Diary of Rev Edward Stevens

1886, August 11, Wednesday   a b c d

Fine day. I took Frank down to the second day’s sale at Swalcliffe Vicarage. I bid up to £15 for a mail phaeton, convertible into a wagonette, but it was bought by Mr Fortescue senior of Banbury, who got it for £20 and was very much pleased with his bargain, telling me that he had been prepared to go much beyond that figure for it. He then had his own carriage put up for sale, in which he had driven over, and which his son John told me they had used for 33 years. It fetched £6.10 and was bought by Girling, the coachbuilder of Banbury, who, Fortescue said, would set to work on it and probably sell it for £20. It wanted a good deal of “doing up.”

The books fetched wonderfully little money. Most of the handsome, whole bound, classical books, sermons, pacts, etc realising less than 3d per volume. I bought 12 volumes of the Parker Society’s Life of Cranmer etc for 2/6 and some splendid editions of Euripides etc for 3d per volume.

I received a letter this morning from a clergyman at Morecambe Rectory, Lancaster, asking me for character etc of Rev Mr White who is a candidate for his Curacy. I could not make out his signature but I think it is J. S. Marsden, and I am unable to find Morecambe Rectory in “Crockford.” I therefore replied to him to that effect and added that on hearing again from him I would forward the letter I had written in reply to his.

George Burdon, of Brailes called on me at my request and I engaged him as Groom and Gardener, and to make himself generally useful. I have promised to give him 14/- a week with cottage and garden to start with. If he suits I will raise him to 15/- at the end of 6 months, and to 16/- at the end of 12 months. I told him all I required of him, having made memoranda beforehand of what I wished to say. He is 26 years of age, is married to a young woman belonging to a village between Shipston and Stratford, the name of which I have

…forgotten?

He belongs to a Benefit Club and sick club for himself and his family. He is to enter upon his duties on Thursday 19th inst.

On Monday William Lyne and his wife asked me to advertise for them in the Oxford Journal – as coachman, groom and gardener etc – and laundress, which I did. I heard subsequently that they did not get any satisfactory reply, and that owing to their propensity for drink they received no assistance in getting a situation from

It looks as if Stevens’s writing was interrupted at this point; the last sentence was not finished, and the writing continues in a fainter ink and smaller hand, repeating a topic from a couple of pages earlier.

Attended sale of Furniture etc at Swalcliffe Vicarage, belonging to late Canon Payne. Bought a few books for absurdly small sum. Books were evidently at a discount, for although many volumes were handsomely bound and originally cost a good deal, the average price, some half dozen rare works being excepted, was only 2 or 3 pence per volume.

Memoranda for George Burdon, pasted into diary:

  • Regular Communicant
  • Children to day and Sunday School when old enough.
  • Self or wife never attend other place of worship than Church.
  • Touch hat when meeting ladies and gentlemen of neighbourhood whom you know.
  • Sign pledge or promise never to visit public house
  • Never talk of my affairs to others
  • Keep self always tidy
  • Touch hat when starting carriages
  • Yes, Sir. No Mam
  • Keep places such as stable etc tidy
  • Behave kindly and respectfully to other servants
  • We never give beer, all our servants have been total abstainers hitherto.
  • Whole time as my servant never take any occupation off my premises without my permission.
  • Always come to me and the Mistress and ask if you are wanted before going home to bed.
  • Not smoke on my premises. If you smoke, smoke at home. Never smoke whilst driving my carriage.
  • A place for everything and everything in its place.
  • Be here in good time in the morning. Go to your breakfast at 8 to 8.30
  • Bring your lunch with you.
  • Dinner 12 – 1.
  • Tea 4 – 4½ or when convenient.
  • Church twice on Sunday
    • week night service
    • choir practice.
  • Benefit Club and Doctor’s Club
  • Any little job of painting etc.
  • Lamps, carpets, mats.
  • Master Frank, Sir.
  • Clothes. Black coat on Sundays. Top hat for driving etc

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Read about the Rev Edward Stevens here.