excerpt from 'Journal entry, 23 May 1834' pp. 84–85 (201 words)

excerpt from 'Journal entry, 23 May 1834' pp. 84–85 (201 words)

part of

Journal entry, 23 May 1834

original language

urn:iso:std:iso:639:ed-3:eng

in pages

84–85

type

text excerpt

encoded value

On Monday last I went to Petworth, and saw the finest fête that could be given. Lord Egremont has been accustomed some time in the winter to feast the poor of the adjoining parishes (women and children, not men) in the riding-house and tennis court, where they were admitted by relays. His illness prevented the dinner taking place; but when he recovered he was bent upon having it, and, as it was put off till the summer, he had it arranged in the open air, and a fine sight it was; fifty-four tables, each fifty feet long, were placed in a vast semicircle on the lawn before the house. […] [T]he firing of guns announced the hour of the feast. Tickets were given to the inhabitants of a certain district, and the number was about 4,000; but, as many more came, the old Peer could not endure that there should be anybody hungering outside his gates, and he went out himself and ordered the barriers to be taken down and admittance given to all. They think 6,000 were fed […] A band of music paraded round, playing gay airs. The day was glorious—an unclouded sky and soft southern breeze.

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excerpt from 'Journal entry, 23 May 1834' pp. 84–85 (201 words)

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