![]() ![]() It was a plain room in the oldest part of the inn, with a single window pierced through the thick stone wall. In summertime day-trippers came out from the towns on the new railway, to hire a punt or a skiff at the Swan and spend an afternoon on the river with a bottle of ale and a picnic, but in winter the drinkers were all locals, and they congregated in the winter room. These different elements had been harmonized by the thatch that roofed them, the lichen that grew on the old stones, and the ivy that scrambled up the walls. It had been constructed in three parts: one was old, one was very old, and one was older still. The Swan was a very ancient inn, perhaps the most ancient of them all. The Swan at Radcot had its own specialty. ![]() If you were a gambling man, the Stag at Eaton Hastings was the place for you, and if you preferred brawling, there was nowhere better than the Plough just outside Buscot. Inglesham had the Green Dragon, a tobacco-scented haven of contemplation. ![]() The Red Lion at Kelmscott was musical: bargemen played their fiddles in the evening and cheesemakers sang plaintively of lost love. There were a great many inns along the upper reaches of the Thames at the time of this story and you could get drunk in all of them, but beyond the usual ale and cider each one had some particular pleasure to offer. ![]() There was once an inn that sat peacefully on the bank of the Thames at Radcot, a day's walk from the source. ![]()
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