biggest towns in that county sent no members to Parliament, and
   that the smallest did--that is to say that Sherborne, Blandford,
   Wimborneminster, Stourminster, and several other towns choose no
   members; whereas Weymouth, Melcombe, and Bridport were all burgess
   towns.  But now we come to Devonshire we find almost all the great
   towns, and some smaller, choosing members also.  It is true there
   are some large populous towns that do not choose, but then there
   are so many that do, that the county seems to have no injustice,
   for they send up six-and-twenty members.
   However, as I say above, there are several great towns which do not
   choose Parliament men, of which Bideford is one, Crediton or Kirton
   another, Ilfracombe a third; but, those excepted, the principal
   towns in the county do all choose members of Parliament.
   Honiton is one of those, and may pass not only for a pleasant good
   town, as before, but stands in the best and pleasantest part of the
   whole county, and I cannot but recommend it to any gentlemen that
   travel this road, that if they please to observe the prospect for
   half a mile till their coming down the hill and to the entrance
   into Honiton, the view of the country is the most beautiful
   landscape in the world--a mere picture--and I do not remember the
   like in any one place in England.  It is observable that the market
   of this town was kept originally on the Sunday, till it was changed
   by the direction of King John.
   From Honiton the country is exceeding pleasant still, and on the
   road they have a beautiful prospect almost all the way to Exeter
   (which is twelve miles).  On the left-hand of this road lies that
   part of the county which they call the South Hams, and which is
   famous for the best cider in that part of England; also the town of
   St.-Mary-Ottery, commonly called St. Mary Autree.  They tell us the
   name is derived from the River Ottery, and that from the multitude
   of otters found always in that river, which however, to me, seems
   fabulous.  Nor does there appear to be any such great number of
   otters in that water, or in the county about, more than is usual in
   other counties or in other parts of the county about them.  They
   tell us they send twenty thousand hogsheads of cider hence every
   year to London, and (which is still worse) that it is most of it
   bought there by the merchants to mix with their wines--which, if
   true, is not much to the reputation of the London vintners.  But
   that by-the-bye.
   From hence we came to Exeter, a city famous for two things which we
   seldom find unite in the same town--viz., that it is full of gentry
   and good company, and yet full of trade and manufactures also.  The
   serge market held here every week is very well worth a stranger's
   seeing, and next to the Brigg Market at Leeds, in Yorkshire, is the
   greatest in England.  The people assured me that at this market is
   generally sold from sixty to seventy to eighty, and sometimes a
   hundred, thousand pounds value in serges in a week.  I think it is
   kept on Mondays.
   They have the River Esk here, a very considerable river, and
   principal in the whole county; and within three miles, or
   thereabouts, it receives ships of any ordinary burthen, the port
   there being called Topsham.  But now by the application, and at the
   expense, of the citizens the channel of the river is so widened,
   deepened, and cleansed from the shoal, which would otherwise
   interrupt the navigation, that the ships come now quite up to the
   city, and there with ease both deliver and take in their lading.
   This city drives a very great correspondence with Holland, as also
   directly to Portugal, Spain, and Italy--shipping off vast
   quantities of their woollen manufactures especially to Holland, the
   Dutch giving very large commissions here for the buying of serges
   perpetuans, and such goods; which are made not only in and about
   Exeter, but at Crediton, Honiton, Culliton, St.-Mary-Ottery, Newton
   Bushel, Ashburton, and especially at Tiverton, Cullompton, Bampton,
   and all the north-east part of the county--which part of the county
   is, as it may be said, fully employed, the people made rich, and
   the poor that are properly so called well subsisted and employed by
   it.
   Exeter is a large, rich, beautiful, populous, and was once a very
   strong city; but as to the last, as the castle, the walls, and all
   the old works are demolished, so, were they standing, the way of
   managing sieges and attacks of towns is such now, and so altered
   from what it was in those days, that Exeter in the utmost strength
   it could ever boast would not now hold out five days open trenches-
   -nay, would hardly put an army to the trouble of opening trenches
   against it at all.  This city was famous in the late civil
   unnatural war for its loyalty to the king, and for being a
   sanctuary to the queen, where her Majesty resided for some time,
   and here she was delivered of a daughter, being the Princess
   Henrietta Maria, of whom our histories give a particular account,
   so I need say no more of it here.
   The cathedral church of this city is an ancient beauty, or, as it
   may be said, it is beautiful for its antiquity; but it has been so
   fully and often described that it would look like a mere copying
   from others to mention it.  There is a good library kept in it, in
   which are some manuscripts, and particularly an old missal or mass-
   book, the leaves of vellum, and famous for its most exquisite
   writing.
   This county, and this part of it in particular, has been famous for
   the birth of several eminent men as well for learning as for arts
   and for war, as particularly:-
   1.  Sir William Petre, who the learned Dr. Wake (now Archbishop of
   Canterbury, and author of the Additions to Mr. Camden) says was
   Secretary of State and Privy Councillor to King Henry VIII., Edward
   VI., Queen Mary, and Queen Elizabeth, and seven times sent
   ambassador into foreign countries.
   2.  Sir Thomas Bodley, famous and of grateful memory to all learned
   men and lovers of letters for his collecting and establishing the
   best library in Britain, which is now at Oxford, and is called,
   after his name, the Bodleian Library to this day.
   3.  Also Sir Francis Drake, born at Plymouth.
   4.  Sir Walter Raleigh.  Of both those I need say nothing; fame
   publishes their merit upon every mention of their names.
   5.  That great patron of learning, Richard Hooker, author of the
   "Ecclesiastical Polity," and of several other valuable pieces.
   6.  Of Dr. Arthur Duck, a famed civilian, and well known by his
   works among the learned advocates of Doctors' Commons.
   7.  Dr. John Moreman, of Southold, famous for being the first
   clergyman in England who ventured to teach his parishioners the
   Lord's Prayer, Creed, and Ten Commandments in the English tongue,
   and reading them so publicly in the parish church of Mayenhennet in
   this county, of which he was vicar.
   8.  Dr. John de Brampton, a man of great learning who flourished in
    
					     					 			the reign of Henry VI., was famous for being the first that read
   Aristotle publicly in the University of Cambridge, and for several
   learned books of his writing, which are now lost.
   9.  Peter Blundel, a clothier, who built the free school at
   Tiverton, and endowed it very handsomely; of which in its place.
   10.  Sir John Glanvill, a noted lawyer, and one of the Judges of
   the Common Pleas.
   11.  Sergeant Glanvill, his son; as great a lawyer as his father.
   12.  Sir John Maynard, an eminent lawyer of later years; one of the
   Commissioners of the Great Seal under King William III.  All these
   three were born at Tavistock.
   13.  Sir Peter King, the present Lord Chief Justice of the Common
   Pleas.  And many others.
   I shall take the north part of this county in my return from
   Cornwall; so I must now lean to the south--that is to say, to the
   South Coast--for in going on indeed we go south-west.
   About twenty-two miles from Exeter we go to Totnes, on the River
   Dart.  This is a very good town, of some trade; but has more
   gentlemen in it than tradesmen of note.  They have a very fine
   stone bridge here over the river, which, being within seven or
   eight miles of the sea, is very large; and the tide flows ten or
   twelve feet at the bridge.  Here we had the diversion of seeing
   them catch fish with the assistance of a dog.  The case is this:-
   On the south side of the river, and on a slip, or narrow cut or
   channel made on purpose for a mill, there stands a corn-mill; the
   mill-tail, or floor for the water below the wheels, is wharfed up
   on either side with stone above high-water mark, and for above
   twenty or thirty feet in length below it on that part of the river
   towards the sea; at the end of this wharfing is a grating of wood,
   the cross-bars of which stand bearing inward, sharp at the end, and
   pointing inward towards one another, as the wires of a mouse-trap.
   When the tide flows up, the fish can with ease go in between the
   points of these cross-bars, but the mill being shut down they can
   go no farther upwards; and when the water ebbs again, they are left
   behind, not being able to pass the points of the grating, as above,
   outwards; which, like a mouse-trap, keeps them in, so that they are
   left at the bottom with about a foot or a foot and a half of water.
   We were carried hither at low water, where we saw about fifty or
   sixty small salmon, about seventeen to twenty inches long, which
   the country people call salmon-peal; and to catch these the person
   who went with us, who was our landlord at a great inn next the
   bridge, put in a net on a hoop at the end of a pole, the pole going
   cross the hoop (which we call in this country a shove-net).  The
   net being fixed at one end of the place, they put in a dog (who was
   taught his trade beforehand) at the other end of the place, and he
   drives all the fish into the net; so that, only holding the net
   still in its place, the man took up two or three and thirty salmon-
   peal at the first time.
   Of these we took six for our dinner, for which they asked a
   shilling (viz., twopence a-piece); and for such fish, not at all
   bigger, and not so fresh, I have seen six-and-sixpence each given
   at a London fish-market, whither they are sometimes brought from
   Chichester by land carriage.
   This excessive plenty of so good fish (and other provisions being
   likewise very cheap in proportion) makes the town of Totnes a very
   good place to live in; especially for such as have large families
   and but small estates.  And many such are said to come into those
   parts on purpose for saving money, and to live in proportion to
   their income.
   From hence we went still south about seven miles (all in view of
   this river) to Dartmouth, a town of note, seated at the mouth of
   the River Dart, and where it enters into the sea at a very narrow
   but safe entrance.  The opening into Dartmouth Harbour is not
   broad, but the channel deep enough for the biggest ship in the
   Royal Navy.  The sides of the entrance are high-mounded with rocks,
   without which, just at the first narrowing of the passage, stands a
   good strong fort without a platform of guns, which commands the
   port.
   The narrow entrance is not much above half a mile, when it opens
   and makes a basin or harbour able to receive 500 sail of ships of
   any size, and where they may ride with the greatest safety, even as
   in a mill-pond or wet dock.  I had the curiosity here, with the
   assistance of a merchant of the town, to go out to the mouth of the
   haven in a boat to see the entrance, and castle or fort that
   commands it; and coming back with the tide of flood, I observed
   some small fish to skip and play upon the surface of the water,
   upon which I asked my friend what fish they were.  Immediately one
   of the rowers or seamen starts up in the boat, and, throwing his
   arms abroad as if he had been bewitched, cries out as loud as he
   could bawl, "A school! a school!"  The word was taken to the shore
   as hastily as it would have been on land if he had cried "Fire!"
   And by that time we reached the quays the town was all in a kind of
   an uproar.
   The matter was that a great shoal--or, as they call it, a "school"-
   -of pilchards came swimming with the tide of flood, directly out of
   the sea into the harbour.  My friend whose boat we were in told me
   this was a surprise which he would have been very glad of if he
   could but have had a day or two's warning, for he might have taken
   200 tons of them.  And the like was the case of other merchants in
   town; for, in short, nobody was ready for them, except a small
   fishing-boat or two--one of which went out into the middle of the
   harbour, and at two or three hauls took about forty thousand of
   them.  We sent our servant to the quay to buy some, who for a
   halfpenny brought us seventeen, and, if he would have taken them,
   might have had as many more for the same money.  With these we went
   to dinner; the cook at the inn broiled them for us, which is their
   way of dressing them, with pepper and salt, which cost us about a
   farthing; so that two of us and a servant dined--and at a tavern,
   too--for three farthings, dressing and all.  And this is the reason
   of telling the tale.  What drink--wine or beer--we had I do not
   remember; but, whatever it was, that we paid for by itself.  But
   for our food we really dined for three farthings, and very well,
   too.  Our friend treated us the next day with a dish of large
   lobsters, and I being curious to know the value of such things, and
   having freedom enough with him to inquire, I found that for 6d. or
   8d. they bought as good lobsters there as would have cost in London
   3s. to 3s. 6d. each.
   In observing the coming in of those pilchards, as above, we found
   that out at sea, in the offing, beyond the mouth of the harbour,
   there was a whole army of porpoises, which, as they told us,
   pursued the pilchards, and, it is probable, drove them into the
   harbour, as above.  The school, it seems, drove up the river 
					     					 			 a
   great way, even as high as Totnes Bridge, as we heard afterwards;
   so that the country people who had boats and nets catched as many
   as they knew what to do with, and perhaps lived upon pilchards for
   several days.  But as to the merchants and trade, their coming was
   so sudden that it was no advantage to them.
   Round the west side of this basin or harbour, in a kind of a
   semicircle, lies the town of Dartmouth, a very large and populous
   town, though but meanly built, and standing on the side of a steep
   hill; yet the quay is large, and the street before it spacious.
   Here are some very flourishing merchants, who trade very
   prosperously, and to the most considerable trading ports of Spain,
   Portugal, Italy, and the Plantations; but especially they are great
   traders to Newfoundland, and from thence to Spain and Italy, with
   fish; and they drive a good trade also in their own fishery of
   pilchards, which is hereabouts carried on with the greatest number
   of vessels of any port in the west, except Falmouth.
   A little to the southward of this town, and to the east of the
   port, is Tor Bay, of which I know nothing proper to my observation,
   more than that it is a very good road for ships, though sometimes
   (especially with a southerly or south-east wind) ships have been
   obliged to quit the bay and put out to sea, or run into Dartmouth
   for shelter.
   I suppose I need not mention that they had from the hilly part of
   this town, and especially from the hills opposite to it, the noble
   prospect, and at that time particularly delightful, of the Prince
   of Orange's fleet when he came to that coast, and as they entered
   into Tor Bay to land--the Prince and his army being in a fleet of
   about 600 sail of transport ships, besides 50 sail of men-of-war of
   the line, all which, with a fair wind and fine weather, came to an
   anchor there at once.
   This town, as most of the towns of Devonshire are, is full of
   Dissenters, and a very large meeting-house they have here.  How
   they act here with respect to the great dispute about the doctrine
   of the Trinity, which has caused such a breach among those people
   at Exeter and other parts of the county, I cannot give any account
   of.  This town sends two members to Parliament.
   From hence we went to Plympton, a poor and thinly-inhabited town,
   though blessed with the like privilege of sending members to the
   Parliament, of which I have little more to say but that from thence
   the road lies to Plymouth, distance about six miles.
   Plymouth is indeed a town of consideration, and of great importance
   to the public.  The situation of it between two very large inlets
   of the sea, and in the bottom of a large bay, which is very
   remarkable for the advantage of navigation.  The Sound or Bay is
   compassed on every side with hills, and the shore generally steep
   and rocky, though the anchorage is good, and it is pretty safe
   riding.  In the entrance to this bay lies a large and most
   dangerous rock, which at high-water is covered, but at low-tide
   lies bare, where many a good ship has been lost, even in the view
   of safety, and many a ship's crew drowned in the night, before help
   could be had for them.
   Upon this rock (which was called the Eddystone, from its situation)
   the famous Mr. Winstanley undertook to build a lighthouse for the
   direction of sailors, and with great art and expedition finished
   it; which work--considering its height, the magnitude of its
   building, and the little hold there was by which it was possible to
   fasten it to the rock--stood to admiration, and bore out many a
   bitter storm.
   Mr. Winstanley often visited, and frequently strengthened, the
   building by new works, and was so confident of its firmness and
   stability that he usually said he only desired to be in it when a
   storm should happen; for many people had told him it would
   certainly fall if it came to blow a little harder than ordinary.