MULLION— ST. NEOT'S on these. One series of ten gives the symbols of the Passion and Crucifixion — the scourge, the wounds, the crown of thorns, the reed, sponge, spear, nails, dice, hammer and pincers ; also the chalice and wafer. There is also some good glass in the church. The grand coast scenery, with its caverns and cliffs of serpentine, is causing Mullion to be resorted to by tour- ists, and the efforts of the old inn to cater for these are now seconded by large modern hotels. But the tourist season is not a long one, and at other times this region, poorly served by railways, is one of the loneliest in Cornwall. Mullion Island, close to the Cove, is easily reached, and gives an extensive view of the shore. A former vicar, G. Harvey, wrote an excellent little guide to Mullion, telling of its traditions and its many shipwrecks. Mylur (2 m. N. of Falmouth, across the Penryn Creek) preserves the name of the mar- tyred Prince Melor, son of St. Melyan ; their story is rather involved and difficult, and the martyrdom which they suffered was more likely political than religious. The church retains much of its original Norm, character, with Perp. additions ; there is a good Trefusis monu- ment, and a lofty cross in the churchyard. The church-town is about a mile from the village of Mylor Bridge, at the head of the creek. St. Xeofs (5 m. N.W. of Liskeard) is the second largest parish in Cornwall, comprising nearly 14,000 acres. At the Conquest there was a Saxon collegiate foundation here known 195