[Highways & Byways in Sussex by E.V. Lucas]@TWC D-Link book
Highways & Byways in Sussex

CHAPTER XI
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In order to get practice with worthy players he would walk from Duncton to Brighton, just as Lambert would walk from Reigate to London, or Noah Mann ride to Hambledon from Petworth.

Jim Broadbridge's first great match was in 1815, for Sussex against the Epsom Club, including Lambert and Lord Frederick Beauclerk, for a Thousand Guineas.
Broadbridge, after his wont, walked from Duncton to Brighton in the morning, and he looked so much like a farmer and so little like a cricketer that there was some opposition to his playing.

But he bowled out three and caught one and Sussex won the money.
Above Duncton rises Duncton Down, which is eight hundred and thirty-seven feet high, one of our mountains.

But we are not to climb it just now, having business in the weald some four miles away to the east, past Barlavington and Sutton, at Bignor.
[Sidenote: THE OLDEST GROCER'S SHOP] Admirers of yew trees should make a point of visiting Bignor churchyard.
The village has also what is probably the quaintest grocer's shop in England; certainly the completest contrast that imagination could devise to the modern grocer's shop of the town, plate-glassed, illumined and stored to repletion.

It is close to the yew-shadowed church, and is gained by a flight of steps.


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