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The
Boscobel Oak, in Shropshire, is one one
of very few trees in the realm in which
a King has slept. Charles II was the royal
snoozer in question. He slept in the said
oak to avoid capture by Cromwell's bloodthirsty
hordes. On his return to the throne, Charles
famously had a fling with that buxom purveyer
of oranges, Nell Gwynne.
This Nell, however,
should not be confused with Little Nell,
the character created by another Charles
- Dickens. Curiously, the real Little
Nell is buried not far from Boscobel,
in the Shropshire village of Tong, while
another Dickensian character - Ebeneezer
Scrooge - can be found buried in Shrewsbury.
This was the home
of Charles Darwin who proposed that we
are all descended from monkeys, a species
renowned for their tree-climbing abilities.
Perhaps he drew a little inspiration from
the frankly wanton behaviour that occurs
every May in Aston-on-Clun, when the Abor
Tree - confusingly a black poplar - is
dressed and much merriment ensues. The
occassion? Royal Oak Day, of course, in
honour of Charles II. |