Please place your order at the bar, not forgetting to take note of your table number. Pick Your Main Meal Homemade Fish Fingers Breaded Scampi Homemade Chicken Goujons Homemade Beef Burger Light Bites Grilled Chicken Salad £4.95 Ham or Cheese Sandwich On your choice of Locally Baked White or Wholemeal Bread £4.95 Desserts Fresh Fruit Salad £3.95 Now Choose Your Side Trio of Ice Cream (Strawberry, Chocolate & Vanilla) Chips £3.95 Mash Potato New Potatoes Kids Drinks Mineral Water (Still or Sparkling) £1.85 Orange or Apple Juice £2.00 And Lastly J2O (Orange & Passion Fruit or Apple & Raspberry) £2.25 Garden Peas Appletiser Fresh Steamed Vegetables £2.25 Baked Beans Dressed Salad Squash Blackcurrant, Orange or Lime with water £0.50 £5.95 If your little ones are bursting with energy after their meal, then why not let them burn some of it off in our exciting Outdoor Children’s Play Area. THE LOST LAND OF LYONESSE The kingdom of Lyonesse is a place shrouded in mystery and myth; the exact location of the ancient country is unknown but the legendary land is said to lie between Land’s End and the Isles of Scilly. Lyonesse was said to be a wondrous and wealthy place with one hundred and forty ornate churches and great forests covering the landscape. However, the story of Lyonesse was to have a sad end, when many years ago, or so the legends say, the great cities and bell-towers were suddenly submerged deep under the Atlantic Ocean. Over the years, many sailors and fishermen in these waters have claimed to see the ruins of Lyonesse beneath the waves and some have even ‘caught’ ancient objects from the drowned buildings in their nets. On a calm night, if you listen carefully, the locals say you can hear the ‘phantom bells’ of Lyonesse chiming under the deep, dark waves of the Cornish sea. In one tale of the legendary land, an ancient man named Trevelyan escaped the flooding of Lyonesse; seeing the waves quickly approaching, Trevelyan mounted his horse and galloped to higher ground but the cities behind him were forever drowned and looking back all Trevelyan could see was the highest peaks of the kingdom pointing out the deep sea towards the dark sky. In Arthurian legend, the ghost of the great wizard Merlin drowned the kingdom of Lyonesse after a great battle between the mighty King Arthur and his troubled son Mordred. King Arthur had journeyed away from Britain to wage war on the Emperor of Rome and, in his absence, Mordred crowned himself King and captured Arthur’s wife Queen Guinevere. On hearing of Mordred’s betrayal, Arthur was furious and travelled home to recapture his kingdom and save his queen. The great knights of King Arthur fought the rebel army of Mordred and at Lyonesse they fought for the right to the throne. The Battle between Mordred and Arthur raged fiercely and when few remained and all seemed lost, the ghost of the powerful Merlin raised his arm and the ground of Lyonesse shook as the seas began to rise. King Arthur and his remaining supporters fled to rest in peace at Avalon, the island of the fortunate and the faeries, and the rebels with Mordred sunk with the ancient cities of Lyonesse.
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