[1]English Villages, P. H. Ditchfield. [2] Also between Hitchin and Cambridge, at Clothall, in Herts, on the Chiltern Hills, on the steep side of the Sussex Downs, in Clun Forest, in Carmarthenshire, and in Wilts. [3] See p. 10. [4] W. Long, in the Wilts Arch. Mag., p. 121. [5] A furrow, or furlong, was, roughly speaking, the distance the plough would travel up or down the field before it was turned. [6] Spinneys are plantations of trees growing closely together. [7] A diocese is the district over which a bishop rules. [8] In the Fens. [9] The Cistercian houses here in England, however, were always known as abbeys, though Citeaux, their head-quarters, was in France. [10] Commonly called Verulam, but Verulamium was its Roman name. [11] feaden, that is, feed. [12] pullen, that is, poultry. [13] Notice a fine specimen, written before the Conquest, given on p. 103, and the illustration facing p. 88. [14] In the "Lancet Windows", shown in the illustration on p. 94, you have a specimen of that thirteenth-century or Early-English style. [15] See "Fourteenth-century Doorway", on p. 94, for a specimen of this style. [16] The Jews were expelled from England A.D. 1290. [17] This was built in the fifteenth century; but of course it has been restored since then. At the end of the eighteenth century the authorities of the city actually sold it to a gentleman who proposed to place it in his own pleasure-ground; but the people of the city drove away the workmen who were sent to remove it, and so it had to remain in its ancient place. [18] Such a Butter Cross is seen in the view of Dunster, facing p. 105. [19] That is, whipped at a cart's tail. [20] Terra-cotta is a compound of pure clay, fine sand, or powdered flint. [21] See the picture on p. 144. [22] Jacobean means of the time of James I and on to James II. Transcriber's note: A paragraph break has been inserted on Page 143 after the diagram "Diagram of a Large House." |