"While the antiquary studies the shattered walls [of Okehampton Castle], the folk-lorist will be rejoicing in the legend of Lady Howard of notorious memory. She was the daughter of Sir John Fitz, of Fitzford, Tavistock (not the Elizabethan astrologer, whose name we shall presently see, but a later knight of the same name), and has a reputation of having been very wicked, but if we read her history we shall perhaps feel she was more sinned against than sinning. Four husbands had she (but was twice a widow before she was sixteen!). She always chose to be called by the title of her third husband, Sir Charles Howard, son of the Duke of Suffolk; her fourth was Sir Richard Granville, the most detestable of all the governors of Lydford Castle.
In the Civil War Lady Howard chose to espouse the Parliamentary cause, which doubtless aggravated her crimes in the opinion of loyal west-countrymen. Mrs Bray says that she had heard a vague tradition that Lady Howard died in a state of mental misery and agony in a house near Okehampton, and to this day expiates her wickedness by running nightly to Fitzford, Tavistock, to Okehampton Park, in the form of a black dog, to bring away a blade of grass. When all the grass is plucked the day of judgment will come, and her penance will be ended. Sometimes the dog is described as accompanying the coach of bones, in which tradition says she used to drive towards the moor. Mr. Baring Gould preserves the story among Songs of the West in a ballad, gruesome both in words and tune :-
My Ladye hath a sable coach,
With horses two and four;
My Ladye hath a gaunt bloodhound,
That goeth before:
My Ladye's coach hath nodding plumes,
The driver hath no head,
My Ladye is an ashen white,
As one that long is dead.
It is needless to add that misfortune is sure to follow the luckless individual who meets "My Ladye" in her weird journey across the moor."
Cresswel 1921
Map - Okehampton
Map - Lydford Castle
Map - Fitzeford House Gatehouse, Tavistock
Cresswel 1921
Map - Okehampton
Map - Lydford Castle
Map - Fitzeford House Gatehouse, Tavistock
No comments:
Post a Comment