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Highways and Byways in Lincolnshire

Chapter 59: APPENDIX I
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About This Book

A richly illustrated travel and topographical guide that leads readers along the county’s principal roads and lesser byways, describing towns, villages, rolling wolds, marshes and fenlands, and numerous churches and medieval remains. The author follows motor routes radiating from major towns, providing architectural description, local history, and place-by-place notes, alongside chapters on the cathedral, monastic sites, fen churches, rural customs, folk song and notable families. Practical observations about landscape, views and travel combine with antiquarian detail and sketches of local life to offer both a route planner and a cultural portrait of Lincolnshire.

APPENDIX I

The altar tombstone from which John preached is near the chancel door. Epworth people will tell you that the mark of his heels is still visible on the stone. Really they are segments of two ironstone nodules in the sandstone slab. The inscription is a remarkable one:

“Here lieth all that was mortal of Samuel Wesley, A.M., who was Rector of Epworth for 39 years and departed this life 15th of April, 1735, aged 72.

As he lived so he died, in the true Catholic faith of the Holy Trinity in Unity, and that Jesus Christ is God incarnate and the only Saviour of mankind.—Acts 4, 12.

Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord: yea, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their labours; and their works do follow them.—Rev. 14, 13.”