[1] See “Wells and Glastonbury,” by T. S. Holmes.
[2] See Prince’s “Worthies of Devon.”
[3] German schelm.
[4] See “Plymouth Armada Heroes,” by M. W. S. Hawkins.
[5] It is a repliqua of the one at Tavistock.
[6] Open to the public on one afternoon a week, but not always on the same day.
[7] The King’s General in the West—more often called Granville: but as his family is so often mentioned in these pages I thought it best to keep to one form.
[8] “History of Dunster,” by Sir H. Maxwell-Lyte.
[9] “Old Falmouth,” by Miss S. E. Gay.
[10] “Pendennis and St. Mawe’s,” by Captain Oliver.
[11] “Old Falmouth,” by Miss S. E. Gay.
[12] “History of the Granville Family,” by Roger Granville.
[13] “History of the Granville Family.”
[14] “Copyed from oone accounte in Maisster Alston’s Seamanshyppe Booke.”
[15] From “History of the Granville Family.”
[16] See “The Vicar of Morwenstow,” by the Rev. S. Baring-Gould.
[17] Do not take the road to the left, marked Lynton on the signpost, for it goes down the notorious “Beggar’s Roost” hill, roughly one in three.
[18] Most of the facts relating to the history of Dunster are derived from Sir H. Maxwell-Lyte’s “History of Dunster.”
[19] “The Holland House Circle,” by Lloyd Sandars.