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diff --git a/10120-h/10120-h.htm b/10120-h/10120-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f35351b --- /dev/null +++ b/10120-h/10120-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,10359 @@ +<?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1"?> + +<!DOCTYPE html + PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" + "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" > + +<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> + <head> + <meta content="pg2html (binary version 0.11)" name="linkgenerator" /> + <title> + The Project Gutenberg eBook of Spring, by Edward Hutton. + </title> + <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve"> + + body { margin:5%; text-align:justify} + P { text-indent: 2em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; } + H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; } + hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;} + .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; } + blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;} + .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;} + .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;} + .toc2 { margin-left: 25%;} + div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; } + pre { font-family: Times; font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;} + +</style> + </head> + <body> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of England of My Heart--Spring, by Edward Hutton + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: England of My Heart--Spring + +Author: Edward Hutton + +Release Date: November 18, 2003 [EBook #10120] +Last Updated: October 22, 2012 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENGLAND OF MY HEART--SPRING *** + + + + +Produced by Ted Garvin, Carol David, David Widger and PG Distributed Proofreaders + + + + + +</pre> + <h1> + ENGLAND of my HEART + </h1> + <h1> + SPRING + </h1> + <h2> + <b> BY </b> <b> EDWARD HUTTON </b> <br /> +<br /> +WITH MANY ILLUSTRATIONS BY GORDON HOME<br /> +<br /> + MCMXIV <br /> +<br /> +<br /> +TO MY FRIEND O.K. <a name="link2HINT1" id="link2HINT1"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </h2> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/frontis.jpg" width="100%" alt="frontis (96K)" /> + </div> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <h2> + INTRODUCTION + </h2> + <p> + England of my heart is a great country of hill and valley, moorland and + marsh, full of woodlands, meadows, and all manner of flowers, and + everywhere set with steadings and dear homesteads, old farms and old + churches of grey stone or flint, and peopled by the kindest and quietest + people in the world. To the south, the east, and the west it lies in the + arms of its own seas, and to the north it is held too by water, the + waters, fresh and clear, of the two rivers as famous as lovely, Thames and + Severn, of which poets are most wont to sing, as Spenser when he invokes + the first: + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + "Sweete Themmes runne softly till I end my song"; +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + or Dryden when he tells us of the second: + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + "The goodly Severn bravely sings + The noblest of her British kings, + At Caesar's landing what we were, + And of the Roman conquest here...." +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + Within England of my heart, in the whole breadth of her delight, there is + no industrial city such as infests, ruins, and spoils other lands, and in + this she resembles her great and dear mother Italy. Like her, too, she is + full of very famous towns scarcely to be matched for beauty and + ancientness in the rest of the world, and their names which are like the + words of a great poet, and which it is a pleasure to me to recite, are + Canterbury, Chichester, Winchester, Salisbury, Bath, Wells, Exeter, and + her ports, whose names are as household words, even in Barbary, are Dover, + Portsmouth, Plymouth, Falmouth, and Bristol. All these she may well boast + of, for what other land can match them quite? + </p> + <p> + But there is a certain virtue of hers of which she is perhaps unaware, + that is nevertheless among her greatest delights: I mean her infinite + variety. Thus she is a true country, not a province; indeed, she is made + up of many counties and provinces, and each is utterly different from + other, and their different genius may be caught by the attentive in their + names, which are Kent, Sussex, Hampshire, Wiltshire, Dorset, Somerset, + Devon, Cornwall, Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire, and Berkshire. Her variety + thus lies in them and their dear, and let us hope, immortal differences + and characteristics, their genius that is, which is as various as their + scenery. For England of my heart not only differs fundamentally from every + other country of the known world, but from itself in its different parts, + and that radically. Thus in one part you have ranges of chalk-hills, such + as no other land knows, so regular, continuous, and tremendous withal, + that you might think some army of archangels—and such might well + abide there—had thrown them up as their vast and beautiful + fortifications, being good Romans and believing in the value of such + things, and not as the heathen despising them. These chalk downs are + covered, as indeed becomes things so old, with turf, the smoothest, + softest, and sweetest under the sun. + </p> + <p> + There are other hills also that catch the breath, and these be those of + the west. They all bear the beautiful names of home, as Mendip, Quantock, + Brendon, and Cotswold. And as there are hills, so there are plains, plains + uplifted, such as that great silent grassland above Salisbury, plains + lonely, such as the Weald and the mysterious marsh of Romney in the east + by which all good things go out of England, as the legions went, and, as, + alas, the Faith went too, another Roman thing many hundred years ago. + There is also that great marsh in the west by the lean and desolate sea, + more mysterious by far, whence a man may see far off the great and solemn + mountains of another land. By that marsh the Faith came into England of my + heart, and there lies in ruin the greatest of its shrines in loving but + alien hands, and desolate. + </p> + <p> + I have said nothing of the valleys: they are too many and too fair, from + the fairest of all through which Thames flows seaward, to those + innumerable and more beloved where are for sure our homes. I say nothing + of the rivers, for who could number them? Yet I will tell you of some if + only for the beauty of their names, passing the names of all women but + ours, as Thames itself, and Medway, Stour, and Ouse and Arun and Rother; + Itchen and Test, Hampshire streams; and those five which are like the + fingers of an outstretched hand about Salisbury in the meads, Bourne and + Avon and Wylye and Nadder and Ebble; and those of the West, Brue, which is + holiest of all, though all be holy, Exe and Barle, Dart and Taw, Fal under + the sloping woods, Tamar, which is an eastern girdle to a duchy, and + Camel, which kissed the feet of Iseult, and is lost ere it finds the sea. + </p> + <p> + Of the uplifted moorlands which are a part of the mystery of the west, of + the forests, of the greenwood, of the meads, of the laughing coast, white + as with dawn in the east, darkling in the west, I know not how to speak, + for in England of my heart we take them for granted and are satisfied. + They fill all that quiet and fruitful land with their own joy and + beneficence, and are a part of God's pleasure. Because of them the name of + England of my heart might be but Happiness, or—as for ages we have + named that far-off dusky Arabia,—Anglia Felix. + </p> + <p> + And yet, perhaps, the chief thing that remains with the mere sojourner in + this country of mine, the true Old England, is that in the whole breadth + of it, it is one vast graveyard. Do you not know those long barrows that + cast their shadows at evening upon the lonely downs, those round tumuli + that are dark even in the sun, where lie the men of the old time before + us, our forefathers? Do you not know the grave of the Roman, the mystery + that seems to lurk outside the western gate of the forgotten city that was + once named in the Roman itinerary and now is nothing? Do you not know many + an isolated hill often dark with pines, but, more often still, lonely and + naked where they lie of whom we are come, with their enemies, and they + call the place Battlebury or Danesbury, or for ever deserted like all + battlefields it is nameless? If you know not these you know not England of + my heart, though you know those populous graveyards about the village + churches where the grass is so lush and green and the dead are more than + the living; though you know that marvellous tomb, the loveliest thing in + all my country, where the first Earl of Salisbury lies in the nave of the + great church he helped to build; though you know that wonder by the + roadside where Somerset and Wiltshire meet; though you know the beauty + that is fading and crumbling in the little church under the dark woods + where the dawn first strikes the roots of the Quantock Hills. + </p> + <p> + There is so much to know, and all must be got by heart, for all is a part + of us and of that mighty fruitful and abiding past out of which we are + come, which alone we may really love, and which holds for ever safe for us + our origins. + </p> + <p> + After all, we live a very little time, the future is not ours, we hold the + present but by a brittle thread; it is the past that is in our hearts. And + so it is that to go afoot through Southern England is not less than to + appeal to something greater and wiser than ourselves, out of which we are + come, to return to our origins, to appeal to history, to the divine + history of the soul of a people. + </p> + <p> + There is a <i>genius loci</i>. To look on the landscapes we have always + known, to tread in the footsteps of our fathers, to follow the Legions + down the long roads, to trudge by the same paths to the same goal as the + pilgrims, to consider the silence of the old, old battlefields, to pray in + forgotten holy places to almost forgotten deities, is to be made partakers + of a life larger and more wonderful than that of the individual, is to be + made one with England. For in the quietness of those ancient countrysides + was England made by the men who begat us. And even as a man of the Old + Faith when he enters one of his sanctuaries suddenly steps out of England + into a larger world, a universal country; so we in the earthwork by + Thannington or the Close of Canterbury, or upon the hill where Battle + Abbey stood, surely have something added to us by the genius of the place, + indeed pass out of ourselves into that which is England, a splendour and a + holiness beyond ourselves, which cannot die. + </p> + <p> + It is in such places we may best face reality, for they lend to history + all its poetry and, as Aristotle knew, there is more truth in poetry than + in history. And this, at least to-day, is perhaps the real value and + delight of our churches; I mean those great sanctuaries we call Cathedrals + which stand about England like half-dismantled castles and remind us more + poignantly than any other thing of all we are fain to forget. There are + the indelible words of our history most clearly written. Consider the + bricks of S. Martin's, the rude stones of the little church of Bradford, + the mighty Norman work of Romsey, the Early English happiness of + Salisbury, the riches and security of the long nave of Winchester. Do we + not there see the truth; can stones lie or an answer be demanded of them + according to folly? And if a man would know the truth, let us say, of the + thirteenth century here in England, where else will he find any answer? + Consider it then, the joy as of flowers, the happiness as of Spring, in + that architecture we call Early English, which for joy and happiness + surpasses any other in the world. The men who carved those shafts and + mouldings and capitals covering them with foliage could not curb their + invention nor prevent their hands from beauty and joy. They forgot + everything in their delight, even the great logic of design, even to leap + up to God, since He was here in the meadows in this garden of ours that He + has given us and blest. + </p> + <p> + But these great buildings, scarcely to be understood by us save by the + grace of God and now a little lonely too, missing so many of their + sisters, and certainly in an alien service, are how much less appealing + and less holy than those village churches so humble and so precious that + everywhere ennoble and glorify England of my heart. They stand up still + for our souls before God, and are to be loved above all I think—and + even the humblest of them is to be loved—for the tombs they shelter + within and without. More than any Cathedral they touch in us some profound + and fundamental mystery common to us all, that is the life and the energy + of the Christian soul. They, above all, express England, England of my + heart, in them we find utterance, are joined with the great majority and + together approach, in their humility, beauty, and quietness, God who has + loved us all and given us England therein and thereby to serve Him in + delight. They kneel with the hind and now as ever in the name of Our Lord. + It is enough. The Cathedrals are haunted by the Old Faith, and by Rome, + whose they are: but the village churches are our own. Nor though we be of + the Old Faith let us be too proud to salute their humility. They stand + admittedly in the service of man, and this at least is admirable in the + Church of England of my heart—I mean her humility. To her, unlike + Rome, absolute Truth has not been revealed; she is so little sure of + anything that she will condemn no man, no, not one of her officers, though + he deny the divinity of Christ. She desires only to serve: and if any man, + even an atheist, can approach the God he ignorantly denies most easily + through her open gates, she will not say him nay, nor deny him, nor send + him away. It is her genius. Let us salute its humility. + </p> + <p> + And so I look upon England of my heart and am certain I am of the + civilisation of Christ. He hath said, ye shall not die but live— + England blossoms in fulfilment. He hath founded his Church, whose children + we are, whether we will or no, and after a far wandering presently shall + return homeward. For those words endure and will endure; more living than + the words even of our poets, more lasting than the cliffs of the sea, or + the rocks of the mountains, or the sands of the deserts, because they are + as the flowers by the wayside. + </p> + <p> + Therefore England is not merely what we see and are; it is all the past + and all the future, it is inheritance; the fields we have always ploughed, + the landscape and the sea, the tongue we speak, the verse we know by + heart, all we hope for, all we love and venerate, under God. And there + abides a sense of old times gone, of ancient law, of friendship, of + religious benediction. + </p> + <p> + E. H. + </p> + <hr /> + <h2> + CONTENTS + </h2> + <p> + <br /> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HINT1"> INTRODUCTION </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH2"> CHAPTER I </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH3"> CHAPTER II </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH4"> CHAPTER III </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH5"> CHAPTER IV </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH6"> CHAPTER V </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH6a"> CHAPTER VI </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH7"> CHAPTER VII </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH8"> CHAPTER VIII </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH9"> CHAPTER IX </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH10"> CHAPTER X </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH11"> CHAPTER XI </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH12"> CHAPTER XII </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH13"> CHAPTER XIII </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH14"> CHAPTER XIV </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH15"> CHAPTER XV </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH16"> CHAPTER XVI </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH17"> CHAPTER XVII </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH18"> CHAPTER XVIII </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH19"> CHAPTER XIX </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH20"> CHAPTER XX </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH21"> CHAPTER XXI </a> + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /><br /><br /> + </p> + <hr /> + <p> + <br /><br /><br /><br /> + </p> + <h2> + LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS + </h2> + <p> + <br /> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-1"> Shooters' Hill </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-2"> Dartford Church and Bridge </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-3"> The Gateway of the Monastery Close, Rochester </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-4"> Rochester </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-5"> Canterbury Cathedral from Christchurch Gate </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-6"> West Gate, Canterbury </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-7"> On the Stour Near Canterbury </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-8"> Chilham </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-9"> A Corner of Romney Marsh </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-10"> Rye </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-11"> Winchelsea Church </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-12"> Battle Abbey </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-13"> Lewes Castle </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-14"> The Downs </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-15"> The Weald of Sussex, North Of Lewes </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-16"> Arundel Castle </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-17"> The Market Cross, Chichester </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-18"> Bosham </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-19"> The Tudor House, Opposite St Michael's Church, + Southampton </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-20"> In the New Forest </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-21"> Romsey Abbey </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-22"> North Transept, Winchester Cathedral </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-23"> St Cross, Winchester </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-24"> Selborne from the Hanger </a> + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /><br /><br /> + </p> + <hr /> + <p> + <br /><br /><br /><br /> + </p> + <h1> + ENGLAND OF MY HEART + </h1> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH2" id="link2HCH2"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER I + </h2> + <p> + THE PILGRIMS' ROAD TO CANTERBURY FROM THE TABARD INN TO DARTFORD + </p> + <p> + When I determined to set out once more to traverse and to possess England + of my heart, it was part of my desire first of all to follow, as far as + might be, in the footsteps of Chaucer's pilgrims. Therefore I sought the + Tabard Inn in Southwark. + </p> + <p> + For true delight, it seems to me, a journey, especially if it be for love + or pleasure, should always have about it something of devotion, something + a little rigid too, and dutiful, at least in its opening stages; and in + thus determining my way I secured this. For I promised myself that I would + start from the place whence they set out so long ago to visit and to pray + at the tomb of the greatest of English saints, that I would sleep where + they slept, find pleasure in the villages they enjoyed, climb the hills + and look on the horizons that greeted them also so many hundred years ago, + till at last I stood by the "blissful martyr's tomb," that had once made + so great a rumour in the world and now was nothing. + </p> + <p> + In many ways I came short of all this, as will be seen; but especially in + one thing—the matter of time. Chaucer and his pilgrims are generally + thought to have spent three and a half or four days and three nights upon + the road. It is true they went ahorseback and I afoot, but nevertheless a + man may easily walk the fifty-six miles from London to Canterbury in four + days. I failed because I found so much to see by the wayside. And to begin + with there was London itself, which I was about to leave. + </p> + <p> + It was very early on an April morning when I set out from my home, coming + through London on foot and crossing the river by London Bridge. It was + there I lingered first, in the half light, as it were to say good-bye. + </p> + <p> + I do not know what it is in London that at long last and in some quite + impersonal way clutches at the heart and receives one's eager affection. + At first, even though you be one of her children, she seems and for how + long like something fallen, calling you with the monotonous, mighty, + complaining voice of a fallen archangel, ceaselessly through the days, the + years, the centuries and the ages. She is one of the oldest of European + cities, she is one of the most beautiful, of all capitals she is by far + the most full of character: and yet she is not easy to know or to love. + Perhaps she does not belong to us, but is something apart, something in + and for herself, a mighty and a living thing, owing us nothing and + regarding us, whom she tortures, with a sort of indifference, if not + contempt. + </p> + <p> + And yet she is ours after all; she belongs to us, is more perhaps our very + likeness and self than the capital of any other people. What is Berlin but + a brutalised village, or Paris now but cosmopolis, or Rome but a universe? + She is ours, the very gate of England of my heart. For she stands there + striding the boundary of my country, the greatest of our cities, the + greatest even of our industrial cities—a negative to all the rest. + To the North she says Nay continually, for she is English, the greater + successor of Winchester, and in her voice is the soul of the South, the + real England, the England of my heart. + </p> + <p> + Ah, we have never known her or loved her enough or understood that she is + a universe, without the self-consciousness of lesser things or the + prepared beauty of mortal places. Indeed, she has something of the + character of the sea which is our home, its changefulness, its infinity, + its pathos in the toiling human life that traverses it. Almost featureless + if you will, she is always under the guidance of her ample sky, responding + immediately to every mood of the clouds; and in her, beauty grows up + suddenly out of life and is gone e'er we can apprehend it.... + </p> + <p> + But to come into Southwark on a Spring morning in search of Chaucer and + the Tabard Inn is to ask of London more than she will give you. It is + strange, seeing that she is so English, that for her the living are more + than the dead. Consider England, southern England, if you know her well + enough, and remember what in the face of every other country of Europe she + has conserved of the past in material and tangible things—roads, + boundaries, churches, houses, and indeed whole towns and villages. Yet + London has so little of her glory and her past about her in material + things, that it is often only by her attitude to life you might know she + is not a creation of yesterday. It is true the fire of 1666 destroyed + almost all, but apparently it did not destroy the Tabard Inn, which + nevertheless is gone—it and its successors. + </p> + <p> + Something remained that should have been sacred, not indeed from Chaucer's + day but at least from that of the Restoration, something that was + beautiful, till some forty years ago. All is gone now; of the old Inn as + we may see it in a drawing of 1810, a two-storied building with steepish + roofs of tiles, dormer windows and railed balconies supported below by + pillars of stone, above by pillars of wood, standing about two sides of a + courtyard in which the carrier's long covered carts from Horsham or + Rochester are waiting, nothing at all remains. The last of it was finally + destroyed in 1875, and the Tabard Inn of the new fashion was built at the + corner as we see. + </p> + <p> + The old hostelry, which besides its own beauty had this claim also upon + our reverence, that it represented in no unworthy fashion the birthplace + as it were of English poetry, owes of course all its fame to Chaucer, who + lay there on the night before he set out for Canterbury as he tells us: + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + When that Aprille with his shoures sote + The droghte of Marche hath perced to the rote.... + Bifel that, in that season on a day + In Southwerk at the Tabard as I lay + Redy to wenden on my pilgrimage + To Caunterbury with ful devout corage, + At night was come into that hostelrye + Wel nyne and twenty in a companye + Of sondry folk, by aventure yfalle + In felawshipe, and pilgrims were they alle, + That toward Caunterbury wolden ryde; + The chambres and the shelter weren wyde, + And wel we weren esed atte beste + And shortly, whan the sonne was to reste, + So hadde I spoken with hem everichon, + That I was of hir felawshipe anon + And made forward erly for to ryse, + To take our wey, there as I yow devyse. +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + It is in these verses lies all the fame of the Tabard, which it might seem + was not a century old when Chaucer lay there. In the year 1304 the Abbot + of Hyde, near Winchester, bought two houses here held of the Archbishop of + Canterbury by William de Lategareshall. The abbot bought these houses in + order to have room to build himself a town house, and it is said that at + the same time he built a hostelry for travellers; at any rate three years + later we find him applying to the Bishop of Winchester for leave to build + a chapel "near the inn." In a later deed we are told that "the abbots + lodgeinge was wyninge to the backside of the inn called the Tabarde and + had a garden attached." Stow, however, tells us: "Within this inn was also + the lodging of the Abbot of Hide (by the city of Winchester), a fair house + for him and his train when he came from that city to Parliament." + </p> + <p> + Here then from the Inn of the Abbot of Hyde Chaucer set out for Canterbury + with those pilgrims, many of whose portraits he has given us with so + matchless a power. The host of the inn at that time was Harry Bailey, + member of Parliament for Southwark in 1376 and 1379. He was the wise and + jocund leader of the pilgrimage as we know, and though Chaucer speaks of + him last, not one of the pilgrims is drawn with a livelier touch than he: + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Greet chere made our hoste us everichon + And to the soper sette us anon; + And served us with vitaille at the beste, + Strong was the wyn, and wel to drinke us leste. + A semely man our hoste was with alle + For to han ben a marshal in an halle; + A large man he was eyen stepe, + A fairer burgeys is ther noon in Chepe; + Bold of his speche and wys, and wel y-taught, + And of manhod him lakkede right naught. + Eek therto he was right a mery man, + And after soper pleyen he bigan, + And spak of mirthe amonges others thinges, + Whan that we hadde maad our rekeninges.... +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + A noble portrait in the English manner; there is but one, and that is + wanting, we should have preferred. I mean the portrait of Chaucer himself—that + "wittie" Chaucer who "sate in a Chaire of Gold covered with Roses writing + prose and risme, accompanied with the Spirites of many Kyngs, Knightes and + Faire Ladies." For that we must go to a lesser pen, to Greene, who thus + describes him in his vision: + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + His stature was not very tall, + Lean he was; his legs were small + Hos'd within a stock of red + A button'd bonnet on his head + From under which did hang I ween + Silver hairs both bright and sheen; + His beard was white, trimmèd round; + His countenance blithe and merry found; + A sleeveless jacket, large and wide + With many plaits and skirts side + Of water-camlet did he wear; + A whittle by his belt he bear; + His shoes were cornèd broad before; + His ink-horn at his side he wore, + And in his hand he bore a book;— + Thus did this ancient poet look. +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + There is one other personage upon whom indeed the whole pilgrimage + depended of whom Chaucer says next to nothing, but we should do wrong to + forget him: I mean the "blissful martyr" himself—St Thomas of + Canterbury. In old days, certainly in Chaucer's, we should have been + reminded of him more than once on our way e'er we gained the Tabard. For + upon old London Bridge, the first stone bridge, built in the end of the + twelfth century, there stood in the very midst of it a chapel of + marvellous beauty with a crypt, from which by a flight of steps one might + reach the river, dedicated in honour of St Thomas Becket. This chapel was + built in memory of St Thomas by one Peter, priest of St Mary Colechurch, + where the martyr had been christened. It was this same Peter who began to + build the great bridge of stone, and when he died he was buried in the + chapel he had erected in the midst of it. + </p> + <p> + Such a wonder was, however, by no means the only memorial here, at the + very opening of the way, of the great and holy end and purpose of it. + </p> + <p> + Every schoolboy knows St Thomas's Hospital in Lambeth, but not all know + that the saint whose name that hospital bears is not the Apostle, but + England's Martyr. Now, until 1868 St Thomas's Hospital stood not in + Lambeth but in Southwark, upon the site of London Bridge Station. + [Footnote: The fact is still remembered in the name of St Thomas Street, + leading out of the Borough High Street on the east.] It seems that within + the precincts of St Mary Overy a house of Austin Canons, now the Anglican + Cathedral of St Saviour, Southwark, was a hospital for the sick and poor + founded by St Thomas, which after his beatification was dedicated in his + honour. But in the first years of the thirteenth century, Peter des + Roches, Bishop of Winchester, rebuilt the little house in a healthier + situation—<i>ubi aqua est uberior et aer est melior</i>—where + the water was purer and the air better, and this new house, finished in + 1215, of course also bore the name of St Thomas of Canterbury. That the + hospital fulfilled its useful purpose we know from a petition which it + presented to Pope Innocent VI., in 1357, wherein it was stated that so + many sick and poor resorted to it that it could not support its charges. + Not quite two hundred years later, in 1539, a few days before the feast of + St Thomas upon December 29, it was surrendered to King Henry VIII., the + infamous Layton having been its visitor. From the king it was bought by + the City of London, a rare comment upon its suppression, and so + notoriously useful was it that Edward VI. was compelled to refound it, and + therefore in some sort it still remains to us. It is curious to note that, + ages before the hospital came to Lambeth, St Thomas was at home there, for + he had a statue upon the Lollards' Tower, and it was the custom of the + watermen to doff their caps to it as they rowed by. + </p> + <p> + It is meet and right that this pilgrimage should be begun with thoughts of + St Thomas, and especially of what we owe to him, for the first few miles + of the way upon what we need not doubt was of old the Pilgrims' road, is + anything but uplifting, crowded though it be with memories, most of them + of course far later than the Canterbury pilgrimage. As you go down the + Borough High Street, for Southwark is of course the old <i>borgo</i> of + London, and all the depressing ugliness of modern life, it is not of + anything so serene as that great poet of the fourteenth century, the + father of English poetry, that you think, but of one who nevertheless, in + the characteristic nationalism of his art, in his humanity and love of his + fellow-men, was only second to Chaucer, and in his compassion for the poor + and lowly only second to St Thomas: I mean Charles Dickens. No one + certainly can pass the site of the Marshalsea Prison without recalling + that solemn and haunting description in the preface to "Little Dorrit": + "Whosoever goes into Marshalsea Place, turning out of Angel Court leading + to Bermondsey, will find his feet on the very paving stones of the extinct + Marshalsea jail; will see its narrow yard to the right and to the left, + very little altered if at all, except that the walls were lowered when the + place got free; will look upon the rooms in which the debtors lived; will + stand among the crowding ghosts of many miserable years." + </p> + <p> + It is still of Dickens most of us will think in passing St George's + Church, for was it not there that Little Dorrit was christened and + married, and was it not in the vestry there she slept with the burial- + book for a pillow? But St George's has other memories too, for it was + there that Edmund Bonner, Bishop of London, who staunchly refused the oath + of supremacy to Elizabeth, was buried at midnight after his death in the + Marshalsea, on September 5th, 1569. There too General Monk was married to + Anne Clarges. + </p> + <p> + These memories, for the most part so unhappy, have, however, nothing to do + with the Pilgrims' Way. No memory of that remains at all amid all the + dismal wretchedness of to-day, until one comes to the "Thomas à Becket" + public-house at the corner of Albany Road. This was the site of the + "watering of Saint Thomas": + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + A-morwe, whan that day bigan to springe, + Up roes our host, and was our aller cok, + And gadrede us togirde, alle in a flok, + And forth we riden, a litel more than pas + Unto the watering of seint Thomas. +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + The "watering of St Thomas" was a spring dedicated to St Thomas, and it + came to be the first halting-place of the pilgrims. It is still remembered + in the name of St Thomas's Road close by, and not inappropriately in the + tavern which bears St Thomas's name. It was here that the immortal tales + were begun: + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + And there our host bigan his hors areste, + And seyde; Lordinges, herkneth, if yow leste. + Ye woot your forward, and it yow recorde + If even-song and morwe-song acorde, + Lat see now who shal telle the firste tale.... +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + No memory of the pilgrims would seem to remain at all in the road after St + Thomas's watering until we come to Deptford. The "Knight's Tale" and the + "Miller's Tale" have filled, and one would think more than filled that + short three miles of road, till in the Reve's Prologue the host began "to + spake as loudly as a king...." + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Sey forth thy tale and tarie nat the tyme, + Lo, Depeford! and it is half-way pryme. +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + Nothing more lugubrious is to be found to-day in the whole length of the + old road than Deptford; but it is there that we begin to be free of the + mean streets. For Deptford, which the pilgrims reached, after their early + start, at "half-way pryme"—any hour, I suppose, between six and nine—lies + at the foot of Blackheath Hill above Greenwich: + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Lo, Greenwich, ther many a shrewe is inne. +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + Deptford Bridge, the only remaining landmark of old time, by which we + cross Deptford Creek, had in the fourteenth century a hermitage at its + eastern end dedicated in honour of St Catherine of Alexandria, and Mass + was said there continually from Chaucer's day down to the suppression in + 1531, the king, Henry VIII., having previously helped to repair the + chapel. + </p> + <p> + It is at Deptford, as I say, that we begin to leave the mean streets, for + at the cross-roads we turn up Blackheath Hill, and though this is not in + all probability the ancient way, it is as near it as modern conditions + have allowed us. The old road, as far as can be made out, ran farther to + the east, quite alongside Greenwich Park, and not over the middle of the + Heath, as the modern road does. Blackheath is not alluded to in Chaucer's + poem, though it must have been famous at the time he was writing, for in + 1381 Jack Straw, Wat Tyler, and their company were there gathered. Perhaps + the most famous spectacle, however, that Blackheath has witnessed was not + this abortive revolt of the peasants nor the rising of Jack Cade in 1450, + but the meeting here in 1400 of King Henry IV. and the Emperor of + Constantinople, who came to England to ask for assistance against the + ever-encroaching Turk, then at the gates of Constantinople, which some + fifty years later was to fall into his hands. Blackheath, indeed, has + always played a considerable part in the history of southern England, + partly because it was the last great open space on the southern confines + of London, and partly because of the royal residence at Greenwich. Fifteen + years after it had seen a guest so strange as the Emperor of the East, it + saw Henry V. return from Agincourt, and the Mayor of London with the + aldermen and four hundred citizens, "all in scarlet with hoods of red and + white," greet the hero king. + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + ... London doth pour out her citizens + The mayor and all his brethren in best sort + Like to the senators of the antique Rome + With the plebeians swarming at their heels, + Go forth and fetch their conquering Caesar in! +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + Across the Heath we go, taking the road on the right at the triangle, + before long to find ourselves perhaps for the first time on the very road + the pilgrims followed—the great Roman highway of the Watling Street. + </p> + <p> + I call the Watling Street a great Roman highway, for that, as we know it, + is what it is, but in its origin it is far older than the Roman + occupation. It ran right across England from the continental gate at + Dover, through Canterbury to Chester, fording the Thames at Lambeth, and + it was the first of the British trackways which the Romans straightened, + built up, and paved. It has been in continuous use for more than three + thousand years, and may therefore be said to be the oldest road in + England. It is older than the greatness of London, for in its arrow flight + across England it ignores the City. After the ford at Lambeth, to-day + represented by Lambeth Bridge, an older crossing of the Thames than that + at London Bridge, it mounted the northern slope, passing perhaps across + the present gardens of Buckingham Palace and the eastern end of Hyde Park, + where to-day it is lost or merely represented by Grosvenor Place and Park + Lane, to cross the great western road out of London at Tyburn, the + original "Cross Roads," the ancient place of execution close by the + present Marble Arch, and to pursue its way, as we may see it still, + directly and in true Roman fashion down what we know as Edgware Road. That + great north-western highway lies over the very pavement of the Romans, + which lies only a few feet below the surface of the modern road. + </p> + <p> + It is then upon this most ancient highway that in the footsteps of the + Britons, the Romans their beneficent conquerors, and the English pilgrims + our forefathers, we shall march on to Canterbury. The road of course is + broken here and there, indeed in many places, and notably between Dartford + and Rochester, but for the most part it remains after three thousand years + the ordinary highway between the capital and the archi-episcopal city. + </p> + <p> + The Watling Street takes Shooters' Hill, so called, I suppose, from the + highwaymen that infested the woods thereabouts, in true Roman fashion, and + it is from its summit that we get the first really great view on our way, + for that so famous from Greenwich Park does not properly belong to our + journey. We must, however, turn to another and a later poet than Chaucer + for any description of that tremendous spectacle. Here indeed, more than + in any other prospect the road affords, the horizon is changed from that + Chaucer looked upon. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-1" id="linkimage-1"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/002.jpg" width="100%" alt="Shooters' Hill " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> + <br /><br /> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> +For we turn to gaze on London, the Protestant, not the Catholic, city: + A mighty mass of brick and smoke and shipping, + Dirty and dusky, but as wide as eye + Could reach, with here and there a sail just skipping + In sight, then lost amid the forestry + Of masts; a wilderness of steeples peeping + On tiptoe through their sea-coal canopy; + A huge dun cupola like a foolscap crown + On a fool's head—and there is London town! + + Don Juan had got out on Shooters' Hill + Sunset the time, the place the same declivity + Which looks along that vale of good and ill + Where London streets ferment in full activity; + While everything around was calm and still + Except the creak of wheels which on their pivot he + Heard—and that bee-like, babbling, busy hum + Of cities, that boil over with their scum. +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + The prospect eastward across the broad valley of the Darent, if less + wonderful, is assuredly far lovelier than that north-westward over London; + but from the top of Shooters' Hill we probably do not follow the actual + route of the ancient way until we come to Welling. The present road down + the hill eastward is said to date from 1739 only. [Footnote: See H. + Littlehales, "Some Notes on the Road from Canterbury in the Middle Ages" + (Chaucer Society, 1898).] + </p> + <p> + There is nothing to keep us in Welling, nor indeed in Bexley Heath, except + to note that they are the first two Kentish villages upon our route, now + little more than suburban places spoiled of any virtue they may have + possessed. It is said that at Clapton Villa in the latter place there is + preserved "an ancient and perfect sacramental wafer"— perhaps an + unique treasure. + </p> + <p> + The road runs straight on through a rather sophisticated countryside, + almost into Crayford, but in preparing to cross the Cray the old road has + apparently been lost. We may be sure, however, of not straying more than a + few yards out of the way, if we keep as straight on as maybe, that is to + say, if we take the road to the right at the fork, which later passes + Crayford church on the south. + </p> + <p> + Crayford, though it be anything but picturesque, is nevertheless not + without interest. It is the Creccanford of the "Saxon Chronicle," and was + the scene of the half-legendary final battle between the Britons here and + Hengist, who utterly discomfited them, so that we read they forsook all + this valley, even, so we are asked to believe, those strange caves which + they are said to have burrowed in the chalk for their retreat, and which + are so plentiful hereabouts, but which assuredly are infinitely older than + the advent of the Saxon pirates. + </p> + <p> + The real interest of Crayford, however, as of more than one place in this + valley, lies in its church. This is dedicated in honour of the companion + of St Augustine, St Paulinus, who became the third Bishop of Rochester. + The form of the church is curious, the arcade of the nave being in the + midst of it, while the chancel, of about the same width as the nave, is + possessed of two arcades and divided into three aisles; thus the arcade of + the nave abuts upon the centre of the chancel arch. Parts of the church + certainly date from Chaucer's day, but most of it is Perpendicular in + style. + </p> + <p> + More interesting than Crayford itself are North Cray and Foot's Cray in + the upper valley beyond Bexley. At North Cray there is one of the best + pictures Sassoferrato ever painted, a Crucifixion, over the altar. At + Foot's Cray, the church, besides being beautiful in its situation, + possesses a great square Norman font. + </p> + <p> + These places are, however, off the Pilgrims' Road, which climbs up through + Crayford High Street, and then in about two miles begins to descend into + the very ancient town of Dartford, where it is said Chaucer's pilgrims + slept, their first night on the road. + </p> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH3" id="link2HCH3"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER II + </h2> + <p> + THE PILGRIMS' ROAD FROM DARTFORD TO ROCHESTER + </p> + <p> + The entry into Dartford completes the first and, it must be confessed, the + dullest portion of the Pilgrims' Road to Canterbury. Here at Dartford the + pilgrims slept, here to-day we say farewell to all that suburban district + which now stretches for so many miles in every direction round the + capital, spoiling the country as such and making of it a kind of unreality + very hard to tolerate. The traveller must then realise that it is only at + Dartford his pleasure will begin. + </p> + <p> + Dartford, as one sees at first sight, is an old, a delightful, English + town, full of happiness and old-world memories. Its situation is + characteristic, for it lies in the deep and narrow valley of the Darent + between two abrupt hills, that to the west of chalk, that to the east of + sand, up both of which it climbs without too much insistence. Between + these two hills runs a rapid stream from the Downs to the southward, that + below the town opens out suddenly into a small estuary or creek. Where the + Watling Street forded the Darent there grew up the town of Dartford, on + the verge of the marshes within reach of the tide, but also within reach + of an inexhaustible river of fresh water. The ford was presently replaced + by a ferry, and later still, in the latter years of Henry VI., by a great + bridge, as we see, but the town had already taken its name from its + origin, and to this day is known as Dartford, the ford of the Darent. + </p> + <p> + The situation of Dartford is thus very picturesque, and as we might + suppose its main street is the old Roman highway that the pilgrims used. + This descends the West Hill steeply after passing the Priory, or as it is + now called the Place House, the first religious house which Dartford could + boast that the pilgrims would see. In Chaucer's day this was a new + foundation, Edward III., in 1355, having established here a convent of + Augustinian nuns dedicated in honour of Our Lady and St Margaret. The + house became extremely popular with the great Kentish families, for it was + not only very richly endowed, but always governed by a prioress of noble + birth, Princess Bridget, youngest daughter of Edward IV., at one time + holding the office, as later did Lady Jane Scrope and Lady Margaret + Beaumont: all are buried within. In the miserable time of Henry VIII., + when it was suppressed, its revenues amounted to nearly four hundred + pounds a year. The king immediately seized the house for his own pleasure, + but later gave it to Anne of Cleves. On her death it came back to the + Crown, but James I. exchanged it with the Cecil family for their mansion + of Theobalds. They in their turn parted with it to Sir Edward Darcy. + Little remains of the old house to-day, a gate-house of the time of Henry + VII., and a wing of the convent, now a farm-house; but considerable parts + of the extensive walls may be seen. + </p> + <p> + It may well have been when the bell of that convent was ringing the + Angelus that Chaucer and his pilgrims entered Dartford on that April + evening so long ago. As they came down the steep hill, before they entered + the town, they would pass an almshouse or hospital, midway upon the hill, + a leper-house in all likelihood, dedicated in honour of St Mary Magdalen. + Something of this remains to us in the building we see, which, however, is + later than the Reformation. + </p> + <p> + Nothing I think actually in the town can, as we see it, be said to have + been there when Chaucer went by except the very noble church. He and his + pilgrims looked and wondered, as we do still, upon the great tower said to + have been built by Gundulph as a fortress to hold the ford, which, altered + though it has been more than once, is still something at which one can + only admire. The upper part, however, dates from the fifteenth century. + Then there is the chancel restored in 1863, the north part of which is + supposed to have been built in the thirteenth century in honour of St + Thomas himself, no doubt by the pilgrims who, passing by on their way to + Canterbury, were wont to spend a night in Dartford town, and certainly to + hear Mass in the place of their sojourn e'er they set out in the earliest + morning. The screen is of the fourteenth century, as are the arcades of + the nave and the windows on the north, and these too Chaucer may have + seen; but all the monuments, some of them interesting and charming, are + much later, dating from Protestant days. Certain brasses, however, remain + from the fifteenth century, notably that of Richard Martyn and his wife + (1402), that of Agnes Molyngton (1454), and that of Joan Rothele (1464). + There is, too, a painting of St George and the Dragon at the end of the + south chancel chapel, behind the organ. + </p> + <p> + Within the town one or two houses remain, perhaps in their foundations, + from the fifteenth century. The best of these is that on the left just + west of the church, at the corner of Bullis Lane. This house, according to + Dunken, the historian of Dartford, was the dwelling of one "John + Grovehurst in the reign of King Edward IV. That gentleman in 1465 obtained + permission of the Vicar and church-wardens of Dartford to erect a chimney + on a part of the churchyard, and in acknowledgment thereof provided a lamp + to burn perpetually during the celebration of divine service in the parish + church. The principal apartment in the upper floor (a room about + twenty-five feet by twenty feet) was originally hung round with tapestry, + said to be worked by the nuns of the priory, who were occasionally + permitted to visit at the mansion. The principal figures were in armour, + and two of them as large as life, latterly called Hector and Andromache; + in the background was the representation of a large army with inscribed + banners." + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-2" id="linkimage-2"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/003.jpg" width="100%" alt="Dartford Church and Bridge " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + The churchyard upon which John Grovehurst was allowed to erect a chimney + was till about the middle of the nineteenth, century larger than it now + is, part of it at that time being taken "to make the road more commodious + for passengers." This road was of course the Pilgrims' Road, the Watling + Street. That this always passed to the south of the church is certain, but + it may have turned a little in ancient time to take the ford. It turns a + little to-day to approach the bridge, and thereafter climbs the East Hill. + </p> + <p> + Dartford Bridge, which already in the Middle Ages had supplanted ford and + ferry, happily remains to the extent of about a third of the width of the + two pointed arches which touch the banks. It was kept in order and repair + by the hermit who dwelt in a cell at the foot of the bridge on the east, a + cell older than the bridge, for the hermits used to serve the ford. Here + stood the Shrine of Our Lady and St Catherine of Alexandria, which was + much favoured by the pilgrims, so we may well suppose that Chaucer and his + friends did not pass it by without a reverence. + </p> + <p> + Here too at the eastern end of the town stood a hospital dedicated in + honour of the Holy Trinity, but this Chaucer knew not, any more than we + may do, for it was only founded in 1452. It seems, however, to have been + built really over the stream upon piers, perhaps in something the same way + as the thirteenth-century Franciscan house at Canterbury was built, which + we may still see. + </p> + <p> + Dunken tells us that "the steep ascent of the Dover road leading towards + Brent was in ancient times called St Edmunde's Weye from its leading to a + Chapel dedicated to that saint situated near the middle of the upper + churchyard." This chapel, of which nothing remains, Edward III. bestowed + upon the Priory of Our Lady and St Margaret. On its site, such is the + irony of time, a "martyr's memorial" has been erected to the unhappy and + unfortunate folk burnt here in the time of Queen Mary. + </p> + <p> + But Dartford is too pleasant a place to be left with such a merely + archaeological survey as this. It is a town in which one may be happy; + historically, however, it has not much claim upon our notice, its chief + boast being that it was here the first act of violence in the Peasants' + Revolt of 1381 occurred, when Wat Tyler broke the head of the poll-tax + collector who had brutally assaulted his daughter. Wat or Walter—Tyler, + because of his trade, which was that of covering roofs with tiles—would + seem, however, not to have been a Dartford man at all. The very proper + murder of the tax-collector would appear to have been the work of a + certain John "Tyler" of the same profession, here in Dartford. + </p> + <p> + The Peasants' Revolt, which, alas! came to nothing, brings us indeed quite + into Chaucer's day, but it would have had little sympathy from him, nor + indeed has it really anything specially to do with this town. The true + fame of Dartford, which is its paper-making, dates from the end of the + sixteenth century, when one Sir John Speelman, jeweller to Queen + Elizabeth, is said to have established the first paper-mill. + </p> + <p> + If Dartford is poor in history, nevertheless it is worth a visit of more + than an hour or so for its own sake, as I have said. It boasts of a good + inn also, and the country and villages round about are delicious. All that + upper valley of the Darent, for instance, in which lie Darenth, + Sutton-at-Hone, Horton Kirby, and, a little way off Fawkham, Eynsford, and + Lullingstone, is worth the trouble of seeing for its own beauty and + delight. + </p> + <p> + There is Darenth for instance, Darne, as the people used to call it, only + two miles from the Pilgrims' Road, it is as old as England, and doubtless + saw the Romans at work straightening, paving, and building that great Way + which has remained to us through so many ages, and which the Middle Age + hallowed into a Via Sacra. What can be more worthy and right than that a + modern pilgrim should visit this little Roman village to see the + foundations of the Roman buildings, to speculate on what they may have + been, and generally to contemplate those origins out of which we are come? + </p> + <p> + And then there is the church too, dedicated in honour of St Margaret, the + dear little lady who is so wonderfully and beautifully represented in + Westminster Abbey for all to worship her, high up over the rascal + politicians. All the village churches in England of my heart are + entrancingly holy and human places, but it is not always that one finds a + church so rare as that of St Margaret in Darenth. For not only is it built + of Roman rubble or brick, the work of the Saxons, the Normans, and of us + their successors, but it boasts also an arch of tufa, has an Early English + vaulted chancel of two stories, and a Norman font upon which are carved + scenes from the life of St Dunstan, to say nothing of a thirteenth-century + tower. + </p> + <p> + Not far away at Horton Kirby, to be reached through South Darenth, are the + remains of Horton Castle and a very interesting, aisleless cruciform + church of Our Lady with central tower, a great nave, arcaded transepts, + and much Early English loveliness, to say nothing of the Decorated tomb of + one of the De Ros family, lords of Horton Castle, and fifteenth- and + sixteenth-century brasses. Horton got its name of Kirby in this manner. At + the time of the Domesday Survey the place was held by Auschetel de Ros + from Bishop Odo, but the heir of De Ros was Lora, Lady of Horton, who + married into the north-country family of Kirby, who, however, had for long + owned lands hereabouts. In the time of Edward I. the Kirby of that day, + Roger, rebuilt the castle, but it is not the ruins of his work we see, + these being of a much later building. Nor will any one who visits Horton + fail to see Fawks, the famous old Elizabethan mansion of the London + Alderman Lancelot Bathurst, who died in 1594. + </p> + <p> + All this valley, as I have said, was used and cultivated by the Romans, + whose work we find not only at Darenth but also here at Horton. At + Fawkham, however, on the higher ground to the east I found something more + germane to the pilgrimage. For in the old church of Our Lady there, over + the western door, is a window in which we may see one William de Fawkham + clothed as a pilgrim with a book in his hand, and on one side a figure of + Our Lord, on the other the Blessed Virgin. + </p> + <p> + But the goal of my journey from the highway was reached at Eynsford. Here + indeed I found my justification for leaving the road while on pilgrimage + to Canterbury. For not only is Eynsford a beautiful place in itself, + beautifully situated, but it was the quarrel which William de Eynesford + had with St Thomas Becket, when the great archbishop was in residence at + Otford Castle, that led to the murder in Canterbury Cathedral and the + great pilgrimage which has brought even us at this late day on our way. + </p> + <p> + Becket's quarrel with the king and the civil power was, as we know, + concerning the liberty of the Church, and more particularly here a dispute + as to the presentation to the church of St Martin in Eynsford, which still + retains many features of that time. After the martyrdom, William de + Eynesford, though he does not appear to have been directly concerned in + the murder, was excommunicated, and Eynsford Castle was left without + inhabitants, for no one would enter it. It fell into decay, and was never + after used or restored or rebuilt, only Henry VIII. venturing to use it as + a stable; but his work has been cleared away, and what we see is a ruin of + the time of St Thomas, and indeed in some sort his work. The ruin bears a + strong resemblance to the mighty castle of Rochester, and though it is of + course very small in comparison with that capital fortress, it must have + been a place of some strength when Henry II. was king. + </p> + <p> + St Martin's Church, whose spire rises so charmingly out of the orchards + white with spring, has a fine western doorway and tower of Norman work, + and a chancel and south transept lighted by Early English lancets. That + tower certainly heard the rumour of St Thomas's murder, and frightened men + no doubt crowded into that western door to hear William de Eynesford + denounced from the altar. + </p> + <p> + Now when I had seen all this and reminded myself thus of that great tale + which is England, I set out on my way back to Dartford, passing by the + footpath through the park to the south-east towards Lullingstone Castle, + which, however, is not older in the main than the end of the eighteenth + century. + </p> + <p> + And then from Lullingstone through the shining afternoon I made my way by + the western bank of the Darent to Sutton-at-Hone, where there are remains + of a Priory of the Knights of St John of Jerusalem; the place is still + called St John's. The church dedicated to St John Baptist is a not + uninteresting Decorated building, the last resting place of that Sir + Thomas Smyth of Sutton Place, who was not the least of Elizabethan + navigators, director of the East India Company, interested in the Muscovy + trade, and treasurer of the Virginia Company (1625). So I came back to + Dartford and on the next day set out once more for Canterbury. + </p> + <p> + One leaves Dartford, on the Pilgrim's Road, with a certain regret, to find + oneself, at the top of the East Hill, face to face with a problem of the + road. For there on the hill-top the road forks; to the left runs the + greater way of the two, into Gravesend; straight on lies a lane which + after a couple of miles suddenly turns southward to Betsham, where the + direct way is continued by a footpath across Swanscombe Park. Which of + these ways was I to follow? That question was hard to answer, because the + road through Gravesend is full of interest, while the direct way is almost + barren all the way to Rochester. There can be little doubt, too, that many + of the pilgrims on the way to Canterbury did pass through Gravesend, to + which town doubtless many also travelled from London by water, while + others landed there from Essex and East Anglia. But the lane which is the + straight way and its continuation in the footpath across Swanscombe Park + is undoubtedly the line of the Roman road and in all probability the route + of Chaucer. + </p> + <p> + Face to face with these considerations, being English, I decided upon a + compromise. I determined to follow the Gravesend road so far as + Northfleet, chiefly for the sake of Stone, and there by a road running + south-east to come into the Roman highway again, two miles or so east of + Swanscombe Park, whence I should have a practically straight road into + Rochester. + </p> + <p> + I say I chose this route chiefly for the sake of seeing Stone. This little + place, some two miles and a half from Dartford, has one of the loveliest + churches in all England, to say nothing of a castellated manor house known + as Stone Castle. "It is a common jest," says Reginald Scot, writing in the + time of Elizabeth, "It is a common jest among the watermen of the Thames + to show the parish church of Stone to their passengers, calling the same + by the name of the 'Lanterne of Kent'; affirming, and that not untruly, + that the said church is as light (meaning in weight not in brightness) at + midnight as at noonday." The church, indeed, dedicated in honour of Our + Lady is a very beautiful and extraordinarily interesting building of the + end of the thirteenth century, in the same style as the practically + contemporary work in Westminster Abbey and, according to the architect and + historian, G.E. Street, who restored it, possibly from the design of the + same master-mason. Certainly nothing in the whole county of Kent is better + worth a visit. It would seem to have been built with a part of the money + offered at the shrine of St William in the Cathedral of Rochester upon the + Pilgrim's Way; for Stone belonged to the Bishops of Rochester, who had a + manor house there. The nave, aisles, chancel, and tower are all in the + Early English style and very noble work of their kind, built in the time + of Bishop Lawrence de Martin of Rochester (1251-1274); while to the + fourteenth century belongs the vestry to the north of the chancel and the + western windows in nave and aisles and the piers of the tower as we now + see them. Perhaps the oldest thing in the church is the doorway in the + north aisle which would seem to be Norman, but Street tells us that this + "is a curious instance of imitation of earlier work, rather than evidence + of the doorway itself being earlier than the rest of the church." + </p> + <p> + Within, the church is delightful, increasing in richness of detail + eastward towards the chancel where nothing indeed can surpass the beauty + of the arcade, so like the work at Westminster, borne by pillars of + Purbeck, its spandrels filled with wonderfully lovely, delicate, and yet + vigorous foliage. Here are two brasses, one of 1408 to John Lambarde, the + rector in Chaucer's day, the other of 1530 to Sir John Dew. In the north + aisle we may find certain ancient paintings the best preserved of which + represents the Madonna and Child. + </p> + <p> + The north aisle of the chancel is not at one with the church; it was built + in the early sixteenth century by the Wilshyre family as their Chantry. + Here lies Sir John Wilshyre, Governor of Calais in the time of Henry VIII. + The glass everywhere is unfortunately modern. + </p> + <p> + One leaves Stone church with regret; it is so fair and yet so hopelessly + dead that one is astonished and almost afraid. Less than a mile along the + road, to the north of it one passes Ingress Abbey, where once the nuns of + Dartford Priory had a grange. The present house, once the residence of + Alderman Harmer, the radical and reformer of our criminal courts, was + built of the stone of old London Bridge. + </p> + <p> + Here upon the high road one is really in the marshes by Thames side; but a + little way off the highway to the south on higher ground stands Swanscombe + and it is worth while to see it for it is a very famous place. "After such + time," says Lambarde, quoting Thomas the monk and chronicler of St + Augustine's Abbey in Canterbury, "after such time as Duke William the + Conqueror had overthrown King Harold in the field at Battell in Sussex and + had received the Londoners to mercy he marched with his army towards the + castle of Dover, thinking thereby to have brought in subjection this + county of Kent also. But Stigande, the archbishop, perceiving the danger + assembled the countrymen together and laid before them the intolerable + pride of the Normans that invaded them and their own miserable condition + if they should yield unto them. By which means they so enraged the common + people that they ran forthwith to weapon and meeting at Swanscombe elected + the archbishop and the abbot for their captains. This done each man got + him a green bough in his hand and beare it over his head in such sort as + when the Duke approached, he was much amazed therewith, thinking at first + that it had been some miraculous wood that moved towards him. But they as + soon as he came within hearing cast away their boughs from them, and at + the sound of a trumpet bewraied their weapons, and withall despatched + towards him a messenger, which spake unto him in this manner:—'The + Commons of Kent, most noble Duke, are ready to offer thee either peace or + war, at thy own choice and election; Peace with their faithfull obedience + if thou wilt permit them to enjoy their ancient liberties; Warr, and that + most deadly, if thou deny it them.'" + </p> + <p> + They prevailed according to the legend and this as some say is the + difference between the Men of Kent and the Kentish Men, for the former + retained their old liberties and were never conquered, and these dwelt in + the valley of Holmsdale; but the rest were merely <i>victi</i>. As the old + rhyme has it— + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + The vale of Holmsdale + Never conquered, never shall. +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + It is pleasing with the memory of all this in one's heart—and upon + it there is a famous song—to come upon Swanscombe church, in which + much would seem to be of Saxon times, as parts of the walls of both nave + and chancel, and the lower part of the tower, where one may see signs of + Roman brick. The nave, however, at least within, is late Norman if not + Transitional, and the windows in the chancel are Norman and Early English. + Here, too, is the tomb of Sir Anthony Weldon, the malicious gossip + [Footnote: He was the author of "The Secret History of the first Two + Stuart Kings" and of "A Catt may look at a King, or a Briefe Chronicle and + Character of the Kings of England..."] of the time of James I., who had + acted as clerk of the kitchen to Elizabeth. His wife lies opposite him + with others of his family. It is more interesting for us, however, to note + that in Chaucer's day the church was chiefly famous for its shrine of St + Hildefrith, a soveran advocate against the vapours. + </p> + <p> + I left Swanscombe in the early afternoon, and passing through Northfleet + with its great church of St Botolph I followed the road with many happy + glimpses of the Thames, avoiding Gravesend and making southward for the + Watling Street, which I found at last, and an old Inn at the cross roads + upon it. Thence I marched upon what I took to be the veritable way and was + presently assured of this at Singlewell, which it is said was originally + Schingled well, that is a well roofed with shingles of wood. This well + stood within the parish of Ifield, but so famous was it, for it was known + to every pilgrim, that it presently quite put out the name of the parish, + which in 1362 is described as Ifield-juxta-Schyngtedwell, and to this day + the place is marked on the maps as Singlewell or Ifield. A chapel was soon + built beside the well and here doubtless the pilgrims prayed and made + offerings. Singlewell, however, must not be confused with St Thomas's well + a mile further on the road, which is still used and still known as St + Thomas's well. + </p> + <p> + All this proved to me that I was indeed upon the old road, and so I went + on across Cobham Park without a thought of the great house, intent now on + the noble city of Rochester, which presently as I came over the last hill + I saw standing in all its greatness over the broad river of Medway, its + mighty castle four square upon the further bank. Then was I confirmed in + my heart in the words of Chaucer— + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Lo Rouchestre stant here fast by. +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH4" id="link2HCH4"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER III + </h2> + <p> + THE PILGRIMS' ROAD ROCHESTER + </p> + <p> + One comes down the hill into Rochester, through Strood, on this side the + Medway, to find little remaining of interest in a place that has now + become scarcely more than a suburb of the episcopal city. Some memory, + however, lingers still in Strood of St Thomas, for certain folks there + hated him and to spite him one day as he rode through the village they cut + the tail from his horse. Mark now the end of this misdeed. In Strood + thereafter everyone of their descendants was born, it is said, with a + tail, even as the brutes which perish. + </p> + <p> + The church of Strood, restored in 1812, is without interest, but close to + the churchyard is the site of a Hospital, founded, in the time of Richard + I., who endowed it, by Bishop Glanville of Rochester. This place must have + been known to Chaucer and his pilgrims. It was dedicated in honour of Our + Lady and cared for "the poor, weak, infirm and impotent as well as + neighbouring inhabitants or travellers from distant places, until they die + or depart healed." Those who served it followed the Benedictine Rule. A + singular example of the hatred of these for the monks of Rochester appears + in the story of the fight between the monks and the Hospital staff with + whom sided the men of Strood and Frinsbury, a village hard by, which took + place in the orchard of the Hospital. The Bishop, however, soon brought + all to reason, and as a punishment the men of Strood were obliged to go in + procession to Rochester upon each Whit-Monday, carrying the clubs with + which they had assaulted the monks. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-3" id="linkimage-3"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/004.jpg" width="100%" + alt="The Gateway of the Monastery Close, Rochester " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + That Strood stood on the ancient way its name assures us, since it is but + another form of Street or Strada, as they say in Italy. From Strood we + cross the great iron bridge, the successor of that at the Strood end of + which Bishop Glanville built a small chapel. The story of the bridge is + interesting. We do not know that there was a bridge at all in Roman times, + but certainly a wooden bridge was supplemented in the time of Richard II. + by a new one of stone, consisting of twenty-one arches of different spans. + This bridge stood higher up the river than that of to-day, nearer indeed + to the Castle, and as at its western end there was a chapel, so at its + eastern under the Castle, John de Cobham founded, in Chaucer's time, in + 1399, a Chantry for all Christian souls, of which some ruins remain. This + bridge, patched, altered, and constantly repaired, lasted till the + existing bridge was built in our own time on the site of the old one of + wood. + </p> + <p> + From the bridge we enter the High Street, almost certainly lying over the + old Roman road. Here are the old Inns, the Crown, the Bull, and the King's + Head. It is even probable that Chaucer may have stayed at the Crown, the + oldest of the three, not of course in the present house, but in that which + stood on the same site till 1863, and which was said to date from the + fourteenth century. [Footnote: The old house was famous at least as the + scene of Shakespeare's "Henry IV.," pt. i. act ii. sc. i., as the + resting-place of Queen Elizabeth in 1573, and as the inn honoured by Mr + Pickwick. It should never have been destroyed.] + </p> + <p> + In Rochester, serene and yet active, the very ancient seat of a bishopric, + we have something essentially Roman, the fortress on the Watling Street + guarding the passage of the Medway, precisely as Piacenza was and is a + Roman fortress upon the Emilian Way guarding the passage of the Po. The + Romans called the place Durobrivae, and though we know little of it during + the Roman occupation of Britain, we may be sure it was a place of very + considerable importance, as indeed it has remained ever since, twice in + fact in our history the possession of Rochester has decided a whole + campaign. + </p> + <p> + Rochester, indeed, could not have escaped the military eye of the Romans. + It must be remembered that the natural entry into England is by the + Straits of Dover, and that for a man entering by that gate there is only + one way up into England and that the line of the Watling Street, for he + must cross the Thames, even though he be going only to London. The lowest + ford upon the Thames is that at Lambeth, which the Watling Street used. + Now there is but one really formidable obstacle in the whole length of the + Watling Street south of the Thames. That obstacle is the estuary of the + Medway, which Rochester guarded and possessed. Rochester then was first + and foremost a great fortress, just as Piacenza was and is. + </p> + <p> + What was its fate in the Dark Age that followed the failure of the Roman + administration we do not know; but with the advent of St Augustine + Rochester at once received a Bishop. It was, indeed, the first post in St + Augustine's advance from Canterbury, King Ethelbert himself building there + a church in 597 in honour of St Andrew. It thus became a spiritual as well + as a material fortress. Of its fate after the Battle of Hastings we know + little, but it submitted without resistance and came into the hands of + that Odo of Bayeaux who gave so much trouble to William Rufus. + </p> + <p> + It is now that we see Rochester suddenly appear in its true greatness. + Odo, expelled by William, had on the Conqueror's death returned and + successfully obtained of Rufus his estates, among them the Castle of + Rochester, which he had built. In 1088, however, he was once more in + rebellion against the Crown on behalf of the Conqueror's eldest brother, + Robert of Normandy. Rufus struck him first at Pevensey, which was the + Norman gate of England. He took it but unwisely released Odo, on his oath + to give up Rochester Castle and leave the country. Rochester was then in + the hands of Eustace of Boulogne, sworn friend of Duke Robert, and when + Odo appeared with the King's Guard before the Castle, demanding its + surrender, he, understanding everything, captured his own lord and the + king's guard also and brought them in. Rufus then turned to his English + subjects and demanded their assistance, for his Barons were then, as they + have invariably been throughout English history, against the Crown, which + truly represented and defended the people. They flocked to the Royal + Standard, and after six weeks' siege, plague and famine ravaging the + garrison, Odo surrendered and was imprisoned at Tonbridge, and later + expelled the kingdom. As this great rascal Bishop came out of Rochester + Castle, the English youths sang out "Rope and Cord! Rope and Cord for the + traitor Bishop." But Odo was too near to the king. + </p> + <p> + That was the first time we know of in which Rochester stood like the gage + of England; the second was in the Barons' wars. When King John, in 1215, + had taken Rochester and notably discomfited the rascal Barony, they + immediately invited Louis of France to assist them. He set sail with some + seven hundred vessels, landed at Sandwich, and retook Rochester, which had + been so badly damaged that it could not defend itself. Forty-eight years + later, in 1264, Henry III. being king, Simon de Montfort coming into Kent, + burnt the wooden bridge over the Medway which was too strongly held by the + loyal inhabitants of Rochester for him to capture, took the city by storm, + sacked the Cathedral and the Priory, and laid siege to the Castle. He + failed, and Lewes could not give him what Rochester had denied. + </p> + <p> + Rochester Castle, which hitherto only famine had been able to open, was to + fall at last to Wat Tyler and his Peasants in 1381, with the help of the + people of the city. After that culminating misery of the fourteenth + century, which was so full of miseries, Rochester plays little part in + history for many years. She appears again to take part in innumerable + pageants, such as that in which Henry VIII. in 1540, and on New Year's + day, first saw Anne of Cleves and was astonished at her little beauty, or + that which greeted Elizabeth in 1573, or that which greeted Charles I. and + his bride after their wedding at Canterbury, or that which shouted for the + Merry Monarch, when Charles II. rode down the High Street in 1660, after + his landing at Dover. It was his brother, unfortunate and unhappy, who + came in without any herald and stole away in the night of December 19, + 1688, having foregone a throne and lost a kingdom. + </p> + <p> + All these, sieges or pageants, however, what are they but a tale that is + told. There remains, in some sort at least, the Cathedral. This is the + oldest thing in Rochester and the most lasting. It was founded in the end + of the sixth century as we have seen, and its first Bishop was that St + Justus who had come with St Augustine from the monastery of St Andrew on + the Coelian Hill in Rome, the monastery we now know by the name of the man + who sent them, St Gregory the Great. St Augustine and St Justus were not, + however, at first received with enthusiasm in Rochester. Indeed, it is + said that fish tails were hung to their habits as they went through the + city and that in consequence the people of the diocese of Rochester were + ever after born with tails, and were thus known as caudati or caudiferi, + while upon the Continent this beastly appellation was even till our + fathers' time applied to all English people. + </p> + <p> + What the Cathedral suffered in the centuries between its foundation and + the Norman Conquest, we shall never rightly know. That it was ravaged, + burnt and sacked by the Danes is certain and it seems even at the time of + the Norman Conquest to have scarcely recovered itself. Indeed, Pepys, who + was in Rochester in 1661, tells us that he found the western doors of the + church still "covered with the skins of Danes." Nor did it fare much + better when Odo of Bayeaux was lord. But when Gundulph, the associate of + the good and great Lanfranc, became bishop in 1077, the Cathedral was + almost entirely re-established and the Priory which served it rebuilt. + Gundulph, however, would have nothing to do with the seculars who had + hitherto served the great church. He established Benedictine monks in + their place and Ernulph, Prior of Canterbury, where Lanfranc had done the + same, succeeded him. + </p> + <p> + Of the Saxon church which St Justus built, he and his successors, nothing + remains but the foundations discovered in 1888. This church, which was + very small, about forty-two feet long by twenty-eight feet in breadth, was + furnished with an apse, but had neither aisles nor transepts. + </p> + <p> + Of the first Norman church which Bishop Gundulph built, very little + remains, perhaps a part of the crypt, the nave, and the great fortress + tower he built on the north side of the church. This church was a very + curious piece of Norman building. It was a long aisled church, that was + unbroken from end to end, but the choir-proper was shut off from its + aisles by walls of stone as at St Albans. There were no transepts or + central tower, but two porches, one on the north and the other on the + south, and in the angle formed by them with the choir, Gundulph built + towers, one a belfry, the other a fortress detached from the church. To + the south of the nave stood the first monastery and it is there that we + may still see fragments, five arches in all, of Gundulph's nave. + </p> + <p> + It was Ernulph who built the second monastery to replace the probably + wooden buildings of the first, to the south of the choir of which parts + remain to us. This done, he turned to the Cathedral and began entirely to + rebuild it, recase it with Caen stone or to remodel what he left. It is + therefore twelfth century Norman work we see at Rochester. All this work, + however, some of it not twenty-five years old, was damaged in 1179 by + fire, and once more the monks began to rebuild their church. They seem to + have begun on the north aisle of the choir, and then to have set to work + on the south aisle. Thence they proceeded to rebuild the eastern end of + the church, erecting a transept beyond the old choir, finishing their new + sanctuary in 1227. + </p> + <p> + The work did not stop there, however; by 1245 the north-west transept was + finished, and by 1280 the south-west and the two eastern bays of the nave. + It is astonishing to find the monastery able to support such immense and + extravagant operations, but we know that in 1201 the monks had + successfully established a new shrine in their church, the shrine of St + William. This popular sanctuary was the tomb of a Scotch pilgrim from + Perth who had been a baker. "In charity he was so abundant that he gave to + the poor the tenth loaf of his workmanship; in zeal so fervent that in vow + he promised and in deed attempted, to visit the places where Christ was + conversant on earth; in which journey he made Rochester his way, where, + after he had rested two or three days, he departed towards Canterbury. But + ere he had gone far from the city, his servant—a foundling who had + been brought up by him out of charity—led him of purpose out of the + highway and spoiled him both of his money and his life. The servant + escaped, but his master, because he died in so holy a purpose of mind, was + by the monks conveyed to St Andrews and laid in the choir. And soon he + wrought miracles plentifully." + </p> + <p> + The enormous fame of St William and the popularity of his shrine, not only + with those who were on the way to Canterbury, but with such as were merely + travellers to the coast, lasted for nearly a hundred years, enriching the + monks of Rochester. By the end of the thirteenth century, however, this + shrine of St William had been utterly eclipsed by the fame of the shrine + of St Thomas. For this reason, then, the monks of Rochester were happily + never able to rebuild their nave, which remains a Norman work of the + twelfth century. + </p> + <p> + In the fourteenth century the central tower was at last completed, but it + ceased to exist in 1749. Indeed, the resources of Rochester seem to have + been small after the third quarter of the thirteenth century. They had no + Lady Chapel and when one was provided it was contrived out of the + south-west transept. Later the north aisle of the choir, always dark on + account of Gundulph's tower, was heightened and vaulted and lighted with + windows. Later still, similar Perpendicular windows were placed in the old + nave, the Norman clerestory was destroyed and a new one built, together + with a new wooden roof and the great western window was inserted. In 1830 + Cottingham, and in 1871 Scott, worked their wills upon the place under the + plea of restoration. Little has escaped their attention, neither the + beautiful Decorated tomb of Bishop Walter de Merton (1278) nor that of + Bishop John de Sheppey (1360). The best thing left to us in the Cathedral + and that which gives it its character is the great western doorway with + its sombre Norman carving of the earlier part of the twelfth century. The + nave is also beautiful and the crypt is undoubtedly one of the most + interesting monuments left in England. Of the Priory practically nothing + remains but a few fragments. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-4" id="linkimage-4"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/005.jpg" width="100%" alt="Rochester " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + Doubtless Chaucer and his company did not leave the great church unvisited + nor fail to look curiously, nor perhaps to pray, at the shrine of St + William, for they, too, were travellers and pilgrims. But the spectacle in + the little city which it might seem most filled their imagination, as it + does ours, was not the Cathedral at all, but the great Keep which stands + above it, frowning across the busy Medway. Nothing more imposing of its + kind than this great Norman Castle remains in England. Having a base of + seventy feet square, and consisting of walls twelve feet thick and one + hundred and twenty feet high, it still seems what in fact it was, almost + impregnable by any arms but those of the modern world. Its great weakness + lay always in the matter of provision, but it was perfectly supplied with + water, by means of a well sixty feet under ground, in which stood always + ten feet of water. From this well a stone pipe or tunnel, two feet nine + inches in diameter, led up to the very roof, access to it being given on + each of the four floors into which the keep was divided within. These + apartments one and all were divided from east to west by walls five feet + thick, so that on each floor there were two chambers forty-six feet long + by about twenty feet in breadth. That this enormous keep is the work of + Gundulph and contemporary with the Tower of London, there seems to be no + reason to doubt. Of the great part it played in English history I have + already spoken. But even in ruin it impresses one as few things left to us + nowadays, when everything we make is so monstrous in comparison with the + work of our fathers, are able to do. To stand there on the platform a + hundred and twenty feet in the air and look out over the Medway crowded + with shipping, ringing, echoing with factories on either shore, to see the + great ships in the tideway and the fog and smoke of Chatham and its + dockyards down the stream, is to receive an impression of the fragile, but + tremendous, greatness of our civilisation such as few other places in + South England would be able to give us suddenly between two heart beats. + </p> + <p> + Such a vision of feverish and yet noble energy and endeavour, wholly + material if you will, and seemingly unaware of any world or life but this, + is altogether alien from Rochester itself, where an old fashioned leisure, + an air almost Georgian lingers yet. Indeed, one expects to meet Mr + Pickwick in the High Street or at least Charles Dickens come in from + Gadshill. + </p> + <p> + The only mood that has quite passed from Rochester, and that is yet more + securely crystallised there in the Cathedral and the Castle than any + other, is that of the Middle Age. You will not find it in any of the + churches now, nor in any inn that is left to us, nor in the houses often + both interesting and charming. All day long Rochester expects the coach + and not the pilgrims; but at night, under a windy sky, if you wander up + the hill and linger about the Cathedral in the shadow of the great Keep + while the moon reels steeply up the heavens, you may in early Spring at + any rate return for a little to that age which built such things as these, + so that they have outlasted everything that has followed them and put it + under their feet. And yet their heart was set upon no such victory, but in + the heavens. It was the great and self-forgetting act of an obscure baker, + but a saint of God, that built the mighty half abandoned church we see at + Rochester, nor was he for sure altogether forgotten when all England went + by to kneel and to pray beside Becket's shrine at Canterbury, raised there + in a heavenly cause, which must prevail in the end, though neither + Rochester nor Canterbury to-day might seem to bear out any such certainty. + </p> + <p> + The modern pilgrim, knowing what he knows, will be fain to remember at + Rochester, on his way to St Thomas, one who died in the same cause, but as + it might seem, disastrously without success. + </p> + <p> + For the liberty of the Church St Thomas died, that neither the king nor + any civil power should control, or govern that which Christ had founded + long ago upon the rock of Peter. In that same cause died Blessed John + Fisher, the last Catholic Bishop of Rochester, in the year 1535. He was + almost the first of Henry's victims, and he was beheaded, as was Blessed + Thomas More, for refusing to recognise the royal supremacy. It was treason + to deny the king's right to the title of Supreme Governor of the Church in + England; and though it be still treason to deny it, a host to-day will + gladly stand beside St Thomas Becket and Blessed John Fisher of Rochester. + </p> + <p> + This quarrel need never have arisen had not Henry, perjured and + adulterous, desired to make the Pope his accomplice in putting away his + lawful wife in order that he might marry Anne Boleyn. Because the Pope + refused to aid him in this crime Henry destroyed the Catholic Church in + England, and he and his successors founded the so-called Church of + England, with himself as first Supreme Governor. + </p> + <p> + Among those who had most strenuously opposed the claim for divorce was + Blessed John Fisher of Rochester, and with equally unflinching firmness he + opposed the doctrine of the royal supremacy. He asserted that "The + acceptance of such a principle would cause the clergy of England to be + hissed out of the society of God's Holy Catholic Church." He was right, + his prophecy has come true, and he nearly won. His opposition so far + prevailed that a saving clause was added to the oath of convocation, "so + far as the law of God allows." This Henry refused. The King persecuted + him, Anne Boleyn tried to poison him, all England was putrid with lies + concerning him contrived by those masters of lies, the Tudors; but the + imperial ambassador asserted that the Bishop of Rochester was "the paragon + of Christian prelates both for learning and holiness," and the Pope made + him Cardinal with the title of San Vitalis. Henry, in November 1534, with + the passing of the Act of Supremacy, attainted him of treason and declared + the see of Rochester vacant. But Blessed John Fisher said, as St Thomas + had said, "The King our Sovereign is not supreme head on earth of the + Church in England." For this he was condemned to die a traitor's death; + that is, to be hanged, disembowelled, and quartered at Tyburn in order + that Henry might enjoy his Kentish mistress in peace, and found a new + Church eager to acknowledge his adultery as lawful and to enjoy the spoil + of God. + </p> + <p> + That death, once shameful but soon to be rendered glorious by the + Carthusians, was denied to Fisher. His sentence was commuted to that of + death by beheading upon Tower Hill, where he suffered upon June 22, 1535. + His head was exposed on London Bridge; his body, interred without + ceremony, now lies in the Tower, where a little later that of Blessed + Thomas More was laid beside it—two countrymen of St Thomas Becket + martyred in the same cause. + </p> + <p> + They might seem to have died in vain; their cause, as old as Christendom, + might seem to have been long since defeated. Not so: this battle truly is + decided, but in their favour, and my little son may live to see the glory + of their victory. For he shall know and believe in his heart that his love + and hope are set upon a country and a city founded in the heavens of which + David sang, to which St John looked forth from Patmos, and of which these + our Saints have told us. + </p> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH5" id="link2HCH5"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER IV + </h2> + <p> + THE PILGRIMS' ROAD ROCHESTER TO FAVERSHAM + </p> + <p> + The old road leaves Rochester to pass through Chatham, and is by no means + delightful until it has left what Camden called "the best appointed + arsenal the world ever saw." Chatham, indeed, is little else but a huge + dockyard and a long and dirty street, once the Pilgrim's Way. There is, + however, very little to detain us; only the Chapel of St Bartholomew to + the south of the High Street is worth a visit for Bishop Gundulph's sake, + for he founded it. Even here, however, only the eastern end is ancient. + The parish church of Our Lady was for the most part rebuilt in 1788, but + it still keeps a good Norman door to the south of the nave. It was here + that Our Lady had in Chaucer's day a very famous shrine concerning which + the following rather gruesome legend is told. The body of a man, no doubt + a criminal or suicide, having been cast upon the beach in this parish, was + buried here in the churchyard. Our Lady of Chatham, however, was offended + thereby, and by night went Herself to the house of the clerk and awakened + him. And when he would all trembling know wherefor She was come. She + answered that near to Her shrine an unshriven and sinful person had been + laid, which thing offended Her, for he did naught but grin in ghastly + fashion. Therefore unless he were removed She Herself must withdraw from + that place. The Clerk arose hurriedly we may be sure, and, going with Our + Lady along towards the church, it happened that She grew weary and rested + in a bush or tree by the wayside, and ever after this bush was green all + the winter through. But the Clerk, going on, dug up the body and flung it + back into the water from which it had so lately been drawn. + </p> + <p> + Now, as to this story, all I have to say of it is that I do not believe a + word of it. Not because I am blinded by any sentimentalism of to-day, + which, as in a child's story, brings all right for everyone in the end; + but for this very cogent reason that of all created beings Our Lady is the + most merciful, loving and tender—Refugium Peccatorum. + </p> + <p> + Also I know a better story. For it is said that one day Our Lord was + walking with Sampietro in Paradise, as the Padrone may do with his + Fattore, when after a while He said, not as complaining exactly but as + stating a fact, "Sampietro, this place is going down!" + </p> + <p> + Here Sampietro, who is always impetuous and knew very well what He meant, + dared to interrupt, "Il Santissimo can't blame me," said he huffily. "Il + Santissimo does not suppose they all come in by the gate? <i>Che Che!</i>" + </p> + <p> + "Not come in by the gate, Sampietro. What do you mean?" said Our Lord. "If + Il Santissimo will but step this way, round by these bushes," said + Sampietro, "He shall see." And there sure enough He saw; for there was Our + Lady drawing us all up helter-skelter, pell-mell, willy-nilly into Heaven + in a great bucket, to our great gain and undeserved good. O clemens, O + pia, O dulcis Virgo Maria. + </p> + <p> + The road between Chatham and Sittingbourne might seem to be unquestionably + that by which the pilgrims rode, and as certainly the Roman highway. It + is, however, rather barren of mediaeval interest, little being left to us + older than the change of religion. At Rainham we have a church, however, + dedicated in honour of St Margaret, parts of which date from the + thirteenth century, though in the main it is a Perpendicular building. + Within are two ornaments of the late seventeenth century, and two brasses, + one to William Bloor, who died in 1529, and the other to John Norden, who + died in 1580, and to his four wives. As for William Bloor, there is a + local story of some relation of his, Christopher Bloor by name, and of a + nightly journey on a coach driven by a headless coachman beside whom sits + a headless footman, and all drawn by headless horses, Christopher himself + sitting within, his head in his hands. So much I heard, but I could not + find out what it portended or referred to. + </p> + <p> + But it is not till we come into Newington that we find any sign or memory + of St Thomas or the Pilgrimage. This village, however, became famous as a + station for the pilgrims, because on his last journey from London to + Canterbury, the great Archbishop here administered the rite of + Confirmation. A cross was erected to commemorate this event, and there the + pilgrims knelt to pray. But Newington in St Thomas's day was better known + on account of a great scandal involving the name of the convent there. + This convent was held of the king, of his manor of Middleton. We read that + divers of the nuns, "being warped with a malicious desire of revenge, took + advantage of the night and strangled the lady abbess, who was the object + of their fury and passionate animosities, in her bed; and after, to + conceal so execrable an assassination, threw her body into a pit, which + afterwards contracted the traditional appellation of Nun-pit." [Footnote: + Philipotts, "Villare Cantianum," quoted by Littlehales, <i>op. cit.</i> p. + 27.] Now whether this tale be true or an invention to explain the queer + name "Nun-pit" we shall never know, but as it happens we do know that the + nuns were removed to the Isle of Sheppey and that St Thomas persuaded King + Henry II. to establish at Newington a small house of seven secular canons + to whom was given the whole manor. But curiously enough, one of these + canons was presently found murdered at the hands of four of his brethren. + Exactly where this convent was situated would seem to be doubtful. What + evidence there is points to Nunfield Farm at Chesley, about a mile to the + south of the high road. + </p> + <p> + Newington itself in its cherry-orchards is a pretty place enough to- day, + with an interesting, if restored, church of Our Lady in part of the + thirteenth, but mainly of the fourteenth century. It is a fine building + with charming carved details and at least four brasses, one of the end of + the fifteenth century (1488) to William Monde, two of the sixteenth + century (1510 and 1581) and one of the year 1600. There is nothing, + however, in the place to delay anyone for long, and the modern pilgrim + will soon find himself once more on the great road. + </p> + <p> + On coming out of Newington such an one will find himself in about a mile + at Key Street, where is the Fourwent Way, in other words the cross roads, + where the highway from the Isle of Sheppey to Maidstone crosses the + Pilgrims Way. Here of old stood a chapel of St Christopher or another, at + which the pilgrims prayed, and remembering this, I too, at the cross + roads, though there was no chapel, prayed in the words of the prayer which + begins: + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + St Christopher who bore Our Lord + Across the flood—O precious Load.... +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + So I prayed, "er I come to Sidingborne," as Chaucer says. + </p> + <p> + The author of "Sittingbourne in the Middle Ages" tells us that, "Mediaeval + Sittingbourne consisted of three distinct portions. The chief centre of + population was near the church, but there was an important little hamlet + called Schamel at the western extremity of the parish on the London Road + ... as any traveller from London approached Sittingbourne in the Middle + Ages, the first thing to attract his attention was a chapel and hermitage + standing on the south side of the road, about three parts of the way up + that little hill which rises from Waterlanehead towards the east; this was + Schamel Hermitage and the Chapel of St Thomas Becket, to which were + attached houses for the shelter of pilgrims and travellers. A small Inn + called "The Volunteers" now stands upon or close to the site of this + ancient chapel and this hermitage." The chapel and hermitage it seems were + first built at Schamel in the time of King John, when they were occupied + by a priest named Samuel. He said Mass daily in the chapel and gave such + accommodation as he had to wayfarers, by whose alms he lived. After his + death the chapel fell into disrepair, but in the time of Henry III. it was + rebuilt on a larger scale. A hermit named Silvester, of the "Order of St + Austin," was appointed to the house which had now attached to it four + lodgings for pilgrims on the road to Canterbury. But on Silvester's death + it was realised that the chapel interfered so much with the parish church + that before the end of the thirteenth century it was suppressed. It + re-arose, and in Chaucer's day would seem to have been in a flourishing + condition; at any rate it continued till the spoliation. + </p> + <p> + If indeed Chaucer and his pilgrims slept in Sittingbourne, as one may well + believe, it is probable that they slept either at this chapel at Schamel + or at the Lion Inn in the town. This Inn was certainly in existence in his + time, and there in 1415 King Henry V. was entertained on his return from + Agincourt by the Squire of Milton. There, too, in all likelihood, Cardinal + Wolsey rested in the autumn of 1514, and there Henry VIII., who spoiled + the face of England and changed her heart, "paied the wife of the Lyon in + Sittingbourne by way of rewarde iiiis. viiid." for the accommodation + given. This famous Inn stands in the centre of the town, the road passing + to the south of it. Unhappily the church is less interesting, having been + almost entirely rebuilt in 1762; but close by it were some old houses + which apparently once formed part of another old Inn called the White + Hart. Certainly much of the town must have been devoted to the + entertainment of travellers. + </p> + <p> + From Sittingbourne I wandered out to Borden, lovely in itself and in its + situation upon the rising ground under the North Downs. It possesses a + very fine church with a low Norman tower and western door of the same + date. Within is a very nobly carved Norman arch under the belfry. + </p> + <p> + If Schamel was, as it were, the western part of Sittingbourne with its + chapel and hermitage, Swanstree was the eastern part, and it, too, had its + chapel of St Cross and its hospital of St Leonard. There is, however, this + difference, that, whereas the priest and people of Sittingbourne did all + they could to suppress the chapel and hermitage of Schamel, they on the + contrary did all they could to encourage the chapel and hospital of + Swanstree. Why? Because pilgrims coming from London or the north with full + pockets towards Canterbury, would reach Schamel <i>before</i> passing + through Sittingbourne, but Swanstree only <i>after</i> passing through the + town! + </p> + <p> + Following the Pilgrim's Road out of Sittingbourne one soon comes to + Bapchild, where at the exit from the village on the north side of the road + of old stood an oratory, and a Leper's Hospital, of which nothing seems + really to be known save that it was founded about the year 1200. According + to Canon Scott-Robertson, it was dedicated in honour of St James, which is + a curious dedication for a Leper House, but common enough in a Hospital + for pilgrims. Oratory and Hospital have alike disappeared, but close by + the place where they stood there still remains St Thomas's Well, now known + as Spring Head or Spring. + </p> + <p> + So I went on through Radfield, where of old was a wayside chapel, and + Green Street to the Inn at Ospringe, passing, half a mile away to the + north, Stone Farm, and, nearer the road, the ruins of Stone Chapel, + another of those little wayside oratories still so common in Italy and + France but which nowadays in England we lack altogether. + </p> + <p> + Ospringe itself is an interesting place. To begin with, the very ancient + inn by the roadside, together with the equally old house opposite were + once, according to Hasted, the historian of Kent, a Hospital founded by + Henry II., for the benefit especially of pilgrims. This hospital, he tells + us, "was dedicated to the Blessed Virgin and was under the management of a + master, three brethren and two clerks existed till the time of Edward IV." + Henry VIII., having seized by force all such property as this in England, + gave this Hospital to St John's College in Cambridge, which still owns it + to the loss of us poor travellers. No doubt what money comes to the + college from this poor place goes to the support and bolstering up of the + Great Tudor Myth upon the general acceptance of which most of the vested + interests in England largely depend. But let us poor men lift up our + hearts. The Great Tudor Myth is passing, and every day it is becoming more + evident that it can be supported very little longer. Let us determine, + however, that we will not be taken in again, and under the pretence of a + reformation of religion fix upon our necks a new political despotism worse + than the Whig and Protestant aristocracy that the sixteenth century + brought into being, to the irreparable damage of the Crown and the + unspeakable loss of us the commonalty. May St Thomas avert an evil only + too likely to befall us. As for Ospringe, however, it was after all in + some sort royal property, the Crown having anciently a Camera Regis there + for the King's use when he was on his way to Canterbury or to France. + </p> + <p> + At Ospringe I left the great road to visit Davington and to sleep at + Faversham. The long spring day was already drawing in when I came into + Davington, as delightful and charming a little place as is to be found + anywhere along the great road. Upon a hill-top there perhaps the Romans + had a temple or a villa, at any rate they called the place Durolevum, and + so it stands in the Antonine <i>Itinerary</i>. There is evidence, too, + that the site was not abandoned when with the failure of their + administration and the final departure of the Legions, there went down the + long roads, our youth and hope. Where the present church stands, in part a + Norman building, there was probably a Saxon Chapel. Then in 1153 came + Fulke de Newenham and founded here and built a Benedictine nunnery in + honour of St Mary Magdalen. That the house was never richly endowed nor + large at all, we may know from that name it had—the house of the + poor nuns of Davington. We know, however, very little about them or it, + but its poverty did not save it of course at the dissolution. The Priory + was then turned into a manor house, and this in part remains so that we + find there a part of the cloisters of the time of Edward I., and other + remains of Edward III.'s time. Then in Elizabeth's day the house seems to + have been practically rebuilt. As for the little church, it owes all it is + to-day to its late owner and historian, Mr Willement, and though it is not + in itself of very great interest it serves as a memorial of his enthusiasm + and love. + </p> + <p> + Davington is less than a mile out of the town of Faversham, and therefore + it was not quite dark when I made my way into that famous place. Faversham + must always have been an important place from its position with regard to + the great road. We have seen how the source of the greatness of Rochester + lay in its position upon the Watling Street where that great highway + crossed the Medway. Faversham has half Rochester's fortune, for it stands + where the road touches an arm or creek of the Swale, that important + navigable waterway, an arm of the sea which separates Sheppey from the + mainland. + </p> + <p> + The Swale there served the road and made of Faversham a port, but the road + did not cross it and therefore the Swale, unlike the Medway, was never an + obstacle or a defence. Thus Faversham never became a great fortress like + Rochester; it was a port, and as it happened a Royal Villa, where so long + ago as 930 Athelstan held his witan. Its fate, however, after the + Conquest, was to be more glorious. In 1147 Stephen and his wife, Matilda, + founded an abbey of Benedictine monks here at Faversham in honour of Our + Lord, and known as St Saviours, upon land she had obtained from William of + Ypres, Stephen's favourite captain, in exchange for her manor of + Littlechurch in this county. At the end of April 1152 she fell sick at + Hedingham Castle in Essex, and dying there three days later, was buried in + the abbey church at Faversham. In August of the following year her eldest + son, Eustace, was laid beside her, and in 1154 Stephen, the King, was also + buried here. The abbey was, as I have said, dedicated to Our Saviour, and + this because it possessed a famous relic of the True Cross which had been + the gift of Eustace of Boulogne; the abbey was thus founded "In worship of + the Croys," and one might have expected some such dedication as "Holy + Cross." As founder, the King, for he and his Queen had been equally + concerned in the foundation, claimed after the death of the abbot certain + toll such as the abbot's ring, drinking cup, horse and hound. The abbot + was a very great noble, held his house "in chief" and sat in Parliament. + At the Suppression Henry VIII. granted the place to Sir Thomas Cheynay. + Now mark the almost inevitable end. The Cheynays were living on Church + property obtained by theft; at the least they were receivers of stolen + goods. Do you think they could endure? They presently sold to a certain + Thomas Arden, sometime Mayor of Faversham. Upon Sunday, 15 February 1551, + this man was foully murdered in the abbey house he called his own, by a + certain Thomas Mosby, a London tailor, the lover of Alice Arden, Thomas + Arden's wife. This tragic affair so touched the imagination of the time + that not only did Holinshed relate it in detail, but some unknown writer + who, by not a few, has been taken for Shakespeare himself, used the story + as the plot for a play. Arden of Faversham, according to the dramatist, + was a noble character, modest, forgiving, and affectionate. His wife + Alecia in her sleep by chance reveals to him her adulterous love for + Mosby; but Arden forgives her on her promising never again to see her + seducer. From that moment she plots with her lover to murder her husband, + and succeeds at last, after many failures, by killing him in the abbey + house by the hands of two hired assassins, while he is playing a game of + draughts with Mosby. All concerned in the affair were brought to justice, + but the abbey of Faversham was no longer coveted as a place of abode. + </p> + <p> + Almost every stone has disappeared of the abbey church in which lay + Stephen, his Queen, and their son. It stood on the northern side of the + town, where indeed the Abbey Farm still remains. It is to the parish + church of Our Lady of Charity that we must turn for any memory of the + conventual house where many a pilgrim must often have knelt to venerate + the relic of the Holy Cross. + </p> + <p> + The great church which remains to us is said to have been used by the + monks, and if not part of the abbey itself which would seem to have stood + at some distance from it, more than one thing that remains in it would + seem to endorse such a theory. To begin with, the church is very spacious, + and cruciform in plan, though the tower is at the west end. This, however, + is a very ugly affair, dating from 1797. In the main the great church, + which has been tampered with at very various times, if not rebuilt, must + have been Early English in style. As we see it we have a building divided + into three aisles, in nave, chancel and transepts. The nave as it is at + present may be neglected, but in the north transept we have a curious + hagioscope or other opening in the shape of a cross and there used to be + some remains of paintings; the Nativity, the Virgin and Child, the Gloria + in Excelsis, the Crucifixion and the holy women at the Sepulchre of Our + Lord. In the chancel were other remains of paintings. There still remain + the very noble stalls which seem to assure us of the monastic use of the + church, and a fine altar tomb of the fifteenth century; this on the north + side. On the south are very fine sedilia and piscina. Close by is a brass + to William Thanbury, the vicar here, dating from 1448. The inscription + considering the use of the church to-day, is pathetic; for there we read + CREDO IN SANCT. ECCLES. CATH., a pleasing misreading of the true text + which every one, though for different reasons, will rejoice to read. + </p> + <p> + We are told by local tradition or gossip that the tomb at the end of the + south aisle is that of King Stephen. This, however, could only be true if + this were indeed the church of the monastery. The tomb is Decorated in + style and has a canopy, but is without inscription. + </p> + <p> + Our Lady of Charity was, however, chiefly famous for its chapel of St + Thomas of Canterbury on the north side of the chancel, and for its altars + of SS. Crispin and Crispian and of St Erasmus. Many pilgrims turned aside + from the road to visit Faversham which was not a station on the + pilgrimage, for the sake of these shrines and altars and especially to + pray in the chapel of St Thomas. + </p> + <p> + It is said, indeed, that "no one died who had anything to leave without + giving something to St Erasmus light." As for SS. Crispin and Crispian + they were the patrons of the town and leapt into great fame after the + victory of Agincourt upon their feast day, October 25, when the King had + invoked them upon the field. + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + This day is called the feast of Crispian; + He that outlives this day, and comes safe home, + Will stand a-tiptoe when this day is named, + And rouse him at the name of Crispian. + + And Crispin Crispian shall ne'er go by + From this day to the ending of the world, + But we on it shall be remembered. +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + The two saints, Crispin and Crispian, are not less famous in France than + in England. They were indeed Rome's missionaries in Gaul about the middle + of the third century. They seem to have settled at Soissons, where now a + great church stands in their honour. There they practiced the craft of + cobblers and of all cobblers they are the patrons. After some years the + Emperor Maximian Hercules coming into Gaul, a complaint concerning them + was brought to him. They were tried by that most inhuman judge Rictius + Varno, the Governor, whom, however, they contrived to escape by fleeing to + England and to Faversham, where, as some say they lived, but as others + assert they were shipwrecked. For us at any rate their names are secure + from oblivion, not so much by reason of the famous victory won upon their + day as because Shakespeare has gloriously recorded their names with those + familiar in our mouths as household words: + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Harry the King, Bedford, and Exeter, + Warwick, and Talbot, Salisbury and Gloucester.... +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH6" id="link2HCH6"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER V + </h2> + <p> + THE PILGRIMS' ROAD FAVERSHAM TO CANTERBURY + </p> + <p> + From Faversham at least to the environs of Canterbury, the Pilgrim's Road + seems to be unmistakable, for the Watling Street runs all the way straight + as a ruled line. Yet so few are the remaining marks of the pilgrimage, so + little is that great Roman and mediaeval England remembered by men or even + by the fields or the road which runs between them with so changeless a + purpose, that at first sight we might think it all a myth. And yet + everything that is fundamental or really enduring and valuable in our + lives we owe to that England which was surely one of the most glorious and + strong, as well as one of the happiest, countries in Europe. Yet must the + disheartened voyager take comfort, for in how many small and negligible + things may we not see even to-day the very mark and standard of Rome, her + sign manual after all, under the rubbish of the modern world. And if you + desire an example, let me give you weathercocks. + </p> + <p> + No man can walk for day after day along this tremendous road which leads + us straight as a javelin thrust back through all the lies and excuses to + the truth of our origins, without noticing, and especially since he must + keep an eye on the wind and the weather, the astonishing number of + weathercocks there be between London and Canterbury. Upon almost every + steeple, chanticleer towers shining in the sun and wildly careering in the + winds of spring. You think that nothing at all, the most ordinary sight in + modern England? But for the seeing eye it reveals, how much! Everyone of + these weathercocks crows there on the tip top of the steeple over each + town or village because of an order of the Pope. They were to be the sign + of the jurisdiction of St Peter, and that by a Bull of the ninth century. + How entrancing it is to remember such a thing as that in the midst of + modern England. + </p> + <p> + In spite of the weathercocks and their watchfulness, however, the memories + of the great pilgrimage between Faversham and Harbledown are + dishearteningly few. One might surely expect to find something at Preston + for instance, where, coming out of Faversham, one rejoins the Watling + Street, but there is nothing at all to remind one of the great past of the + Way. It is true that Preston church, dedicated in honour of St Catherine, + is both ancient and beautiful, and once belonged to the monastery of + Christ Church in Canterbury; but neither in its channel, which must once, + before the eastern window was inserted in 1862, with its single lancets + and sedilia, have been extraordinarily fine, nor in the nave, is there any + memory at all of St Thomas or the Pilgrims. It is not indeed until we come + to Boughton that we are reminded of them. + </p> + <p> + The older part of the parish of Boughton is South Street, where, however, + nothing now remains older than the sixteenth century at the earliest. + Here, however, was anciently a wayside chapel to the south of the road + where now Holy Lane turns out of it. About a mile, or rather less, to the + south, and clean off the road, stands on the crest of a steep, though not + a high hill, the lovely village of Boughton under Blee, which, curiously + enough, if we consider what is omitted, is mentioned by Chaucer, + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + When ended was the lyf of seint Cecyle, + Er we had riden fully fyve myle, + At Boghton under Blee us gan atake + A man, that clothed was in clothes blake, + And undernethe he hadde a whyt surplys.... + It semed he had priked myles three. +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + This man who, with his yeoman, overtakes the pilgrims, is the rich canon, + the alchemist who could pave with gold "all the road to Canterbury town." + He is said to have already ridden three miles, but whence he had come it + is impossible to say. That the pilgrims who had ridden not quite five + miles had come from Ospringe might seem certain, and since they were + overtaken by the Canon it is possible that he was coming from Faversham. + It is, however, more important to explain, if we can, what the pilgrims + were doing more than a mile off the true Way at Boughton under Blean. The + church of SS. Peter and Paul is of some interest and of considerable + beauty it is true, but so far as we may know there was no shrine there of + sufficient importance to draw the pilgrims from the road, as at Faversham, + nor one might think would they be easily diverted from the goal of their + journey almost within reach. All sorts of routes have been given here, one + going so far as to lead the pilgrims south and east quite off the Watling + Street and across the old green road, the Pilgrims Way from Winchester, to + enter Canterbury at last by the South Gate. This is absurd. No good + explanation has yet been offered, but perhaps we may be near the truth if + we suggest that Chaucer and his pilgrims never visited Boughton under + Blean and the church of SS. Peter and Paul at all. After all we have in + Chaucer's text (Frag. G. Canon's Yeoman Prologue) merely the name, and + that in the old form, Boghton under Blee. All this wild woodland and + forest country which lies on a great piece of high ground stretching + north-east and south-west across the Way parallel with the valley of the + Great Stour, between Faversham and Canterbury, hiding the one from the + other, was known as the Blean. It is equally certain that the village of + Dunkirk was known as Boughton until the middle of the eighteenth century, + when a set of squatters took possession of the ground, then extra + parochial as of a "free- port" from which no one could dislodge them. The + district including the greater part of the forest was afterwards erected + into a separate villa called the "villa of Dunkirk." Now Boughton Hill + rises abruptly beyond the village of Dunkirk, and it may well be that this + and not the tiny hamlet nearly a mile to the south of the great Way, was + Chaucer's Boghton under Blee, where the Canon and his yeoman overtook the + "joly companye," and rode in with them to Canterbury. And it is there at + Mad Tom's corner that we first catch sight of the glorious city of St + Thomas. + </p> + <p> + "Mad Tom's corner!" That name, it is needless to say I hope, has no + reference to the great archbishop or the pilgrimage. Mad Tom's corner, + whence we get our first view of Canterbury, is intimately connected with + the gate close by, called Courtenay's gate, and refers to the exploits of + a mad Cornishman who came to Kent and especially to Canterbury about 1832, + and presently proclaimed himself to be the New Messiah and showed to his + deluded disciples the sacred stigmata in his hands and feet. It was the + custom of these unhappy people to meet in the woods of the Blean, and it + is said one may still see their names cut upon the trees. Mad Tom, who, + besides proclaiming himself to be the Messiah, claimed also to be the heir + to the earldom of Devon, and called himself Sir William Percy Honeywood + Courtenay, the Hon. Sydney Percy, Count Moses Rothschild and Squire + Thompson, to say nothing of Knight of Malta and King of Jerusalem, was a + madman, with a method in his madness and a certain reasonable truth behind + his absurdities. His mission was, he said, to restore the land to the + people, to take it away, that is to say, from the great rascal families of + the sixteenth century, the Russells, Cavendishes and so forth, who had + appeared like vermin to feed upon the dead body of the Church, to gorge + themselves upon her lands and to lord it in her Abbeys and Priories. In + the minds of these people Tom was not only mad but dangerous. Mad he + certainly was, for all his dreams. Nevertheless he stood for Canterbury in + the year of the Reform Bill and polled 275 votes, and in the following + year he started a paper called the <i>Lion</i> which ran to eighteen + numbers. Five years later, however, he had become such a nuisance that a + warrant was safely issued against him "on the charge of enticing away the + labourers of a farmer." Tom shot one of the constables who served the + warrant, and on the afternoon of the last morning of May in 1838, two + companies of the 45th regiment were marched out of Canterbury to take him. + They found him here in Blean Wood, surrounded by his followers. He, + however, was a man of action, and he promptly shot the officer in command. + The soldiers then began to fire, and next minute were charging with fixed + bayonets. Tom and eight of his followers were killed, and three more died + a few days later. + </p> + <p> + One may well ask what can have induced the stolid Kentish folk to follow + so wild a Celt as this. We shall probably find the answer in the fact that + Tom was exceedingly handsome in an Italian way, having "an extraordinary + resemblance to the usual Italian type of the Saviour." Also, without + doubt, he voiced, though inanely, the innate resentment of the English + peasant against the great sixteenth century robber families and their + sycophants. These great families, now on their last legs and about to be + torn in pieces by a host, financial and disgusting, without creed or + nationality, seven times worse than they, laughed at Tom. They do not + laugh at those who, about to compass their destruction, led by another + Celt, have digged a pit into which they trample headlong, and astonishing + as it might seem, to the regret of that very peasantry which has hated + them for so long. At least, and let us remember this, if they were greedy + and unscrupulous their vices were ours, something we could understand. + They were of our blood, we took the same things for granted, had the same + prejudices, and after all the same sense of justice. They with us were a + part of Europe and looked to Rome as their ancestor and original. But + those who are about to displace them! Alas, whence do they come who begat + them, from what have they issued out? I cannot answer; but I know that + with all their faults, their sacrilege, robbery, and treason, Russell, + Cavendish, Cecil and Talbot are English names, and they who bear them men + of our blood, European, too, and of our civilisation. But who are those + that now begin to fill their places? Aliens, Orientals and worse now + received without surprise into the peerage of England and the great + offices of justice. And the names which recall Elizabeth and whose + syllables are a part of our mother tongue, are obliterated by such jargon + as these. + </p> + <p> + These are miserable thoughts to come to a man on the road to Canterbury, + but they are inevitable to-day in England of my heart. The new times + belong to them. Let us then return to the old time before them and here + for the first time in sight of Canterbury let us remember St Thomas, the + greatest of English Saints, the noblest English name in the Roman + calendar. + </p> + <p> + All that wonder which greets you from Mad Tom's corner upon Boughton Hill + is, rightly understood, the work of St Thomas, and we might say indeed + that the great Angel Steeple was the last of his miracles for it is the + last of the Gothic in England, and it rose above his tomb, while that tomb + was still a shrine and a monument in the hearts of men. For "the church + dedicated to St Thomas erects itself," as Erasmus says, "with such majesty + towards Heaven that even from a distance it strikes religious awe into the + beholders." + </p> + <p> + So I went on my way in the mid-afternoon down hill to what in my heart I + knew to be Bob-up-and-down on the far side of which lies and climbs + Harbledown and the hospital of St Nicholas. + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Wite ye nat wher ther stant a litel town + Which that y-cleped is Bop-up-and-down + Under the Blee in Caunterbury weye? +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + This "littel town" it might seem, has disappeared, unless indeed it be + Harbledown itself, which certainly bears geographically much resemblance + to that descriptive name, as Erasmus describes it in his strange book. + "Know then," says he, "that those who journey to London, not long after + leaving Canterbury, find themselves in a road at once very hollow and + narrow and besides the banks on either side are so steep and abrupt that + you cannot escape; nor can you possibly make your journey in any other + direction. Upon the left hand of this road is a hospital of a few old men, + one of whom runs out as soon as they perceive any horseman approaching; he + sprinkles his holy water and presently offers the upper part of a shoe + bound with an iron hoof on which is a piece of glass resembling a precious + stone. Those that kiss it give some small coin.... Gratian rode on my left + hand, next to the hospital, he was covered with water; however he endured + that. When the shoe was stretched out, he asked the man what he wanted. He + said that it was the shoe of St Thomas. On that my friend was angered and + turning to me he said, 'What, do these brutes imagine that we must kiss + every good man's shoe? Why, by the same rule, they would offer his spittle + to be kissed or other bodily excrements.' I pitied the old man, and by the + gift of a small coin I comforted his trouble." + </p> + <p> + It is easy to see that we are there in the modern world on the very eve of + the Reformation. The unmannerly Gratian was John Colet to be the Dean of + St Paul's, hardly defended from the charge of heresy by old Archbishop + Wareham. And like so many of his kidney he seems to have forgotten the + scripture upon which, as he would have asserted, his whole philosophy and + action was based,—the scripture I mean which speaks of One, "the + lachet of whose shoes I am not worthy to stoop down and unloose." We shall + not have the opportunity of being so proud and impatient as Dean Colet of + unhappy memory, for no shoe, alas, of St Thomas or any other saint will be + offered for our veneration in the Hospital of St Nicholas at Harbledown + to-day. Yet not for this should we pass it by, for of all places upon the + road, it best of all conserves the memory of those far away days when + Chaucer came by, and half-way up the hill rested awhile and prayed, e'er + from the summit he looked down upon Canterbury. + </p> + <p> + The Hospital of the Forest or Wood of Blean, dedicated in honour of St + Nicholas, lies upon the southern and western side of the last hill before + the western gate of the city. It was founded in 1084 by Archbishop + Lanfranc, and no doubt for a time served as a hospital for Lepers, but it + was soon appropriated for the use of the sick and wayfarers generally, and + though nothing save the chapel remains to us from Lanfranc's day, the + whole place is so full of interest that no one should pass it by. + </p> + <p> + The chapel became in time the parish church of this little place on the + hillside which grew up about the hospital which itself was probably placed + here on account of the spring of water known as St Thomas's or the Black + Prince's well, south and west of the building. Most of the chapel is of + Norman building, the western doorway for instance, the pillars and round + arches on the north of the nave dating from Lanfranc's time. But the south + side is later, of the thirteenth century, and the font and choir are later + still, being Perpendicular fifteenth century work. + </p> + <p> + The hospital, however, as we see it, is a rebuilding of the seventeenth + century, but it was fundamentally restored in the nineteenth. In the + "Frater Hall," however, are some interesting remains of the old house, + among them a fine collection of mazers and two bowls of maple wood, in one + of which lies perhaps the very crystal which Erasmus saw, and which was + set in the upper leather of the shoe of St Thomas. + </p> + <p> + Below the hospital in the orchard is the old well known as St Thomas's. + Above it grows an elder, surely a relic of the days of the Pilgrimage. For + the elder was known as the wayfaring tree and was sacred to pilgrims and + travellers. It is not strange then, that it should cool with its shade the + spring of St Thomas; it is only strange that the vandal has spared it for + us to bless. But why the elder was sacred to travellers I do not know. + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Wayfaring Tree! What ancient claim + Hast thou to that right pleasant name? + Was it that some faint pilgrim came + Unhopedly to thee + In the brown desert's weary way + 'Midst thirst and toils consuming sway, + And there, as 'neath thy shade he lay, + Blessed the Wayfaring Tree? +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + But doggerel never solved anything. In truth a very different story is + told of the elder and on good authority too. For if we may not trust Sir + John Maundeville who tells us that, "Fast by the Pool of Siloe is the + elder tree on which Judas hanged himself ... when he sold and betrayed our + Lord," Shakespeare says that, "Judas was hanged on an elder," and Piers + Plowman records: + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Judas he japed + With Jewish siller + And sithen on an elder tree + Hanged himsel. +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + It is from the quietness and neglected beauty of this well of St Thomas + that under the evening I turned back into the road and, climbing a little, + looked down upon what was once the holiest city of fair England. + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Felix locus, felix ecclesia + In qua Thomae vivit memoria: + Felix terra quae dedit praesulem + Felix ilia quae fovit exsulem. +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + In that hour of twilight, when even the modern world is hushed and it is + possible to believe in God, I looked with a long look towards that glory + which had greeted so often and for so many centuries the eager gaze of my + ancestors, but I could not see for my eyes like theirs were full of tears. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /><br /><br /> <a name="link2HCH6a" id="link2HCH6a"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER VI + </h2> + <p> + THE CITY OF ST THOMAS + </p> + <p> + When a man, alone or in a company, entered Canterbury at last by the long + road from London, in the thirteenth, fourteenth or fifteenth century, he + came into a city as famous as Jerusalem, as lovely as anything even in + England, and as certainly alive and in possession of a soul as he was + himself. + </p> + <p> + When a man comes into Canterbury to-day he comes into a dead city. + </p> + <p> + I say Canterbury is dead, for when the soul has departed from the body, + that is death. Canterbury has lost its soul. + </p> + <p> + Go into the Cathedral, it is like a tomb, but a tomb that has been rifled, + a whited sepulchre so void and cold that even the last trump will make + there no stir. It was once the altar, the shrine, and as it were the + mother of England, one of the tremendous places of Europe into which every + year flocked thousands upon thousands upon thousands of men. The altar is + thrown down, the shrine is gone and forgotten, in all that vast church the + martyred Saint who made it what it was is not so much as remembered even + in an inscription or a stone; and the enthusiasm and devotion of centuries + have given place to a silence so icy that nothing can break it. The place + is dead. + </p> + <p> + I remember very well the first time I came to Canterbury. I was a boy, and + full of enthusiasm for St Thomas, I would have knelt where he fell, I + would have prayed, yes with all my fathers, there where he was laid at + last on high above the altar. But there was nothing. I was shown, as is + the custom, all that the four centuries of ice have preserved of the work + of my forefathers; the glorious tombs of King and Bishop, the storied + glass of the thirteenth century, unique in England, the litter and the + footsteps of thirteen hundred years. I was led up past the choir into that + lofty and once famous place where for centuries the greatest and holiest + shrine in England stood. All about were still grouped the tombs of + Princes; Edward, the Black Prince, the hero of Crecy, Henry IV., the + usurper, Cardinal Chatillon; but of the shrine itself, of the body it held + up to love and honour and worship there was nothing, no word even, no sign + at all to tell that ever such a thing had been, only an emptiness and a + space and a silence that could be felt. + </p> + <p> + Later I was led down into that north-west transept, once known as the + Martyrdom, where St Thomas laid down his life; and left alone there, I + remember I tried in all that dumbness and silence to recollect myself, to + pray, at least to recall, something of that great sacrifice which had so + moved Christendom that for centuries men flocked here to worship—where + now no man kneels any more for ever. + </p> + <p> + I remember very well how it came to me in that tingling and icy silence + that St Thomas died for the liberty of the Church, that here in England + she might not become the king's chattel or anyway at all the creature of + the civil power. I was too young to smile when I remembered that in the + very place where St Thomas laid down his life in that cause, there sits + to-day in his usurped place one who eagerly acknowledges the king as the + "Supreme Governor of the Church within these realms." Yet in my heart I + heard again those tremendous words, "Were all the swords of England + hanging over my head you could not terrify me from my obedience to God and + my Lord the Pope." They who slew him fled away, and their title, shouted + in the winter darkness that filled the church, was heard above the thunder + and has echoed down the ages since: Reaux! Reaux! King's men! King's men! + Is it not they who now sit in Becket's place? + </p> + <p> + But to-day I am content with a judgment less bitter and less logical. Who + may know what is in the heart of God? Perhaps after all, after this age of + ice, Canterbury will rise again and my little son even may hear them + singing in the streets, gay once more and alive with endless processions + that noble old song: + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Laureata novo Thoma, + Sicut suo Petro Roma, + Gaude Cantuaria! +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-5" id="linkimage-5"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/006.jpg" width="100%" + alt="Canterbury Cathedral from Christchurch Gate " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + For though St Thomas be forgot in Canterbury, he is on high and valiant, + and one day maybe he will return from exile as before, to accomplish + wonderful things. + </p> + <p> + And indeed dead as she is and silent, Canterbury is worthy of resurrection + if only because she is as it were a part of him and a part, too, of our + origins, the well, though not the source from which the Faith was given + us. For some thirteen hundred years when men have spoken of Canterbury, + they have had in mind the metropolitan church of England, the great + cathedral which still stands so finely there in the rather gloomy close + behind Christ Church gate, rightly upon the foundations of its + predecessors, Roman, Saxon, and Norman buildings. Ever since there was a + civilisation in England, there has been a church in this place; it is our + duty, then, as well as our pleasure to approach it to-day with reverence. + </p> + <p> + Canterbury began as we began in the swamps and the forests, a little lake + village in the marshes of the Stour, holding the lowest ford, not beyond + the influence of the sea nor out of reach of fresh water. When great Rome + broke into England lost in mist, here certainly she established a city + that was as it were the focus of all the ports of the Straits whence most + easily a man might come into England from the continent. Canterbury grew + because she was almost equally near to the ports we know as Lympne, Dover, + Richborough and Reculvers, so that a man setting out from the continent + and doubtful in which port he would land, wholly at the mercy of wind and + tide as he was, would name Canterbury to his correspondent in England as a + place of meeting. Thus Canterbury increased. There in the Roman times + doubtless a church arose which, doubtless, too, perished in the Diocletian + persecution. That it re-arose we know, for Venerable Bede describes it as + still existing when, nearly two hundred years after the departure of the + Roman legions, St Augustine came into England, sent by St Gregory to make + us Christians. He came, as we know, first into Kent to find Canterbury the + royal capital of King Ethelbert, and when, says Bede, "an episcopal see + had been given to Augustine in the king's own city he <i>regained + possession (re</i>cuperavit) with the king's help, <i>of a church there + which he was informed had been built in the city long before by Roman + believers</i>. This he consecrated in the name of the Holy Saviour Jesus + Christ, our Lord and God, and fixed there a home for himself and all his + successors." [Footnote: Bede, <i>Hist. Eccl.</i>, I. xxviii.] This church, + rudely repaired, added to and rebuilt, stood until Lanfranc's day, when it + was pulled down and destroyed to make way for the great Norman building + out of which the church we have has grown. + </p> + <p> + The little church which Lanfranc destroyed and which had seen so many + vicissitudes, was probably a work of the end of the fourth century, at any + rate in its foundations. Eadmer indeed who tells us all we know of it says + that it was built on the plan of St Peter's in Rome. "This was that very + church," he writes, "which had been built by Romans as Bede witnesses in + his history, and which was duly arranged in some parts in imitation of the + church of the blessed Prince of the Apostles, Peter, in which his holy + relics are exalted by the veneration of the whole world." We shall never + know much more than Eadmer tells us, for if the foundations still exist + they lie within the present church. It is recorded, however, that in the + time of St Elphege the church was badly damaged by the Danes, the + archbishop himself being martyred at Greenwich. No doubt as often before, + the church was patched up, only to perish by fire in 1067, the year after + the Battle of Hastings. + </p> + <p> + When Lanfranc then entered Canterbury, he found his Cathedral a mere ruin, + but with his usual energy, though already a man of sixty-five, he set to + work to re-establish not only his Cathedral but also the monastery + attached to it. He did this on a great scale, providing accommodation for + three times the number of monks that had served the Cathedral in the + decadent days of the Saxon monarchy, and when this was done he first + "destroyed utterly" the Romano-Saxon church and then "set about erecting a + more noble one, and in the space of seven years, 1070- 1077, he raised + this from the foundations and brought it near to perfection." That he + worked in great haste and too quickly seems certain. In fact it must be + confessed that Lanfranc's church in Canterbury was a more or less exact + copy of his church of St Stephen at Caen, but, built much more quickly, + was too mean for its purpose. It soon became necessary to rebuild the + choir and sanctuary; the nave, however, was allowed to stand until the end + of the fourteenth century; but even then its design so hampered the + builders of the present nave, for it had been decided to preserve one of + Lanfranc's western towers, that to this day the nave of Canterbury is too + short, consisting of but eight bays. + </p> + <p> + Lanfranc's choir was of but two bays and an apse. This was too obviously + inadequate to be tolerated by the monks. In 1096 it was pulled down and a + great apsidal choir of ten bays was built over a lofty crypt, with a tower + on either side the apse and an eastern transept having four apsidal + chapels in the eastern walls, two in the north arm and two in the south. + All this was done in the time of St Anselm and finished in 1115, when + Conrad was Prior of Christ Church. + </p> + <p> + It was this church with Lanfranc's short Norman nave, western façade and + towers, and Conrad's glorious great choir high up over the crypt, a choir + broader than the nave and longer too, and with two transepts, the western + of Lanfranc's time, the eastern of St Anselm's, that St Thomas knew and + that saw his martyrdom in 1170. + </p> + <p> + Materials for the life of St Thomas are so plentiful that his modern + biographers are able to compose a life fuller perhaps in detail and fact + than would be possible in the case of any other man of his time. But no + account ever written of his martyrdom is at once so simple and so touching + as that to be found in the Golden Legend. It was this account which the + man of the Middle Age knew by heart, and which brought him in his + thousands on pilgrimage to Canterbury, and therefore I give it here. + </p> + <p> + "When the King of France had made accord between St Thomas and King Henry, + the Archbishop," Voragine tells us, "came home to Canterbury, where he was + received worshipfully, and sent for them that had trespassed against him, + and by the authority of the Pope's Bull openly denounced them accursed, + unto the time they came to amendment. And when they heard this they came + to him and would have made him assoil them by force; and sent word over to + the King how he had done, whereof the King was much wroth and said: If he + had men in his land that loved him they would not suffer such a traitor in + his land alive. + </p> + <p> + "And forthwith four knights took their counsel together and thought they + would do to the King a pleasure and emprised to slay St Thomas and + suddenly departed and took their shipping toward England. And when the + King knew of their departing he was sorry and sent after them, but they + were in the sea and departed ere the messenger came, wherefore the King + was heavy and sorry. + </p> + <p> + "These be the names of the four knights: Sir Reginald Fitzurse, Sir Hugh + de Morville, Sir William de Tracy and Sir Richard le Breton. + </p> + <p> + "On Christmas Day St Thomas made a sermon at Canterbury in his own church + and, weeping, prayed the people to pray for him, for he knew well his time + was nigh, and there executed the sentence on them that were against the + right of Holy Church. And that same day as the King sat at meat all the + bread that he handled waxed anon mouldy and hoar that no man might eat of + it, and the bread that they touched not was fair and good for to eat. + </p> + <p> + "And these four knights aforesaid came to Canterbury on the Tuesday in + Christmas week, about evensong time and came to St Thomas and said that + the King commanded him to make amends for the wrongs he had done and also + that he should assoil all them that he had accursed anon or else they + should slay him. Then said Thomas: All that I ought to do by right, that + will I with a good will do, but as to the sentence that is executed I may + not undo, but that they will submit them to the correction of Holy Church, + for it was done by our holy father the Pope and not by me. Then said Sir + Reginald: But if thou assoil not the King and all other standing in the + curse it shall cost thee thy life. And St Thomas said: Thou knowest well + enough that the King and I were accorded on Mary Magdalene day and that + this curse should go forth on them that had offended the Church. + </p> + <p> + "Then one of the knights smote him as he kneeled before the altar, on the + head. And one Sir Edward Grim, that was his crossier, put forth his arm + with the cross to bear off the stroke, and the stroke smote the cross + asunder and his arm almost off, wherefore he fled for fear and so did all + the monks that were that time at Compline. And then each smote at him, + that they smote off a great piece of the skull of his head, that his brain + fell on the pavement. And so they slew and martyred him, and were so cruel + that one of them brake the point of his sword against the pavement. And + thus this holy and blessed archbishop St Thomas suffered death in his own + church for the right of all Holy Church. And when he was dead they stirred + his brain, and after went in to his chamber and took away his goods and + his horse out of his stable, and took away his Bulls and writings and + delivered them to Sir Robert Broke to bear into France to the King. And as + they searched his chambers they found in a chest two shirts of hair made + full of great knots, and then they said: Certainly he was a good man; and + coming down into the churchyard they began to dread and fear that the + ground would not have borne them, and were marvellously aghast, but they + supposed that the earth would have swallowed them all quick. And then they + knew that they had done amiss. And soon it was known all about, how that + he was martyred, and anon after they took his holy body and unclothed him + and found bishop's clothing above and the habit of a monk under. And next + his flesh he wore hard hair, full of knots, which was his shirt, and his + breech was of the same, and the knots sticked fast within his skin, and + all his body full of worms; he suffered great pain. And he was thus + martyred the year of Our Lord one thousand one hundred and seventy-one, + and was fifty-three years old. And soon after tidings came to the King how + he was slain, wherefore the King took great sorrow, and sent to Rome for + his absolution...." + </p> + <p> + Of the King's penance Voragine says nothing, but indeed it must have + reverberated through Europe, though not perhaps with so enormous a rumour + as the humiliation of the Emperor Henry IV. before Pope Gregory VII. at + Canossa scarce a hundred years before had done. The first and the most + famous of Canterbury pilgrims came to St Dunstan's church upon the Watling + Street, outside the great West Gate of Canterbury, as we may believe in + July 1174. There he stripped him of his robes and, barefoot in a woollen + shirt, entered the city and walked barefoot through the streets to the + door of the Cathedral. There he knelt, and being received into the great + church, was led to the place of Martyrdom where he knelt again and kissed + the stones where St Thomas had fallen. In the crypt where the body of the + martyr was preserved, the King laid aside his cloak and received five + strokes with a rod from every Bishop and Abbot there present, and three + from every one of the eighty monks. In that place he remained through the + whole night fasting and weeping to be absolved on the following day. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-6" id="linkimage-6"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/007.jpg" width="100%" alt="West Gate, Canterbury " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + The martyrdom of St Thomas, the penance of the King, these world- shaking + and amazing events might in themselves, we may think, have been enough to + transform the church in which they took place, if as was thought at the + time, heaven itself had not intervened and destroyed Conrad's glorious + choir by fire. This disaster fell upon the city and the country like a + final judgment, less than two months after the penance of the King in + 1174, and within four years of St Thomas's murder. + </p> + <p> + Something of the great masterpiece that then perished is left to us + especially without, and it is perhaps the most charming work remaining in + the city, the tower of St Anselm, for instance, and much of the transept + beside it. + </p> + <p> + For the rest the choir of Canterbury, as we know it, the choir began in + 1174 by William of Sens, is as French as its predecessor, but in all else + very different. In order perhaps to provide a great space for the shrine + of the newly canonised St Thomas of Canterbury, to whose tomb already half + Europe was flocking, the choir was built even longer than its predecessor. + The great space provided for the shrine in the Trinity Chapel behind the + choir and high altar opened on the east into a circular chapel known, + perhaps on account of the relic it held, as Becket's Crown. Till 1220 when + all was ready, the body of St Thomas lay in an iron coffin in the crypt, + and the great feast and day of pilgrimage in his honour was the day of his + martyrdom, December 29, so incredibly honourable as being within the + octave of the Nativity of Our Lord. But in 1220 it was decided to + translate the body from the crypt to the new shrine in the Trinity Chapel + in July, for the winter pilgrimage was irksome. From that year a new feast + was established, the feast of the Translation of St Thomas upon July 7th, + and thus in England down to our own day, St Thomas has two feasts, that of + his Martyrdom on December 29, when still his relics are exposed in the + great Catholic Cathedral of Westminster, and in the little church of St + Thomas, the Catholic sanctuary in Canterbury, and that of his Translation + upon July 7th. + </p> + <p> + Of that first summer pilgrimage to the new shrine of St Thomas we have + very full accounts. It was the most glorious and the most extraordinary + assemblage that had perhaps ever been seen in England. The Archbishop had + given two years' notice of the event, and this had been circulated not + only in all England, but throughout Europe. "Orders had been issued for + maintenance to be provided for the vast multitude not only in the city of + Canterbury itself, but on the various roads by which the pilgrims would + approach. During the whole celebration along the whole way from London to + Canterbury, hay and provender were given to all who asked, and at each + gate of Canterbury in the four quarters of the city and in the four + licensed cellars, were placed tuns of wine to be distributed gratis, and + on the day of the festival, wine ran freely through the gutters of the + streets." In the presence of the young Henry III., too young himself to + bear a part, the coffin in which lay the relics of St Thomas was borne on + the shoulders of the Papal Legate, the Archbishop Stephen Langton, the + Grand Justiciary Hubert de Burgh, and the Archbishop of Rheims, from the + crypt up to the Trinity Chapel in the presence of every Bishop and Abbot + of England, of the great officials of the kingdom and of the special + ambassadors of every state in Europe. + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Of bishops and abbots, prior and parsons, + Of earls and of barons and of many knights thereto, + Of sergeants and of squires and of his husbandmen enow, + And of simple men eke of the land—so thick hither drew. +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + So was St Thomas vindicated and God avenged. And St Thomas reigned as was + thought for ever on high, in the new sanctuary of his Cathedral Church. + </p> + <p> + I say he reigned on high. The choir and sanctuary of Canterbury had even + in St Anselm's time as we have seen, been high above the nave. William of + Sens designed the new choir, as high as the old, but very nobly raised + still higher, the great altar, and higher yet the Chapel of the Trinity in + which stood the shrine. St Thomas had an especial devotion to the Holy + Trinity. It was in a former Trinity Chapel that he had said his first + Mass, and whether on this account or another, his devotion was such that + it was he who first established that Feast, till then merely the octave of + Whitsunday. His shrine then was well placed in the Chapel of the Holy + Trinity. + </p> + <p> + In examining the church to-day one can well understand the beauty of + William of Sens' idea, and see, too, where, and perhaps understand why, it + really fails or at least comes short of perfection. + </p> + <p> + William of Sens trained in Latin traditions had, and rightly, little + respect, we may think, for the work of the past. He would have had all + new. But by 1174, unlike Anselm in 1096, and still more unlike Lanfranc in + 1070, he had in all probability a genuine English and national prejudice + to meet, an English dislike of destruction and an English hatred of + anything new. + </p> + <p> + It has been said that the failure of William of Sens' design was due to + the meanness of the monks of Christ Church. But meanness is not an English + failing; on the contrary, our great fault is the very opposite, + extravagance. It was surely not meanness and at such a time and in such a + cause that forced the monastery to deny William of Sens the free hand he + desired; it was prejudice and a fear, almost barbaric; of destruction. The + monks forced their builder to accommodate the new choir to what remained + of the old work. They refused to sacrifice St Anselm's tower on the south + or the tower of St Andrew on the north, therefore the wide choir of + Canterbury, already wider than the nave and growing wider still as it went + eastward, had to be strangled between them, and to open again as well as + it could into the Trinity Chapel and the Corona. All that was old, too, + and that they loved they used; the old piers of the crypt were to remain + and still to support the pillars of the choir, which were thus, no doubt + to William's disgust, unequally placed so that here the arches are pointed + but there round. In many ways William must have considered his employers + barbarians, and in the true sense of that much abused term, he was right. + No man brought up in the Greek and Latin traditions would have hesitated + to destroy in order to build anew. The English cannot do that; they patch + and make do, and what must be new they cannot love until it is old; their + buildings are not so much works of art as growths, and there is much to be + said for them. Only here at Canterbury their prejudice has been a + misfortune. Not even the most convinced Englishman can look upon the + twisted and constricted choir of Canterbury and rejoice. + </p> + <p> + William of Sens, however, hampered though he was, is responsible for the + work we see. It is true he died after some four years of work at + Canterbury, falling one day from a scaffold, but William the Englishman + who followed him only completed what was really already finished. The + design, the idea, and the genius of Canterbury choir are + </p> + <p> + French, spoiled by English prejudice, but undoubtedly French for all that. + </p> + <p> + As it appeared when that great Transitional choir was finished, Canterbury + Cathedral remained till 1379. It is true that the north wall of the + cloister and the lovely doorway in the north-east corner were built in the + Early English time. It is equally true that the lower part of the Chapter + House and the screens north and south of the choir and a glorious window + in St Anselm's Chapel are Decorated work, but the Cathedral itself knows + nothing of the Early English or of the Decorated styles. It stood till + 1379 with a low and short Norman nave and transept to the west, and a + great Transitional choir and transept to the east. In 1379 Lanfranc's nave + and transept were destroyed. + </p> + <p> + It may be thought that at last a great and noble nave would be built north + of the Frenchman's choir. Not at all. Again the English prejudice against + destruction—a lack of intellectual daring in us perhaps— + prevented this. One of the western towers of Lanfranc was to remain, and + therefore the new nave though loftier than the old, was no longer, and it + remains a glory certainly without, but within a hopeless disappointment + saved from utter ineffectiveness only by the noble height of the great + choir above it. It remains without life or zest, not an experiment but a + task honestly and thoroughly done in the Perpendicular style. + </p> + <p> + To the same period belong the great western screen of the choir, the + Chapel of St Michael and the Warrior's Chapel in the south transept, the + Lady Chapel in the north transept, the Chantry and the tomb of Henry IV. + in the Trinity Chapel, the Black Prince's Chantry and the screens of the + Lady Chapel in the Crypt, the upper part of the Chapter House, now lost to + us by restoration, and the south-west Tower. + </p> + <p> + There remained at the end of the fifteenth century but one thing needed—the + central Tower. This, as it happened, was to be the last great Gothic work + undertaken in this country, and in every way it is one of the most + impressive and successful. Begun in 1475 and finished in 1503, the Angel + Steeple is the last of Catholicism in England, and I like to think of it + towering as it does over that dead city, and the low hills of Kent, over + all that was once so sacred and is now nothing, as a kind of beacon, a + sign of hope until it shall ring the Angelus again and once more the sons + of St Benedict shall chant the Mass of St Thomas before the shrine new + made: <i>Gaudeamus omnes in Domino, diem festum celebrantes, sub honore + beati Thomae Martyris, de cujus passione gaudent angeli et collaudant + filium Dei</i>. + </p> + <p> + For the great shrine, which for so long had been the loftiest beacon in + England of the Christian Faith, was destroyed. It was the first work of + the last Henry to avenge his namesake, and having made another Thomas + martyr in the same cause, to wipe out for ever all memory of the first who + had steadfastly withstood his predecessor. It is strange that the severed + head of Blessed Thomas More should lie in the very church whence Henry II. + set forth to do penance for the murder of the first Thomas. + </p> + <p> + We have no authentic record of the final catastrophe, such deeds are + usually done in darkness. All we really know is that in 1538 "the bones, + by command of the Lord (Thomas) Cromwell, were there and then burnt ... + the spoile of the shrine in golde and precious stones filled two greate + chests such as six or seven strong men could doe no more than convey one + of them out of the church." That the shrine was of unsurpassed + magnificence we have many witnesses. "The tomb of St Thomas the Martyr," + writes a Venetian traveller who had seen it, "surpasses all belief. + Notwithstanding its great size it is wholly covered with plates of pure + gold; yet the gold is scarce seen because it is covered with various + precious stones as sapphires, balasses, diamonds, rubies and emeralds; and + wherever the eye turns something more beautiful than the rest is observed; + nor in addition to these natural beauties is the skill of art wanting, for + in the midst of the gold are the most beautiful sculptured gems, both + small and large as well as such as are in relief, as agates, onyxes, + cornelians and cameos; and some cameos are of such size that I am afraid + to name it; but everything is far surpassed by a ruby, not larger than a + thumb-nail, which is fixed at the right of the altar. The church is + somewhat dark and particularly in the spot where the shrine is placed, and + when we went to see it the sun was near setting and the weather cloudy; + nevertheless I saw the ruby as if I had it in my hand. They say it was + given by a king of France." + </p> + <p> + To carry out the theft with impunity it was first of all necessary to + degrade the great national hero and saint and expose his memory to + ridicule. In November 1538 St Thomas was declared a traitor, every + representation of him was ordered to be destroyed, and his name was erased + from all service books, antiphones, collects and prayers under pain of his + Majesty's indignation, and imprisonment at his Grace's pleasure. The saint + indeed is said to have been cited to appear at Westminster for treason, + and there to have been tried and condemned. That seems, too + superstitiously insolent even for such a thing as Henry. But we may + believe Marillac, the French Ambassador, when he tells us "St Thomas is + declared a traitor <i>because</i> his relics and bones were adorned with + gold and stones." + </p> + <p> + So perished the shrine and memory of St Thomas, and with it the thousand + year old religion of England to be replaced by one knows not what. + </p> + <p> + With the destruction of religion went the destruction of the religious + houses. Of these the chief was the Benedictine monastery of Christ Church + which lay to the north of the Cathedral and whose monks from St + Augustine's time had always served it. Almost nothing remains of this, + save the Cloister and Chapter House and Treasury attached to the + Cathedral, the Castellum Aquae, now called the Baptistery, the Prior's + Chapel, now the Chapter Library, the Deanery, once part of the Prior's + lodging, the Porter's gate, the Norman staircase of the King's school and + the fragmentary ruins scattered about the precincts, including the remains + of the Archbishop's Palace in Palace Street. + </p> + <p> + Not less venerable than the Benedictine House of Christ Church was the + other Benedictine monastery, also founded by St Augustine in honour of SS. + Peter and Paul, to which dedication St Dunstan added the name of St + Augustine himself. This stood outside the city to the east. It is said to + have been founded by St Augustine outside the walls with a view to his own + interment there since it was not the Roman custom, as we know, to bury the + dead within the walls of a city. So honourable a place in the Order did + this great house hold that we are told the abbot of St Augustine's + Canterbury sat next to the abbot of Monte Cassino, the mother house, in + the councils of the Order, and none but the archbishop himself consecrated + the abbot of St Augustine's, and that in the Abbey Church. This also Henry + stole away, seizing it for his own use. But by 1844 what was left of the + place had become a brewery, and to-day there remains scarcely more than a + great fourteenth century gateway and hall, the work of Abbot Fyndon in + 1300. Of the church there is left a few fragments of walling, of St + Augustine's tomb, nothing whatsoever. + </p> + <p> + Less still remains to us of the smaller religious houses that abounded in + Canterbury. Of the Austin Canons, the Priory of St Gregory founded by + Lanfranc in 1084 near St John's Hospital, also a foundation of Lanfranc, + in Northgate Street, really nothing, a fragment of old wall; of the + Nunnery of St Sepulchre, a Benedictine house, nothing at all. As for the + Friars' houses scarcely more remains. Of the earliest, the Dominican + house, only the scantiest ruins of the convent, the refectory, however, + once in the hands of the Anabaptists, is now a Unitarian chapel. Of the + White Friars, nothing. Of the Franciscan house, the charming thirteenth + century ruin that stands over the river to the south of St Peter's Street. + That is all. + </p> + <p> + The Canterbury of St Thomas is no more, it perished with his shrine and + his religion. Even the hospital he is said to have founded, which at any + rate was dedicated in his honour, was suppressed by Edward VI.; it is, + however, still worth a visit, if only for the sake of the wall painting + recovered in 1879, in which we see the Martyrdom, and the penance of the + King. + </p> + <p> + But in Canterbury to-day St Thomas is really a stranger, no relic, + scarcely a remembrance of him remains; yet he was the soul of the city, he + is named in the calendar of his Church St Thomas of Canterbury. + </p> + <p> + No relic do I say? I am wrong. Let all the pilgrims of the past come in at + the four gates in their thousands and their thousands; let the great + processions form as though this were a year of jubilee, they shall not be + disappointed. Yet it is not to the Cathedral they shall go, but to an ugly + little church (alas!), in a back street, where over the last altar upon + the Epistle side there is a shrine and in the shrine a relic—the + Soutan of St Thomas. The place is humble and meek enough to escape the + notice of all but the pilgrims who sought and seek Canterbury only for St + Thomas. + </p> + <p> + Musing there in the late spring sunshine, for the church is open and + quiet, and within there is always a Guest, I fell asleep; and in my sleep + that Guest came to me and I spoke with Him. It seemed to me that I was + walking in early morning—all in the England of my heart—across + meadows through which flowed a clear translucent stream, and the meadows + were a mass of flowers, narcissus, jonquil, violet, for it was spring. And + beyond the meadows was a fair wood all newly dressed, and out of the wood + there came towards me a man, and I knew it was the Lord Christ. And I went + on to meet Him. And when I was come to Him I said: "I shall never + understand what You mean ... I shall never understand what You mean. For + You say the meek shall inherit the earth.... I shall never understand what + You mean." + </p> + <p> + And He looked at me and smiled, and stretching forth His hands and looking + all about He answered: "But I spoke of the flowers." + </p> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH7" id="link2HCH7"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER VII + </h2> + <p> + THE VALLEY OF THE STOUR CAESAR IN KENT + </p> + <p> + It was upon as fair a spring morning as ever was in England, that I set + out from Canterbury through the West Gate, and climbing up the shoulder of + Harbledown, some little way past St Dunstan's, turned out of the Watling + Street, south and west into the old green path or trackway, which, had I + followed it to the end, would have brought me right across Kent and Surrey + and Hampshire to Winchester the old capital of England. This trackway, far + older than history, would doubtless have perished utterly, as so many of + its fellows have done, but for two very different events, the first of + which was the Martyrdom of St Thomas, and the other the practice of + demanding tolls upon the great new system of turnpike-roads we owe to the + end of the eighteenth century. For this ancient British track leading half + across England of my heart, a barbarous thing, older than any written word + in England, was used and preserved, when, with the full blossoming of the + Middle Age in the thirteenth century, it might have disappeared. It was + preserved by the Pilgrims to St Thomas's Shrine. All those men who came + out of the West to visit St Thomas, all those who came from Brittany, + central and southern France and Spain, gathered at Winchester, the old + capital of the Kingdom, and when they set out thence for Canterbury this + was the way they followed across the counties; this most ancient way which + enters Canterbury hand in hand with the Watling Street by the West Gate. + </p> + <p> + To describe a thing so ancient is impossible. It casts a spell upon the + traveller so that as he follows under its dark yews across the steep hop + gardens of Kent from hillside to hillside, up this valley or that, along + the mighty south wall of the North Downs to the great ford of the Medway, + and beyond and beyond through more than a hundred miles to Winchester he + loses himself; becomes indeed one with his forefathers and looks upon that + dear and ancient landscape, his most enduring and most beautiful + possession as a child looks upon his mother, really with unseeing eyes, + unable to tell whether she be fair or no, understanding indeed but this + that she is a part of himself, and that he loves her more than anything + else in the world. + </p> + <p> + But that glorious way in all its fulness was not for me. I had determined + to follow the Pilgrims' Road but a little way, indeed but for one long + day's journey, so far only as Boghton Aluph, where it turns that great + corner westward and proceeds along the rampart of the Downs. But even in + the ten miles twixt Canterbury and Boghton, that ancient way gives to him + who follows it wonderful things. + </p> + <p> + To begin with, the valley of the Stour. There can be few valleys in this + part of England more lovely than this steep and wide vale, through the hop + gardens, the woods and meadows of which, the Great Stour proceeds like a + royal pilgrim, half in state to Canterbury, and on to the mystery of the + marshes, and its death in the sea. Above Canterbury certainly, and all + along my way, there is not a meadow nor a wood, nor indeed a single mile + of that landscape, which has not been contrived and created by man, by the + love and labour of our fathers through how many thousand years. And this + is part of the virtue of England, that it is as it were a garden of our + making, a pleasaunce we have built, a paradise and a home after our own + hearts. And in that divine and tireless making we, without knowing it, + have so moulded ourselves that we are one with it, it is a part of us, a + part of our character and nature. There lie ever before us our beginnings, + the earthworks we once defended, the graves we built, the defeats, the + victories, the holy places. By these a man lives, out of these he draws + slowly and with a sort of confidence the uncertain future, glad indeed of + this divine assurance that there is nothing new under the sun. + </p> + <p> + Such monuments of an antiquity so great that they have no history but what + may be gathered from barrows and stones, accompany one upon any day's + journey in southern England, but it is only in one place that a man can + stand and say: Here began the history of my country. That place as it + happens lies as it should upon the Pilgrims' Road. + </p> + <p> + Beyond Harbledown, some two miles from Canterbury, he Pilgrims' Road along + the hillside passes clean through earthwork of unknown antiquity. Well, it + was here the Seventh Legion charged: here, indeed, we stand upon the very + battlefield which saw the birth of civilisation in our island. Lying there + in the early morning sunshine I considered it all over again. + </p> + <p> + Caesar's first landing in Britain in B.C. 55 had been, as he himself tells + us, merely a reconnaissance. In the following summer, however, he returned + in force, indeed with a very considerable army, and with the intention of + bringing us, too, within that great administration which he and his + adoptive son Augustus were to do so much to make a final and in many ways + an indestructible thing. + </p> + <p> + It might seem that in spite of the lack of the means of rapid + communication we possess, the admirable system of Roman roads enabled + Caesar to administer his huge government—he was then in control of + the two Gauls—with a thoroughness we might envy. After his first + return from Britain in the early autumn of B.C. 55 he crossed the Alps, + completed much business in Cisalpine Gaul, journeyed into Illyricum to see + what damage the Pirustae had done, dealt with them effectively, returned + to Cisalpine Gaul, held conventions, crossed the Alps again, rejoined his + army, went round all their winter quarters, inspected all the many ships + he was building at Portus Itius and other places, marched with four + Legions and some cavalry against a tribe of Belgae known as the Treviri, + settled matters with them, and before the summer of B.C. 54 was back at + Portus Itius, making final preparations for the invasion of Britain. + </p> + <p> + This invasion, glorious as it was to be, and full of the greatest results + for us, was accompanied all through by a series of petty disasters. Caesar + had purposed to set out certainly early in July, but delay followed upon + delay, and when he was ready at last, the wind settled into the north-west + and blew steadily from that quarter for twenty-five days. It had been a + dry summer and all Gaul was suffering from drought. The great preparations + which Caesar had been making for at least a year were at last complete, + the specially built ships, wide and of shallow draft, of an intermediate + size between his own swift- sailing vessels and those of burthen which he + had gathered locally, were all ready to the number of six hundred, with + twenty-eight <i>naves longae</i> or war vessels, and some two hundred of + the older boats. But the wind made a start impossible for twenty-five + days. + </p> + <p> + It was not till August that the south-west came to his assistance. As soon + as might be he embarked five Legions, say twenty-thousand men, with two + thousand cavalry and horses, an enormous transport, and doubtless a great + number of camp followers, leaving behind on the continent three legions + and two thousand horse to guard the harbours and provide corn, and to + inform him what was going on in Gaul in his absence, and to act in case of + necessity. + </p> + <p> + He himself set sail from Portus Itius, which we may take to be Boulogne, + at sunset, that is to say about half-past seven; but he must, it might + seem, have devoted the whole day to getting so many ships out of harbour. + The wind was blowing gently from the south-west, bearing him, his fortunes + and ours. At midnight the second of those small disasters which met him at + every turn upon this expedition fell upon him. The wind failed. In + consequence his great fleet of transports was helpless, it drifted along + with the tide, fortunately then running up the Straits, but this bore him + beyond his landing-place of the year before, and daybreak found him + apparently far to the east of the North Foreland. What can have been the + thoughts of the greatest of men, helpless in the midst of this treacherous + and unknown sea? To every Roman the sea was bitter, even the tideless + Mediterranean, how much more this furious tide-whipt channel. Caesar + cannot but have remembered how it had half broken him in the previous + year. Very profoundly he must have mistrusted it. But his Gaulish sailors + were doubtless less disturbed; they expected the ebb, and when it came, + every man doing his utmost, the transports were brought as swiftly as the + long ships to that "fair and open" beach where Caesar had landed in the + previous summer, the long beach which Deal and Sandwich hold. + </p> + <p> + Caesar himself, as it happens, does not tell us that he landed in the same + place upon this his second invasion of Britain as he had done before; it + is to Dion Cassius that we owe the knowledge that he did so. It is Caesar, + however, who tells us that he landed about mid-day and that all his ships + held together and reached shore about the same time. He adds that there + was no enemy to be seen, though, as he afterwards learned from his + prisoners, large bodies of British troops had been assembled, but, alarmed + at the great number of the ships, more than eight hundred of which, + including the ships of the previous year and the private vessels which + some had built for their convenience, had appeared at one time, they had + retreated from the coast and taken to the heights. The heights must have + been the hills to the south of Canterbury, nearly a day's march from the + sea. + </p> + <p> + If Caesar landed, as we know from Dion Cassius that he did, in the same + place as he had done in the previous year, he must have known all there + was to know about the natural facilities there for camping, about the + supply of fresh water for instance. But perhaps he had not considered the + dryness of the summer. In any case it might seem to have been some + pressing need, such as the necessity for a plentiful supply of fresh + water, which forced him immediately to make a night march with his army. + Leaving as he tells us, under Quintus Atrius, ten cohorts, that is, as we + may suppose, two cohorts from each of his five legions, and three hundred + horse to guard the ships at anchor, and to hold the camp, hastily made + between midday and midnight, in the third watch, that is between midnight + and three o'clock, he started with his five legions and seventeen hundred + horse, as he asserts, to seek out the enemy. Something, we may be sure, + more pressing than an attack upon a barbarian foe there was no hurry to + meet, must have forced Caesar to march his army sleepless now for two + nights, one of which had been spent upon an unusual and anxious adventure + at sea, out of camp, in the small hours, into an unknown and roadless + country in search of an enemy which had taken to its native hills. The + necessity that forced Caesar to this dangerous course was probably a lack + of fresh water. He was seeking a considerable river, for the smaller + streams, as he probably found, could not suffice after a long drought for + so great a force as he had landed. + </p> + <p> + He himself asserts that he advanced "by night" across that roadless and + unknown country a distance of twelve miles. We know of course of what the + armies of Caesar were capable in the way of marching; there have never + been troops carrying anything like their weight of equipment which have + done better than they; but to march something like fifteen thousand men + and seventeen hundred horse twelve miles in about three hours into the + unknown and the dark, is an impossible proceeding. That march of "about + twelve miles" cannot have occupied less than from six to eight hours, one + would think, and the greater part of it must have been accomplished by + daylight, which would break about half-past three o'clock. As we have good + reason to think, Caesar's march, however long a time it may have occupied, + was in search of fresh water, and it is significant that when the Britons + were at last seen, they "were advancing to the river with their cavalry + and chariots from the higher ground." In other words, Caesar's march had + brought him into the valley of the Great Stour, where he not only found + the water he sought, but also the enemy, who had probably followed his + march from the great woods all the way. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-7" id="linkimage-7"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/008.jpg" width="100%" alt="On the Stour Near Canterbury " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + The spot at which Caesar struck the valley was, as we may be sure, that + above which the great earthwork stands, opposite Thannington. Here upon + the height was fought the first real battle of Rome upon our soil. It was + opened by the Britons who "began to annoy the Romans and to give battle." + But the Roman cavalry repulsed them so that they again sought refuge in + the woods where was their camp, "a place admirably fortified by nature and + by art ... all entrance to it being shut by a great number of felled + trees." But like all barbarians, the Britons were undisciplined and + preferred to fight in detached parties, and as seemed good to each. Every + now and then some of them rushed out of the woods and fell upon the + Romans, who continually were prevented from storming the fort and forcing + an entry. Much time was thus wasted until the soldiers of the Seventh + Legion, having formed a <i>testudo</i> and thrown up a rampart against the + British fort, took it, and drove the Britons out of the woods, receiving + in return a few, though only a few, wounds. Thus the battle ended in the + victory of our enemies and our saviours. Caesar tells us that he forbade + his men to pursue the enemy for any great distance, because he was + ignorant of the nature of the country, and because, the day being far + spent, he wished to devote what remained of the daylight to the building + of his camp. + </p> + <p> + Caesar speaks of this camp and rightly of course, as a thing of + importance. We know from his narrative, too, that it was occupied by some + fifteen thousand foot and seventeen hundred horse, with their baggage and + equipment for more than ten days. Where did it stand? It must have been + within reach of the river, for without plentiful water no such army as + Caesar encamped could have maintained itself for so long a period as ten + days; exactly where it was, however, we shall in all probability never + know. + </p> + <p> + Wherever it was, there Caesar spent the night, both he and his army, + sleeping soundly, we may be sure, after the sleepless and anxious nights, + one spent in the peril of the sea, the other in a not less perilous night + march in a roadless and unknown country. + </p> + <p> + Yet did Caesar sleep? Towards sunset the wind arose, and all night a great + gale blew. This was the fourth misfortune the expedition had experienced. + It had first been delayed for twenty-four days in starting; it had then + lost the wind and had been for hours at the mercy of the tide, only + landing at last when the day was far spent after a whole night upon the + waters; it had been compelled by lack of water to quit the camp at the + landing-place without rest, and utterly weary and sleepless, to undertake + a perilous night march in search of water. And now in the darkness, after + the first encounter with the enemy, a great gale arose. + </p> + <p> + How often during that night must Caesar have awakened and thought of the + sea and his transports. It was, as he would remember, just such a storm + which had ruined him in the previous summer. To avoid a like disaster he + had had his boats built for this expedition, shallow of draft and with + flat bottoms that they might be beached. But with the Mediterranean in his + mind and the certain weather of the south, Caesar, seeing the August sky + so soft and clear, had anchored and not beached the ships after all. + Perhaps the late landing, the necessity of building a large camp, and + finally the perilous lack of water had prevented him from calling upon his + men for a task so enormous as the beaching of eight hundred ships. + Whatever had prevented him, that task was not undertaken. The eight + hundred ships were anchored in the shallows, when, upon that third night + of the expedition, a great gale arose. + </p> + <p> + Anxious though he must have been, very early in the morning of the + following day, he sent out three skirmishing parties to reconnoitre and + pursue the defeated Britons of the day before; but the last men were not + out of sight when gallopers came in to Caesar from Quintus Atrius, at the + camp by the shore, to report "almost all the ships dashed to pieces and + cast upon the beach because neither the anchors and cables could resist + the force of the gale, nor the sailors or pilots outride it, and thus the + ships had dashed themselves to pieces one against another." + </p> + <p> + The appalling seriousness of this disaster, as reported to Caesar, was at + once understood by him. He recalled his three parties of skirmishers, and + himself at once returned to Quintus Atrius and the ships. He tells us that + "he saw before him almost the very things which he had heard from the + messengers and by letters"; but he adds that only "about forty ships were + lost, the remainder being able to be repaired with much labour." This he + at once began with workmen from the Legions, and others he brought from + the Continent, and at the same time he wrote to Labienus at Portus Itius + "to build as many ships as he could." Then he proceeded to do what he had + intended to do at first; with great difficulty and labour he dragged all + the ships up on the shore and enclosed them in one fortification with the + camp. In these matters about ten days were spent, the men labouring night + and day. Then he returned to the main army upon the Stour. + </p> + <p> + But that delay of ten days had given the Britons time to recover + themselves and to gather all possible forces. Caesar returned to his army + to find "very great forces of the Britons already assembled" to oppose + him, and the chief command and management of the war entrusted to + Cassivellaunus, who, though he had been at war with the men of Kent, was + now placed, so great was the general alarm, in command of the whole war. + </p> + <p> + Caesar, however, cannot have been in any way daunted save perhaps by the + memory of the time already lost and the advancing season. He at once began + his march into Britain. We may well ask by what route he went, and to that + question we shall get no certain answer. But it would seem he must have + marched by one of two ways for he had to cross the Stour, the Medway and + the Thames. We may be sure then that his route lay either along the old + trackway which, straightened and built up later by the Romans, we know as + the Watling Street, which fords the Medway at Rochester, and the Thames at + Lambeth and Westminster, or by the trackway we call the Pilgrims' Way + along the southern slope of the North Downs, in which case he would have + forded the Medway at Aylesford and the Thames at Brentford. The question + is insoluble, Caesar himself giving no indications. + </p> + <p> + Now, when I had well considered all this, I went on to that loveliness + which is Chilham; passing as I went, that earthwork older than any history + called Julaber's Grave, marked by a clump of fir trees. Here of old they + thought to find the grave of that Quintus Laberius, who fell as Caesar + relates, at the head of his men, on the march to the Thames; but it was + probably already older when Caesar passed by, than it would have been now + if he had built it. + </p> + <p> + No one can ever have come, whether by the Pilgrims' Road or another, into + the little hill-village of Chilham, into the piazza there, which is an + acropolis, without delight. It is one of the surprises of England, a place + at once so little, so charming and so unexpected that it is extraordinary + it is not more famous. It stands at a point where more than one little + valley breaks down into the steep valley of the Stour and every way to it + is up hill, under what might seem to be old ramparts crowned now with + cottages and houses, till suddenly you find yourself at the top in a large + piazza or square closed at the end by the church, at the other by the + castle, and on both sides by old lines of houses; really a walled <i>place</i>. + </p> + <p> + The church dedicated in honour of Our Lady is of some antiquity in the + main and older parts, a work of the fourteenth century replacing doubtless + Roman, Saxon and Norman buildings, but with later additions, too, of the + Perpendicular time in the clerestory, for instance, and with much modern + work in the chancel. Of old the place belonged to the alien Priory of + Throwley in this county, itself a cell of the Abbey of St Omer, in Artois; + but when these alien houses were suppressed, Chilham like Throwley itself + went to the new house of Syon, founded by the King. To-day, apart from the + English beauty of the church, not a work of art but of history, its chief + interest lies in its monuments, some strangely monstrous, of the Digges + family—Sir Dudley Digges bought Chilham at the beginning of the + seventeenth century—the Colebrooks, who followed the Digges in 1751 + and a Fogg and a Woldman, the latter holding Chilham until 1860. There is + little to be said of these monuments save that they are none of them in + very good taste, the more interesting being those to Lady Digges, and a + member of the Fogg family, both of the early seventeenth century, in which + the Purbeck has been covered with a charming arabesque and diapered + pattern in relief. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-8" id="linkimage-8"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/009.jpg" width="100%" alt="Chilham " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + But it was not the church, beautiful though I found it on that afternoon + of spring, that made me linger in Chilham, but rather the castle, which + occupies the site of a Roman camp; and perhaps of what a camp? It may be + that it was here Caesar lay on the first night of his resumed march after + the disaster of the ships. It may be that it was here, after all, that + Quintus Laberius fell, and that here he was buried so that the ancient + earthwork known as Julaber's Grave, though certainly far older than + Caesar, was in fact used as the tomb of the hero whose immortality Caesar + insured by naming him in his Commentaries. Who knows? If Julaber is not a + corruption of Laberius as the old antiquaries asserted, and as the people + here about believe, one likes to think it might be, for no other + explanation of this strange name is forthcoming. + </p> + <p> + So I went on through King's wood, and as I came out of it southward I saw + a wonderful thing. For I saw before me that division or part of the world + which stands quite separate from any other and is not Europe, Asia, Africa + nor America, but Romney Marsh. It lay there under the sunset half lost in + its own mists, far off across the near meadows of the Weald, for I was now + upon the southern escarpment of the North Downs and in the foreground rose + the town of Ashford where I was to sleep. It was twilight and more, + however, before I reached it, for in those woods I heard for the first + time that year the nightingale, and my heart, which all day had been full + of Rome, was suddenly changed, so that I went down through the dusk to + Ashford, singing an English song: + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + By a bank as I lay, I lay, + Musing on things past, heigh ho! + In the merry month of May + O towards the close of day— + Methought I heard at last— + O the gentle nightingale, + The lady and the mistress of all musick; + She sits down ever in the dale + Singing with her notès smale + And quavering them wonderfully thick. + O for joy my spirits were quick + To hear the bird how merrily she could sing, + And I said, good Lord, defend + England with Thy most holy hand + And save noble George our King. +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH8" id="link2HCH8"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER VIII + </h2> + <p> + THE WEALD AND THE MARSH + </p> + <p> + Ashford as we see it to-day, a town of thirteen thousand inhabitants, is + altogether a modern place and really in the worst sense, for it owes its + importance and its ugliness to the railway; it is a big junction and the + site of the engineering works of the South Eastern and Chatham Company. + Lacking as it is in almost all material antiquity, it has little that is + beautiful to show us, a fine church with a noble tower that has been + rather absurdly compared with the Angel Steeple at Canterbury—nothing + more—and its history is almost as meagre. It stands, the first town + of the Kentish Weald, where the East Stour flows into the Great Stour, in + the very mouth of the deep valley of the latter which there turns + northward through the Downs. To the North, therefore, it is everywhere cut + off by those great green uplands, save where the valley, at the other end + of which stands Canterbury, breaks them suddenly in twain. To the south it + is cut off by a perhaps greater barrier; between it and the sea, stands + the impassable mystery of Romney Marsh. In such a situation, before the + railways revolutionised travel in England, how could Ashford have had any + importance? Even the old road westward from Dover into Britain, the + Pilgrims' Way to Stonehenge or Winchester passed it by, leaving it in the + Weald to follow the escarpment of the Downs north or west. No Roman road + served it, and indeed it was but a small and isolated place till the + Middle Age began to revive and recreate Europe. Even then Ashford was + probably late in development. + </p> + <p> + Its history, if one may call it history, is concerned with the owners of + the manor of Ashford and not with any civil or municipal records. Indeed + the earlier chroniclers, though they speak of Great Chart and Wye, know + nothing of Ashford which in Domesday Book appears to have consisted of a + few mills and a small church, the manor being in possession of Edward the + Confessor, while St Augustine's at Canterbury and Earl Godwin held certain + lands thereabout. Hugh de Montfort got what the King and Earl Godwin had + possessed, after the Conquest, but the Monastery of St Augustine's seems + to have continued to hold its land. We know nothing more of Ashford, + which, as I have said, till late in the Middle Age consisted of a church + and two mills and a dene for the pannage of hogs in the Weald. It is not + one of the many owners of the Manor who is remembered to-day in Ashford as + its benefactor, but the Lord of the Manor of Ripton during the Wars of the + Roses, Sir John Fogge, who was Treasurer of the Royal Household and a + Privy Councillor. In the fourteenth century the church had passed to Leeds + Abbey, and with the abbey the church of Ashford remained until the + suppression, when it passed to the Dean and Chapter of Canterbury. It was + not, however, the Abbey of Leeds that rebuilt it as we see it, a poor + example it must be confessed in spite of the nobility of the tower, of the + latest style of English Gothic architecture, the Perpendicular. It was Sir + John Fogge, who for this and other reasons, is the father of the town. He + lies in a great tomb in the chancel. As for the Smyths, who lie in the + south transept, Thomas, and Alicia his wife held the manor of Ashford in + the sixteenth century. Alicia was the daughter of Sir Andrew Judde to whom + the manor of Ashford had been mortgaged in the time of Henry VII. Her son, + Sir Michael Smyth, lies close by. The family were later ennobled and bore + the title of Viscounts Strangford. + </p> + <p> + For the outside world, however, Sir John Fogge is not Ashford's greatest + son. This honour belongs surely to Jack Cade whom Shakespeare speaks of as + the "headstrong Kentish man John Cade of Ashford," and who, according to + the poet, if headstrong, proved in the end so feeble- minded that in + Shakespeare's play we might seem to have a picture of one suffering from + general paralysis of the insane. Jack Cade, however, was, as we are + beginning to realise, a much greater and more significant figure than + Shakespeare allows us to see. + </p> + <p> + But Ashford is not made for lingering, it is all for departure, the roads, + if not the trains, lead swiftly away north, south, east and west. As for + me I went by the south-west road which said twelve miles to Tenterden. + </p> + <p> + I went under a fine rain on a day of married white and blue, and even + before I had forgot Ashford, which was long before I crossed the Stour, + the rain had ceased, the sun shone forth and a great wind came out of the + marsh and the sea full of good tidings, so that climbing up to Great Chart + I laughed in my heart to be in England on such a day and on such a road. + </p> + <p> + Great Chart, as I saw while still far off, is a village typical of this + country that I love, if indeed a place so completely itself is typical of + anything: a little English village, but it outfaces the whole world in its + sureness of itself, its quietness and air of immemorial antiquity. Many a + city older by far looks parvenu beside Great Chart. Let us consider, with + tears if you will, what they are making of Rome and be thankful that our + ways are not their ways. For what wins you at once in Great Chart is the + obvious fact that it has always stood there on its hill over the Weald, + and as far as one may see at a glance, much the same as it stands to-day. + And what delights you is the church there on the highest ground, on the + last hill overlooking the great Weald, a sign in the sky, a portent, a + necessary thing natural to the landscape. + </p> + <p> + What you see is a rectangular building with three eastern gables over + three Decorated windows, a long nave roof over square Perpendicular + windows and clerestory, flat outer roofs and tall western Tower, a noble + thing significant of our civilisation and the Faith out of which it has + come. + </p> + <p> + Within, one finds a church like and yet unlike that at Ashford. Nave and + chancel are of the same width, and the arcades run from end to end of the + church really without a break, though half way a wall, borne by three + arches, crosses the church separating the chancel and its chapels from the + nave. The central arch of the three is of course the chancel arch, but the + wall it bears does not reach to the roof so that the nave, clerestory and + roof are seen running on beyond it. All this is curious rather than + lovely, but like every other strangeness in England of my heart, it is to + be explained by the long, long history of things still—Deo gratias—remaining + to us, so that when I said that our buildings were growths rather than + works of art I spoke truth. + </p> + <p> + The church of St Mary of Great Chart is not mentioned in the Domesday + Survey, but that a church existed here in the twelfth century is certain, + for even in the present building we have evidences of Norman work, for + instance in the walling of the south chapel, and in the vestry doorway. + According to the Rev. G.M. Livett, [Footnote: K.A.S. 26.] the Norman nave + was as long as that we have, which is built in all probability on its + foundation. The aisleless Norman church, however, had a central tower to + the east of the present chancel arch and transepts, as well as a chancel. + This church appears to have stood till the fourteenth century, when it was + entirely rebuilt and reclaimed, and all the lower part of the present + church built, to be heightened and lengthened at the end of the fifteenth + century when the clerestory and the chancel arcade were built, a new aisle + wall set up on the north and the south aisle raised, the rood loft built + or rebuilt. + </p> + <p> + We are reminded of all this history by the fine altar tomb in the north + chapel where lie William Goldwell and Alice his wife (d. 1485). Their son + James was Vicar of Great Chart in 1458, and became Bishop of Norwich in + 1472, when he obtained from the Pope "an indulgence in aid of the + restoration of Great Chart church which had been damaged by fire." Here is + the cause and the source of the fifteenth century alterations and the + church we see. The brasses in the church are also interesting. Many of + them commemorate the Tokes of Godinton, who founded the almshouse in the + village, which, rebuilt more than once I think, we still see. All these + things and more than these the great yew in the churchyard has seen as its + shadow grew over the graves. + </p> + <p> + From Great Chart I went on through the spring sunshine across the Weald to + Bethersden, whose quarries have supplied so much of the grey marble one + finds in Kentish churches, in the monuments and effigies and in the old + manor houses in the carved chimney-pieces fair to see. These quarries are + now all but deserted, but of old they were the most famous in Kent, which + is poor in such things. Most of the stone for the cathedrals and greater + religious houses in the county came from Caen, whence it was easily + transported by water; but this stone not only weathered badly, but was too + friable for monumental effigies or sculpture. For these harder stone was + needed, resembling marble, and this Bethersden supplied, as we may see, in + the Cathedrals of Canterbury and Rochester and especially at Hythe where + the chancel arcade is entirely built of it. + </p> + <p> + Something too we may learn at Bethersden of the true nature of the Weald. + I shall have something to say of this later, but here at any rate the + curiously difficult character of this country in regard to the going may + be understood, though of course less easily now than of old. It is said + that before, at the end of the eighteenth century, the excellent system of + roads we still use was built up, the ways hereabouts were so bad—they + are still far from good—that when spring came it was customary to + plough them up in order that they might dry off. We hear of great ladies + going to church in carriages drawn by teams of oxen. Hardly passable after + rain, the roads, says Hasted, were "so miry that the traveller's horse + frequently plunged through them up to the girths of the saddle; and the + waggons sank so deep in the ruts as to slide along on the nave of the + wheels and axle of them. In some few of the principal roads, as from + Tenterden hither, there was a stone causeway, about three feet wide, for + the accommodation of horse and foot passengers; but there was none further + on till near Bethersden, to the great distress of travellers. When these + roads became tolerably dry in summer, they were ploughed up, and laid in a + half circle to dry, the only amendment they ever had. In extreme dry + weather in summer, they became exceedingly hard, and, by traffic, so + smooth as to seem glazed, like a potter's vessel, though a single hour's + rain rendered them so slippery as to be very dangerous to travellers." The + roads in fact were and are, little more than lanes between the isolated + woods across the low scrub of the old Weald. + </p> + <p> + The church of Bethersden is dedicated to St Margaret. It follows the local + type having a nave with north and south aisles and a chancel with north + and south chapels, vestry, south porch and western tower. The place is not + mentioned in Domesday Book, but about 1194 we find Archbishop Herbert + confirming the church of St Margaret of Beatrichesdenne, with the chapel + of Hecchisdenne (Etchden) to the Priory of St Gregory in Canterbury. No + sign of this Norman church remains, the building we see in Bethersden + being mainly Perpendicular; but the double lighted windows at the west end + of the north aisle are Early English and there is a Decorated niche under + the entrance to the rood left. The tower is modern, but possesses a + fourteenth century bell. + </p> + <p> + It is curious that though the church is dedicated to St Margaret and the + fair, according to Hasted, was held upon July 20th, St Margaret's day, the + place should be spoken of as Beatrichesdenne as though there were some + local St Beatrice; but of her we know nothing. + </p> + <p> + Bethersden is connected with the Lovelaces for they owned it, Richard + Lovelace, the poet, having sold Lovelace Place to Richard Hulse, soon + after the death of Charles I. Three members of the Lovelace family lie in + the church, their tombs marked by brasses; William Lovelace (1459) another + William Lovelace, gentleman (1459), and Thomas Lovelace (1591). + </p> + <p> + From Bethersden I went on to High Halden, which stands upon a ridge out of + the Weald, a very characteristic and beautiful place, with a most + interesting church dedicated to Our Lady. Indeed I do not know where one + could match the strange wooden tower and belfry and the noble fourteenth + century porch, masterpieces of carpentry, which close on the west the + little stone church of the fifteenth century. Within the most interesting + thing left to us is the glass in the east window of the south chancel + where we see the Blessed Virgin with her lily, part of an Annunciation. + There, too, in another window are the arms of Castile and of Leon, a + strange blazon to find in the Weald of Kent. + </p> + <p> + But characteristic as Great Chart, Bethersden and High Halden are of this + strange wealden county, they do not express it, sum it up and dominate it + as does Tenterden Town, some two or three miles to the south of High + Halden. + </p> + <p> + If we look at the ordnance map we shall see that the town of Tenterden is + set upon a great headland thrust out by the higher land of the Kentish + Weald, southward and east towards those low marshlands that are lost + almost imperceptibly in the sea, and are known to us as Romney Marsh. This + great headland, in shape something like a clenched fist, stands between + the two branches of the Rother, the river which flows into the sea at Rye, + and which was once navigable by ships so far up as Small Hythe just under + the southern escarpment of the headland upon which Tenterden stands. + Hither so late as 1509 the Rother was navigable, and we find Archbishop + Warham on the petition of the people licensing a small chapel there of St + John Baptist still in existence, for the use of the inhabitants and as a + sanctuary or a graveyard for the burial of those wrecked on the + "sea-shore" <i>infra predictum oppidum de Smallhyth</i>. + </p> + <p> + Now in this lies all the greatness of Tenterden. Rye, which had early been + added to the Cinque Ports, was a place of very considerable importance, + but upon the east it was entirely cut off by Romney Marsh, upon the west, + too, a considerable marshland closed by a great and desolate hill country + closed it in, but to the north was a navigable river, a road that is, + leading up into England, and at the head of it a town naturally sprang up. + That town was Tenterden, and her true position was recognised by Henry + VI., when he united her to Rye. Till then she was one of "the Seven + Hundreds" belonging to the Crown. Domesday Book knows nothing of her; as a + place of importance, as a town that is, she is a creation of Rye, and her + development was thus necessarily late and endured but for a season. I + suppose the great days of Rye to have been those of the thirteenth and + fourteenth and fifteenth centuries; and it was therefore during this + period that Tenterden began its career as a town. After the failure of the + sea, Rye sank slowly back into what it is to-day, but Tenterden would + appear to have stood up against that misfortune with some success, for we + find Elizabeth incorporating it under a charter. + </p> + <p> + There can be but few more charming towns in Kent than Tenterden as we see + it to-day, looking out from its headland southward to the great uplifted + Isle of Oxney beyond which lies the sea, and eastward over all the mystery + of Romney Marsh. The church which should, one thinks, have borne the name + of St Michael, is dedicated in honour of St Mildred. It is a large + building of the thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, the tower, + its latest feature, being also its noblest. Indeed the tower of Tenterden + church, if we may believe the local legend, is certainly the most + important in Kent. For it is said, and, rightly understood, there may + after all be something in it, to have been the cause of the Goodwin Sands. + Fuller asserts "when the vicinage in Kent met to consult about the + inundation of the Goodwin Sands (date not given) and what might be the + cause thereof, an old man imputed it to the building of Tenterden steeple + in this county; for these sands, said he, were firm sands before that + steeple was built, which ever since were overflown with sea-water. + Hereupon all heartily laughed at his unlogical reason, making that effect + in Nature which + </p> + <p> + was only the consequent on time; not flowing from, but following after the + building of that steeple." + </p> + <p> + According to Latimer, however, it was Sir Thomas More who drew this answer + from the ancient, and if this be so, it certainly fixes the date. "Maister + More," says Latimer, "was once sent in commission into Kent to help to + trie out (if it might be) what was the cause of Goodwin Sands and the + shelfs that stopped up Sandwich haven. Thither cometh Maister More and + calleth the countye afore him, such as were thought to be men of + experience, and men that could of likelihode best certify him of that + matter, concerning the stopping of Sandwich haven. Among others came in + before him an olde man with a white head, and one that was thought to be + little lesse than an hundereth yeares olde. When Maister More saw this + aged man he thought it expedient to heare him say his minde in this + matter, for being so olde a man it was likely that he knew most of any man + in that presence and company. So Maister More called this olde aged man + unto him and sayd, 'Father,' sayd he, 'tell me if ye can what is the cause + of this great arising of the sande and shelves here about this haven the + which sop it up that no shippes can aride here? Ye are the oldest man that + I can espie in all this companye, so that, if any man can tell any cause + of it, ye of all likelihode can say most in it, or at least wise more than + any other man here assembled.' 'Yea forsooth, good maister,' quod this + olde man, 'for I am well nigh an hundred yeares olde and no man here in + this company anything neare unto mine age.' 'Well, then,' quod Maister + More, 'how say you in this matter? What thinke ye to be the cause of these + shelves and flattes that stop up Sandwiche haven?' 'Forsooth syr,' quod + he, 'I am an olde man. I think Tenterden steeple is the cause of Goodwin + Sandes. For I am an old man syr' quod he, 'and I may remember the building + of Tenterden Steeple and I may remember when there was no steeple at all + there. And before that Tenterden Steeple was in building there was no + manner of speaking of any flats or sands that stopped the haven; and + therefore I thinke that Tenterden steeple is the cause of the destroying + and decaying of Sandwich haven." + </p> + <p> + Post hoc, propter hoc and this silly old man has been held up to all + ensuing ages as an absurdly simple old fellow. But what after all if he + should be right in part at least? + </p> + <p> + Tenterden church, we are told, belonged to the Abbey of St Augustine in + Canterbury, which also owned the Goodwin Sands, part, it is said, of the + immense domain of Earl Godwin. Now it was in their hands that the money + collected throughout Kent for the building and fencing of the coast + against the sea had always been placed. We learn that "when the sea had + been very quiet for many years without any encroachings," the abbot + commuted that money to the building of a steeple and endowing of the + church in Tenterden, so that the sea walls were neglected. If this be so, + that oldest inhabitant was not such a fool as he seems to look. + </p> + <p> + I slept under the shadow of Tenterden steeple and very early in the + morning set out for Appledore, where I crossed the canal and came into the + Marsh. I cannot hope to express my enthusiasm for this strange and + mysterious country so full of the music of running water, with its winding + roads, its immense pastures, its cattle and sheep and flowers, its far + away great hills and at the end, though it has no end, the sea. It mixes + with the sea indeed as the sky does, so that no man far off can say this + is land or this is water. + </p> + <p> + It is famous as a fifth part of the world different from its fellows. And + indeed, if it resembles anything I know it is not with the wide moors of + Somerset, Sedgemoor, or the valley of the Brue, nor with the great windy + Fenland in the midst of which Ely rises like a shrine or a sanctuary, I + would compare it, but with the Campagna of Rome, whose tragic mystery it + seems to have borrowed, at least in part, whose beauty it seems to wear, a + little provincially, it is true, and whose majesty it apes, but cannot + quite command. It is the Campagna in little; the great and noble + mountains, the loveliest in the world are sunk to hills pure and exquisite + upon which, too, we may still see the cities, here little towns and + villages, as Rye, Winchelsea, Appledore, Lympne or Hythe, dear places of + England of my heart, and all between them this mysterious and lowly thing + not quite of this world, a graveyard one might think, as the Campagna is, + a battlefield as is the Trasimeno plain, a gate and certainly an exit not + only out of England but from the world and life itself. + </p> + <p> + As one wanders about England here and there, one comes to understand that + if its landscape is unique in its various charm and soft beauty, it is + also inhuman in this, that most often it is without the figure of man, the + fields are always empty or nearly always, the hills are uniformly barren + of cities or towns or villages, it is a landscape without the gesture of + human toil and life, without meaning that is, and we can bear it so. But + no man could live in the Marsh for a day without that gesture of human + life that is there to be seen upon every side. Lonely as it is, difficult + as it is to cross, because of its chains and twisting lines of runnels, + man is more visibly our comrade there than anywhere else in England I + think, and this though there be but few men through all the Marsh. He and + his beasts, his work too, and his songs, redeem the Marsh for us from + fear, a fear not quite explicable, perhaps, to the mere passenger, but + that anyone who has lingered there during a month of spring will recognise + as always at his elbow and only kept out of the soul by the humanity which + has redeemed this mysterious country, the shepherd with his flock, the + dairyman with his cows, the carter with his great team of oxen in the + spring twilight returning from the fields. And then there are the + churches, whose towers stand up so strong out of the waters and the mist + so that their heads are among the stars, and whose bells are the best + music because they tell not only of God and his Saints but of man, of the + steading and of home. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-9" id="linkimage-9"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/010.jpg" width="100%" alt="A Corner of Romney Marsh " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + Take Appledore, for instance, with its fine old church, with its air of + the fourteenth century and its beautiful old ivy grown tower, once a port + they say, on the verge of the Marsh; what could be more nobly simple and + homely? Within, you may, if you will, find, in spite of everything, all + our past, the very altar at which of old was said the Holy Mass, the very + altar tomb maybe where, upon Maunday Thursday Christ Himself was laid in + the sepulchre, an old rood loft, too, certain ancient screens complete, a + little ancient glass. What more can a man want or at least expect from + England of my heart? And if he demand something more curious and more + rare, at Horn's Place, not a mile away, is a perfect chapel of the + fifteenth century which served of old some great steading, where, for a + hundred years Mass was perhaps said every day and the Marsh blessed. Or + take Snargate with its church of St Dunstan. It, too, has a fine western + tower of the fifteenth century, but much of the church dates from the + thirteenth, and upon the north chancel roof-beams are heraldic devices, + among them an eagle and the initials W.R. And here is a piece of fine old + glass in which we may see the Lord Christ. Or take Ivychurch; so noble and + lovely a thing is the church that even without it catches the breath, + while a whole afternoon is not enough to enjoy its inward beauty. Or take + Brenzett, where, it is true, the church has been rebuilt, but where you + will still find a noble seventeenth century tomb with its effigies in + armour. + </p> + <p> + It is, however, at Romney, Old Romney and New, that we shall find the best + there is to be had I think in this strange country from which the waters + have only been barred out by the continual energy of man. We are not + surprised to find that New Romney is older than Old Romney, it is almost + what might have been expected, but no one can ever have come to these + places without wonder at the nobility of what he sees. + </p> + <p> + At New Romney there were of old five churches, dedicated in honour of St + John Baptist, St Laurence, St Martin, St Michael, and St Nicholas, for + Romney was, in the time of Edward I., the greatest of the Cinque Ports. It + fell when, as we are told, in a great storm the course of the Rother was + changed so that it went thereafter to serve Rye, and New Romney fell + slowly down so that to-day but one of those five churches remains, that of + St Nicholas. But what a glorious church it is, and if the rest were like + it, what idea must we have of the splendour of New Romney in the + thirteenth century? This great Norman church of St Nicholas with its + partly fourteenth century nave, its clerestory, its fine chancel with + sedilia and Easter sepulchre, and noble pinnacled tower is perhaps the + greatest building in the Marsh. It belonged to the Abbey of Pontigny and + was served by its monks who had a cell here, and the town it adorns and + ennobles, was the capital of all this district. + </p> + <p> + Nothing so glorious and so old remains in Old Romney, where the church of + St Clement has nothing I think, earlier than the thirteenth century, and + little of that, being mainly a building of the fourteenth and fifteenth + centuries, and yet it is not to be despised, for where else in the Marsh + will you find anything more picturesque or anything indeed more English? + </p> + <p> + Not at Dymchurch for all its Norman fragments. But Dymchurch is to be + visited and to be loved for other reasons than that of beauty. It is the + sentinel and saviour of the Marsh, for it holds back the sea from all this + country with its great wall, twenty feet high and twenty feet broad and + three miles long. Also here we have certain evidence of the Roman + occupation of the Marsh, and may perhaps believe that it was Rome which + first drained it. + </p> + <p> + I said that the church of St Nicholas at New Romney was the noblest + building in the Marsh. When I said so had I forgotten the church of All + Saints at Lydd, which is known as the Cathedral of the Marshes. No, + glorious as All Saints is, it has not the antiquity of St Nicholas; it is + altogether English and never knew the Norman. For all that, it is a very + splendid building with a tower standing one hundred and thirty-two feet + over the Marsh, a sign and a blessing. And yet before it I prefer the bell + tower, built of mighty timber, aloof from the church, lonely, over the + waters at Brookland. All Saints at Lydd belonged to Tintern Abbey, but All + Saints at Brookland to St Augustine's at Canterbury, and as its font will + tell us it dates from Norman times, for about it the Normans carved the + signs of the Zodiac. + </p> + <p> + Brookland, hard to get at, stands on the great road which runs south- + westward out of the Marsh and brings you at last out of Kent into Sussex + at Rye. It was there I lingered a little to say farewell. As one looks at + evening across that vast loneliness, so desolate and yet so beautiful and + infinitely subject to the sky, lying between the hills and sinking so + imperceptibly into the sea, one continually asks oneself what is Romney + Marsh, by whom was it reclaimed from the all-devouring sea, what forces + built it up and gathered from barrenness the infinite riches we see? Was + it the various forces of Nature, the racing tides of the straits, some + sudden upheaval of the earth, or the tireless energy of men—and of + what men? Those seventeen miles of richest pasture which lie in an + infinite peace between Appledore and Dungeness, to whom do we owe them and + their blessedness? That wall at Dymchurch which saves the marshes, Romney, + Welland, Guildford and Denge, who contrived it and first took advantage of + those great banks of shingle and of sand which everywhere bar out the + great tides of the straits and have thus created and preserved this + strange fifth part of the world? Was it the Romans? May we see in Romney + Marsh the greatest material memorial of their gigantic energy and art to + be found in the western provinces, a nobler and a greater work than the + Wall as well as a more lasting? And if this be so, how well is the Marsh + named after them, for of all they did materially in our island, this work + of reclamation was surely the worthiest to bear their name. + </p> + <p> + But to these questions there can perhaps never be an answer. Certainly the + very aspect of the Marsh recalls nothing so much as the Campagna of Rome, + in its nobility, loneliness and infinite subjection to the sun, the + clouds, and the sky, so that at evening there we might almost think that + Rome herself lay only just beyond that large horizon, and that with an + effort we might reach the great gate of San Giovanni e'er darkness fell. + It is as though in the Marsh our origins for once and unmistakably were + laid bare for us and we had suddenly recognised our home. + </p> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH9" id="link2HCH9"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER IX + </h2> + <p> + RYE AND WINCHELSEA + </p> + <p> + Out of the vagueness and loneliness of the Marsh, with its strange level + light and tingling silence, I climbed one spring evening at sunset into + the ancient town of Rye, and at first I could not believe I was still in + England. No one I think can wander for more than a few days about the + Marsh, among those half deserted churches, far too big for any visible + congregation, whose towers in a kind of despair still stand up before God + against the sea, raging and plotting far off against the land, without + wondering at last into what country he has strayed. In Rye all such doubt + is resolved at once, for Rye is pure Italy, or at least it seems so in the + evening dusk. When I came up into it in the spring twilight out of the + Marsh, I was reminded of one of those Italian cities which stand up over + the lean shore of the Adriatic to the south of Rimini, but it was not of + them I thought when in the morning sunlight I saw those red roofs piled up + one upon another from the plain: it was of Siena. And indeed Rye is in its + smaller, less complete and of course less exquisite way very like the most + beautiful city in Tuscany. Here, too, as in Siena, the red-roofed houses + climb up a hill, one upon another, a hill crowned at last by a great + church dedicated in honour of the Blessed Virgin. But here the likeness, + too fanciful for reality, ceases altogether. It is true that Siena looks + out beyond her own gardens and vineyards upon a desert, but it is a very + different desolation upon which Rye gazes all day long, out of which she + rises with all the confidence, grace, and gaiety of a flower, and over + which she rules like a queen. + </p> + <p> + From the Porta Romana of Siena or the outlook of the Servi, you gaze + southward across the barren, scorched valleys to the far-away mountains, + to Monte Amiata, the fairest mountain of Tuscany. From the Ypres Tower of + Rye or the Gun Garden below it, you look only across the level and empty + Marsh which sinks beyond Camber Castle imperceptibly into the greyness and + barrenness of the sea. To the east, across the flat emptiness, the Rother + crawls seaward; to the west across the Marsh, as once across the sea, + Winchelsea rises against the woods, and beyond, far away, the darkness of + Fairlight hangs like a cloud twixt sea and sky. + </p> + <p> + Indeed, to liken Rye to any other place is to do her wrong, for both in + herself and in that landscape over which she broods, there is enough + beauty and enough character to give her a life and a meaning altogether + her own. From afar off, from Winchelsea, for instance, in the sunlight, + she seems like a town in a missal, crowned by that church which seems so + much bigger than it is, gay and warm and yet with something of the + greyness of the sea and the sea wind about her, a place that, as so few + English places do, altogether makes a picture in the mind, and is at unity + with itself. + </p> + <p> + And from within she seems not less complete, a thing wholly ancient, + delightful, with a picturesque and yet homely beauty that is the child of + ancientness. Yet how much has Rye lost! The walls of Coeur de Lion have + fallen, and only one of the gates remains; but so long as the church and + the beautiful strong tower of William de Ypres stand, and the narrow + cobbled streets full of old and humble houses climb up and down the steep + hill, the whole place is involved in their beauty and sanctity, our hearts + are satisfied and our eyes engaged on behalf of a place at once so old and + picturesque and yet so neat and tidy and always ready to receive a guest. + </p> + <p> + A place like Rye, naturally so strong, a steep island surrounded by sea or + impassable marsh, must have been a stronghold from very early times; it is + in fact obviously old when we first hear of it as a gift, with Winchelsea, + of Edward the Confessor's to the Benedictine Abbey of Fécamp just across + the grey channel in Normandy. Both Rye and Winchelsea remained within the + keeping of the Abbey of Fécamp until, for reasons of State easy to be + understood, Henry III. resumed the royal rights in the thirteenth century, + compensating the monks of Fécamp with manors in Gloucestershire and + Lincolnshire. For before the end of the twelfth century it would seem Rye + with Winchelsea had become of so much importance as a port as to have been + added to the famous Cinque Ports, Sandwich, Dover, Hythe, Romney and + Hastings. From this time both play a considerable part in the trade and + politics of the Channel and the Straits. + </p> + <p> + It was to enable her to hold herself secure in this business and + especially against raids from the sea that the Ypres Tower was built in + the time of King Stephen, by William of Ypres, Earl of Kent. It was a + watch tower and perhaps a stronghold, but it was never sufficient. Even in + 1194 Coeur de Lion permitted the town to wall itself. Nevertheless Louis + the Dauphin of France took Rye, and it may well have been this which + determined Henry III. to take the town out of the hands of the monks of + Fécamp and to hold it himself. + </p> + <p> + Doubtless Rye's greatest moment was this thirteenth century, nor did she + appear much less in the fourteenth and the first half of the fifteenth + century. But often sacked and burned, the town was practically destroyed + by the French in 1378 and 1448, when only the Ypres Tower, part of the + church, the Landgate, the Strandgate and the so-called chapel of the + Carmelite Friars escaped destruction. But from this blow Rye recovered to + play a part, if a small one, in the defeat of the Armada, and though the + retreat of the sea, which seems to have begun in the sixteenth century, + undoubtedly damaged her, it did not kill her outright as it did + Winchelsea, for she had the Rother to help her, and we find her prosperous + not only in the time of the Commonwealth, but even to-day, when, with the + help of a new harbour at the mouth of the river, she is still able to + carry on her trade. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-10" id="linkimage-10"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/011.jpg" width="100%" alt="Rye " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + Nothing in fact strikes the visitor to Rye more than the bustle and life + of a place obviously so old. All the streets are steep and narrow and the + chief of them, the High Street, seems always to be gay and full of + business, and is as truly characteristic of Rye as those still and + grass-grown ways cobbled and half deserted, which lead up to the noble + great church in its curious <i>place</i>. + </p> + <p> + It is of course to this great sanctuary dedicated in honour of the Blessed + Virgin, that everyone will go first in Rye. It has been called the largest + parish church in England, and though this claim cannot be made good, it is + in all probability the largest in Sussex, is in fact known as the + Cathedral of East Sussex, and if a church became a cathedral by reason of + its beauty and size it might rightly claim the title. It is certainly + worthy of the most loving attention. + </p> + <p> + The church of Our Lady at Rye is a great cruciform building with + clerestory, transepts, and central tower, but without western doors, the + chief entrance being in the north transept. The church is of all dates + from the Norman time onward, a very English patchwork, here due to the + depredations, not so much of time, as of the French who have so often + raided and burnt the town. The oldest part is the tower, which is Norman, + as are, though somewhat later, the transepts, where certain details show + the Transitional style. In this style again, but somewhat later, is the + nave. The chancel and its two chapels are Early English, but with many + important Decorated, Perpendicular and modern details, such as the arcade + and the windows. The Early English chapel upon the north is that of St + Clare, that upon the south is dedicated in honour of St Nicholas. In the + south aisle of the nave is an Early English chantry, now used as a vestry. + The communion table of carved mahogany is said to have been taken from a + Spanish ship at the time of the Armada, but it would seem certainly not to + be older than the end of the seventeenth century. The curious clock whose + bells are struck by golden cherubs on the north side of the tower, is said + to have been a gift of Queen Elizabeth and to be the oldest clock in + England still in good order. It is probably of late Caroline construction, + but even though it were of the sixteenth century its claim to be the + oldest clock now at work in England could not be upheld for a moment, that + in Wells Cathedral being far older. The pulpit is of the sixteenth + century. In the north aisle is a curious collection of Bibles and cannon + balls, and here, too, is a small window with glass by Burne Jones. + </p> + <p> + To the south-west of the church is the so-called Carmelite Chapel, a late + Decorated building. What exactly this was and to whom it belonged, is + uncertain; it was not a chapel of Carmelite Friars. The only establishment + belonging to that Order within the county of Susses was at Shoreham, + founded in honour of the Blessed Virgin, by Sir John de Mowbray in 1316. + </p> + <p> + So far as we know the only religious to be found in + </p> + <p> + Rye at the time of the spoliation were the Austin Friars. Their house + still stands—a building of the late fourteenth or early fifteenth + century—on the Conduit Hill. It has passed through many strange + uses, among others that of a Salvation Army barracks. It is now the + Anglican Church House. This was the only settlement of the Austin Friars + in Sussex, and of its origin nothing is known. In 1368 we hear that the + prior and convent of the Friars Eremites of St Austin in Rye permitted one + of their brethren, a priest, to say Mass daily, at the altar of St + Nicholas, in the parish church for the welfare of William Taylour of Rye, + and of Agnes his wife. In 1378 the town granted them a place called "le + Haltone" near the town ditch. But apart from these two facts their history + is altogether wanting. + </p> + <p> + From the parish church one descends south-east to the Ypres Tower. This + watch tower and stronghold was built in the time of King Stephen by + William of Ypres, Earl of Kent, and is in many ways the most impressive + building left to us in Rye. It is undoubtedly best seen from the river, + but it and the garden below it afford a great view over the marshes on a + clear day, eastward to the cliffs of Folkestone and westward to Fairlight. + In itself it is a plain rectangular building with round towers at the + angles, but with nothing of interest within. Yet what would Rye be without + it. For many years it was the sole defence of the town. + </p> + <p> + Most of those who come to Rye enter the town, and with a sudden surprise + not to be found elsewhere, by the Landgate upon the north. There were, it + is said of old, five gates about the town, but this is the only one left + to us. Nothing, or almost nothing, of the walls remain. Doubtless the + French destroyed anything in the nature of fortification so far as they + could, only the Ypres Tower they failed to pull down or to burn, and this + great round towered gateway upon the north—why we do not know? + </p> + <p> + It is the Landgate which gives to Rye its power of surprise, so that a man + coming up from the railway, at sight of it, is suddenly transported into + the Middle Age, and in that dream enters and enjoys Rye town, which has + never disappointed those who have come in the right spirit. For besides + the monuments of which I have spoken there are others of lesser interest, + it is true, but that altogether go to make up the charm and delight of + this unique place. Among these I will name Mermaid Street where the grass + grows among the cobbles and where stands the Mermaid Inn and the half + timber house called the Hospital, Pocock's School and Queen Elizabeth's + Well. Better still, for me at least, is the life of the river and the + shipyards, where, though Rye is now two miles from the sea, ships are + still built and the life of the place and its heart are adventured and set + upon the great waters. + </p> + <p> + So alluring indeed is this little town that one is always loath to leave + it, one continually excuses oneself from departure. One day I delayed in + order to see the famous poem in the old book in the town archives which I + already knew from Mr Lucas's book. It is certainly of Henry VIII.'s time, + and who could have written it but that unhappy Sir Thomas Wyatt who loved + Anne Boleyn— + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + What greater gryffe may hape + Trew lovers to anoye + Then absente for to sepratte them + From ther desiered joye? + + What comforte reste them then + To ease them of ther smarte + But for to thincke and myndful bee + Of them they love in harte? + + And sicke that they assured bee + Ehche toe another in harte + That nothinge shall them seperate + Untylle deathe doe them parte? + + And thoughe the dystance of the place + Doe severe us in twayne, + Yet shall my harte thy harte imbrace + Tyll we doe meete agayne. +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + Then one sunny afternoon I went out by the road past Camber Castle across + Rye Foreign for Winchelsea on its hill some two miles from Rye to the + west. + </p> + <p> + There is surely nothing in the world quite like Winchelsea. Lovelier by + far than Rye, not only in itself, but because of what it offers you, those + views of hill and marsh and sea with Rye itself, like I know not what + little masterpiece of Flemish art, in the middle distance eastward, + Winchelsea is a place never to be left or at worst never to be forgotten. + One comes to it from Rye on a still afternoon of spring when the faint + shadows are beginning to lengthen, expecting little. In fact, if the + traveller be acceptable, capable of appreciating anything so still and + exquisite, Winchelsea will appear to him to be, as it is one of the + loveliest things left to us in England, place, as Coventry Patmore so well + said, in a trance, La Belle an Bois dormant. Nowhere else in England + certainly have I found just that exquisite stillness, that air of + enchantment, as of something not real, something in a picture or a poem, + inexplicable and inexpressible. How spacious it is, and how quiet, full of + the sweetness and the beauty of some motet by Byrd. History is little to + us in such a place, which is to be enjoyed for its own sake, for its own + unique beauty and delight. And yet the history of Winchelsea is almost as + unique as is the place itself. + </p> + <p> + Winchelsea when we first hear of it as given by King Edward Confessor to + the monks of Fécamp, was not set upon this hill-top as we see it to-day, + but upon an island, low and flat, now submerged some three miles south and + east of the present town. Here William the Conqueror landed upon his + return from Normandy when he set out to take Exeter and subdue the West; + here again two of those knights who murdered St Thomas landed in their + pride, hot from the court of Henry their master. Like Rye, its sister, to + whom it looked across the sea, Winchelsea was added to the Cinque Ports + and was presently taken from the monks of Fécamp by Henry III. It was now + its disasters began. In 1236 it was inundated by the sea as again in 1250, + when it was half destroyed. Eagerly upon the side of Montfort it was taken + after Evesham by Prince Edward, and its inhabitants slain, so that when in + 1288 it was again drowned by the sea it was decided to refound the town + upon the hill above, then in the possession of Battle Abbey, which the + King purchased for this purpose. At that time the hill upon which + Winchelsea was built, and still stands, was washed by the sea, and the + harbour soon became of very great importance, indeed until the sixteenth + century, when the sea began to retire, Winchelsea was of much greater + importance than Rye. The retreat of the sea, however, completely ruined + it, for it was served by no river as Rye was by the Rother. + </p> + <p> + The town of Edward I., as we may see to-day, by what time has left us of + it, was built in squares, a truly Latin arrangement, the streets all + remaining at right angles the one to the other. It had three gates and was + defended upon the west, where it was not naturally strong, by a great + ditch. It was attacked and sacked by the French as often as Rye, though + not always at the same time. Thus in 1377, when Rye was half destroyed, + Winchelsea was saved by the Abbot of Battle, only to be taken three years + later by John de Vienne, when the town was burnt. No doubt these constant + and mostly successful attacks deeply injured the place which, after the + sea had begun to retreat in the sixteenth century, at the time of + Elizabeth's visit in 1573, only mustered some sixty families. From that + time Winchelsea slowly declined till there remains only the exquisite + ghost we see to-day. + </p> + <p> + One comes up out of the Marsh into Winchelsea to-day through the Strand + Gate of the time of Edward I., and presently finds oneself in the + beautiful and spacious square in which stands the lovely fragment of the + church of St Thomas of Canterbury. + </p> + <p> + This extraordinarily lovely building dates from the fourteenth century. As + we see it, it is but a fragment, consisting of the chancel and two side + chapels, but as originally planned it would seem to have been a cruciform + building of chancel, choir with side chapels, a central tower, transept + and nave. It is doubtful, however, whether the nave was ever built, the + ruins of the transepts and of two piers of the tower only remain. + </p> + <p> + I say it was doubtful whether this nave was ever built. It has been + asserted, it is true, that it was burnt by the French either in 1380 or in + 1449, but it seems more probable that it was never completed owing to the + devastation of the Black Death of 1348-9, though certain discoveries made + of late would seem to endorse the older theory. Certain it is that until + the end of the eighteenth century, there stood to the south-west of the + church a great bell tower, a detached campanile, now dismantled, whose + stones are said to have been used to build Rye Harbour. + </p> + <p> + The church, as we have it, is one of the loveliest Decorated buildings in + the county; the Perpendicular porch, however, by which we enter does not + belong to the church but possibly came here from one of the destroyed + churches of Winchelsea, St Giles's or St Leonard's. Within we find + ourselves in a great choir or chancel, with a chapel on either hand, that + on the right dedicated in honour of St Nicholas and known as the Alard + Chantry, that on the left the Lady Chapel known as the Farncombe Chantry. + The arcades which divide these chapels from the choir are extraordinarily + beautiful, as are the restored sedilia and piscina with their gables and + pinnacles and lovely diaper work. The windows, too, are very noble and + fine, and rich in their tracery, which might seem to be scarcely English. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-11" id="linkimage-11"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/012.jpg" width="100%" alt="Winchelsea Church " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + In the Chapel of St Nicholas, the Alard Chantry, on the south, are the + glorious canopied tombs of Gervase Alard (1300) and Stephen Alard. The + first is the finer; it is the tomb of the first Lord High Admiral of + England. The sepulchral effigy lies cross-legged with a heart in its hands + and a lion at its feet; and about its head two angels once knelt. The + whole was doubtless once glorious with colour, traces of which still + remain on the beautiful diaper work of the recess. The tomb of Stephen + Alard is later, but similar though less rich. Stephen was Admiral of the + Cinque Ports in the time of Edward II. Another of the family, Reginald, + lies beneath the floor where of old a brass marked his tomb (1354). + </p> + <p> + In the Chapel of the Blessed Virgin, the Farncombe Chantry, are three + tombs all canopied with a Knight in chain armour, a Lady, and a young + Squire. We are ignorant whose they may be. It is certain that these tombs + are older than the church, and they are said to have been brought here + from old Winchelsea. + </p> + <p> + But Winchelsea has other ruins and other memories besides those to be + found in the parish church. + </p> + <p> + The Franciscans, the Grey Friars, were established in Winchelsea very + early, certainly before 1253; and when old Winchelsea was destroyed and + the new town built on the hill by the King it was agreed that no monastery + or friary should be built there save only a house for the Friars Minor. + This was erected where now the modern mansion called 'The Friars' stands, + the old convent having been pulled down so lately as 1819. A part of the + ruined Chapel of the Blessed Virgin remains, however, the choir and apse. + Decorated work not much later than the parish church, and of great beauty. + Unhappily we know absolutely nothing of the Friars in Winchelsea, except + that when the house was suppressed in 1538 it was exceedingly poor. + </p> + <p> + The Franciscans, however, were not the only Friars in Winchelsea in spite + of the agreement made at the foundation of the new town. In 1318 Edward + II. granted the Black Friars, the Dominicans, twelve acres on the southern + side of the hill. This situation was found inconvenient, and in 1357 the + Dominicans obtained six acres "near the town." Nothing, or almost nothing, + remains of their house. + </p> + <p> + Besides these two religious houses, Winchelsea possessed three hospitals, + those of St John, St Bartholomew and Holy Cross. + </p> + <p> + The Hospital of St Bartholomew was near the New Gate on the south-west of + the town, and dated from the refounding of Edward. Nothing remains of it, + or of the Hospital of Holy Cross, which had existed in old Winchelsea and + was set up in the new town also near the New Gate. But the oldest and the + most important of the three hospitals was that of St John. A fragment of + this remains where the road turns towards Hastings to the north of the + churchyard. Close by is the thirteenth- century Court House. + </p> + <p> + It is always with regret I leave Winchelsea when I must, and even the + beautiful road through Icklesham into Hastings will not reconcile one who + has known how to love this place, to departure. And yet how fair that road + is and how fair is the Norman church of St Nicholas at Icklesham upon the + way! The road winds up over the low shore towards Fairlight, ever before + one, and at last as one goes up Guestling Hill through a whole long + afternoon and reaches the King's Head Inn at sunset, suddenly across the + smoke of Hastings one sees Pevensey Level, and beyond, the hills where + fell the great fight in which William Duke of Normandy disputed for + England with Harold the King. At sunset, when all that country is half + lost in the approaching darkness, one seems to feel again the tragedy of + that day so fortunate after all, in which once more we were brought back + into the full life of Europe and renewed with the energy Rome had stored + in Gaul. + </p> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH10" id="link2HCH10"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER X + </h2> + <p> + THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS + </p> + <p> + It is not often on one's way, even in England of my heart, that one can + come upon a place, a lonely hill-side or a city, and say: this is a spot + upon which the history of the world was decided; yet I was able on that + showery morning, as I went up out of Hastings towards Battle and saw all + the level of Pevensey full of rain, to recall two such places in which I + had stood already upon my pilgrimage. For I had lingered a whole morning + upon the battlefield where the Romans first met and overthrew our + forefathers and thus brought Britain within the Empire; while at + Canterbury I had been in the very place where, after an incredible + disaster, England was persuaded back again out of barbarism into the + splendour of the Faith and of civilisation. These places are more than + English, they are European sanctuaries, two of the greater sites of the + history of Europe. Perhaps as much cannot rightly be said for the hill + where the town of Battle stands, the landing-place at Pevensey and the + port of Hastings. + </p> + <p> + And yet I don't know. What a different England it would have been if + William of Normandy had failed or had never landed here at all. And if + such an England could have endured how changed would have been the whole + destiny of Europe. I am not sure after all that we ought not to be as + uplifted by the memory of Hastings as we are or should be by the memory of + Caesar's advent. At any rate since Hastings was fought and won in the + eleventh century any national prejudices that belong wholly to the modern + world are quite as much out of place with regard to it as they are with + regard to Caesar or St Augustine. And if we must be indignant and remember + old injuries that as often as not were sheer blessings, scarcely in + disguise, let us reserve our hatred, scorn and contempt for those damned + pagan and pirate hordes that first from Schleswig-Holstein and later from + Denmark descended upon our Christian country, and for a time overwhelmed + us with their brutish barbarism. As for me I am for the Duke of Normandy; + without him England were not the England of my heart. + </p> + <p> + Now the great and beautiful road up out of Hastings, seven miles into + Battle, is not only one of the loveliest in Britain, every yard of it is + full of Duke William's army, and thence we may see how in its wonderful + simplicity all that mighty business which was decided that October morning + on the hill-top that for so long Battle Abbey guarded as a holy place, was + accomplished. For looking southward over the often steep escarpment, + always between three and five hundred feet over the sea plain, we may see + Pevensey Castle, the landing, Hastings, the port, and at last come to + Battle, the scene of the fight that gave England to the Norman for our + enormous good and glory and honour. + </p> + <p> + I say that the struggle for the English crown between Duke William of + Normandy and Harold, King of England, was in no sense of the word a + national struggle; on the contrary, it was a personal question fought and + decided by the Duke of Normandy and his men, and Harold and his men. + Indeed the society of that time was altogether innocent of any impulse + which could be called national. That society, all of one piece as it was, + both in England and in Gaul, was wholly Feudal, though somewhat less + precisely so here than in Normandy. Men's allegiance was not given to any + such vague unity as England, but to a feudal lord, in whose quarrel they + were bound to fight, in whose victory they shared, and in whose defeat + they suffered. The quarrel between King Harold and Duke William was in no + sense of the word a national quarrel but a personal dispute in which the + feudal adherents of both parties were necessarily involved, the gage being + the crown and spoil of England. This is at once obvious when we remember + that the ground of William's claim to the throne was a promise received + from King Edward personally, unconfirmed by council or witan, but endorsed + for his own part by Harold when shipwreck had placed him in Duke William's + power. Such were the true elements of the dispute. + </p> + <p> + It is true that the society of that time was, as I have said, all of one + piece both in England and in Gaul, but it is certain that in England that + society was less precisely organised, less conscious of itself, less + logical in its structure, in a word less real and more barbarous than that + of the Normans. The victory of Duke William meant that the sluggish + English system would be replaced or at any rate reinvigorated by an energy + and an intelligence foreign to it, without which it might seem certain + that civilisation here would have fallen into utter decay or have perished + altogether. The service of Duke William then, while not so great as that + of Caesar and certainly far less than that of St Augustine, was of the + same kind; he rescued England from barbarism and brought us back into the + full light of Europe. The campaign in which that great service was + achieved divides itself into two parts, the first of which comes to an end + with the decisive action at Hastings which gave Duke William the crown; + the second consists of three great fighting marches, the result of which + was the conquest of England. I am only here concerned with the first part + of that campaign, and more especially with the great engagement which was + fought out upon the hill-top which the ruins of Battle Abbey still mark. + Let us consider this. + </p> + <p> + Harold, the second son of Earl Godwin, was crowned King of England at + Westminster upon the feast of the Epiphany in the year 1066. When Duke + William heard of it he was both angry and amazed, and at once began to + call up his feudatories to lend him aid to enforce his claim to the Crown + of England against King Harold. This was not an easy thing to do, nor + could it be done at all quickly. It was necessary to gather a great host. + </p> + <p> + Those lords who owed him allegiance had as often as not to be persuaded or + bribed to fulfil their obligation; and they with their followers and + dependents were not enough; it was necessary to engage as many as possible + of those chiefs who did not own him as lord; these had to be bought by + promises of gain and honour. Also a considerable fleet had to be built. + All this took time, and Harold was therefore perfectly aware of what Duke + William intended, and gathered his forces, both of ships and men, to meet + him in the south of England. All through the spring and summer he waited, + in vain. Meantime, soon after Easter, a strange portent appeared in the + heavens "the comet star which some men call the hairy star," and no man + could say what it might mean. It was not this, however, which delayed + William; he was not ready. It is possible that had he been able to advance + during the summer the whole history of England might have been different. + As it was, when autumn was at hand with the Birthday of the Blessed + Virgin, Harold's men were out of provisions and weary of waiting; they + were allowed to disperse, Harold himself went to London and the fleet beat + up into the Thames, not without damage and loss, against the wind, which, + had he but known it, now alone delayed the Duke. + </p> + <p> + But that wind which kept William in port brought another enemy of Harold's + to England with some three hundred galleys, Hardrada of Norway, who came + to support the claims of Tostig, now his man, King Harold's exiled + brother, to Northumbria; for the Northumbrians had rebelled against him, + and Harold had acquiesced in their choice of Morkere for lord. Neither + Morkere nor his brother Edwin, with their local forces, was able to meet + Hardrada with success. They attempted to enter York but at Fulford on the + 20th September they were routed, and Hardrada held the great northern + capital. + </p> + <p> + Meanwhile Harold had not been idle. Gathering his scattered forces he + marched north with amazing speed, covering the two hundred miles between + London and Tadcaster in nine days, to meet this new foe; but this almost + marvellous performance left the south undefended. He entered York on + September 25th, and on the same day, seven miles from the city at Stamford + Bridge, he engaged the enemy and broke them utterly. Three days later + William landed at Pevensey. + </p> + <p> + What could Harold do? He did all that a man could do. William had landed + at Pevensey upon Thursday, September 28th. It is probable that Harold + heard of it on the following Monday, October 2nd. Immediately he set out + for London, which by hard riding he reached, though probably with but a + few men, on Friday, October 6th, an amazing achievement, only made + possible by the great Roman road between York and London. Upon the + following Tuesday and Wednesday he was joined by his victorious forces + from the north, who had thus repeated their unequalled feat and marched + south again as they had north some two hundred miles in nine days. Upon + Wednesday, October 11th, Harold marched out of London at the head of this + force, and by the evening of October 13th—a day curiously enough to + be kept later as the feast of St Edward the Confessor—this heroic + force had marched in forty-eight hours some sixty miles across country, + and was in position upon that famous hill some two hours from the coast, + overlooking the landing- place of William at Pevensey and the port he had + seized at Hastings. That great march has, I think, never been equalled by + any British army before or since. + </p> + <p> + It might seem strange that William, who had landed at Pevensey upon the + 28th of September, had not advanced at all from the sea-coast when Harold + and his men appeared upon that hill after their great march from York upon + October 13th. But in fact William, Norman as he was, had a very clear idea + of what he intended to do. He left little to chance. He landed his men at + Pevensey, seized upon Hastings and beached his ships; then for a whole + fortnight he awaited the hot and weary return of Harold. Harold appeared + upon the evening of October 13th. Upon the following day, a Saturday, the + battle William had expected was fought, Harold was slain and his heroic + force destroyed. + </p> + <p> + The story of that day is well known. Harold's forces were drawn up upon + the ridge where the ruins of Battle Abbey now stand. William, upon the + thirteenth, had marched out of Hastings and had occupied the hill to the + east called Telham, where to-day stands Telham Court. In those days + probably no village or habitation of any sort occupied either of these + heights; one of the chroniclers calls the battlefield the place of "the + Hoar Apple Tree." + </p> + <p> + It is said that the night of October 13th was passed by Harold and his men + in feasting and in jollity, while the Normans confessed their sins and + received absolution. However that may be, in the full daylight, about nine + o'clock of Saturday, October 14th, the battle was joined. + </p> + <p> + This tremendous affair which was to have such enormous consequences was + opened by the minstrel Taellefer, who had besought leave of Duke William + to strike the first blow. Between the two armies he rode singing the Song + of Roland, and high into the air he flung his lance and caught it three + times e'er he hurled it at last into the amazed English, to fall at last, + slain by a hundred javelins as he rode back into the Norman front. + </p> + <p> + Thus was begun the most famous battle ever fought in England. It endured + without advantage either way for some six hours till the Norman horse, + flung back from the charge, fell into the Malfosse in utter confusion, and + the day seemed lost to the Normans. But Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, retrieved + it and from that time, about three o'clock, the Normans began to have the + advantage. The battle seems to have been decided at last by two clever + devices attributed to William himself. He determined to break Harold's + line, and since he had not been able to do this by repeated charges, he + determined to try a stratagem. Therefore he ordered his men to feign + flight, and thus to draw the English after them in pursuit. This was + successfully done, and when the English followed they were easily + surrounded and slain. William's other device is said to have been that of + shooting high into the air so that the arrows might turn and fall as from + the sky upon the foe. This stratagem is said to have been the cause of + Harold's death; for it was an arrow falling from on high and piercing him + through the right eye that killed him or so grievously wounded him that he + was left for dead, to be finally killed by Eustace of Boulogne and three + other knights. + </p> + <p> + With Harold down there can have been little hope of victory left to his + men, and indeed before night William had planted the Pope's banner where + Harold's had floated and held the battlefield. There he supped among the + dead, and having spent Sunday, October 15th, in burying the fallen, he set + out not for London, but for Dover, for his simple and precise plan was to + secure all the entries into England from the continent before securing the + capital. When he had done this he marched up into England by the Watling + Street, burned Southwark, crossed the Thames at Wallingford, received + there the submission of the Archbishop of Canterbury, and at Berkhampstead + the submission of London and the offer of the Crown which he received at + Westminster at Mass upon Christmas Day; twelve days less than a year after + Harold had been crowned in the same place. + </p> + <p> + One comes to Battle to-day along that great and beautiful road, high up + over the sea plain, which still seems full with memories of the Norman + advance from Hastings, thinking of all that great business. If one comes + up on Tuesday, upon payment of sixpence, one is admitted to the gardens of + the house in which lie the ruins of the abbey William founded in + thankfulness to God for his victory, the high altar of which was set upon + the very spot where Harold fell: "Hic Harold Rex interfectus est." + </p> + <p> + It was while William was encamped upon Telham Hill, expecting the battle + of the morrow, that he vowed an abbey to God if He gave him the victory. + He was heard by a monk of Marmoutier, a certain William, called the Smith, + who, when Duke William had received the crown at Westminster, reminded him + of his promise. The King acknowledged his obligation and bade William of + Marmoutier to see to its fulfilment. The monk thereupon returned to + Marmoutier, and choosing four others, brought them to England; but finding + the actual battlefield unsuited for a monastery, since there was no water + there, he designed to build lower down towards the west. Now when the King + heard of it he was angry and bade them build upon the field itself, nor + would he hear them patiently when they asserted there was no water there, + for, said he: "If God spare me I will so fully provide this place that + wine shall be more abundant there than water is in any abbey in the land." + Then said they that there was no stone. But he answered that he would + bring them stone from Caen. This, however, was not done, for a quarry was + found close by. Also the King richly endowed the house, giving it all the + land within a radius of a league, and there the abbot was to be absolute + lord free of bishop and royal officer, [Footnote: The unique privileges of + the abbot of Battle included the right to "kill and take one or two beasts + with dogs" in any of the King's forests.] and very many manors beside. Yet + ten years elapsed before the Abbey of Battle was sufficiently completed to + receive an abbot. In 1076, however, Robert Blancard, one of the four monks + chosen by William of Marmoutier, was appointed, but he died e'er he came + to Battle. Then one Gausbert was sent from Marmoutier, and he came with + four of his brethren and was consecrated "Abbot of St Martin's of the + place of Battle." Beside the extraordinary gifts and privileges which the + Conqueror had bestowed upon the Abbey in his lifetime, upon his death he + bequeathed to it his royal embroidered cloak, a splendid collection of + relics and a portable altar containing relics, possibly the very one upon + which Harold had sworn in his captivity in Normandy to support his claim + to England. William is said to have intended the monastery to be filled + with sixty monks. We do not know whether this number ever really served + there. In 1393, but that was after the Black Death, there appear to have + been some twenty-seven, and in 1404 but thirty. In 1535, on the eve of the + Suppression, Battle Abbey was visited by the infamous Layton who reported + to Thomas Cromwell that "all but two or three of the monks were guilty of + unnatural crimes and were traitors," adding that the abbot was an arrant + churl and that "this black sort of develish monks I am sorry to know are + past amendment." Little more than two years later the abbot surrendered + the abbey and received a pension of one hundred pounds. The furniture and + so forth of the house was then very poor. "So beggary a house I never see, + nor so filthy stuff," Layton writes to Wriothesley. "I will not 20s. for + all the hangings in this house...." In August 1538 the place was granted + to Sir Anthony Browne, who is said to have removed the cloak of the + Conqueror and the famous Battle Abbey Roll to Cowdray. This rascal razed + the church and cloisters to the ground, and made the abbot's lodging his + dwelling. It is said that one night as he was feasting a monk appeared + before him and solemnly cursed him, prophesying that his family should + perish by fire. To the fulfilment of this curse Cowdray bears witness even + to this day. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-12" id="linkimage-12"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/013.jpg" width="100%" alt="Battle Abbey " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + What spoliation, time and neglect have left of the Abbey is beautiful, + especially the great fourteenth century gateway which faces the Market + Green. Nothing save the foundations is left of the great church. From the + terrace, doubtless, we look across the battlefield, but all is so changed, + the bleak hill-top has become a superb garden, that it is impossible to + realise still less to reconstruct the battle, and indeed since we can only + visit the place amid a crowd of tourists, our present discomfort makes any + remembrance of the fight or of the great and solemn abbey which for so + long turned that battlefield into a sanctuary impossible. + </p> + <p> + Nor indeed are we more fortunate in the parish church which was originally + built by Abbot Ralph in the twelfth century. It has been so tampered with + and restored that little remains that is unspoilt. There, and I think most + fittingly, lies that Sir Anthony Browne who got Battle Abbey from the King + who had stolen it. + </p> + <p> + Now when I had seen all this I went on my way, and because I was unhappy + on account of all that theft and destruction, and because where once there + had been altar and monks to serve it, now there was none, and because what + had once been common to us all was now become the pleasure of one man, I + went up out of Battle into the hills by the great road through the woods + and so on and up by Dallington and Heathfield and so down and down and + down all a summer day across the Weald till at evening I came to Lewes + where I slept. I remember nothing of that day but the wind and the hills + and the great sun of May which went ever before me into the west so that I + soon forgot to be sorry and rejoiced as I went. + </p> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH11" id="link2HCH11"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER XI + </h2> + <p> + LEWES AND SIMON DE MONTFORT + </p> + <p> + I do not know of a more beautiful town than Lewes in all the wide south + country; it is beautiful not only in itself but in its situation, set + there upon an isolated hill over the Ouse and surrounded, as though they + were great natural bastions set there in her defence, by Malling Hill on + the north, Mount Caburn on the west, the broken heights of the Downs to + the south, through which the Ouse flows towards Newhaven and the sea, and + on the east by Mount Harry under which was fought the very famous battle + of Lewes in which Simon de Montfort took his king prisoner. + </p> + <p> + The natural strength and beauty of this situation has been much increased + by the labour of man, for Lewes is set as it were all in a garden out of + which it rises, a pinnacle of old houses crowned by the castle upon its + half precipitous hill. It is a curiously un-English vision you get from + the High Street for instance, looking back upon the hill or from the + little borgo of Southover or from Cliffe, and yet there can be few more + solidly English places than Lewes. + </p> + <p> + That the Romans had here some sort of settlement there can be no doubt, + that Lewes was a place of habitation in the time of the Saxons is certain, + indeed in Athelstan's day it boasted of two mints, but the town, as it + appears to us in history, grew up about the Cluniac Priory of St Pancras + under the protection of the Castle, and to these it owes everything except + its genesis. + </p> + <p> + Whatever Lewes may have been before the Conquest that revolution saw it + pass into the power of one of the greatest of William's nobles, that + William de Warenne who was his son-in-law. It was he and his wife + Gundrada, generally supposed to be the Conqueror's daughter, who founded + the Priory of St Pancras at Southover. It is probable, even certain, that + a chapel, possibly with some sort of religious house attached to it, + existed here before William de Warenne obtained from the Conqueror the + rape and town of Lewes. In any case it can have been of small importance. + But within ten years of the Conquest William de Warenne and his wife + determined to found an important monastery at the gates of their town, and + with this intention they set out on pilgrimage for Rome to consult, and to + obtain the blessing of, the Pope. They got so far as Burgundy when they + found that it was impossible to go on in safety on account of the war + between the Pope and the Emperor. When they found themselves in this + predicament they were not far from the great Abbey of SS. Peter and Paul + at Cluny. + </p> + <p> + Now the Cluniac Congregation, the first great reform of the Benedictine + Order, had been founded there in the diocese of Macon in 910, and it was + then at the height of its power and greatness. Cluny was the most + completely feudal of the orders, for the Cluniac monks were governed by + Priors each and all of whom were answerable only to the Abbot of Cluny + himself, while every monk in the Order had to be professed by him, that + mighty ecclesiastic at this time can have been master of not less than two + thousand monks. Cluny's boast was its school and the splendour of its + ceremonies and services; God was served with a marvellous dignity and + luxury undreamed of before, and unequalled since Cluny declined. It was to + this mother house of the greatest Congregation of the time that William de + Warenne turned with his wife when war prevented them on the road to Rome, + and we cannot wonder that they were so caught by all they saw that they + determined to put the monastery they proposed to build under the Abbot of + Cluny and to found a Cluniac Priory at the gates of their town of Lewes. + They therefore approached the Abbot with the request that he would send + three or four of his monks to start the monastery. They did not find him + very willing; for the essence of Cluny was discipline, the discipline of + an army, and doubtless the Abbot feared that, so far away as Sussex + seemed, his monks would be out of his reach and might become but as other + men. But at last the Conqueror himself joined his prayers to those of + William de Warenne, and in 1076 the Abbot of Cluny sent the monk Lanzo and + three other brethren to England, and to them William de Warenne gave the + little church of St Pancras especially rebuilt for their use with the land + about it, called the Island, and other lands sufficient to support twelve + monks. But the Abbot of Cluny had no sooner agreed to establish his + congregation in England than he seems to have repented. At any rate he + recalled Prior Lanzo and kept him so long that William de Warenne, growing + impatient, seriously thought of transferring his foundation to the + Benedictines; but at length Prior Lanzo returned and all was arranged as + was at first intended. The monastery flourished apace and grew not only in + wealth but in piety. Prior Lanzo proved an excellent ruler, and the Priory + of St Pancras at Lewes became famous for its sanctity through all England. + </p> + <p> + To the same William de Warenne Lewes owes the foundation or the + refoundation of its Castle the second centre about which the town grew. + </p> + <p> + A glance at the map will assure us that Lewes could not but be a place of + great importance, increasing with England in wealth and strength. The + South Downs stand like a vast rampart back from the sea, guarding South + England from surprise and invasion. But this great wall is broken at four + different places, at Arundel in the west where the Arun breaks through the + chalk to find the sea, at Bramber where the Adur passes seaward, at Lewes + where the Ouse goes through, and at Wilmington where the Cuckmere winds + through the hills to its haven. Each of these gaps was held and guarded by + a castle while the level eastward of Beachy Head was held by Pevensey. Of + these castles I suppose the most important to have been Lewes, for it not + only held the gap of the Ouse but the pass by Falmer and in some sort the + Cuckmere Valley also. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-13" id="linkimage-13"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/014.jpg" width="100%" alt="Lewes Castle " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + But the great day of Lewes Castle was that of Simon de Montfort—I + shall deal with that later. Here it will be enough to point out that only + a fragment of the great building with its double keep, whose ruin we see + to-day, dates from the time of the first De Warenne, the rest being a + later work largely of Edward I's. time. + </p> + <p> + Let me now return to the Priory which, in the development of the town, + played a part at least as great as that of the Castle. + </p> + <p> + The Priory had always been famous for its piety, and in 1199, Hugh, who + had been Prior there till 1186, was raised to be Abbot of Cluny itself. + This is interesting and important for we have thus an ex-Prior of Lewes as + Abbot of Cluny during the great dispute between the Order and the Earl of + Warenne. In 1200 Lewes was without a Prior, and Abbot Hugh appointed one + Alexander. For some reason or other De Warenne refused to accept him and + even went so far as to claim that the appointment lay with him, an + impossible pretension. Yet even within the Priory he is said to have won + support, certain of the monks claiming that, save for a tribute of one + hundred shillings a year to Cluny, they were independent. The Pope was + appealed to and he of course gave a clear decision, not in the English way + of compromise, which is the way of a barbarian and a coward, but like an + honest man deciding 'twixt right and wrong. His judgment was wholly in + favour of the Abbot of Cluny. The Earl then began to bluster and to + attempt to appeal beyond the Pope; he even dared to place armed men at the + Priory gate and to stop all communications with Cluny. The Abbot replied + by an interdict upon Lewes, and things were in this confusion when the + Pope appointed the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Bishops of Chichester + and Ely to hear what De Warenne had to say in excuse for his violence. The + Abbot of Cluny himself came over and was insulted in Lewes by De Warenne's + men. In appointing English judges to hear the case the Pope must have + known that all would end in a compromise. At any rate this is what + happened, and it was decided that in future, when a vacancy occurred, the + Abbot of Cluny should nominate two candidates of whom De Warenne should + choose one for Prior. This ridiculous judgment decided nothing. Of two + things, one; either the Abbot was right or he was wrong. If he were right + why should he forego his claim, to satisfy De Warenne who was wrong? A + decision was what was needed. In 1229 the Pope rightly declared the + compromise null and void, and the Abbot of Cluny regained his rights. At + once the moral condition of the house improved, and when it was visited in + 1262 everything was reported to be satisfactory, and unlike any other + Cluniac house in England this of Lewes was not in debt. + </p> + <p> + The turning point in the history of the Priory would seem to have been the + one great moment in the story of the town; the appalling affair in which + it was involved by Simon de Montfort in 1264 when he took the town, then + Henry III.'s headquarters, and captured the King and young Prince Edward. + It would seem that De Montfort's soldiers had very little respect for holy + places, for we read that not only were the altars defiled but the very + church was fired and hardly saved from destruction. + </p> + <p> + The quarrel between the King and his barons would seem, too, to have + involved the monks, for we find the sub-prior and nine brethren were + expelled from Lewes for conspiracy and faction and went to do penance in + various houses of the Congregation. Indeed such was the general collapse + here that before the end of the century the Priory was practically + bankrupt. + </p> + <p> + That Lewes suffered severely from the Black Death of 1348-49 is certain, + but we know very little about it, and indeed the history of the house is + negligible until, in the beginning of the fifteenth century the whole + system of Cluny was called in question and it was claimed on behalf of + Lewes that it should be raised to an abbacy with the power to profess + monks. It will be remembered that the Abbot of Cluny—the only Abbot + within the Congregation—alone could profess, and in times of war, + such as the fourteenth century, this must have been very inconvenient. + Indeed we read of men who had been monks their whole life long, but had + never been professed at all. It is therefore not surprising that such a + claim should at last have been put forward. It is equally not surprising + that such a claim was not allowed. The Abbot of Cluny refused to raise + Lewes to the rank of an abbey, but he granted the Prior the privilege of + professing his monks; this in 1410. So things continued till in 1535, the + infamous Layton was sent by Thomas Cromwell to inquire into the state of + the Priory of Lewes, to nose out any scandal he could and to invent what + he could not find. His methods as applied to Lewes are notorious for their + insolence and brutality. He professes to have found the place full of + corruption and rank with treason. And in this he was wise, for his master + Cromwell wanted the house for himself. Upon November 16, 1537, the Priory + of St Pancras at Lewes was surrendered. It was then served by a Prior and + twenty-three monks and eighty servi; and it and its lands were granted by + the King to Thomas Cromwell. + </p> + <p> + Such was the end of the most famous Cluniac house in England, the + sanctuary founded by that De Warenne who had built up Lewes between his + Castle on the height and his monastery in the vale. Almost nothing remains + to-day of that great and splendid building, but in 1845, in building the + railway, the coffins of the founders De Warenne and his wife Gundrada were + found. These now lie in St John's Church, here in Southover close by, + which belonged to the Priory. It was originally a plain Norman building of + which the nave remains, the rest of the church as we see it, being for the + most part either Perpendicular or altogether modern. + </p> + <p> + Of course the Priory of St Pancras was not alone in the fate that befell + it at the hands of the Tudor in 1537. The only other religious house in + Lewes suffered a like fate. This was the convent of the Franciscans, + dedicated, as most authorities agree, in honour of Our Lady and St + Margaret. The Friars Minor were established in Lewes before 1249, and + their convent was one of the last to be surrendered, in 1538. + </p> + <p> + From St John's Church, the visitor, not without a glance at the old half + timber house close by said to have been the residence of Anne of Cleves, + will pass up to the High Street where, under the Castle, stands the parish + church of St Michael, the only ancient part of which is the round Norman + tower, a rare thing. A fourteenth century brass to one of the De Warennes + is to be seen within. Further west is the Transitional Norman church of St + Anne, with curious capitals on the south side of the nave. Here is a fine + basket-work Norman font, and in the south aisle at the east end a vaulted + chapel. To the north of the chancel is a recessed tomb. + </p> + <p> + But it is not in the churches we have in Lewes that we shall to-day find + the symbol, as it were, of that old town, still so fair a thing, which + held the passage of the Ouse through the Downs and in the thirteenth + century witnessed the great battle in which Simon de Montfort, mystic and + soldier, defeated and took captive his king. For that we must go to the + Castle ruin that crowns Lewes as with a battlement. + </p> + <p> + The Castle is reached from the High Street near St Michael's church by the + Castlegate. It was founded, as I have said, by the first De Warenne, but + the gate-house by which we enter is later, dating from King Edward's time, + the original Norman gate being within. The Castle had two keeps, a rare + feature. Only one of these remains, reached by a winding steep way, and of + this only two of the fine octagonal towers are left to us. These two are + thirteenth century works. From the principal tower, now used as a museum, + we may get the best view of the famous battlefield under Mount Harry, one + of the most famous sites of the thirteenth century in England, for the + battle that was fought there seemed to have decided everything; in fact it + decided nothing, for its result was entirely reversed at Evesham by the + military genius of Prince Edward. + </p> + <p> + The cause contested upon these noble hills to the north-west of Lewes is + one which continually recurs all through English history; the cause of the + Aristocracy against the Crown. The monarchies of western Europe, which + slowly emerged from the anarchy of the Dark Ages and helped to make the + Middle Age the glorious and noble thing it was, are, if we consider them + spiritually at least, democratic weapons, or rather, politically, they + seem to sum up the national energy and to express it. In them was vested, + and this as of divine right, the executive. Without the Crown nothing + could be done, no writ issued, no fortress garrisoned. In the Crown was + gathered all the national ends, it was a symbol at once of unity and of + power. Against this glorious thing in England we see a constant and + unremitting rebellion on the part of the aristocracy. It was so in the + time of King John when the rascal barons curbed and broke the central + government; it was so in the time of Henry III. when Simon de Montfort + led, and for a time successfully, the rebellion. It has been so always and + not least in the Great Rebellion of the seventeenth century so falsely + represented as a democratic movement, when the parvenu aristocracy founded + upon the lands and wealth of the raped Church in the sixteenth century, + broke the Crown up and finally established in England a puppet king, a + mere Venetian Doge incapable, as we have seen in the last few years, of + defending the people against an unscrupulous and treasonous plutocracy led + by a lawyer as certainly on the make as Thomas Cromwell. The infamous + works of such men as these have most often been done under the + hypocritical and lying banner of the rights of the people as though to + gain his ends the devil should bear the cross of Christ. It is so to-day; + it was so in the time of Simon de Montfort. + </p> + <p> + I have said that the King was the fountain of all power in the England of + Simon; it was therefore his supreme object to get possession of the King's + body that he might have control of the executive machinery of the country + and thus in fact be king <i>de facto</i>. It was this which he achieved + upon the battlefield of Lewes in 1264. + </p> + <p> + For some ten years before that battle the Barons of England had been + restless under the yoke of the central government, the Crown, which stood + not for them but for us all. They had already wrung from Henry III. under + compulsion, when he was within their power and not a free agent, certain + concessions which now he refused to confirm to them. They called him liar + and covered him with the same abuse that their successors hurled at + Charles I.; but Henry stood firm, he refused what had been dragged from + him by force, and Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester, raised an army not + from the people but from his own feudal adherents and his friends and took + the field, striking into the valley of the Severn, where he seized + Hereford, Gloucester, Worcester and Bridgnorth with their castles. Then he + marched straight upon London where, among the Guilds, he had many + adherents and friends. War seemed inevitable, but, as it happened, a truce + was called, and the question which Simon had made an excuse for his + rising, the question of the King's refusal to confirm the grant of + privileges wrung from him by force, was submitted for decision to St Louis + of France, undoubtedly the most reverent, famous, and splendid figure of + that day. St Louis, unlike an Englishman, decided not with a view to peace + as though justice were nothing and right an old wives' tale, but according + to law and his conscience, honestly and cleanly before God like an + intelligent being. Of two things one, either the King was right or he was + wrong. St Louis decided that the King was right, and this upon January + 23rd, 1264. + </p> + <p> + Simon refused to abide by the decision. This man in his own conception was + above law and honour and justice, he was the inspired and privileged + servant of God. In this hallucination he deceived himself even as Oliver + Cromwell did later and equally for his own ends. He, too, would break the + Crown and himself govern England. He, too, was brutal beyond bearing, + proud and insolent with his inferiors, imperious even to God, a great man, + but one impossible to suffer in any state which is to endure, a dangerous + tyrant. + </p> + <p> + This great mystical soldier at once took the field, and when Henry + returned from Amiens, where the court of St Louis had sat, he found all + England up, the Cinque Ports all hot for Simon, London ponderous in his + support, and in all south-eastern England but one principle fortress still + in loyal hands, that of Rochester. + </p> + <p> + North and west of London, however, things were less disastrous, and + Henry's first move was to secure all this and to cut off London, the + approach to which he held on the south-east in spite of everything, since + he commanded Rochester, from the Midlands and the West. Simon's answer was + the right one; he struck at Rochester and laid siege to it. Down upon him + came King Henry to relieve it and was successful. Simon swept back upon + London, there he gathered innumerable levies and again advanced into the + south against the King. + </p> + <p> + Henry having relieved Rochester, marched also into the south, doubtless + intent upon the reduction of the Cinque ports; for this, however, Simon + gave him no time. He came thundering down, half London weltering behind + him, across the Weald, and Henry, wheeling to meet him, came upon the 12th + of May up the vale of Glynde and occupied Lewes. On the following day + Simon appeared at Fletching in the vale of the Weald, some nine miles + north of Lewes; there he encamped. Very early in the morning of the 14th + May, Simon arrayed his troops and began his march southward upon the royal + army. Dawn was just breaking when his first troopers came over the high + Down and saw Lewes in the morning mist, the royal banners floating from + the Castle—all still asleep. Slowly and at his ease Simon ordered + his men. Upon the north, conspicuously, he set his litter with his + standard above it and about it massed the raw levies of London. Upon the + south he gathered the knights and men-at-arms led by the young Earl of + Gloucester. As for himself he remained with the reserve. Then when all was + ready he gave the order and both wings, north and south, began to advance + upon the town "hoping to find their enemies still abed." + </p> + <p> + Simon's plan was a simple one, he hoped to surprise his foes and he + intended in any case to throw his main strength southward upon the Priory + of St Pancras, while pretending that his main attack was to be upon the + Castle. He did not altogether succeed in surprising his foes, but in + everything else he was successful. The royalists were aware of his + approach only at the last moment, so that when they poured out of the + Castle and Priory and town they were in some confusion. Then Prince + Edward, observing the standard of Simon over the litter, flung himself + upon the Londoners, who broke and fled while he pursued them, nor did he + stay his hand till he was far away from Lewes. He returned at last + victorious and triumphant to find Simon's banner floating from Lewes + Castle, the King of the Romans and the King of England in Simon's hands + and the day lost. Weary though he was, he attempted with all the + impetuosity of youth to reverse that verdict. Through the streets of Lewes + he fought, till at length he was forced to take refuge in the church of + the Franciscans, where indeed Simon found him. + </p> + <p> + Such was the battle of Lewes, which gave all England to De Montfort for + more than a year; till indeed Lewes was reversed, by Prince Edward who, + escaping from his hands at Hereford, gathered a new army about him and + forced Simon to meet him upon the field of Evesham where, when the great + soldier-mystic saw the royal banners upon the dawn, he cried out that last + great word of his, "The Lord have mercy on our souls for our bodies are + Prince Edward's": to be answered when he demanded mercy, "there is no + treating with traitors." + </p> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH12" id="link2HCH12"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER XII + </h2> + <p> + THE DOWNS LEWES TO BRAMBER + </p> + <p> + Perhaps after all the most fundamental truth about Lewes is that she is + the capital of the South Downs, and the South Downs are the glory of the + South Country; from the noble antiquity of Winchester to the splendour of + Beachy Head they run like an indestructible line of Latin verse beneath + the blazon of England. They stand up between the land and the sea, the + most Roman thing in England, and of all English land it is their white + brows that the sun kisses first when it rises over the sea, of all English + hills every morning they are the first to be blest. + </p> + <p> + The most Roman thing in England I call them; and indeed this "noble range + of mountains" has not the obvious antiquity of the Welsh mountains or the + Mendip Hills, nor the tragic aspect as of something as old as time, as old + as the world itself, of the dark and sea-torn cliffs of Cornwall, or the + wild and desolate uplands of Somerset and Devon. The South Downs seem + indeed not so much a work of Nature as of man; and of what men! In their + regular and even line, in their continuity and orderly embankment, in + their splendid monotony of contour they recall but one thing—Rome; + they might be indeed only another work of that mighty government which + conceived and built the great Wall that stretches from the Solway to the + Firth of Forth which marked the limit of the Empire and barred out its + enemies. And this wall of the South Downs, too, marked but another + frontier of the same great government; beyond it lay the horizons unknown, + and it barred out the sea. + </p> + <p> + But how much older than Rome are the South Downs! Doubtless before the + foundation of Rome, e'er Troy was besieged, these hills stood up against + the south and served us as a habitation and a home. Nor indeed have we + failed to leave signs of our life there so many thousand years ago, so + that to-day a man wandering over that great uplifted plateau which slopes + so gradually towards the sea, though he seem to be utterly alone, as far + as possible from the ways and the habitations of men, immersed in an + immemorial silence, in truth passes only from forgotten city to forgotten + city, amid the strongholds and the burial places of a civilisation so old + that it is only the earth itself which retains any record or memory of it. + Here were our cities when we feared the beast, before we had knowledge of + bronze or iron, when our tool and our weapon was the flint. + </p> + <p> + The man, our ancestor, who chipped and prepared the flints for our use at + Cissbury for instance, doubtless looked out upon a landscape different + from that we see to-day and yet essentially the same after all. The South + Downs in their whole extent slope, as I have said, very gradually seaward + and south, and there of old were our cities chiefly set, but northward + their escarpment is extraordinarily steep, rising from time to time into + lofty headlands of which the noblest, the most typical and the most famous + is Chanctonbury. Standing above that steep escarpment a man to-day looks + all across the fruitful Weald till far off he sees the long line of the + North Downs running as it were parallel with these southern hills, and + ennobled and broken by similar heights as that of Leith Hill. Between, + like an uneven river bed with its drifts and islands of soil, running from + west to east, lies the Weald, opening at last as it were into the broad + estuary of Romney Marsh, half lost in the sea. And what we see to-day our + neolithic forefathers saw too—with a difference. Doubtless the Downs + then were as smooth and bare as they are now, but the Weald, we may be + sure, was different, wilder and certainly fuller of woodland, though never + perhaps the vast and impenetrable forest of trees of which we have been + told. + </p> + <p> + I say that the Downs, now deserted save by the shepherd and his flock, + were of old populous, and of this fact the evidence is plentiful. There is + indeed not one of the five main stretches of the Downs that does not bear + witness to the immemorial presence of man. To say nothing of the + discoveries about Beachy Head, the earthworks there, and the neolithic + implements and bronze weapons discovered about East Dean and Alfriston, we + have in the Long Man of Wilmington, that gigantic figure cut out in the + chalk of the hill-side, something comparable only with the Giant of Cerne + Abbas in Dorset and the White Horses of Wiltshire. That figure is some two + hundred and forty feet in height and holds in each hand a stave or club + two hundred and thirty feet long. It would seem impossible to be certain + either of its age or its purpose, but we may perhaps be sure that it lay + there upon the Downs above Polegate before the landing of Caesar, and it + may have been the foundation of one of those figures described by him as + formed of osiers and filled with living men to be destroyed by fire as a + sacrifice for our barbarian gods. + </p> + <p> + Nor is this all. The whole range of the Downs as I say is scattered thick + with the work of our pre-historic forefathers. In Burlough Castle and + Mount Caburn we have fortresses so old that it is impossible to name the + age in which they were contrived and built, nor can we assert with any + confidence who they were that first occupied the camp upon Ditchling + Beacon, the highest point of the South Downs, or who first defended + Wolstanbury. And it is the same with those most famous places Cissbury + Ring and Chanctonbury. But the flint mines upon Cissbury give us some idea + of the neolithic men, our forefathers, which should and does astonish us. + The Camp itself is less wonderful than the mines upon the western side of + it. Here we have not only numerous pits from ten to seventy feet in + diameter and from five to seven feet deep, but really vast excavations + leading to galleries which tap a belt or band of flints. That these mines + were worked by neolithic man it is impossible to doubt, but he may not + have discovered or first used them. They may be older than he, though all + record even upon that marvellous hill- side, has been lost of those who + first exploited them. Nor is Chanctonbury, though it cannot boast of mines + such as these, less astonishing or less ancient. The camp set there + following the contour of the hill can only have been one of the most + important in south- east England. It commands the camps at Cissbury, the + Devil's Dyke, High Down and White Hawk, the whole breadth of the Weald lay + beneath it and a signal displayed upon Leith Hill upon the North Downs + could easily be answered from this noble mountain; Mount Caburn itself was + not more essentially important. + </p> + <p> + It has been thought that the Romans may have used Chanctonbury, but if so + they have left but little mark of their occupation, and indeed, though the + Downs as a whole far off are stamped with so Roman a character, there is + but one spot in their whole length where we may say; here certainly the + Legions have been. That spot lies upon the last division of the Downs + towards the west, the line of hills which stands between Chichester and + the Weald. + </p> + <p> + It is certain that the Romans were, in Sussex, most at home on that great + sea plain towards which the Downs slope so gradually southward. Here + indeed they built their town of Regnum, and perhaps towards the end of + their occupation of Britain they laid out the only purely military highway + which they built here from Regnum to London Bridge. This great Roman road, + known as the Stane Street, coming out of the eastern gate of Chichester, + takes the Downs as an arrow flies, crossing them between Boxgrove and + Bignor, nor is the work of Rome even to-day wholly destroyed, for there + under Bignor Hill we may still see the pavement of their Way, while at + Bignor itself we have perhaps the best remains of a Roman villa left to us + in Sussex. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-14" id="linkimage-14"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/015.jpg" width="100%" alt="The Downs " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + But though all these marks and signs, the memory and the ruins not only of + our forefathers, but of those our saviours who drew us within the + government of the Empire so that we are to-day what we are and not as they + who knew not the Romans, make the Downs sacred to us, it is not only or + chiefly for this that we love them or that in any thought of Southern + England, when far away, it is these great hills which first come back into + the mind and bring the tears to our eyes. We love them for themselves, for + their beauty and their persistence certainly, but really because we have + always known them and they more than any other thing here in the south + remind us and are a symbol of our home. A man of South England must always + have them in his heart + </p> + <p> + for every day of his childhood they have filled his eyes. And to-day more + especially they stand as a sign and a symbol. For not only are they the + first great hills which the Londoner sees, but they offer the nearest + relief and repose from the modern torture and noise of that enormous place + which has ceased to be a city and become a mere asylum of landless men. + From the mean and crowded streets he seeks with an ever increasing + eagerness the space of the Downs, from the noise and confusion and throng, + this silence and this emptiness; from the breathless street, this free and + nimble air, which is better than wine. And so to-day more than ever the + Downs have come to stand as a symbol of an England half lost, which might + seem to be passing away, but that is, as indeed these hills assure us, + eternal and indestructible, the very England of our hearts, which cannot + die. There are some doubtless who grumble at this invasion and are fearful + lest even this last nobility should be destroyed by the multitude or this + last sanctuary desecrated by the rapacity of the rich, or this last + silence broken by the brutal noise of the motor car. But the Downs are too + strong, they have seen too many civilisations pass away, and the men and + the ages that built upon their hill-sides have become less than a dream in + the morning. They remain. And is it nothing that in our day if a man hears + a bird sing in a London street in spring it is of the Downs he thinks, if + the wind comes over the gardens in some haggard suburb it is these hills + which rise up in his mind, these hills, which stand there against the + south, our very own from everlasting to everlasting. + </p> + <p> + But to possess the Downs at least as a symbol, to dream of them as a + refuge, it is not necessary to know them in all their secret places, to + have seen all their little forgotten homesteads, or to be able to + recognise all their thousand steep tracks one from another. + </p> + <p> + For me indeed the Downs, long as I have known them, remain most dear as a + spectacle, but this you will miss altogether if you are actually upon + them, lost amid their rolling waves of green turf with only the sky and + the wind and the sun for companions. Therefore when I set out from Lewes + to go westward I did not take the way up past the race- course over the + battlefield south of Mount Harry towards Ditchling Camp and Beacon. Let me + confess it, I followed the road. And what a road! In all South England I + know no other that offers the traveller such a spectacle, where above him, + in full view, that great rampart stands up like a wall, peak speaks to + peak, till presently with a majesty and a splendour, not to be matched I + think in our island, Chanctonbury stands forth like a king crowned as with + laurel towering upon the horizon. + </p> + <p> + Now this road I followed passes westward out of Lewes and then turns + swiftly north, climbing as it goes, under the Downs beyond Offham, turning + west again under Mount Harry and so on past Courthouse Farm and Plumpton + church, which stands lonely in a field to the north of the road, till + suddenly by Westmaston church under Ditchling Beacon it turns north again + towards the Weald and enters the very notable village of Ditchling. All + that way is worth a king's ransom, for it gives you all the steepness of + the Downs upon their steepest side, their sudden north escarpment, + towering up over the Weald some seven hundred feet or more. On a spring + morning early I know no way more joyful. + </p> + <p> + Ditchling Beacon itself stands some eight hundred and fifty feet above the + sea and is the highest point in all the range of the South Downs, though + it lacks the nobility of Chanctonbury. The earthworks here are irregular + and not very well defined, but there is a fine dewpound to the east of the + camp though perhaps this has not much antiquity, a seemingly older + depression now dry in the north-west corner is rather an old rainwater + ditch than a dewpound. Altogether it might seem that Ditchling Camp was + rather a refuge for cattle than a military fortress. + </p> + <p> + Ditchling village is charming, with more than one old half-timber house, + and the church of St Margaret's is not only interesting in itself, but, + standing as it does upon rising ground and yet clear of the great hills, + it offers you one of the finest views of the Downs anywhere to be had from + the Weald. It consists of a cruciform building of which the north transept + and the north wall of the nave were rebuilt in the thirteenth century. The + chancel, however, has some beautiful Early English work to show and the + nave is rather plain Transitional. The eastern window and most of the + windows in the nave are of the early Decorated period, the window in the + south chancel aisle being somewhat later. + </p> + <p> + Something better than Ditchling church awaits the traveller at Clayton + where the little church of St John the Baptist possesses a most + interesting chancel arch, round and massive, that may well be Saxon. The + chancel itself is of the thirteenth century with triple lancets at the + western end with two heads, perhaps of a king and queen on the moulding. + Here, too, on the south chancel wall is a fine brass of 1523 in which we + see a priest holding chalice and wafer. In the nave are the remains of + frescoes of the Last Judgment. + </p> + <p> + Right above Clayton rises Wolstanbury, a hill-top camp or circular work + some two hundred and fifty yards in diameter. It is interesting because it + is curiously and cleverly fortified, the rampart being built up below and + outside the fosse, owing to the steepness of the hill. To the left are + certain pits which may have been the site of dwellings; certainly many + neolithic implements have been found here. + </p> + <p> + Below Wolstanbury which thrusts itself out into the Weald like a great + headland nearly seven hundred feet in height, lies Pyecombe to the + south-west. This little place which lies between the heights of + Wolstanbury and Newtimber Hill is celebrated for two things, its + shepherds' crooks and the Norman font of lead in the little church whose + chancel arch is Norman too. You may see here even in so small a place, + however, all the styles of England, for if the font and chancel arch are + Norman, the lancets in the chancel are Early English, the double piscina + is Decorated and the windows of the nave are Perpendicular while the + pulpit is of the seventeenth century. + </p> + <p> + Pyecombe is hard to reach from Clayton without a great climb over the + Downs, but there is a way, though a muddy one, which turns due west out of + the Brighton road where the railway crosses it. This leads one round the + northern side of Wolstanbury (and this is the best way from which to visit + the camp on the top) and so by a footpath past Newtimber Place, a moated + Elizabethan house well hidden away among the trees west of the road to + Hurstpierpoint. + </p> + <p> + From Pyecombe there is a delightful road winding in and out under the + Downs about Newtimber Hill to Poynings. Poynings is, or should I say was, + one of the loveliest, loneliest and most unspoiled villages to be found + here under the Downs, but of late it has been accessible by railway from + the Devil's Dyke and Brighton. Nothing, however, can spoil the beauty and + interest of its church which is, I suppose, one of the earliest + Perpendicular works in the county, built before 1368 by the third Baron de + Poynings, some remains of whose old manor-house may still be found east of + the churchyard. The church is a Greek cross with central tower, and is + dedicated in honour of the Holy Trinity. Everything in it is charming, + especially the beautiful eastern window, the triple sedilia and the + piscina; but the pulpit and altar rails are of the seventeenth century as + is the great south window which once stood in Chichester Cathedral. The + Poynings lie in the south transept, but their tombs have been defaced. The + north transept is the Montagu Chapel; here in the window is some old glass + in which we may see the Annunciation. + </p> + <p> + The Devil's Dyke, which stands right above Poynings, is a great trench in + the Downs, dug according to the legend by the devil, whose genial + intention it was to drown holy Sussex by letting in the sea. He was + allowed from sunset to sunrise to work his will, but owing to the + vigilance of those above who had Sussex particularly in their keeping, the + cocks all began to crow long before the dawn, and the devil, thinking his + time was spent, went off in a rage before he had completed his work. This + would seem to prove what I have often suspected that the devil is as great + a fool as he looks. + </p> + <p> + The camp above the Devil's Dyke is of the usual design of a hill-top + fortress, the defence following the natural line of the hill, the look-out + having been apparently upon the north-west, whence a remarkably extensive + view is to be had both over the Weald and the Downs. But as no water would + seem to have been conserved here it is difficult to believe that this camp + was ever a permanent fortress which only a very large number of people + could have defended. Nevertheless a great number of neolithic implements + have been found there. + </p> + <p> + From Poynings in full view of Chanctonbury the beautiful road runs all the + way at the foot of the Downs to that great gap through which the Adur + seeks the sea, and which of old was guarded by Bramber Castle. On the way + it passes through the loveliest of villages, to wit, Edburton, where in + the Early English church of St Andrew is the second of the three Norman + fonts of lead within this county. The church is altogether interesting, + for if it is for the most part of the thirteenth century, it has a + charming Decorated eastern window and it is said that Archbishop Laud + himself presented the pulpit and altar rails. What the two low side + windows were for I know not, but the chapel on the north was dedicated in + honour of St Catherine of Alexandria. + </p> + <p> + It was already dusk when I came out of Edburton church, the late dusk of a + day in early May; and so, liking the place passing well, I determined to + sleep there and soon found a hospitable cottage. In the morning I liked + the place better still, and remembering the "tarmac" and the + sophistication (alas!) of Steyning, I decided to stay where I was two or + three days and to visit thence a place in the Weald it had long been my + desire to see. And so having made up my mind, before nine o'clock I set + out on my way. + </p> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH13" id="link2HCH13"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER XIII + </h2> + <p> + THE WEALD + </p> + <p> + There can be no one who has stood upon one of the great heights of the + Downs north and south, upon Ditchling Beacon, Chanctonbury or Leith Hill, + who, looking across the Weald, has not wondered what this country, lying + between the two great chalk ranges, might be, what is its nature and its + history and what part it has played in the great story of England. For + even to the superficial onlooker it seems to differ essentially not only + from the great chalk Downs upon which he stands, but from any other part + of England known to him. It lies, thickly sprinkled with scattered and + isolated woodlands, a mighty trench between the heights, not a vast plain + but an uneven lowland diversified by higher land but without true hills, + and roughly divided west and east into two parts by a great ridge known by + various names, but in its greater part called the Forest, St Leonard's + Forest, Ashdown Forest, Dallington Forest, and so forth. This country + which we know as the Weald is obviously bounded north and south by the + Downs which enclose it, as they do, too, upon the west, where between + Winchester and Petersfield and Selborne the two ranges narrow and meet. + Thence, indeed, the Weald spreads eastward in an ever widening delta till + it is lost in the marshes and the sea. + </p> + <p> + Such is the aspect of this great country as we see it to-day from any of + the heights north and south of it; but what is its true character and what + is its history? + </p> + <p> + We hear of it first under a Saxon name, Andredeswald, whence we get our + name of the Weald, and we find it always spoken of not only by the Saxons, + but by the Romans before them as an obstacle, though not, it would seem, + an insurmountable one. It was, in fact, a wild forest country of clay + containing much woodland, everywhere covered with scrub, and traversed by + various sleepy and shallow streams. That it was difficult to cross we have + Roman evidence; that it was a secure hiding- place we know from the + Saxons; but as we look upon it to-day neither of these historic facts is + self-evident, and therefore a curious myth has grown up with regard to the + Weald; and the historian, seeking to explain what is not to be understood + without time and trouble and experience, tells us that the Weald was once + an impenetrable forest, a whole great woodland and undergrowth so thick + that no man might cross it without danger. Such an assertion is merely an + attempt on the part of men, who do not know the Weald, to explain the + facts of which I have spoken, namely, that the Weald appears as an + obstacle in our early history, though not insurmountable, and that it + continually offered a secure hiding-place and refuge to the fugitive. + </p> + <p> + The Weald as it appears to us first, is the secure home of those who first + smelted the ironstone in which it abounds, and as such it remained during + many ages. But the two main facts about it which help to explain + everything in its history are first that it consisted for the most part of + clay, and secondly that it was everywhere ill watered. Let us consider + these things. + </p> + <p> + The Weald, even as we see it to-day, tilled and cultivated and tended + though it be, remains largely a country of scattered woodland, very + thickly wooded, indeed, as seen in a glance from any height of the Downs, + but revealing itself, as we traverse it, as a country of isolated woods, + often of oak, and with here and there the remains of a wild and rough + moorland country, of which, as we may think, in the Roman times, it, for + the most part, consisted. It later possessed some six forests properly so + called, but itself was never a legal forest nor in any sense of the words + an impenetrable wood. It always possessed homesteads, farms and steadings, + but almost nowhere within it was there a great or populous town; men lived + there it is true, but always in a sort of isolation. And this was so not + because the Weald was an impassable forest of woodland and undergrowth—it + was never that; but because of its scarcity of water or more accurately + its uncertainty of water and its soil, the Wealden clay. The state of + affairs anciently obtaining in the Weald does not fundamentally differ + from what obtains to-day, and in a word it was and is this: in dry weather + there is no water, but the going is good; in wet weather there is plenty + of water, but the going is impossible. Of course, these conditions have in + modern times been modified by the building of roads and the sinking of + wells and the better embankment and preservation of the rivers, but in + Roman times, as later, the Weald was an obstacle because it was difficult, + though never impossible, to cross on account of the badness of the going + or the lack of water. It was a secure hiding-place for such a fugitive as + a Saxon king because he could not be pursued by an army; he himself with a + few followers could move from steading to steading and enjoy a certain + amount of state, but a pursuing army would have perished. + </p> + <p> + Evidence in support of this explanation of the secret and character of the + Weald is not far to seek. The Weald lay between the Channel and its ports, + that is to say, the entries into England from the continent, and the + Thames valley; it was then an obstacle that had to be overcome. Had it + been merely a great woodland forest, it would not have troubled the Romans + who would merely have driven a great road through it. But the Romans had + more to face than an impenetrable woodland or the roughness of the + country; they had to overcome the lack of water, and therefore in the + Weald their day's march of some twelve miles was pressed to double its + normal length. The French armies, according to Mr Belloc, do exactly the + same thing in the Plain of Chalons to-day. And indeed a man may see for + himself, even yet, what exactly the Weald was if in summer he will cross + it by any of the winding byways that often become good roads for a mile or + so and then lapse again into lanes or footpaths. Let him follow one of + these afoot and drink only by the wayside. And then in winter let him + follow the same tracks if he can. He will find plenty of water, but his + feet will be heavy with clay. For an army or even a regiment to go as he + goes would be almost impossible, and this not because of the woodland or + undergrowth, but because of the lack of water, the lack of towns or large + villages and the clay underfoot. + </p> + <p> + Such then was the nature of the barrier which lay between the ports of the + Channel and the valley of the Thames. The Weald was indeed inhuman, and + this helps to explain why it was not only a barrier but a refuge. + </p> + <p> + We read in the rude chronicle of the Saxons of two men who sought refuge + in the Weald, in the seventh and eighth centuries. The first of the three + was Caedwalla, (659?-689) a young man of great energy, according to Bede, + and probably a dangerous aspirant to the West-Saxon throne. At any rate he + was exiled from Wessex and he took refuge with his followers in the forest + of Anderida, that is to say in the Weald. There about 681 he met St + Wilfrid who had fled, too, from the West Saxon kingdom. Wilfrid was busy + converting the South Saxons, and Caedwalla, going from steading to + steading with his followers, saved from any considerable pursuit by the + nature of the country, became great friends with him. This, however, did + not prevent him in 685 from ravaging Sussex, slaying the South Saxon king + and at last succeeding his old enemy Centwine upon the West Saxon throne. + Caedwalla, after conquering the Isle of Wight and putting to death the two + sons of King Arvaldus, having allowed them first to be baptised, was + himself converted, and to such purpose that he laid down his crown, went + on pilgrimage to Rome, and was baptised under the name of Peter, by the + Pope, on the vigil of Easter 689. He died, however, before Domenica in + albis, and was buried in Old St Peter's, nor was he the only English king + that lay there. + </p> + <p> + All this came out of the Weald; but it is most significant for us because + it allows us to understand the nature of this refuge and what it offered + in the way of safety to an exile. + </p> + <p> + This is confirmed by the experience of Sigebert, King of the West Saxons. + He, too, first took refuge in the Weald when deposed by his witan. He fled + away and was pursued, we read, by Cynewulf, so that he took refuge in the + forest of Andred where he was safe from pursuit by many men, being killed + at last at Privet near Petersfield in Hampshire by a swineherd in revenge + for his master's death. Such then was the nature of the Weald and such + fundamentally it remains, a stubborn and really untameable country, even + to-day not truly humanised, still largely empty of towns and villages but + scattered with isolated farms and steadings. And the essential inhumanity + of the true heart of the Weald is borne out by the scarcity of religious + houses there. Only the little Priory of Rusper, a small Benedictine + nunnery perhaps founded by one of the De Braose family before the end of + the twelfth century, and the small Benedictine nunnery of Easebourne + founded in the thirteenth century may be said to belong to the true Weald; + of the others, such as the Abbey of Robertsbridge, the Priories of + Michelham and Shulbred, the Abbeys of Otham, Bayham, and Dureford not one + is really old or stands really within the true Weald. Nor are they of very + much importance. The greatest of these houses was the Cistercian Abbey of + Robertsbridge founded in 1176 by Alfred de St Martin, Sheriff of the rape + of Hastings, within which the abbey stood, really upon the last of the + forest ridge towards the Level of Pevensey. It is true that this abbey + played a considerable part in history during the first years of its + existence; for it was the Abbot of Robertsbridge who set out with the + Abbot of Boxley to search for Coeur de Lion in 1192 and who found him in + Bavaria, and we find the Abbot of Robertsbridge employed more than once + again as an ambassador; but its fame soon dwindled, and though it escaped + the first suppression and indeed survived till 1538 it could boast then of + but eight brethren. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-15" id="linkimage-15"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/016.jpg" width="100%" + alt="The Weald of Sussex, North Of Lewes " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + The only other houses as old as Robertsbridge are those of Otham and + Dureford, houses of Premonstratensian Canons, neither in the heart of the + Weald, and both dating from the twelfth century. The other religious + houses, Michelham and Shulbred of the Augustinian Canons, Easebourne of + Augustinian nuns and Bayham the successor of Otham, all date from the + thirteenth century, and indeed no more belong to the true Weald than do + the rest. It is, in fact, only to-day that a great monastery stands in the + heart of the Weald, and of all wonderful things that is a Carthusian House + of the like of which Pre-reformation England boasted but twelve, and + Sussex none at all. + </p> + <p> + It was one day as I came over the Adur by Moat Farm that I became aware of + this great establishment, for there suddenly, as I turned a corner, by the + Lord, the road was full of Carthusian monks all in their white habits, a + sight as marvellous as delightful once more upon an English road. And so I + found my way to the great house of St Hugh at Parkminster. + </p> + <p> + One should learn to be astonished at nothing in England of my heart, for + it will beggar one's admiration. But Carthusians! Was it not this Order + which Henry II. had brought into England as part of his penance for the + murder of St Thomas? Was it not this Order which had first been + established in my own Somerset, and alone of all Orders in England by a + Saint, and which there at Witham and at Hinton, still so fair and lovely, + built its first two houses in England, of which all told there were but + twelve? Was it not this Order that had faced and outfaced Henry Tudor to + the last so that the monks of the London Charterhouse were burnt at the + stake at Tyburn? + </p> + <p> + Well is this monastery dedicated in honour of St Hugh. And if you do not + know why let me write it here. It is well known that after the murder of + St Thomas and Henry II.'s public repentance for his part in all that evil, + Pope Alexander III. gave him for penance a crusade of three years in the + Holy Land, but when that was found not to be convenient he commuted it for + the building of three monasteries of which one was to be Carthusian, for + the Carthusians at that time had no house in England. This Order had been + founded at Grenoble in 1086 by St Bruno, who had been sent by St. Hugh, + Bishop of Grenoble, to a desert spot in the Alps 14,000 feet above the + sea. There St Bruno founded his monastery known as the Grande Chartreuse. + His monks were hermit monks, each had, as each has still, his own little + dwelling. The Order, which has never been reformed—Cartusia nunquam + reformata Quia nunquam deformata—and has uniformly followed the Rule + approved by Pope Innocent XI., recognises three classes of brethren, the + fathers, the conversi or lay brethren, and nuns. Each house is governed by + a Prior and each monk lives, as I have said, in a separate dwelling of + five little rooms and a tiny cloister, or rather ambulatory, facing a + little garden. His food is given him through a hatch at the foot of the + stairs leading to his rooms. He attends Mass in Choir, Matins and Vespers + too, but the other Hours are said in his cell. As the Carthusians were + when they first came into England so they are to-day. + </p> + <p> + But it is not in honour of St Hugh, Bishop of Grenoble, that the monastery + at Parkminster is dedicated, but of quite another saint. + </p> + <p> + When Henry II. set out to found a Carthusian house in England in obedience + to the Pope, the place he chose for it was Witham in Selwood, a solitude, + for the Rule of the Order demanded it, and that is also why we have this + monastery in the Weald to-day. It bears witness as nothing else could do + to-day, perhaps, to the true character of the Weald. + </p> + <p> + Witham, it is true, was not so desolate as the Grande Chartreuse, but it + was in the heart of the Forest, far from the abode of men. Even to- day + Witham is not easy to reach by road. This house, thus founded did not + flourish; whether the place was too hard for the monks, or whether there + was some other cause we know not, but the first two priors, though both + from the Grande Chartreuse, failed to establish it. Then King Henry was + advised to beg of the mother-house her great and shining light, Hugh of + Avalon, not of Avalon in England, but of Avalon in Burgundy. He was + successful in his request. The Bishop of Bath and Wells, his ambassador, + then in the Alps, was able to bring Hugh home with him, though the loss of + that "most sweet presence," as the Prior declared, widowed his house; and + Hugh came to England and to Witham and was received as "an angel of the + Lord." It is in honour of this great and holy man, later Bishop of Lincoln + and known as St Hugh of Avalon, that the Carthusian monastery of + Parkminster is dedicated. I have here no room to speak of him, the true + founder of the Order in England, of his holy, brave and laborious life in + Selwood or of his rule there of ten years. He is forgotten even at Witham + and his name no longer, alas, means anything to us whom he served. Only + the Carthusians have not forgotten, and to the keeping of no other saint + in the Calendar could they so honourably have entrusted their new house. + </p> + <p> + This monastery, founded in the Weald, upon October 17, 1877, is a great, + if not a beautiful, pile of buildings, and is, in fact, one of the largest + houses of the Order in the world. The visitor rings at the gate, and is + admitted by a lay-brother dressed in the beautiful white habit, caught + about the waist by a leathern girdle from which a rosary hangs. Upon his + feet are rough shoes and his head is shorn but he greets you with a smile + of welcome and leads you into a large quadrangle, where before you is the + great Romanesque church with a chapel upon one side and the refectory upon + the other, and all about are cloisters. Here over the entrance to the + church is a statue of St Hugh. Within, the church is divided by a screen + into two parts, the choir for the Fathers, the nave for the lay-brothers. + Over the screen is a rood, and beneath, two altars, dedicated in honour of + St John the Baptist, who went into the desert, and St Bruno, the founder + of the Order. From the church one is led to the Chapter House, in which + there stands an altar and Crucifix, and there upon the walls are depicted + scenes from the martyrdom of the London Carthusians in the time of Henry + VIII. From the Chapter House one is led to the Chapel of the Relics, where + there is a beautiful silver reliquary that belonged to the English + Carthusians before the Reformation, and in it is a relic of St Thomas of + Canterbury. Here, too, is the stole of St Hugh and a bone of St Bruno. + </p> + <p> + The monastery proper lies behind the church, where a vast quadrangle, the + Great Cloister, some three acres in extent, opens out, surrounded on three + sides by the little houses of the monks, with the graveyard in the midst. + Here the monks live, and are buried without coffin or shroud in their + white habits, the hood drawn over the face. The cells are delightful to + look upon, "a solitude within a solitude"; each consists of five rooms, + two below and three above, reached by a staircase, the whole approached + from a passage closed by a door giving on to the Great Cloister. Here live + and pray some thirty-six monks, with a like number of conversi or + lay-brothers. + </p> + <p> + I do not know in all England a place more peaceful than this one, more + solemn and salutary to visit in the confusion of our modern life. Here is + one of the lightning conductors that preserves the modern world from the + wrath of God. Let others think as they will, for me the monastery of St + Hugh in the Weald is holy ground. + </p> + <p> + And at any rate, even though you may not agree with me so far, in this at + least I shall carry you with me, when I say that this monastery, and + especially because it is Carthusian, bears out the old character of the + Weald and endorses it. I have said the Weald was ever a wild and inhuman + place where only few men could go together, without great towns and with + only infrequent villages; not a thick or impenetrable woodland but a + difficult and a lonely country sparsely scattered with steadings. Well, it + is such places that the Carthusians have ever sought out for their houses, + such was Witham and such was the Grande Chartreuse also. That a Carthusian + monastery should have been founded to-day in the midst of the Weald + proves, if anything can, that it has not yet wholly lost its character. + </p> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH14" id="link2HCH14"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER XIV + </h2> + <p> + TO ARUNDEL AND CHICHESTER + </p> + <p> + From my little quiet retreat at Edburton, I set out one May morning to + follow the road under the Downs, through Steyning for Arundel and + Chichester, because it is one of the fairest ways in all the world, and, + rightly understood, one of the most interesting. And to begin with, I + found myself crossing one of those gaps in the South Downs, each of which + is held by a castle. The one I now crossed was that made by the Adur, and + it was held by the Castle of Bramber. + </p> + <p> + Now Bramber, merely beautiful to-day, must in the old times always have + been of importance, for it holds an easy road through the rampart of the + Downs, one of the great highways into Normandy, because of the harbour of + Shoreham at the mouth of the Adur, one of the principal ports upon this + coast. Of immemorial antiquity, the harbour of Shoreham, first of Old + Shoreham, perhaps the Roman Portus Adurni, and then when that silted up of + New, has played always a great part in the history of South England. That + the Romans knew and used it is certain. It was probably here that the + Saxon Ella and his three sons Cymne, Cissa, and Wlencing, landed in 477, + and it is not likely that it was neglected by the Normans, who, in fact, + built here a very noble cruciform church, dark and solemn, indeed, rather + a fortress than a church. It was at Shoreham certainly that John landed + when he returned to England to make himself king after the death of Coeur + de Lion, and we may gather some idea of the real importance of the port + from the fact that it furnished Edward III. with twenty-six ships for his + fleet in 1346. Thereafter the place declined, but history repeated itself + when Charles II., in flight in 1651 and anxious to reach the French coast, + set out from Shoreham and landed at Fécamp. Shoreham thus was an important + way in and out of England, but the road by which it lived was not in its + keeping at all, but in the power of the Castle of Bramber which dominated + and held it on the north side of the Downs, where it issued out of the + pass or gap made by the Adur. + </p> + <p> + Bramber Castle stands upon a headland thrust out into the valley and the + Weald in the very mouth of the pass; and even in its ruin, only an old + gateway tower and a fragment of the lofty barbican in which is a Norman + window remain. It is easy to understand how important and how strong it + must once have been. Indeed, Norman though these remains are, it was by no + means the Normans who first fortified this promontory and held this pass. + It is probable that the Castle of Bramber occupies the site of a Roman + Castellum and a Saxon fortress, some say a palace of the Saxon kings. + After the Conquest the castle came into the hands of the great William de + Braose, lord of Braose, near Falaise in Normandy, who received such great + estates in England from the Conqueror. He fixed his seat, however, here at + Bramber, and built or rebuilt the Castle which became the greatest + fortress in his possession. Later, by marriage, it passed to the Mowbrays, + and from them descended to the Dukes of Norfolk, the present Duke, indeed, + still holding it. It is, however, of William de Braose we think in + Bramber; for he not only built the great Castle which gives its character + to the place even to-day, but the church of St Nicholas also, under the + Castle, of which the nave and tower of his time only remain. He built it + indeed as a chapel to his Castle, and to serve it he founded there a small + college of secular canons under a dean, and endowed it with the church of + Beeding and many tithes, among them those of Shoreham. But about 1080 + William de Braose seems to have repented of what he had done, for he then + granted to the Abbey of St Florent in Saumur the reversion of the church + of St Nicholas here, when the last of the canons then living in his + college at Beeding should have died. It was thus that the Abbey of St + Florent came to establish a Priory at Beeding, or Sele as the monks called + it, and this about 1096; and William's son Philip confirmed them in his + father's gifts, and before the end of the twelfth century this alien + priory possessed the churches of Sele, Bramber, Washington, Old Shoreham + and New, to say nothing of the little chapel of St Peter on the old bridge + between Bramber and Beeding. + </p> + <p> + This old bridge over the Adur is worth notice, for it is said to have been + first established by the Romans upon a road of theirs that ran under the + north escarpment of the Downs from Dover to Winchester. Certain Roman + remains have indeed been found there, and the chapel of St Peter <i>de + veteri ponte</i> was doubtless founded in order to guard it and keep it + open and in order. + </p> + <p> + Evil days fell upon the Priory with the rise of nationalism and the wars + of the fourteenth century. Like every other alien house it came under + suspicion of spying, and being near the coast, indeed, at the very + threshold of an important gate, it was seized by the Crown. At last, in + 1396, Richard II. permitted it to naturalise itself, and its only + connection thereafter with St Florent was the payment of a small annual + tribute. But the misfortunes of the Priory were not over. For sixty years + or more all went well, but in 1459 the Bishop of Winchester bought the + patronage of the place from the Duke of Norfolk, and won leave from the + Pope and the Bishop of Chichester to suppress it and appropriate it to his + new College of St Mary Magdalen in Oxford. The suppression, however, was + not to take effect till the last monk then living should die, and this + came to pass in 1480. For thirteen years the Priory was unoccupied, and + then in 1493 the Fellows of Magdalen allowed the Carmelite Friars of + Shoreham to use the place, their own house in Shoreham having been + engulfed by the sea. These White Friars were the poorest in all Sussex; so + poor were they that they failed even to maintain themselves at Sele. In + July 1538, when the Bishop of Dover came to visit the place, he found + "neither friar nor secular, but the doors open ... and none to serve God." + Such was the end of the house William de Braose had built in the first + years of the Conquest. What remains of it will be found in the church of + St Peter in Upper Beeding, an Early English building of no great interest + save that it contains many carved stones from the Priory, a window and a + door also from the same house, upon the site of which the vicarage now + stands. + </p> + <p> + William de Braose, who made Bramber his chief seat, must have had an + enormous influence upon building in this neighbourhood, which abounds in + Norman churches such as those of Botolphs and Coombes, to say nothing of + those at Shoreham Old and New; but he was by no means the only renewer of + life here. + </p> + <p> + The most beautiful thing in the still beautiful village of Steyning is the + great church of St Andrew, but with this the Lord of Bramber has nothing + to do; the Benedictine Abbey of Fécamp rebuilt this noble sanctuary, but + its foundation is said to be due to an English saint, St Cuthman, who, + having been a shepherd boy, upon his father's death came out of the west + into Sussex bearing his mother, who was crippled, in a kind of barrow + which he dragged by a cord. A thousand queer stories are told of him as he + went on his way, happily enough it seems, until he came to Steyning, where + the cord of his barrow broke. There he built a hut for his mother, and + constructed a little church of timber and wattles in which at last he was + buried. In his life he had performed divers miracles so that his grave + became a place of pilgrimage, and it is said to have been about this + shrine that the village and church of Steyning grew up. It remained a holy + place, and Ethelwolf, the father of Alfred, is said to have been buried + there, his body later being removed to Winchester. + </p> + <p> + That the place was of some sort of importance would seem to be evident, + for we find Edward the Confessor, granting the manor and churches of + Steyning to the Benedictines of Fécamp, Harold taking it from them, and + the Conqueror restoring it. Two churches at Steyning are spoken of in the + Domesday Survey, and it has been thought that the second of these is + really that at Warminghurst. But we find a church in Steyning in the + thirteenth century served by secular canons. This was, however, in all + probability the church of St Andrew we know, which in 1290 was a royal + free chapel answerable neither to the Archbishop nor to the Bishop of + Chichester, but to the Abbot of Fécamp only. The College of Canons had by + then, if indeed it ever served this church, been dissolved. At the + suppression of the alien priories in the fifteenth century Steyning passed + to the new Abbey of Sion. + </p> + <p> + There can be no doubt that the church we have at Steyning is due to the + Benedictines of Fécamp, and it is one of the noblest buildings in the + county. Of the earlier church they built here much would seem to remain, + the rudely carved arches at the eastern end of the aisles, the Norman + window on the north, and much of the aisle walls. This church was probably + cruciform and may have been larger than that we now see. It was rebuilt + again by the monks in the middle of the twelfth century, when the great + chancel arch we have, the beautiful nave arcades and clerestory were + built, with the fine mouldings and capitals and dog-tooth ornament. The + font, too, would seem to be of about this time. The tower only dates from + the sixteenth century, and the chancel is modern. + </p> + <p> + Now Steyning lies under Chanctonbury, but I resisted the temptation to + spend the afternoon in the old camp there looking over the "blue goodness + of the weald," for I wished especially to visit the church of Wiston, and + to see, if I might, Wiston House, which Sir Thomas Shirley built about + 1576, and where those three brothers were born who astonished not only + Sussex and all England, but Rome itself and the Pope by their marvellous + daring and adventures. + </p> + <p> + The old manor house is delightfully situated in its beautiful park under + the dark height of Chanctonbury, and though much altered, retains on the + whole its fine Elizabethan character. The manor originally belonged to the + De Braose, from whom it passed by marriage to the Shirleys. In the church, + a small Decorated building, there is a fine brass of 1426 to Sir John de + Braose, on which over and over again we read Jesu Mercy: this in the south + chapel. His little son is buried under an arch on the north, where there + is a curious effigy of him. The first Shirley, whose monument we find + here, though only in part, is that of Sir Richard, who died in 1540; but + it was Sir Thomas, who also has his monument, that built Wiston and was + the father of those three remarkable sons. He was the great-grandson of + Ralph Shirley of Wiston, and the son of William Shirley, who died in 1551. + Till his time the family had of course been Catholic; it was he who first + abandoned the Faith; perhaps it was this spirit of adventure so + unfortunate in him which descended to that famous "leash of brethren" and + drove them out upon their adventures. The least remarkable and the most + unfortunate of these sons of his was the eldest, Thomas, whose life, + however, as a soldier and freebooter, both on shore in the Low Countries + and at sea, is sufficiently full of adventure to satisfy anyone. He came, + however, to utter grief at last, and had to sell Wiston, retiring to the + Isle of Wight, where he died in 1630. + </p> + <p> + It was his brother Anthony who really made the Shirleys famous. He had + graduated at Oxford in 1581, and having, as he said, "acquired those + learnings which were fit for a gentleman's ornament," he went to the Low + Countries with Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, and was present at the + battle of Zutphen, where Sir Philip Sidney fell. In 1591 he was in + Normandy with the Earl of Essex, whom he devotedly followed, in support of + Henry of Navarre, who made him a knight of St Michael. For accepting a + foreign knighthood without her leave, Elizabeth locked him up in the + Fleet, and only let him out when he promised to retire from the Order. + This he actually did, but his title stuck to him, and he was always known + as Sir Anthony. He then married Elizabeth Devereux, a first cousin of his + patron, the Earl of Essex; but the marriage was unfortunate; he could not + abide his wife, and in order to "occupy his mind from thinking of her + vainest words," in 1595 he fitted out with Essex's aid and his father's a + buccaneering expedition to the Gulf of Guinea. But in something less than + two years after the most amazing adventures he came home to Wiston under + the Downs, "alive but poor," and with his passion for adventure in nowise + abated. In 1597 he accompanied Essex on the "Islands voyage," but, seeking + more paying adventure, in the winter of 1598 he consented at Essex's + suggestion to lead a little company of English adventurers to assist + Cesare D'Este to regain his Duchy of Ferrara, then in the hands of the + Pope. He set forth, but upon reaching Venice found that Cesare had + submitted. Again he was out of employment; but it was upon the quays of + Venice that he conceived the most astonishing enterprise that even an + Englishman has ever undertaken. He proposed to set out for Persia with the + object of persuading the Shah to ally himself with Christendom against the + Turk, and hoped also to establish commercial relations between England and + Persia. Upon this astonishing Crusade he left Venice with his brother + Robert and twenty-five Englishmen disappointed of a row in Ferrara, on May + 29, 1599, for Constantinople. Thence he went on to Aleppo, and so down the + Euphrates, to Babylon, to Isapahan and Kazveen, where he met the Shah + Abbas the Great. There, thanks to the Shah's two Christian wives, he had a + good reception; the rank of Prince was conferred upon him, and he won the + concession, for all Christians, of the right, not only to trade freely, + but to practise their religion in Persia. For five months he remained at + the court of the Shah, and then returned to Europe as his ambassador to + invite all Christian powers to ally themselves with Persia against the + Turk. He went first to Moscow, where he was, however, treated with + contempt, as was his mission. He went to Prague and was well received. At + last, in 1601, after visiting Nuremberg, Augsburg, Munich, Innsbruck, and + Trent, he arrived in Rome, and, professing enthusiasm for the Faith his + father had repudiated, was well received. The truth was, he was in grave + money difficulties, and indeed in 1603 was arrested by the Venetians and + imprisoned "in a certain obscure island near unto Scio." The English + Government, however, came to his aid and obtained his release, but refused + him permission to return to England. He went to Prague, and thence on the + business of the Emperor to Morocco. There he was received in great state + and remained five months. Before leaving, however, he released certain + Portuguese whom he found in slavery, and sailed with them for Lisbon, + where he hoped to reimburse himself for their ransom. In this he was + disappointed, so on he went to Madrid, where he was made very much of and + promised the Order of Sant'Iago. In the service now of Spain, he went to + Naples in 1607, after a visit to the Emperor at Prague where he was + created a Count of the Holy Roman Empire. He seems to have travelled + considerably in Southern Italy, and after a brief visit, to obtain money, + to Madrid, set out for Sicily in command of a fleet to attack the Moors + and Turks. He achieved nothing and was dismissed. In 1611 he appeared + again in Madrid in utter poverty, but the King took compassion upon him + and gave him a pension, and in Madrid he remained writing an account of + his adventures till he died in beggary. The English ambassador notes in + 1619, "The poor man sometimes comes to my house and is as full of vanity + as ever he was, making himself believe that he shall one day be a great + prince." It might indeed seem a long road from Wiston under the Downs to + the Gulf of Guinea, the Quays of Venice, Constantinople, the Euphrates, + Babylon, Moscow, Prague, Rome, and Morocco, to die at last a beggar in + purse, but in heart a great Prince in Madrid. + </p> + <p> + Now, when I had been reminded of all this, I was directed to visit Buncton + Chapel to the north of Wiston Park, where I found indeed some Norman work + in the nave and chancel arch. And so I went on my way through the failing + afternoon by that beautiful road within sight of the high Downs to the + Washington Inn, where I slept, for it is a quiet place not to be passed + by. + </p> + <p> + And on the morrow I went on my way, still through as fair a country as is + to be found in all South England, through Storrington, and so by way of + Parham Park, with its noble Elizabethan house and little church with the + last leaden font in Sussex, a work of the fourteenth century, to Amberley + in the meads of the Arun, a dear and beautiful place. + </p> + <p> + Amberley boasts a Castle and stands right in the mouth of one of those + gaps in the Downs as Bramber does, the gap of the Arun, and it might well + be thought that Amberley held this pass. As a fact she did not. That gap + is held by Arundel; the Castle at Amberley was a palace of the Bishop of + Chichester, granted to the Bishop of Selsey long before the Conquest; it + was only castellated in the fourteenth century. It is none the less an + interesting ruin, very picturesque, with remains of a chapel, while the + beautiful house built within the castle walls early in the sixteenth + century is altogether lovely. And as for the church, I can never hope to + tell of all its interest and beauty. Certainly a Norman church once stood + here, of which the nave of that we see was part, as was the very noble + chancel arch; but the chancel itself, the south aisle, and the tower are + of the thirteenth century, while the south door is very early Decorated, + most beautifully carved. There is not surely in all Sussex a more + delightful spot than this lying so quietly in the meads, with its + beautiful church, its ruined castle, and fine old Elizabethan house, where + Arun bends slowly and lazily towards the Downs and the sea. + </p> + <p> + It was with real regret that on that May morning I left Amberley, turning + often to look back at it, and last from the great seven-arched bridge over + the Arun, whence one may look down stream upon the wooded slopes of + Arundel Park. Then I went on up the road that winds through the steep + village of Houghton swiftly up on to the Downs, wooded here very nobly, + and so at the top of Rewell Hill I turned to the left and made my way + through the noble park to the little town of Arundel. + </p> + <p> + Now I cannot say why, but in spite of its seduction, which is full of + splendour, of its noble history and great buildings, I have never been + able to love Arundel. One is there always I feel too much in the shadow of + that mighty Castle which for the most part is not old at all, too much in + the power of that great new church that surely was never built by English + hands, which has altogether blotted out the older sanctuary, and which, + Catholic though it be, has never won my affection. Arundel itself is all + in the shadow of these two things, each of which is too big for it, too + heavy for free laughter and light- heartedness. So it seems to me. + </p> + <p> + All I can find in Arundel that pleases me lies in the little town itself, + and in the old church of which one half, the chancel, has been closed to + all who do not hold the Duke's written permission to enter it—as + though the house of God, even though it be the property of a Catholic + duke, were not by nature as it were free to all. And so there is a kind of + sorrowfulness about Arundel that spoils my pleasure in it, yes, even in + the very noble remains of the old Castle that are hidden away within the + sham Gothic affair of 1791. Even in the beautiful old church, of which one + half is closed, even in the steep little town which might have been as gay + as Rye, I felt, overwhelmed by the new Castle and the new church, neither + of which has any antiquity, tradition, or beauty. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-16" id="linkimage-16"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/017.jpg" width="100%" alt="Arundel Castle " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + The old Castle, with its great circular Norman keep within the huge sham + "fortress" of the eighteenth century, beneath which the town lies like one + afraid to ask for mercy, should not be left unvisited, for it was probably + built by that Roger de Montgomery, who led the Breton centre at Hastings, + and has thus nearly a thousand years of history behind it, to say nothing + of three sieges, that of 1102, when it was surrendered to Henry I., that + of 1139, when Stephen there held Matilda prisoner and allowed her to pass + out, and that of 1643, when Waller took it after seventeen days. + </p> + <p> + Nor indeed should anyone fail to visit the beautiful parish church of St + Nicholas, a glorious cruciform building, Perpendicular in style, built in + 1380. It, too, has a long history. The church was originally served by + secular canons, but in 1177 the then Earl of Arundel introduced in their + place four or five monks under a Prior from St Martin of Seez. In the + fourteenth century, however, these alien monks withdrew to their mother + house, and in 1380 the Priory of St Nicholas in Arundel was reconverted + into a collegiate church. This college consisted of a master and + sub-master, ten chaplains, two deacons, two sub-deacons, and five + choristers. The choir of the church was the chapel of the college, the + remainder being parochial. The college survived the general suppression, + but was eventually bought by the Earl of Arundel, who had previously + offered a thousand pounds for it. And so it was that after a long law-suit + in 1880 the chancel of the parish church of Arundel was given up to the + Duke of Norfolk. + </p> + <p> + I did not sleep in Arundel, but, though it was already afternoon, I set + out westward once more through the great park, and just before sunset I + came to the great church of Boxgrove, which stands between the road I had + followed from Arundel and the Roman Stane Street, where they approach to + enter the East Gate of Chichester together at last. This great and + beautiful sanctuary, gives one, I think, a better idea of what the great + monastic churches really were, than any other building left to us in + Sussex. It is like a cathedral for solemnity, and for size too, though it + is only a fragment, and its beauty cannot be forgotten. + </p> + <p> + In its foundation the church is very ancient, a small college of secular + canons serving it in Saxon times. But all was changed when Robert de Haza, + to whom Henry I. had granted the honour of Halnaker, in 1105 bestowed the + church upon the Abbey of Lessay, which sent hither its Benedictines and + built for them a new sanctuary. Boxgrove was thus an alien priory from + 1108 till in 1339. Richard II. affirmed its independence, and this was + confirmed by the Pope in 1402. It seems then to have been in a bad way, + but later recovered. In the thirteenth century it had boasted nineteen + monks, but at the time of the suppression it only mustered eight priests, + who seem to have kept a school for the children of the neighbourhood. What + remains of the Priory, not much more than a gateway, for most of it was + destroyed in 1780, stands to the north of the church. + </p> + <p> + The original Norman church here was cruciform. Of this building we still + see the tower, the transepts and the lower part of what remains of the + nave, and the arcade to the south. This Norman church was greatly enlarged + in the twelfth century, when the nave now destroyed was built, the tower + piers were then cased in the Transitional style and the arches which carry + the tower were altered. Later, about 1235, the chancel we see and its + aisles, as lovely as anything in southern England, were added in the Early + English style, that often reminds one of Chichester Cathedral. To the + fourteenth century belong the south porch and more than one window in the + aisles, while the font and other windows are Perpendicular. + </p> + <p> + I had often read of the unique vaulting of the choir of Boxgrove Priory, + but the twilight was so deep in the church, for it was already evening, + that I could not see it. I saw, however, the empty tomb, very fine and + splendid, of the Earl de la Warr, who begged Boxgrove of Thomas Cromwell + unsuccessfully; and then I went out and marched on into Chichester, the + East Gate of which I entered not long after dark. + </p> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH15" id="link2HCH15"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER XV + </h2> + <p> + CHICHESTER + </p> + <p> + The mere plan of Chichester proclaims its Roman origin. It is a little + walled city lying out upon the sea plain of Sussex, cruciform by reason of + its streets, North Street, South Street, East Street, and West Street, + which divide it into four quarters, of which that upon the south became + wholly ecclesiastical: the south-west quarter being occupied by the + Cathedral and its subject buildings, while the south- east quarter was the + Palatinate of the Archbishop. As for the quarter north-east it was + appropriated to the Castle and its dependencies, of which however, nothing + remains, while the quarter north-west was occupied by the townspeople, and + to-day contains their parish church of St Peter Major. These four quarters + meet at the Market Cross, whence the streets that divide the city set out + for the four quarters of the world. + </p> + <p> + To come into Chichester to-day even by the quiet red-brick street— + South Street—from the railway station, the least interesting entry + into the city, is to understand at once what Chichester is; one of those + country towns that is to say, cities in the good old sense, because they + were the seat of the Bishop, which are not only the pride of England, but + perhaps the best things left to her and certainly the most characteristic + of all that she truly means and stands for. If such places are without the + feverish and confused life of the great industrial centres of modern + England, let us thank God for it, they have nevertheless a quiet vitality + of their own, which in the long run will prove more persistent and strong + than the futile excitement of places noisy with machinery and wretched + with the enslaved poor. Such places as Chichester may indeed stand for + England in a way that Manchester, for instance, with its cosmopolitan + population and egotistical ambition, its greed, its helplessness, and + appalling intellectual mongrelism and parvenu and international society, + can never hope to do. England truly remains herself, the England of my + heart, because of such places as Chichester, Winchester, Salisbury, Wells, + and those dear market towns which still remember and maintain her great + past and renew the ways of our forefathers. All are very old, co-eval with + England, all have sturdy and unforgotten traditions, and in these, if we + but knew it, lies our best hope for the future. + </p> + <p> + Among these dear places Chichester is no exception, rather is she most + typical; she has an immemorial past, and out of it she will contrive + somehow or other to face and to outface whatever the future may bring. + Like everything that is best in England, that is indeed most typical of + ourselves, her origins are not barbarian, but Roman. Her ancient name was + Regnum, the city, it is said, first of Cogidubnus, King of the Regni and + Legate in Britain of Claudius Caesar. That the Romans built and maintained + an important town here cannot be doubted; the very form of the city to-day + would be enough to establish this, apart from the notable discoveries of + buildings, pavements, urns, inscriptions, and I know not what else + belonging to the whole of the Roman occupation of Britain. It is obvious + that Chichester played a great part in the Roman administration of South + Britain; its port was large, safe and accessible, while it was the first + town upon the east of that great group of creeks and harbours which run up + out of Spithead and Southampton Water. Throughout the Middle Ages, Bosham, + the port of Chichester, maintained its position, while even in the + eighteenth century Chichester harbour was sufficiently important to + warrant the cutting of the canal which unites the Arun with Chichester + Channel. There is, however, something else which must always place beyond + doubt the importance of Chichester in Roman times. It was from Chichester, + out of the East Gate, that the great Roman road set forth for London, the + road we know as the Stane Street, chiefly, as we may suppose, a great + military way. This was the only Roman road over the South Downs, the only + road that connected London with the greater harbours of the South Coast. + Its terminus was Chichester. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-17" id="linkimage-17"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/018.jpg" width="100%" alt="The Market Cross, Chichester " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + Of the early connection of the town with Christianity there is to say the + least high probability. An inscription found in North Street, and now + preserved at Goodwood, recording the dedication of a Temple by the College + of Smiths to Neptune and Minerva, would seem to refer to that Claudia and + that Pudens mentioned by St Paul, and thus to connect them with Regnum. + However that may be, we know that it with the rest of Britain must have + been a Christian city long before the failure of the Roman administration. + </p> + <p> + With that failure and the final departure of the Legions, Regnum fell on + evil days. Its position as the key to those harbours which had given it + its importance now exposed it to the first raids of the pirates. These + barbarians, according to legend, were Ella and his three sons, one of + whom, Cissa, is said to have given Chichester her name—Cissa's camp, + Cissa's Ceaster. Of Chichester's story during the Dark Ages we know as + little as we know of most of the cities of England, but that it was + destroyed utterly, as has been asserted, common sense refuses to allow us + to believe. It certainly continued to exist, in barbarous fashion perhaps, + but still to live, till with the conversion of the English it began to + take on a new life, and with the Conquest was finally established as the + seat of the Bishop. + </p> + <p> + The apostle of the South Saxons, St Wilfrid, wrecked upon the flat and + inhospitable shore of Selsey, was, as we know, their first bishop. He + established his See, however, not at Chichester, but at Selsey where it + remained until the Conqueror began to reorganise England upon a Roman + plan, when more than one See was removed from the village in which it had + long been established to the neighbouring great town. So it was with the + Bishopric of Sussex, which in the first years of the Norman administration + was removed from Selsey to Chichester. + </p> + <p> + Thus Chichester was restored in 1075 to the great position it had held in + the time of the Romans. Its lord was that Roger de Montgomery who received + it from the Conqueror, together with more than eighty manors, and to him + was due the castle which stood in the north-east quarter, and the + rebuilding of the Roman walls, which continually renewed and rebuilt, + still in some sort stand, upon Roman foundations, and mark the limits of + the Roman town. + </p> + <p> + Of the South Saxon cathedral church at Selsey we know almost nothing. It + seems to have been established as a Benedictine house under an abbot who + was also bishop, but later the monks were replaced by secular canons. Then + when in 1075 the See was removed from Selsey to Chichester the old church + dedicated in honour of St Peter, which stood upon the site of the present + cathedral, was used as the cathedral church, and the Benedictine nuns, to + whom it then belonged were dispossessed in favour of the canons. This, + however, did not last long; by 1091 a new Norman church, the work of + Bishop Ralph, whose great stone coffin stands in the Lady Chapel, had been + built upon this site and dedicated in honour of the Blessed Trinity, the + old church being commemorated in the nave, which still was used as the + parochial church of St Peter Major. This new building, however, was soon + so badly damaged by fire that it was necessary to rebuild it—this in + 1114; but a like fate befell it in 1187, and again the church was + restored, this time by Bishop Seffrid. Then in the thirteenth century came + Bishop Richard. He was consecrated in 1245, and ruled the diocese for + eight years. This man was a saint, and in 1261 he was canonised. Thus + Chichester got a shrine of its own, which became exceedingly famous and + attracted vast crowds of pilgrims, and thus indirectly brought so much + money to the church that great works, such as the transformed Lady Chapel, + and the many chapels which the Cathedral boasts, were able to be + undertaken. + </p> + <p> + St Richard of Chichester was not a Sussex man; he was born about 1197, at + Droitwich in Worcestershire, and thus gets his name Richard de Wyche. His + father, a man well-to-do, died, however, when Richard was very young, and + he being only a younger son fell into poverty. We find him, according to + his fifteenth-century biographer, labouring on his brother's land, and to + such good purpose, it is said, that he quite re- established his family, + and withal such love was there between the brothers that the elder would + have resigned all his estates in favour of the younger. But Richard would + not consent, preferring to go as a poor scholar to Oxford, where, we + learn, that he lived in the utmost poverty sharing indeed a tunic and a + hooded gown with two companions, so that the three could only attend + lectures in turn. At Oxford he seems chiefly to have devoted himself to + the study of Logic, and for this purpose he presently went to Paris, + returning, however, to Oxford to take his degree. Thence once more he set + out, this time to study Canon Law at Bologna, where he not only won a + great reputation, but was appointed a public professor of that faculty. So + beloved and respected was he in that great university, where there was + always a considerable English contingent, that his tutor offered him his + daughter in marriage, and gladly would he have taken her, but that + marriage was not for him. So he set out for England and Oxford, where he + was joyfully received and indeed such was his fame that he was made + chancellor of the university. In truth, he was in such great demand that + both Canterbury and Lincoln wished to secure him, and at last Archbishop + Edmund Rich succeeded where Robert Grosseteste failed, and Richard became + chancellor of Canterbury and the dear friend of the Archbishop. They were + indeed two saints together, and even in their lifetime were greeted as + "two cherubim in glory." Together they faced the king, when he continued + to allow so many English bishoprics to remain vacant, and together they + went into exile to Pontigny, and later to Soissy, where St Edmund died. + Heart-broken by the loss of so dear a friend Richard retired into a + Dominican house in Orleans and immersed himself in the study of Theology. + There he was ordained priest, and there he founded a chapel in honour of + St Edmund. But Boniface of Savoy, who had succeeded St Edmund in the + archbishopric of Canterbury, besought him to return. He obeyed, and was + appointed rector of Charing and vicar of Deal in 1243, becoming once more + Chancellor of Canterbury. But still there remained the enmity of the King. + Two good things Henry III. gave us, Westminster Abbey and Edward I.; but + he was almost as difficult as Henry II., with regard to investitures. + Fortunately he was not so obstinate, or we might have had a martyr instead + of a confessor in Chichester, as we have in Canterbury. + </p> + <p> + In the year 1244 the See of Chichester fell vacant by the death of Bishop + Ralph Neville, and at the King's suggestion the canons elected their + archdeacon, a keen supporter of his. Boniface at once held a synod, + quashed the election, and recommended his chancellor Richard as Bishop, to + which the chapter agreed. The king was, of course, furious. Richard, who + was received by him, could do nothing with him, and so immediately + appealed to the Pope, Innocent IV., it was, who consecrated him at Lyons + upon March 5, 1245. Even this did not move the King. Richard returned to + England, found the temporalities of his See disgracefully wasted by the + King, sought and obtained an interview with Henry, but achieved nothing. + For a time he lived at Tarring with a poor priest named Simon, for in his + own diocese he was a beggar and a stranger as it were in a foreign land. + In 1246, however, the Pope having threatened excommunication, the King + gave way, and Richard at once began to reform his diocese, to discipline + his priests, and to restore the ritual of his cathedral, and indeed of all + the churches in his diocese. He lived a life of severe asceticism, and + gave so much in alms that he was always a beggar. Usurers were punished by + excommunication, and Jews were forbidden to build new synagogues. It was + he, too, who first established the custom of the Easter offering + contribution from the faithful to the Cathedral, known later as St + Richard's pence. He loved the Friars, more especially the Dominicans, who + had befriended him at Orleans, and to which Order his confessor belonged. + He ardently preached the crusade and was eagerly loyal to St Peter. It + was, indeed, as he was journeying through southern England, urging men to + take the Cross, that at Dover he fell ill and died there during Mass in + the Hospitium Dei. His body was buried in a humble grave, we read, near + the altar he had built in honour of St Edmund, his friend, in the + Cathedral of Chichester. And from the moment of his death he was accounted + a saint. Miracles were performed at his tomb, which even Prince Edward + visited, and in 1262, in the church of the Fransicans at Viterbo, Pope + Urban IV. raised him to the altar. In June 1276 St Richard's body was + taken from its grave in the nave of Chichester Cathedral, and in the + presence of King Edward I. and a crowd of bishops, was translated to a + silver gilt shrine. Later, this was removed to the tomb in the south + transept. + </p> + <p> + St Richard was not only a popular hero and saint both before and after his + death, to him and his shrine is due very much that is most lovely in the + Cathedral, and it was he who really reformed the chapter there. + </p> + <p> + Chichester had always been served by a dean and chapter of secular canons. + The canons were originally, of course, resident, but the chapter had + always been poorly endowed, and as time went on residence was actually + discouraged. Perhaps then arose the canon's vicars who represented the + canons and chanted in choir. The vicars choral were, however, not + incorporated until 1465; they were assisted by ten or twelve boy + choristers, whose chief business it was, I suppose, to sing the Lady-Mass + in prick-song. Beside this company of canons, vicars and choristers + directly serving the cathedral, a number of chaplains served the various + altars and chantries within it, which at the Dissolution numbered fifteen. + St Richard not only reorganised the cathedral staff, but also established + the "use" of Chichester, which he ordered to be followed throughout the + diocese. This "use" was followed until 1444, when, by order of the + archbishop, that of Sarum, was established. + </p> + <p> + With the Reformation, of course, everything but the Cathedral itself and + the form of its administration and government was swept away. Nor was it + long before even what Henry and Elizabeth had spared was demolished. In + 1643 Chichester was besieged by Waller and taken after ten days. His + soldiers, we read, "pulled down the idolatrous images from the Market + Cross; they brake down the organ in the Cathedral and dashed the pipes + with their pole-axes, crying in scoff, "Harke! how the organs goe"; and + after they ran up and down with their swords drawn, defacing the monuments + of the dead and hacking the seats and stalls." Indeed, such was their + malice that it is wonderful to see how much loveliness remains. + </p> + <p> + No cathedral, I think, and certainly no lesser church in England is so + completely representative of the whole history of our architecture as is + Chichester. In Salisbury we have the most uniform building in our island, + in Chichester the most various, for it possesses work in every style, from + the time of the Saxons to that of Sir Gilbert Scott. + </p> + <p> + It was Bishop Ralph who before 1108 built the church we know, and + completed it save upon the west front, where only the lower parts of the + south-western tower are Norman. But work earlier than his, Saxon work, may + be seen in the south aisle of the choir, where there are two carved stones + representing Christ with Martha and Mary and the Raising of Lazarus. + Bishop Ralph's church was badly damaged by fire in 1114, and it would seem + that the four western bays of the nave date from the following rebuilding + and restoration. Then in 1187 the Cathedral was burnt again, and Bishop + Seffrid vaulted it for the first time—till then only the aisles had + been vaulted—building great buttresses to support this and + re-erecting the inner arcade of the clerestory. Apparently the apse and + ambulatory which till then had closed the great church, on the east had + been destroyed in the fire. At any rate Bishop Seffrid replaced them with + the exquisite retro-choir we have, and square eastern chapels. He did the + same with the old apses of the transepts, and he recased the choir with + Caen stone, using Purbeck very freely and with beautiful effect. All this + work is very late Transitional, the very last of the Norman or Romanesque. + </p> + <p> + Then in the thirteenth century, which was to see St Richard Bishop of + Chichester, the beautiful south porch was built, a pure Early English + work, the north porch almost as lovely and of the same date, and later the + sacristy beside the south porch. In St Richard's own day the south- west + tower was built as we see it. The Norman tower over the crossing was + destroyed and a lighter one built in its place as we see, and the galilee + was set up before the western doors. Then, too, the chapels were built out + from the nave aisles, upon the north those of St Thomas, St Anna, and St + Edmund, upon the south, those of St George and St Clement, things unique + in England, and all largely works of the second half of the thirteenth + century and the early Decorated style, which indeed give to the Cathedral, + with its dark Norman nave, all its charm, its variety and delight. + </p> + <p> + Not much later than this transformation of the nave, though the nave + itself was not touched, was the rebuilding or rather the lengthening and + transformation of the Lady Chapel. Fundamentally this beautiful Decorated + chapel is a Norman work, transformed into a Transitional one, to be + glorified and transfigured in the very end of the thirteenth century, and + now spoilt as we see. All this was done either by St Richard himself, or + with the money gathered at his shrine. + </p> + <p> + In the first half of the fourteenth century little would appear to have + been built, save that certain beautiful windows, as that in the end of the + south aisle of the choir and that in the south transept, with Bishop + Langton's tomb beneath it, were inserted, and the fine stalls were built + in the choir. + </p> + <p> + In the Perpendicular period the detached campanile was erected to the + north-west and the Cathedral was crowned by the great spire, a noble work + lost to us in our own time and replaced by the copy of Sir Gilbert Scott. + Later still, in the sixteenth century, a great stone screen, now + destroyed, was erected across the church, with chantries, and the cloister + was built. There, over a doorway on the south, is a shield, with the arms + of Henry VII., and two figures kneeling before the Blessed Virgin, + attended by an angel holding a rose. + </p> + <p> + A few tombs of interest or beauty, which the Puritans failed to destroy, + remain to this great Catholic building. These are the tombs of St Richard, + of which I have spoken, in the north transept against the choir, the + restored Arundel Chantry and tomb of Richard Fitzalan in the north aisle + of the nave, and the exquisite Decorated tomb in the chapel of St John + Baptist at the eastern end of this aisle; little beside. + </p> + <p> + It must indeed be confessed that when all is said and done, essentially + romantic as the Cathedral of Chichester is with its so various styles of + architecture, lovely as certain parts of it are still, it must always have + been a building rather interesting than beautiful, and it has suffered so + much from vandalism and restoration that it cannot be accounted a monument + of the first order. Nevertheless, I always return to it with delight and + am reluctant to go away, for in England certainly a cathedral, even of the + second order, of restricted grandeur and spoilt beauty, may be a very + charming and delightful and precious thing as indeed this church of + Chichester is. + </p> + <p> + At any rate it is by far the most interesting thing left to us in the + city. The other churches, except perhaps St Olave's, are not worth a + visit; even in St Olave's everything has been done to make it as little + interesting as possible. + </p> + <p> + The best thing left to us in Chichester, apart from the Cathedral and its + subject buildings, is, I think, St Mary's Hospital, a foundation dating + from the time of Henry II., which possesses a noble great hall, and a + pretty Decorated chapel, with old stalls, which is still used as an + almshouse. It stands upon the site of the first Franciscan house + established in Chichester. In 1269 the Friars Minor left this place and + moved to the site of the old Castle. There they built the church of which + the choir still remains, a lovely work ruined at the dissolution and used + as the Guildhall. It is now a store room. Nothing in Chichester is more + beautiful than this Early English fragment, which seems to remind us of + all we have lost by that disastrous revolution of the sixteenth century, + whose latest results we still await with fear and dread. + </p> + <p> + But let who will be disappointed in Chichester, I shall love it all my + days; not so much for these its monuments, but for itself, its curiously + sleepy air of disinterested quiet, its strong dislike of any sort of + enthusiasm, its English boredom, even of itself, its complete surrender to + what is, its indifference to what might be. May it ever remain secure + within sight of the hills, within sight of the sea, steeped in the Tudor + myth, certain in its English heart, that twice two is not four but + anything one likes to make it, nor ever hear ribald voices calling upon it + to decide what after all it stands for in the world, denying it any longer + the consolation it loves best of finding in the conclusion what is not in + the premises, or, as the vulgar might put it, of having its cake and + eating it too. + </p> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH16" id="link2HCH16"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER XVI + </h2> + <p> + SELSEY, BOSHAM AND PORCHESTER + </p> + <p> + It was my good fortune, while I was in Chichester, to be tempted to + explore the peninsula of Selsey, which most authorities declare to have no + beauty and little interest for the traveller to-day. For St Wilfrid's + sake, I put aside these admonishments, and one morning set out upon the + lonely road to Pagham, across a country as flat as a fen, of old, as they + say, a forest, the forest of Mainwood, and still in spite of drainage and + cultivation very bleak and lonely with marshes here and there which are + still the haunt of all kinds of wild-fowl. + </p> + <p> + It is only to the man who finds pleasure in the Somerset moors, the fens + of Cambridgeshire or the emptiness of Romney Marsh that this corner of + England will appeal, but to such an one it is full of interest and + certainly not without beauty. Pagham, however, of which I had read, with + its creek and harbour, its curious Hushing Well, its golden sands, and + extraordinary melancholy, as it were a ruin of the sea, sadly disappointed + me. Only its melancholy remains. Its harbour, where of old we read the + sea-fowl were to be seen in innumerable flocks, and the whole place was + musical with the cry of the wild-swan, has been wholly reclaimed, and the + famous Hushing Well no longer exists at all. This last was a curious + natural phenomenon and must have been worth seeing. It consisted + apparently of a great pool in the sea, one hundred and thirty feet long by + thirty feet broad, boiling and bubbling and booming all day long. This was + caused, it is said, by the air rushing through a bed of shingle beneath + which was a vast cavern from which the sea continuously expelled the air + as it rushed in. Nothing of the sort exists at Pagham to-day; it has + disappeared with the reclamation of the harbour, which itself was formed, + we are told, in the fourteenth century by a tidal wave, when nearly three + thousand acres were inundated. The only thing which the continual fight of + man against water in this peninsula has left us that is worth seeing in + Pagham to-day is the church of St Thomas of Canterbury. This is an Early + English building much spoiled by restoration, the best thing remaining + being the beautiful arcade of the end of the twelfth century. But the + eastern window which consists of three lancets is charming, as is the + fourteenth-century chantry at the top of the north aisle, founded in 1383 + by John Bowrere. In the chancel is a curious slab with an inscription in + Lombardic characters, perhaps a memorial of a former rector. The font is + Norman. The church was probably built by one of the early successors of St + Thomas in the See of Canterbury; for Pagham belonged to the Archbishops + until the Reformation, and certain ruins of their palace remain in a field + to the south-east of the church. At Nyetimber, on the Chichester road, a + mile out of Pagham, are the ruins of a thirteenth-century chapel. + </p> + <p> + To reach Selsey and its old church of Our Lady, what remains of it, from + Pagham is not an easy matter, the footpaths across the fields being + sometimes a little vague. The walk, however, is worth the trouble it + involves, for you may thus gather some idea of the history of this + unfortunate coast, which the sea has been eating up for at least fifteen + hundred years. Indeed, in the time of St Wilfrid the peninsula was + probably nearly twice as big as it is to-day, and Selsey was undoubtedly a + little island, probably of mud, divided from the mainland at least by the + tide. It was here, St Wilfrid was shipwrecked in 666, and it is from his + adventures in Sussex that we learn of the extraordinary barbarism of the + South Saxons, two generations after the advent of St Augustine. + </p> + <p> + St Wilfrid's ship, it seems, was stranded on the mud flats, and the quite + pagan South Saxons attacked him and the crew, and it was only the rise of + the tide which floated the ship that saved them, with a loss of five men. + It was not till 681 that Wilfrid, really a fugitive, came again into + Sussex, and this time as to a refuge, for Ethelwalch, king of the South + Saxons, and his queen were then Christians, though their people were still + pagan. There was a certain monk, however, probably an Irishman, who had a + small monastery at Bosham encompassed by the sea and the woods, and in it + were five or six brethren who served God in poverty and humility; but none + of the natives cared either to follow their course of life or to hear + their preaching. Of these heathen St Wilfrid at once became the Apostle. + For, as Bede tells us, he "not only delivered them from the misery of + perpetual damnation, but also from an inexpressible calamity of temporal + death, for no rain had fallen in that province in three years before his + arrival, whereupon a dreadful famine ensued which cruelly destroyed the + people. In short, it is reported that very often forty or fifty men, being + spent with want, would go together to some precipice, or to the sea-shore, + and there hand in hand perish by the fall, or be swallowed up by the + waves. But on the very day on which the nation received the baptism of + faith there fell a soft but plentiful rain; the earth revived again, and, + the verdure being restored to the fields, the season was pleasant and + fruitful. Thus the former superstition being rejected, and idolatry + exploded, the hearts and flesh of all rejoiced in the living God and + became convinced that He who is the true God had, through His heavenly + grace, enriched them with wealth, both temporal and spiritual. For the + bishop, when he came into the province and found so great misery from + famine, taught them to get their food by fishing; for their sea and rivers + abounded in fish, but the people had no skill to take them except eels + alone. The bishop's men having gathered eel-nets everywhere, cast them + into the sea, and by the blessing of God took three hundred fishes of + several sorts, which, being divided into three parts, they gave a hundred + to the poor, a hundred to those of whom they had the nets, and kept a + hundred for their own use. By this benefit the bishop gained the + affections of them all, and they began more readily to hear his preaching + and to hope for heavenly good, seeing that by his help they had received + that good which is temporal. Now at this time King Ethelwalch gave to the + most reverend prelate Wilfrid, land of eighty-seven families, which place + is called Selsey, that is, the Island of the Sea-Calf. That place is + encompassed by the sea on all sides, except the west, where is an entrance + about the cast of a sling in width; which sort of place by the Latins is + called a peninsula, by the Greeks a chersonesus. Bishop Wilfrid, having + this place given him, founded therein a monastery, which his successors + possess to this day, and established a regular course of life, chiefly of + the brethren he had brought with him; for he, both in word and actions, + performed the duties of a bishop in those parts during the space of five + years, until the death of King Egfrid. And forasmuch as the aforesaid + king, together with the said place, gave him all the goods that were + therein, with the lands and men, he instructed them in the Faith of Christ + and baptised them all. Among whom were two hundred and fifty men and women + slaves, all of whom he by baptism, not only rescued from the servitude of + the devil, but gave them their bodily liberty also and exempted them from + the yoke of human servitude." + </p> + <p> + The church and monastery which St Wilfrid thus founded at Selsey, thereby + establishing the bishopric of Sussex, have long since disappeared beneath + the sea. Camden, however, tells us that he saw the foundations at low + water; they lay about a mile to the east of the little church of Our Lady, + which remained complete until the middle of the nineteenth century, when + it was all pulled down except the chancel which we see to-day in the + graveyard which it serves as chapel. It is a work of the fourteenth + century, and within is the fine sixteenth-century monument of John Lews + and his wife. The old Norman font has been removed to the new church of St + Peter at Selsey, built largely out of old materials. There, too, is an + Elizabethan chalice and paten of the sixteenth century. + </p> + <p> + Thus nothing at all remains at Selsey, not even the landscape as it was in + St Wilfrid's day. Till yesterday, however, one might realise in the + loneliness and desolation of this low, lean headland something of that + far-off time in which the great bishop came here and had to teach that + barbarous folk even to fish. Now even that is going, or gone, for the new + light railway from Chichester is bringing a new life to Selsey, which, + after all, it would ill become us to grudge her. + </p> + <p> + By that railway indeed I returned to Chichester, and then at once set out + westward for Bosham, where I slept. Bosham is perhaps the most interesting + place in all this peninsula as well as probably the most ancient. That + Bosham was a port of the Romans seems likely, but that it was the earliest + seat of Christianity in Sussex after the advent of the pagans is certain. + There, as Bede tells us, St Wilfrid, when he came into Sussex in 681, + found a Scottish (most probably Irish) monk named Dicul, who had, in a + little monastery encompassed by the sea and the woods, five or six + brethren who served God in poverty and humility. With the conversion of + the South Saxons that monastery flourished, the house grew rich, and + Edward the Confessor bestowed it upon his Norman chaplain Osbern, Bishop + of Exeter, whom, of course, the Conqueror did not dispossess. Indeed, the + place became famous and appears in the Bayeaux tapestry, in the very first + picture, where we see "Harold and his Knights riding towards Bosham" to + embark for Normandy. Bosham, indeed, was one of Harold's manors, his + father, according to the legend, having acquired it by a trick. <i>Da mihi + basium</i>, says Earl Godwin to the Archbishop Aethelnoth, thus claiming + to have received Bosham. That Earl Godwin held Bosham we are assured by + the Domesday Survey, which also speaks of the church, presumably the + successor of the old monastery of Dicul. This, as I have said, and as + Domesday Book tells us, Bishop Osbern of Exeter "holds of King William as + he had held it of King Edward." The Bishop of Exeter still held it, "a + royal free chapel" in the time of Henry I. Then was established here, in + place, as I suppose, of the monks, a college of six secular canons, the + Bishop being the Dean. Exeter, indeed, only once lost the church of + Bosham, and that in a most glorious cause, the cause of St Thomas. For + when Henry II. quarrelled with Becket [Footnote: Herbert of Bosham, + possibly a canon of Bosham, was St Thomas' secretary and devoted follower, + and was certainly born in Bosham.] he deprived the Bishop of Exeter, who + took his part, of this church and bestowed it upon the Abbot of Lisieux, + who held it till 1177, when it came once more to the Bishop of Exeter, who + held it, he and his successors till the Reformation. In 1548 the college + was suppressed, only one priest being left to serve the church, with a + curate to serve the dependent parish of Appledram. + </p> + <p> + The church, as we have it to-day upon a little sloping green hill over the + water, is of the very greatest interest. The foundations of a Roman + building have been discovered beneath the chancel, and the foundation and + basis of the chancel arch may be a part of this building. But the greater + part of the building we have is undoubtedly Saxon; the great grey tower, + the nave, the chancel arch, one of the most characteristic works of that + period, and the chancel itself, though enlarged in later times, are + without doubt buildings of Saxon England. Mr Baldwin Brown in his fine + work upon "The Arts in Early England," thus speaks of it: "The plan, as + will be seen at a glance, has been set out with more than mediaeval + indifference to exactness of measurements and squareing, and the chancel + diverges phenomenally from the axis of the nave. The elevations are gaunt + in their plainness, and the now unplastered rubble-work is rough and + uncomely, but the dimensions are ample, the walls lofty, and the chancel + arch undeniably imposing." Of the bases here he says: "These slabs are + commonly attributed to the Romans, but it is not easy to see what part of + a Roman building they can ever have formed. The truth is that they bear no + resemblance to known classical features, while they are on the other hand, + characteristically Saxon. The nearest parallel to them is to be found in + the imposts of the chancel arch at Worth in Sussex, a place far away from + Roman sites. The Worth imposts, like the bases at Bosham, are huge and + ungainly, testifying both to the general love of bigness in the Saxon + builder and to his comparative ignorance of the normal features which in + the eleventh century were everywhere else crystallising into Romanesque. + Saxon England stood outside the general development of European + architecture, but the fact gives it none the less of interest in our + eyes." + </p> + <p> + The church of Holy Trinity, Bosham, is thus the most important Saxon work + left to us in Sussex, indeed save for the aisles and arcades and the + Norman and Early English additions to the chancel, that glorious eastern + window of five lancets, which in itself is worth a journey to see, the + clerestory, and the furniture we have here really a complete Saxon work. + The font is later Norman and not very interesting; but the exquisite + recessed tomb with the effigy of a girl lying upon it is a noble work of + the thirteenth century, said to mark the grave of Canute's daughter. The + crypt dates also from that time. Near the south door is another fine + canopied tomb, said to be that of Herbert of Bosham. The windows are + Norman in the clerestory and Early English and Decorated elsewhere + throughout the church. The stalls in the chancel are Perpendicular. But + here if anywhere in south-eastern England we have a church dating from the + Dark Age, in which happily we were persuaded back again within the + influence of the Faith and of Rome. Bosham then for every Englishman is a + holy place only second to Glastonbury and Canterbury: it is a monument of + our conversion, of the re-entry of England into Christendom, of that + Easter of ours which saw us rise from the dead. + </p> + <p> + A few ruins, mere heaps of stones, mark the site of the college to the + north of the church. Of Earl Godwin's manor-house only the moat remains + near an ancient mill towards the sea; and there, upon the little green + between the grey church and the grey sea, one may best recall the reverent + past of this lovely spot. Little is here for pride, much to make us humble + and exceeding thankful. God was worshipped here between the sea and the + greenwood when our South Saxon forefathers were not only the merest + pagans, but so barbarous that they knew not even how to fish, when they + were so wretched that in companies they would cast themselves into the sea + because there was no light in their hearts and nothing else to do. Out of + that darkness St Wilfrid led them, but even before he came with the light + of Christ and of Rome, in some half barbarous way in this little place men + prayed and Mass was said, and there was the means of deliverance though + men knew it not, being barbarians. + </p> + <p> + It is as though at Bosham we were able to catch a glimpse, as it were, of + all that darkness out of which we are come by the guiding of a star. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-18" id="linkimage-18"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/019.jpg" width="100%" alt="Bosham " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + That Bosham was a harbour in Roman times, and that it had more than a + little to do with the founding of Regnum, and the building perhaps of the + Stane Street, I had long since convinced myself. All these creeks and + harbours were probably known and used even then, and certainly all through + the Middle Ages Bosham was of importance as a port; and the series of + creeks, the most eastern of which it served, and the most western of which + is Southampton Water, with Portsmouth Harbour between them, was still + among the greatest ports in England, easily the greatest, I suppose, in + the south country. + </p> + <p> + In order to see something of this low and muddy coast, which has seen so + much of the history of England, I set out from Bosham very early one + morning, intending to make my way through Emsworth and Havant, by the + Roman road which joins Chichester and Southampton and runs across the + north of these creeks, which may perhaps be considered as one great port + of which only the more western part is famous still. + </p> + <p> + That way has little to recommend it, and indeed I learned little, for the + modern world has obliterated with its terrible footsteps nearly all that + might have remained of our humble and yet so glorious past, and it was + still early morning when I crossed the Hampshire boundary and came into + the little town of Emsworth, once famous for its trade in foreign wines, + now, I suppose, best known as a yachting station. Emsworth was originally + of far less importance than Warblington, of which it was a hamlet. There + the fair was upon the morrow of the feast of the Translation of St Thomas + of Canterbury, to which saint the parish church of Warblington is + dedicated. This is a very beautiful and interesting building, but it is + obvious at once that it cannot always have stood in the name of St Thomas, + for part of its central tower—the church consists of chancel, and + nave, with a tower between them, north chancel, vestry, north and south + nave-aisles, and north porch—is of Saxon workmanship. Only one stage + of this, however, now remains, the lower part having been altogether + rebuilt. This tower was originally a western tower, the Saxon church + standing to the east of it. There is no sign of Norman work here, and it + seems probable that the Saxon church remained until in the first years of + the thirteenth century a new nave and aisles were built to the west of the + old tower, the lower part of which was then removed and the tower + supported by arches in order to open a way into the nave of the old + church, which thus became the chancel of the new. It was then in all + probability that the church was newly dedicated in honour of St Thomas. + The whole of the old church, nave and chancel together, however, was + destroyed before the end of the thirteenth century, and a large new + chancel built with a chapel or vestry at the eastern end upon the north; + at the same time the aisles of the nave were rebuilt. Later in the + fourteenth century the eastern arch bearing the tower was rebuilt, and + thus appeared the church which in the main we still see. The difference in + the north and south arcades of the nave is, though, very striking here, + because of the great contrast between the exquisite and delicate beauty of + the south with its clustered columns of Purbeck and the plain round stone + columns of the north, common enough. Tradition has it that the church was + built by two maiden ladies who lived in the old castle near the church, + and that each built a side of the church according to her taste. One is + said to lie in the chapel at the east end of the south aisle, where there + is a tomb with effigy, the other in a tomb in the north aisle. The + "castle" came in 1551 to Sir Richard Cotton, whose son George entertained + Queen Elizabeth there for two days in 1586. In 1643 a Richard Cotton held + the "strong house" of Warblington against the Parliament till it was taken + by "sixty soldiers and a hundred muskets." All that remains of the place + to-day is a beautiful octagonal tower of red brick and stone, once part of + the main gateway. + </p> + <p> + Now when I had seen all this I went on into Havant, and there at the + cross-roads I found the church of St Faith close by an old sixteenth- + century half-timbered house—the Old House at Home. Havant is, in + spite of the modern world, a place of miracle; for it possesses a spring + to the south-west of the church, called, I think, St Faith's, which never + fails in summer for drought, nor in winter for frost. But for all that the + most interesting thing in the town remains the church. This is a cruciform + building with a tower over the crossing, and is as, we have it, of Norman + foundation, though it seems to stand upon a Roman site, coins having been + found when the old nave was destroyed in 1832 and Roman brick and cement + and foundations. The church we see, however, dates absolutely from the + late twelfth century, and is nowhere, it would appear, older. Unhappily + much is far later, the nave being really a modern building and even the + central tower has been entirely taken down and rebuilt, and indeed all + periods of English architecture would seem to have left their mark upon + the church between the end of the twelfth century and our own day. The + manor of Havant belonged when Domesday Survey was made to the monks of + Winchester. But it is not of them but of William of Wykeham we think here, + for his secretary, Thomas Aylward, was rector of this parish and in 1413 + was buried here in the north transept, where his brass still remains, + showing his effigy vested in a cope. He was not the only notable rector of + Havant, for in 1723 Bingham, the author of the "Antiquities of the + Christian Church," was holding the living when he died. Three years before + he had been wrecked in the South Sea Bubble, and this is supposed to have + caused his death. His work was put into Latin, and was, I think, one of + the last English works to be translated into the universal tongue. + </p> + <p> + Out of Havant I went, nor did I stay now on my way until a little after + noon I reached Porchester; but in Bedhampton I did not forget to pray for + the soul of Elizabeth Juliers, who died there after a most unfortunate and + most wretched life in 1411. This lady, daughter of the Marquis of Juliers + and widow of John Plantagenet, Earl of Kent, took the veil in her + widowhood at Waverley. Then appears Sir Eustace Dabrieschescourt, and she + being young, in spite of her vow, marries him. And having repented and + confessed she devoted her life to penance, being condemned daily to repeat + the Gradual and the Penitential Psalms, and every year to go on pilgrimage + to the shrine of St Thomas. This penance, with others, she performed + during fifty-one years. She was married to Dabrieschescourt in the church + of Wingham in Kent, and died here in Bedhampton, and was buried in the + church of St Thomas, for the manor was her father's and part of her first + dower. + </p> + <p> + Porchester, where I found myself late in the afternoon, is a very + interesting and curious place. What we really have that is ancient there + is a great walled green about six hundred feet square. We enter this area + to-day on the west, the outer gate being thus opposite to us in the + eastern wall, the castle keep and bailey on our left in the north-west + corner, and the church to the south-east. All this is mediaeval work, but + the origins of Porchester are far older than that; the place was a + fortress of the Romans. + </p> + <p> + It is certain that a Roman road ran, as I have said, from Southampton to + Chichester, which it entered by the West Gate, and met the Roman military + highway, the Stane Street which entered Chichester by the East Gate, + whither it had come from London' Bridge. This Roman road doubtless served + many a little port upon these creeks and harbours that lie between + Southampton Water and Chichester Harbour, but undoubtedly the most + important port upon that road, apart from the two cities which it joined, + was the Roman Porchester. + </p> + <p> + It has been suggested, and not without reason, that the Stane Street + itself dates only from the latter part of the Roman occupation of Britain, + that it was, in fact, a purely military way built for the passage of + troops, which until the fourth century were certainly not needed in any + quantity in southern Britain. That they were needed then was due to the + Saxon pirates. The same pagan robbers, who, when the Legions left us never + to return in the first years of the fifth century, might seem to have + overrun the whole country. Now it seems fairly certain that Roman + Porchester was a military and perhaps a naval fortress, built not earlier + than the fourth century here at the western extremity of what the Romans + called the Litus Saxonicum, and for the purpose of defending southern + Britain from the raids of these barbarous and pagan rogues. If so, it + might seem to be of one piece with that presumably purely military Way the + Stane Street, and to give it its meaning. + </p> + <p> + At any rate, the mediaeval builder of Porchester Castle used, with the + help of rebuildings and patchings, the Roman fortifications, which did not + perhaps differ very much, and not at all in form, from those we see. Roman + Porchester was just what mediaeval Porchester was, a great fortress, not a + "city," nor a village, but a port similar to the others that lined the + Saxon shore from the Wash to Beachey Head. + </p> + <p> + Of what became of the place in Saxon times we are entirely ignorant. The + Domesday Survey speaks of it as a "halla," but in the first half of the + twelfth century the Normans built a castle in the north-west corner of the + Roman enclosure, which in 1153 Henry II. granted to Henry Manduit, and + from that time it appears as the military port, as it were, of the + capital, Winchester; Henry II. Richard I. John and Henry III. not only + frequently taking up their residence at Porchester, and there as in a + strong place, transacting the most important business, but they all of + them most frequently set out thence for the Continent in days when a king + of England was as often abroad as at home. Except Edward I. there is + scarcely an English king from Henry II. to Henry VIII. who did not use + Porchester, and Elizabeth, the last royal visitor, held her court in the + Castle. + </p> + <p> + As we see it to-day the keep of Porchester Castle resembles that of + Rochester, not only in its appearance, though there it comes short, but in + its arrangement. It is, however, surrounded by some later ruins of the + fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, the use of which has, I think, never + been ascertained. + </p> + <p> + The whole place is extraordinarily impressive, and not less so on account + of its containing a church within the Roman walls, possibly occupying the + site of a Roman sanctuary. The church of Our Lady of Porchester, however, + as we see it, was, of course, a Norman building, built not later than 1133 + when Henry I. gave it to the Austin Canons as their priory church, but + about 1145 the canons were removed to Southwick, where a house was built + for them. They must, indeed, have been very much in the way within so + important a fortress seeing how international the interests of their + congregation were. The church, of course, remained. It was originally a + cruciform building, with central tower, but the south transept has been + destroyed as has the chapel east of the north transept where now the + vestry stands. The eastern apse, too, has been replaced by a square end. + Apart from these changes, however, the church remains largely as it was in + the time of Henry I., the west front being especially fine, and the font + with its relief of the Baptism of Our Lord, a very notable Romanesque + work. I lingered long in Porchester, indeed till sundown. Nothing in all + England rightly understood is more reverent than this great ruin, not even + the Wall. It, too, like that great northern barrier, was built in our + defence by our saviours against our worst foes the barbarians, the pagans. + It, too, was an outpost of civilisation and of the Faith against the + darkness. Wherever Rome has passed, there a flower will blow for ever, + wherever Rome has been, there is light, wherever Rome has built, there is + something which moves us as nothing else can do, and not least here in + England of my heart upon the verge of the Saxon shore, while we recall the + past at evening and question the future, the future which will not be + known. + </p> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH17" id="link2HCH17"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER XVII + </h2> + <p> + SOUTHAMPTON + </p> + <p> + When I left Porchester I went on into Fareham to sleep, and next morning + set out by train, for it was raining, to go to Clausentum. Before I left + the railway, however, the weather began to clear, and presently the sun + broke through the clouds, so that when I came into Clausentum the whole + world was again full of joy. + </p> + <p> + Clausentum, which even to-day, is not without charm was as I understand + it, the mother of Southampton, a Roman, perhaps even a Celtic foundation, + for its name Clausentum is certainly of Celtic origin. Of its high + antiquity there can at least be no doubt, for there we may still see parts + of the Roman walls near nine feet thick and innumerable Roman remains have + been found within them. + </p> + <p> + The situation of Clausentum, too, was rather Celtic than Roman. It stands + upon a tongue of land thrust out into the Itchen from the left bank, + between Northam and St Denys on the right bank; the river washed its walls + upon three sides, north, south and west, but upon the landward side to the + east it was protected by two lines of defence, an outer and an inner, the + one nearly three hundred yards from the other. At first this arrangement + might seem rather Celtic than Roman, and in fact, it may well be that the + Romans occupied here earthworks far older than anything built by them in + Britain, and yet it seems perhaps more probable that they are responsible + for all we have here, un-Roman though it seems, and that the true + explanation is that the outer defences, while their work, are the older of + the two; that with the decline of their administration in the fourth + century, with the building of the Stane Street and the general walling of + the Roman towns this older and larger defence was abandoned, and the + place, whatever it may have been, reduced to a mere fort to hold which + upon the landward side the inner defence was there built. + </p> + <p> + Of the fate of Clausentum in the Dark Age we know nothing; if it was a + mere fort with no life of its own it may or may not have been abandoned; + but it would seem certain that with the renewal of civilisation in + southern England, by the return of Christianity, a town was established + upon the right bank of the estuary opposite Clausentum. This town was the + first Southampton, and there Athelstane is said to have established mints. + This town, however, does not seem to have occupied the same site as the + Southampton we know, but rather to have been gathered about St Mary's + church to the north-east as Leland was told when he visited Southampton in + 1546. The place was probably burnt by the Danes, and it is to one of them, + to Canute, that we owe the foundation of the town we know. If Canute was + the founder of Southampton, however, it was the Normans who really and + finally established it, the greatness of the place as a port really dating + from the Conquest. The Normans seem to have settled there early in + considerable numbers, and their energy and enterprise began the + development which continued throughout the Middle Age and the Renaissance. + In the seventeenth century, however, Southampton rapidly declined, and + this continued till in the time of our grandfathers it was arrested and + Southampton rose again, to become the chief port of southern England. So + extraordinary indeed has been her modern development that it has + completely engulfed the great town of the Middle Age, which, for all that, + still forms the nucleus as it were of the modern city, though no one, I + suppose would suspect it at first sight. + </p> + <p> + Of the greatness of Southampton in the Middle Age, however, there can be + no doubt. It was the best exit out of that England into Normandy, the + natural port of the capital Winchester, and its whole record is full of + glory. It was in a very real sense the gate of England. Hither came the + great ships from the South and the East, from the ports of Normandy and + Anjou, from Bayonne and Venice, with wine and Eastern silks, leather from + Cordova, swords and daggers from Toledo, spices from India, and coloured + sugars from Egypt. Here the merchants disembarked to trade in the capital + or to attend the great fair of St Giles; hither came the pilgrims, + thousands upon thousands, to follow the old road from Winchester to the + Shrine of St Thomas at Canterbury; while out of Southampton streamed the + chivalry of the Crusades; hence "cheerly to sea" sailed the fleets of + Coeur de Lion for Palestine, of Edward III. for France, the army that won + at Crecy, the army that won at Agincourt. All the glory of mediaeval + England Southampton has seen pass by. + </p> + <p> + That the abandonment of Guienne and Aquitaine by the English was a severe + blow to Southampton is certain, but still it had the Venice trade, the + "Flanders Galleys" laden with the spoil of the East, the wines of the + Levant, the "fashions of proud Italy"; and the real decline of Southampton + dates from the moment when Venice too was wounded even to death by the + discovery of the Cape route to the East and the rise of Portugal. + </p> + <p> + As it happens we have at the time of her greatest prosperity a description + of the town from the hand of Leland. "There be," he writes, "in the fair + and right strong wall of New Hampton, eight gates. Over Barr Gate by north + is the <i>Domus Civica</i>, and under it the town prison. There is a great + suburb without it, and a great double dyke, well watered on each hand + without it. The East Gate is strong, not so large as Barr Gate, and in its + suburb stands St Mary's Church, to the South Gate joins a Castelet well + ordinanced to beat that quarter of the haven. There is another mean gate a + little more south called God's house gate, of an hospital founded by two + merchants joined to it; and not far beyond it is the Water Gate, without + which is a quay. There are two more gates. The glory of the Castle is in + the dungeon, that is both fair and large and strong, both by work and the + site of it. There be five parish churches in the town. Holy Rood Church + standeth in the chief street, which is one of the fairest streets that is + in any town in England, and it is well builded for timber building. There + be many fair merchants' houses, and in the south-east part was a college + of Grey Friars. Here was also an hospital called God's House, founded by + two merchants, appropriated since to Queen's College, Oxford." + </p> + <p> + Of all this what remains? Happily more than might seem possible + considering the enormous modern development of the place. The town of + Southampton stood looking south-west upon a tongue of land thrust out + south into the water with the estuary of the Itchen upon the east, and + Southampton Water upon the west, upon the south were the vast mud-flats + swept by every tide which the great modern docks now occupy. The town was, + as we have seen, enclosed by walls, perhaps by Canute, certainly by the + Normans, and these seem to have been enlarged by King John, and rebuilt + and repaired after the French raid of 1338. They formed a rude + quadrilateral, roughly seven hundred yards from north to south, and three + hundred from east to west, were from twenty-five to thirty feet high and + of varying thickness. Something of them still remains, especially upon the + west of the town over the quays. Here we have two great portions of the + old wall which is practically continuous from the site of the Bugle Tower + upon the south, to the site of the Bigglesgate about half-way up this + western side. This portion includes two of the old gates, the West Gate + and the Blue Anchor Postern. Beyond the site of the Bigglesgate the old + wall has been destroyed as far as the Castle, but from there it still + stands all the way to the Arundel Tower at the north-west corner of the + town. So much for the western front. Upon the north the wall is broken + down at the western end, the Bargate, which still stands, being isolated, + but beyond two portions remain complete as far as the Polymond Tower at + the north-east angle. Upon the east of the town there is very little + standing until we come to the southern corner, where God's House Tower and + the South-East Gate remain. Upon the south almost nothing is left. + </p> + <p> + Southampton in its mediaeval greatness had eight gates, of which, as we + see, four remain: two upon the west, the West Gate and the Blue Anchor + Postern; one upon the north, the Bargate; upon the east, or rather at the + south-eastern angle of the walls, God's House or South-East Gate; upon the + south none at all. + </p> + <p> + The West Gate is a plain but beautiful work of the fourteenth century, a + great square tower over a pointed arch, under which is the entry. The + tower within consists of three stages, the last being embattled and now + roofed, while the first is reached by a picturesque outside stairway of + stone, which served both it and the ramparts. Close by, against the wall, + is a timber building upon a stone basement, called the guard-room, dating + from the fifteenth century. + </p> + <p> + The best portions of the old wall run northward from the West Gate over + the western shore road. This is Norman work added to in the fourteenth + century. Here is the Blue Anchor Postern, or as it is more properly + called, simply the Postern, little more than a round archway within the + great arcading and the wall itself. Just to the south of this gate is the + twelfth-century building known as King John's Palace. We follow the grand + old wall till it ends upon the site of the Bigglesgate, where we turn + eastward a little into the town and come to the Castle, of which, + unhappily, almost nothing remains. It consisted of a great Keep in the + midst of an enclosure, entered by two gates, the Castle Gate upon the + north-east where now is Castle Lane, and the Postern over the site of + which we have entered the Castle Green. The decay of this fortress dates, + at least, from the sixteenth century, and apparently before the Civil War + it had been pulled down. + </p> + <p> + The walls still enclose the Bailey of the Castle upon the west. There, in + some sort, still stands the Castle Water Gate, a mere fragment, within + which is a great vaulted chamber some fifty feet long and twenty-five feet + high, with only one small window. From this fragmentary gate the wall + sweeps away to the salient, for the most part Norman; but beyond the + salient its character changes, two towers appear—the Catchcold Tower + of the late fourteenth and early fifteenth century, and the fine Arundel + Tower, now only a curtain of fourteenth- century work in the Decorated + style. + </p> + <p> + It is in these western walls of the town that we shall get our best idea + of what mediaeval Southampton was, and if we add to our impression by an + examination of the two remaining gates, one upon the north and the other + at the south-east angle, we may perhaps understand how formidable it must + have appeared standing up out of the sea armed at all points. + </p> + <p> + Mediaeval Southampton had eight gates, of these, as I have said, but four + remain, the most notable of which is undoubtedly the Bargate, upon the + north. This is a fine work of various periods in two stages, the lower + consisting of a vaulted passage-way of fine proportions, a work of the + fourteenth century and the upper of a great hall, the Guildhall now used + as a court room. The original gate, of course, was Norman, and this seems + to have endured until about 1330 two towers were built on either side, + without the gate, and a new south front added. In the first years of the + fifteenth century a new north front was contrived, and this remains more + or less as we see it. Of old the gate was reached by a drawbridge across a + wide moat. + </p> + <p> + Beyond the Bargate we come to the Polymond Tower or the Tower of St Denys, + beautiful with creepers. This would seem to be in some way connected with + the Priory of St Denys which held all the churches in the town, as we + shall see. As for its other name of Polymond, it would seem to get it from + that John Polymond, who, in the fourteenth century, from which time the + tower, as we see it, dates, was nine times mayor of Southampton. + </p> + <p> + As for the God's House Gateway, to reach it we must cross the town. It is + a plain but charming work of two periods, the gate proper being of the + thirteenth century, while the tower with the two-storied building attached + to it is of the fourteenth. From the beginning of the eighteenth century + until 1855 it was used as the town gaol. + </p> + <p> + The old town of Southampton, a town within a town, is a fascinating study, + the interest of its gates and old walls is inexhaustible, but apart from + these it has little architectural beauty to boast of. For all that it is + amusing to linger there, if only to solve the problems that time has + contrived for us. Among these not the least is that of the first site of + the town. Not one of the churches in Southampton is of any great beauty or + interest, but it is astonishing to find that the mother church is not in + the town at all, but at least half a mile outside it upon the north. + Leland, as I have already said, was told, when he was in Southampton in + 1546, that the first town did not occupy the site of that we see but was + further to the north, where St Mary's stands. The fact that St Mary's is + the mother church would seen to confirm this. Moreover, there is no + mention in the Domesday Survey of any church at all within the borough of + "Hantune," and though we may think that the church of St John then + existed, St John's was never the mother church; this was St Mary's which + possessed all the tithes of the town. In the time of Henry II. we find the + King granting to the Priory of St Denys, founded in 1124 by Henry I., a + Priory of Austin Canons, his "chapels" of St Michael, the Holy Rood, St + Laurence and All Saints, that is all the churches save St John's already + granted to the Abbey of St Mary of Lire, in Southampton. But that these + chapels had some relation to the mother church of St Mary might seem + certain. Indeed the rector of St Mary's was continually in controversy + with the canons as to his rights, and eventually, in the thirteenth + century, he won the day. In any case the mother church of Southampton was + St Mary's, outside the walls of the town. That a Saxon church stood upon + this site is certain, and this was possibly represented in Leland's time + by the chapel of St Nicholas, "a poor and small thing," which then stood + to the East of "the great church of Our Lady," which he saw and which + probably dated from the time of Henry I. This church was, alas, destroyed + by the town only a few years later because its spire was said to guide the + French cruisers into Southampton Water, and the stones were used to mend + the roads. It may be that the chancel escaped, or it may be that a new and + much smaller church was erected in 1579. This, whichever it was, was much + neglected till in 1711 a nave was built on to it. Then in 1723 the chancel + was destroyed, and a new one built. In 1833 this was rebuilt, and then in + 1878 a new church was built, in place of the old which was pulled down, by + Street. Thus in St Mary's church, the mother church of Southampton to-day, + we have only a lifeless modern building. + </p> + <p> + Much the same fate has befallen the churches within the walls of + Southampton. The oldest, that of St John, was pulled down in the + seventeenth century, that of Holy Rood, in the High Street, was rebuilt + about fifty years ago, so was St Laurence, while All Saints was destroyed + in the eighteenth century. The only ancient church remaining is that of St + Michael, which, though not destroyed, was ruined in 1826. It remains, + however, in part, a Norman building, with an interesting font of the + twelfth century, a lectern of the fifteenth century, and a fine tomb with + the effigy of a priest in mass vestments. + </p> + <p> + The same fate which has so brutally overtaken the churches of Southampton + has, with perhaps more excuse, fallen upon the old religious houses. The + Priory of St Denys, founded by Henry I., upon which all these churches + within the walls were in a sense dependent, has been totally destroyed, a + piece of ruined wall alone remaining, the present church of St Denys + dating from 1868. + </p> + <p> + Nor does much remain of the Hospital of St Julian or God's House, founded + for the poor in the town, by Gervase le Riche, in 1197. It was one of the + most important hospitals in the diocese of Winchester, and in 1343 the + King, its protector, gave it to Queen's College, Oxford, just founded by + Queen Philippa. As the possession of this college it survived the + suppression, and was still carrying on its good work in 1560. About 1567, + however, certain Walloons, refugees from the Low Countries, settled in + Southampton, and these were granted the use of St Julian's Chapel by + Queen's College. + </p> + <p> + The house should have remained to us, but that in 1861, by as black an act + of vandalism as was ever perpetrated, this seat of learning swept away all + the old domestic buildings of the hospital, which dated from its + foundation, and in their place erected what we might expect, at the same + time "restoring" the chapel of St Julian, of course, out of all + recognition. May St Julian forget Queen's College, Oxford, for ever and + ever. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-19" id="linkimage-19"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/020.jpg" width="100%" + alt="The Tudor House, Opposite St Michael's Church, Southampton " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + Not far from this hospital for the poor the Grey Friars built their house + in 1237, or rather the burgesses of Southampton built it for them, + including a cloister of stone, but nothing remains at all of this house. + </p> + <p> + For the most part, too, the great houses that of old filled Southampton, + and helped to glorify it, are gone. "The chiefest house," writes Leland, + "is the house that Huttoft, late customer of Southampton, builded on the + west side of the town. The house that Master Lightster, chief baron of the + King's exchequer, dwelleth in, is very fair; the house that Master Mylles, + the recorder, dwelleth in, is fair, and so be the houses of Niccotine and + Guidote, Italians." Of these, what remains? Nothing. The only noble + dwelling is that called Tudor House, in St Michael's Square, a fine + half-timbered building, and of this nothing is known. + </p> + <p> + No, the only thing to be enjoyed in Southampton to-day is the old wall + with its gateways, that upon the west still valiantly outfaces the modern + world and recalls for us all that noble great past out of which we are + come. And yet I suppose Southampton is fulfilling its purpose to-day more + wonderfully than ever before. It was once the port of England for those + dominions oversea we held in France. They are gone, but others we have + since acquired, though less fair by far, remain. It is to these + Southampton looks to-day, south and east, as of old over how many thousand + miles of blue water. + </p> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH18" id="link2HCH18"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER XVIII + </h2> + <p> + BEAULIEU AND CHRISTCHURCH + </p> + <p> + While I was in Southampton, I made up my mind to visit a place which I had + all my life desired to see, but which I had never yet set eyes upon, I + mean Beaulieu Abbey in the New Forest. To this end I set out early one + morning, by steamboat, across Southampton Water, and landed at Hythe, + whence I had only to cross the eastern part of Beaulieu Heath, a walk of + some five miles, to find myself where I would be. + </p> + <p> + The day was fair, the tide at the flood; in the woods, across the water, I + could see where Netley Abbey, another Cistercian house, younger than + Beaulieu, once lifted up its voice in ceaseless praise of God, the Maker + of all that beauty in which it stood, scarcely spoiled even now by the + amazing energy of the modern world. It was then with a light heart that I + set out by a byway under Furze Down, and so across the open heath, coming + down at last through the woods to the ruins of the abbey and the river of + Beaulieu. + </p> + <p> + There can be no more delicious spot in the world. St Bernard loved the + valleys as St Benedict the hills, and as St Bernard was the refounder of + the Cistercian Order to which Beaulieu belonged, it, like Waverley, + Tintern, Netley, and a hundred others in England, was set in one of those + delicious vales in which I think England is richer than any other country, + and which here, in England of my heart, seem to demand rather our worship + than our praise. + </p> + <p> + Beaulieu Abbey had always interested me. In the first place it was one of + the greatest, though not the earliest, houses in England of the Cistercian + Order, that reform of the Benedictines begun as William of Malmesbury + bears witness by an Englishman, Stephen Harding, sometime a monk of + Sherborne. And then it was the only religious house within the confines of + the New Forest. It seems that in the year 1204, just a year after he had + given the manor of Faringdon in Berkshire to St Mary of Citeaux, and + established there a small house of Cistercian monks, King John founded + this great monastery of St Mary of Beaulieu for the same Order, making + provision for not less than thirty brethren, and giving it Faringdon for a + cell. John endowed the house with some six manors and several churches, + gave it a golden chalice, and many cattle, as well as corn and wine and + money, and besought the aid of the abbots of the Order on behalf of the + new house. To such good purpose, indeed, did he support Beaulieu, that + Hugh, the first abbot, was alone his friend, when Innocent III., in the + spring of 1208 placed England under an interdict. This Hugh went as the + King's ambassador to Rome, and having received promises of submission from + the King, who awaited his return in the mother house of the Order in + England, at Waverley, was successful in reconciling him with the Pope. In + return the King gave him a palfrey among other presents, and the interdict + being lifted, contributed nine hundred marks towards the building of + Beaulieu, to be followed by other even more generous offerings. Nor was + Henry III. neglectful of the place, so that in 1227 upon the vigil of the + Assumption, the monks were able to use their church, though it was not + till nineteen years later that the monastery was completed, and dedicated + in the presence of the King and Queen, Prince Edward and a vast concourse + of bishops, nobles, and common folk, by the Bishop of Winchester. Upon + that occasion, Prince Edward was seized with illness, and, strange as it + may seem, we are told that the Queen remained in the abbey, to nurse him, + for three weeks. But the house was always under the royal protection. + Edward I. constantly stayed there, and the abbots were continually + employed upon diplomatic business. From 1260 to 1341, when he asked to be + freed from the duty, the abbot of Beaulieu sat in Parliament, and in 1368 + Edward III. granted the monks a weekly market within the precincts. One + other privilege, unique in southern England, Beaulieu had, the right to + perpetual sanctuary granted by Innocent III., and this seems to have been + used to the full in the Wars of the Roses, at least we find Richard III. + inquiring into the matter in 1463. There it seems Perkin Warbeck had found + safety, as had Lady Warwick after Barnet, and at the time of the + Suppression there were thirty men in sanctuary in the "Great Close of + Beaulieu," which seems to have included all the original grant of land + made to the abbey by King John. Beaulieu evidently very greatly increased + in honour, for in 1509 its abbot was made Bishop of Bangor but continued + to hold the abbey, and when he died the abbot of Waverley, the oldest + house of the Order in England, succeeded him, the post being greatly + sought after. The Act of 1526 suppressing the lesser monasteries, in which + so many Cistercian houses perished, did not touch Beaulieu, but Netley + fell early in the following year, and the monks were sent to Beaulieu. + Many then looked for the spoil of the great abbey, among them Lord Lisle + who besought Thomas Cromwell for it, but he was denied. Indeed there seems + to have been no idea of suppressing the house at that time. But the Abbot + Stevens was a traitor. In 1538 he eagerly signed the surrender demanded by + the infamous Layton and Petre, and the site was granted to Thomas + Wriothesley, afterwards Earl of Southampton, from whose family it came in + the time of William III. to Lord Montagu, and so to the Dukes of + Buccleuch, who still hold it. + </p> + <p> + Nothing can exceed the beauty of the remains of the house there by the + river, in perhaps the loveliest corner of southern England. The great + abbey church has gone, destroyed at the Suppression, but not a little of + the monastery remains. The great Gate House called the abbot's lodging and + now the Palace House, the seat of Lord Montagu of Beaulieu, a fine + Decorated building with a beautiful entrance hall, may sometimes be seen. + From this one passes across the grass to the old Refectory, now fitted up + as the parish church, a noble work of the Early English style of the + thirteenth century, as is the fine pulpit with its arcade in the thickness + of the wall. Here of old the monk read aloud while his brethren took their + meagre repast. + </p> + <p> + From the Refectory one comes into the ruined cloisters, lovely with all + manner of flowers, and so to the site of the old Chapter House, of the + sacristy and the monastic buildings. All that remains is in the early + Decorated style of the end of the thirteenth century. Here, too, upon the + north stood the great abbey church, three hundred and thirty-five feet + long, a cruciform building consisting of nave with two aisles, central + tower, transepts with aisles, chancel with circular apse and chapels, now + marked out in chalk upon the grass. All about are the woods, meadows, + fishponds and greens of the monks who are gone. + </p> + <p> + I do not know how this strikes another who shall see it to-day, in all its + useless beauty, in the midst of our restless and unhappy England; but what + I felt has already been expressed and by so good an Englishman as William + Cobbett. + </p> + <p> + "Now ... I daresay," he writes, "that you are a very good Protestant; and + I am a monstrous good Protestant too. We cannot bear the Pope, nor "they + there priests that makes men confess there sins and go down upon their + marrow-bones before them." But let us give the devil his due; and let us + not act worse by these Roman Catholics (who by the by were our + forefathers) than we are willing to act by the devil himself. Now then + here were a set of monks. None of them could marry, of course none of them + could have wives and families. They could possess no private property; + they could bequeath nothing; they could own nothing but that which they + owned in common with the rest of their body. They could hoard no money; + they could save nothing. Whatever they received as rent for their lands, + they must necessarily spend upon the spot, for they never could quit that + spot. They did spend it all upon the spot; they kept all the poor. + Beaulieu and all round about Beaulieu saw no misery, and had never heard + the damned name of pauper pronounced as long as those Monks continued. + </p> + <p> + "You and I are excellent Protestants; you and I have often assisted on the + 5th of November to burn Guy Fawkes, the Pope and the Devil. But you and I + would much rather be life holders under Monks than rackrenters...." + </p> + <p> + St Thomas Aquinas has told us that there were three things for a sight of + which he would have endured a year in Purgatory, not unwillingly: Christ + in the flesh, Rome in her flower, and an Apostle disputing. Christ in the + flesh, I would indeed I might have seen, and Rome in her flower were worth + even such a price, but for me an Apostle disputing would, let me confess + it, have little attraction. Instead I would that I might see England + before the fall, England of the thirteenth, fourteenth or fifteenth + century, England of my heart, with all her great cathedrals still alive, + with all her great monasteries still in being, those more than six hundred + houses destroyed by Henry, and not least this house of the Cistercians in + Beaulieu. And if I might see that, I should have seen one of the fairest + things and the noblest that ever were in the world. + </p> + <p> + From Beaulieu I set out in the afternoon across the Forest, and at first + over the western part of Beaulieu Heath for Brockenhurst. The road across + the heath is not in itself of much beauty, but it affords some glorious + views both of the Forest and the sea. As I drew nearer to Brockenhurst, + however, I came into the woods, and the sylvan beauty of the vale, through + which the Lymington River flows southward, was delicious. Brockenhurst + itself is charmingly embowered and is surrounded by some of the loveliest + of the woodlands. The church stands high, perhaps as a guide, over a + woodland churchyard, and is the evident successor of a Norman building, as + its south doorway and font of Purbeck bear witness and the chancel arch + too, unless indeed this be earlier still. The chancel, however, dates from + the fourteenth century, a good example in its littleness of the Decorated + style, but it is half spoiled by the enormous pew which blocks the + entrance. The tower and spire and a good part of the nave are completely + modern. The great yew in the churchyard must date at least from Edward + I.'s time, and perhaps may have seen the day on which Red William fell. + </p> + <p> + From Brockenhurst, on the following morning, I set out again over the open + heath for Boldre southward. Many a fine view over the woods I had, and + once, as I came down Sandy Down, I caught sight of the Isle of Wight. Then + the scene changed, and I came through meadows, and past coppices into + Boldre. In the midst of a wood, as it were, I suddenly found the church, + and this interested me more than I can well say, for here again I found + what at one time must have been a complete Norman building. Surely if the + history-books are right this is an astonishing thing; but then, as I have + long since learned, the history one is taught at school is a mere + falsehood from start to finish. There is probably no schoolboy in England + who has not read of the awful cruelty and devastation that went with the + formation of the New Forest, by the Conqueror in 1079. It is generally + spoken of as only less appalling than the burning of Northumberland. It is + said that more than fifty-two parish churches within the new bounds of the + New Forest were destroyed, and a fertile district of a hundred square + miles laid waste and depopulated to provide William with a hunting-ground. + Now if this be true how does it come that upon my first day in the Forest + I find a Norman church at Brockenhurst with something very like a Saxon + chancel arch, and that upon my second day I walk right into another church + in part Norman too? This is surely an astonishing thing. It is also, I + find, a fact that much of the New Forest had been a royal hunting- ground + in the Saxon times, and that the afforestation of William is not so much + as mentioned in the Saxon Chronicle. The whole story of the devastation of + this great country would seem to rest upon the writings of William of + Jumièges or Ordericus Vitalis, neither of whom was alive at the time of + the afforestation. This must have been known surely to our modern + historians; but so is the history of England written. Our real grievance + against William was not his afforestation, but his cruel Forest Law, which + demanded the limb of a man for the life of a beast, a thing I think + unknown in England before his advent. It was this harsh law, so bitterly + resented, which at last, as we may think, cost William Rufus his life. But + the old tale remains, and therefore I was greatly astonished in Boldre + Church. + </p> + <p> + Doubtless the original Norman church consisted of a nave, chancel and + north and south aisles. The south aisle remains, as does the arcade which + separates it from the nave. In the Early English time the north aisle was + rebuilt or added, perhaps, for the first time, and the chancel rebuilt. + Later the church was lengthened westward, and the tower built at the + eastern end of the Norman aisle. In that aisle there is a tablet to + William Gilpin, the author of "Forest Scenery," who was vicar of Boldre + for a generation, dying in 1804 aged eighty years. He is buried in the + churchyard. + </p> + <p> + Boldre is certainly a place to linger in, a place that one is sorry to + leave, but I could not stay, being intent on Lymington. Therefore I went + down through the oak woods, over Boldre Bridge, to find the high road, + which presently brought me past St Austin's once belonging to the Priory + of Christchurch, under Buckland Rings to the very ancient borough of + Lymington, with its charming old ivy-clad church tower at the end of the + High Street. The church, in so far as it is old of the thirteenth and + fourteenth centuries, has little to boast of, for it has been quite + horribly restored. In the long street of Lymington I slept. + </p> + <p> + There seemed to be nothing to keep me in Lymington, and therefore, early + upon the following morning, I set out for Milford, five miles away by the + sea, and there I wonderfully saw the Needles and the great Island and + found another Norman church, Norman that is to say in its foundations. All + Saints, Milford, consists to-day of chancel with north and south chapels + west of it, transepts, nave with north and south aisles, and a western + chapel on either side the western tower, and a south porch. It is a most + beautiful and interesting building. Doubtless there originally stood here + a twelfth-century Norman church, consisting of nave with aisles and + chancel, of which two arches remain in the south arcade of the nave. Then + in the thirteenth century the church was rebuilt, as we see it, and very + beautiful it is, in its Early English dress, passing into Decorated, in + the chancel and transepts. + </p> + <p> + From Milford, through a whole spring day, I went on by the coast as far I + could, westward to Christchurch. All the way, the sea, the sky, and the + view of the island and of Christchurch bay closed by Hengistbury Head in + the west, and the long bar on which Hurst Castle stands in the east were + worth a king's ransom. They say all this coast has strong attractions for + the geologist; but what of the poet and painter? Surely here, when the + wind comes over the sea and the Island, showing his teeth, to possess the + leaning coast, one may see and understand why England is the England of my + heart. At least I thought so, and lingered there so long that twilight had + fallen before I found myself under the darkness of the great Priory of + Christchurch, the goal of my desire. + </p> + <p> + It was not without due cause and reason that I wished to see, instead of + an Apostle disputing, England before the fall. Indeed I am sure that I + should not have been unwise to exchange "Rome in her flower" for such a + sight as that; Christchurch proves it. + </p> + <p> + We march up and down England and count up our treasures, of which this + Priory of Christchurch is not the least; but we never pause perhaps to + remember what, through the damnable act of Thomas Cromwell and Henry + Tudor, we have lost. What we have lost! hundreds of churches, hundreds of + monasteries as fine as Christchurch, and hundreds far more solemn and + reverent. Reading, which now gives a title to an Isaacs, (God save us + all!) was, before the fall, just a great monastery, a Norman pile as grand + as Durham or Ely. What of Glastonbury and Amesbury, older far, and of + those many hundred others which stood up strong before God for our souls—without + avail? They are gone; Christchurch in some sort remains. + </p> + <p> + Christchurch stands in the angle where the rivers Avon and Stour meet, and + it is thus secured upon the north, east, and south; its great and perhaps + its only attraction is the great Priory church in whose name that of the + town, Twyneham, has long been lost; but there are beside a ruined Norman + house, and a pretty mediaeval bridge over the Avon, from which a most + noble view of the great church may be had. This, which dates in its + foundation from long before the Conquest, is to-day a great cruciform + building consisting roughly of Norman nave and transepts, the nave + buttressed on the north in the thirteenth century, fifteenth-century + chancel and western tower, and thirteenth-century north porch—altogether + one of the most glorious churches left to us in England. + </p> + <p> + Its history, as I say, goes back far beyond the Conquest, when it was + served by secular canons, as it was at the time of the Domesday Survey, + when we find that twenty-four were in residence. But in the time of + William Rufus, Ranulph Flambard, the Bishop of Durham, his chief minister, + obtained a grant of the church and town of Christchurch, and soon had + suppressed all the canonries save five, and would have suppressed them all + but for the timely death of the Red King, which involved the fall and + imprisonment of his rascal minister. After an interval, in which the + church was governed by Gilbert de Dousgunels, who set out for Rome to get + the Pope's leave to refound the house, but died upon the journey, Henry I. + gave manor, town and church to his cousin, Richard de Redvers, who proved + a great benefactor to the Priory, and established a Dean over the canons, + one Peter, who was succeeded by Dean Ralph. Then in 1150 came Dean Hilary, + who as Bishop of Chichester, petitioned Richard de Redvers to establish + Christchurch as a Priory of Canons Regular of St Austin. This was done; a + certain Reginald was appointed first prior, and he ruled Christchurch for + thirty-six years till, in 1186, he was succeeded by Ralph. It was not, + however, till the time of the third Prior that the high altar of the new + church begun by Gilbert and continued by Richard de Redvers and his priors + was dedicated upon the feast of St Thomas of Canterbury, 1195. This would + seem to prove that the Norman choir was not finished until then; similar + consecration of other altars would lead us to believe that perhaps the + vault and the clerestory of the nave were completed in 1234. At the same + time the beautiful north porch was built and the north aisle was + buttressed. To the fourteenth century we owe the fine rood screen restored + in 1848, but the next great period of building was the fifteenth century, + when the Lady Chapel, with the chapels north and south of it, were built, + and later in the same century the great choir was entirely re-erected. + </p> + <p> + Thus Christchurch Priory grew until the Reformation. It escaped the first + raid of Cromwell in 1536, but in spite of the petition of John Draper, the + last Prior, in 1539 the house was demanded of him and he surrendered it. + The report of the vandals and sacrilegious persons who received it is + worth copying, if only to show their character. "We found," they wrote, + "the Prior a very honest, conformable person, and the house well furnished + with jewels and plate, whereof some be meet for the king's majesty in use + as a little chalice of gold, a goodly large cross, double gilt with the + foot garnished, and with stone and pearl; two goodly basons double gilt. + And there be other things of silver.... In thy church we find a chapel and + monument curiously made of Caen stone, prepared by the late mother of + Reginald Pole for her burial, which we have caused to be defaced, and all + the arms and badges to be delete." It is consoling to note that one of the + rascals that signed that report, Dr London, was shortly afterwards exposed + in his true colours and openly put to penance for adultery before he died + in prison, where he lay for perjury. + </p> + <p> + The report stated that the church was superfluous. It was the only true + word written there. When a religion is destroyed, its temples are + certainly superfluous. However, there was a considerable influence brought + to bear by the people of the neighbourhood, and the church itself was + granted them for their use. The Priory, which stood to the south of the + church, was, of course, destroyed. + </p> + <p> + One might stand a whole month in that glorious building with this only + regret, that it is in the hands of strangers. The use to which it is put + is not that for which it was intended, and half the delight of the place + is thus lost to us. But no one can pass down that great avenue of elms to + the glorious north porch, a master-work of the thirteenth century, without + rejoicing that when all is said the church was saved to us. The great + Norman nave, with its thirteenth-century clerestory, and alas, modern + stucco vaulting, the Norman aisles and north transept, are too reverent + for destruction, the fifteenth-century choir and eastern chapels too + lovely. + </p> + <p> + A certain amount of the old furniture remains to the church in the + restored screen of the fourteenth century, and the reredos over the + communion table and another in the Lady Chapel; here, too, is the old + altar stone of Purbeck. The chantry of the poor Countess of Salisbury, who + was beheaded for high treason in 1541, so brutally defaced by Dr London + and his infamous colleagues, stands there too upon the north; and close by + in the north chapel is the tomb with fine alabaster effigies of Sir John + and Lady Chydroke (d. 1455), removed from the nave, and in the Lady Chapel + lie its founders, Sir Thomas and Lady West. Of the modern restorations and + additions I have nothing to say, and more especially of the monument to + Shelley; a parody of a Pietà merely blasphemous, beneath the tower. + </p> + <p> + Now when I had seen all this, to say nothing of the old school-room over + the Lady Chapel and the Norman house and castle mound of the De Redvers, + somewhat sorrowful for many things, I began to think again of the Forest, + and immediately set out where the road led to Lyndhurst, and this just + before midday. + </p> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH19" id="link2HCH19"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER XIX + </h2> + <p> + THE NEW FOREST AND ROMSEY ABBEY + </p> + <p> + All day I went through the Forest, sometimes by green rides, enchanted + still, such as those down which Lancelot rode with Guinevere, talking of + love, sometimes over heaths wild and desolate such as that which knew the + bitterness of Lear, sometimes through the greenwood, ancient British + woodland, silent now, where the hart was once at home in the shade, and + where at every turn one might expect to come upon Rosalind in her boy's + dress, and think to hear from some glade the words of Amiens' song: + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Under the greenwood tree + Who loves to lie with me, + And turn his merry note + Unto the sweet bird's throat; + Come hither, come hither, come hither.... +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + There are days in life of which it can only be said, that they are + blessed; golden days, upon which, looking back, the sun seems to shine; + they dazzle in the memory. Such was the day I spent in the byways of + Holmsley and Burley, in the upper valleys of Avon water, Ober water and + Black water, forest streams; in the silent woods, where all day long the + sun showered its gold, sprinkling the deep shade with flowers and blossoms + of light, where there was no wind but only the sighing of the woods, no + sound but the whisper of the leaves or the rare flutter of a bird's wings, + no thoughts but joyful thoughts filling the heart with innocence. + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Who doth ambition shun, + And loves to live i' the sun, + Seeking the food he eats + And pleased with what he gets; + Come hither, come hither, come hither.... +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + At evening I came to Lyndhurst. + </p> + <p> + Lyndhurst is the capital of the Forest; as its name implies it was + established in a wood of limes, a tree said to have been introduced into + England only in the sixteenth century. It is already spoken of in the + tenth century Anglo-Saxon ballad of the Battle of Brunanburh! + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Athelstan king, + Lord among earls, + Bracelet bestower and + Baron of barons; + He with his brother + Edmund Atheling + Gaining a lifelong + Glory in battle. + Slew with the sword-edge, + There by Brunanburh, + Brake the shield wall, + <i>Hew'd the lindenwood</i>, + Hack'd the battleshield, + Sons of Edward with hammered brands. +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + Oak, beech, and holly, which so largely make up the woodland of the New + Forest we have always had in England, but the limes which named Lyndhurst + it is said we owe to someone else, and if so it can only be to the Roman. + </p> + <p> + What the Forest was when the Romans administered the land we know not; but + in Anglo-Saxon times it was doubtless a royal hunting ground, <i>terra + regis</i> and <i>silva regis</i>, for spoiling which by fire as for + killing the game therein fines must be paid. These royal hunting grounds, + of which the great Forest in Hampshire was certainly not the least, only + became legal "forests" with the Conquest, when they were placed under a + new Forest law of extraordinary harshness, which even in the Conqueror's + time indeed demanded an eye or a hand for the taking of game, and in the + days of the Red King the life of a man for the life of a beast. + </p> + <p> + The Conqueror, as we know, greatly enlarged the old "royal hunting ground" + here in Hampshire when he made the New Forest, and that act of his which + brought an immensely larger area than of old under a new and incredibly + harsher forest law gradually produced a legend of devastation and + depopulation here which, as I have already said, can no longer be accepted + as true. Henry of Huntingdon (1084?-1155) asserts that "to form the + hunting ground of the New Forest he (William) caused churches and villages + to be destroyed, and, driving out the people, made it a habitation for + deer." It is true that the Conqueror forged a charter purporting to date + from Canute in which the king's sole right to take beasts of chase was + asserted, and to this he appealed as justifying his harsh new laws; but it + is untrue that he depopulated and destroyed a thriving district to make a + wilderness for the red deer. "We shall find," says Warner, "that the lands + comprised in this tract (the New Forest) appear from their low valuation + in the time of the Confessor to have been always unproductive in + comparison with other parts of the kingdom; and that notwithstanding this + pretended devastation they sunk (in many instances) but little in their + value after their afforestment. So that the fact seems to have been, + William, finding this tract in a barren state and yielding but little + profit, and being strongly attached to the pleasures of the chase, + converted it into a royal forest, without being guilty of those violences + to the inhabitants of which Henry of Huntingdon, Malmesbury, Walter Mapes, + and others complain." + </p> + <p> + Of this great New Forest, Lyndhurst was made the capital and the + administrative centre, and such it is still. In Domesday Book we read: + "The King himself holds Lyndhurst, which appertained to Amesbury, which is + of the King's farm." + </p> + <p> + The King granted a small part, namely, one virgate to "Herbert the + Forester," before 1086, and this Herbert is generally supposed to have + been the ancestor of those Lyndhursts who for so long held the wardenship + of the Forest. The King's house, a fine building of Queen Anne's time, is + the successor of the old royal lodge at least as old as the fourteenth + century, and is now occupied by the Deputy Surveyor of the Forest. In the + Verderers' Hall close by, the forest courts of the verderers are still + held. There, too, may be seen the old dock, certain trophies of the chase + and "the stirrup-iron of William Rufus," really the seventeenth century + gauge "for the dogs allowed to be kept in the forest without expeditation, + the 'lawing' being carried out on all 'great dogs' that could not pass + through the stirrup." + </p> + <p> + Lyndhurst itself, as we see it to-day, is devoid of interest; even the + church dates but from 1863, and its greatest treasure is the wall- + painting by Lord Leighton of the Wise and Foolish Virgins in the chancel. + A church, a chapelry of Minstead, certainly stood here in the thirteenth + century, but was destroyed, and a Georgian building erected —in its + turn to give place to the church we see. + </p> + <p> + Lyndhurst, though almost without interest itself, is undoubtedly the best + centre for exploring the Forest, or, at any rate, perhaps the most + beautiful and certainly the most interesting parts of it. So by many a + byway I went northward to Minstead in Malwood, where I found a most + curious church, rather indeed a house than a church, with dormer windows + in the roof, an enormous three-decker pulpit within, galleries, and two + great pews, one with a fireplace, and I know not what other quaint rubbish + of the eighteenth century. All this I found enchanting, and more + especially because the nave and chancel seemed to me to be originally of + the thirteenth century, and certainly the font is Norman. But the church + with its eighteenth-century tower is perhaps the most amazing + conglomeration of the work of all periods since the twelfth century to be + found in southern England. + </p> + <p> + From Minstead I went on up the Bartley water to Stone Cross, nearly four + hundred feet over the Forest, from which by good fortune I saw the mighty + Abbey of Romsey in the valley of the Test, where I intended to sleep. Then + I went down past Castle Malwood to where stands Rufus' Stone. There I + read: + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + "Here stood the oak-tree on which an arrow shot by Sir + Walter Tyrrell at a stag glanced and struck King William II., + surnamed Rufus, on the breast, of which stroke he instantly + died on the 2nd August 1100. + + "King William II., surnamed Rufus, being slain as before related, + was laid in a cart belonging to one Purkess and drawn + from hence to Winchester and buried in the cathedral church + of that city. + + "That where an event so memorable had happened might + not hereafter be unknown this stone was set up by John Lord + Delaware who had seen the tree growing in this place anno + 1745. + + "This stone having been much mutilated and the inscriptions + on the three sides defaced, this more durable memorial + with the original inscription was erected in the year 1841 by + him. Sturges Bourne, warden." +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + The memorial and inscription are of iron. + </p> + <p> + The most famous thing that ever befell in the New Forest was this strange + murder or misfortune which cost the Red King his life. It haunts the whole + forest, and rightly understood fills it with meaning and can never have + been or be far from the thoughts of anyone who wanders there, even as I + have done in the excellent days of Spring. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-20" id="linkimage-20"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/021.jpg" width="100%" alt="In the New Forest " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + No less than three members of the Conqueror's family were killed in the + New Forest; first Richard, one of his sons, then another Richard, bastard + son of Duke Robert of Normandy, this in May 1100; and in August of the + same year, his son and successor William, surnamed Rufus. All these deaths + are said to have been caused by accidents, all were caused by arrows; it + is a strange thing. + </p> + <p> + All we really know about the death of William Rufus may be found in the + English "Chronicle." "On the morrow was the King William shot off with an + arrow from his own men in hunting." Whether the arrow, as tradition has + it, was shot by Walter Tyrrel or no, whether it was aimed at the King or + no, can never now be known. The most graphic account of the affair is + given to us by Ordericus Vitalis, who, however, was not only not present, + but at best can have been but a child at the time, for he died in 1150. + For all that he doubtless had access to sources of which we now know + nothing, and the whole atmosphere of his story suggests that, as we might + expect, the King was murdered because of his general harshness and + oppression, perhaps especially exemplified in his Forest Law. It was he + and not the Conqueror who demanded the life of a man for that of a beast; + his father had been content with an eye or a limb. + </p> + <p> + It would seem, according to Ordericus, that the whole country was full of + stories of terrible visions concerning the end of the King long before his + sudden death. Henry of Huntingdon, for instance, tells us that "blood had + been seen to spring from the ground in Berkshire," and adds that "the King + was rightly cut off in the midst of his injustice," for "England could not + breathe under the burdens laid upon it." Ordericus himself says that + "terrible visions respecting him were seen in the monasteries and + cathedrals by the clergy of both classes, and becoming the talk of the + vulgar in the market-places and churchyards, could not escape the notice + of the King." + </p> + <p> + He then gives a particular instance: "A certain monk of good repute and + still better life, who belonged to the Abbey of St Peter at Gloucester, + related that he had a dream in the visions of the night to this effect: 'I + saw,' he said, 'the Lord Jesus seated on a lofty throne, and the glorious + host of heaven, with the company of the saints, standing round. But while, + in my ecstasy, I was lost in wonder, and my attention deeply fixed on such + an extraordinary spectacle, I beheld a virgin resplendent with light cast + herself at the feet of the Lord Jesus, and humbly address to Him this + petition, "O Lord Jesus Christ, the Saviour of mankind, for which Thou + didst shed Thy precious blood when hanging on the Cross, look with an eye + of compassion on Thy people, which now groan under the yoke of William. + Thou avenger of wickedness, and most just judge of all men, take vengeance + I beseech Thee on my behalf of this William and deliver me out of his + hands, for as far as lies in his power he hath polluted and grievously + afflicted me." The Lord replied, "Be patient and wait awhile, and soon + thou wilt be fully avenged of him." I trembled at hearing this and doubt + not that the divine anger presently threatens the King; for I understood + that the cries of the holy virgin, our mother the Church, had reached the + ears of the Almighty by reason of the robberies, the foul adulteries and + the heinous crimes of all sorts which the King and his courtiers cease not + daily of committing against the divine law.'" + </p> + <p> + On being informed of this, the venerable Abbot Serle wrote letters which + he despatched in a friendly spirit from Gloucester informing the King very + distinctly of all the monk had seen in his vision. + </p> + <p> + William of Malmesbury also records that the King himself the day before he + died, dreamed that he was let blood by a surgeon, and that the stream, + reaching to heaven, clouded the light and intercepted the day. Calling on + St Mary for protection he suddenly awoke, commanded a light to be brought + and forbade his attendants to leave him. They then watched with him + several hours until daylight. Shortly after, just as the day began to + dawn, a certain foreign monk told Robert Fitz Haman one of the principal + nobility that he had that night dreamed a strange and fearful dream about + the King: "That he had come into a certain church, with menacing and + insolent gesture as was his custom, looking contemptuously on the standers + by. Then violently seizing the Crucifix he gnawed the arms and almost tore + away the legs; that the image endured this for a long time, but at length + struck the King with its foot, in such a manner that he fell backwards; + from his mouth as he lay prostrate issued so copious a flame that the + volumes of smoke touched the very stars. Robert, thinking that this dream + ought not to be neglected as he was intimate with him, immediately related + it to the King. William, repeatedly laughing, exclaimed, 'He is a monk and + dreams for money like a monk; give him a hundred shillings.'" + </p> + <p> + "Nevertheless," adds William of Malmesbury, "being greatly moved, the King + hesitated a long while whether he should go out to hunt as he designed; + his friends persuading him not to suffer the truth of the dreams to be + tried at his personal risk. In consequence he abstained from the chase + before dinner, dispelling the uneasiness of his unregulated mind by + serious business. They relate that having plentifully regaled that day, he + soothed his cares with a more than usual quantity of wine." + </p> + <p> + All this, I suppose, befell in the Castle of Malwood. + </p> + <p> + After dinner the King prepared to hunt. "Being in great spirits," says + Ordericus, "he was joking with his attendants while his boots were being + laced, when an armourer came and presented him six arrows. The King + immediately took them with great satisfaction, praising the work, and + unconscious of what was to happen, kept four of them himself and held out + the other two to Walter Tyrrel. "It is but right," said he, "that the + sharpest arrows should be given to him who knows best how to inflict + mortal wounds with them." This Tyrrel was a French knight of good + extraction, the wealthy lord of the castles of Poix and Pontoise, filling + a high place among the nobles, and a gallant soldier; he was therefore + admitted to familiar intimacy with the King and became his constant + companion. Meanwhile as they were idly talking and the King's household + attendants were assembled about him, a monk of Gloucester presented + himself and delivered to the King a letter from his abbot. Having read it, + the King burst out laughing and said merrily to the knight just mentioned, + "Walter, do what I told you." The knight replied, "I will, my lord." + Slighting then the warnings of the elders, and forgetting that the heart + is lifted up before a fall, he said respecting the letter he had received, + "I wonder what has induced my lord Serlo to write me in this strain, for I + really believe he is a worthy abbot and respectable old man. In the + simplicity of his heart he transmits to me, who have enough besides to + attend to, the dreams of his snoring monks and even takes the trouble to + commit them to writing and send them a long distance. Does he think that I + follow the example of the English, who will defer their journey or their + business on account of the dreams of a parcel of wheezing old women? + </p> + <p> + "Thus speaking, he hastily rose and mounting his horse rode at full speed + to the forest. His brother, Count Henry with William de Bretanel, and + other distinguished persons, followed him, and having penetrated into the + woods the hunters dispersed themselves in various directions according to + custom. The King and Walter Tyrrel posted themselves with a few others in + one part of the forest and stood with their weapons in their hands eagerly + watching for the coming of the game, when a stag suddenly running between + them the King quitted his station and Walter shot an arrow. It grazed the + beast's grizzly back, but glancing from it mortally wounded the king, who + stood within its range. He immediately fell to the ground, and, alas! + suddenly expired." + </p> + <p> + William of Malmesbury gives a somewhat different account of the King's + death. "The sun was declining when the King, drawing his bow and letting + fly an arrow; slightly wounded a stag which passed before him; and keenly + gazing followed it still running a long time with his eyes, holding up his + hand to keep off the power of the sun's rays. At this instant, Walter, + conceiving a noble exploit, which was, while the King's attention was + otherwise occupied, to transfix another stag which by chance came near + him, unknowingly and without power to prevent it—oh gracious God!—pierced + his breast with a fatal arrow. On receiving the wound the King uttered not + a word; but breaking off the shaft of the weapon where it projected from + his body, fell upon the wound by which he accelerated his death. Walter + immediately ran up, but as he found him senseless and speechless he leaped + swiftly upon his horse, and escaped by spurring him to his utmost speed. + Indeed, there was none to pursue him; some consented in his flight, and + others pitied him, and all were intent on other matters. Some began to + fortify their dwellings; others to plunder, and the rest to look out for a + new king. A few countrymen conveyed the body, placed on a cart, to the + cathedral at Winchester, the blood dripping from it all the way. Here it + was committed to the ground within the tower, attended by many of the + nobility though lamented by few. Next year [really in 1107] the tower + fell; though I forbear to mention the different opinions on this subject, + lest I should seem to assent too readily to unsupported trifles, more + especially as the building might have fallen through imperfect + construction even though he had never been buried there. He died in the + year of our Lord's Incarnation, 1100, of his reign the thirteenth, on the + fourth before the nones of August, aged above forty years." + </p> + <p> + So died the Red King. Whose arrow it was that slew him, whether it came + aforethought from an English bow or by chance from that of Walter Tyrrel, + we shall never know. The Red King fell in the New Forest and there was no + one in all broad England to mourn him. William of Malmesbury says that a + few countrymen carried his body to Winchester. We may well ask why not to + Malwood Castle, which was close by? We may ask, but we shall get no + answer. According to a local legend it was a charcoal burner of Minstead, + Purkess by name, who found the King's body and bore it away, and ever + after his descendants have remained in Minstead, neither richer nor poorer + than their ancestor. As for Sir Walter, he is said to have sworn to the + Prior of St Denys de Poix, a monastery of his foundation, that he knew + nothing of the King's death. Leland tells us that in his day not only did + the tree still exist against which, according to him, the arrow glanced + off and struck the King, but a little chapel remained there then very old, + in which Mass was wont to be offered for the repose of the King's soul. I + wish that I might have seen it, for it would have pleased me. + </p> + <p> + Now when I had well considered all this, not without an orison for that + misguided King, I set off for Cadnam, and holding now only to the road, + marching fast, for it was late, I came over the ridge beyond Black water + into the valley of the Test, and so entered Romsey a little after it was + dark. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-21" id="linkimage-21"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/022.jpg" width="100%" alt="Romsey Abbey " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + Romsey, as I soon found on the following morning, has nothing at all to + offer the traveller except one of the most solemn and noble Norman + churches in all England, monastic too, for it was the church of the great + Benedictine Nunnery of Our Lady of Romsey. It is impossible to exaggerate + the impression this astonishing Norman pile, of vast size and unsurpassed + age and reverence, makes upon the traveller. One seems in looking upon it + to see before his eyes the foundation of England. I cannot hope to + describe it or to convey to another what it meant to me. It is at once + grandiose and reverent, of enormous, almost incredible size and weight and + strength larger than many a cathedral, heavy as a kingdom, stronger than a + thousand years. It seems to have been hewn bodily out of the cliffs or the + great hills. + </p> + <p> + It is enormously old. The house was founded or perhaps refounded more than + a millennium ago by Edward the Elder in 907; his daughter was abbess here, + and here was buried. In 967 Edgar his grandson gave the house to the + Benedictines. It remained English after the Conquest, for William seems + not to have dealt with it and in 1086 the sister of Edgar Atheling became + abbess. Out of it Henry I. chose his bride that Abbess's niece Maud a + novice of Our Lady of Romsey. Said I not well that it was as the + foundation of England? + </p> + <p> + We know little of the Abbey for near a hundred years after that, and then + in 1160 the daughter of King Stephen, Mary, whose uncle, Henry of Blois, + was Bishop of Winchester, became abbess, and it was decided to rebuild the + place. Thus the great Norman church we have, arose in the new England of + the twelfth century. Mary, princess and abbess, was, however, false to her + vows. How long she was abbess we do not know, perhaps only a few months or + even days. At any rate, in the very year she became abbess, the year of + her mother's death,[Footnote: See supra under Faversham.] she forsook her + trust and married the son of the Earl of Flanders, and by him she had two + daughters. Then came repentance; she separated from her husband and + returned to Romsey as a penitent. + </p> + <p> + The great religious house which had grown up thus with England, continued + its great career right through the Middle Ages, about forty nuns serving + there in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, though this number had + dwindled to twenty-three at the time of the Surrender in 1539. How this + surrender was made we do not know; but whether with or without trouble the + result was the same, the great convent was utterly destroyed. Many of the + lands passed to Sir Thomas Seymour, and the people of Romsey, who had + always had a right to the north aisle of the church, which indeed they + enlarged at their own expense in 1403, bought the whole from the Crown, + for one hundred pounds, in 1554. + </p> + <p> + I have said that there was undoubtedly a great Saxon church here, where + the Norman Abbey of Romsey now stands, and part of the foundations of this + great building were discovered in 1900. That building, founded by Edward + the Elder, rebuilt by Edgar and restored by Canute, stood till the + building of the present church in 1125. The older part of this building + (1125-1150) is to the east of the nave, and consists of sanctuary and + transepts: the nave was begun towards the end of the twelfth century, the + church being finished in the beginning of the thirteenth. The church is + cruciform, two hundred and sixty-three feet long and one hundred and + thirty-one wide; it consists of a great sanctuary with aisles ending in + chapels, square without, apsidal within, wide transepts each having an + eastern apsidal chapel, nave with aisles, and over the crossing a low + tower which was once higher, having now a seventeenth century polygonal + belfry. To the east of the sanctuary stood two long chapels destroyed + since the Suppression. We have here, as I have said, one of the most + glorious Norman buildings in the world, Norman work which at the western + end passes into the most delightful Early English. The cloister stood to + the south of the nave, to the north stood of old the parish church, + growing out of the north aisle as it were, built so in 1403. This has been + destroyed and the north aisle wall has been rebuilt as in 1150. + </p> + <p> + The church possesses more than one thing of great interest. The old + high-altar stone is still in existence, and is now used as the communion + table. In the south transept is a fine thirteenth century effigy of a + lady, carved in purbeck. At the end of the south aisle of the choir is a + remarkable stone Crucifix that evidently belonged to the old Saxon church; + about the Cross stand Our Lady, St John and the Roman soldiers, above are + angels. A later Rood is to be seen in the eastern wall of the old cloister + which abutted on to the transept; this dates from the twelfth century. In + the north aisle of the choir is a very fine painting which used to stand + above the high altar in Catholic times. There we see still the + Resurrection of Our Lord with two angels, above are ten saints, among them + St Benedict and St Scholastica, St Gregory, St Augustine of Canterbury, St + Francis and St Clare. This fine work, which of old showed, above, Christ + in Glory, is of the end of the fourteenth century. + </p> + <p> + Now when you have seen Romsey Abbey thus as it were with the head; then is + the time to begin to get it by heart. In all South England you may find no + greater glory than this, nor one more entirely our very own, at least our + own as we were but yesterday. It may be that such a place as Romsey Abbey + means nothing to us and can never mean anything again. But I'll not + believe it. For to think so is to despair of England, to realise that + England of my heart has really passed away. + </p> + <p> + There are two ways by which a man may go from Romsey, in the valley of the + Test to Winchester, in the valley of the Itchen. The more beautiful, for + it gives you, if you will, not only Otterbourne, Shawford and Compton to + the west of the stream, but Twyford to the east, the Queen of Hampshire + villages, is that which makes for the Roman road between Winchester and + Southampton, and following up the valley of the Itchen enters Winchester + at last, by the South Gate, after passing St Cross in the meads. The + shorter road, though far less lovely, is in some ways the more + interesting; for it passes Merdon Castle and Hursley, where the son of + Oliver Cromwell lies, and for this cause I preferred it. + </p> + <p> + Merdon Castle, of which some few scanty ruins remain, was built by the + Bishop Henry of Blois about 1138, and no doubt it served its purpose in + the anarchy of Stephen's time, but thereafter it seems to have become + rather a palace than a fortress. The manor of Merdon had always belonged + to the See of Winchester, it is said, since 636, when it was granted to + the Bishop by King Kinegils. It remained with the Bishopric until the + Reformation, when it was granted to Sir Philip Hoby to be restored to the + Church by Queen Mary, and then again regranted to the Hoby family about + 1559. The manor had passed, however, by 1638 to Richard Major, a miser and + a tyrant, who "usurped authority over his tentant" and more especially, + for he was a fanatic Roundhead, "when King Charles was put to death and + Oliver Cromwell was Protector of England and Richard Major of his Privy + Council, and Noll's eldest son, Richard, was married to Mr Major's Doll." + Thus Merdon came into the Cromwell family, another piece of Church + property upon which that very typical sixteenth-century family had already + grown exceedingly wealthy. Richard Cromwell (as he called himself) lived + at Merdon a good deal, till he succeeded his father in the usurped + governance of England. But when he was turned out in 1660 he found it + safer to return to Merdon, but only for a little while, France offering + him, as he wisely thought, a more secure asylum, not only from a charge of + High Treason, but from his creditors. While he was abroad, we learn he + went under another name; not a new experience for one of his family, which + seems to have had no legitimate name of its own, its members, Oliver + amongst them, signing in important personal matters such as getting hold + of the dowries of their wives, "Williams <i>alias</i> Cromwell." It would, + therefore, be interesting to know under what alias this latest descendant + of the infamous minister of Henry VIII. corresponded with the wife and + family he had left at Merdon. He did not return to Merdon till 1705, upon + the death of his son Oliver. His wife had died in 1676, and his time was + soon to come. He died at Cheshunt in 1712, and was buried with + considerable pomp in Hursley church, where we may still see his monument, + moved from the old church and re-erected in that built by the efforts of + John Keble, vicar of this parish for thirty years, from 1836 to 1866. + </p> + <p> + And so considering all these strange things I went on to Winchester. + </p> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH20" id="link2HCH20"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER XX + </h2> + <p> + WINCHESTER + </p> + <p> + I do not know what it is that moves me so deeply in the old cities of + Southern England, in Canterbury, Rochester, Chichester, most of all, + perhaps, in Winchester, unless it be that they sum up in a way nothing + else can do the England that is surely and irrevocably passing away. How + reverently we approach them, with what hesitation and misgiving we try to + express what we feel about them! They are indeed the sanctuaries of + England, sanctuaries in which it is wiser to pray than to exult, since + their beauty and antiquity, their repose and quietness, fill us with an + extraordinary uneasiness and amazement, a kind of nostalgia which nothing + really our own can satisfy. For if Winchester appeals to us as the symbol + of England, it is not the England of our day for which she stands. Let + Manchester or Sheffield stand for that, places so unquiet, so meanly + wretched and hopeless, that no one has ever thought of them without a kind + of fear and misery. Alas, they are the reality, while Winchester gradually + fades year by year into a mere dream city, as it were Camelot indeed, too + good to be true, established, if at all, rather in the clouds, or in our + hearts, than upon the earth we tread. And if in truth she stands for + something that was once our own, it is for something we are gradually + leaving behind us, discarding and forgetting, something that after four + centuries of disputation and anarchy no man any longer believes capable of + realisation here and now. Yet Winchester endures in her beauty, her now so + precarious loveliness, and while she endures it is still possible to + refuse to despair of England. For she is co-eval with us; before we knew + ourselves or were aware of our destiny she stood beside the Itchen within + the shadow of her hills east and west, in the meads and the water meadows. + She saw the advent of the Roman, she claims to be Arthur's chief city, as + later she was the throne of the Saxon kings; in her council chamber + England was first named England. + </p> + <p> + Of what indeed she was before the Romans came and drew us within their + great administration, we are largely ignorant; but we know that they + established here a town of considerable importance, which they called + Venta Belgarum, larger than Silchester, if we may believe that the + mediaeval walls stand upon Roman foundations, and certainly a centre of + Roman administrative life. Four Roman roads undoubtedly found in her their + goal and terminus, coming into her Forum from Sorbiodunum (Old Sarum) upon + the west, from Calleva (Silchester) upon the north, from Porchester upon + the south, and from Clausentum upon the south-west. Her chief Temple in + Roman times, before the advent of Christianity, was that of Apollo, which + is said to have occupied the site of the Cathedral, close by was the + Temple of Concord, while it is impossible to believe that a town so + plentifully supplied by nature with water was without considerable baths. + Legend has it indeed that Winchester was the capital of the King Lucius, + who is said in the second century to have introduced Christianity into + Britain. The first Christian church, which he erected, traditionally stood + upon the site of the Cathedral. But alas, Lucius is a myth, his cathedral + a church never built with hands. We know nothing of any Christian church + in Roman Winchester, and though we may be sure that such a building + certainly existed, no excavation has so far laid bare its foundations. + Indeed we are almost as ignorant of Roman as we are of Celtic Winchester. + Even the lines of its walls are conjectural, we suppose them to be the + same as those of the Middle Age, yet such foundations of Roman buildings + as have been discovered, lie not only within an area much more restricted + than that which the mediaeval walls enclosed, but in certain instances + outside them. No discoveries of Roman foundations have been made to the + north of the High Street. This fact, however, formidable though it be, + does not of itself prove that the Roman walls did not coincide with the + mediaeval fortifications; it is even probable that they did, except at the + south-west corner, where stood the mediaeval castle. In any case, the + Roman walls, built we may think in the fourth century, enclosed an + irregular quadrilateral, and possessed four gates out of which issued + those four roads to Old Sarum, to Silchester, to Clausentum and to + Porchester. + </p> + <p> + In the beginning of the fifth century the Roman administration which had + long been failing, to which one may think the building of those walls + bears witness, collapsed altogether, and with the final departure of the + Legions full of our youth and strength, Britain was left defenceless. What + happened to Winchester in the appalling confusion which followed, we shall + never know. It is said that in 495, three generations that is to say after + the departure of the Legions for the defence of Rome, Cerdic and his son, + Cymric, landed upon the southern coast, and presently seized Winchester + within whose broken walls they established themselves. In the year 519, + according to the "Saxon Chronicle," "Cerdic and Cymric obtained the + kingdom of the West Saxons; and the same year they fought against the + Britons where it is now named Cerdicsford. And from that time forth the + royal offspring of the West Saxons reigned." That is all we know about it, + and it is not enough upon which to build an historical narrative or from + which to draw any clear idea even of what befell. All we can say with any + sort of certainty is that the Saxons, through long years of probably + spasmodic fighting, very gradually established themselves in southern + England, and out of it carved a dominion, the kingdom of Wessex, whose + capital was Winchester. Until the year 635 this kingdom, such as it was, + was pagan. In that year St Birinus converted the West Saxons and their + King Kynegils to Christianity. Though Kynegils seems immediately to have + begun to build a church in Winchester in which he established monks and + endowed it with the whole of the land for a space of seven miles round the + city, Winchester did not become an episcopal See until the year 662. Till + then, Dorchester in the Thames Valley had been the seat of the Bishop of + Wessex, but in that year Kynewalch, the son and successor of Kynegils, + completed the church of Winchester, in which he had been crowned, and his + father buried, as for the most part were their successors, and there he + established a bishop. + </p> + <p> + It was now that Winchester began her great career. She rose with the + fortunes of the Wessex kingdom until, in the time of Egbert, she appears + as the capital of the new kingdom of England which is so named, and for + the first time in her witan. + </p> + <table summary=""> + <tr> + <td> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + The com kyng Egbryth + Ant wyth batyle ant fyht + Made al Englond yhol + Falle to ys oune dol; + Ant sethe he reignede her + Ahte ant tuenti folle yer: + At Wynchestre lyggeth ys bon, + Buried in a marble-ston. +</pre> + </td> + </tr> + </table> + <p> + Egbert triumphed and established England none too soon. As early as the + year 787, according to the "Saxon Chronicle," "ships of the Northmen" had + reached our southern coasts, and Egbert had scarcely named his new kingdom + when they imperilled it. His son, Ethelwulf, who came to his throne in + 836, was to see Winchester itself stormed before the invaders were beaten + off; but beaten off they were, and it was in Winchester that Alfred was to + reign, to give forth his laws and to plan his campaigns against the same + enemy. He was victorious, as we know, and at Ethandune not only broke his + pagan foes, but dragged Guthrum, their leader, to baptism. And in his + capital he made and kept the only record we have of the Dark Ages in + England, the "Saxon Chronicle," begun in Wolvesey Palace; founded the + famous nunnery of St Mary to the north-east of the Cathedral in the meads; + and provided for the foundation, by Edward his son, of the great New + Minster close by, where his bones at last were to be laid. The three great + churches with their attendant buildings must have been the noblest group + to be seen in the England of that day. Thus Winchester flourished more + than ever secure in its position as capital, so that Athelstan, we read, + established there six mints, and Edgar, reigning there, made "Winchester + measure" the standard for the whole kingdom: "and let one money pass + throughout the king's dominions, and let no man refuse; and let one + measure and one weight pass, such as is observed at London and + Winchester." + </p> + <p> + Such was Winchester at the beginning of the ninth century; before the end + of that century she was to suffer violence from the Danes; and in the + first years of the tenth century to fall with the rest of England into + their absolute power, and to see a Danish king, Canute, crowned in her + Cathedral. There, too, at last, that Danish king was buried. He was a + generous conqueror, and a great benefactor to his capital, and with him + passes much of the splendour of Winchester. Edward the Confessor, though + hallowed at Winchester, looked upon London as his capital and there built + the great abbey which was thenceforth to see the crowning of England's + kings. For St Edward was at heart a Norman, and Winchester, beside summing + up in itself all the splendour of pre-Norman England, had been given by + Ethelred to the widow of Canute, Emma, the mother of St Edward. She allied + herself with the great Earl Godwin to oppose the Norman influence which St + Edward had brought into England, and it was only when she died that the + king came again into Winchester for Easter, and to hold a solemn court. + During that Easter week Earl Godwin died, and was buried in the Cathedral. + He was the last champion of Saxon England to lie there. + </p> + <p> + Nothing marks the change that England had passed through during the first + half of the eleventh century more certainly than the fact that William + Duke of Normandy was crowned King of England, not in the old Minster of + Winchester but in that of St Peter, Westminster, which Pope Nicholas II. + in King Edward's time had constituted as the place of the inauguration of + the kings of England. It is true that William was later crowned again in + Winchester, as were Stephen and Coeur de Lion, but the fact remains that + from the time of William the Conqueror down to our own day, as the Papal + Bull had ordered, Westminster and not Winchester has been the coronation + church of our kings. This Bull marks, as it were, the beginning of the + decline of Winchester. Little by little, in the following centuries, it + was to cease to be the capital of England. Little by little London was to + take its place, a thing finally achieved by Edward I., when he removed the + royal residence from Winchester. + </p> + <p> + Norman Winchester was, however, by no means less splendid than had been + the old capital of the Saxon kings. There Domesday Book was compiled, and + there it was kept in the Treasury of the Norman kings, and the only name + which it gives itself is that of the "Book of Winchester." There the great + Fair of St Giles was established by the Conqueror, which attracted + merchants from every part of Europe, and there in 1079 Bishop Walkelin + began, from the foundations, a new cathedral church completed in 1093, of + which the mighty transepts still remain. In 1109 the monks of New Minster, + which had suffered greatly from fire and mismanagement, removed to a great + new house without the walls upon the north, and since this new site was + called Hyde Meads, New Minster was thenceforth known as the Abbey of Hyde; + and certainly after the fire in 1141, if not before, the great Benedictine + Nunnery of St Mary was rebuilt. + </p> + <p> + As for the Castle of Wolvesey, Bishop Henry of Blois rebuilt it in 1138. + It was indeed in his time that Winchester suffered the most disastrous of + all its sieges, as we may believe, and this at the hands of the Empress + Matilda in 1141. The greater part of the city is then said to have been + destroyed; the new Abbey of Hyde was burned down not to be rebuilt till + 1182; the old Nunnery of St Mary was destroyed also by fire; and we are + told of more than forty churches which then perished. "Combustibles were + hurled from the Bishop's Castle," William of Malmesbury tells us, "in the + houses of the townspeople, who, as I have said, rather wished success to + the empress than to the bishop, which caught and burned the whole abbey of + nuns within the city and the monastery which is called Hyde without the + walls. Here was an image of Our Lord crucified, wrought with a profusion + of gold and silver and precious stones, through the pious solicitude of + Canute, who was formerly king and presented it. This being seized by the + flames and thrown to the ground was afterwards stripped of its ornaments + at the command of the Legate himself; more than five hundred marks of + silver and thirty of gold, which were found in it, served for a largess to + the soldiers." + </p> + <p> + It would, perhaps, be untrue to say that Winchester never really recovered + from the appalling sack and pillage which followed the flight of Matilda; + but it is true to assert that time was fighting against her, and that the + thirteenth century did not bring the splendid gifts to her that it brought + to so many of our cities. One great ceremony, the last of its kind, + however, took place in her Cathedral in 1194; the second coronation of + Coeur de Lion. "Then King Richard," we read, "being clothed in his royal + robes, with the crown upon his head, holding in his right hand a royal + sceptre which terminated in a cross, and in his left hand a golden wand + with the figure of a dove at the top of it, came forth from his apartment + in the priory, being conducted on the right hand by the Bishop of Ely, his + Chancellor, and on the left by the Bishop of London. ... The silken canopy + was held on four lances over the King by four Earls. ... The King being + thus conducted into the Cathedral and up to the High Altar, there fell + upon his knees, and devoutly received the archbishop's solemn benediction. + He was then led to the throne, which was prepared for him, on the south + side of the choir. ... When Mass was finished the King was led back to his + apartments with the solemnities aforesaid. He then laid aside his robes + and crown, put on other robes and a crown that were much lighter, and so + proceeded to dinner, which was served in the monks' refectory." + </p> + <p> + Winchester's next glory was the birth of Henry III., known to the day of + his death as Henry of Winchester—this in 1207. In 1213 the city was + the scene of the reconciliation of King John and Archbishop Stephen, but + in 1265 she was sacked by the younger de Montfort, and this seems finally + to have achieved her overthrow. When Edward I. came to the throne in 1272 + he abandoned Winchester. The city never regained its place, London was too + strong for it both geographically and economically. Its trade, which + remained very considerable until the latter part of the fourteenth + century, chiefly owing to its wool and cloth, was, however, slowly + declining, and politically the history of the city becomes a mere series + of incidents, among the more splendid of which were the marriage of Henry + IV. with Joan of Navarre in 1403; the reception of the French ambassadors + by Henry V. before Agincourt in 1415; the rejoicings for the birth in + Winchester of Arthur Tudor the son of Henry VII. and Elizabeth of York in + 1457; the meeting of the Emperor Charles V. and Henry VIII. in 1522; and + the marriage of Mary Tudor to Philip of Spain in 1554. At that great + ceremony, the last Catholic rite the old Cathedral was to witness, there + were present, according to the Venetian Envoy, "the ambassadors from the + Emperor, from the Kings of the Romans and Bohemia, from your Serenity, + from Savoy, Florence, and Ferrara and many agents of sovereign princes. + The proclamation was entitled thus: Philip and Mary, by the grace of God, + King and Queen of England, France, Naples, Jerusalem, Ireland, Defender of + the Faith, Prince of Spain, Archduke of Austria, etc." + </p> + <p> + But when Queen Elizabeth visited the city in 1560 (she was there four + times during her reign), she said to the mayor, "Yours Mr Mayor is a very + ancient city"; and he answered, "It has abeen, your Majesty, it has + abeen," and in spite of bad grammar he spoke but the truth, Winchester's + great days were over. Yet it saw the trial of Sir Walter Raleigh in 1603, + and the town having been taken by Waller in 1644 the Castle was besieged + by Cromwell himself in 1645. "I came to Winchester," he writes, "on the + Lord's Day the 28th of September. After some disputes with the Governour + we entered the town. I summoned the Castle; was denied; whereupon we fell + to prepare batteries, which we could not perfect until Friday following. + Our battery was six guns; which being finished, after firing one round, I + sent in a second summons for a treaty; which they refused, whereupon we + went on with our work and made a breach in the wall near the Black Tower; + which after about two hundred shot we thought stormable; and purposed on + Monday morning to attempt it. On Sunday morning about ten of the clock the + Governour beat a parley, desiring to treat, I agreed unto it, and sent + Colonel Hammond and Major Harrison in to him, who agreed upon these + enclosed articles." + </p> + <p> + Cromwell presently departed and the city caught a glimpse of the Royal + Martyr, the victim of the great families, as he passed from Hurst Castle + to Windsor and the scaffold in Whitehall. With the Restoration, which was + most gallantly welcomed in the old royal city, Charles II. came to + Winchester, and having been burnt out at Newmarket was, according to + Evelyn, "all the more earnest to render Winchester the seat of his + autumnal diversions for the future, designing a palace there where the + ancient castle stood.... The surveyor has already begun the foundation for + a palace estimated to cost £35,000...." But Charles died too soon to + finish this new house, which, it is said, Queen Anne wished to complete, + liking Winton well, but again death intervened. + </p> + <p> + In spite of these royal fancies, however, Winchester, which had suffered + badly in the plague of 1667, continued to decline in importance and in + population, and to depend more and more upon the two great establishments + which remained to it, the Cathedral, founded by Kynegils in 635 and + re-established under a new Protestant administration in the sixteenth + century, and the College of St Mary of Winchester founded by William of + Wykeham in connection with the College of St Mary, Winton, in Oxford, + called New College, for the education of youth and the advancement of + learning. Winchester is, of course, as it ever has been, the county-town + of Hampshire, but it still maintains itself as it has done now these many + years chiefly by reason of these two great establishments. + </p> + <p> + Certainly to-day the traveller's earliest steps are turned towards these + two buildings, and first to that which is in its foundation near eight + hundred years the older—the Cathedral church once of St Swithin, the + Bishop and Confessor (852-863) and now since the Reformation of the Holy + Trinity. + </p> + <p> + To come out of the sloping High Street past the ancient city Cross, + through the narrow passage-way into the precincts, and to pass down that + great avenue of secular limes across the Close to the great porch of the + Cathedral, is to come by an incomparable approach to perhaps the most + noble and most venerable church left to us in England. The most venerable—not + I think the most beautiful. No one remembering the Abbey of Westminster + can claim that for it, and then, though it possesses the noblest Norman + work in England and the utmost splendour of the Perpendicular, it lacks + almost entirely and certainly the best of the Early English. Its wonder + lies in its size and its antiquity. It is now the longest mediaeval church + not only in England, but in Europe, though once it was surpassed by old St + Paul's. It is five hundred and twenty- six feet long, but it lacks height, + and perhaps rightly, at least I would not have it other than it is, its + greatness lying in its monotonous depressed length and weight, an enormous + primeval thing lying there in the meads beside the river. Winchester + itself might seem indeed to know nothing of it. The city does not rejoice + in it as do Lincoln and York in their great churches; here is nothing of + the sheer joy of Salisbury, a Magnificat by Palestrina; the church of + Winchester is without delight, it has supremely the mystery and monotony + of the plainsong, the true chant of the monks, the chorus of an army, with + all the appeal of just that, its immense age and half plaintive glory, + which yet never really becomes music. + </p> + <p> + And Winchester, too, has all and more than all, the surprise of the + plainsong; the better you know it the more you are impressed. No one + certainly has ever come by the narrow way out of the High Street, down the + avenue of limes to the West Front without being disappointed; but no one + thus disappointed has ever entered into the church without astonishment, + wonder and complete satisfaction. It was not always so. That long nave was + once forty feet longer and was flanked upon either side by a Norman tower + as at Ely. Must one regret their loss? No, the astonishment of the nave + within makes up for everything; there is no grander interior in the world, + nor anywhere anything at all like it. Up that vast Perpendicular nave one + looks far and far away into the height, majesty and dominion of the + glorious Norman transept, and beyond into the light of the sanctuary. It + has not the beauty of Westminster Abbey, nor the exquisite charm of Wells, + but it has a majesty and venerable nobility all its own that I think no + other church in England can match. + </p> + <p> + Of the old Saxon church, so far as we really know, the only predecessor of + the present church, nothing really remains. This, as I have said, had been + founded by King Kynegils upon his conversion, by St Birinus in 635. We + know very little about it, except that it was enlarged or rebuilt in the + middle of the tenth century by St Aethwold, and if we may believe the + poetical description of Wolstan, we shall be inclined to believe the + church was enlarged, for it appears to have been a very complex building + with a lofty central tower, having a spire and weathercock, in accordance + with the Bull of Pope Urban, and a crypt, both the work of St Elphege. + This church, which, like its successor until the Reformation, was served + by monks, stood till the year 1093, when it was destroyed as useless, for + the new Norman church of Bishop Walkelin begun in 1079 was then far enough + advanced to be used. It is thus practically certain that the two churches + did not stand on the same site, the newer, it would seem, rising to the + south of the older building. But the sacred spot which, it would seem, + every church, that may ever have stood in this place, must have covered is + the holy well, immediately beneath the present high altar in the crypt of + the Norman building. This surely was within the Saxon building as it must + have been within any church that may have stood here in Roman times? + </p> + <p> + The two great shrines of the Saxon church were, however, those of St + Birinus, the Apostle of Wessex, and of St Swithin, Bishop of Winchester in + the ninth century, the day of whose translation, July 15th, was, till the + Reformation, a universal festival throughout England. In his honour the + Saxon church, till then known as the church of SS. Peter and Paul, was + rededicated in 964. + </p> + <p> + The great Norman church which Bishop Walkelin built to take the place of + the Saxon minster cannot fundamentally have differed very much from the + church we see, at any rate so far as its nave and transepts were + concerned. The eastern arm was, however, different. It consisted of four + bays, with north and south aisles at the end of which were rectangular + chapels, an apse about which the aisles ran as an ambulatory, and beyond + the apse an eastern apsidal chapel. Of this church all that really remains + to us is the crypt and the transept. In the crypt we divine the old + eastern limb of the church, and are doubtless in the presence of the + earliest work in the Cathedral. It is, however, in the double aisled + transepts that we can best appreciate how very glorious that first Norman + church must have been; there is nothing in England more wonderful; and so + far as I know there is nothing in Europe quite to put beside them. If only + the whole mighty church could have remained to us! + </p> + <p> + The first disaster that befell Bishop Walkelin's building was the fall of + the central tower in 1107, which all England, at the time, attributed to + the burial beneath it of William Rufus. The tower was rebuilt, though not + to its original height, but in the reconstruction, the parts of the + transept nearest to the tower were also rebuilt, and thus we have here two + periods of Norman work; the main building of 1107 and the reconstruction + after that date. + </p> + <p> + Of the Transitional work of the second half of the twelfth century very + little is to be seen at Winchester. It was for the most part the period of + that great Bishop Henry of Blois, and he was probably too much immersed in + the brutal politics of his time, too busy building and holding his castle + to give much thought to the Cathedral. The font, however, dates from his + time, and perhaps a door in the north-western bay of the south transept. + </p> + <p> + The earliest Gothic work in the Cathedral is the chapel of St Sepulchre, + which was built upon the northern wall of the choir before the north + transept. There we may still see wall paintings of the Passion of Our + Lord. Not much later is the retro-choir. This consists of three bays, and + is the largest in England. It was begun in 1189 by Bishop Godfrey de Lucy, + and we must admit at once that it is wholly without delight, and yet to + build it the Norman apse was sacrificed. According to Mr Bond, this was + probably a very popular destruction. The reversion, says he, "to the + favourite square east end of English church architecture was popular in + itself. Almost every Norman cathedral ended in an apse; and in the apse, + high raised behind the high altar, sat the Norman bishop facing the + congregation; the hateful symbol of Norman domination." This may have been + so, but considering that the monastic choir of Winchester occupied not + one, as the choir does to-day, but three bays of the nave from which it + was separated by a vast rood screen, though the Bishop had been as high as + Haman, he would have been scarcely visible to the populace in the western + part of the nave. Popular or no, however, the apse was sacrificed and the + low retro-choir built with the Lady Chapel in the Early English style. + </p> + <p> + The next thing undertaken was to place in the old Norman choir the + magically lovely choir stalls (1245-1315) which happily still remain to + us. Perhaps it was their enthusiastic loveliness which led about 1320 to + the rebuilding of the Presbytery and the lovely tabernacle in the back of + the wall of the Feretory. When all this was done there remained of the old + Norman church only the transepts and the nave. The transepts remain to us + still, but the nave was transformed, in the very beginning of the + Perpendicular time. It was transformed not rebuilt. Bishop William of + Wykeham has obliterated Bishop Walkelin, but fundamentally the nave of + Winchester remains Norman still. The Perpendicular work is only a lovely + mask, or rather just the sunlight of the fourteenth century which has come + into the dark old Norman building. The most notable change is the roof, in + Norman times a flat ceiling, now a magnificent vault. But that century was + not content with transforming the nave, it littered it with the first of + its various delights, those chantries which are among the greatest + splendours of this Cathedral, and which still, in some sort, commemorate + Bishop Edingdon (1366), Bishop Wykeham (1404), Bishop Beaufort (1447), + Bishop Waynflete (1416), Bishop Fox (1528) and Bishop Gardiner (1555) the + last Catholic Bishop to fill the See. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-22" id="linkimage-22"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/023.jpg" width="100%" + alt="North Transept, Winchester Cathedral " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + The transformation of the nave, which occupied full an hundred years, was + not, however, the last work undertaken in the Cathedral before the change + of religion. Bishop Courtenay, in the last years of the fifteenth century, + lengthened the Lady Chapel, and finally Bishop Fox in the very beginning + of the sixteenth century began the transformation of the early fourteenth + century Presbytery, but got little further than the insertion of the + Perpendicular windows. He did, however, transform the Norman aisles there, + and screened them, and upon the screens in six fine Renaissance chests he + gathered the dust of the old Saxon saints and kings. + </p> + <p> + But apart from its architecture the church is full of interest. Where can + we find anything to match the exquisite iron screen of the eleventh + century which used to guard St Swithin's shrine but which, now that is + gone, covers the north-west doorway of the nave? Is there another font in + England more wonderful than that square black marble basin sculptured in + the twelfth century with the story of St Nicholas? Is there any series of + chantries in England more complete or more lovely than these at + Winchester, or anywhere a finer fourteenth century monument than that of + Bishop Wykeham? Nowhere in England certainly can the glorious choir stalls + be matched, nor shall we easily find a pulpit to surpass that in the choir + here dating from 1520. If the restored retablo over the high altar is + disappointing in its sophistication, we have only to pass into the + Feretory to discover certain marvellous fragments of the original reredos + which are so beautiful that they take away our breath—that broken + statue of the Madonna and Child, for instance, perhaps the loveliest piece + of fourteenth century sculpture to be found in England. No, however we + consider the great church of Winchester, it stands alone. As a mere + building it is more tremendous and more venerable than anything now left + to us upon English soil; as a burial place it possesses the dust not only + of the Apostle of the heart of England but of the greatest of the Saxon + kings, while beneath its mighty vault William Rufus sleeps, the only + Norman king that lies in England. And as a shrine of art it still + possesses incomparable things. It stands there as the Pyramids stand in + the desert, a relic of a lost civilisation; but by it we may measure the + modern world. + </p> + <p> + It is, too, when you consider it, utterly lonely. The revolution we call + the Reformation upon which the modern world turns and turns as upon a + pivot, while it spared Winchester Cathedral, though reluctantly, swept + away all the buildings which surrounded it. The great monastery is gone, + scarcely a sign of it remains. Nothing at all is left of the famous + nunnery of St Mary. Of Wolvesey Castle there are a few beautiful ruins, of + Hyde Abbey, all has been swept away, even the stones, even the bones of + Alfred. Nor have the other and later religious houses, with which + Winchester was full, fared better. It is difficult to find even the sites + of the houses of the Franciscans, the Dominicans, the Austin Friars, the + Carmelites. And what remains of the College of St Elizabeth, and, but for + a Norman doorway, now in Catholic hands, of the Hospital of St Mary + Magdalen? Only the Hospital of St John remains at the east end of the High + Street, still in possession of its fine Hall and Chapel, and the great + school founded by William of Wykeham in 1382, "for seventy poor and needy + scholars and clerks living college-wise in the same, studying and becoming + proficient in grammaticals or the art and science of grammar." It remains + without compare, the oldest and the greatest school in England, whose + daughter is Eton and whose late descendant is Harrow. + </p> + <p> + To say that the Cathedral, the College and the Hospital of St John are all + that remains of mediaeval Winchester would not, perhaps, be strictly true; + but it is so near the truth that one might say it without fear of + contradiction. Most of the old churches even have perished. There remain + St John Baptist, which can boast of Transitional arcades, and fifteenth + century screen and pulpit; St Maurice with a Norman doorway; St Peter with + its twelfth and thirteenth century work; St Bartholomew with some Norman + remains near the site of Hyde Abbey; and in the High Street there is more + than one fine old house. The fact that so little remains cannot altogether + be placed to the discredit of the Reformation and the Puritan fanatics. + Until the eighteenth century something remained of Hyde Abbey, much of the + Hospital of St Mary Magdalen; the city walls were then practically + perfect, having all their five gates, north, south, east and west, and + King's gate; now of all these only the Westgate of the thirteenth century + remains to us with the King's gate over which is the little church of St + Swithin. + </p> + <p> + But in spite of vandalism, forgetfulness and barbarism, often of the worst + description as in the mere indifference and ignorance that scattered + Alfred's bones, no one has ever come to Winchester without loving it, no + one has ever been glad to get away. Its innumerable visitors are all its + lovers and the most opposite temperaments find here common ground at last. + Walpole praises it, and so does Keats. "We removed here," writes the + latter in 1819 to Bailey, "for the convenience of a library, and find it + an exceedingly pleasant town, enriched with a beautiful cathedral and + surrounded by fresh-looking country.... Within these two months I have + written fifteen hundred lines, most of which, besides many more of prior + composition, you will probably see next winter. I have written two tales, + one from Boccaccio called the 'Pot of Basil' and another called 'St Agnes + Eve' on a popular superstition, and a third called 'Lamia' + (half-finished). I have also been writing parts of my 'Hyperion,' and + completed four acts of a tragedy." + </p> + <p> + "This Winchester," he writes again, "is a place tolerably well suited to + me. There is a fine cathedral, a college, a Roman Catholic chapel ... and + there is not one loom or anything like manufacturing beyond bread and + butter in the whole city. There are a number of rich Catholics in the + place. It is a respectable, ancient, aristocratic place, and moreover it + contains a nunnery." "I take a walk," he writes to his family, "every day + for an hour before dinner, and this is generally my walk; I go out the + back gate, across one street into the cathedral yard, which is always + interesting; there I pass under the trees along a paved path, pass the + beautiful front of the cathedral, turn to the left under a stone doorway—then + I am on the other side of the building—which, leaving behind me, I + pass on through two college- like squares, seemingly built for the + dwelling-place of dean and prebendaries, garnished with grass and shaded + with trees; then I pass through one of the old city gates and then you are + in College Street, through which I pass, and at the end thereof, crossing + some meadows, and at last a country of alley gardens I arrive, that is my + worship arrives, at the foundation of St Cross, which is a very + interesting old place.... Then I pass across St Cross meadows till I come + to the most beautiful clear river." + </p> + <p> + That walk, or rather that over the meads to St Cross, is for every lover + of Winchester that which he takes most often I think, that which comes to + him first in every memory of the city. Its beauty makes it sacred and its + reward is an hour or more in what, when all is said, is one of the + loveliest relics of the Middle Age anywhere left to us in England, I mean + the hospital and church of St Cross in the meads of the Itchen. + </p> + <p> + Doubtless we are the heirs of the Ages, into our hearts and minds the + Empire, the Middle Age and the Renaissance have poured their riches. + Doubtless we are the flower of Time and our Age, the rose of all the Ages. + That is why, in our wisdom, we have superseded such places as St Cross by + our modern workhouses. + </p> + <p> + St Cross was founded by the great Henry of Blois in 1133 for the + reception, the clothing and the entertainment of thirteen poor men, + decayed or past their strength, and the relief of an hundred others; it + was a mediaeval workhouse, called a hospital in those days, and in its + beauty and its humanity and its success it cannot, of course, compare with + the institutions which, since we have not been able to abolish poverty + altogether, we have everywhere established for the reception of our + unfortunate brethren. It would be odd indeed if eight hundred years of + Christian government, four hundred of them enjoying the infinite blessings + bestowed by the Reformation and the Protestant religion, had not vastly + improved these institutions for the reception of the very poor. It is, in + fact, in such establishments as our workhouses that our "progress" is to + be seen most clearly. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-23" id="linkimage-23"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/024.jpg" width="100%" alt="St Cross, Winchester " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + Well, it is something to be assured of that; and yet, let me confess it, + St Cross has a curious fascination for me. I feel there, it is true, that + I am in a world different from that in which we do so well to rejoice, but + such is my perversity I cannot help preferring the old to the new. This is + a mere prejudice, quite personal to myself, and comes perhaps of being a + Christian. When I look at St Cross I am vividly reminded that this was + once a Christian country with a Christian civilisation; when I look at one + of our great workhouses I know that all that has passed away and that we + have "progressed" so fast and so far that Christianity has been left some + four hundred years behind us. St Cross is, as it were, a rock of the old + Christian time still emerging from the grey sea of the modern world. + </p> + <p> + Bishop Henry de Blois intended, as I have said, to provide, by the + foundation of the Hospital of St Cross, for the maintenance of thirteen + poor men and the relief of an hundred others. His design was perverted in + the thirteenth century, but gloriously restored by the founder of + Winchester College and his successor in the Bishopric, Cardinal Beaufort, + who added to the original foundation the almshouse of Noble Poverty, in + which he hoped to support thirty-five brethren with two priests and three + nuns to minister to the inmates. The hospital, by the merest good fortune, + escaped suppression at the Reformation, but during most of the sixteenth, + seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and through many years of the + nineteenth its revenues were enjoyed by men who, as often as not, had + never seen the place, and so the poor were robbed. Perhaps the most + insolent abuse of the kind occurred between 1808 and 1815. In the former + year Bishop Brownlow North, of Winchester, appointed his son Francis, + later Earl of Guildford, to be master. This man appropriated the revenues + of the place to the tune of fourteen hundred pounds a year, and when at + last the scandal was exposed, it was discovered that between 1818 and 1838 + he had taken not less than fifty-three thousand pounds in fines on + renewing leases, a manifest and probably wilful breach of trust, that + ought, one may think, to have brought him to the Old Bailey. The exposure + of this rascal led to a reformation of the administration, which is now in + the hands of trustees who elect thirteen brethren provided for by Bishop + Henry of Blois. These wear a black gown with a silver cross. St Cross also + still maintains certain brethren of Noble Poverty, and these wear a red + gown, and not less than fifty poor folk, who do not live within its walls, + while a very meagre wayfarer's dole is still distributed to all who pass + by so far as a horn of beer and two loaves of bread will go. Each of the + Brethren of St Cross beside a little house and maintenance receives five + shillings a week. + </p> + <p> + All this sounds, if you be poor, too good to be true. It is too good to + owe its origin to the modern world, but not extraordinary for the Middle + Age, which was eagerly and even violently Christian. And just as the + institution seems in itself wonderful to us in our day, so do the + buildings, which, if one would really understand how gloriously strange + they are, should be carefully compared with the county workhouse. + </p> + <p> + One enters the Hospital by a gate, and, passing through a small court, + comes to the great gatehouse of Cardinal Beaufort, consisting of gateway, + porter's lodge and great square tower. Here and there we still see + Cardinal Beaufort's arms and devices, while over the gate itself are three + niches, in one of which a kneeling figure of the Cardinal remains. Within + this gatehouse is a large quadrangle, about three sides of which the + hospital is set with the church upon the south, between which and the + gatehouse runs a sixteenth century cloister. The whole is wonderfully + quiet and peaceful, a corner of that old England, England of my heart, + which is so fast vanishing away. + </p> + <p> + The noblest building of this most noble place, and the only one now left + to us which dates from its foundation by Bishop Henry of Blois is the + church. This is a great Transitional building, one of the finest examples + of that style in England, and dates from about 1160 to 1292. It is a + cruciform building with central tower, the nave and chancel being aisled, + the transepts, aisles and all, vaulted in stone in the fourteenth century. + The earliest part of the church is the chancel, which has a square eastern + end, and the lower parts of the transepts probably date from the same + time. These transepts were finished a little later, when the nave was + begun and finished, and the north porch built in the thirteenth century. + The clerestory of the nave dates from the first half of the fourteenth + century, and so does the great western window. Much of the furniture of + the church is interesting, such as the fourteenth century tiles, the + curious Norman bowl that does duty as a font, the fourteenth century glass + in the clerestory window of the nave, and that, little though it be, of + the fifteenth century in the north transept, the fine fifteenth century + screen between the north- choir aisle and the chancel, the foreign + sixteenth century woodwork in the south-choir aisle, the curious wall + painting of the Martyrdom of St Thomas in the south transept, and the old + Purbeck altar stone that now serves as the communion table. Here, before + the altar, lies John de Campeden, appointed Master of St Cross by Bishop + William of Wykeham in 1383, his grave marked by a good brass. + </p> + <p> + Much, too, within the hospital is interesting, and the old men who eagerly + show one all these strange and beautiful things are most human and + delightful. Nevertheless, though the church would anywhere else claim all + our attention for a whole morning, and an afternoon is easily spent poking + about the hospital, it is not of the mere architecture, beautiful though + it be, that one thinks on the way back into Winchester, across the meads + beside the river which has seen and known both the Middle Age and this + sorrowful time of to-day, but of that wondrous institution where poverty + was considered honourable and destitution not an offence or even perhaps a + misfortune, where it was still remembered that we are all brethren, and + that Christ, too, had not where to lay His head. All of which seems + nothing less than marvellous to-day. + </p> + <p> + <a name="link2HCH21" id="link2HCH21"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER XXI + </h2> + <p> + SELBORNE + </p> + <p> + I set out from Winchester early one June morning by Jewry Street, as it + were out of the old North Gate to follow, perhaps, the oldest road in old + England towards Alton, intending to reach Selborne more than twenty miles + away eastward on the tumble of hills where the North Downs meet the South, + before night. + </p> + <p> + I say the road by which I went out of Winchester and followed for so many + miles, through King's Worthy and Martyr Worthy, Itchen Abbas, New + Alresford and Bishops Sutton, is perhaps the oldest in England; in fact it + is the old British trackway from the ports of the Straights and Canterbury + to Winchester and Old Sarum, the western end, indeed, of the way I had + already followed from Canterbury to Boughton Aluph up the valley of the + Great Stour, known to us all as the Pilgrim's Way. For though it is older + than any written history, it was preserved from neglect and death when the + twelfth and thirteenth centuries were making all new, here as elsewhere, + by the pilgrims, who, coming from Western England, from Brittany and Spain + to visit St Thomas' shrine, used it as their road across Southern England + from Winchester to Canterbury. + </p> + <p> + Now, though for any man who follows that road to-day it is filled with + these great companies of pilgrims, there are older memories, too, which it + evokes and which, if the history of England is precious to him, he cannot + ignore. + </p> + <p> + To begin with the exit from Winchester: there in Jewry Street a Roman road + overlies the older British way, not indeed exactly, but roughly, certainly + as far as King's Worthy, whence it still shoots forth straight as an + arrow's flight over hill over dale to Silchester. The very street by which + he leaves the city, as it were, by the now destroyed North Gate, is Roman, + one of the four roads which met in the Forum of Venta Belgarum and divided + Roman Winchester into four quarters, though, perhaps because of the + marshes of the Itchen, not into four equal parts as in Chichester. The + present name of this road, Jewry Street, indicates its character all + through the Middle Ages, when here by the North Gate, upon the road to + London, the Jews had their booths, and the quarter of Winchester which + this road served was doubtless their ghetto, the richest quarter of the + city. + </p> + <p> + It was not, however, of the Middle Age, but of the Dark Age I thought as I + issued out of Winchester where, not much more than a hundred years ago, + the old North Gate still held the way. In the year 1001, after the battle + of Alton, in which the men of Hampshire were utterly broken by Sweyn and + his Danes, this road was filled with the routed Saxons in flight pouring + into the city of Winchester. The record of that appalling business is very + brief in the "Anglo-Saxon Chronicle," a few lines under the date 1001. "A. + 1001. In this year was much fighting in the land of the English, and well + nigh everywhere they (the Danes) ravaged and burned so that they advanced + on one course until they came to the town of Alton; and then there came + against them the men of Hampshire and fought against them. And there was + Ethelward the King's high-steward slain, and Leofric at Whitchurch and + Leofwin the King's high-steward and Wulfhere the bishop's thane, and + Godwin at Worthy, Bishop Elfry's son, and of all men one hundred and + eighty; and there were of the Danish men many more slain, though they had + possession of the place of slaughter." A mere plundering expedition, we + may think, but it foretold with certainty the rule of the Danes in + England, which as we know came to pass, and was not the catastrophe it + might have been, because of the victory of Alfred at Ethandune, a century + and a half before, when he had made Guthrum and his host Christians. Till + the year 1788 Alfred's bones lay beside this very gate through which the + beaten Saxons poured into his city in 1001. For though Hyde Abbey was + destroyed at the Reformation his bones seem to have been forgotten, to be + discovered in the end of the eighteenth century in their great leaden + coffin and sold, I know not to whom, for the sum of two pounds. + </p> + <p> + I considered these unfortunate and shameful things as I went on along this + British, Roman, Saxon and English way, the way of armies and of pilgrims + into Headbourne Worthy, whose church stands by the roadside on the north. + </p> + <p> + This little church dedicated in honour of St Swithin is all of a piece + with the road, and illustrates it very well. Its beauty alone would + recommend it to the wayfarer, but it also possesses an antiquity so great + that nothing left to us in Winchester itself can match it. For in plan, + and largely in masonry too, it is a Saxon sanctuary, though a late one, + dating as it would seem from the early part of the eleventh century. What + we see is a beautiful little building consisting of nave with curious + western chamber, chancel, south-western tower and modern south porch. The + original church probably did not differ very much in plan from that we + have, but only the north and west walls of the nave of the original + building remain to us; the latter having the original doorway of Binstead + stone. The south wall of the nave and the tower were rebuilt in the + thirteenth century, as was the chancel, which is now a modern building so + far as its north and eastern walls are concerned. In the late fifteenth + century the western chamber was added to the nave as in our own day the + south porch. The best treasure of the church is, however, the great spoilt + Rood, with figures of our Lady and St John, upon the outside of the west + wall of the Saxon nave, to preserve which, in the fifteenth century, the + western chamber was built. The western chamber was originally in two + stages, the lower acting as a porch to the church, the upper as a chapel + with an altar under the Saxon rood. It is needless to say that the + Reformers, Bishop Horne of Winchester it is said, the accursed miscreant + who ordered the destruction of all crucifixes in his diocese, defaced this + glorious work of art and religion, cutting the relief away to the face of + the wall so that only the outline remains. Nevertheless it is still one of + the most imposing and notable things left to us in southern England. + </p> + <p> + Headbourne Worthy, granted to Mortimer after the Conquest, was the most + important of the three little places grouped here in a bunch which bear + that name. King's Worthy, where the road first turns eastward and where + the church, curiously enough, stands to the south of the way, [Footnote: + According to Mr Belloc (<i>The Old Road</i>) this modern road does not + exactly represent the route of the Pilgrim's Way which ran to the south of + King's Worthy church] was but a hamlet and of Martyr Worthy, Domesday + knows nothing. Little that is notable remains to us in either place, only + the charming fifteenth century tower of King's Worthy church and a + fourteenth century font therein. + </p> + <p> + Much the same must be said of Itchen Abbas, Itchen A Bas, where the road + falls to the river, the small Norman church there having been both rebuilt + and enlarged in or about 1863, while an even worse fate has befallen the + church of Itchen Stoke, two miles further on, for it has disappeared + altogether. Nor I fear can much be said for the church of New Alresford or + the town either, for apparently, owing to a series of fires, it has + nothing to show us but a seventeenth century tower, a poor example of the + building of that time, the base of which may be Saxon, while the windows + seem to be of the thirteenth century. + </p> + <p> + New Alresford would seem only to have come into existence as a town in the + end of the twelfth century, when it was re-established by Bishop Godfrey + de Lucy (1189-1204). The old road did not pass through it as the modern + road does; for as Mr Belloc seems to have proved the Pilgrim's Way, which + descended to the river at Itchen A Bas as we have seen, crossed the ford + at Itchen Stoke, Itchen Stakes that is, and proceeded east by south where + the workhouse now stands, coming into the modern road again at Bishop + Sutton. But though the Pilgrim's Way knew it not, New Alresford is of high + antiquity. Local tradition has it that it owes its existence, as distinct + from Old Alresford, "to a defeat inflicted by the Saxons on a party of + Danes near the village of West Tisted about five miles (south) east of + Alresford. The Saxons granted quarter to the defeated enemy on condition + that they went to the ford over the River Alre [Footnote: It is curious + that Guthrum was baptised at Aller and then his Danes in the Alre] to be + baptised. In commemoration of the victory a statue of the Virgin was then + erected in the churchyard of Old Alresford." [Footnote: V.C.H., Hampshire, + vol. 3, p. 350.] Local tradition cannot, at any time, be put lightly + aside, and when as here it preserves for us one of the great truths of the + early history of modern Europe we should rejoice indeed. For here we have + the obvious reality of the eighth century when Europe, slowly recovering + itself and beginning to realise itself as Christendom, was everywhere + attacked by hordes of pagans. The work of Charlemagne, of Offa and of + Alfred was not merely the conquest of the barbarians, but really since + they could not be wholly destroyed, their conversion, and thus alone could + Christendom be certainly preserved. So after Ethandune Guthrum must be + christened at Aller, and after the fight here on the Alre the defeated + heathen must be christened at the ford. Since New Alresford has preserved + for us a memory of this fundamental act we can easily forgive her lack of + material antiquity. + </p> + <p> + The little village thus founded, certainly still existed in the time of + the Conquest, and such it would always have remained but for Godfrey de + Lucy, Bishop of Winchester, who, among his many achievements, numbers this + chiefly that he made the Itchen navigable not only from Southampton to + Winchester but here also in its headwaters, and this by means of the great + reservoir, known as Alresford Pond, into which he gathered the waters of + many streams to supply his navigation. In return, King John not only gave + him the royalty of the river, but a weekly market here for which he + rebuilt the place and called it New Market a name which was soon lost, the + people preferring their old name New Alresford. So the market town of New + Alresford came into existence, and, but for the unfortunate fires of the + seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, would bear upon its face the marks + it now lacks of antiquity. + </p> + <p> + Bishop Godfrey de Lucy was constantly in residence at Bishop Sutton in the + palace there. The road passes through this delightful village a mile or + more to the east of New Alresford and something remains, the ruins of the + kennels it is said, of the palace. This was doubtless "the manour-house + ... a verie olde house somtyme walled round aboutte with stone now decaied + well waterid with an olde ponde or moote adjoyning to it," of which we + hear in the time of Edward VI. It seems to have been destroyed in the + Civil war, but even in 1839 much remained of it. "Within the memory of + many persons now living," writes Mr Duthy in 1839, "considerable vestiges + of a strong and extensive building stood in the meadows to the north of + the church, which were the dilapidated remains of an ancient palace of the + Bishops of Winchester. The walls were of great thickness and composed of + flints and mortar, but it was impossible to trace the disposition of the + apartments or the form of the edifice." Bishop Sutton had belonged to the + church of Winchester since King Ine's day, but in the early part of the + eleventh century it was held by Harold, and after the Conquest by Eustace + of Boulogne. Bishop Henry de Blois regained it for the church by exchange, + in whose possession it has remained but for a few brief intervals in the + sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, in one of which John Evelyn bought + it, until to-day. + </p> + <p> + It is probably to this fact we owe the beauty and preservation of the + church here, with its fine twelfth century nave, not fundamentally + altered, and its chancel still largely of the thirteenth century. + Especially notable are the two Norman doorways in the nave and curious + supports of the belfry there, four naked and massive posts. + </p> + <p> + <br /><br /> <a name="linkimage-24" id="linkimage-24"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/025.jpg" width="100%" alt="Selborne from the Hanger " /> + </div> + <!-- IMAGE END --> + <p> + <br /><br /> + </p> + <p> + Bishop Sutton was the last place I was to see upon the old road, for a + mile beyond that village I left it where it turned northward, to go east + into Ripley and so by the byways to climb into the hills, and crossing + them to descend steeply at evening into the village of Selborne by the + Oakhanger stream just before it enters that narrow brief pass into the + Weald. There in the twilight I stayed for awhile under the yew tree in the + churchyard to think of the writer, for love of whom I had made this + journey all the way from Winchester. + </p> + <p> + "In the churchyard of this village," writes Gilbert White in "The + Antiquities of Selborne," "is a yew-tree whose aspect bespeaks it to be of + great age; it seems to have seen several centuries and is probably co-eval + with the church, and therefore may be deemed an antiquity; the body is + squat, short and thick, and measures twenty-three feet in the girth, + supporting a head of suitable extent to its bulk. This is a male tree, + which in the spring sheds clouds of dust and fills the atmosphere around + with its farina.... Antiquaries seem much at a loss to determine at what + period this tree first obtained a place in churchyards. A statute was + passed A.D. 1307 and 35 Edward I., the title of which is "Ne rector + arbores in cemeterio prosternat." Now if it is recollected that we seldom + see any other very large or ancient tree in a churchyard but yews, this + statute must have principally related to this species of tree; and + consequently their being planted in churchyards is of much more ancient + date than the year 1307. As to the use of these trees, possibly the more + respectable parishioners were buried under their shade before the improper + custom was introduced of burying within the body of the church where the + living are to assemble. Deborah, Rebekah's nurse, was buried under an oak—the + most honourable place of interment —probably next to the cave of + Machpelah, which seems to have been appropriated to the remains of the + patriarchal family alone. The further use of yew trees might be as a + screen to churches, by their thick foliage, from the violence of winds; + perhaps also for the purpose of archery, the best long bows being made of + that material, and we do not hear that they are planted in the churchyards + of other parts of Europe, where long bows were not so much in use. They + might also be placed as a shelter to the congregation assembling before + the church doors were opened, and as an emblem of mortality by their + funeral appearance. In the south of England every churchyard almost has + its tree and some two; but in the north we understand few are to be + found." + </p> + <p> + Even in that passage, full as it is of all the quietness of the English + countryside, something of the secret of Gilbert White, his ever living + incommunicable charm may be found: his extraordinary and gentle gift of + becoming, as it were, one with the things of which he writes, his + wonderfully sympathetic approach to us, his so simple and so consummate + manner. The man might stand in his writings for the countryside of + England, incarnate and articulate. He not only leads you ever out of + doors, but he is just that, the very spirit of the open air, the out- + of-doors of a country where alone in Europe one can be in the lanes, in + the meadows, on the hills under the low soft sky with delight every day of + the year. He teaches, as Nature herself teaches; we seem to move in his + books as though they were the fields and the woods, and there the flowers + blow and the birds sing. It is not so much that his observation is + extraordinarily wide and accurate, but that we see with his eyes, hear + with his ears, and the phenomena, beautiful or wonderful, which he + describes, we experience too, and because of him with something of his + love, his interest and carefulness. What other book ever written upon + Natural History can we read, who are not Naturalists, over and over and + over again, and for its own sake, not for the myriad facts he gathered + through a long lifetime, the acute observation and record of which have + won him the homage of his fellow scientists, but for the pure human and + literary pleasure we find there, a pleasure the like of which is to be + found nowhere else in such books in the same satisfying quantity, and at + all, only because of him. + </p> + <p> + And so on the next morning the first place I went to see was The Wakes, + the house where this great and dear lover of England of my heart lived, + dying there in 1793, to lie in his own churchyard, his grave marked by a + simple headstone bearing his initials "G.W." and the date. In the church + is a tablet to him and his brother Benjamin, who has also placed there in + memory of him the seventeenth century German triptych over the altar. But + he needs no memorial from our hands; all he loved, Selborne itself in all + its beauty, the exquisite country round it, the hills, the valleys, the + woods and the streams are his monument, the very birds in their songs + remind us of him, and there is not a walk that is not the lovelier because + he has passed by. Do you climb up through the Hanger and admire the + beeches there? It is he who has told us what to expect, loving the beech + like a father, "the most lovely of all forest trees whether we consider + its smooth rind or bark, its glossy foliage or graceful pendulous boughs." + Do you linger in the Plestor? It is he who tells you of the old oak that + stood there, and was blown down in 1703 "to the infinite regret of the + inhabitants and the vicar who bestowed several pounds in setting it in its + place again; but all this care could not avail; the tree sprouted for a + time then withered and died." Or who can pass by Long Lythe without + remembering that it was a favourite with him too. For he loved this place + so well, that as Jacob waited for Rachel so he for Selborne. He had been + born there, where his grandfather being then vicar, aged seventy-two years + and eleven months, he was to die in 1720. He went to school at Farnham and + Basingstoke, and then in 1739 to Oriel College, Oxford, where in 1744 he + was elected to a Fellowship. Presently benefice after benefice was offered + him but he refused them all, having made up his mind to live and die at + Selborne. Selborne must then have been a very secluded place, the nearest + town, Alton, often inaccessible in winter one may think, judging from the + description Gilbert White gives of the "rocky hollow lane" that led + thither, but it is perhaps to this very fact that we owe more than a few + of those immortal pages ever living and ever new. Since he was cut off + from men he was able to give himself wholly to nature. He is less a part + of the mere England of his day than any man of that time; he belonged only + to England of my heart. Yet the events of his time, though they touched + him so little, were neither few nor unimportant. The year of his birth was + the year of the South Sea Bubble. When he was a year old the great Duke of + Marlborough died. His eighth birthday fell in the year which closed the + eyes of Sir Isaac Newton. He was twenty-five in the "forty-five," when + Prince Charles Edward held Edinburgh after Preston Pans. He saw the change + in the calendar, the conquest of India by Clive, the victory and death of + Wolfe at Quebec the annexation of Canada, the death of Chatham, the loss + of the American Colonies, the French Revolution. And how little all this + meant to him! + </p> + <p> + But anything connected with Selborne interested him, and he wrote of and + studied its "antiquities" as well as its "natural history." Nor were these + antiquities so negligible as one might think. In his day the church was + still an interesting building, and he has left us an interesting account + of it. But he does not forget to tell us, too, of the Augustinian Priory + of Selborne, that was founded in 1233 and stood to the east of the + village, the way to it lying through his beloved Long Lythe, and the site + of which is now occupied by Priory Farm, a few ruins remaining. Nothing, + indeed, that concerned his beloved village was to him ungrateful. It is, + without doubt, this careful love of his for the things that were his own, + at his door, common things if you will, common only in England of my + heart, that has endeared him to innumerable readers, many of whom have + never set foot upon our shores and would only not be utter strangers here + if they did, because of him. Such at least is the only explanation I can + give of his immortality, his constant appeal to all sorts and conditions + of men. + </p> + <p> + Day by day as I wandered through the lanes and the woods that he had loved + with so wonderful and unconscious an affection, in a repose that we have + lost and a quietness we can only envy him, I tried to discover, I tried to + make clear to myself, what it really is that on a dull evening at home, in + a sleepless night in London, or in the long winter evenings anywhere, + draws me back again and again to that curious book. But even there in + Selborne the secret was hidden from me. In truth one might as well inquire + of the birds why they delight us, or of the flowers why we love them so; + for in some way I cannot understand Gilbert White was gently at one with + these and spoke of them sweetly like a lover and a friend having a gift + from God by which he makes us partakers of his pleasure. + </p> + <p> + And so spring drew to a close as I lingered in Selborne, for I could not + drag myself away. And when, at last, I determined to set out, the Feast of + St John was already at hand, so that I made haste once more across the + hills for Winchester on my way to Old Sarum and Stonehenge, where I would + see the sunrise on midsummer morning. + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> + <p> + + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's England of My Heart--Spring, by Edward Hutton + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENGLAND OF MY HEART--SPRING *** + +***** This file should be named 10120-h.htm or 10120-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/1/0/1/2/10120/ + +Produced by Ted Garvin, Carol David and PG Distributed Proofreaders + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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