Cromwell,' when he
came to decide the plan of campaign in the West.
Ottery St Mary is able to pride itself on being the birthplace of the poet Coleridge, whose family had long
been connected with the county. The poet's father was Vicar, and Master of the Grammar School. Great as
was his genius, Coleridge was not[Pg 59] in every respect worthy of his birthplace, for in one of his letters he
actually announces that he prefers Somerset to Devon!—evidence which clearly proves the correctness
of the popular belief that poets have no judgment. But his real affection for the Otter is shown in his sonnet to
the river on whose banks he lived in early years. Another poem, the 'Songs of the Pixies,' was inspired by the
Pixies' Parlour, a tiny cave with roots of old trees for a ceiling, that stands halfway up a low cliff overhanging
the river, just beyond the town. In this poem are the lines:
A winter traveller in passing through the lanes near here recalls some beliefs of a past generation: 'The faint
chimes of St Mary's in distant Ottery are playing their Christmas greeting over many a mile of moorland. We
are passing the old "cob" walls and grey-headed barns of a substantial farmstead. The cocks will crow here all
the night before Christmas Day, according to the beautiful legend of the county, to bid
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The very oxen at midnight will fall down on their knees before the manger. The next turn brings us to the
Otter rushing along some forty feet below with angry stream.' Almost at the mouth[Pg 60] of the river is the
village of Otterton, and here was a Benedictine Priory, founded in the reign of King John. The Prior of this
little monastery had certain privileges. Amongst others, ten marks had to be subscribed among the tenants for
'a palfrey to be presented to a new Prior on his coming to reside in the midst of his flock, and every plough
had to plough one acre of land for him annually.' He had the 'right of pre-emption of fish in all his ports, and
the choice of the best fish.' Conger-eels were specially mentioned in a marginal note. Besides this, he claimed
every porpoise caught in the sea or other neighbouring waters, but paid for it with twelve pence and a loaf of
white bread to each sailor, and two to the master of the boat from which it was caught. Lastly, the Prior
claimed the half of every dolphin. But no Prior is likely to have had many chances of asserting this right.
The river runs into the sea by the charming little town of Budleigh Salterton; but it is more interesting to cross
the water at Otterton, and passing through the village of East Budleigh, nearly opposite, to go towards Hayes
Barton, the house where Sir Walter Raleigh was born.
Fardell, near Ivybridge, was the ancestral home of the Raleighs, but Sir Walter's father settled at Budleigh. In
front of the garden a swirling stream crosses a strip of green; and in the garden, at the right time, one may see
the bees busy among golden-powdered clusters of candytuft, and dark-red gillyflowers, and a few
flame-rose-coloured tulips, proud and erect. The house is very picturesque; it has cob walls and a thatched
roof, and is built in the shape of the letter E; a wing projects at either end, and in the middle the porch juts out
slightly. The two wings are gabled; there is a small gable over the porch and two dormer ones over the
windows at each side of it, the windows having lattice lights and narrow mullions. Dark carved beams above
them show up well against the cream-coloured walls. The heavy door is closely studded with nails, and over it
fall the delicate sprays and lilac 'butterfly' blossoms of a wistaria. The house has been little altered, and its
outward appearance was probably almost the same in Sir Walter's boyhood as it is to-day.[Pg 61]
Branscombe
In front of Hayes Barton is a hill covered with oak-woods, and to the west the ground begins to slope upwards
to the high moorland of Woodbury Common. Sir Walter had a great affection for his boyhood's home, and
later, in trying to buy it back, he wrote to the then owner: 'I will most willingly give you whatsoever in your
conscience you shall deem it worth; ... for ye naturall disposition I have to that place, being borne in that
house, I had rather seat myself there, than anywhere else.'
James Rodge of Honitonin ye County of Devonshire (Bonelace Siller)Hath given unto the Poore of Honinton41P'isheThe
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To realize Sir Walter at all adequately, he must be contemplated as soldier, sailor, statesman, courtier,
explorer, poet, historian, Governor of colonies abroad and of very important offices at home—most of
all as a seer, for his eyes discerned a light that did not dawn on his contemporaries. He and his half-brother,
Sir Humphrey Gilbert, foresaw 'that colonization, trade, and the enlargement of empire, were all more
important for the welfare of England than the discovery of gold.' Major Hume, who is by no means
over-prejudiced in Raleigh's favour, has said in his 'Life of Sir Walter Raleigh': 'To him is due the undying
glory of having made the great northern continent of America an English-speaking country. With him it was
no accident. The plan sprang fully formed from his great brain. He was greedy of gain, but he spent his money
like water in this great project. He knew full well that there was no gold to reward him; that the profit, if any,
must be slow, and must accrue mainly to the nation, and not to an individual; and yet he laboured on for thirty
years in the face of defeat, disaster, contumely, and disgrace, in full faith and confidence that the great
continent was by God's providence reserved for England.'
Raleigh's biographers have wondered at his immense knowledge of naval matters, and particularly of naval
warfare, for the Ark Raleigh, which he had built after his own plans, was admitted to be the best ship in the
fleet at the time of the Armada. Perhaps his genius for absorbing information developed very early, and Sir
John Millais's picture of the two little boys, fascinated by the words of the sailor speaking to them of the
breathless adventures he had fought through, the gorgeous sights that he[Pg 62] had seen in the lands
overseas, helps to explain it. Most West-Countrymen can tell a tale dramatically, as the sailor is telling
it—the picture was painted at Budleigh Salterton—and it may be that, with Raleigh's amazing
faculty for gathering knowledge, he learned enough of seamanship as he grew up to enable him to grasp and
hoard in his memory every detail of the subject as it came before him in later life.
It is impossible to judge any character of a past century without trying to realize in many questions of conduct
the gulf that lies between the former point of view and our own, and whatever Sir Walter's faults were, his
genius was incomparably greater. His failings were those of his age, and were more than surpassed by the
shortcomings of several of Queen Elizabeth's very eminent statesmen. Raleigh left Oxford when he was only
seventeen, and joined Mr Henry Champernowne's band of gentlemen volunteers who were fighting for the
Protestant Princes in France. After six years' fighting he left the army and betook himself to the Middle
Temple, where possibly he spent more time over lyrics than over the law, for a biographer, describing this
period of his life, passes over his legal acquirements, but says that 'his vein for ditty and amorous ode was
esteemed most lofty, insolent, and passionate.' He and Spenser were very congenial companions, and later
Spenser, speaking of their great friendship, said: 'He pip'd, I sang, and when he sang, I pip'd.'
Sir Walter left the Temple for the sea, then went to fight in Ireland, and at the time of the Armada he was Lord
Warden of the Stannaries, and responsible for the companies of tinners, who had turned to soldiering. He
planned one expedition after another to the New World, and sent them out mainly at his own expense, giving
careful instructions to those in charge to observe carefully any plants or produce of any kind that might profit
this country, whereas usually explorers searched eagerly for precious metals alone. It was due to these
instructions that the potato was brought to England. Rumour for long maintained that Sir Walter actually
brought back the plant himself, but, as a matter of fact, the credit of this is due to Heriot, a man of science[Pg
63] employed by Raleigh. He showed it with the other 'commodities' he had collected to Sir Walter, who took
the potatoes with him to Ireland, and planted them in his new estate of Youghal.
And though it was most probably Sir John Hawkins who introduced tobacco into England, it certainly was Sir
Walter who brought smoking into fashion. In parenthesis, a warning may be given that anyone who wanders
from east to west along the south coast of Devon will be wearied beyond measure by the numbers of rooms,
banks, porches, and gardens, shown as the identical spot 'where Sir Walter smoked his first pipe.' Dr
Brushfield, in an exhaustive article on 'Raleghana,' counts only six places, but they reach from Penzance to
Islington, and one is in Ireland.
James Rodge of Honitonin ye County of Devonshire (Bonelace Siller)Hath given unto the Poore of Honinton42P'isheThe
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After the last dreary voyage, rendered fruitless by the contemptible double-dealing of James I, and during his
trial, Sir Walter's self-possession and courage showed at their best. 'From eight in the morning till nearly
midnight he fronted his enemies with unshaken courage. The bluster of Attorney-General Coke roared around
him without effect. "I want words," stormed the great prosecutor, "to express thy viperous treason."
'"True," said Raleigh, "for you have spoken the same thing half a dozen times over already."'
It was characteristic of his grand views of life that within the four walls of a prison he should undertake no
less a work than the History of the World. The unfinished history shows a depth of learning and dignity of
style, very wonderful in the writings of a man who spent his life in incessant and absorbing action. It must
have been the vast number of the chances and changes of life he had seen around him, and himself
experienced, that inspired him to write that splendid apostrophe: 'O eloquent, just, and mighty Death! whom
none could advise, thou hast persuaded; what none have dared, thou hast done; and whom all the world have
flattered, thou only hast cast out of the world and despised; thou hast drawn together all the far-stretched
greatness, all the pride, cruelty, and ambition of man, and covered it all over with these two narrow words,
Hic jacet.'[Pg 64]
Not only in his visions of colonies was Raleigh far in advance of his time. Major Hume quotes his ideas on
trade and commerce, the statesmanship displayed in his Prerogative of Parliaments, and his writings on the
construction of ships and naval tactics, to show that in each subject he had arrived at conclusions now
generally accepted, but only discovered by the public long after his death. This biographer ends by describing
him as 'perhaps the most universally capable Englishman that ever lived.'
Sir Walter's last lines were written a few hours before his death, in his Bible:
Farther eastward, one comes to Branscombe, a straggling village in a broad hollow where three valleys meet.
A stream flows down each combe, and eventually all three join and run together into the sea at Branscombe
Mouth. There is a great deal to admire in the steep sides and irregular curves, softened by the spreading woods
in these valleys, and close to the shore a hill rises almost precipitously for six hundred feet.[Pg 65]
James Rodge of Honitonin ye County of Devonshire (Bonelace Siller)Hath given unto the Poore of Honinton43P'isheThe
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Beer Beach
A very short distance further on, the white cliffs of the tiny cove of Beer come into view. Beer is an
exceptionally delightful village, because of its strong individuality. At the top of the inlet the houses are
clustered irregularly in little offshoots, but the main street runs down a deep cleft narrowing towards the sea
between white gleaming chalk cliffs such as are rare in this county. A rapid stream races down the side of the
street, and, dashing over a rock at the edge of the beach, buries itself in the shingle. Beer Head and the cliff
that separates the village from Seaton run out into the sea, so that it is completely shut in, and from the water's
edge it is impossible to see past those massive walls standing against the sea and sky on either side. The cove
is so small that one wonders it counts as a harbour at all, but the beach is covered with many small boats and
several heavily-built trawlers. As I saw it, the water was a clear blue-grey, and some sea-gulls were placidly
floating a few yards from land, rising and falling as the waves rolled in, and looking as if they must be buried
by each one. From Beer Head there is a splendid view of the coast; to the east, beyond Seaton, the landslip,
and Lyme Regis, the line stretches grey and dim in the distance towards Portland; westwards, beyond
Sidmouth's red cliffs, one sees how the land bends southward to Budleigh Salterton, and still further south
towards Exmouth.
The little inobtrusive haven of Beer was in every way convenient for smugglers, and was naturally much
beloved by them. Not more than seventy or eighty years ago, all the people in the village were supposed to
take a share in the perils and joys of the ventures whenever they got the chance. The greatest of their number
was a certain Jack Rattenbury, who began his life at sea when he was nine years old. Five years later he had
already decided, 'I wished to make a figure on the stage of life,' and joined a privateering expedition. The ship
was captured by the French, and Rattenbury taken prisoner. He escaped from prison, but not from Bordeaux,
where for more than a year he was forced to stay, and he then sailed on his own account to America, and back
to Havre, Copenhagen, and Guernsey. By the time he reached[Pg 66] home again he was only sixteen! His life
was an unceasing turmoil: smuggling, privateering, being impressed for the navy, and devising wiles for
slipping away again, with the variation of being taken prisoner by French or Spaniards.
A steep road runs through lovely scenery from Ottery to Seaton. At intervals it passes through woods, or looks
down into the misty, green, undulating country northwards; then, climbing a ridge, the sea, framed in woods,
is seen over little hollows in the distant cliffs to the south. The road crosses a common with a few knots of
wind-swept fir-trees, and runs steeply down to Seaton. On the west side of the bay the cliffs are a creamy
white; eastwards, the shades are chiefly buff and pale brown. The variety of their strata make the cliffs
interesting to geologists, for here are found layers of different kinds of chalk, limestone, greensand, marls,
chert, and interspersed lines of flints.
James Rodge of Honitonin ye County of Devonshire (Bonelace Siller)Hath given unto the Poore of Honinton44P'isheThe
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Seaton is a pleasant little town without any remarkable feature. In the church is this curious epitaph with the
date 1633 A.D.:
John Starre
......
Starr on hie!
Where should a starr be
But on Hie?
On the east side of Seaton is the flat wide Valley of the Axe. The river is broad and rather important-looking,
but it makes a most inglorious exit into the sea, for a huge pebble ridge rises as an impassable barrier, and the
river has to twist away farther east and run out obliquely through a narrow channel. Axmouth, on the farther
side, is a pretty old-fashioned little village, the thatched whitewashed cottages forming a street that curves
round almost into a loop, while a chattering stream runs between the houses. In the church is the figure of a
tonsured priest, with chasuble, stole, and alb, supposed to be one of the early Vicars of Axmouth. At his feet
lies a dog, and the legend goes that this was not merely the customary image of a dog seen on tombs, but the
effigy of his own favourite, whom he desired to be buried at his feet;[Pg 67] and as an indemnity for this order
he left a piece of ground to be devoted to charitable purposes, called Dog Acre Orchard. Mr Rogers, in his
'Memorials of the West,' tells us that the name remains till to-day.
Seaton Headland
A very short distance beyond is the great landslip which fell in 1839, when about fifty acres of the cliff slid
more than a hundred feet to the shore beneath, but in such a way that part of an orchard descended with its
growing trees, and they continued to flourish at their new level. More wonderful still, two cottages settled
down on to the shore, without falling in pieces. The ground began to slide on the night of Christmas Eve, and
by the evening of December 26 the great mass had fallen. To the west is a great chasm, and the cliff rises high
on the seaward side. Farther east, no cliff rises beyond the chasm, but little hillocks and sand-dunes slope
unevenly to the beach. The undercliff has not in the least the barren look of an ordinary bit of waste ground
touching the shore, but is covered with grass and thick undergrowth, oaks and hawthorns, and masses of ivy,
and beneath them the long spear-like leaves and scarlet-berried pods of the wild-iris.
If one returns to the Axe and begins to follow up its innumerable bends, one arrives opposite the little town of
Colyton, which is not quite on the river. Mr Rogers says that the name comes from the British Collh y tun, and
has the pretty meaning of 'the town where the hazels grow.'
James Rodge of Honitonin ye County of Devonshire (Bonelace Siller)Hath given unto the Poore of Honinton45P'isheThe
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Here is a fine church, chiefly Perpendicular, well known, among other reasons, for a richly carved tomb, on
which is the effigy of a very small lady, a coronet on her head and a dog at her feet, with coats of arms
hanging above. The figure was always known by the curious name of 'Little Choak-a-bone.' The old story said
that the lady was the daughter of Lord Devon and his wife, Princess Katherine, daughter of Edward IV, and
that she died because a fish-bone choked her. Now this has been corrected, and it is believed that the
monument is of the wife of the fifth Earl of Devon, who lived nearly one hundred years earlier. But no
disproof has been brought against the fish-bone!
Close to Colyton are the ruins of an old house of the Courtenays,[Pg 68] Colcombe, which has been partly
converted into a farmhouse. Here Princess Katherine occasionally lived during her widowhood. Colcombe
suffered much in the Civil War, for it was garrisoned by Prince Maurice, who led his troops into several
skirmishes with the enemy, and during one of these affairs (it is supposed) the Castle was burned down.
The poor people living near Colcombe must have had a very bad time, with energetic Royalist and
Parliamentary troops on either hand. Some sad little entries at this time are quoted from the diary of a
serge-maker of Colyton, in which he counts up what he lost in cloth through the inroads of the 'Lyme Men'
(Parliamentarians), and the 'wostard woole' and 'sarge' torn from him by 'Percy's men' (Royalists).
Unluckily, it is not possible to pause among the throng of interesting memories that are called up by almost
every step of the way. One may not sketch the career of Dr Marwood, who journeyed to London from these
parts and cured 'a certain noble Lord,' a favourite of Queen Elizabeth, but returned home because, 'finding
himselfe much envyed by the Court physitians, he thought he was not safe there!'—a naïve reflection
on the doctors that reminds one of their contemporary Catherine de' Medici's creature, René of Milan, who
was popularly known as l'empoisonneur de la reine.
It is only possible to make a brief reference to a manor, nowadays a farm—Ashe, where the great Duke
of Marlborough was born. Marlborough can hardly be called a son, but perhaps a grandson, of the county, for
though Sir Winston Churchill was of Dorsetshire, the Churchills were an old Devonshire family, of whom one
branch had migrated to the next county. Ashe was the home of the Duke's mother, Elizabeth, daughter of Sir
John Drake, and here she returned when the Civil War was just ended, and the triumphant Parliamentarians
were making themselves very objectionable, especially to such a fervent Royalist as her husband. Sir Winston
was eventually forced to compound for so large a sum that it was convenient for them to live for some years
with Lady Churchill's father.[Pg 69]
There is, unfortunately, no space to look at the very interesting history of the Bonvilles, the ruins of whose old
house, Shute, in its beautiful park, among deer and woods and magnificent cedars, is close to Ashe. The title
became extinct in the Wars of the Roses, for the family suffered beyond recovery, and the last Lord Bonville
had the overwhelming grief of losing his only son and grandson in the Battle of Wakefield. The great estates
passed to his little great-granddaughter, Cicely Bonville, who, more than forty years later, built the Dorset
aisle in the church at Ottery St Mary.
The fine building, Newenham Abbey, stood close to the outskirts of the park, and Sir Nicholas Bonville was a
great benefactor to the Abbey, but it was founded by two brothers, Sir William and Sir Reginald Mohun. The
Abbey Church alone was three hundred feet in length and one hundred and fifty feet in breadth, and now of all
the buildings, there remain but a few fragments of walls and the stonework of a chapel window.
Axminster, not a mile away, was in Leland's day 'a pratie quik Market Town.' It was the scene of one very
interesting event, for here the Duke of Monmouth's followers first met the royal troops under the renowned
General Monk, then Duke of Albemarle, and caused them to fly before their inferior undisciplined numbers.
Albemarle dared not risk a battle, as he became alarmed by the temper of his troops, and feared lest they
might go over to Monmouth if they did but catch sight of their beloved hero; for the General's troops belonged
James Rodge of Honitonin ye County of Devonshire (Bonelace Siller)Hath given unto the Poore of Honinton46P'isheThe
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to the Devonshire militia, and Monmouth was adored by all the country-people in the West. The General
ordered a hurried retreat, without attempting any engagement, and Monmouth marched triumphantly to
Taunton. The callous brutality of Sedgmoor, and the atrocious barbarities of the Bloody Assizes following it,
are too intolerable to think of. A ballad has been written called 'The Sorrowful Lamentation of the Widdows
of the West', and one wonders whether its obsequious tone is due to the author being a partisan of James II,
who expressed what he thought they ought to feel, or whether the verse-maker was one in their midst,[Pg 70]
who saw that there was indeed no spirit left in them. I quote a few of the verses:
[Pg 71]
James Rodge of Honitonin ye County of Devonshire (Bonelace Siller)Hath given unto the Poore of Honinton47P'isheThe
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Dartmoor
'Dartmoor! thou wert to me, in childhood's hour,
A wild and wond'rous region. Day by day
Arose upon my youthful eye thy belt
Of hills mysterious, shadowy...
...I feel
The influence of that impressive calm
Which rests upon them. Nothing that has life
Is visible:—no solitary flock
At will wide ranging through the silent Moor
Breaks the deep-felt monotony; and all
Is motionless save where the giant shades,
Flung by the passing cloud, glide slowly o'er
The grey and gloomy wild.'
Carrington: Dartmoor.
The region of the Forest of Dartmoor and Commons of Devon is one which excites a vast difference of
opinion. For some it has an extraordinary fascination, whilst to others it is only, like a beautiful view in the
Highlands which I once heard depreciated by a native—'just hills.' And the hills on Dartmoor are not
even very high. Yes Tor, till lately thought to be the highest point, is only a little over two thousand feet; and
High Willhayes, its superior, cannot claim to be more than a few feet higher. So there are no towering heights
or tremendous precipices to explain its peculiar spell. Sir Frederick Pollock, in paying true homage to the
moor, gives the reason that accounts for Dartmoor's dominion—its individuality. 'The reader may think
CHAPTER IV 48
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fit to observe, and with undisputable truth, that there are many other moors in the world. Yes, but they are not
Dartmoor.' And there is no more to be said.
A very truthful and vivid description of the moor has been given by the late Mr R. J. King: 'The dusky sweep
of hills stretches away with an endless variety of form and outline; in some parts[Pg 72] sharply peaked, and
crested with masses of broken rock; at others, rounded and massive, and lifting a long line of sombre heath
against the sky. The deep hollows which separate the hills are thickly covered with fern and heather, over
which blocks of granite are scattered in all directions; and, as in all similar districts, each valley has its own
clear mountain stream, which receives the innumerable waterfalls descending from the hill-sides. The whole
country has a solitude, and an impressive grandeur, which insensibly carries back the mind to an earlier and
ruder age.'
Dartmoor 49
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Yes Tor:
Dartmoor
Dartmoor rises high above the surrounding country, and keeps his white winter livery lying upon it long time,
if not washed away by rain. The air is delicious, but it must be admitted that the moor has a very ample share
of wind, rain, and mists. Faultfinders have also complained of the bogs, and occasional accidents to travellers'
horses have given the mires the significant name of 'Dartmoor Stables,' although the moor ponies are
supposed always to be able to pick a safe path through dangerous places.
From a certain point of view, Dartmoor reminds one of the mirror of the Lady of Shalott, for here
The great numbers of prehistoric people who lived on the moor are very remarkable. 'Tens of thousands of
their habitations have been destroyed,' says Mr Baring-Gould, 'yet tens of thousands remain. At Post Bridge,
Dartmoor 50
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within a radius of half a mile, are fifteen pounds. If we give an average of twenty huts to a pound, and allow
for habitations scattered about, not enclosed in a pound, and give six persons to a hut, we have at once a
population, within a mile, of 2,000 persons.' Perhaps they climbed so high because on the lower slopes the
forest was thick, and wild beasts were more to be feared, though, according to tradition, they were certainly
not free from danger on the moor; for 'wolves and winged serpents were no strangers to the hills or valleys.'
All their possessions that we are aware of belong to the early Bronze Age, when flint was used in great
quantities, and bronze was known, but was rare and very valuable. The amber pommel of a dagger, inlaid with
gold pins, and part of a bronze dagger blade, were found in a barrow on Hameldon, and a few other bronze
weapons have been discovered; flint implements in abundance. Great numbers of flint scrapers for cleaning
the skins of animals, and small[Pg 75] knives for cutting up meat, have been picked up; arrow-heads are
scarce, and it would seem that they left very few celts or axes, and spear-heads.
Lustleigh
Cleave
Of the exceedingly interesting remains, perhaps the most interesting—at any rate, to the
uninitiated—is Grimspound. The boundary wall, which is double, encloses four acres; it is from ten to
twelve feet thick, but not above five and a half feet in height. Within the circle are twenty-four hut-circles, and
in some of them charcoal and fragments of pottery have been found. A brook, dipping under the walls, and
passing through the enclosure, supplied the camp with water.
Drizzlecombe, near Sheep's Tor, is rich in a variety of antiquities, for it has three stone rows, a large tumulus,
a kistvaen, and a later relic—a miner's blowing-house. One of the avenues is two hundred and sixty feet
long, and one is double for a part of the way, and each of the three starts from a menhir, or long stone. Near
Merivale Bridge are two double stone rows, but the stones are small. Close by are a sacred circle, a kistvaen, a
pound and hut-circles, and one cairn, besides the ruins of others that have been destroyed. It would be absurd
to pretend to enter on such a wide subject here. Some idea of its extent may be gathered by considering one
single branch of it: Mr Baring-Gould has stated that no fewer than fifty stone avenues have been observed in
different parts of the moor. And hut-circles and ancient track-lines are unnumbered, although very many
antiquities of all kinds have been destroyed when granite was wanted for rebuilding churches, or for making
doorways or gate-posts, or even for mending roads.
The early antiquaries discovered the hand of the Druids in certain unusual rock-shapes, now known to be the
work of Nature—such as rock-basins, which are developed in the granite by the action of wind and
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rain; tolmens, or holed stones; and logans, or rocking-stones. Granite on the moor generally weathers
irregularly, and if the lower part of a piled-up mass partly crumbles away, a huge layer of harder granite
remains balanced on one or two points, and becomes what is called a logan-stone.[Pg 76] In some cases,
though the slab is almost impossible to remove, it will rock at a finger-touch. Perhaps the most striking
example on Dartmoor is the Rugglestone, near Widdecombe, which it has been calculated weighs about one
hundred and ten tons; but there are several in the neighbourhood, and a logan called the Nut-Crackers is
perched among the thickly scattered boulders on Lustleigh Cleave. This lovely little valley lies on the eastern
edge of the moor, and the River Bovey flows through it. Masses of granite crown the ridge; lower on the
hill-side is a jungle of tall bracken, and the stream is overshadowed by a wood, crowded with matted
undergrowth and with innumerable rocks tumbled together.
Granite more consistent than that found on most of the tors—that is, 'not broken into the usual layers of
soft beds alternating with hard layers'—forms the great masses of rock on Hey Tor, and these have not
weathered into strange, jagged outlines. William Howitt wrote a charming description of Hey Tor in his 'Rural
Life of England,' from which I quote a few lines: 'Below, the deep dark river went sounding on its way with a
melancholy music, and as I wound up the steep road all beneath the gnarled oaks, I ever and anon caught
glimpses of the winding valley to the left, all beautiful with wild thickets and half-shrouded faces of rock, and
still on high these glowing ruddy tors standing in the blue air in their sublime silence. My road wound up and
up, the heather and bilberry on either hand.'
A 'wonder' which has been associated with the Druids is the grove of oaks called Wistman's Wood. It lies
close to Two Bridges, on the slope above the West Dart, and at a little distance looks more like a furze-brake
than a wood. All the oaks are dwarfs, stunted by the lack of soil and force of the winds. Mr Rowe quotes from
a 'botanical writer,' who examined some of them: 'The bole of this tree was about three feet high, and its total
height to the topmost branches fifteen feet. The circumference of the trunk was six feet, and its prime must
have been about the date of the Norman Conquest.' Some of the boughs, like the trunks, are immensely thick
for the height of the trees, and[Pg 77] they are covered with very deep cushions of bright green moss and
hangings of polypody, and whortleberries grow upon them. Every step between the trees is perilous, among
the uneven crowded masses of rocks and half-concealed clefts. Many of the boulders are moss-covered, a kind
of sedge and long, flag-like grass spring among the crevices and add to the pitfalls, and the whole wood really
has the air of having been bewitched. Mrs Bray's impressions of it are interesting. She found the slope 'strewn'
all over with immense masses of granite.... In the midst of these gigantic blocks, growing among them, or
starting, as it were, from their interstices, arises wildly, and here and there widely scattered, a grove of dwarf
oak-trees.... They spread far and wide at their tops, and their branches twist and bend in the most tortuous
manner; sometimes reminding one of those strange things called mandrakes, of which there is a superstition
noticed by Shakespeare—
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Wistman's Wood
Though some of the stone circles on the moor are due to miners rather than to prehistoric man, their antiquity
may very well win respect; for, according to the views of the early nineteenth century, it was quite probable
that the Phoenicians were trading with this island for tin in the year 1000 B.C.! It is unnecessary to say that
the reasoning which supports this theory is very ingenious, and later opinions do not allow that the
Phoenicians ever traded directly with Britain at all. The metal, it is held, was brought to the Mediterranean
coast through the medium of 'the Veneti of what is now Vannes, and the tin trade was carried through Gaul to
Marseilles.' To take a great leap from the date originally suggested, there is certain evidence that British tin
was conveyed over this trade route in the year 40 B.C. The Romans taught the Britons better methods of
mining, and how tin might be used for household needs. Another long interval without any mention of the
subject brings us to the reign of the Normans, when it seems that the mines were almost entirely in the hands
of the Jews. On their expulsion by Edward I, the mines were neglected for a few years, and next a[Pg 78]
charter was granted to several Devonshire gentlemen, at their request, conferring the important privilege of
holding plea of all actions relating to the mines, 'those of lyfe, lymme, and lande' excepted. Henceforward the
Devonshire miners were separated from the Cornish, and held stannary parliaments on the top of Crockern
Tor. The summit is piled with granite, and out of the rock was hewn 'a warden's or president's chair, seats for
the jurors, and a high corner stone for the crier of the court, and a table,' says Polwhele; and here the 'hardy
mountain council'—twenty-four burgesses from each of the stannary towns—assembled. 'This
memorable place is only a great rock of moorstone, out of which a table and seats are hewn, open to all the
weather, storms and tempests, having neither house nor refuge near it by divers miles,' wrote Prince. It is
much to be regretted that nearly all traces of the court have now disappeared, and a report says that the table
and seats were carried away to be used for some buildings not far off. It is said that the last parliament was
held on this tor in 1749, but for some time before that date the court merely met on the tor, and, after the
jurors had been sworn in, adjourned to one of the stannary towns.
From the charter of Edward I onwards, mining seems to have prospered, with one or two intervals of great
depression, and as late as 1861 seventy-four mines were being worked in Devonshire. 'Streaming' for tin was
very much practised in the Middle Ages, and the sides of valleys all over Dartmoor are scored with the works
of the tin-streamers, who turned about the streams and examined the beds for 'grain-tin.' Many of the ruined
'blowing-houses' are still to be seen on the moor. Mrs. Bray mentions a curious testimony to the wildness and
remoteness of the parts in which some of the miners must have worked: 'A very old woodcut ... exhibited a
whole pack of hounds harnessed and laden with little bags of tin, travelling over the mountains of Dartmoor;
these animals being able to cross the deep bogs of the forest in situations where there were no roads, and
where no other beasts of burden could pass.'
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It was owing to the mines that Dartmoor became a part of the[Pg 79] Duchy, for the 'metalliferous' moors of
Dartmoor and Cornwall had, on that account, long been Crown lands; and therefore, when Edward III created
his eldest son Prince of Wales and Duke of Cornwall, the Chase of Dartmoor, and the Castle and Manor of
Lydford were granted to him with the estates in Cornwall. Dartmoor has existed as a forest practically from
time immemorial, and the date when forest laws were first imposed on it is, in the opinion of the learned, 'lost
in antiquity.' The first charter affecting the state of the moor was bestowed in 1204, when King John was
compelled reluctantly to grant a Charter of Forests, disafforesting the lands that had been gradually
appropriated by the Kings since Henry I. Surrounding the forest proper are lands known as the Commons of
Devon, and, usually speaking, they are included in any general reference to Dartmoor. Every parish in
Devonshire, excepting Barnstaple and Totnes, has a right to pasture cattle on them for the payment of a small
sum. Two classes of men have special rights in the moor: owners and occupiers of tenements within the forest,
and venville tenants, or owners of land in particular vills, or towns, adjoining the forest. Claims and
counter-claims as to their exact rights and liabilities have been pressed in successive centuries, but various
ancient documents set forth these tenants' rights, 'time out of mind, to take all things that might do them good,
saving green oak and venison.' These privileges include pasturing all 'commonable beasts' on the moor,
digging turf for fuel, stone and sand for mending houses and lands, and taking heath for thatching, 'paying
their dues and doing their suits and services.' The 'suits and services' involved attendance at the Prince's
Courts, and the tenants' help at the time of the bullock and pony drifts—that is, when the herds are
driven off the moor by the moormen to a point chosen by the Duchy steward, and are there identified by their
owners.
In the Duchy records appear various well-known names that one does not naturally associate with the Forest.
The Conqueror granted it to his half-brother, Robert, Earl of Montaigne; King John gave the Earldom of
Cornwall to his second son, Richard Plantagenet, afterwards King of the Romans. This Prince[Pg 80] 'much
augmented the powers of the stannaries of Devon and Cornwall, and under his auspices they thrived
exceedingly.' For a short time the earldom was bestowed on Piers Gaveston; Thomas Cromwell and some
others had a lease of the lead-mines on the moor for twenty-one years; the first Earl of Bedford was 'Custos of
the Forest or Chase of Dartmoor'; and Sir Walter Raleigh was appointed Ranger and Master Forester, besides
being Lord Warden of the Stannaries. The first perambulation of the forest boundaries probably took place in
1224, and others have been made at intervals ever since; yet a long tale of grievances from that date almost up
to the present time might be heard from commoners whose rights have been encroached upon.
The bounds of property owned by religious houses at certain points were marked by granite crosses, of which
a great number are still to be found on the moor. Some of them, however, were standing long before the
monasteries were built. To take one instance, the cross on Sourton Down has an inscription which, it has been
declared, belongs to the sixth century, and which can still be deciphered when the sun is setting and the rays
slant across it. The Abbot's Way, leading over the moor, is marked by crosses. It ran westwards from Buckfast
Abbey, and divided at Broad Rock, near Plym Head, in the middle of the moor—one branch going to
Tavistock, and the other to Buckland Abbey. The path cannot now be traced the whole way, but the crosses
show the line. Beckamoor Cross (or the Windy Post, as it is sometimes called), between two and three miles
south-east of Tavistock, is a typical Dartmoor cross, and a fine example, but it cannot be numbered among the
very old ones, for it seems to date from the sixteenth century.
Perhaps the Dartmoor village best known by name is Widdecombe-in-the-Moor, and its fame is spread by the
song 'Widdecombe Fair;' this is the most popular of Devonshire folk-songs, and the air served the Devon
Regiment as a march in the Boer War. But Widdecombe has more solid claims to consideration, and one of
them is the large and beautiful church, with its very fine tower and high crocketed pinnacles, each pointed by
a cross. The roof is adorned by 'bosses, carved and painted with heads, flowers[Pg 81] and leaves, and also
figures or marks which obscurely shadow forth the learning of the alchemist.' The presence of these symbols
is explained by a tradition that the church was built by miners. 'On one of the bosses is the combination of
three rabbits, each with a single ear, which join in the centre, forming a triangle—a favourite
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alchemical symbol, called the hunt of Venus.' Parts of the rood-screen remain, and on the panels are painted
saints and doctors of the Church, and a king and queen. On October 21, 1638, a terrible storm raged here
during service-time. First fell 'a strange darkenesse'; then a terrific thunder-clap; 'the ratling thereof' was much
like 'the report of many great cannons.' 'Extraordinarie lightning' flashed, 'so flaming that the whole church
was presently filled with fire and smoke,' and a smell of brimstone, and a great ball of fire came in at the
window and passed through the church. The church itself was much torne and defaced, 'stones throwne from
the Tower as thick as if an hundred men had been there throwing.' Several people were killed and many
'grievously scalded and wounded.' The history of the storm has been told in verse, and the lines were painted
on tablets and placed in the church. Mrs Bray found 'the wildest tales' of the storm floating among the people
in the neighbourhood, and, amongst them, 'One story is that the devil, dressed in black and mounted on a
black horse, inquired his way to the church, of a woman who kept a little public-house on the moor. He
offered her money to become his guide; but she distrusted him, in remarking that the liquor went hissing down
his throat, and finally had her suspicions confirmed by discovering he had a cloven foot, which he could not
conceal even by his boot.'
Widdecombe-in-the-Moor
Widdecombe is called cold and bleak, and it is not only with the terrific tempest that its name is associated,
for when the snow fell thickly the South Devon folk used to look—as perhaps they still
do—towards the moor, and say to the children: 'Widdecombe hills are picking their geese, faster, faster,
faster.'
About twelve miles south-west of Widdecombe is Sheeps Tor, a sharply defined height that has given its
name to the parish[Pg 82] and tiny village that it overshadows. Originally it was called Shettes
Tor—that is, Steep Tor, the word being derived from the Celtic syth.
Hidden among the great piles of moorstone heaped upon the tor is a cave known as the Pixies' House. Mrs
Bray describes an expedition that she made to Sheeps Tor, and how, on asking her way to the cave, she was
told to 'be careful to leave a pin, or something of equal value, as an offering to these invisible beings;
otherwise they would not fail to torment us in our sleep.' Grass grows on the lower slopes, but near the
summit there spreads a 'bold and shelving sweep of about two hundred feet, the granite ... totally bare, save
where it was here and there covered by a coating of mosses and lichens. It lies tossed about in enormous
masses in every direction.' The cave itself is in the midst of 'most confused masses of rock, that looked as if
they had been tossed about by the fiends in battle,' and the entrance itself is a 'cleft between two rocks.' A
story of human interest is also connected with the cave, for here Walter Elford, Lord of the Manor, was forced
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to hide when the country was being searched for him. Squire Elford was a Parliamentarian, and one of the
'secluded' members of the Long Parliament; but he was so far thrown into opposition by the development of
the Protector's policy that he reached the point of plotting against him, and in consequence a party of
Desborough's troops were sent in pursuit of the squire to his own house. Fortunately, among the huge boulders
the entrance to the cave was very difficult to find, and the Pixies' House proved a safe refuge until the
search-parties were withdrawn.
About fifteen miles from Widdecombe, on the north-west side of the moor, lies Lydford, whose size is in no
way proportionate to its antiquity. 'Doubtless,' says Risdon, 'in the Saxons' heptarchy, it was a town of some
note, that felt the furious rage of the merciless Danes.' And it is true that in 997 Lydford was burned down by
them. At this time Lydford had its own mint, and money was coined here; and in the Domesday Book it was
described as being taxed equally with London. But the village is very conspicuously a victim of 'the whirligig
of time,' and William Browne[Pg 83] gives a most unflattering picture of its appearance in the middle of the
seventeenth century:
Sheepstor
'I oft have heard of Lydford law,
How in the morn they hang and draw,
And sit in judgment after:
At first I wondered at it much;
But soon I found the matter such
As it deserves no laughter.
'They have a castle on a hill;
I took it for some old windmill,
The vanes blown off by weather.
Than lie therein one night 'tis guessed
'Twere better to be stoned, or pressed,
Or hanged, ere you come hither.
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But I saw ne'er a cloak:
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Lydford Bridge
From an historical point of view, it is ludicrous to think of Lydford and Princetown, its neighbour (as one
counts neighbours on a moor)—Lydford, in all its glory nearly a hundred years before the Conquest,
and Princetown, created by the Prince Regent. It is, I believe, the highest village in England, and in walking
up to it there comes a feeling that this is rather like walking up a gigantic snail-shell, and that, when one
reaches the top, it is the very top and end of all things. A tranquillity reigns over the tiny town which even the
occasional sight of warders with their loaded rifles does not break; and the workaday world seems to have
been left far below.
But the desolate moor as seen from this point, the bleak winds, and very frequent rain, brought cold comfort to
the French prisoners of war, on whose account the prison was built. Their views are probably reflected in a
gloomy description of Princetown, traducing the climate, which was given by a French writer, quoted by Mr
R. J. King. 'For seven months in the year,' says a[Pg 85] M. Catel, 'it is a vraie Sibérie, covered with
unmelting snow. When the snows go away, the mists appear.'
The lot of the French prisoners, however, was tempered by certain alleviations, and very many of them were
allowed to live on parole in specified towns, most of which are near the moor. In 1813 a large number of
American prisoners of war were added to the eight thousand French at Princetown, but for some reason were
not at first allowed the same privileges. This may help to account for the aggrieved tone in which one of them
refers to his French fellow-prisoners, as well as to the British. Andrews wrote a journal which was afterwards
published. 'The Seigneurs,' he says, 'received remittances from their friends or had money of their own, and
were able to support themselves in a genteel manner.' They were allowed to have plays with a stage and
scenery once a month, and also 'had their schools for teaching the arts and sciences, dancing, fencing, and
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fiddling.' He criticises them severely: 'They drink, sing and dance,' and, with a fine allusion to emphasise his
point, declares: 'But the Americans have not that careless volatility, like the cockle in the fable, to sing and
dance when the house is on fire over them.' The French were released after the abdication of Napoleon; a year
later, peace was signed between England and America, and then, till 1850, the buildings were unoccupied. In
that year the decision was made that they should be used as a convict prison, and as a result, one must agree
with Sir Frederick Pollock, it 'is the ugliest thing physically and morally on the moor.'
It is pleasanter to turn back to the moor itself—to topics less out of character with it. Foremost appear
stories of magic, black and white, ancient beliefs and legends without end. Mr King, whose knowledge of the
country was at once vast and minute, is quoted as having said 'that he believed almost every form of
superstition or superstitious observances condemned in the Penitential of Bartholomew, Bishop of Exeter,
1161-1184, might be found sheltering itself under the Dartmoor Tors.' (This remark must have been made
about the middle of the nineteenth century.) 'The same wild creed has been handed down from generation
to[Pg 86] generation; the same spots on the lonely moor, and the same gloomy pools in the river, that were
shunned by his forefathers, are avoided as "critical" (to use his own word) by the Devonshire peasant now ...
and whoever may find himself in the heart of its lonely wastes when daylight is closing, and the air seems to
fill with
'"Undescribed sounds
That come a-swooning over hollow ground,
And wither drearily on barren moors,"
will scarcely wonder that the spirits of the elder world should not yet have been effectually dislodged from
their ancient solitudes.... The Pixies, thoroughly mischievous elves, who delight to lead all wanderers astray,
dwell in the clefts of broken granite, and dance on the green sward by the side of the hill streams; ...
sometimes, but very rarely, they are seen dancing by the streams dressed in green, the true livery of the small
people. They ride horses at night, and tangle their manes into inextricable knots. They may be heard pounding
their cider and threshing their wheat far within the recesses of their "house" on Sheepstor—a cavern
formed by overhanging blocks of granite. Deep river pools and deceitful morasses, over which the cotton
grass flutters its white tassels, are thought to be the "gates" of their country, where they possess diminutive
flocks and herds of their own. Malicious, yet hardly demoniacal, they are precisely Dryden's "spirits of a
middle sort"—
"Too black for heaven, and yet too white for hell,
Who just dropped half-way down, nor lower fell"
—a character which cannot, however, be assigned to their unearthly companions, the wish-hounds.
These have no redeeming tinge of white, and belong to the gloomiest portion of the underworld.'
A true lover of the moor, and very sensitive to its element of mystery, Mr King has put what he has seen and
imagined into verse that must be most appreciated by those who know the Forest best:[Pg 87]
[Pg 89]
Hey Tor
CHAPTER V
The Teign
'Ting (whose banks were blest
By her beloved nymph dear Leman) which addrest,
And fully with herself determined before
To sing the Danish spoils committed on her shore,
When hither from the east they came in mighty swarms,
Nor could their native earth contain their numerous arms,
Their surcrease grew so great, as forced them at last
To seek another soil, as bees do when they cast;
And by their impious pride how hard she was bested,
When all the country swam with blood of Saxons shed.'
Drayton: Poly-olbion.
The Teign rises, as do most of the rivers in Devon, on Dartmoor, and starts across the moorlands towards the
north. After a few miles it is joined by the Wallabrook, and at that point turns eastwards.
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The moorland country about it is very beautiful, but especially when the heather and furze are in flower
together, and far and wide stretches a most royal display of rose-purple and gold. Ferns hang over the
transparent brown water, with its glancing lights, and tiny ferns and polypodys peer out from the crannies and
hollows of big grey boulders. Here and there bushy willows grow along the edge, or a mountain-ash shows its
feathery, deep green foliage and clusters of scarlet berries. A clapper bridge—that is, a bridge formed
out of a single slab of granite—over twelve feet long lies across the Wallabrook near the meeting of the
streams. Beside it grows a mountain-ash, and the quivering and wavering leaves, and their shadows that
quiver and waver in the ripples beneath, make a profound contrast to that massive, immovable stone, that from
its look may certainly be included among those Dartmoor antiquities which Sir Frederick Pollock says 'may
very well have been as great a mystery to the contemporaries of Julius Cæsar as they are to ourselves.'
Modern opinion,[Pg 90] however, denies that these bridges on the moor are of a very great age. Close by on
the north stands Scorhill Circle, one of those stone circles over the history of which antiquaries still differ.
A little farther down, on the north bank, is a tolmen, and there is a tradition that to creep through the hole
brings luck. The rock has, of course, been associated with the Druids and their rites, but the hole is really a
natural one.
About three miles farther down the river one arrives at Chagford, and perhaps the two things that a stranger
will first notice about this little town are, that the air is very exhilarating and the people particularly courteous.
For the rest, though not echoing Lord Clarendon's remark, that, but for the calamity of Sidney Godolphin's
death, it is 'a place which could never otherwise have had a mention in this world,' one must admit that it is
not very remarkable. The moment when Chagford came most violently into contact with public affairs was
that mentioned by Lord Clarendon, and most heartily must the inhabitants have wished themselves back in
their usual peaceful solitude. Sir John Berkeley, at that time, 'with a good party, volant, of horse and
dragoons,' was descending in 'all places in the surrounding country where Parliamentarians were known to be
assembled, "dissolving" them, and taking many prisoners.' Of one of these 'necessary and brisk expeditions'
Chagford was the goal, and arriving very early in the morning, still in the dark, they fell upon it before day.
The chilly January dawn broke over a much-discomforted town, ringing with shots, the trampling of horses,
and the clash of steel, but the Royalist troops were sturdily resisted, and Godolphin was slain, it is said, in the
porch of the Three Crowns Inn. Clarendon writes of him: 'There was never so great a mind and spirit
contained in so little room;' and in his account of the skirmish he says: 'As his advice was of great authority
with all the commanders ... so he exposed his person to all action, travel, and hazard; and by too forward
engaging himself in this last received a mortal shot by a musket, a little above the knee, of which he died in
the instant.' Sidney Godolphin, it will be remembered, was one of the celebrated 'four[Pg 91] wheels of
Charles's Wain, all Devonshire and Cornish men, and all slain at or near the same place, the same time, and in
the same cause....
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Fingle
Bridge
'"Th' four wheels of Charles's wain,
Grenvill, Godolphin, Trevanion, Slanning slain."'
In early days Chagford was one of the four Stannary towns, the others being Ashburton, Tavistock, and
Plympton. Risdon mentions that 'This place is priviledged with many immunities which tinners enjoy; and
here is holden one of the courts for Stannary causes.'
The river flows from Chagford in a north-easterly direction till Drewsteignton stands due north, when it turns
to the east. Drewsteignton is a large village, and has a granite church, the tower of which is Decorated, and the
nave Perpendicular. In this parish was the barton of Drascombe, and in the reign of Edward I, Walter de
Bromehall held it 'by the sergeanty of finding our Lord the King, whensoever he should hunt in the forest of
Dartmoor, one bow and three barbed arrows. And it was let at five shillings a year rent.' One would imagine
that King Edward I can seldom have found time to amuse himself so far west, and the tenant would not find
the conditions a heavy tax.
The scenery by the river is very fine all about here, and Fingle Gorge is generally considered to be the most
beautiful of the many beautiful glens through which the Teign passes. It is a deep ravine with high and steep
sides, that are thickly wooded and broken by great boulders. At Fingle Bridge four winding valleys meet; that
is, the combe down which the river sweeps from above curves one way, and the narrow opening into which it
disappears twists sharply round in another. A cleft, half hidden in trees, divides the line of hills that shut in the
tiny valley-meadow on the west, and a road and a small stream scramble down a less severe descent between
the high sides, from the north-east. But from no point near the bridge would it be more possible to see far up
any cleeve, than it would be for a ladybird, perched at one end, to trace all the lines of a stag's horn. If in one
direction there was a gentle slope and smiling prospect beyond, the peculiar effect would be[Pg 92] gone.
There is a stillness, and almost a solemnity, in this little opening closed in narrowly on every side by the steep
hills rising straight above it on every side, and looking as unchanging as if what they are to-day, that they have
been since the beginning of time. Besides, there is a feeling of wildness and remoteness which cannot be
exactly accounted for by the scenery. A living writer has said that there is that, in a beautiful landscape in a
country inhabited from prehistoric time, that there is not in an equally lovely scene in a new country. Though
no tangible marks of the presence of men may be left, there is an intangible something that makes itself felt
though it cannot be defined, and the view is on that account the more interesting, and makes a deeper appeal
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to the spectator.
In Fingle Gorge, actual though not conspicuous traces of the Britons are easily found. Immediately above a
precipitous ascent to the north are the remains of an old camp, which antiquaries have decided was British. On
the opposite height is another camp, called Cranbrook Castle. 'This camp is of irregular form, circular towards
the north-east and south-east, but almost square on other quarters. On its south side it has a high rampart and a
deep ditch. On its northern side, the steepness of the hill formed the only defence.' It has been supposed that at
this narrow pass the last struggle the Damnonians made against the Romans took place; but whether this were
the case or not, the holders of the camp possessed a supreme coign of vantage, and could have chosen no
better place for checking an enemy's advance.
As the crow flies, Moreton Hampstead is about three miles south of Fingle Gorge, but the roads are rambling.
The name was originally Moor-Town, standing as it once did on the edge of the moor; and the manor, like the
barton of Drascombe, was held on a curious tenure. 'Which manor was the Earls of Ulster in King Edward the
first's age, who held it of the king for one sparrow-hawke yearly to be yielded.' Moreton is a small place, and
in these days perhaps its most marked characteristic is the Dancing Tree, or Cross Tree, as it is sometimes
called, for it has grown out of the steps that encircled the now broken village[Pg 93] cross. This tree, an elm,
was pollarded, and the branches so trained that it was possible to lay a dancing floor between them when it
was wanted; the floor was then railed round, and a ladder placed to lead up to it. Mr Baring-Gould, in his
'Book of the West,' quotes some most interesting references to the tree from a journal kept by an old
gentleman living at Moreton Hampstead, in the beginning of the nineteenth century:
'June 4th, 1800.—His Majesty's birthday. Every mark of loyalty was shown. In the afternoon a concert
of instrumental music was held on the Cross Tree....
'August 19th, 1807.—This night the French officers assembled in the Cross Tree with their band of
music. They performed several airs with great taste.'
The 'French officers' were prisoners of war, staying on parole at Moreton Hampstead.
'Unfortunately, and to the great regret of the inhabitants of Moreton, the tree was wrecked by a gale on
October 1, 1891.'
About a mile to the north of Fingle stands Great Fulford, an estate mentioned in the Domesday Book, which
belongs to the Fulford family. They have owned it continuously since the reign of Richard I. Many members
of the family have distinguished themselves, but the most picturesque figure is that of Sir Baldwin, who was
'of so undaunted resolution,' says Prince, 'that, for the honor and liberty of a royal lady in a castle besieged by
infidels, he fought a combat with a Sarazen; for bulk and bigness an unequal match (as the representation of
him cut in the wainscot at Fulford-hall doth plainly show); whom yet he vanquished and rescued the lady.' Sir
Baldwin's name must have been woven in many a romance and ballad in later days.
During the Civil War, Great Fulford was garrisoned for the King, but was eventually forced to surrender to
Fairfax.
Leaving the river and walking north-east, the wayfarer will come in time to the parish of Whitstone, rather
more than three miles from Exeter. The church has several interesting features. From the south transept a
hagioscope slants through the[Pg 94] wall to the chancel; and in one of the windows of the north aisle is a bit
of very old, though not very beautiful, stained glass. A gallery at the west end bears a series of panels
emblazoned with coats of arms. In the chancel is some Jacobean carving, and behind the altar there stand a
double row of carved eagles, most of them drooping their heads to one side. Close to the church is a huge tithe
barn, the date of which appears to be between 1450 and 1500. In a little entry-way joining the Rectory lie the
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old stocks, opposite carved panels, and the wood of which is so old that it has almost lost its grain.
In the early part of the nineteenth century, the rector of the parish, the Rev. Charles Brown, collected a large
amount of varied information concerning the parish into a manuscript volume, and from this record the
present rector has most kindly allowed me to make some extracts. Mr Brown begins by explaining the
meaning of the name, derived from the Celtic Wad, a hill or ridge, which became in time Whit, and don,
land—Whitstone, the hill land. Whitstone certainly deserves the name, as it is high, looking towards
Dartmoor, but the Celtic form is more correctly kept by a hill in the parish, which is still called Wadaldon, or
more commonly Waddlesdown.
Against the entries of burials in the parish register Mr Brown made biographical notes, pithy, and quite free
from that too flattering note often sounded in epitaphs. Here are some examples:
'William Speare, D.D., buried 1812.... He formed a Paddock of 120 acres [of land left him in this parish]. His
penuriousness was as remarkable as his taste. Often I have seen him in Exeter, whither he rode every day,
with one spur only, and that tied to his boot with string.
'1814.—James Hammett, 39, was before he came to reside in Whitstone, a follower of Joanna
Southcott, from whom he purchased for half a crown a piece of parchment, which was to entitle him to free
admission into Heaven.
'1820.—James Sutton, 82, was for many years Sexton of the Parish, was buried according to his request
near the Rectory[Pg 95] Granary. He said that the Rector had been very kind to him; he would lie as near as
possible to his house.
'1829.—Ann Hexter, School-mistress at home and Mistress of the Sunday School many years. Was for
twenty years occasionally insane, and at last never free from lunacy.
'Thomas Lake, 85, said he had never taken medicine and would not begin at 85.
'1833.—John Coven, my carpenter, 26 years, never defrauded his employers of a minute's work; but his
obstinacy was equal to his honesty. He spent all his gains, openly declaring that the Parish should maintain
him when he could no longer work. At his death he had received £60, but he gave up to the Overseers a legacy
of £30.
'1834.—John How, 73. Having a pension of 4.0 a week, as Serj. of Marines, once refused a shill. from
me, saying he did not want it.'
'1835.—Thomas Snowden, 54. He died the day his son was christened, of apoplexy.' The curate, W.
Ley, had been present at a festive christening dinner, and had left Mr Snowden still entertaining a fellow
guest. The seizure took place while they were alone. 'Mrs S. sent for Ley, and, taking him into the room, said:
"That's the man who has just killed my husband." That man she afterwards married.'
Some interesting memoranda from the overseers and churchwardens give a glimpse of hard days in the past.
In 1811 an entry shows the churchwardens making an effort to relieve the acute distress caused by the high
price of food. Wages were particularly low, and a succession of bad harvests raised the price of wheat to
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famine price, whilst the war with Napoleon prevented any grain coming into the country, from France or
America. So we find rice and barley sold to poor parishioners cheaper than they could have bought it for
themselves.[Pg 96]
'"The Parsonage is haunted." This has been asserted for 100 years, at least. It is still asserted, and proved too
by the following story, invented by Jacob Wright, a lively servant of mine in 1814. "'Jacob,' said my master,
'come into my room. I am going to lay the ghost—don't be frightened.' Well, we went in, and frightened
enough I was when I saw the ghost fly out of the window with Master's hat and wig."'
If only Mr Brown had had enough imagination to omit the word 'invented'! His eyes must have twinkled again
while he was enjoying the following speech: 'It is reported that a calf with two heads has been seen in Hare
Lane. Hannah Splatt says:[Pg 97] "Though I have walked about as a nurse at all hours, I never saw anything
more frightful than myself."' The italics in both cases are his. Superstitions are followed by a long list of
words that strike him (who must have come from 'up the country') as peculiar, though many of them are
commonly used to-day. And he makes one delightful quotation. In mentioning the fact that Devonshire people
say 'to' where others say 'at'—far instance, 'working to blacksmith's,' or 'living to Exeter'—he
writes: 'Dr Atterbury used to say that if he had been Bishop of Exeter, the Devonshire folks would have called
him Dr To Terbury.'
Rejoining the Teign, one descends a valley very beautiful, but less striking than Fingle Gorge, the sides wider
apart and less high, but thickly wooded. It is especially lovely in late March or early April, when the
woodbine wreaths give an earnest of what the spring's full touch will bring, and buds are bursting and tiny
quilled leaves showing on the hazels scattered among the oaks that form the chief substance of the coppices.
Near Dunsford lies a sea of blue-green daffodil spears, with the pale gold flowers showing among them.
These flowers push up among the rustling brown leaves, under interlacing branches overhead, but at a turn of
the river a large flat meadow spreads out before one, and here the daffodils indeed 'dance' in their myriads.
Just beyond is the bridge below Dunsford, and here are several tiny islands, each about large enough to hold a
sapling and a tangle of overflowing green that trails into the water; and rushing by on each side, after falling
over a little weir, the river dashes itself into a line of foam and races on under the archway.
Some miles down the valley and east of the river is Doddiscombsleigh, whose chief feature is its church. The
chancel is early Decorated, the nave and north aisle Perpendicular, and in the windows of this aisle, and more
especially in the east window, is some good stained glass—a rarity in the churches in this
neighbourhood. The subject, a rather uncommon one in England, is the Seven Sacraments, and, as the old
glass was no longer intact, the window has been lately restored.
Farther south, and on the other side of the river, is Christow,[Pg 98] with its granite Perpendicular church. In
the porch is a tribute to long service—a stone to
Tradition says that the stone marks the actual spot where he died, and the wording of the epitaph favours the
idea. It may be that he went to church in a very feeble state, perhaps thinking that neither parson nor
congregation could get on without him, and with a supreme effort crowned his many years of service.
The valley has a solitary look, as if it were very remote from hurry or turmoil, with the green, silent hills
rising high towards Haldon's moorlands on one side, and to Dartmoor on the other. But when the tides of the
Civil War surged backward and forward, the valley of the Teign had its full share of trouble. Those who lived
there were too near Exeter for their peace and comfort, and must have been repeatedly harassed by the troops
of one side or the other while they were clattering to or from the city, or quartered in the villages near, and the
commotion must have been especially trying when Fairfax was beginning the siege of Exeter by hemming in
the city with his outposts.
Canonteign House was garrisoned for the King, and was considered 'a strong fort'; but at the end of the year
1645, when the Royalist cause was lost, it was taken by a body of troops from the regiment of Colonel Okey,
who after the Restoration was executed as one of the Regicides. A short account of the affair is given in
'Anglia Rediviva': 'Information being given that the house of one Mr Davis at Canonteen (being within four
miles of Exeter) stood convenient for a garrison, and might bear a useful proportion towards the blocking up
of Exeter, hindering of provision from the Southams, some more of Colonel Okey's dragoons were ordered
thither to possess the same, who accordingly went and fulfilled their orders, December 21, and were no longer
in the house; but Monday, December 22, in the morning, the enemy sent a force against it, who stormed the
house, burnt the out-houses; yet Captain Woggan, who commanded the dragoons, behaved himself so
gallantly that he beat[Pg 99] the enemy off, killed four, desperately wounded a lieutenant-colonel, and took
divers prisoners.'
The manor of Canonteign was bought by the first Lord Exmouth, who built a new Canonteign House near the
old one. In Christow Church is a memorial of the great Admiral—the flag flown by his ship during the
battle of Algiers. A broadside ballad commemorating that splendid fight has a fine disregard for the more
pedantic rules of making verse, and the metre is a good example of what is called 'rugged'; but those who are
superior to such details will appreciate the directness and air of enjoyment that are very appropriate to the
song of a gallant sailor:
'Come, all you Britons, stout and bold, that love your native land.
Rejoicing in your victory, Lord Exmouth gave command.
Lord Exmouth will your rights maintain, as you shall plainly see,
How we all fought like lions bold, to set the Christians free.
Chorus.
'You British tars, be steady, and maintain your glorious name;
You will ever find Lord Exmouth to lead you into fame.
'On the 17th July in Plymouth Sound we lay,
Lord Exmouth made a signal our anchor for to weigh;
We exercis'd our great guns, believe me what I say,
That we might do the best we could on that glorious day.
'When we came to Gibraltar, for three days there we lay,
Our cabins there we all knock'd down, our decks we cleared away.
That nothing in our way might be, for we their batteries saw,
Prepar'd to send their burning shot upon our decks below.'
Here follows a detailed account of the order of the ships going into battle and of the fight itself, finishing with:
At the beginning of the fourteenth century there was a lively trade in woollen goods, which were made here in
considerable quantities, and this industry was carried on with varying prosperity through several centuries. In
the reign of James I the trade was particularly flourishing, and, though gradually lessening, it was in existence
till the end of the reign of George II.
The people of Chudleigh are said to have been careful to favour neither side in the Civil War—a small
and defenceless town, swept through by each party in turn, could hardly take any other course. In January,
1646, while Exeter was still holding out against the Parliament, Fairfax and his army were quartered here. The
surrounding country is very pretty, and Chudleigh Rock and Chudleigh Glen are particularly delightful. The
Rock is of blue limestone, and a deep cavern runs far into it, once supposed to be haunted by the pixies. It is
still called the 'Pixies' Parlour.' A stream runs through the Glen, and joins the Teign just below the town.
Near Chudleigh is Ugbrooke Park, which, with its hills and valleys, streams, lakes, trees, and deer, has all that
is wanted to make a park beautiful. 'Fair Rosamond' is so well known by that title alone that it is sometimes
forgotten that she was a De Clifford. In her lifetime, their principal estate was in Herefordshire, but later the
heiress of Ugbrooke brought this property by marriage to Antony Clifford.[Pg 101]
Chudleigh Glen
Perhaps the member of the family who played the most important part in history is Sir Thomas Clifford,
afterwards the Lord Clifford whose initial is the first of the five that together spell 'Cabal.' In its early days, he
was the leading spirit of that famous council. One branch of the Cliffords had settled in Holland, and it was
probably in staying there with his relations that Sir Thomas had been brought to the notice of Charles II and
first gained his influence over him. Lord Macaulay is not complimentary in his references to any member of
the Cabal, but such commendations as he has to give are bestowed on Clifford. Sir Thomas, he says, 'had
greatly distinguished himself in the House of Commons. Of the members of the Cabal, he was the most
respectable. For, with a fiery, imperious temper, he had a strong though a lamentably perverted sense of duty
and honour.' Farther on he adds that Clifford 'alone of the five had any claim to be regarded as an honest man.'
Sir Thomas started a scheme which was practically the origin of the National Debt. Several statesmen who
enjoyed the King's favour greatly desired the Lord Treasurer's office, and here Charles displayed his usual
astuteness; for, being, as always, in want of money, he said to them that the man who should be Lord
Treasurer was the man who could show him a way of putting money into the Treasury. The plan that Sir
Thomas proposed to the King, and which was put into execution, Lord Clifford has most kindly sketched out
as follows: 'The first Lord Clifford of Chudleigh was made Lord Treasurer by Charles II, and recommended
the King to seize the money deposited in the Exchequer and secured by the allocation of various revenues.
These loans had always up to this been faithfully met. By seizing this money, nominally only for a year, he
acquired the sum of £1,300,000 at 6 per cent. At the succession of William and Mary the Public Debt was
£664,263, and this was probably part of the money so seized; but it was not till 5 William and Mary, c. 20,
There is a fine picture of the Lord High Treasurer, by Sir Peter Lely, at Ugbrooke, of which two replicas hang,
one in the Treasury, and the other at Ham House, which belonged to the Duke of Lauderdale, who was the L
of the Cabal. Lord Clifford is wearing a crimson robe, under a magnificent flowing mantle of ermine, and in
his right hand is the white wand of office. His face shows shrewdness and determination, and a certain
geniality, which suggests that, though on occasion he might not have scrupled to act as an oppressor, yet he
would always have liked to do so as pleasantly as possible.
A remnant of former friendship was shown seven years after the Cabal was dissolved. In December, 1680,
when the country was still seething against Popery, a Bill was brought before the House of Lords which
provided, amongst other things, that all Papists of influence should be removed from their own estates to a far
distant county. Lists of the gentlemen 'selected' in each county were made out (and have been reprinted among
the manuscripts of the House of Lords), and after the last list is written: 'In addition to the above Lists, there
was one for Devonshire, which appears to have been given to Earl Shaftesbury ... but which is not
forthcoming.' A subsequent collection of the names of those 'selected' in this county follows this statement,
but Lord Clifford's name does not appear among them; therefore Lord Shaftesbury's reason for 'mislaying' this
one list is supposed to be that he had suppressed in it the name of his former friend's son; and no second
formal list for Devonshire seems to have been made. The Bill never became law.
At Newton Abbot the river reaches its most southerly point and again turns east. Lysons says that its 'market
and fair were spoken of in the reign of Edward I;' but there are not many old buildings, and those that there are
seem completely swamped by numerous modern ones. The parish church, to the south of the[Pg 103] town,
contains much that is most interesting; and Forde House, a fine Jacobean building, welcomed under its roof
Charles I on two occasions, and, having changed owners meanwhile, greeted William of Orange, when,
thirty-three years later, he was on his way from Torbay.
Teignmouth and
Shaldon
Bishopsteignton has a church in which there are portions of Norman work, and in the parish lie the remains of
a Bishop's palace, 'From ancient times,' says Lysons, 'one of the country seats of the bishops.' It was
practically rebuilt by Bishop Grandisson.
I was once given an interesting piece of information relating to Bishopsteignton by an old man living near
Newton St Cyres. He said that in a general way the women there used to be very small, and folks said that was
because they had been changed by the pixies when they were babies.
It is unnecessary to dwell on the fact that Teignmouth, besides being a port, is a most flourishing
watering-place. The colouring is very rich, and especially lovely when set off by a brilliant sky and glittering
blue water. Blood-red cliffs lead north and south, and the green of grass and plants, broken by masses of
wild-flowers of all tints, here scattered thinly, there in clumps, overlaps and creeps down the face of the rock
wherever there is foothold. Between Teignmouth and Dawlish an 'island-rock' of the warmest red runs out into
the sea, and through an arch in it the rippling water may be seen beyond. Looking down at Teignmouth from
the hill on the opposite side, the town seems to run very flatly into the angle between sea and river. In the
estuary, at[Pg 104] low tide, the ships and boats lie in pools among the sand-banks, with the gulls circling and
screaming about them.
It has been said that 'the cliffs of Teignmouth owe their deep-red hue to the slaughter of the inhabitants by the
Danes in 970, when "the very rocks streamed with blood"'; and the old people confidently assert that the
dwarf-elder (called hereabouts 'Danes-elder') grows only upon the site of old battle-fields 'where the Danes'
blood was spilt!' These legends are not altogether baseless, for there is no doubt as to the pitiless brutality
which the Danes showed in their various incursions into Devon between the years 894 and 1013. Drayton's
image is bold and gruesome:
Teignmouth was last troubled by an enemy in 1690, when Admiral de Tourville, having defeated the united
English and Dutch fleets off Beachy Head, sailed down the Channel and anchored one night in Tor Bay. The
Devonshire militia flew to arms. 'In twenty-four hours all Devonshire was up. Every road in the county from
sea to sea was covered by multitudes of fighting men, all with their faces set towards Torbay.' De Tourville,
upon this discouraging reception, gave up any ideas he may have had of disembarking, and merely sent some
galleys to Teignmouth, who first turned their cannon on the town and afterwards landed and burned it.
The general excitement that this attack created found voice in a ballad called 'The Devonshire Boys' Courage,
1690.' It is utter doggerel, but expresses the contemporary views of the people, and was sung to a tune called
'Liggan Water,' a title that, according to Mr William Chappell, refers to an Irish stream. I give only a few
verses:
[Pg 105]
[Pg 106]
Torbay
'Torbay, unknown to the Aonian Quire,
Nothing oblig'd to any Poet's lyre ...
The Muses had no Matter from thy Bay,
To make thee famous till great William's Day....
To Orange only and Batavia's Seed
Remain'd this glory, as of old decreed,
To make thy Name immortal, and thy Shore
More famous and renown'd than heretofore....
O happy, happy Bay! All future times
Shall speak of thee renown'd in foreign Climes!...
Muses have matter now, enough to make
Poets of Peasants for Torbaia's sake....
King David's Deeds were sung, and Triumphs too,
And why should not Great Orange have his due?
Supream in Earth, Dread Sovereign thou art;
Long may'st thou reign, we pray with all our heart.'
Avant: Torbaia digna Camœnsis.
It is impossible for those who have had no better fortune than to see Torbay only in prints or photographs to
gather more than a very imperfect idea of what its best can be. The cliffs near Paignton are red, nearer
Torquay they are a warm russet, alternating with a rosy grey where limestone comes to the surface; and some
of the rocks beneath, shining with salt water, are pink, interlined with white veins. In fair weather the warm
tints of these cliffs, chequered by a green lattice-work of plants and bushes, and the rich, full colours of the
sea, make a picture that is more easily remembered than described.
The great promontories of Hope's Nose and Berry Head stand between three and four miles apart at the
northern and southern points of this rounded, shallow bay. Torquay itself is a new town, and only developed
into being one in the early part of the last century. At the time that there was real fear of Napoleon making[Pg
107] a descent on this coast, fortifications were built on Berry Head, and houses were wanted for the officers
in charge. One authority suggests that Torquay was brought into general notice by serving as a lodging for the
families of officers in the Channel Fleet under Lord St Vincent, who used Torbay as an anchorage. But in any
case its existence is really due to Napoleon. Certainly the growth was rapid, for Lysons, writing about 1820,
speaks of Torquay as having been till lately a hamlet,—and even its name is modern.
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The one important building was the Abbey, founded in 1196 by William, Lord Briwere, and endowed by him
with the whole of the Manor of Wolborough and part of the Manor of Torre. The probable origin of this great
gift is interesting. The Abbey was founded soon after the return from Austria of the hostages who had been
kept there till the ransom of King Richard I was paid, and it has been generally supposed that, as the eldest
sons of the greatest noblemen were sent, Lord Briwere's only son was among the number, and that the Abbey
was a thank-offering, the fruit of a vow made by the father in regard to his son's happy return. Lord Briwere
installed in the Abbey seven monks of the Premonstratensian Order. Alicia, daughter of Lord Briwere,
married Reginald de Mohun, and as, on the death of her brother, she inherited the Torre property, it is easily
seen how Tor-Mohun came to be the name of the parish. Successive bequests to the monastery made it the
richest house of the Order in England, though at the time of its dissolution there were only fifteen monks
besides the Abbot. The peace and prosperity of the Abbey were once broken, Dr Oliver tells us in his
'Monasticon Diœcesis Exoniensis,' by a painful incident: 'In 1390, notwithstanding the Abbot's
irreproachable life and manners, some malicious person spread a rumour that he had beheaded one of the
Canons of Tor called Simon Hastings.' The Abbot was 'greatly distressed,' and the Bishop pronounced the
accusation to be a falsehood of the 'blackest dye,' and, besides, declared that he, the said Canon, was alive and
well. But that it should be possible to bring such a charge against an 'irreproachable' Abbot in this casual
way,[Pg 108] and that the accusation should for a moment be listened to, is a view of those days not often
opened to one.
After changing hands several times, the Abbey became the property of the Carys (in 1662), and their
descendants still live in it. Many alterations have been inevitable, but much of the character of the building
still remains. Parts of the walls of the original church are still standing, and enough of the masonry is left to
show the exact plan. It was longer than any other church that has since been built in Torquay, and wanted only
seven feet to equal the length of Exeter Cathedral between the west end and the organ-screen. The refectory
stretches towards the west; it has been converted into a chapel, and a stone cross rises from the roof. The
embattled gateway and the whole of the building near it are of a soft rose colour; beyond stands a tower,
duller in tint, and at right angles the old grange, known since Elizabethan days as the Spanish Barn. For the
Capitana, the first ship of the Armada to be taken, fell to Sir Francis Drake off Torbay, and the four hundred
men captured on her were brought to Tor Abbey and imprisoned in the grange.
Leaving Torquay, and going some miles to the north, and slightly inland, one arrives at Haccombe, the
smallest parish in England. This year (1908) the population numbers nine. It is also conspicuous for having as
its Rector the sole 'Arch-priest' in the kingdom, and for its independence, for though Haccombe Church is
subject to the jurisdiction of the Bishop, it claims to be free from any ruling of the Archdeacon. A college or
arch-presbytery was founded there in 1341, 'which college,' says Lysons, 'consisted of an arch-priest and five
other priests, who lived together in community.' The Arch-priest, or Rector, as he is usually called, is the only
remaining member of the college.
Haccombe passed by a succession of heiresses from the Haccombes, who held it in the time of William I, to
the Carews, during the fourteenth century, to which family it still belongs. On the church door hang two
horseshoes, commemorating a victory that George Carew, Earl of Totnes, wrested from his cousin, Sir
Arthur[Pg 109] Champernowne. A wager was laid as to whose horse could swim farthest into the sea, and the
horse of 'the bold Carew' won. The story is told in the following ballad:
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And his name Sir Arthur Champernowne.
'"Good Earl of Totnes, I've brought with me
My fleetest courser of Barbary;
And whether good or ill betide,
A wager with thee I mean to ride."
'"No Barbary courser do I own;
But I have," quoth the Earl, "a Devonshire roan;
And I'll ride for a wager by land or sea,
The roan 'gainst the courser of Barbary."
'"'Tis done," said Sir Arthur, "already I've won;
And I'll stake my manor of Dartington
'Gainst Haccombe Hall and its rich domain."
So the Earl of Totnes the wager hath ta'en.
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And he nailed the roan's shoes to the chapel door.'
How far this account is accurate it is difficult to say, but the Champernownes are still at Dartington.
Some miles south, and a little to the west, about midway between Haccombe and Torquay, lies Kingskerswell,
a village not very much heard of nowadays, but once the property of a very distinguished soldier and
statesman. 'The Lord Nicolas de Mules (or Meoles, or Molis), a counsellor of estate, had this manor in the
time of Henry III, to whom the King granted other lands to hold by knightly service.... He was Sheriff of
Hampshire and Governor of Winchester Castle, and held the islands of Guernsey, Jersey, Serke, and Aureney
committed to his trust. In 23 Henry III he was Sheriff of Yorkshire, and afterwards sent Ambassador to
denounce war against France, and, being an expert[Pg 111] soldier, was upon the King's return to England
appointed Seneschal of Gascoigne, being held in such esteem by Henry III that he admitted James, his son and
heir, to have education with Prince Edward at the King's charge. Continuing still in Gascoigne, he obtained a
signal victory over the King of Navarre.' Risdon adds the information that Sir Nicolas took the King 'prisoner
in the field.' On his return he took part in the 'War against the Welsh,' and must have acquitted himself
brilliantly, since hereafter honours were showered upon him. He was made Governor of the Castles of
Carmarthen and Cardigan, then 'Constable of Dover Castle and Warden of the Cinque-ports, and the same
year Sheriff of Kent, also Governor of the Castles of Canterbury and Rochester; and of Sherborne and Corfe
Castle,' in the county of Dorset. It is almost bewildering to follow his rapid plunges from one sphere of action
to another, and it certainly emphasizes the fact that the strenuous life is no novelty. It contradicts, too, a view
rather generally held, that the spirit of restless daring and love of adventure that have distinguished
innumerable men of Devon belonged solely to Elizabethan days—a view that has, no doubt, sprung up
because the great lights that shone in that glorious reign have eclipsed all lesser ones.
But the poppy of oblivion has fallen on the name of Sir Nicolas, and he is no conspicuous figure in the most
local histories; even Prince does not count him among his 'Worthies.'
From Kingskerswell one passes through a fertile and pleasant country, which suggests to the passer-by that
the time and labour needed in weeding and chopping down must be almost greater than that spent in sowing
and growing plants. The number of orchards here has perhaps given rise to a proverb, said to be peculiar to
South Devon, but calling to mind Tusser's treatise on Husbandry:
A road leading south, then to the east, reaches Paignton, which stands almost midway between north and
south in the bay. The old town was at a little distance from the sea, but latterly new houses have been built in
all directions, and have brought it close to the water's edge. Paignton has a fine church, chiefly Perpendicular,
but parts are of earlier work, and there is a most beautiful carved screen.
The adventures of a native of Paignton—a certain Will Adams, born about 1612, 'of mean and obscure
parentage'—are not to be forgotten. He was, says Mr Norway, 'one of those "Turkish captives" of
whom so many were languishing in Algiers two centuries ago, and who, there is little doubt, were specially in
the minds of the authors of the petition in our Litany, "For all poor prisoners and captives" ... and it may very
well be that Adams' name was coupled with this prayer on many a Sunday in Paignton Church, for the agony
of his captivity lasted full five years.' At the end of that time he and his companions, despairing of rescue, set
to work on what would indeed have seemed to most people a hopeless venture. They began to make a boat
with a keel twelve feet long, but 'because it was impossible to convey a piece that length out of the city, but it
must be seen and suspected, they cut it in two and fitted it for joyning, just in the middle.' Then 'because
boards would require much hammering and that noise would be like to betray them, they bought as much
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canvas as would cover their boat twice over.' With as much 'pitch, tar, and tallow, as would serve to make a
kind of tarpauling cloth, two pipe staves saw'd across ... for oars, a little bread and two leather bottles full of
fresh water, and as much canvas as would serve for a sail,' their preparations before 'launching out into the
deep' were complete. But even their courage was not the most splendid in the affair. When the prisoners had
actually started, they found that the boat was overloaded, so 'two were content to stay on shore.' They were
'content' to return to toil and slavery indefinitely, and to face the bitter wrath and vengeance of their captors,
enraged by the loss of so many prisoners.
Those who escaped had much to endure. Their boat leaked, and[Pg 113] the salt water spoiled their bread.
'Pale famine stared them in the face' writes Prince, and they suffered even greater tortures from thirst and heat.
'On the fifth day, as they lay hulling up and down, God sent them some relief, viz., a tortois,' which they came
upon asleep in the sea and caught. With strength almost gone, they reached Majorca, where, luckily, the
Viceroy was kindly disposed towards them, and they started home in one of 'the King of Spain's gallies.'
Berry Head
Adams died at a good old age in his native place.
The fine cliff called Berry Head runs far out into the sea at the southern edge of Tor Bay, and standing back,
within the bay, is the small and pretty town of Brixham—celebrated for its trawlers, and for being the
landing-place of William III. The red and brown sails of 'Brixham trawlers' scattered over the blue-grey
waters of the bay seem very familiar, and it is a question for consideration how many exhibitions at the Royal
Academy have not included a picture bearing that title. The fishery is an old one, and in the reign of Henry
VIII the Vicar could claim personal tithes in fish equal in value to £340 of our money.
Fishermen and others gave a very cordial welcome to the Prince of Orange when he arrived on November 5,
1688. But by no one can he have been more vehemently applauded than by the author of the lines I have
quoted at the head of the present chapter—the Rev Philip Avant, Vicar of Salcombe. The poem,
originally written in Latin, and translated by the author, takes up almost the whole of his small and rather rare
volume, Torbaia digna Camœnsis. It is in parts unintentionally amusing, and is interesting as showing
how far the frenzied fervour of bigotry may carry a naturally amiable person, for in the narrow intervals
between his torrents of denunciation it is clear that Mr Avant was, in ordinary matters, a kindly-disposed man.
A pamphlet graphically describing the 'Expedition from Torbay to Whitehall' was written by another
clergyman, John Whittle by name, a 'Minister Chaplain in the Army,' and from this pamphlet long extracts are
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given in a paper on this subject by the late Mr Windeatt. Some of these quotations I am now venturing[Pg
114] to repeat: 'The morning was very obscure with the Fog and Mist, and withal it was so calm that the
Vessels now as 'twere touch'd each other, every ship coming as near unto the ship wherein the Prince of
Orange was, as the Schipper thereof would permit them.... His Highness the Prince of Orange gave orders that
his Standard should be put up, and accordingly it was done, the White Flag being put uppermost, signifying
his most gracious offer of Peace unto all such as would live peaceably. And under that, the Red or Bloody
Flag was set up, signifying War unto all such as did oppose his designs. The Sun, recovering strength, soon
dissipated the Fog, and dispers'd the Mist, insomuch that it prov'd a very pleasant Day. By this time the people
of Devonshire thereabout had discovered the Fleet, the one telling the other thereof; they came flocking in
droves to the side or brow of the Hills to view us. Some guess'd we were French because they saw divers
White Flags; but the standard of the Prince, the Motto of which was, For the Protestant Religion and Liberty,
soon undeceived them.... Bells were ringing as we were sailing towards the Bay, and as we landed, which
many judged to be a good omen.' A little later, when they had landed, people 'came running out at their doors
to see this happy sight. So the Prince with Marschal Schomberg, and divers Lords, Knights and Gentlemen,
marched up the Hill, which all the Fleet could see over the Houses, the Colours flying and flourishing before
his Highness, the Trumpets sounding, the Haut-boys played, the Drums beat, and the Lords, Knights and
Gentlemen shouted; and sundry Huzzas did now echo in the Fleet, from off the Hill, insomuch that our very
hearts below in the water were even ravish'd for going thereof.'
There is an absurd story, here quoted with mild ridicule, that on the Prince's landing he was received by the
inhabitants of Brixham with this address:
Brixham Trawlers
The 'And please' must be a corruption of 'An it please,' which does make sense, but the rhyme cannot have
been invented until later, for it certainly was not within the power of a fisherman to offer 'bohea,' or any other
kind of tea, in those days. 'Buck-horn' is rather puzzling, for it gives no clue as to what it might be. Anybody
who has heard of edible buck-horn (or buck's-horn) at all, would probably think of an obscure and humble
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salad herb, now practically forgotten, and at no time a dainty to be pressed on 'King William's' notice in this
manner. The English Dialect Dictionary comes to the rescue by explaining that in Cornwall, Devon, and
Cumberland, 'buck-horn' is a name for 'salted and dried whiting.' 'Bok horñ' also appears in the Receiver's
accounts at Exeter (about 1488), when the citizens, having a quarrel with the Bishop, tactfully sent successive
presents of fish to the Lord Chancellor while the case lay before him. Buck-horn is still sold in Brixham.
The soldiers' first experiences in England were not agreeable, as 'they were marching into Camp all hours in
the Night'; and some having been unlucky enough to get astray from their companies, 'it was no easy matter to
find them in the dark amongst so many thousands. It was a cold, frosty night, and the stars twinkl'd
exceedingly; besides the Ground was very wet after so much Rain and ill Weather; the Souldiers were to stand
to their arms the whole Night, at least to be in readiness if anything should happen, or the enemy make an
Assault, and therefore sundry Souldiers were to fetch some old Hedges and cut down green Wood to burn
these with, to make some Fire.'
Mr Windeatt, writing in 1880, gives an astonishing instance of how few links a chain may sometimes need in
order to stretch from century to century. He says a gentleman gave him the following account: 'There are few
now left who can say, as I can, that they have heard their father and their wife's father talking together of the
men who saw the landing of William III at Torbay. I have heard Captain Clements say he as a boy heard as
many as seven or eight old men each giving the particulars of what he saw then. One saw a shipload of horses
hauled up to the quay, and the[Pg 116] horses walked out all harnessed, and the quickness with which each
man knew his horse and mounted it surprised them. Another old man said: "I helped to get on shore the horses
that were thrown overboard, and swam on shore guided by only a single rope running from the ship to the
shore"; and another would describe the rigging and build of the ships, but all appeared to welcome them as
friends.
'My father remembered only one—"Gaffer Will Webber," of Staverton, who served his apprenticeship
with one of his ancestors, and who lived to a great age—say that he went from Staverton as a boy with
his father, who took a cartload of apples from Staverton to the highroad from Brixham to Exeter, that the
soldiers might help themselves to them, and to wish them "Godspeed."'
The gentlemen of the county were more tardy in their welcome, and perhaps this is not very surprising, when
one considers that they can scarcely have recovered from the terrible vengeance that seared all who had
followed Monmouth only three years before.
Sir Edward Seymour, formerly Speaker of the House of Commons, was one of the first and, says Macaulay,
the most important of the great landowners who joined the Prince at Exeter. He was 'in birth, in political
influence, and in parliamentary abilities ... beyond comparison the foremost among the Tory gentlemen of
England.'
Sir Edward evidently rode in great state, for the Duke of Somerset, his descendant, still has a very imposing
red velvet saddle, elaborately embroidered with heraldic and other designs in silver, that 'Mr Speaker
Seymour' used on this occasion.
The march was continued in the most miserable discomfort. Six hundred horses had died either at sea or from
the effects of the storm, and the men, still suffering from a 'dissiness in the Heads after they had been so long
toss'd at Sea,' had extra burdens to carry. The weather was wet and stormy, the roads were 'extreme rough and
stony,' and when they encamped and lay down for the night, 'their Heads, Backs and Arms sank deep into the
Clay.'[Pg 117] Further, their rations were so spare that when they came on an inclosure with turnips they felt
they had found a feast. 'Some roasted them and others eat them raw, and made a brave Banquet.' However,
matters improved the next day as they drew nearer to Newton Abbot. People came in crowds to see them.
'Now they began to give us applause and pray for our Success.' Hitherto they had but wavered as they said,
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'the Irish would come and cut them in pieces if it should be known.' On approaching Newton, 'a certain Divine
went before the Army, and finding 'twas their Market day, he went unto the Cross, or Town hall,' and read the
Declaration of the Prince of Orange. 'To which the people with one Heart and Voice answered Amen: Amen,
and forthwith shouted for Joy, and made the Town ring with their echoing Huzzas.'
Such was the auspicious reception of the 'Deliverer of the Nation from Popery, Slavery, Brass Money and
Wooden Shoes.'
A very different note, jarring against this triumphal strain, is struck by a Jacobite ballad on the same event, too
long to quote entirely here. It bears the conciliatory title of
[Pg 119]
Postbridge
CHAPTER VII
The Dart
'I cannot tell what you say, green leaves,
I cannot tell what you say;
But I know that there is a spirit in you,
And a word in you this day.
'I cannot tell what you say, rosy rocks,
I cannot tell what you say;
But I know that there is a spirit in you,
And a word in you this day.
'I cannot tell what you say, brown streams,
I cannot tell what you say;
But I know that in you too a spirit doth live,
And a word doth speak this day.
'Oh! green is the colour of faith and truth,
And rose the colour of love and youth,
And brown of the fruitful clay.
Sweet Earth is faithful, and fruitful and young,
And her bridal day shall come ere long,
And you shall know what the rocks and the streams
And the whispering woodlands say.'
Kingsley: Dartside.
Of all the rivers of Devonshire, the Dart claims the first place, both for beauty and for interesting associations;
and between the lonely wastes about its source on Dartmoor, and the calm, broad reaches above Dartmouth,
the scenery is not only always beautiful, but adds the great charm of being beautiful in quite different ways.
Drayton recognises the claim, for in the Poly-olbion, speaking of the 'mother of rivers,' Dartmoor, he says:
'From all the other floods that only takes her name
And as her eld'st in right the heir of all her fame.'
[Pg 120]
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There is a saying that 'the river "cries" when there is to be a change of wind. "Us shall have bad weather,
maister; I hear the Broadstones a-crying." The Broadstones are boulders of granite lying in the bed of the
river. The cry, however, hardly comes from them, but from a piping of the wind, in the twists of the glen
through which the turbulent river writhes.'
Many tales on the Moor speak of the amazing swiftness with which a freshet will suddenly swell and sweep
down, an overwhelming flood. Only a few years ago a farmer was crossing a very safe ford when he saw the
freshet coming, and tried to hurry his horse, but before he could reach the bank the torrent caught his cart and
overturned it, and he and his horse were drowned.
The East Dart runs throughout its course in a south-easterly direction, and at Post Bridge just below the road
from Moreton Hampstead to Tavistock it is crossed by an old bridge, one of the many rugged witnesses to
unwritten history scattered all over[Pg 121] Dartmoor. It is a massive structure, built of rough granite blocks;
the 'table-stones' that rest on the piers are each about fifteen feet long.
Dartmeet Bridge
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The West Dart rises farther south than the East Dart, and runs almost due south as far as Two Bridges, and
then, in many curves to the east—sometimes almost hidden in the depths of the hollow that has been
worn between the high bare sides of the valley—till about five miles from Two Bridges it reaches
Dartmeet. From the top of a tor close to the point where the two streams meet the effect is rather curious, for
sunk deep between the wide barren stretches of moor and desolate tors, broad green ribbons of trees and
undergrowth, broken by tufts and uneven edges, mark the course of the rivers till they wind away out of sight.
Their darker green makes them stand out against the sides of the valleys, and they are the only trees in sight.
In summer the river is often very low, and then masses of great boulders in the river-bed are seen, and some of
the biggest are crowned with ferns, high tufts of grass, or little bushes, with the clearest water streams
between them. The bridge is over the East Dart, above the meeting of the waters, and from just below it is
possible to get a charming view of the arches thrown up against a sunlit mass of shimmering leaves.
From here the Dart runs south almost to Holne, the birthplace of that true lover of Devon, Charles Kingsley.
At this point it makes a great loop to the north, flowing among lovely scenery along a steep and narrow valley,
where great rocks break through the woods; then curving round in Holne Chase, it turns south again to Holne
Bridge, which is crossed by the Ashburton road. The town is about three miles to the east.
Ashburton is one of the old stannary towns, and besides mining, it was known for its trade in woollen goods,
especially serges. In fact, 'the seal of the Port-reeve bears a church between a teasel and a saltire, with the sun
and moon above.' The teasel was used to raise the nap in making cloth, and was a symbol of that industry, as
the sun and moon were symbols of mining. In 1697 the manufacturers felt foreign competition so keenly that
the Port[Pg 122]-reeve, traders, and inhabitants of Ashburton signed a petition to Parliament, begging that an
Act might be passed to discourage the importation of Irish and other foreign woollen goods.
This borough sent members to Parliament from the reign of Edward I, but in time its representation ceased.
The privilege was given back to the borough after the Restoration, through the intervention of Sir John
Northcote, and was held until Ashburton was disfranchised in 1868.
A few miles farther down the river is Buckfastleigh, a small but very flourishing town, and one of the very
few that still produce the serges and woollen goods for which the county was once famous, in the sixteenth
century especially, for then, as Green tells us, 'the broadcloths of the West claimed the palm among the
woollen stuffs of England.' The church stands apart on a height overlooking the town, and the tapering spire
adds to the effect given by its commanding position. By far the most interesting building here is Buckfast
Abbey, founded in the reign of Henry II, on the site of a Benedictine abbey of Saxon days. The place must
have been very remote and inaccessible when the Benedictines first settled there, and the Saxon name given in
Bishop Ælfwold's charter in 1016 was 'Buckfæsten, i.e., Deer-fastness,' which would seem to argue that the
Abbey was surrounded by thick woods, and was particularly lonely, even for those times. Sable, a crozier in
pale, argent, the crook or, surmounted by a buck's head, caboshed of the second, horned gules, were the
ancient arms of the Abbey, as they are still, though now impaled with the Clifford arms, by permission of
Lord Clifford.
The second colony of monks here were Cistercians, and the monastery became very prosperous and the
richest house of that order in the county. King John deposited some of his jewels, gold and silver in their
keeping, and in 1297 Edward I visited the Abbey. The Cistercians were great wool-traders, and did much for
both trade and agriculture in the districts near them. It has been supposed that the sunken track called the
Abbot's Way was used in carrying the wool from the moorland farms belonging to the monastery towards
Plymouth and Tavistock. In the thir[Pg 123]teenth century the monks showed their interest in trading by
joining the 'Gild Merchant' of Totnes. A memorandum on the back of one of the 'membership rolls' in 1236
records an agreement between the burgesses of Totnes and the abbot and convent of Buckfast; that the monks
might be able 'to make all their purchases in like manner with the burgesses, the abbot and monks agree to pay
twenty-two pence on the Saturday before Christmas day.'[4]
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Holne Bridge
The buildings at the time of the Dissolution were very large, and there was a fine church, but of these only a
Perpendicular tower adjoining the cloisters, and a large tithe-barn, are in a state of good preservation at the
present day. A modern house was built on the western side of the vanished cloisters, but in 1882 the Abbey
was bought for a colony of Benedictine monks from Pierrequivire in Burgundy, who have partly rebuilt the
monastery on its ancient lines, and are restoring the Abbey church.
A few miles away to the south-west is Dean Prior, and the living that Herrick held when he poured out his
grumbles and complaints about 'dull Devonshire.' Herrick was a true Cockney, and the earliest part of his life
was spent in a house in Cheapside. When he grew up, he had the good luck to come into the brilliant and witty
company that gathered round Ben Jonson, so it must be allowed that he had an excuse for sometimes thinking
that life in an obscure hamlet, two hundred miles from London, was a dreary exile. But, as Mr R. J. King
remarks, in spite of all his grievances, he had in him a sense that responded very readily to the pretty customs
and observances of the village, that marked, here with a handful of flowers, there with a sheaf of wheat or a
branch of holly, the different festivals of the year.
Herrick's poem 'Christmas Eve' refers to a local custom that appealed to him:
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'The pie represented the manger of Bethlehem, and its contents the wise men's offerings. The Devonshire
"Christmas play" has had a curious fate. Except, perhaps, in some of the moorland parishes, it has disappeared
at home. But the Newfoundland fisheries were long carried on for the most part by sailors from the
neighbourhood of Dartmouth and Tor Bay, and Mr Jukes tells us that the streets of St John's at Christmas-time
continue to exhibit St George, the Turkish Knight, and all their companions, in full vigour.'
The charm of Herrick's verses on country joys is deepened—to the folk-lorist in particular—by
remembering that the rustic ceremonies he commemorates were probably the usual customs observed at Dean
Prior in his time. On a hot August evening he may have watched the happy and excited children who are
described in the poem 'The Hock-Cart, or Harvest-Home.'
Herrick was fortunate in having a kind and hospitable neighbour. Sir Edward Giles was famed for his
uprightness and generous disposition, and was looked up to by all the neighbourhood. He succeeded to 'a large
park and very handsome house,' whose existence was partly due to the problem of the unemployed that was
perplexing the benevolent more than three hundred years ago; for John Giles, 'to the honour of his memory ...
began building of the house, and setting up the walls about his park, in the time of a very great dearth;
whereby hundreds of poor men ... were daily fed at his table, who else together with their families in
probability would have perished for want.' Sir Edward succeeded immediately to his father, who was 'a good
old gentleman,' with a taste for small jokes that must have been sometimes a little tedious. The son had too
'active and vigorous a spirit' to rest 'within the compass of an island, wherefore ... he travelled beyond the
seas,' and in the Low Countries 'trayl'd a pike in her Majesty's service, Queen Elizabeth of glorious memory.'
Having carved for himself a high reputation, he came to the court of King James, to find that his fame had
preceded him, and he received the honour of knighthood at the time of the King's coronation. This gave the
old knight a chance for a little jest, which his son must have found rather exasperating. When he came home,
his father received him with all ceremony, though 'more jocularly than seriously ... saluted him with his title
of Sir Edward Giles at every word, and by all means would place him[Pg 126] above him, as one dignified
with the more honourable degree; until at length inquiring of him: "Sir Edward, pray tell me," said the old
gentleman, "who must discharge the fees and charges of your knighthood and honour?" Being answered,
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"That he hoped he would be pleased to do that," "Nay, then," says the old gentleman, "come down, Sir
Edward Giles, and sit beneath me again, if I am he that must pay for thy honour."' One can imagine his
beaming satisfaction over it all!
Among Sir Edward's friends was the 'eminent and pious and learned Divine,' Dr Barnabas Potter, whom he
presented with the living of Dean Prior. Herrick and his predecessor were indeed a contrast to one another, for
Dr Potter was 'melancholy, lean, and a hard student.' He was afterwards transplanted from his peaceful
solitude to Court, where he was appointed Chaplain in Ordinary to Prince Charles, and was known as the
Penitential Preacher. Afterwards, when preferred to the bishopric of Carlisle, 'he was commonly called the
Puritanical Bishop, and they said of him in the time of king James, that Organs would blow him out of the
church, which I do not believe, the rather because he lov'd Vocal Music, and could bear his own part therein.'
Altogether, he and the future Merry Monarch must have been very congenial companions.
Going farther south, and still keeping to the west of the river, the traveller comes to Rattery, close to which is
Venton House, once owned by the Gibbses. In the reign of Edward III John Gibbs was chosen to undertake
important work, for he was called to serve on several Commissions appointed to carry out the King's business
in the county. The most interesting of these Commissions seems to have been the one appointed in 1462, for
the purpose of collecting ships for the King's fleet from those ports—the Commissioners to be
responsible for furnishing them completely, from 'Masters and Mariners' to 'bows and bowstrings, wheat,
beans, and ale.'
The members of the family whose doings were the most amusing, though not the most to be admired, were
William Gibbs and his son Thomas, who were proceeded against in the Star Chamber by the Chaplain and
Curate of Rattre (Rattery) Church. Some[Pg 127] manuscript notes very kindly sent to me by Mr Herbert
Gibbs give a good instance of the light-hearted manner in which it was possible to break and make the peace
in a country district about the year 1517. The Church of Rattery claimed that William Gibbs owed £21 2s. 8d.,
and he claimed that the church owed him sixty-three shillings, and, putting into practice the adage that
Possession is nine points of the law, he boldly took out of the church 'a yron boxe locked with two lockes,'
and helped himself to the money. The complainants brought their case to be tried before the Bishop of Exeter
and several justices, but Andrew Hillersdon, son-in-law to William Gibbs, was among them, with the result
that the only penalty imposed was to find surety for his good 'aberying' (bearing) of 100 marks. Although this
was a very mild verdict, it infuriated the culprit, whose next step was to shear the Church lambs, and carry off
'11 youes with their lambs'; and on the Thursday night before the Feast of St. Matthew he, with his son
Thomas and many others, did 'then and there ryottusly assemble theym togeders to kyll your said orators,
leyin awayte,' and the said 'Thomas Gybbys with a swarde and a bokeler made a sawte' upon John Hals, ' ... so
as the said John Hals was in danger of his lyf and toke the church and church yerde for his savegard and kept
the same by the space of two hours.' His enforced vigil had the added bitterness that, according to the
complainants, he had had no previous quarrel of any kind with his assailant. But this demonstration was not
enough to satisfy the Gibbses, and the next Sunday they came again to Rattery 'in manner of a new
insurrection with twenty-three persons and above,' and with such a fierce aspect that they caused 'great feer
and dreed' to their neighbours, who in alarm of worse to come warned 'your said orators ... to kepe them
absent from their said church and from their divine service, and so they dyd.' The complainants now evidently
felt that the time for definite action on their part had come, and the case was eventually carried before the
'Lord Cardinall, Chancellor of England,' but the account of the proceedings does not give his verdict.
Returning to the river, Dartington Hall, the beautiful home of[Pg 128] the Champernownes, is soon reached.
Dartington was originally the gift of the Conqueror to William de Falaise, and passed through the hands of the
Lords Audley and of John Holland, Duke of Exeter, half-brother of Richard II, before Sir Arthur
Champernowne exchanged for it the lordship of Polslo, and settled here in the reign of Elizabeth. And now,
says Westcote, 'it glories in the knightly tribe of Champernowne.' Originally Dartington consisted of two large
quadrangles, but one has long been in ruins. The most striking feature is the hall, which is seventy feet long
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and forty feet wide, and has pointed windows, a huge old fireplace, and a porch with a groined ceiling. This
dates from the fourteenth century, and part of the quadrangle, together with the gateway at the south end, is
early fourteenth-century work.
The Champernownes are a very ancient and distinguished family, though Prince complains that their 'actions
and exploits for the greatest part is devoured by time.' Sir Arthur Champernowne was 'a good soldier and an
eminent commander in the Irish wars' of the sixteenth century, and was conspicuous for his zeal and valour.
Prince gives an odd little bit of gossip about an heiress of this family. He says she was 'a frolic lady,' and no
unusual epithet could be more descriptive; for the lady 'married William Polglas, within three days after her
father's death; and within two days after her husband Polglas's death, she was married again unto John
Cergeaux!'
In the reign of Queen Elizabeth Mr Henry Champernowne headed one hundred gentleman volunteers, who,
with the Queen's permission, went to help the cause of the 'Protestant Princes' in France; and it is interesting to
learn that Sir Walter Raleigh, then seventeen years old, was one of this company.
The Champernownes of Dartington were, however, only a younger branch of the family. The elder branch
lived 'in great splendour' at Modbury. A story is told about them of which, perhaps, the most accurate version
may be found in Britton and Brayley's 'Beauties of England and Wales': 'Tradition speaks very highly ... of the
magnificent manner in which the Champernownes lived, and particularly of their keeping a very fine band
of[Pg 129] singers and musicians, which band, if report may be credited, was the occasion of the family's ruin,
"for that Mr Champernowne taking it on the Thames in the time of Queen Elizabeth, her Majesty was so
delighted with the music, that she requested the loan of it for a month; to which Mr Champernowne, aware of
the improbability of its ever returning, would not consent, saying that he 'hoped her Majesty would allow him
to keep his fancy.' The Queen was so highly exasperated at this refusal, that she found some pretence to sue
him at law, and ruin him, by obliging him, in the course of the proceedings, to sell no fewer than nineteen
manors." This anecdote, at least the circumstance of the sale of the nineteen manors about the above period, is
in a great degree confirmed by the title-deeds of some lands in and about Modbury.'
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When Leland journeyed through it, the town already gave the idea of having passed its meridian, and his
words are clear and concise: 'The Castelle of Totnes standith on the hille North West of the Towne. The
Castell waulis and the stronge Dungeon be maintained. The Loggingis of the Castelle be clene in Ruine.'
The early chroniclers go back gloriously into the dim mists of antiquity for the origin of Totnes, and when no
carping critics insisted on analyzing popular history and distilling all the romance out of it, the story of the
town was very fine indeed. The founder of Totnes, then, was Brutus of Troy, who after long wanderings
arrived in this charming bit of country, and on this hill made the great announcement:
The claims of Totnes have been set forth with no undue modesty. 'It hath flourished, and felt also the storms
of affliction, under[Pg 130] Britons, Romans, Saxons, and Normans. To speak somewhat of the antiquity
thereof, I hope I shall take no great pains to prove it (and that without opposition) the prime town of Great
Britain.' Its history is taken in grand strides. Having explained that the coming of Brutus was held by some to
be contemporary with the rule of Eli as high-priest in Israel, the writer continues: 'The first conqueror Brutus
gave this town and the two provinces, Devon and Cornwall, then but one, to his cousin and great assistant,
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Corinœus, as is well known; whereof the western part is (as they say) called Cornwall; who peopled it
with his own regiment; and being an excellent wrestler, as you have heard, trained his following in the same
exercises; whereof it comes that the western men in that sport win the mastery and game wheresoever they
come.... The second conqueror, William of Normandy, bestowed this town, together with Dartmouth and
Barnstaple, on a worthy man named Judæel.'
The space of time between the first and second 'conquerors' does not seem to strike the historian as a rather
wide gap, and the doings of the one and the other are related with almost equal confidence and with the same
air of authority.
Judhael de Totnes is supposed to have built the castle, and although only the walls of the round keep now
remain, the trouble of the long climb up to it is well repaid by the lovely view that is gained from the ruin.
Fertility and abundance seem to be the characteristics of the land, and the ridiculous suggestion that the town's
name has been corrupted from Toute-à-l'aise is one shade less absurd, because that title would be so very
appropriate. Here and there a silver gleam shows where the river runs between heavily wooded banks. To the
east a green and smiling country of gentle hills and valleys leads to that shade of past splendour, the Castle of
Berry Pomeroy; and far away to the north-west, it is possible to see the high, sharp tors on Dartmoor. Looking
straight down, the uneven roofs seem tumbled over one another in a way that suggests that different ages have
casually showered them into the little town.
Totnes received its first charter from King John, and there are[Pg 131] few older boroughs in the country.
Originally a walled town, Fore Street is still crossed by the East Gate, which has been rebuilt in comparatively
modern times. Within is a room decorated by an early Renaissance frieze and 'linen-pattern' panelling. The
upper stories of some of the old houses project over the lower ones, and in the High Street they jut quite
across the pavements, and rest upon columns, making piazzas or covered ways along the street. Such piazzas
are very uncommon in England, but there is a short one, called the Butter Walk, at Dartmouth.
The church is a very fine Perpendicular building, of a warm rose colour, and it has a high battlemented tower
from which three figures look out of their niches. Some very grotesque gargoyles peer down from the roof at
intervals. The great treasure of the church is its screen, carved so finely that the pattern seems like lacework,
and it is difficult to realize that it can be of stone. The main lines of the carving curve and spread upwards
almost like the lines of palm-leaves, and the screen is coloured and gilded. There is another beautiful and
delicate, though less elaborate, bit of carving which divides a little chapel from the south side of the chancel.
Under the tower arch is a curious monument to Christopher Blackhall, who died in 1635, and his four wives,
who are kneeling one behind the other. The dates of their deaths are very clearly marked by the different
fashions of their dresses—a compact and upstanding ruff adds to the stiff precision of the first wife's
appearance; while the sloping lines of a 'Vandyke' collar embellish the dress of the fourth.
On the north side of the church stands the old Guildhall, and in front of it another tiny piazza, bordered by
granite pillars. Inside 'linen-pattern' panelling lines the walls; there are carved seats all round the upper end,
and in the council-chamber beyond are some fragments of fine moulding.
Before leaving the town, a curious custom practised in the eighteenth century must be mentioned—that
of taking dogs to help in catching salmon. Defoe came here in his travels in the West, and saw the fish being
caught. The fish, he says, in the flowing tide swim into a 'cut, or channel,' which has a 'grating of[Pg 132]
wood, the cross-bars of which ... stand pointing inward towards one another.... We were carried thither at low
water, where we saw about fifty or sixty small salmon, about seventeen to twenty inches long, which the
country people call salmon-peel,' caught by putting in a net at the end of a pole. 'The net being fixed at one
end of the place, they put in a dog (who was taught his trade beforehand) at the other end of the place, and he
drives all the fish into the net, so that, only holding the net still in its place, the man took up two or three and
thirty salmon-peel at the first time.' He finishes the story by saying that they bought some for dinner at
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twopence apiece. 'And for such fish, not at all bigger, and not so fresh, I have seen six and sixpence each
given at a London fish-market.'
The river leaves Totnes in broad, sweeping curves between the hills, and rolls on past the lovely woods of
Sharpham, and on its course to Dartmouth passes the early homes of two men who each played a part in
English history. At Sandridge, close to the river, lived Captain John Davies, or Davis, whose name is familiar
as the discoverer of Davis's Straits. Prince, who himself lived not far away, takes the fascination of
Dartmouth, and the longing for the sea that Dartmouth seemed to inspire, as quite natural, and says casually
that, living so near this town, 'Mr Davis had ... a kind of invitation, to put himself early to sea.'
These were in the days when the Merchant Adventurers were at the height of their importance and prosperity,
and it was in the hope of opening up a trade for the woollen goods of the West-country with India and China
that Captain Davis set out to look for the North-West Passage.
To face all the hazards of this journey, so very far away from civilization, and the perils and shocks that might
await him in the frozen North, he fitted out a little fleet which consisted of the 'Barke Sunneshine, of London,
fifty tunnes, and the Moonshine, of Dartmouth, thirty-five tunnes, the ship Mermayd, of a hundred and twenty
tunnes, and a pinesse of tenne tunnes named the North Starre.'[5] But in spite of this name of good augury the
little[Pg 133] pinnace never came home again, and one can only admire with awe the daring that ventured to
sail a boat of ten tons across the boisterous Atlantic into the unknown Arctic Seas. Traces of Davis's
wanderings along the coasts of North America may still be found in the names he bestowed on different
points. 'On sighting first the land, he named the bay which he entered after his friend, Gilbert Sound; we find
also Exeter Sound, Totnes Roads, Mount Raleigh, and other familiar titles. A few years later John Davis
found the right course to India and China, and introduced the trade from this country which exists to the
present time.'
Sharpham Woods:
River Dart
A greater man than Davis lived farther down the river at Greenaway, opposite the pretty village of Dittisham,
which, with its strip of beach and ferry, looks as if it had been 'made for a picture.' Sir Humphrey Gilbert,
stepbrother to Sir Walter Raleigh, was a great man to whom Fortune was not overkind, but his 'virtues and
pious intentions may be read ... shining too gloriously to be dusked by misfortune.' His aims were higher than
the hopes that stirred most of his contemporaries, and of his 'noble enterprizes the great design ... was to
discover the remote countries of America, and to bring off those savages from their diabolical superstitions, to
the embracing the gospel.' He made two efforts to graft a colony with little success, but his third effort was
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rather happier; and having left Devonshire in June, 1583, he 'sailed to Newfoundland and the great river of St
Laurence in Canada; which he took possession of, and seized the same to the crown of England, and invested
the Queen in an estate for two hundred leagues in length by cutting a turf and rod after the antient custom of
England.' From the developments of that great country that are now taking place, it cannot but be interesting
to look back along the vista of years to this very simple ceremony.
Later this group of emigrants lost heart, and nearly all returned to England, and possibly Sir Humphrey may
have wondered whether this venture also would have but a flickering existence, and would leave no lasting
result of the work on which he[Pg 134] had spent his years and his strength and his riches. Or it may be that
no doubts troubled him, for he had a 'noble and gallant spirit,' and his dauntless motto was 'Quid non?' The
story of his death makes an appropriate ending to his life. He was with his colony in Newfoundland when
'necessaries began to fail,' and he was urged to return home. He started in the Squirrel, a ship of ten tons.
When they were far out at sea a violent tempest blew up, and those in the Golden Hind (a larger ship
accompanying them) saw with horror the imminent danger that their friends were in. But Sir Humphrey was
quite composed, and those in the Golden Hind were near enough to hear him cry 'aloud to his company, in
these words: "We are so near to heaven here at sea as at land."' In the height of the storm the little boat was
swallowed up by the waves, and all on board perished.
A portrait of Sir Humphrey hung in his grand-nephew's house at Compton, where Prince saw it. 'The one hand
holdeth a general's truncheon, and the other is laid on the globe of the world, Virginia is written over; on his
breast hangs the golden anchor, with the pearl at the peak; and underneath are these verses, which, tho' none
of the best, may here supply the place of an epitaph:
Although upon all parts of the South Hams there hovers a spell that is inexplicable, perhaps it is felt more in
Dartmouth than in any other place one can think of. Possibly it is the loveliness of sea[Pg 136] and land,
flowers in the crevices of the cliffs hanging low towards the water's edge, the round tower rising out of the
sea, the picturesqueness of the town, with its thronging associations, or just the intangible influences of
bygone days. But there is something of enchantment about the tower, especially when it is contemplated from
the water. And to fully appreciate the whole, one should slip out of the harbour past the Mew Stone, where the
sea-gulls rise like a drift of snowflakes on a sudden gust, into the midst of sliding walls of transparent green
water beyond, where—if there is wind enough—glassy hillocks all round, at moments, hide
everything else from sight. Besides the fascination of watching waves towering above the boat, and following
it as if they would fall over and bury it in their depths, and climbing them, with the sudden plunge into the
hollow beyond, it may be, especially if shoals of mackerel are near, that one may have the pleasure of coming
upon a flock of gulls, swimming, swooping, flapping about, and all busy fishing. Or perhaps there will be a
group of brown divers, floating placidly on the waves, and then suddenly disappearing, one or two at a time or
several in a moment. And possibly a great black creature may appear a little way off, tossing and seeming to
turn somersaults in the water, and another and another, and one may find oneself among a school of porpoises,
and hear the curious puffing sounds they make that are not quite like anything else. From a little distance out,
looking back across the changing lights that glance over the water, one gets a quite fresh view of the harbour's
mouth, shut in by its high cliffs, half veiled by soft masses of green.
Dartmouth had a great stake in the country's welfare in early days, and was a port of much stir and traffic.
From here sailed many of the ships that Richard I gathered together to take the English who were going with
him on the Third Crusade. William Rufus started once from this harbour when there was trouble in
Normandy, and King John paid the town two visits. In Edward III's time Dartmouth had already become
renowned for her shipping and sent six ships for the King's service in a fight in which engaged the combined
French, Flemish, and Genoese fleets; and[Pg 137] she sent two more a few years later to help in his war
against Scotland. Fifty years later this loan was entirely eclipsed by the magnificence of contributing no fewer
than thirty-one ships to the siege of Calais.
In 1470 Dartmouth was a step in the retreat of Warwick, 'the King-maker,' when Edward IV pursued him as
far as Exeter. Warwick embarked here for France, and his arrival in those unsettled times must have created
much bustle and excitement amongst all the gossips of the place. The Earl was 'in danger of being surprized,
whereupon leisurely (for his great spirit disdained anything that should look like a Flight) he retired to Exeter,
where having dismissed the Remainder of the troops that attended him, he went to Dartmouth, and there, with
many ladies in his company and a large Retinue, he took ship and sailed directly to Calais.'
Amongst the celebrities of Dartmouth is a certain John Hawley, a great merchant of immense wealth. A
couplet ran of him:
When Leland came here, he remarked on the great ruins of 'Hawley's Haul ... a rich merchant and a noble
warrior against the French Men.' Hawley is buried in the beautiful church of St Saviour's, and a large brass
represents him as lying between his two wives.
In this church is a most delicately carved screen, and leaves, sprays, and grapes are conspicuous amongst the
details of its graceful design. The groined cornice is decorated by exquisite fan-tracery, and various saints and
'doctors of the church' are painted on the panels of the lower part. In the high carved stone pulpit are
tabernacled recesses, once enclosing figures, but now containing 'royal badges and devices'; and both screen
and pulpit were coloured and gilded, and are rather dimmed by time. The church has many very interesting
features, and in the south porch is a most curious wrought-iron door, showing a tree with long, drooping
branches and large diamond-shaped leaves, and two wonderful heraldic lions impaled on it.
The Castle was built in the time of Henry VII, on the site of an older one; for when Edward IV reigned, the
men of Dartmouth built themselves a castle at the desire of the King, who promised that if they would by this
means protect the town—and, further, would guard the harbour by putting a chain across the
mouth—they should have £30 yearly from the customs of Dartmouth and Exeter. The chain stretched
across to Kingswear, and a hollow in the rock by the ruins of an old guard-house shows where it once passed.
The little square castle of Kingswear stands close by, and from certain points of view both Kingswear and the
beautiful round tower of Dartmouth Castle seem to be rising straight out of the waves.
In 1685 an agreement very much like the earlier one was made. James II had some cause for uneasiness and
for looking closely to his defences, and, as it happened, three years later there landed, only a few miles away,
the man who, superseding him, was hailed by the majority as England's Deliverer. But when James came to
the throne he had already seen Dartmouth conquered by an enemy's troops; for, although Prince Maurice had
secured it in the[Pg 139] earlier stages of the war, Fairfax had taken it later. Among the Duke of Somerset's
papers are some orders given by a Council of War, at which 'Colonel Edward Seymour, Governor of
Dartmouth town and garrison,' was present, providing very minutely for the defence of the town and for the
supplies of the garrison. Stories of the Parliamentary troops quartering themselves in churches are sometimes
told, with the unfair implication that they alone were guilty of such desecration; for where need was urgent the
Royalists took the same course. Here we find orders: 'Captain Haughton ... with forty men shall lie in
Townstall church, for the fortifying thereof against the enemy, and that the said captain, his officers and
company, shall have their victuals from Mount Boone.' Also that a 'month's provision of victuals be laid into
St Petrox church for five hundred men, and the said Major Torner and his select officers shall be keepers
thereof.' The Church of St Clement at Townstall was fortified with ten cannon.
Dartmouth Castle
Fairfax attacked in the first days of January, 1646, in exceptionally cold weather. Honourable conditions of
surrender had been first offered to the Governor, but were refused, and he prepared to fight to the end. 'In
extreme bitter cold weather and snow' the Parliamentary forces moved forward, and, after examining the town
as closely as they could, decided to take it by storm. Additional troops were ordered up to strengthen the
besiegers, and Sir Thomas Fairfax sent for a squadron to prevent any help reaching the Royalists by sea. On
Sunday evening 'the soldiers were all drawn out; about seven at night forlorn hopes were set, the evening very
mild, as at midsummer, the frost being newly gone; the word was given: God with us.... About 11 o'clock at
night the storm began.'
Three separate attacks were made simultaneously on different parts of the town, and though the besieged
fought bravely, they fought in vain, and by the next morning all but the Castle and the little fort above were in
the hands of the enemy. Sir Hugh Pollard, the Governor (Sir Edward Seymour was at this time taking part in
The fort above Kingswear, commanded by Sir Henry Cary, was protected by strong bulwarks, and the defence
being very well carried out, the garrison obtained better terms. 'To save time,' writes Fairfax to the House of
Peers, 'I willingly condescended to let Sir Henry Cary march away with the rest, leaving the arms, ordnance,
ammunition, with all provisions.'
This was all accomplished on the Monday, and on the evening following the attack the Parliament was in full
possession of the town.
[Pg 141]
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up its individuality. It has the peculiar atmosphere of a sea-town, but why, precisely, it is difficult to say.
The Fore Street is steep and winding, and on one side stands a church which, without any very striking
feature, is quietly impressive. It is a cruciform building, and a steeple rises from the centre. A chapel,
dedicated to St Edmund, King and Martyr, stood on this spot before the year 1250; but it was rebuilt and
aisles were added by the Abbot and monks of Buckfast in the beginning of the fifteenth century. In the south
transept of the present church are remains of early English work, and the font is Early English. Hagioscopes
slant through the chancel walls from the aisle on either side. The very unusual name of a benefactress must be
noticed—Tryphena Tobys.[Pg 142]
Dodbrooke is joined so closely to Kingsbridge that their streets run into each other, and they are separated
only by small streams now partly covered in. It would be almost impossible for a stranger wandering about to
say offhand which town he was in. Dodbrooke is really the older of the two. A grant to hold a market was
made to Alan Fitz-Roald, in or possibly just before the year 1256. About this time a serious quarrel occurred,
when 'Henry Fitz-Alan impleaded Matthew Fitz-John, with forty others, for throwing down a pillory in
Dodbrooke. Forty seems a good many against the pillory! But the affair was not one of those cases in which a
spark causes a fire, but was rather an outburst of flame in a long-smouldering feud between the Fitz-Alans and
the Lords of Stokenham over the manor of Dodbrooke. In the end, the Fitz-Alans triumphed.
Three hundred years later we find the people of Dodbrooke complaining of the heavy contributions that they
were called on to make towards furnishing 'ships of war'; for after the Armada had been defeated the means of
defence on these coasts were for some years kept up to a very high standard. Mr Richard
Champernowne,—who, it must be admitted, from the general tenor of his ways, seems to have been
one of those well-meaning but egotistical and meddlesome people who are always being surprised and hurt
because their good offices are not better received,—wrote to the local authorities as follows:
'Cousin Cary, and the rest of the Commissioners for the ship causes, I have received some grievous
complaints of some poor men who are taxed in Dodbrook to this, more than all their goods are worth....
Surely, as the country must bitterly speak against those [who] are procurors and assistants in this country, so
would it be as highly disliked both of her Majesty as of the Lords, if they knew rightly of whom, and on what
sort, this tax is levied.'
But, alas! a severe snub was the result of this appeal, and the unhappy Mr Cary must have deeply regretted
that he had obligingly forwarded the grievance to the Lords of the Council.
Their answer ran: 'The Court.... The Council to George[Pg 143] Carey, J.P....' They learn by his late letter that
the county is unwilling to contribute the charges imposed upon it for 'setting out ships etc.' It is paid cheerfully
by other counties, and he is desired to return the names of those persons who are obstinate in refusing
payment.
There is no building of special interest excepting the church, which is dedicated to St Thomas à Becket. The
arches dividing the aisles from the nave are high and rather pointed, giving an impression of loftiness. There is
a beautiful carved screen, with painted figures on the panels; and the font is a very early one. Of the infants
baptized in it, one at least obtained a rather unenviable celebrity—Dr John Wolcot, better known as
'Peter Pindar.' His bitter satires earned for him a harvest of hatred and abuse, but nobody denied his wit. 'There
is a pretty story of the older Pindar that a swarm of bees lighted on his cradle in his infancy and left honey on
his lips; but we fear in the case of our hero they were wasps that came, and that they left some of the caustic
venom of their stings.' A surgeon's son, he studied medicine himself, but was unpopular with his patients for
the reason that his ideas were too far ahead of his time. His opinion that 'a physician can do little more than
watch Dame Nature, and give her a shove in the back when he sees her inclined to do right,' was considered a
shocking heresy, and, no doubt, a confession of his own ignorance.
There is a charm over all this country, not solely due to its beauty. It is true that it is rather drowsy, that the
'spell of the briar-rose' in part lies over it, but it may be that this adds to the charm. There is an absence of
competition, an air of plenty and of kindness, a golden glamour that gives the impression that Nature has told
the people theirs is a generous portion, and they may sit still and be content. And they are content.
There is such an overbrimming wealth of bushes and plants and flowers on every side, that the fact of the
water in the estuary being salt scarcely seems to prevent their growing in it! Along the bank washed by the
flowing tide, and almost touching the masses of tough golden-brown seaweed on the rocks, are multitudes of
the daisy-flowers of sea-mayweed, flowering samphire, the stars of sow-thistle, and bright yellow bunches of
charlock and straggling spires of wild-mignonette, against a darker background of blackthorn, hawthorn, ivy,
and furze, lightly powdered with trails of bramble-blossom. Creeks, edged with low hills, wind away from the
estuary. When the tide is low, great stretches of mud and sand lie on either side, and here may be seen black
cormorants and crowds and crowds of gulls, here and there a heron, and quantities of smaller birds. The scene
changes entirely at the mouth of the creek, for here the banks rise into high rugged cliffs, and the water frets
restlessly over sunken rocks.
Salcombe is a tiny little town, with steep, narrow streets and high-walled gardens on each side of the close
lane that ends the principal street; and between the gardens the air is fragrant with sweet clematis, that, as well
as red valerian, tumbles in clusters[Pg 145] over the walls. Salcombe has a very good claim to remembrance,
for on a peninsular rock at the mouth of the harbour stand the ruins of a fortress that held out for King Charles
later than any other place in Devonshire. It was defended by Sir Edward Fortescue, and surrendered only on
May 7, 1646.
On the opposite side of the estuary, high on the cliffs, lies the small village of Portlemouth. The cross-shaped
church is dedicated to a Celtic saint, St Winwaloe, locally called St Onolaus. A proverb without much point
(probably only the fragment of a more coherent saying) mentions St Winwaloe amongst several saints whose
days fall on windy dates.
In his church here is a very finely carved screen, and of one of the figures on it Mr Baring-Gould tells an
amusing story: 'The sixth is Sir John Schorne, a Buckinghamshire rector, who died in 1308, and was supposed
to have conjured the devil into a boot. He was venerated greatly as a patron against ague and the gout. There
Bolt Head
To the south of Salcombe rise the great cliffs of Bolt Head, and a few miles farther to the west is Bolt Tail. Mr
Norway points out that 'no other town in South Devon possesses, nor, indeed, more than one or two on any
coast, a headland so high and dark and jagged as the entrance to the harbour. It is wild and rugged like a
Cornish headland, and the walk across it to Bolt Tail is the finest between Portland and the Lizard.' A few
miles to the west is Thurlestone, and all about here the coast is most dangerous. A ship flung in a storm
towards the shore has no chance on the jagged rocks that spur-like, jut out from the cliffs, and the tide races
inshore with terrific power, even when it is not driven by a wild south-westerly wind. This part of the coast
was naturally a happy hunting-ground for smugglers, and was not altogether innocent of wreckers. A fearful
wreck that happened in 1772 is still remembered. A large vessel—the Chantiloupe, from the West
Indies—went ashore in Bigbury Bay. All the passengers but one were drowned, and over the death of a
lady there hangs a terrible doubt. On realizing the desperate plight of the ship, she had hurriedly dressed
herself in her most beautiful clothes and jewels, no doubt hoping that, as they were so close to land, there was
a good chance of escape. She was, indeed, thrown up on the beach, but, it is to be hoped, already dead, for,
with shocking callousness, the people watching there snatched away all her valuables and left her lying there.
An account of the wreck, written in 1874, tells that at that date a lady living near the bay still had a corner of
the victim's apron, a very beautifully embroidered bit of fine muslin. The unfortunate passenger's name was
never really known, but rumour has always connected her with Edmund Burke; for it is certain that he feared
In repeating these stories, I feel rather in fault, for I have listened to, and been impressed by, the views of a
native of these parts, who was extremely severe on anyone that wrote about wreckers and reflected discredit
on this coast, giving the idea that 'we robbed and murdered people.' A little to my surprise, he said he liked
reading books about Devonshire, and admired some well-known novels dealing with the county, though he
thought them quite inaccurate. 'But,' he added tolerantly, 'they say that, to get at the truth from a guide-book,
you must divide what you read in three, and then take away half.' He admitted, all the same, that there had
been a certain amount of wrecking in the days of the pirates (smugglers?), and putting lights in the wrong
places. When he was a boy, what they liked best was a wreck with a 'general' cargo, so that the men could sell
the mineral and the wives could wear the silk; but there were fewer wrecks of any kind nowadays. It is very
quiet in the winter (east of Kingsbridge), unless anyone is going to be buried, and the only other chances of
any stir are if there is a wedding or a christening, or a wreck in Start Bay.
Thurlestone takes its name from a 'thirled' or pierced rock, on the shore through which the waves have drilled
an arch. The rector of Thurlestone has very kindly allowed me to make some extracts from a manuscript
history of the parish in his possession, the earlier notes of which have been taken from entries made at the
time of the events, in the Bishop of Exeter's registers, and have,[Pg 148] therefore, the value of contemporary
evidence. They are very interesting, as giving glimpses at the course of events in a remote parish through
several centuries.
During part of the fourteenth century the parishioners seem to have been rather turbulent and the history tells
of storms. Some while before the first entry, in June, 1328, someone had not only been murdered, but actually
done to death within the church. There is no record of the punishment of the culprit or culprits, or of any sign
of penitence shown by the parish; but probably some steps had been taken, for at that date Bishop Grandisson
commissioned the Archdeacon of Totnes to reconcile the parish church of Thurlestone, 'which had been
polluted by the shedding of blood therein. For some reason not given the Archdeacon was excused from
performing this duty, and Stephen Abbot of Buckfast was commissioned to officiate.... On the 8th of the
Kalends of August, 1328, the Bishop issued his mandate to the Archdeacon of Totnes, informing him that the
Abbot, having proceeded to Thurlestone, had reconciled the church, and that he was to require the
Parishioners to pay the customary dues within eight days of the serving of this Monition to that effect.' The
dues, however, were not forthcoming, and on October 6 the Bishop, who allowed no insubordination,
threatened the defaulters with excommunication unless they paid the desired amount within six days. 'This
had the desired effect, and on the 20th of October the Bishop sent to the Rector and the parishioners the
formal acquittance. On the same day, he commissioned Sir Robert de Pynho, the Rector, to absolve the
parishioners and relax the interdict imposed on their Parish Church.'
An unpleasant experience of Sir Henry Benet, priest and Canon of the Church of Crediton, and Rector of
Thurlestone, witnesses to the lawlessness of the time in East Devon. He was 'peaceably entering the town of
St Mary [Ottery St Mary] on Tuesday (tertia feria) of the then instant Pentecost Sunday,' when 'certain
unknown persons, sons of perdition ... under colour of a precept which they falsely asserted they had received
from the Sheriff of Devon, rushed on Sir Henry and ... rashly, violently and sacrilegiously laid hands[Pg 149]
on him and inhumanly forced him into the public prison for thieves and criminals.' A 'Denuntiation of
Excommunication' against these 'sons of perdition' in Bishop Grandisson's register is undated, but it follows
A later rector must have been a pleasant acquaintance and a good friend. The Rev. John Snell 'was a person of
firm and unshaken loyalty,' and when 'Fort-Charles' was about to be besieged, he joined the garrison in order
to give all the help he could to Sir Edward Fortescue. On the surrender of the fort, amongst the very
honourable conditions that Sir Edward obtained was the agreement that Mr Snell 'should be allowed the quiet
possession of his Parsonage; but Articles, like oaths, in those days, were only matter of Form, and accordingly
(about the year 1646) he was soon after plundered of his cattle and other goods without-doors, and several
times forced to fly for his life.' Later, his lot was made still harder by the confiscation of his living, which he
did not regain until after the Restoration. In the old parish register is a note, probably interpolated by John
Snell when he had returned to his living, and with outraged feelings had been looking at the volume, and
reading the entry referring to the appointment of a lay registrar in his parish. The registrars elected in 1653
were not only given charge of the parish registers, but took another office out of the hands of the clergy. No
marriage might take place without the registrar's certificate that he had called the banns. The couple then took
the certificate to the nearest magistrate, who, after hearing each of them repeat a brief formula, was authorized
to declare them legally married.
Mr Snell's exclamation of distress appears under a notice which 'certyfyed John Calder (?) of the parish of
Thurelston to bee Register of the sayde Parish,' and was signed by 'Will Bastard,' and dated 'September 20th,
1653.' Above and below the date is written:
[Pg 150]
On Mr Snell's tombstone is a long Latin epitaph, from an English version of which the following lines are
taken:
Not far from Thurlestone was another parson who worked hard to embarrass the besiegers of the Royalists in
Salcombe Castle, and who had his share of thrilling adventures. Mr Lane was the rector of Aveton Giffard, a
Slapton Lea
If the traveller returns to Prawle Point, and then follows the coast towards Dartmouth, he will soon come to
the ridge of Start Point, which 'stretches boldly to sea, sloped on each side like the roof of a house, and
crowned along its entire length by fanciful crags, strangely weathered and shaggy with moss.' Round the Point
at a certain state of every tide there is a formidable tide-race, and always a swell so strong as to make small
boats very careful of the weather before they try to sail round the Start. Dartmouth lies almost due north, and
the coast-line between is very lovely, though it has not the impressiveness of the cliffs farther west. Slapton
Sands are over two miles long, and the hills stand back far enough from the shore to leave room for Slapton
Lea, a fresh-water lake, almost smothered with tall, feathery reeds and rushes in the summer, separated from
the sea by a barrier of pebbles. The line of these wooded hills is broken by three little valleys, and down each
one flows a brook that feeds the Lea. At the southern edge is Tor Cross, a handful of cottages under the
shadow of a cliff that shuts away the shore-line to the south. The long stretch of sands is delightful. They are
dotted all over with the glaucous leaves and brilliant flowers of the yellow-horned poppy, and bristling blue
viper's bugloss, and on the inland edge there is a scattered border of the rest-harrow's pink butterfly blossoms.
The short turf beyond is sprinkled with the little white bladder campion and thrift and many other flowers.
At the northern end of the sands the road turns inland, and presently comes to Blackpool, very small, but one
of the most perfect of miniature bays. The cliffs are 'of various colours and very lustrous,' and almost on the
brink the road winds its way amongst woods of firs and pines that seem to breathe out a pecu[Pg 152]liarly
spice-like sweetness. When I saw it the sea was like molten silver, for the sunlight poured on it from beyond
clouds, and the sun itself was not to be seen. But though this bay looks as if it had fallen from a poet's dream,
In Queen Mary's reign the secret landing of doubtful characters was a danger that had to be diligently guarded
against, and the Lords of the Council received an agitated letter from Sir John St Leger on this subject just
after the flight of Sir Peter Carew. Sir Peter had a castle and many friends at Dartmouth, and Sir John quotes
him as often having said that if he were the King's enemy he could take 'Dartmouth Castle' and 'burne the
Towne with fewer than a hundred persons and lett ynto the haven suche as pleased hym. I, also, am
creadeably informed the way howe he should be able to do so. That within a myle, or les, of the said Towne,
there is a very good open place called Black poole, for the queene's enemyes to lande, and invade, and from
thense may come to the saide towne from the back side.'
But when Queen Elizabeth came to the throne, and Sir Peter was reinstated and held in great honour, the coast
was still far from safe, and there is a letter written by the Queen in 1564 to her 'Right Trustie and wel-beloved'
Sir Peter, commissioning him to get ready and arm two ships, that, as the 'cost of Devonshyre and Cornwall is
by reput much harted with pyrattes and Rovers,' so he should repress and, as far as possible, capture them.
Twenty-four years later a far more serious danger threatened, and the preparations against the Spanish
Armada were very elaborate. Masses of the most stringent orders are still preserved amongst the House of
Lords manuscripts, and to quote a few will give an idea of their nature and scope.
On July 11, 1588, it was ordered: 'That all persons of what[Pg 153] degree soever ... whose armour and
furniture shall not be found serviceable, for the first offence shall be put into the stocks one whole day,
publicly; and for the second offence to the gaol for ten days' etc. Careful instructions are sent as to the choice
of watchmen for the beacons and their duties; and a brief note refers to a letter written by the Council to Sir
Walter Raleigh, then Warden of the Stannaries, demanding the muster-rolls of the tinners, both horse and foot,
'who poured to war' as well from Dartmoor's as from 'Mendip's sunless caves.'
After the Armada had been defeated, there were fears of another Spanish invasion, and in January, 1595-96,
news came to the Deputy-Lieutenants and Justices of the Peace of Devon that 'The Queen has found it
convenient to have her navy and certain companies of Soldiers for land-service in readiness to be victualled'
with all possible speed 'for her service ... 400 quarters of wheat, 200 oxen, and 200 flitches of bacon are
required from Devonshire.'
There are notices, too, respecting such gentlemen as 'have been charged with light horses and petronels,' and
of the particular divisions of coast apportioned to each. For instance, in a certificate dated June 25, 1596, it is
stated that 'Mr Seymour's colonelship reacheth from Plymouth to Dartmouth. Mr Cary's from Dartmouth to
Exmouth. Sir Thomas Dennis from Exmouth to Axmouth.' And, going into particulars: 'For Salcomb, Mr
William Courtenay with the assistance of the constable and other officers there.... Long Sands [Slapton] and
Black pool to be defended by Mr Ameredith and Mr Roope.' The notice continues to give an exact list of the
places next one another along the coast, the names of the officers and numbers of men appointed to defend
each.
In spite of all that was done, in the summer of 1598 the Lords of the Council were dissatisfied, and wrote to
the Lord-Lieutenant to complain of 'the number of horse, which we think to be very few in that country in
regard to the largeness and wealth of the same.' But the people in the county looked at the matter in a different
light, and in the following April, at a meeting in Exeter, it was[Pg 154] resolved that a letter should be written
to the Lords of the Council to convey 'the desire of the country' to be freed from a certain 'contribution'
wherewith they find themselves much burdened and grieved in respect of the manifold impositions daily
coming upon them.'
'June 23, Greenwich.—The composition money for Devonshire, though the whole amounts but to £113
6s. 8d., remains partly unpaid; we have therefore sent down a messenger to bring before us all those who
remain in arrear.'
Fortunately, the period of acute alarm had now passed away, and the train-bands were dismissed, so that the
burden of levying contributions must for a while have been lightened.
[Pg 155]
CHAPTER IX 103
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Devon, Its Moorlands, Streams and Coasts, by Rosalind Northcote
No one who has not studied the history of the Three Towns can realize how keenly Plymouth has been
affected by every declaration of war or peace that this country has known—at latest, since the reign of
Edward I—nor how vividly its victories and disasters have been brought home to the people. The
number of fleets that have returned to this port in triumph, or sometimes in humiliation, and the succession of
ever-famous expeditions that have sailed from the Sound, must continually have carried their thoughts across
the seas, and prevented petty local affairs from bounding their horizon. The old chronicles seem to show that
stirring events perpetually followed each other at short[Pg 156] intervals, and when no great expedition was
occupying men's minds, there were usually plenty of adventurous spirits to provide
excitement—privateers, such as those who took service with the Prince of Condé, and searched the
Channel for Roman Catholic ships, and others, ready for 'semi-piratical ventures.' There were also moments
when Plymouth was the victim, and in dread watched for the Turkish and Algerine pirates who were known to
be hovering near, and were making raids in the neighbourhood.
Plymouth seems to keep a peculiarly strong hold on the affections of her sons, no matter how far or wide they
wander, and it is said that the city 'has given its name to more towns than any other town or city in the world.
There are seventeen Aberdeens outside Scotland. There are twenty-nine Londons, but forty Plymouths.'
From the Hoe, one point after another that catches the eye suggests a fresh train of ideas. To the east is Sutton
Pool, with its coasting vessels and fishing-boats; south, across the Cattewater, lies Mount Batten, whose round
tower recalls the long and resolute defence of the town in the Civil War. Still farther south are the high
grounds of Plymstock and Bovisand, with their modern fortifications; to the north stretches the town and far
in the distance the heights of Dartmoor; and to the south-west, over the Cornish border, lies beautiful Mount
Edgcumbe, which 'so affected the Duke of Medina-Sidonia' Fuller tells us,'(though but beholding it at a
distance from the Sea), that he resolved it for his own possession in the partage of this kingdom (blame him
not if choosing best for himself), which they had preconquered in their hopes and expectation.' Mr Norway
sketches the view in rapid touches: 'The Sound lies veiled in a thin blue mist, behind which a hot sun beats,
scattering it gradually with the aid of a stiff breeze off the land. But it hangs around Mount Edgcumbe on the
right, where the grey towers of the mansion stand in shadow among dark woods, while on the summit of the
hill above the green fields catch the sunlight. A little lower, Drake's Island lies impalpable and dim amid the
mist which sweeps so softly round the forts and the green grassy slopes as to touch it all with[Pg 157] mystery
one moment, while the next it is bright again with sunlight, sparkling amid the dazzling sea. Within the
breakwater the sea is alive with craft.'
The little island in the Sound has been transferred from patron to patron. Originally called after St Michael, to
whom its chapel was dedicated, the name was changed to that of St Nicholas, the patron saint of mariners, and
eventually the island was renamed in honour of Plymouth's greatest hero. The chapel had been destroyed
before Drake's day at the bidding of the Privy Council, and fortifications were reluctantly built upon it by the
Mayor and Corporation, the Council 'mervelinge of their unwillingnesse to proceede in the fortefynge of St
Michaell's Chapele to be made a Bulwarke.'
Plymouth is not rich in old buildings. The Citadel was rebuilt in the reign of Charles II, and the new Guildhall
is little over thirty years old. St Andrew's, a large Perpendicular building with a fine tower, is the only old
church, but it stands on the site of a much older one—the church of the Augustinians of Plympton
Priory.
Really, neither Stonehouse nor Devonport has any history. In the reign of Henry III, Stonehouse consisted of
the dwelling of Joel de Stonehouse, who at that time owned the manor, and it is only comparatively lately,
since it has been transformed into a huge naval storehouse, and the great Marine Barracks have been built, that
it has become of importance.
The very early history of Plymouth is not specially interesting to anyone who cares over-much for sober fact;
but looking at it in the generous spirit of the ancient chroniclers, and not stickling over probabilities, the story
of the first great event in Plymouth is almost as fine as the traditions of Totnes itself. Giants, we all know,
flourished in Cornwall, and soon after the arrival of the Trojans—about 1200 B.C.—they made a
furious onslaught upon[Pg 158] the invaders, but were defeated after a desperate battle. The crowning struggle
between Goemagot (the name afterwards turned into Gogmagog), chief of the giants, and Corinæus the
Trojan, took place in Plymouth Hoe, as Drayton's vigorous lines declare:
In the Domesday Book Plymouth appears as the Manor of Sutton, and this was later on divided into three
separate portions—Sutton Valletort or Vautier, Sutton Prior, and Sutton Raf. The village of Sutton
Valletort was 'the germ of ancient Plymouth.' Sutton was given by Henry I to Reginald de Valletort, who
bestowed lavish gifts on the monastery at Plympton; and as his example was followed by his successors, the
title of the second portion of the manor is easily accounted for. The whole place was dominated by the
Valletorts and the Priors, but the power of the monks increased steadily, till, at an inquisition held in 1281, 'it
was presented that the Ville of Sutton belonged to the Prior of Plympton, with assize of bread and beer, and
this right was allowed.' Sutton was now becoming a flourishing town, and some years later the King made
inquiries about his property in it, for the burgesses had petitioned that some waste land might be granted them
at a yearly rent. To this 'the Prior and the Valletorts declared that the town was wholly theirs, and none of the
King's,' and the dispute was followed by a series of efforts, on the part of the townspeople, to free themselves
from the rule of the Priors—efforts which succeeded each other, at no long intervals, through the next
hundred and twenty years.[Pg 159]
As time went on, the Crown gradually granted rights to the burgesses, and increased their responsibilities, till
in 1439 an Act of Parliament was passed incorporating the three Suttons as a free borough, with one Mayor,
and the manorial rights of the Priory were ceded to the Mayor and Corporation, who paid to the Priory a fixed
yearly sum in compensation. The name Plymouth, which had been used in speaking of the port, was now
formally adopted for the whole town.
From the 'mene thing, as an inhabitation for Fischars,' that Leland says it was in the reign of Henry II, the
town grew rapidly, and before the end of the thirteenth century it was represented in Parliament. In 1287, for
the first time on record, the splendid harbour was officially recognized as a grand rendezvous, and three
hundred and twenty-five vessels gathered here before sailing for Guienne under the command of the King's
brother. Half a century later, orders were sent that men and ships should be collected at Plymouth to escort
Princess Johanna, the King's daughter, to Gascony, and escorts for various Princes had to be provided on
several occasions. The Black Prince was kept by contrary winds in the port for forty days, when he was on his
way to France to fight the 'glorious battell at Poictiers.' In the early part of the fifteenth century Plymouth
suffered severely from the attacks of the French and Bretons, and in 1403 the Bretons, under the Sieur du
Chastel, burned six hundred houses in the part since called Briton Side. The name became gradually
transformed into 'Burton,' but the memory of the raid survived so far, Mr Worth tells us, as to enable the boys
who lived in the Old Town to taunt the 'Burton boys' during the wars with France, by reminding them of the
harm that the French had done to their quarter.
On Freedom Day, a 'local Saturnalia kept as such from the earliest times,' one of the features was the fighting
between the Old Town and Burton boys for a barrel of beer, provided by the Mayor. Long after this custom
had been dropped, the recollection of it was revived by the sign of a public-house, the Burton Boys, though
eventually the owner changed the sign to that[Pg 160] of the Black Lion, as he 'wished for some more
peaceful name'!
Plymouth does not seem to have been much affected by the Wars of the Roses, but Henry VII, as Earl of
Richmond, 'while he houered upon the coast,' came ashore at Cawsand, and here 'by stealth refreshed
himselfe; but being advertised of streight watch, kept for his surprising at Plymouth, he richly rewarded his
hoste, hyed speedily a ship boord, and escaped happily to a better fortune.'
The fisheries of the port are old and important. The earliest grant now to be traced, made by Reginald de
Valletort to Plympton Priory, was that of all his fishing rights in Tamar and Lynher—a privilege which
Mr Worth thinks was probably bestowed 'not long after the manor passed into the hands of the Valletort
family.' In 1384 Parliament decreed that all fish caught in the waters of Sutton, Plymouth, and Tamar should
be displayed for sale in Plymouth and Aish [Saltash] only, which sounds as if Plymouth were already jealous
of other fish-markets, as was certainly the case later on. During parts of the sixteenth century the industry
flagged, and in Henry VIII's reign a royal proclamation ordered abstinence from flesh on Saturdays as well as
Fridays, with the frank explanation that this was 'not only for health and discipline, but for the benefit of the
Commonwealth, and profit of the fishing trade.' In Queen Elizabeth's reign matters were still worse, for the
eating of fish had now come to be a badge of religious opinions, and '"to detest fish" in all shapes and forms
had become a note of Protestantism.'
And not only had the demand for fish lessened, but the fisheries had fallen into the hands of foreigners. The
Yarmouth waters were 'occupied by Flemings and Frenchmen,' 'the narrow seas by the French,' 'the western
fishing for hake and pilchard by a great navy of French within kenning of the English shores,' and Scots and
Spaniards fished other parts of the coasts. Cecil, who was anxious for greater reasons, to find 'means to
encourage mariners,' set to work to revive the English fishing-trade, and with great difficulty succeeded in
carrying a Bill through the House of[Pg 161] Commons, making 'the eating of flesh on Fridays and Saturdays
a misdemeanour, punishable by a fine of three pounds or three months' imprisonment, and as if this was not
enough, adding Wednesday as a subsidiary half-fish day.'
About this time Plymouth tried to rid itself of at least one branch of foreign competition by appealing to the
Privy Council to forbid 'the exportation of pilchards, save in ships of Devon and Cornwall, because "divers
ships and mariners lye idle without employment within our harbour," while foreign ships were continually
employed.' Pilchards were a very important item, and many regulations were made in reference to them. One
order, dated 1565-66, gives a good example of Plymouth's views of free trade. It ran: 'That no alien should
lade or buy fresh pilchards above the number of 1,000 in a day; no man ... being free to buy or sell above
5,000, unless the fish "were in danger of perishing."' The business of curing fish was a large one and very
jealously guarded. At the British Museum, among the Lansdowne manuscripts, is a letter to Lord Burghley
from Mr Richard Browne, showing that this subject was sometimes the source of friction between the citizens
themselves. It begins:
It was the outburst of ventures of every description, with all their different aims—ventures of soldiers,
explorers, privateers, and merchants—in the reign of Queen Elizabeth that brought Plymouth to its
greatest glory. In the interval between William Hawkins' first voyage to the South Seas—about
1528—and 1601, when Captain William Parker sailed to Panama and took Porto Bello, Plymouth was
the starting-point of forty voyages, every one of which is historical. Mr Worth gives the exact date of each,
and the names of the commanders. 'Here,' says Carew, 'mostly have the troops of adventurers made their
Rendezvous for attempting new discoueries or inhabitances.' And Westcote, in the reign of James I, writes:
'Whatever show it makes in description, it is far larger in fame, and known to the farthest and most remote
parts of the world.' In Camden's opinion, this great reputation was won 'less by the convenience of the
harbour, as for the valour and worth of the Inhabitants,' and the worthies of Plymouth are indeed beyond
number. Among the comparatively few whose names have not been lost, there stands out conspicuously Sir
William Wilford, who after a French invasion returned the charge by swooping down on Brittany, where he
'made them to pay, besides costs and charges, more than sixfold damages.' And Captain Cocke, a 'Cock of the
Game indeed,' according to Fuller; 'A Volanteer in his own ship,' he went out against the Armada, and 'lost his
life to save his Queen and Countrey.' Then there is Cockrem, who sailed with William Hawkins, and was left
alone among the Brazilians as a hostage for one of the 'Savage Kings' Hawkins brought back with
him—but, as Mr Norway says, 'Plymouth has too many heroes; in the crowd the faces of all but one or
two are blurred.'
For three generations the Hawkinses were 'the master spirits' of Plymouth, and of them all Sir John Hawkins
was the most famous. His character was a curious medley of incongruous[Pg 163] features, bluff
straightforwardness and crooked diplomacy, faithful affection—such as his bold schemes to help his
captured comrades proved—balanced by a hard indifference that ignored the misery of the wretched
negroes he sold to West Indian planters. Pluck and daring were the only qualities he showed consistently from
first to last. His zeal in slave-hunting, repulsive to us, is excused by Froude on the ground that 'negro slavery
in theory was an invention of philanthropy.' Labourers were a necessity for the Spanish colonist, 'the proud
and melancholy Indian pined like an eagle in captivity, refused to accept his servitude, and died; the more
tractable negro would domesticate like the horse or the ass.' Though Hawkins met with much good as well as
bad luck, he was one of those who have need to remember that fate does not shower favours on all men, but 'if
a man look sharply and attentively, he shall see Fortune; for though she be blind, yet she is not invisible,' and
his success was to a very great extent due to his stout heart and quick discernment. These qualities stood him
in good stead at San Juan de Ulloa, when his few ships were overwhelmed by a much larger fleet. 'The name
of Hawkins was so terrible that the Spaniards dared not give him warning that he was to be attacked;' but
mounted their batteries in the dark, and from land and sea 'every gun which could be brought to bear' opened
upon the unprepared English. After sinking two Spanish ships and setting a third on fire, Hawkins saw that
flight was their only chance, and, gathering his men together in two small tenders, he 'crawled out under the
fire of the mole and gained the open sea.' The position of affairs was dispiriting in the extreme. Many men and
three good ships were lost, besides treasure worth more than a million pounds, that had been won, by running
'When the Minion stood off,' says Hortop, who wrote the tale[Pg 164] on his return to England, 'our generall
courageously cheered up his soldiers and gunners, and called to Samuel his page for a cup of beer, who
brought it to him in a silver cup. And he, drinking to all the men, willed the gunners to stand to their ordnance
lustily like men. He had no sooner set the cup out of his hand, but a demi-culverin shot struck away the cup
and a cooper's plane that stood by the mainmast and ran out on the other side of the ship, which nothing
dismayed our generall, for he ceased not to encourage us, saying, "Fear nothing: for God who hath preserved
me from this shot will also deliver us from these traitors and villains."'
Hawkins is chiefly known by his voyages and enterprises, and all that he did for his country by monotonous
hard work is not so often remembered. For twenty-one years he 'toiled terribly' as Treasurer of the Queen's
Marine Causes and Comptroller of the Navy, and when the ships were sent out to meet the Armada they were
'in such condition, hull, rigging, spars, and running rope, that they had no match in the world either for speed,
safety, or endurance.'
There is no space here to speak of Sir John's father, 'the pioneer of English adventure in the South Seas,' who
made three famous voyages to Brazil, and laid a good foundation for future traffic in that he 'behaved wisely'
to the natives; nor to do more than glance at the ventures of Sir John's son, Sir Richard Hawkins, the
'Complete Seaman,' whose 'high-spirited actions, had they been all duly recorded (as pity it is, they were not),'
says Prince, 'would have made a large volume in themselves.' Sir Richard rediscovered the Falkland Isles, and
passed the Straits of Magellan. His fleet was reduced to a single vessel, and he had taken five richly laden
ships, when 'the King of Spain's vice-roy in those parts' sent 'eight ships to intercept him. Sir Richard Hawkins
held the fight for three days, with but three score and fifteen men and boys, against thirteen hundred of the
enemy, and those the choice of Peru.' In the end, being 'dangerously wounded in six several places,' and with
many of his crew killed or wounded, he was forced to surrender upon 'honourable articles of life and liberty,'
which, however, were not observed, and he was sent to[Pg 165] Spain, where for long years he remained a
prisoner. Sir Richard left an account of his 'Voyage to the South Sea'—a 'record of misfortune, but of
misfortune which did no dishonour to him who sank under it; and there is a melancholy dignity in the style in
which Hawkins tells his story, which seems to say that ... he respects himself still for the heart with which he
endured a shame which would have broken a smaller man.' A second William Hawkins, Sir John's brother,
commanded a Huguenot vessel under the commission of the Prince of Condé; and yet another William of a
younger generation went as ambassador of the East India Company to the Great Mogul, and succeeded in
setting up a trading station at Surat.
Every Plymouth hero, however, is eclipsed by Sir Francis Drake, who is always counted their chief, though he
was born near Tavistock. 'Could my pen as ably describe his worth as my heart prompteth to it, I would make
this day-star appear at noon-day as doth the full moon at midnight,' is Risdon's ecstatic exclamation.
When all his grand qualities and successes have been contemplated, it is still rather surprising to find the
extraordinary impression he created in that epoch of heroic enterprise. The stories of magic that have clustered
round his name witness to his wonderful personality, for naturally they are much more significant than those
that have been woven around the older heroes of a more superstitious, less civilized age. These legends must
have been handed down to generation after generation, for, writing about 1835, Mrs Bray mentions that the
peasantry near Tavistock still talked of the 'old warrior,' as they called him. To choose one or two at random,
there is the story that once, after he had been away for a very long time, his wife supposed him to be dead, and
thought that she was free to marry again. A spirit whispered the news to Sir Francis, who was at the
Antipodes. At once he fired a great cannon-ball, 'so truly aimed that it shot up right through the globe, forced
When the citizens of Plymouth wanted a more abundant supply of water, they appealed to Drake, and he was
ready to help them. 'So he called for his horse, mounted, rode to Dartmoor, and hunted about till he found a
very fine spring. Having fixed on one that would suit his purpose, he gave a smart lash to his horse's side,
pronouncing as he did so some magical words, when off went the animal as fast as he could gallop, and the
stream followed his heels all the way into the town.' It is not possible here to pick more legends from the
group, excepting one which was certainly told among the people a few years ago. Drake promised, they said,
that if ever the country were hard pressed by any foe, and his countrymen should call him by striking his
drum, he would hear them, and come back and scatter the enemy.
Of Drake it has been said that 'his Puritanism went hand-in-hand with his love of adventure. 'To sell negroes
to the planters, to kill Spaniards, to sack gold-ships, was in the young seaman's mind the work of "the elect of
God"'—a belief that no doubt partly explains how the most desperate circumstances seemed unable to
teach him the meaning of fear. It is easy to understand how a leader who combined such glorious courage with
great unselfishness could take his men anywhere. On arriving off the coast, on his first independent voyage to
America, he found this encouraging greeting—'a plate of lead, fastened to a very great tree,' engraved
with a message which began:
'Captain Drake,
'If you fortune to come into this port, make haste away, for the Spaniards which you had with you here last
year have betrayed this place.'
[Pg 167]
The message was signed by Captain Garret of Plymouth. Quite undismayed by the warning, Drake led his
company to Nombre de Dios, which they successfully attacked. Here he received a dangerous wound; though
he valiantly concealed it a long time, knowing if the general's heart stoops, the men's will fall, and that if so
bright an opportunity once setteth, it seldom riseth again.' And he went forward till 'at the public treasury they
had discovered ... bars of silver, piled up against the wall, seventy foot in length, ten in breadth, and twelve in
height ... withal telling them, "That he had brought them to the mouth of the treasury of the world."' But
before much could be done his strength failed and he fainted, when his followers became aware of the wound
that he had not mentioned, but from which he was losing 'so much blood as filled his very footsteps in the
sands.' They were at once anxious to take him back to his ship; Drake, on recovering consciousness, being the
only man who wished them to persevere in their search for gold and jewels. But his men 'added force to their
entreaties, and so carried him to his pinnace.'
As soon as he was able, Drake started on fresh enterprises with varying success, and after several months had
passed on returning laden with treasure to the point on the coast at which he expected to meet his pinnaces, to
his great dismay he found none, but saw seven Spanish ships lying in the distance. The company instantly fell
into despair, convinced that their pinnaces had been taken and the crews tortured, and that they themselves
were left alone in the midst of the enemy's country, from which they could not escape. Drake's self-possession
alone was unshaken, and, after casting about for some way of reaching safety, he noticed trees floating slowly
down the river. With 'the most confident and cheerful expression, he asked: "Who would accompany him to
An incident that happened when Drake was taking leave of some friendly negroes showed his generous
disposition. 'Pedro, ... an eminent person among the Symerons, and one who had been greatly serviceable to
Captain Drake, had a great mind to a rich cymeter the captain had, but was unwilling to ask it, lest he should
prize it also: which known, the captain freely presented it to him. Who being willing to make a grateful return,
desired him to accept of four wedges of gold, as a pledge of his thanks: whose importunity not being able to
avoid, Captain Drake received them courteously, but threw them into the common stock, saying, "That it was
just that those who bore part of the charge with him, in setting him to sea, should likewise enjoy their full
proportion of the advantage at his return."'
All Drake's voyages and adventures, however, did not prevent him from keeping in touch with Plymouth and
local interests. In 1581 he was Mayor; for four years he represented the borough in Parliament, and he
certainly did bring the citizens water from Dartmoor, though at greater pains than in the fashion described in
the legend. In memory of this great service there is still an annual ceremony called the Fishing Feast. The
Mayor and Corporation inspect the leat by which the water is brought to Plymouth, attended by a huge crowd
of spectators, and afterwards two toasts are drunk—one in water, to 'The pious memory of Sir Francis
Drake,' and the other in wine—'May the descendants of him who brought us water never want wine.'
Plymouth townsfolk had every reason to be glad when the Pelican sailed into the harbour after her voyage
round the world, for it was not only a national hero, but their own particular countryman and good friend, that
they hurried out to welcome.
Amongst 'Commendations by Principal Persons friendly to the Author or the Work' which preface a book
written by Sir Humphrey Gilbert, are some lines by Sir Francis which are very expressive of the views that
seem to have guided his life. The book, whose aim must have been to encourage the idea of settling in the[Pg
169] new colony, is called 'A true Report of the late Discoveries and Possession taken in the Right of the
Crowne of Englande, of the New found Landes.' I do not quote the whole poem:
'Who seekes by gaine and wealth to advance his house and blood,
Whose care is great, whose toile no less, whose hope is all for good,
If anie one there bee that covettes such a trade,
Lo heere the plot for commonwealth, and private gaine is made.
'He that for vertue's sake will venture farre and neere,
Whose zeale is strong, whose practize trueth, whose faith is void of feare,
If any such there bee, inflamed with holie care,
'Heere may hee finde a readie meane his purpose to declare,
So that for each degree this Treatise dooth unfolde
The path to fame, the proofe of zeale, and way to purchase golde.'
Drake's audacity was never more amazing than in the expedition of 1587, when he sailed along the Spanish
and Portuguese coast, plundering and burning the ships in their own harbours. His fearlessness filled the
Spaniards with a very generous admiration. 'So praised was Drake for his valour of them, that were it not that
he was a Lutheran, they said, there was not the like man in the world.' Once, when the King invited a lady of
the Court to go in his barge on a lake near Madrid, 'the lady said she dared not trust herself in the water even
with his Majesty, lest Sir Francis Drake should have her.' His name passed even into nursery songs, and one
of them has been translated as follows:
Drake's Island,
Plymouth Sound
In 1595 Sir Francis and Sir John Hawkins started on that ill-starred expedition to the West Indies, from which
neither returned. Sir Francis died, and was buried at sea.
'The waves became his winding-sheet, the waters were his tomb;
But, for his fame, the ocean sea was not sufficient room.'
The translation of what Prince calls an 'ingenuous epigram' written in Latin is beneath his portrait in the
Guildhall:
In 1620 there came into Plymouth Harbour that little band of Puritans known to posterity as the Pilgrim
Fathers. For the sake of liberty of conscience they had been living for some years at Leyden, and they had
now resolved to take up a new life in America. The start was not auspicious, for after leaving Southampton
they were forced to put into Dartmouth for repairs, and were afterwards obliged to stop at Plymouth, where
the Speedwell was declared to be unseaworthy. Serious alterations of their plans had to be made, but at last,
'all troubles being blown over,' the travellers were 'compacted together in the one ship,' and on September 6,
1620, 'thirteen years after the first colonization of Virginia, two months before the concession of the grand
charter of Plymouth, without any warrant from the sovereign of England,[Pg 172] without any useful charter
from a corporate body, the passengers in the Mayflower set sail for a New World.'
'Most despair here,' wrote Lord Holland briefly, and 'the distress was so acute that the Mayor raised the
standard of revolt. The losses of the town had been calamitous—first at the hands of pirates, next by
collapse of trade, and finally by the billeting.'
No doubt Plymouth's consistent hostility to the King's party throughout the war is in part explained by the
results of this wretched state of affairs, and by the persecution of their Vice-Admiral, the heroic member for St
Germans, Sir John Eliot.
As soon as the war broke out, Plymouth's sympathies were plainly shown, and before long Sir Ralph Hopton
made an attack on the town. On December 1, 1642, Royalists and Parliamentarians 'stood upon the Lary for
the space of three hours' facing one another, but each too cautious to make the first move and leave a point of
vantage. The siege was seriously undertaken three months later, when Hopton concentrated all his forces upon
the town. As Plymouth could always be supplied by sea, there was no chance of its being starved into
submission, and already it was gravely doubted whether the town would ever be taken. By the beginning of
July nearly all the Royalist forces had been drawn off, and Plymouth set to work with great energy to
strengthen the defences by building a new wall. Tradition says that even women and children took a share in
the work. In August an attack was made by Colonel Digby, but the town was at this time threatened by a
greater danger—the treachery of Sir Alexander Carew, commander of the Fort and of Drake's Island.
'He was proved an Apostate,' says a contemporary account, 'and went about to betray that island and the town
of Plymouth into the hands of Cornish cavaliers, but was prevented by the fidelity of his honest soldiers.' Sir
Alexander was arrested by order of the Mayor, and sent to London, where eventually he was beheaded.
Prince Maurice marched on the town after he had taken Dartmouth, and there followed three weeks of assaults
and skirmishes, much hard fighting, and many desperate struggles. In the end the besiegers succeeded in
capturing Mount Stamford, a fort on the south of the Cattewater, 'the first and only advantage gained by the
Royalists during the protracted and often revived siege.' An[Pg 174] invitation to surrender on lenient
conditions made the townspeople waver, but the Governor, Colonel Wardlaw, stood firm. All were ordered to
take a solemn vow and covenant, which pledged each one to take part in the defence 'to the utmost of my
power.' And the town, hitherto 'divided and heartless in its defence, now grew to be united.'
Not long afterwards the siege was raised for a time. The poor people had suffered much from the scarcity of
food, though once they had been cheered by a wonderful supply. 'There came an infinite number of pilchards
into the harbour within the Barbican, which the people took up with great ease in baskets, which did not only
refresh them for the present, but a great deal more were taken, preserved and salted, whereby the poor got
much money.' It was not only by endurance that the women had shown their courage, for in the midst of some
of the engagements they had brought out provisions 'for the refreshing of our soldiers, though many women
were shot through the clothes.'
Assaults, occasional sorties, and intervals of comparative peace followed one another till, in September 1644,
the King appeared in person before the town, and tried first by force of arms and then by offering very
indulgent terms to bring about its surrender. The answer to the King was not sent till the day after his
summons had been received, but 'if not speedy, it was decided—"Never."' A second futile assault was
made by the Royalists, and then the King and Prince Maurice with their troops, turned their backs on
Plymouth. For four months longer the blockade was continued, and at the end of that time Sir Richard
Grenville made a very[Pg 175] determined effort, attacking at four points simultaneously. A desperate
struggle ensued in which he gained nothing and lost three hundred men killed, and many hundreds wounded.
Another twelve months passed without any serious attempt to storm the town, and in January, 1646, on
Fairfax's advance upon Dartmouth the siege was finally raised, the Royalists marching away in such haste that
guns, arms, and ammunition were left behind.
Charles II paid several visits to the town, and on one occasion he attended the service at St Andrew's Church
where a state canopy and throne had been prepared for him and where sufferers were brought to him to be
'touched for the king's evil.' A ridiculous incident marked another visit. The Mayor, rather agitated by the
honour of entertaining the King, and anxious to find the best means of giving him pleasure, had the happy
inspiration of inviting His Majesty to look at the outworks that had protected Plymouth 'in the time of the late
war.' The King's reply was 'on a sudden' to walk to the landing-steps, get into his pinnace, and start for Mount
Edgcumbe. The Mayor in great dismay, followed by the Aldermen, who had come in their robes in state to
attend on the King, hurried down to the water's edge and taking possession of a wherry, they started off as fast
as they could in pursuit. It is satisfactory to know that by the time they succeeded in catching up the King he
had quite recovered his usual good-humour.
Plymouth was to some degree affected by the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, for it had always been a
refuge for the Huguenots—the Rochellers, as they are often called in sixteenth-century
chronicles—and now many of them fled to this shelter. The first party of about fifty people crossed the
Channel in an open boat, and their flight was followed by a great number of refugees. These settled in the
town, and many of their descendants married English people, and the little colony became absorbed into the
general population. A curious glimpse of the original refugees is given in a letter written in 1762 by Mr
Pentecost Barker, of Plymouth, to the Rev. Samuel Merivale. He says: 'Those, of whom I remember many
scores, who came from France in 1685-6,[Pg 176] etc., are mostly dead, and their offspring are more English
than French, and will go to the English Church, though some few may come to us. What an alteration Time
makes! There was ... a French Calvinist Church and a Church of England French Church here, besides a
Church at Stonehouse. Many women in wooden shoes—very poor, but very industrious—living
on limpets, snails, garlick, and mushrooms.'
Several times the town was threatened by a French invasion and badly scared, but the greatest fear was felt in
1779, when for four days the united French and Spanish fleets lay off the Sound. Plymouth had every reason
to be afraid; for, had the enemy but known it, there were at that moment but two small armed vessels to
defend the harbour. Crowds of women and children left the town in haste and confusion, thousands of
country-people tramped to the coast to have a look at the enemy. A few private persons made single-handed
efforts to strengthen the defences, and a little later 'the bustle was again revived by the hourly arrival of
troops, baggage, waggons, and powder.'
It is said that in Totnes the saying, 'Going to Paignton to meet the French,' is still a synonym for meeting
trouble halfway. Amongst endless stories of fears and flights, there is one of delightful imperturbability:
'One old sailor ... had his wits about him, when his daughter shook him out of a deep sleep with the news that
the French had landed. Rubbing his eyes, he told her to go and look at the weathercock. She came back,
saying the wind was from the north. "I thought so," said he, "and so it was yesterday. The French can't land
with this wind." And so the ancient mariner turned round and went to sleep again.'
Alarms, suspense, and occasional ecstasies of triumph followed one another till the final defeat of Napoleon.
For several days the Bellerophon actually lay in Plymouth Harbour, to the intense excitement of the
townspeople, who circled round the ship as closely as might be in the hope of catching a glimpse of the
captive Emperor.
To the north-east of Plymouth lies Saltram, the great house and wide, beautiful grounds that belong to Lord
Morley. Saltram is in the parish of Plympton St Mary, once celebrated for the large and important Priory
which for some time governed the affairs of Plymouth. Plympton St Mary is neighbour to the[Pg 178] parish
of Plympton St Maurice and the little town of Plympton Erle. On the north of the town are the ruins of the
Norman castle built chiefly by Richard de Redvers, and razed to the ground in the reign of Stephen. It was
rebuilt not long afterwards. A fragment of a small keep is all that remains of the stonework, but the Normans'
castle was raised upon a fort that was standing when they arrived, and 'the earthworks of the conquered are
more enduring than the stone defences of the conqueror.' The mound on which the keep stands, and the banks
that enclose a base-court about seven hundred and ten feet long and three hundred and eighty feet wide, have
been little harmed or altered and are still in a very perfect condition; but the moat that once surrounded them
The father of Sir Joshua Reynolds was master of the Grammar School of Plympton Erle, and here the great
painter was born. In the crowded days of his middle life he gave a proof of his interest in his native town by
being its Mayor, and on his election presented the town with his own portrait painted by himself. The picture
was hung in the Guildhall, and Sir Joshua asked the Recorder of the borough to see that it was hung in a good
position. In his reply the Recorder paid a compliment whose full meaning he did not grasp. He explained that
'he had seen to this, and the portrait hung between old pictures of Ourry and Edgecumbe which serve as foils,
and set it off to great advantage. This letter greatly amused Sir Joshua, who knew that these old pictures were
early works of his own.'
[Pg 179]
CHAPTER X 116
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Devon, Its Moorlands, Streams and Coasts, by Rosalind Northcote
Among the rest a shepherd (though but young,
Yet hearten'd to his pipe), with all the skill
His few years could, began to fit his quill.
By Tavy's speedy stream he fed his flock,
Where when he sat to sport him on a rock,
The water-nymphs would often come unto him,
And for a dance with many gay gifts woo him.
Now posies of this flower, and then of that;
Now with fine shells, then with a rushy hat,
With coral or red stones brought from the deep
To make him bracelets, or to mark his sheep.'
W. Browne: Britannia's Pastorals.
Tavistock is a quiet little 'ancient borough,' which at the first glance from the hill to the north-west suggests
the early-Victorian word 'embowered,' for it looks as if the rudiments of the town had arisen in the midst of a
large wood. The town lies chiefly in a hollow, and the trees that cover the sides surround and encroach upon
the streets in the pleasantest way, and their foliage, the hills on every side, and the rushing Tavy through the
midst, give an un-[Pg 180]townlike air that is charming. But to imagine, from this rustic and very still look,
that the place lacked history, would be to make a great mistake. On the contrary, its history starts in such very
early days that only a few scattered relics remain to show the wave of human life that passed over the country.
Between A.D. 240 and the latter half of the sixth century, the Irish made many invasions, overran the South
and West of England, and settled colonies in parts of Devon and Cornwall, more especially along their
northern coasts. Mr Baring-Gould, in a most interesting paper, sketches out the various descents and
settlements, and traces them by their stone monuments and by the names of the Irish saints that they left in
churches and villages and holy wells. Some of the invaders established themselves near Tavistock, and tokens
of them have been found in the neighbourhood in the shape of three stones bearing inscriptions—one in
Ogham characters. The stones are now in the Vicarage garden. 'On one, which is over seven feet high, occurs
a name, probably of a Sept or tribe in Kerry, where several stones inscribed with the same name are found. On
the third are the words: "Dobunii Fabri fili Enabarri...." Dobun was a faber, or smith. In Celtic organizations
every tuatha, or tribe, had its chief smith.... Dobunii ... is the Latin for the genitive Douvinias, also a Kerry
name.... Here, then, we have written and engraven in stone for our learning the record of an Irish settlement
from Kerry in the neighbourhood of Tavistock.'
Mr Baring-Gould further mentions briefly the different tribes and peoples that have invaded and possessed
themselves of the land, to be in turn conquered by new-comers, and the eventual, amalgamation of races, and
quotes Professor Sullivan to the discomfiture of those who rhapsodize over the 'pure Celt' in Great Britain or
Ireland—for, after all, it was Irish colonists and conquerors who 'gave their name to Scotland, and at
one time occupied the coast of Wales and 'West Domnonia.'
Professor Sullivan writes: 'The Irish tenants of to-day are composed of the descendants of Firbolgs and other
British and[Pg 181] Belgic races; Milesians ... Gauls, Norwegians, Anglo-Saxons, Anglo-Normans, and
English.... This is a fact which should be remembered by those who theorize over the qualities of the "pure
Celt," whoever they may be.' There are many amateurs whose views would be less tedious if they could be
convinced by Professor Sullivan.
The memory of one Irish saint clung for centuries to Tavistock, for the abbey was dedicated jointly to St Mary
the Holy Virgin, and to St Rumon, an Irish missionary who came over to Cornwall. The abbey has
unfortunately been totally destroyed, and various buildings now stand on its site. The old chapter-house was
pulled down by a certain Saunders, 'of barbarous memory,' 'to make way for a modern house now called the
Bedford Hotel.' The refectory is used as a Unitarian chapel, and still keeps its fine pinnacled porch. A ruined
tower covered with ivy, called Betsy Grimbal's Tower (a young woman was supposed to have been murdered
The abbey had only stood for about thirty years, when a frightful blow fell: the Danes burst upon the country,
harrying it with fire and sword. They landed in Cornwall, and here Egbert hastened with his army and
defeated them at Hingston Down; but a great horde broke away, and crossing the border descended on
Tavistock, where the inhabitants in a body rose to meet them and a terrible battle was fought. Its deadly nature
is summed up with great directness in an old jingle:
Tavistock was a Benedictine monastery, over which forty abbots ruled in succession. Some of the later ones
were noted for their lack of discipline—even to the point of allowing the monks 'to affect the
fashionable costume of the times, adopting the secular buttoned hoods and beaked boots'; but the earlier
abbots were both pious and learned, and one of the earliest printing-presses set up in England was owned by
the abbey. The first statutes of the stannaries that ever were printed were printed here: a 'Confirmation of the
Charter perteynynge to all the tynners wythyn the coūty of Devonshyre wyth their Statutes also made at
Crockeryntorre by the whole assēt and cōset of al the sayd tynners'—of the date 1510. In
very early days the abbots were 'lessees of the Devonshire stannaries ... and controllers of the issues of royal
mines in Devon and part of Cornwall,' says Dr. Oliver.
At the Dissolution the King presented the abbey and most of its estates to the Earl of Bedford. The first trace
of this great family in Devonshire that I have been able to find is a lawsuit in regard to certain lands, between
John Russell and Rohesia his wife and Henry de Pomeroy, which took place in the reign of King John. But
there was a much closer connection with the county in later days. Unfortunately, space makes it impossible to
touch on more than a few of the most striking events in the career of John Russell, first Earl of Bedford, to
whom the Abbey was granted.
On January 11, 1506, the Archduke Philip of Austria was driven by a violent storm to take shelter at
Weymouth, where Sir Thomas Trenchard, Governor of the Coast, hurried to receive him, and to offer such
entertainment as he could provide. It so happened that there was staying with Sir Thomas a young cousin
lately returned from his travels, who combined great 'skill in[Pg 183] foreign languages ... with his sprightly
conversation and polite address.' The Archduke was enchanted to find someone better acquainted with his
speech and customs than the stay-at-home squires who surrounded him, and when he set out for Windsor he
would not leave Mr Russell behind. To the King the Archduke praised his protégé in glowing words, and he
was given a small post at Court. Nature had favoured him at the start, for he is said to have been of 'a moving
beauty that ... exacted a liking if not a love from all that saw him' and to this valuable gift was added that of a
'learned discourse and generous deportment.'
On the accession of Henry VIII, he won the good-will of the young King by the zeal with which he threw
himself into 'the dance, the Masque, the pagent, the tourney,' in which Henry himself delighted; and he soon
had a chance for distinguishing himself in serious matters. In 1513 he accompanied the King in his campaign
In 1517 Mr Russell was appointed Deputy-Governor of Tournay; in 1532 he was knighted after taking part in
a descent on the coast of Brittany, and in later years he rose to positions of great and greater importance.
When Henry was supporting the Constable de Bourbon against his Sovereign, Francis I, Sir John was
entrusted with the dangerous mission of conveying a huge sum of money through a country where many were
well affected to the French King.
One of his first steps was to leave his company at a town on the frontier with orders to spread the news that he
was ill, whilst he hastened without escort and with the money—Henry had promised the Duke de
Bourbon 100,000 crowns a month—to Geneva. Here he heard the comforting news that the Swiss and
Frenchmen were so certain of robbing him that they had already 'lotted[Pg 184] every of the captains his
portion of the said money.' With great speed and secrecy he caused it to be 'packed in bales, trussed with
baggage, as oats or old clothes, to make it bulky, and nicked with a merchant's mark.' As a further precaution
he begged the help of the Duke of Savoy, who eventually allowed muleteers in his service to hire mules as if
for his own use to take it across the mountains, and 'so bruit it to be carried as his stuff unto the Duchess his
wife.' Arrived at Chambéry, the secret of the bales was allowed to leak a very little, and Sir John, knowing
that there were 'divers ambushes and enterprises set for to attrap me,' set out again with his bales towards
Geneva. Out of sight of the town he altered his course for Mont Cenis. And this expedient was in itself a
blind, for two or three days before Sir John's departure the treasure had been sent very secretly on other mules
to Turin, where it arrived safely. He finishes his account with conscious simplicity: 'Which ways was
occasion, as I think the said enterprises to fail of their purpose.'
Sir John met with many very exciting adventures, of which perhaps the most interesting is one that happened
to him at Bologna, for here he was very skilfully rescued from an unpleasant position by the great Thomas
Cromwell, then a practically unknown soldier. Sir John was passing through the town, when he was very
treacherously stopped and surrounded in his hotel by the municipal authorities. Cromwell managed to
persuade them that he was a Neapolitan acquaintance of Sir John, and that if he might speak to him he would
be able to induce the knight to surrender himself into their hands. But what he actually did was to suggest to
Sir John that he should change clothes with a servant that Cromwell had brought with him, and in this
disguise he helped him to escape from the town.
When Cromwell came to England, it was Sir John who first commended him to Wolsey's notice.
In the reign of Charles I, William, Lord Russell (afterwards Earl of Bedford), and Pym, the great commoner,
were returned together as co-members for Tavistock; and when war was declared the Earl of Bedford sided
with the Parliament and was appointed[Pg 185] to raise the Devonshire Militia for them. He was not
personally hostile to the King but thought, like others, that if Charles saw the Parliament in arms against him,
he would realize that the nation was resolute in defence of its liberty. The Earl of Bedford, at the head of his
recruits, engaged the enemy near Sherborne Castle, and was victorious; and at the battle of Edge Hill he 'was
reported by Lord Wharton to have done extraordinary service.' Later he was among those most anxious for a
treaty of peace, but he suffered from holding too moderate views. In taking up arms against the King he had
offended the Queen too bitterly to be well received when he, in company with some other peers, went to the
Court at Oxford, and his sympathy with the King alienated him from the Parliament. Sincerely anxious for
peace, he soon saw the hopelessness of all efforts in that direction, and long before the struggle was over he
practically withdrew from public affairs.
Tavy Cleave
Tavistock's greatest glory, Sir Francis Drake, has already been spoken of; but among the lesser lights is a
Captain fully worthy to have sailed in the company of Queen Elizabeth's illustrious Captains, though he lived
in the less triumphant days of Charles I. Captain Richard Peeke, or Peke, or Pike (he signs himself Peeke in
his pamphlet, but in a private letter Dr. Meddus, a contemporary, refers to him as Pike), has left no account of
his career, only that of his great adventure in Spain.
The first attack was made on 'Cales' (Cadiz), and Peeke gives a vivid description of the hot and stubborn fight
that took place before the fort of Puntal surrendered. The whole army was then landed, but Peeke did not go
with them; 'for I was no Land Soldier, and therefore all that while kept aboard.' As the fate of the expedition
has nothing to do with his story, it is enough to say that the men got very much out of hand, the Commander,
in great alarm, hurriedly retreated, and, without attempting to follow up his victory on land, set sail in pursuit
of a Spanish fleet that he never came up with, and three weeks later returned in disgrace to England.
To return to Richard Peeke. After the army had all landed he thought that 'the late storms had beaten all the
Spaniards in' for a time, and that he would go on shore for a little diversion. Meeting some Englishmen
coming back to the ships, laden with 'Oranges and Lymons' which they had taken from some gardens not far
off, he set off to find some fruit for himself, the men assuring him that there was no danger. Less than a mile
away, however, he came, '(for all their talking of no danger), on Three Englishmen starke dead, being slayne,
lying in the way,' and another 'not fully dead.... I then resolved (and was about it) for Christian Charities sake,
and for Countries sake, to have carried him on my back to our Shippes, farre off though they lay.... But my
Peeke was again severely wounded while being led through the streets of Cadiz, but met with better treatment
in prison, though his forebodings were gloomy. And when he was soon afterwards sent for by the Governor to
Xeres, he went 'wondrous unwilling ... because I feared I should ther be put to Tortures.' On the day of trial he
was brought before a great assembly of nobles, 'my sword lying before them on the table. It was reached to
me; I tooke it and embraced it in mine arms, and with teares in my eyes kist the Pommel of it. He [the Duke of
Medina] then demanded how many men I had kild with that Weapon? I told him, if I had kild one, I had not
bene there now before that Princely Assembly, for when I had him at my foote, begging for mercy, I gave him
Life, yet he then very poorely did me a mischiefe. Then they asked Don John (my Prisoner) what Woundes I
gave him; He sayd, None: Upon this he was rebuked and told, that if upon our first Encounter, he had run me
through, it had been a faire and Noble Triumph; but so to wound me, being in the hands of others, they held it
Base.' Peake was now questioned as to the name of his ship, the Captain, and the number of cannon on board.
'I sayd, forty Peices. But the Lords, looking all this while on a Paper which they held in their hands, Duke
Medyna sayd, In their note there was but thirty-eight.' He afterwards found that in that paper they had every
detail about 'our Shippes, their Burden, Men ... as perfect as wee ourselves had them in England. Of what
strength (quoth another Duke) is the Fort of Plymouth? I answered, very Strong. What Ordnance in it? Fifty,
sayd I. That is not so, sayd he, there is but seuenteene. How many Soldiers are in the Fort? I answered, Two
hundred: That is not so (quoth a Conde), there is but twenty.
'Marquesse Alquenezes asked me, of what strength the little[Pg 188] Island was before Plymouth. I told him, I
know not; Then (quoth he), wee doe.
'Is Plymouth a Walled Towne? Yes, my Lords. And a good Wall? Yes, say I, a very good Wall: True, sayd a
Duke, to leape ouer with a Staffe. And hath the Towne, sayd the Duke of Medyna, strong Gates? Yes. But,
quoth he, there were neither Wood nor Iron to those Gates, but two dayes before your Fleete came away.'
Among many other questions, they asked why 'in all this Brauery of the Fleete the English had not taken
Cales as well as Puntal?' To which Peeke, who must have often asked this question of himself, replied boldly
that 'the Lord Generall ... was loath to rob an Almeshouse, hauing a better Market to goe to. Cales, I told
them, was held Poore, unmanned, unmunitioned. What better market? sayd Medyna. I told him Genoa or
Lisbon.'
All around stood the 'Common People,' who made the ordeal still harder by 'many jeerings, mockings,
scornes, and bitter jests' against the English, 'which I must not so much as bite my lippe against, but with an
inforced patient care stood still.... Amongst many other raproches and spightfull Names, one of the Spaniards
called English Men Gallinas (Hennes).' This amused the 'Great Lords,' and one of them asked the prisoner if
the Spaniards, when they came to England (in war), would prove such hens as the English. To which Peeke
answered, 'somewhat emboldned by his merry countenance,' that they would prove chickens. 'Darst thou then
(quoth Duke of Medyna, with a browe half angry) fight with one of these Spanish Pullets? O my Lord! sayd I,
I am a Prisoner, and my life at stake, and therefore dare not be so bold as to adventure upon any such Action,
... Yet ... with all told him, he was unworthy of the Name of an English Man, that should refuse to fight with
one Man of any Nation whatsoever. Hereupon my Shackells were knockt off and my Iron Ring and Chayne
taken from my Neck.'
'Yet being by the Noblemen pressed agen and agen to try my Fortune with an other, I (seeing my Life was in
the Lyon's paw, to struggle with whome for safety there was no way but one, and being afrayd to displease
them) sayd: That if their Graces and Greatnesses would giue me leave to play at mine owne Countrey Weapon
called the Quarter Staffe, I was then ready there an Oposite, against any Commer.' When a 'hansome and well
Spirited Spaniard steps foorth, with his Rapier and Poniard,' Peeke explained that he 'made little account of
that One to play with, and should shew them no Sport.
'Then a second (Arm'd as before) presents himselfe; I demanded if there would come no more? The Dukes
asked, how many I desired? I told them, any number under sixe. Which resolution of mine, they smiling at, in
a kind of scorne, held it not Manly ... to worry one Man with a Multitude.
'Now Gentlemen, if here you condemne me for plucking (with mine owne hands) such an assured danger
upon mine head: Accept of these Reasons for excuse.
'To dye, I thought it most certaine, but to dye basely, I would not: For Three to kill One had bin to mee no
Dishonour; To them (Weapons considered) no Glory: An Honourable Subjection I esteemed better, than an
Ignoble conquest.... Only Heaven I had in mine eye, the Honor of my Country in my heart, my Fame at the
Stake, my Life on a narrow Bridge, and death before and behind me.'
With a supreme effort Peeke succeeded in killing one of his opponents and disabling the other two. Then for a
moment he feared the threatening anger of the crowd, but the nobles showed great generosity in their
admiration of his pluck, whether they felt mortified or not, and he was treated with extreme kindness,[Pg 190]
both then and afterwards. He 'was kept in the Marquesse Alquenezes House, who one day ... desired I would
sing. I willing to obey him (whose goodnesse I had tasted), did so, and sung this Psalme: When as we sate in
Babylon, etc. The meaning of which being told he saide to me, English Man, comfort thyself, for thou art in
no Captivity.'
Peeke was then sent to the King of Spain, who tried to keep him in his service, but with a becoming gratitude
for the favours shown to him, Peeke begged to be allowed to return home, 'being a Subject onely to the King
of England.' Whereupon the King very magnanimously gave 'one hundred Pistoletts to beare my charges.'
A play has been written called 'Dick of Devonshire,' in which the adventures of 'Dick Pike' are set in the midst
of a Spanish tragi-comedy.
Nothing is known of Peeke's life after he came back to his own country, but there are strong reasons for
believing that he returned to Tavistock. And if it was himself, and not a namesake, who flourished there, in
1638, our hero might be seen in an entirely new rôle, for that year Richard Peeke filled the peaceful office of
people's churchwarden!
Tavistock's fine church is dedicated to St Eustachius, and it has a high battlemented tower crowned with
slender pinnacles. The tower is 'pierced with arches in all four sides, so that it stands on piers. It is thus a true
campanile, and was never joined to the church.' There are monuments to several families in the nave and
chancel, and stories and memories crowd especially round two of them. One is the tomb of John Fitz of
Fitz-ford and his wife, at the back of which their son Sir John kneels at a desk with a book before him.
'Dr Jago, the clergyman of Milton Abbot, however, told me that occasionally she was said to ride in a coach of
bones up the West Street towards the Moor.... My husband can remember that, when a boy, it was a common
saying with the gentry at a party, "It is growing late; let us be gone, or we shall meet Lady Howard as she
starts from Fitzford."'
A still more conspicuous monument in the church is connected with the other tragedy. The family of Glanvills
had long been settled near Tavistock, and the figure is of Judge Glanvill in his robes. At his feet kneels a
life-size figure of his wife. 'Her buckram waist, like armour, sleeves, ruff, and farthingale are all monstrous;
and her double-linked gold chains are grand enough for the Lord Mayor. On the whole she looks so very
formidable, that thus seen stationed before the Judge, she might be considered as representing Justice herself,
but it would be in her severest mood.'[Pg 192]
The mournful story is that of another member of the family, Eulalia Glanvill, who was forced against her will
to marry an old man named Page, when she was in love with a young man, George Strangwich. After much
misery, she and Strangwich agreed to murder Page, and the story is told in several ballads, in one of which
there is a ring of sincerity which makes the 'verses sound better to the brain than to the ear.' It is now thought
that the ballad was written by Delaney, but in the early editions the ballad was attributed to Mrs Page herself,
and a copy in the Roxburghe Ballads is headed: 'Written with her owne hand, a little before her death.' 'The
Lamentation of Master Page's Wife' was sung to the tune of 'Fortune my Foe':
At the end of this year (1645) Prince Charles paid a visit to the town, and was so much 'annoyed by wet
weather, that ever after, if anybody remarked it was a fine day, he was wont to declare that, however fine it
might be elsewhere, he felt quite sure it must be raining at Tavistock.' One cannot help wondering if his
courtiers kept to English tradition of perpetually speaking of the weather.
To walk away from Tavistock along the Tavy's bank is to follow the footsteps of that river's special poet,
William Browne. His poems are not so well known as they might be, and his most celebrated lines are nearly
always attributed to Ben Jonson—I mean the fine epitaph on 'Sidney's sister, Pembroke's
mother'—though any doubt as to the author of the lines is cleared up by a manuscript in the library of
Trinity College, Dublin. Not very many details of his life are known, but he had the happiness of being better
appreciated by his contemporaries than by posterity, and Ben Jonson and Michael Drayton wrote
complimentary verses, as a sort of introduction to volumes of his poems when they were published. Browne's
work is very uneven, many of his poems are charming, some diffuse and rather poor; but he had a sincere
feeling for Nature, and his nymphs and swains revelled in posies and garlands in the shade of groves full of
singing birds.
In the third book of his long poem, 'Britannia's Pastorals,'[Pg 195] there is a quaint and pretty song, of which
one verse runs:
Some way below Tavistock is Buckland Abbey, founded by Amicia, Countess of Devon, in 1278, and for
long years the home of Cistercians. At the Dissolution the Abbey was granted for a small sum to Sir Richard
Grenville (grandfather of the hero of the Revenge), who altered it into a dwelling-house. Sir Richard, his
grandson, sold it to John Hele and Christopher Harrys, who were probably acting for Sir Francis Drake, and
he formally bought it of them ten months later. The house was built in the body of the church, and it is still
easy to trace its ecclesiastical origin from some of the windows and architecture. In the hall[Pg 196] is a fine
frieze, with raised figures in high relief and an elaborate background, the subject a knight turned hermit. The
knight, wearing a hermit's robe, is sitting beneath spreading boughs, and a skull is lodged in a hollow of the
tree-trunk. His charger and his discarded armour lie near him. In the same hall rests the famous drum that
went round the world with Drake, the drum referred to in the traditional promise that Mr Newbolt has put into
verse:
Close by is a glen, which Mrs Bray says, 'I have ventured to name the Valley of Waterfalls, on account of the
vast number of small but exquisitely beautiful falls seen there.' A narrow lane with high hedges leads round
the shoulder of the hill to the steep little valley, where the Tavy jostles against obstructive boulders, and a
high, narrow, unstable-looking bridge of tarred timber (sometimes called a 'clam' bridge) crosses the stream.
Climbing up on the farther side, the road soon reaches the village of Mary Tavy. In reference to these villages
a very old joke is told of a Judge unacquainted with these parts who, in trying a case, not un[Pg 197]naturally
confused the names with those of witnesses, and ordered that Peter and Mary Tavy be brought into court.
Mary Tavy has not the unusual attractiveness of Peter Tavy. It looks barer, and is overshadowed by that
peculiarly comfortless air always given by chimneys or machinery of mines. The church stands above the
road, and beside it a large old tree, whose lower branches are so abundantly covered with polypody that the
fronds hang like long fringes from either side of each branch. The porch has a white groined ceiling, crossed
with fragments of the old timber roof, on which are bosses carved in different designs.
From Mary Tavy a road runs nearly parallel to the river. Beyond Horndon the houses are fewer and more
scattered, and somehow there is a suggestion that one is coming nearer and nearer to the verge of civilization.
The few houses look nice in themselves, with the exception of a farm, so cheerless and neglected-looking, that
it was a surprise to find it inhabited; and not far beyond this house the road reaches another and very different
farm, looking full of comfort—and goes no farther. This farm has the significant name of Lane End,
and one realizes from its solitary, exposed position that the high and substantial wall surrounding it was built
for sound reasons. It stands on the moor, and the cultivation is of the roughest kind; the fields, such as they
are, being plentifully sprinkled with huge boulders. In winter, when there is much fear of snow, these fields
serve as an enclosure for the ponies that are driven-in off the moor—looking like wild animals in their
The last time I saw it a vague threat hung over everything, adding a cold fascination to the moor. The hills
showed tints of faint green and palest brown, and patches of bracken gave a consoling shade of russet. Hare
Tor rose beyond, silent and impressive, covered with snow. The Tavy had a new beauty, for it was almost
frozen over, and the dark water, and along whirling scraps of foam, showed between the blocks of ice and
snow, and the boulders were each bordered with shining white. The sky was[Pg 198] heavy with snow-clouds,
and beneath them and in the rifts were stormy red sunset tints, while a cold blue-grey mist was creeping up the
valley.
Brent Tor
There are some places—the Castle of Elsinore, for instance—that seem to have an amazing and
incomprehensible gift of resisting civilization. They may be brought up to date, and trimmed, and filled with
inappropriate people, and everything else done that should spoil them, but in spite of it all they do not for a
moment look as if any modern extraneous objects had a meaning for them. They belong to their own day and
its manner, and to no other.
The same sort of feeling hovers about Tavy Cleave, and a great sense of the mystery that here more, there
less, broods over the moor. But there is no suggestion as to who it is that the moor has most truly and
absolutely belonged to, nor even the region of time: only the feeling that the valley is, in a finer than the usual
sense, haunted.
Looking to the west from above the Cleave, one sees—as from any distance round one sees—the
most characteristic height of Brent Tor, with the tiny church on the top. It is not that the tor is so very high,
but in some astonishing way it always seems to appear as a landmark, north, south, east, or west, when one
imagines it to be absolutely out of range. The sides are steep and rocky, and the church stands 'full bleak and
weather-beaten, all-[Pg 199]alone as it were, forsaken, whose churchyard doth hardly afford depth of earth to
bury the dead; yet doubtless they rest there as securely as in sumptuous St Peter's until the day of Doom.'
The story told of the church is that a man once almost gave himself up for lost—some say in a storm,
others in an impenetrable, unending fog—in the Channel, and vowed that, if he ever came safe to shore,
he would build a church on the first bit of land he saw. As Brent Tor is far inland, the fog story sounds the
more probable, for there is no saying how mist wreaths may drift. The church is dedicated to St Michael de la
Rupe, and here another tradition comes in, for it is popularly supposed that, when the building of the church
was begun, the devil pulled away all the day's work in the night. At last St Michael came to the rescue, and
hurled such an enormous mass of rock upon the devil that he fled away and hindered no more. The building is
very tiny, and a countryman told me that as a child he used to be puzzled by the cryptic warning: 'If you get
into the second aisle of Brent Tor Church, you will never get out again.' Of course—there is no second
aisle.
The beauty of many of the places on the banks of the Tamar is celebrated. Among the exquisite woods and
lawns of Endsleigh—through which one Duke of Bedford cut no less than forty miles in
rides—the river twists and winds for a long distance at one point, and curves round almost into a ring.
A little farther south are Morwell Rocks, which Mr Norway had the good fortune to see in the spring. 'The
trees stretch far away along the river, dense and close to the water's edge, a mountain of gold and sunny green,
broken in the midst by a high grey crag, which stands up sheer and grey amid the mass of gorgeous colour.
This is the first peak of a great range of limestone cliffs, which for the most part, as the hill sweeps round
above the village of Morwellham, are hidden in the woods. But when that tiny cluster of cottages and wharves
is left behind, the stream creeps closer to the hill, and it is as if the buried rock stirred and flung the coppice
off its shoulders, for the limestone precipices rise vertically out of the water to a vast height. The[Pg 200]
summits are weathered into most fantastic shapes, pinnacles and towers break the skyline, and wherever a
crevice in the rock has allowed the lodging of a little earth, some oak-tree roots itself, or a wild tangle of
greenery drops down the scarred surface of the cliff.'
A little farther down, the Tamar and the Tavy join, and with the Cornish Lynher form the Hamoaze—a
view of land and water that is very admirable. It is not a scene whose dimly realized charm grows gradually
stronger, but one whose triumphant beauty is beyond dispute. The innumerable creeks and inlets, the rich
abundance of foliage and pasture, and the sweeping sense of spaciousness from the open sea that comes off
Plymouth Sound, help to make the grand effect; and the feelings of few can be quite unstirred by the
battleships, or perhaps black sinister destroyers, and the multitude of other shipping lying at anchor in that
famous haven, and by the thought of all that they mean to us.
[Pg 201]
Bideford
CHAPTER XI
It is difficult to imagine that there could be a more fitting description of Bideford than that drawn in the
opening words of 'Westward Ho!' Bideford, it has been said, is spoilt by ugly modern houses, but the remark
implies a matter-of-fact view,[Pg 202] for the ugliness and modernness are only skin-deep, and can easily be
ignored. A matter of far greater importance is that there is an old-world essence, a dignity in the whole tone
and spirit of the town, that keep it in touch with the glorious past.
Faithful followers of the heroes on the borderland of myth—King Arthur, Charlemagne, Holger
Danske—believed that in their country's need these would arise from the shades to lead their people to
victory; and at Bideford one feels that, should any 'knight of the sea' return, he would find a town not strange
CHAPTER XI 129
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Devon, Its Moorlands, Streams and Coasts, by Rosalind Northcote
to him, and, if the stress were sharp enough to pierce the thin husk that later civilization has added, a people
who would understand and not fail him.
The name comes from By-the-ford, but a ford between East-the-water and the town must have been rather
perilous, and only possible at low-tide. In the early part of the fourteenth century some of the chief inhabitants
resolved to build a bridge, but several efforts were made in vain, for they were always thwarted by failure to
find a firm enough foundation. Then Sir Richard Gurney, priest of the place, was 'admonished by a vision ...
to begin that excellent work ... where he should find a stone fixed in the ground.' This dream he thought
nothing of, 'until, walking by the river, he espied such a stone or rock there rolled and fixed firmly, which he
never remembered to have seen formerly,' and was hereby convinced 'that his dream was no other than an
heavenly inspiration.' The whole neighbourhood combined to help, the rich sending money and lending the
services of their workmen, and the poor giving such time and labour as they could afford. The bridge, which
has since been widened, is a very fine one, of twenty-four arches. Westcote says: 'A bark of 60 tons (without
masts) may pass and repass with the tide, which flows near five miles above it.'
Gifts and bequests were made to the bridge, and the funds belonging to it became so large, and the business
connected with them so important, that in 1758 a hall was built for the use of the feoffees, and decorated with
the royal arms and the arms of the bridge.[Pg 203]
St Mary's Church was built about the same date as the bridge, but about forty years ago all but the tower was
pulled down and rebuilt. It had suffered considerably from the ravages of the Reformers, whose horror of
ritualism reached the point of throwing the font out of doors, whereupon 'one schismatic,' more crazy than the
rest, took it, says Watkins, in wrath, 'for the purpose of a trough for his swine to feed out of; and if he had had
his deserts, he would have made one of their company.' The font was probably rescued by some pious person,
for the one now in the church is a fine Norman one, with cable moulding.
In this church was baptized 'Raleigh,' the Indian brought back by Sir Richard Grenville from Carolina, and
called after the great Sir Walter, who was doing much for that country. Sir Richard kept 'Raleigh' in his own
house, and the dark stranger must have caused great chattering and excitement among the children and some
of their elders in the town, but he did not survive transplantation, and a year later was buried in Bideford
Churchyard. In the register he is described as a native of Wynganditoia.
On the south side of the church is the tomb of Thomas Grenville, who lies in armour, with a dog—not,
as on most monuments, at his feet, but by his side. On the tomb are various coats of arms, and over it rises an
arch ornamented with high stone tracery. A curious screen between the tower and the church has been made
from the old carved bench-ends. Most of the subjects are grotesque, and on some of the panels are gnome-like
heads, with long beards, big hats, and impudent, leering expressions.
In the history of Bideford the name of Grenville shines on many occasions. Both Devon and Cornwall claim
this eminent family, their 'chiefest habitation' of Stow being in Cornwall, while, according to some authorities,
their first dwelling-place in this part of the world was at Bideford.
Richard de Grenville, near the end of the fourteenth century, for his valour and courage in the Welsh wars was
awarded the town and county of Neath, in Glamorgan. Being pious as well as brave, he devoted all this wealth
to the Church, building and endowing a monastery for Cistercian monks. A quaint 'prophecy' regarding this
family was said to have been found many[Pg 205] years later in the Abbey of Neeth, where it was kept 'in a
most curious box of jett, written in the year 1400.'
It begins:
The dignity and authority, the commanding presence of Sir Richard as a country gentleman, a neighbour, a
Justice of the Peace, are admirably suggested in 'Westward Ho!' Apart from warfare on land or sea, he
interested himself in a host of affairs at home, and was both member of parliament and High Sheriff for
Cornwall. He was also called to serve on Commissions for making inquiries about pirates and strengthening
the defences of the coast; and notes show that within six months he was occupied with places as far east and
west as Dover and Tintagel.
In 1587 he was appointed by the Queen to review the 'trained bands' in Devon and Cornwall, that nothing of
their equipment might be lacking when the expected enemy arrived; and when the shattered remnants of the
Armada were straggling down the Irish Channel, Sir Richard had special orders to 'stay all shipping upon the
north coast of Devon and Cornwall.' The catalogue alone of the tasks allotted to him shows how greatly the
'And he sailed away from Flores till the Spaniard came in sight,
With his huge sea-castles heaving upon the weather-bow.
"Shall we fight or shall we fly?
Good Sir Richard, tell us now,
For to fight is but to die!
There'll be little of us left by the time this sun be set."
And Sir Richard said again: "We be all good Englishmen;
Let us bang those dogs of Seville, the children of the devil,
For I never turned my back upon Don or devil yet."
Sir Richard spoke and he laughed, and we roared a hurrah, and so
The little Revenge ran on sheer into the heart of the foe,
With her hundred fighters on deck, and her ninety sick below;
For half of their fleet to the right and half on the left were seen,
And the little Revenge ran on through the long sea-lane between.
. . . . .
And the sun went down and the stars came out far over the summer sea,
But never a moment ceased the fight of the one and the fifty-three.
Ship after ship, the whole night long, their high-built galleons came,
Ship after ship, the whole night long, with her battle-thunder and flame;
Ship after ship, the whole night long, drew back with her dead and her
shame.'
When the day dawned, 'all the powder of the Revenge to the last barrell was now spent, all her pikes broken,
fortie of her best men slaine, and the most part of the rest hurt.' Then Sir Richard 'commanded the maister
Gunner, whom he knew to be a most resolute man, to split and sinke the ship; that thereby nothing might
remaine of glorious victorie to the Spaniards; seeing in so manie houres fighte with so great a Navie they were
not able to take her, having had fifteene houres time, fifteene thousand men, and fifty and three suite of menne
of warre to perform it withall.'
The Captain and most of the crew felt that this supreme sacrifice was not required of them, and offered to treat
with the Spaniards, who, filled with generous admiration for the amazing courage that had been shown by
their adversaries, offered honourable terms of surrender. Sir Richard, who had[Pg 207] received several
wounds, and who was at the point of death, was carried on board the Spanish Admiral's ship, where his life
ebbed away within a few days. 'Here die I, Richard Grenville, with a joyful and quiet mind, for that I have
ended my life as a true soldier ought to do that hath fought for his country, Queen, religion, and honour: My
soul willingly departing from this body, being behind the lasting fame of having behaved as every valiant
soldier is in his duty bound to do.'
Sir Richard's famous grandson, Sir Bevil Grenville, was a brave soldier, but less awe-inspiring; 'the most
generally beloved man in Cornwall,' according to Clarendon; and he adds that 'a brighter courage and a
gentler disposition were never married together.' When war was declared, volunteers flocked to his standard,
and in his first engagement, near Liskeard, he inflicted defeat on the Parliamentary troops, and took twelve
hundred soldiers and all the guns.
At Stratton his achievements were even more brilliant, for his troops began at a serious disadvantage. The
enemy, with ample supplies and ammunition, were encamped on the top of a hill; 'the Royalist troops, less
than half their number, short of ammunition, and so destitute of provisions that the best officers had but a
biscuit a day, lay at Launceston.' Undaunted by these discouraging conditions, they determined to attack, and
having marched twenty miles, the soldiers arrived at the foot of the hill, weary, footsore, and exhausted from
Sir Bevil met his death at Lansdowne, when, with grim doggedness, the Royalists were again climbing the
heights in the face of the enemy's fire. Very many fell, and he among them. 'Young John Grenville, a lad of
sixteen, sprang, it is said, into his father's saddle, and led the charge, and the Cornishmen followed with
their[Pg 208] swords drawn and with tears in their eyes, swearing they would kill a rebel for every hair of Sir
Bevil's head.'
It is not possible to follow the careers of others of his family, but a saying in the West Country ran: 'That a
Godolphin was never known to want wit, a Trelawney courage, or a Grenville loyalty.' Their love of
adventure perhaps descended from an earlier Sir Richard Grenville, who puts forward his views in a poem
called
[Also entitled 'In Praise of Seafaring Men in Hope of Good Fortune, and describing Evil
Fortune.']
Unfortunately, it is not possible here to dwell upon the delightful minor annals of Bideford, such as the history
of that stalwart pamphleteer, Dr Shebbeare, who, for his repeated attacks on the Ministry, was condemned to
stand in the pillory at Charing Cross. The sentence was carried out, but not exactly in the usual manner, for
'Mr Beardmore, the under-sheriff, being a friend of the Doctor's, permitted him to stand unconfined on the
platform of the pillory, attended by a servant in livery holding an umbrella over him.' It is lamentable that the
authorities were sufficiently vindictive and small-minded to visit this act of friendly tolerance on Mr
Beardmore with a fine of £50 and two months' imprisonment. Dr. Shebbeare was also imprisoned; but later in
life the tide turned, and the King was persuaded to pension him with £200. As Dr Johnson was pensioned
about the same time, with the same sum, the joke ran that the King had shown benevolence to a He Bear and a
She Bear.
It is also impossible to do more than touch on the tragic episode of 1682—the trial of three unhappy
women, Susanna Edwards, Temperance Lloyd, and Mary Trembles, who were accused of having practised
witchcraft. Here are a few fragments of the evidence given at the trial. A witness said that, while nursing a
sick woman, a magpie fluttered once against the window, and that Temperance admitted that this 'was the
black man in the shape of a bird.' Another time 'a grey or braget cat' of rather mysterious movements was an
object of suspicion, and Temperance was reported to have confessed that 'she believed it to be the Devil.' The
evidence of a dead woman was brought forward, she having 'deposed that the said Temperance had appeared
to her in the shape of a red pig.' Susanna Edwards, under strict[Pg 210] examination, 'confesseth that the Devil
hath appeared to her in the shape of a Lyon, as she supposed.'
Some of the questions put to the wretched 'witches' were simply grotesque, and reflect, as Watkins caustically
observes, on the intelligence of the examiner. Temperance was asked:
'Temperance, how did you come in to hurt Mrs Grace Thomas? Did you pass through the key-hole of the
door, or was the door open?...
'H. [the examiner]. Did you know any Marriners, that you or your Associates destroyed, by overturning of
ships or boats?
'H. You say you never hurt ships nor boats; did you never ride over an arm of the sea on a Cow?'
To the north of Bideford is a little peninsula formed by the mouth of the Torridge on the east, the far wider
estuary of the Taw on the north, and the open sea on the west. The whole course of the Torridge is very
capricious. The source is within four miles of the sea, not far south of Hartland, and, at once turning inland,
the stream takes a south-easterly direction till it reaches the first slopes that, rising out of the fertile country,
mount gradually as they stretch towards the borders of Dartmoor. At this check the Torridge runs due east till,
within a few miles of Okehampton, it turns in a great rounded loop, and flows north and slightly west to the
north coast again.
The Taw's course is far more direct. It rises in Dartmoor, and, occasionally bending slightly to east or west, it
makes a fairly straight way towards the north till Barnstaple is reached, and then, turning almost at a right
angle, runs westward to the sea.
Following the strip of land along the west bank of the Torridge from Bideford, the road passes Northam, and
on the north-eastern point, at the meeting of the rivers, stands Appledore. Before reaching Northam, by
Appledore
The Danes buried Hubba 'on the shore near his ships, and, according to the manner of northern nations, piled
on him a heap of copped stones as a trophy to his memorial, whereof the place took name Hubba-stone.'
Risdon speaks of the 'sea's encroaching,' and of the stones having been swept away by it before his day, but
the name still clings to the spot where it stood.
A little fort at Appledore was built, it is said—but the authority is not infallible—at the same
time that the forts were thrown up at Bideford, and towards the end of July, 1644, it was called on to make a
defence. Barnstaple had suddenly rebelled against the Royalists, and the citizens resolved to take possession
of the guns that commanded the river's mouth. Sir John Berkeley, writing what must have been an
unsatisfactory letter to Colonel Seymour, in answer to a request for more men, speaks of the troops sent to
help the defenders: 'Your desire and expectance of supply is most just and reasonable. Having been exhausted
of men by the Prince, and having sent to the relief of Appledore, by His Majesty's command, 500 under
Colonel Apsley ... I am not able to give you the least assistance at present.' And Sir Hugh Pollard, writing at
the same time, mentions that Colonel Apsley's force will meet 'a many of Doddington's horse at Chimleigh, to
the relief of the fort at Appledore, which is straitly besieged by those of Barnstaple.'
The garrison consisted of forty Cornishmen, and before the siege was raised they were 'much straitened both
for dread and[Pg 212] fresh water.' They were particularly badly off because 'a certain colonel, who is
stigmatized covertly as "no Cornishman," had been entrusted with the victualling of the fort, but had neglected
his duty.'
Close to the sea, on the west, lies Westward Ho!—a tiny (and modern) watering-place, named after
Kingsley's famous book. Along the western shore as far as the Taw stretch Northam Burrows, covered for
some distance by a fine elastic turf that is far-famed, and by patches of rushes. Beyond the golf-links the
ground breaks into sand-hills, all hillocks and hollows of pure sand, soft and yielding, dented by every
footstep, set with rushes and spangled with crane's-bill, yellow bedstraw, tiny purple scented thyme-flowers,
and a kind of spurge.
Both sand-hills and common are protected from the sea by the well-known Pebble Ridge, which stretches for
two miles in a straight line. It is a mass—fifty feet wide and twenty feet high—of large, smooth,
rolled slate-stones, some being two feet across, though most of them are smaller.
Turning westwards along the coast, Lundy is often to be seen like a faint blue cloud on the horizon, especially
when a softening haze hovers over the land—but on a clear day it is very distinct. And on a fine
evening, when the dim blue twilight is creeping up on every side, it has the very air of an enchanted island
against the radiant crimson that for a few moments spreads and glows in the west after sundown.
A little distance farther on is Portledge, 'the most antient seat of the name and family of Coffin,' says Prince;
and he mentions a boundary deed between Richard Coffin and the Abbot of Tavistock, written 'in the Saxon
tongue, which giveth good confirmation thereof.' Sir William Coffin was one of several Devonshire
gentlemen who were 'assistants' to Henry VIII in the tournaments of the 'Field of the Cloth of Gold,' being of
great courage, and 'expert at feats of arms.' A story which is often told of him gives a good illustration of his
strong will. While living on a property that belonged to his wife in Derbyshire, Sir William chanced one day
to pass a churchyard, and seeing a[Pg 213] group of people standing about, he asked what was happening.
Being told that 'they had brought a corps to be buried, but the priest refused to do his office unless they first
delivered him the poor man's cow, the only quick goods left,' for a burial fee, he commanded the priest to read
the service. But the priest declined to do so until he had received his fee. On this answer, Sir William 'caused
the priest to be put into the poor man's grave, and earth to be thrown upon him; and he still persisting in his
refusal, there was still more earth thrown in, until the obstinate priest was either altogether or well nigh
suffocated.'
Prince is entirely delightful over this story. He goes on: 'Now, thus to handle a priest in those days was a very
bold adventure;' as if to bury a priest alive was usually considered a pleasant amusement. Sir William,
however, not only lived through the storm that the high-handed action raised, but actually succeeded in
moving Parliament to pass an Act regulating the burial fees that might be asked of the poor. So our biographer
finishes with the triumphant axiom: 'Evil manners are often the parent of good laws!'
Eleven miles west of Bideford is Clovelly. Here one feels, rather despairingly, that anyone who has seen this
wonderful village can listen to no description of it; while to those who have never seen it, no description is of
any value.
A road leads towards it through the Hobby, a wood overhanging the sea, which Kingsley describes as 'a forest
wall five hundred feet high, of almost semi-tropic luxuriance.' The road was 'banked on one side with
crumbling rocks, festooned with heath, and golden hawkweed, and London pride, like velvet cushions covered
with pink lace, and beds of white bramble-blossom alive with butterflies; while above my head, and on my
right, the delicate cool canopy of oak and birch leaves shrouded me so close that I could have fancied myself
miles inland, buried in some glen unknown to any wind of heaven, but that everywhere between green sprays
and grey stems gleamed that same boundless ocean blue.'
The village itself lies in a ravine of the rock, and the 'street'[Pg 214] is so precipitous that the eaves of one
house are on a level with the foundations of its next neighbour above. Kingsley and Dickens have written
descriptions that, scarcely overlapping, seem to complete each other.
'I was crawling up the paved stairs, inaccessible to cart or carriage, which are flatteringly denominated
Clovelly street; ... behind me a sheer descent, roof below roof, at an angle of 75°, to the pier and bay, two
'The village was built sheer up the face of a steep and lofty cliff. There was no road in it, there was no
wheeled vehicle in it, there was not a level yard in it. From the sea-beach to the cliff-top two irregular rows of
white houses, placed opposite to one another and twisting here and there, and there and here, rose like the
sides of a long succession of stages of crooked ladders, and you climbed up village or climbed down the
village by the staves between, some six feet wide or so, and made up of sharp, irregular stones. The old
pack-saddle, long laid aside in most parts of England, as one of the appendages of its infancy, flourished here
intact. Strings of pack-horses and pack-donkeys toiled slowly up the staves of the ladders, bearing fish and
coal, and such other cargo as was unshipping at the pier from the dancing fleet of village boats and from two
or three little coasting traders. As[Pg 215] the beasts of burden ascended laden, or descended light, they got so
lost at intervals in the floating clouds of village smoke, that they seemed to dive down some of the village
chimneys and come to the surface again far off, high above others. No two houses in the village were alike in
chimney, size, shape, door, window, gable, roof-tree, anything. The sides of the ladder were musical with
water, running clear and bright. The staves were musical with the clattering feet of the pack-horses and
pack-donkeys, and the voices of the fishermen urging them up mingled with the voices of the fishermen's
wives and their many children.... The red-brown cliffs, richly wooded to their extremest verge, had their
softened and beautiful forms reflected in the bluest water, under the clear North Devonshire sky of a
November day without a cloud. The village itself was so steeped in autumnal foliage, from the houses joining
on the pier to the topmost round of the topmost ladder, that one might have fancied it was out a-bird's-nesting,
and was (as indeed it was) a wonderful climber.'
Clovelly
The harbour is very small, but on a cliff-bound, dangerous coast it is one of the very few between Bideford
and Padstow. Clovelly's great herring fishery used to be famous, but it is not now so large as it used to be.
Above the village, the beautiful park of Clovelly Court lies along the cliffs, looking over the wide distances of
Bideford Bay; and on a fine day the Welsh coast may be seen. Inland, great forest trees tower above a
miniature forest of bracken, and at the opening of a glade one may catch glimpses of the deer appearing and
vanishing again.
The Carys were in very ancient days settled at St Giles-in-the-Heath, but a branch of them came to Clovelly in
the reign of Richard II. They were of the same race as the Carys of Torre Abbey, and the family of whom
Lord Falkland is the head. John Cary, who acquired the property, was a distinguished character. As a Judge,
'he scattered the rays of justice about him, with great splendour.' He was called to show firmness and loyalty
under the most trying circumstances, but, 'true as steel ... the greatest dangers could not affright him from his
duty and[Pg 216] loyalty to his distressed master Richard II, unto whom he faithfully adhered when most
others had forsaken him.' When the King had been deposed, 'this reverend Judge, unable and unwilling to bow
like a willow with every blast of wind, did freely and confidently speak his mind.' So faithfully did he
maintain King Richard's cause that, when Henry IV came to the throne, the Judge was banished the kingdom,
and his goods and lands were confiscated. These, Sir Robert Cary, his son, recovered literally at the point of
the sword, for a 'certain Knight-errand of Arragon,' of great skill in feats of arms, 'arrived here in England,
where he challenged any man of his rank and quality.' Sir Robert accepted the challenge, and a 'long and
doubtful combat was waged in Smithfield, London.' In the end the 'presumptious Arrogonoise' was
vanquished, and Henry V, to whom Sir Robert's gallantry appealed, restored him 'a good part of his father's
lands,' and granted him leave to bear 'in a field silver, on a bend sable, three white roses,' the arms of the
conquered knight—the arms that the Carys still bear. The Clovelly branch of the family is now extinct.
A little to the south of Clovelly, and on high ground, are Clovelly Dykes, the remains of an old camp,
sometimes called British and sometimes Roman. It is large and circular, and the position was strengthened by
three great trenches, about eighteen feet deep and three hundred feet long, which lie around it. The camp
commands the only old road in the surrounding country.
About seven or eight miles to the west is the grand headland of Hartland Point. It is a narrow ridge that rises
precipitously three hundred and fifty feet above the water, projects far out into the sea, and abruptly ends the
coast-line to the west. The coast is very fine, but also most dangerous, and the cliffs, cleft here and there by
great chasms, fall sheer down to needle-points of hard black slate rock jutting out into the sea.
The name of Herty Point, as it used to be called, was originally, says Camden, 'Hercules's promontory,' and
this title has given rise to 'a very formal story that Hercules came into Britain and killed I know not what
giants.' Here Camden pauses in his[Pg 217] description of the place, to consider whether there ever was a
Hercules at all, and, if so, whether there were not really forty-three Hercules; and if this was not so, whether
Hercules was perhaps 'a mere fiction to denote the strength of human prudence,' or, again, possibly a myth
personifying the sun, and his labours the signs of the zodiac, 'which the sun runs through yearly.' On the
whole, he decides that, at any rate, Hercules never came to Britain, but the name might have been given to the
point by the Greeks 'out of vanity,' because 'they dedicated everything they found magnificent in any place to
the glory of Hercules.'
Four miles south-east of the headland lies Hartland town. It has been briefly described as 'a very quiet street of
grey stone cottages and whitewashed houses on a high and windy tableland.' Close by is Hartland Abbey,
founded, according to tradition, by Githa, the wife of Earl Godwin, and mother of Harold II, in honour of St
Nectan; for she 'highly reverenced the man, and verily believed that through his merits her husband had
escaped shipwreck in a dangerous tempest.' In the reign of Henry II, leave was given to Oliver de Dynant to
change the community of secular canons into regular canons of St. Augustine's order, and to found a
monastery for them. But between the successors of the founder and the canons matters did not always run
smoothly; in fact, on one occasion, about a hundred years later, they actually came to blows in the church, as
is made clear by an entry in the register of Bishop Bronescombe, for it records that the bishop had reconciled
the church, 'which had been polluted by an effusion of blood in an affray between Oliver de Dinham and the
canons.'
After the Dissolution the Abbey was bestowed by the King upon the Sergeant of his cellar, a man named
Abbott. Parts of the Abbey remained unaltered and in good repair till the end of the eighteenth century, when,
in building the present house, the unfortunate taste of the period destroyed the hall, which was over seventy
feet long, and a portion of the cloisters, which were then still perfect. Parts of them, however, are still
standing.[Pg 218] The cloisters had been rebuilt at a very early date, for Dr. Oliver quotes an inscription
which was over one of the arches that shows them to be the work of the Abbot John of Exeter, who resigned
in 1329. Bishop Stapledon had found many defects in the structure of the Abbey, when he made his visitation
in 1319, and had ordered them to be at once remedied. During the alterations made about one hundred and
twenty years ago, the monument of a Knight Hospitaller was found, and within the last few years small pieces
of carved stone have been dug up—amongst others, a Madonna's head with traces of blue and gold still
upon it; a monk kneeling, and a knight and lady hand in hand. The Abbey is now the property of Sir Lewis
Stucley.
Nearer the shore, and on high ground, is the church of St Nectan, whose tall pinnacled tower is a landmark to
sailors. The tower is Perpendicular, but most of the church is late Decorated, and the north side has a Norman
doorway. The great feature is the very beautiful screen which stretches across the whole church; but the cradle
roofs are good, and there is other carving. On the pulpit is the figure of a goat with tusks, and the puzzling
inscription, 'God save King James. Fines.' The Norman font is curiously sculptured with grotesque faces that
look down on to equally quaint faces on the pedestal—an allegory in stone which Mr Hawker of
Morwenstow interpreted as the righteous looking down on the wicked.
Three or four miles farther on is the actual border-line, and here one must turn, although, looking south
towards Widemouth Bay, it is irresistibly tempting to quote a few verses of rank doggerel, written on a
shipwreck which happened there on November 23, 1824. The verses were probably inspired by terrible stress
of emotion, and suggest the idea that they were written with a spar rather than with a pen; but no doubt they
were for ever the joy and pride of their author.
Morthoe
Kingsley remarks that 'an agricultural people is generally as cruel to wrecked seamen as a fishing one is
merciful,' and speaks of the many stories he has heard of 'baysmen' on this coast 'risking themselves like very
heroes to save strangers' lives, and at the same time beating off the labouring folk who swarmed down for
plunder from the inland hills.'
Retracing the way to Northam Burrows, passing through them to their most northerly point, and crossing the
Taw, one arrives at a strip of shore—Braunton Burrows—which corresponds to the strip on the
southern bank of the river.
'A great chaos of wind-strewn sand-hills,' inhabited by armies of rabbits, and haunted by peewits and gulls,
the Burrows are brightened by masses of wild-flowers, from the great mullein—once known as
hedge-taper, because of its pale torch of blossoms—to the tiny delicate rose-pink bells of the
bog-pimpernel. 'To the left were rich, alluvial marshes, covered with red cattle sleeping in the sun, and laced
with creeks and flowing dykes.... Beyond again [looking back to the south] two broad tide-rivers, spotted with
white and red-brown sails, gleamed like avenues of silver ... till they vanished among the wooded hills. On the
eastern horizon the dark range of Exmoor sank gradually into lower and more broken ridges, which rolled
away, woodland beyond woodland, till all outlines were lost in a purple haze; while far beyond the granite
peaks of Dartmoor hung like a delicate blue cloud, and enticed the eye away into infinity.'
In the midst of the sand-dunes are the remains of a little, very old chapel, St Anne's Chapel, which is said to
have been built by St Brannock. North of the Burrows the land rises into cliffs, on which grew (I hope, grows)
the great sea-stock; and Baggy Point, at the southern end of Morte Bay, runs out into the sea. Beyond the
Not far off was the manor of the Tracys, Woolacombe Tracy. A curse was brought on this family by William
de Tracy, 'first and forwardest of the knights who murdered Thomas a Becket.' For, 'the Pope banning,
cursing, and excommunicating,'[Pg 222] a 'Miraculous Penance' was imposed on the Tracys, 'that whether
they go by Land or Water, the Wind is ever in their faces.' Fuller, who gives this information, concludes dryly:
'If this was so, it was a Favour in a hot Summer to the Females of that Family, and would spare them the use
of a Fan.' On William de Tracy himself fell the special curse, that ever after his death he should be compelled
to wander at night—some say over Woolacombe Sands, others among Braunton Burrows—till
he could make a rope of sand. But, whenever the rope is nearly woven, there comes a black dog, with a ball of
fire in his mouth, and breaks it; so the penance is never at an end. Shrieks and wails have been heard by
people in cottages near the shore. Sometimes the uneasy spirit haunts the northern landing-place of the ferry
from Braunton Burrows to Appledore, and a wild, long-drawn cry of 'Boat ahoy!' comes ringing in the
darkness over the waters. No one answers that cry now after dusk, for once, many years ago, the ferryman,
who is well remembered among the Appledore people, went over, and no man was there, but the black dog
jumped into the boat. The ferryman, not much liking this, put back again as fast as he could, but when
Appledore was nearly reached the dog swamped the boat, made his way to shore, and was lost in the shadows
of Northam Burrows. 'And the boatman's nerve was so much shaken that soon afterwards he gave up the ferry.
A monument to William de Tracy was wrongly supposed to lie in the church of Morthoe, or Morte, as it is
more commonly called, on the north of the bay. The memorial is of another William de Tracy, rector here till
his death in 1322. It is an elaborately sculptured altar-tomb, and bears the incised effigy of a priest; on the
sides are figures of St Catherine and St Mary Magdalene, to whom jointly the rector founded a chapel in his
church. The church is mainly Perpendicular, but it has an Early English chancel.
The northern curve of the bay ends in Morte Point, and here is a cromlech in ruins, for the massive slab of
rock which formed the cover-stone has fallen from the upright stones on which it used to lie.[Pg 223]
St Brannock Church is large, and, like Morte Church, is partly Perpendicular and partly Early English. It has
an unusually wide panelled roof, and on one of the panels is carved a sow and[Pg 224] some little
pigs—an illustration of a legend connecting the saint with the church, for the tradition ran that he had
been told in a dream to build his church 'wherever he should first meet a sow and her family.' A similar group
is to be seen in the porch of the church at Newton St Cyres. Some of the bench-ends in St Brannock's Church
are very beautifully carved.
The road to Barnstaple, bending to the south-east, follows the estuary of the Taw for nearly six miles.
The town is very prettily placed, but it is dominated by modern buildings, and has not the air of antiquity with
which its history might have invested it. The river sweeps round a bend of a green and pleasant valley just
above the town, and along the strand is a walk shaded with trees, looking over the river to a pastoral country
beyond. Nearer the bridge is Queen Anne's Walk, 'an open portico near the river, called the Quay Walk, being
an exchange of the merchants, etc.,' renamed when it was rebuilt in Queen Anne's reign. From the bridge
westward the scene has an air of peaceful contentedness. Sea-gulls flutter among the sand-banks, from which
'the sea retires itself' at low-tide, leaving only a small, shining stream, which seems 'to creep between shelves
and sands.' Beyond are green marshes, and gentle rounded hills behind them lead on one from another. The
country is much the same all along the river to the sea.
Bideford is proud of its bridge, which is very high, and has sixteen arches. Several people have been given the
credit of building it, and its date is supposed to be some time during the thirteenth century.
The church, dedicated to St Peter and St Paul, is cross-shaped, and the lead steeple looks well against the sky,
especially when it is surrounded by a shoal of swallows swooping and darting about it in all directions. The
church has been much restored, and altered from the original building; evidently there were once three altars
in it; and a piscina still remains in the south aisle, close to the west wall of the transept. A curious monument
was erected in 1634 by Martin Blake, the Vicar, to his son and four children who died very young. A
heavy[Pg 225] and elaborate framework surrounds a severe likeness of a melancholy-looking man, who is
resting his head on his hand. On the monument are short detached sentences, numbered:
. . . . .
'10. His heart on fire for the love of God.
'11. Martin Blake, the Father, was taken from the Pulpit, and sent to Exeter jail for four years.
'12. The Pulpit empty, and the congregation waiting for him.
'13. He wishes to depart this life, and be at peace with his children.
'14. But it is necessary I should remain in the flesh for the good of my people.
'15. He that shall endure to the end shall have a crown of life.'
Mr Blake suffered much during the Civil War, but I can find no record of any imprisonment beyond his being
in 1657 'a prisoner at large in Exeter for six weeks.' In 1646 he was petitioned against on account of his
Royalist sympathies, 'by one Tooker,' to whom he had shown great kindness, and who intrigued against him in
the most abominable manner. Though Sir Hardress Waller wrote to the Committee of sequestrations on his
behalf, he was suspended, and as about a year later his suspension was cancelled, the infamous Tooker very
hurriedly concocted a petition, ostensibly from Barnstaple, praying that the 'Discharge' might be repealed.
Walker comments on the astonishing speed with which Tooker managed this business. 'The Reader ... will
certainly think, as I do, that he who walked to and fro in the Earth, helped them to it; tho' not in the Quality of
a Courier, but in his other Capacity, that of the Father of Lies.' Mr Blake, however, was allowed to return to
his living, but 'not without the cumbrance of a Factious Lecturer,' and was not in full possession till after the
Restoration.
Barnstaple asserts that it became a borough at a very early date—in fact, that it 'obtained divers
liberties, freedoms, and immunities from King Athelstan'; but whether this were so or[Pg 226] not, the
inhabitants certainly received a charter from Henry I, and further privileges were added by King John. The
barony of Barnstaple, first granted to Judhael de Totnes, passed to the Tracys, then by marriage to the Lords
Martin, and again by an heiress to the Lords Audley. The son of this heiress was the 'heroical' Lord Audley
who so greatly distinguished himself at the Battle of Poitiers.
Barnstaple sent three ships to join the fleet that met the Armada. Risdon calls it 'the chief town of merchandise
next the river's mouth,' and says that the people 'through traffic have much enriched themselves,' although
their haven is so shallow 'that it hardly beareth small vessels.' Yet spring-tides sometimes flood the marshes
all round, and on one occasion some of the people 'to save their lives were constrained from their upper rooms
to take boat and be gone.' Westcote speaks of it as trading especially with 'Spain and the islands,' and till the
latter half of the eighteenth century wool for the serge-makers from Ireland and America was brought to this
port; but its trade has now almost dwindled away.
Barnstaple Fair is a great institution, and, though not quite the event that it used to be, still keeps up many
traditional ceremonies. On the first morning a large stuffed glove is put out on the end of a pole from a
window of the Guildhall, and is supposed to be the symbol of welcome to all comers. This sign was adopted
long ago, and in the accounts in 1615 and 1622 are two entries: 'Paid for a glove put out at the fair, 4d.,' and
'Paid for a paire of gloves at the faire, 4d.'
In the Guildhall, toast and spiced ale are handed round in loving-cups to all comers, and after two or three
speeches the Mayor and Corporation proceed to the High Cross and other places in the borough, and the Town
Clerk reads the Proclamation of the Fair. A 'Fair Ball' is still given, but the custom of a stag-hunt on the
second day has been dropped.
Barnstaple was a sort of shuttle-cock during the Civil War. Here, as elsewhere, the citizens were not all of one
mind; though the merchants and the majority were for the Parliament,[Pg 227] and it was taken possession of
first by one side and then by the other.
Barnstaple Bridge
In August, 1643, Barnstaple and Bideford sent a combined force against the royal troops under Colonel Digby
at Torrington, but being completely routed, their courage was shaken, and a few days later Barnstaple was
surrendered to Prince Maurice. The next year, however, most of the garrison having been drawn away, the
inhabitants arose and took possession of the town for the Parliament. Prince Maurice hurriedly sent Colonel
Digby to bring them to reason, but with great determination they resisted the Royal troops, who were driven
back. During the next three months the fortunes of the Parliament in the West were at a very low ebb, and in
September the town was summoned by Lord Goring. The store of ammunition was very low, and as soon as
they were blockaded, the townspeople found themselves short of provisions. 'At that time but weakly
garrisoned, the town surrendered on terms, and the garrison quitted it on the 17th, leaving 50 pieces of
ordnance.'
In the following May the Prince of Wales arrived, for, says Clarendon, 'no place was thought so convenient
for his residence as Barnstaple, a pleasant town in the north part of Devonshire, well fortified, with a good
garrison in it, under the command of Sir Allen Apsley.' The King sent orders to the Prince, who at this time
was little more than fifteen years old, 'by the advice of his council, to manage and improve the business of the
West, and provide reinforcements for the army.' The Prince's council had no easy task, for they were harassed
by several causes. Lord Goring's jealousy and selfishness were a great hindrance; in consequence of a petition
regarding the violence of his horse, the Prince, says Clarendon, 'writ many earnest letters to the Lord Goring.'
Another great difficulty to be grappled with here was a fierce quarrel between Sir Richard Grenville and the
Commissioners of Devon and Cornwall, who complained of him in such bitter terms, that anyone who judged
from their report must have concluded him to be 'the most justly odious to both counties that can be
imagined.'[Pg 228]
Prince Rupert paid the Prince a visit in June, and not long afterwards Lord Goring's horse arrived in hot
disorder, having been chased most of the way from Bridgwater by Fairfax's troops. In the following spring the
town was besieged by the Parliament's troops, and the day after the treaty for the surrender of Exeter was
completed, Fairfax himself marched to Barnstaple. The Governor, seeing that resistance was hopeless, gave
'the castle and the town ... as a security for surrender of the fort at eight days' end'; and on honourable terms
Barnstaple yielded to the enemy. It was the last town in Devonshire to be delivered to the Parliament.
About two miles upstream the river 'Taw vails bonnet to Tawstock, in our ancestors' speech,' says Westcote,
and he goes on to describe it as 'a pleasant and delicate seat indeed, in a rich soil, and inhabited by worthy
personages.' The modest claim has been put forward that the view here includes 'the most valuable manor, the
best mansion, the finest church, and the richest rectory, in the county.' Possibly other parishes may not agree
with all the superlatives, but the beautiful features of the valley certainly offer a temptation to use them.
Tawstock Court was once the property of the Earls of Bath, and now belongs to their descendant, Sir
Bourchier Wrey. An Elizabethan gateway is all that is left of the old house, which was burnt down, and rebuilt
in 1787. The beautiful cruciform church is chiefly Decorated, but parts are of a later date; it is dignified by a
fine central embattled tower, crowned by pinnacles. In the church are several altar-tombs to the Bourchiers,
Barons Fitzwarine and later Earls of Bath, and to their wives, and there is a very early effigy carved in wood.
Leaving the Taw and crossing the country to the south, and a little to the west, one reaches the Torridge, and
Torrington, a town 'built scatteringly, lying at length, as it were, upon the brow of a hill hanging over the
river.' It is, perhaps, chiefly known as the scene of a skirmish and an engagement during the Civil War. The
skirmish, already mentioned, took place when the Parliament's partisans set out from Barnstaple and Bideford
to attack Colonel[Pg 229] Digby, who, with a small force, had established himself there. It was indeed a case
of fortune favouring the bold, for the Royalists were taken unawares, and had it not been for the daring of 'the
Colonel, whose courage and vivacity upon action was very eminent, and commonly very fortunate,' the day
might well have been with the other side. Colonel Digby had divided a small number of horse into little
parties in different fields, and was waiting for some of his troops to join him before attacking the enemy,
when a band of about fifty Parliamentary musketeers came towards the ground where they stood. Realizing
that, if these once gained possession of the high banks between the two forces, his party must be driven off,
Colonel Digby, with instant decision, took four or five officers with him, and charged with such vigour that
the raw country troops, smitten with panic, threw down their arms and ran, 'carrying so infectious a fear with
them, that the whole body of troops was seized by it and fled.' Colonel Digby followed, with all the horse at
his disposal, 'till,' says Clarendon complacently, 'their swords were blunted with slaughter.' Perhaps the
Royalists were more anxious to impress a salutary warning against the sin of rebellion than to kill the
fugitives, for Clarendon finishes the account by saying that the rebels 'were scattered and dispersed all over
the country, and scarce a man without a cut over the face and head, or some other hurt, that wrought more
upon their neighbours towards their conversion, than any sermon could be preached to them.' This affair
practically brought about the submission of Barnstaple, Bideford, and Appledore.
The second engagement was of a far more important character, with fatal consequences to the King's cause in
the West—already in a hopeless condition. In the early spring of 1646, Lord Hopton marched to
Torrington, and was waiting there for the arrival of about half his ammunition and provisions, when he heard
that Sir Thomas Fairfax, with a large army, was in the immediate neighbourhood. To the best of his power, he
hurriedly made such defences as were possible. His position was excellent, for Torrington stands on a hill
almost surrounded by deep valleys,[Pg 230] but his force was very inferior in numbers to that of the enemy. It
is curious that the second engagement at Torrington began accidentally. Fairfax's army had had a series of
encounters with an outlying troop of Royalist dragoons on approaching the town, and by the time they drew
near the day was nearly spent. As the Royalists were well prepared for their arrival, the lanes and fields near
the town being lined with musketeers, the Parliamentary Generals resolved to stay at a little distance and wait
for the morning to attack. The Royalist word for the night was, 'We are with you,' and their sign, that each
man had a handkerchief tied round his right arm. The word for the other army was, 'Emmanuel, God with us,'
and their signal, a sprig of furze in every hat.
Torrington
About nine o'clock a noise in the town suddenly awoke the suspicion that the Royalists were retreating, so,
says Sprigg, 'that we might get certain knowledge whether they were going off or not, a small party of
dragoons were set to fire on the enemy near the barricadoes and hedges; the enemy answered us with a round
volley of shot.' Whereupon the engagement became general, and both sides fought 'in the dark for some two
hours, till we beat them from the hedges and within their barricadoes, which were very strong, and where
some of their men disputed the entrance of our forces with push of pike and butt-end of musket for a long
time.' At length the Parliamentary troops prevailed, and their horse 'chased the enemy through the town.' Lord
Hopton, bringing up the rear, had his horse shot dead under him in the middle of the town, but, in spite of the
fact that he was slightly wounded, he made yet another effort to rally his troops, and they, 'facing about in the
street, caused our foot to retreat.' Then a body of horse dashed up with a vehemence that the Royalists could
not stand against, and they were obliged to fly; 'one of the officers publicly reporting,' says Clarendon bitterly,
'lest the soldiers should not make haste enough in running away, that he saw their general run through the
body with a pike.'
Scarcely were the Parliamentarians in possession of the town,[Pg 231] when a frightful explosion occurred.
The church, which unknown to them, Lord Hopton had used as a powder-magazine, was blown up and about
two hundred prisoners whom the Roundheads had confined in the church were killed. In his account of the
disaster, Sprigg, who was obviously, from passages in his writings, a man of warm feelings, and a clergyman
by profession, refers very cheerfully to the fact that 'few were slain besides the enemy's (that were prisoners in
the church where the magazine was blown up), and most of our men that guarded them, who were killed and
buried in the ruins,' and not for one moment does the melancholy fate of the many victims seem to damp his
joy.
The victory was a very important one, and a public thanksgiving was held in consequence—indeed, this
was the last real resistance made by the Royalists in the West.
The church has been very unfortunate, for since it was rebuilt in 1651 the tower has been blown down, and it
fell through the roof, doing a good deal of damage. An old print shows this tower to have been a wonderful
erection of slates and tiles, projecting eaves, and irregular gables, surmounted by a little dome, with a
weathercock on the top of all. It was replaced by a slender, tapering, but more conventional spire.
Margaret, Countess of Richmond, and mother of Henry VII, lived here for some time, and left a generous gift,
for, 'pitying the long path the pastor had from home to church,' she 'gave to him and his successors the
manor-house with lands thereto': and on this site of the manor-house stands the present vicarage. Besides
making this gift, 'on every occasion a friend to learning, even in its infancy, she built a room for a library, and
furnished it with the most useful books then to be had.'
Torridge Castle, a building of the fourteenth century, stood on the verge of a steep descent to the river. In
Risdon's day it was almost gone, the ruins had 'for many years hovered, which, by extreme age, is almost
brought to its period;' and in 1780 the chapel, the only part left, was partly pulled down and afterwards turned
into a school.
About a mile or so to the east stands Stevenstone—a new house,[Pg 232] in the midst of a fine
deer-park. For over three centuries Stevenstone was owned by the Rolles, and when Fairfax's troops advanced
on Torrington, two hundred dragoons were being entertained by 'Master Rolls,' and the advance was disputed
by these dragoons, who, after a long and straggling fight in the narrow and dirty lanes, eventually fell back on
the town. Here Fairfax took up his quarters after the town had been taken.
A few miles upstream the Torridge passes Potheridge, the birthplace of General Monk, whose ancestors had
owned property here since the reign of Henry III.
The character of George Monk is extraordinarily interesting, a curious point being that, though he was
essentially cautious, level-headed, and, as Clarendon says, 'not enthusiastical,' and therefore unlikely to rouse
very vivid sentiments in others, as a matter of fact he awoke violent feelings either of glowing enthusiasm or
of extreme bitterness. It is easy to understand his unpopularity with keen partisans who looked on their
opponents and all their ways with abhorrence, and therefore failed to understand how an honest man could
fight for the King, then accept a command from Cromwell, and finally become the prime mover of the
Restoration. But—'If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a
different drummer'; and it may well be that the beat that ruled Monk's steps was the peaceable government
and welfare of the people, and especially of the army, and to the personal claims and rights of the rulers he
was indifferent. The general state of things needed reform badly enough. Monk's acts were never inconsistent,
but he had a genius for silence. When war in England broke out, he returned from fighting for the King in
Holland, to fight for him at home. When Cromwell offered him his release from the Tower, at the price of
helping to subdue the Irish rebels, his accepting the command was to the advantage of this country.
To begin with, Monk was forced to turn soldier with unexpected suddenness. The Under-Sheriff of Exeter
publicly affronted Sir Thomas Monk, on which his son, aged sixteen, went to Exeter and gave the offender
'the chastisement he deserved (without[Pg 233] any intention of murder).' This step created a good deal of
disturbance, and to avoid more, 'our young gentleman' was packed off to 'the School of War in the Low
Countries.'
He was taken prisoner early in the Civil War, and after over two years of close imprisonment, agreed to
accompany the Lord Deputy Lisle to Munster. After leaving Ireland he gained brilliant successes at sea over
the Dutch. Prince tells a tale that is characteristic of him and of Cromwell. The seamen who had served under
Monk had been told that they should receive their full pay as soon as the prizes were sold off, but were
unreasonably impatient; and while Monk was actually at Whitehall putting their claims before the Protector,
news was brought him 'that three or four thousand seamen were come as far as Charing Cross with swords,
pistols, and clubs, to demand their pay. General Monk, thinking himself wronged in this, ran down to meet
them, drew his sword, and fell upon them; Cromwell following with one or two attendants, cut and hew the
seamen, and drove them before him.' Prince finishes the story with applause of the boldness that 'should drive
such great numbers of such furious creatures as English seamen.' Later, Monk's command in Scotland resulted
in a state of order and quietness then very unusual in that country.
Accusations of dealing unfairly with the Parliament in 1659 may be levelled against him with some justice,
but how was loyalty possible to a household so divided against itself as were the rulers of the Kingdom? The
Had Monk openly declared himself for the Stuarts, at the time that he first began to prepare for the
Restoration, he would probably have imperilled the success of the whole scheme, and most certainly would
have plunged the country again into the horrors of Civil War. When he did reveal his negotiations with the
exiled Court at Breda, 'London would not have borne many days, or even many hours longer, the extreme
tension it was then suffering—the City one way, Westminster the other way; Monk's army between
them, and Fleetwood's wolves prowling all round, and ready to pour in.'
Apart from all else, tribute must be paid to Monk's marvellous skill in so ordering affairs that the Restoration
was brought about almost without the cost of a drop of blood. During the winter of 1659, a far larger army
than his own lay for many weeks a few miles to the south on the Border, sent there with the especial purpose
of watching and if necessary attacking him. But Monk knew how to bide his time and to prolong negotiations
to suit his convenience till in the end, without a blow being struck, he marched his army south to London.
Masterly was the diplomacy and grasp of detail which, on the eve of announcing the Restoration, dispersed
over the country all soldiers who would be inclined to stand by the Parliament, making any serious attempt at
a revolt on their part impossible.
One failing his most fervent admirer cannot ignore—a strong leaning to avarice. But his popularity was
unbounded, and 'it was his singular fortune to win in succession the affection of three very different
populations, those of Dublin, Edinburgh, and London.' In Ireland his men were devoted to him. 'A soldier,[Pg
235] tho' sick and without shoes, would strive to go out with honest George Monk.' After the death of
Cromwell he was offered the crown, but he refused, 'holding it a greater honour to be an honest subject than a
great usurper.'
During the frightful visitation of the Plague, the Earl of Craven, and the Archbishop of Canterbury and Monk,
were the only high officials who stayed at their posts, and exposed themselves perpetually to the 'seeds of
death.' So great was the public confidence in him, that at the time of the Great Fire, he being then at sea, 'the
people did believe and say: "If he had been there, the city had not been burned."' No idol of the mob could ask
a more whole-hearted adoration.
The popular feeling is expressed in a rather limping acrostic on his name, of which I quote only the first
quarter. It was called 'England's Heroick Champion, or The ever-renowned General George Monck.' The date
is about 1659-60.
[Pg 236]
R ichly rewarded.
G ainst thy virtue none dare stand,
E xcluded Members now are
Back return'd by thy hand.
'M any miles didst thou compass,
O nly us to free;
N othing by thee too hard was,
C ompared to be.
K eep us in thy protection!
We were all greatly distrest;
Bring thou in all the best.
'G reat bonfires then was made,
E xpressing joy,
O f us that sorrow did invade,
R efresh our annoy.
G uard us with thy aid, we desire;
E xaltation we all will raise
Unto heaven in thy praise.
'M uch good hast thou already done,
O ver this land;
N ow our hearts thou hast quite won:
C ommand! Command!
K indly we will entertain
Those that were excluded,
For they have not intruded.'
In later years, as Duke of Albemarle, he returned to the estate of his forefathers, and rebuilt Potheridge in a
very magnificent manner. It has since been pulled down.
If the traveller follows the Torridge upstream, he will be led south till he is within two miles of Hatherleigh,
and here the river curves away westwards, and then in a northerly direction. In the spring, this clear, rippling
stream has a special charm—thousands and thousands of daffodils grow along the banks though only
sparingly in the fields beyond, so that, if the river happens to be low and the water not to be seen at a little
distance, the windings of the river through the wide green valley are marked by two broad lines of pale, clear
yellow.
Hatherleigh Moor was given a bad name very long ago. The saying is double-edged:
For some years, in this part of the country, while he was curate to his father, who had the neighbouring living
of Iddesleigh, the renowned 'Jack' Russell preached on Sundays and hunted on weekdays. He was immensely
popular, and so many stories are told of him and his hounds that it has been already said,[Pg 237] 'Russell is
fast becoming mythical.' He was not the ideal of a modern parish priest, but this is the opinion of one who
remembers him. The writer begins by speaking of a friend of Russell's as a man who 'seems ... to have been as
good a Christian as he was a gentleman; not ecstatic perhaps, but in the sense of leading a godly, righteous
and sober life. And,' he goes on, 'the same may with certainty be predicated of Russell ... Russell, like a wise
man, got right home to Nature. It was not for nothing that the gipsy chieftain left him his rat-catcher's belt, and
begged for burial at his hands in Swymbridge churchyard.'
Perhaps the following story of him is not quite so well known as many others:
Mr Russell once advertised for a curate: 'Wanted, a curate for Swymbridge: must be a gentleman of moderate
and orthodox views.'
Soon after this advertisement had appeared Mr Hooker, Vicar of Buckerell, was standing in a shop door in
Barnstaple, 'when he was accosted by Will Chapple, the parish clerk of Swymbridge, who entered the grocer's
shop. "Havee got a coorate yet for Swymbridge, Mr Chapple?" inquired the grocer, in Mr Hooker's hearing.
"No, not yet, sir," replied the sexton. "Master's nation purticler, and the man must be orthodox." "What does
that mean?" inquired the grocer. "Well, I reckon it means he must be a purty good rider."
Here we must leave the Torridge altogether, and go eleven miles south-east to the point where the Taw leaves
the uplands of Dartmoor. Almost the first village that the river passes is South Zeal, close to South Tawton,
and near South Zeal was the old home of the Oxenhams, the family about whom the well-known legend of the
white bird is told. When an Oxenham is about to die, a white bird flaps at the window or flies about the
sickroom, and stories of the bird having been seen at such times have been told at intervals, through two
centuries. The evidence in some instances seems fairly good, but where an apparition is expected it is not
unlikely imagination may play tricks, or a chance event may be interpreted as an omen.[Pg 238]
Lysons quotes from Mr Chapple's manuscript collections a case that happened in 1743, the story being given
to Mr Chapple by the doctor. Mr William Oxenham was ill, and 'when the bird came into his chamber, he
observed upon the tradition as connected with his family, but added he was not sick enough to die, and that he
should cheat the bird, and this was a day or two before his death, which took place after a short illness.'
It is necessary to pass over thirteen or fourteen miles, but at Chumleigh one must turn aside to the east, for
about six miles in that direction was the ancient home of the Stucleys. Affeton Castle has been for many years
altogether in ruins, but in the middle of the last century Sir George Stucley roofed over the old gate-house and
made it habitable as a shooting-box. This is the only part of the castle still standing, though the farmhouse
close by is no doubt built upon some of the foundations. 'Lusty Stukeley' (the name was spelt in several ways)
was far from among the worthiest of his family, but distinctly the most entertaining. His ideas were certainly
'spacious' enough for the great days in which he lived, though he was too crack-brained and full of self to fall
into line with his betters, whose deeds still bear rich fruit. 'He was,' says Fuller severely, 'one of good parts,
but valued the less by others, because over-prized by himself.'
If it be allowed that the personality of everyone inclines to being drab or flamboyant, his may be compared to
fireworks. Thomas Stukely, who was born about 1530, was for a younger brother unusually well endowed,
'but his profluous prodigality soon wasted it; yet then, not anyway dejected in mind, he projected to people
Florida, and there in those remote countries to play rex.' He 'blushed not' to tell Queen Elizabeth 'that he
preferred rather to be sovereign of a mole-hill than the highest subject to the greatest king in Christendom.'
His audacity reached the point of bandying words with the Queen, who seems, from the polite irony of her
tone, to have been amused by his vanity.
'I hope,' said the Queen, 'I shall hear from you when you[Pg 239] are stated in your Principality?' 'I will write
unto you,' quoth Stuckley. 'In what language?' said the Queen. He returned, 'In the stile of Princes, To our dear
Sister.'
And on this Stukely departed, but not to Florida, for he met with reverses which dashed his plans, but not his
spirits. Westcote quotes 'a ditty made by him, or of him,' apparently at this time:
Five miles north of Bishop's Nympton is the old town of South Molton, and the manor was part of the
demesne of Edward the Confessor. In the reign of Edward I, Lord Martin held it 'by sergeantry to find a man
with a bow and three arrows to attend the Earl of Gloucester when he goeth to Gower [in Wales] to hunt.'
In the spring of 1654, Charles II was proclaimed King in South Molton, for the Wiltshire gentlemen who had
risen against the Government, headed by Sir Joseph Wagstaff and led by Colonel Penruddock and Mr Hugh
Groves, made their way so far west before they were overpowered. Sir Joseph escaped, but the other two
leaders were beheaded at Exeter.
A little to the north of the town, and about eight miles south of Barnstaple, are the wide grounds of Castle
Hill—broad lawns and slopes, clear streams, and rich feathery masses of woodland that, shaded and
softened by distance, spread far away.
The Fortescues, not long after the Conquest, were granted lands in Devonshire, and in one generation after
another they have come forward to take a part in public affairs—often a Samson's share of toil. Sir John
Fortescue fought at Agincourt, and was chosen Governor of Meaux by Henry V. Sir Edward Fortescue, when
he had surrendered Salcombe Castle, had the consolation of knowing that this fort had been held for the King
Sir John Fortescue, Lord Chief Justice, is usually spoken of as Lord Chancellor, though it is doubted whether
he ever received a valid appointment; for when the honour was bestowed upon him, Yorkists and Lancastrians
were already at war. As the trouble deepened, Sir John laid aside his robe for his sword, and fought bravely
for the 'falling cause' in the terrible battle of Palm Sunday. Later, he accompanied the King and Queen in their
flight, and while abroad, with courageous optimism, began to[Pg 241] instruct the Prince in the 'lawes of his
country and the duties of a King of England.' Of Sir John's two celebrated treatises—De Natura Legis
Naturæ, and De Laudibus Legum Angliæ—the latter and most famous was specially compiled for the
benefit of the Prince, and Sir Edward Coke has enthusiastically declared it 'worthy to be written in letters of
gold for the weight and worthiness thereof.'
A Fortescue of a later generation who 'took to the law,' eventually became Master of the Rolls. He was a great
friend of the poet Pope, and from the gentle mockery in some of the long letters of the poet still in existence, it
would seem that Mr Fortescue had a proper share of prejudice in favour of his own county. In 1724 Pope
writes: 'I am grieved to tell you that there is one Devonshire man not honest; for my man Robert proves a vile
fellow, and I have discarded him.' And in another letter, nearly ten years later, in March, 1734-35: 'Twitnam is
very cold these easterly winds; but I presume they do not blow in the happy regions of Devonshire.'
Sir John Fortescue, born in 1533, had the honour of being chosen 'Preceptor to the Princess Elizabeth.' Later
he was appointed Keeper of the Great Wardrobe; whereupon it was remarked that Sir John Fortescue was one
whom the Queen trusted with the ornaments of her soul and body. 'Two men,' Queen Elizabeth would say,
'outdid her expectations,—Fortescue for integrity, and Walsingham for subtlety and officious services.'
Towards the end of the eighteenth century a member of one of the branches of Fortescues who settled in
Ireland was created Lord Clermont. He was very much liked by the Prince of Wales, and both Lord and Lady
Clermont were a great deal at Court. In Wraxall's 'Posthumous Memoirs' there is an amusing account of an
evening spent by Lady Clermont in launching into London society the Count Fersen who was noted for his
devotion to Marie Antoinette. Already 'Swedish Envoy at the Court of France,' he had arrived in England,
'bringing letters of introduction from the Duchesse de Polignac to many persons of distinction here, in
particular for Lady Clermont. Desirous to present[Pg 242] him in the best company, soon after his arrival she
conducted him in her own carriage to Lady William Gordon's assembly in Piccadilly. She had scarcely
entered the room and made Count Fersen known to the principal individuals of both sexes, when the Prince of
Wales was announced. I shall recount the sequel in Lady Clermont's own words to me, only a short time
subsequent to the fact. "His Royal Highness took no notice of me on his first arrival, but in a few minutes
afterwards, coming up to me: 'Pray, Lady Clermont,' said he, 'is that man whom I see here Count Fersen, the
queen's favourite?' 'The gentleman,' answered I, 'to whom your royal highness alludes is Count Fersen; but so
far from being a favourite of the queen, he has not yet been presented at Court.' 'D——n!'
exclaimed he, 'you don't imagine I mean my mother?' 'Sir,' I replied, 'whenever you are pleased to use the
word "queen" without any addition, I shall always understand it to mean my queen. If you speak of any other
queen, I must entreat that you will be good enough to say the Queen of France, or of Spain.' The Prince made
no reply; but after having walked once or twice round Count Fersen, returning to me: 'He's certainly a very
handsome fellow,' observed he. 'Shall I have the honour, sir,' said I, 'to present him to you?' He instantly
turned on his heel, without giving me any answer; and I soon afterwards quitted Lady William Gordon's
house, carrying Count Fersen with me. We drove to Mrs St John's, only a few doors distant, who had likewise
a large party on that evening. When I had introduced him to various persons there, I said to him, 'Count
Fersen, I am an old woman and infirm, who always go home to bed at eleven. You will, I hope, amuse
yourself. Goodnight.' Having thus done the honours as well as I could to a stranger who had been so highly
recommended to me, I withdrew into the ante-chamber and sate down alone in a corner, waiting for my
'"While there the Prince came in, and I naturally expected, after his recent behaviour, that he would rather
avoid than accost me. On the contrary, advancing up to me: 'What are you doing here, Lady Clermont?' asked
he. 'I am waiting for my coach,[Pg 243] sir,' said I, 'in order to go home.' 'Then,' replied he, 'I will put you into
it and give you my arm down the stairs.' 'For heaven's sake, sir,' I exclaimed, 'don't attempt it! I am old, very
lame, and my sight is imperfect; the consequence of your offering me your arm will be that, in my anxiety not
to detain your royal highness, I shall hurry down and probably tumble from the top of the staircase to the foot.'
'Very likely,' answered he, 'but if you tumble, I shall tumble with you. Be assured, however, that I will have
the pleasure of assisting you and placing you safely in your carriage.' I saw that he was determined to repair
the rudeness with which he had treated me at Lady William Gordon's, and therefore acquiesced. He remained
with me till the coach was announced, conversed most agreeably on various topics, and as he took care of me
down the stairs, enjoined me at every step not to hurry myself. Nor did he quit me when seated in the carriage,
remaining uncovered on the steps of the house till it drove off from the door."'[Pg 244]
Lantern Rock:
Ilfracombe
CHAPTER XII
Ilfracombe's tiny bay is almost surrounded by rocks, but a pier was built by one of the Bourchiers, Earls of
Bath, and his successors[Pg 245]—one Sir Bourchier Wrey after another—have improved and
enlarged it. Westcote speaks of it as 'a pretty harbour for ships of small burden, but dangerous to come in in
some winds, especially for strangers; for whose better security they keep a continual pharos to direct their
course.' The lighthouse now stands on the Lantern Rock, at the mouth of the harbour, where once stood a little
chapel dedicated to St Nicholas. The dedication explains its position, for St Nicholas was a sea-saint, whose
protection used to be specially implored as a defence against shipwreck.
Nowadays Ilfracombe is of no consequence as a port, but six centuries ago it must have been of some
importance, for when Edward III was besieging Paris it contributed six ships and eighty-two mariners to a
fleet. Although the nucleus of the town is old, and indeed consisted only of one 'scattering street,' its
development is very modern, and has happened since it became popular as a watering-place.
The architecture of the church is very varied. The tower is probably Norman, finished by Perpendicular
battlements and pinnacles; it is built above the centre of the north aisle, and projects into the church. There are
also remains of Transitional work, and in the chancel is a Decorated piscina.
Leading inland from Ilfracombe are 'lovely combes, with their green copses, and ridges of rock, and golden
furze, fruit-laden orchards, and slopes of emerald pasture, pitched as steep as house-roofs, where the red
long-horns are feeding, with their tails a yard above their heads.' About twenty-two miles to the west, the
sea-line is broken by an island, about which there is an indefinable air of romance. Lundy is three and a half
miles long, its greatest width is a few yards short of a mile, and it is surrounded by high and dangerous cliffs
and rocks—too well known even in the present day by the ships wrecked on them. Perhaps those
oftenest heard of are the reefs of the Hen and Chickens, 'fringed with great insular rocks, bristling up amid the
sea,' which dashes on them in a never-ceasing cloud of foam on the north, and the fatal Shutter on the
south-west. Lundy has been described as a 'lofty table-headed granite rock.... The cliffs[Pg 246] and adjacent
sea are alive with seabirds, every ledge and jutting rock being alive with them, or they are whirling round in
clouds, filling the air with their discordant screams.' Westcote remarked: 'In breeding time, in some places,
you shall hardly know where to set your foot but on eggs,' and adds that it affords 'conies plentifully, doves,
stares (which Alexander Nectan termeth Ganymede's birds).' Mr Chanter translates 'Ganymede's birds to be
gannets, as there were very many of these birds there'; but an older commentator soars higher, and thinks of
eagles and ostriches!
A description of Lundy as it was in the middle of the eighteenth century is dimly suggestive of Robinson
Crusoe. 'Wild fowl were exceeding plenty, and a vast number of rabbits. The island was overgrown with ferns
and heath, which made it almost impossible to go to the extreme of the island. Had it not been for the supply
of rabbits and young sea-gulls our tables would have been but poorly furnished, rats being so plenty that they
destroyed every night what was left of our repast by day. Lobsters were tolerably plenty, and some other fish
Many centuries later it seems to have had the power of inspiring fabulous tales, for Miss Celia Fiennes, who
looked at it in her journey from Cornwall, makes a statement almost as wonderful as some of Sir John
Mandeville's tales of Barnacle Trees and other marvels. She says: 'I saw the isle of Lundy, which formerly
belonged to my Grandfather, William Lord Viscount Say and Seale, which does abound with fish and rabbits
and [Pg 247]all sorts of ffowles, one bird yt lives partly in the water and partly out and so may be called an
amphibious creature; it's true that one foot is like a turkey, the other a goose's foote; it lays its eggs in a place
the sun shines on and sets it so exactly upright on the small end, and there it remaines till taken up, and all the
art and skill of persons cannot set it up soe againe to abide.'
Legends apart, Lundy has been the scene of many thrilling adventures, and has had an eventful history. The
advantages of its position for watching and falling upon richly laden merchant ships on their way to and from
Bristol and other towns, and the great difficulties that met any enemy trying to land, resulted in the island
being appropriated by one band of pirates after another, of whom the De Moriscoes were the most celebrated.
Henry II, getting tired of their turbulence and lawlessness, granted the island to the Knights Templars, but it
does not appear they were ever able to establish themselves there. In 1158 the raids of the Moriscoes became
so intolerable that a special tax was imposed in Devon and Cornwall for the defence of their ports, and for
furnishing means for an attack on Lundy, but Sir William de Morisco seems to have triumphantly survived the
storm. Later he was taken prisoner by the French in a sea-fight, but was eventually released.
Sir William, his son, was charged, upon the evidence of a semi-lunatic, with conspiring to assassinate Henry
III, and on the strength of it was condemned to death—a sentence that, as he fled to Lundy, was not
carried out for four years, when he was taken by stratagem. Lundy was then seized by the King, but forty
years later the Moriscoes once more gained possession of it. Edward II granted the island to one of the
Despencers, and in his own distress attempted to take refuge here:
During the reign of Henry VIII, French pirates seized the island, and plundered and robbed at large, but they
were accounted for by the valour of Clovelly fishermen, who made a determined attack, and killed or made
prisoners of the whole band. In 1608 a commission was held to consider the grievances of merchants who
French pirates made Lundy their headquarters three years later, and in June, 1630, Captain Plumleigh reported
that 'Egypt was never more infested with caterpillars than the Channel with Biscayers. On the 23rd instant
there came out of St Sebastian twenty sail of sloops; some attempted to land on Lundy, but were repulsed by
the inhabitants.'
One of the most conspicuous of all Lundy's owners was a certain[Pg 249] Thomas Benson, merchant of
Bideford, who, with great sang-froid and considerable humour, combined smuggling and piracy with being a
member of Parliament. Unfortunately, his varied occupations after a while brought him to grief. Amongst
other charges, it was proved that he had 'entered into a contract with the Government for the exportation of
convicts to Virginia and Maryland, and gave the usual bond to the sheriff for so doing. But instead of doing
this he shipped them to Lundy, where he employed them in building walls and other work in the island. Every
night they were locked up in the old keep of the Mariscoes. He regarded himself as King of Lundy, and ruled
with a high hand.' In answering this accusation he offered the ingenious excuse for his breach of contract:
'That he considered Lundy to be quite as much out of the world as these colonies.'
From Ilfracombe, towards Lynton, the road at first follows the edge of the cliff, high above the sea. One tiny
bay curves inland till the road seems almost to overhang the water, blue-green with undertones of grey, and
the foam splashing on the broken rocks. All around is a sense of wide spaces and freshness. Headland beyond
headland rises to the east, the Little Hangman, Great Hangman, and Highveer Point, softened by a transparent
grey haze. A little to the right of them are the first ridges of Exmoor, some long, some short, ending in full
curves and slopes clearly outlined against the sides of their higher neighbours, and the highest against the sky.
In the prettiest of hollows, Watermouth Castle looks down a slope of richest pasture to the sea sparkling
below, and a great mass of rock shields it from storms blowing off the water. Clouds of foliage soften the lines
of the hill rising behind the Castle.
A short distance inland is the village of Berrynarbour, chiefly to be remembered as the birthplace of John
Jewel, Bishop of Salisbury, 'a perfect rich gem, and true jewel indeed,' over whose virtues Westcote falls into
panegyrics. 'If anywhere the observation of Chrysostom be true, that there lies a great hidden treasure in
names, surely it may rightly be said to be here; grace in John and eminent perfection in Jewel.'[Pg 250]
John Jewel was born in 1522, and when very young was sent to Oxford, where he showed a passion for
learning, and before long became famous as a lecturer and preacher. 'His behaviour was so virtuous that his
heaviest adversary ... could not notwithstanding forbear to yield this testimony to his commendation: "I should
love thee, Jewel, wert thou not a Zuinglian. In thy faith thou art a heretic, but sure in thy life thou art an
angel."'
Jewel's friendship with Peter Martyr, and other marks of his Protestant leanings, were the reason of his being
expelled, in Queen Mary's days, from Corpus Christi College. But he had 'a little Zoar to fly
unto'—Broadgates Hall, now Pembroke College.
Our author finishes his remarks on Berrynarbour by quoting an epitaph then to be found in the church, a
building which has a fine Perpendicular tower with battlement and pinnacles. The memorial was to Nicholas
Harper:
Combe Martin has the rare distinction amongst English parishes of owning mines with veins of silver as well
as lead. Camden tells us that the silver-mines 'were first discovered in Edward the First's days, when three
hundred and fifty men were brought from the Peak in Derbyshire, to work here.' This statement Fuller
amplifies by the note that 'It was forged for the Lady Eleanor Dutchesse of Barr, daughter to the said King,
who married the year before.'
In the reign of Edward III the mines yielded the King 'great profits towards carrying on the French war,' and
Henry V 'made good use of them,' but after that they were neglected for a long while. In Queen Elizabeth's
reign, Adrian Gilbert, Sir Humphrey's brother, began to work them again, and Sir Beavis Bulmer followed
with considerable success, 'by whose mineral skill great quantity of silver was landed and refined.'
The Queen presented the Earl of Bath with a rich and fair silver cup made here, bearing this inscription:
From Combe Martin the road to Lynton turns inland and makes a deep curve to the south, and two or three
miles from its most southerly point, and about ten miles from Ilfracombe, is Arlington Court, the home of one
of the many branches of that great North Devon family, the Chichesters. The first of this name were settled at
Chichester in Sussex, but by marriage with the daughter and heiress of John de Raleigh, about the middle of
the fourteenth century, John Chichester came into the possession of several manors in North Devon. About a
hundred and fifty years later, Youlston, with other manors, was granted to 'John Chichester and Margaret his
wife and their heirs for ever, at the annual rent of a rose, at the feast of St John the Baptist.'
Sir John Chichester was among the most zealous Protestants in suppressing the rising that broke out in the
West in 1549. After the insurrection was crushed, 'it was declared that the rebels used the church bells in
every parish to excite the people. The bells were taken down, and all the clappers were made a present to Sir
John Chichester, as a reward for having assisted against the rebels. Strype says: "No question he made good
benefit thereof."'
Sir John had reason to be proud of his seven sons, for four 'were knights, one created a baron, and one a
viscount.' Ireland was the special field of their triumphs, and it is a curious coincidence that four hundred
years before one of their ancestors, 'Master Robert de Cicester, ... being a discreet person,' had been specially
chosen to go on the King's business to that country.
Prince calls Sir Arthur Chichester, the second son, 'one of the chiefest ornaments of our country.' He received
his baptism of fire in France, under the command of Henri IV, and 'for some[Pg 253] notable exploit done by
him ... was by that puissant prince honoured with knighthood.' He fought in the Armada, and the next year
sailed as one of Drake's captains, and then became lieutenant-colonel of a regiment in the West Indies. Fuller
speaks of his career in Ireland in the sympathetic tone of his day towards that unhappy country. 'By his valour
he was effectually assistant, first to plough and break up that barbarous Nation by Conquest, and then to sow
it with seeds of civility when by King James made Lord Deputy of Ireland.' The 'good laws and Provisions'
made by former Governors were 'like good lessons set for a Lute out of tune, useless untill the Instrument was
fitted for them.' Sir Arthur established new and wider circuits for Justices of Assize, with the most excellent
results, for, 'like good Planets in their several spheres, they carried the influence of Justice round about the
Kingdom.' And, if Fuller is right, although he governed with a very firm and sometimes heavy hand, he
contrived to avoid the unpopularity which it would be imagined must have fallen to his share amongst an
oppressed and rebellious people. Indeed, not only did the Irish under his authority seem, for a time, resigned
to English rule, but they even showed a passing desire to imitate their fashions; for, 'in conformity to the
English Custome, many Irish began to cut their mantles into cloaks.'
In 1612 Sir Arthur was created Lord Chichester of Belfast, and, having resigned his office of Lord Deputy,
was called back to it two years later—the same year, his biographer observes, that the Irish harp took its
place in the arms of England. His 'administration,' says Leland, 'was active, vigilant, cautious, firm, and suited
to a country scarcely emerging to civilization and order.'
A rather florid 'Elegie on the Death of my Lord Chichester' reflects contemporary opinion:
The descent into Parracombe is almost alarming, as the village is at the bottom of a valley with precipitous
sides. Driving down-hill, the ground falls away so sharply that just beyond the horses' heads one sees only
space. The old and interesting church of St Helen is Early English; it is now used only on rare occasions, and
a new church has been built close by. St Helen's keeps its old chancel screen, but it is in a mutilated condition,
for the rood-beam was taken away to be cut up into bench-ends!
Over all this valley hovers the charm of an overflowing abundance, which particularly shows itself in the
pleasant gardens of fruit and flowers, and the overgrown hedges with their rich decoration of berries, crimson
leaves, and purple and golden flowers.
Directly north is the bit of coast that Kingsley so vividly described: 'What a sea-wall they are, those Exmoor
hills! Sheer upward from the sea a thousand feet rise the mountains; and as we slide and stagger lazily along
before the dying breeze, through the deep water which never leaves the cliff, the eye ranges, almost dizzy, up
some five hundred feet of rock, dappled with every hue, from the intense dark of the tide-line; through the
warm green and brown rock-shadows, out of which the horizontal cracks of the strata loom black, and the
breeding gulls show like lingering[Pg 255] snowflakes; up to the middle cliff, where delicate grey fades into
pink, pink into red, red into glowing purple; up to where the purple is streaked with glossy ivy wreaths, and
black-green yews; up to where all the choir of colours vanishes abruptly on the mid-hill, to give place to one
yellowish-grey sheet of upward down, sweeping aloft smooth and unbroken, except by a lonely stone, or knot
of clambering sheep, and stopped by one great rounded waving line, sharp-cut against the brilliant blue. The
sheep hang like white daisies upon the steep; and a solitary falcon rides, a speck in air, yet far below the crest
of that tall hill. Now he sinks to the cliff edge, and hangs quivering, supported, like a kite, by the pressure of
his breast and long curved wings, against the breeze.'
Countisbury
Foreland
About six miles west of Lynmouth is the lovely valley of Heddon's Mouth—that is, 'the Giant's mouth;
Etin, A.S., a giant.' It is a very narrow green cleft, shut in by two precipitous cliffs rising eight hundred feet
straight out of the sea. Heddon's Mouth Water hurries along the glen, buries itself in a bank of shingle, and
flows out again lower down the beach. Huge rocks tumbled together make great barriers that block each side
of the cove. On the eastern side, close to the mouth of the valley, part of the towering wall seems to have
fallen away, showing bare rocks and soil of a warm light brown tempered by shades of pink. The western side
is very steep, but covered with short grass, sea-pinks and thyme, and crowned by a great mass of boulders.
The face to the sea is slightly hollowed, suggesting that on this side also part of the cliff has fallen. East and
west, one great headland after another is seen, misty but impressive, above a silvery grey sea. Inland the
valley changes suddenly from barren cliffs to a profusion of copses and thickets, and several beautiful deeply
cleft combes, overbrimming with thick trees, open into the valley. Among the wayside bushes are the pretty
purple-crimson flower-heads and thick cool leaves of that not very common wild-flower, livelong.
A road passing through a wood and by a little rushing stream overhung by hazels, leads towards Lynton, and
crosses the tiny railway, on whose bank masses of the slender stems of great[Pg 256] moon-like evening
primroses shine in the grey twilight with an almost weird effect.
The more interesting way to Lynton is along the coast-road, which is soon reached from the valley. Beneath
the road the cliffs fall precipitously hundreds of feet to the sea, and a few little horned sheep and some white
goats, scrambling on the face of them, seemed to have the same hold as flies on a window-pane. Ravens are
often seen even now amongst these almost inaccessible rocks. The road runs through a fir-wood, and as it
rises and falls one may catch delicious glimpses of the sea through the ruddy stems and the great dark fans and
tasselled ends of the branches; and the scent of pine-needles and of the sea stirring amongst them makes the
charm still greater. The road looks down into Wooda Bay, which is also surrounded by woods, and passes to
the tinier but very lovely Lee Bay. A little combe leads down to the shore, sheltered by leaves which,
luminous from the sunshine above them, shade the glen from the fierce rays, and it is filled with a subdued,
mysterious light. Stem beyond stem is partly hidden by the fresh, vigorous green shoots springing round them,
or hanging in garlands from branch to branch, and suggests the wonderful fairyland that Richard Doyle saw,
and enabled many people to see.
A little stream, breaking into miniature waterfalls and reflecting the foliage in its pools, finally disappears into
Close to the bay stands Lee Abbey, a comparatively modern house, on the site of the old house of the De
Wichehalses—a family who, considering the not very remote date of their history, have been
surrounded with a surprising number of fables: Mr Blackmore contributed a share.
The Wichehalses had not a Dutch origin; the daughter of the house called Janifred never existed, and
consequently the whole tragic tale of her lover's faithlessness and her sad fate is entirely imaginary. 'The
Wichehalses,' says Mr Chanter, who has studied[Pg 257] their history with minute care, 'originally took their
name from their dwelling-place, a hamlet called Wych, near Chudleigh. Nicholas, a younger son, but founder
of the most eminent branch, settled in Barnstaple about 1530, and made a large fortune in the woollen trade,
part of which he spent in buying property in North Devon—amongst others, the Manors of Lynton and
Countisbury. Here his grandson Hugh Wichehalse removed in 1627, leaving Barnstaple with his wife and
children for the double reason that political troubles were already brewing and rumours were afloat that the
plague was drawing near.'
Hugh Wichehalse seems to have avoided all strife as far as possible, but his son John threw himself
vehemently on to the side of the Parliament, and became notorious for persecuting the Royalist clergy in the
country round, whose lot in any case was a sorry one. John sold some of his estates and left a portion to his
younger son, so that his eldest son (another John) and his wife, both of whom were extravagant, soon found
themselves in difficulties. John Wichehalse made himself justly unpopular by the part he played after
Sedgemoor. A Major Wade, in the Duke of Monmouth's army, had escaped from the battle-field and, with two
other men, was hidden by a farmer at Farley. A search was made for them, in which Wichehalse joined with
one of his servants, whom he had armed. His conduct was particularly odious, because Wade was a great
friend of some of his own relations, who had very generously, by gifts, loans, and good counsel, repeatedly
helped him out of his difficulties. In course of time they arrived at the right farm, and while they were coming
in by the front door, Wade and the others escaped by the back. Babb, Wichehalse's servant, and another of the
party saw the men running, and fired, and Wade was shot through the body, so that he was disabled and taken
prisoner. Wichehalse's servants also killed another of Monmouth's men, and his body was impaled on a gate
near Ley.
'In the neighbourhood,' says Mr Chanter, 'the blame was put on his servant, John Babb, who was said to have
incited his master to kill every rebel they could find; and local tradition has it that[Pg 258] the Babbs, who had
been the favourite retainers at Ley, never prospered after. When their master left Lynton they moved to West
Leymouth, as the modern Lynmouth was called then, and employed themselves in the herring-curing industry,
which the cottagers said failed because Babb was engaged in it; and years after his granddaughter, Ursula
Babb, was pointed out as the last of the race with the curse on it, and, as she was reported to possess the evil
eye, became a great object of fear to all around.'
John Wichehalse and his wife went to London, and wasted their goods until he died, when the mortgages were
foreclosed, and no property in Lynton was left to the family. The melancholy fate of their daughter Mary may
have suggested the more romantic story of Janifred. Mary Wichehalse married, but later returned to Lynton,
where, under the care of a faithful servant, she spent her time wandering over the cliffs looking at the lost
inheritance. Some say that she fell off the rocks, and others that she was washed away by the tide, but both
accounts agree that she was drowned.
The Valley of Rocks is wild, grand, and rather dreary, 'all crags and pinnacles.' Southey was deeply impressed
by it: 'Imagine a narrow vale between two ridges of hills somewhat steep; the southern hill turfed; the vale,
which runs from east to west, covered with huge stones and fragments of stone among the fern that fills it; the
northern ridge completely bare, excoriated of all turf and all soil, the very bones and skeletons of the earth;
Lynmouth
Perched on the cliffs nine hundred feet immediately above Lynmouth, Lynton looks down to the inlet, into
which two ravines open from the south. Down these ravines rush the East and West Lyns, hidden among the
woods; and the two streams join just before they reach the sea-shore. Countisbury Foreland stands high to the
east of the harbour and stretches far out into the sea, and between the foreland and the mainland is another
long, steep, winding cleft.
I once saw the bay in an exquisite light very early in the morning. Earth and sky and sea were all veiled in the
softest grey, and in the sky was one little flush of pale rose pink. But for a sea-gull crying under the cliff, the
stillness was absolute.
Lynmouth consists of a tiny quay, a little group of houses, and the ravines beyond. It is impossible to imagine
any place where buildings and tourists could more exasperate a true lover of earlier days. Still, they cannot
have more than a superficial effect—except at the meeting of the streams, which is quite spoilt by the
houses on either side.
The music of the Lyns has been noticed by many comers, and about sixty years ago the Rev. H. Havergal,
whilst staying here and listening to the continuous tone of the Lyn at low-water, composed this chant:
MUSIC OF
THE LYNS.
As a place for visitors to admire, Lynton was discovered[Pg 260] in the beginning of the nineteenth century.
The French Revolution and Napoleonic wars obliged those who were in the habit of going abroad for change
and amusement to look for it in comparatively unknown parts at home. In 1807 the first hotel—not
counting a small and inconvenient village hostelry—was opened; and even at this date there were no
wheeled vehicles in either village, ponies and donkeys carrying everything. Until this time Lynton and
Lynmouth had been the quietest of little fishing-villages, without even the doings of a resident squire or rector
to furnish a subject for a little gossip.
The ecclesiastical history of the little neighbouring parish of Countisbury is very much mixed up with that of
Lynton. Mr Chanter prints some of the Countisbury churchwardens' accounts, which, as he observes, are
chiefly remarkable for the prominent part that beer played in every event, from killing a fox to the visitation of
'ye Dean Ruler.'
s. d.
'Pd when one fox was killed for beer 2 0
Pd more for beare when one fox was killed 2 6
Pd for bear when two foxes were killed 7 6
Pd for ale for the fox hunters 2 0'
Other entries are for killing 'wild cats, greys [badgers], and hedge hogs ... salaries of dog-whipper ...
fox-hunter, etc., and repairs to the base viol.'
Lynmouth and Lyn were noted for the fishery, and especially for their herrings and oysters. The fishery was
developed in quite early days by the abbots of Ford Abbey, who claimed the whole coast-line of Lynton and
of Countisbury. Cellars and curing-houses, called 'red-herring houses,' were built close to the beach, and were
apt to be swept away by any violent storm, for the little harbour has a double reason for dreading bad
weather—not only do the breakers surge over their usual limits and wash away or damage all that is in
their way, but at the same time the streams come down a roaring, foaming torrent, which rolls along great
boulders and hurls itself against all obstacles. In 1607 a[Pg 261] whole row of red-herring houses was swept
away, and since that date the records of disputes as to repairs to the harbour and petitions from the fishermen
tell how greatly they have suffered from this cause. The fishing has dwindled until it is now a very trifling
matter indeed.
The small parish of Countisbury is high on the cliffs, on the eastern side of the river, and the road to it from
Lynmouth rises at once to a height of eleven hundred feet. A little Perpendicular church with an embattled
tower crowned by pinnacles stands at the mercy of every wind that blows.
Farther to the east, and almost on the boundary-line of Somerset, is Oldbarrow Camp, which differing
archæologists have claimed to be British, Roman, and Danish. From this hill the fall to the sea is precipitous,
and the descent into Somerset is almost as steep; inland, the ground also sinks away, leaving a magnificent
view and a grand sense of space. Even when the light is fading there is a great charm, for looking down into
The winding valley of the West Lyn is very beautiful, but not so wild as that of the East Lyn; it lies deep
down beneath fir-woods, whose serried spires mount higher and higher on the steep hill-side. A little way
from Lynton, along this lovely road, is Barbrook Mill, and close by a cottage covered with purple clematis,
among trees loaded with rosy apples.
Following up the East Lyn from Lynton, the fitness of Dean Alford's words is realized:[Pg 262]
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The road passes a fir-wood, bright with golden-rod and ragwort and soft blue scabious, and by-and-by turns
eastward, and reaches the scattered village of Brendon. Brendon 'church-town' is made up of church, school,
parsonage, and a few farms, and can scarcely be called a village. The church stands high on the hill above the
river; it is very small, and has been rebuilt comparatively lately; its dedication is the most interesting thing
about it.[Pg 263] All who ever rejoiced in 'The Water Babies' should remember this Irish saint. 'Did you never
hear of the blessed St Brandan, how he preached to the wild Irish, on the wild, wild Kerry coast; he, and five
other hermits, till they were weary and longed to rest?... So St Brandan went out to the point of Old Dunmore,
and looked over the tide-way roaring round the Blasquets, at the end of all the world, and away into the ocean,
and sighed, "Ah that I had wings as a dove!" And far away, before the setting sun, he saw a blue fairy sea, and
golden fairy islands, and he said, "Those are the islands of the blest!" Then he and his friends got into a
hooker and sailed away and away to the westward, and were never heard of more.'
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Malmsmead
A little higher up the little river (here known as Brendon Water) is a very old bridge, now unused, and a wide
modern bridge, which crosses the two branches of the divided stream just below a little green island. Bushes
crowd and overlap each other on the banks, and it is very likely a grey water-wagtail will dart from among the
leaves and flit jauntily upstream.
The road all this way follows the water—for some distance the boundary between the
counties—and here it is sunk between the barriers of the County Wall separating Devonshire and
Somersetshire. A great bare cliff, covered only with short grass, and scanty tufts of heather and furze growing
thinly upon it, towers above the road; the other side of the valley is lower, gentler, and wooded. Malmsmead
Bridge crosses over the Badgeworthy Water, as the stream—which seems to change its name nearly
every half-mile in the most perplexing manner—is here called, a little higher than the point at which it
is joined by its tributary, Oare Water. Above the bridge the road becomes a rough track that leads up into the
very wild and beautiful valley of Badgeworthy Water, well known by name to all lovers of 'Lorna Doone.'
Some of the natives are apt to mislead strangers by wrongly calling this glen the Doone Valley. Further
upstream the valley becomes narrower, and the sides steeper, winding in long beautiful curves. The shallow
stream is brown, but very bright and clear and pebbled; boggy patches lie here and there by the side, and in
one patch the sweet-[Pg 264]ferns grow so large and thick that their characteristic 'sharp sweet' scent is strong
enough to betray them before one catches sight of the finely-cut fronds. On the east side of Badgeworthy
Water is Deer Park, where many deer lie and the fir-woods come down to the water's edge. On the opposite
side is Badgeworthy Wood, chiefly of oaks, most of which are not very large, but many of them are gnarled.
The number of oak-apples that I have seen in this wood was amazing; on one tree they seemed like cherries on
a cherry-tree. Nearly all were scarlet, and they glowed in the sunshine.
'Lorna Doone' has brought so many visitors to the scene that it is no news to say that the account of the
water-slide is fictitious. This word is deliberately chosen instead of 'exaggerated,' which is often applied to Mr
Blackmore's picture of the fall; for he was not describing scenery—he was setting a scene in his novel,
and there was no reason why he should be bound to inches, or even feet! And this argument applies to what he
has said of the Doone Valley. At the same time, in his 'Exploration of Exmoor,' Mr Page observes that a true
description of the valley of Badgeworthy Water would very nearly represent Mr Blackmore's Glen Doone;
and it still seems absolutely apart from the ordinary race and fret of life.
Two long, smooth slopes of rock one below another form the chief part of the water-slide, and the thin stream
slipping over them makes one wish to see how the fall would look when the water comes down, a roaring
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torrent, swollen by heavy rains and melting snow. On one side of the water-slide the ground rises very
sharply, but up the other side a tiny path twists through the wood, and opens quite suddenly on a very still
valley with steep sides and a broad, open space between. A mountain-ash bearing vividly scarlet bunches of
berries hangs over the stream close to the opening; but beyond, only a few stunted thorns grow sparsely
amongst an abundance of heather, furze, bracken, and whortleberries. Lorna's bower seems to have been seen
to some extent through the author's imagination. In a shallow combe at a little distance are the ruins of what
appear to have been the walls of enclosures,[Pg 265] but they are very indefinite. These are all that remain of
the Doones' houses, but recent research denies that the Doones ever existed!
Lorna's Bower
From the top of the hill above the water-slide there is a very beautiful view of the winding glens opening out
of each other, and at this point one is able to follow their curves for a long way before the hills shut them out
of sight. With the sun shining through the haziest clouds, and the radiant glow of a diffused light calling out
delicate tints on the distant slopes, the whole scene seems most fitly described by the old words of praise, 'a
fair country.'
Retracing the path to Malmsmead, one is irresistibly tempted to go a few steps into Somerset to look at the
tiny church of Oare, where, Mr Blackmore says, Lorna Doone and Jan Ridd were married. The church is very
narrow, and it stands among trees on the slope above the stream. On the south side of the nave, close to where
the old east wall stood (the chancel is new), is an early piscina of a curious shape; it is supported by a large
carved human head, with a hand to each cheek, and there is a thick, solid cap on the top.
Challacombe is a small village on the western border of Exmoor, seven or eight miles south of Lynton, and
the church looks far over the moors. Westcote derives the name from 'Choldicombe, or rather Coldecombe,
from its cold situation, next neighbour to Exmoor;' and he speaks of 'divers hillocks of earth and stones ...
termed burrows and distinguished by sundry names,' in the parish, and hints at their uncanny nature by telling
how 'fiery dragons have been seen flying and lighting on them.' Such tales he dismisses scornfully, but he tells
of 'a strange accident' that happened 'within these seven years, verified by oath of the party, who otherwise
might have had credit for his honesty.' A labouring man, having saved enough money to buy a few acres of
waste land, began to build himself a house on it, and from a burrow near by he fetched stones and earth. He
had cut deep into the hillock, when 'he found therein a little place, as it had been a large oven, fairly, strongly,
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and closely walled up; which com[Pg 266]forted him much, hoping that some great good would befall him,
and that there might be some treasure there hidden to maintain him more liberally and with less labour in his
old years: wherewith encouraged he plies his work earnestly until he had broken a hole through this wall, in
the cavity whereof he espied an earthen pot, which caused him to multiply his strokes until he might make the
orifice thereof large enough to take out the pot, which his earnest desire made not long a-doing; but as he
thrust in his arm and fastened his hand thereon he suddenly heard, or seemed to hear, the noise of the
trampling or treading of horses coming, as he thought, towards him, which caused him to forbear and arise
from the place, fearing the comers would take his purchase from him (for he assured himself it was treasure);
but looking about every way to see what company this was, he saw neither horse nor man in view. To the pot
again he goes, and had the like success a second time; and yet, looking all about, could ken nothing. At the
third time he brings it away, and therein only a few ashes and bones, as if they had been of children, or the
like. But the man, whether by the fear, which yet he denied, or other cause, which I cannot comprehend, in
very short time after lost senses both of sight and hearing, and in less than three months consuming died.'
This tale is followed by another, of a 'mystical sciencer,' and Westcote finishes with the comment that the
stories are 'not unfit tales for winter nights when you roast crabs by the fire, whereof this parish yields none,
the climate is too cold, only the fine dainty fruits of wortles and blackberries.'
A little to the north of Challacombe is the great hill of Chapman Burrows, where stands a 'tall, lean slab of
slate, the Longstone.' It is nine feet high, and in the broadest part about two feet eight inches wide. The history
of the Longstone is unknown, but the suggestion has been made that it may be an ancient relic, a menhir, and
this view is supported by the fact that about a dozen large tumuli lie on the slopes around. One of these is
between ten and twelve feet high and three hundred feet round at the base. Burrows are found all over
Exmoor. 'The eye of reflection sees stand uninterrupted a number of simple sepulchres of departed[Pg 267]
souls.... A morsel of earth now damps in silence the éclat of noisy warriors, and the green turf serves as a
sufficient shroud for kings.'
Waterslide: Doone
Valley
By far the greatest part of Exmoor lies in Somerset, so that here one must not wander far amongst great round
hills, wide distances, and deep combes. One has heard of strangers who have been disappointed by the first
sight of Exmoor, for its heights are not very evident. There are no peaks, no sharply-cut isolated hills, nor any
with a very striking outline, except Dunkery; but the whole moor is a tableland, across which the coach road
runs at a level from twelve hundred to fourteen hundred feet above the sea: 'A bare rolling waste of moorland
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stretching away into the eastern distance, like the ocean "heaving in long swells,"' and large spaces of bracken,
of bogs fringed with cotton-grass and rough grass and whortleberries, among which rise little glittering
streams that splash their way down into the valleys beneath.
The sides of the glens leading from the borders of the moor are crowded with endless masses of
mountain-ashes, and whether the leaves make a background to the flat creamy clusters of sweet, heavily
scented flowers or to great bunches of scarlet fruit, the long ranks give a very rich effect.
Mr R. J. King has observed that Exmoor, 'still lonely and uncultivated,' was probably at one time during the
English conquests a boundary or 'mark,' 'always regarded as sacred and placed under the protection of some
deity or hero.' Amongst some very interesting remarks, he says that the intermingling in Devonshire of the
Celtic and Teutonic races 'may be traced in folk-lore, not less distinctly than in dialect or in features....
Sigmund the Waelsing, who among our English ancestors represented Sigfried, the great hero of the
Niebelungen-lied, has apparently left his name to the deep pool of Simonsbath ... again, side by side with
traditions of King Arthur, to the parish of Simonsward in Cornwall.'
It is difficult to imagine any moorlands destitute of superstition, and plenty linger on Exmoor. Mr Page
(writing in 1890) gave some instances that have occurred comparatively lately.[Pg 268] He speaks of
'overlooking' and of witchcraft, and says that 'not many years since the villagers of Withycombe, by no means
an Ultima Thule among hamlets, firmly believed that certain ancient dames had the power of turning
themselves into white rabbits.'
'An astonishing instance of belief in witchcraft' within his own experience was one where an old
woman—'as harmless a creature as can be found in the country'—was believed by her
neighbours to have not only the evil eye, but also 'the power of turning herself into a black dog, in which form
she was met a short time since, during the twilight hour, in a neighbouring lane. For these all-sufficient
reasons the poor old soul was, for a while, unable to obtain the services of a nurse during an illness from
which she is only now recovering.'
Another story shows the remarkable powers of a wise woman. Mr Page explains that he cannot give the real
name of the couple, but calls them Giles. Giles deserted his wife. 'For a while Mrs Giles bore his absence with
a fortitude born, perhaps, of no very great love for her partner. Then she suddenly took it into her head to have
him home. She did not telegraph, she did not even write; but one day the errant husband was seen by the
astonished villagers hurrying towards his deserted home. And his footsteps were marked with blood! The
witch-wife had compelled his return in such haste that not only the soles of his boots, but those of his feet,
were worn out.'
Mr Page mentions that 'the old mediæval custom of touching a corpse still prevails. At an inquest lately held
at or near South Molton, each of the coroner's jury, as he filed past the body, laid his fingers on the forehead.
This act, it was believed, would free him from dreams of the deceased.
Omens and portents such as mysterious knockings, a particular sound of church-bells, or a bird flying into a
room, are very grave warnings, and a story of this character comes from near Taunton. 'A farmer riding home
from Taunton Market noticed a white rook among the sable flock settling over a field. When he reached home
there were symptoms of uneasiness among his cattle, and[Pg 269] that night the dogs barked so vociferously
that he had to get up and quiet them. In the morning he was dead.'
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Doone Valley
Writing of other traditions, 'one of the most beautiful of Easter customs still survives. Young men have not yet
ceased on the Resurrection morning to climb the nearest hill-top to see the sun flash over the dark ridge of
Quantock, or the more distant line of Mendip.' To see the newly-arisen sun on Easter morning was an augury
of good luck. 'Early in the century Dunkery, probably because it is the highest land in Somerset, was favoured
above all surrounding hills, and its sides,' says Miss King, 'were covered with young men, who seemed to
come from every quarter of the compass, and to be pressing up towards the Beacon.'
Exmoor stag-hunting is far-famed, for it is the only corner of England where wild red deer are still to be
found. The fashion of coming here to hunt from a distant part of the country is comparatively modern, but
Hugh Pollard, Ranger of the Forest, kept a pack of stag-hounds at Simonsbath more than three hundred years
ago, and the Rangers who succeeded him continued to keep the hounds.
Even before the Conquest, the moor had been a royal hunting-ground. Deeds show that in the reign of Edward
the Confessor there were at least three Royal Foresters; and William I, says Mr Rawle, 'probably reserved to
himself the forest rights, for the Conqueror, according to the Saxon Chronicle, "loved the tall deer as though
he had been their father," and would scarcely be likely to forgo any privileges concerning the vert and
venison.' Various tenures show that later Kings kept Exmoor as a preserve. Walter Aungevin held land in Auri
and Hole (near South Molton) under Edward III, 'by sergeantry that whensoever our lord the King should hunt
in the forest of Exmoor, he should find for him two barbed arrows.' And Morinus de la Barr, farther to the
west, near Braunton, held his land on the same tenure with the addition of finding 'one salmon.'
Nearly thirty years later in the same reign, a very curious tenure is registered. 'Walter Barun held certain lands
and tenements in the town of Holicote, of the King in capite, by the service[Pg 270] of hanging upon a certain
forked piece of wood the red deer that die of the murrain in the King's forest of Exmoor; and also of lodging
and entertaining the poor strangers, weakened by infirmities, that came to him, at his own proper costs, for the
souls of the ancestors of our Lord King Edward.'
The Forest of Exmoor was part of the jointure of several Queens of England. Henry VIII settled it on
Catherine of Aragon, and it was afterwards held by Jane Seymour. James I gave it to his Queen, but Charles I
had other views, and announced his intention of drawing 'the unnecessary Forests and Waste Lands'
[Dartmoor and Exmoor] 'to improvement.' Needless to say, the scheme died in its early stages, and when
Charles II came to the throne, he granted a lease of the forest to the Marquis of Ormonde.
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Besides the wild-deer on Exmoor, there are, as everyone knows, creatures almost as wild—herds of
Exmoor ponies. Very few now are pure 'Exmoors,' except those belonging to Sir Thomas Acland. Among
these ponies the true breed has been carefully preserved, and there has been no crossing. It seems a little odd
to think of Exmoor ponies being mentioned in Domesday, but Mr Chanter quotes an entry referring to the
stock in the parishes of Lynton and Countisbury, '72 brood mares, probably the Exmoor ponies running half
wild on the moor; in Brendon, 104 wild mares (equas indomitas) are mentioned.'
'The average height is 12½ hands, and bays and buffy bays with mealy noses prevail; in fact, are in the
majority of three to one.' The older ponies live out all the year round, but stacks of hay and straw are built by
the herdsmen against the time when the snow lies deep. 'Still, like honest, hard-working labourers, the ponies
never assemble at the wicket till they have exhausted every means of self-support by scratching with their
fore-feet in the snow for the remnants of the summer tufts, and drag wearily behind them an ever-lengthening
chain of snowballs.'
The moor makes an excellent sheep-walk, but attempts to cultivate it have not prospered. As far as
agriculturists are concerned, 'Exmoor is best left alone—the "peat and heather in hill and dale."'[Pg
271]
There is an old ballad called 'The Farmer's Son of Devonshire,' in which the views of one character, 'Brother
Jack,' show a distinct resemblance to those of the great John Fry in 'Lorna Doone.' Here are a few verses. The
sub-title is a long one, beginning: 'Being the Valiant Coronel's Return from Flanders.' To the tune of 'Mary,
live long.'
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'Such honour I scorn, I'd rather be mowing,
Nay, plowing or sowing, or threshing of corn,
At home in a barn;
Then to leave Joan my wife, and to loose my sweet life,
In peace let me dwell;
I am not for fighting, I am not for fighting,
So, Brother, Farewell.'
[Pg 272]
Powderham Castle
CHAPTER XIII
The Castle was strongly fortified, and in the Civil War withstood an attack planned by General Fairfax
himself. The General,[Pg 273] says Sprigg, ordered 'a design in hand against Pouldrum-house, by water and
land, which, being on Friday, December 12, was immediately put in execution.... The design against
Pouldrum-house was this, and thus carried: Lord's Day, December 14, nine of the clock at night, Captain
Deane (the comptroller of the ordnance) was commanded over Ex with 200 foot and dragoons, to possess
Pouldrum-castle, but the enemy had some few hours before got 150 into it, unto those that were there before,
which our men not discovering before they had landed, would not return without attempting something. The
church at Pouldrum being not far distant from the castle, they resolved to possess and make the best of it, and
accordingly did so, and the next morning they got provisions from Nutwell-house unto them into the church,
and began to fortify the same. The enemy at Excester, much startled hereat, fearing the castle would be lost, as
well as the river blocked up by the fortifying of this church, sent therefore, on Monday, the 15th, a party of
500 foot, who joining with 200 from the castle assaulted our men about seven at night, threw in many hand
granadoes amongst them, and so continued storming till ten, but were beaten off with much loss, leaving their
dead on the place, and carrying with them many wounded, as appeared by the snow, that was much stained
with blood as they retreated.' The Parliamentary soldiers remained in the church, and Sprigg, not unnaturally,
vaunts their stoicism a little. 'They were resolved to continue in their duty; and notwithstanding the extremity
of the cold, by reason of the great frost and snow, and want of all means to resist or qualify the same in the
church, having no firing there, they would not quit the same till they received orders to do so; which hard
service (hard in every respect) ... they were not immediately discharged of.' However, the next day, 'the
general considering further the bitter coldness of the weather, and the hardness of the duty they would
necessarily be put unto, if they should make good the church, sent orders to them to draw off, wh that they
might do with the more safety, two regiments were appointed to draw down and alarm the enemy on that side
Excester, while they made good their retreat over the river.'[Pg 274]
Powderham held out gallantly for more than another month, notwithstanding that 'Colonel Hammond was set
down with some force' about it; and Fairfax, on his return from his victory at Dartmouth, 'marched to Chidley,
endeavouring first to take a view of Pouldrum,' meditating a fresh attack. But the garrison had reached their
limit of endurance, and the same night (January 24, 1646) the Castle was surrendered.
About the year 1700 great alterations were made, and now battlemented towers and French windows, iron
balconies, and loopholes in massive walls many feet thick, in strange juxtaposition, show how it has been
adapted to the taste and needs of its successive owners. On the west is a large courtyard, the Castle itself
forming one side of the quadrangle; on the east, a broad terrace, set with little box-edged beds, high vases, and
clipped cypresses, and little turrets at the angles. Smaller terraces run north and south of the Castle, and along
the south terrace is a magnificent thick, high, and very dense yew-hedge. The centre of the east front is a low
tower, and at each end are projecting wings. In the south wing is the present chapel, once a granary. Perhaps
its most uncommon feature is the number of old bench-ends, most of whose panels are carved with heads,
some of which were shaped piously, though others are grotesque. Through the chapel is the priest's room, a
large and delightful one, lighted on three sides; with Pope Gregory in stained glass, and the Courtenay arms
beneath, in one window.
The walls of the 'staircase hall' are a pale blue-green, and show a bold and very elaborate decoration, a belated
example of the manner of Grinling Gibbons. Long white garlands, holding together flowers, fruit, spears, a
quiver of arrows, birds, beasts, trumpets, and a mass of intricate designs, hang down the walls in high relief.
Powderham was brought to the Courtenays as the dowry of Margaret Bohun, daughter of the Earl of Hereford,
and she left it to her fifth son, Sir Philip Courtenay, the ancestor of the present owner.
It would be impossible here to attempt the most imperfect outline of the changing fortunes of this 'imperial
family,' even from the date at which they settled in England, and without any reference to the days when
Courtenays were Kings of Jerusalem and Emperors of Constantinople. Members of this family have played
important parts in different crises of the nation's history, and very many have been eminent in peace and war.
From the chronicle of their lives and losses, battles and honours, I am able to quote here only a few scattered
instances.
Sir Hugh Courtenay, born 1327, was often 'employed by the King in his wars in France and Scotland,' and
fought at the battle of Crecy. The next year, among other 'brave Martialists,' he diverted himself by mimic
battles at Eltham, and it is recorded that at this tournament the King gave him 'an Hood of White Cloth,
embroidered with men in the posture of Dancers, buttoned with large Pearls.' Authorities are divided as to
whether he or his[Pg 276] father, the Earl of Devonshire, was one of the founders of the Order of the Garter.
Sir Hugh's son of the same name married Matilda, daughter of the Earl of Kent, and his wife—usually
known as the Fair Maid of Kent, Lady Matilda Courtenay—inherited her mother's beauty—'"the
fairest lady in England," saith Froissard.' Hugh Courtenay died young, and his widow fell in love with 'Lord
Valeran, Earl of St Paul, who, having been taken Prisoner in the Marches of Calais, was kept in the English
Court, and by his winning Behaviour did much engage the Ladies Affections to him. The Princess her Mother
[who as a widow had married the Black Prince] was at first much against the match, but at last she yielded,
and the king her brother gave his consent, and for her dowry bestowed upon the Earl the Manor of Byfleet.
Walsington says that this marriage was celebrated on the Octaves of Easter, at Windsor, with great Pomp, and
the Earl got from France a great many Musicians and Dancers for that purpose.'
Sir Hugh was the eldest of seventeen children, and several of the sons were distinguished men. On the eve of
the Battle of Navaretto, Sir Hugh, Sir Philip, and Sir Peter were knighted together by the Black Prince. Their
eagerness to fight on land or sea led, on one occasion, to an unfortunate result. In 1378 the Duke of Lancaster
was exasperating the fleet under his orders by his 'slow Proceedings and unnecessary delays,' and a part of it
set out without him. 'Sir Philip and Sir Peter Courtenay, two brothers who had the Command of some ships,
espying some vessels belonging to the enemy, inconsiderately assaulted them, being the whole Spanish Fleet,
and though they bravely fought, and defended themselves, yet in the end were beaten, most of them who were
good gentlemen of Devonshire and Somersetshire being slain. Sir Peter with some others were taken
Prisoners, and Sir Philip was sore wounded but escaped the hands of his enemies.'
William Courtenay, a brother to Sir Philip, was Bishop of London at the critical time when Wyclif's doctrines
were first stirring men's minds, and after the murder of Archbishop Sudbury, Bishop Courtenay was translated
to Canterbury, and began to take very severe measures against the heretics. A strange event marked a meeting
of many dignitaries of Church and State, who had gathered to censure Wyclif's teaching and find means for its
extermination. 'When they were just going to begin their business a wonderful and terrible earthquake
happened throughout all England, whereupon differs of the suffragans being affrighted thought fit to leave off
their business, but the Archbishop encouraged them to go on, and they proceeded to examine Articles of
Wickliff, and to give their censure upon them.'
The Archbishop persuaded Parliament to pass an Act against certain preachers of heresy, that they might be
arrested and kept 'in strong Prison until they shall justify themselves according to the Law of the Holy
Church,' and brought the Chancellor of Oxford literally to his knees, begging the Archbishop's pardon for
having shown favour to the Lollards against special commands.
His strong will was exercised in all matters, great and small, and offenders were punished in the most
conspicuous fashion. The Archbishop took a high hand in dealing with affairs of the Diocese of Exeter, and
the Bishop of Exeter greatly resented it, and appealed against him to Rome. The Archbishop then 'cited'
Bishop Brantyngham 'to answer certain Articles to be[Pg 278] proposed to him in the Visitation,' but some of
the 'Bishop's Officers' met the bearer at Topsham, and 'did beat him, and forced him to eat the Citation,
Parchment, Wax, and all.' The contempt of his commands, and the maltreatment of his messenger, naturally
roused the Archbishop to wrath, and he inflicted this very heavy penance: 'That in the Church of Canterbury,
St Paul's in London, and the Cathedral Church of Exeter, they should upon three Holy Days named, being in
their shirts only, in a Procession going before the Cross, carry Wax Tapers burning in their hands, and then
that they should give to the Priest a Salary to say Mass every day at the Tomb of the Earl of Devonshire; and
lastly, every one of them was enjoined to pay a sum of money, for repairing the Walls of the City of Exeter.'
In addition to the public disgrace, the trouble and cost of this penance must have been immense.
The sixth of these brothers, Sir Peter Courtenay, was, says Fuller, 'a true son of Mars and actuated with such
heroic fire, that he wholly addicted himself unto feats of arms.' It has been already mentioned that he fought in
the Spanish wars, and in milder moments he distinguished himself at 'justs and tournaments now justled out of
fashion by your carpet knights.' As a prisoner of war in France, his captivity was lightened by the attentions he
received, even from the King of France himself, and he was on such good terms with his captors that after his
release he gained leave of Richard II 'to send into France, by Northampton Herald, and by Anlet Pursuivant,
as a return for the civilities he received in France ... eight cloths of Scarlet, Black and Russet, to give to certain
Noblemen of that Realm; as also two Horses, six saddles, six little bows, one sheaf of large Arrows and
another sheaf of Cross-bow Arrows; likewise a Greyhound, and other dogs for the King of France's Keeper.'
The Wars of the Roses were especially fatal to the House of Courtenay, no less than three Earls of Devon
losing their lives for King Henry, and in consequence the elder branch of the family became extinct.
The irony of the King's choice of a nom de guerre seems to have escaped the historian.
'On the 1st day of May 1510, 2 Henry VIII, the King, accompanied with a great many valiant Nobles, rode
upon managed Horses to the Wood to fetch May, where he and three others, viz., Sir Edward Howard,
Charles Brandon, and Edward Nevil, which were Challengers, shifted themselves, and did put on coats of
green Sattin, guarded with crimson Velvet; and on the other side were the Earls of Essex and Devonshire, the
Marquis of Dorset, and the Lord Howard, and they were all in crimson Sattin, guarded with a pounced Guard
of green Velvet. On the third Day the Queen made a great Banquet for the King and those who had justed, and
after the Banquet she gave the Chief Prize to the King, the second to the Earl of Essex, the third to the Earl of
Devonshire, and the Fourth to the Marquess of Dorset. Then the Heralds cried aloud, My Lords, For your
noble Feats in Arms, God send you the Love of the Ladies whom you most admire.'
The next year the Earl of Devonshire died, and was succeeded by his son, Henry, who for a time was high in
the favour of his royal cousin. He seems also to have taken part in many 'Justs and Tourneys.' One summer
'the Queen desired the King to bring to his Manour of Havering in Essex, to the Bower there, the Gentlemen
of France that were Hostages, for whose Welcome she provided all things in a liberal manner.' The
entertainment[Pg 280] seems to have taken the shape of a small masked ball, and 'the King gave many gifts
where he liked.' At the Field of the Cloth of Gold, the Earl of Devonshire had the honour of tilting with the
French King, 'and they ran so hard together that both their Spears broke, and so they maintained their Courses
nobly.'
The next year 'the King kept his Christmas at Greenwich in great splendour'; and there was another
tournament and many challenges. 'Noble and rich was their Apparel, but in Feats of Arms the King excelled
the rest.'
In the year 1525 the Earl was created Marquis of Exeter, and seven years later, before starting for France, the
King formally named his cousin Heir Apparent to the Crown. After this Fortune turned her back on him, and
though, at the King's bidding, he dealt with the northern rebels, taking with him 'a jolly company of Western
Men, well and completely appointed,' it was thought that his power, shown by 'so sudden raising divers
thousands,' awoke the King's jealousy. The influence of the Marquis 'over the west was second only to the
hold which the Duke of Norfolk had upon the eastern counties'; and therefore, when two years later it was
reported he had said, 'Knaves rule about the King. I trust to give them a buffet one day,' Cromwell was glad to
seize the opportunity of simultaneously striking at feudalism in the West, and of dealing a blow at the
inflexible Cardinal Pole, the Courtenays' kinsman. The Marquis was at once arrested on the charge of being an
accomplice of the Cardinal, and was beheaded on Tower Hill.
Edward, his son, who was only twelve years old at the time of his father's death, was committed to the Tower,
'lest he should raise Commotions by revenging his Father's Quarrel,' and here he remained for twenty-seven
years. There is a pretty account of Queen Mary coming to the Tower, soon after her accession, where
'Thomas, Duke of Norfolk, Dr Gardiner, late Bishop of Winchester, Edward Courtenay, son and heir to Henry
Marquis of Exeter, the Dutchess of Somerset, Prisoners in the Tower, kneeling on the Hill, within the same
Tower, saluted her Grace, and[Pg 281] she came to them and kissed them, and said, "These be my prisoners,"
The very next day the Queen restored to her cousin the title of Earl of Devon (forfeited by his father's
attainder), and soon after all his lands that remained in her possession, and also showed him other favours. In
fact, 'it was reported that she carried some good affections towards the Earl, from the first time that she saw
him.... Concerning which, there goes a story that the young Earl petitioning the Queen for leave to travel, she
advised him to marry and stay at home, assuring him that no lady in the land, how high soever, would refuse
to accept of him for a husband, by which words, she pointed out herself to him, as plainly as might either
stand with the Modesty or Majesty of a Maiden Queen.' But, says Fuller with extreme candour, 'either because
his long durance had some influence on his brain, or that naturally his face was better than his head, or out of
some private fancy and affection (which is most probable) to the Lady Elizabeth,' who, another writer
declares, 'of that moderate Share of Beauty that was between them, had much the better of her,' the Earl
evaded the honour hinted to him, and begged leave to pay his addresses to the younger Princess. The Queen's
feelings and vanity were deeply wounded, and, on a suspicion that the Princess as well as himself were
concerned in Wyatt's rebellion, they were both sent to the Tower.
Cleaveland tells a charming story of the Princess and of a child who lived in the Tower. 'During the time that
the Lady Elizabeth and the Lord Courtenay were in Prison, a little boy, the son of a Man that lived in the
Tower, did use to resort unto their chambers and did often bring her Grace Flowers, as he did to the other
Prisoners that were there, whereupon some suspicious heads, thinking to make something of it, on a Time
called the Child unto them, promising him Figs and Apples, and asked him when he had been with the Earl of
Devonshire, knowing that he did use to go to him: The Boy answered, That he would go by and by thither.
Then they demanded of him, when he was with the Lady Elizabeth? He answered Every Day. Then they asked
him, what[Pg 282] the Lord Devonshire sent by him to her Grace? The Child said, I will go and know what he
will give to carry to her; such was the discretion of the child (says Mr Fox), being but four Years of Age. This
same is a crafty Boy, said the Lord Chamberlain; How say you, my lord Shandois? I pray you, my Lord, says
the Boy, give me the Figs you promised me; No, quoth the Lord, thou shalt be whipt, if thou come any more to
the Lady Elizabeth or the Lord Courtenay. The Boy answered, I will bring my Lady and Mistress more
flowers, whereupon the Child's Father was commanded to permit the Boy to come no more up into the
chambers. The next Day, as her Grace was walking in the Garden, the Child peeping in at a Hole in the Door,
cried unto her, Mistress, I can bring no more flowers: Whereat she smiled, but said nothing, understanding
thereby what they had done. Soon after the Chamberlain rebuked highly his Father, commanding him to put
him out of the House; Alas! poor Infant, said the Father: It is a crafty Knave, quoth the Lord Chamberlain, let
me see him here no more.'
Soon after Queen Mary's marriage, her husband tried hard to persuade her to release her sister and the Earl,
'and nothing, says Heylin, did King Philip more Honour amongst the English.' It is to be remembered to his
good, that he interceded very earnestly, and in the end successfully, for another Devonshire conspirator in
Wyatt's rising, Sir Peter Carew.
The Earl, fearing that he might, 'upon the first disorder, be committed to the Tower, to which his Stars seemed
to condemn him,' prudently resolved to go abroad; but he must have been born under a very unlucky planet,
for the next year he was seized with illness, and died at Padua. With him the title became extinct for about two
hundred and fifty years; then Lord Courtenay, a descendant of the Powderham branch of Courtenays,
established his claim to the earldom. As the attainder of the Marquis of Exeter was never reversed, that title
was never revived in this family.
Among the 'Roxburghe Ballads' is one relating to the Courtenays, called 'The Stout Cripple of Cornwall.' No
notes throw[Pg 283] any light upon the possible origin of the story or offer any opinion as to the probability of
the ballad being an account of a true incident, or 'founded on fact,' or wholly imaginary.
A curtain wall connects the gateway with a tower called St Margaret's Tower, of which merely the shell
remains, smothered in overhanging ivy, brambles, long grass, and a tapestry of plants, and beneath the tower
is a small, dark dungeon. To the left, across the quadrangle and along the western wall, are a number of rooms
more or less imperfect that belonged to the Pomeroys' castle. They lead one into another, and contain
enormous fireplaces and chimneys. Opposite the gateway the ruins are much more broken down, in parts
hardly more than fragments and tall trees peer over a low wall, the crowning point of a very steep ascent.
Just inside the gateway, on the right, is the skeleton of the splendid west front, due to Sir Edward Seymour.
The inner buildings, which rose in Tudor days, are of a character entirely different from that of the older
remains, and the Seymours' spacious ideas were reflected in the magnificence of their castle. The windows
and traces of fireplaces in the walls show that it must have been four stories high and held a maze of rooms.
One becomes confused wandering through enclosed spaces, cell-like, for the great height, unbroken by floor
or ceiling, gives an impression that the rooms are small. Over all is an uncomfortable sense of desertion, and
the high empty windows, with stone mullions and square labels, somehow give a skull-like appearance to the
frame of the west front. There is not the feeling of repose that there is about some ruins, which seem to
disown their debt to man, and to be bent on pretending that they are as entirely a work of Nature as any
lichen-covered boulder lying near them. I do not know if Berry Pomeroy is said to be haunted, but it[Pg 287]
awakens an uneasy sensation that it is itself a ghost—the ghost of an unsatisfied ambition, the creation
of many minds who planned and toiled, soared and fell.
Of the Pomeroys of Berry Pomeroy few records of much importance remain. Ralph de la Pomerai was so
'greatly assistant to William the Conqueror' in subduing this kingdom, that no less than fifty-eight lordships in
Devonshire were awarded him. Henry de Pomeroy, in the reign of King John, was a powerful and rebellious
noble, who must have been a terror to his weaker neighbours. Occasional glimpses of this family are given by
old deeds and papers, as, for instance, in 1267, when a 'Pardon' was granted by 'Edward, eldest son of the
king, to Sir Henry de la Pomeroy, who was against the king in the late disturbances in the kingdom.' About the
same date is a grant by Sir Henry, 'for the health of his soul,' of the Manor of Canonteign, the advowsons of
four churches, and 'other possessions to the Prior and Convent of the Blessed Mary of Martin ... by ordinance
of Walter, Bishop of Exeter.'
Some years later Edward I, now King, sent a second pardon to Sir Henry 'and Joan, his wife, for detaining
Isabella, daughter and one of the heirs of John de Moles, deceased, and marrying her against the king's will to
William de Botreaux, the younger.' So that he appears to have followed his own pleasure with extreme
independence.
A note on a more peaceful subject is extracted from the Testa de Nevil: 'Geoffrey de la Worthy holds one
tenement, four acres of land and a half, and two gardens of Henry de la Pomeroye, in Bery, rendering at Easter
and Midsummer four shillings and nine pence, and one pound of wax and three capons, the price of the wax
sixpence, and the capons one penny.' One penny!
The terms of settling several other disputes are preserved—in one case at great length. In the reign of
Henry VII, Sir Edward[Pg 288] Pomeroy fell out with 'the Mayor of Totnes and his brethren'; several
gentlemen arbitrated between them, and eventually 'awarded that the said Sir Edward Pomeroy shall clearly
exclude, forgive, and put from him all malice and debates ... and from hensforth to be loving unto theym,' and
the same conciliatory spirit was to be shown by the other side. As a really satisfactory conclusion, Sir Edward
was desired to send the Mayor and his brethren a buck to be eaten in state, 'Provided that the same Sir Edward
be at the etyng of the same bucke, in goodly manner. Furthermore we award that the said maiour and his
brethren shal paye for the wyne which shal be dronke at the etyng of the same bucke.'
Sir Thomas Pomeroy, the last of this family to own the Castle, fell into disgrace through joining in the
Western rebellion against the Prayer-Book, and his estate passed to the Protector Somerset.
It would be absurd in this chapter to attempt to touch on more than a very few points in the history of the great
family of the Seymours, or to touch on any that are not connected with Devonshire. Amongst the Duke of
Somerset's papers are some extremely interesting letters and documents relating to Sir Edward Seymour's
descendants in this county. The second wife of the Protector Somerset, Ann Stanhope, is described in no
flattering terms, one biographer attributing some of the Duke's later troubles to 'the pride, the haughty hate,
the unquiet vanity of a mannish, or rather of a divellish, woman.' Haywood says she was 'subtle and violent in
accomplishing her ends, and for pride, monstrous.' It can easily be imagined, therefore, that she persuaded the
Duke to set aside her stepson in favour of her own eldest son; but all the honours that should have passed to
him were forfeited by the attainder of the Duke. The title of Earl of Hertford was, however, restored to Ann
Stanhope's son in the reign of James I.
The true heir, Sir Edward Seymour, to whose descendants the dukedom has now reverted, was given Berry
Pomeroy by his father. His grandson, Edward, showed great zeal in making ready the defences of the coast
when the Armada was expected, and[Pg 289] from various letters, orders, and 'precepts,' it is obvious that
these preparations brought him great responsibility and an immense amount of work. In 1586 a letter was
forwarded to him from the Lord-Lieutenant in reference to the 'beacon watches.' Instructions were sent that
'one, two, or three horses for post' should be kept at a convenient place near each beacon, that one or more
might be ready to start at a moment's notice if the signal were given. Further directions were: 'That the wisest
and discreetest men of every parish be appointed to assist the constables; ... Commandment to every person
within every parish that they do not [set any furze or] heath on fire after seven of the clock in the afternoon.'
And there were a host of orders regarding 'the trained soldiers, and also all others mustered and charged with
armour.'
Later Colonel Seymour was called into council with the Earl of Bath, the Lord-Lieutenant of the county, and
others, to draw up orders as to stores of 'powder, match, and lead,' that 'one moiety more of each sort' be kept
in towns than was previously ordered, and that 'armour, weapons, horses, and other necessary furnitures for
the wars be held in perfect readiness ... for all sudden service without defect.'
His grandson, another Sir Edward, was a very loyal and devoted servant of Charles I. In 1643 he was given
full power and authority in His Majesty's name 'to impress, raise, enroll, and retain one regiment of 1,500 foot
soldiers;' and in the following August he was appointed to the important post of Governor of Dartmouth.
Besides supervising the garrison and the defences of the town, this officer was required to raise loans, supply
ordnance, ammunition, and other necessaries—sometimes even troops—to captains in the
neighbourhood. He was also desired to do his best to provide money and 'sea-victuals' for ships going out in
the King's service, and received particular instructions from the King to prevent any 'ships, vessels, prizes, or
anything belonging to them,' that might be captured, from being plundered or disposed of before they had
been 'legally adjudicated by the judge of our Admiralty there ... for the time being.'[Pg 290]
The tone of letters that passed between certain generals, Royalist and Puritan, about this date, furnishes an
additional reason for mourning the tragedies of the time. The following letter is from the Earl of Warwick to
Colonel Seymour:
'I return you my serious acknowledgment of your civility, and should most gladly embrace an opportunity to
serve you, not only for your respects, but also for that ancient acquaintance I have had with your noble family
and the honour I have borne it, the recalling whereof to memory adds to the trouble of our present distance,
which I hope God will, in due time, reconcile, so as the mutual freedom of conversation which we sometimes
enjoyed may be restored, which I shall the more value as it may give me advantage of testifying my esteem of
you.... It is a pity the truth should be clouded by some mis-informations that have overspread these parts. God
will in his time scatter them and undeceive those that wait upon him for counsel.'
A few days later, in Colonel Seymour's reply to this letter, he admits he has been culpably generous to his
adversary. 'Truly, for my own part, I had rather err with mercy than justice, for had not my lenity made me a
delinquent to duty, your Lordship had wanted some of Dartmouth now aboard you.'
At the beginning of the war a fine letter was written by Sir William Waller to his friend and present adversary,
Lord Hopton:
'Bath,
Later, Colonel Seymour gave up the Governorship of Dartmouth, and was succeeded by Sir Lewis Pollard.
Among the Seymour papers are some interesting notes, dated '1645, May 22,' relating to horses and arms
raised in the Hundred of Stanborough. 'Mr Bampfield, parson, will bring a horse and arms to-morrow at
Berry.... John Key of Rattery affirms that he hath three horses in the King's service; that he hath one mare
only, which he proffers; his estate not above 40 li. per annum, and hath no money. Dipford:—Mr
William Fowell, late of Dipford Downs, assessed a horse and arms complete; his wife appears; says that
Prince Maurice had one horse and Captain Newton had another for a country horse very lately; all the answer.
Mr John Newton doth not appear. Buckfastleigh:—Mr Richard Cable hath brought one gelding with all
arms, only a carbine instead of pistols, and no rider. Dortington:—Mr Champernowne brought a little
pretty fat old horse, but nothing else.'
In 1647 Colonel Seymour's lands and goods were sequestrated, and he himself was kept either in prison or on
parole all through Cromwell's days. Letters and papers of this period shed a light on the difficulties and
hardships that in some cases befell the families of Cavaliers. Sir Thomas Fairfax intervened on behalf of
Mistress[Pg 292] Seymour, who was then at the estate of Maiden Bradley in Wiltshire, saying that he had
forbidden the soldiers to molest her in any way, and begging the Committee for the County to insure that no
civilian 'should prejudice her in the enjoyment of her rights.' The lady had a humbler but very earnest
advocate, a servant of Sir Henry Ludlow's, who had been in danger of being ruined 'had she not been means
for my preservation.' She had begged his liberty of Colonel Molesworth when the King's soldiers were
hunting for him, in order to exchange him for one of their side taken prisoner, 'a blackamoor.' Mistress
Seymour, too, gave this poor man a good price for some wheat, 'which then none else would do, and had she
not bought it, it is very likely that it would have been taken away by the soldiers, as the corn in the barn was.'
Mistress Seymour was evidently strong-minded as well as charitable, as is shown in a letter written by her
husband from the Marshalsea, at Exeter,—an appeal to be given a hearing. He complains that being
'hurried away to prison and no bail taken, no crime or accusation produced, makes me sigh when I remember
the liberty due to a freeborn subject in England'; and the thrust is followed by a threat: 'If this request be
denied, I have found a way to be even with them; for, if not granted, I intend to send up my wife.... And I pray
advise the Council of State from me, in relation to their own quiet, let them grant my request rather than be
punished with her importunity.'
The Council were evidently impressed by Colonel Seymour's wisdom, for two months later they granted him
a pass to return home. His liberty was, however, very much clipped, and rather more than two years later the
following 'parole' was exacted of him: 'Undertaking to remain at the dwelling-house of Mr Holt in Exeter, and
when required to deliver himself a prisoner to Captain Unton Crooke.' Signed.
Sir Edward received scanty reward for all his sacrifices, but he was reappointed Governor of Dartmouth, and
in 1679 his son writes to tell him that he had been 'pricked Sheriff for the County of Devon ... by the King
with all the kindness imaginable,' and an assurance that if Sir Edward felt the work too much for him, a
subordinate should be found and the 'chargeable part' made easy. The Earl of Bath wrote by the same post:
'His Majesty declared in Council that he made choice of you, not only because you were the best man of your
county, but also a person on whom he could by long experience place his greatest confidence.'
Sir Edward died in the winter of 1688, and his son became the fifth Sir Edward Seymour of Berry Pomeroy in
succession.
The new Sir Edward was a very distinguished man, who in 1672 had been unanimously chosen Speaker of the
House of Commons. He was the Seymour whose influence Lord Macaulay rated so highly, and whose support
was extremely valuable to William of Orange when he arrived in England. Unfortunately, few of Sir Edward's
papers, or papers referring to him, are now to be found. A long and carefully balanced epitaph in Maiden
Bradley Church describes him as
[Pg 294]
About five miles north-east of Berry Pomeroy stands Compton Castle, and there is a tradition that they were
once connected by a subterranean passage. Compton is a very interesting example of a fortified manor-house,
built in the early part of the fifteenth century. It stands low on the slope of a narrow, winding green valley, and
on the west the hill has been cut back to make room for the walls.
The castle faces east, a garden-plot lies in front, and the foundations of an ancient wall divide it from the lawn
beyond. Close to the central door stands the base and broken shaft of a stone cross. The picturesque western
front of the castle is gabled and embattled, and a very high archway is built in the centre of the wall. The
colour is difficult to describe, for the castle is very much overgrown with ivy and a faint green lichen has crept
over the stones in many parts, but the shades pass from a rich cream colour to a soft grey. A very marked
feature is 'the great number of projections carried on machicoulis, through the openings of which stones and
other missiles could be thrown on the heads of assailants.' Both the chief doorway and a postern gate to the
On the north side an Early Perpendicular window marks the chapel. The central doorway opened into the large
and almost square guard-room, and on the north side of this room a pointed doorway leads into the chapel,
which keeps some of its special characteristics. At the east end a square space is sunk in the wall above the
spot where the altar stood, and in this space the faint traces of a fresco can still just be seen. In the wall that
shuts off the guard-room is a cinquefoiled piscina and a four-light window, the stonework of which is like that
in the east window, and this window allowed anyone in the guard-room to join in Divine service. In the west
wall is a hagioscope, and from a room next the chapel a newel staircase led to the priest's room on the floor
above. A little window with two cinquefoiled openings in his wall enabled the priest to look down into the
chapel., and the height of the sill from the floor suggests that it may have served him as a prie-dieu. The
moulded base of a stone cross still remains over the ancient belfry, which rises out of a mass of ivy.[Pg 295]
Compton Castle
There are a bewildering number of rooms, many now inaccessible, and the height of the walls shows that there
were two or three, and in the north-east block four, stories. The banqueting-hall, forty-two feet in length and
twenty-three in width, has utterly disappeared, and only the gable-marks of the roof against the buildings on
the south side have enabled Mr Roscoe Gibbs to draw his very careful deductions. In the kitchen the huge
fireplace, stretching the whole width of one wall, still keeps its great fire-bars; next the kitchen is the steward's
room, above which two stories still stand, though the upper one is absolutely in ruins.
Outside these rooms is a large open space, now grass-grown, and the sprays and buds of a cluster-rose tap
against the massive walls. Close by lies a heavy round of granite, slightly hollowed out towards the centre,
which is shown as one of the stones used for grinding corn. In an upper room is a hiding-place for
treasure—two long, shallow cavities in the floor, of which there cannot have been the slightest sign
when the floor was covered with planking. A vaulted passage leads to the south court, and in one corner of
this court rises a watch-tower over a horrible little dungeon or chamber of torture.
The walls throughout the whole building are from two and a half to four feet thick, and a thick and solid wall
nearly twenty-four feet high protects an inner court, where even in January the turf is firm, springy, and close.
At the farther end, on steps leading into the garden, a peacock looks wonderfully appropriate, and some white
fantails strutting in front of the heavy walls add very much to the picture. There is scarcely any sign of the old
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'pleasaunce,' except a low and fairly broad box-hedge, which runs each side of a path in the present garden,
where a few violets and one or two strawberry-blossoms are tokens of the softness of the air.
The Castle has changed owners many times. 'Stephen' held it of Judhael of Totnes; then it passed to the De la
Poles; Lady Alice de la Pole gave it to the Comptons, and seven generations later a Compton heiress brought
it, in the reign of Edward II, to the family of Gilberts, of whom Sir Humphrey Gilbert was a[Pg 296]
descendant. The Gilberts seem to have lived alternately at Compton and on their older property, Greenway,
and with one interval the castle belonged to them till nearly the end of the eighteenth century. The only trace
of them now to be seen is in the spandrels of a small cinquefoil-headed opening on the projecting gabled wing
to the south of the central door. Each spandrel is sculptured with their crest, a squirrel holding a hazel branch.
'At gloaming time, when the jackdaws make an end of day, when weary birds rustle in the ivy ere they sleep,
hearts and eyes, gifted to feel and see a little above the level prose of working hours, shall yet conceive these
heroes of old moving within their deserted courts. Some chambers are still whole, and bats sidle through the
naked window at the call of dusk; some are thrown open to sun and rain and storm; the chapel stands intact;
the scoop for holy water lies still within the thickness of its wall. But aloft, where rich arras once hid the
stone, and silver sconces held the torch, Nature now sets her hand, brings spleenwort and harts-tongue, trails
the ivy, the speedwell, and the toad-flax....
'Ivy-mantled, solemn, silent, it stands like a sentient thing, and broods with blind eyes upon ages forgotten;
when these grey stones still echoed neigh of horse and bay of hound, rattle of steel, blare of trump, and bustle
of great retinues.'
The castle of Okehampton stands about half a mile from the town, and looks on one side over fertile hills and
valleys, woods, and rich meadows, and the gleaming waters of the West Okement, on the other towards the
bold, changeless outlines of the outer barriers of Dartmoor. The Castle was once surrounded by its park.
Risdon mentions that originally there were 'Castle, market, and park adjoining.... The park, which containeth a
large circuit of land, King Henry the eighth, by the persuasion of Sir Richard Pollard, disparked and alienated
the same.' The Okement, rippling over a rocky bed—the name uisg maenic means the 'stony
water'—hurries past the foot of a knoll on which the castle rises out of a cloud of green leaves that
shelter[Pg 297] and half hide the walls. Protected by the river and a steeply scarped bank on the south, a
natural ravine on the north, and a deep notch cut on the western side, the mass of slate rock that it stands on
was a point of vantage. On the crest of the hill the keep stands on a mound, with which two sets of buildings
were connected by curtain walls. These buildings stretch down the slope to the east, the space between the two
blocks narrowing towards the gateway.
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Okehampton
Castle
Mr Worth observes that in Devonshire and Cornwall most of the smaller Norman keeps were round, as at
Totnes, Launceston, and Plympton; but the stronger castles had square keeps. Okehampton, though not a large
or very strong fortress, was distinguished by its square keep, and 'occupies what may be called a middle
position.'
Tradition has always held that Baldwin de Brionis, to whom the Conqueror gave the manor, built the Castle,
and Mr Worth, after a searching examination, thinks that, as regards the lower part of the keep walls, this may
very well be the case; for they are not only Norman, but Norman of the period in which Baldwin lived. The
other buildings are later, but vary in date, the most modern being the part of the block which contains the
chapel, and which was probably reconstructed from older buildings towards the close of the thirteenth
century.
There are gaps in the walls of the keep, but the ruins show that there were four rooms, two above and two
below; some of the windows and a fireplace in one of the upper rooms are still to be seen. In the northern
block of buildings was the great hall—forty-five feet long and twenty-five feet wide—lighted by
two large windows to the south, and entered by a boldly moulded granite doorway. A second doorway in one
corner led to a staircase-turret which led to the roof.
On the southern side the buildings are larger and less imperfect. Here is the chapel, 'evidently,' says Mr
Worth, 'a portion of a larger structure, which has, perhaps, for the most part disappeared....'
East of the chapel are the guard-rooms, in a two-storied block of two rooms on each floor. A doorway in the
north-eastern corner leads into the porter's lodge, a small room in the gate-tower with[Pg 298] 'a loop window
in the eastern wall commanding the approach. Above this chamber there is one precisely similar in the upper
story (the floor, of course, is gone), and it is noteworthy that this is the only part of the fabric that retains its
roof, which is supported by three massive stone ribs.'
The barony of Okehampton was one of many grants made by the Conqueror to Baldwin de Brionis, and some
generations later it passed by marriage to the Courtenays, in which family it remained until the Marquis of
Exeter was attainted and beheaded in 1538. The Castle was among the possessions that Queen Mary restored
to the Earl of Devon, and on his death in 1556 his lands were divided amongst his heirs. Okehampton Castle
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fell to the share of the Mohuns, and in 1628 John Mohun was granted a peerage and took the title of Lord
Mohun of Okehampton. The last Lord Mohun died in 1712.
To the barony of Okehampton belonged Floyer's Hayes, in the parish of St Thomas the Apostle, near Exeter,
and it was held on this curious tenure: 'That if the Courtenays, Earls of Devon, came at any time into Exe Isle,
they [the Floyers] were to attend them, decently apparelled with a clean towel on their shoulders, a flagon of
wine in one hand and a silver bowl in the other, and offer to serve them with drink.'
About thirteen miles south-west of Okehampton, Sydenham stands in a beautiful valley, overshadowed by
woods, in which the shining green of the laurels, the darker masses of the rhododendrons' tapering leaves,
patches of russet bracken, and feathery light green moss make a feast of colour, even when overhead there is
only the bare tracery of twigs and branches. The coverts lie on a hill-side that is steep and fairly high, and at
the foot is a rushing stream which is crossed by a bridge exactly opposite the front of the house.
The following notes have been most kindly sent me by Mrs. Tremayne:
'The Manor of Sidelham, or Sidraham, now called Sydenham, appears to have been originally held by four
Saxon Thanes, whose names have not been preserved, and to have passed from them[Pg 299] into the hands
of that powerful noble, Judhaell de Totnais. On his banishment by William Rufus, his property was
confiscated, and Sydenham gave its name to a family who still possessed it in the reign of Henry III, and was
succeeded by a family called Mauris, from whom it passed in marriage to Trevage, and from Trevage to Wise.
Part of the house dates from the fourteenth century, and is said to have originally formed a quadrangle or H,
but in the reign of Elizabeth it was built into the shape of an E, and is a very perfect example of Tudor
domestic architecture.
Sydenham House
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'Sir Edward Wise, in the reign of James I, very much beautified the house, and legend says that he tried to add
such height and such an amount of granite to it that Risdon writes, "The very foundations were ready to reel
under the burthen." The house lies in a lovely wooded valley on the banks of the River Lyd, and it has four
separate entrances, each opening on to a court or garden. Access to the front-entrance—commonly
called the Green Court—is through a fine iron gateway, and above the central door are the Wise arms.
Most of the windows have eight rounded granite mullions and small leaded panes of glass, and in some the
original glass still remains. Two windows in the front are of Charles I.'s date, and have quaint fan-shaped
lights. Over the large granite open fireplace in the front-hall is the date 1656, when the house underwent repair
after damage, caused, it is said, in the Civil Wars. There is a story repeated in many histories of Devon, and
told by Lysons amongst others, that Sydenham was taken in 1644 by Colonel Holborne; but I have every
reason to believe that the Sydenham garrisoned and taken was Combe Sydenham, in the parish of Stogumber,
near Taunton, but the fact that within the last forty years a sword and other weapons, also seventeenth-century
horseshoes, have been found may be taken as a proof that fighting of some sort did take place.
'In making alterations in the kitchen chimney some twenty years ago, a little hiding-place, or priest's room,
was found opening out of it, and in it was an oak table and the remains of a chair; and since then large and
small unsuspected rooms have been discovered, and it has been said that in the largest a troop[Pg 300] could
lie hidden—as indeed it could with ease. Quite recently a secret passage leading from the house
towards the river has been found, bearing out the legend always handed down, "that the Lady Wise of the day
escaped with a large party by a secret passage near the river, and got into the woods undetected by the soldiers
who were round the house." It is very probable that the secret rooms mentioned and the passage
communicated.
'There is fine oak panelling in most of the rooms, and in the dining-room the panelling is inlaid in a delicate
design with an ivory-like substance. Secret passages exist to this day in the walls, which are of immense
thickness, in some places being seven feet in depth. There are three oak staircases, the main one being finely
carved with figures standing at the angles, and another having very fine newels.
'In what goes by the name of the King's Room there is an ancient bed, with fine old red silk curtains and the
Prince of Wales's plumes over it, in which Charles I and Charles II are reported to have slept. It is quite likely
that Charles II, when Prince of Wales, did come here, as he is known to have been many weeks in the
neighbourhood.'
The garden is delightful, and no change in it has been made for very many years. A wide lawn slopes away
from the house, and a very small straight rivulet runs through it just a foot or two from the path. At the foot of
the slope is a tiny lake, which, though very narrow, divides the lawn from end to end, and beyond the water
the ground rises gradually. Clipped bushes and a large flower-border mark the farther edge of the lawn.
The Tremaynes were originally a Cornish family, but they came to Devonshire early in the fourteenth century.
For at this time Isabella Trenchard of Collocombe married Thomas Tremayne, and after his death Sir John
Damarel, 'and so much gain'd the affection of her second husband that he gave her and her heirs by Tremain
(having none of his own)' some of his estates.
Thomas Tremayne and Philippa his wife lived during the sixteenth century, and had sixteen children, several
of whom distinguished themselves. Andrew and Nicholas were twins, and so[Pg 301] amazingly alike 'in all
their lineaments, so equal in stature, so colour'd in hair, and of such resemblance in face and gesture,' that they
were only recognized, 'even by their near relations,' 'by wearing some several coloured riband or the like ...
yet somewhat more strange was that their minds and affections were as one: for what the one loved the other
desired: ... yea, such a confederation of inbred power and of sympathy was in their natures, that if Nicholas
were sick or grieved, Andrew felt the like pain, though far distant and remote in their persons.'
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When Sir Peter Carew fled the country, suspected of plotting against Queen Mary, Andrew Tremayne
embarked with him at Weymouth, and later Nicholas joined his twin in France, and they threw in their lot
with a troop of adventurers who harassed the Channel. Froude has said: 'The sons of honourable houses ...
dashed out upon the waters to revenge the Smithfield massacres. They found help where it could least have
been looked for: Henry II of France hated heresy, but he hated Spain worse. Sooner than see England
absorbed in the Spanish monarchy, he forgot his bigotry in his politics. He furnished these young mutineers
with ships and money and letters of marque. The Huguenots were their natural friends; with Rochelle for an
arsenal, they held the mouth of the Channel, and harassed the communications between Cadiz and Antwerp.'
Occasionally the twins met with ill-luck, and an entry in the Acts of the Privy Council records that: 'To be
committed to several prisons, to be kept secret, without having conference with any ... Andrew Tremayne to
the Marshalsey and Nicholas Tremayne to the Gate House, suspected of piracy.' Afterwards they went back to
their life of risks and chances on the high seas.
But when Elizabeth came to the throne a different view was taken of these rovers. 'Privateering suited
Elizabeth's convenience,' says Froude. 'Time was wanted to restore the Navy. The privateers were a resource
in the interval ... they were really the armed force of the country.' So (in 1559) instructions were sent to the
English Ambassador in Paris that certain gentlemen, among whom were the Tremaynes, 'as shall serve their
country, the[Pg 302] Ambassador shall himself comfort them to return home. Circumspection must be used.'
The postscript is characteristically cautious.
The Queen valued Nicholas as a trustworthy messenger, where a matter needed discreet handling, and the
bearer of it was likely to be in danger. In 1559-60 the Bishop of Aquila wrote to the King of Spain: 'The
Queen has just sent to France an Englishman called Tremaine, a great heretic, who is to disembark in Brittany.
I understand that he goes backwards and forwards with messages to the heretics in that country.' On one
journey he was arrested when carrying letters in cipher, and Throckmorton, the English Ambassador in Paris,
wrote to the Due de Guise, asking for his release. Nicholas was a special favourite of the Queen, but as he
loved a camp better than a court, she gave him leave 'to enter into the service of the King of Navarre, by
which means he will be better able to serve her.' The King of Navarre, however, did not greatly appreciate
Tremayne, and a short time afterwards Throckmorton writes: 'The bearer, Mr Tremayne, came out of England
with intent to see the wars in Almain, or elsewhere, thereby to be better able to serve the Queen. He has been
here a good while to hearken which way the flame will rise to his purpose; but now, finding all the Princes in
Christendom inclined to sit still, returns home. Desires Cecil to do something for him to help him to live, as it
will be right well bestowed. The Queen will have a good servant in him, and Cecil an honest gentleman at his
command.'
Andrew had entered the army, and in Scotland reaped fame from the brilliant cavalry charge which drove the
French back into Leith. Lord Grey wrote in 1560-61 that he had chosen Captain Tremayne to escort Lord
James, 'because he is a gentleman of good behaviour, courtesy, and well trained, and also that he stands in the
favour of the Lords of Scotland by reason of his valiant service at Leith.'
In the winter of 1562-63 the Queen began openly to help the Huguenots at Havre, and Nicholas Tremayne
was sent there at the head of 'fifty horsemen pistolliers.' In the following May Captain Tremayne's band and
some others, in a skirmish, 're[Pg 303]pulsed the Rheingrave's whole force, slain and taken near 400, with one
ensign and seven drums. Not more than twenty of their own were killed and wounded, none to his knowledge
taken.' Four days later Tremayne's troops, over-confident, risked too much, and their Captain was shot, to the
great grief of his fellow-officers. Warwick wrote to Cecil: 'Whereas you write that you are more sorry for the
death of Tremain than you could be glad of the death of a 100 Allmaynes, I assure you that there is never a
man but is of the same opinion.' The Queen was much grieved by the loss. 'She had resented,' says Froude,
'the expulsion of the French inhabitants of Havre ... she was more deeply affected with the death of Tremayne;
and Warwick was obliged to tell her that war was a rough game; she must not discourage her troops by
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finding fault with measures indispensable to success; for Tremayne, he said, "men came there to venture their
lives for her Majesty and their country, and must stand to that which God had appointed either to live or die."'
Risdon concludes his account of the twins by saying that they died together; but this is not altogether accurate,
for, about a week after the death of Nicholas, Andrew with three hundred soldiers set sail from Berwick for
Havre. It is, however, quite true that they died in the same place, and the interval between their deaths was
very short, for about seven weeks after his twin was killed Andrew Tremayne succumbed to the plague.
Edward Tremayne, another brother, followed the fortunes of the Marquis of Exeter, and was 'a great sufferer
for his inviolable fidelity to his noble master.' So firm was his devotion that even torture failed to extort from
him a confession that the Marquis and 'the Lady Elizabeth' had been involved in Wyatt's conspiracy. His
'invincible resolution' asserted their innocence, even on the rack, and Queen Elizabeth later recognized this
splendid loyalty by making him 'one of the clerks of Her Majesty's most honourable privy-council.'
Cecil had a high opinion of Tremayne, and in 1569 showed his faith in Tremayne's judgment by sending him
to Ireland, to sift the terrible but conflicting stories of its miseries and rebellions, and[Pg 304] 'to let him know
quietly the real condition of the country.' Tremayne, to begin with, wrote hopefully of remedies for all that
was wrong, but after a year's study and experience realized that the trouble lay deeper than he had at first
understood. Nevertheless, some notes on the state of Ireland by Edward Tremayne are endorsed by Lord
Burghley 'A good advice.' The Queen showed her confidence by entrusting to him (in 1580) a very delicate
task. The treasure that Drake brought home in the Pelican had to be registered; the examination must be made
before some public officer, but the Queen feared that it might be necessary to make restitution to Spain, and,
not objecting to a little crooked dealing, was very anxious that the total amount of the booty should never be
made known. In obedience to the instructions he received from her, Tremayne writes to Walsingham: 'I have
at no time entered into the account, to know more of the very value of the treasure than he made me
acquainted with. And to say the truth, I persuaded him to impart to me no more than need, for so I saw him
commanded in her Majesty's behalf, that he should reveal the certainly to no man living.' Here follows a fine
tribute to Drake's unselfishness: 'And withal, I must say, as I find by apparent demonstration, he is so inclined
to advance the value to be delivered to her Majesty and seeking in general to recompense all men that have
been in this case dealers with him, as I dare take an oath with him, he will rather diminish his own portion
than leave any of them unsatisfied.'
Edmund Tremayne, of a later generation, faithfully served his King in the troubled times of the Civil Wars,
'and was several hundred pounds deep in their books, at Haberdashers' Hall, for his loyalty. He is also stated
to have repaid a considerable portion of the money borrowed for the necessities of the Queen during her
sojourn at Exeter, at the time of the birth of the Princess Henrietta. Later he was imprisoned and his goods
were sequestrated.'
A very treasured possession in the family is the 'tongue token,' believed to have originally belonged to this
Edmund Tremayne. These tokens, small enough to put under the tongue in case of need, were given to the
bearers of messages from those of high rank[Pg 305] or importance, as a proof of the genuineness of the
bearer, where there was too much danger to risk a written word. This token is a tiny oval of gold, with the
head of King Charles on one side and his initials on the other. Edmund Tremayne is supposed to have
received this token when he carried the news of the Princess's birth from Exeter to the King at Oxford.
Mr Tremayne's grandson, Edmund, married Arabella, the daughter and heiress of Sir Edward Wise, who
brought Sydenham to the Tremaynes. Various traces of the Wises remain, among them a portrait of a
golden-haired Lady Wise. She is painted wearing a white satin dress, an immense Vandyck collar, and many
ornaments. Among her possessions was a magnificent set of 'horse furniture,' made, it is supposed, for some
state occasion when she rode with her husband in the year (1633) that he was High Sheriff. It is of very fine
and rich crimson velvet, arranged to fit over the pommels of the saddle and hang down on either side. The
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furniture includes an imposing red velvet stirrup, and both this and the saddle-cloth are elaborately and
beautifully worked with silver embroidery, and hung with silver tassels to match; and a piece of velvet that lay
over the crupper is thickly strewn with delicate little silver cockle-shells.
About fourteen miles north-east of Exeter, in the valley of the Culm, stands Bradfield; an avenue of cedars
leads up to the house, which is an Elizabethan one in a very perfect condition. The banqueting-hall is panelled
throughout, and its fine carved roof is supported by elaborately carved and pierced hammer-beams. High at
one end is the minstrels' gallery, and at the other is a latticed window, which opened on to a corridor, and is
said to have been used by the lady of the house, who could see from it anything that might be happening in the
hall. A high arch on one side of the hall divides a small panelled room, where the guests gathered before
dinner. The arch is of white stone, and little blocks, each bearing a shield or flower, are set at intervals on the
mouldings.
The music-room is panelled, and above the panels are hangings[Pg 306] of Spanish leather covered with
graceful designs. The fireplace and very interesting 'porch' projecting into the room look like late Italian
Renaissance work, though, from the dresses of the carved figures on them, they are supposed to have been
actually made in England. The porch is richly carved and painted, and slender strips of very light wood are
inlaid amongst a mass of ornamental details. The figures seem more than a little incongruous to each other.
On one panel are Adam and Eve with the Tree of Knowledge between them, and above appear ladies and
gentlemen of the court of Queen Elizabeth—little coloured figures, standing well out from the backs of
their niches.
Bradfield
The fireplace is very elaborately carved and painted, and here, too, are figures in curious juxtaposition
surrounded by very rich decorations. Amongst others may be seen a farmer and his wife, a cook, with a large
goose that she is about to kill, and a dairymaid, with a miniature cow in her arms. High above these are the
sons and daughters of Jesse in splendid robes and crowns.
Bradfield, in ancient days Bradefelle, was once held by a family of that name. The deed that carried it to the
Walronds is not dated, but a marginal note says that 'Fulke Paynel' was dead in 1 Henry III. The deed runs as
follows:
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Fulke Paynel grants to Richard Walerond of Exeter all his land of Bradfield in his Manor of Offeculme.
Richard Walerond is to make two suits yearly, one at 'La Hockeday,'[10] and one at Michaelmas amercement,
to consist of one sextary of wine of the value of sixpence and not more. Grant of common pasture throughout
the manor, except in fields and meadows. One pound of pepper to be paid at Michaelmas annually. In
recognition of this grant Richard Walerond 'pays to Fulke Paynel five marks of silver, and gives to Hande his
wife' one golden ring, and to William his heir one golden brooch.
[Pg 307]
Witnesses: Simon son of Roger, Hamelin de Boulay, William de Lomene, Walter de Tiddecomba, Simon de
Baunton and Robert his brother, Peter Comyn, Radulphus de Doddescomba, Walter de Soffewill, 'and many
others.'
Among the Walrond papers is an agreement dated Michaelmas, 1261, regarding a farm 'let for nineteen years,
in consideration of four marks paid and one mark a year for six years and rent of six shillings a year ... and
two capons at Michaelmas and one bushel of winter wheat at Christmas in each year, from one ferling of land
in Cumb.'
I believe that the views held by Sir Henry Walrond of the arrival of William of Orange are not clearly
recorded, but whatever they were, a note written by General Ginkel, during the march from Tor Bay to
Whitehall, was, considering the position of things, decidedly peremptory:
'Sir van Ginkel, Lt.-General of the Cavalry of the United Netherlands, in the service of his Highness, the
Prince of Orange, etc.
'We have taken up our quarters in the house of Sir Hendrie Waldron, which quarters we desire shall be kept
open as long as the troops of His Highness shall remain in this town or neighbourhood; we have also left in
the care of the aforesaid Sr Hendries Waldron two black horses, and likewise the gray mare, which he shall
keep for us.
A charming echo from the past sounds in a very different epistle—a love-letter from Sir William
Walrond to a Mistress Courtenay. The letter is written on a sheet of paper covered with gold-leaf and bordered
with elaborate designs. The case belonging to it is embroidered in fine crewel-work in (more or less) natural
colours, representing figures, scenery, and a house in the background, and it suggests the needles of Little
Gidding.[Pg 308]
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'The happiness I late enjoy'd by the fruition of your sweete society gives an incentive to mee to let you knowe
how deep you are percullest[11] in my brest, though their injurious feare [youth's usual concomitant] obscured
those larger narratives of my most intensive love and really devoted service ... 'twas my present fate then to be
lesse expressive when I most admir'de these eminent perfections which both art & nature have adorn'd you
with and as being doubtful of obtaining what I heartily desired remained your captive but in confidence of
your candid disposition am now your humble petitioner to bee so far happified as to be deemed your
honouring servant. Let then, I beseech you (worthy, lady) this poor and unpolished character of my due
respects and firm affections achieve the happiness of kissing your fairest hands and you shall thereby engage
at present and in future
'Will Walrond.
Pynes stands in the Exe Valley, just within three miles of Exeter Cathedral. It is of red brick with white
dressings, and has many high narrow windows. A view has been put forward that the politics of country
gentlemen in the early part of the eighteenth century may always be traced by their trees; those who were in
favour of William III set lime-avenues, while Jacobites planted Scotch firs. There is a tradition in the family
that, while the Northcotes were for the Prince of Orange, the Staffords were for King James, but it seems quite
as likely that political significance was not always the chief point in planting trees. In any case, there are many
Scotch firs, and a lime-avenue (peculiarly in keeping with the style of the house) is shown by prints to have
led far over the hill to Upton Pyne, but is now, alas! represented only by one or two aged survivors.
The manor belonged to the family of Pyne in the reign of Henry I, and after many years was brought by an
heiress to[Pg 309] the Larders. From this family, after another interval, it passed by marriage to the
Coplestones, of whom it was bought by Hugh Stafford.
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The Staffords, or, as the name originally was, Stowfords, migrated from Stowford in Dolton near Torrington,
soon after the Restoration. Hugh Stafford, born in 1674, was very keenly interested in the subject of
apple-growing and cider. He wrote a 'Dissertation' on the subject, and especially on a certain apple called the
Royal Wilding, from which it had just been discovered (about 1710) a very superior kind of cider could be
produced. Unfortunately, Lord Bute's cider-tax so greatly discouraged the manufacture that after it had been
imposed farmers only made enough for their own use and their labourers', and were not very critical as to the
quality. In consequence, the choicest kinds of fruit were neglected, and both the Royal Wilding and the White
Sour of the South Hams, another much-prized apple, are no longer to be found.
The daughter and heiress of Mr Stafford married her neighbour, Sir Henry Northcote. The Northcotes have
been settled in Devonshire since the reign of Henry I, when Galfridus de Northcote held the lands of
Northcote at East Down, near Barnstaple, and in the middle of the sixteenth century Walter Northcote was
living at Uton, in the parish of Crediton. In this neighbourhood his descendants remained until Sir Henry's
marriage, when they came to Pynes.
John Northcote was one of the Devonshire justices who attended Quarter Sessions during the later part of the
reign of Elizabeth, and he lived till within ten years of the outbreak of Civil War. From his epitaph, it appears
that he was tried by the Star Chamber; the verse has been translated as follows:
Another justice, Walter Yonge, notes in his diary that in 1627 letters were sent to the justices of Devon, 'to the
Mayors of port-towns, Exeter, Dartmouth, Totnes, Plymouth, and Barnstaple, bidding the towns provide
ships, and the country, men and victuals.' Later, letters were sent demanding that a large sum should be raised
'to set a fleet at sea ... we having but six or seven days to raise the money, and to return it to London; but our
county refused to meddle therein.' John Northcote was Sheriff just at this time, and was most probably held
responsible for the intractability of his countrymen.
Sir John Northcote, his son, was born in 1599, and became a Member of Parliament, he and Sir Edmund
Fowel representing Ashburton in the Long Parliament. During his first few weeks in the House of Commons,
Sir John took notes of the proceedings, and the small brown volume in which they are written still exists. The
notes have been transcribed by Mr A. H. A. Hamilton, and are very interesting, for they record threatenings of
the great storm so soon to burst over England. The pages open with 'Proceedings against the Earl of Strafford.
Mr Pimm's [Pym] Report'—which report prefaces terrible accusations with a personal touch: 'Long
known the person charged by acts of friendship.'
Many letters, reports, and commissions, refer to Jesuits and priests, and often the Queen's name appears
intervening on their behalf; laws against them were more and more relaxed, 'signifying his Majesty's pleasure
at instance of her Majesty,' till the Commons became uneasy, and a 'petition' was framed to the King, to
remind him of his 'protestation' at the opening of his reign, that the Queen 'should not intermeddle with
matters of religion.'
The long and stubborn opposition to the exaction of ship-money, 'Voted illegal and entered nullo
contradicente,' is given. The Judges who had declared the tax to be legal were supposed to have been
tampered with by Strafford, and Mr Hyde (afterwards[Pg 311] Lord Clarendon) suggested that they should be
interviewed as to what had passed. The following is a bit of the debate as it was taken down; as Sir John did
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not write shorthand, he was naturally able to give only the gist of each speech:
'Mr Hide. That some of the house be sent to know what solicitations [had been made].
. . . . .
'Sir Franc. Seymour. That proof be first made.
'Mr Pelham. That it will amount to high treason and to prepare present charge.
'Sir Jo. Wray. The posy of his grandfather, Just and True. Sir Ed. Cook [said] whoever shall go about to
overthrow Common Law, the Common Law will overthrow him. His motion, Currat Lex.
'Mr Controller. That respect be had to Judges. That none be urged to be accuser, but concluded that all be sent
to.
'Sir Jo. Culpeper. Of twelve one was a Judas. To send to all the Judges that gave the Judgment, and to send
immediately.'
Another debate shows the King and Parliament for the moment on unusually good terms. Sir Benjamin
Rudyard said: 'God blest his Majesty with hopeful and fruitful progeny. To put in mind to provide for them.
The first prince born amongst us this 100 years. Queen's good affection to Parliament. Concern her Majesty to
uphold the glory and government of this kingdom.'
When the crisis came, most of the Devonshire members seem to have supported the Parliament, guided, no
doubt, to some extent by the wonderful influence of 'King' Pym. Pym sat for Tavistock; 'his colleague was a
son of the House of Russell. William Strode sat for Buralston, and his elder brother for Plympton.' Northcote
was slightly connected with the Strodes, and when war broke out he followed the Earl of Bedford. In
Septem[Pg 312]ber, 1642, Sir Hugh Pollard wrote to the Earl of Bath: 'The Earl of Bedford is now at Taunton,
in want of men and money; he hath sent to his friends Chudleigh, Bampfield, and Northcote, for a supply of
both, whose oratory cannot get one trained man to move, nor above eight volunteers.'
The letter receives a curious comment from the succeeding ones. At that very time the Earl of Bedford was
issuing orders for the arrest of Sir Hugh Pollard, and four days afterwards Sir George Chudleigh and Sir John
Northcote wrote to Major Carey, expressing their approval of Captain Dewett's conduct in capturing the Earl
of Bath. Sir John was now at the head of a regiment of twelve hundred men, and seems to have held the
command during the first two years of the Civil War. He took an active part in the defence of Plymouth, and
in 1643 at Modbury a victory was won by the forces under Lieutenant-General Ruthen, Sir J. Bampfield, and
Sir John Northcote, over Lord Hopton's troops. Many of the Parliamentarian gentlemen were anxious for
peace, and just after this skirmish tried to arrange an 'association' or neutrality between Devon and Cornwall;
but the idea was quashed by Commissioners from London. A few months later Clarendon mentions that Sir
John was sent by the Earl of Bedford, the Parliamentary General of Horse, to negotiate a treaty with the
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Marquis of Hertford.
Sir John was elected to the Parliament of 1656, and showed himself a constant lover of liberty. He inveighed
against the powers granted to Cromwell's House of Peers. 'It was minded you ... that no law was rightly made
but by King, Lords, and Commons. I am sure this law was not made so.' He lays stress on the point that the
old House of Lords ventured all that they had, and protests against their being superseded by new-comers.
'That they should be excluded and these advanced is not just nor reasonable.' A little later he spoke again on
the same subject: 'We thought in the long Parliament we might restrain the inordinate power of the Chief
Magistrate. That was the ground of our quarrel in the late war; but ... it seems we cannot bound these Lords'
exorbitant powers.... I did fight against an exorbitant[Pg 313] power in the King's hands, and I will fight
against it again to the last drop of blood, if his Highness command me, whenever such power shall be set up,
if it be to-morrow, and in whatever hands it be.'
John Northcote was one of the two Knights of the Shire for Devon in the Convention Parliament, the other
being the Lord General Monk. The Restoration was gladly welcomed by him, but he 'spoke repeatedly in[Pg
314] favour of pardon and amnesty, and when necessity arose, he seems to have confronted the triumphant
Cavaliers in debate as boldly as he had met them, or their fathers, in the field.' This was the last Parliament
that Sir John sat in. A little later he turned to the West, and spent most of the days that were left him in
Devon.[Pg 315]
Britton (J.) and Brayley (E. W.): Beauties of England and Wales.
Carewe (Sir Peter), Dyscourse and Dyscoverye of the Lyffe of, ...
collected by John Vowell, als. Hoker, of the Citie of Excester, gent.
Cleaveland (E.): Genealogical History of the Noble and Illustrious Family of Courtenay.
Cotton (R. W.): Barnstaple and the Northern Part of Devonshire during the Great Civil War.
Cotton (W.) and Woollcombe (H.): Gleanings from Municipal and Cathedral Records of Exeter.
Fiennes (Celia): Through England on a Side-Saddle in the Time of William and Mary.
Pollock (Sir F.): Dartmoor and the Walkham. Eng. Illus. Mag., 1884.
Whitfeld (H. F.): Plymouth and Devonport in Times of War and Peace.
[Pg 316]
[Pg 317]
Index
[Pg 318]
Arundell, Colonel, 46
Ashburton, 121
Index 201
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Ashe, 68
Axminster, 69
Axmouth, 66
Ballads, poems, and songs, local, 69, 70, 83, 87, 99, 104, 106, 109, 117, 123, 124, 125, 134, 141, 149, 170,
179, 192, 193, 195, 201, 206, 208, 218, 239, 247, 251, 261, 271, 283
Bampton, 13
Barnstaple, 224
Beer, 65
Berrynarbour, 249
Index 202
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Bickleigh, 24
Bideford, 201
Blackaller, John, 8
Blackmore, R. D., 20
Blackpool, 151
Blowing-house on Dartmoor, 75
Blundell, Peter, 19
Boniface, 35
Bradfield, 305
Bradninch, 29
Branscombe, 64
Brendon, 262
Index 203
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Brudenell, Mr, 31
Buckfastleigh, 122
Buck-horn, 115
Budleigh, East, 60
Budleigh Salterton, 60
Burgoyne, General, 30
Bussell, Nicholas, 98
Canonteign, 98, 99
Index 204
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Dorothea, 17;
Sir Gawen, 38, 52, 53, 54;
George, 52, 108;
John, 52;
Sir Peter, 38, 52, 53, 54, 152, 282, 301;
Sir William, 53
Carew arms, 52
Chagford, 90
Challacombe, 285
Index 205
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Christow, 97
Chudleigh, 100
Civil War, the, 11, 12, 22, 32, 50, 58, 90, 98, 139, 173, 194, 207, 226, 229, 273, 289, 312
Clovelly, 213
Clyst River, 45
Colcombe, 68
Colyton, 67
Cosway, Richard, 16
Countess Weir, 7
Index 206
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Coven, John, 95
Cranbrook Castle, 92
Crediton, 34
Creedy River, 34
Crockern Tor, 78
Cromwell, Thomas, 80
Crosses on Dartmoor, 80
Cullompton, 27
Culm River, 27
Damarel family, 45
Daniel, Tom, 17
Dart, the, 19
Index 207
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Dartmoor Forest, 71
Dartmouth, 136
De Albemarle family, 45
Devonport, 157
Dittisham, 133
Dodbrooke, 142
Doddiscombsleigh, 97
Downes, 39
Drake, Sir Francis, 11, 108, 134, 165, 185, 195, 204;
Sir John, 68
Index 208
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Drewsteignton, 91
Drizzlecombe, 75
Dunsford, 97
Earls, William, 95
Elford Walter, 82
Endsleigh, 199
Escot, in Ottery, 55
Exe, the, 13
Exeter, 1;
arms and motto, 9
Exeter Canal, 8
Exeter Cathedral, 5
Exeter Guildhall, 9
Exmoor, 267
Exmouth, 45
Index 209
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Exmouth, Lord, 99
Fairfax, Sir Thomas, 12, 23, 58, 98, 139, 229, 272, 274, 291
Fingle Bridge, 91
Fingle Gorge, 92
Folk-lore, 254
Fortibus, Isabel, 7
Index 210
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Gates, General, 31
Gaveston, Piers, 80
Godolphin, Sidney, 90
Great Fulford, 93
Greenaway, 133
Index 211
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Richard de, Sir Richard, 174, 191, 194, 195, 203, 204, 205, 207, 208, 227;
Thomas, 203
Grimspound, 74, 75
Grove, ——, 12
Guildhall, Exeter, 9
Guilds in Exeter, 9, 10
Haccombe, 108
Hameldon Barrow, 74
Hammett, John, 94
Harnage, Major, 30
Hartland, 217
Hatherleigh, 236
Index 212
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Hayes Barton, 60
Hembury Fort, 48
Hexter, Ann, 95
Holne, 121
Honiton, 47
Honiton lace, 49
Hounds as tin-carriers, 78
How, John, 95
Index 213
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Lady, 190
Hungerford, Lord, 29
Hut-dwellings on Dartmoor, 74
Ilfracombe, 244
Killerton, 29
Kingsbridge, 141
Kingskerswell, 110
Kingsteignton, 103
Lake, Thomas, 95
Index 214
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Landslip at Lyme, 67
Ley, W., 95
Lyde, Robert, 42
Lydford, 82
Lydford Gorge, 84
Lynton, 259
Marwood, Dr, 68
Index 215
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Mohun arms, 52
Moore, Major, 24
Moretonhampstead, 92
Morton, Cardinal, 29
Morwellham, 199
Newcomb, John, 8
Newenham Abbey, 69
Newton St Cyres, 41
Norden, John, 8
Oare, 265
Index 216
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Okey, Colonel, 98
Osey, Thomas, 37
Otter River, 47
Otterton, 60
Ottery Mohun, 52
Ottery St Mary, 55
Paignton, 110
Parracombe, 254
Peryam, William, 36
Peverell, Hugh, 27
Pickering, Colonel, 58
Index 217
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Pixies, the, 86
Pixies' House, 82
Plymouth, 155
Plympton, 177
Plymtree, 28
Poltimore, 31
Poltimore, Lord, 32
Portledge, 212
Potheridge, 232
Prayer-Book riot, 38
Index 218
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Princetown, 84
Pynes, 308
Rame, Thomas, 7
Rattenbury, Jack, 65
Rattery, 126
Reay, Samuel, 17
Reynell, Lieut, 30
Robin, Mr, 11
Rodge, James, 49
Rugglestone, the, 76
Russell, Lord, 9,
Rev. John, 20, 236;
John, 182;
William Lord, 184
Index 219
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Salcombe, 144
Saltram, 177
Sampford Peveril, 26
Sandridge, 132
Screen at Plymtree, 28
Seaton, 66
Shapcote, Colonel, 46
Sheeps Tor, 81
Shute, 69
Sidmouth, 64
Slee, George, 16
Smuggling, 65
Snowdon, Thomas, 95
Index 220
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Speare, William, 94
Splatt, Hannah, 96
Sprigg, Joshua, 58
Stannary Parliament, 78
Starcross, 42
Starre, John, 66
Stevenstone, 231
Stonehouse, 157
Storm at Widecombe, 80
Index 221
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Devon, Its Moorlands, Streams and Coasts, by Rosalind Northcote
Sutton, James, 94
Sydenham, 298
Tavistock, 179
Tawstock, 228
Teign, the, 89
Teignmouth, 103
Thurlestone, 147
Tiverton, 14
Topsham, 41
Torbay, 106
Torquay, 106
Torrington, 228
Index 222
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Totnes, 129
Trelawny, Rebecca, 40
Tuckfield, John, 36
Ugbrooke, 100
Wallabrook, the, 89
Index 223
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Devon, Its Moorlands, Streams and Coasts, by Rosalind Northcote
Weare, Colonel, 22
Wesley, Samuel, 19
Whitstone, 93
Widdecombe-in-the-Moor, 80
Wistman's Wood, 76
Index 224
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Devon, Its Moorlands, Streams and Coasts, by Rosalind Northcote
Woggan, Captain, 98
Woodbury Castle, 45
Wright, Jacob, 96
Wynfrith, St, 35
FOOTNOTES
[1] Vuzz, i.e. furze.[Pg 35]
[7] Cease.
[10] 'La Hockeday' is commonly, but incorrectly, supposed to commemorate the freedom of the English by
the massacre of the Danes on the Feast of St. Brice, 1002. 'Hoke-tide' began on the Monday after the second
Sunday after Easter.
[11] Portcullised.
FOOTNOTES 225
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