The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction. Volume 12, No. 328, August 23, 1828
By these mysterious ties the busy pow'r
Of mem'ry her ideal train preserves
Intire; or, when they would elude her watch,
Reclaims their fleeting footsteps from the waste
Of dark oblivion.
AKENSIDE
Gentle, courteous, and patient reader—to understand the above plan, it is requisite that you carry your mind's eye back to those troublous times when men enjoyed no protection, but in opposing force to force; and to a period when every man's house was his castle , though not in the metaphorical sense we have since been accustomed to apply these words, viz. to the protection and security of British subjects.
Few portions of our island have been more amply illustrated, by antiquarians, than OXFORD; and from one of these we learn that a Keep Tower, or Castle, existed here a considerable time before the conquest; for Alfred lived here; and Harold Harefoot was crowned and resided here; and one of Alfred's sons struck money here. Hearne has likewise identified this fact by the very ancient and original arms of Oxford, which have a castle represented, with a large ditch and bridge. Upon the same authority we learn that Offa built walls at Oxford, and by him, therefore, a Saxon castle was originally built at Oxford.
Leland, Dugdale, and Camden, on the other hand, affirm that the castle at Oxford was built by Robert D'Oiley, who came into England with William the Conqueror; and the Chronicles of Osney Abbey, preserved in the Cottonian library, even ascertain the precise date of this great baron's undertaking, viz. A.D. 1071. No question, therefore, can remain, but that this illustrious chieftain either repaired or rebuilt the castle; but as we have shown, upon equal authority, there was a Saxon castle, fit for a royal residence at Oxford, long previous to D'Oiley's time. About the year 1794, several Saxon remains were discovered here; but our engraving represents the castle in Norman times, with Robert D'Oiley's magnificent additions, and is a facsimile of a plan by Ralph Agas, in 1538, which, allowing a little for bad or unskilful drawing, may be taken as a perfect specimen of Norman military architecture, and will, we are persuaded, be received by our readers as a popular and interesting illustration of the warlike character of the age in which the castle was erected.
Various
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ANCIENT PLAN OF OXFORD CASTLE.
THE "INTELLECTUAL CAT."
STANZAS FOR MUSIC.
"TROUT BINNING" IN WEST-MORELAND.
THE TOPOGRAPHER.
AN EXCURSION TO THE RUINS OF RIEVAULX AND BYLAND ABBEYS; AND TO THE RESIDENCE OF LAURENCE STERNE, COXWOLD, YORKSHIRE.
ON VIEWING THE RUINS OF BYLAND ABBEY THROUGH THE DETACHED GATEWAY ON THE WEST.
CROMLEH IN ANGLESEA.
NOTES OF A READER.
WOMAN AND SONG.
CLAUDE LORRAINE.
KISSING THE FOOT.
BOHEMIAN BLESSING.
REVIEWING.
MOTTOES FOR SUN DIALS.
THE PINE-APPLE.
STONE-MASON'S CRITICISM
PLEASURES OF HISTORY.
CHARMS OF SAVAGE LIFE.
PATRONS OF ASTRONOMY.
SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS
DINNERS.
THE SCOLD.
SELECT BIOGRAPHY
LEDYARD THE TRAVELLER.
THE GATHERER.
LARGE BONNETS.