Page:Cornwall (Mitton).djvu/164

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SANDY BEACHES OF THE NORTHERN COAST 107 golf-links on the heights above Wrangle Point, belonging to the old Falcon Hotel by the bridge. About two miles inland is Stratton, the scene of the victory of Sir Bevil Grenville over the Round- heads, a victory which was within an ace of being a defeat. The Earl of Stamford had marched into Cornwall, with forces of about seven thousand men, and camped at Stratton, where he was attacked by Sir Bevil with half the number and defeated. Grenville came of a famous Cornish family which numbered among its members Sir Richard, who with his little ship the Revenge, tackled the great Spanish galleons and managed to damage many of them before he fell mortally wounded as is recorded in Tennyson's much-quoted poem ! Further north still, the very last place of note on the Cornish coast, is Morwenstow, visited by hundreds of people because of its association with its one-time vicar, the Rev. Robert Stephen Hawker, a muscular Christian of a peculiarly pungent per- sonality. His generosity and kindliness toward his fellow-men was unstinting, but he was withal full to the brim of eccentricity. He married while still a youth of twenty at the University, his godmother, who was twenty- one years his senior, and they lived happily together until her death in extreme old age.