"Whoso prefers either Matrimony or other Ordinance before

the Good of Man and the plain Exigence of Charity, let

him profess Papist, or Protestant, or what he will, he

is no better than a Pharisee."--J. MILTON.

I

Shaston, the ancient British Palladour, From whose foundation first such strange reports

arise,

(as Drayton sang it), was, and is, in itself the city of a dream.

Vague imaginings of its castle, its three mints, its magnificent

apsidal abbey, the chief glory of South Wessex, its twelve churches,

its shrines, chantries, hospitals, its gabled freestone mansions--all

now ruthlessly swept away--throw the visitor, even against his will,

into a pensive melancholy, which the stimulating atmosphere and

limitless landscape around him can scarcely dispel. The spot was the

burial-place of a king and a queen, of abbots and abbesses, saints

and bishops, knights and squires. The bones of King Edward "the

Martyr," carefully removed hither for holy preservation, brought

Shaston a renown which made it the resort of pilgrims from every part

of Europe, and enabled it to maintain a reputation extending far

beyond English shores. To this fair creation of the great Middle-Age

the Dissolution was, as historians tell us, the death-knell. With

the destruction of the enormous abbey the whole place collapsed in a

general ruin: the Martyr's bones met with the fate of the sacred pile

that held them, and not a stone is now left to tell where they lie.

The natural picturesqueness and singularity of the town still remain;

but strange to say these qualities, which were noted by many writers

in ages when scenic beauty is said to have been unappreciated, are

passed over in this, and one of the queerest and quaintest spots in

England stands virtually unvisited to-day.

It has a unique position on the summit of a steep and imposing scarp,

rising on the north, south, and west sides of the borough out of

the deep alluvial Vale of Blackmoor, the view from the Castle Green

over three counties of verdant pasture--South, Mid, and Nether

Wessex--being as sudden a surprise to the unexpectant traveller's

eyes as the medicinal air is to his lungs. Impossible to a railway,

it can best be reached on foot, next best by light vehicles; and

it is hardly accessible to these but by a sort of isthmus on the

north-east, that connects it with the high chalk table-land on that

side.

Such is, and such was, the now world-forgotten Shaston or Palladour.

Its situation rendered water the great want of the town; and within

living memory, horses, donkeys and men may have been seen toiling

up the winding ways to the top of the height, laden with tubs and

barrels filled from the wells beneath the mountain, and hawkers

retailing their contents at the price of a halfpenny a bucketful.




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