Sorry, Wardy, you have become the victim of an urban myth. The law requiring a London taxi driver to carry a bale of hay on the roof of his cab to feed the horse was only a local bylaw and repealed in 1976. Some London drivers keep an ornamental small bale in their cars to show gullible people who will perpetuate the impression that we are all backward and a bit quaint and tip better!!.
The cabby, however, is still supposed to ask each passenger whether they are suffering from any �notifiable disease such as smallpox or the plague�. In Congleton a byelaw is still in force that prevents you �wilfully and persistently� loitering near a church door �to the annoyance or obstruction of any persons going to divine service�. Going back to London, the Chelsea and Kilmainham Act (of 1826) still makes it illegal to impersonate a Chelsea Pensioner. And wherever you are, the law against swearing imposed a sliding scale of penalties for cursing or swearing: one shilling for an �everyday labourer�, two shillings for everyone else �under the degree of gentleman�, and five shillings if you were above the degree of gentleman. This law was repealed only in 1967. But the ecclesiastical courts are still technically responsible for the prosecution on adultery and fornication.