Notes and Queries, Number 06, December 8, 1849 by Various
page 27 of 63 (42%)
page 27 of 63 (42%)
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conflagration, and able, at this time, to supply timber to
rebuild all the royal navies in Europe, if they were all to be destroyed, and set about the building them together. "I left _Tunbridge_ ... and came to _Lewes_, through the deepest, dirtiest, but many ways the richest and most profitable country in all that part of England. {88} "The timber I saw here was prodigious, as well in quantity as in bigness, and seem'd in some places to be suffered to grow only because it was so far off of any navigation, that it was not worth cutting down and carrying away; in dry summers, indeed a great deal is carried away to Maidstone and other parts on the Medway; and sometimes I have seen one tree on a carriage, which they call here a _tug_, drawn by two-and-twenty oxen, and even then this carried so little a way, and then thrown down and left for other _tugs_ to take up and carry on, that sometimes it is two or three years before it gets to Chatham; for if once the rains come in it stirs no more that year, and sometimes a whole summer is not dry enough to make the roads passable. Here I had a sight which, indeed, I never saw in any other part of England, namely, that going to church at a country village, not far from _Lewes_, I saw an ancient lady, and a lady of very good quality, I assure you, drawn to church in her coach with six oxen; nor was it done in frolic or humour, but mere necessity, the way being so stiff and deep that no horses could go in it."--_A Tour through Great Britain by a Gentleman_. London, 1724. Vol. i. p. 54. Letter II. Factotum |
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