The Trusty Servant May 2015 No.119 | Page 4

NO.119 on his typewriter, only occasionally venturing through the green baize door to view the chaos rampant on the other side. From the world of papal intrigues and excess he had just left behind it probably did not look too bizarre, and somehow his blinking gaze and beaming smile proved just enough both to keep the show on the road and to encourage his charges to make something of the unusual freedoms they had been given. T H E T R U S T Y S E RVA N T Following retirement and the death of his first wife in 1990 he remarried and carved out a new life in Bath and Umbria, where he had built a house many years earlier. A minor stroke and reduced mobility did little to diminish his intellectual acumen (or the roar of his laugh). In the tradition of historians who can never stop writing until they drop, he completed a book manuscript on Baroque Rome in his 80s and spent the last months of his life writing poems, commencing a lively autobiography and establishing a website to host his work. He is survived by his second wife, Joyce Hitchcock, and three children. I Courtesy of The Guardian A Memorial Service for Peter will be held in Chapel on Saturday 27th June at 2.30pm. All those wishing to attend are asked to email: [email protected] Agincourt 600 and the French Prisoner The Bursar wrote: In soluto pro quodam Francigeno nomine Lodewico serviente in coquina hoc anno, 20s 4d. The College Archivist writes: The news of the battle of Agincourt was brought to Win Coll by John Coudray, son of Edward, gentleman at arms of the Lord Bishop of Winchester. It is uncertain whether Coudray sold Lewis the Frenchman to the Bursar or if he was the booty of some other passing soldier. Lewis became a kitchen boy at a w