and the
River Nene According to local folklore, related in Defoe's ''
A tour thro' the whole island of Great Britain'' (1724), the name Wansford-in-England comes from the tale of a local man who fell asleep on a
hayrick and upon awakening found himself floating down the River Nene towards the sea. He asked a traveller on the riverbank where he was, and upon hearing the reply "Wansford", asked, "Wansford in England?". The name stuck and the Haycock Hotel takes its name from the legend. This version of the story seems to be derived by
oral transmission from ''"Barnabæ Itinerarium, or Barnabee's Journal"'', an account of four long and often drunken journeys north through England published by
Richard Brathwait in 1638 and reprinted in 1820, with extensive notes, by
Joseph Haslewood. The hero, Barnaby, was allegedly born in
Appleby-in-Westmorland, and his surname may have been Harrington (there was much discussion of the truth of these facts in prefaces to later editions - and indeed as to whether Barnaby had ever existed). The poem is written in elegant Latin verse with a parallel translation into English doggerel (only the English is given here). The references to Wansford are in the third journey, after Barnaby has visited
Stilton and before he heads north to
Stamford. As the second verse shows, he arrived when Wansford had been hit by
the plague and the doors were marked with warnings. ==Transport==