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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Old Sports and Sportsmen, by John Randall
-
-
-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: Old Sports and Sportsmen
- or, the Willey Country
-
-
-Author: John Randall
-
-
-
-Release Date: November 18, 2020 [eBook #63805]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLD SPORTS AND SPORTSMEN***
-
-
-Transcribed from the 1873 Bunny and Evans edition by David Price.
-
- [Picture: Portrait of Lord Forester]
-
-
-
-
-
- OLD SPORTS AND
- SPORTSMEN
-
-
- Or, the Willey Country
-
- * * * * *
-
- WITH SKETCHES OF SQUIRE FORESTER
-
- AND HIS WHIPPER-IN
-
- TOM MOODY
-
- (“You all knew Tom Moody the Whipper-in well”).
-
- * * * * *
-
- BY JOHN RANDALL, F.G.S.
- AUTHOR OF “THE SEVERN VALLEY,” ETC.
-
- * * * * *
-
- LONDON:
- VIRTUE & CO., 26, IVY LANE
-
- SALOP: BUNNY and EVANS; and RANDALL,
- BOOKSELLER, MADELEY
- 1873
-
- * * * * *
-
- LONDON
- PRINTED BY VIRTUE AND CO.,
- CITY ROAD.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-IT is too much to expect that these pages will altogether escape
-criticism; my object will have been gained, however, if I have succeeded
-in collecting and placing intelligibly before the reader such noticeable
-facts as are interesting matters of local history. Should it appear that
-there has been imported into the work too many details touching the
-earlier features of the country, the little that is generally known on
-the subject, the close connection of cause and effect, and the influences
-the old forests may have had in perpetuating a love of sport among some
-members of a family whose name appears to have been derived from pursuits
-connected therewith, must be my excuse. Dr. Arnold once remarked upon
-the close connection existing between nature and mankind, and how each in
-turn is affected by the other, whilst a living writer, and a deeper
-thinker, has gone still further, in saying that “He is great who is what
-he is from nature.” Of course it is not intended to claim greatness for
-Squire Forester in the sense in which the word is ordinarily used, or
-qualities, even, differing very much from those bearing the impress of
-the common mould of humanity; but simply that he was what he was from
-nature, from pre-disposition, and from living at the time he did. Also,
-that he was in many respects a fair representative of the squirearchy of
-the period, of a class of squires in whom we recognise features
-discoverable in those in the enjoyment of the same natural vigour in our
-own day, but who may have chosen different fields for its development.
-
-It did not appear to come within the scope of the work to enter to the
-same extent upon the doings of other sportsmen of Squire Forester’s time,
-or to dilate upon those of gentlemen who subsequently distinguished
-themselves. It would have required many additional pages, for instance,
-to have done justice to the exploits of the first Lord Forester; or to
-those of the present right honourable proprietor of Willey, who upon
-retiring from the mastership of the Belvoir hounds was presented with a
-massive piece of plate, representing an incident which happened in
-connection with the Hunt. Of both Nimrod has written in the highest
-terms. The names of several whose deeds the same felicitous writer has
-described in connection with Shropshire will occur to the reader, as Mr.
-Stubbs, of Beckbury; Mr. Childe, of Kinlet; Mr. Boycott, of Rudge—who
-succeeded Sir Bellingham Graham on his giving up the Shifnal country;
-Lord Wenlock; Squire Corbett, and the Squire of Halston; names which, as
-Colonel Apperley has very justly said, will never be forgotten by the
-sporting world. As the reader will perceive, I have simply acted upon
-the principle laid down in the “Natural History of Selborne” by the Rev.
-Gilbert White, who says, “If the stationary men would pay some attention
-to the district in which they reside, and would publish their thoughts
-respecting the objects that surround them, from such materials might be
-drawn the most complete county history.” This advice influenced me in
-undertaking the “Severn Valley,” and I have endeavoured to keep the same
-in view now, by utilising the materials, and by using the best means at
-command for bringing together facts such as may serve to illustrate them,
-and which may not be unlooked for in a work of the kind.
-
-Since the old Forest Periods, and since old Squire Forester’s day even,
-the manners and the customs of the nation have changed; but the old love
-of sport discoverable in our ancestors, and inherited more or less by
-them from theirs, remains as a link connecting past generations with the
-present.
-
-It matters not, it appears to me, whether either the writer or the reader
-indulges himself in such sports or not, he may be equally willing to
-recall the “Olden Time,” with its instances of rough and ready pluck and
-daring, and to listen to an old song, made by an aged pate,
-
- “Of a fine old English gentleman who had a great estate.”
-
-Shropshire and the surrounding counties during the past century had, as
-we all know, many old English gentlemen with large estates, who kept up
-their brave old houses at pretty liberal rates; but few probably
-exercised the virtue of hospitality more, or came nearer to the true type
-of the country gentleman of the period than the hearty old Willey Squire.
-Differ as we may in our views of the chase, we must admit that such
-amusements served to relieve the monotony of country life, and to make
-time pass pleasantly, which but for horses and hounds, and the
-opportunities they afforded of intercourse with neighbours, must have
-hung heavily on a country gentleman’s hands a hundred years ago.
-
-It is, moreover, it appears to me, to this love of sport, in one form or
-another, that we of this generation are indebted for those grand old
-woods which now delight the eye, and which it would have been a calamity
-to have lost. The green fertility of fields answering with laughing
-plenty to human industry is truly pleasing; but now that blue-bells, and
-violets, foxgloves and primroses are being driven from the hedgerows, and
-these themselves are fast disappearing before the advances of
-agricultural science, it is gratifying to think that there are wastes and
-wilds where weeds may still resort—where the perfumes of flowers, the
-songs of birds, and the music of the breeze may be enjoyed. That the
-love of nature which the out-door exercises of our ancestors did so much
-to foster and perpetuate still survives is evident. How often, for
-instance, among dwellers in towns does the weary spirit pant for the
-fields, that it may wing its flight with the lark through the gushing
-sunshine, and join in the melody that goes pealing through the fretted
-cathedral of the woods, whilst caged by the demands of the hour, or kept
-prisoner by the shop, the counter, or the machine? Spring, with its
-regenerating influences, may wake the clods of the valley into life, may
-wreathe the black twigs with their garb of green and white, and give to
-the trees their livery; but men who should read the lessons they teach
-know nothing of the rejoicings that gladden the glades and make merry the
-woods. Nevertheless, proof positive that the love of nature—scourged,
-crushed, and overlaid, it may be, with anxious cares for existence—never
-dies out may be found in customs still lingering among us. In the
-blackest iron districts, where the surface is one great ink-blotch, where
-clouds of dust and columns of smoke obscure the day, where scoria heaps,
-smouldering fires, and never-ceasing flames give a scorched aspect to the
-scene, the quickening influences that renew creation are felt, teaching
-men—ignorant as Wordsworth’s “Peter Bell”—to take part in the festival of
-the year. When the sap has risen in the tree when the south wind stirs
-the young leaves, and the mechanism of the woods is in motion, when the
-blackbird has taken his place in the bush, and the thrush has perched
-itself upon the spray, in the month of pelting showers and laughing
-sunshine, when the first note of the cuckoo is heard from the ash in the
-hedge-row or the wild cherry in the woods, an old custom still proclaims
-a holiday in honour of his arrival. When the last lingering feature of
-winter has vanished; when brooks, no longer hoarse, sink their voices to
-a tinkling sweetness, flooding mead and dingle with their music; when the
-merry, merry month, although no longer celebrated for its floral shows
-and games as formerly, arrives, the May-bush may be seen over the door of
-the village smithy and on the heads of horses on the road.
-
-It would have been of little use passing acts of Parliament, like the one
-which has just become law, for the preservation of members of the
-feathered tribes, if their native woods had not been preserved to us by
-sportsmen. To have lost our woods would have been to have lost the
-spring and summer residences of migratory birds: to have lost the laugh
-of the woodpecker, the songs of the blackbird and the thrush, the
-woodlark’s thrilling melody, and the nightingale’s inimitable notes, to
-say nothing of those faint soothing shadowings which steal upon one from
-these leafy labyrinths of nature. As some one taking deeper views has
-said:—
-
- “There lie around
- Thy daily walk great store of beauteous things,
- Each in its separate place most fair, and all
- Of many parts disposed most skilfully,
- Making in combination wonderful
- An individual of a higher kind;
- And that again in order ranging well
- With its own fellows, till thou rise at length
- Up to the majesty of this grand world;—
- Hard task, and seldom reached by mortal souls,
- For frequent intermission and neglect
- Of close communion with the humblest things;
- But in rare moments, whether memory
- Hold compact with invention, or the door
- Of heaven hath been a little pushed aside,
- Methinks I can remember, after hours
- Of unpremeditated thought in woods.”
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
- PAGE
- CHAPTER I.
- THE MARSH AND FOREST PERIODS.
-The Hawk an Acquisition to Sportsmen—Hawk aeries—Hawks 8
-according to Degrees—Brook and other kinds of
-Hawking—Hawking and Hunting—A Shropshire Historian’s charge
-against the Conqueror—Bishops and their Clergy as much
-given to the Sport as Laymen—The Rector of Madeley—The
-Merrie Days, &c.
- CHAPTER II.
- MORFE FOREST.
-Morfe Forest one of the Five Royal Forests of 17
-Shropshire—Its History and Associations—Early British,
-Roman, Danish, and Norman Mementoes—Legends and Historical
-Incidents—Forest Wastes—Old Names—Hermitage Hill—Stanmore
-Grove—Essex Fall—Foresters—Old Forest Lodge, &c.
- CHAPTER III.
- ROYAL CHASE OF SHIRLOT.
-Royal Chase of Shirlot—Extent—Places 31
-disafforested—Hayes—Foresters—Hunting Lodge—Priors of
-Wenlock—Curious Tenures—Encroachments upon Woods by
-Iron-making Operations—Animals that have
-disappeared—Reaction due to a love of Sport—What the
-Country would have lost—“The Merrie Greenwood”—Old Forest
-Trees, &c.
- CHAPTER IV.
- THE WREKIN FOREST AND THE FORESTERS.
-The Wrekin Forest and the Foresters—Hermit of Mount St. 54
-Gilbert—Poachers upon the King’s Preserves—Extent of the
-Forest—Haye of Wellington—Robert
-Forester—Perquisites—Hunting Matches—Singular Grant to John
-Forester—Sir Walter Scott’s Anthony Forster a Member of the
-Shropshire Forester Family—Anthony Forster Lord of the
-Manor of Little Wenlock, and related to the Foresters of
-Sutton and Bridgnorth—Anthony Foster altogether a different
-Character to what Sir Walter Scott represents him
- CHAPTER V.
- WILLEY.
-Willey, Close Neighbour to the Royal Chase of 70
-Shirlot—Etymology of the Name—Domesday—The Willileys—The
-Lacons—The Welds and the Foresters—The Old Hall—Cumnor Hall
-as described by Sir Walter Scott—Everything Old and
-Quaint—How Willey came into possession of the Foresters
- CHAPTER VI.
- THE WILLEY SQUIRE.
-The Willey Squire—Instincts and Tendencies—Atmosphere of 77
-the times favourable for their development—Thackeray’s
-Opinion—Style of Hunting—Dawn of the Golden Age of the
-Sport, &c.
- CHAPTER VII.
- THE WILLEY KENNELS.
-The Willey Kennels—Colonel Apperley on Hunting a hundred 83
-years ago—Character of the Hounds—Portraits of
-Favourites—Original Letters
- CHAPTER VIII.
- THE WILLEY LONG RUNS.
-The Willey Long Runs—Dibdin’s fifty miles no figure of 93
-speech—From the Wrekin to the Clee—The Squire’s
-Breakfast—Phœbe Higgs—Doggrel Ditties—Old Tinker—Moody’s
-Horse falls dead—Run by Moonlight
- CHAPTER IX.
- BACHELOR’S HALL.
-Its Quaint Interior—An Old Friend’s Memory—Crabbe’s Peter 102
-at Ilford Hall—Singular Time-pieces—A Meet at Hangster’s
-Gate—Jolly Doings—Dibdin at Dinner—Broseley Pipes—Parson
-Stephens in his Shirt—The Parson’s Song
- CHAPTER X.
- THE WILLEY RECTOR AND OTHER OF THE SQUIRE’S FRIENDS.
-The Squire’s Friends and the Rector more fully 113
-drawn—Turner—Wilkinson—Harris—The Rev. Michael Pye
-Stephens—His Relationship to the Squire—In the Commission
-of the Peace—The Parson and the Poacher—A Fox-hunting
-Christening
- CHAPTER XI.
- THE WILLEY WHIPPER-IN.
-The Willey Whipper-in—Tom’s Start in Life—His Pluck and 124
-Perseverance—Up hill and down dale—Adventures with the
-Buff-coloured Chaise—His own Wild Favourite—His Drinking
-Horn—Who-who-hoop—Good Temper—Never Married—Hangster’s
-Gate—Old Coaches—Tom gone to Earth—Three View Halloos at
-the Grave—Old Boots
- CHAPTER XII.
- SUCCESS OF THE SONG.
-Dibdin’s Song—Dibdin and the Squire good fellows well 140
-met—Moody a character after Dibdin’s own heart—The Squire’s
-Gift—Incledon—The Shropshire Fox-hunters on the Stage at
-Drury Lane
- CHAPTER XIII.
- THE WILLEY SQUIRE MEMBER FOR WENLOCK.
-The Willey Squire recognises the duty of his position, and 147
-becomes Member for Wenlock—Addison’s View of Whig Jockeys
-and Tory Fox-hunters—State of Parties—Pitt in
-Power—“Fiddle-Faddle”—Local Improvements—The Squire Mayor
-of Wenlock—The Mace now carried before the Chief Magistrate
- CHAPTER XV.
- THE SQUIRE AND HIS VOLUNTEERS.
-The Squire and his Volunteers—Community of Feeling—Threats 154
-of Invasion—“We’ll follow the Squire to Hell, if
-necessary”—The Squire’s Speech—His Birthday—His Letter to
-the _Shrewsbury Chronicle_—Second Corps—Boney and
-Beacons—The Squire in a Rage—The Duke of York and Prince of
-Orange come down
- CHAPTER XV.
- THE WILLEY SQUIRE AMONG HIS NEIGHBOURS.
-The Squire among his Neighbours—Sir Roger de 173
-Coverley—Anecdotes—Gentlemen nearest the fire in the Lower
-Regions—Food Riots—The Squire quells the Mob—His Virtues
-and his Failings—Influences of the Times—His career draws
-to a close—His wish for Old Friends and Servants to follow
-him to the Grave—To be buried in the dusk of the
-evening—His Favourite Horse to be shot—His estates left to
-his cousin, Cecil Weld, the First Lord Forester—New Hunting
-Song
-Appendix 189
-Index 201
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
- PAGE
-LORD FORESTER _Frontispiece_
-THE VALLEY OF THE SEVERN 1
-TRAINED FALCON 8
-HOODED FALCON 9
-MORFE FOREST 17
-STAG 17
-BOAR HUNT IN MORFE FOREST 21
-FALLOW DEER 31
-DEER LEAP 36
-CHAPTER HOUSE OF WENLOCK PRIORY 38
-WATERFALL 44
-FOREST SCENERY 46
-LADY OAK AT CRESSAGE 50
-THE BADGER 53
-GROUP OF DEER 54
-NEEDLE’S EYE 56
-DEER AND YOUNG 59
-ATCHAM CHURCH 62
-RICHARD FORESTER’S OLD MANSION 65
-WILLEY OLD HALL 70
-THE OLD SQUIRE 77
-FAVOURITE DOGS 83
-PORTRAIT OF A FOX-HOUND 93
-BUILDWAS ABBEY 100
-MOODY’S HORN, TRENCHER, CAP, SADDLE, &c. 122
-GONE TO EARTH 122
-A MEET AT HANGSTER’S GATE 140
-THE FIRST IRON BRIDGE 147
-VIEW OF BRIDGNORTH 154
-WILLEY CHURCH 173
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION.
-
-
- [Picture: Valley of the Severn, near Willey]
-
-A SIMPLE reading of the history of the earth is sufficient to show that
-hunting is as old as the hills—not figuratively, but literally; and that
-the hunter and the hunted, one furnished with weapons of attack, and the
-other with means of defence, have existed from the earliest periods of
-creation to the present. That is, the strong have mastered the weak, and
-in some instances have fallen side by side, as we see by their remains.
-In the economy of Nature, the process of decay appears to have been the
-exception, rather than the rule; with beak or tooth, or deadly claw, the
-strong having struck down the less defended in a never-ending arena.
-What a hunting field, in one sense, the Old World must have been, when
-creatures of strange and undefined natures infested the uncertain limits
-of the elements, and what encounters must have taken place in the ooze
-and mud periods, when monsters, enormous in stature and stretch of wing,
-were the implacable hunters of the air, the water, and the slime! Nor
-can the inhabitants of the earth, the water, and the air, taking the term
-in its broad rather than in its technical sense, be said to be less
-hunters now, or less equipped with deadly weapons. Some have
-supernumerary teeth to supply the loss of such as might get broken in the
-fray. One strikes down its prey at a blow, another impales its victims
-on thorns, and a third slays by poison. Some hunt in company, from what
-would seem to be a very love of sport—as crows and smaller birds give
-chase to the owl, apparently rejoicing in his embarrassment, at break of
-day.
-
-We need but refer to those remotely removed stages of human life
-illustrated by drift beds, bone caves, and shell heaps—to those primitive
-weapons which distinguished the lowest level of the Stone Age, weapons
-which every year are being brought to light by thousands—to give the
-_genus homo_ a place among the hunters; indeed one of the strongest
-incentives which helped on Pre-historic Man from one level to the other
-through the long night of the darkest ages, appears to have been that
-which such a pursuit supplied. To obtain the skins of animals wilder
-than himself he entered upon a scramble with the wolf, the bear, and the
-hyena. Driven by instinct or necessity to supply wants the whole
-creation felt, his utmost ingenuity was put forth in the chase; and in
-process of time we find him having recourse to the inventive arts to
-enable him to carry out his designs. On the borders of lakes or on river
-banks, in caverns deep-seated amid primeval forest solitudes, he
-fashioned harpoons and arrow-heads of shell, horn, or bone, with which to
-repulse the attack of prowlers around his retreat and to arrest the
-flight of the swiftest beast he required for food; and when he emerged
-from the dark night which Science has as yet but partially penetrated,
-when he had succeeded in pressing the horse and the dog into his service,
-and when the cultivation of the soil even had removed him above the
-claims of hunger, he appears equally to have indulged the
-passion—probably for the gratification it gave and the advantages it
-brought in promoting that tide of full health from which is derived the
-pleasing consciousness of existence.
-
-Tradition, no less than archæology and the physical history of the
-country itself, lead us to suppose that when those oscillations of level
-ceased which led to the present distribution of land and water, one-third
-of the face of the country was covered with wood and another with
-uncultivated moor, and that marsh lands were extensive. Remains dug up
-in the valley of the Severn, and others along the wide stretch of country
-drained by its tributaries, together with those disinterred from the bog
-and the marsh, show that animals, like plants, once indigenous, have at
-comparatively recent periods become as extinct as Dodos in the Mauritius.
-Old British names in various parts of the country, particularly along the
-valley of the Severn, exist to show that the beaver once built its house
-by the stream, that the badger burrowed in its banks, and that the eagle
-and the falcon reared their young on the rocks above. At the same time,
-evidence exists to show that the bear and the boar ranged the forests as
-late as the conquest of England by the Normans, whilst the red deer, the
-egret and the crane, the bittern and the bustard, remained to a period
-almost within living memory.
-
-River loams, river gravels, lake beds, and cave breccias, disclose hooks
-and spears, and sometimes fragments of nets, which show that hunting and
-fishing were practised by the primitive dwellers along river plains and
-valleys.
-
-The situations of abbeys, priories, and other monastic piles, the ruins
-of which here and there are seen along the banks of rivers, and the
-records the heads of these houses have left behind them, lead us to
-suppose that those who reared and those who occupied them were alive to
-the advantages the neighbourhood of good fisheries supplied. Some of the
-_vivaries_ or fish-pools, and meres even, which once afforded abundant
-supplies, no longer exist, their sites being now green fields; but
-indications of their former presence are distinct, whilst the positions
-of weirs on the Severn, the rights of which their owners zealously
-guarded, may still be pointed out. Sometimes they were subjects of
-litigation, as with the canons of Lilleshall, who claimed rights of
-fishing in the Severn at Bridgnorth, and who obtained a bull from Pope
-Honorius confirming them in their rights. In 1160 the Abbot of Salop,
-with the consent of his chapter, is found granting to Philip Fitz-Stephen
-and his heirs the fishery of Sutton (piscarium de Sutana), and lands near
-the said fishery. These monks also had fisheries at Binnal, a few miles
-from Willey; and it is well known that they introduced into our rivers
-several varieties of fish not previously common thereto, but which now
-afford sport to the angler.
-
-Fishing, it is true, may have been followed more as a remunerative
-exercise by some members of these religious houses, still it did not fail
-to commend itself as an attractive art and a harmless recreation
-congenial to a spirit of contemplation and reflection to many
-distinguished ecclesiastics. That the Severn of that day abounded in
-fish much more than at present is shown by Bishop Lyttleton, who takes
-some pains to describe it at Arley, and who explains the construction of
-the coracle and its uses in fishing, the only difference between it both
-then and now, and that of early British times, being that the latter was
-covered with a horse’s hide.
-
-A jury, empannelled for the purpose of estimating the value of Arley
-manor upon the death of one of its proprietors, gave the yearly rental of
-its fishery at 6_s._ 8_d._,—a large sum in comparison with the value of
-sixty acres of land, stated to have been 10_s._, or with the rent of a
-ferry, which was put down at sixpence. There must have been fine fishing
-then. Trout were plentiful, so were salmon; there were no locks or
-artificial weirs to obstruct the attempts of fish—still true to the
-instinct of their ancestors—to beat the tide in an upward summer
-excursion in the direction of its source. The document states that the
-part of the river so valued “abounded in fish.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- NOTE.—The Bishop of Worcester, by his regulations for the Priory of
- Little Malvern, in 1323, enjoins the prior not to fish in the stew set
- apart from ancient times _for the recreation of the sick_, unless
- manifest utility, to be approved by the Chapter, should sanction it; in
- which case he was, at a fit opportunity, to replace the fish which he
- caught.
-
- We fancy it is not difficult to recognise a growing feeling against
- that separation of religion, recreation, and health which unfortunately
- now exists, and in favour of re-uniting the three; and we are persuaded
- that the sooner this takes place the better for the nation.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-THE MARSH AND FOREST PERIODS.
-
-
-Early Features of the Country—The Hawk an acquisition to Sportsmen—Hawk
-aeries—Hawks according to Degrees—Brook and other kinds of
-Hawking—Hawking and Hunting—A Shropshire Historian’s Charge against the
-Conqueror—Bishops and their Clergy as much given to the Sport as
-Laymen—The Rector of Madeley—The Merrie Days, &c.
-
-[Picture: Trained Falcon] DIVERSIFIED by wood and moor, by lake and sedgy
-pool, dense flocks of wild fowl of various kinds at one time afforded a
-profusion of winged game; and the keen eye and sharp talons of the hawk
-no doubt pointed it out as a desirable acquisition to the sportsman long
-ere he succeeded in pressing it into his service; indeed it must have
-been a marked advance in the art when he first availed himself of its
-instinct. Old records supply materials for judging of the estimation in
-which this bird was held by our ancestors, it being not uncommon to find
-persons holding tenements or paying fines in lieu of service to the lord
-of the fee by rendering a _sore_ sparrow-hawk—a hawk in its first year’s
-plumage. Stringent restrictions upon the liberty the old Roman masters
-of the country allowed with respect to wild fowl were imposed; the act of
-stealing a hawk, and that of taking her eggs, being punishable by
-imprisonment for a year and a day. The highborn, with birds bedecked
-with hoods of silk, collars of gold, and bells of even weight, but of
-different sound, appeared according to their rank—a ger-falcon for a
-king, a falcon gentle for a prince, a falcon of the rock for a duke, a
-janet for a knight, a merlin for a lady, and a lamere for a squire. From
-close-pent manor and high-walled castle, to outspread plain and expansive
-lake or river bank, the gentry of the day sought perditch and plover,
-heron and wild fowl, many of which the fowling-piece has since driven
-from their haunts, and some—as the bustard and the bittern, the egret and
-the crane—into extinction.
-
-Mention is often made of hawk aeries, as at Little Wenlock, and in
-connection with districts within the jurisdiction of Shropshire forests,
-which seem to have been jealously guarded. The use of the birds, too,
-appears to have been very much restricted down to the time that the
-forest-charter, enabling all freemen to ply their hawks, was wrung from
-King John, when a sport which before had been the pride of the rich
-became the privilege of the poor. It was at one time so far a national
-pastime that an old writer asserts that “every degree had its peculiar
-hawk, from the emperor down to the holy-water clerk.” {10} The sport
-seems to have divided itself into field-hawking, pond-hawking,
-brook-and-river hawking; into hawking on horseback and hawking on foot.
-In foot hawking the sportsman carried a pole, with which to leap the
-brook, into which he sometimes fell, as Henry VIII. did upon his head in
-the mud, in which he would have been stifled, it is said, had not John
-Moody rescued him; whether this Moody was an ancestor of the famous
-Whipper-in or not we cannot say.
-
-Evidence is not altogether wanting to show that during the earlier
-history of the Marsh period, the gigantic elk (_Cervus giganteus_), with
-his wide-spreading antlers, visited, if he did not inhabit, the flatter
-portions of the Willey country; and it is probable that the wild ox
-equally afforded a mark for the arrow of the ancient inhabitants of the
-district in those remote times, which investigators have distinguished as
-the Pile-building, the Stone, and the Bronze periods, when society was in
-what has been fittingly called the hunter-state. At any rate, we know
-that at later periods the red deer, the goat, and the boar, together with
-other “beasts,” were hunted, and that both banks of the Severn resounded
-with the deep notes of “veteran hounds.” Of the two pursuits, Prior in
-his day remarks, “Hawking comes near to hunting, the one in the ayre as
-the other on the earth, a sport as much affected as the other, by some
-preferred.” That the chase was the choice pastime of monarchs and nobles
-before the Conquest, and the favourite sport of “great and worthy
-personages” after, we learn from old authors, who, like William Tivici,
-huntsman to Edward I., have written elaborate descriptive works,
-supplying details of the modes pursued, and of the kinds of dog which
-were used.
-
-Our Saxon ancestors no doubt brought with them from the great forests of
-Germany not only their institutions but the love of sport of their
-forefathers, pure and simple. With them the forests appear to have been
-open to the people; and, although the Danes imposed restrictions, King
-Canute, by his general code of laws, confirmed to his subjects full right
-to hunt on their own lands, providing they abstained from the forests,
-the pleasures of which he appears to have had no inclination generally to
-share with his subjects. He established in each county four chief
-foresters, who were gentlemen or thanes, and these had under them four
-yeomen, who had care of the vert and venison; whilst under these again
-were two officers of still lower rank, who had charge of the vert and
-venison in the night, and who did the more servile work. King William
-curtailed many of the old forest privileges, and limited the sports of
-the people by prohibiting the boar and the hare, which Canute had allowed
-to be taken; and so jealous was he of the privileges of the chase that he
-is said to have ordained the loss of the eyes as the penalty for killing
-a stag. His Norman predilections were such that an old Shropshire
-historian, Ordericus Vitalis (born at Atcham), who was at one time
-chaplain to the Conqueror, charges him with depopulating whole parishes
-that he might satisfy his ardour for hunting. Prince Rufus, who
-inherited a love of the chase from his father, is made by a modern author
-to reply to a warning given him by saying:—
-
- “I love the chase, ’tis mimic war,
- And the hollow bay of hound;
- The heart of the poorest Norman
- Beats quicker at the sound.”
-
-King John stretched the stringent forest laws of the period to the
-utmost, till the love of liberty and of sport together, still latent
-among the people, compelled him to submit to an express declaration of
-their respective rights. By this declaration all lands afforested by
-Henry I. or by Richard were to be disafforested, excepting demesne woods
-of the crown; and a fine or imprisonment for a year and a day, in case of
-default, was to be substituted for loss of life and members.
-
-To prevent disputes with regard to the king’s forests, it was also agreed
-that their limits should be defined by perambulations; but as a check
-upon the boldness of offenders in forests and chaces, and warrens, and
-upon the disposition of juries to find against those who were appointed
-to keep such places, it was deemed necessary on the other hand to give
-protection to the keepers.
-
-Large sums were lavished by kings and nobles on the kennels and
-appliances necessary for their diversions. Nor were these costly
-establishments confined to the laity. Bishops, abbots, and high
-dignitaries of the Church, could match their hounds and hawks against
-those of the nobles, and they equally prided themselves upon their skill
-in woodcraft.
-
-That the clergy were as much in favour of these amusements as the laity,
-appears from an old Shropshire author, Piers Plowman (Langland), who
-satirically gave it as his opinion that they thought more of sport than
-of their flocks, excepting at shearing time; and likewise from Chaucer,
-who says, “in hunting and riding they are more skilled than in divinity.”
-That Richard de Castillon, an early rector of Madeley, was a sportsman
-appears from the fact that when Henry III. was in Shrewsbury in
-September, 1267, concluding a treaty with Llewellyn, and settling sundry
-little differences with the monks and burgesses there, he granted him
-license to hunt “in the royal forest of Madeley,” then a portion of that
-of the Wrekin. In 1283 also, King Edward permitted the Prior of Wenlock
-to have a park at Madeley, to fence out a portion of the forest, and to
-form a haia there for his deer. It has been said that Walter, Bishop of
-Rochester, was so fond of sport, that at the age of fourscore he made
-hunting his sole employment. The Archdeacon of Richmond, at his
-initiation to the Priory of Bridlington, is reported to have been
-attended by ninety-seven horses, twenty-one dogs, and three hawks.
-Walter de Suffield, Bishop of Norwich, bequeathed by will his pack of
-hounds to the king; but the Abbot of Tavistock, who had also a pack, was
-commanded by his bishop about the same time to break it up. A famous
-hunter was the Abbot of Leicester, whose skill in the sport of hare
-hunting was so great, that we are told the king himself, his son Edward,
-and certain noblemen, paid him an annual pension that they might hunt
-with him. Bishop Latimer said: “In my time my poor father was as
-diligent to teach me to shoot as to learn me any other thing, and so I
-think other men did their children. He taught me how to draw, how to lay
-my body in my bow, and not draw with strength of arms as other nations
-do;” and the good bishop exclaims with the enthusiasm of a patriot, “It
-is a gift of God that He hath given us to excel all other nations withal;
-it hath been God’s instrument whereby He hath given us many victories
-over our enemies.”
-
-Such were the “merrie days,” when the kennels of the country gentry
-contained all sorts of dogs, and their halls all sorts of skins, when the
-otter and the badger were not uncommon along the banks of Shropshire
-streams, and ere the fox had taken first rank on the sportsman’s list.
-An old “Treatise on the Craft of Hunting” first gives the hare, the
-herte, the wulf, and the wild boar. The author then goes on to say—
-
- “But there ben other beastes five of the chase;
- The buck the first, the second is the doe,
- The fox the third, which hath ever hard grace,
- The fourth the martyn, and the last the roe.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-MORFE FOREST.
-
-
-Morfe one of the Five Royal Forests of Shropshire—Its History and
-Associations—Early British, Roman, Danish, and Norman Mementoes—Legends
-and Historical Incidents—Forest Wastes—Old Names—Hermitage Hill—Stanmore
-Grove—Essex Fall—Foresters—Old Forest Lodge, &c.
-
-THE hunting ground of the Willey country embraced the sites of five royal
-forests, the growth of earlier ages than those planted by the Normans,
-alluded to by Ordericus Vitalis. In some instances they were the growth
-of wide areas offering favourable conditions of soil for the production
-of timber, as in the case of that of Morfe. In others they were the
-result probably of the existence of hilly districts so sterile as to
-offer few inducements to cultivate them, as in the case of Shirlot, the
-Stiperstones, the Wrekin, and of the Clee Hills. Some of these have
-histories running side by side with that of the nation, and associations
-closely linked with the names of heroic men and famous sportsmen. Morfe
-Forest, which was separated from that of Shirlot by the Severn, along
-which it ran a considerable distance in the direction of its tributary
-the Worf, is rich in traditions of the rarest kind, the Briton, the
-Roman, Saxon, Dane, and Norman, having in succession left mementoes of
-their presence. Here, as Mr. Eyton in his invaluable work on the
-“Antiquities of Shropshire” says,—“Patriotism, civilisation, military
-science, patient industry, adventurous barbarism, superstition, chivalry,
-and religion have each played a part.”
-
- [Picture: Morfe Forest]
-
- [Picture: Stag]
-
-The ancient British tumuli examined and described more than one hundred
-and thirty years ago by the Rev. Mr. Stackhouse have been levelled by the
-plough, but “the Walls” at Chesterton, and the evidence the name of
-Stratford supplies as to Roman occupation, to which Mr. Eyton refers, as
-well as the rude fortifications of Burf Castle, constructed by the Danes
-when they came to recruit after being out-manœuvred by Alfred on the
-Thames, remain. At Quatford, a mile and a half west, on three sides of a
-rock overhanging the Severn, near to Danesford, are trenches cut out of
-the solid sandstone which, whether Danish or Norman, or in part both,
-shewed by the vast number of wild boar and red deer remains disclosed a
-few years ago the success with which the chase had here at one time been
-pursued.
-
-Within the forest were four manors, the continuous estate in Saxon times
-of Algar, Earl of Mercia, which after the Conquest were granted in their
-integrity to the first Norman Earl of Shrewsbury, and which in 1086 were
-held wholly in demesne by his son Hugh. The predilections of the first
-Norman Earl of Shrewsbury for this vast forest, lying between those of
-Kinver, Wyre, and Shirlot,—the whole of which wide wooded district seems
-to have been comprehended under the old British name of _Coed_—are shown
-by the fact that he built his famous’ castle on the Severn close by, and
-founded there his collegiate church, the stones of which remain to attest
-its erection by a Norman founder. The legend relating to the erection of
-the church seems so well to bear out the supposition that Morfe was the
-favourite hunting ground of the earl that, although frequently quoted, it
-may not be out of place to give it. In substance it is this:—
-
-In 1082, Sir Roger married for his second wife a daughter of Sir Ebrard
-de Pusey, one of the chief nobles of France. On coming over to England
-to join her husband a storm arose which threatened the destruction of the
-vessel when, wearied with much watching, a priest who accompanied her
-fell asleep and had a vision, in which it was said:—“If thy lady would
-wish to save herself and her attendants from the present danger of the
-sea, let her make a vow to God and faithfully promise to build a church
-in honour of the blessed Mary Magdalene, on the spot where she may first
-happen to meet her husband in England, especially where groweth a hollow
-oak, and where the wild swine have shelter.” The legend adds that upon
-awaking the priest informed his lady, who took the prescribed vow; that
-the storm ceased, that the ship arrived safely in port, that the lady met
-the earl hunting the boar where an old hollow oak stood, and that at her
-request, and in fulfilment of her vow, Sir Roger built and endowed the
-church at Quatford, which a few years ago only was taken down and
-rebuilt.
-
- [Picture: Boar Hunt in Morfe Forest]
-
-On the high ground a little above the church there are still several
-trees whose gnarled and knotted trunks have borne the brunt of many
-centuries, two of which are supposed to have sprung from the remains of
-the one mentioned in the legend.
-
-Not only legends, but traditions, and some historical incidents, as those
-brought to light by the Forest Rolls, afford now and then an insight of
-the sporting kind of life led within the boundary and jurisdiction of the
-forest and upon its outskirts. The bow being not only the chief weapon
-of sport but of war, those with a greater revenue from land than one
-hundred pence were at one time not only permitted but compelled to have
-in their possession bows and arrows, but, to prevent those living within
-the precincts of the forest killing the king’s deer, the arrows were to
-be rounded. These were sometimes sharpened, and disputes arose between
-their owners, the dwellers in the villages, and the overseers of the
-forest, the more fruitful source of grievance being with the commoners,
-who, claiming pasturage for their cows and their horses, often became
-poachers. On one occasion a kid being wounded by an arrow at Atterley,
-on the Willey side of the Severn, and the culprit not being forthcoming,
-a whole district is in _misericordiâ_, under the ban of the fierce Forest
-Laws of the period. On another occasion a stag enters the postern gate
-of the Castle of Bridgnorth, and the vision of venison within reach
-proving too strong for the Castellan, he is entrapped, and litigation
-ensues. Sometimes the stout foresters and sturdy guardians of the
-castle, and burgesses of the town, indulge in friendly trials of skill at
-quarter-staff or archery, or in a wrestling match for a cross-bow, a ram,
-or a “red gold ring.” In Ritson’s “Robin Hood” we read:—
-
- “By a bridge was a wrastling,
- And there taryed was he:
- And there was all the best yemen
- Of all the west countrey.
- A full fayre game there was set up,
- A white bull up y-pight,
- A great courser with saddle and brydle
- With gold burnished full bryght;
- A payre of gloves, a red golde ringe,
- A pipe of wyne good fay:
- What man bereth him best I wis,
- The prize shall bear away.”
-
-In 1292, a wrestling match at a festive gathering on Bernard’s Hill takes
-place, when from ill blood arising from an old feud a dispute ensues, and
-a forester named Simon de Leyre quarrels with Robert de Turbevill, a
-canon of St. Mary’s, Bridgnorth, over a greyhound, which the latter,
-contrary to the regulations of the courts, had brought within the forest;
-and a jury of foresters, verderers, and regarders, in pursuance of the
-king’s writ, is empowered to try the case. The evidence adduced shows
-that the foresters were to blame, the verdict come to being that the men
-of Brug, although at the wrestling match with bows and arrows, were in no
-way chargeable with the assault upon the forester. “They had been
-indicted for trespass,” the jurors said, “not under any inquest taken on
-the matter, but by one Corbett’s suggestion to the Justice of the Forest;
-they had been attacked and imprisoned under the warrant of the said
-Justice, Corbett’s grudge being that two men of Brug had once promised
-him a cask of wine, a present in which the corporate body refused to
-join.” Corbett was pronounced by the jurors “a malevolent and a procurer
-of evil.”
-
-To correct evils like these the “ordinatio” of Edward I. was introduced,
-containing many beneficial regulations, and stating that proceedings had
-been taken in the forest by one or two foresters or verderers to extort
-money, also providing that all trespassers in the forest of green hue and
-of hunting shall be presented by the foresters at the next Swainmote
-before foresters, verderers, and other officers. In the same year the
-king confirmed the great charter of liberties of the forest.
-
-Various official reports of this Chace, drawn up from time to time, show
-how the great forest of Morfe gradually diminished, as the vills of
-Worfield and Claverley, and other settlements, extended within its
-limits, causing waste and destruction at various times of timber. During
-the Barons’ War the bosc of Claverley was further damaged, it was said,
-“by many goats frequenting the cover;” it suffered also from waste by the
-Earl of Chester, who sold from it 1,700 oak trees. Other wastes are
-recorded, as those caused by cutting down timber “for the Castle of
-Bridgnorth,” and “for enclosing the vill before it was fortified by a
-wall.” The report further states that “there were few beasts,” because
-“they were destroyed in the time of war, and in the time when the liberty
-of the forest was conceded.” By degrees, from one cause or another, and
-by one means or another, this, the “favourite chace of English kings and
-Norman earls,” which, so late as 1808, consisted of upwards of 3,820
-acres, disappeared, leaving about the names of places it once enclosed an
-air of quaint antiquity, the very mention of some of which may be
-interesting. Among them are Bowman’s Hill, Bowman’s Pit, and Warrener’s
-Dead Fall—names carrying back the mind to times when bowmen were the
-reliance of English leaders in battles fought on the borders, and before
-strongholds like the Castle of Bridgnorth. Gatacre, and Gatacre Hall,
-suggest a passing notice of a family which witnessed many such
-encounters, and which remained associated with a manor here from the
-reign of Edward the Confessor to the time when Earl Derby sought shelter
-as a fugitive after the Battle of Worcester. As Camden describes it, the
-old hall must have been a fitting residence truly for a steward of the
-forest. It had, in the middle of each side and centre, immense oak
-trees, hewn nearly square, set with their heads on large stones, and
-their roots uppermost, from which a few rafters formed a complete arched
-roof.
-
-The Hermitage, with its caves hewn out of the solid sand rock, by the
-road which led through the forest in the direction of Worfield, meets us
-with the tradition that here the brother of King Athelstan came seeking
-retirement from the world, and ended his days within sight of the queenly
-Severn. Besides tradition, however, evidence exists to shew that this
-eremetical cave, of Saxon origin, under the patronage of the crown, was
-occupied by successive hermits, each being ushered to the cell with royal
-seal and patent, in the same way as a dean, constable, or sheriff was
-introduced to his office; as in the case of John Oxindon (Edward III.,
-1328), Andrew Corbrigg (Edward III., 1333), Edmund de la Marc (Edward
-III., 1335), and Roger Boughton (Edward III., 1346). From the frequency
-of the presentations, it would appear either that these hermits must have
-been near the termination of their pilgrimage when they were inducted, or
-that confinement to a damp cell did not agree with them: indeed, no one
-looking at the place itself would consider it was a desirable one to live
-in.
-
-Other names not less significant of the former features of the country
-occur, as Stoneydale, Copy Foot, Sandy Burrow, Quatford Wyches, and Hill
-House Flat,—where the remains of an old forest oak may still be seen. In
-addition to these we find Briery Hurst, Rushmoor Hill, Spring Valley,
-Stanmore Grove, and Essex Fall, the latter being at the head of a ravine,
-half concealed by wood, where tradition alleges the Earl of Essex,
-grandson of the Earl who founded St. James’s, a refuge, a little lower
-down, for sick and suffering pilgrims, which had unusual forest
-privileges allowed by royal owners, was killed whilst hunting. Here too,
-higher up on the hill, may still be seen the remains of the old Forest
-Lodge, which, with its picturesque scenes, must have been associated with
-the visits of many a noble steward and forest-ranger. Many a hunter of
-the stag and wild boar has on the walls of this old Lodge hung up his
-horn and spear, as he sought rest and refreshment for the night.
-
-The names of some of the stewards and other officers of the forest are
-preserved, together with their tenures and other privileges. By an
-inquisition in the reign of Henry III., it was found that Robert, son of
-Nicholas, and others were seized of “Morffe Bosc.” {28} In the 13 Hen.
-IV., “Worfield had common of pasture in Morffe.” Besides many tenures
-(enumerated in Duke’s “Antiquities of Shropshire,” p. 52), dependent upon
-the forest, the kings (when these tenures were grown useless and
-obsolete) appointed stewards and rangers to take care of the woods and
-the deer; in the 19 Rich. II., Richard Chelmswick was forester for life:
-in the 1 Henry IV., John Bruyn was forester; and in the 26th Henry IV.,
-the stewardships of the forest of Morfe and Shirlot were granted to John
-Hampton, Esq., and his heirs. Again, we find 9 Henry VII., rot. 28,
-George Earl of Shrewsbury, was steward and ranger for life, with a fee of
-4_d._ per day. Orig. 6 Edward VI., William Gatacre de Gatacre, in com.
-Salop, had a lease of twenty-one years of the stewardship; and in the
-20th Elizabeth, George Bromley had a lease of twenty-one years of the
-stewardship, at a rent of 6_s._ 8_d._, et de incremento, 12_d._; and 36
-Elizabeth, George Powle, Gent., was steward, with a fee of 4_d._ per day.
-
-One of the descendants of George Earl of Shrewsbury sold at no very
-distant period the old Lodge and some land to the Stokes family of
-Roughton, and the property is still in their possession. The remains of
-the old Lodge were then more extensive, but they were afterwards pulled
-down, with the exception of that portion which still goes by the name.
-As we have said, these places have about them interesting forest
-associations, reminding us that early sportsmen here met to enjoy the
-pleasures of the chase, with a success sometimes told by red-deer bones
-and wild-boar tusks, dug from some old ditch or trench. Where the
-plough-share now cleaves the sandy soil, the wild-boar roamed at will;
-where fat kine feed in pastures green, stout oaks grew, and red-deer
-leaped; where the Albrighton red-coats with yelping hounds now meet, the
-ringing laugh of lords and ladies, of bishops and their clergy, hunting
-higher game, was heard. Then, as good old Scott has said,—
-
- “In the lofty arched hall
- Was spread the gorgeous festival,
- Then rose the riot and the din
- Above, beneath, without, within,
- For from its lofty balcony,
- Rang trumpet, shawm and psaltery.
- Their clanging bowls old warriors quaff’d,
- Loudly they spoke and loudly laugh’d,
- Whisper’d young knights in tones more mild,
- To ladies fair, and ladies smiled.
- The hooded hawks, high perch’d on beam,
- The clamour join’d with whistling scream,
- And flapped their wings and shook their bells,
- In concert with the stag-hounds’ yells.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-ROYAL CHASE OF SHIRLOT.
-
-
-Afforestation of Shirlot—Extent—Places
-Disafforested—Hayes—Foresters—Hunting Lodges—Sporting Priors—Old
-Tenures—Encroachments upon Woods by Iron-making Operations—Animals that
-have Disappeared—Reaction due to a Love of Sport—What the Country would
-have lost—“The Merrie Greenwood”—Remarkable old Forest Trees, &c.
-
- “Where with puffed cheek the belted hunter blows
- His wreathed bugle horn.”
-
-MR. EYTON thinks the afforestation of Shirlot was probably suggested by
-its proximity to the Morville and Chetton manors, where Saxon kings and
-Mercian earls had their respective demesnes, and that Henry I. and his
-successors, in visiting the Castle of Bridgnorth, or as guests of the
-Prior of Wenlock, had obvious reasons for perpetuating there the
-exclusive rights of a Royal chace. Although Shirlot Forest was separated
-from that of Morfe by the Severn, its jurisdiction extended across the
-river to Apley, and embraced places lying along the right bank of the
-river, in the direction of Cressage. Bridgnorth with its surroundings
-was not taken out of its jurisdiction or thrown open by perambulation
-till 1301, when it was disafforested, together with Eardington, Much
-Wenlock, Broseley, and other places. The extent and ancient jurisdiction
-of this forest may be estimated by the number of places taken from it at
-this date, as Benthall, Buildwas, Barrow, Belswardine, Shineton,
-Posenall, Walton, Willey, Atterley, the Dean, the Bold, Linley, Caughley,
-Little Caughley, Rowton, Sweyney, Appeleye (the only vill eastward of
-Severn), Colemore, Stanley, Rucroft, Medewegrene, Cantreyne, Simon de
-Severn’s messuage (now Severn Hall), Northleye, Astley Abbot’s Manor, La
-Dunfowe (Dunwall), La Rode (now Rhodes), Kinsedeleye (now Kinslow),
-Tasley, Crofte, Haleygton (Horton, near Morville), Aldenham, the Bosc of
-the Earl of Arundel within the bounds of the forest of Schyrlet, which is
-called Wiles Wode (_i.e._ Earl’s Wood), Aston Aer, Momerfield (Morville),
-Lee, Underdone, Walton (all three near Morville), Upton (now Upton
-Cresset), Meadowley, Stapeley, Criddon, Midteleton (Middleton Scriven),
-the Bosc of the Prior of Wenlock, called Lythewode, half the vill of
-Neuton (Newton near Bold), Faintree, Chetton, Walkes Batch (Wallsbatch,
-near Chetton), Hollycott, Hapesford (now Harpswood), Westwood (near
-Harpswood), Oldbury, a messuage at the More (the Moor Ridding), a
-messuage at La Cnolle (now Knowle Sands), and the Bosc which is called
-Ongeres.
-
- [Picture: Fallow deer]
-
-The ancient extent of the forest must have been about twelve miles by
-five. The names of the places mentioned to which the limits of the chace
-are traced are so different in many instances from the present that it
-may be of interest to give a few of them. From Yapenacres Merwey the
-boundary was to go up to the Raveneshok (Ravens’ Oak), thence straight to
-the Brenallegrene, near the Coleherth (Coal Hearth) going up by the
-Fendeshok (Friends’ Oak) to the Dernewhite-ford. Thence upwards to the
-Nethercoumbesheved; and so straight through the Middlecoumbesheved, and
-then down to Caldewall. Then down through the Lynde to the Mer Elyn.
-Thence down to Dubledaneslegh, and then up by a certain watercourse to
-the Pirle; and so up to Wichardesok; and so to the Pundefold; and so down
-by the Shepewey to the Holeweeuen, and then up by a certain fence to
-Adame’s Hale (Adam’s Hall), and thus by the assarts which John de
-Haldenham (Aldenham) holds at a rent of the king to the corner of
-Mokeleyes Rowe (Muckley Row); and thence down to Yapenacres Merwey, where
-the first land-mark of the Haye begins. There was also, it was said, a
-certain bosc which the King still held in the same forest, called
-Benthlegh Haye (Bentley Haye).
-
-In addition to this Haye there was the Haye of Shirlot, opposite to which
-a portion of the forest in the fifth of Henry III.’s reign was ordered to
-be assarted, which consisted in grubbing up the roots so as to render the
-ground fit for tillage.
-
-In connection with these Hayes, generally a staff of foresters,
-verderers, rangers, stewards, and regarders was kept up; and forest
-courts were also held at stated times (in the forest of the Clee every
-six weeks), at which questions and privileges connected with the forest
-were considered. Philip de Baggesour, Forester of the Fee in the king’s
-free Haye of Schyrlet in 1255, in the Inquisition of Hundreds, is said to
-have under him “two foresters, who give him 20_s._ per annum for holding
-their office, and to make a levy on oats in Lent, and on wheat in
-autumn.” “The aforesaid Philip,” it is said, “hath now in the said Haye
-of Windfalls as much as seven trees, and likewise all trees which are
-wind-fallen, the jurors know not by what warrant except by ancient
-tenure.” These privileged officers had good pickings, evidently by means
-of their various time-sanctioned customs, and jolly lives no doubt they
-led.
-
-In the forty-second of Henry III. Hammond le Strange was steward of this
-forest, and in the second of Edward I. the king’s forester is said to
-have given the sheriff of the county notice that he was to convey all the
-venison killed in the forests of Salop, and deliver it at Westminster to
-the king’s larder, for the use of the king’s palace. According to the
-same record, the profits that were made of the oaks that were fallen were
-to be applied to the building of a vessel for the king. In the
-nineteenth of Richard II., Richard Chelmswick was appointed forester for
-life; and in the twenty-sixth of Henry III. the stewardship both of the
-forests of Morfe and of Shirlot was granted to John Hampton and his
-heirs.
-
-Some of the chief foresters also held Willey, and probably resided there;
-at any rate it is not improbable that a building which bears marks of
-extreme antiquity, between Barrow and Broseley, called the Lodge Farm,
-was once the hunting lodge. It has underneath strongly arched and
-extensive cellaring, which seems to be older than portions of the
-superstructure, and which may have held the essentials for feasts, for
-which sportsmen of all times have been famous. Near the lodge, too, is
-the _Dear-Loape_, or Deer Leap, a little valley through which once
-evidently ran a considerable stream, and near which the soil is still
-black, wet, and boggy. A deer leap, dear loape, or _saltory_, was a
-pitfall—a contrivance common during the forest periods, generally at the
-edge of the chace, for taking deer, and often granted by charter as a
-privilege—as that, for instance, on the edge of Cank, or Cannock Chace.
-Sometimes these pitfalls, dug for the purpose of taking game, were used
-by poachers, who drove the deer into them. It is, therefore, easy to
-understand why the forest lodge should be near, as a protection. It was
-usually one of the articles of inquiry at the Swainmote Court whether
-“any man have any great close within three miles of the forest that have
-any saltories, or great gaps called deer loapes, to receive deer into
-them when they be in chasing, and when they are in them they cannot get
-out again.”
-
- [Picture: Deer Leap]
-
-Among sportsmen of these forest periods we must not omit to notice the
-Priors of the ancient Abbey of Wenlock. The heads of such wealthy
-establishments by no means confined themselves within the limits of the
-chapter-house. They were no mere cloistered monks, devoted to book and
-candle, but jolly livers, gaily dressed, and waited upon by
-well-appointed servants; like the Abbot of Buildwas, who had for his
-vassal the Lord of Buildwas Parva, who held land under him on condition
-that he and his wife should place the first dish on the abbot’s table on
-Christmas Day, and ride with him any whither within the four seas at the
-abbot’s charge. They had huntsmen and hounds, and one can imagine their
-sporting visitation rounds among their churches, the chanting of priests,
-the deep-mouthed baying of dogs, early matins, and the huntsman’s bugle
-horn harmoniously blending in the neighbourhood of the forest. Hugh
-Montgomery in his day gave to the abbey a tithe of the venison which he
-took in its woods, and in 1190 we find the Prior of Wenlock giving twenty
-merks to the king that he may “have the Wood of Shirlott to himself,
-exempt from view of foresters, and taken out of the Regard.” As we have
-already shown, the priors had a park at Madeley, they had one at
-Oxenbold, and they also had privileges over woods adjoining the forest of
-the Clees, where the Cliffords exercised rights ordinarily belonging to
-royal proprietors, and where their foresters carried things with such a
-high hand, and so frequently got into trouble with those of the priors,
-that the latter were glad to accept an arrangement, come to after much
-litigation in 1232, by which they were to have a tenth beast only of
-those taken in their own woods at Stoke and Ditton, and of those started
-in their demesne boscs, and taken elsewhere. These boscs appear to have
-been woodland patches connecting the long line of forest stretching along
-the flanks of the Clee Hills with that on the high ground of Shirlot and,
-as in the case of others even much further removed, their ownership was
-exceedingly limited. One of the complaints against Clifford’s foresters
-was, that they would not suffer the priors’ men to keep at Ditton Priors
-and Stoke St. Milburgh any dogs not _expedited_, or mutilated in their
-feet, nor pasture for their goats.
-
- [Picture: Chapter House of Wenlock Priory]
-
-Imbert, one of these priors, was chosen as one of the Commissioners for
-concluding a truce with David ap Llewellyn in July, 1244. He was
-subsequently heavily fined for trespasses for assarting, or grubbing up
-the roots of trees, in forest lands at Willey, Broseley, Coalbrookdale,
-Madeley, and other places, the charge for trespass amounting to the large
-sum of £126 13_s._ 4_d._
-
-A survey of the Haye of Shirlot, made by four knights of the county,
-pursuant to a royal writ in October 21, 1235, sets forth “its custody
-good as regards oak trees and underwood, except that great deliveries
-have been made by order of the king to the Abbeys of Salop and Bildewas,
-to the Priory of Wenlock, and to the Castle of Brug, for the repairs of
-buildings, &c.”
-
-Some curious tenures existed within the jurisdiction of this forest, one
-of which it may be worth while deviating from our present purpose to
-notice, as it affords an insight into the early iron manufacturing
-operations which, at a later period, led to the destruction of forest
-trees, but, at the same time, to the development of the mineral wealth of
-the district within and bordering upon the forest. Of its origin nothing
-is known; but it is supposed to have arisen out of some kingly peril or
-other forest incident connected with the chase. It consisted in this,
-that the tenant of the king at the More held his land upon the condition
-that he appeared yearly in the Exchequer with a hazel rod of a year’s
-growth and a cubit’s length, and two knives. The treasurer and barons
-being present, the tenant was to attempt to sever the rod with one of the
-knives, so that it bent or broke. The other knife was to do the same
-work at one stroke, and to be given up to the king’s chamberlain for
-royal use. {41}
-
-That iron was manufactured at a very early period in the heart of the
-forests of Shirlot and the Clees, is shown by Leland, who informs us that
-in his day there were blow-shops upon the Brown Clee Hills in Shropshire,
-where iron ores were exposed upon the hill sides, and where, from the
-fact that wood was required for smelting, it is only reasonable to look
-for them. Historical records and monastic writings, as well as old
-tenures, traditions, and heaps of slag, tell us that iron had been
-manufactured in the midst of these woods from very remote periods. As
-far back as 1250, a notice occurs of a right of road granted by Philip de
-Benthall, Lord of Benthall, to the monks of Buildwas, over all his
-estate, for the carriage of stone, coal, and timber; and in an old work
-in the Deer Leap, very primitive wooden shovels, and wheels flanged and
-cut out of the solid block, and apparently designed to bear heavy
-weights, were found a short time since, which are now in possession of
-Mr. Thursfield, of Barrow, together with an iron axletree and some brass
-sockets, two of which have on them “P. B.,” being the initials of Philip
-Benthall, or Philip Burnel, it is supposed, the latter having succeeded
-the former. At Linley, and the Smithies, traces of old forges occur; so
-that there is good reason for supposing that knives and other articles of
-iron may have been manufactured in the district from a very early period.
-Among the assets, for instance, of the Priory of Wenlock, in the year
-1541–2, is a mine of ironstone, at Shirlot, fermed for £2 6_s._ 1_d._ per
-annum; and a forge, described as an Ierne Smythee, or a smith’s place, in
-Shirlot, rented at £12 8_s._ Another forge produced £2 13_s._ 4_d._ per
-annum; and the produce of some other mineral, probably coal, was £5 3_s._
-10_d._ These large rents for those days show the advance made in turning
-to account the mineral wealth of the district, and the superior value of
-mines compared with trees, or mere surface produce.
-
-Wherever powerful streams came down precipitous channels, little forges
-with clanging hammers were heard reverberating through the woods as early
-as the reigns of the Tudors. Their sites now are—
-
- “Downy banks damask’d with flowers:”
-
-but they reveal the havoc made of the timber by cutting and burning it
-for charcoal down to the reign of Elizabeth, when an act was passed to
-restrict the use for such purposes.
-
-These iron-making and mining operations caused the forest to be
-intersected by roads and tramways, as old maps and reports of the forest
-shew us; so that few beasts, except those passing between their more
-secluded haunts, were to be found there; and, as the stragglers preferred
-the tender vegetation the garden of the cottager afforded, even these
-were sometimes noosed, or shot with bows and arrows, which made no noise.
-
- [Picture: Waterfall]
-
-To such an extent had destruction of timber in this and other forests in
-the country been carried, that it was feared that in the event of a
-foreign war sufficient timber could not be found for the use of the navy.
-A reaction, however, set in: wealthy landowners set themselves to work to
-remedy the evil by planting and preserving trees, especially the oak; and
-many of the woods and plantations which gladden the eye of the traveller
-in passing through the country, and which afford good sport to the
-Wheatland and Albrighton packs, were the result.
-
-To this indigenous and deep-rooted love of sport we are therefore
-indebted, to a very great extent, for those beautiful woods which adorn
-the Willey country and many other portions of the kingdom. But for our
-woods and the “creeping things” they shelter, we should have imperfect
-conceptions of those earlier phases of the island:—
-
- “When stalked the bison from his shaggy lair,
- Thousands of years before the silent air
- Was pierced by whizzing shafts of hunters keen.”
-
-The country would have been wanting in subjects such as Creswick, with
-faithful expressions of foliage and knowledge of the play of light and
-shade, has depicted. It would have lost the text-work of those
-characteristics Constable revelled in, and those Harding gave us in his
-oaks. We should have lost subjects for the poet as well as for the
-painter; for the ballad literature of the country is redolent of sights
-and sounds associated therewith. To come down from the earliest times.
-How the old Druids reverenced them! how the compilers of that surprising
-survey of the country we find in Domesday noted all details concerning
-them! what joyous allusions Chaucer, Spenser, and later writers make to
-them! what peculiar charms the “merry green-wood” and the deep forest
-glades had for the imagination of the people! Hence the popular sympathy
-expressed by means of tales and traditions in connection with Sherwood’s
-sylvan shade, and the many editions of the song of the bold outlaw, and
-of the adventures contained therein. Even the utilitarian philosopher
-and the ultra radical, fleeing from the stifling atmosphere of the town,
-and diving for an hour or so into some paternal wood, is inclined, we
-fancy, to sponge from his memory the bitter things he has said of the
-owners and of that aristocratic class who usually value and guard them as
-they do their picture galleries. Thanks to such as these, there is now
-scarcely a run in the Willey country but brings the sportsman face to
-face with vestiges of some sylvan memorial Nature or man has planted
-along the hill and valley sides, memorials renewed again and again, as
-winter after winter rends the red leaves from the trees: and the man who
-has not made a pilgrimage, for sport or otherwise, through these
-far-reaching sylvan slopes along the valley of the Severn, stretching
-almost uninterruptedly for seven or eight miles, or through some similar
-wooded tract, witnessing the sheltered inequalities of the surface,
-varied by rocky glens and rushy pools—the winter haunt of snipe and
-woodcock—has missed much that might afford him the highest interest.
-Here and there, on indurated soils along the valley sides, opportunities
-occur of studying the manner in which trees of several centuries’ growth
-send their gnarled and massive roots in between the rocks in search of
-nourishment, for firmness, or to resist storms that shake branches little
-inferior to the parent stem. Few places probably have finer old hollies
-and yew-trees indigenous to the soil, relieving the monotony of the
-general grey by their sombre green—trees rooted where they grew six or
-eight centuries since, and carrying back the mind to the time of Harold
-and the bowmen days of Robin Hood.
-
- [Picture: Forest scenery]
-
-Spoonhill, a very well-known covert of the Wheatland Hunt, was a slip of
-woodland as early as a perambulation in 1356, when it was recorded to lie
-outside the forest, its boundary on the Shirlot side being marked by a
-famous oak called Kinsok, “which stood on the king’s highway between
-Weston and Wenlock.”
-
-The Larden and Lutwyche woods for many years have been famous for foxes.
-The late M. Benson, Esq., told us that a fox had for several seasons made
-his home securely in a tree near his house, he having taken care to keep
-his secret. The woods, too, on the opposite side of the ridge, rarely
-fail to furnish a fox; and it is difficult to imagine a finer spot than
-Smallman’s Leap, {49a} or Ipikin’s Rock, on the “Hill Top,” presents for
-viewing a run over Hughley and Kenley, or between there and Hope Bowdler.
-Near Lutwyche is a thick entangled wood, called Mog Forest; and in the
-old door of the Church of Easthope, {49b} near, is a large iron ring,
-which is conjectured to have been placed there for outlaws of the forest
-who sought sanctuary or freedom from arrest to take hold of. Now and
-then, in wandering over the sites of these former forests, we come upon
-traditions of great trees, sometimes upon an aged tree itself, “bald with
-antiquity,” telling of parent forest tracts, like the Lady Oak at
-Cressage, which formerly stood in the public highway, and suffered much
-from gipsies and other vagabonds lighting fires in its hollow trunk, but
-which is now propped, cramped, and cared for, with as much concern as the
-Druids were wont to show to similar trees. A young tree, too, sprung
-from an acorn from the old one, has grown up within its hollow trunk, and
-now mingles its foliage with that of the parent.
-
- [Picture: Lady Oak]
-
-There are a few fine old trees near Willey, supposed to be fragmentary
-forest remains. One is a patriarchal-looking ash in the public road at
-Barrow; another is an oak near the Dean; it is one of which the present
-noble owner of Willey shows the greatest pride and care. There are also
-two noble trees at Shipton and Larden; the one at the latter place being
-a fine beech, the branches of which, when tipped with foliage, have a
-circumference of 35 yards. A magnificent oak, recently cut down in Corve
-Dale, contained 300 cubic feet of timber, and was 18 feet in
-circumference. This, however, was a sapling compared with that king of
-forest trees which Loudon describes as having been cut down in Willey
-Park. It spread 114 feet, and had a trunk 9 feet in diameter, exclusive
-of the bark. It contained 24 cords of yard wood, 11½ cords of four-feet
-wood, 252 park palings, six feet long, 1 load of cooper’s wood, 16½ tons
-of timber in all the boughs; 28 tons of timber in the body, and this
-besides fagots and boughs that had dropped off:—
-
- “What tales, if there be tongues in trees,
- Those giant oaks could tell,
- Of beings born and buried here;
- Tales of the peasant and the peer,
- Tales of the bridal and the bier
- The welcome and farewell.”
-
-The old oak forests and chestnut groves which supplied the sturdy
-framework for the half-timbered houses of our ancestors, the rafters for
-their churches, and the beams for their cathedrals, are gone; and the
-mischief is, not only that we have lost former forests, but that our
-present woods every year are growing less, that much of that shrubby
-foliage which within our own recollection divided the fields, forming
-little copses in which a Morland would have revelled, have had to give
-way to agricultural improvements, and the objects of sport they sheltered
-have disappeared. The badger lingered to the beginning of the present
-century along the rocks of Benthall and Apley; and the otter, which still
-haunts portions of the Severn and its more secluded tributaries, and
-occasionally affords sport in some parts of the country higher up, was
-far from being rare. On the left bank of the Severn are the
-“Brock-holes,” or badger-holes, whilst near to it are the “Fox-holes,”
-where tradition alleges foxes a generation or two ago to have been
-numerous enough to have been a nuisance; and the same remark may apply to
-the “Fox-holes” at Benthall. As the district became more cultivated and
-the country more populated, the range of these animals became more and
-more circumscribed, and the cherished sports of our forefathers came to
-form the staple topics of neighbours’ oft-told tales.
-
-Within our own recollection the badger was to be found at Benthall Edge;
-but he had two enemies—the fox, who sometimes took possession of his den
-and drove him from the place, and the miners of Broseley and Benthall,
-who were usually great dog-fanciers, and who were accustomed to steal
-forth as the moon rose above the horizon, and intercept him as he left
-his long winding excavation among the rocks, in order to make sport for
-them at their annual wakes.
-
- [Picture: The Badger]
-
- [Picture: Group of deer]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-THE WREKIN FOREST AND THE FORESTERS.
-
-
-The Wrekin Forest—Hermit of Mount St. Gilbert—Poachers upon the King’s
-Preserves—Extent of the Forest—Haye of Wellington—Robert
-Forester—Perquisites—Hunting Matches—Singular Grant to John Forester—Sir
-Walter Scott’s Tony Foster a Member of the Shropshire Forester
-Family—Anthony Foster Lord of the Manor of Little Wenlock—The Foresters
-of Sutton and Bridgnorth—Anthony Foster altogether a different Character
-from what Sir Walter Scott represents him.
-
- “I am clad in youthful green, I other colours scorn,
- My silken bauldrick bears my bugle or my horn,
- Which, setting to my lips, I wind so loud and shrill,
- As makes the echoes shout from every neighbouring hill;
- My dog-hook at my belt, to which my thong is tied,
- My sheaf of arrows by, my wood-knife by my side,
- My cross-bow in my hand, my gaffle on my rack,
- To bend it when I please, or if I list to slack;
- My hound then in my thong, I, by the woodman’s art,
- Forecast where I may lodge the goodly hie-palm’d hart,
- To view the grazing herds, so sundry times I use,
- Where by the loftiest head I knew my deer to choose;
- And to unherd him, then I gallop o’er the ground,
- Upon my well-breathed nag, to cheer my learning hound.
- Some time I pitch my toils the deer alive to take,
- Some time I like the cry the deep-mouthed kennel make;
- Then underneath my horse I stalk my game to strike,
- And with a single dog to hunt or hurt him as I like.”
-
- DRAYTON.
-
-IT is important, to the completion of our sketch of the earlier features
-of the country, that we cross the Severn and say a word or two respecting
-the forest of the Wrekin, of which the early ancestors of the present
-Willey family had charge. This famous hill must then have formed a
-feature quite as conspicuous in the landscape as it does at present. As
-it stood out above the wide-spreading forest that surrounded it, it must
-have looked like a barren island amid a waving sea of green. From its
-position and outline too, it appears to have been selected during the
-struggles which took place along the borders as a military fortress,
-judging from the entrenchments near its summit, and the tumuli both here
-and in the valley at its foot, where numbers of broken weapons have been
-found. At a later period it is spoken of as Mount St. Gilbert, in
-honour, it is said, of a recluse to whom the Gilbertine monks ascribe
-their origin. Whether the saint fixed his abode in the cleft called the
-Needle’s Eye (which tradition alleges to have been made at the
-Crucifixion), or on some other part of the hill, there is no evidence to
-show; but that there was a hermitage there at one time, and that whilst
-the woods around were stocked with game, is clear. It is charitable to
-suppose, however, that the good man who pitched his tent so high above
-his fellows abstained from such tempting luxuries, that on his wooden
-trencher no king’s venison smoked, and that fare more becoming gown and
-girdle contented him; so at least it must have been reported to Henry
-III., who, to give the hermit, Nicholas de Denton by name, “greater
-leisure for holy exercises, and to support him during his life, so long
-as he should be a hermit on the aforesaid mountain,” granted six quarters
-of corn, to be paid by the Sheriff of Shropshire, out of the issues of
-Pendleston Mill, near Bridgnorth.
-
- [Picture: Needle’s Eye]
-
-That there were, however, poachers upon the king’s preserves appears from
-a criminal prosecution recorded on the Forest Roll of 1209, to the effect
-that four of the county sergeants found venison in the house of Hugh le
-Scot, who took asylum in a church, and, refusing to quit, “there lived a
-month,” but afterwards “escaped in woman’s clothes.”
-
-Certain sales of forest land made by Henry II. near the Wrekin, and
-entered on the Forest Roll of 1180, together with the assessments and
-perambulations of later periods, afford some idea of the extent of this
-forest, which, from the Severn and the limits of Shrewsbury, swept round
-by Tibberton and Chetwynd to the east, and included Lilleshall, St.
-George’s, Dawley, Shifnal, Kemberton, and Madeley on the south. From the
-“Survey of Shropshire Forests” in 1235, it appears that the following
-woods were subject to its jurisdiction: Leegomery, Wrockwardine Wood,
-Eyton-on-the-Weald Moors, Lilleshall, Sheriffhales, the Lizard,
-Stirchley, and Great Dawley. A later perambulation fixed the bounds of
-the royal preserve, or Haye of Wellington, in which two burnings of lime
-for the use of the crown are recorded, as well as the fact that three
-hundred oak-trees were consumed in the operation.
-
-Hugh Forester, and Robert the Forester, are spoken of as tenants of the
-crown in connection with this Haye; and it is an interesting coincidence
-that the land originally granted by one of the Norman earls, or by King
-Henry I., for the custody of this Haye, which included what is now called
-Hay Gate, is still in possession of the present noble owner of Willey.
-It seems singular, however, that in the “Arundel Rolls” of 1255, it
-should be described as a _pourpresture_, for which eighteen pence per
-acre was paid to the king, as being held by the said Robert Forester
-towards the custody of the Wellington Haia.
-
- [Picture: Deer and young]
-
-Among the perquisites which the said Robert Forester was allowed, as
-Keeper of the Haye, all dead wood and windfalls are mentioned, unless
-more than five oak-trees were blown down at a time, in which case they
-went to the king. The Haye is spoken of here as an “imparkment,” which
-agrees with the descriptions of Chaucer and other old writers, who speak
-of a Haia as a place paled in, or enclosed, into which deer or other game
-were driven, as they now drive deer in North America, or elephants in
-India, and of grants of land made to those whose especial duty it was to
-drive the deer with their troop of followers from all parts of a wide
-circle into such enclosure for slaughter. The following description of
-deer-hunting in the seventeenth century by Taylor, the Water Poet, as he
-is called, will enable us to understand the plan pursued by the Norman
-sportsmen:—
-
- “Five or six hundred men do rise early in the morning, and they do
- disperse themselves divers ways; and seven, eight, or ten miles’
- compass, they do bring or chase in the deer in many herds (two,
- three, or four hundred in a herd) to such a place as the noblemen
- shall appoint them; then, when the day is come, the lords and
- gentlemen of their companies do ride or go to the said places,
- sometimes wandering up to the middle through bourns, and rivers; and
- then, they being come to the place, do lie down on the ground till
- those foresaid scouts, which are called the Tinkheldt, do bring down
- the deer. Then, after we had stayed three hours or there abouts, we
- might perceive the deer appear on the hills round about us (their
- heads making a show like a wood), which being followed close by the
- Tinkheldt, are chased down into the valley where we lay; then all the
- valley on each side being waylaid with a hundred couple of strong
- Irish greyhounds, they are let loose as occasion serves upon the herd
- of deer, that with dogs, guns, arrows, dirks, and daggers, in the
- space of two hours fourscore fat deer were slain.”
-
-Hunting matches were sometimes made in these forests, and one, embittered
-by some family feud respecting a fishery, terminated in the death of a
-bold and ancient knight, an event recorded upon a stone covering his
-remains in the quaint and truly ancient church at Atcham.
-
- “The bugle sounds, ’tis Berwick’s lord
- O’er Wrekin drives the deer;
- That hunting match—that fatal feud—
- Drew many a widow’s tear.
-
- “With deep-mouthed talbe to rouse the game
- His generous bosom warms,
- Till furious foemen check the chase
- And dare the din of arms.
-
- “Then fell the high-born Malveysin,
- His limbs besmeared with gore;
- No more his trusty bow shall twang,
- His bugle blow no more.
-
- “Whilst Ridware mourns her last brave son
- In arms untimely slain,
- With kindred grief she here records
- The last of Berwick’s train.”
-
- [Picture: Atcham Church]
-
-Robert Forester appears to have had charge not only of the Haye of the
-Wrekin, but also of that of Morfe, for both of which he is represented as
-answering at the Assizes in February, 1262, for the eight years then
-past. A Robert Forester is also described as one chosen with the
-sheriff, the chief forester, and verderers of Shropshire in 1242, to try
-the question touching the _expeditation_ of dogs on the estates of the
-Lilleshall Abbey, and his seal still remains attached to the juror’s
-return now in possession of the Sutherland family at Trentham.
-
-A Roger de Wellington, whom Mr. Eyton calls Roger le Forester the second,
-is also described as one of six royal foresters-of-the-fee, who, on June
-6th, 1300, met to assist at the great perambulation of Shropshire
-forests. He was admitted a burgess of Shrewsbury in 1319. John
-Forester, his son and heir, it is supposed, was baptised at Wellington,
-and attained his majority in 1335; {63} and a John Forester—a lineal
-descendant of his—obtained the singular grant, now at Willey, from Henry
-VIII., privileging him to wear his hat in the royal presence. After the
-usual formalities the grant proceeds:—“Know all men, our officers,
-ministers, &c. Forasmuch as we be credibly informed that our trusty and
-well-beloved John Foster, of Wellington, in the county of Salop,
-Gentilman, for certain diseases and infirmities which he has on his hede,
-cannot consequently, without great danger and jeopardy, be discovered of
-the same. Whereupon we, in consideration thereof, by these presents,
-licenced hym from henceforth to use and were his bonet on his said hede,”
-&c.
-
-It will be observed that in this grant the name occurs in its abridged
-form as Foster, and in the Sheriffs of Shropshire and many old documents
-it is variously spelt as Forester, Forster, and Foster, a circumstance
-which during the progress of the present work suggested an inquiry, the
-result of which—mainly through the researches of a painstaking friend—may
-add weight and interest to the archæological lore previously collected in
-connection with the family. It appears, for instance, that the Anthony
-Foster of Sir Walter Scott’s “Kenilworth” was descended from the
-Foresters of Wellington; that he held the manor of Little Wenlock and
-other property in Shropshire in 1545; that the Richard Forester or
-Forster who built the interesting half-timbered mansion, {64} still
-standing in the Cartway, Bridgnorth, where Bishop Percy, the author of
-“Percy’s Reliques,” was born, was also a member; and that Anne, the
-daughter of this Richard Forester or Forster, was married in 1575 at
-Sutton Maddock to William Baxter, the antiquary, mentioned by the Rev.
-George Bellet at page 183 of the “Antiquities of Bridgnorth.” Mr.
-Bellet, speaking of another mansion of the Foresters at Bridgnorth, says,
-“One could wish, as a mere matter of curiosity, that a remarkable
-building, called ‘Forester’s Folly,’ had been amongst those which escaped
-the fire; for it was built by Richard Forester, the private secretary of
-no less famous a person than Bishop Bonner, and bore the above
-appellation most likely on account of the cost of its erection.” William
-Baxter, who, it will be seen, was a descendant of the Foresters, has an
-interesting passage in his life referring to the circumstance. {66}
-
- [Picture: Richard Forester’s Old Mansion]
-
-We believe that the Forester pedigree in the MS. collection of Shropshire
-pedigrees, now in possession of Sidney Stedman Smith, Esq., compiled by
-that careful and painstaking genealogist the late Mr. Hardwick, fully
-confirms this, and shows that the Foresters of Watling Street, the
-Foresters or Forsters of Sutton Maddock, and the Forsters or Fosters of
-Evelith Manor were the same family. The arms, like the names, differ;
-but all have the hunter’s horn stringed; and if any doubt existed as to
-the identity of the families, it is still further removed by a little
-work entitled “An Inquiry concerning the death of Amy Robsart,” by S. J.
-Pettigrew, F.R.S., F.S.A. Mr. Pettigrew says: “Anthony Forster was the
-fourth son of Richard Forster, of Evelith, in Shropshire, by Mary,
-daughter of Sir Thomas Gresley, of an ancient family. The Anthony
-Forster of Sir Walter Scott’s novel is supposed to have been born about
-1510; and a relative, Thomas, was the prior of an ecclesiastical
-establishment at Wombridge, the warden of Tong, and the vicar of Idsall,
-as appears by his altar-tomb in Shifnal Church. He is conjectured to
-have attended to the early education of Anthony, whose after-connection
-with Berks is accounted for by the fact that he married somewhere between
-1530 and 1540 a Berkshire lady, Ann, daughter of Reginald Williams,
-eldest son of Sir John Williams. He purchased Cumnor Place, in Berks, of
-William Owen, son of Dr. G. Owen, physician to Henry VIII. He was not,
-therefore, as Sir Walter Scott alleges, a tenant of the Earl of
-Leicester, to whom, however, he left Cumnor Place by will at his death in
-1572.” It is gratifying to find that Mr. Pettigrew, in his “Inquiry,”
-shows how groundless was the charge built up by Sir Walter Scott against
-the Earl of Leicester; and, what is still more to our purpose, that he
-completely clears the character of Anthony Forster, who was supposed to
-have been the agent in the foul deed, of the imputation, and shows him to
-have been quite a different character to that represented by this
-distinguished writer. This, indeed, may be inferred from the fact that
-Anthony Forster not only enjoyed the confidence of his neighbours, but so
-grew in favour with the people of Abingdon that he acceded in 1570 to the
-representation of that borough, and continued to represent it till he
-died; also, from the inscription on his tomb, which is as follows:—
-
- “Anthonius Forster, generis generosa propago,
- Cumneræ Dominus Barcheriensis erat;
- Armiger, Armigero prognatus patre Ricardo,
- Qui quondam Iphlethæ Salopiensis erat.
- Quatuor ex isto fluxerunt stemmate nati,
- Ex isto Antonius stemmate quartus erat.
- Mente sagax, animo præcellens, corpore promptus;
- Eloquii dulcis, ore disertus erat.
- In factis probitas fuit, in sermonte venustas,
- In vultu gravitas, religione fides;
- In patriam pietas, in egenos grata voluntas,
- Accedunt reliquis annumeranda bonis:
- Sic quod cuncta rapit, rapuit non omnia Lethum,
- Sed quæ Mors rapuit, vivida fama dedit.”
-
-Then follow these laudatory verses:—
-
- “Argute resonas Citharæ prætendere chordas,
- Novit et Aonia concrepuisse lyra.
- Gaudebat terræ teneras defigere plantas,
- Et mira pulchras construere arte domos.
- Composita varias lingua formare loquelas,
- Doctus et edocta scribere multa manu.”
-
-Cleared of the slanders which had been so unjustly heaped upon his
-memory, one can welcome Anthony Forster, the Squire of Cumnor, as a
-member of the same distinguished family from which the Willey Squire and
-the present ennobled house of Willey are descended. {69} But before
-introducing the Squire, it is fitting to say something of Willey itself.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-WILLEY.
-
-
-Willey, close Neighbour to the Royal Chace of Shirlot—Etymology of the
-Name—Domesday—The Willileys—The Lacons—The Welds and the Foresters—Willey
-Old Hall—Cumnor Hall as described by Sir Walter Scott—Everything Old and
-Quaint—How Willey came into possession of the Foresters.
-
- “’Bove the foliage of the wood
- An antique mansion might you then espy,
- Such as in the days of our forefathers stood,
- Carved with device of quaintest imagery.”
-
- [Picture: Willey Old Hall]
-
-TO commence with its earlier phase, it was clear that Willey would be
-close neighbour to the Royal Chace of Shirlot, and that it must have been
-about the centre of the wooded country previously described. The name is
-said to be of Saxon origin; and in wattle and dab and wicker-work times,
-when an osier-bed was probably equal in value to a vineyard, the place
-might have been as the word seems to suggest, one where willows grew,
-seeing that various osiers, esteemed by basket makers, coopers, and
-turners, still flourish along the stream winding past it to the Severn.
-The name is therefore redolent of the olden time, and is one of those old
-word-pictures which so often occur to indicate the earlier features of
-the country. Under its agricultural Saxon holders, however, Willey so
-grew in value and importance that when the Conquest was complete, and
-King William’s generals were settling down to enjoy the good things the
-Saxons had provided, and as Byron has it—
-
- “Manors
- Were their reward for following Billy’s banners,”
-
-Willey fell to the lot of a Norman, named Turold, who, as he held twelve
-other manors, considerately permitted the Saxon owner to continue in
-possession under him. Domesday says: “The same Turold holds Willey, and
-Hunnit (holds it) of him.” “Here is half a hide geldable. Here is
-arable land sufficient for ii ox teams. Here those ox teams are,
-together with ii villains, and ii boors. Its value is v shillings.” At
-the death of Hunnit the manor passed to a family which took its name from
-the place; and considerable additions resulted from the marriage of one,
-Warner de Williley, with the heiress of Roger Fitz Odo, of Kenley.
-Warner de Williley appears to have been a person of some consequence,
-from the fact that he was appointed to make inquiry concerning certain
-encroachments upon the royal forests of Shropshire; but an act of
-oppression and treachery, in which his wife had taken a part, against one
-of his own vassals, whose land he coveted, caused him to be committed to
-prison. Several successive owners of Willey were overseers of Shirlot
-Forest; and Nicholas, son and heir of Warner, was sued for inattention to
-his duties; an under tenant also, profiting probably by the laxity of his
-lord, at a later period was charged and found guilty of taking a stag
-from the king’s preserves, on Sunday, June 6th, 1253. Andrew de Williley
-joined Mountford against King Edward, and fell August 4th, 1265, in the
-battle of Evesham; in consequence of which act of disloyalty the property
-was forfeited to the crown, and the priors of Wenlock, who already had
-the seigniory usual to feudal lords, availing themselves of the
-opportunity, managed so to increase their power that a subsequent tenant,
-as shown by the Register at Willey, came to Wenlock (1388), and “before
-many witnesses did homage and fealty,” and acknowledged himself to hold
-the place of the lord prior by carrying his frock to parliament. They
-succeeded too, after several suits, in establishing their rights to the
-advowson of the Church, founded and endowed by the lords of the place.
-
-By the middle of the 16th century Willey had passed to the hands of the
-old Catholic family of the Lacons, one of whom, Sir Roland, held it in
-1561, together with Kinlet; and from them it passed to Sir John Weld, who
-is mentioned as of Willey in 1666. He married the daughter of Sir George
-Whitmore, and his son, George Weld, sat for the county with William
-Forester, who married the daughter of the Earl of Salisbury, and voted
-with him in favour of the succession of the House of Hanover.
-
-Who among the former feudal owners of Willey built the old hall, is a
-question which neither history nor tradition serves to solve. Portions
-of the basement of the old buildings seem to indicate former structures
-still more ancient, like spurs of some primitive rock cropping up into a
-subsequent formation. Contrasted with the handsome modern freestone
-mansion occupied by the Right Hon. Lord Forester close by, the remains
-shown in our engraving look like a stranded wreck, past which centuries
-of English life have gone sweeping by. Some of the walls are three feet
-in thickness, and the buttressed chimneys, and small-paned windows—“set
-deep in the grey old tower”—make it a fair type of country mansions and a
-realisation of ideas such as the mind associates with the homes of the
-early owners of Willey.
-
-Although occupying a slight eminence, it really nestles in the hollow,
-and in its buff-coloured livery it stands pleasingly relieved by the high
-ground of Shirlot and its woods beyond. In looking upon its quaint
-gables, shafts, and chimneys, one feels that when it was complete it must
-have had something of the poetry of ancient art about it. Its
-irregularities of outline must have fitted in, as it were, with the
-undulating landscape, with which its walls are now tinted into harmony,
-by brown and yellow lichens. There was nothing assuming or pretentious
-about it; it was content to stand close neighbour to the public old coach
-road, which came winding by from Bridgnorth to Wenlock, and passed
-beneath the arch which now connects the high-walled gardens with the
-shaded walk leading to its modern neighbour, the present mansion of the
-Foresters.
-
-Sir Walter Scott, in his description of Cumnor Place, speaks of woods
-closely adjacent, full of large trees, and in particular of ancient and
-mighty oaks, which stretched their giant arms over the high wall
-surrounding the demesne, thus giving it a secluded and monastic
-appearance. He describes its formal walks and avenues as in part choked
-up with grass, and interrupted by billets, and piles of brushwood, and he
-tells us of the old-fashioned gateway in the outer wall, and of the door
-formed of two huge oaken leaves, thickly studded with nails—like the gate
-of an old town. This picture of the approaches to the old mansion where
-Anthony Foster lived was no doubt a more faithful representation than the
-one he gave of the character of the man himself. At any rate, it is one
-which would in many respects apply to old Willey Hall and its
-surroundings at the time to which the great novelist refers. Everything
-was old and old-fashioned, even as its owners prided themselves it should
-be, and as grey as time and an uninterrupted growth of lichens in a
-congenial atmosphere could make it. Hollies, yews, and junipers were to
-be seen in the grounds, and outside were oaks and other aged trees,
-scathed by lightning’s bolt and winter’s blast. Here and there stood a
-few monarchs of the old forest in groups, each group a brotherhood
-sublime, carrying the thoughts back to the days when “from glade to
-glade, through wild copse and tangled dell, the wild deer bounded.”
-Trees, buildings, loose stones that had fallen, and still lay where they
-fell, were mossed with a hoar antiquity. Everything in fact seemed to
-say that the place had a history of its own, and that it could tell a
-tale of the olden time.
-
-From the lawn and grounds adjoining a path led to the flower-gardens,
-intersected by gravel walks and grassy terraces, where a sun-dial stood,
-and where fountains, fed by copious supplies from unfailing springs on
-the high grounds of Shirlot, threw silvery showers above the shadows of
-the trees into the sunlight.
-
-Willey, augmented by tracts of Shirlot, which was finally disafforested
-and apportioned two centuries since, came into possession of the
-Foresters by the marriage of Brook Forester, of Dothill Park, with
-Elizabeth, only surviving child and heiress of George Weld, of Willey;
-and George Forester, “the Squire of Willey,” was the fruit of that
-marriage.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-THE WILLEY SQUIRE.
-
-
-Squire Forester—His Instincts and Tendencies—Atmosphere of the Times
-favourable for their Development—Thackeray’s Opinion—Style of
-Hunting—Dawn of the Golden Age of Fox-hunting, &c.
-
-IT will be seen that around Willey and Willey Hall, associations crowd
-which serve to make the place a household word and Squire Forester a man
-of mark with modern sportsmen and future Nimrods, at any rate if we
-consent to regard the Squire’s characteristics as outcrops of the
-instincts of an ancient stock. Descended from an ancestry so associated
-with forest sports and pursuits, he was like a moving plant which
-receives its nourishment from the air, and he lived chiefly through his
-senses. He was waylaid, as it were, on life’s path by hereditary
-tendencies, and his career was chequered by indulgences which, read in
-the light of the present day, look different from what they then did,
-when at court and in the country there were many to keep him in
-countenance. At any rate, Squire Forester lived in what may be called
-the dawn of the golden age of fox-hunting. We say dawn, because although
-Lord Arundel kept a pack of hounds some time between 1690 and 1700, and
-Sir John Tyrwhitt and Charles Pelham, Esq., did so in 1713, yet as Lord
-Wilton, in his “Sports and Pursuits of the English” states, the first
-real pack of foxhounds was established in the West of England about 1730.
-It was a period when, for various reasons, a reaction in favour of the
-manly sports of England’s earlier days had set in, one being the
-discovery that those distinguished for such sports were they who assisted
-most in winning on the battle-fields of the Continent the victories which
-made the British arms so renowned. Then, as now, it was found that they
-led to the development of the physical frame—sometimes to the removal of
-absolute maladies, and supplied the raw material of manliness out of
-which heroes are made—a view which the Duke of Wellington in some measure
-confirmed by the remark that the best officers he had under him during
-the Peninsular War were those whom he discovered to be bold riders to
-hounds. Lord Wilton, in his book just quoted, goes still further, by
-contending that “the greatness and glory of Great Britain are in no
-slight degree attributable to her national sports and pastimes.”
-
-That such sports contributed to the jollity and rollicking fun which
-distinguished the time in which Squire Forester lived, there can be
-little doubt. In his “Four Georges,” Thackeray gives it as his opinion,
-that “the England of our ancestors was a merrier England than the island
-we inhabit,” and that the people, high and low, amused themselves very
-much more. “One hundred and twenty years ago,” he says, “every town had
-its fair, and every village its wake. The old poets have sung a hundred
-jolly ditties about great cudgel playings, famous grinnings through
-horse-collars, great Maypole meetings, and morris-dances. The girls used
-to run races, clad in very light attire; and the kind gentry and good
-parsons thought no shame in looking on.” He adds, “I have calculated the
-manner in which statesmen and persons of condition passed their time; and
-what with drinking and dining, and supping and cards, wonder how they
-managed to get through their business at all.” That they did manage to
-work, and to get through a considerable amount of it, is quite clear; and
-probably they did so with all the more ease in consequence of the
-amusement which often came first, as in the case of “Naughty idle Bobby,”
-as Clive was called when a boy; and not less so in that of Pitt, who did
-so much to develop that spirit of patriotism of which we boast. It was a
-remark of Addison, that “those who have searched most into human nature
-observe that nothing so much shows the nobleness of the soul as that its
-felicity consists in action;” and that “every man has such an active
-principle in him that he will find out something to employ himself upon
-in whatever place or state he is posted.”
-
- [Picture: The Old Squire]
-
-Those familiar with the _Spectator_ will remember that he represents
-himself to have become so enamoured of the chase, that in his letters
-from the country he says: “I intend to hunt twice a week during my stay
-with Sir Roger, and shall prescribe the moderate use of this exercise to
-all my country friends as the best kind of physic for mending a bad
-constitution and preserving a good one.” He concludes with the following
-quotation from Dryden:—
-
- “The first physicians by debauch were made;
- Excess began, and sloth sustains the trade:
- By chase our long-liv’d fathers earned their food;
- Toil strung their arms and purified their blood.”
-
-But a country squire of Mr. Forester’s day even more pithily and quaintly
-expresses himself as to the advantages to be derived from out-door
-sports:—“Those useful hours that our fathers employed on horseback in the
-fields,” he says, “are lost to their posterity between a stinking pair of
-sheets. Balls and operas, assemblies and masquerades, so exhaust the
-spirits of the puny creatures over-night, that yawning and chocolate are
-the main labours and entertainments of the morning. The important
-affairs of barber, milliner, perfumer, and looking-glass, are their
-employ till the call to dinner, and the bottle or gaming table demand the
-tedious hours that intervene before the return of the evening
-assignations. What wonder, then, if such busy, trifling, effeminate
-mortals are heard to swear they have no notion of venturing their bodies
-out-of-doors in the cold air in the morning? I have laughed heartily to
-see such delicate smock-faced animals judiciously interrupting their
-pinches of snuff with dull jokes upon fox-hunters; and foppishly
-declaiming against an art they know no more of than they do of Greek. It
-cannot be expected they should speak well of a toil they dare not
-undertake; or that the fine things should be fit to work without doors,
-which are of the taylor’s creation.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-THE WILLEY KENNELS.
-
-
-The Willey Kennels—Colonel Apperley on Hunting a Hundred Years
-ago—Character of the Hounds—Portraits of Favourites—Original
-Letters—Style.
-
- “Tantivy! the huntsman he starts for the chase,
- In good humour as fresh as the morn,
- While health and hilarity beam from his face,
- At the sound of the mellow-toned horn.”
-
-THE style of hunting in vogue in Squire Forester’s day was, in the
-opinion of authorities on the subject, even more favourable to the
-development of bodily strength and endurance than now. The late Mr.
-Thursfield, of Barrow, was wont to say that it was no unusual thing to
-see Moody taking the hounds to cover before daylight in a morning. The
-Squire himself, like most other sportsmen of the period, was an early
-man.
-
- [Picture: Childers, Pilot, and Pigmy]
-
-Col. Apperley says: “With our forefathers, when the roost-cock sounded
-his clarion, they sounded their horn, throwing off the pack so soon as
-they could distinguish a stile from a gate, or, in other words, so soon
-as they could see to ride to the hounds. Then it was that the hare was
-hunted to her form by the trail, and the fox to his kennel by the drag.
-Slow as this system would be deemed, it was a grand treat to the real
-sportsman. What, in the language of the chase, is called the
-‘tender-nosed hound,’ had an opportunity of displaying itself to the
-inexpressible delight of his master; and to the field—that is, to the
-sportsmen who joined in the diversion—the pleasures of the day were
-enhanced by the moments of anticipation produced by the drag. As the
-scent grew warmer, the certainty of finding was confirmed; the music of
-the pack increased; and the game being up, away went the hounds in a
-crash. Both trail and drag are at present but little thought of. Hounds
-merely draw over ground most likely to hold the game they are in quest
-of, and thus, in a great measure, rely upon chance for coming across it;
-for if a challenge be heard, it can only be inferred that a fox has been
-on foot in the night—the scent being seldom sufficient to carry the
-hounds up to his kennel. Advantages, however, as far as sport is
-concerned, attend the present hour of meeting in the field, independently
-of the misery of riding many miles in the dark, which sportsmen in the
-early part of the last century were obliged to do. The game, when it is
-now aroused, is in a better state to encounter the great speed of modern
-hounds; having had time to digest the food it has partaken of in the
-night previous to its being stirred. But it is only since the great
-increase of hares and foxes that the aid of the trail and drag could be
-dispensed with without the frequent recurrence of blank days, which now
-seldom happen. Compared with the luxurious ease with which the modern
-sportsman is conveyed to the field—either lolling in his chaise and four,
-or galloping along at the rate of twenty miles an hour on a
-hundred-guinea hack—the situation of his predecessor was all but
-distressing. In proportion to the distance he had to ride by starlight
-were his hours of rest broken in upon, and exclusive of the time that
-operation might consume another serious one was to be provided for—this
-was the filling his hair with powder and pomatum until it could hold no
-more, and forming it into a well-formed knot, or club, as it was called,
-by his valet, which cost commonly a good hour’s work. The protecting mud
-boots, the cantering hack, the second horse in the field, were luxuries
-unknown to him. His well-soiled buckskins, and brown-topped boots, would
-have cut an indifferent figure in the presence of a modern connoisseur by
-a Leicestershire cover side.” “Notwithstanding all this, however,” he
-adds, “we are inclined strongly to suspect that, out of a given number of
-gentlemen taking the field with hounds, the proportion of really
-scientific sportsmen may have been in favour of the olden times.”
-
-The Willey Kennels were within easy reach of the Hall, between Willey and
-Shirlot, where the pleasant stream before alluded to goes murmuring on
-its way through the Smithies to the Severn. But in order to save his
-dogs unnecessary exertion there were others on the opposite, or Wrekin,
-side of the river—
-
- “Hounds stout and healthy,
- Earths well stopped, and foxes plenty,”
-
-being mottoes of the period. The dogs were of the “heavy painstaking
-breed” that “stooped to their work.” How, it was said,
-
- “Can the fox-hound ever tell,
- Unless by pains he takes to smell,
- Where Reynard’s gone?”
-
-Experience taught the Squire the importance of a principle now more
-generally acted upon, that of selecting the qualities required in the
-hounds he bred from; and by this means he obtained developments of
-swiftness and scent that made his pack one good horses only of that day
-could keep up with. He prided himself much upon the blood of his best
-hounds, knew every one he had by name, and was familiar with its
-pedigree. Portraits of four of his favourites were painted on canvas and
-hung in the hall, with lines beneath expressive of their qualities, and
-the dates at which the paintings were made. The Right Hon. Lord Forester
-takes great care of these, as showing in what way the best dogs of that
-day differed from those of the present; and through his kindness we have
-been enabled to get drawings made, of which his lordship was pleased to
-approve, and we fancy there is no better judge living.
-
-Three of these are shown in our engraving at the head of this chapter.
-
-Pigmy, the bitch in the group nearest to the fox, is said to have been
-the smallest hound then known. Underneath the portrait are the following
-lines:—
-
- “Behold in miniature the foxhound keen,
- Thro’ rough and smooth a better ne’er was seen;
- As champion here the beauteous Pigmy stands,
- She challenges the globe, both home and foreign lands.”
-
- 1773.
-
-The one the farthest from the fox, is a white dog, Pilot; and underneath
-the painting is the following:—
-
- “Pilot rewards his master Rowley’s care,
- And swift as lightning skims the transient air;
- Famed for the chase, from cover always first,
- His tongue and sterne proclaimed an arrant burst.”
-
- 1774.
-
-The dog in front, with his head thrown up, is Childers; and underneath
-the picture are these lines:—
-
- “Sportsmen look up, old Childers’ picture view,
- His virtues many were, his failings few;
- Reynard with dread oft heard his awful name,
- And grateful Musters thus rewards his fame.”
-
- 1772.
-
-The following letters from Mr. Forester to Walter Stubbs, Esq., of
-Beckbury, afterwards of Stratford-on-Avon, where he became distinguished
-in connection with the Warwickshire Hunt, show how particular he was in
-his selection. It would seem that whilst admiring the Duke of Grafton’s
-hounds, which under the celebrated Tom Rose (“Honest old Tom,” as he was
-called), who used to say, “a man must breed his pack to suit his
-country,” gained some celebrity, he not unnaturally preferred his own.
-We give exact copies of two of his letters, they are so characteristic of
-the man. In all the letters we have seen he began with a considerable
-margin at the side of the paper, but always filled up the space with a
-postscript:—
-
- “WILLEY HALL, March 15, 1795.
-
- “DEAR SIR,
-
- “I beg leave to return you my hearty thanks for your civility in
- sending your servant to Apley with three couple of my hounds that run
- into your’s ye other day. Could I have returned compliment in
- sending ye three couple, that were missing from you, I should have
- been happy in ye discharge of that duty, so incumbent on every good
- sportsman. I hear you are fond of the Duke of Grafton’s hounds.
- It’s a sort I have ever admired, and have received favours from his
- Grace in that line, having been acquainted together from our infancy
- up; and on course, most likely to procure no very bad sort from his
- Grace’s own hands. I have sent you (as a present) a little bitch of
- ye Grafton kind, which I call Whymsy, lately taken up from quarters,
- and coming towards a year old. She’s rather under size for me, or
- otherwise I see not her fault. She’s, in my opinion, _a true
- Non-Pareil_. Your acceptance of her from me _now_, and any other
- hound of ye Grafton sort, that may come in near her size, will afford
- me singular satisfaction; as I make it a rule that no man who shows
- me civility shall find me wanting in making a proper return.
-
- “I am, dear sir,
-
- “Your obliged and very humble servant,
-
- “G. FORESTER.
-
- “P.S.—Next year Whymsy will be completely fit for entrance, but
- rather too young for _this_. The Duke’s hounds rather run small
- enough for this country. I see no other defect in them. They are
- invincibly stout, and perfectly just in every point that constitutes
- your real true fox hound.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- “WILLEY, April 19, 1795.
-
- “DEAR SIR,
-
- “Per bearer I send you yr couple of bitches I promised you. The
- largest is near a year old, the lesser about half a one, and if she
- be permitted to walk about your house this summer, will make you a
- clever bitch; further, she’s of Grace Grafton’s kind, as her father
- was got by his Grace’s Voucher, and bred by Mr. Pelham. Blood
- undeniable, _at a certainty_. As to yr dam of her, she’s of my old
- sort, and a bitch of blood and merit. The other bitch I bred also,
- _to ye test_ of my judgment, from a dog of Pelham’s. I call her
- handsome in my eye, and not far off _being a beauty_. Her dam was
- got by Noel’s famous Maltster, out of a daughter of Mr. Corbet, of
- Sundorn, named Trojan. I wish you luck and success with your hounds,
- and when I can serve you _to effect_, at any time, you may rely on my
- faithful remembrance of you.
-
- “I remain, dear sir,
-
- “Your very humble servant,
-
- “G. FORESTER.
-
- “P.S.—The largest bitch is named Musick, the lesser is named Gaudy.
-
- “P.S.—We have had good sport lately; and _one particular_ run we had,
- upon Monday last, of two hours and one quarter (from scent to view),
- without one single interruption of any kind whatever.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-THE WILLEY LONG RUNS.
-
-
-The Willey Long Runs—Dibdin’s Fifty Miles no Figure of Speech—From the
-Clee Hills to the Wrekin—The Squire’s Breakfast—Phœbe Higgs—Doggrel
-Ditties—Old Tinker—Moody’s Horse falls Dead—Run by Moonlight.
-
- “Ye that remember well old Savory’s call,
- With pleasure view’d her, as she pleased you all;
- In distant countries still her fame resounds,
- The huntsmen’s glory and the pride of hounds.”
-
- 1773.
-
- [Picture: Savory]
-
-THE portrait at the head of this chapter is from a carefully drawn copy
-of a painting at Willey of a favourite hound of the Squire’s, just a
-hundred years ago.
-
-Dibdin, in his song of Tom Moody, speaks of “a country well known to him
-fifty miles round;” and this was no mere figure of speech, as the hunting
-ground of the Willey Squire extended over the greater part of the forest
-lands we have described. There were fewer packs of hounds in Shropshire
-then, and the Squire had a clear field extending from the Clee Hills to
-the Needle’s Eye on the Wrekin, through which, on one remarkable
-occasion, the hounds are reported to have followed their fox. The Squire
-sometimes went beyond these notable landmarks, the day never appearing to
-be too long for him.
-
-Four o’clock on a hunting morning usually found him preparing the inner
-man with a breakfast of underdone beef, with eggs beaten up in brandy to
-fill the interstices; and thus fortified he was ready for a fifty miles
-run. He was what Nimrod would have called, “a good rough rider” over the
-stiff Shropshire clays, and he generally managed to keep up with the best
-to the last;
-
- “Nicking and craning he deemed a crime,
- And nobody rode harder perhaps in his time.”
-
-He could scarcely “Top a flight of rails,” “Skim ridge and furrow,” or,
-charge a fence, however, with Phœbe Higgs, who sometimes accompanied him.
-
-Phœbe, who was a complete Diana, and would take hazardous leaps,
-beckoning Mr. Forester to follow her extraordinary feats, led the Squire
-to wager heavy sums that in leaping she would beat any woman in England.
-With Phœbe and Moody, and a few choice spirits of the same stamp on a
-scent, there was no telling to what point between the two extremities of
-the Severn it might carry them. They might turn-up some few miles from
-its source or its estuary, and not be heard of at Willey for a week. One
-long persevering run into Radnorshire, in which a few plucky riders
-continued the pace for some distance and then left the field to the
-Squire and Moody, with one or two others, who kept the heads of their
-favourites in the direction Reynard was leading, passed into a tradition;
-but the brush appears not to have been fairly won, a gamekeeper having
-sent a shot through the leg of the “varmint” as he saw him taking shelter
-in a churchyard—an event commemorated in some doggrel lines still
-current.
-
-Very romantic tales are told of long runs by a superannuated servant of
-the Foresters, old Simkiss, who had them from his father; but we forbear
-troubling the reader with more than an outline of one of these, that of
-Old Tinker. Old Tinker was the name of a fox, with more than the usual
-cunning of his species, that had often proved more than a match for the
-hounds; and one morning the Squire, having made up his mind for a run,
-repaired to Tickwood, where this fox was put up. On hearing the dogs in
-full cry the Squire vowed he would “Follow the devil this time to hell’s
-doors but he would catch him.” Reynard, it appears, went off in the
-direction of the Clee Hills; but took a turn, and made for Thatcher’s
-Coppice; from there to the Titterstone Hill, and then back to Tickwood,
-where the hounds again ousted him, and over the same ground again. On
-arriving at the Brown Clee Hills the huntsman’s horse was so blown that
-he took Moody’s, sending Tom with his own to the nearest inn to get
-spiced ale and a feed. By this time the fox was on his way back, and the
-horse on which Tom was seated no sooner heard the horn sounding than he
-dashed away and joined in the chase. Ten couples of fresh hounds were
-now set loose at the kennels in Willey Hollow, and these again turned the
-fox in the direction of Aldenham, but all besides Moody were now far
-behind, and his horse fell dead beneath him. The dogs, too, had had
-enough; they refused to go further, and Old Tinker once more beat his
-pursuers, but only to die in a drain on the Aldenham estate, where he was
-found a week afterwards.
-
- “A braver choice of dauntless spirits never
- Dash’d after hound,”
-
-it is said, and to commemorate one of the good things of this kind, a
-long home-spun ditty was wont to be sung in public-houses by tenants on
-the estate, the first few lines of which were as follows:—
-
- “Salopians every one,
- Of high and low degree,
- Who take delight in fox-hunting,
- Come listen unto me.
-
- “A story true I’ll tell to you
- Concerning of a fox,
- How they hunted him on Tickwood side
- O’er Benthall Edge and rocks.
-
- “Says Reynard, ‘I’ll take you o’er to Willey Park
- Above there, for when we fairly get aground
- I value neither huntsmen all
- Nor Squire Forester’s best hound.
-
- “‘I know your dogs are stout and good,
- That they’ll run me like the wind!
- But I’ll tread lightly on the land,
- And leave no scent behind.’”
-
-Other verses describe the hunt, and Reynard, on being run to earth,
-asking for quarter on condition that
-
- “He will both promise and fulfil,
- Neither ducks nor geese to kill,
- Nor lambs upon the hill;”
-
-and how bold Ranter, with little faith in his promise, “seized him by the
-neck and refused to let him go.” It is one of many specimens of a like
-kind still current among old people. An old man, speaking of Mr. Stubbs,
-for whom, he remarked, the day was never too long, and who at its close
-would sometimes urge his brother sportsmen to draw for a fresh fox, with
-the reminder that there was a moon to kill by, said,
-
- “One of the rummiest things my father, who hunted with the Squire,
- told me, was a run by moonlight. I’m not sure, but I think Mr.
- Dansey, Mr. Childe, and Mr. Stubbs, if not Mr. Meynell, were at the
- Hall. They came sometimes, and sometimes the Squire visited them.
- Howsomeever, there were three or four couples of fresh hounds at the
- kennels, and it was proposed to have an after-dinner run. They dined
- early, and, as nigh as I can tell, it was three o’clock when they
- left the Hall, after the Beggarlybrook fox. Mind that was a fox,
- that was—he was. He was a dark brown one, and a cunning beggar too,
- that always got off at the edge of a wood, by running first along a
- wall and then leaping part of the way down an old coal pit, which had
- run in at the sides. Well, they placed three couples of hounds near
- to this place in readiness, and the hark-in having been given, the
- gorse soon began to shake, and a hound or two were seen outside, and
- amongst them old Pilot, who now and then took a turn outside, and
- turned in, lashing his stern, and giving the right token. ‘Have at
- him!’ shouted one; ‘Get ready!’ said another; ‘Hold hard a bit, we
- shall have him, for a hundred!’ shouted the Squire. Then comes a
- tally-ho, said my father, and off they go; every hound out of cover,
- sterns up, carrying a beautiful head, and horses all in a straight
- line along the open, with the scent breast high. Reynard making
- straight for the tongue of the coppice, finds himself circumvented,
- and fresh hounds being let loose, he makes for Wenlock Walton as
- though he was going to give ’em an airing on the hill-top.
-
- “‘But, headed and foiled, his first point he forsook,
- And merrily led them a dance o’er the brook.’
-
- “Some lime burners coming from work turned him, and, leaving Wenlock
- on the left, he made for Tickwood. It was now getting dark, and the
- ground being awkward, one or two were down. The Squire swore he
- would have the varmint out of Tickwood; and the hounds working well,
- and old Trumpeter’s tongue being heard on the lower side, one
- challenged the other, and they soon got into line in the hollow, the
- fox leading. Stragglers got to the scent, and off they went by the
- burnt houses, where the Squire’s horse rolled over into a sand-pit.
- The fox made for the Severn, but turned in the direction of Buildwas,
- and was run into in the moonlight, among the ivied ruins of the
- Abbey.”
-
- [Picture: Buildwas Abbey]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-BACHELOR’S HALL.
-
-
-Its quaint Interior—An Old Friend’s Memory—Crabbe’s Peter at Ilford
-Hall—Singular Time-pieces—A Meet at Hangster’s Gate—Jolly Doings—Dibdin
-at Dinner—Broseley Pipes—Parson Stephens in his Shirt—The Parson’s Song.
-
-WE have already described the exterior of the Hall and its approaches.
-In the interior of the building the same air of antiquity reigned. Its
-capacious chimney-pieces, and rooms wainscoted with oak to the ceiling,
-are familiar from the descriptions of an old friend, whose memory was
-still fresh and green as regards events and scenes of the time when the
-Hall stood entire, and who when a boy was not an unfrequent visitor.
-Like Crabbe’s Peter among the rooms and galleries of Ilford Hall,
-
- “His vast delight was mixed with equal awe,
- There was such magic in the things he saw;
- Portraits he passed, admiring, but with pain
- Turned from some objects, nor would look again.”
-
-Against the walls were grim old portraits of the Squire’s predecessors of
-the Weld and Forester lines, with stiff-starched frills, large vests, and
-small round hats of Henry VII.’s time; others of the fashions of earlier
-periods by distinguished painters, together with later productions of the
-pencil by less famous artists, representing dogs, cattle, and favourite
-horses. In the great hall were horns and antlers, and other trophies of
-the chase, ancient guns which had done good execution in their time, a
-bustard, and rare species of birds of a like kind. Here and there were
-ancient time-pieces, singular in construction and quaint in contrivance,
-one of which, on striking the hours of noon and midnight, set in motion
-figures with trumpets and various other instruments, which gave forth
-their appropriate sounds. A great lamp—hoisted to its place by a thick
-rope—lighted up that portion of the hall into which opened the doors of
-the dining and other rooms, and from which a staircase led to the
-gallery.
-
-A meet in the neighbourhood of Willey was usually well attended: first,
-because of the certainty of good sport; secondly, because such sport was
-often preceded, or often followed by receptions at the Hall, so famous
-for its cheer. Jolly were the doings on these occasions; songs were
-sung, racy tales were told, old October ale flowed freely, and the jovial
-merits and household virtues of Willey were fully up to the mark of the
-good old times. The Squire usually dined about four o’clock, and his
-guests occasionally came booted and spurred, ready for the hunt the
-following day, and rarely left the festive board ’neath the hospitable
-roof of the Squire until they mounted their coursers in the court-yard.
-
-Dibdin, from materials gathered on the spot, has, in his own happy
-manner, drawn representations of these gatherings. His portraits of
-horses and dogs, and his description of the social habits of the Squire
-and his friends are faithfully set forth in his song of “Bachelor’s
-Hall:”—
-
- “To Bachelor’s Hall we good fellows invite
- To partake of the chase which makes up our delight,
- We’ve spirits like fire, and of health such a stock,
- That our pulse strikes the seconds as true as a clock.
- Did you see us you’d swear that we mount with a grace,
- That Diana had dubb’d some new gods of the chase.
- Hark away! hark away! all nature looks gay,
- And Aurora with smiles ushers in the bright day.
-
- “Dick Thickset came mounted upon a fine black,
- A finer fleet gelding ne’er hunter did back;
- Tom Trig rode a bay full of mettle and bone,
- And gaily Bob Buckson rode on a roan;
- But the horse of all horses that rivalled the day
- Was the Squire’s Neck-or-Nothing, and that was a grey.
- Hark away! &c.
-
- “Then for hounds there was Nimble who well would climb rocks,
- And Cocknose a good one at finding a fox;
- Little Plunge, like a mole, who would ferret and search,
- And beetle-brow’d Hawk’s Eye so dead at a lurch:
- Young Sly-looks that scents the strong breeze from the south,
- And Musical Echo with his deep mouth.
- Hark away! &c.
-
- “Our horses, thus all of the very best blood,
- ’Tis not likely you’d easily find such a stud;
- Then for foxhounds, our opinion for thousands we’ll back,
- That all England throughout can’t produce such a pack.
- Thus having described you our dogs, horses, and crew,
- Away we set off, for our fox is in view.
- Hark away! &c.
-
- “Sly Reynard’s brought home, while the horn sounds the call,
- And now you’re all welcome to Bachelor’s Hall;
- The savoury sirloin gracefully smokes on the board,
- And Bacchus pours wine from his sacred hoard.
- Come on, then, do honour to this jovial place,
- And enjoy the sweet pleasures that have sprung from the chase.
- Hark away! hark away! while our spirits are gay,
- Let us drink to the joys of next meeting day.”
-
-On the occasion of Dibdin’s visit there were at the Hall more than the
-usual local notables, and Parson Stephens was amongst them. As a treat
-intended specially for Dibdin, the second course at dinner consisted of
-Severn fish, such as we no longer have in the river. There were eels
-cooked in various ways, flounders, perch, trout, carp, grayling, pike,
-and at the head of the table that king of Severn fish, a salmon.
-
-_Dibdin_: “This is a treat, Squire, and I can readily understand now why
-the Severn should be called the ‘Queen of Rivers;’ it certainly deserves
-the distinction for its fish, if for nothing else.”
-
-_Mr. Forester_: “Do you know, Dibdin, that fellow Jessop, the engineer,
-set on by those Gloucester fellows, wants to put thirteen or fourteen
-bars or weirs in the river between here and Gloucester; why, it would
-shut out every fish worth eating.”
-
-“What could be his object?” asked Dibdin.
-
-“Oh, he believes, like Brindley, that rivers were made to feed canals
-with, and his backers—the Gloucester gentlemen, and the Stafford and
-Worcester Canal Company—say, to make the river navigable at all seasons
-up to Coalbrookdale; but my belief is that it is intended to crush what
-bit of trade there yet remains on the river here, and to give them a
-monopoly in the carrying trade, for our bargemen would be taxed, whilst
-their carriers would be free, or nearly so.”
-
-“We beat them, though,” said Mr. Pritchard.
-
-“So we did,” added the Squire, “but we had a hard job: begad, I thought
-our watermen had pretty well primed me when I went up to see Pitt on the
-subject; but I had not been with him five minutes before I found he knew
-far more about the river than I did:
-
- “‘I am no orator, as Brutus is,
- But, as you know me all, a plain and honest man.’”
-
-_Several voices_: “Bravo, Squire.”
-
-_To Stephens_: “Will you take a flounder?—‘flat as a flounder,’ they say.
-I know you have a sympathy with flats, if not a liking for them.”
-
-“The Broseley colliers made a flat of him when they dragged his own pond
-for the fish he was so grateful for,” said Hinton.
-
-The laugh went against the parson, who somehow missed his share of a
-venison pasty, which was a favourite of his. He had been helped to a
-slice from a haunch which stood in the centre of the table, and had had a
-cut out of a saddle of mutton at one end, but he missed his favourite
-dish.
-
-“Is it true,” inquired Dibdin, looking round at roast, and boiled, and
-pasties, “what we hear in London, that there is very considerable
-_scarcity_ and _distress_ in the country?”—(general laughter). This
-brought up questions of political economy, excess of population,
-stock-jobbing, usury, gentlemen taking their money out of the country and
-aping Frenchified, stick-frog fashions on their return. The latter was a
-favourite subject with the Squire, who could not see, he said, what
-amusement a gentleman could find out of the country equal to foxhunting,
-and gave him an opportunity of introducing his favourite theory of taxing
-heavily those who did so. The discussion had lasted over the fifth
-course, when more potent liquors were put upon the table, together with
-Broseley pipes. The production of the latter was a temptation Stephens
-could not resist of telling the story of the Squire purchasing a box, for
-which he paid a high price, in London, and finding, on showing them to
-one of his tenants, as models, that they were made upon his own estate.
-The laugh went against the Squire, who gave indication, by a merry
-twinkle in his eye, that he would take an opportunity of being quits.
-Discussions ensued upon the virtues and evils of tobacco, and the refusal
-of Parliament to allow a census to be taken; one of the guests expressing
-a belief, founded upon a statement put forth by a Dr. Price, that the
-population of England and Wales was under five millions, or less, in
-fact, than it was in the reign of Queen Elizabeth. “Which,” added the
-Squire, “is not correct, according to poor-law and other statistics
-produced before Parliament, which show that there are from three to four
-births to one death.”
-
-_Mr. Whitmore_: “I can readily believe that this is true in your parishes
-of Willey and Barrow, Forester, where a certain person’s amours, like
-Jupiter’s, are too numerous to mention.” (Laughter, in which the Squire
-joined.)
-
-_Mr. Forester_: “A truce to statistics and politics, let us have Larry
-Palmer, our local Incledon, in to sing us some of Dibdin’s songs.”
-(General approbation.)
-
-And Larry, who was blind, and who was purposely kept in ignorance of
-Dibdin being present, then gave in succession several of what Incledon
-called his “sheet-anchors,” including “The Quaker,” “My Trim-built
-Wherry,” “Tom Bowling,” &c., with an effect and force which made the
-author exclaim that he never heard greater justice done to his
-compositions, and led to an exhibition of feeling which made the old hall
-ring again.
-
-Dibdin’s health was next given, with high eulogiums as to the effect of
-his animating effusions on the loyalty, valour, and patriotism which at
-that time blazed so intensely in the bosom of the British tar.
-
-Dibdin, in acknowledging the toast, related incidents he had himself
-several times witnessed at sea; and how deeply indebted he felt to men
-like Incledon and others, adding that the inspiration which moved him was
-strongly in his mind from his earliest remembrance. It lay, he said, a
-quiet hidden spark which, for a time, found nothing hard enough to vivify
-it; but which, coming in contact with proper materials, expanded.
-
-“Tell Dibdin of Old Tinker,” cried Childe, of Kinlet.
-
-The tale of Old Tinker was given, the last bit of court scandal
-discussed, and some tales told of the King, with whom Mr. Forester was on
-terms of friendship, and the festivities of the evening had extended into
-the small hours of the morning, when, during a brief pause in the general
-mirth, a tremendous crash was heard, and the Squire rushing out to see
-what was the matter, met one of the servants, who said the sound came
-from the larder, whither Mr. Forester repaired. Looking in, he saw
-Stephens _in his shirt_, and, with presence of mind, he turned the key,
-and went back to his company to consider how he should turn the incident
-to account.
-
-It appears that Stephens had been several hours in bed, when, waking up
-from his first sleep, he fancied he should like a dip into the venison
-pie, and forthwith had gone down into the larder, where, in searching for
-the pie, he knocked down the dish, with one or two more. The Squire was
-not long in making up his mind how he should turn the matter to account;
-he declared that it was time to retire, but before doing so, he said,
-they must have a country dance, and insisted upon the whole household
-being roused to take part in it. There was no resisting the wishes of
-the host; the whole of the house assembled, and formed sides for a dance
-in the hall, through which Stephens must necessarily pass in going to his
-room. Whilst this was taking place Mr. Forester slipped the key into the
-door, and going behind Stephens, unkennelled his fox, making the parson
-run the gauntlet, in his shirt, amid an indescribable scene of merriment
-and confusion!
-
-The very Rev. Dr. Stephens had paid for his nocturnal escapade, one would
-have thought, sufficiently to satisfy the most exacting. But the Squire
-and his guests, just ripe for fun, insisted that he should dress and come
-down into the dining-room to finish the night. The further penalty, too,
-was inflicted of making him join in the chorus of the old song, sung with
-boundless approbation by one of the company, beginning—
-
- “A parson once had a remarkable foible
- Of loving good liquor far more than his Bible;
- His neighbours all said he was much less perplext
- In handling a tankard than in handling a text.
- Derry down, down, down, derry down.”
-
-The gist of which lies in the parson’s reply to his wife, who, when the
-pigs set his ale running, and he stormed and swore, reminded him of his
-laudation of the patience of Job, whereupon he denies the application,
-with the remark—
-
- “Job never had such a cask in his life.”
-
- “The hunting in the Cheviot,”
-
-now called “Chevy Chase,” succeeded, and the night closed with Dibdin
-singing his last new song, to music of his own composing, with a jolly,
-rollicking chorus by the whole company.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-THE WILLEY RECTOR, AND OTHER OF THE SQUIRE’S FRIENDS.
-
-
-The Squire’s Friends and the Willey Rector more fully
-drawn—Turner—Wilkinson—Harris—The Rev. Michael Pye Stephens—His
-Relationship to the Squire—In the Commission of the Peace—The Parson and
-the Poacher—A Fox-hunting Christening.
-
-BESIDES professional sportsmen who were wont to make the Willey
-roof-trees echo with their shouts, the Squire usually assembled round his
-table, on Sundays, the leading men of the neighbourhood, each of some
-special note or importance in his own district, who formed at Willey a
-sort of local parliament. Among these were brother magistrates, tenants,
-and members of the clerical, legal, and medical professions. Thomas
-Turner, a county magistrate, and the chairman of a court of equity, to
-establish which the Squire assisted him in obtaining an Act of
-Parliament, to whom was dedicated a sermon delivered before the justices
-of the peace by the Rev. L. Booker, LL.D., was one of these. Mr. Turner
-carried on the now famous Caughley works, where he succeeded in
-producing, by means of English and French workmen, china of superior
-merit, which, like the old Wedgwood productions, is now highly prized by
-connoisseurs. He was the first producer of the “willow pattern,” still
-so much in demand, and his general knowledge gave him great influence.
-The Squire paid occasional visits to his elegant chateau at Caughley, and
-gave him one of the two portraits of himself which he had painted, a
-picture now in possession of the widow of Mr. Turner’s son, George, of
-Scarborough, in which the Squire is represented—as in our engraving—in
-his scarlet hunting coat, with a fox’s brush in his hand—a facsimile of
-the one from which our woodcut is taken. Another, but only an occasional
-visitor at the Hall, was John Wilkinson, “the Father of the Iron Trade,”
-as he is now called, who then lived at Broseley, and who was one of the
-most remarkable men of the past century. He was for some years a tenant
-of the Squire, and carried on the Willey furnaces. He was also a friend
-of Boulton and Watt, and was the first who succeeded in boring their
-cylinders even all through; he was the first, too, who taught the French
-the art of boring cannon from the solid. He built and launched at Willey
-Wharf the first iron barge—the precursor of all iron vessels on the
-Thames and Tyne, and of the Great Eastern, as well as of our modern
-iron-clads. Mr. Harries of Benthall, Mr. Hinton of Wenlock, Mr. Bryan of
-The Tuckies, and Mr. John Cox Morris, farmer of Willey, who took the
-first silver cup given by the Agricultural Society of Shropshire for the
-best cultivated farm, and who had still further distinguished himself in
-the estimation of sportsmen by a remarkable feat of horsemanship for a
-large amount, were among those who visited the Squire.
-
-But a more frequent guest at the Hall and at the covert-side was the
-Willey Rector, the Rev. Michael Pye Stephens, whose family was related to
-that of the Welds, through the Slaneys. The Rector was therefore, as
-already shown, on familiar terms with the Squire, and the more so as he
-was able to tell a good tale and sing a good song. The rural clergy a
-century ago were great acquisitions at the tables of country squires, and
-were not unfrequently among the most enthusiastic lovers of the chase.
-It was by no means an uncommon thing, forty years ago, to see the horse
-of the late Rector of Stockton, brother to the Squire of Apley, waiting
-for him at the church door at Bonnigale, which living he also held, that
-he might start immediately service was over for Melton Mowbray. His
-clerk, too, old Littlehales, who to more secular professions added that
-of village tailor, has often told how his master, being sorely in need of
-a pair of hunting breeches for Melton, undertook to close the church one
-Sunday in order to give him the opportunity of making them, with the
-remark, “Oh, d—n the church, you stop at home and make the breeches.”
-But the Rector of Willey was by no means so enthusiastic as a sportsman.
-He was not the
-
- “Clerical fop, half jockey and half clerk,
- The tandem-driving Tommy of a town,
- Disclaiming book, omniscient of a horse,
- Impatient till September comes again,
- Eloquent only of the pretty girl
- With whom he danced last night!”
-
-Neither did he resemble those more bilious members of the profession of
-modern times—
-
- “Who spit their puny spite on harmless recreation.”
-
-On the contrary, he held what it may be difficult to gainsay, that
-amusements calculated to strengthen the frame and to improve the health,
-if fitting for a gentleman, were not unfitting for a clergyman. His
-presence, at any rate, was welcomed by neighbouring squires in the field,
-as “Hark in! Hark in! Hark! Yoi over boys!” sounded merrily on the
-morning air; and as he sat mounted on the Squire’s thorough-bred it would
-have been difficult to have detected anything of the divine; the
-clerico-waistcoat and black single-breasted outer garment having given
-place to more fitting garb. Fond of field sports himself, he willingly
-associated with his neighbours and joined in their pastimes and
-amusements. A man who was a frequent guest at the Hall, who received
-letters from the Squire when in London, and who would take a long pipe
-now and then between his lips, and moisten his clay from a pewter tankard
-round a clean-scoured table in a road-side inn, was naturally of
-considerable importance in his own immediate district.
-
-The Rector of Willey had, we believe, been brought up to the legal
-profession, he had also a smattering knowledge of medicine, which enabled
-him to render at times service to his parishioners, who called him Dr.
-Stephens. He was in the commission of the peace, too, for the borough;
-and so completely did the characters combine—so perfectly did law and
-divinity dove-tail into each other—that he might have been taken as a
-personification of either.
-
- “Mild were his doctrines, and not one discourse
- But gained in softness what it lost in force.”
-
-Without stinginess he partook of the good things heaven to man supplies;
-he was “full fed;” his face shone with good-humour, and he was as fond of
-a joke as of the Squire’s old port. As a justice of the peace he was no
-regarder of persons, providing they equally brought grist to his mill; he
-had no objection to litigants smoothing the way to a decision by
-presents, such as a piece of pork, a pork pie, or a dish of fish; once or
-twice, however, he found the fish to have been caught the previous night
-out of his own pond. Next to a weakness for fish was one for
-knee-breeches and top-boots, which in the course of much riding required
-frequent renewal; and, ’tis said, that seated in his judicial chair, he
-has had the satisfaction of seeing a pair of new chalked tops projecting
-alike from plaintiff’s and defendant’s pockets. In which case, with
-spectacles raised and head thrown back, as though to look above the petty
-details of the plaint, after sundry hums and haws, with inquiries after
-the crops between, and each one telling some news about his neighbour, he
-would find the evidence on both sides equally balanced and suggest a
-compromise! A good tale is told of the justice wanting a hare for a
-friend, and employing a notorious poacher to procure one. The man
-brought it in a bag. “You’ve brought a hare, then?” “I have, Mr.
-Stephens, and a fine one too,” replied the other, as he turned it out,
-puss flying round the room, and over the table amongst the papers like a
-mad thing. “Kill her! kill her!” shouted Stephens. “No, by G—,” replied
-the poacher, who knew that by doing so he would bring himself within the
-law, “you kill her; I’ve had enough trouble to catch her.” After two or
-three runs the justice succeeded in hitting her on the head with a ruler,
-and thus brought himself within the power of the poacher.
-
-The parson was sometimes out of temper, and then he swore, but this was
-not often; still his friends were wont to joke him on the following
-domestic little incident:—His services were suddenly in demand on one
-occasion when, a full clerical costume being required, he found his bands
-not ready, and he set to work to iron them himself. He was going on
-swimmingly as he thought, and had only left the iron to go to the bottom
-of the stairs, with a “D—n you, madam,” to his wife, who had not yet come
-down; “d—n you, I can do without you,” when, on returning, he found his
-bands scorched and discoloured.
-
-A foxhunter’s christening in which the Willey Rector played a part on one
-occasion is too good to lose. He was the guest of Squire B—t, a
-well-known foxhunter, who at one time hunted the Shifnal country with his
-own hounds. A very jovial company from that side had assembled, and it
-was determined to celebrate a new arrival in the Squire’s family, and to
-take advantage of the presence of the parson to christen the little
-stranger. The thing was soon settled, and Stephens proceeded in due form
-with the ceremony necessary to give to the fair-haired innocent a name by
-which it should be known to the world. The conversation of the company
-had of course been upon their favourite sport, a good many bottles of
-fine sherry and crusty old port had been drunk, and under their
-influence, it was settled that one of the company should give the child a
-name in which it should be baptized, let it be what it would. Stephens
-having taken the child in his hands, in due form asked the name; it was
-given immediately as Foxhunting Moll B—t! With this name the little
-innocent grew up, and finally became the wife of Squire H—s; with this
-name she of course signed all legal documents—first, as Foxhunting Moll
-B—t, and, secondly, as Foxhunting Moll H—s.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER, XI.
-THE WILLEY WHIPPER-IN.
-
-
-The Willey Whipper-in—Tom’s Start in Life—His Pluck and Perseverance—Up
-Hill and down Dale—Adventures with the Buff-coloured Chaise—His own Wild
-Favourite—His Drinking-horn—Who-who-hoop—Good Temper—Never
-Married—Hangster’s Gate—Old Coaches—Tom Gone to Earth—Three View Halloos
-at the Grave—Old Boots.
-
- * * * * *
-
- “The huntsman’s self relented to a grin,
- And rated him almost a whipper-in.”
-
- [Picture: Moody’s Horn, Trencher, Cap, Saddle, &c.]
-
-TOM MOODY never rose above his post of whipper-in, but he had the honour
-of being at the top of his profession; and before proceeding further with
-our sketch of Squire Forester it may be well to dwell for a time upon
-this well-known character, whom Dibdin immortalised in his song, so
-familiar to all sportsmen. He was in fact, in many respects, what Mr.
-Forester had made him: Nature supplied the material, and Squire Forester
-did the rest. Tom had the advantage of entering the Squire’s service
-when a youth. Like most boys of that period, he had been thrown a good
-deal upon his own resources, a state of things not unfavourable to a
-development of self-reliance, and a degree of humble heroism, such as
-made life wholesome. Tom had no opportunities of obtaining a
-national-school education, nor of carrying away the prize now sometimes
-awarded to the best behaved lad in the village. But in the unorganized
-school of common intercourse, common suffering, and interest, was
-developed a pluck and daring which led him to perform a feat on the bare
-back of a crop-eared cob that gave birth to the after events of his life.
-It appears that he was apprenticed to a Mr. Adams, a maltster, who had
-sent him to deliver malt at the Hall. On his return he was seen by the
-Squire trying his horse at a gate, and repeating the attempt till he
-compelled him to leap it. It is said that—
-
- “He who excels in what we prize,
- Appears a hero in our eyes.”
-
- [Picture: Gone to earth]
-
-And Squire Forester, struck by his pluck and perseverance, made up his
-mind to secure him. He sent to his master to ask if he were willing to
-give him up, adding that he would like to see him at the Hall. The
-message alarmed the mother, who was a widow, for, knowing her son’s
-froward nature, she at once imagined Tom had got into trouble. On
-learning the true state of the case, however, and thinking she saw the
-way open to Tom’s promotion, she consented to the change in his
-condition. His master, too, agreed to give him up, and Tom was
-transferred to the Willey stables, where, from his good nature and other
-agreeable qualities, he became a favourite, and from his daring courage
-quite a sort of little hero. It was Tom’s duty to go on errands from the
-Hall, and once outside the park, feeling he had his liberty, he did not
-fail to make use of opportunities for displaying his skill. In riding,
-it was generally up hill and down dale, at neck-or-nothing speed,
-stopping neither for gate nor hedge—his horse tearing away at a rate
-which would have given him three or four somersaults at a slip. He
-seldom turned his horse’s head if he could help it, and if he went down
-he was soon up again. Extraordinary tales are told of Tom’s adventures
-with the Squire’s buff-coloured chaise, in taking company from the Hall,
-and in fetching visitors from Shifnal, then the nearest place to reach a
-coach. Having a spite at a pike-keeper, who offended him by not opening
-the gate quick enough, “Tom tanselled his hide,” and resolved the next
-time he went that way not to trouble him. Driving up to the gate, he
-gave a spring, and touching his horse on the flanks, went straight over
-without starting a stitch or breaking a buckle. On another occasion he
-tried the same trick, but failed; the horse went clean over, but the gig
-caught the top rail, and Tom was thrown on his back. “That just sarves
-yo right,” said the pike-keeper. “So it does, and now we are quits,”
-added Tom; and they were friends ever after. This, however, did not
-prevent Tom trying it again; not that he wanted to defraud the pike-man,
-whom he generally paid another time, but for “the fun of the thing.”
-Indeed, with his old wild favourite, with or without the buff-coloured
-gig, there were no risks he was not prepared to run. “Ay, ay, sir,” said
-one of our aged informants, “you should have seen him on his horse, a
-mad, wild animal no one but Tom could ride. He could ride him though,
-with his eyes shut, savage as he was, and on a good road he would pass
-milestones as the clock measured minutes; but give him the green meadows,
-and Lord how I have seen him whip along the turf!” “He was like a winged
-Mercury, making light both of stone walls and five-feet six-inch gates.
-He was a regular centaur, for he and his horse seemed one,” said another.
-“I cannot tell you the height of his horse,” said a third, “but he was a
-big un; whilst Tom himself was a little one, and he used to be on
-horse-back all day long. If he got into the saddle in a morning he
-rarely left it till night.”
-
-In giving the qualifications necessary for one aspiring to the post of
-whipper-in, a well-known authority on sporting subjects has laid it down
-that he should be light (not too young), with a quick eye and still
-quicker ear, and that he should be—what in fact he generally is—fond of
-the sport, or he seldom succeeds in his profession. Now Moody, or Muddy,
-as his name was pronounced, answered to these conditions.
-
- “His conversation had no other course
- Than that presented to his simple view
- Of what concerned his saddle, groom, or horse;
- Beyond this theme he little cared or knew:
- Tell him of beauty and harmonious sounds,
- He’d show his mare, and talk about his hounds.”
-
-He was what was called _Foxy_ all over—in his language, dress, and
-associations. He wore a pin with a knob, something smaller than a
-tea-saucer, of Caughley china, with the head of a fox upon it; and
-everything nearest his person, so far as he could manage it, had
-something to put him in mind of his favourite sport. His bed-room walls
-were hung with sporting prints, and on his mantelpiece were more
-substantial trophies of the hunt—as the brush of some remarkable victim
-of the pack, his boots and spurs, &c. His famous drinking-horn, which we
-have engraved together with his trencher in the trophy at the head of
-this chapter, was equally embellished with a representation of a hunt,
-very elaborately carved with the point of a pen-knife. At the top is a
-wind-mill, and below a number of horsemen and a lady, well mounted, in
-full chase, and with hounds in full cry after a fox, which is seen on the
-lower part of the horn. A fox’s brush forms the finis. The date upon
-the horn, which in size and shape resembles those in use in the mansions
-of the gentry in past centuries when hospitality was dispensed in their
-halls with such a free and generous hand, is 1663. It is a relic still
-treasured by members of the Wheatland Hunt, who look back to the time
-when the shrill voice of Moody cheered the pack over the heavy
-Wheatlands; and together with his cap, of which we also give a
-representation, is often made to do duty at annual social gatherings.
-
-Tom was a small eight or nine stone man, with roundish face, marked with
-small pox, and a pair of eyes that twinkled with good humour. He
-possessed great strength as well as courage and resolution, and displayed
-an equanimity of temper which made him many friends. The huntsman was
-John Sewell, and under him he performed his duties in a way so
-satisfactory to his master and all who hunted with him, as to be deemed
-the best whipper-in in England. None, it was said, could bring up the
-tail end of a pack, or sustain the burst of a long chase, and be in at
-the death with every hound well up, like Tom. His plan was to allow his
-hounds their own cast without lifting, unless they showed wildness; and
-if young hounds dwelt on a stale drag behind the pack he whipped them on
-to those on the right line. He never aspired to be more than “a
-serving-man;” he wished, however, to be considered “a good whipper-in,”
-and his fame as such spread through the country. There was not a spark
-of envy in his composition, and he was one of the happiest fellows in the
-universe. The lessons he seemed to have learnt, and which appeared to
-have sunk deepest into his unsophisticated nature, were those of being
-honest and of ordering himself “lowly and reverently towards his
-betters,” for whom he had a reverence which grew profound if they
-happened to have added to their qualifications of being good sportsmen
-that of being “_Parliament_ men.”
-
-Tom’s voice was something extraordinary, and on one occasion when he had
-fallen into an old pit shaft, which had given way on the sides, and could
-not get out, it saved him. His halloo to the dogs brought him
-assistance, and he was extricated. It was capable of wonderful
-modulations, and to hear him rehearse the sports of the day in the big
-roomy servants’ kitchen at the Hall, and give his tally-ho, or
-who-who-hoop, was considered a treat. On one occasion, when Tom was in
-better trim than usual, the old housekeeper is said to have remarked,
-“La! Tom, you have given the who-who-hoop, as you call it, so very loud
-and strong to-day that you have set the cups and saucers a dancing;” to
-which a gentleman, who had purposely placed himself within hearing,
-replied, “I am not at all surprised—his voice is music itself. I am
-astonished and delighted, and hardly know how to praise it enough. I
-never heard anything so attractive and inspiring before in the whole
-course of my life; its tones are as fine and mellow as a French horn.”
-
-When Squire Forester gave up hunting, the hounds went to Aldenham, as
-trencher hounds; the farmers of the district agreeing to keep them. They
-were collected the night before the hunt, fed after a day’s sport, and
-dismissed at a crack of the whip, each dog going off to the farm at which
-he was kept. But it was a great trial to Tom to see them depart; and he
-begged to be allowed to keep an old favourite, with which he might often
-have been seen sunning himself in the yard. He continued with his master
-from first to last, with the exception of the short time he lived with
-Mr. Corbet, when the Sundorne roof-trees were wont to ring to the toast
-of “Old Trojan,” and when the elder Sebright was his fellow-whip.
-
-Like the old Squire, Tom never married, although, like his master, he had
-a leaning towards the softer sex, and spent much of his time in the
-company of his lady friends. One he made his banker, and the presents
-made to him might have amounted to something considerable if he had taken
-care of them. In lodging them in safe keeping he usually begged that
-they might be let out to him a shilling a time; but he made so many calls
-and pleaded so earnestly and availingly for more, and was so constant a
-visitor at Hangster’s Gate, that the stock never was very large. Indeed
-he was on familiar terms with “Chalk Farm,” as the score behind the
-ale-house door was termed; still he never liked getting into debt, and it
-was always a relief to his mind to see the sponge applied to the score.
-
-Tom was a great gun at this little way-side inn, which was altogether a
-primitive institution of the kind even at that period, but which was
-afterwards swept away when the present Hall was built. It then stood on
-the old road from Bridgnorth to Wenlock, which came winding past the
-Hall; and in the old coaching days was a well-known hostelry and a
-favourite tippling shop for local notables, among whom were old Scale,
-the Barrow schoolmaster and parish clerk; the Cartwrights and Crumps, of
-Broseley; and a few local farmers. One attraction was the old coach,
-which called there and brought newspapers, and still later news in
-troubled times when battles, sieges, and the movements of armies were the
-chief topics of conversation. Neither coachmen nor travellers ever
-appeared to hurry, but would wait to communicate the news, particularly
-in the pig killing season, when a pork pie and a jug of ale would be
-sufficient to keep the coach a good half hour if need be. We speak of
-course of “The time when George III. was king,” before “His Majesty’s
-Mail” became an important institution, and when one old man in a scarlet
-coat, with a face that lost nothing by reflection therewith—excepting
-that a slight tinge of purple was visible—who had many more calling
-places than post offices on the road, carried pistols in his holsters,
-and brought all the letters and newspapers Willey, Wenlock, Broseley,
-Benthall, Ironbridge, Coalbrookdale, and some other places then required;
-and these, even, took the whole day to distribute. Although the
-lumbering old vehicle was constantly tumbling over on going down slight
-declivities, it was a great institution of the period; it was—
-
- “Hurrah for the old stage coach,
- Be it never so worn and rusty!
- Hurrah for the smooth high road,
- Be it glaring, and scorching, and dusty!
-
- “Hurrah for the snug little inn,
- At the sign of the Plough and Harrow,
- And the frothy juice of the dangling hop,
- That tickles your spinal marrow.”
-
-It was a great treat to travellers, who would sometimes get off the coach
-and order a chaise to be sent for them from Bridgnorth or Wenlock, to
-stop and listen to Tom relating the incidents of a day’s sport, and a
-still greater treat to witness his acting, to hear his tally-ho, his
-who-who-hoop, or to hear him strike up—
-
- “A southerly wind and a cloudy sky
- Proclaim a hunting morning.”
-
-Another favourite country song just then was the following, which has
-been attributed to Bishop Still, called—
-
- THE JUG OF ALE.
-
- “As I was sitting one afternoon
- Of a pleasant day in the month of June,
- I heard a thrush sing down the vale,
- And the tune he sang was ‘the jug of ale,’
- And the tune he sang was the jug of ale.
-
- “The white sheet bleaches on the hedge,
- And it sets my wisdom teeth on edge,
- When dry with telling your pedlar’s tale,
- Your only comfort’s a jug of ale,
- Your only comfort’s a jug of ale.
-
- “I jog along the footpath way,
- For a merry heart goes all the day;
- But at night, whoever may flout and rail,
- I sit down with my friend, the jug of ale,
- With my good old friend, the jug of ale.
-
- “Whether the sweet or sour of the year,
- I tramp and tramp though the gallows be near.
- Oh, while I’ve a shilling I will not fail
- To drown my cares in a jug of ale,
- Drown my cares in a jug of ale!”
-
-To which old Amen, as the parish clerk was called, in order to be
-orthodox, would add from the same convivial prelate’s farce-comedy of
-“Gammer Gurton’s Needle:”—
-
- “I cannot eat but little meat
- My stomach is not good;
- But sure I think that I can drink
- With him that wears a hood.”
-
-A pleasant cheerful glass or two, Tom was wont to say, would hurt nobody,
-and he could toss off a horn or two of “October” without moving a muscle
-or winking an eye. His constitution was as sound as a roach; and whilst
-he could get up early and sniff the fragrant gale, they did not appear to
-tell. But he had a spark in his throat, as he said, and he indulged in
-such frequent libations to extinguish it, that, towards the end of the
-year 1796, he was well nigh worn out. After a while, finding himself
-becoming weak, and feeling that his end was approaching, he expressed a
-desire to see his old master, who at once gratified the wish of the
-sufferer, and, without thinking that his end was so near, inquired what
-he wanted. “I have,” said Tom, “one request to make, and it is the last
-favour I shall crave.” “Well,” said the Squire, “what is it, Tom?” “My
-time here won’t be long,” Tom added; “and when I am dead I wish to be
-buried at Barrow, under the yew tree, in the churchyard there, and to be
-carried to the grave by six earth-stoppers; my old horse, with my whip,
-boots, spurs, and cap, slung on each side of the saddle, and the brush of
-the last fox when I was up at the death, at the side of the forelock, and
-two couples of old hounds to follow me to the grave as mourners. When I
-am laid in the grave let three halloos be given over me; and then, if I
-don’t lift up my head, you may fairly conclude that Tom Moody’s dead.”
-The old whipper-in expired shortly afterwards, and his request was
-carried out to the letter, as the following characteristic letter from
-the Squire to his friend Chambers, describing the circumstances, will
-show:—
-
- “DEAR CHAMBERS,
-
- “On Tuesday last died poor Tom Moody, as good for rough and smooth as
- ever entered Wildmans Wood. He died brave and honest, as he
- lived—beloved by all, hated by none that ever knew him. I took his
- own orders as to his will, funeral, and every other thing that could
- be thought of. He died sensible and fully collected as ever man
- died—in short, died game to the last; for when he could hardly
- swallow, the poor old lad took the farewell glass for success to
- fox-bunting, and his poor old master (as he termed it), for ever. I
- am sole executor, and the bulk of his fortune he left to
- me—six-and-twenty shillings, real and _bonâ fide_ sterling cash, free
- from all incumbrance, after every debt discharged to a farthing.
- Noble deeds for Tom, you’d say. The poor old ladies at the Ring of
- Bells are to have a knot each in remembrance of the poor old lad.
-
- “Salop paper will show the whole ceremony of his burial, but for fear
- you should not see that paper, I send it to you, as under:—
-
- “‘Sportsmen, attend.—On Tuesday, 29th inst., was buried at Barrow,
- near Wenlock, Salop, Thomas Moody, the well-known whipper-in to G.
- Forester, Esq.’s fox-hounds for twenty years. He was carried to the
- grave by a proper number of earth-stoppers, and attended by many
- other sporting friends, who heartily mourned for him.’
-
- “Directly after the corpse followed his old favourite horse (which he
- always called his ‘Old Soul’), thus accoutred: carrying his last
- fox’s brush in the front of his bridle, with his cap, whip, boots,
- spurs, and girdle, across his saddle. The ceremony being over, he
- (by his own desire), had three clear rattling view haloos o’er his
- grave; and thus ended the career of poor Tom, who lived and died an
- honest fellow, but alas! a very wet one.
-
- “I hope you and your family are well, and you’ll believe me, much
- yours,
-
- “G. FORESTER.
-
- “WILLEY, Dec. 5, 1796.”
-
-We need add nothing to the description the Squire gave of the way in
-which Tom’s last wishes were carried out, and shall merely remark that
-the old fellow kept on his livery to the last, and that he died in his
-boots, which were for some time kept as relics—a circumstance which leads
-us to appropriate the following lines, which appeared a few years ago in
-the _Sporting Magazine_:—
-
- “You have ofttimes indulged in a sneer
- At the old pair of boots I’ve kept year after year,
- And I promised to tell you (when ‘funning’ last night)
- The reasons I have thus to keep them in sight.
-
- “Those boots were Tom Moody’s (a better ne’er strode
- A hunter or hack, in the field—on the road—
- None more true to his friend, or his bottle when full,
- In short, you may call him a thorough John Bull).
-
- “Now this world you must own’s a strange compound of fate,
- (A kind of tee-to-turn resembling of late)
- Where hope promised joy _there_ will sorrow be found,
- And the vessel best trimm’d is oft soonest aground.
-
- “I’ve come in for my share of ‘Take-up’ and ‘Put-down,’
- And that rogue, Disappointment, oft makes me look brown,
- And then (you may sneer and look wise if you will)
- From those old pair of boots I can comfort distil.
-
- “I but cast my eyes on them and old Willey Hall
- Is before me again, with its ivy-crown’d wall,
- Its brook of soft murmurs—its rook-laden trees,
- The gilt vane on its dovecot swung round by the breeze.
-
- “I see its old owner descend from the door,
- I feel his warm grasp as I felt it of yore;
- Whilst old servants crowd round—as they once us’d to do,
- And their old smiles of welcome beam on me anew.
-
- “I am in the old bedroom that looks on the lawn,
- The old cock is crowing to herald the dawn;
- There! old Jerry is rapping, and hark how he hoots,
- ‘’Tis past five o’clock, Tom, and here are your boots.’
-
- “I am in the old homestead, and here comes ‘old Jack,’
- And old Stephens has help’d Master George to his back;
- Whilst old _Childers_, old _Pilot_, and little _Blue-boar_
- Lead the merry-tongued hounds through the old kennel door.
-
- “I’m by the old wood, and I hear the old cry—
- ‘Od’s rat ye dogs—wind him! Hi! Nimble, lad, hi!’
- I see the old fox steal away through the gap,
- Whilst old Jack cheers the hounds with his old velvet cap.
-
- “I’m seated again by my old grandad’s chair,
- Around me old friends and before me old fare;
- Every guest is a sportsman, and scarlet his suit,
- And each leg ’neath the table is cas’d in a boot.
-
- “I hear the old toasts and the old songs again,
- ‘_Old Maiden_’—‘_Tom Moody_’—‘_Poor Jack_’—‘_Honest Ben_;’
- I drink the old wine, and I hear the old call—
- ‘Clean glasses, fresh bottles, and _pipes_ for us all.’”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-SUCCESS OF THE SONG.
-
-
-Dibdin’s Song—Dibdin and the Squire good fellows well met—Moody a
-Character after Dibdin’s own heart—The Squire’s Gift—Incledon—The
-Shropshire Fox-hunters on the Stage at Drury Lane.
-
-THE reader will have perceived that George Forester and Charles Dibdin
-were good fellows well met, and that no two men were ever better fitted
-to appreciate each other. Like the popular monarch of the time, each
-prided himself upon being a Briton; each admired every new distinguishing
-trait of nationality, and gloried in any special development of national
-pluck and daring. No one more than Mr. Forester was ready to endorse
-that charming bit of history Dibdin gave of his native land in his song
-of “The snug little Island,” or would join more heartily in the chorus:—
-
- “Search the globe round, none can be found
- So happy as this little island.”
-
- [Picture: A meet at Hangster’s gate]
-
-No one could have done its geography or have painted the features of its
-inhabitants in fewer words or stronger colours. We use the word stronger
-rather than brighter, remembering that Dibdin drew his heroes redolent of
-tar, of rum, and tobacco. He had the knack of seizing upon broad
-national characteristics, and, like a true artist, of bringing them
-prominently into the foreground by means of such simple accessories as
-seemed to give them force and effect.
-
-In the Willey whipper-in Dibdin found the same unsophisticated bit of
-primitive nature cropping up which he so successfully brought out in his
-portraits of salt-water heroes; he found the same spirit differently
-manifested; for had Moody served in the cock-pit, the gun-room, on deck,
-or at the windlass, he would have been a “Ben Backstay” or a “Poor
-Jack”—from that singleness of aim and daring which actuated him. How
-clearly Dibdin set forth this sentiment in that stanza of the song of
-“Poor Jack,” in which the sailor, commenting upon the sermon of the
-chaplain, draws this conclusion:—
-
- “D’ye mind me, a sailor should be, every inch,
- All as one as a piece of a ship;
- And, with her, brave the world without off’ring to flinch,
- From the moment the anchor’s a-trip.
- As to me, in all weathers, all times, tides, and ends,
- Nought’s a trouble from duty that springs;
- My heart is my Poll’s, and my rhino my friend’s,
- And as for my life, ’tis my King’s.”
-
-The country was indebted to this faculty of rhyming for much of that
-daring and devotion to its interests which distinguished soldiers and
-sailors at that remarkable period. Dibdin’s songs, as he, with pride,
-was wont to say, were “the solace of sailors on long voyages, in storms,
-and in battles.” His “Tom Moody” illustrated the same pluck and daring
-which under the vicissitudes and peculiarities of the times—had it been
-Tom’s fortune to have served under Drake or Blake, Howe, Jervis, or
-Nelson—would equally have supplied materials for a stave.
-
-From the letter of the Squire the reader will see how truthfully the
-great English Beranger, as he has been called, adhered to the
-circumstances in his song:—
-
- “You all knew Tom Moody, the whipper-in, well.
- The bell that’s done tolling was honest Tom’s knell;
- A more able sportsman ne’er followed a hound
- Through a country well known to him fifty miles round.
- No hound ever open’d with Tom near a wood,
- But he’d challenge the tone, and could tell if it were good;
- And all with attention would eagerly mark,
- When he cheer’d up the pack, ‘Hark! to Rockwood, hark! hark!
- Hie!—wind him! and cross him! Now, Rattler, boy! Hark!’
-
- “Six crafty earth-stoppers, in hunter’s green drest,
- Supported poor Tom to an earth made for rest.
- His horse, which he styled his ‘Old Soul,’ next appear’d,
- On whose forehead the brush of his last fox was rear’d:
- Whip, cap, boots, and spurs, in a trophy were bound,
- And here and there followed an old straggling hound.
- Ah! no more at his voice yonder vales will they trace!
- Nor the welkin resound his burst in the chase!
- With high over! Now press him! Tally-ho! Tally-ho!
-
- “Thus Tom spoke his friends ere he gave up his breath:
- ‘Since I see you’re resolved to be in at the death,
- One favour bestow—’tis the last I shall crave,
- Give a rattling view-halloo thrice over my grave;
- And unless at that warning I lift up my head,
- My boys, you may fairly conclude I am dead!’
- Honest Tom was obeyed, and the shout rent the sky,
- For every one joined in the tally-ho cry!
- Tally-ho! Hark forward! Tally-ho! Tally-ho!”
-
-On leaving Willey, Mr. Forester asked Dibdin what he could do to
-discharge the obligation he felt himself under for his services; the
-great ballad writer, whom Pitt pensioned, replied “Nothing;” he had been
-so well treated that he could not accept anything. Finding artifice
-necessary, Mr. Forester asked him if he would deliver a letter for him
-personally at his banker’s on his arrival in London. Of course Dibdin
-consented, and on doing so he found it was an order to pay him £100!
-
-When the song first came out Charles Incledon, by the “human voice
-divine,” was drawing vast audiences at Drury Lane Theatre. On
-play-bills, in largest type, forming the most attractive morceaux of the
-bill of fare, this song, varied by others of Dibdin’s composing, would be
-seen; and when he was first announced to sing it, a few fox-hunting
-friends of the Squire went to London to hear it. Taking up their
-positions in the pit, they were all attention as the inimitable singer
-rolled out, with that full volume of voice which at once delighted and
-astounded his audience, the verse commencing:—
-
- “You all knew Tom Moody the whipper-in well.”
-
-But the great singer did not succeed to the satisfaction of the small
-knot of Shropshire fox-hunters in the “tally-ho chorus.” Detecting the
-technical defect which practical experience in the field alone could
-supply, they jumped upon the stage, and gave the audience a specimen of
-what Shropshire lungs could do.
-
-The song soon became popular. It seized at once upon the sporting mind,
-and upon the mind of the country generally. The London publishers took
-it up, and gave it with the music, together with woodcuts and
-lithographic illustrations, and it soon found a ready sale. But the
-illustrations were untruthful. The church was altogether a fancy sketch,
-exceedingly unlike the quaint old simple structure still standing. A
-print published by Wolstenholme, in 1832, contains a very faithful
-representation of the church on the northern side, with the grave, and a
-large gathering of sportsmen and spectators, at the moment the “view
-halloo” is supposed to have been given. It is altogether spiritedly
-drawn and well coloured, and makes a pleasing subject; but the view is
-taken on the wrong side of the church, the artist having evidently chosen
-this, the northern side, because of the distance and middle distance, and
-in order to make a taking picture. The view has this advantage, however,
-it shows the Clee Hills in the distance. Tom’s grave is covered by a
-simple slab, containing the following inscription,
-
- TOM MOODY,
- BURIED NOV. 19TH, 1796,
-
-and is on the opposite side, near the old porch, and chief entrance to
-the church.
-
-In the full-page engraving, representing a meet near “Hangster’s Gate,” a
-famous “fixture” in the old Squire’s time, the assembled sportsmen are
-supposed to be startled by the re-appearance of Tom upon the ground of
-his former exploits. It is the belief of some that when a corpse is laid
-in the grave an angel gives notice of the coming of two examiners. The
-dead person is then made to undergo the ordeal before two spirits of
-terrible appearance. Whether this was the faith of Tom’s friends or not
-we cannot say, but Tom was supposed to have been anything but satisfied
-with his quarters or his company, and to have returned to visit the
-Willey Woods. The picture presents a group of sportsmen and hounds
-beneath the trees, and attention is directed towards the spectre, an old
-decayed stump. The following lines refer to the tradition:—
-
- “See the shade of Tom Moody, you all have known well,
- To our sports now returning, not liking to dwell
- In a region where pleasure’s not found in the chase,
- So Tom’s just returned to view his old place.
- No sooner the hounds leave the kennel to try,
- Than his spirit appears to join in the cry;
- Now all with attention, his signal well mark,
- For see his hand’s up for the cry of Hark! Hark!
- Then cheer him, and mark him, Tally-ho! Boys! Tally-ho!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-THE WILLEY SQUIRE MEMBER FOR WENLOCK.
-
-
-The Willey Squire recognises the Duties of his Position, and becomes
-Member for Wenlock—Addison’s View of Whig Jockeys and Tory
-Fox-hunters—State of Parties—Pitt in Power—“Fiddle-Faddle”—Local
-Improvements—The Squire Mayor of Wenlock—The Mace now carried before the
-Chief Magistrate.
-
-THERE is an old English maxim that “too much of anything is good for
-nothing;” the obvious meaning being that a man should not addict himself
-over much to any one pursuit; and it is only justice to the Willey Squire
-that it should be fully understood that whilst passionately fond of the
-pleasures of the chase, he was not unmindful of the duties of his
-position. Willey was the centre of the sporting country we have
-described; but it was also contiguous to a district remarkable for its
-manufacturing activity—for its iron works, its pot works, and its brick
-works, the proprietors of which, no less than the agricultural portion of
-the population, felt that they had an interest in questions of
-legislation. Mr. Forester considered that whatever concerned his
-neighbourhood and his country concerned him, and his influence and
-popularity in the borough led to his taking upon himself the duty of
-representing it in Parliament. There was about the temper of the times
-something more suited to the temperament of a country gentleman than at
-present, and a member of Parliament was less bound to his constituents.
-His duties as a representative sat much more lightly, whilst the
-pugnacious elements of the nation generally were such that when Mr.
-Forester entered upon public life there was nearly as much excitement in
-the House of Commons—and not unlike in kind—as was to be found in the
-cockpit or the hunting-field.
-
-As long as Mr. Forester could remember, parties had been as sharply
-defined as at present, and men were as industriously taught to believe
-that whatever ranged itself under one form of faith was praiseworthy,
-whilst everything on the other side was to be condemned. Addison, in his
-usually happy style, had already described this state of things in the
-_Spectator_, where he says:—
-
- “This humour fills the country with several periodical meetings of
- Whig jockeys and Tory fox-hunters; not to mention the innumerable
- curses, frowns, and whispers it produces at a quarter sessions. . . .
- In all our journey from London to this house we did not so much as
- bait at a Whig inn; or if by chance the coachman stopped at a wrong
- place, one of Sir Roger’s servants would ride up to his master full
- speed, and whisper to him that the master of the house was against
- such an one in the last election. This often betrayed us into hard
- beds and bad cheer, for we were not so inquisitive about the inn as
- the innkeeper; and, provided our landlord’s principles were sound,
- did not take any notice of the staleness of the provisions.”
-
-So that Whig and Tory had even then long been names representing those
-principles by which the Constitution was balanced, names representing
-those popular and monarchical ingredients which it was supposed assured
-liberty and order, progress and stability. But about the commencement of
-Mr. Forester’s parliamentary career parties had been in a great measure
-broken up into sections, if not into factions—into Pelhamites,
-Cobhamites, Foxites, Pittites, and Wilkites—the questions uppermost being
-place, power, and distinction, ministry and opposition—the Ins and the
-Outs. The Ins, when Whigs, pretty much as now, adopted Tory principles,
-and Tories in opposition appealed to popular favour for support; indeed
-from the fall of Walpole to the American war, as now, there were few
-statesmen who were not by turns the colleagues and the adversaries, the
-friends and the foes of their contemporaries. The general pulse, it is
-true, beat more feverishly, and men went to Parliament or into battle as
-readily as to the hunting-field—for the excitement of the thing. To
-epitomise, mighty armies, such as Europe had not seen since the days of
-Marlborough, were moving in every direction. Four hundred and fifty-two
-thousand men were gathering to crush the Prince of a German state, with
-one hundred and fifty thousand men in the field to encounter them. The
-English and Hanoverian army, under the Duke of Cumberland, was relied
-upon to prevent the French attacking Prussia, with whom we had formed an
-alliance. England felt an intense interest in the struggle, and bets
-were made as to the result. Mr. Forester was returned to the new
-Parliament, which met in December, 1757, in time, we believe, to vote for
-the subsidy of £670,000 asked for by the king for his “good brother and
-ally,” the King of Prussia. A minister like Pitt, who was then inspiring
-the people with his spirit, and raising the martial ardour of the nation
-to a pitch it had never known before, who drew such pictures of England’s
-power and pluck as to cause the French envoy to jump out of the window,
-was a man after the Squire’s own heart, and he gave him his hearty “aye,”
-to subsidy after subsidy. As a contemporary satirist wrote:—
-
- “No more they make a fiddle-faddle
- About a Hessian horse or saddle.
- No more of continental measures;
- No more of wasting British treasures.
- Ten millions, and a vote of credit.
- ’Tis right. He can’t be wrong who did it.”
-
-Mr. Forester gave way to Cecil Forester, a few months prior to the
-marriage of the King to the Princess Charlotte; but was returned again,
-in 1768, with Sir Henry Bridgeman, and sat till 1774, during what has
-been called the “Unreported Parliament.” He was returned in October of
-the same year with the same gentleman. He was also returned to the new
-Parliament in 1780, succeeding Mr. Whitmore, who, having been returned
-for Wenlock and Bridgnorth, elected to sit for the latter; and he sat
-till 1784. Sir H. Bridgeman and John Simpson, Esq., were then returned,
-and sat till the following year; when Mr. Simpson accepted the Chiltern
-Hundreds, and Mr. Forester, being again solicited to represent the
-interests of the borough, was returned, and continued to sit until the
-sixteenth Parliament of Great Britain, having nearly completed its full
-term of seven years, was dissolved, soon after its prorogation in June,
-1790.
-
- [Picture: The First Iron Bridge]
-
-It is not our intention to comment upon the votes given by the Squire in
-his place in Parliament during the thirty years he sat in the House;
-suffice it to say, that we believe he gave an honest support to measures
-which came before the country, and that he was neither bought nor bribed,
-as many members of that period were. He was active in getting the
-sanction of Parliament for local improvements, for the construction of a
-towing-path along the Severn, and for the present handsome iron
-bridge—the first of its kind—over it, to connect the districts of
-Broseley and Madeley. On retiring from the office of chief magistrate of
-the borough, which he filled for some years, he presented to the
-corporation the handsome mace now in use, which bears the following
-inscription:—
-
- “The gift of George Forester of Willey, Esq., to the Bailiff,
- Burgesses, and Commonalty of the Borough of Wenlock, as a token of
- his high esteem and regard for the attachment and respect they
- manifested towards him during the many years he represented the
- borough in Parliament, and served the office of Chief Magistrate and
- Justice thereof.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-THE SQUIRE AND HIS VOLUNTEERS.
-
-
-The Squire and the Wenlock Volunteers—Community of Feeling—Threats of
-Invasion—“We’ll follow the Squire to Hell if necessary”—The Squire’s
-Speech—His Birthday—His Letter to the _Shrewsbury Chronicle_—Second
-Corps—Boney and Beacons—The Squire in a Rage—The Duke of York and Prince
-of Orange came down.
-
- * * * * *
-
- “Not once or twice, in our rough island story,
- The path of duty was the way to glory.”
-
- [Picture: Bridgnorth]
-
-WE fancy there was a greater community of feeling in Squire Forester’s
-day than now, and that whether indulging in sport or in doing earnest
-work, men acted more together. Differences of wealth caused less
-differences of caste, of speech, and of habit; men of different classes
-saw more of each other and were more together; consequently there was
-more cohesion of the particles of which society is composed, and, if the
-term be admissible, the several grades were more interpenetrated by
-agencies which served to make them one. Gentlemen were content with the
-good old English sports and pastimes of the period, and these caused them
-to live on their own estates, surrounded by and in the presence of those
-whom modern refinements serve to separate; and their dependants therefore
-were more alive to those reciprocal, neighbourly, and social duties out
-of which patriotism springs. They might not have been better or wiser,
-but they appear to have approached nearer to that state of society when
-every citizen considered himself to be so closely identified with the
-nation as to feel bound to bear arms against an invading enemy, and, as
-far as possible, to avert a danger. Never was the rivalry of England and
-France more vehement. Emboldened by successes, the French began to think
-themselves all but invincible, and burned to meet in mortal combat their
-ancient enemies, whilst our countrymen, equally defiant, and with
-recollections of former glory, sought no less an opportunity of measuring
-their strength with the veteran armies of their rivals. The embers of
-former passions yet lay smouldering when the French Minister of Marine
-talked of making a descent on England, and of destroying the Government;
-a threat calculated to influence the feelings of old sportsmen like
-Squire Forester, who nourished a love of country, whose souls throbbed
-with the same national feeling, and who were equally ready to respond to
-a call to maintain the sacredness of their homes, or to risk their lives
-in their defence. Oneyers and Moneyers—men “whose words upon ’change
-would go much further than their blows in battle,” as Falstaff says, came
-forward, if for nothing else, as examples to others. On both banks of
-the Severn men looked upon the Squire as a sort of local centre, and as
-the head of a district, as a leader whom they would follow—as one old
-tradesman said—to hell, if necessary. A general meeting was called at
-the Guildhall, Wenlock, and a still more enthusiastic gathering took
-place at Willey. Mr. Forester never did things by halves, and what he
-did he did at once. He was not much at speech-making, but he had that
-ready wit and happy knack of going to the point and hitting the nail on
-the head in good round Saxon, that told amazingly with his old foxhunting
-friends.
-
-“Gentlemen,” he said, “you know very well that I have retired from the
-representation of the borough. I did so in the belief that I had
-discharged, as long as need be, those public duties I owe to my
-neighbours; and in the hope that I should be permitted henceforth to
-enjoy the pleasures of retirement. I parted with my hounds, and gave up
-hunting; but here I am, continually on horseback, hunting up men all
-round the Wrekin! The movement is general, and differences of feeling
-are subsiding into one for the defence of the nation. Whigs and Tories
-stand together in the ranks; and as I told the Lord-Lieutenant the other
-day, we must have not less than four or five thousand men in uniform,
-equipped, every Jack-rag of ’em, without a farthing cost to the country.
-(Applause.) There are some dastardly devils who run with the hare, but
-hang with the hounds, damn ’em (laughter); whose patriotism, by G—d,
-hangs by such a small strand that I believe the first success of the
-enemies of the country would sever it. They are a lot of damnation
-Jacobins, all of ’em, whining black-hearted devils, with distorted
-intellects, who profess to perceive no danger. And, by G—d, the more
-plain it is, the less they see it. It is, as I say, put an owl into
-daylight, stick a candle on each side of him, and the more light the poor
-devil has the less he sees.” (Cries of “Bravo, hurrah for the Squire.”)
-In conclusion he called upon the lawyer, the ironmaster, the pot maker,
-the artisan, and the labourer to drill, and prepare for defending their
-hearths and homes; they had property to defend, shops that might be
-plundered, houses that might be burned, or children to save from being
-brained, and wives or daughters to protect from treatment which sometimes
-prevailed in time of war.
-
-As a result of his exertions, a strong and efficient company was formed,
-called “The Wenlock Loyal Volunteers.” The Squire was major, and he
-spared neither money nor trouble in rendering it efficient. He always
-gave the members a dinner on the 4th of June, the birthday of George
-III., who had won his admiration and devotion by his boldness as a
-fox-hunter, no less than by his daring proposal, during the riots of
-1780, to ride at the head of his guards into the midst of the fires of
-the capital. On New Year’s Day, that being the birthday of Major
-Forester, the officers and men invariably dined together in honour of
-their commander. The corps were disbanded, we believe, in 1802, for we
-find in a cutting from a Shrewsbury paper of the 12th of January, 1803,
-that about that time a subscription was entered into for the purchase of
-a handsome punch-bowl. The newspaper states that
-
- “On New Year’s Day, 1803, the members of the late corps of Wenlock
- Loyal Volunteers, commanded by Major Forester, dined at the Raven
- Inn, Much Wenlock, in honour of their much-respected major’s
- birthday, when the evening was spent with that cheerful hilarity and
- orderly conduct which always characterised this respectable corps,
- when embodied for the service of their king and country. In the
- morning of the day the officers, deputed by the whole corps, waited
- on the Major, at Willey, and presented him, in an appropriate speech,
- with a most elegant bowl, of one hundred guineas value, engraved with
- his arms, and the following inscription, which the Major was pleased
- to accept, and returned a suitable answer:—‘To George Forester, of
- Willey, Esq., Major Commandant of the Wenlock Loyal Volunteers, for
- his sedulous attention and unbounded liberality to his corps, raised
- and disciplined under his command without any expense to Government,
- and rendered essentially serviceable during times of unprecedented
- difficulty and danger; this humble token of their gratitude and
- esteem is most respectfully presented to him by his truly faithful
- and very obedient servants,
-
- “‘THE WENLOCK VOLUNTEERS.
-
- “‘Major Forester.’”
-
-The following reply appeared in the same paper the succeeding week:—
-
- “Major Forester, seeing an account in the Shrewsbury papers relative
- to the business which occurred at Willey upon New Year’s Day last,
- between him and his late corps of Wenlock Volunteers, presumes to
- trouble the public eye with his answer thereto, thinking it an
- unbounded duty of gratitude and respect owing to his late corps, to
- return them (as their late commander) his most explicit public
- thanks, as well as his most grateful and most sincere
- acknowledgments, for the high honour lately conferred upon him, by
- their kind present of a silver bowl, value one hundred guineas.
- Major Forester’s unwearied attention, as well as his liberality to
- his late corps, were ever looked upon by him as a part of his duty,
- in order to make some compensation to a body of distinguished
- respectable yeomanry, who had so much the interest and welfare of him
- and their country at heart, that he plainly perceived himself, and so
- must every other intelligent spectator on the ground at the time of
- exercise, that they only waited impatiently for the word to put the
- order into execution directly; but with such regularity as their
- commander required and ever had cheerfully granted to him. A return
- of mutual regard between the major and his late corps was all he
- wished for, and he is now more fully convinced, by this public mark
- of favour, of their real esteem and steady friendship. He therefore
- hopes they will (to a man) give him credit when he not only assures
- them of his future constant sincerity and unabated affection, but
- further take his word when he likewise promises them that his
- gratitude and faithful remembrance of the Wenlock Loyal Volunteers
- shall never cease but with the last period of his worldly existence.
-
- “WILLEY, 12th Jan., 1803.”
-
-Soon after the first corps of volunteers was disbanded, the Squire was
-entertaining his guests with the toast—
-
- “God save the king, and bless the land
- In plenty, song, and peace;
- And grant henceforth that foul debates
- ’Twixt noblemen may cease—”
-
-when he received a letter from London, stating that at an audience given
-to Cornwallis, the First Consul was very gracious; that he inquired after
-the health of the king, and “spoke of the British nation in terms of
-great respect, intimating that as long as they remained friends there
-would be no interruption to the peace of Europe.”
-
-One of the guests added—
-
- “And that I think’s a reason fair to drink and fill again.”
-
-It was clear to all, however, who looked beneath the surface, that the
-peace was a hollow truce, and that good grounds existed for timidity, if
-not for fear, respecting a descent upon our shores:
-
- “Sometimes the vulgar see and judge aright.”
-
-Month by month, week by week, clouds were gathering upon a sky which the
-Peace of Amiens failed to clear.
-
-The First Consul declared against English commerce, and preparations on a
-gigantic scale were being made by the construction of vessels on the
-opposite shores of the Channel for invasion.
-
-The public spirit in France was invoked; the spirit of this country was
-also aroused, and vigorous efforts were made by Parliament and the people
-to maintain the inviolability of our shores. Newspaper denunciations
-excited the ire of the First Consul, who demanded of the English
-Government that it should restrict their power. A recriminatory war of
-words, of loud and fierce defiances, influenced the temper of the people
-on each side of the Channel, and it again became evident that differences
-existed which could only be settled by the sword. In a conversation with
-Lord Whitworth, Napoleon was reported to have said:—“A descent upon your
-coasts is the only means of offence I possess; and that I am determined
-to attempt, and to put myself at its head. But can you suppose that,
-after having gained the height on which I stand, I would risk my life and
-reputation in so hazardous an undertaking, unless compelled to it by
-absolute necessity. I know that the probability is that I myself, and
-the greatest part of the expedition, will go to the bottom. There are a
-hundred chances to one against me; but I am determined to make the
-attempt; and such is the disposition of the troops that army after army
-will be found ready to engage in the enterprise.” This conversation took
-place on the 21st of February, 1803; and such were the energetic measures
-taken by the English Government and people, that on the 25th of March,
-independent of the militia, 80,000 strong, which were called out at that
-date, and the regular army of 130,000 already voted, the House of
-Commons, on June 28th, agreed to the very unusual step of raising 50,000
-men additional, by drafting, in the proportion of 34,000 for England,
-10,000 for Ireland, and 6,000 for Scotland, which it was calculated would
-raise the regular troops in Great Britain to 112,000 men, besides a large
-surplus force for offensive operations. In addition to this a bill was
-brought in shortly afterwards to enable the king to call out the levy _en
-masse_ to repel the invasion of the enemy, and empowering the
-lord-lieutenants of the several counties to enrol all the men in the
-kingdom, between seventeen and fifty-five years of age, to be divided
-into regiments according to their several ages and professions: those
-persons to be exempt who were members of any volunteer corps approved of
-by his Majesty. Such was the state of public feeling generally that the
-king was enabled to review, in Hyde Park, sixty battalions of volunteers,
-127,000 men, besides cavalry, all equipped at their own expense. The
-population of the country at the time was but a little over ten millions,
-about a third of what it is at present; yet such was the zeal and
-enthusiasm that in a few weeks 300,000 men were enrolled, armed, and
-disciplined, in the different parts of the kingdom.
-
-The movement embraced all classes and professions. It was successful in
-providing a powerful reserve of trained men to strengthen the ranks and
-to supply the vacancies of the regular army, thus contributing in a
-remarkable manner to produce a patriotic ardour and feeling among the
-people, and laying the foundation of that spirit which enabled Great
-Britain at length to appear as principal in the contest, and to beat down
-the power of France, even where hitherto she had obtained unexampled
-success.
-
-Thus, after the first Wenlock Loyal Volunteers were disbanded, Squire
-Forester found but little respite; he and the Willey fox-hunters again
-felt it their duty to come forward and enroll themselves in the Second
-Wenlock Royal Volunteers.
-
- “Design whate’er we will,
- There is a fate which overrules us still.”
-
-No man was better fitted to undertake the task; no one knew better how
-
- “By winning words to conquer willing hearts,
- And make persuasion do the work of fear.”
-
-And, mainly through his exertions, an able corps was formed, consisting
-of a company and a half at Much Wenlock, a company and a half at
-Broseley, and half a company at Little Wenlock; altogether forming a
-battalion of 280 men. For the county altogether there were raised 940
-cavalry, 5,022 infantry; rank and file, 5,852. Mr. Harries, of Benthall;
-Mr. Turner, of Caughley; Mr. Pritchard and Mr. Onions, of Broseley;
-Messrs. W. and R. Anstice, of Madeley Wood and Coalport; Mr. Collins, Mr.
-Jeffries, and Mr. Hinton, of Wenlock; and others, were among the officers
-and leading members. The uniform was handsome, the coat being scarlet,
-turned up with yellow, the trousers and waistcoat white, and the hat a
-cube, with white and red feathers for the grenadiers, and green ones for
-the light company. The old hall once more resounded with martial music,
-the clang of arms, and patriotic songs; drums and fifes, clarionets and
-bugles, were piled up with guns and accoutrements in the form of
-trophies, above the massive chimney-piece, putting the deer-horns, the
-foxes’ heads, and the old cabinets of oak—black as ebony—out of
-countenance by their gaudy colouring. People became as familiar with the
-music of military bands as with the sound of church bells; both were
-heard together on Sundays, the days generally selected for drill, for
-heavy taxes were laid on, and people had to work hard to pay them, which
-they did willingly. The Squire had the women on his side, and he worked
-upon the men through the women. There was open house at Willey, and no
-baron of olden time dealt out hospitality more willingly or more
-liberally. The Squire was here, there, and everywhere, visiting
-neighbouring squires, giving or receiving information, stirring up the
-gentry, and frightening country people out of their wits. _Boney_ became
-more terrible than _bogy_, both to children and grown-up persons; and the
-more vague the notion of invasion to Shropshire inlanders, the more
-horrible the evils to be dreaded. The clergy preached about Bonaparte
-out of the Revelations; conjurers and “wise-men,” greater authorities
-even then than the clergy, saw a connection between Bonaparte and the
-strange lights which every one had seen in the heavens! The popular
-notion was that “Boney” was an undefined, horrible monster, who had a
-sheep dressed every morning for breakfast, who required an ox for his
-dinner, and had six little English children cooked—when he could get
-them—for supper! At the name of “Boney” naughty children were
-frightened, and a false alarm of his coming and landing often made
-grown-up men turn pale.
-
- “This way and that the anxious mind is torn.”
-
-The impulse was in proportion to the alarm; the determination raised was
-spirited and praiseworthy. Stout hearts constituted an _impromptu_
-force, daily advancing in organization, with arms and accoutrements,
-ready to march with knapsacks to any point where numbers might be
-required. Once or twice, when a company received orders to march, as to
-Bridgnorth, for instance, an alarm was created among wives, daughters,
-and sweethearts, that they were about to join the battalion for active
-service, and stories are told of leave-takings and weepings on such
-occasions. Beacons were erected, and bonfires prepared on the highest
-points of the country round, as being the quickest means of transmitting
-news of the approach of an enemy. Of these watch-fire signals, Macaulay
-says:—
-
- “On and on, without a horse untired, they hounded still
- All night from tower to tower, they sprang from hill to hill,
- Till the proud peak unfurled the flag o’er Derwent’s rocky dales,—
- Till like volcanoes flared to heaven the stormy hills of Wales,—
- Till twelve fair counties saw the blaze on Malvern’s lonely height,—
- Till streamed in crimson on the wind the Wrekin’s crest of light—
- Till broad and fierce the star came forth on Elsig’s stately fane,
- And tower and hamlet rose in arms o’er all the boundless plain.”
-
-Within a mile of Willey Hall a tenant of Squire Forester, and, as we have
-seen, an occasional guest—John Wilkinson, “the great ironmaster”—was
-urging his men day and night to push the manufacture of shot, shell,
-howitzers, and guns, which Mr. Forester believed were for the government
-of the country, but many of which were designed for its enemies. Night
-and day heavy hammers were thundering, day and night the “great blast”
-was blowing. He was well known to the French government and French
-engineers, having erected the first steam engine there in 1785, for which
-he was highly complimented by the Duke d’Angouleme, M. Bertrand, and
-others, and treated to a grand banquet, given to him on the 14th of
-January, 1786, at the Hôtel de Ville. Arthur Young, in his travels in
-France, tells us that until this well-known English manufacturer arrived
-the French knew nothing of the art of casting cannon from the solid, and
-then boring them. When Wilkinson returned to England, he continued to
-send guns after war had been declared. This clandestine proceeding came
-to the knowledge of Squire Forester, who swore, and roared like a caged
-lion. Here was the Squire, who boasted of his loyalty to good King
-George, having the minerals of his estate worked up into guns for those
-wretched French, whom he detested. He declared he would hunt Wilkinson
-out of the country; but the latter took care to keep out of his way.
-
-The exposure ended in a seizure being made. But Wilkinson, a
-money-getting, unprincipled fellow, finding he could not send guns
-openly, sent best gun-iron in rude blocks, with a pretence that they were
-for ballast for shipping, but which, like some of his water-pipes, were
-used for making guns. His warehouse was at Willey Wharf, on the Severn,
-by which they were sent, when there was sufficient water, in barges,
-which took them out into the British Channel, and round the coast to
-French cruisers; and it was at this wharf he built his first famous iron
-barge. The proprietors of the Calcutts furnaces, at which young
-Cochrane, afterwards Earl Dundonald—one of the last of our old “Sea
-Lions”—spent some time, when a boy, with his father, Lord Dundonald,
-{171} were also casting and boring guns; but, in consequence of refusing
-to fee Government servants at Woolwich, the manufacturers had a number of
-them thrown upon their hands, which they sold to a firm at Rotherham, and
-which found their way to India, where they were recognised by old workmen
-in the army, who captured them during the Sikh war. At the same time
-cannon which burst, and did almost as much damage to the English as to
-their enemies, were palmed off upon the nation.
-
-Mr. Forester wrote to the Duke of York, who came down, accompanied by the
-Prince of Orange, to examine the guns for himself; and a number of 18 and
-32-pounders were fired in honour of the event. Others were subjected to
-various tests, to the entire satisfaction of the visitors.
-
-At this period the Willey country presented a spectacle altogether
-unparalleled in Mr. Forester’s experience; his entire sympathy and that
-of his fox-hunting friends was enlisted in the warlike movements
-everywhere going forward, for the standards of the Wenlock and Morfe
-Volunteers now drew around them men of all classes. Farmers allowed
-their ploughs to stand still in the furrows, that the peasant might hurry
-with the artisan, musket on shoulder, to his rallying point in the fields
-near Wenlock, Broseley, or Bridgnorth. Whigs and Tories stood beside
-each other in the Volunteer ranks, heart-burnings and divisions as to
-principles and policy were for the time forgotten, and the Squire,
-although now unable to take the same active part he formerly did,
-contributed materially by his presence and advice to the zeal and
-alacrity which distinguished his neighbours.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-THE WILLEY SQUIRE AMONG HIS NEIGHBOURS.
-
-
-The Squire among his Neighbours—Roger de Coverley—Anecdotes—Gentlemen
-nearest the Fire in the Lower Regions—Food Riots—The Squire quells the
-Mob—His Virtues and his Failings—Influences of the Times—His Career draws
-to a Close—His wish for Old Friends and Servants to follow him to the
-Grave—That he may be buried in the Dusk of Evening—His Favourite Horse to
-be shot—His Estates to go to his Cousin, Cecil Weld, the First Lord
-Forester.
-
-LIKE Addison’s Sir Roger de Coverley, the Willey Squire lived a father
-among his tenants, a friend among his neighbours, and a good master
-amongst his servants, who seldom changed. He feasted the rich, and did
-not forget the poor, but allowed them considerable privileges on the
-estate; and there are a few old people—it is true there are but few—who
-remember interviews they had with the Squire when going to gather
-bilberries in the park, or when sent on some errand to the Hall. An old
-man, who brightened up at the mention of the Squire’s name, said,
-“Remember him, I think I do; he intended that I should do so. I was sent
-by my mother to the Hall for barm, when, seeing an old man in the yard,
-and little thinking it was the Squire, I said, ‘Sirrah, is there going to
-be any stir here to-day?’ ‘Aye, lad,’ says he, ‘come in, and see;’ and
-danged if he didn’t get the horse-whip and stir me round the kitchen,
-where he pretended to flog me, laughing the while ready to split his
-sides. He gave me a rare blow out though, and my mother found
-half-a-crown at the bottom of the jug when she poured out the barm.”
-“Did you ever hear of his being worsted by the sweep?” said another. “He
-was generally a match for most, but the sweep was too much for him. The
-Squire had been out, and, being caught in a storm, he called at a
-public-house to shelter. Seeing that it was Mr. Forester, the customers
-made way for him to sit next the fire, and whilst he was drying himself a
-sweep came to the door, and looked in; but, seeing the Squire, he was
-making off again. ‘Hollo,’ said Mr. Forester, ‘what news from the lower
-region?’ ‘Oh,’ replied the sweep, ‘things are going on there, Squire,
-much as they are here—the _gentlemen are nearest the fire_!’” A third of
-our informants remarked: “He was one of the old sort, but a right ’un.
-Why, when there was a bad harvest, and no work for men, after one of them
-war times, and the colliers were rioting and going to break open the
-shops, to tear down the flour mill, and do other damage, the old Squire
-was the only man that could stop them—he had such influence with the
-people. The poor never wanted a friend whilst old George Forester lived.
-There were plenty of broken victuals to be had for the fetching, a
-tankard of right good ale, with bread and cheese, or cold mutton, for all
-comers.”
-
- [Picture: Willey Church]
-
-The years 1774–1782 were periods of local gloom and distress, when
-haggard hunger and ignorant force banded together to trample down the
-safeguards of civil rights, and armed ruffians took the initiative in
-violent scrambles for food. The cavalry were called out, and fierce
-battles were fought in the iron districts, where the rioters sometimes
-took refuge on cinder heaps, which supplied them with sharp cutting
-missiles. In 1795 the colliers and iron-workers being in a state of
-commotion, were only prevented from rising by assurances that gentlemen
-of property were disposed to contribute liberally to their relief, and
-thousands of bushels of Indian corn were obtained by the Squire and
-others from Liverpool to add to the grain procurable in the neighbourhood
-to meet immediate necessities. A meeting of gentlemen, farmers, millers,
-and tradesmen was held at the Tontine Hotel, on the 9th of July in that
-year, to consider the state of things arising out of the scarcity of corn
-and the dearness of all other provisions, at which a committee was formed
-for the immediate collection of contributions and the purchase of grain
-at a reduction of one-fourth, or 9_s._ for 12_s._ Mr. Forester at once
-gave notice to all his tenants to deliver wheat to the committee at
-12_s._, whilst he himself gave £105, and agreed to advance £700 more, to
-be repaid from the produce of the corn sold at a reduced price. Such
-were the wants of the district, the murmurs of the inhabitants, and the
-distinctions made between those who were considered benefactors, and
-others who were not, that fear was entertained of a general uprising; and
-application was made to Mr. Forester, both as a friend and a magistrate.
-He assumed more the character of the former, and his presence acted like
-magic upon the rough miners, who by his kindness and tact were at once
-put into good humour. Having brought waggons of coal, drawn with ropes,
-for sale, the first thing the Squire did was to purchase the coal: he
-then bought up all the butter in the market, and purchased all the bread
-in the town, he emptied the butchers’ shops in the same way, and advised
-the men to go home with the provisions he gave them.
-
-We are quite aware that it might be said that Squire Forester was not a
-model for imitation; and it might be replied that no man ever was,
-altogether, even for men of his own time, much less for those of one or
-two generations removed, always excepting Him whose name should never be
-uttered lightly, and in whom the human and divine were combined. He had
-sufficient inherent good qualities, however, to make half a dozen
-ordinary modern country gentlemen popular; still his one failing, shared
-among the same number, might no less damn them in the eyes of society.
-
-Some would, no doubt, have liked Dibdin’s heroes better if he had been
-less truthful, by making the language more agreeable to the ear, by
-substituting, as one writer has said, “dear me” for “damme,” and lemonade
-for grog; but such critics are what Dibdin himself called “lubbers” and
-“swabs.” In the same way, some would be for toning down the characters
-of Squire Forester and Parson Stephens; but this would be a mistake: an
-artist might as well smooth over with vegetation every out-cropping rock
-he finds in his foreground. We might say a great deal more about the old
-Squire, and the Willey Rector too, but there is no reason why we should
-say less. If we err, we err with the best and gravest writers of
-history, who, without fear or favour, wrote of things as they found them;
-and those who are familiar with the writings of men of the past—such as
-the Sixth Satire of Juvenal, will admit that men like Squire Forester
-were examples of modesty. Men of all grades, every day, are brought in
-contact with much that might more strongly be objected to in the public
-Press; and there is no reason why the veil should not be raised in order
-that we may view the past as it really was.
-
-The fact is, the Squire found the atmosphere of the times congenial to
-his temperament. A very popular Shropshire rake and play writer,
-Wycherley, had done much to lower the tone of morality by representing
-peccadilloes, not as something which the violence of passion may excuse,
-but as accomplishments worthy of gentlemen,—his “Country Wife” and “Plain
-Dealer” being examples. Congreve followed in his wake, with his “Old
-Bachelor,” which may be judged by its apothegm:—
-
- “What rugged ways attend the noon of life;
- Our sun declines, and with what anxious strife,
- What pain, we tug that galling load—a wife!”
-
-A fair estimate of the looseness of the time may be formed from another
-representation:—
-
- “The miracle to-day is, that we find
- A lover true, not that a woman’s kind;”
-
-and from the fact that even Pope, in his “Epistle to a Lady,” out of his
-mature experience could write—
-
- “Men some to business, some to pleasure take,
- But every woman is at heart a rake.”
-
-The Squire had been jilted, and breathing such an atmosphere, no wonder
-he cast lingering looks to the time
-
- “Ere one to one was cursedly confined,”
-
-or that he never married. It is fortunate he did not, for Venus herself,
-we fancy, could not have kept him by her side. His amours were
-notorious, and some of his mistresses were rare specimens of rustic
-beauty. Two daring spirits who followed the hounds were regular Dianas
-in their way, and he spent much of his time in the rural little cottages
-of these and others which were dotted over the estate at no great
-distance from the Hall. As rare Ben Jonson has it:—
-
- “When some one peculiar quality
- Doth so possess a man that it doth draw
- All his effects, his spirits, and his powers,
- In their confluction all to run one way,
- This may be truly said to be a humour.”
-
-Such a humour the old Squire had. Towards the last he found that some of
-his mistresses gave him a good deal of trouble; for in carrying out his
-desire to leave them comfortably provided for, his best intentions
-created jealousy, and he found it difficult to adjust their claims as
-regarded matters of income, Phœbe Higgs, who survived the Squire many
-years, and lived in a cottage with land attached, on the Willey side of
-the Shirlot, being the most clamorous. She set out one night with the
-intention of shooting the Squire, but was unnerved by her favourite
-monkey, who had stealthily gone on before, and jumped unobserved on her
-shoulder as she opened a gate. On another occasion she succeeded in
-surprising the Squire by forcing her way into his room and pointing a
-loaded pistol at him across the table, vowing she would shoot him unless
-he promised to make the sum left for her maintenance equal to that of
-Miss Cal—t. He had his children educated; they frequently visited at the
-Hall, and some married well. He speaks of them as his children and
-grandchildren in his letters, and manifested the greatest anxiety that
-everything should be done that could be done, by provisions in his will
-for those he was about to leave behind him. Indeed the same
-characteristics which gave a colouring to his life distinguished him to
-the last; and if the old fires burnt less brightly, the same inner sense
-and outward manifestations were evident in all he did.
-
-One thing which troubled him was the chancel of Barrow Church, as will be
-seen by the following characteristic letter to his agent, Mr. Pritchard,
-asking him to procure a legal opinion about certain encroachments upon
-what he conceived to be his rights, and those of the parishioners:—
-
- “DEAR SIR,—
-
- “You must remember Parson Jones has oft been talking to me about the
- pews put up, unfairly, I think, in the chancel of Barrow church. The
- whole of the chancel is mine as patron, and I am always obliged to do
- all the repairs to it, whenever wanted. There is a little small pew
- in it of very ancient date, besides these other two; in this, I
- suppose, it is intended to thrust poor me, the patron, into; humble
- and meek, and deprived of every comfort on my own spot, the chancel.
- The parson, you know, has been saucy on the occasion, as you know all
- black Toms are, and therefore I’ll now know my power from Mr. Mytton,
- and set the matter straight somehow or other. I can safely swear at
- this minute a dozen people of this parish (crowd as they will) can’t
- receive the Sacrament together, and therefore, instead of there being
- pews of any kind therein, there ought to be none at all, but a free
- unencumbered chancel at this hour. Rather than be as it is, I’ll be
- at the expense of pulling the present chancel down, rebuilding and
- enlarging it, so as to make all convenient and clever, before I’ll
- suffer these encroachments attended with every insult upon earth.
- Surely upon a representation to the bishop that the present chancel
- is much too small, and that the patron, at his own expense, wishes to
- enlarge it, I cannot think but it will be comply’d with. If this is
- not Mr. Mytton’s opinion as the best way, what is? and how am I to
- manage these encroaches?
-
- “Yours ever,
- —
-
- “P.S.—If the old chancel is taken down, I’ll take care that no pew
- shall stand in the new one. Mr. Mytton will properly turn this in
- his mind, and I’ll then face the old kit of them boldly. The old pew
- I spoke of, besides the other two in the chancel (mean and dirty as
- it is to a degree), yet the parson wants to let, if he does not do so
- now, to any person that comes to church, no matter who, so long as he
- gets the cash. It’s so small no one can sit with bended knees in it;
- and, in short, the whole chancel is not more than one-half as big as
- the little room I am now seated in; which must apparently show you,
- and, on your representation, Mr. Mytton likewise, how much too small
- it must be for so large a parish as Barrow, and with the addition of
- three pews—one very large indeed, the next to hold two or three
- people abreast, and the latter about three sideways, always standing,
- and totally unable to kneel in the least comfort.”
-
-Years were beginning to tell upon the old sportsman, reminding him that
-his career was drawing to a close, and he appeared to apprehend the truth
-Sir Thomas Brown embodied in the remark, that every hour adds to the
-current arithmetic, which scarce stands one moment; and since “the
-longest sun sets at right declensions,” he looked forward to that setting
-and made arrangements accordingly, which were in perfect keeping with the
-character of the man. He felt that his day was done, that night was
-coming on; and it was his wish that those who knew him best should be
-those chosen to attend his funeral, that his domestics and servants who
-had experienced his kindness should carry him to the tomb. And let it be
-when the sun goes down, when the work of the day is done; let each have a
-guinea, that he may meet his neighbour afterwards and talk over, if he
-likes, the merits and demerits of his old master, as none—next to his
-Maker—know them better. The provisions in the will of the old Squire, in
-which he left his estates to his cousin Cecil, afterwards Lord Forester,
-father of the present Right Hon. Lord Forester, made about five years
-before his death, were evidently made in this spirit.
-
-He became ill at one of his cottages on Shirlot, was taken home, attended
-by Dr. Thursfield (grandfather of the present Greville Thursfield, M.D.),
-and died whilst the doctor was still with him, on the 13th of July, 1811,
-in the seventy-third year of his age.
-
- * * * * *
-
- EXTRACTS _from the last Will and Testament_ (_dated the_ 3_rd_ _day
- of November_, 1805) _of George Forester_, _late of Willey_, _in the
- County of Salop_, _Esquire_.
-
- “I desire that all my just debts and funeral expenses, and the
- charges of proving this my Will, may be paid and discharged by my
- Executors hereinafter named, with all convenient speed after my
- decease, and that my body may be interred in a grave near the
- Communion table in the Parish Church of Willey aforesaid, or as near
- thereto as may be, in a plain and decent manner. And it is my Will
- that eight of my Servants or Workmen be employed as Bearers of my
- body to the grave, to each of whom I bequeath the sum of One Guinea,
- and I desire my Cousin Cecil Forester, of Ross Hall, in the County of
- Salop, Esquire, Member of Parliament for the Town and Liberties of
- Wenlock, in the same County, the eldest son of my late uncle, Colonel
- Cecil Forester, deceased, to fix upon and appoint six of those of my
- friends and companions in the neighbourhood of Willey aforesaid, whom
- he knew to have been intimate with, and respected by, me, to be
- Bearers of the Pall at my funeral, and I request that my body may be
- carried to its burial-place in the dusk of the evening.
-
- “And I do hereby direct that my chestnut horse, commonly called the
- Aldenham horse, shall be shot as soon as conveniently may be after my
- decease by two persons, one of whom to fire first, and the other to
- wait in reserve and fire immediately afterwards, so that he may be
- put to death as expeditiously as possible, and I direct that he shall
- afterwards be buried with his hide on, and that a flat stone without
- inscription shall be placed over him. And I do hereby request my
- Cousin Cecil Forester and the said John Pritchard, as soon as
- conveniently may be after my decease, to look over and inspect the
- letters, papers, and writings belonging to me at the time of my
- decease, and such of them as they shall deem to be useless I desire
- them to destroy.”
-
-His wishes, we need scarcely say, were carried out to the letter. He was
-buried by torchlight in the family vault in Willey Church, beneath the
-family pew, to which the steps shown in our engraving lead. Founded and
-endowed by the lords of Willey at some remote period, this venerable
-edifice has remained, with the exception of its chancel, the same as we
-see it, for many generations past. It stands within the shadow of the
-Old Hall, and might from its appearance have formed the text of Gray’s
-ivy-mantled tower, where
-
- “The moping owl does to the moon complain;”
-
-being covered with a luxuriant growth of this clinging evergreen to the
-very top. Standing beneath, and peering through the Norman-looking
-windows, which admit but a sober light, glimpses are obtained of costly
-monuments with the names and titles of patrons whose escutcheons are
-visible against the wall. The Squire’s tomb remains uninscribed; but in
-1821 Cecil Weld, the first Lord Forester, erected a marble tablet near,
-with the simple record—“To the memory of my late cousin and benefactor,
-George Forester, Esq., Willey Park, May 10, 1821.”
-
-
-
-
-THE SQUIRE’S CHESTNUT MARE.
-
-
- A NEW HUNTING SONG.
-
- _Written for the present Work by_ J. P. DOUGLAS, ESQ.
-
- AWAY we go! my mare and I,
- Over fallow and lea:
- She’s carried me twenty years or nigh—
- The best of friends are we.
- With steady stride she sweeps along,
- The old Squire on her back:
- While echoes far, earth’s sweetest sound,
- The music of the pack.
- Ah! how they stare, both high and low,
- To see the “Willey chestnut” go.
-
- Full many a time, from dewy morn
- Until the day was done,
- We’ve follow’d the huntsman’s ringing horn,
- Proud of a gallant run.
- Well in the front, my mare and I—
- A good ’un to lead is she;
- For’ard, hark for’ard! still the cry—
- In at the death are we.
- My brave old mare—when I’m laid low
- Shall never another master know.
-
- The sailor fondly loves his ship,
- The gallant loves his lass;
- The toper drains with fever’d lip,
- His deep, full-bottom’d glass.
- Away! such hollow joys I scorn,
- But give to me, I pray,
- The cry of the hounds, the sounding horn,
- For’ard! hark, hark away!
- And this our burial chant shall be,
- For the chestnut mare shall die with me!
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX.
-
-
-A.—_Page_ 10.
-
-
-STRUTT, quoting from the book of St. Alban’s the sort of birds assigned
-to the different ranks of persons, places them in the following order:—
-
-The eagle, the vulture, and the melona for an emperor.
-The ger-falcon and the tercel of the ger-falcon for a king.
-The falcon gentle and the tercel gentle for a prince.
-The falcon of the rock for a duke.
-The falcon peregrine for an earl.
-The bastard for a baron.
-The sacre and the sacret for a knight.
-The lanere and the laneret for an esquire.
-The marlyon for a lady.
-The hobby for a young man.
-The gos-hawk for a yeoman.
-The tercel for a poor man.
-The sparrow-hawk for a priest.
-The musket for a holy-water clerk.
-The kesterel for a knave or a servant.
-
-Of some of the later and milder measures taken to protect the hawk, it
-may be remarked that the 5th of Elizabeth, c. 21, enacts that if any
-person shall unlawfully take any hawks, or their eggs, out of the woods
-or ground of any person, and be thereof convicted at the assizes or
-sessions on indictment, bill or information at the suit of the king, or
-of the party, he shall be imprisoned three months, and pay treble
-damages, and after the expiration of three months shall find sureties for
-his good abearing for seven years, or remain in prison till he doth, § 3.
-
-The last statute concerning _falconry_ (except a clause in 7 Jac. c. 11,
-which limits the time of hawking at pheasants and partridges) is that of
-the 23rd Eliz. c. 10, which enacts that if any manner of person shall
-hawk in another man’s corn after it is eared, and before it is shocked,
-and be therefore convicted at the assizes, sessions, or leet, he shall
-pay 40_s._ to the owner, and if not paid within ten days he shall be
-imprisoned for a month.
-
-
-
-B.—_Page_ 41.
-
-
-Mr. Eyton, to whose learned and valuable work on the “Antiquities of
-Shropshire” the author again acknowledges his obligations, as all who
-follow that painstaking writer must do, with regard to the holding at the
-More, says, “The earliest notice of this tenure which occurs in the Roll
-of Shropshire Sergeantries, is dated 13th of John, 1211, and merely says
-that Richard de Medler holds one virgate of land, and renders for the
-same annually, at the Feast of St. Michael, two knives (knifeulos). A
-second contemporary roll supplies the place of payment, viz., the
-Exchequer; a third writes the name, Richard le Mener. In 1245 Nicholas
-de More is said to pay at the Exchequer two knives (cultellos)—one good,
-the other very bad—for certain land which he holds of the King in capite
-in More. In 1255 the Stottesden Jurors report that Nicholas de Medler
-holds one virgate in More, in capite of the Lord King, rendering at the
-Exchequer two knives, one of which ought to cut a hazel rod, and he does
-no other service for the said land. In that of 1274 Jurors of the same
-Hundred say at length that Nicholas de la More holds one virgate in that
-vill of the Lord King, in capite, by sergeantry, of taking two knives to
-the King’s Exchequer, at the feast of St. Michael in each year, so that
-he ought to cut a hazel rod with one knife, so that the knife should bend
-(plicare) with the stroke; and again, to cut a rod with the other knife.
-The record of 1284 describes Nicholas de la More as holding three parts
-of a virgate and two moors, by sergeantry, &c. The Jurors of Oct. 1292
-say that William de la More, of Erdington, holds one virgate in the More,
-by sergeantry of taking two knives to the King’s Exchequer on the morrow
-of St. Michael, and to cut with the same knives two hazel rods.”
-
-
-
-C—_Page_ 49.
-
-
-This bold projecting rock is called, from Major Thomas, “Smallman’s
-Leap,” from a tradition that the major, a staunch Royalist, being
-surprised by a party of Cromwell’s horse, was singly and hotly pursued
-over Westwood, where, finding all hope of escape at an end, he turned
-from the road, hurried his horse into a full gallop to the edge of the
-precipice, and went over. The horse was killed by falling on the trees
-beneath, but the major escaped, and secreted himself in the woods.
-Certain historical facts, showing that the family long resided here,
-appear to give a colouring to this tradition. Thus, in the reign of
-Henry III. (57th year) William Smallman had a lease from John Lord of
-Brockton par Shipton, Corvedale, of 17½ acres of land, with a sytche,
-called Woolsytche, and two parcels of meadow in the fields of Brockton.
-John Smallman possessed by lease and grant, from Thomas de la Lake, 30
-acres of land in the fields of Larden par Shipton, for twenty years from
-the feast of St. Michael, living 4th Edward II. (1310) 41st Edward III.
-(1367), Richard Smallman, of Shipton, granted to Roger Powke, of
-Brockton, all his lands and tenements in the township and fields of
-Shipton, as fully as was contained in an original deed. Witnesses—John
-de Galford, Sir Roger Mon (Chaplain), Henry de Stanwy, John Tyklewardyne
-(Ticklarton), of Stanton, John de Gurre of the same, with others. 1st
-Henry VI. (1422), John Smallman was intrusted with the collection of the
-subsidies of taxes payable to the Crown within the franchise of Wenlock.
-Thomas Smallman, of Elton, co. Harford, and Inner Temple,
-barrister-at-law, afterwards a Welsh judge, purchased the manor of
-Wilderhope, Stanway, and the teg and estates, and had a numerous grant of
-arms, 5th October, 1589. Major Thomas Smallman, a staunch royalist, born
-1624, compounded for his estate £140.
-
-Underneath this bold projecting headland, sometimes called “Ipikin’s
-Rock,” is Ipikin’s Cave, an excavation very difficult of approach, where
-tradition alleges a bold outlaw long concealed himself and his horse, and
-from which he issued to make some predatory excursion.
-
-The term _hope_, both as a prefix and termination, is of such frequent
-occurrence here that it is only natural to suppose that it has some
-special signification; and looking at the positions of Prest_hope_,
-East_hope_, Millic_hope_, Middle_hope_, Wilder_hope_, _Hope_say, and
-_Hope_ Bowdler, that signification appears to be a recess, or place
-remote between the hills. Easthope is a rural little village about two
-miles beyond Ipikin’s Rock, pleasantly situated in one of these long
-natural troughs which follow the direction of Wenlock Edge.
-
-It appears to have been within the Long Forest, and is mentioned in
-Domesday as being held in Saxon times by Eruni and Uluric; it was
-afterwards held by Edric de Esthop, and others of the same name. There
-was a church here as early as 1240, and in the graveyard, between two
-ancient yews, are two tombs, without either date or inscription, in which
-two monks connected with the Abbey of Wenlock are supposed to have been
-interred.
-
-Near Easthope, and about midway between Larden Hall and Lutwyche Hall, is
-an enclosure comprising about eight acres, or an encampment, forming
-nearly an entire circle, surrounded by inner and outer fosses. The
-internal slope of the inner wall is 12 feet, and externally 25, while the
-crest of the parapet is 6 feet broad. The relief of the second vallum
-rises 10 feet from the fosse, and is about 12 feet across its parapet.
-There is also a second ditch, but it is almost obliterated. It is
-supposed to have been a military post, forming an important link in the
-chain of British entrenchments which stretched throughout this portion of
-the county. Near it a mound resembling a tumulus was opened some years
-since by the Rev. R. More and T. Mytton, Esq., and in or near which a
-British urn of baked clay was discovered, on another occasion, while
-making a drain.
-
-
-
-D.—_Page_ 66.
-
-
- “Proavus meus Richardus de isto matrimonio susceptus uxorem habuit
- Annam Richardi dicti Forestarii filiam qui quidem Richardus filius
- erat natu minor prænobilis familiæ Forestariorum (olim Regiorum
- Vigorniensis saltûs custodum) et famoso Episcopo Bonnero a-Secritis
- Hic Suttanum Madoci incolebat, et egregias ædes posuit in urbicula
- dicta Brugge, sive ad Pontem vel hodie dictas Forestarii Dementiam,”
-
-
-
-E.—PEDIGREE OF THE FORESTER FAMILY, _Page_ 69.
-
-
-In his “Sheriffs of Shropshire,” Mr. Blakeway in speaking of the Forester
-family, says: “They were originally Foresters, an office much coveted by
-our ancestors, which latter seems probable, from the fact, that on the
-Pipe Rolls of 1214, Hugh Forester accounts for a hundred merks that he
-may hold the bailiwick of the forest of Salopscire, as his father held it
-before him.” King John, however, remits thirty merks of the payment in
-consequence of Hugh having taken to wife the niece of John l’Estrange, at
-_His Majesty’s request_. It does not seem clear, however, that Hugh, the
-son of Robert, can be traced to have been in the direct line of the
-Willey family, he having been ancestor to Roger, son of John, the first
-of the king’s six foresters. The other, Robert de Wellington, the late
-Mr. George Morris, in his “Genealogies of the Principal Landed
-Proprietors,” now in the possession of T. C. Eyton, Esq., to whose
-kindness we are indebted for this extract, says was the earliest person
-that can certainly be called ancestor of the present family of Forester.
-His sergeantry is described as the custody of the King’s Hay of Eyton, of
-which, and several adjoining manors, Peter de Eyton, lineal ancestor of
-the present Thomas Campbell Eyton, of Eyton, and grandson of Robert de
-Eyton, who gave the whole of the Buttery estate to Shrewsbury Abbey, was
-the lord.
-
-Thomas, a son of Robert Forester of Wellington, in the Hundred Rolls, in
-1254, is said by the king’s justices itinerant to hold half a virgate of
-the king to keep the Hay of Wellington. Roger le Forester of Wellington,
-who succeeded Robert, appears to have died 1277–8, and to have left two
-sons, Robert and Roger. Robert had property in Wellington and the
-Bailiwick of the forest of the Wrekin, and is supposed to have succeeded
-his father, whom he did not long survive, having died the year following,
-1278–9. Roger his brother succeeded to his possession, and held also the
-Hay of Wellington, of which he died seized in 1284–5. Robert, the
-Forester of Wellington, Mr. Blakeway says, occurs in the Hundred Roll of
-Bradford in 1287, and is shown to have held the Hay of Wellington till
-1292–3, when Roger, son of Roger, proving himself of age, paid the king
-one merk as a relief for his lands in Wellington, held by sergeantry, to
-keep Wellington Hay, in the forest of the Wrekin, &c. This is the Roger
-de Wellington before-mentioned, as one of King Edward’s foresters by fee,
-recorded in his Great Charter of the forests of Salopssier, in the
-perambulation of 1300. He died 1331.
-
-John le Forester, as John, son and heir of Roger le Forester de Welynton,
-succeeded to the property, and proved himself of age in the reign of
-Edward III., 1335. With John de Eyton he attested a grant in Wellington,
-and died 24th of Edward III., 1350.
-
-William le Forester succeeded his father, John, in 1377, and died 19th of
-Richard II., 1395.
-
-In 1397 Roger Forester de Wellington is described as holding Wellington
-Hay and Chace. He died in 1402.
-
-Roger, his son and heir, was in 1416 appointed keeper of the same haia by
-the Duchess of Norfolk and the Lady Bergavenny, sisters and co-heiresses
-of the great Thomas Fitz-Alan, Earl of Arundel.
-
-His son and successor, John, died 5th of Edward IV. 1465, seized of the
-lands, &c., in Wellington, and the custody of the forest of the Wrekin.
-He had two sons, William and John, also a son Richard; and William, son
-of the above, appears to have been the father of another John, the former
-John having died without issue. John, in 1506, witnesses a deed of
-Thomas Cresset, as John Forester the younger; he married Joice Upton, the
-heiress of Philip Upton, of Upton under Haymond, and obtained the estate
-of that place, which is still inherited by his descendants.
-
-This John Forester first resided in Watling Street, where his ancestors
-for several generations had lived, in the old timbered mansion, now
-occupied by Dr. Cranage, but he afterwards removed to Easthope, whilst
-his son William resided at Upton; and Richard Forester, alias Forster of
-Sutton Maddock, secretary to Bishop Bonner, who built the old mansion in
-Bridgnorth, called “Forester’s Folly,” which was burnt down during the
-siege of the castle, when the high town became a heap of ruins, appears
-to have been a son of John Forester, of Easthope; and Anthony Forester or
-Foster of Sir Walter Scott’s novel, who was born about 1510, was a son of
-his.
-
-In the 34th of Henry VIII., 1542–3, Thomas Foster and Elizabeth his wife,
-account in the Exchequer for several temporalities in connection with the
-monastery of St. Peter’s, Shrewsbury. Sir William Forester, KB., married
-Lady Mary Cecil, daughter of James, third Earl of Salisbury. He was a
-staunch Protestant, and represented the county with George Weld, as
-previously stated, with whom he voted in favour of the succession of the
-House of Hanover, and the family came into possession of the Willey
-estates by the marriage of Brook Forester of Dothill Park, with one of
-the Welds, the famous George Forester, the Willey Squire, being the fruit
-of that marriage. George Forester left the whole of his estates to his
-cousin, Cecil Forester, of Ross Hall, who was allowed by George the
-Fourth, whose personal friendship he had been permitted to enjoy for many
-years, to add the name of Weld in 1821. Cecil Weld Forester, Esq., was
-ennobled the same year by George the Fourth, who, when Prince of Wales,
-honoured him with a visit at Ross Hall. He married Catherine, daughter
-of His Grace the fourth Duke of Rutland, and was not less renowned than
-his cousin, as a sportsman. His eagerness for the chase was happily
-characterised by the late Mr. Meynell, who used to say, “First out of
-cover came Cecil Forester, next the fox, and then my hounds.” A famous
-leap of his, thirty feet across a stream, on his famous horse Bernardo,
-has been recorded in some lines now at Willey which accompany the
-portrait of the horse. He is supposed to have been one of the first who
-instituted the present system of hard riding to hounds, and a horse known
-to have been ridden by him, it is said, would at any time fetch £20 more
-than the ordinary price. Speaking of the classic proportions of a horse,
-and the perfection of the art of riding in connection with his lordship
-as a sportsman, Colonel Apperley, remarked some years ago, “Unless a man
-sits gracefully on his horse, and handles him well, that fine effect is
-lost. As the poet says, he would be incorporated with the brave beast,
-and such does Lord Forester appear to be. His eye to a country is also
-remarkably quick, and his knowledge of Leicestershire has given him no
-small advantage. On one occasion he disregarded the good old English
-custom of ‘looking before you leap,’ and landed in the middle of a deep
-pool. ‘Hold on,’ a countryman who saw him, shouted to others coming in
-the same direction. ‘Hold your tongue—say nothing, we shall have it full
-in a minute,’ said Lord Forester.” The Colonel added, “In consequence of
-residing in Shropshire, a country which has been so long famous for its
-breed of horses, he has a good opportunity of mounting himself well. He
-always insisted on the necessity of lengthy shoulders, good fetlocks,
-well formed hind legs and open feet; and knowing better than to confound
-strength and size, his horses seldom exceeded fifteen hands. On anything
-relating to a hunter his authority has long been considered classic, and
-if Forester said so it was enough. Lord Forester will always stand
-pre-eminent in the field, whilst in private life he is a very friendly
-man, and has ever adhered to those principles of honour and integrity
-which characterise the gentleman.” He died on the 23rd of May, 1828, in
-his 61st year. He had, as we have said, ten children, the gallant Frank
-Forester, as Colonel Apperley styles him, being one. The oldest was the
-present Right Hon. J. G. W. Forester, whose popularity in connection with
-the Belvoir Hunt is so well known.
-
-His lordship, whose portrait we give at the commencement of this work,
-and who is now in the 73rd year of his age, has added very much to the
-Willey estates, both by purchase and by improvements, and is very much
-esteemed by his tenantry.
-
-The Right Hon. General Forester, who succeeded his brother in the
-representation of Wenlock, has sat for the borough for forty-five years,
-and is now the Father of the House of Commons. Whether out-door
-exercises, associated with the pleasures of the chase, to which the
-ancestors of the Foresters have devoted themselves for so many centuries,
-have anything to do with it or not we cannot say; but the Foresters are
-remarkable for masculine and feminine beauty, and the General has
-frequently been spoken of by the press as the best looking man in the
-House of Commons. Neither he nor his elder brother, the present Rt. Hon.
-Lord Forester, are likely to leave behind them direct issue. The younger
-brother, the Hon. and Rev. O. W. W. Forester, has one son, Cecil, who has
-several sons to perpetuate the name of Forester, which we hope will long
-be associated with Willey.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
-Abbot of Leicester, 15
- ,, Salop, 6
- „ Tavistock, 15
-Addison, 80
-Albrighton red-coats, 30
-Aldenham, 32
-Alfred, 19
-Algar, 19
-Apley, 32
-Apperley, Col., 84
-Arrows, 22
-Atterley, 22, 32
-
- * * * * *
-
-Bachelors’ Hall, 104
-Badger, 52
-Barons’ War, 25
-Barrow, 32
-Battle of Worcester, 26
-Baxter, 65
-Beacons, 168
-Beaver, 4
-Bellet’s, Rev. George, Antiquities of Bridgnorth, 66
-Belswardine, 32
-Benson, M., Esq., 48
-Benthall, 32
-Benthall Edge, 53
-Bernard’s Hill, 23
-Bishop Bonner, 66
- ,, Percy, 65
-Bittern, 5
-Black Toms, 182
-Bold, 32
-Boney, 167
-Bowman’s Hill, 26
-Bow, the weapon of sport and of war, 22
-Brock-holes, 52
-Broseley, 32, 40
-Brown Clee, 96
-Brug, 40
-Buck, 16
-Buildwas, 100
-
- * * * * *
-
-Cantreyne, 32
-Castellan, 23
-Castillon, 14
-Cask of wine, 24
-Castle, 22
-Caughley, 32
-Chace of Shirlot, 31
-Chaucer, 46
-Chesterton, 18
-Chester, Earl of, 25
-Chetton, 31
-Childers, 88
-Christmas Day, 38
-Claverley, 25
-Clee Hills, 39
-Cliffords, 40
-Coalbrookdale, 40
-Coed, 19
-Colemore, 32
-Collars of gold, 9
-Constable, 45
-Coracle, 6
-Corbett, 24
-Corve Dale, 51
-Cox Morris, 115
-Craft of Hunting, 16
-Cressage, 49
-Creswick, 45
-
- * * * * *
-
-D—n the Church, 116
-Danesford, 19
-Dastardly devils, 157
-Dawley, 58
-Dean, 32
-Deer, 31, 36, 37, 39
-Deer Leap, 36
-Dibdin, 141
-Ditton, 39
-Dodos, 4
-Domesday, 71
-Dothill, 65
-Druids, 46, 50
-Drury Lane, 144
-Duke’s Antiquities, 28
-Duke of York, 171
-
- * * * * *
-
-Early features of the country, 8
-Earl of Derby, 26
-Earl Dundonald, 171
-Easthope, 49
-Egret, 5
-Elk, Gigantic, 11
-England, The, of our ancestor, 79
-Evelith, 66
-Eyton, 58
-Eyton, Sir H, 63
-Eyton, T. C, 63
-
- * * * * *
-
-Falcon, 9
-First iron barge, 170
-Fishing a recreation for the sick, 7
-Fishing an attractive art, &c., 6
- „ practised by primitive dwellers, 5
-Forest Lodge, 28
-Forest Roll, 58
-Forester, Brook, 76
- „ George, 76
- ,, Hugh, 58
- „ John, 63
- „ Robert, 58, 60, 63
- „ Roger, 63
- „ Squire, 76
- „ William, 73
-Forester’s Folly, 66
-Forster, Richard, 64
-Foster, Anthony, Lord of the Manor of Little Wenlock, 64
-Foster, Anthony, a different character to what Sir Walter Scott
-represents him, 67, 68
-Fox-holes, 52
-Fox-hunters’ Christening, 120
-Fox-hunting Moll, 121
-
- * * * * *
-
-Gammer Gurton’s Needle, 26, 29
-Gatacre, 26
-Gentlemen nearest the fire, 175
-George Earl of Shrewsbury, 29
-Goats, 25
-Grant, singular, to John Forester, 63
-
- * * * * *
-
-Hangster’s Gate, 145
-Harold, 48
-Harpswood, 33
-Hay Gate, 59
-Haye, 60
-Haye of Shirlot, 40
- ,, Wellington, 58
-Hawking, 10
-Hermitage, 26, 27
-Heron, 10
-Hill Top, 49
-Hinton, 115
-Honest old Tom, 89
-Hope Bowdler, 49
-Hughley, 49
-Hugh Montgomery, 39
-Hunting as old as the hills, 1
-Hunting-matches, 61
-
- * * * * *
-
-Imbert, 40
-Incledon, 143
-Ipikin’s Rock, 49
-Iron, 41
-
- * * * * *
-
-Kennels, 86
-King Canute, 12
- „ Edward I., 24
- ,, „ VI., 29
- „ Henry I., 13
- „ „ III. in Shrewsbury, 14
- ,, ,, III., 28
- ,, ,, VII., 29
- „ „ VIII., 10, 63
- „ John, 10
- ,, Richard I., 13
- „ „ II., 28
- „ William I., 12
-
- * * * * *
-
-Lacon, 73
-Lady Oak, 49, 50
-Larden, 48
-Larry Palmer, 109
-Latimer, 15
-Legend, 20
-Leland, 41
-Lilleshall, 5
-Linley, 42
-Little Wenlock, 10
-Lodge Farm, 36
-Long runs, 96
-Lutwyche, 48
-
- * * * * *
-
-Major Forester and his Volunteers, 159
-Marsh and forest periods, 8
-Maypoles, 86
-Merrie days, 16
-Mog Forest, 49
-Moody, 11
-Moody’s Horn, 127
-Morfe Forest, 17
- „ Volunteers, 172
-Morville, 31
-Mount St. Gilbert, 57
-Muckley Row, 34
-Needle’s Eye, 56
-
- * * * * *
-
-Oaks, 51
-Offenders in forests, 14
-Old boots, 138
-Old Hall, 73
- „ Lodge, 29
- „ names, 27
- „ records, 96
- „ style of hunting, 84
- ,, Simkiss, 96
- „ tenures, 41
- ,, Tinker, 96
- „ trees, 50, 55
- „ Trojan, 130
-Ordericus Vitalis, 13, 18
-Original letters, 90, 91
-
- * * * * *
-
-Parson Stephens in his shirt, 111
-Parson Stephens and the poacher, 119
-Pendlestone Mill, 57
-Phœbe Higgs, 95
-Pigmy, 88
-Pilot, 88
-Piers Plowman, 14
-Prince Rufus, 13
-
- * * * * *
-
-Quatford, 21
-
- * * * * *
-
-Red deer, 30
-Robin Hood, 23
-Roger de Montgomery, 21
-
- * * * * *
-
-Savory, 92
-Seabright, 130
-Second Wenlock Loyal Volunteers, 165
-Shade of Tom Moody, 146
-Sherwood, 47
-Shirlot, 34
-Shipton, 51
-Smallman’s Leap, 49
-Smith, Sidney Stedman, Esq., 66
-Smithies, 42
-Sore sparrow-hawk, 9
-Spoonhill, 48
-Sporting priors, 37
-Sporting visitations, 38
-Sportsmen attend, 136
-Squire Forester’s gift to Dibdin, 143
-Squire Forester among his neighbours, 173
-Squire Forester and the rioters, 177
-Squire Forester in Parliament, 151
-Squire Forester not a model for imitation, 177
-Squire Forester notorious for his amours, 180
-Squire Forester, Death of, 185
- ,, „ Extracts from the will of, 185
-Stoke St. Milburgh, 40
-Stubbs, 89
-Sutton Maddock, 65
-Swainmote, 24, 37
-Swine, 20
-Sylvan slopes, 47
-
- * * * * *
-
-Tasley, 32
-Taylor, the water-poet, 60
-Tevici, huntsman to Edward I., 12
-Thursfield, Thomas, 44
- „ William, 84
-Tickwood, 100
-Tom Moody, 122
-Tom Moody’s last request, 135
-Trencher hounds, 130
-Tumuli, 18
-Turner, 114
-
- * * * * *
-
-Venison, 35
-Vivaries, 5
-Volunteers, 158, 166
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Walls,” The, 18
-Wastes, 25
-Weirs, 5
-Welds, The, 73
-Wenlock (Loyal Volunteers), 159
-Wenlock, 38, 152
-Wheatland, 45
-Who-who-hoop, 129
-Wild boar, 29
-Wilkinson, 114
-Willey, 70
- ,, Church, 173, 186
- „ rector, 118
- ,, Wharf, 170
-Williley, 72
-Wilton, 79
-Windfalls, 35
-Woodcraft, 14
-Worf, 18
-Wrekin, 55
-
- * * * * *
-
- * * * * *
-
- PRINTED BY VIRTUE AND CO., CITY ROAD, LONDON.
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- * * * * *
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- HANDBOOK
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- TO THE
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-
- With Twenty-five Illustrations.
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- BY J. RANDALL, F.G.S.
-
- Author of “The Severn Valley,” “Old Sports and Sportsmen,” “Villages
- and Village Churches,” &c.
-
- [Picture: Illustration of from Severn Valley Railway book]
-
- VIRTUE & CO., 26, IVY LANE, LONDON;
- J. RANDALL, MADELEY, SHROPSHIRE.
-
- * * * * *
-
- TENT LIFE
-
- WITH
-
- ENGLISH GIPSIES IN NORWAY.
-
- BY HUBERT SMITH,
-
- Member of the English Alpine Club; Norse Turist Forening; and Fellow
- of the Historical Society of Great Britain.
-
- _With Five full-page Engravings_, _Thirty-one smaller_
- _Illustrations_, _and Map of the Country_, _showing Routes_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The following is a recent Review of the Book:—
-
- “We do not know any similar kind of work, and we believe that it will
- stand alone in the speciality of its interest.
-
- “In addition to much adventure resulting from a nomadic life in a
- foreign country, it contains descriptions of scenery, besides
- information which may instruct the philologist. A carefully prepared
- map shows the routes and camp grounds of the Author’s nomadic
- expedition.
-
- “The work, in consequence of the death of his late Majesty, Carl XV.,
- on the 18th Sept., 1872, is dedicated by permission of his present
- Majesty, Oscar II., ‘_In Memoriam_.’
-
- “The work has clearly been undertaken at considerable cost, and the
- scenes of travel described extend over nearly 2,000 miles of sea and
- land traversed by the Author with tents, gipsies, animal
- commissariat, and baggage, independent of any other shelter or
- accommodation than what he took with him. In the course of the
- expedition one of the highest waterfalls of Norway was visited,
- ‘Morte fos,’ and the highest mountain in Norway, the ‘Galdhossiggen’
- was ascended. The book is cheap at a guinea, being illustrated with
- five full-page engravings, all of which are taken from the Author’s
- original sketches, or photographs specially obtained for the purpose;
- they are beautiful works of Art, and are admirably executed by the
- celebrated Mr. Edward Whymper, Author of ‘Scrambles amongst the
- Alps.’”
-
- * * * * *
-
- LONDON: S. KING & CO., 63, CORNHILL;
- AND 72, PATERNOSTER ROW.
-
- * * * * *
-
- [Picture: Decorative graphic with letters C S N on it, underneath which
- is written Coalport]
-
- JOHN ROSE & CO.,
-
- _PORCELAIN MANUFACTURERS_,
-
- COALPORT, SHROPSHIRE.
-
- _Five minutes’ walk from Coalport Station on the Severn Valley and_
- _Shropshire Union Railways_.
-
- * * * * *
-
- MEDAL OF THE SOCIETY OF ARTS, 1820.
- FIRST CLASS MEDAL, EXHIBITION, 1851.
- First Class Medal, Paris Exhibition, 1855.
- FIRST CLASS MEDAL, EXHIBITION, 1862.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The _Court Journal_, speaking of the productions exhibited by William
-Pugh, Esq., May, 1871, says—
-
- “We do not think that any porcelain productions would equal those of
- the Coalport works. The show-case that the owners exhibit
- independently, and their manufactures, displayed by various firms,
- have, in all instances, the highest merit. We are well aware we
- shall be informed that our praise is but a stale echo, as this firm
- is renowned of old for producing the finest china, having some
- process of blending or applying chemical agencies known only to
- themselves, and being celebrated over Europe for the beautiful colour
- of the gold—a matter of course of very considerable consequence, as
- it is used so bounteously in the ornamentation of china.”
-
-In an article on the “world’s great show,” as the Viennese were pleased
-to call it, the same Journal remarked—
-
- “We have latterly challenged the continental world to compete with us
- and to contend for equality in many branches of manufacture into
- which art excellence and refinement of taste enter, and we have
- carried off the palm. Neither Sèvres nor Dresden has of late years
- compared with the best English productions. There is no doubt of
- this; and most especially we might instance as successful rivalry the
- progress that the Coalport Works have made. The marked patronage of
- Royal circles on the Continent and at home for their productions is,
- perhaps, the best proof of the truth of our statement. . . . They
- have been especially practical in their catering for the Vienna
- Exhibition, and met the foreigner at his weak point rather than
- courted rivalry at his strongest. No nation on the Continent can
- compete with the French as regards the painting, though Coalport
- could and will challenge with every hope of success for the first
- place when it comes to the question of rivalry in design, exquisite
- form, graceful ornamentation, brilliancy of colour, bright burnish of
- gold, and tenderness of glaze in merely decorative porcelain works.
- The specimens of this character which are sent will, we are sure,
- worthily maintain the reputation of Coalport.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The _Standard_ also, May 23, 1873, in an article on the “Ceramic Art,”
-had the following:—
-
- “Messrs. Daniell have so many good things from Coalport Works that it
- would be difficult to present even a brief mention of them all.
- There is one beautiful pair of vases in imitation Cashmere ware which
- Sir R. Wallace has already purchased, and the same gentleman has also
- secured a number of plates delightfully painted by Faugeron with
- exotic leaves. Two portrait vases of the Emperor and Empress of
- Austria are of old Sèvres shape, the bodies being of turquoise and
- gold, and the paintings by Palmere, almost miniatures in their fine
- detail. Two gros bleu vases, with raised and chased gold
- ornamentation and panels, choicely painted with birds by Randall, are
- as elegant as a pair of jardinières, with a cobalt ground and gold
- ferns and grasses in relief, butterflies touched up in bright enamel,
- toning the otherwise too great richness of the dark gold and blue.
- These are only a few of the attractions of one of the finest, though
- not largest, cases in the section. Messrs. Pellatt exhibit some
- Coalport ware, which is in every respect worthy of the high repute of
- that renowned manufactory.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- MARBLE AND STONE WORKS, SWAN HILL, SHREWSBURY.
-
- * * * * *
-
- R. DODSON
-
- Respectfully begs to intimate that the Show Rooms contain a large
- collection of
-
- MARBLE, STONE, & ENAMELLED SLATE CHIMNEY PIECES,
-
- MARBLE AND STONE MURAL MONUMENTS,
-
- CEMETERY AND CHURCHYARD MEMORIALS,
-
- FONTS, FOUNTAINS, VASES, SLATE CISTERNS,
- &c. &c. &c.
-
- _Designs forwarded for inspection_; _and communications by letter will_
- _receive immediate attention_.
-
- * * * * *
-
- THE COALBROOKDALE CO.
-
- MANUFACTURERS OF ALL KINDS OF
-
- BRICKS AND TILES,
-
- RIDGING, FLOORING,
-
- FIRE BRICKS, SQUARES, CHIMNEY
- TOPS, &c.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _PRESSED & MOULDED BRICKS_
-
- FOR FACING STRING COURSES,
-
- And other Architectural Purposes, in Blue, White,
- and Red.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _ALSO PLAIN AND ORNAMENTAL_
-
- RADIATING ARCH BRICKS,
-
- FOR WINDOWS AND OTHER OPENINGS,
- IN THE ABOVE COLOURS.
-
- * * * * *
-
- FLOWER POTS, BOXES, PENDANTS,
- &c.
-
- * * * * *
-
- ALL MATERIALS OF THE BEST AND MOST DURABLE DESCRIPTION.
-
- * * * * *
-
- CRAVEN, DUNNILL, & CO.
- (LIMITED),
-
- Encaustic & Geometrical Tiles,
-
- JACKFIELD WORKS,
-
- NEAR IRONBRIDGE, SHROPSHIRE.
-
- * * * * *
-
- PATTERN SHEETS, SPECIAL DESIGNS, AND
- ESTIMATES,
-
- ON APPLICATION TO THE WORKS.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Elementary Geological Collections, at 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, to 100 guineas
-each, and every requisite to assist those commencing the study of this
-interesting branch of Science, a knowledge of which affords so much
-pleasure to the traveller in all parts of the world.
-
-A collection for Five Guineas, to illustrate the recent works on Geology,
-by Ansted, Buckland, Lyell, Mantell, Murchison, Page, Phillips, and
-others, contains 200 specimens, in a plain Mahogany Cabinet, with five
-trays, comprising the following specimens, viz.:—
-
-MINERALS which are either the components of Rocks, or occasionally
-imbedded in them—Quartz, Agate, Chalcedony, Jasper, Garnet, Zeolite,
-Hornblende, Augite, Asbestos, Felspar, Mica, Talc, Tourmaline, Spinel,
-Zircon, Corundum, Lapis Lazuli, Calcite, Fluor, Selenite, Baryta,
-Strontia, Salt, Sulphur, Plumbago, Bitumen, &c.
-
-NATIVE METALS, or METALLIFEROUS MINERALS; these are found in masses or
-beds, in veins, and occasionally in the beds of rivers. Specimens of the
-following Metallic Ores are put in the Cabinet:—Iron, Manganese, Lead,
-Tin, Zinc, Copper, Antimony, Silver, Gold, Platina, Mercury, Titanium,
-&c.
-
-ROCKS: Granite, Gneiss, Mica-slate, Clay-slate, Porphyry, Serpentine,
-Sandstones, Limestones, Basalt, Lavas, &c.
-
-PALÆOZOIC FOSSILS from the Cambrian, Silurian, Devonian, Carboniferous,
-and Permian Rocks.
-
-SECONDARY FOSSILS from the Rhætic, Lias, Oolite, Wealden, and Cretaceous
-Groups.
-
-TERTIARY FOSSILS from the Plastic Clay, London Clay, Crag, &c.
-
-In the more expensive collections some of the specimens are rare, and all
-more select.
-
- JAMES TENNANT, Mineralogist (by Appointment)
- to Her Majesty, 149, Strand, London, W.C.
-
- * * * * *
-
- THE
- OLD HALL SCHOOL,
- WELLINGTON, SALOP.
-
- * * * * *
-
- RESIDENT MASTERS:
-
- Principal.
-
-J. EDWARD CRANAGE, M.A., Ph.D. of the University of Jena; Author of
-“Mental Education;” Lecturer to the Society of Arts, &c., &c.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Head Master.
-
- DAVID JOHNSTON, Esq., M.A., Aberdeen.
-
- Second Master.
-
- THOMAS WILLIAMS, Esq., B.A.,
- (In Mathematical Honours) Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge.
-
- Modern Languages Master.
-
- MONSIEUR VIDAL, of the University of Louvain.
-
- * * * * *
-
- TERMS FOR BOARD AND LODGING.
-
- (EXCLUSIVE OF SCHOOL FEES, FOR WHICH SEE SEPARATE CIRCULAR.)
-
-PER QUARTER. £ _s._ _d._
-Private pupils above 18 years of age, with separate 42 0 0
-bedroom, horse riding, and other privileges
-Ditto, without horse exercise, under 18 26 5 0
-Boarders 12 12 0
-Ditto, under 10 years of age 10 10 0
-Separate bedroom for one boy 5 5 0
-Ditto, for two boys (each) 4 4 0
-Ditto, for three boys (each) 3 3 0
-Washing, according to clothes used, generally 0 15 0
-
-DR. CRANAGE’S undeviating aim is to train the boys committed to his care,
-not only in mental acquisitions, but in their whole moral and physical
-being; believing, that as much pains and unremitting attention are
-required for the latter as the former. Attention is given not only to
-the studies which the boys pursue, but to their recreation, games, and
-amusements—upon the principle that almost every incident affords
-materials for improvement, and opportunities for the formation of good
-habits.
-
-His main object in the intellectual culture is to teach the boy to think;
-without omitting the positive work and hard study to brace “the nerves of
-the mind” for the making of a scholar.
-
-The system of rewards and punishments is peculiar, with the general
-absence of corporal punishment; but the experience of more than
-twenty-four years has fully proved its efficiency.
-
-Above all, his desire is to bring them to Christ as their Saviour, and
-then to help them to walk like Christ, as their example.
-
-Dr. Cranage finds the most wonderful difference in the progress and
-conduct of the boys committed to his care according to the measure of
-moral support he receives from the parents and guardians of the boys. He
-earnestly solicits their hearty and constant co-operation in his anxious
-labours.
-
-The skeleton Report will give a succinct view of the subjects of study.
-The aim is to give a thoroughly liberal education, without too exclusive
-attention to Latin and Greek. In the study of languages the system of
-Arnold is considered admirable, but not perfect; the grammar is therefore
-supplied, and iteration and reiteration of declensions, conjugations, and
-rules to impress indelibly, by rote even, all the fundamentals are
-resorted to. Latin, as the basis of most of the modern European
-languages, is considered—even to boys not going to college—very
-important; it is deemed also very desirable for _all_ boys to be able to
-read the Greek Testament before leaving school.
-
-Some objects are taught by familiar Lectures only, illustrated by
-extensive apparatus; while many other subjects are occasionally thus
-exemplified.
-
-A report of each boy’s improvement and conduct is sent to his parents or
-guardians eight times in each year.
-
-At the end of each year the School is examined by the authority and
-direction of the Syndicate appointed by the University of Cambridge, and
-a copy of the Report is sent to the parents or guardians of each boy.
-There is also an examination at midsummer by the masters of the school on
-the work of the previous half-year; a report of which is sent to the
-parents.
-
-The boy’s Reading Room is furnished with good Periodicals and a
-well-selected Library.
-
-There is a well-furnished Laboratory for the study of Chemistry,
-Photography, &c.; Dr. Cranage himself instructing in science in the
-school.
-
-A Museum is established for collecting specimens to illustrate natural
-history, arts, and sciences, together with articles of virtû and
-antiquity—the boys themselves being the principal collectors and
-contributors.
-
-There are three orders of distinction in the school conferred for
-proficiency, combined with good conduct:—1st, Holder of a Certificate;
-2nd, Palmer, or Holder of the Palm; 3rd, or highest, Grecian.
-
-The School-house is delightfully situated within a mile of the
-railway-station of Wellington; it is well adapted for its purpose, and
-fitted up with the necessary appliances. The school-room, reading-room,
-dining-room, lavatory, bath-room, and dormitories are spacious, airy, and
-convenient; the playgrounds very extensive, and well fitted for healthy
-recreation.
-
-There is a swimming-bath on the grounds.
-
- * * * * *
-
- BUNNY AND EVANS
-
- (LATE J. D. SANDFORD),
-
- 25, HIGH STREET, SHREWSBURY,
-
- GENERAL PRINTERS, BOOKSELLERS,
- BOOKBINDERS, STATIONERS,
-
-Beg to inform the Nobility, Gentry, Clergy, and the General Public that
-they have every facility for the execution of all orders with which they
-may be entrusted with the utmost promptitude and on the most reasonable
-terms.
-
- PRINTING.
-
-This branch includes the production of Maps and Plans of Estates, &c., in
-Lithography; and the Letter-press Printing that of Pamphlets, Sermons,
-Reports of Societies, Particulars of Sales, Posters and Handbills,
-Billheads, Memorandum Forms, &c.
-
- STAMPING,
-
-in colours or plain, in the best London fashion.
-
- BOOKBINDING,
-
-plain and ornamental.
-
- STATIONERY.
-
-Note Papers from 2s. to 10s. per ream, Envelopes from 4_s._ per 100
-upwards. Ledgers, Journals, and Cash Books in stock, or made to any
-pattern.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Bibles_, _Church Services_, _Prayers_, _and devotional books in great_
- _variety_.
-
- MAGAZINES AND NEWSPAPERS SUPPLIED.
-
- * * * * *
-
- URICONIUM.
-
- Mr. W. Wright’s valuable and comprehensive work on this
- ancient Roman city is still on sale at 25_s._
-
- * * * * *
-
- _ESTABLISHED_ 1772.
-
- * * * * *
-
- THE
- SHREWSBURY CHRONICLE,
- AND SHROPSHIRE AND MONTGOMERYSHIRE TIMES.
-
- THE COUNTY NEWSPAPER,
-
-And LEADING JOURNAL for Shropshire and North Wales, has the GREATEST
-CIRCULATION through a most extensive district and possesses a wide-spread
-influence amongst the most important classes of the community.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Best Medium for Advertisers.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Published every Friday morning by the Proprietor, JOHN WATTON,
- at the Offices, St. John’s Hill, Shrewsbury.
-
- * * * * *
-
- EDDOWES’S
- SHREWSBURY JOURNAL,
- AND SALOPIAN JOURNAL,
-
- (Established 1794.)
-
- Advertiser for Shropshire and the Principality of Wales.
-
- Published every Wednesday morning at the Offices,
-
- MARKET SQUARE.
-
- PRICE 2d.
-
- * * * * *
-
-EDDOWES’S JOURNAL is the only Conservative Paper published in the County
-of Salop and is the recognised organ of the CHURCH OF ENGLAND, and the
-Constitutional Party in the district.
-
-It has a guaranteed circulation throughout the county of Salop and the
-whole principality of Wales, and also an Advertising patronage amongst
-Capitalists, Solicitors, Auctioneers, Merchants, Land Agents, and
-Traders, SUPERIOR TO THAT OF ANY OTHER NEWSPAPER published in the
-district. It also circulates extensively in the neighbouring Counties,
-and will be found at the principal hotels and commercial offices in
-London, Birmingham, Liverpool, Manchester, and other important towns. It
-is thus UNQUESTIONABLY THE BEST MEDIUM FOR ADVERTISING, and affords a
-safe and widely-spread means of publicity amongst all those classes most
-likely to be useful to advertisers.
-
- _Annual Subscriptions_, _free by post_, 13_s._; _if paid in advance_,
- 11_s._
-
- * * * * *
-
- _VALUABLE MEDIUM FOR ADVERTISING_.
-
- * * * * *
-
- THE IRONBRIDGE WEEKLY JOURNAL
-
- AND
-
- Borough of Wenlock Advertiser,
- Published every Saturday. Price One Penny.
-
- * * * * *
-
- SCALE OF CHARGES FOR ADVERTISING.
-
- Not exceeding 24 Words 1s. 0d.
- Ditto 40 Words 1s. 6d.
-
-The Charges above apply to the class of Advertisements enumerated below
-and are strictly confined to those that are _paid for in advance_.
-
-Situations Wanted. Apartments Wanted. Articles Lost.
-Situations Vacant. Apartments to Let. Articles Found, &c.
-
- PUBLISHED AT
- JOSEPH SLATER’S STEAM PRINTING OFFICE,
- THE MARKET SQUARE,
- IRONBRIDGE, SALOP.
-
- * * * * *
-
- BRIDGNORTH.
-
- * * * * *
-
- CROWN AND ROYAL HOTEL.
- FAMILY, COMMERCIAL, AND POSTING HOUSE.
-
- _Every attention paid to the Comfort and Convenience of Visitors_.
-
- BILLIARD-ROOM.
-
- Post Horses and Carriages. Omnibus to and from each
- Train, and Refreshment Rooms at Station.
-
- T. WHITEFOOT, Proprietor.
-
- N.B.—RAILWAY PARCELS OFFICE.
-
- * * * * *
-
- WREKIN HOTEL COMPANY, LIMITED.
- WELLINGTON, SALOP.
-
- * * * * *
-
- FAMILY AND COMMERCIAL HOTEL.
-
- * * * * *
-
- EXTENSIVE LOCK-UP BAIT AND LIVERY STABLES, COACH
- HOUSES, LOOSE BOXES, &c.
-
- Posting in all its Branches—Billiards—Hot and Cold Baths.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES.
-
-
-{10} Appendix A.
-
-{28} Inquis. Henry III., incerti temporis, Nu. 6, 156.
-
-{41} For additional particulars respecting this interesting tenure we
-refer the reader to the Appendix B.
-
-{49a} There is a legend that Major Smallman, a staunch royalist,
-surprised by some of Cromwell’s troopers, hotly pursued over Presthope,
-turned from the road, spurred his horse at full gallop to the edge of the
-precipice, and went over. The horse is said to have been killed on the
-trees, whilst the Major escaped, and secreted himself in the woods.
-Facts and local circumstances concur in giving a colouring to the
-tradition, and deeds extant show that the family resided here from the
-reign of Henry III. to the time mentioned. See Appendix C.
-
-{49b} See Appendix.
-
-{63} In 1390, Sir Humphrey de Eyton, an ancestor of T. C. Eyton, Esq.,
-of Eyton, was ranger of this forest.
-
-{64} The Old Hall, which we suppose to have been the old hunting lodge,
-the residence of Dr. Cranage, Watling Street, is another interesting
-specimen of the residences of the Forester family, and of the style of
-building and profusion of wood used therein during the great forest
-periods. Dothill, now the residence of R. Groom, Esq., is another of the
-old family residences of the Foresters.
-
-{66} Appendix D.
-
-{69} For a more complete account of the Forester family, we refer the
-reader to the Pedigree given in the Appendix E.
-
-{171} Lord Dundonald, who lived in the old mansion, still standing, at
-the Tuckies, was an excellent chemist, and constructed some ingeniously
-contrived ovens, by which he extracted from coal a tar for the use of the
-navy, and which also became an article of general commerce.
-
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLD SPORTS AND SPORTSMEN***
-
-
-******* This file should be named 63805-0.txt or 63805-0.zip *******
-
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-http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/6/3/8/0/63805
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