St Walstan
from Arthur MEE - The King's England: Norfolk, Green Pastures and Still Waters, London, Hodder and Stoughton, 1940, p.30.

 

"The story tells that in 1016 (St Walstan) knew he was about to die, and after praying that God would bless the spot where he should be laid he directed that his body should be drawn in a cart by two oxen his master had given him, and that he should be buried wherever they stopped. So it came to pass. He died in the hayfield. As the oxen wandered through the Costessey Wood, they halted a while and a spring gushed from the ground; continuing their journey till they reached Bawburgh and halted near his home, where another spring came to life; a little way off they came to rest, and there the labourers buried the saint and built a shrine."

from A.C. Paddison, Tonna