THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES A HOBBLE THROUGH THE CHANNEL ISLANDS IN 1858; OB, THE SEEINGS, DOINGS AND MUSINGS OF ONE TOM HOBBLER, DURING A FOUR MONTHS' RESIDENCE IN THOSE PARTS. BY EDWARD T. GASTINEAU. WITH A VIEW OF BOT7LEY BAY, DRAWN FROM A BOUGH SKETCH BY TOM HOBBLER. LONDON: CHARLES WESTERTON, 20, ST. GEORGE'S PLACE, HTDE PARK CORNER. 1860. LONDON ; Printed by A. Scbulze, 13, Poland Street. DA DEDICATION. To the reader, these pages are most respectfully dedicated. In all humbleness of mind, I had intended dedicat- ing them to myself, thinking that I should most probably be their only reader. But on mature con- sideration, I have come to the conclusion, perhaps an audacious one, that they may fall into the hands of some one else, in which case such a dedication would be considered both egotistical and conceited. There- fore, kind reader, whoever you may be, I have taken the liberty of dedicating this little work to you, trust- ing that should you consider it worth a moment's critical notice, you will not forget, in returning that 629826 iv DEDICATIQN. most undoubted verdict, of guilty of writing a great deal of trash, to remember your usual kindly and generous feelings, and strongly recommend the Author to mercy, on account of its being his first offence. THE AUTHOR. June, 1860. PREFACE. " Travelling in youth is part of education," said the great Lord Bacon, and travelling in all stages of one's life, must also be a means of continued educa- tion. Travelling is a very great luxury ; not only highly instructive, but most amusing, and exceedingly plea- sant to all beings intelligently constituted. It ex- pands the ideas, which perhaps before have been woefully contracted ; and it instructs the mind in a manner which books can never do, for many things that we read of, we cannot bring our minds to see in their proper light, without their actual visual con- firmation. It also removes false prejudices, and overcomes many absurd scruples ; and certainly to refined minds, is both most amusing and delightful. And not only so to the traveller himself, but it also VI PREFACE. renders him a very agreeable companion to others, always provided, however, that he is not much given to prosy descriptions, which it is to be feared is too often the case. Now, travelling is particularly enjoyable when the tourist is in possession of good health. The case is, perhaps, a little different where the wanderer is in search of that health more than of pleasure ; though even here, although the prostration of body from the effects of long sickness, must, of course, act to a certain extent upon the mind, still the mental powers are almost always sufficiently alive to acknowledge, with thankfulness, the delights that change of air, and change of scene must always afford, and more especially so when the invalid has the opportunity of finding those changes amidst some of Nature's richest beauties. But it is not my intention to write an essay on travelling, a subject very much hackneyed, and though doubtless a most excellent theme, it is possible to have too much, even of a good thing. Suffice it then, that in the spring of 1858, the subject of these sketches, was slowly recovering from a long, serious, and very painful illness, which had deprived him of his liberty for more than a year and PREFACE. Vll a half, and had now left him in a shattered and crippled state; and having sought in vain for thorough restoration to health, in short visits to places not very far removed from London, such as the Kentish coast, and the Isle of Wight, now turned his thoughts to those beautiful islands of the British Channel, which lie closely adjoining to the coast of France, and are generally known as the Channel Islands. It was not our traveller's first visit to these parts. He had been there on two previous occasions for a week or two, and was so charmed at those times, that he was determined to pay them a more lengthened visit, though somewhat against the wishes of his friends, who thought the journey one of too hazard- ous and fatiguing a character for an invalid. But he did brave those dangers and fatigues, and resided in those charming islands for more than four months ; and his idea is now to impart to any one who may be induced to read these pages, some of the amusement and instruction that he derived there, and also to record some of his thoughts and musings, on what he saw, heard, and was told, whilst resident in these beautiful islands of La Manche. At the same time, I distinctly wish to state, that it is not intended Vll PREFACE. to write a guide book, which is frequently made only a medium for advertising, and is too often only a false representation of things ; or a book of travels, which it certainly cannot be called, the journeyings being of too limited a character to bear that appellation ; but only a kind of chit-chat description of all he saw, and what he thought, perfectly unshackled by, and free from all conventionalities. The Author may be perhaps allowed to add here, that these pages were not originally intended for public observation, but only for circulation among his own immediate friends. A combination of circumstances have, however, in a measure, compelled him to publish them, and he can only express his modest, but sincere desire that a kind and generous public may be induced to look friendly and pleasantly on his humble and unpretend- ing effort, to bask in the sunshine of their favour and good will. CONTENTS. INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER. The History and Geography of the Channel Islands. . 1 CHAPTER I. ST. HELIEES AND ITS NEIGHBOUEHOOD. Hobbler's arrival in St. Heliers, and location there. Description of the Town and its Environs. St. Aubin's Bay. Fort Regent. The Piers. Harbours. An improvised race. The Markets. Elizabeth Castle and the Bridge of Death. The Hermitage and the good old Saints. Public Buildings. Victoria College. The People of St. Heliers. A Review. Sharp practice. Telegraph Fetes. Regatta. Hobbler's excursion into Fashionland. Crinoline victorious. 15 CHAPTER II. BOULET BAT. Hobbler at Bouley Bay. Description of that Place and its Neigh- bourhood. He studies men and manners. Great variety of Characters in its Visitors. Cockneys and their Peculiarities. Sun-rise, Moon-rise. Evening solitude. Glorious Sea. General Post Office and its machinery. Gallant conduct of mine host. Fleeting nature of travelling friendships. ... 58 X CONTENTS. CHAPTER III. GENERAL TIEW OF THE ISLAND OF JERSEY. The size of the Island and general appearance. How to see the Island. Description of its beautiful bays, and charming coast scenery. Its valleys, lanes, and roads. Its orchards, flowers and beautiful cows. Hobbler's ruminations on the scenery of Jersey. The romance of man's life. The people of Jersey. Their Dress. Their industry and penuriousness, and general character. Their great prosperity and its causes. Their Laws. Society. Lack of English Sports Clameur de Haro. . . 87 CHAPTER IV. GUERNSEY. St. Peter's Port. The Landing and shouting porters. Castle Cornet. Harbours. The Fish-market. Churches. Dearth of Public Buildings. General View of the Island. Cobo Bay and " poor Billy." Splendid scenery on the south-west coast. In- habitants of Guernsey. Their Courtesy. Their Gardens and Flowers. Guernsey Society. 133 CHAPTER V. THE ISLANDS Of SERK, HERM, JETHOU AND ALDERNEY, AND THE CASKET ROCKS. Excursion to Serk. The Voyage. Neptune and Boreas at play, and the Steward at work. Fair Venus in danger. The parting glass. Approach to the Island. Harbour of Le Creui. La Coupee and its story. General description of the Island. Hera and its tiny shells. Melancholy incident. Life and Death. Jethou. Alderney and its fortified works. The Casket Rocks. . 153 CONTENTS. XI CHAPTER VI. THREE MONTHS' EETLREMENT AT BOULET. Hobbler returned to his Jersey home, appears in a new character. Cincinnatus. My bed-room. Our kitchen. He studies domes- tic economy. Turns cook, and goes a marketing. A Thunder- storm. The Fetes at Cherbourg. Hobbler's Dream of the Fu- ture. Atlantic Telegraph. The Comet. Conclusion of the Season. Harvest. Fern Cutting. Vraic Gathering Florence Nightingale. The Ladies of Bouley. Adieu to Bouley. . 175 CHAPTER VII. HOMEWARD BOUND. Departure from Bouley. Day-break. Beautiful effects. Adieu to Jersey. A November day on board a Steamer. Little epi- sode on the Voyage. Cupid and Uniforms. The Guard's Story about the Livery. Arrival at Southampton. Hobbler on the Custom-house. The Author's Adieu to the Reader. 224 A HOBBLE THROUGH THE CHANNEL ISLANDS. INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER. The History and Geography of the Channel Islands. BEFORE starting on his journey, our traveller thought it might be as well to read up something of the History and Geography of the Islands. He did so, and behold the results of his readings. When Mr. Thomas Hobbler was at school, some twenty years or so ago, he had been taught that the Islands of the British Channel were Jersey, Guernsey, Alderney and Sark ; but now he finds added to them, in the maps of those parts, Herm and Jethou. Now where did these two new islands spring from all of a sudden ? Perhaps they X A HOBBLE THROUGH are only coral rocks, islands in process of forma- tion raised from out the ocean, in a few short years, by those industrious insects? No, that cannot be. He finds that they are veritable islands, with veritable granite foundations; and, moreover, that they are inhabited and under cultivation. So he is obliged to come to the conclusion, that though thehydrographer, of thirty years ago, ignored their existence, they nevertheless have for many centuries past formed part of that family of iron bound isles, which stud the Southern British Channel, and which have so long been ' the terror of the navigator of those parts. These islands all lie within one hundred miles of Old England, due south of the coast of Dorset- shire ; Jersey being the furthest removed from it, and Alderney the nearest, the former being about one hundred miles off, and the latter about sixty. Guernsey is about twenty miles north of Jersey, and Serk, Herm and Jethou, within a few miles of the former, a little to the eastward. They are all situated closely adjacent to the French coast. Alderney commands the harbour of Cherbourg, from which it is distant less than twenty miles, and Jersey is fifteen miles from the THE CHANNEL ISLANDS. 3 coast of Normandy. Jersey may be said to be situated within a bay of the coast of France, formed by Cape La Hogue on the north, and Cape de Carteret on the east, the former of which headlands seems to take Jersey, and the intervening rocks, within its embrace, as much as to say, nature made you part of our land, and you ought to come under the same rule as we. Many people have supposed that these islands were at one time joined to the continent of Europe, but others again have laughed at this suggestion, though really there is nothing laughable in such a supposition. Now I do not profess to be a geological scholar, and, therefore, lay no claim to a knowledge of that science ; but yet it appears to me far from impro- bable, that one of those mighty convulsions of nature, which upheaved the vast plains of the earth, and formed them into those stupendous an