Six hundred men are set at work by him,

That else might starve, or seeke abroade their bread;

Who now live well, and go full brave and trim,

And who may boast they are with paper fed."

In another part of the poem Churchyard adds:

"An high Germaine he is, as may be proovde,

In Lyndoam Bodenze, borne and bred,

And for this mille, may heere be truly lovde,

And praysed, too, for deep device of head."

It is a common idea that this was the first paper-mill erected in England; and we find an intelligent modern writer, Mr. J.S. Burn, in his History of the Foreign Refugees, repeating the same erroneous statement. At page 262, of his curious and interesting work be says: