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486 the dust but last year, so as to widen High Street. Cooke urged its destruction in 1809, as "useless and dormant."

Cooke built himself a villa residence, which he dubbed "Waterloo Cottage." He was a very plain man, with thick, coarse mouth, and a broken nose. A portrait, a profile, is prefixed to his pamphlet, Old England for Ever but there is one much finer of him, in colour, representing him in uniform. This is in the library of the Institution at Exeter.

That the man had enormous self-confidence and conceit saute aux yeux, but that he was a useful man to his country, to the county, and to the city is also clear.

Cooke assures us that he had been in 400 out of the 466 parishes of Devon, "having the heartfelt satisfaction of being respected" in all of them, "and knowing fifteen lords, four honourables, twenty-two baronets, and three knights, and most of the clergy and gentry" of the county.