Read Ebook: Motor Tours in Wales & the Border Counties by Stawell Rodolph Mrs Stawell R De S Photographer
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MANORBIER CASTLE, NEAR TENBY 197
ENTRANCE TOWER, PEMBROKE CASTLE 202
PEMBROKE COAST 203
CAREW CASTLE 208
ST. DAVID'S CATHEDRAL AND RUINS OF THE BISHOP'S PALACE 209
ST. MARY'S COLLEGE, ST. DAVID'S 212
ST. DAVID'S CATHEDRAL: INTERIOR 213
KILGERRAN CASTLE, NEAR CARDIGAN 222
THE WYE NEAR ITS SOURCE 223
CONFLUENCE OF THE WYE AND THE MARTEG NEAR RHAYADER 234
HEREFORD 235
THE PREACHING CROSS, HEREFORD 238
ROSS FROM WILTON 239
MONNOW BRIDGE, MONMOUTH 250
RAGLAN CASTLE, ENTRANCE TOWER 251
THE MOAT, RAGLAN CASTLE 254
LLANTHONY PRIORY 255
INTERIOR OF LLANTHONY PRIORY, SHOWING THE EAST END 258
TINTERN ABBEY 259
TINTERN ABBEY 266
CHEPSTOW CASTLE 267
SHORT RUNS IN SHROPSHIRE
There was once a tramp who said--"Och, now, it's true what I'm tellin' ye; I never got a bit o' good out o' me life till I took to the road!"
He was quite serious about it. He was a nice tramp, with a fine sense of romance and a large trust in the future, and on this first day of the tour his words ring in my head above the rush of the wind and the throbbing of the engine. For though all the days will be good, this first day is surely the best. To be on the road again; to have one's luggage behind one and all the world in front; to watch the villages slipping by and mark their changing character; to saunter through strange towns and swing across great, desolate moorlands; to pause at some attractive inn, or eat sandwiches and sunshine by the wayside--this is the first day. History and the camera must wait; the first day must be given up to the sheer joy of the road.
So, as we shall not be able to hurry in Shropshire, seeing that there history cannot be ignored, we shall do well to cross its border in the evening, and spend the night in Ludlow. We will drop gently down the hill by Ludford House, and cross the Teme when the light is growing dim, and we can only tell by the deepening of the shadows in the trees on the left that the castle stands among them. Then we will climb a short, steep hill into the town through the only one of the old gates that is still standing, turn to the right through the Bull Ring, and draw up before the famous carved front of the "Feathers."
The President of this Council lived in the great castle that still stands so imposingly above the Teme, with its outer and inner baileys, its Norman keep and curious round chapel, and all its long, long memories.
"We will that our said son have his breakfast immediately after his mass; and between that and his meat to be occupied in such virtuous learning as his age shall suffer to receive."
His age at this time was three years. Not only was the virtuous learning to occupy him from breakfast till dinner, but during the latter meal "such noble stories as behoveth to a prince to understand and know" were to be read aloud to him; and "after his meat, in eschewing of idleness," he was to be "occupied about his learning" again. It is a relief to read that after his supper he was to have "all such honest disports as may be conveniently devised for his recreation." At eight o'clock his attendants were "to enforce themselves to make him merry and joyous towards his bed"; and, indeed, after so hard a day of virtuous learning and noble stories and honest disports, the poor child must have been glad to get there!
These are the gentler memories of Ludlow. Of the fiercer kind there is no lack, from the old fighting days of the de Lacy who built the keep, and the de Dinan who built the round chapel, down through centuries of siege and battle to the time of the Civil War, when the King's flag flew here longer than on any other castle of Shropshire.
Ludlow might well be chosen as a centre for motor drives in Herefordshire, Shropshire, and Worcestershire. But for the moment we are concerned with Shropshire only, and the centre of that county, in every sense, is Shrewsbury; and so, sad though it is to leave Ludlow so soon, we must glide away down the steep pitch beyond the door of the "Feathers," past the railway station, past the racecourse, and over the twenty-nine miles of excellent and level road that lie between Ludlow and Shrewsbury.
The first village on this road, Bromfield, is very typical of the villages of Shropshire at their best. The black-and-white cottages seem to have been set in their places with an eye to pictorial effect; the stream and bridge are exactly in the right spot; and to complete the picture, a beautiful old gatehouse stands a little way back from the road. It is built half of stone, half of timber and plaster, and was once the gateway of a Benedictine Priory which is mentioned in Domesday Book as being of some importance. It leads now to the church, and is one of those unexpected touches of beauty and interest that may meet one's eye at any turn of a Shropshire road.
At Onibury we cross the line and the river Onny, and about a mile and a half further on we should begin to look for Stokesay Castle on the left. As it is a little way from the main road, and partly hidden by trees, it is easy to miss it when travelling at a good pace; but it is perhaps the most attractive ruin in Shropshire from an artist's point of view, and should on no account be neglected. It is really a fortified house rather than a castle, and the mingling of the warlike with the domestic gives it a peculiar charm. The northern end, with its irregular roof and overhanging upper storey, the "Solar Room," with its magnificent carved chimney-piece, and even the timbered gateway, are all merely suggestive of a dwelling-house; and it is only when we turn to the curious polygonal tower that we remember how in the old days an Englishman's house was either very literally his castle or was likely to become some other Englishman's house at an early date. As far as I know, however, the only time that Stokesay had to make any use of its defences was when it was garrisoned for the King during the Civil War, and on that occasion it seems to have yielded without much ado.
The story of St. Mary's lovely spire, on our right, is full of incident. In 1572 it was "blown aside by wind"; in 1594 "there fell such a monstrous dry wind, and so extreme fierce ... that the like was never seen of those that be living ... the force whereof removed the upper part of St. Mary's steeple out of his place towards the south about five inches"; in 1662 the steeple was "taken down six yards from the top"; in 1690 it was damaged by an earthquake; in 1754 it was "shattered by a high wind"; in 1756 the newly-built part was again "blown aside"; in 1818 the upper part "became loose"; and during a terrific storm in 1894 fifty feet of its masonry fell through the roof of the nave shortly after the evening service. Most wonderfully this last disaster did no damage to the stained glass, which is St. Mary's great glory and has itself had an eventful existence; for some of it was in old St. Chad's when it fell, and much of it, long ago, filled the windows of religious houses in Germany.
Just beyond the church is the Crown Hotel, and whether we stay there or at the "Raven," a hundred yards away, we shall hear the bells of St. Mary's, once described as "the comfortablest ring of bells in all the town," and the chiming clock that was the bequest of Fanny Burney's Uncle James, and the curfew, which still rings every night at nine. And after the curfew we shall hear the number of the day of the month rung out--a relic of the times before cheap almanacs existed.
There is no doubt that the most satisfactory way of seeing Shropshire is to spend a few nights in Shrewsbury, and make it the basis of operations; for Shrewsbury lies exactly in the centre of the county, and is the meeting-point of a particularly large number of good roads. The old town itself, too, does not deserve to be hurried through. The longer one stays in it the more one feels the charm of its gentle old age.
The Old School Buildings are within a stone's-throw of us, with all their memories of the wise and great: memories that are, as a matter of fact, older than themselves; for though Charles Darwin was educated within these very walls, it was in an older building of wood, standing on the same spot, that Philip Sidney was a schoolboy--gentle and grave, and as much loved then as he was destined to be all his life, and is still. It was while he was here that his father wrote him a "very godly letter ... most necessarie for all yoong gentlemen to be carried in memorie," which his mother, who added a postscript "in the skirts of my Lord President's letter," considered to be so full of "excellent counsailes," that she begged Philip to "fayle not continually once in foure or five daies to reade them over." The counsels were certainly excellent. "Be humble and obedient to your master," says Sir Henry, "... be courteous of gesture.... Give yourself to be merie ... but let your mirth be ever void of all scurrillitie and biting words to any man.... Above all things, tell no untruth, no not in trifles"; and he ends quaintly: "Well, my little Philip, this is enough for me, and I feare too much for you." If my Lord President had not also been my Lord Deputy of Ireland one might have loved him nearly as much as his son.
Not far from the fragments of this ruined church is the High Street, where are some of the oldest and prettiest houses in the town; and hard by is the Tudor marketplace, with its statue of Richard, Duke of York. The claims of the Unitarian chapel in the same street are not based on beauty, but on the fact that Coleridge's voice once rose in it "like a steam of rich distilled perfumes," according to William Hazlitt, who had walked ten miles to hear Coleridge preach here, and was as much delighted, he says, "as if he had heard the music of the spheres." Charles Darwin attended the services of this chapel as a boy, but was baptized in New St. Chad's, the eighteenth-century church near the Quarry, within whose classical walls Dr. Johnson once worshipped. The Doctor's famous rolling walk, too, of which we have all heard so much, was once seen under the splendid limes of the Quarry.
As we entered Shrewsbury by the English Bridge we caught a glimpse of the Abbey behind us. Leaving the town by the London Road, on our way to see something of the eastern side of the county, we shall pass close by the old red building that was partly spared when Roger de Montgomery's great monastery was dissolved. It will be worth while to stop the engine for a moment, and to look at the massive Norman piers of the nave, the fine altar-tombs, and the fragment of St. Winifred's shrine. The founder himself was buried here, after a long life of storm and stress, and three days in a monk's habit; but the knightly figure that has been thought to represent him is said by the best authorities to be of a later date than his. This Roger is very prominent in Shropshire history, and is, indeed, not unknown in that of England, for he figured in the Battle of Hastings, and wherever he figured he made himself felt. We hear many conflicting things of his character, but from them all we gather that he was a typical man of his day, spending his time chiefly in acquiring his neighbour's goods, and his leisure moments in building abbeys. Having built this Abbey of Shrewsbury he was careful to see that other people enriched it, and it soon became one of the most important in England. Its actual buildings covered ten acres: yet now all of it that we can see is this restored church, and, across the road, a relic of a later date. There, in the din and dust of a coal-yard, stands the graceful stone pulpit that was once in the refectory wall. From under its delicately carved canopy a lay brother read pious works aloud to the monks while they ate.
As we drive up the Abbey Foregate, between the trees and old houses, the memory of the Benedictines is with us still; for it was down this road that the monks, with their abbot at their head, came once in solemn procession with the bones of St. Winifred. These, by the combined use of a smooth tongue and a stout spade, they had brought triumphantly away from the churchyard of a Welsh village, knowing full well that no wealth of lands and churches enriched a monastery so surely as a handful of saintly dust.
From Uriconium a very pretty road leads us to Buildwas. The Severn winds below us on the right, and on the hillside to the left is the little village of Eaton Constantine, which Constantine the Norman--who also gave his name to the C?tentin in France--held in the days of Domesday Book at a rental of a pair of white gloves, valued at one penny. Even at this distance is visible the black-and-white gable of the farmhouse that was once the home of Richard Baxter, author of "The Saints' Everlasting Rest," and an amazing number of other books--enough, said Judge Jeffreys, "to load a cart." Dr. Johnson, however, pronounced them to be "all good." Here, we learn, Baxter "passed away his Childhood and Youth, which upon Reflection he, according to the Wise Man's Censure, found to be vanity." In spite of these austere views, however, his childhood was not without its wild oats, for we are told that he "joyn'd sometimes with other Naughty Boys in Robbing his Neighbours' Orchards of their Fruit, when he had eno' at home ... and was bewitched with a love of Romances and Idle Tales."
Presently, after passing through the pretty village of Leighton-under-the-Wrekin, we see Buildwas, the Shelter near the Water, on the further side of the river. Perhaps this is the most striking view of the fourteen massive pillars of this roofless nave, in which the Cistercians of the twelfth century austerely worshipped; but we can visit the ruins if we wish to do so by crossing the bridge that has quite recently superseded one built by Telford. There is not very much more to be seen at close quarters than from here: the great charm of Buildwas lies in its effect as a whole, in its simplicity and strength, and in its position by the river.
It was hours before he was there, whereas we, if we were as much hurried as he was, might be there in half an hour or so. But though there is nothing to keep us at Shifnal we must pause at Tong, where there are some especially pretty timbered cottages and a church that is really remarkable, for it contains a collection of tombs which I should imagine to be unequalled in a village church. They are those of the Vernon family, and among them is that of Dame Margaret Stanley, the sister of Dorothy Vernon, of Haddon Hall. Charles Dickens said himself that it was of Tong Village he was thinking when he wrote the end of "The Old Curiosity Shop," and those to whom Little Nell appeals may think of her and her grandfather in the porch of this church. Some of us, however, will take more interest in the shot-marks that have scarred the northern wall ever since the days of the Civil War.
In a park near the village stands the astonishing structure called Tong Castle. It was once a real castle of stone; in the sixteenth century Sir Henry Vernon rebuilt it of brick; in the eighteenth a new owner thought that Moorish cupolas would make a pretty finish to it. When, in 1643, it was in the possession of the Parliamentarians, it was said on that account to be a "great eye-sore to his Majesty's good subjects who pass'd yt road." For other reasons it is so still.
From Boscobel we strike due north to Ivetsey Bank, where we shall find an inn capable of providing a good, if homely, luncheon or tea. Thence sixteen miles on Watling Street will bring us without a pause through Wellington to the point where we left the main road on our outward journey. It is worth while, by the way, to avoid the unpleasant bit of road through Oakengates by striking across to the main road from Shifnal; to do which we must take a turn in St. George's, where a lamp-post stands out prominently. We enter Shrewsbury, as we left it, by the London Road.
There is nothing of special note between Battlefield and Hawkestone, which is about twelve miles from Shrewsbury, and is a private park, open to visitors. In the rhododendron season it is well worth while to leave one's car at the extremely nice hotel at the outskirts of the park, and to walk about a mile through pretty grounds swarming with black rabbits, to see the blaze of blossom for which Hawkestone is famous. And yet I think they will fare still better who choose the time of bluebells. These should drive through the park by the public road. Beyond the gate, where the stream is close to them on the right and woods slope to its edge, they will see, bright in the near foreground but fading away into the distance under the trees in a misty cloud, a soft, ethereal veil of grey-blue. Here and there the green breaks through, and the flowers look like wisps of smoke trailing across the grass. This wonderful sheet of mystic blue borders the river and the road for some way, till the wood ends suddenly, and Hodnet Hall comes in sight.
One really grows a little tired of recording the picturesqueness of Shropshire villages. They are nearly all pretty: for the houses, when they are not of timber and plaster, are often built of the warm red sandstone that is the stone of the county and acquires such soft, mellow colours in its old age. But I sometimes think Hodnet is the prettiest village of them all. Half the houses are black-and-white; and near the church gate a group of timber gables, with the octagonal tower in the background, forms a complete and perfectly composed picture. Bishop Reginald Heber, the author of "From Greenland's icy mountains," was rector of Hodnet for some years before he sailed for "India's coral strand."
From Hodnet we may either drive back to Shrewsbury or turn to the left in the middle of the village and take a run of about thirty-four miles by Market Drayton and Newport, two picturesque old towns with a good road between them. The scenery in this part of the county is pleasing, but not especially striking. If we choose this way we shall, as we draw near Shrewsbury, pass the ruins of Haughmond, one of the great Shropshire abbeys.
From this road near Haughmond we have perhaps the loveliest view of distant Shrewsbury. The pale hills rim the horizon, the river winds in the foreground, and between them rise the clear outlines of the two incomparable spires that crown The Delight.
Another of the Shropshire monasteries that must certainly be seen is Wenlock Priory, which lies on the way to Bridgnorth. It is a fairly level road that leads to it by Cross Houses and Cound and pretty Cressage, which in Domesday Book is Cristes-ache, or Christ's Oak. Christianity was preached here, it is said, under an old oak-tree, in days so early that when St. Augustine visited the place he found it already Christian. Between Harley and Wenlock there is a hill which the Contour Book describes with perfect accuracy as "a precipitous hill on which innumerable accidents have happened." The accidents, I fancy, have mostly happened to horse-drawn vehicles and bicycles--especially the latter--when descending the hill, for it is a mile long and has a turn in the middle. There is no reason why it should inconvenience a good car, for the average gradient is nothing more alarming than 1 in 8, and it is well worth climbing for the sake of the wide view from the top, just beyond which Much Wenlock lies.
Milburga, Saxon princess and saint, built the first religious house at Wenlock, and became its abbess, and was finally buried within its precincts. William of Malmesbury tells us how, long after her death, she enriched the place to which she had given her life and all she possessed. "Milburga," he says, "reposes at Wenlock ... but for some time after the arrival of the Normans, through ignorance of the place of her burial, she was neglected. Lately, however, a convent of Clugniac monks being established there, while a new church was erecting, a certain boy, running violently along the pavement, broke into the hollow of the vault, and discovered the body of the virgin, when a balsamic odour pervading the whole church, she was taken up, and performed so many miracles that the people flocked thither in great multitudes. Large spreading plains could hardly contain the troops of pilgrims, while rich and poor came side by side, one common faith compelling all."
The convent of Clugniac monks in question was built by that notable man Roger de Montgomery, and was the same whose ruins speak so plainly to-day of the ornate tastes of the monks of Clugny. We saw no arcaded walls such as these of the chapter-house, nor richly moulded doorways, nor any such elaborate ornament at Cistercian Buildwas, whose lands marched with the lands of this Priory, and whose monks found the Rule of Clugny too soft, the tastes of Clugny too enervating. Go to Wenlock in the spring, when its slender columns rise above a sea of sweet-scented flowers, and its old wall is bright with rock-plants--for the Priory stands in private grounds and is cared for like a garden. It is the third religious house that has stood on this spot, for between the days of Milburga, the royal saint, and those of Roger and his Clugniacs, there was another monastery founded here by Leofric of Mercia and his wife Godiva, a well-loved woman whom we are glad to connect with this beautiful spot. The picturesque old Prior's Lodge is inhabited, and it is only on Tuesdays and Fridays that the world at large is admitted to the ruins. Perhaps nothing recalls to one so vividly the daily life of the monks in this place as the long causeway that stretches across the field near the Priory garden. It was here that the brothers took their daily exercise, raised above the surrounding marsh--a long procession of dark figures, walking slowly to and fro--and among them, unsuspected, that interesting swashbuckler of whom we long to hear more, that man of extremes whose strange career is all summed up for us in one short, pregnant sentence. "In 1283," we learn, "a brother of Wenlac became a captain of banditti." We hear no more of him, alas! except that he was hanged.
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