The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction. Volume 12, No. 329, August 30, 1828
In our days, hundreds of London tourists breakfast at the Bush , although, after sixteen miles' ride, their appetites do not require this stimulant any more than do the glories of the Bush cellars after dinner.
But we must pass on to the church. The old building was in the Gothic or pointed style, with lancet windows, &c., but much disfigured by churchwardens' repairs, although the great Inigo Jones is said to have built its square, brick tower. At length, a considerable portion of this ancient structure fell in one Sunday morning, during the service, but, as the newspapers say, fortunately no lives were lost. The inhabitants then resolved to rebuild nearly the whole, and the design of Mr. J.B. Watson was adopted. The foundation stone was laid March 31, in the present year, and the building is to be completed by Christmas next. The church is intended to contain 1,100 persons. The length of the interior, 65 feet; width, 47 feet; height to ceiling, 25 feet. The chancel is to be rebuilt at the expense of the impropriators. The lower part of Inigo Jones's tower is to remain, and the whole is to be raised 23 feet. These repairs, with the enclosure of the churchyard, will not exceed 4,000 l .; and the progress of the undertaking is highly creditable to the taste and execution of all the parties concerned.
As one act of public spirit generally leads to another, the erection of a new stone bridge is projected at Staines; it is to be nearer the church than the present bridge, and will afford a better view of the new structure. An elegant stone bridge was erected here in 1796, but two of the piers sinking, the bridge was taken down, and an iron one substituted; this failed, and has since been supported by wooden piles and frame-work.
There is a part of the river Wye, between the city of Hereford and the town of Moss, which was distinguished and well known for upwards of two centuries, by the appellation of the Spectre's Voyage; across which, so long as it retained that name, neither entreaty nor remuneration could induce any boatman to convey passengers after a certain hour of the night. The superstitious ideas current amongst the lower orders of people were, that on every evening about the hour of eight, a beautiful female figure was seen in a small vessel, sailing from Hereford to Northrigg, (a small village about three miles distant,) with the utmost rapidity, against wind and tide, or even in a dead calm—landed at the little village, returned, and vanished, when arrived at a certain part of the river, where the current is remarkably strong, about half a mile from the city of Hereford.
Various
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NEW CHURCH, BUILDING AT STAINES.
THE SPECTRE'S VOYAGE.
HARVEST HOME.
STANZAS TO, AND IN ILLUSTRATION OF, A LANDSCAPE BY CLAUDE.
MARCH OF "IMPROVEMENT."
INTRODUCTION OF SILK INTO EUROPE.
LADIES' FASHIONS.
RETROSPECTIVE GLEANINGS
HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF SMITHFIELD.
THE ANECDOTE GALLERY.
THE ANDALUSIAN ASS.
SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY.
IMPROVED SAFETY LAMP.
EPITAPH ON A FRENCH SCOLD.
PENELOPE, OR LOVE'S LABOUR LOST.
DIALOGUES ON FLY FISHING.
SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS.
PAROCHIAL HISTORIES.
THE GATHERER.
IAMBICS.
BISHOP AND NEGUS.
POLITE EVIDENCE.
BELL ROCK LIGHT-HOUSE.
NEWSPAPER WONDERS.
IMPROMPTU ON RELIEVING A BEGGAR.