British men of the cloth

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storeynicholas

Mon Feb 01, 2010 7:39 pm

Robert Stephen Hawker, Rector of Morwenstow, in North Cornwall and a poet, most famed for The Song of The Western Men a sort of Anthem for the Little Land of Cornwall:-

And have they fixed the where and when
And shall Trelawney die?
Here's twenty thousand Cornishmen
Will know the reason why!


He also once ex-communicated a cat for catching a mouse on a Sunday. His coat was claret and he wore a blue fisherman's jersey sewn with a red cross to mark the point at which he thought the centurion's spear stabbed Christ. Often he wore long sea boots too:

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Sabine Baring-Gould, whose hymn Onward Christian Soldiers remains a favourite, even, sometimes, with the revised lyrics of Lloyd George Knew My Father, after a certain amount of refreshment. The father of many children, once there was a children's party in the house and he came across a glum little girl sitting on the stairs and to cheer her he said "Now then, whose little girl are you?" She then burst into tears and blubbed "Yours.":

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Cosmo Gordon Lang, Archbishop of Canterbury, a central character in the drama of the abdication crisis:
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