Tour through the Eastern Counties of England, 1722

especially in a cheap year.

The next article brought thither is wool, and this of several

sorts, but principally fleece wool, out of Lincolnshire, where the

longest staple is found; the sheep of those countries being of the

largest breed.

The buyers of this wool are chiefly indeed the manufacturers of

Norfolk and Suffolk and Essex, and it is a prodigious quantity they

buy.

Here I saw what I have not observed in any other county of England,

namely, a pocket of wool. This seems to be first called so in

mockery, this pocket being so big, that it loads a whole waggon,

and reaches beyond the most extreme parts of it hanging over both

before and behind, and these ordinarily weigh a ton or twenty-five

hundredweight of wool, all in one bag.

The quantity of wool only, which has been sold at this place at one

fair, has been said to amount to fifty or sixty thousand pounds in

value, some say a great deal more.

By these articles a stranger may make some guess at the immense

trade carried on at this place; what prodigious quantities of goods

are bought and sold here, and what a confluence of people are seen

here from all parts of England.

I might go on here to speak of several other sorts of English

manufactures which are brought hither to be sold; as all sorts of

wrought-iron and brass-ware from Birmingham; edged tools, knives,

etc., from Sheffield; glass wares and stockings from Nottingham and

Leicester; and an infinite throng of other things of smaller value

every morning.

To attend this fair, and the prodigious conflux of people which

come to it, there are sometimes no less than fifty hackney coaches

which come from London, and ply night and morning to carry the

people to and from Cambridge; for there the gross of the people

lodge; nay, which is still more strange, there are wherries brought

from London on waggons to ply upon the little river Cam, and to row

people up and down from the town, and from the fair as occasion

presents.

It is not to be wondered at, if the town of Cambridge cannot

receive, or entertain the numbers of people that come to this fair;

not Cambridge only, but all the towns round are full; nay, the very

barns and stables are turned into inns, and made as fit as they can

to lodge the meaner sort of people: as for the people in the fair,

they all universally eat, drink, and sleep in their booths and

tents; and the said booths are so intermingled with taverns,

coffee-houses, drinking-houses, eating-houses, cook-shops, etc.,

and all in tents too; and so many butchers and higglers from all

the neighbouring counties come into the fair every morning with

beef, mutton, fowls, butter, bread, cheese, eggs, and such things,

and go with them from tent to tent, from door to door, that there

is no want of any provisions of any kind, either dressed or

undressed.

In a word, the fair is like a well-fortified city, and there is the

least disorder and confusion I believe, that can be seen anywhere

with so great a concourse of people.

Towards the latter end of the fair, and when the great hurry of

wholesale business begins to be over, the gentry come in from all

parts of the county round; and though they come for their

diversion, yet it is not a little money they lay out, which

generally falls to the share of the retailers, such as toy-shops,

goldsmiths, braziers, ironmongers, turners, milliners, mercers,

etc., and some loose coins they reserve for the puppet shows,

drolls, rope-dancers, and such like, of which there is no want,

though not considerable like the rest. The last day of the fair is

the horse-fair, where the whole is closed with both horse and foot

races, to divert the meaner sort of people only, for nothing

considerable is offered of that kind. Thus ends the whole fair,

and in less than a week more, there is scarce any sign left that

there has been such a thing there, except by the heaps of dung and

straw and other rubbish which is left behind, trod into the earth,

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