Part 21 (1/2)
_Markets_, Wednesday and Sat.u.r.day.--_Fairs_, February 14; (Holloway) July 10; and Aug. 10, (Lansdown) for cattle, horses and all kinds of merchandise. The Falmouth Mail arrives 7.54 morning, and departs 6.30 afternoon. The Carmarthen Mail arrives 7.48 morning, and departs 6.56 afternoon.--_Bankers_, (Bladud Bank) Tufnell and Co.; draw on Jones, Lloyd and Co.; Tugwell and Co., draw on Barnard and Co.; (Old Bank) Hobhouse and Co., draw on Jones, Lloyd and Co.; (City Bank) Smith and Moger, draw on Barclay and Co.--_Inns_, York Hotel, White Hart, White Lion, Greyhound, Castle, and Elephant and Castle.
[Sidenote: Account of the celebrated Beau Nash.]
[Sidenote: Refused to be knighted.]
[Sidenote: Conduct of Nash towards the Princess Amelia.]
[Sidenote: His death.]
[Sidenote: Dissenting Chapels.]
[Sidenote: Use of the waters in certain disorders.]
[Sidenote: The Theatre.]
[Sidenote: Sydney Gardens.]
Map
Names of Places.
County.
Number of Miles From
+--+-----------------+----------+-------------+-------------+ 34
Bathampton pa
Somerset
Bath 2
Chippenham 11
34
Bathealton pa
Somerset
Wivelis...o...b..3
Milverton 3
34
Batheaston[A] pa
Somerset
Bath 3
Chippenham 10
34
Bathford pa
Somerset
... 4
... 9
30
Bathley to
Nottingham
Newark 4
Muskham 1
34
Bathwick pa
Somerset
Bath 1
Chippenham 12
45
Batley pa & to
W.R. York
Wakefield 7
Leeds 8
15
Batsford pa
Gloucester
Moreton 2
Campden 4
35
Batterley ham
Stafford
Sandbach 8
Barthomley 1
43
Battersly ham
N.R. York
Stokesley 5
Gisborough 7
37
Battersea[B] pa
Surrey
Clapham 2
Putney 3
36
Battisford pa
Suffolk
Needham 2
Ipswich 4
+--+-----------------+----------+-------------+-------------+
Dist.
Map
Names of Places.
Number of Miles From
Lond.
Population.
+--+-----------------+------------------------+-----+-------+ 34
Bathampton pa
Devizes 15
104
314
34
Bathealton pa
Wellington 5
153
98
34
Batheaston[A] pa
Devizes 14
103
1783
34
Bathford pa
... 13
102
870
30
Bathley to
Southwell 7
128
197
34
Bathwick pa
Devizes 16
105
4035
45
Batley pa & to
Bradford 8
189
11335
15
Batsford pa
Stow 7
88
107
35
Batterley ham
Newcastle 8
158
242
43
Battersly ham
Helmsley 14
242
77
37
Battersea[B] pa
Hammersmith 3
4
5540
36
Battisford pa
Bildeston 8
71
436
+--+-----------------+------------------------+-----+-------+
[A] BATHEASTON. This village is situated on the London road from Bath.
The upper part contains the church, and amongst some handsome houses, is one which was formerly the residence of John Wood, Esq., the ingenious architect, to whom Bath owes many of its n.o.blest buildings. The church is antique. At the west-end it has a fine square tower, one hundred feet high. The inside is remarkable for its neat and decent appearance. A custom long observed at the villa of Sir John Millar, Bart., displays his elegance and refinement in the choice of his amus.e.m.e.nts, as well as of his visitors. He had purchased an antique vase, discovered at Frescati, in Italy, in 1759; and having placed it in a room convenient for the purpose, he consecrated it to Apollo, and ordained Lady Miller, high priestess. He then issued a general invitation to all votaries of the muses, to a.s.semble on a certain day in each week, and offer their poetical oblations at the shrine; the degree of merit each possessed was decided by the public voice, and the author of the best was crowned with myrtle. A collation succeeded. This attic pastime continued for some years, till some witling contaminated the purity of the urn by a licentious composition, and the vessel was closed for ever. Two small volumes of these effusions have been published.
[Sidenote: The vase of Apollo.]
[B] BATTERSEA is seated on the Thames, and gives the t.i.tle of Baron to the family of St. John. The church contains many monuments, chiefly of the above n.o.ble family; particularly one in grey marble, to the memory of the celebrated statesman, Henry St. John, Viscount Bolingbroke, and of his second wife, whose profiles are sculptured in ba.s.s-relief. A monument near the south wall, represents Sir Edward Wynter in the act of performing two extraordinary exploits, thus described in his epitaph:--
Alone, unarmed, a tyger he oppressed, And crush'd to death the monster of a beast.
Twice twenty mounted Moors he overthrew, Singly on foot, some wounded, some he slew, Dispersed the rest--what more could Sampson do?
A neat tablet, at the east end of the church, commemorates Thomas Astle, who was long a distinguished member of the Society of Antiquaries, Keeper of the Records in the Tower, a Trustee of the British Museum, and author of Treatise ”on the Origin and Progress of Writing.” He died in 1802, and left a valuable collection of ma.n.u.scripts. Here are also interred, Arthur Collins, Esq., known as the author of an ”Historical Account of the Peers and Baronets of England;” William Curtis, author of the ”Flora Londinensis,” and the Rev. Joseph Gardner, author of ”Views on the Rhine,” and otherwise distinguished by his attachment to the arts. Bolingbroke House was a s.p.a.cious edifice, said to have contained fifty rooms on a floor, of which a few only remain; among which is the favourite apartment of Lord Bolingbroke, wainscotted with cedar. A horizontal air-mill now occupies the site of this mansion, and in the gardens have been erected bullock-houses. Sherwood Lodge, near the Thames, is the residence of James Wolf, Esq. whose valuable collection of plaster-casts, from antique statues, are deposited in a gallery of Doric architecture, remarkable for the purity of its style. A wooden bridge was built over the Thames at this place, in 1771.
[Sidenote: Sir E. Wynter's exploits.]
[Sidenote: Bolingbroke house.]
Map
Names of Places.
County.
Number of Miles From
+--+-------------------+-------+-------------+-------------+ 38
Battle[A] m.t. & pa
Suss.e.x
Tunbridge 26
Hastings 8
48
Battle[B] pa
Brecon
Brecon 3
Trecastle 9
+--+-------------------+-------+-------------+-------------+
Dist.
Map
Names of Places.
Number of Miles From
Lond.
Population.
+--+-------------------+---------------------+-----+-------+ 38
Battle[A] m.t. & pa
Bexhill 6
56
2999
48
Battle[B] pa
Builth 15
174
192
+--+-------------------+--------------------+------+-------+
[A] BATTLE, anciently called Epiton, derived its present denomination from the conflict between William the Norman, and Harold Harefoot, which decided the fate of these realms, and gave to the former the surname of Conqueror. This engagement happened on the 14th of October, 1066, and continued from morning until sunset, when the Normans had sustained a loss of 15000 men, and the English four times that number, among whom was their king. The Conqueror, grateful for his victory, and in performance of a vow, commenced the foundation of an abbey on that part of the field where the battle had raged most fiercely, causing the high altar to be raised on the spot where the body of his valiant antagonist; or, as others say, his standard had been found. This abbey was dedicated to St. Martin, and the privileges enjoyed by the superiors within its precincts were almost regal; an exclusive right of inquest in cases of murder--the property of all treasure discovered there--free warren and exemption, even for their tenants, from all ecclesiastical jurisdiction--right of sanctuary for their church in cases of homicide--and the power of pardoning any condemned thief whom they should meet going to execution. From the foundation of this abbey, till its dissolution, it was governed by thirty-one abbots. Sometime after the latter period, it was the property of the Montagues, who sold it to Sir Thomas Webster, and that gentleman made it his residence. Sir G.o.dfrey Webster, Bart., is the present owner. In its present state, Battle Abbey bears ample testimony to its ancient magnificence, the ruins being extensive, and exhibiting a mixture of the light Norman with the solid Saxon architecture. These remains occupy two sides of a quadrangle, of which one is an ancient gateway. Nine elegant arches, now filled up, are all that remain of the church. Two detached buildings, supposed to have been refectories, are now converted into offices. The town of Battle consists of one street, and has a handsome church, the windows of which are embellished with stained gla.s.s. The chancel contains a fine altar-monument to the memory of Sir Anthony Browne, armour-bearer to Henry VIII. This place is celebrated for a manufacture of gunpowder, inferior only to that at Dartford.
_Market_, Thursday.--_Fairs_, Whit-Monday; Nov. 22, cattle and pedlary; second Tuesday in every month, cattle.--_Bankers_, Smith, Gill, and Co., draw on Spooner and Co.--_Mail_ arrives 4.20 morning; departs 9.40 afternoon.--_Inn_, George.
[Sidenote: The Abbey.]
[B] BATTLE. The church is placed upon an eminence on the east side of the Escir river. It is a low edifice surrounded by a cemetry, bounded by a wall. A few straggling houses give this place the name of a village.
History has fixed this spot as the scene of action where the fate of Brecknocks.h.i.+re was decided, upon its attack by Bernard Newmarch. The vestiges which indicate such an event, are, a well called Ffynon Pen Rhys; a lane called Heol y Cymri, and a long upright stone below the church on the south side; no other vestiges remain to recall the event.
Half a mile eastward from Battle, appears the stately residence of the vicar of Llandevalle. Upon the wall of an inner court is an inscription in Latin. From the windows of this house are three most beautiful views; on the east side through a small vista, are seen the village of Llanddew, and in the back ground the black mountain beyond Talgarth.
From the library, in which is a capital picture of our Saviour bearing the Cross, by Correggio, looking west, is the vale of Usk, with the highly ornamented grounds above Penpont; beyond which, Abercamlais, and the mountains in Llywel and Devynock close the scene. Nearly opposite is the gradually rising knoll of Benni, covered to the top on all sides with wood, beyond which appear the precipitous and majestic summits of the Beacons. Merthyr Cynog, or Saint Cynog, lies about four miles north.
Cynog or Canoc, was the illegitimate son of Brychan Brecheinog. He was slain or murdered in one of the early eruptions of the Saxons into Wales, in the 5th century, on the summit of a hill in this parish, nearly opposite Castlemadoc, called Vanoleu, and according to Owen, was buried in Merthyr church. The edifice which remains, does not appear to be of an earlier date than the Norman era; it is situated upon a lofty ridge between the vales of Escir fawr and Escir fechan, in nearly the centre of the parish. It resembles a large barn, in which are some divisions, like pens for sheep, thrown in disorder to rot, when unfit for use.
[Sidenote: Scene of a Welsh battle.]
Map
Names of Places.
County.
Number of Miles From
+--+--------------------+----------+--------------+-------------+ 25
Battle Bridge ham
Middles.e.x
Holborn Bars 1
Paddington 2
3
Battleden[A] pa
Bedford
Woburn 3
Hockliffe 2
33
Battlefield[B] pa
Salop
Shrewsbury 4
Wem 9
16
Baughurst pa
Hants
Basingstoke 7
Kingsclere 3
4
Baulking ham
Berks
Farringdon 4
Wantage 6
34
Baumber pa
Lincoln
Horncastle 6
Wragby 8
15
Baunton pa
Glocester
Cirencester 2
Northleach 9
56
Bauseley to
Montgomery
Welch Pool 10
Shrewsbury 12
41
Baverstock pa
Wilts
Wilton 4
Salisbury 7
29
Bavington, Great to
Northumb
Hexham 12
Bellingham 12
29
Bavington, Little to
Northumb
... 11
... 12
+--+--------------------+----------+--------------+-------------+
Dist.
Map
Names of Places.
Number of Miles From
Lond.
Population.
+--+--------------------+-------------------------+-----+-------+ 25
Battle Bridge ham
Hoxton 2
1
3
Battleden[A] pa
Leighton 4
39
145
33
Battlefield[B] pa
Shawbury 4
155
70
16
Baughurst pa
Newbury 11
54
434
4
Baulking ham
Lambourne 7
66
185
34
Baumber pa
Louth 12
141
356
15
Baunton pa
Gloucester 17
91
144
56