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Ancient Village / Settlement / Misc. Earthwork
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There is one institution connected with Dartmoor that must not be passed over - Bellever Day. When hare-hunting is over in the low country, then, some week or two after Easter, the packs that surround Dartmoor assemble on it, and a week is given up to hare-hunting. On the last day, Friday, there is a grand gathering on Bellever Tor.
All the towns and villages neighbouring on Dartmoor send out carriages, traps, carts, riders; the roads are full of men and women, ay, and children hurrying to Bellever.
Little girls with their baskets stuffed with saffron cake for lunch desert school and trudge to the tor. Ladies go out with champagne luncheons ready. Whether a hare be found and coursed that day matters little. It is given up to merriment in the fresh air and sparkling sun.
And the roads that lead from Bellever in the afternon are careered over by riders, whose horses are so exhilerated that they race, and the riders have a difficulty in keeping their seats. Their faces are red, not those of the horses, but their riders - from the sun and air - and they are so averse to leave the moor, that they sometimes desert their saddles to roll on the soft and springy turf. 'A Book of the West' by Sabine Baring-Gould (1899).
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Posted by Rhiannon
7th July 2024ce
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