"Thos. Loder was charged with furiously driving an omnibus in the High-street, on the 30th of July.- Mr Willesford attended for the defendant, Loder, on the day in question was driving an omnibus from the Half Moon Inn to the Railway Station, taking his route down High-street and Fore-street into St.Thomas; and the furious driving was witnessed by the Mayor and others; also by Wm. England, of the night police, B. Twiggs, &c.
"On the other hand, Mr Willesford called John Hancock, a guard on the railway, who was on the front of the omnibus, and Thomas Hawkins, the conductor of it, who differed materially from the other witnesses as to the rate at which the carriage passed the Hall, and ascribed this - (such as they admitted it to be,) - to be one of the horses having attempted to turn into Queen-street, the way it had been used to go, as also it did, after passing the Hall, towards the Globe Hotel by Broad-street; and gave it as their opinion that the skill of Loder alone prevented accident - Mr. Blackall delivered the judgement , saying, the Magistrates have no doubt that at the time spoken of, the man was furiously driving this omnibus, he is therfore convicted, and fined the sum of 20s. and expenses , making 7s 0d. more.
"Mr. Blackall continued. Having delivered the judgement of the Court in this case, I have no hesitation in saying that it was most clearly proved, and I would advise the drivers of these omnibuses to be more careful in this respect in future than they have been in times past, as the lives of the inhabitants of this city must not be allowed to be endangered, because they may happen to be a little too late.
"The Mayor said, the case was now closed, and therefore he had no hesitation in saying in the face of his fellow citizens , that he had never before seen in the streets of Exeter an instance of such furious driving as this was; and further, he was continually receiving letters and personal communications on the subject of the fierce driving of those omnibuses through the streets. With Mr. Blackall then, he would recommend these drivers to be careful in future."
The Half Moon Inn, at 22 High Street, was a coaching inn and busdriver Thomas Loder was, no doubt, trying to ensure that his passengers caught their train from the railway station, newly opened, at St.Thomas. It was unwise of him to pass the Guildhall, where the Mayor and the Magistrates saw him whizz past, and he should, perhaps, have followed the wise horse that wanted to take him down Queen-street. ( I assume an alternative route. (?))
He was driving furiously. The word, together with its adjectival form, occurs four times in this report. It was, I feel sure, the much quoted passage in the King James' Bible: and the driving is like the driving of Jehu the son of Nimshi for he driveth furiously, that caused this to be the word used by Victorian writers. A modern rendering has he drives like a maniac. These days, though, we mostly drive dangerously.
Source The Exeter Flying Post, 15th August, 1844.
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