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diff --git a/56429-8.txt b/56429-0.txt index 5ad654e..06553be 100644 --- a/56429-8.txt +++ b/56429-0.txt @@ -1,32 +1,7 @@ -The Project Gutenberg EBook of Gray Days and Gold, by William Winter +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 56429 *** -This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most -other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have -to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. -Title: Gray Days and Gold - in England and Scotland -Author: William Winter - -Release Date: January 25, 2018 [EBook #56429] - -Language: English - -Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 - -*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GRAY DAYS AND GOLD *** - - - - -Produced by Petra A, Suzanne Shell and the Online -Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This -file was produced from images generously made available -by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) @@ -730,7 +705,7 @@ immediately opposite to the village church. The rest of the houses are mostly cottages, made of red brick and roofed with red tiles. Ivy flourishes, and many of the cottages are overrun with climbing roses. Roman relics are found in the neighbourhood,--a camp near the ford, -and other indications of the military activity of Cæsar. The church, +and other indications of the military activity of Cæsar. The church, All Saints', is of great antiquity. It has been in part restored, but its venerable aspect is not impaired. The large low tower is of brick, and this and the church walls are thickly covered with glistening ivy. @@ -1004,7 +979,7 @@ moat.[7] A part of the original structure remains at the back,--a porchway entrance, once accessible across the moat, and an oriel window at the right of that entrance. Over the front window are displayed the arms of Clopton,--an eagle, perched upon a tun, bearing a shield; -and in the gable appear the arms of Walker, with the motto, Loyauté +and in the gable appear the arms of Walker, with the motto, Loyauté mon honneur. Sir Edward Walker was Lord of Clopton soon after the Restoration, and by him the entrance to the house, which used to be where the dining-room now is, was transferred to its present position. @@ -1083,7 +1058,7 @@ St. Mary's church at Warwick has been restored since 1885, and now it is made a show place. The pilgrim may see the Beauchamp chapel, in which are entombed Thomas Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, the founder of the church; Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, in whose Latin epitaph -it is stated that "his sorrowful wife, Lætitia, daughter of Francis +it is stated that "his sorrowful wife, Lætitia, daughter of Francis Knolles, through a sense of conjugal love and fidelity, hath put up this monument to the best and dearest of husbands";[9] Ambrose Dudley, elder brother to Elizabeth's favourite, and known as the Good Earl @@ -1099,7 +1074,7 @@ friends, in his 70th year, on the 28th of April, A.D. 1639." Another, placed for himself by Thomas Hewett during his lifetime, modestly describes him as "a most miserable sinner." Sin is always miserable when it knows itself. Still another, and this in good verse, by Gervas -Clifton, gives a tender tribute to Lætitia, "the excellent and pious +Clifton, gives a tender tribute to Lætitia, "the excellent and pious Lady Lettice," Countess of Leicester, who died on Christmas morning, 1634: @@ -1111,7 +1086,7 @@ Lady Lettice," Countess of Leicester, who died on Christmas morning, Darling to the maiden Queene, Till she was content to quit Her favour for her favourite.... - While she lived she livéd thus, + While she lived she livéd thus, Till that God, displeased with us, Suffered her at last to fall, Not from Him but from us all." @@ -1293,7 +1268,7 @@ beneath a dark blue slab, still shown to visitors. A few miles away, but easily within reach of your vision, is the field of Marston Moor, where the impetuous Prince Rupert imperilled and well-nigh lost the cause of Charles the First, in 1644; and as you look toward that fatal -spot you can almost hear, in the chamber of your fancy, the pæans of +spot you can almost hear, in the chamber of your fancy, the pæans of thanksgiving for the victory that were uttered in the church beneath. Cromwell, then a subordinate officer in the Parliamentary army, was one of the worshippers. Charles also has knelt at this altar. Indeed, of @@ -1573,7 +1548,7 @@ square, for his avowed disbelief of the doctrine of transubstantiation. An important and deeply interesting institution of Devizes is the Wilts County Museum, in Long street, devoted to the natural history -and the archæology of Wiltshire. The library contains a priceless +and the archæology of Wiltshire. The library contains a priceless collection of Wiltshire books, and the museum is rich in geological specimens,--richer even than the excellent museum of Salisbury; for, in addition to other treasures, it includes the famous Stourhead @@ -1921,7 +1896,7 @@ Quin. His tablet was formerly to be found in the chancel, but now it is obscurely placed in a porch, on the north corner of the building, on what may be termed the outer wall of the sanctuary. It presents the face of the famous comedian, carved in white marble and set against -a black slab. Beneath is the date of his death, "Ob. MDCCLXVI. Ætat. +a black slab. Beneath is the date of his death, "Ob. MDCCLXVI. Ætat. LXXIII.," and his epitaph, written by David Garrick. At the base are dramatic emblems,--the mask and the dagger. As a portrait this medallion of Quin gives convincing evidence of scrupulous fidelity to @@ -2044,7 +2019,7 @@ building made of red stone, remarkable for a massive square tower of great age and formidable aspect. In the adjacent churchyard are The Giant's Grave and The Giant's Thumb, relics of a distant past that strongly and strangely affect the imagination. The grave is said to -be that of Ewain Cæsarius,[16] a gigantic individual who reigned over +be that of Ewain Cæsarius,[16] a gigantic individual who reigned over Cumberland in remote Saxon times. The Thumb is a rough stone, about seven feet high, presenting a clumsy cross, and doubtless commemorative of another mighty warrior. Sir Walter Scott, who traversed Penrith @@ -2415,11 +2390,11 @@ and Anne Hathaway. It is a long, narrow strip of parchment, and it has been glazed and framed. Two seals of light-coloured wax were originally attached to it, dependent by strings, but these have been removed,--apparently for the convenience of the mechanic who -put the relic into its present frame. The handwriting is crabbéd and +put the relic into its present frame. The handwriting is crabbéd and obscure. There are but few persons who can read the handwriting in old documents of this kind, and thousands of such documents exist in the church-archives, and elsewhere, in England, that have never been -examined. The bond is for £40, and is a guarantee that there was no +examined. The bond is for £40, and is a guarantee that there was no impediment to the marriage of William Shakespeare and Anne Hathaway. It is dated November 28, 1582; its text authorises the wedding after only once calling the banns in church; and it is supposed that the @@ -2568,7 +2543,7 @@ have lately been discovered there. Incledon, the famous singer, died there. Prince Arthur [1486-1502], eldest son of King Henry the Seventh, was buried in Worcester Cathedral, where a beautiful chantry was built over his remains in 1504. Bishop John Gauden [1605-1662], who wrote the -_Eikon Basiliké_, long generally attributed to Charles the First, rests +_Eikon Basiliké_, long generally attributed to Charles the First, rests there. The Duke of Hamilton, who died of his wounds, after a Worcester fight, was transferred to that place, from his temporary grave in the Commandery. And in the centre of the sacrarium stands the tomb of that @@ -2694,7 +2669,7 @@ never would have written at all. Monsters do not suffer. The true appreciation of Byron is not that of youth but that of manhood. Youth is captured by his pictorial and sentimental attributes. Youth beholds him as a nautical Adonis, standing lonely upon a barren -cliff and gazing at a stormy sunset over the Ægean sea. Everybody +cliff and gazing at a stormy sunset over the Ægean sea. Everybody knows that familiar picture,--with the wide and open collar, the great eyes, the wild hair, and the ample neckcloth flowing in the breeze. It is pretty but it is not like the real man. If ever at any time he @@ -2823,7 +2798,7 @@ race. The poet himself had just turned thirty-six; his mother was only forty-six when she passed away. This name of Curtis Jackson in the register was that of the rector or curate then incumbent but now departed. The register is a long narrow book made of parchment and full -of various crabbéd handwritings,--a record similar to those which are +of various crabbéd handwritings,--a record similar to those which are so carefully treasured at the church of the Holy Trinity at Stratford; but it is more dilapidated. @@ -3615,7 +3590,7 @@ David Gray (of Buffalo), the Duchess of Coburg, Moses H. Grinnell, Lord Leigh, of Stoneleigh Abbey, J. M. Bellew, Samuel Longfellow, Charles and Henry Webb (the Dromios), Edna Dean Proctor, Gerald Massey, Clarence A. Seward, Frederick Maccabe, M. D. Conway, the Prince of -Condé, and John L. Toole. That this repository of autographs is +Condé, and John L. Toole. That this repository of autographs is appreciated may be inferred from the fact that special vigilance has to be exercised to prevent the hotel registers from being carried off or mutilated. The volume containing the signature of Washington Irving was @@ -4356,7 +4331,7 @@ Leicestershire for monuments to the dead. Most of those stones record modern burials, the older graves being unmarked. The grass grows thick and dense all over the churchyard. Upon the church walls are several fine specimens of those mysterious ray and circle marks which have long -been a puzzle to the archæological explorer. Such marks are usually +been a puzzle to the archæological explorer. Such marks are usually found in the last bay but one, on the south side of the nave, toward the west end of the church. On Ratcliffe Culey church they consist of central points with radial lines, like a star, but these are not @@ -4522,7 +4497,7 @@ old glass presents can be seen in the glass that is manufactured now. It is imitated indeed, but it does not last. The subjects portrayed in those sumptuous windows are mostly scriptural, but the centre window on the north side of the chancel is devoted to portraits of noblemen, one -of them being Errard de la Marck, who was enthroned Bishop of Liège in +of them being Errard de la Marck, who was enthroned Bishop of Liège in 1505, and who, toward the end of his stormy life, adopted the old Roman motto, comprehensive and final, which, a little garbled, appears in the glass beneath his heraldic arms: @@ -4848,7 +4823,7 @@ ecclesiastical ruins, Fountains Abbey,--and cherished in theatrical annals as the place of the death and burial of the distinguished founder of the Jefferson family of actors.[48] Bleak Haworth is not far distant, and remembrance of it prompts many sympathetic thoughts -of the strange genius of Charlotte Brontë. Darlington is the next +of the strange genius of Charlotte Brontë. Darlington is the next important place, a town of manufacture, conspicuous for its tall, smoking chimneys and evidently prosperous. This is the land of stone walls and stone cottages,--the grim precinct of Durham. The country @@ -5871,7 +5846,7 @@ The great fame of Scott had been acquired by the time he began to write his _Journal_, and it rested upon a broad foundation of solid achievement. He was fifty-four years old, having been born August 15, 1771, the same year in which Smollett died. He had been an author for -about thirty years,--his first publication, a translation of Bürger's +about thirty years,--his first publication, a translation of Bürger's _Lenore_, having appeared in 1796, the same year that was darkened by the death of Robert Burns. His social eminence also had been established. He had been sheriff of Selkirk for twenty-five years. @@ -5888,7 +5863,7 @@ many essays and reviews, were produced by him between 1825 and 1832, while also he was maintaining a considerable correspondence, doing his official duties, writing his _Journal_, and carrying a suddenly imposed load of debt,--which finally his herculean labours paid,--amounting -to £130,000. But between 1805 and 1817 he had written _The Lay of the +to £130,000. But between 1805 and 1817 he had written _The Lay of the Last Minstrel_, _Ballads and Lyrical Pieces_, _Marmion_, _The Lady of the Lake_, _The Vision of Don Roderick_, _Rokeby_, _The Lord of the Isles_, _The Field of Waterloo_, and _Harold the Dauntless_,--thus @@ -6077,8 +6052,8 @@ external circumstances.... I shall never see the three-score and ten, and shall be summed up at a discount. No help for it, and no matter either." In the mood of mingled submission and resolve denoted by these sentences (which occur at long intervals in the story), he wrought at -his task until it was finished. By _Woodstock_ he earned £8000; by the -_Life of Napoleon_ £18,000; by other writings still other sums. The +his task until it was finished. By _Woodstock_ he earned £8000; by the +_Life of Napoleon_ £18,000; by other writings still other sums. The details of his toil appear day by day in these simple pages, tragic through all their simplicity. He was a heart-broken man from the hour when his wife died, but he sustained himself by force of will and @@ -6910,7 +6885,7 @@ Scott's novel, at the time of the great festival in honour of Queen Elizabeth, in 1575, because at that time she had been dead fifteen years. Dudley secretly married Douglas Howard, Lady Sheffield, in 1572-73, but would never acknowledge her. His third wife was the -Lætitia whose affection deplores him, in the Beauchamp chapel. +Lætitia whose affection deplores him, in the Beauchamp chapel. [10] Those cedars are ranked with the most superb trees in the British Islands. Two of the group were torn up by the roots during a terrific @@ -6942,7 +6917,7 @@ became Sir Henry Irving. [16] "In our stage to Penrith I introduced Anne to the ancient Petreia, called Old Penrith, and also to the grave of Sir Ewain -Cæsarius, that knight with the puzzling name, which has got more +Cæsarius, that knight with the puzzling name, which has got more indistinct."--_Journal of Sir Walter Scott_, Vol. II., p. 151. [17] The poet Gray, who visited these mountains in 1769, wrote, in @@ -6958,14 +6933,14 @@ lamented. His widow,--the once distinguished actress, Miss Ada Cavendish,--died, at 34 Thurloe square, London, October 6, 1895. [19] The Traveller's Rest is 1481 feet above the sea-level, whereas -the inn called The Cat and Fiddle,--a corruption of Caton le Fidèle, +the inn called The Cat and Fiddle,--a corruption of Caton le Fidèle, governor of Calais,--on Axe Edge, near Buxton, is 1700 feet above the level of the sea. [20] Mr. Wadley died at Pershore, April 4, 1895, and was buried in Bidford churchyard on April 10. -[21] See in the _London Athenæum_, February 9, 1889, a valuable +[21] See in the _London Athenæum_, February 9, 1889, a valuable article, by Mr. John Taylor, on "Local Shakesperean Names" based upon, and incorporative of, some of the researches of Mr. Wadley. @@ -7130,367 +7105,4 @@ Inconsistencies in spelling and hyphenation have been retained. 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