Doctor Syn: A Smuggler Tale of Romney Marsh. Arthur Russell Thorndike
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Arthur Russell Thorndike
Doctor Syn: A Smuggler Tale of Romney Marsh
Published by Good Press, 2020
EAN 4064066067908
Table of Contents
The Coming of the King's Frigate
A Landed Proprietor Sets Up a Gallows Tree
The Coffin-Maker Has a Visitor
Captain Collyer Entertains an Attorney from Rye
Adventures in Watchbell Street
A Military Lady-killer Prepares for Battle
Dymchurch-under-the-wall
CHAPTER I
DYMCHURCH-UNDER-THE-WALL
To those who have small knowledge of Kent let me say that the fishing village of Dymchurch-under-the-wall lies on the south coast midway between two of the ancient Cinque ports, Romney and Hythe.
In the days of George III, with Trafalgar still unfought, our coast watchmen swept with keen glasses this broad bend of the Channel; watched not for smugglers (for there was little in Dymchurch to attract the smuggler, with its flat coastline open all the way from Dover cliffs around Dungeness to Beachy Head), but for the French men-o'-war.
In spite of being perilously open to the dangers of the French coast, Dymchurch was a happy little village in those days—aye, and prosperous, too, for the Squire, Sir Antony Cobtree, though in his younger days a wild and reckless adventurer, a gambler and a duellist, had, of late years, resolved himself into a pattern Kentish squire, generous to the village, and so vastly popular. Equally popular was Doctor Syn, the vicar of Dymchurch: a pious and broad-minded cleric, with as great a taste for good Virginia tobacco and a glass of something hot as for the penning of long sermons which sent every one to sleep on Sundays. Still, it was clearly his duty to deliver these sermons, for, as I have said, he was a pious man, and although his congregation for the most part went to sleep, they were at great pains not to snore, because to offend the old Doctor would have been a lasting shame.
The little church was old and homely, within easy cry of the sea; and it was pleasant on Sunday evenings, during the Doctor's long extempore prayers, to hear the swish and the lapping and continual grinding of the waves upon the sand.