marked out was exceeding large, near ten miles in circumference,
   and ended west upon the open Downs, in view of the town of
   Stockbridge.
   This house was afterwards settled, with a royal revenue also, as an
   appanage (established by Parliament) upon Prince George of Denmark
   for his life, in case he had out-lived the queen; but his Royal
   Highness dying before her Majesty, all hope of seeing this design
   perfected, or the house finished, is now vanished.
   I cannot omit that there are several public edifices in this city
   and in the neighbourhood, as the hospitals and the building
   adjoining near the east gate; and towards the north a piece of an
   old monastery undemolished, and which is still preserved to the
   religion, being the residence of some private Roman Catholic
   gentlemen, where they have an oratory, and, as they say, live still
   according to the rules of St. Benedict.  This building is called
   Hide House; and as they live very usefully, and to the highest
   degree obliging among their neighbours, they meet with no
   obstruction or disturbance from anybody.
   Winchester is a place of no trade other than is naturally
   occasioned by the inhabitants of the city and neighbouring villages
   one with another.  Here is no manufacture, no navigation; there was
   indeed an attempt to make the river navigable from Southampton, and
   it was once made practicable, but it never answered the expense so
   as to give encouragement to the undertakers.
   Here is a great deal of good company, and abundance of gentry being
   in the neighbourhood, it adds to the sociableness of the place.
   The clergy also here are, generally speaking, very rich and very
   numerous.
   As there is such good company, so they are gotten into that new-
   fashioned way of conversing by assemblies.  I shall do no more than
   mention them here; they are pleasant and agreeable to the young
   peoples, and sometimes fatal to them, of which, in its place,
   Winchester has its share of the mirth.  May it escape the ill-
   consequences!
   The hospital on the south of this city, at a mile distant on the
   road to Southampton, is worth notice.  It is said to be founded by
   King William Rufus, but was not endowed or appointed till later
   times by Cardinal Beaufort.  Every traveller that knocks at the
   door of this house in his way, and asks for it, claims the relief
   of a piece of white bread and a cup of beer, and this donation is
   still continued.  A quantity of good beer is set apart every day to
   be given away, and what is left is distributed to other poor, but
   none of it kept to the next day.
   How the revenues of this hospital, which should maintain the master
   and thirty private gentlemen (whom they call Fellows, but ought to
   call Brothers), is now reduced to maintain only fourteen, while the
   master lives in a figure equal to the best gentleman in the
   country, would be well worth the inquiry of a proper visitor, if
   such can be named.  It is a thing worthy of complaint when public
   charities, designed for the relief of the poor, are embezzled and
   depredated by the rich, and turned to the support of luxury and
   pride.
   From Winchester is about twenty-five miles, and over the most
   charming plains that can anywhere be seen (far, in my opinion,
   excelling the plains of Mecca), we come to Salisbury.  The vast
   flocks of sheep which one everywhere sees upon these Downs, and the
   great number of those flocks, is a sight truly worth observation;
   it is ordinary for these flocks to contain from three thousand to
   five thousand in a flock, and several private farmers hereabouts
   have two or three such flocks.
   But it is more remarkable still how a great part of these Downs
   comes, by a new method of husbandry, to be not only made arable
   (which they never were in former days), but to bear excellent
   wheat, and great crops, too, though otherwise poor barren land, and
   never known to our ancestors to be capable of any such thing--nay,
   they would perhaps have laughed at any one that would have gone
   about to plough up the wild downs and hills where the sheep were
   wont to go.  But experience has made the present age wiser and more
   skilful in husbandry; for by only folding the sheep upon the
   ploughed lands--those lands which otherwise are barren, and where
   the plough goes within three or four inches of the solid rock of
   chalk, are made fruitful and bear very good wheat, as well as rye
   and barley.  I shall say more of this when I come to speak of the
   same practice farther in the country.
   This plain country continues in length from Winchester to Salisbury
   (twenty-five miles), from thence to Dorchester (twenty-two miles),
   thence to Weymouth (six miles); so that they lie near fifty miles
   in length and breadth; they reach also in some places thirty-five
   to forty miles.  They who would make any practicable guess at the
   number of sheep usually fed on these Downs may take it from a
   calculation made, as I was told, at Dorchester, that there were six
   hundred thousand sheep fed within six miles of that town, measuring
   every way round and the town in the centre.
   As we passed this plain country, we saw a great many old camps, as
   well Roman as British, and several remains of the ancient
   inhabitants of this kingdom, and of their wars, battles,
   entrenchments, encampments, buildings, and other fortifications,
   which are indeed very agreeable to a traveller that has read
   anything of the history of the country.  Old Sarum is as remarkable
   as any of these, where there is a double entrenchment, with a deep
   graff or ditch to either of them; the area about one hundred yards
   in diameter, taking in the whole crown of the hill, and thereby
   rendering the ascent very difficult.  Near this there is one farm-
   house, which is all the remains I could see of any town in or near
   the place (for the encampment has no resemblance of a town), and
   yet this is called the borough of Old Sarum, and sends two members
   to Parliament.  Whom those members can justly say they represent
   would be hard for them to answer.
   Some will have it that the old city of SORBIODUNUM or Salisbury
   stood here, and was afterwards (for I know not what reasons)
   removed to the low marshy grounds among the rivers, where it now
   stands.  But as I see no authority for it other than mere
   tradition, I believe my share of it, and take it AD REFERENDUM.
   Salisbury itself is indeed a large and pleasant city, though I do
   not think it at all the pleasanter for that which they boast so
   much of--namely, the water running through the middle of every
   street--or that it adds anything to the beauty of the place, but
   just the contrary; it keeps the streets always dirty, full of wet
   and filth and weeds, even in the middle of summer.
   The city is placed upon the confluence of two large rivers, the
   Avon and the Willy, neither of them considerable rivers, but very
   large when joined together, and yet larger when they receive a
   third river (viz., the Naddir), which 
					     					 			 joins them near Clarendon
   Park, about three miles below the city; then, with a deep channel
   and a current less rapid, they run down to Christchurch, which is
   their port.  And where they empty themselves into the sea, from
   that town upwards towards Salisbury they are made navigable to
   within two miles, and might be so quite into the city, were it not
   for the strength of the stream.
   As the city of Winchester is a city without trade--that is to say,
   without any particular manufactures--so this city of Salisbury and
   all the county of Wilts, of which it is the capital, are full of a
   great variety of manufactures, and those some of the most
   considerable in England--namely, the clothing trade and the trade
   of flannels, druggets, and several other sorts of manufactures, of
   which in their order.
   The city of Salisbury has two remarkable manufactures carried on in
   it, and which employ the poor of great part of the country round--
   namely, fine flannels, and long-cloths for the Turkey trade, called
   Salisbury whites.  The people of Salisbury are gay and rich, and
   have a flourishing trade; and there is a great deal of good manners
   and good company among them--I mean, among the citizens, besides
   what is found among the gentlemen; for there are many good families
   in Salisbury besides the citizens.
   This society has a great addition from the Close--that is to say,
   the circle of ground walled in adjacent to the cathedral; in which
   the families of the prebendaries and commons, and others of the
   clergy belonging to the cathedral, have their houses, as is usual
   in all cities, where there are cathedral churches.  These are so
   considerable here, and the place so large, that it is (as it is
   called in general) like another city.
   The cathedral is famous for the height of its spire, which is
   without exception the highest and the handsomest in England, being
   from the ground 410 feet, and yet the walls so exceeding thin that
   at the upper part of the spire, upon a view made by the late Sir
   Christopher Wren, the wall was found to be less than five inches
   thick; upon which a consultation was had whether the spire, or at
   least the upper part of it, should be taken down, it being supposed
   to have received some damage by the great storm in the year 1703;
   but it was resolved in the negative, and Sir Christopher ordered it
   to be so strengthened with bands of iron plates as has effectually
   secured it; and I have heard some of the best architects say it is
   stronger now than when it was first built.
   They tell us here long stories of the great art used in laying the
   first foundation of this church, the ground being marshy and wet,
   occasioned by the channels of the rivers; that it was laid upon
   piles, according to some, and upon woolpacks, according to others.
   But this is not supposed by those who know that the whole country
   is one rock of chalk, even from the tops of the highest hills to
   the bottom of the deepest rivers.
   They tell us this church was forty years a-building, and cost an
   immense sum of money; but it must be acknowledged that the inside
   of the work is not answerable in the decoration of things to the
   workmanship without.  The painting in the choir is mean, and more
   like the ordinary method of common drawing-room or tavern painting
   than that of a church; the carving is good, but very little of it;
   and it is rather a fine church than finely set off.
   The ordinary boast of this building (that there were as many gates
   as months, as many windows as days, as many marble pillars as hours
   in the year) is now no recommendation at all.  However, the mention
   of it must be preserved:-
   "As many days as in one year there be,
   So many windows in one church we see;
   As many marble pillars there appear
   As there are hours throughout the fleeting year;
   As many gates as moons one year do view:
   Strange tale to tell, yet not more strange than true."
   There are, however, some very fine monuments in this church;
   particularly one belonging to the noble family of Seymours, since
   Dukes of Somerset (and ancestors of the present flourishing
   family), which on a most melancholy occasion has been now lately
   opened again to receive the body of the late Duchess of Somerset,
   the happy consort for almost forty years of his Grace the present
   Duke, and only daughter and heiress of the ancient and noble family
   of Percy, Earls of Northumberland, whose great estate she brought
   into the family of Somerset, who now enjoy it.
   With her was buried at the same time her Grace's daughter the
   Marchioness of Caermarthen (being married to the Marquis of
   Caermarthen, son and heir-apparent to the Lord of Leeds), who died
   for grief at the loss of the duchess her mother, and was buried
   with her; also her second son, the Duke Percy Somerset, who died a
   few months before, and had been buried in the Abbey church of
   Westminster, but was ordered to be removed and laid here with the
   ancestors of his house.  And I hear his Grace designs to have a yet
   more magnificent monument erected in this cathedral for them, just
   by the other which is there already.
   How the Dukes of Somerset came to quit this church for their
   burying-place, and be laid in Westminster Abbey, that I know not;
   but it is certain that the present Duke has chosen to have his
   family laid here with their ancestors, and to that end has caused
   the corpse of his son, the Lord Percy, as above, and one of his
   daughters, who had been buried in the Abbey, to be removed and
   brought down to this vault, which lies in that they call the Virgin
   Mary's Chapel, behind the altar.  There is, as above, a noble
   monument for a late Duke and Duchess of Somerset in the place
   already, with their portraits at full-length, their heads lying
   upon cushions, the whole perfectly well wrought in fine polished
   Italian marble, and their sons kneeling by them.  Those I suppose
   to be the father of the great Duke of Somerset, uncle to King
   Edward IV.; but after this the family lay in Westminster Abbey,
   where there is also a fine monument for that very duke who was
   beheaded by Edward VI., and who was the great patron of the
   Reformation.
   Among other monuments of noble men in this cathedral they show you
   one that is very extraordinary, and to which there hangs a tale.
   There was in the reign of Philip and Mary a very unhappy murder
   committed by the then Lord Sturton, or Stourton, a family since
   extinct, but well known till within a few years in that country.
   This Lord Stourton being guilty of the said murder, which also was
   aggravated with very bad circumstances, could not obtain the usual
   grace of the Crown (viz., to be beheaded), but Queen Mary
   positively ordered that, like a common malefactor, he should die at
   the gallows.  After he was hanged, his friends desiring to have him
   buried at Salisbury, the bishop would not consent that he should be
   buried in the cathedral unless, as a farther mark of infamy, his					     					 			r />
   friends would submit to this condition--viz., that the silken
   halter in which he was hanged should be hanged up over his grave in
   the church as a monument of his crime; which was accordingly done,
   and there it is to be seen to this day.
   The putting this halter up here was not so wonderful to me as it
   was that the posterity of that lord, who remained in good rank some
   time after, should never prevail to have that mark of infamy taken
   off from the memory of their ancestor.
   There are several other monuments in this cathedral, as
   particularly of two noblemen of ancient families in Scotland--one
   of the name of Hay, and one of the name of Gordon; but they give us
   nothing of their history, so that we must be content to say there
   they lie, and that is all.
   The cloister, and the chapter-house adjoining to the church, are
   the finest here of any I have seen in England; the latter is
   octagon, or eight-square, and is 150 feet in its circumference; the
   roof bearing all upon one small marble pillar in the centre, which
   you may shake with your hand; and it is hardly to be imagined it
   can be any great support to the roof, which makes it the more
   curious (it is not indeed to be matched, I believe, in Europe).
   From hence directing my course to the seaside in pursuit of my
   first design--viz., of viewing the whole coast of England--I left
   the great road and went down the east side of the river towards New
   Forest and Lymington; and here I saw the ancient house and seat of
   Clarendon, the mansion of the ancient family of Hide, ancestors of
   the great Earl of Clarendon, and from whence his lordship was
   honoured with that title, or the house erected into an honour in
   favour of his family.
   But this being a large county, and full of memorable branches of
   antiquity and modern curiosity, I cannot quit my observations so
   soon.  But being happily fixed, by the favour of a particular
   friend, at so beautiful a spot of ground as this of Clarendon Park,
   I made several little excursions from hence to view the northern
   parts of this county--a county so fruitful of wonders that, though
   I do not make antiquity my chief search, yet I must not pass it
   over entirely, where so much of it, and so well worth observation,
   is to be found, which would look as if I either understood not the
   value of the study, or expected my readers should be satisfied with
   a total omission of it.
   I have mentioned that this county is generally a vast continued
   body of high chalky hills, whose tops spread themselves into
   fruitful and pleasant downs and plains, upon which great flocks of
   sheep are fed, &c.  But the reader is desired to observe these
   hills and plains are most beautifully intersected and cut through
   by the course of divers pleasant and profitable rivers; in the
   course and near the banks of which there always is a chain of
   fruitful meadows and rich pastures, and those interspersed with
   innumerable pleasant towns, villages, and houses, and among them
   many of considerable magnitude.  So that, while you view the downs,
   and think the country wild and uninhabited, yet when you come to
   descend into these vales you are surprised with the most pleasant
   and fertile country in England.
   There are no less than four of these rivers, which meet all
   together at or near the city of Salisbury; especially the waters of
   three of them run through the streets of the city--the Nadder and
   the Willy and the Avon--and the course of these three lead us
   through the whole mountainous part of the county.  The two first
   join their waters at Wilton, the shiretown, though a place of no
   great notice now; and these are the waters which run through the
   canal and the gardens of Wilton House, the seat of that ornament of
   nobility and learning, the Earl of Pembroke.
   One cannot be said to have seen anything that a man of curiosity
   would think worth seeing in this county, and not have been at
   Wilton House; but not the beautiful building, not the ancient