Augustus J. C. Hare

The Story of My Life, volumes 1-3


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STOKE CHURCH 136 STOKE RECTORY—THE GARDEN SIDE 141 HURSTMONCEAUX 165 THE VESTRY, HURSTMONCEAUX 188 LEWES 195 AUGUSTUS J. C. HARE. From S. Lawrence. (Photogravure) To face 202 REV. O. LEYCESTER'S GRAVE, STOKE CHURCHYARD 208 EDWARD STANLEY, BISHOP OF NORWICH. (Photogravure) To face 232 THE TOWER AT ROCKEND, TORQUAY 252 WILMINGTON PRIORY 257 FLOWERS GREEN, HURSTMONCEAUX 259 THE RYE GATE, WINCHELSEA 290 IN ST. HELEN'S, BISHOPSGATE 336 LE TOMBEAU NAPOLEON 349 CANON STANLEY'S HOUSE, CANTERBURY 358 SITE OF BECKET'S SHRINE, CANTERBURY 361 STEPS AT LIME 367 LIME, THE APPROACH 410 ARCHDEACON HARE'S STUDY, HURSTMONCEAUX RECTORY 466 JULIUS C. HARE. From Richmond. (Photogravure) To face 468 HURSTMONCEAUX CHURCH 483 LIME, FROM THE GARDEN 491 ALFRISTON 506

       ANTECEDENTS

       Table of Contents

      "Time doth consecrate;

       And what is grey with age becomes religion."—SCHILLER.

      "I hope I may be able to tell the truth always, and to see it aright, according to the eyes which God Almighty gives me."—THACKERAY.

      IN 1727, the year of George the First's death, Miss Grace Naylor of Hurstmonceaux, though she was beloved, charming, and beautiful, died very mysteriously in her twenty-first year, in the immense and weird old castle of which she had been the heiress. She was affirmed to have been starved by her former governess, who lived alone with her, but the fact was never proved. Her property passed to her first cousin Francis Hare (son of her aunt Bethaia), who forthwith assumed the name of Naylor.

      The new owner of Hurstmonceaux was the only child of the first marriage of that Francis Hare, who, through the influence first of the Duke of Marlborough (by whose side, then a chaplain, he had ridden on the battle-fields of Blenheim and Ramilies), and afterwards of his family connections the Pelhams and Walpoles, rose to become one of the richest and most popular pluralists of his age. Yet he had to be contented at last with the bishoprics of St. Asaph and Chichester, with each of which he held the Deanery of St. Paul's, the Archbishopric of Canterbury having twice just escaped him.