Park--Dorking--Weller
and the Marquis of Granby Inn--Deepdene--Betchworth Castle--The
River Mole--Boxhill--The Fox and Hounds--The Denbies--Ranmore
Common--Battle of Dorking--Wotton
Church--Epsom--Reigate--Pierrepoint House--Longfield--The Weald of
Kent--Goudhurst--Bedgebury Park--Kilndown--Cranbrook--Bloody
Baker's Prison--Sissinghurst--Bayham Abbey--Tunbridge
Castle--Tunbridge Wells--Penshurst--Sir Philip Sidney--Hever
Castle--Anne Boleyn--Knole--Leeds Castle--Tenterden Steeple and the
Goodwin Sands--Rochester--Gad's Hill--Chatham--Canterbury
Cathedral--St. Thomas a Becket--Falstaff Inn--Isle of
Thanet--Ramsgate--Margate--North Foreland--The Cinque
Ports--Sandwich--Rutupiae--Ebbsfleet--Goodwin Sands--Walmer
Castle--South Foreland--Dover--Shakespeare's
Cliff--Folkestone--Hythe--Romney--Dungeness--Rye--Winchelsea--Hastings
--Pevensey--Hailsham--Hurstmonceux
Castle--Beachy Head--Brighton--The Aquarium--The South
Downs--Dichling Beacon--Newhaven--Steyning--Wiston
Manor--Chanctonbury Ring--Arundel Castle--Chichester--Selsey
Bill--Goodwood--Bignor--Midhurst--Cowdray--Dunford
House--Selborne--Gilbert White; his book; his house, sun-dial, and
church--Greatham Church--Winchester--The New
Forest--Lyndhurst--Minsted Manor--Castle Malwood--Death of William
Rufus--Rufus's Stone--Beaulieu
Abbey--Brockenhurst--Ringwood--Lydington--Christchurch--Southampton
--Netley Abbey--Calshot Castle--The Solent--Portsea
Island--Portsmouth--Gosport--Spithead--The Isle of Wight--High
Down--Alum Bay--Yarmouth--Cowes--Osborne
House--Ryde--Brading--Sandown--Shanklin Chine--Bonchurch--The
Undercliff--Ventnor--Niton--St. Lawrence Church--St. Catharine's
Down--Blackgang Chine--Carisbrooke
Castle--Newport--Freshwater--Brixton--The Needles.
GUILDFORD.
[Illustration: HIGH STREET, GUILDFORD.]
Crossing over the Thames to the Surrey side, we proceed southward to
that vast chalk-measure which, like a miniature mountain-wall, divides
the watershed draining into that river from the Weald of Sussex and of
Kent. This chalky hill is here and there breached by the valley of a
stream, and through it the Wey and the Mole, to which we have heretofore
referred, flow northward to join the current of the Thames. In the gap
formed by each there is a town, Guildford standing alongside the Wey,
and Dorking on t
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