RAMBLE OVER DERBYSHIRE HILLS AND DALES. 127 
the remains of President Bradshaw’s House,* now used as a barn 
and cow-shed ; and finished the day’s work at photographing with 
a view of the village looking east. 
After tea I went again into the churchyard, and was copying 
inscriptions from gravestones till the wind and rain drove me 
indoors. We spent another cozy, chatty evening ; and, after 
talking over the next day’s route, and regretting we could not 
bring in a visit to Wet-Within’s Druidical circle on the Moor, went 
to bed rather earlier. 
Amongst the inscriptions, I copied the following from a quaint 
tablet to the memory of Anne Sellars and her husband :— 
Here Li’th 
Ye Body of Anne Sellars Bu 
Ried by this Stone. Who dy 
ed on Jan.y. 15 Day 1731. 
Likewise Here lise dear Jsaac 
Sellars my Husband & my 
Right. Who was buried on 
that Same Day Come seuen 
years 1738. In seuen years 
time there Comes a Change 
Obsarve and Here you'll See 
On that same Day come 
Seuen years my Husbands’ 
laid by Me. 
Cunningham, a curate at Eyam near a century ago, has left - 
behind him, on the tombstones in this churchyard, several 
specimens of his poetic ability. The following verses are said 
to have been written by him :— 
To the Memory of 
Edward, the son of 
Thomas & Mary Froggatt 
Who died December IV 
A:D: MDCCLXXIX;: 
Aged XVIII years. 
* See notice of this place by Mr. Furness, in Zhe Religuary, Vol. 2, p. 219. 
