From London to Land’s End

appointed at the several ends of the town.

There was a calculation made of what increase there would be, both

of wealth and people, in twenty years in this town; what a vast

consumption of provisions they would cause, more than the four

thousand acres of land given them would produce, by which

consumption and increase so much advantage would accrue to the

public stock, and so many subjects be added to the many thousands

of Great Britain, who in the next age would be all true-born

Englishmen, and forget both the language and nation from whence

they came. And it was in order to this that two ministers were

appointed, one of which should officiate in English and the other

in High Dutch, and withal to have them obliged by a law to teach

all their children both to speak, read, and write the English

language.

Upon their increase they would also want barbers and glaziers,

painters also, and plumbers; a windmill or two, and the millers and

their families; a fulling-mill and a cloth-worker; as also a master

clothier or two for making a manufacture among them for their own

wear, and for employing the women and children; a dyer or two for

dyeing their manufactures; and, which above all is not to be

omitted, four families at least of smiths, with every one two

servants–considering that, besides all the family work which

continually employs a smith, all the shoeing of horses, all the

ironwork of ploughs, carts, waggons, harrows, &c., must be wrought

by them. There was no allowance made for inns and ale-houses,

seeing it would be frequent that those who kept public-houses of

any sort would likewise have some other employment to carry on.

This was the scheme for settling the Palatinates, by which means

twenty families of farmers, handsomely set up and supported, would

lay a foundation, as I have said, for six or seven hundred of the

rest of their people; and as the land in New Forest is undoubtedly

good, and capable of improvement by such cultivation, so other

wastes in England are to be found as fruitful as that; and twenty

such villages might have been erected, the poor strangers

maintained, and the nation evidently be bettered by it. As to the

money to be advanced, which in the case of twenty such settlements,

at 1,000 pounds each, would be 80,000 pounds, two things were

answered to it:-

1. That the annual rent to be received for all those lands after

twenty years would abundantly pay the public for the first

disburses on the scheme above, that rent being then to amount to

40,000 pounds per annum.

2. More money than would have done this was expended, or rather

thrown away, upon them here, to keep them in suspense, and

afterwards starve them; sending them a-begging all over the nation,

and shipping them off to perish in other countries. Where the

mistake lay is none of my business to inquire.

I reserved this account for this place, because I passed in this

journey over the very spot where the design was laid out–namely,

near Lyndhurst, in the road from Rumsey to Lymington, whither I now

directed my course.

Lymington is a little but populous seaport standing opposite to the

Isle of Wight, in the narrow part of the strait which ships

sometimes pass through in fair weather, called the Needles; and

right against an ancient town of that island called Yarmouth, and

which, in distinction from the great town of Yarmouth in Norfolk,

is called South Yarmouth. This town of Lymington is chiefly noted

for making fine salt, which is indeed excellent good; and from

whence all these south parts of England are supplied, as well by

water as by land carriage; and sometimes, though not often, they

send salt to London, when, contrary winds having kept the Northern

fleets back, the price at London has been very high; but this is

very seldom and uncertain. Lymington sends two members to

Parliament, and this and her salt trade is all I can say to her;

for though she is very well situated as to the convenience of

shipping I do not find they have any foreign commerce, except it be

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