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You can search through the full text of this book on the web. TINNEY, IN THE * CORNISHMAN.'. No leafy crown may poor Comubia wear. Wind- swept from sea to sea her cairns outstand . Stranger, away 1 No charm detaineth here —.
Only brown heath, low wood, and level sand. ANT, TOWEDNACK AND ZEN NOR.
Lelant Church — Ancient grants thereto — Full description of the fabric. King Charles' letter of thanks — Pre- Reformation clergy — Sepulchral. Towednack Church —. Description of the fabric— Sepulchral monuments. Zennor Church. — Description of the fabric before and since the restoration of 1. The Mermaid of Zennor — Pre- Reformation clergy — Grant of tithes to.
Zennor — Post- Reformation vicars — Sepulchral monu- . II. CHAPTER VIII. Hext ; how the interest is to. Mr. Aubyn is chosen recorder — Mr. Francis Arundel. receives the freedom— A felon's goods forfeited to the borough —. Making the pillory — Fines for * bloodshed '—The press- gang — Pro- .
Lord Protector — Females whipped at the cart's tail —. Gerance Bettie is accused of witchcraft — The almshouse on the Island. The cucking- stool is repaired— John Fox and other Quakers arrested. Lanceston Gaol — A burgess hanged for murder — The.
Bowling Green — Election for the last Commonwealth Parliament —. An address to the Lord Protector — Rejoicings on the Restoration —. The bill for beer on the Coronation Day — The trained band and the. Proclamation for observing Lent — Payments to the. Bringing home the drum — His Majesty's.
X TABLE OF CONTENTS. Watering Elizabeth Grenfcll— The. Island — The Maypole— Watching a French pirate ship. The weapons in the Town Hall— Mr.
Nosworthy gives the tithes of. Searching for a Jesuit — The Huguenot. Quakers of Marazion— A breach of the. Saboth * — A riotous assembly of Saint Just men — Mending the town. A writ of Quo Warranto is brought against the Charter — Pro- . King James II.— The new Charter is brought home— The.
Duke of Monmouth's rebellion — Rejoicings on the defeat of the rebels. New making the town drum and beating it — The sugar * stolen per. Teage' — Mr. Robinson, the curate; his miscellaneous duties — The. King's general pardon is brought from London — The.
Maypole is. taken to the saw- pit ... CHAPTER XV. Praed — Proclama- . Jacobite plot — Mr. Praed's venison— The Duke of.
Bolton is treated with sack — His mounted guard— He is sworn as. Proclaiming Queen Anne— The Battle of *Bleinhieim' —. Jonathan Toup comes to Saint Ives— The mayor is indicted for. TABLE OF CONTENTS.
Stephens' liberality in the matter of the new ducking- . The advent of glasses and punch — A loyal address to King. George I. Knill's neat account— A Sunday. George and Dragon — A bottle of wine. An imposter whipped at the tail of a cart — The Serjeants'. Six pints of beer *by way of tasting'— Forty- .
The sloop En- . i/^avour—Funher corporation muniments — Alexander James unlawfully. CHAPTER XVIII. Knill's. The Trenwiths' town house — Trevethoe — Gunwin — Reviere —. The Abbey ' at Lelant — Trevegia— Names of streets, roads, lanes, etc..
Saint Ives - -- -- -- 3. CHAPTER XIX. Wesley's room at. Rosemergy — Dr. Borlase's opinion of the Methodist movement — Vicar. Hoblyn preaches against the new sect — Persecution of John Nance —. The Devil rages horribly' at Saint Ives— A change in the attitude of. The plague of uncustomed goods — The great storm.
Pretty butterflies' — Preaching to the whole town — My Lady's. Preachers— Death of John Nance— The results of Wesley's preaching. Decay of the old- world beliefs and practices . John Knill — ^A sketch.
An unpublished letter from him — 'Knill's Steeple' —. Account of the first Knillian Festival. Henry. Quick, the Zennor poet— A pair of Saint Ives nonagenarians - 4. CHAPTER XXXII. 5.
List of Authorities - -- -- -- 5. Corrigenda et Addenda ... Index II.—Nomina Locorum ...
Index III.— General - .- .. Digitized by Vj. OOQIC. PREFACE. It is true that in the last century Mr. John Hicks, of. Saint Ives, wrote a history of his native town, and that many. Hicks' manuscript.
The author therefore claims from his readers the. Time was. when a parish church could be dismissed as * a mediaeval. Gothick style, dedicated to S' Mary'; and when. England was not so much a record of facts, as an. Church and State. But nowadays people read history with. A full. and complete history, such as it aspires to be, must embody.
And it will. hardly be denied that a real benefit is conferred upon the reader. Nor is the writer willing to resign all. PREFACE. More- . over, he has, he believes, left no likely class of public records.
Foremost among these friendly. Rev. Prebendary Hingeston- Randolph, who has. West of England. He very kindly lent the. Saint Ives, Lelant, Towednack and. Zennor. Edward Hain, junior, most obligingly lent the.
Saint Ives Borough Accounts, and. Thanks are also due to. Mr. Tresidder for permission to copy a number of municipal. Rev. Balmer Jones, the.
Rev. Farwell Roe, vicars of. Saint Ives, Lelant and Zennor respectively, who allowed un- . Mr. Anthony, postmaster of Saint Ives, who wrote a reliable. That portion of the first.
Saint Ives. district was set in order by a learned naturalist, Mr. James. Ambrose Story, B. A., of Cardiff. To these gentlemen, and to. The older. part of the town stands on an isthmus which separates a small. Some centuries ago this peninsula. The Island. Let us begin by describing the coast line.
The farthest. points which we can see westward are the jagged headlands of. Clodgy and Carthew, between which last and the Island is the. Porthmeor. The extreme point of the Island is. Pendinas, or Saint Ives Head. Between this and the. Porthgwidden, the rocks of Carn Crowz.
The shore close to the town is called the. Foresand, and is separated by Penolva Point from the sands of. Porthminster. Still looking eastward around Saint Ives Bay we. Penmester ; the small cove of. Porthgroynia ; the expansive sands of Porthripter, separated by. Carrack Gladn Point from those of Porthkitny; Hawk's Point. Lelant, and the mouth of the Hayle.
A HISTORY OF ST. IVES. River ; and then, on the other side of Saint Ives Bay, the black.
Godrevy. Beyond this we see the. Saint Agnes, and still farther to the north- east we. Trevose. Head. Westward stretches the vast Atlantic.
Near the town are the eminences. Barnoon and the Stennack, and the hills of Penmester and. Tregenna. Further to the south and west are Carn Stabba and. Trencrom Hill, the Rocky Downs, Rosewall Hill, Worvas Hill. Knill's Steeple), Trink, Trendrean and Tre- . Hills. Ives contains statute acres, 1. Lelant . The Tregenna stream rises on the hill of that name, flows.
Tregenna Castle, and loses itself in the. Porthminster, near the foundations of an ancient chapel. It gives its name to the manufacturing town of Hayle. Lelant and Phillack. This river. and the valley of Saint Erth form a continuous, though irregular. West Cornwall peninsula, and separating. Land's End district from the rest of the county.
Recent. geological investigations conclusively demonstrate that this depres- . Cassiterides, or tin- bearing islands.
Quaint, laborious old Holinshed found out all about these. The soile also is very hillie here, as for saint les towne, it is. I said) a byland, and yet it is well watered with. Michael's Mount). Villa Seynt Hy sup: mare borial: circa 1. Anglie.' (The town of St.
Ives is on the. northern sea about 1. Kingdom of England.). Le North sea. Ville p. Cipales sup: mare boriale site. Primo. Seynt Hyes villa . Hyes usque Lananta 2 miliaria.' (The.
North Sea. The principal towns situated on the northern sea. Ives, a town towards the east, on the northern side. Mousehole 8 miles.
Ives to. Lelant 2 miles.). Mem. Ives' town, and all the towns. Lanceston.). * Mem.
The Place that. the chief of the Toun hath and partely dooth stonde yn is a very. Peninsula, and is extendid into the Se of Severn as a Cape. This. Peninsula to cumpace it by the Rote lakkith litle of a Mile.'. The Town of S. And yet, sith I haue spoken of it, you shall. Pendinas, and beside that the. Pharos or light therein, for.
There is also at. Pendinas, a chappell of saint Nicholas. Irish woman saint.
It belonged. of late to the Lord Brooke, but now (as I guesse) the Lord. Mountioy enioieth it. There is also a blockhouse, and a peere in.
S. Carantokes. insomuch that the greatest part of this Byland is now couered. Edition of 1. 58.
Writing of the accumulated sands on the eastern shore of. Saint Ives Bay, Halliwell says . Their further progress is now retarded by the extensive. Arundo arenaria of.
Linnaeus, or, as some have it, Calamagrostis arenaria. This rush. grows rapidly on the sand, where it mechanically opposes all. The result is that these huge sandy. Here may also be seen the common eringo, which was. Hayle in Elizabeth's time for the sake. Drayton. From the Hayle Towans.
Godrevy rocks and lighthouse; at low. St. Ives fishermen casting their launce- nets for bait . Penzance, when the wide expanse of the estuary is then a. Lelant, with. its woods to the water- edge. But above all is from this spot the.
St. No one could fancy, as one sees. English Constantinople — of how squalid. In a maritime parish of Cornwall the rocks of the shore are an. A full list of these coast- rocks will be found in another.
Just under Tregenna is an old house known as the Vow. A PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION OF THE DISTRICT, $. Cot, meaning 'the cottage by the cave'; and in Carrack Gladn.
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