Capitolo 17
haughty in spirit after some, and he/she despises limestone on anything less
what an one of the colonels of Your Majesty or secretary under the Crown. Here
it is the graves of the Atkinsons, the Jaffreys, the Sherburnes the
Sheafes, the Swamps the Mannings, the Gardners and others of the
quality. All around You are under the feet fall-in coffins, with here and
there a rusted sword on, and it faded shields, and crumbling heraldic
equipments. You is moving himself/herself/itself in the very best society.
However, this is not the first cemetery of Portsmouth. A hour
walks from the Episcopal enclosure it will bring her to the stain, already
it mentioned, where the first house was built and the first grave did,
to the Point of Odiorne. The exact place of the Feud is not known, but it is
supposed to be well some north of rods of an old man of still-flowing water,
to that they extinguished the Tomsonses and the Hiltonses and the their their comrade
is thirsty more than two hundred and sixty years ago. The Point of Oriorne is
possessed by the Mr. Eben L. Odiorne, a direct descendant of the worthy one that who has contained
the ownership in 1657. Not away from the old spring it is the remain-place
of the more first pioneers.
"This first cemetery of the white man in Hampshire Nuovo", he/she writes Mr.
Brewster, (1. The Mr. Charles W. Brewster, for almost fifty years the
editor of the Diary of Portsmouth and the author of two volumes of
you squirt local to that here the writer of these pages admits his
indebtedness.) "it occupies a space of perhaps one hundred feet within ninety,
and it is walled well in. The western side is now used as a burial-place
for the family but two that third with he is filled with perhaps forty
graves, pointed out by raw head and foot stones. Who there the rest anybody
living now knows. But the same care is taken of their calm beds as if
they was of his/her own family of the owner. In 1631 Mason sent on around
eighty emigrants that very of whom is dead in some years, and here they was