First Impressions of England And Its People

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— The old English Yeoman. —Quit Olney.
— Companions in the Journey. — Incident. — Newport Pagnell. — Mr.
Bull and the French Mystics.— Lady of the Fancy. —Champion of all England. — Pugilism. — Anecdote.
Half an hour's leisurely walking — and, in consideration of my companion's three score and eleven summers, our walk- ing was exceedingly leisurely — brought us, through field and dingle, and a country that presented, as we ascended, less of an agricultural and more of a pastoral character, to t
...he woods of Yardley Lodge. We enter through a coppice on a grassy field, and see along the opposite side a thick oak wood, with a solitary brick house, the only one in sight, half hidden amid foliage in a corner. The oak wood has, we find, quite a char- acter of its own. The greater part of its trees, still in their immature youth, were seedlings within the last forty years : they have no associates that bear in their well-developed pro- portions, untouched by decay, the stamp of solid mid-aged tree hood; but here and there, — standing up among them, like the 'ong-lived sons of Noah, in their old age of many centuries, amid a race cut down to the three score and ten, — we find some of the most ancient oaks in the empire, — trees that were trees in the days of William the Conqueror.

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