Tour through the Eastern Counties of England, 1722

would taste of the root, yet upon experience it is found that at

market there is no difference, nor can they that buy single out one

joint of mutton from another by the taste. So that the complaint

which our nice palates at first made begins to cease of itself, and

a very great quantity of beef and mutton also is brought every year

and every week to London from this side of England, and much more

than was formerly known to be fed there.

I cannot omit, however little it may seem, that this county of

Suffolk is particularly famous for furnishing the City of London

and all the counties round with turkeys, and that it is thought

there are more turkeys bred in this county and the part of Norfolk

that adjoins to it than in all the rest of England, especially for

sale, though this may be reckoned, as I say above, but a trifling

thing to take notice of in these remarks; yet, as I have hinted,

that I shall observe how London is in general supplied with all its

provisions from the whole body of the nation, and how every part of

the island is engaged in some degree or other of that supply. On

this account I could not omit it, nor will it be found so

inconsiderable an article as some may imagine, if this be true,

which I received an account of from a person living on the place,

viz., that they have counted three hundred droves of turkeys (for

they drive them all in droves on foot) pass in one season over

Stratford Bridge on the River Stour, which parts Suffolk from

Essex, about six miles from Colchester, on the road from Ipswich to

London. These droves, as they say, generally contain from three

hundred to a thousand each drove; so that one may suppose them to

contain five hundred one with another, which is one hundred and

fifty thousand in all; and yet this is one of the least passages,

the numbers which travel by Newmarket Heath and the open country

and the forest, and also the numbers that come by Sudbury and Clare

being many more.

For the further supplies of the markets of London with poultry, of

which these countries particularly abound, they have within these

few years found it practicable to make the geese travel on foot

too, as well as the turkeys, and a prodigious number are brought up

to London in droves from the farthest parts of Norfolk; even from

the fen country about Lynn, Downham, Wisbech, and the Washes; as

also from all the east side of Norfolk and Suffolk, of whom it is

very frequent now to meet droves with a thousand, sometimes two

thousand in a drove. They begin to drive them generally in August,

by which time the harvest is almost over, and the geese may feed in

the stubbles as they go. Thus they hold on to the end of October,

when the roads begin to be too stiff and deep for their broad feet

and short legs to march in.

Besides these methods of driving these creatures on foot, they have

of late also invented a new method of carriage, being carts formed

on purpose, with four stories or stages to put the creatures in one

above another, by which invention one cart will carry a very great

number; and for the smoother going they drive with two horses

abreast, like a coach, so quartering the road for the ease of the

gentry that thus ride. Changing horses, they travel night and day,

so that they bring the fowls seventy, eighty, or, one hundred miles

in two days and one night. The horses in this new-fashioned

voiture go two abreast, as above, but no perch below, as in a

coach, but they are fastened together by a piece of wood lying

crosswise upon their necks, by which they are kept even and

together, and the driver sits on the top of the cart like as in the

public carriages for the army, etc.

In this manner they hurry away the creatures alive, and infinite

numbers are thus carried to London every year. This method is also

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