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    From London to Land's End

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    the reigns before, it was but newly forfeited to the Crown, and was

      not made a royal house till King Charles I., who was not only a

      prince that delighted in country retirements, but knew how to make

      choice of them by the beauty of their situation, the goodness of

      the air, &c. He took great delight here, and, had he lived to

      enjoy it in peace, had purposed to make it another thing than it

      was. But we all know what took him off from that felicity, and all

      others; and this house was at last made one of his prisons by his

      rebellious subjects.

      His son, King Charles II., may well be said to have an aversion to

      the place, for the reason just mentioned--namely, the treatment his

      royal father met with there--and particularly that the rebel and

      murderer of his father, Cromwell, afterwards possessed this palace,

      and revelled here in the blood of the royal party, as he had done

      in that of his sovereign. King Charles II. therefore chose

      Windsor, and bestowed a vast sum in beautifying the castle there,

      and which brought it to the perfection we see it in at this day--

      some few alterations excepted, done in the time of King William.

      King William (for King James is not to be named as to his choice of

      retired palaces, his delight running quite another way)--I say,

      King William fixed upon Hampton Court, and it was in his reign that

      Hampton Court put on new clothes, and, being dressed gay and

      glorious, made the figure we now see it in.

      The late queen, taken up for part of her reign in her kind regards

      to the prince her spouse, was obliged to reside where her care of

      his health confined her, and in this case kept for the most part at

      Kensington, where he died; but her Majesty always discovered her

      delight to be at Windsor, where she chose the little house, as it

      was called, opposite to the Castle, and took the air in her chaise

      in the parks and forest as she saw occasion.

      Now Hampton Court, by the like alternative, is come into request

      again; and we find his present Majesty, who is a good judge too of

      the pleasantness and situation of a place of that kind, has taken

      Hampton Court into his favour, and has made it much his choice for

      the summer's retreat of the Court, and where they may best enjoy

      the diversions of the season. When Hampton Court will find such

      another favourable juncture as in King William's time, when the

      remainder of her ashes shall be swept away, and her complete

      fabric, as designed by King William, shall be finished, I cannot

      tell; but if ever that shall be, I know no palace in Europe,

      Versailles excepted, which can come up to her, either for beauty

      and magnificence, or for extent of building, and the ornaments

      attending it.

      From Hampton Court I directed my course for a journey into the

      south-west part of England; and to take up my beginning where I

      concluded my last, I crossed to Chertsey on the Thames, a town I

      mentioned before; from whence, crossing the Black Desert, as I

      called it, of Bagshot Heath, I directed my course for Hampshire or

      Hantshire, and particularly for Basingstoke--that is to say, that a

      little before, I passed into the great Western Road upon the heath,

      somewhat west of Bagshot, at a village called Blackwater, and

      entered Hampshire, near Hartleroe.

      Before we reach Basingstoke, we get rid of that unpleasant country

      which I so often call a desert, and enter into a pleasant fertile

      country, enclosed and cultivated like the rest of England; and

      passing a village or two we enter Basingstoke, in the midst of

      woods and pastures, rich and fertile, and the country accordingly

      spread with the houses of the nobility and gentry, as in other

      places. On the right hand, a little before we come to the town, we

      pass at a small distance the famous fortress, so it was then, of

      Basing, being a house belonging then to the Marquis of Winchester,

      the great ancestor of the present family of the Dukes of Bolton.

      This house, garrisoned by a resolute band of old soldiers, was a

      great curb to the rebels of the Parliament party almost through

      that whole war; till it was, after a vigorous defence, yielded to

      the conquerors by the inevitable fate of things at that time. The

      old house is, indeed, demolished but the successor of the family,

      the first Duke of Bolton, has erected a very noble fabric in the

      same place, or near it, which, however, is not equal to the

      magnificence which fame gives to the ancient house, whose strength

      of building only, besides the outworks, withstood the battery of

      cannon in several attacks, and repulsed the Roundheads three or

      four times when they attempted to besiege it. It is incredible

      what booty the garrison of this place picked up, lying as they did

      just on the great Western Road, where they intercepted the

      carriers, plundered the waggons, and suffered nothing to pass--to

      the great interruption of the trade of the city of London,

      Basingstoke is a large populous market-town, has a good market for

      corn, and lately within a very few years is fallen into a

      manufacture, viz., of making druggets and shalloons, and such

      slight goods, which, however, employs a good number of the poor

      people, and enables them to get their bread, which knew not how to

      get it before.

      From hence the great Western Road goes on to Whitchurch and

      Andover, two market-towns, and sending members to Parliament; at

      the last of which the Downs, or open country, begins, which we in

      general, though falsely, call Salisbury Plain. But my resolution

      being to take in my view what I had passed by before, I was obliged

      to go off to the left hand, to Alresford and Winchester.

      Alresford was a flourishing market-town, and remarkable for this--

      that though it had no great trade, and particularly very little, if

      any, manufactures, yet there was no collection in the town for the

      poor, nor any poor low enough to take alms of the parish, which is

      what I do not think can be said of any town in England besides.

      But this happy circumstance, which so distinguished Alresford from

      all her neighbours, was brought to an end in the year -, when by a

      sudden and surprising fire the whole town, with both the church and

      the market-house, was reduced to a heap of rubbish; and, except a

      few poor huts at the remotest ends of the town, not a house left

      standing. The town is since that very handsomely rebuilt, and the

      neighbouring gentlemen contributed largely to the relief of the

      people, especially by sending in timber towards their building;

      also their market-house is handsomely built, but the church not

      yet, though we hear there is a fund raising likewise for that.

      Here is a very large pond, or lake of water, kept up to a head by a

      strong BATTER D'EAU, or dam, which the people tell us was made by

      the Romans; and that it is to this day part of the great Roman

      highway which leads from Winchester to Alton, and, as it is

      supposed, went on to London, though we nowhere see any remains of

      it, except between Winchester and Alton, and chiefly bet
    ween this

      town and Alton.

      Near this town, a little north-west, the Duke of Bolton has another

      seat, which, though not large, is a very handsome beautiful palace,

      and the gardens not only very exact, but very finely situate, the

      prospect and vistas noble and great, and the whole very well kept.

      From hence, at the end of seven miles over the Downs, we come to

      the very ancient city of Winchester; not only the great church

      (which is so famous all over Europe, and has been so much talked

      of), but even the whole city has at a distance the face of

      venerable, and looks ancient afar off; and yet here are many modern

      buildings too, and some very handsome; as the college schools, with

      the bishop's palace, built by Bishop Morley since the late wars--

      the old palace of the bishop having been ruined by that known

      church incendiary Sir William Waller and his crew of plunderers,

      who, if my information is not wrong, as I believe it is not,

      destroyed more monuments of the dead, and defaced more churches,

      than all the Roundheads in England beside.

      This church, and the schools also are accurately described by

      several writers, especially by the "Monasticon," where their

      antiquity and original is fully set forth. The outside of the

      church is as plain and coarse as if the founders had abhorred

      ornaments, or that William of Wickham had been a Quaker, or at

      least a Quietist. There is neither statue, nor a niche for a

      statue, to be seen on all the outside; no carved work, no spires,

      towers, pinnacles, balustrades, or anything; but mere walls,

      buttresses, windows, and coigns necessary to the support and order

      of the building. It has no steeple, but a short tower covered

      flat, as if the top of it had fallen down, and it had been covered

      in haste to keep the rain out till they had time to build it up

      again.

      But the inside of the church has many very good things in it, and

      worth observation; it was for some ages the burying-place of the

      English Saxon kings, whose RELIQUES, at the repair of the church,

      were collected by Bishop Fox, and being put together into large

      wooden chests lined with lead were again interred at the foot of

      the great wall in the choir, three on one side, and three on the

      other, with an account whose bones are in each chest. Whether the

      division of the RELIQUES might be depended upon, has been doubted,

      but is not thought material, so that we do but believe they are all

      there.

      The choir of the church appears very magnificent; the roof is very

      high, and the Gothic work in the arched part is very fine, though

      very old; the painting in the windows is admirably good, and easy

      to be distinguished by those that understand those things: the

      steps ascending to the choir make a very fine show, having the

      statues of King James and his son King Charles, in copper, finely

      cast; the first on the right hand, and the other on the left, as

      you go up to the choir.

      The choir is said to be the longest in England; and as the number

      of prebendaries, canons, &c., are many, it required such a length.

      The ornaments of the choir are the effects of the bounty of several

      bishops. The fine altar (the noblest in England by much) was done

      by Bishop Morley; the roof and the coat-of-arms of the Saxon and

      Norman kings were done by Bishop Fox; and the fine throne for the

      bishop in the choir was given by Bishop Mew in his lifetime; and it

      was well it was for if he had ordered it by will, there is reason

      to believe it had never been done--that reverend prelate,

      notwithstanding he enjoyed so rich a bishopric, scarce leaving

      money enough behind him to pay for his coffin.

      There are a great many persons of rank buried in this church,

      besides the Saxon kings mentioned above, and besides several of the

      most eminent bishops of the See. Just under the altar lies a son

      of William the Conqueror, without any monument; and behind the

      altar, under a very fine and venerable monument, lies the famous

      Lord Treasurer Weston, late Earl of Portland, Lord High Treasurer

      of England under King Charles I. His effigy is in copper armour at

      full-length, with his head raised on three cushions of the same,

      and is a very magnificent work. There is also a very fine monument

      of Cardinal Beaufort in his cardinal's robes and hat.

      The monument of Sir John Cloberry is extraordinary, but more

      because it puts strangers upon inquiring into his story than for

      anything wonderful in the figure, it being cut in a modern dress

      (the habit gentlemen wore in those times, which, being now so much

      out of fashion, appears mean enough). But this gentleman's story

      is particular, being the person solely entrusted with the secret of

      the restoration of King Charles II., as the messenger that passed

      between General Monk on one hand, and Mr. Montague and others

      entrusted by King Charles II. on the other hand; which he managed

      so faithfully as to effect that memorable event, to which England

      owes the felicity of all her happy days since that time; by which

      faithful service Sir John Cloberry, then a private musketeer only,

      raised himself to the honour of a knight, with the reward of a good

      estate from the bounty of the king.

      Everybody that goes into this church, and reads what is to be read

      there, will be told that the body of the church was built by the

      famous William of Wickham; whose monument, intimating his fame,

      lies in the middle of that part which was built at his expense.

      He was a courtier before a bishop; and, though he had no great

      share of learning, he was a great promoter of it, and a lover of

      learned men. His natural genius was much beyond his acquired

      parts, and his skill in politics beyond his ecclesiastic knowledge.

      He is said to have put his master, King Edward III., to whom he was

      Secretary of State, upon the two great projects which made his

      reign so glorious, viz.:- First, upon setting up his claim to the

      crown of France, and pushing that claim by force of arms, which

      brought on the war with France, in which that prince was three

      times victorious in battle. (2) Upon setting up, or instituting

      the Order of the Garter; in which he (being before that made Bishop

      of Winchester) obtained the honour for the Bishops of Winchester of

      being always prelates of the Order, as an appendix to the

      bishopric; and he himself was the first prelate of the Order, and

      the ensigns of that honour are joined with his episcopal ornaments

      in the robing of his effigy on the monument above.

      To the honour of this bishop, there are other foundations of his,

      as much to his fame as that of this church, of which I shall speak

      in their order; but particularly the college in this city, which is

      a noble foundation indeed. The building consists of two large

      courts, in which are the lodgings for the masters and scholars, and

      in the centre a very noble chapel; beyond that, in the second

      court, are the schools, with a large cloister beyond them, and some

      enclosures laid
    open for the diversion of the scholars. There also

      is a great hall, where the scholars dine. The funds for the

      support of this college are very considerable; the masters live in

      a very good figure, and their maintenance is sufficient to support

      it. They have all separate dwellings in the house, and all

      possible conveniences appointed them.

      The scholars have exhibitions at a certain time of continuance

      here, if they please to study in the new college at Oxford, built

      by the same noble benefactor, of which I shall speak in its order.

      The clergy here live at large, and very handsomely, in the Close

      belonging to the cathedral; where, besides the bishop's palace

      mentioned above, are very good houses, and very handsomely built,

      for the prebendaries, canons, and other dignitaries of this church.

      The Deanery is a very pleasant dwelling, the gardens very large,

      and the river running through them; but the floods in winter

      sometimes incommode the gardens very much.

      This school has fully answered the end of the founder, who, though

      he was no great scholar, resolved to erect a house for the making

      the ages to come more learned than those that went before; and it

      has, I say, fully answered the end, for many learned and great men

      have been raised here, some of whom we shall have occasion to

      mention as we go on.

      Among the many private inscriptions in this church, we found one

      made by Dr. Over, once an eminent physician in this city, on a

      mother and child, who, being his patients, died together and were

      buried in the same grave, and which intimate that one died of a

      fever, and the other of a dropsy:

      "Surrepuit natum Febris, matrem abstulit Hydrops,

      Igne Prior Fatis, Altera cepit Aqua."

      As the city itself stands in a vale on the bank, and at the

      conjunction of two small rivers, so the country rising every way,

      but just as the course of the water keeps the valley open, you must

      necessarily, as you go out of the gates, go uphill every wry; but

      when once ascended, you come to the most charming plains and most

      pleasant country of that kind in England; which continues with very

      small intersections of rivers and valleys for above fifty miles, as

      shall appear in the sequel of this journey.

      At the west gate of this city was anciently a castle, known to be

      so by the ruins more than by any extraordinary notice taken of it

      in history. What they say of it, that the Saxon kings kept their

      court here, is doubtful, and must be meant of the West Saxons only.

      And as to the tale of King Arthur's Round Table, which they pretend

      was kept here for him and his two dozen of knights (which table

      hangs up still, as a piece of antiquity to the tune of twelve

      hundred years, and has, as they pretend, the names of the said

      knights in Saxon characters, and yet such as no man can read), all

      this story I see so little ground to give the least credit to that

      I look upon it, and it shall please you, to be no better than a

      fib.

      Where this castle stood, or whatever else it was (for some say

      there was no castle there), the late King Charles II. marked out a

      very noble design, which, had he lived, would certainly have made

      that part of the country the Newmarket of the ages to come; for the

      country hereabout far excels that of Newmarket Heath for all kinds

      of sport and diversion fit for a prince, nobody can dispute. And

      as the design included a noble palace (sufficient, like Windsor,

      for a summer residence of the whole court), it would certainly have

      diverted the king from his cursory journeys to Newmarket.

      The plan of this house has received several alterations, and as it

      is never like to be finished, it is scarce worth recording the

      variety. The building is begun, and the front next the city

      carried up to the roof and covered, but the remainder is not begun.

      There was a street of houses designed from the gate of the palace

      down to the town, but it was never begun to be built; the park

     


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