Page:Highways and Byways in Lincolnshire.djvu/156

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She is now immortalised with her master in bronze, executed with loving care by his own old friend and quondam neighbour in the Isle of Wight. The inscription at the back of the pedestal is: "Alfred Lord Tennyson, born 1809, died 1892"; and below it is "George Frederick Watts, born 1817, died 1904."

Another monument which once adorned Lincoln was the first and one of the very best in the list of Queen Eleanor's crosses, designed by the famous "Richard of Stowe," who carved the figures in the angel choir. Only a fragment of this survived what Precentor Venables calls "the fierce religious storm of 1645." Before starting on its long funeral procession to Westminster, the Queen's body was embalmed by the Gilbertine nuns of St. Catherine's Priory, close to which, at the junction of the Ermine Street and Foss Way, the cross was set up, near the leper hospital of Remigius, called the Malandery (Fr. Maladerie) hospital.

THE "STUFF BALL" Two railway stations and the many large iron and agricultural implement works, which have given Lincoln a name all over the world, occupy the lower part of the town, with buildings more useful than beautiful; for this industry has taken the place of the woollen factories which were once the mainstay of Lincoln. But a tall building with small windows, known as "The Old Factory," still indicates the place in which the "Lincoln Stuff" was made, from which the Lincoln "Stuff Ball" took its name. In order to increase the production and popularise the wear of woollen material for ladies' dresses, it was arranged to have balls at which no lady should be admitted who did not wear a dress of the Lincolnshire stuff. The first of these was held at the Windmill Inn, Alford, in 1785. The colour selected was orange; but, the room not being large enough for the number of dancers, in 1789 it was moved to Lincoln, where it has been held ever since, the lady patroness choosing the colour each year. In 1803 the wearing of this hot material was commuted to an obligation to take so many yards of the stuff. The manufacture has long ago come to an end, but the "Stuff Ball" survives, and the colours are still selected.

The swamps of the Wigford suburb have also disappeared, but Brayford Pool, beloved of artists, where the Foss Dyke joins the Witham, still makes a beautiful picture with the boats and barges and swans in front below, and the Minster towers looking down into it from above. This Foss Dyke was a Crown