Chertsey, on the other side of the river, is next passed, the leisurely traveller having the opportunity, if he so please, of visiting the house of Cowley the poet, or of climbing to St. Anne's Hill, once the residence of the statesman Charles James Fox.
Then, still on the right, the mouth of the Wey is seen, the pretty town of Wey-bridge not being far off. Towns and villages now multiply: the villas of city men begin to dot the banks, and the suburban railway station appears, with its hurrying morning and evening crowds. The chronicle of names now would be like the monotonous cry of the railway porter: "Shepperton; Walton; Sunbury; Hampton." But as yet we need not join with the throng. The "silent highway"—as the river has been called—is also a retreat. Still we can leisurely survey the charm, which, so long as the sky, the water, and the trees remain, no builder can efface, although he may try his best, or worst.
A bend in the river between Shepperton and Walton is of historic interest, as there Julius Cæsar with his legions forced the passage of the Thames, and routed the British General Cassivelaunus. "Cæsar led his army to the territories of Cassivelaunus, to the river Thames, which river can be crossed on foot in one place only, and that with difficulty. On arriving, he perceived that great forces of the enemy were drawn up on the opposite bank, which was moreover fortified by sharp stakes set along the margin, a similar stockade being fixed in the bed of the river, and covered by the stream. Having ascertained these facts from prisoners and deserters, Cæsar sent the cavalry in front, and ordered the legions to follow immediately. The soldiers advanced with such rapidity and impetuosity, although up to their necks in the water, that the enemy could not withstand the onset, but quitted the banks and betook themselves to flight." * The name Cowey, or Coway Stakes, to this day commemorates the event.
* Stanley's Life vol. i. p. 37. One of Arnold's Laleham
pupils, afterwards his colleague at Rugby, writes: "The most
remarkable thing which struck me at once in joining the
Laleham circle, was the wonderful healthiness of tone and
feeling which prevailed in it. Everything about me I
immediately felt to be most real; it was a place where a
new-comer at once felt that a great and earnest work was
going forward. Dr. Arnold's great power as a private tutor
resided in this, that he gave such an intense earnestness to
life. Every pupil was made to feel that there was a work for
him to do—that his happiness as well as his duty lay in
doing that work well. Hence, an indescribable zest was
communicated to a young man's feeling about life; a strange
joy came over him on discovering that he had the means of
being useful, and thus of being happy; and a deep respect
and ardent attachment sprang up towards him who had taught
him thus to value life and his own self, and his work and
mission in this world." September 23, 1872.