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Exit the cathedral and turn left through the archway to walk across the Close. On your left, you will pass a Barbara Hepworth sculpture, Homage to Mondrian, and the Pilgrims’ School, from where you may see the choristers filing into the cathedral. Ahead is Cheyney Court. Leave by St Swithun’s Gate to your right and turn left, following the green signs through Kingsgate. The church above is worth visiting - it featured as St Cuthbert’s in Anthony Trollope’s novel The Warden.

Turn left into College Street. Straight ahead, on the corner of Kingsgate Road and Canon Street, is the excellent Wykeham Arms (no children under 14 or mobile phones allowed; good pies served). At 8 College Street - now a private house - a plaque reads "In this house Jane Austen lived her last days."
Next, you’ll pass the entrance to Winchester College, one of the oldest English public schools, founded by Bishop William of Wykeham. Guided one-hour tours cost £3.50, and are the only way to see the college, including its 14th-century chapel, Wren’s 17th-century schoolroom, the Scholars’ Dining Room and the cloisters.

At the end of College Street, on the left, are the ruins of Wolvesey Castle, the Old Bishop’s Palace, where Mary I and Philip of Spain had their wedding breakfast in 1554. Turn right into College Walk, following the "St Cross via the Meadows" sign, then right again at the end, before turning left on to the path across the Water Meadows. The River Itchen and St Catherine’s Hill, an Iron Age fort, will soon appear on your left.

Continue along the bank of the chalk stream and, if you look carefully, you’ll spot trout in the fast current. You’ll also see Winchester College’s pristine cricket pitches and playing fields. Follow this path until you reach Garnier Road, cross and continue on to St Cross Hospital, in its picturesque location at the edge of the Meadows.

Admission to its Grade I buildings and the Almshouses of Noble Poverty is £2.50. The Brethren’s Hall and church are worth seeing, too. As you are arriving on foot, you are entitled to ask for your dole of beer and bread at the Porter’s Lodge. Retrace the route back to the city centre.

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