On this day … 29 July 1618

John Taylor, ‘The Water Poet’, arrived in Preston, where he stayed three days at an inn called the Hind, leaving a poem to commemorate his visit, which includes the following verse

‘The Wednesday being July’s twenty-nine,
My journey I to Preston did confine;
All the day long it rained but one shower.
Which from the morning to the evening did pour,
And I, before to Preston I could get.
Was soused and pickled both with rain and sweat;
But there I was supplied with fire and food
And anything I wanted, sweet and good.
There at the Hind, kind Master Hind, mine host,
Kept a good table, baked and boiled and roast:
There Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, I did stay.’

Does anybody have more information on the Hind?

He was again in Preston in 1625, and again left a poem to mark his visit, which includes the following:

‘Unto my wayward lodgings often did repair,
Kind Master Thomas Banastre the mayor,
Who is of worship and of good respect.
And in his charge discreet and circumspect:
For I protest to God, I never saw
A town more wisely governed by the law.’

Another Bannister, probably an innkeeper at another hostelry, was memorialised in poetry. This time the poet was Richard Braithwaite, who in his Drunken Barnaby’s Four Journeys to the North of England, included the following:

‘Thence to Preston I was led a—
To brave Banister’s to bed a—:
As two born and bred together,
We were presently sworn brether;
Seven days were there assigned;
Oft I supp’d but never dined.

This Banister could have been William Banaster, ‘gentleman and innkeeper’, mentioned in parish records at this time.

John Taylor, in his day one of the most popular poets in England, styled himself ‘The Water Poet’ in reference to his earlier employment as a waterman on the Thames, an occupation:

‘… deemed unpopular by the literary elite of London. Watermen were known to be drunkards, and often gossips and liars, who attempted to cheat patrons into a higher wage for their service. This occupation would be crafted into an image for Taylor later in his career.’


Sources

Fishwick’s History of Preston
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Taylor_(poet)


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