From John O'Groats to Land's End eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,027 pages of information about From John O'Groats to Land's End.

From John O'Groats to Land's End eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,027 pages of information about From John O'Groats to Land's End.

  O yes!  The Fair is begun,
  And no man dare to be arrested
  Until the Fair is done,

while on the Friday evening he again went round the town ringing his bell, to show that the fair was over.  The origin of this custom appeared to be shrouded in mystery, as we could get no satisfactory explanation, but we thought that those three days’ grace must have served as an invitation to evil-doers to visit the town.

The church contained the tomb of Thomas Marwood, who, according to an inscription thereon, “practised Physick and Chirurgery above seventy-five years, and being aged above 105 years, departed in ye Catholic Faith September ye 18th Anno Domini 1617.”  Marwood became famous in consequence of his having—­possibly, it was suggested, by pure accident—­cured the Earl of Essex of a complaint that afflicted him, for which service he was presented with an estate in the neighbourhood of Honiton by Queen Elizabeth.

The “Dolphin Inn” at Honiton was where we made our first practical acquaintance with the delectable Devonshire clotted cream, renewed afterwards on every possible occasion.  The inn was formerly the private mansion of the Courtenay family, and its sign was one of the family crests, “a Dolphin embowed” or bent like a bow.  This inn had been associated with all the chief events of the town and neighbourhood during the past three centuries, and occupied a prominent position near the market cross on the main road.  In January 1688 the inn had been willed to Richard Minify, and after his death to his daughter Ann Minify, and it was in that year that William, Prince of Orange, set sail for England, and landed at Torbay in Devonshire.  The advanced guard of his army reached Honiton on October 19th, and the commander, Colonel Tollemache, and his staff occupied the “Dolphin.”  William was very coldly received by the county families in Devonshire, as they remained strongly attached to the Jacobite cause, and to demonstrate their adhesion to the House of Stuart they planted Scotch fir trees near their mansions.  On the other hand, many of the clergy sympathised with the rebellion, and to show their loyalty to the cause they planted avenues of lime trees from the churchyard gate to the church porch.  James II, whom William came to replace, wrote in his memoirs that the events that happened at Honiton were the turning-point of his fortunes, and it was at the “Dolphin” that these events culminated, leading to the desertion of the King’s soldiers in favour of William.  It seemed strange that a popular song set to a popular tune could influence a whole army, and incidentally depose a monarch from his throne.  Yet such was the case here.

[Illustration:  EXAMPLES OF HONITON LACE.  From specimens kindly lent by Mrs. Fowler, of Honiton.  The lower example is a corner of a handkerchief specially made for Queen Mary.]

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From John O'Groats to Land's End from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.