monk. And likewise other in other places, as
Salisbury, Eridon or Cricklade, Lachlade, Reading,
and Northampton; albeit that the two last rehearsed
were not authorised, but only arose to that name by
the departure of the students from Oxford in time of
civil dissension unto the said towns, where also they
continued but for a little season. When that
of Salisbury began I cannot tell; but that it flourished
most under Henry the Third and Edward the First I
find good testimony by the writers, as also by the
discord which fell, 1278, between the chancellor for
the scholars there on the one part and William the
archdeacon on the other, whereof you shall see more
in the chronology here following. In my time
there are three noble universities in England—to
wit, one at Oxford, the second at Cambridge, and the
third in London; of which the first two are the most
famous, I mean Cambridge and Oxford, for that in them
the use of the tongues, philosophy, and the liberal
sciences, besides the profound studies of the civil
law, physic, and theology, are daily taught and had:
whereas in the latter the laws of the realm are only
read and learned by such as give their minds unto the
knowledge of the same. In the first there are
not only divers goodly houses builded four square
for the most part of hard freestone or brick, with
great numbers of lodgings and chambers in the same
for students, after a sumptuous sort, through the
exceeding liberality of kings, queens, bishops, noblemen
and ladies of the land; but also large livings and
great revenues bestowed upon them (the like whereof
is not to be seen in any other region, as Peter Martyr
did oft affirm) to the maintenance only of such convenient
numbers of poor men’s sons as the several stipends
bestowed upon the said houses are able to support.[1]...
[1] Here follows
a paragraph about the legendary foundation
of the universities.—W.
Of these two, that of Oxford (which lieth west and
by north from London) standeth most pleasantly, being
environed in manner round about with woods on the
hills aloft, and goodly rivers in the bottoms and
valleys beneath, whose courses would breed no small
commodity to that city and country about if such impediments
were removed as greatly annoy the same and hinder
the carriage which might be made thither also from
London. That of Cambridge is distant from London
about forty and six miles north and by east, and standeth
very well, saving that it is somewhat near unto the
fens, whereby the wholesomeness of the air is not
a little corrupted. It is excellently well served
with all kinds of provisions, but especially of fresh
water fish and wild fowl, by reason of the river that
passeth thereby; and thereto the Isle of Ely, which
is so near at hand. Only wood is the chief want
to such as study there, wherefore this kind of provision
is brought them either from Essex and other places
thereabouts, as is also their coal, or otherwise the
necessity thereof is supplied with gall (a bastard
kind of mirtus as I take it) and seacoal, whereof
they have great plenty led thither by the Grant.
Moreover it hath not such store of meadow ground as
may suffice for the ordinary expenses of the town
and university, wherefore the inhabitants are enforced
in like sort to provide their hay from other villages
about, which minister the same unto them in very great
abundance.