. Highways and byways in Devon and Cornwall. i I t. 296 SEA MUTINEERS CHAr. the Admiralty officials leapt down this cliff, for I am half afraidthe sea mutineers meant what they said about killing mutineers were the best of good fellows, kindly andstaunch to a degree ; but they believed that wrecks were their i M £* m ^r^ - >4 j/v^r* {^M • Jf^ s3gt .?,? \^U fill 1 $ Market Pen Street, Penzance. title-deeds, and they were a trifle peremptory about insisting ontheir rights. This story had a sequel of prosecutions ; but thatis a vulgar trivial affair of law courts, and we need not dw
. Highways and byways in Devon and Cornwall. i I t. 296 SEA MUTINEERS CHAr. the Admiralty officials leapt down this cliff, for I am half afraidthe sea mutineers meant what they said about killing mutineers were the best of good fellows, kindly andstaunch to a degree ; but they believed that wrecks were their i M £* m ^r^ - >4 j/v^r* {^M • Jf^ s3gt .?,? \^U fill 1 $ Market Pen Street, Penzance. title-deeds, and they were a trifle peremptory about insisting ontheir rights. This story had a sequel of prosecutions ; but thatis a vulgar trivial affair of law courts, and we need not dwellon it. Wll NEWLYN 297 There is not much to say about Penzance; while the settle-ment of certain distinguished artists at Newlyn has made thatlittle fishy town as familiar as Kensington. The prettiest viewof it, at least in spring time, is from a spot halfway up the hillbeyond, where there is a low wall topped with apple trees, andthrough their pink and rosy blossom one looks down upon the.
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