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diff --git a/25895-h/25895-h.htm b/25895-h/25895-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5f13bd1 --- /dev/null +++ b/25895-h/25895-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,2872 @@ +<!DOCTYPE html + PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" + "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> +<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en"> +<head> +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" /> +<title>A Walk through Leicester</title> + <style type="text/css"> +/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */ +<!-- + P { margin-top: .75em; + margin-bottom: .75em; + } + P.headingsummary { margin-left: 5%;} + H1, H2 { + text-align: center; + margin-top: 2em; + margin-bottom: 2em; + } + H3, H4, H5 { + text-align: left; + margin-top: 1em; + margin-bottom: 1em; + } + BODY{margin-left: 10%; + margin-right: 10%; + } + table { border-collapse: collapse; } +table {margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto;} + td { vertical-align: top; border: 1px solid black;} + td p { margin: 0.2em; } + .blkquot {margin-left: 4em; margin-right: 4em;} /* block indent */ + + .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;} + + .pagenum {position: absolute; + left: 92%; + font-size: smaller; + text-align: right; + color: gray;} + + .citation {vertical-align: super; + font-size: .8em; + text-decoration: none;} + // --> + /* XML end ]]>*/ + </style> +</head> +<body> +<h2> +<a href="#startoftext">A Walk through Leicester, by Susanna Watts</a> +</h2> +<pre> +The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Walk through Leicester, by Susanna Watts + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: A Walk through Leicester + being a Guide to Strangers + + +Author: Susanna Watts + + + +Release Date: June 24, 2008 [eBook #25895] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A WALK THROUGH LEICESTER*** +</pre> +<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p> +<p>Transcribed from the 1804 T. Combe edition by David Price, +email ccx074@pglaf.org</p> +<h1><span class="smcap">a</span><br /> +WALK<br /> +<span class="smcap">through</span><br /> +<i>LEICESTER</i>;<br /> +<span class="smcap">being</span><br /> +A GUIDE TO STRANGERS,<br /> +<span class="smcap">containing</span><br /> +A DESCRIPTION<br /> +<span class="smcap">of the</span><br /> +TOWN AND ITS ENVIRONS,<br /> +<span class="smcap">with remarks upon its</span><br /> +HISTORY AND ANTIQUITIES.</h1> +<blockquote><p>“Within this hour it will be dinner-time,<br +/> +Till that I’ll view the manners of the town,<br /> +Peruse its traders, gaze upon its buildings,<br /> +And then return and sleep within mine inn.”</p> +<p style="text-align: right"><span +class="smcap">Shakespeare</span>.</p> +</blockquote> +<p style="text-align: center">LEICESTER, PRINTED BY T. COMBE,<br +/> +<span class="smcap">and sold by</span><br /> +T. HURST, PATER-NOSTER-ROW, LONDON,<br /> +1804.</p> +<h2><!-- page i--><a name="pagei"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +i</span>ADDRESS.</h2> +<p>The Editor of the following pages, while he has been +solicitous to furnish those who <i>travel</i> with a POCKET +CICERONE, feels at the same time a wish that it may not be +unacceptable to those who are <i>at home</i>. The latter, +though, in the subject of this survey, they trace an old, a +familiar scene, will still feel that it possesses that interest +which the native spot binds around the mind, and when they point +out to their intelligent visitors and curious friends the most +memorable objects of their antient and honourable Town, it is his +wish that this little companion may be found useful; he, +therefore, while he rejoices in their support and feels their +liberality, inscribes it with respect and gratitude, to the</p> +<p style="text-align: center">INHABITANTS <span +class="smcap">of</span> LEICESTER.</p> +<h2><!-- page 1--><a name="page1"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +1</span>A WALK<br /> +<span class="smcap">through</span><br /> +<i>LEICESTER</i>.</h2> +<p>To the traveller who may wish to visit whatever is deemed most +worthy of notice in the town of Leicester, the following sketch +is devoted. And as the highly cultivated state of +topographical knowledge renders superficial remark unpardonable +in local description, we shall endeavor to produce, at the +various objects of our visit, such information and reflections as +a conductor, not wholly uninformed, may be expected to offer to +the curious and intelligent, while he guides him through <!-- +page 2--><a name="page2"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 2</span>a +large, commercial, and, we trust, a respectable town; the capital +of a province which can honestly boast, that by its rich +pasturage, its flocks and herds, it supplies England with the +blessings of agricultural fertility; and by the industry of its +frame-work-knitters, affords an article that quickens and extends +the operations of commerce.</p> +<p>We now request our good-humoured stranger to accept of such +our guidance; whether he be the tourist, whose object of inquiry +is general information—or the man of reflection, who, +wherever he goes, whether in crouded towns or solitary fields, +finds something to engage his meditation—or the mercantile +rider, who, when the business of his commissions is transacted, +quits his lonely parlour for a stroll through the +streets—we shall endeavor to bring before his eye as much +of interest as our scenes <!-- page 3--><a name="page3"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 3</span>will afford: and as for the diligent +antiquary, we assure him we will make the most of our Roman +remains; and we hope he will not quarrel with the rough forest +stones of our streets, when we promise him they shall conduct him +to the smoother pavement of Roman mosaic.</p> +<p>What may have been the name of the town we are about to +traverse, before the establishment of the Romans, cannot be +ascertained; for the Britons had no written monuments, and it +cannot be expected that tradition should have survived the +revolutions, which, since that period, have taken place in this +island. King Leir, and whatever surmises may have been +founded on the similarity between his name and the present name +of the place, may safely be left to those who are more fond of +the flights of conjecture than the solid arguments of truth.</p> +<p><!-- page 4--><a name="page4"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +4</span>After the establishment of the Romans, Leicester became +one of their most important stations; was known, we are well +assured, by the name of <span class="smcap">Ratæ</span>, +and was a colony, composed of the soldiers from the legions, +having magistrates, manners, and language the same as Rome +itself. Under the Saxon dynasty it obtained the name of +<span class="smcap">Leicester</span>, compounded of +<i>castrum</i>, or <i>cester</i>, from its having been a Roman +military station, and <i>leag</i>, or <i>lea</i>, a pasture +surrounded by woods, for such was antiently the scite of the +town. This name it has preserved, with less alteration in +the mode of spelling than almost any other town in the kingdom, +through the barbarous reigns of the Saxon kings, the oppressive +system of the feudal times, the dark gloom of monkish +superstition, and the fatal revolutions occasioned by the civil +commotions of later ages.</p> +<p><!-- page 5--><a name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +5</span>Such is, most probably, the true etymology of the name of +the place we are now proceeding to survey; for which purpose we +will suppose the visitor to set forward from the Three Crowns +Inn, along a strait wide street, called</p> +<h3>GALLOWTREE-GATE,</h3> +<p>(corruptly pronounced <i>Goltre</i>), from its having formerly +led to the place of execution, the left side of which is the +scite of the antient city walls.</p> +<p>At the bottom of this street, a building, formerly the +assembly-room, but now converted to purposes of trade, with a +piazza, under which is a machine for weighing coals, forms the +centre of five considerable streets. The</p> +<h3>HUMBERSTONE-GATE,</h3> +<p>on the right, leads to a range of new and handsome dwellings, +called <span class="smcap">Spa-Place</span>, <!-- page 6--><a +name="page6"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 6</span>from a +chalybeate spring found there, which, though furnished by the +proprietor with neat marble baths and every convenient appendage +for bathing, has not been found sufficiently impregnated with +mineral properties to bring it into use. The +Humberstone-Gate is out of the local limits of the borough, and +subject to the concurrent jurisdiction of the county and borough +magistrates; though in the reigns of Edward VI. and Elizabeth, +attempts were made to bring it exclusively under the magisterial +power of the town. It is part of the manor possessed by the +Bishops of Lincoln, in the twelfth century, and is still called +the <i>Bishops’ Fee</i>.</p> +<p>Southward from the Humberstone-Gate to the Goltre-Gate, very +considerable additions, consisting of several streets, have +lately been made to the town.</p> +<p><!-- page 7--><a name="page7"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +7</span>Advancing forward, the visitor, on passing the weighing +machine, enters the</p> +<h3>BELGRAVE-GATE,</h3> +<p>a street of considerable extent, in the broader part of which +stands what may justly be deemed one of the most valuable +curiosities of the place; it is a <i>milliare</i>, or Roman +mile-stone, forming part of a small obelisk. This stone was +discovered in 1771, by some workmen, digging to form a rampart +for a new turnpike-road from Leicester to Melton, upon the foss +road leading to Newark, and at the distance of two miles from +Leicester. Antiquarians allow it to be the oldest +<i>milliare</i> now extant in Britain; and perhaps the +inscription upon it is older than most others that have been +found upon altars, or other monuments of Roman antiquity in this +island. It is about three feet long, and between <!-- page +8--><a name="page8"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 8</span>five and +six in circumference. The inscription, when the +abbreviations are filled up, may be read thus—</p> +<blockquote><p style="text-align: center">Imperator +Cæsar,<br /> +Divi Trajani Parthici Filius Divus,<br /> +Trajanus Hadrianus Augustus,<br /> +Potestate IV. Consulatu III. A Ratis II.</p> +<p style="text-align: center">Hadrian Trajanus Augustus,<br /> +Emperor & Cæsar, the son of the most illustrious Trajan +Parthicus,<br /> +In the 4th year of his reign, and his 3d consulate.<br /> +From Ratæ (Leicester) 2 miles.</p> +</blockquote> +<p>Such is the inscription on this <i>milliare</i>, which our +industrious antiquaries seem faithfully to have extracted from +among the ruins of time and the injuries of accident; an object, +which exhibits a curious instance of the civilization introduced +by the Roman arms into this <!-- page 9--><a +name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>island; for the +erection of marks to denote the distance from place to place, is +an accommodation, at least to the travelling stranger, which +unpolished nations never devised; and which the inhabitants of +Britain never generally enjoyed from the final departure of the +Roman legions, till the last century, when mile-stones were again +erected along our principal turnpike roads. The unlearned +visitor, it is confessed, will be apt to view, with some degree +of disappointment, the object of which we are speaking, and about +which much busy conjecture, and learned antiquarian research has +been employed; for indeed, its appearance is neither singular nor +striking, the engraving being but slight, and the letters rudely +formed. But the ingenious observer will esteem it a +valuable curiosity; not only because it clears up the long +doubted question, whether <!-- page 10--><a +name="page10"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 10</span>the <span +class="smcap">Ratæ</span> of Antoninus’s Itinerary +was the present Leicester, but because it is one of those objects +which assist the reflecting mind in connecting the past with the +present; and, by confirming from sensible evidence the records of +history, give greater weight and effect to the lessons she may +teach.</p> +<p>The situation in which this stone is at present placed, has +often been thought improper; for it is undoubtedly exposed to +injuries from the wantonness of play, and is so little +conspicuous from its place in the obelisk, that nothing appears +necessarily to attract the attention of the stranger. A +situation more private, though not wholly so, would be more +proper; such a one as the garden of the Infirmary would afford: +it would there have all the publicity the curious could wish, and +all the security the antiquary could desire.</p> +<p><!-- page 11--><a name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +11</span>Our visitor, continuing his walk along this street, +which, as he probably will know, is on the great road from the +metropolis to the north-west part of the kingdom, arrives at a +scene of busy traffic. Here, among numbers of newly-erected +dwellings (proofs of the increasing population of the town) is +the public and principal wharf on the navigable canal, near which +is an iron foundery. This canal was formed, in consequence +of a bill passed in 1791, for the purpose of opening a +communication with the Loughborough canal, and through that, with +the various navigations, united to the Trent. The line of +the canal from Leicester to Loughborough is near sixteen miles in +extent, and serves to supply Leicester with coal, lime, and the +greater part of all the other heavy articles, which the +consumption of a <!-- page 12--><a name="page12"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 12</span>place, containing sixteen thousand +inhabitants, requires.</p> +<p>The rates of tonnage, according to the act, from Loughborough +to Leicester, are—</p> +<table> +<tr> +<td><p>For coals</p> +</td> +<td><p>1s. 2d. per ton.</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Iron, timber, &c.</p> +</td> +<td><p>2s. 6d.</p> +</td> +</tr> +</table> +<p> </p> +<p>Quantity of the articles brought by this canal:</p> +<table> +<tr> +<td><p> </p> +</td> +<td><p><i>tons</i></p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Coal annually consumed in Leicester and its vicinity</p> +</td> +<td><p>35,000</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Ditto forwarded to other canals</p> +</td> +<td><p>18,000</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Merchandize for Leicester</p> +</td> +<td><p>4,000</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Ditto sent down (chiefly wool)</p> +</td> +<td><p>1,600</p> +</td> +</tr> +</table> +<p> </p> +<p>Thus, whether we consider the saving of corn, &c. consumed +by the horses employed in land carriage, the comparative +cheapness of the conveyance, or the improved state of our roads, +relieved from such heavy weights, it must be acknowledged that +this canal adds <!-- page 13--><a name="page13"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 13</span>more than might have been expected to +the convenience of Leicester, and the greater part of its +county. Indeed, these <i>water-roads</i>, as navigable +canals may be termed, reflect the greatest honour on the +ingenuity of man, exemplified in their formation, and prove most +strikingly to the thinking mind, how boundless are the advantages +of civilized life, and how inviolable the security afforded to +property by laws, wisely framed and judiciously enforced.</p> +<p>The view from this spot, across the Abbey Meadow, extending on +the opposite side of the canal, with the ruins of the Devonshire +mansion, commonly termed the <i>Abbey</i>, from its being the +scite of <i>St. Mary de Pratis</i>, will, by most visitors, be +considered, at least, as very pleasing; but as we mean to conduct +our traveller to that place, we shall, at present, forbear to +particularize it.</p> +<p><!-- page 14--><a name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +14</span>We shall immediately, along a lane, called +Arch-deacon’s Lane, about the middle of which is a Meeting +house, with a small burial ground, belonging to the General +Baptists, guide our stranger to</p> +<h3>ST. MARGARET’S CHURCH.</h3> +<p>This structure is rendered venerable by its tower, whose +pinnacles and trefoil-work, with the niche, or tabernacle, on the +corner of the south wall of the church, would have even shown it, +had not its date been confirmed by Bishop Alnwicke’s +register, 1441, to have been the work of the era of the regular +gothic. From this tower, a ring of ten bells, well known +for their excellence, sound in frequent peals of harmony along +the meadow and river below.</p> +<p>This, when the other churches of Leicester were given to the +abbey by <!-- page 15--><a name="page15"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 15</span>Robert Bossu, was annexed as a +prebend to the cathedral of Lincoln, by the bishops of that +diocese to whom it then belonged. The right of presentation +is vested in the person holding the prebend, and the parish, with +the neighbouring dependent parish of Knighton, is exempted from +the jurisdiction of the Arch-deacon of Leicester. The +inside of the church is handsome; the nave and side aisles are +supported by gothic arches, whose beauty and symmetry are not +concealed by aukward galleries. The organ was erected by +the parishioners in 1773.</p> +<p>Several elegant modern monuments adorn the walls, and in the +north aisle is the alabaster tomb of Bishop Penny, many years +abbot of the neighbouring monastery of St Mary de Pratis. +In the church-yard the military trophies of a black tomb +commemorate Andrew <!-- page 16--><a name="page16"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 16</span>Lord Rollo. This nobleman was +an instance of the attraction which a martial life affords to an +elevated mind, for he entered the service at the age of forty, +when generally the habits and inclinations of life are so fixed, +as scarcely to admit any change. After many years of severe +and dangerous services, he died at Leicester, as the inscription +informs us, on his way to Bristol, for the recovery of his +health, 1765.</p> +<p>It is to be observed of this and the other churches in this +place, that the entrance is by a descent of several steps; a +circumstance proving incontestibly, that the ground without has +been considerably raised, since no reason could induce the +founders of these sacred edifices to sink the floors beyond the +natural level; nor is the surface of the church-yards alone, +higher than the floors of the <!-- page 17--><a +name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 17</span>churches; so +caused by the continued interment of the dead: but the general +level of the pavements of the streets is also higher; from which +it must be inferred, that the ground on which the present houses +are built has been every where raised, and that very +considerably. That the rubbish produced by buildings, and +particularly the consumption of fuel, should produce this effect, +is what any one may readily believe; and the Bishop of Llandaff +calculates in his Chemical Essays, that the quantity of coal +consumed annually in London, would raise an area of ten miles +square, a full inch.</p> +<p>But notwithstanding it may safely be affirmed that a much +greater quantity of fuel is at present consumed, and more rubbish +produced annually in Leicester, than at any other period +whatever, yet the seeming paradox may easily be <!-- page 18--><a +name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 18</span>proved, that +little, if any alteration in the level of the town is made +now. For the demand of all the refuse of the yards for the +purposes of agriculture, and the ordinary attention paid to +sweeping the streets, prevent any accumulation of soil: the +change of level then, of which our churches afford such +indubitable proofs, can only have taken place when the streets +were unpaved, and made the receptacle of every kind of offal from +the houses; and when the yards, uncleared for the purposes of +improved agriculture, were choaked by accumulated filth; the +whole almost ever yielding in abundance those noxious steams, the +loathsome parent of pestilences, which, in former days, +frequently proved the scourges of our larger towns, and too often +spread their contagion to the villages. Hence the entrance +into our churches, among other good sentiments, <!-- page 19--><a +name="page19"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 19</span>may excite in +the reflective mind a gratitude for the improved comforts the +inhabitants of large towns now enjoy; and the same circumstances +may also call forth the exertions of benevolence to promote still +greater cleanliness, and to remove from the habitations of man +those effects of filthiness, which, in proportion to their +extent, are always offensive, and sometimes fatal.</p> +<p>Westward from this church-yard, extends a street strait and +wide, but meanly built, called</p> +<h3>SANVY-GATE.</h3> +<p>Here nothing can be traced worthy of observation, except the +etymologist stops to glean the remark that <i>Sanvy</i> is +derived from <i>sancta via</i>, the antient name of the street, +so denominated from the solemn procession that passed through it +on Whitsun Monday, in its way from St. Mary’s <!-- page +20--><a name="page20"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 20</span>to +St. Margaret’s. In this procession the image of the +Virgin was carried under a canopy, with an attendant minstrel and +harp, accompanied by representatives of the twelve apostles, each +denoted by the name of the sacred character he personated, +written on parchment, fixed to his bonnet; these were followed by +persons bearing banners, and the virgins of the parish. +Among other oblations they presented in St. Margaret’s +Church two pair of gloves; one for the Deity, and one for St. +Thomas of India.</p> +<p>The stranger, having visited St. Margaret’s Church, may +proceed up the</p> +<h3>CHURCH-GATE,</h3> +<p>about the middle of which he will pass through an area of +about an acre and a half, the property of Sir Nigel Gresley, +Bart. now used as a wood yard; but formerly given by Queen +Elizabeth <!-- page 21--><a name="page21"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 21</span>to the freemen of Leicester, for the +practice of public sports, and especially archery; whence, from +the butts, or shooting marks erected in it, it is called +<i>Butt-close</i>.</p> +<p>There is good reason to believe that plots of ground were once +destined to the like purposes in almost every village, and butts +erected for the practice of that art, to which several of the +most important victories of the English were certainly +owing. The use of the <i>arbalest</i>, or cross-bow, was +certainly very antient in Europe, and was the weapon that proved +fatal to Harold at the battle of Hastings: but the long bow was +not familiar to the English, or, perhaps, not known in Europe, +till the return of Edward the First from the Holy Land, where he +became sensible of its superior advantages from his conflicts +with the Saracens.</p> +<p><!-- page 22--><a name="page22"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +22</span>From this period till the time of Charles the First, +frequent orders were issued by the kings, and acts of parliament +were passed, enforcing and regulating the exercise of the long +bow. Persons of all ages, from seven years old and upwards, +were obliged by penalties to appear at stated times, each with +his bow of a length equal to his own height, and, at least, a +brace of arrows, to try his skill and strength before the butts +near their respective places of residence; and by a statute of +Henry the Eighth, no one under twenty-four was allowed to shoot +at any mark, at a less distance than eleven score, or 220 yards, +a distance of greater length than our <i>Butt-close</i> is at +present; yet it is certain that the adjoining orchard once formed +part of it, and other encroachments may have been made on it, +probably at the north end.</p> +<p><!-- page 23--><a name="page23"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +23</span>The great execution that may be done by the bow, from +the rapidity of its discharges, and the confusion a flight of +arrows is likely to occasion, especially among cavalry, has +inclined some to contend that it is a weapon in excellence +superior to the musket. But the difficulty of procuring, in +any great quantity, the proper wood for the formation of bows, +the expense of arrows, and, above all, the long practice and +training, even from infancy, necessary to form an archer capable +of drawing <i>an arrow a cloth-yard long</i>, <a +name="citation23"></a><a href="#footnote23" +class="citation">[23]</a> will ever secure the preference to the +latter weapon, which, though as commonly used, perhaps less <!-- +page 24--><a name="page24"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +24</span>certain of hitting the mark, is however capable of doing +much execution at double the distance to which the bow will carry +<a name="citation24"></a><a href="#footnote24" +class="citation">[24]</a>.</p> +<p>Crossing the Butt-close, to the alley on the right, we pass +the <i>Presbyterian</i>, or <span class="smcap">Great Meeting +House</span>, built, as appears by a date on the walls, 1708; the +congregation of which was first established in 1680. The +seats are calculated to accommodate eight hundred persons. +An organ was erected here in 1800, a valuable advantage to the +choir, who form a musical society, cultivated with great care, +and justly celebrated for its excellence.</p> +<p>In an opposite lane, now called Causeway-lane, but formerly +St. John’s, leading to the Town Goal, the scite of St. <!-- +page 25--><a name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +25</span>John’s Chapel, is a small place of worship +appropriated to the service of the <i>Romish Church</i>. It +is secluded from observation, being situated behind the house of +the officiating priest, and is a neat miniature representation of +the peculiar decorations with which the members of that religion +adorn the places where they offer up their public devotions.</p> +<p>Opposite the Great Meeting is a Meeting House newly erected by +a society of<i> Independents</i>, which will seat six hundred +persons; and in the adjoining lane, which has undergone a nominal +degeneracy from <i>St. Peter’s</i> to <i>Woman’s +Lane</i>, is another, erected 1803, by a society calling +themselves <i>Episcopalian Baptists</i>. Between these two +latter buildings, is an area used as a <i>Bowling Green</i>, and +<i>Tea Garden</i>, with many small structures <!-- page 26--><a +name="page26"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 26</span>erected for +the general purposes of amusement; it is known by the name of the +<i>New Vauxhall</i>. Among this various assemblage of +edifices stands one, which from its size will attract the +attention of visitors; it is a spacious House for the reception +of Lunatics, under the direction of Dr. Arnold. From hence +we pass an irregular street, now called the</p> +<h3>SWINE MARKET,</h3> +<p>formerly <i>Parchment Lane</i>; which may afford interest to +the mind tho’ not to the eye; for the reflective Traveller +will not regard as unimportant the humble dwellings of those +Manufacturers whose industry supplies the commercial wealth of +the nation.</p> +<p>From this street we arrive at a spot still called the</p> +<h3>EAST-GATES,</h3> +<p>tho the gates of the ancient town were, <!-- page 27--><a +name="page27"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 27</span>some years +ago, taken down to render the passage more commodious. In +the massy wood of these gates were found balls of a large size, +which probably had lodged there ever since the assault made upon +the town by king Charles’s forces in 1695, when according +to a note in the pocket-book of one Simmonds, a quarter-master in +the King’s army, which is now preserved in the Harleian +library, “Col. Bard’s Tertia fell on with scaling +ladders, some near a flanker, and others scaled the horne work +before the draw-bridge on the east side.”</p> +<p>We now advance along the</p> +<h3>HIGH-STREET,</h3> +<p>observing on the right hand, about half way up, a lofty +hexagon turret, whose top is glaz’d for the purpose of a +prospect <!-- page 28--><a name="page28"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 28</span>seat. It bears on the inside, +marks of considerable antiquity, and is a remain of the mansion +of Henry Earl of Huntingdon, called <i>Lord’s +Place</i>. It has a winding stair-case of stone, with a +small apartment on each story, and is now modernized with an +outward coating of brick.</p> +<p>From hence we enter a street, which was formerly upon the +great north road; it leads to Ashby-de-la-zouch, and changing its +denomination at different places, intersects the town from the +southern extremity, where stands the Infirmary, to the North +Bridge, a space of a mile and one eighth; where it is crossed by +High-Street and St. Nicholas’ Street, it takes the name +of</p> +<h3>HIGH-CROSS-STREET,</h3> +<p>from a plain doric pillar bearing the name of High Cross, and +which formed <!-- page 29--><a name="page29"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 29</span>some years ago one of the supporters +of a light temple looking building of the same name, that served +as a shelter to the country people who here hold a small market +on Wednesdays and Fridays for the sale of butter, eggs, +&c. Here the members of parliament are proclaimed, and +here also may be seen on Michaelmas day, the grotesque ceremony +of the poor men of Trinity Hospital, arrayed like ancient +Knights, having rusty helmets on their heads and breast-plates +fastened over their black taberdes proclaiming the fair.</p> +<p>Some paces lower the massy stone front of an edifice adorned +with rusticated pillars points to the eye the <i>County Goal</i>, +erected in the year 1791, at the expense of six thousand +pounds. The spectator may prehaps be led into a reflection +on the violation of propriety, when he sees the Roman Fasces and +Pileus encircled <!-- page 30--><a name="page30"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 30</span>by heavy chains decorating an English +prison. Under these symbols the name of the Architect is +fully conspicuous, and it may be observed as an example of sudden +vicissitude, that the builder of this fabrick became, as a +debtor, its first inhabitant.</p> +<p>This prison, to which the county bridewell is now added, was +erected, upon the scite of the old goal, some years after the +benevolent Howard visited Leicester, and is built with solitary +cells after the plan recommended by that celebrated +philanthropist.</p> +<p>The mention of a character so widely expanding beyond the +customary sphere of human action irresistibly arrests the +attention of the heart that glows into admiration at striking +examples of virtue, and of the head that feels interest in +tracing the motives which influence the conduct of man.</p> +<p><!-- page 31--><a name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +31</span>Separated from the county prison, by a lane called +<i>Free-School Lane</i>, is a rude heavy building, adorned with +the Royal Arms. This is the <span class="smcap">Free +Grammar School</span>, the æra of whose original foundation +has been thought uncertain; but upon the authority of the learned +topographer Leland, it is ascertained to have been founded by one +of the three Wigstons interred in the collegiate church in the +Newark, and who, according to the same writer, was a Prebendary +of that church. This, if not the same person, was brother +to him who founded the Hospital dedicated to St. Ursula, now +called <i>Wigston’s Hospital</i>. The master of that +Hospital, had formerly the privilege of recommending, if not +appointing the master and usher of the school, but this right is +now exercised by the Mayor and senior Aldermen.—The present +building was erected by the <!-- page 32--><a +name="page32"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 32</span>Mayor and +Burgesses, in the fifteenth of Elizabeth, who granted them for +that purpose, the materials of the adjoining church of St. +Peter.</p> +<p>On the opposite side of the street projects the gabel end of a +building once part of the <i>Blue Boar</i>, afterwards <i>Blue +Bell</i> inn, in ancient times undoubtedly the principal inn of +the place. The old over-hanging window gave light to a +chamber in which stood the bedstead, which has been celebrated by +the name of <i>King Richard’s Bedstead</i>, from the +circumstance of his having slept in it a few nights preceding +Bosworth Fight.</p> +<p>Antiquaries have spoken of this bedstead as belonging to the +king rather than to the master of the house; and this opinion has +been thought favoured by the circumstance of a large sum in gold +coin, partly of Richard’s <!-- page 33--><a +name="page33"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 33</span>reign, +accidentally discovered in its double bottom. The bedstead +is of oak, highly ornamented with carved work, and is now, in the +possession of Tho. Babington Esq. <span +class="smcap">m.p.</span> There seems but little reason to +suppose that a Royal General while attending the march of his +Army, should unnecessarily encrease his baggage by so cumbrous a +piece of furniture, or that a Sovereign, guarded by nearly all +the military force of the Nation, should find it expedient to +hide his gold like a private unprotected person. The +bedstead therefore, it may safely be inferred, belonged, not to a +monarch, but to the master of a good inn; and the money was +secreted in it by some person anxious to secure his property from +the dangers threatened by times of civil distraction.</p> +<p><!-- page 34--><a name="page34"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +34</span>At the bottom of <i>Blue Boar Lane</i>, which takes it +name from the inn, is a small Alms-house, founded 1712, by +Matthew Simons Esq. for six Widows, and endowed with 20<i>l.</i> +10<i>s.</i> annually.</p> +<p>The next observable object in the High Cross Street, is the +<span class="smcap">Town Goal</span>. It is a commodious +building, with a handsome stone front, and built after the plan +of Howard—the Architect, Mr. W. Firmadge.</p> +<p>In taking down the old Goal for the erection of the present +edifice, in the year 1792, incorporated with the walls of the +cells were discovered the remains of the chapel of St John, +supposed to have been destroyed during the contests between Henry +the Second and his Son. A regular stone arch belonging to +this chapel, of a circular form, with ornaments of cheveron work, +was carefully taken from among the ruins of the old <!-- page +35--><a name="page35"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 35</span>goal, +and preserved by that industrious Antiquary and Historian of +Leicester, Mr. Throsby.</p> +<p>The small Hospital of St. John, to which this chapel belonged, +joins the prison; it supports six Widows who subsist on a very +scanty stipend arising from various annual donations. +Bent’s Hospital, being the ground floor of the same +building, supports four Widows on an endowment equally small.</p> +<p>We are now approaching one of the most valuable traces which +Leicester affords of our Roman Conquerors, a relick of their +tesselated floors; preserved with great attention, in the cellar +of Mr. Worthington, opposite the town prison. It was +discovered in the year 1675, about four feet and a half under the +surface of the earth, which beneath was found to consist of +oyster shells to a considerable <!-- page 36--><a +name="page36"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 36</span>depth; it was +sunk from its original portion on one side being considerably +inclined from the level.—This pavement, which is an octagon +three feet diameter, represents a Stag looking intently upon the +modestly-inclined countenance of a figure seemingly female, with +her arm resting affectionately against his neck; in front stands +a boy, whose wings and bow plainly indicate him to be a Cupid; he +appears about to discharge an arrow at the breast of the female; +a circumstance which renders it very certain that the subject +must be the amours of some fabulous personages, but assuredly not +<i>Dïana and Actæon</i>; nor yet as some Antiquaries +have hastily supposed, <i>Cypressus</i> lamenting the death of +his favourite stag. Indeed in the whole of the +<i>Metamorphoses</i>, no story cm be found bearing the slightest +resemblance to the subject before us.</p> +<p><!-- page 37--><a name="page37"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +37</span>The elegant and picturesque Gilpin has chosen to +denominate this pavement “a piece of miserable +workmanship,” which can only be owing to the manner in +which he injudiciously viewed it. By placing the light in a +proper position, the spectator will observe that the effect of +the whole piece gives the idea of good design, shade, and relief; +and will be clearly convinced that it could not have been wrought +by a hand which had not made considerable progress in the art of +painting, as is evident from the rounding of the arm of the +female, the foreshortening of the stag’s horn, and the +animated expression of each countenance. The tesseræ +are of various sizes, mostly square, but where a narrow line of +light was required, as in the strait Grecian nose of the female, +they are small and long. They <!-- page 38--><a +name="page38"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 38</span>appear to be +a composition, and are of three or four distinct shades, the +darkest a brown approaching to black, the next a warm or red +brown, and the lightest, which forms the ground work, an ochery +white.</p> +<p>The admirers of this art, so much practised by the Romans as a +decoration of their magnificent buildings, an art which has +survived so long as to have obtained an established manufactory +in modern Rome, will ascertain the pavement in question to be one +of the first specimens of antient mosaic, and will, with +gratified attention, here behold form and shade called up from +that unmanageable material, a piece of baked earth.</p> +<p>The commonly received opinion of these pavements having been +the floors of baths, as founded on the circumstance of their +being discovered three <!-- page 39--><a name="page39"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 39</span>or four feet under the surface of the +earth, is not conclusive; for the soil has been raised by +accidental accumulation; and had not this been the case, the +depth of three or four feet would not have been sufficient for a +Bath as it could not have allowed room for submersion. +Neither does the vault with a floor and walls of tesselated work, +and pipes in the roof, discovered near Leicester in the reign of +James the first, the memory alone of which is preserved by our +indefatigable topographer, Mr. Nichols, render such an opinion in +any respect more certain; but that some of them were floors of +sitting rooms may be justly inferred, from the flues constructed +under them for the purpose of conveying heat.</p> +<p>In examining the specimens of the mosaic art, we are tempted +to draw a far different conclusion from that <!-- page 40--><a +name="page40"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 40</span>adopted by +the truly learned author of the <i>Munimenta Antiqua</i>, who +strongly adduces the number of <i>fragile</i> (as he terms them) +tesselated floors found in Britain, as a proof of the slightness +of the superstructures erected by the Romans. Now, surely +it is not to be expected that a people whose architecture in +their own country was so strikingly characterized by massiveness +& splendor, should, in this island, which though a distant +was a durable conquest, and improved by all their arts and +industry, have departed from their usual principles. And +farther, the taste and costly magnificence discoverable in these +curious remains must lead to the conclusion that they could not +have committed them to slight or ordinary buildings, for they +were decorations which the experience of more than fourteen +hundred years has scarcely surpassed. <!-- page 41--><a +name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 41</span>Even the +looms of modern Brussels, in elegance and beauty of pattern, +cannot fairly outvie the Mosaic Carpets of the antient +Romans.</p> +<p>The next object that engages the eye is the church of <i>All +Saints</i>, projecting on the west end into the street, +exhibiting in its clock an humble copy of the machinery of St +Dunstan’s, in London. It is a small neat church with +three aisles and a low tower, and nothing in its architecture +attracts regard. This vicarage with that of <i>St +Peter’s</i>, which was annexed to it in the reign of +Elizabeth, includes the antient parish of <i>St Michael</i>, and +part if not the whole, of that of <i>St. Clement</i>.</p> +<p>A monument in this church-yard commemorates a character +greatly distinguished by his large donations to the +poor—<i>Ald. Gabriel Newton</i>.</p> +<p>Of the prevalence of alms-giving in <!-- page 42--><a +name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 42</span>Leicester, +this parish, together with the rest, bears full testimony, in a +long list of benefactors, from the Royal Grant of Charles the +first of forty acres of land in Leicester forest, to poor +housekeepers, (which now produces annually 33l. 11s. 4d <a +name="citation42"></a><a href="#footnote42" +class="citation">[42]</a>) to the donor of the penny wheaten +Loaf. From the returns to Parliament in the present reign, +when accounts were made of all the charitable donations in the +kingdom, it appears that there are donations in the parishes of +Leicester, in land and money (including the endowments of the +lesser Hospitals) mostly vested in the trust of the Corporation +and by them distributed, to the annual amount of upwards of +800l.—see Nichols.—</p> +<p><!-- page 43--><a name="page43"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +43</span>A short space below the church is the spot where +formerly stood the North Gates; here a narrow lane, which once +obtained the name of St. Clements, from its leading to that +church, but which is now degraded into <i>Dead-mans Lane</i>, is +the passage to a Meeting House, belonging to the Society of +Quakers. The street continuing in a right line, now takes +the name of</p> +<h3>NORTH-GATE STREET.</h3> +<p>and conducts us to a bridge over the Canal, beyond which is +the <i>North</i> or <i>St. Sunday’s Bridge</i>. This +is an elegant stone structure, erected in 1796 and when viewed +from the Abbey meadow below, it forms with the trees and slopes +beyond it a very pleasing <!-- page 44--><a +name="page44"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 44</span>scene. +Its three arches are small segments of a large circle.</p> +<p>At the foot of the bridge in an area enclosed by a low wall, +and distinguished by a few scattered grave-stones, the +church-yard of <i>St. Leonard</i> meets the eye. The +church, of which no trace remains, was demolished by the +Parliament Garrison in the reign of Charles the first; as from +its convenient situation it might have covered the approach of +the enemy, and given them the command of the bridge. The +parish still remains distinct, and the occasional duty is +performed by the minister of St. Margaret’s.</p> +<p>We cannot leave the North Bridge, without remarking that near +this spot once stood an establishment, which as it related to a +privilege exclusively royal, that of coining money, has ever been +thought to confer honor on the <!-- page 45--><a +name="page45"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 45</span>places where +it was allowed to be exercised. It is undoubtedly proved +from the series of coins that has been collected, that money was +coined at the <i>Mint at Leicester</i>, in regular succession +from the reign of the Saxon king Athelstan, down to Henry the +second. The <i>Monetarii</i>, or Governors of the mint, +were entitled to considerable privileges and exemptions, being +<i>Socmen</i>, or holders of land in the Soc, or franchise of a +great Baron, yet they could not be compelled to relinquish their +tenements at their lord’s will. They paid twenty +pounds every year, a considerable sum, as a pound at the time of +the conquest, contained three times the weight of silver it does +at present. These pounds consisted of pennies, each +weighing one <i>ora</i> or ounce, of the value of 20 pence. +Two thirds of this sum were paid to the <!-- page 46--><a +name="page46"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 46</span>king, and the +other third to the feudal Baron of Leicester.</p> +<p>The Leicester coins of Athelstan and Edmund the first have +only a rose with a legend of the king’s name, that of the +Moneyer, and Leicester; from Etheldred the second, they bear the +impress of the royal head and sceptre, with the same stile of +legend unchanged.</p> +<p>In this series of Leicester coins, which has been engraved +with accurate attention in the valuable work of Mr. Nichols, the +triangular helmets, uncouth diadems, and rudely expressed +countenances of our Saxon Sovereigns, exhibit, when opposed to a +plate of Roman coinage, a striking contrast to the nicely +delineated features of the laurelled Cæsars. In no +instance of comparison does the Roman art appear more +conspicuous. The great <!-- page 47--><a +name="page47"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 47</span>quantity of +coins of that scientific people which have been found at +Leicester, is an additional testimony of its consequence as a +Roman town; these, unfortunately upon being found at different +periods, have paffed into various hands, and altho’ some +few gentlemen here have made collections, yet it is to be +regretted that by far the greater part of the coins have been +taken from the town. Had those found in the last century +been thrown together into one cabinet, Leicester might have +exhibited at this time a respectable series of Roman coinage, +both in brass and silver, from the emperor Nero, down to +Valens. Leaving those whose taste shall so direct them, to +pursue the train of reflections to which this most curious +subject may lead, we return to our route. From the North +Budge two <!-- page 48--><a name="page48"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 48</span>streets branch out, that on the left +the</p> +<h3>WOOD-GATE,</h3> +<p>leading to the Ashby-de-la-Zouch road, and that on the right, +the</p> +<h3>ABBEY-GATE,</h3> +<p>conducting us to the Abbey.</p> +<p>The name of <i>Abbey</i>, so dear to painting, poetry, and +romance, naturally raises in the mind an idea of the picturesque +and the aweful; but we are now approaching no gothic +perspectives, no “long drawn aisles and fretted +vaults,” and scarcely able to bring a single instance of +assimilation, we visit indeed an Abbey only in name; yet we visit +a spot well adapted to the purposes to which it was +appropriated. Sequestered, surrounded by pleasing objects, +and dignified by <!-- page 49--><a name="page49"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 49</span>the not uncertain evidences of +history, it offers to the thinking mind all those interesting +sensations which a review of past times, important events, and +manners now no more, can possibly produce.</p> +<p>An antient brick wall with a small niche of stone is the first +indication of its boundaries. This is said by Leland, to +have been built by Bishop Penny who was Abbot of this Monastery +in 1496. This prelate continued in his Abbacy till he was +translated to the See of Carlisle, and even then, when spared +from his episcopal duty, he delighted to dwell among his brethren +in this religious retreat, and was interred in the neighbouring +church of St. Margaret. Tracing the wall, we enter the +grounds by a modern gateway, and perceive, among orchards, +gardens, and potatoe <!-- page 50--><a name="page50"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 50</span>plantations (the land being occupied +by a Gardener and Nursery-man) the front wall, facing the north +west, of the mansion, once belonging to the Earls of Devonshire, +which, as Mr. Grose has ascertained from a MS. in the British +Museum, was built out of the ruins of the Abbey, long after its +dissolution. The massy stone stanchions of the windows of +this house which still remain entire, and the firmness of the +walls, shew the durability of the materials. They still +retain the traces of that fire by which the forces of Charles the +first on their retreat northward after their defeat at Naseby, +destroyed that mansion, a few days before, the quarters of the +king himself.</p> +<p>In these gardens, nearly thirty acres in extent, no traces now +remain of the refectory, the cells of the Abbot <!-- page 51--><a +name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 51</span>and twelve +Canons, the structures raised in the year 1134, by the great +Robert Bossu, Earl of Leicester; neither is there, as might have +been hoped, one vestige of that noble church, believed to have +been built by Petronilla, the wife of his son Robert +Blanch-mains, and adorned with the pious donation of a braid of +her hair wrought into a rope, to suspend the lamp in the great +choir; an offering at which some of our modern females who +sacrifice their tresses with other views, may perhaps +smile. Nor has the diligence of the enquiring Antiquary +been more successful in the discovery of any traces of the tomb +of Cardinal Wolsey, that great example of fallen ambition; who, +after a life of more than princely magnificence, stripped of his +honours, deprived <!-- page 52--><a name="page52"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 52</span>of his eight hundred attendants, came +here, sick, almost solitary, and a prisoner, performing a +wearisome journey on an humble mule, to crave of the Abbot +“<i>a little earth for charity</i>.”</p> +<p>But, however barren this spot may seem to be of antient +relicks, it is not wholly destitute of objects calculated to +revive in the thinking mind, the events to which we have been +alluding; for in the small garden or court before the main front +of the present ruins are still to be seen the delapidated towers +of that gate-way thro’ which Wolsey entered in melancholy +degradation, and thro’ which other great, more prosperous, +and often royal visitors were admitted with their stately +trains.</p> +<p>Returning by the first entrance, and passing this interesting +gate-way, and <!-- page 53--><a name="page53"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 53</span>the antient stone wall of the Abbey, +overhung with profuse ivy, the visitor will find himself well +recompensed for the trouble of a traverse along the Abbey meadow, +from the Bleach-yard at the angle of the wall, to the navigation +bridge at the bottom of North-gate street.</p> +<p>On crossing the antient bed of the Soar, the eye will +immediately take its flight over a fine level plain containing at +least five hundred acres of perhaps the richest soil in the +kingdom, for that may truly be said of the <i>Abbey +Meadow</i>. The right of this tract is vested partly in a +number of proprietors who claim the hay, and partly in the +inhabitants of Leicester, who possess the privilege of here +pasturing their cows till a certain period of the year.</p> +<p>This ample area was formerly used <!-- page 54--><a +name="page54"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 54</span>as a race +ground, but that annual sport is now removed to the South-side of +the town, having been here frequently incommoded by the floods +from the Soar.</p> +<p>It has lately, at various reviews been dignified by a display +of that admirable patriotism, which, while it reflects honor on +the British name in general, is found in particular to glow with +equal zeal and firmness in the breasts of the Volunteers of +Leicester and its County.</p> +<p>The view to the North-ward is simply ornamented by the church +and village of Belgrave, whose inhabitants in 1357, in +consequence of a dispute with the Abbot concerning the boundaries +of the Stocking Wood, blockaded the North Bridge, and the Fosse, +with a determination of depriving the Monks of their usual supply +of provision <!-- page 55--><a name="page55"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 55</span>from their <i>Grange</i>, or Farm at +Stoughton. This view forms a pleasing contrast to the +towering churches and close grouped houses of Leicester. +The eye of taste will however soon turn from these objects and +dwell with greater pleasure on the noble ivied walls bounding the +Abbey domains; it will proceed to contemplate the mingling angles +of its ruins, and in the back ground, the rich tops of the woods +in the neighbourhood of Beaumont Leys. This scene however, +will not serve merely to amuse the eye, but will naturally lead +the well informed visitor to interesting and affecting thoughts, +while he contemplates the spot in which, in former times, were +acted all the striking rites of the Romish Church, tho’ he +may lament the superstitious errors into which a dark and +ignorant age had plunged <!-- page 56--><a +name="page56"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 56</span>mankind, he +need not join with the destroyer of these venerable institutions +in lording then memory with odious crimes, nor deem them even +wholly useless. Pity and a regard to truth will lead him to +acknowledge that, tho’ their worship was less pure than the +reformed service now happily established in this Island, yet it +was calculated, by its address to the senses, to keep alive the +remembrance of the faith of the Gospel, and to prevent the +warring Baron and his rude vassals from relapsing into +heathenism. Let it also be remembered, that Monks, odious +as we are wont to consider them, were at one time, the only +inhabitants of Christendom, who were at all acquainted with such +sciences as then peered above the mists of overwhelming +ignorance. Of history, they may be said to be the modern +fathers, <!-- page 57--><a name="page57"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 57</span>and tho’ perhaps, like the age +in which they lived, in some respects, blind themselves, they +led, not indirectly to the enlightening of the present age. +But in their own times they were far from useless; their +monasteries were ever ready to receive the wearied traveller, and +many persons of family, tho’ of broken fortunes were +honorably maintained at their board. The poor were +gratuitously relieved from their kitchens, and that in a manner, +upon the whole, more favorable to religion and morality than they +are now by those parish rates, which the abolition of +monasteries, and the partition of their property among private +individuals, have rendered so oppressively necessary. To +these valuable purposes the revenues of our Abbey were fully +competent, for it possessed the <!-- page 58--><a +name="page58"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 58</span>advowsons of +thirty six parish churches in Leicester and its County, which +together with lands in various places, and rights in particular +districts, produced annually for its disposal more than one +thousand pounds.</p> +<p>Quitting the Abbey meadow, and passing the North lock, we +still continue our walk along pleasing rural scenes. The +sweeps of the river which here beautifully meanders, wash, almost +closely, a large extent of town, affording an agreeable prospect +on the left, and a slope finely diversified with groves and +pasturage descends gently to the meadows on the right. +Approaching the Bow-Bridge, we pass a plot of ground insulated by +the Soar, called the Black Friars, once the scite of a monastery +belonging to the Augustine or Black Friars, of which no traces +now remain. That arm of <!-- page 59--><a +name="page59"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 59</span>the river +which flows under the west bridge, is by some supposed, from its +passing under the scite of the old Roman town, to be a canal +formed by that people for the convenience of their +dwellings. It is now called the <i>New Soar</i>, and +whether it can authentically boast the honor of being a Roman +work, the antiquary may perhaps endeavour in vain to +decide. A tunnel or Roman sewer, was discovered in 1793, at +an equal distance between the Roman ruin, called Jewry Wall, and +the river, and in a direct line towards the latter, which +contained some curious fragments of Roman pottery.</p> +<p>Tho’ it be the leading purpose of this survey to point +out existing objects, those who lament the loss of such antient +remains as were justly to be prized, will pardon a brief tribute +<!-- page 60--><a name="page60"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +60</span>to the memory of <i>Bow-Bridge</i>. That single +arch of stone, richly shadowed with ivy, spanned, at the corner +of this island, the arm of the Soar. Its beautiful curve, +unbroken either by parapet or hand-rail, well merited the name +with which some Antiquaries have graced it, the <i>Rialto +Bridge</i>. On the top of the bow, feeding on the mould +which time had accumulated upon the stony ridge, flourished a +spreading hawthorn; this with the stream below, when sparkling +under the reflection of the western sun, the broken shrubby +banks, and the distant swell of Brad-gate Park hill, formed a +picture which has often allured the eye; a picture, that, as it +repeatedly arrested the painter’s hand, we can hardly say +is now no more.</p> +<p>Of this Bridge, the learned author of the <i>Desiderata +Curiosa</i>, who has <!-- page 61--><a name="page61"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 61</span>mistaken it for the adjoining one of +four arches, has given a plate in which is represented a troop of +horsemen with banners, carrying the dead body of Richard the +third, thrown upon a horse, over a bridge which never exceeded +three feet; a width fully sufficient for the purpose for which it +seems to have been constructed, that of affording a foot passage +from the monastery of the Augustines to a spring of pure water +some yards distant. This spring till within a few years, +was covered with a large circular stone, having an aperture in +the centre, thro’ which the monks let down their pitchers +into the water, and retained the name of <i>St. Austin’s +Well</i>.</p> +<p>But tho’ not over this bridge, yet over the adjoining +one, known also, probably from its vicinity to the other, by <!-- +page 62--><a name="page62"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +62</span>the name of <i>Bow-Bridge</i>, the monster Richard +really passed, proud, angry, and threatening, mounted on his +charger to meet Richmond; and over it, the day after the battle, +his body was brought behind a pursuivant at arms, naked and +disgraced, and after being exhibited in the Town-Hall, then +situated at the bottom of Blue-Boar Lane, was interred in the +church of the Grey-Friars near St. Martins.</p> +<p>The name of this king excites in the mind a sensation of +horror;—and tho’ it required the overwhelming +evidence of human depravity furnished by the French revolution, +to make the author of the “Historic Doubts,” believe +his crimes possible, the concurrent testimonies both of +Lancastrian and Yorkist Chroniclers, too well demonstrate +them. Tho’ the latter may have endeavoured to soften +the picture, and Shakespear <!-- page 63--><a +name="page63"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 63</span>may have +thrown upon it the darkest shades by working up his deformity of +body and mind into a picture of diabolical horror, the original, +the undoubted traits are preserved by both parties; traits, which +so far from being peculiar to Richard, marked likewise the other +characters of the contending houses. Nor did he deviate +widely from the manners of the times when he “<i>waded +thro’ slaughter to a throne</i>.”</p> +<p>A pleasing woody road leads from Bow-Bridge to Danett’s +Hall, the seat of Edward Alexander, M.D. The ground here +rising in a gentle slope obtains a command of the town, and that +the dryness of the soil and agreeableness of the situation, mark +it as a desirable spot for residence, even the taste of the +antient Romans may prove; for in the plot of ground known by the +name of the “great <!-- page 64--><a +name="page64"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 64</span>cherry +orchard,” remains a relic of one of their houses. +This is a fragment of a tesselated floor, discovered a few years +ago, but covered over by a former possessor of the estate. +It is composed of tesserœ of various sizes, forming an +elegant geometrical pattern, but how far it extends, has not yet +been ascertained.</p> +<p>Among the great number of these pavements found at Leicester, +are three very perfect ones discovered in the ground belonging to +Walter Ruding Esq. adjoining the old Vauxhall, near the west +bridge—they also are composed in curious and exact +patterns, and form entire squares; but are now filled up. +Of these, together with that in the great cherry orchard, very +accurate plates are given in Nichols.</p> +<p>To the westward of Danett’s Hall, and West-cotes, the +seat of Mr. <!-- page 65--><a name="page65"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 65</span>Ruding, is a lane or bridle road, +commonly called the Fosse, but various reasons lead to the belief +that it is not part of the antient Roman road of that name. +The unvarying testimony of tradition has clearly proved that the +road from the town westward lay, in the reign of Richard the +third, over Bow-Bridge. By attending to the Fosse, which +runs nearly in the line of the Narborough road by West-cotes, it +will seem likewise necessary to conclude that the approach to +Leicester, in the time of the Romans, was also over a bridge +situate near that spot; for as it is certain that the Fosse did +pass thro’ Leicester, and the Romans in forming their roads +scrupulously adhered to the strait line, they would cross the old +Soar near this place.</p> +<p><!-- page 66--><a name="page66"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +66</span>When the Romans penetrated into Britain under the reign +of Claudius, they found it almost in every part, crowded with +woods, and infested with morasses; and as the natives well knew +how to avail themeslves of these fastnesses, the island could +never be considered as effectually conquered till it was rendered +accessible to the march of the legions, and means were provided +for speedy communication of intelligence from even the most +distant parts of the provinces. On this account their +Cohorts early applied themselves to the task of forming roads; +nor did they cease their labours till in the time of Antoninus, +they had opened passages thro’ the island in all +directions. In the reign of that emperor, these works, +connected with others which they had already constructed on the +continent, formed a great chain of <!-- page 67--><a +name="page67"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +67</span>communication, which, passing thro’ Rome, from the +Pict’s wall, or north west, to Jerusalem, nearly the +southeast point of the empire, was drawn out to the length of +4080 Roman, or as Mr. Reynolds has shewn, of so many British +statute miles. Along these roads proper relays of horses +were stationed at short distances, and it seems that couriers +could travel with ease above an hundred miles a day. Two of +these roads, as already observed, passed thro’ +Leicester. One, the <i>Via Devana</i>, leading from +Camalodunum, or Colchester, in Essex, to <i>Deva</i>, of west +Chester, a distance of about two hundred miles, has been lately +discovered by some ingenious and able Antiquaries of the +University of Cambridge.</p> +<p>It enters Leicestershire in the neighbourhood of Rockingham; +continues <!-- page 68--><a name="page68"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 68</span>a strait road for many miles till it +nearly reaches Leicester, and passing thro’ the town it is +found to leave the county near Ashby-de-la-Zouch. The other +road, called the <i>Via</i> <i>Fossata</i> or Fosse, always +known, and every where remarkable, traverses the island in a +north-east direction, from near Grimsby on the coast of +Lincolnshire, passes thro’ Bath, and terminates at Seaton, +a village situated on the coast of Devonshire, a distance of more +than two hundred and fifty miles. This road enters +Leicesteshire at a place called Seg’s Hill, on the wolds, +or antiently wild and uncultivated parts of the county; from +thence it passes the village of Thurmaston and approaches the +East gates of Leicester, by the street called the Belgrave +Gate. On the south-west of the town it is again recognized +in the <!-- page 69--><a name="page69"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 69</span>Narborough road, and from that +village it proceeds again a solitary lane till it enters +Warwickshire at High Cross, where it crosses the no less +celebrated Roman road, the Watling-Street. It is well known +that in the formation of these roads, the Romans spared no cost +and labour. From the remains of some of them it appears +that upon a bed of sand they spread a coating of gravel, upon +which the pebbles, and sometimes hewn or squared stones were +laid, firmly compacted together in a bed of cement. This, +we have reason to believe, was the structure of such of the roads +in this island as are distinguished by the title of +<i>Street</i>, a word derived from the Latin <i>Strata</i>, +meaning formed of layers. But such pains were not, it is +probable, taken in all cases; and from the name of one of the +roads passing <!-- page 70--><a name="page70"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 70</span>thro’ Leicester, the +<i>Fosse</i>, an abbreviation of the Latin <i>Via Fossata</i>, +meaning the way ditched, or dug, we cannot but conclude that it +was a road raised by the spade and formed with a rampart, and +probably covered with gravel in the manner of our present +turnpike roads. The same may also be said of the <i>Via +Divana</i>, whose rampart, now covered with grass, the ingenious +discoverers observed in many places.</p> +<p>When the Saxons subdued this island, after the departure of +the Romans, to preserve a ready communication between distant +places formed no part of then rude and simple policy. Hence +the best roads of the Romans were neglected by them, and since +the Romans had either forbidden, or the inclination of the +Britons had dissuaded them from erecting villages on the line of +public <!-- page 71--><a name="page71"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 71</span>roads, those roads became useless, +and their lasting materials are only to be found, tho’ not +distinguished, in the foundations of the neighbouring +habitations. As it would always be more easy to carry away +the materials of a Roman road than dig for them in a quarry, it +has happened that those materials have been in general so +intirely removed, as to leave almost no where any other trace, +than history and tradition, of their existence.</p> +<p>From the departure of the Romans in 445, to the beginning of +the eighteenth century, the roads of this Island received little +or no improvement from the legislative powers, except by an order +in the reign of Henry the second, that roads should be cleared of +woods and made open that travellers might have leisure, if they +should find it prudent, to prepare to resist the almost armies of +<!-- page 72--><a name="page72"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +72</span>robbers which were spread over the face of almost every +county. Roads, being no longer regulated by any system, to +pass from place to place so as to avoid as well as might be the +inconveniences of woods, bogs, and sloughs, became the only +business of the traveller. It was thus by accident the line +of our present roads was formed, and to this their frequent +circuits and other inconveniences are owing.</p> +<p>During the period above mentioned they were in general so bad +as to be useless for the passage of any other carriages than +carts, and for these only in the summer season; so that the +people inhabiting the same country as the Britons, who are said +to have had numbers and great variety of cars of all kinds, were +so exclusively confined to the use of horses and mules, that <!-- +page 73--><a name="page73"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +73</span>scarcely any other mode of conveyance was known even in +London, and this so late as in the reigns of Elizabeth and James +the first; for it is certain that when the great Shakespeare fled +from his country and came to town, his first means of subsistence +were the pittances he might earn by holding the horses of the +persons who had come from different parts of London to see the +plays then performed at the Bankside Theatre.</p> +<p>It is not indeed to be asserted that till the eighteenth +century our roads never received any repairs, for necessity would +frequently call for something of the kind in most places; nor yet +that Toll Bars were antiently wholly unknown; for it is certain +that a Gate or Bar was first erected in the reign of Edward the +first, at a place now called Holborn Bars in <!-- page 74--><a +name="page74"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 74</span>London, for +the purpose of collecting tolls for the repairs of the +roads. But it must be allowed that the art of constructing +a good and firm road was ill understood, and worse attended to; +and when, in the beginning of the last century, turnpike roads +were first made, it was imagined that the only good form was that +of a ridge and furrow lying across the road on the line of its +direction. Turnpike gates were also in many places +considered as such impositions that even in the beginning of the +reign of George the second, some persons contested the payment, +several were frequently seen together, especially at newly +erected gates, suffering an interruption in their journey rather +than submit to what they deemed an imposition. Every one +who understands the true conveniences of life will rejoice, that +<!-- page 75--><a name="page75"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +75</span>both the formation and repairs of roads, and also the +usefulness of turn-pike tolls are now better understood; that +even countries once held to be inaccessible are now open at all +times and at all seasons to the traveller, and that most of our +roads are now so well suited to the purposes not only of +convenience but of pleasure, that we have no reason to lament the +destruction of the Roman ways, or even not to think that we have +within these few years greatly surpassed them in the expedition +of our mails and all the conveniences and comforts of +travelling.</p> +<p>On this western side of the town, where its environs afford +the attraction of woody scenery, the stranger is invited to +prolong his stroll round <i>Ruding’s Walk</i>. This +walk, tho’ a <!-- page 76--><a name="page76"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 76</span>continuation of the plantation that +encloses West-cotes, is liberally left open by its possessor, who +generously shares with the public the pleasure of his cool and +shady scenery. Where the walk, after winding thro’ a +flourishing shrubbery, enters a grove of tall and venerable elms, +the churches and buildings of the town, broken by the +intermediate trees of the paddock, and the long line of distance +varied by villages, scattered dwellings and corn-mills, unite in +a rich and pleasing prospect.</p> +<p>On turning towards the West, the lover of contrast may for a +moment call to his imagination the dark, heavy, and almost +impenetrable forest which covered these lands in the twelfth +century, and depicture figures of the inhabitants of Leicester +bearing from thence their allowed load <!-- page 77--><a +name="page77"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 77</span>of wood, the +supply for their hearths, and for this privilege, paying at the +West bridge, their toll of <i>brïgg silver</i> to their +feudal Baron. To this picture he will oppose the present +scene of pasturage, flocks, and free husbandmen, cultivating the +earth under the protection of just and equal laws. The +slightest glance at past ages is a moral study, that renders us +not only satisfied but grateful.</p> +<p>We cannot pass West-cotes, without noticing an object in the +possession of Mr. Ruding, highly interesting to the admirers of +the fine Arts. This is a picture in painted glass, +representing Mutius Scævola affording Porsena an +astonishing proof of his resolution by burning that hand which +had assassinated the secretary instead of the king. The +exquisite finish, and perfect preservation of this small <!-- +page 78--><a name="page78"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +78</span>piece bespeak it of the antient Flemish school, whose +artists according to Guicciardini, invented the mode of burning +their colours into the glass so as to secure them from the +corrosion of water, wind, or even time. There is no +department of the delightful art of painting that so much excites +wonder as this. When, in examining this piece, it is +considered that every tint and demi-tint of the highly relieved +drapery, every stroke of the distant tents and towers, was laid +on in a fusile state; that delicate command of skill which could +prevent the shades from liquefying into each other, and arrest +every touch in its assigned place, so as to produce the effects +of the most finished oil painting, cannot be sufficiently +admired.</p> +<p>Entering the town we pass the <!-- page 79--><a +name="page79"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 79</span>Braunston +Gate, to the bridge of the same name, crossing the old Soar, and +soon arrive at the West bridge, which crosses the new Soar. +From hence the canal, taking the name of Union Canal, proceeds +toward Market Harborough. On the corner of an old house +upon the bridge, is an antient wooden bracket, which formerly +supported a bell, by some supposed to have been used by the +mendicant brothers of the neighbouring monastery of St. +Augustine, who here took their station to beg alms, or, which is +more probable, it might have been the bell belonging to the +porter of the gate which stood here.</p> +<p>The street called Apple-gate, that leads us to the church of +St. Nicholas, will not be passed without interest by those who +recollect that on this spot, where the ground rises in a <!-- +page 80--><a name="page80"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +80</span>gentle ascent from the river, the Legions of Rome +established their town; and we are now arrived at an object which +brings them more forcibly to remembrance, a massy arched wall, +commonly termed, from its bounding the quarter antiently +inhabited by the Jews, the <i>Jewry Wall</i>.</p> +<p>This ruin, so minutely described by many Antiquaries, will +afford to curious and learned observers, a valuable specimen of +the mode of building practised by the Romans, but the uses for +which it was designed, will, most probably, for ever elude their +researches. They will not however, forbear their +conjectures concerning it; of these, two have obtained most +credit; one, that it was a temple of the Roman Janus; and the +other, the Janua, or great Gate-way, of the Roman town. The +latter seems <!-- page 81--><a name="page81"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 81</span>chiefly supported by the assertion of +the learned Leman, that the line of the Fosse, having joined the +Via Devana, runs thro’ this spot. But whoever +minutely examines the arches, will not easily overcome the +objections which the work affords to oppose this opinion; or +assign a reason why a city no larger than our Ratæ should +have a Gateway with so many openings; nor does any satisfactory +answer occur to the query why a gate should be placed in what +seems to have been the central part of the antient city. +And perhaps all the evidence for the other opinion rests upon the +dark sooty coat that encrusts the interior of the arches; an +appearance which the smoak of the town would easily produce in +one century. Indeed, little, it seems, can be concluded +<!-- page 82--><a name="page82"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +82</span>from the present outside of the work; for as we cannot +conceive that the Romans would have elected so rough an edifice, +it must be supposed that the present remains were originally +coated with workmanship more worthy of such polished +builders. If, however we must indulge a conjecture, we +shall be led to imagine, from the slight remain of ornament, +which is only the fragment of a niche, that this wall was either +part of a Roman temple or bath. Still however such an +opinion rests, and must rest, on nothing but conjecture, since +the remains are too scanty to afford sufficient data for a +settled opinion. Thus may we take our leave of this +remarkable object, which, tho’ incontrovertibly of Roman +origin, and likely to exist when the church built with its stolen +spoils shall be no more, <!-- page 83--><a +name="page83"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 83</span>must continue +for ever, as it is at present, an interesting mystery.</p> +<p>The adjoining church of St. Nicholas is a small edifice of +very rude and consequently very antient construction. It +has evidently been built at different periods. It consists +only of two aisles, the north one having long since been taken +down; the south aisle is gothic, and the other, properly the +nave, is of that massy unornamented style, in use before and at +the conquest; from the circumstance of its being built with the +materials of the neighbouring Roman work, it will perhaps be no +anachronism to assign to it a date prior to that period. +The tower is also Saxon; and the spire having been damaged by the +wind is now taken down.</p> +<p>The area, eastward of the churchyard, <!-- page 84--><a +name="page84"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 84</span>is called +<i>Holy Bones</i>; bones of oxen having been there dug up in +sufficient numbers to induce the belief that it was once a place +of sacrifice. The church of St. Augustine which stood on +this spot, is supposed to have been destroyed before the +conquest.</p> +<p>At the corner of this area is a charity school, established on +the bounty bequeathed by Ald. Gabriel Newton, for the clothing +and educating thirty five boys; and in the terms of the +founder’s will, “instructing them in toning and +psalmody.”</p> +<p>In a lane not far from St. Nicholas’ church, called +Harvey Lane, is the meeting house of the Calvinistic Baptists, +which is capable of containing 500 persons.</p> +<p>From St. Nicholas’ street, we again arrive at the +High-Cross, and proceed southward, along High-Cross-Street. +<!-- page 85--><a name="page85"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +85</span>In this street, in the house of Mr. Stephens, are the +remains of a chantry or chapel, established for the purpose of +saying masses for the dead, once belonging to St. Martins +church. They consist of a range of windows, exhibiting in +curiously painted glass, a regular series of sacred history.</p> +<p>The next object, worthy of attention, at which we arrive, is +an elegant gothic building, with an inscription +“<i>Consanguinitarium</i>, 1792.” It consists +of five neat dwellings, to which is annexed a yearly stipend of +upwards of 60l. and was built by John Johnson, Esq. a well-known +Architect as a perpetual home for such of his relations as may +not be favored by successful fortune.</p> +<p>Turning down a narrow alley, called Castle Street, we arrive +at a spacious area, on the right of which is a charity <!-- page +86--><a name="page86"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +86</span>school, built in 1785, belonging to the parish of St. +Mary, which clothes and educates 45 boys and 35 girls.</p> +<p>The visitor will now have a full view of St. Mary’s +church, antiently known by the distinguishing addition of +<i>infra</i> or <i>juxta Castrum</i>, a building in which he will +perceive, huddled together, specimens of various kinds of +architecture, from the Norman gothic of the north chancel, to the +very modern gothic of the spire; a mixture which evinces the +antiquity of the church, marks the disasters of violence, +accident, and time, and proves that the neighbourhood of the +castle, within whose outer ballium or precincts it stood, was +often most dangerous. That there was a church, on this spot +in the Saxon times, seems almost certain, from some bricks +apparently the workmanship of that people, <!-- page 87--><a +name="page87"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 87</span>found in the +chancel; and the cheveron work round the windows of this chancel +proves that the first Norman Earl of Leicester, Robert de +Bellomont, when he repaired the mischiefs of the Norman conquest, +or rather of the attack made by William Rufus upon the property +of the Grentemaisnells, constructed a church on a plan nearly +like the present, and adorned it with all the ornaments of the +architecture of his times. This Earl founded in it a +college of twelve canons, of whom the Dean was most probably one, +and among other donations for their support, he endowed it with +the patronage of all the other churches of Leicester, St. +Margaret’s excepted. These, his son and successor, +Robert, surnamed Bossu, converted into regular canons, and +removed them, with great additional donations <!-- page 88--><a +name="page88"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 88</span>to the Abbey +in the meadows. He seems however to have continued an +establishment of eight canons in the collegiate church, +tho’ with revenues comparatively small, since their income, +at the dissolution of the monasteries, was valued only at 23l. +12s. 11d. That the number of these canons remained +unchanged at the time of the dissolution, appears probable from +the circumstance of seven cranes and a socket for an eighth being +still found in a kind of press, or ark, as it is called, in the +vestry, for the purpose of suspending the priests’ +vestments.</p> +<p>The inside of the church is spacious and commodious, and has +lately been rendered still more so by converting the gothic +arches of the south side of the nave into one bold semicircular +arch whose span is 39 feet, and erecting a gallery in the wide +<!-- page 89--><a name="page89"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +89</span>south aisle, said to have been built by John of Gaunt +Duke of Lancaster.</p> +<p>In the great choir or chapel called Trinity choir, at the east +end of the great south aisle, (for the aisles of our churches +were formerly often divided into chapels, but of which in this +church no traces now remain), was held a <i>Guild</i> or +Fraternity, called <i>Trinity Guild</i>, founded in the reign of +Henry the Seventh, by Sir Richard Sacheverel, Kt. and the good +Lady Hungerford. Collections were made four times a year, +of the brethren and sisters belonging to this Society, whatever +it might be, for Antiquaries have not rendered the point +sufficiently clear, but from their meetings being held in +churches, it is most probable that they were of a religious +nature. The money when collected was <!-- page 90--><a +name="page90"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 90</span>applied to +meet various expenses, but chiefly to pay the wages of their +priest, perhaps their confessor, and to supply their great feast +held annually on Trinity Sunday, for which, according to the +account of the steward and wardens, the following articles were +purchased, A.D. 1508.</p> +<table> +<tr> +<td><p> </p> +</td> +<td><p>s.</p> +</td> +<td><p>d.</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>A dozen of Ale</p> +</td> +<td><p>1</p> +</td> +<td><p>8</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>A fat Sheep</p> +</td> +<td><p>2</p> +</td> +<td><p>4</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Seven Lambs</p> +</td> +<td><p>7</p> +</td> +<td><p>0</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Thirty Chickens</p> +</td> +<td><p>1</p> +</td> +<td><p>11</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Two gallons of Cream</p> +</td> +<td><p>0</p> +</td> +<td><p>8</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>½qr. of Malt</p> +</td> +<td><p>2</p> +</td> +<td><p>0</p> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Fourteen Geese</p> +</td> +<td><p>4</p> +</td> +<td><p>3</p> +</td> +</tr> +</table> +<p>From a curious and ingenious Mathematical Essay on the +comparative prices of similar articles in different ages, +presented to the society of Antiquaries, we have here the +pleasure of offering to the attention of our visitor, <!-- page +91--><a name="page91"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 91</span>the +following valuable remarks.</p> +<blockquote><p>“The generality of readers when they look +into the records of antient times, are forcibly struck by the +seeming lowness of the prices of every article of common demand, +when compared with the modern prices. When they find that +an ox was formerly sold for a few shillings, and the price of a +quarter of corn calculated in pence, they are led to envy the +supposed cheapness of those ages, and to bewail the distressing +dearness of the present. Nothing however can be more absurd +than the whining complaints founded upon such facts; for since +the cheapness of living depends not so much upon the price given +for every article of prime necessity, as upon the means by which, +to use a common expression, the purchase <!-- page 92--><a +name="page92"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 92</span>may be +afforded, we must, if we wish to form a proper judgment on the +subject, rightly compare these means as they existed in different +ages, otherwise our conclusions will be not only idle, but +sometimes mischievous.</p> +<p>“It is very certain that money is a commodity, no less +than the articles it is employed to purchase, and like them, its +absolute value is depreciated or lowered by abundance. +Since the discovery of America, the quantity of gold and silver +brought into general circulation, and of late, the general and +extensive use of paper money which represents real specie, +produces the same effect as would arise from a still greater +encrease of it. From this natural depreciation alone of the +value of coin, it follows that were all other circumstances to +have continued the same, the relative value of money <!-- page +93--><a name="page93"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 93</span>would +have decreased, or a greater number of pieces of the same +denomination would be now required to produce the same effect as +formerly, and therefore that it will be necessary to multiply any +sum of money of the present age, into some certain number, in +order to learn the effect of the same sum in an assigned +preceding age.”</p> +</blockquote> +<p>From this multiplication it is demonstrated that the price of +the dozen of Ale, for which the Trinity Guild paid 20d. is +equivalent to something more than 6d. a quart;—the fat +sheep at 2s. 4d. to 1l. 11s. 4d.—the seven lambs at 7s. to +16s. each;—the thirty chickens at 23d. to rather more than +2s. 6d. the couple;—the two gallons of cream at 8d. to 2s. +8d. a quart;—the half quarter of malt at 2s. to 3l. 4s. the +quarter;—the fourteen <!-- page 94--><a +name="page94"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 94</span>geese at 4s. +3d. to nearly 5s. each.</p> +<p>In the reign of the Norman kings, articles, but especially +corn, were dearer than at present. In Henry the sevenths +reign meat was cheaper, but other articles dearer than at +present. We now return to the church of St. Mary.</p> +<p>In the year 1783, the spire which had several times been +injured by lightening, was so much shattered by a fresh stroke as +to require to be taken down to the battlements. It was +rebuilt under the direction of an architect, of the name of +Cheshire at an expense, exclusive of the old materials, of 245l. +10s. the height of the spire from the ground 61 yards. In +this church, in which for many years he officiated as curate, is +interred the Rev. W. Bickerstaffe, a man of great simplicity of +manners, and urbanity of disposition; <!-- page 95--><a +name="page95"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 95</span>who by his +laborious and minute researches materially assisted the +Topographers of Leicester.</p> +<p>Near the north door of this church is a passage leading under +an old fashioned building forming a gate-way into an area called +the castle yard. That the present structure was the +gate-way of the castle when it was tenable as a place of defence, +cannot, for a moment be imagined; but that there was always an +entrance at this place we are well assured, for the adjoining +building on the left is known by the name of the Porter’s +Lodge, and it must therefore be concluded that the present was +built upon the scite of the antient gate-way, and that it was +constructed with the timbers and other materials taken in later +ages from some part of the castle which had been taken down.</p> +<p><!-- page 96--><a name="page96"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +96</span>At this gateway was preserved, till within a few years +past, an antient ceremony expressive of the homage formerly paid +by the magistrates of Leicester, to the feudal Lords of the +castle. The mayor knocking for admittance at the gate was +received by the constable of the castle, while the mace was +sloped in token of homage; he then took an oath of allegiance to +the king as heir to the Lancastrian property; the latter +ceremony, agreeable to one of the corporation charters, is still +performed, but in private. The office of constable of the +castle, which in the beginning of the reign of Mary, was held by +Henry duke of Suffolk, with the annual fee of sixty shillings and +eight pence, is now retained only nominally.</p> +<p>Opposite the gate-way stands a building most probably erected +by the first <!-- page 97--><a name="page97"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 97</span>of the Bellomonts, tho’ the +modern front which meets the eye effectually conceals all the +outward traces of antiquity. The inside of the edifice +however is a room exceedingly curious. Its area is large, +being about seventy-eight feet long, twenty-four high and +fifty-one broad. It is framed into a sort of aisles, by two +rows of tall and massy oaken pillars, which serve to support a +large and weighty covering of slate. This vast room was the +antient hall of the castle, in which the earls of Leicester, and +afterwards the dukes of Lancaster, alternately held their courts, +and consumed in rude but plenteous hospitality, at the head of +their visitors, or their vassals, the rent of their estates then +usually paid in kind. On the south end appear the traces of +a door-way, which probably <!-- page 98--><a +name="page98"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 98</span>was the +entrance into a gallery that has often, among other purposes, +served as an orchestra for the minstrels and musicians of former +days. This hall, during the reigns of several of the +Lancastrian princes was the scene of frequent Parliaments, whose +transactions our provincial historians have carefully +recorded. At present it is used only for the holding the +assizes and other country meetings, to which purpose it is, from +its length, so well adapted, that, tho’ the business of the +civil and crown bars is carried on at the same time at the +opposite ends of the room, the pleadings of the one do not in the +least interrupt the pleadings of the other.</p> +<p>The reflecting visitor, who may choose to compare the uses to +which this place is now applied, with the purposes for which it +was built, will <!-- page 99--><a name="page99"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 99</span>not fail to derive from the +comparison so very favorable to the present times, a satisfaction +most worthy the benevolent heart. Instead of the rude +licentious carousals of the Bellomonts, when the baron +domineered, even in drunkenness, over his assembled slaves, we +often see large bodies of the inhabitants of the county, men +worthy of freedom and possessing it, assembled to consider with +decorum, and to decide with unawed, unbiassed judgment, upon +measures of no little importance to the kingdom of England. +And instead of the savage violence, or idiot folly which mostly +dictated the award of every kind of property, in those feudal +times, we see happily substituted the fair examination of the +witnesses, the eloquent pleadings of the barristers, the learned +observations of <!-- page 100--><a name="page100"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 100</span>the Judge, and the impartial +decisions of the Jury, nobly co-operating to investigate truth, +and to decide, according to right, the means alike of happiness +and virtue. In what manner, and by what degrees this happy +change was effected, the following well authenticated anecdote +may serve to shew.</p> +<p>Robert de Bellomont, the first earl, sitting in the apartment +of the keep of his castle at Leicester, heard a loud shout in the +neighbouring fields. Enquiring into the cause, he found +that it was given by the partizans of a combatant who was then +fighting a duel with his near relation to ascertain the right to +a certain piece of land in St. Mary’s field. The +cruelty and absurdity of such a mode of decision seems to have +been forcibly impressed upon the mind of the earl, <!-- page +101--><a name="page101"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 101</span>by +this affecting circumstance; and he agreed with the burgesses and +inhabitants of Leicester, on the payment of one penny for every +house that had a gable or gavel in the High-street (a payment +afterwards known by the term <i>gavel pence</i>) that all pleas +of the above mentioned nature should be determined by a jury of +twenty four persons.</p> +<p>From the county hall, or castle, as it is commonly called, a +road to the right leads to an antient gate-way strongly built and +once furnished with a port-cullis, and every requisite for +defence. The embattled parapet being much decayed, was +taken down a few years ago, and its roof is now reduced to one of +an ordinary form. When this alteration was made, the arms +of the dukes of Lancaster by whom the gate-way was undoubtedly +built were destroyed on the outside; but <!-- page 102--><a +name="page102"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 102</span>on the +inside, at the spring of the arch, two mutilated figures, one of +a lion, the other of a bear, doubtless some of their devices, +still remain. The lion passant, it is well known, formed +part of the arms of that family, and the muzzled bear was a +symbol used on the seal by Edward the first in his transactions +with Scotland. Nothing can be more probable than that the +Lancastrian princes would ornament their buildings with a figure +which would serve to preserve the memory of their descent from so +renowned a monarch.</p> +<p>The stranger must now be requested to pass thro’ the +uninviting doorway of the adjoining public house; and he will be +led by an easy ascent up to the <i>mount</i>, or perhaps the +scite of the keep of the castle, which tho’ lately lowered +considerably for the <!-- page 103--><a name="page103"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 103</span>purpose of converting it into a +Bowling-green, yet affords a pleasant station for a view of the +environs of Leicester, and is the spot from which the best idea +can be formed of the antient form and boundaries of the +fortifications.</p> +<p>It is well known that the fast Saxons built few or no castles, +for having nearly exterminated the Britons, during the long +continued warfare that preceded their conquest of that people, +they had no occasion for strong fortresses to secure the +possession of the territories they had acquired; and in the later +ages of their dynasty they were too indolent and ignorant to +undertake such works with spirit and effect, notwithstanding the +frequent and sudden inroads of the Danes, rendered such places of +retreat highly necessary, and the great Alfred earnestly <!-- +page 104--><a name="page104"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +104</span>recommended their construction. Hence the places +of defence found in this island at the conquest, were few in +number, and those generally too slight to resist the continued +attacks of time. For this reason the antiquary need not +endeavour to extend his researches after the state of the castle +of Leicester beyond the time of the arrival of William the +Norman. On the division of the provinces made by that +monarch, Leicester became part of the royal demesne; a castle was +erected to ensure the submission of the inhabitants, and the +wardenship of it entrusted to Hugh Grentemaisnell baron of +Hinckly, who possessed considerable property in the +neighbourhood. This castle, like other Norman works of the +same kind, would have its barbican or out-work, defending the +gate and bridge over the outer <!-- page 105--><a +name="page105"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 105</span>ditch would +be commanded by a strong wall, eight or ten feet thick, and +between twenty and thirty high, with a parapet, and crennels at +the top, towers at proper distances, and a gate-way opening into +the town. It would, we may presume, extend from the river +below the Newark round by St. Mary’s church, and then, +turning towards the river again, whose waters were brought by a +cut across the morass lying on the west side, to wash that part +of the wall, and fill the ditch, would thus enclose what was +called the outer Bayle or Ballium. Within this, at a +distance not now to be ascertained, but probably not less than +eighty or an hundred yards, another, similar, but perhaps +stronger fortification, would extend from, and to the river, and +this entered at the <!-- page 106--><a name="page106"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 106</span>gates already described, would +enclose the inner Bayle, where stood the lofty massy keep, the +hall, and all the apartments and rooms belonging to the noble and +potent owners. Although the curious will be inclined to +join in the pathetic laments of the writer of the memoirs of +Leicester, (Throsby) that the just position of the castle and its +extent in former times cannot be known; yet strong probability +will almost authorize us to believe that the account here given +does not vary very widely from the truth; for these conjectures +are directly confirmed by the well still open on the top of the +castle hill or keep, and by the entire remains of a large cellar, +forty-nine feet long and eighteen wide, nearly adjoining the +great hall, on the west. That more traces should not be +discoverable will not appear <!-- page 107--><a +name="page107"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 107</span>surprising +when we consider what effects may be produced by the decays of +time and accident, by the accumulation of soil, and encroachments +of buildings.</p> +<p>During the disputes concerning the succession, on the death of +the Conqueror, the Grentemaisnells seized Leicester castle, and +held it for duke Robert. This subjected it to the fury of +the successful partizans of William Rufus, and the castle lay for +some time in a dismantled state. In the next reign it was +granted by Henry to his favourite Robert first earl of Leicester, +who repaired the damages and it became the principal place of +residence of himself and the second earl, Robert Bossu. The +third earl Robert surnamed Blanchmains, encreased his property +and power, by <!-- page 108--><a name="page108"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 108</span>his marriage with Petronilla, or +Parnel, the heiress of the Grentemaisnells, but the violent +temper of this earl involved him in disputes with king Henry the +second, whose forces under the command of the Chief Justiciary, +Richard de Lucy, took Leicester and its castle by assault, and +reduced both to an almost uninhabited heap of ruins. +Blanchmains regained however the favor of his king and was +restored to his estates, but both he and his son, Robert +Fitz-Parnel engaging in the crusades, the town of Leicester was +but ill rebuilt, and the castle remained in a state of +delapidation for many years. Fitz-Parnel dying without +issue, the <i>honor</i> of Leicester, as part of the Bellomont +estates were called, passed into the family of Simon de Montfort, +in consequence of his marriage with one of the sisters <!-- page +109--><a name="page109"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 109</span>of +Fitz-Parnels. But the Montfort earls of Leicester, both +father and son, were too much engaged in the busy transactions of +their times to pay much attention to their property at +Leicester. After the death of the latter, in the Battle of +Evesham, the Leicester property was conferred by Henry the third +on his second son Edmond earl of Lancaster, whose second son +Henry, heir and successor to Thomas earl of Lancaster, beheaded +at Pontefract, in the year 1322 made Leicester his principal +place of residence, and under him and the two next succeeding +earls, the castle recovered and probably surpassed its former +state of splendor.</p> +<p>When the dukes of Lancaster ascended the throne, Leicester +tho’ frequently honored with their presence, received no +permanent benefit, and tho’ several <!-- page 110--><a +name="page110"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 110</span>parliaments +were held there in the reign of Henry the sixth, the castle had +so far decayed in the time of Richard the third, that that +monarch chose rather to sleep at an inn a few evenings before his +fall, than occupy the royal apartments in the castle. From +this time the castle seems to have made constant progress to +decay, so that in the reign of Charles the first, orders, dated +the ninth of his reign, were issued to the sheriff Wm. Heyrick, +Esq. of Beaumanor (as appears from papers in the possession of +that family) “to take down the old pieces of our castle at +Leicester, to repair the castle house, wherein the audit hath +been formerly kept, and is hereafter to be kept, and wherein our +records of the honor of Leicester do now remain; to sell the +stones, timber, &c. but not to interfere with <!-- page +111--><a name="page111"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +111</span>the vault there, nor the stalls leading +therefrom.”</p> +<p>From others of the same papers it appears that the timber sold +for 3l. 5s. 8d. the freestone, and iron work for 36l. 14s. 4d. +and that the repairs above ordered cost about 50l. Thus was +the castle reduced to nearly its present state, and tho’ +the Antiquary may in the eagerness of his curiosity lament that +so little of it now remains, yet he must surely rejoice in his +reflecting moments that such structures are not now necessary for +the defence of the kingdom, and that the fortunes of the noblemen +are now spent in a way calculated to encourage the arts and +promote industry, rather than in maintaining in these castles a +set of idle retainers, ever ready to assist them in disturbing +the peace of the realm, and still more ready to insult and <!-- +page 112--><a name="page112"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +112</span>injure the humble inhabitants in then +neighbourhood.</p> +<p>Descending from the castle mount, and passing thro’ the +south gale-way of the castle yard, the visitor enters a district +of the town called the Newark, (New Work) became the edifices it +contained were new when compared with the buildings of the +castle. They owed their foundation to Henry, the third earl +of Lancaster, and his son Henry first duke of that title. +By these two noblemen they were nearly finished, and what was +wanting towards their completion was afterwards added by John of +Gaunt. They must then have formed a magnificent addition to +the antient dignity of the castle. The remains of the walls +which enclosed this area enable us to affirm that its form was a +long square, bounded on the north by the castle, on the <!-- page +113--><a name="page113"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +113</span>east by the streets of the suburbs of the town, on the +south by the fields, and on the west by the river.</p> +<p>Judging from what remains of these walls, we feel inclined to +maintain that they were rather calculated to enclose, than +strongly protect, the buildings they surrounded; for if the walls +now standing be the original walls, they were not capable of +resisting the modes of attack usually practised in the age in +which they were built; nor is the gate-way that still remains +entire, formed with towers to command, or with grooves for a +port-cullis to defend, the entrance. Indeed if the state of +England during the age of the founders be considered, +magnificence rather than great strength might be expected to be +their object, and magnificent truly were the <!-- page 114--><a +name="page114"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 114</span>buildings +of the Newark. The gate-way now known by the name of the +Magazine, from the circumstance of its being the arsenal of the +county, is large and spacious, yet grandly massive; and the form +of its arches, which partake of the style of the most modern +gothic, tho’ built at the time when, according to the +opinions of the most learned Antiquaries, that truly beautiful +species of architecture was not generally established, prove the +ready attention of the founders to the progress of the arts.</p> +<p>This gate-way led to an area, which tho’ nearly +surrounded by buildings, was much more spacious than the present +wide street, an area worthy the dukes of Lancaster. On the +south another gate, similar to the Magazine now standing, opened +into the court opposite the strong south gate of the castle, <!-- +page 115--><a name="page115"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +115</span>and on the west rose a college, a church, and an +hospital, which completed the grandeur of the Newark. These +latter buildings formed a lesser quadrangle or court, having on +the north the present old, or Trinity Hospital, built and endowed +for an hundred poor people, and ten women to serve them. On +the south stood a church dedicated to St. Mary, and cloysters; +the former called by Leland “not large but faire;” +the “floures and knottes in whose vault were gilded,” +he says, by the rich cardinal of Winchester; the latter, (the +cloysters,) were both “large and faire;” the houses +in the compace of the area of the college for the Prebendaries +(standing on the west side) the same author says, “be very +praty,” and the walls and gates of the college occupying +the <!-- page 116--><a name="page116"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 116</span>east side of the court, he says, +“be very stately.” Nor did the princes of +Lancaster limit their designs to magnificent structures; this +college was as well filled as the hospital, for it contained a +dean and twelve prebendaries; thirteen vicars choral, three +clerks, six choristers and one verger, in all thirty-six persons; +and the endowment was adequate to the establishment, for the +revenues at the dissolution amounted to 595l. 12s. 11d. +Among the various donations to this college, the following taken +from the Parliamentary rolls of the year 1450, will not be found +unworthy the attention of the curious. The king (Henry the +seventh) grants to the dean and Canons of the church collegiate +of our lady at Leicester, “a tunne of wynne to be taken by +the chief botteller of England in our port of Kingston upon <!-- +page 117--><a name="page117"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +117</span>Hull,” and it is added “they never had no +wynne granted to them by us nor our progenitors afore this time +to sing with, nor otherwise.”</p> +<p>When it is considered that the castle just surveyed occupies a +station most pleasant as well as commanding; that from the +buildings of the Newark it derived all the splendor which the +arts and taste of the times could bestow, and that its adjoining +a large, well fortified, and not ill built town was calculated to +contribute most essentially to the convenience of its possessors, +it will appear to have been one of the most agreeable residences +in the kingdom for such powerful noblemen as were the dukes of +Lancaster; nor will the visitor be surprised to find that it was +occasionally used as a seat by the kings, its owners.</p> +<p>But of all the periods of its history <!-- page 118--><a +name="page118"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 118</span>that will +surely appear most interesting, in which Henry de Gresmond, first +earl of Derby, and on the death of his father, earl and then duke +of Lancaster, already renowned thro’ Europe for his +atchievements in arms, aud crowned with laurels from the fields +of Guienne, where he taught the English how to conquer at Crecy +and Agincourt, returned to reside at Leicester, and to add to the +distinction of wise and brave the still more valuable title of +<i>good</i>, which he was about to earn by the practice of almost +every virtue at this place. Then indeed was Leicester +castle the scene of true splendor and magnificence, for it was +the scene of bounty influenced by benevolence and guided by +religion, of taste supported by expense yet directed by judgment +and regulated by prudence, and of elegance such <!-- page +119--><a name="page119"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 119</span>as +the most accomplished knight of that most perfect age of chivalry +might be expected to display. This nobleman died of a +pestilential disorder at the castle, in the year 1361, greatly +lamented by the inhabitants of Leicester. The order of his +funeral appointed by himself, and curiously recorded by our local +historians, is a pleasing proof of his good sense and piety; the +body being taken in a hearse from St. Mary’s near the +castle, to his collegiate church as he directed, “without +the pomp of armed men, horses covered, or other +vanities”—and the rank of the deceased alone denoted +by the magnitude of five tapers, each weighing one hundred +pounds, and fifty torches.</p> +<p>The buildings of the Newark continued nearly in the state +already described till the dissolution of the monasteries <!-- +page 120--><a name="page120"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +120</span>in 1538, when Robert Boone the last dean, terrified by +the power of the tyrant Henry, and alarmed by the unjustifiable +rigours of the king’s commissioners, surrendered his house +and received with the rest of his brethren, trifling pensions for +life, from this period the buildings of the college being +unsupported by any fund sunk into decay, or were applied to +purposes widely different from the intention of the +founders. The church, cloysters, and gate-way are entirely +removed, with the exception of two arches of the vault under the +former, which are still to be seen firm and strong in a cellar of +the house, now a boarding school.</p> +<p>The old hospital itself seems also to have been infected with +the contagion of ruin, for tho’ spared by the rapacious +hand of Henry, the <!-- page 121--><a name="page121"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 121</span>number of poor in the house 64 men +and 36 women, are reduced from their original allowance of seven +pence weekly, to the now scanty stipend of two shillings, which +arises from the rents of lands and tenements in Leicester, and +its vicinity. The house has been reduced to its present +form by contracting the dimensions of the old one; for that +standing in need of considerable repairs, his present Majesty, to +whom, as heir to the dutchy of Lancaster, the expensive privilege +of repairing it belongs, gave the produce of the sale of an +estate at Thurnby in this neighbourhood, which had escheated to +the crown, for that purpose.</p> +<p>At the east end is a small chapel in which prayers are read +twice a day, and where some mutilated monumental <!-- page +122--><a name="page122"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +122</span>figures, probably of the Huntingdon family, are still +to be seen.</p> +<p>Nothing farther remains to be noticed concerning this +interesting part of the town, except that the south gateway was +beaten down by the king’s forces at the storming of the +place in the spring of the year 1645, when they left only a part +of the jamb on the eastern side standing. One of the +prebendal houses on the west side of the antient quadrangle of +the college has, within these few years, been purchased for the +vicarage house of St. Mary’s parish. Opposite the old +hospital a house has been lately erected as an Asylum for the +reception and education of poor female children.</p> +<p>From the Newark, in a lane opposite to which called Mill-Stone +lane, is a Meeting-House of the Methodists, we proceed along +South gate or</p> +<h3><!-- page 123--><a name="page123"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 123</span>HORSEPOOL-STREET,</h3> +<p>At the end of this street, situated on a gentle eminence +affording the desirable advantages of a dry soil and open air, we +perceive one of those edifices which a country more than +nominally christian must ever be careful to erect, a house of +refuge for sick poverty. The Infirmary, which owes the +origin of its institution to W. Watts, M. D. was built in 1771, +nearly on the scite of the antient chapel of St. Sepulchre, and +is a plain neat building with two wings, fronted by a garden, the +entrance to which is ornamented with a very handsome iron gate +the gift of the late truly benevolent Shuckbrugh Ashby, Esq. of +Quenby. The house is built upon a plan which for its +convenience <!-- page 124--><a name="page124"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 124</span>and utility received the approbation +of the great Howard, whose experience and observation qualified +him for a competent judge. It is calculated to admit, +exclusive of the fever ward, 54 patients, without restriction to +county or nation. Its funds, notwithstanding the exemplary +liberality it has excited, are, owing to the pressure of the +times, scarcely adequate to its support. Adjoining the +Infirmary is an Asylum for the reception of indigent +Lunatics.</p> +<p>At the distance of a quarter of a mile from the Infirmary, are +some remains of a Roman labour, called the <i>Raw Dikes</i>, +these banks of earth four yards in height, running parralel to +each other in nearly a right line to the extent of 639 yards, the +space between them 13 yards, were some years ago levelled to the +ground except the <!-- page 125--><a name="page125"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 125</span>the length of about 150 yards at the +end farthest from the town. It was a generally received +opinion that they were the fortifications of a Roman camp, till +the supposition of their having been a <i>cursus</i> or race +course, was started by Dr. Stukely. If it is to be admitted +that they formed an area for horse races, of which the Romans are +known to have been extravagantly fond, we may imagine that the +sport here practiced consisted in horses running at liberty +without riders between the banks; traces of such a race run in an +enclosed space may be found in the <i>Corso dei Barberi</i>, now +practiced in the streets of Florence; <a +name="citation125"></a><a href="#footnote125" +class="citation">[125]</a> the Italians having in many instances +preserved the original customs of the Romans. But the <!-- +page 126--><a name="page126"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +126</span>question must still hang in a balance whether the Raw +Dykes were the scene of Roman games, or</p> +<blockquote><p><i>The massy mound, the rampart once</i><br /> +<i>Of iron war in antient barbarous times</i>.</p> +</blockquote> +<p>From the Infirmary, if the visitor wishes to close his walk, +he may enter the town by the Hotel; if he feel inclined to extend +it, he will find himself recompensed by the pleasure his eye may +receive from a lengthened stroll up the public promenade, called +the <i>New Walk</i>. This walk three quarters of a mile +long, and twenty feet wide, was made by public subscription in +1785; the ground the gift of the corporation.</p> +<p>Following the ascent of the walk, we gain on the left a +pleasing peep up a vale watered by the Soar, where the smooth +green of the meadows is contrasted and broken by woody lines <!-- +page 127--><a name="page127"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +127</span>and formed into a picture by the church and village of +Aylestone, and the distant tufted eminances decorated by the +tower of Narborough. A little imagination might give the +scene a trait of the picturesque, by placing among the meadows +near Aylestone, the white tents and streaming banners of king +Charles’ camp, there pitched a few days before his attack +on the garrison of Leicester; or it might advance the royal army +a little nearer to its station in St. Mary’s field, from +whence the batteries against the town were first opened. +Still continuing to ascend, the walk affords along its curving +line many stations from which the town with its churches appears +in several pleasing points of view.</p> +<p>Returning by the London toll-gate if the traveller wishes to +obtain a full view of a fine prospect, he will turn <!-- page +128--><a name="page128"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +128</span>aside from the road, and mount the steps of one of the +neighbouring mills. From such a station the clustered +buildings of the town extend before the eye in full unbroken +sweep; beyond it the grounds near Beaumont Leys varied in their +tints by tufted hedge-rows, and streaky cultivated fields, blend +into the grey softness overspreading those beautiful slopes of +hill into which the eminences of Charnwood forest, Brown-rig, +Hunter’s hill, Bradgate park, Bardon and Markfield knoll, +rise and fall. These hills, running from hence, in a +northern direction compose the first part of the chain or ridge, +that, from the easy irregularity and elegant line it here +displays rises at length into the more grand and picturesque +hills that form the peak of Derbyshire. The abbey and the +adjacent villages pleasingly vary the <!-- page 129--><a +name="page129"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 129</span>scene on +the right, from whence it melts away into the blue distance of +the neighbourhood of Melton, the north-east part of the +county.</p> +<p>As we descend along the London road, watching the hills more +and more hid by the town, the road bends into a curve, and here +takes the name of Granby Street; many ranges of buildings having +been here erected within the last fifteen years. Turning to +the left, we again arrive at the town by the entrance into +<i>Hotel Street</i>.</p> +<p>That ingenuity of improvement not only in the conveniences, +but the recreations of life, which has lately advanced so rapidly +as well in the provincial towns as in the capital, led the +inhabitants of Leicester into a plan for the erection of new +edifices <!-- page 130--><a name="page130"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 130</span>appropriated to the purposes of +public amusement. The considerable buildings, which in this +place arrest the stranger’s eye were accordingly erected by +J. Johnson, Esq. architect, on subscription shares.</p> +<p>The front of the</p> +<h3>HOTEL,</h3> +<p>which name it bears, having been originally designed for that +purpose, may from the grandeur of its windows, its statues, bassi +relievi, and other decorations, be justly considered as the first +modern architectural ornament of the town. Here a room, +whose spacious dimensions, (being seventy-five feet by +thirty-three,) and elegant decorations, adapt it in a +distinguished manner for scenes of numerous and polished society, +is appropriated to the use of the public balls. Its coved +ceiling is enriched with three circular paintings of Aurora, <!-- +page 131--><a name="page131"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +131</span>Urania, and Night, from the pencil of Reinagle, who has +also graced the walls with paintings of dancing nymphs. +Beside the eight beautiful lustres, branches of lights are held +by four statues from the designs of Bacon.</p> +<p>Uniting under the same roof, every convenience for the +gratification of taste, and the amusement of the mind, a coffee +room handsomely furnished and supplied with all the London +papers, affords the gentlemen of the town and country as well as +the stranger, to whom its door is open, an agreeable and +commodious resort, while on the opposite side a spacious +bookseller’s shop furnishes the literary enquirer with a +series of all the new publications.</p> +<p>Adjoining the hotel, a small theatre built also by Mr. +Johnson, neatly and <!-- page 132--><a name="page132"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 132</span>commodiously fitted up, nearly on +the plan of the London houses, furnishes the inhabitants of +Leicester with a more complete display of the dramatic art than +they had before enjoyed, and has been the means of gratifying +them by the talents of several performers of the first rate +excellence. The popular pieces of the London stage, are +here every season represented in a manner pleasing to the town +and honorable to the manager.</p> +<p>Proceeding thro’ a street which now only nominally +retains a trace of the monkish establishments that formerly +occupied its ground, being called Friar Lane, we observe a +charity school, for 35 boys and 30 girls, erected 1791, belonging +to the parish of St. Martin. At the farther and less +handsome end of this street is the Meeting House of the General +Baptists. <!-- page 133--><a name="page133"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 133</span>Passing down the New Street, part of +the scite of the monastery of the Grey Friars, we arrive at</p> +<h3>ST. MARTIN’S CHURCH,</h3> +<p>At what period after the demolition of Leicester in the reign +of Henry the second, the church of St. Martin, antiently St. +Crosse, was rebuilt, cannot be accurately stated. The +chancel, which is the property of the king, rented by the vicar, +and was erected after the main fabrick, is ascertained to been +have built in the reign of Henry the fifth, at the expense of +34l. And as the addition of spires to sacred edifices was +not introduced into England from the east till the beginning of +the reign of Henry the third, the date must be fixed between the +two intervening centuries, and if the spire was built with the +church <!-- page 134--><a name="page134"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 134</span>not very early after the +introduction of that ornament of our churches, as the handsome, +solid form of St. Martin’s bespeaks considerable practice +and expertness in the art.</p> +<p>The church originally consisted only of a nave and two aisles; +the south aisle, where the consistory court is held, which is +formed by a range of gothic arches whose clustered columns unite +strength with lightness, was added after the erection of the +others. In contemplating the inside of this church, it is +curious to draw a brief parallel between its present plain yet +handsome appearance, and its catholic magnificence before the +zeal of the reformation, justly excited, but intemperate in its +direction, had, during its career against Romish absurdities +destroyed almost every trace of ornament in our churches. +And whilst we <!-- page 135--><a name="page135"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 135</span>survey its present few decorations, +its brass chandeliers depending from the elegant cieling of the +nave, the beautiful oak corinthian pillars of its altar piece, +which is ornamented with a picture of the ascension by Francesco +Vanni, (the gift of Sir W. Skeffington Bart.) and its excellent +organ, we can scarcely forbear lamenting the violence with which +the magnificent range of steps was torn from its high altar, then +hung with draperies of white damask and purple velvet.</p> +<p>Its two other altars, <a name="citation135"></a><a +href="#footnote135" class="citation">[135]</a> its chapels of +<i>our Lady</i> and <i>St George</i>, one at the east, the other +at the west end <!-- page 136--><a name="page136"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 136</span>of the south broad aisle, were also +destroyed; the sculptured figures that adorned the pulpit, the +tabernacles, and brazen eagles demolished, and, as the parochial +records testify, 20d. was paid for “cutting the images +heads, and taking down the angels wings.” In the +succeeding century after this sacred structure had exhibited this +scene of demolition, it became a theatre of war. Hither +fled part of the Parliamentary garrison, after being driven by +the royalists from their fortress in the Newark; making a citadel +of a church, which, on the arrival of the enemy to storm the hold +was polluted with the bleeding bodies of Englishmen slain by +Englishmen, who pursued their victory by chacing the defeated +into the Market-Place, where the stragglers were slaughtered.</p> +<p><!-- page 137--><a name="page137"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +137</span>From this anecdote of civil discord we are led to +contemplate the more rationally excited bravery of the present +times, by the sight of the old colours of the 17th or +Leicestershire regiment of foot, which are suspended over the +royal arms at the east end of nave. They were presented to +the corporation by Lieut. Col. Stovin, of that regiment, and how +much their intrepid defenders suffered in guarding them, may be +known from their worn and tattered appearance.</p> +<p>As it is the most curious and useful branch of antiquarian +research to read the manners and sentiments of an age in its +public solemnities and pastimes, we will not leave the church +without a wish for a better investigation of an obscure and +singular custom, <!-- page 138--><a name="page138"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 138</span>that antient carnival of Leicester, +“<i>the riding the George</i>.” The horse of +this chivalrous saint, which, when the reformation had overthrown +the monkish mummeries that so inconsistently blended religion +with pastime, was sold for twelve pence, stood at the west end of +the south aisle, harnessed in all the trappings of Romish +splendor. Notice of the day appointed for this festivity +was annually given by the master of St. George’s Guild; +sports of every variety animated the town, and that the jubilee, +was, in the strictest sense <i>general</i>, is proved from the +summons issued in the 17th of Edward the fourth, ordering +<i>all</i> the inhabitants to attend the mayor, to <i>ride the +George</i>. Mention of the celebration is recorded so late +as the 15th of Henry the eighth.</p> +<p>The stranger who is an admirer of <!-- page 139--><a +name="page139"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 139</span>sacred +harmony will not pass without particular notice, the Organ of St. +Martin’s. A spirited subscription in 1774, furnished +the church with this noble ornament. It was built by the +celebrated Snetzler, and esteemed one of the best specimens of +his art. It has three sets of keys, from F in alt, to +GG. The stops in the great organ are, the stopped diapason, +two open diapasons, flute, and principal, trumpet and baffoon, +all entire, the 12th, 15th, sesqui-altera, cornet and +clarion. In the ch. organ, are two diapasons and +principal. In the swell two diapasons, principal, hautboy +and trumpet.</p> +<p>A range of antient stone building bounding the west side of +the church yard is an hospital founded about the year 1516, by W. +Wigston, Merchant <!-- page 140--><a name="page140"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 140</span>of the staple at Calais, and mayor +of Leicester, for 12 men and 12 women, their pay about 3s. +weekly. It has a master and confrater. The Chapel has +a large gothic window of painted glass.</p> +<p>On the north side of the hospital is a building called <i>the +Town Library</i>, established 1632 by the corporation, at the +motion of the then bishop of Lincoln. It consists of about +948 vols. chiefly the Latin classics and historians, to which no +modern additions whatever have been made.</p> +<p>The building adjoining the Library which is the hall formerly +belonging to the guild or fraternity of St. George, which, +together with the Corpus Chrisri guild, the principal +establishment of that kind in the town, was founded in St. +Martin’s church, was purchased, on the dissolution of +guilds <!-- page 141--><a name="page141"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 141</span>and chantries by the corporation, +and is the guild-hall of the borough. It is adorned with +several portraits among which is that of Sir Thomas White, Kt. +citizen and merchant Taylor of London, who among many magnificent +charities, bequeathed 10,000l. in the trust of the corporation to +be lent without interest in sums of 50l. and 40l. to every +freeman of Leicester for the term of nine years; a charity of +peculiar value as it affords a perpetual incitement to the +exertions of rising industry.</p> +<p>The magistracy of Leicester is an institution of great +antiquity and respectability, being a corporation by +prescription, dating its establishment from immemorial usage +before its first charter in the reign of king John. It +consists of 72 members; 24 aldermen, 48 common council men; the +officers are <!-- page 142--><a name="page142"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 142</span>a recorder, town-clerk, bailiff, and +steward.</p> +<p>By forming cities and towns into corporations, and conferring +on them the privileges of municipal jurisdiction, the first check +was given to the overwhelming evils of the feudal system; and +under their influence freedom and independence began to peep +forth from amid the rigours of slavery and the miseries of +oppression.</p> +<p>To be free of any corporation was not then, as at present +merely to enjoy some privileges in trade, or to exercise the +right of voting on particular occasions, but it was to be exempt +from the hardships of feudal service; to have the right of +disposing both of person and property, and to be governed by laws +intended to promote the general good, and not to gratify the +ambition and avarice of <!-- page 143--><a +name="page143"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +143</span>individuals. These laws, however rude and +imperfect, tended to afford security to property and, encourage +men to habits of industry. Thus commerce, with every +ornamental and useful art, began first in corporate bodies, to +animate society. But in those dark ages, force was +necessary to defend the claims of industry; and such a force +these municipal societies possessed; for their towns were not +only defended by walls and gates vigilantly guarded by the +citizens, but oft-times at the head of their fellow freemen in +arms, the mayor, aldermen, or other officers marched forth in +firm array to assert their rights, defend their property and +teach the proudest and most powerful baron that the humblest +freeman was not to be injured with impunity. It was thus +the commons learned and proved they were not objects of <!-- page +144--><a name="page144"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +144</span>contempt; nay that they were beings of the same species +as the greatest lords.</p> +<p>It is pleasingly curious to observe in these times the shadow +of the semblance of this most useful military power preserved as +at Leicester, in the array of a few of the poor men of Trinity +hospital, clad in pieces of iron armour, attending the beadle +while he proclaims a fair; nor is it less so to recollect that +the feasts annually given by the mayor were once held in +imitation of the rude hospitality of the Barons whose feasts not +a little contributed to give a consequence to the commons of +England, and to humanize the haughty chief by shewing him that +respectability might belong to those who did not wield the sword, +and that men might have dignity even tho’ they had no +pretensions to the <!-- page 145--><a name="page145"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 145</span>glare of titles and the illusions of +birth. Thus will the intelligent observer find, that +corporate bodies were the true sources of law, liberty and +civilization, and by rendering the occupation of trade +respectable they may be deemed the first origin of that commerce +which has rendered Great Britain the most powerful and most happy +nation of the earth.</p> +<p>These few reflections we will suppose to have occupied the +time during the short walk from St. Martin’s church to +the</p> +<h3>MARKET-PLACE.</h3> +<p>In this spacious area, which is surrounded by handsome and +well-furnished shops, and whose public ornaments are the plain +but respectable <!-- page 146--><a name="page146"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 146</span>building called the <i>Exchange</i>, +built in 1747, where the town magistrates transact their weekly +business, and a small octagon edifice enclosing a reservoir of +pure water, the <i>Conduit</i>, erected in 1709, we must, having +completed the circuit of the town, offer our farewell to our +visitor.</p> +<p>Here closing our little tour, which has engaged us in an +imaginary acquaintance with the intelligent stranger, we beg he +will accept a friendly adieu: and a wish, that as he quits the +town thro’ which we have conducted him, and which we have +endeavoured to represent in a view not unworthy the attention of +a mind that seeks for more than mere passing ideas of amusement, +he may not consider that time as prodigally spent which he has +passed in his <span class="smcap">walk through +leicester</span>.</p> +<p><span class="smcap">April</span>, 1804</p> +<h2><!-- page 147--><a name="page147"></a><span +class="pagenum">p. 147</span>MANUFACTORY<br /> +OF<br /> +THE TOWN.</h2> +<p>The Manufactory of Stockings in this town and county, is the +largest in the world; besides wove worsted hose, which are the +staple article of the place, a great variety of cotton hose are +now made, which from their cheapness, obtain a sale in this, and +most other countries.</p> +<p>The machine by which these hose are made, was first invented +in the year 1590, by the Rev. W. Lee, of Calverton, in +Nottinghamshire, who exhibited it before Queen Elizabeth, but not +meeting with that encouragement he so justly deserved, +immediately left the country, and carried it to France, where he +would have established it at Rouen, had it not been for the +murder of the French king which prevented the execution of a +grant of privilege and reward in favor of Mr. Lee and his +art.</p> +<p><!-- page 148--><a name="page148"></a><span class="pagenum">p. +148</span>Soon after Mr. Lee died under great disappointment at +Paris, and several of his workmen returning to London, laid the +foundation of Stocking Weaving in this county. The +manufactory has been gradually increasing, but within these last +ten years has rapidly advanced to its present flourishing +state. The number of workmen employed in this branch is not +less than 20,000 who produce from the raw material about 15,000 +dozen per week.</p> +<p>*†* A full account of this manufactory, in all +its branches, is preparing for the press, and will be published +in the course of the summer.</p> +<h2>ERRATUM.</h2> +<p>The reader is requested to correct the account of St. +Martin’s organ, as follows.</p> +<p>Great organ, two open and a stop diapason, principal, 12th, +15th, ses-quialtia, cornet, clarion, trumpet. Choir organ, +two diapasons, principal, 15th, flute, bassoon. Swell, two +diapasons, principal, cornet, hautboy, trumpet.</p> +<p style="text-align: right">[Combe, Printer, Leicester.]</p> +<h2>HOTEL LIBRARY.</h2> +<p style="text-align: center">T. COMBE,<br /> +<span class="smcap">bookseller</span>,</p> +<p>Has on Sale the best Literary Productions, in elegant and +other Bindings, and every new Work of Merit may be seen at the +Library</p> +<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">as soon as +published</span>.</p> +<p style="text-align: center">Any quantity of Books purchased, or +taken in exchange.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"><i>Printing</i>, <i>Binding & +all sorts of Stationary</i>.</p> +<p>Gold Paper, Ornaments and Borders—Coloured Papers and +Pasteboards—Bristol and Ivory Boards—Whatman’s +Drawing Papers—Newman’s Colours—Middletons +Pencils—Varnish, Perfumery, Patent Medicines, and other +Articles.</p> +<p style="text-align: center">A CIRCULATING LIBRARY,</p> +<p><i>which collects all the varieties of the Day</i>.</p> +<p>Map of Leicester</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/mapb.jpg"> +<img alt="The 1802 map of Leicester published by T. Combe" +src="images/maps.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<h2>Footnotes:</h2> +<p><a name="footnote23"></a><a href="#citation23" +class="footnote">[23]</a> “He had a bow bent in his +hand,<br /> + Made of a trusty tree;<br /> +An arrow of a cloth-yard long,<br /> + Up to the head drew he.”</p> +<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Chevy +Chace</span>.</p> +<p><a name="footnote24"></a><a href="#citation24" +class="footnote">[24]</a> See an Essay on this subject by +the Hon. Daines Barrington in the Archæologia.</p> +<p><a name="footnote42"></a><a href="#citation42" +class="footnote">[42]</a> This sum is now distributed under +the title of wood and coal money.</p> +<p><a name="footnote125"></a><a href="#citation125" +class="footnote">[125]</a> See Starke’s Travels.</p> +<p><a name="footnote135"></a><a href="#citation135" +class="footnote">[135]</a> These altars, dedicated to St. +Dunstan and St. Catherine stood, one where the present vestry is, +the other in Heyrick’s Chancel, so called from its +containing the monuments of that antient family.</p> +<h2>Transcriber’s Notes</h2> +<p>Original spelling, punctuation and grammar have been retained +in this transcription. The following, however, have been +corrected:</p> +<p>page 35: “to to which this chapel” has been +corrected to “to which this chapel”</p> +<p>page 35: “joins the the prison” has been corrected +to “joins the prison”</p> +<p>page 43: “bridge over the the Canal” has been +corrected to “bridge over the Canal”</p> +<p>page 74: “a good and firm rood” has been corrected +to “a good and firm road”</p> +<p>page 75: “usefulness of urn-pike tolls” has been +corrected to “usefulness of turn-pike tolls”</p> +<p>page 90: “comparative prises of similar articles” +has been corrected to “comparative prices of similar +articles”</p> +<p>page 93: “the prssent age” has been corrected to +“the present age”</p> +<p>page 97: “whieh meets the eye” has been corrected +to “which meets the eye”</p> +<p>page 107: “death of he Conqueror” has been +corrected to “death of the Conqueror”</p> +<p>page 109: “Henry the the third” has been corrected +to “Henry the third”</p> +<p>page 118: “supported by expesne” has been +corrected to “supported by expense”</p> +<p>Also note that “have paffed into various hands” +(page 47) and “trumpet and baffoon” (page 139) +are both as in the book, with the old printer’s ff for ss +usage.</p> +<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A WALK THROUGH LEICESTER***</p> +<pre> + + +***** This file should be named 25895-h.htm or 25895-h.zip****** + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/5/8/9/25895 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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