This lovely old vicarage in Cornwall has a quite incredible back story.
Before Thomas Hardy married Emma Gifford, her beau was a curate’s son who lived on the edge of the village of St Clether. And a moment of exquisite pain suffered by that curate’s son was captured for posterity by one of England’s greatest-ever writers.
In his 1871 poem The Face at the Casement, Hardy describes the moment he ran away with the local maiden – with her former flame gazing out of the window as the lovers departed.
Slowly we drove away,
When I turned my head, although not
Called to: why I turned I know not
Even to this day:
And lo, there in my view
Pressed against an upper lattice
Was a white face, gazing at us
As we withdrew…
Then I deigned a deed of hell;
It was done before I knew it;
What devil made me do it
I cannot tell!
These spine-tingling verses refer to the house on this very page, a splendid Georgian four-bedroom home called The Old Vicarage, which is on the market with Keller Williams at £725,000.
Significantly remodelled and redecorated since Hardy’s time – as you’d hope, of course – it’s far more than just a lovely family home.
The Old Vicarage comes with five acres of land, a separate barn conversion, a wooded copse, a stream and a glamping business.
The Elizabethan manor that offered refuge to Charles II as he fled to France
Few houses can boast hundreds of years of history and a sparkling future.
A gorgeous waterside lodge in one of Devon’s most delightful villages
Dinah’s Side is the perfect place to enjoy lazy summer days.