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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/36968-8.txt b/36968-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..871f3e8 --- /dev/null +++ b/36968-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,2605 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of William de Colchester, by Ernest Harold Pearce + +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: William de Colchester + Abbot of Westminster + +Author: Ernest Harold Pearce + +Release Date: August 3, 2011 [EBook #36968] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WILLIAM DE COLCHESTER *** + + + + +Produced by Louise Pryor, David Garcia and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This +book was produced from scanned images of public domain +material from the Google Print project.) + + + + + + +[Illustration: ABBOT COLCHESTER.] + + + + + + +WILLIAM DE COLCHESTER + +ABBOT OF WESTMINSTER + +BY E. H. PEARCE + +CANON OF WESTMINSTER + + + SOCIETY FOR PROMOTING CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE + + LONDON: Northumberland Avenue, W.C. + New York: E. S. GORHAM + 1915 + + + + +TO J. D. AND H. R. D. WITH AFFECTION + + + + +CONTENTS + + + PAGE + + I. A Window in the Nave 9 + II. A Novice from Essex 14 + III. A Man of Affairs 21 + IV. A Proctor at Rome 30 + V. An Archdeacon 41 + VI. Abbot of Westminster 52 + VII. The Abbot at Home 60 + VIII. The Abbot Abroad 73 + + + + +NOTE + + +Having had the honour of an invitation to deliver in May last a "Friday +Evening Discourse" at the Royal Institution on the Archives of Westminster +Abbey, I thought it best to confine what I could say within an hour to +the career of a single man, preferably one whose record had not hitherto +been written. I have here expanded the lecture to some extent, and have +added references. I am indebted to Mr. David Weller, the Dean's Virger, +for some excellent pictures. + + E. H. P. + + 3, Little Cloisters, + _September, 1915._ + + + + +LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS + + + TO FACE PAGE + + Abbot Colchester _Frontispiece_ + The Kitchener's Account for Pancakes 28 + Chambers in Little Cloisters 48 + The Personal Effects of Abbot Litlington 54 + Abbot Colchester's Seal 74 + Coronation of Henry V. 80 + + + + +WILLIAM DE COLCHESTER + + + + +I + +A WINDOW IN THE NAVE + + +When the body of the late Lord Kelvin was laid to rest, by a right +which there was none to dispute, in the Abbey Church of Westminster, it +was placed, by the same kind of right, close to the grave of Sir Isaac +Newton. In the same corner there are the graves, or the memorials, of +Darwin and Herschel, of Joule and Gabriel Stokes and John Couch Adams, +to be joined shortly by tablets in memory of Alfred Russel Wallace, +of Sir Joseph Hooker, and of another Joseph, who died Lord Lister. It +was not likely that Kelvin would long lack some memorial more impressive +than the slab which covers his remains, and it was a happy and appropriate +impulse which caused the representatives of engineering science on both +sides of the Atlantic to undertake the task of providing one. But what +form could it best take? The walls of the church have been overcrowded, +to the grievous destruction of some precious features. The floor-space, as +the centuries following the Reformation were apt to forget, is intended +to serve the purposes of public worship. But the large windows of the +Nave offer to those who would honour and foster the memory of the great +dead a means of fulfilling their desire, and of adorning the fabric at +the same time. In this case the chance was welcomed, and Kelvin has his +Abbey memorial in stained glass. The window is one of a series projected +in 1907 by Dr. Armitage Robinson, now Dean of Wells, and loyally accepted +by his successor in the Deanery of Westminster--a series in which there +are placed side by side a King of England who contributed either to the +greatness of the foundation or to the majesty of the building, and the +Abbot through whom the King worked his pious will. The King in this case +is Harry of Monmouth, and we are thinking with somewhat mingled feelings +that October 25, 1915, brings us to the 500th anniversary of the battle +of Agincourt. But it is Henry V.'s Abbot who concerns us now; for in such +a scheme of windows the Abbots are more difficult to justify to the +ordinary visitor than the monarchs, not because of unworthiness, +but because there has been but little effort made to appraise their +worth as heads of our ancient house, or as conspicuous figures in their +generation.[1] + +In this case the Abbot is William of Colchester. As we shall see, his +character is depicted by Shakespeare, but he has no article to his credit +in the _Dictionary of National Biography_. If he is to be brought back +from obscurity, it can only be accomplished by repeated visits to the +Abbey Muniment Room. I shall therefore ask the reader to climb with me +the turret staircase which is approached from a door in the East Cloister, +and to enter a noble apartment of which that cloister is the origin. For +when Henry III.'s builders came to the planning of the South Transept, +known as Poets' Corner, the lines of the Great Cloister had already +been long established, and must not be minished or altered by the new +work. Therefore, whereas the North Transept has aisles on its east side +and on its west, the South Transept is aisled only on the east side. +The East Cloister occupies the space of what would otherwise be the +western aisle, and thus upholds the floor of the apartment which we +enter. We look into the distant recesses of the Abbey eastward, through +three of Henry III.'s bays, across a low wall split up by the bases of +dwarf pillars. There are signs of royalty in the room, such as the crowned +heads at the capitals of the pillars of the colonnade by which we enter, +and on the wooden wall which shuts off the southern section is the outline +of a white hart crowned, the emblem of Richard II. Professor Lethaby has +suggested to me that such a point of vantage from which to see what stones +and what buildings are here, and from which to observe some procession +of State as it arrives from the Palace by Poets' Corner door and makes +its solemn circuit of the church, would naturally be appropriated as a +royal pew. Be that as it may, the room was set apart in very early times +for the storing of muniments; it contains a cupboard which probably dates +from Richard II.'s reign and now stands under Richard II.'s hart; and at +least one of its archive chests, if not more, belongs to the fourteenth +century. We may assume, then, that here, from that century onwards, the +Convent kept its official archives--charters, leases, acquittances, and +the annual account-rolls of its officers. Here, for the last twenty years, +the Dean and Chapter have had the constant service of Dr. Edward Scott, +formerly of the British Museum, as the Keeper of their muniments. He +has written with his own hand over 110,000 descriptions of documents, +and has compiled, and is still steadily compiling, an index of persons and +things. I am merely attempting to construct a life of Abbot Colchester out +of documents which I have spelt out with Dr. Scott's assistance. Any one +who finds the story uninteresting must console himself with the thought +that it has not been told before. + + + + +II + +A NOVICE FROM ESSEX + + +In Shakespeare's _Tragedy of King Richard II._, there is an Abbot of +Westminster who flits craftily across the scene, generally shadowing a +Bishop of Carlisle, whom we shall meet again. When Bolingbroke announces +that he is about to be crowned King in Richard's stead, this Abbot bids +his friends-- + + "Come home with me to supper; and I'll lay + A plot shall show us all a merry day."[2] + +In the next act[3] it is stated that he is dead-- + + "The grand conspirator, Abbot of Westminster, + With clog of conscience and sour melancholy + Hath yielded up his body to the grave." + +As to which it must be sufficient to say that the poet who could not give +the Abbot's name was equally unconscious of the fact that he outlived +his alleged conspiracy by twenty years. + +But his name was William Colchester, and we may begin by assuming that, +as his name implies, he was a Colchester man. In and before his time, +and for a considerable space afterwards, the customary designation of +a Brother was his Christian name and a place name, with or without the +copula _de_; in earlier years he called himself William de Colchester, +but the documents which concern him as Abbot mostly speak of William +Colchester, or William Abbot of Westminster. Nor are we left to +guess-work as to the place of his origin. In later life, according to +the habit of his time, he busied himself with the endowment of obits, +or anniversaries, for the good of his soul. Here is a document,[4] +dated May 20, 1406, in which he bargained with the Prior of St. Botolph, +Colchester, having paid 40_s._ to Henry IV.'s Clerk of the Hanaper to +seal the bargain, that one of the canon-chaplains of that Priory should +say Mass every week, at sixpence a week, for his soul and for the +souls of his parents; that the Prior and his Brethren should observe +his anniversary, again with a memorial of his parents, in the parish +church of St. Nicholas, Colchester; that a set sum should be distributed +yearly to the vicar of St. Nicholas, to the poor of the parish, and to +the prisoners in Colchester Castle; and that the tomb of his parents +in the parish churchyard should be kept in proper repair. + +We may conclude, then, that this was his native parish, and that in +his great position as Abbot of Westminster he wished the connexion +to be had in remembrance. But he knew to a mile the distance between +his Abbey and Colchester, and how easy it might be for the Prior of St. +Botolph to accept his bequest and to neglect to fulfil its conditions. +So in 1407 (December 3), when he was completing the arrangements[5] for +maintaining an anniversary at the Abbey out of the revenues of the church +of Aldenham,[6] in Hertfordshire, he inserted an instruction that the +Monk-Bailiff of Westminster, at the time of his annual visit to the +Essex manors, should either proceed or send to Colchester and make +careful inquiry as to the due observance of the covenants, as who should +say, "It is as well not to trust these provincial Priors further than +you can see them." + +We get to know also from the grant[7] of another anniversary at the +Abbey's daughter Priory of Hurley, in Berkshire, that his father's name +was Reginald, and his mother's Alice. He had a sister who in 1389-90 +was living in Cambridge, for in that year his Receiver entered a gift +of 12_d._ to a man who came from my lord's sister at that town; and we +shall find that he had other connexions, some poor enough to bring him +a basket of poultry, some rich enough to receive from him a present of +jewelry. Evidently he sprang from a burgher stock of no great eminence, +for whom the Church seemed the sphere in which the career was opened to +the talents. + +How he came to enter our Monastery we shall never know, for with all the +wealth of our materials there survives not a trace of his or of any other +postulant's testimonials. He came, he was seen, he was admitted. We know +what the requisites were--that he must have examined his conscience as +to the motives which led him to apply, that he must be sound in body, +free in civil status, unburdened by debt or other obligations, and as a +rule not less than eighteen years of age.[8] What steps the Fathers of +the Convent took to secure outside evidence of a candidate's fitness +in these respects must be left to the imagination. He passed muster and +joined their number. + +Our first trace of William Colchester's name on the books of the House +is in connexion with his ordination as priest. I cannot tell what +Bishop admitted him to the ministry, nor where it took place, but it +can be ascertained that he said Mass for the first time during 1361-2 +(the conventual year was reckoned for administrative purposes, as it +is still, from Michaelmas to Michaelmas), and we are able to discover +this, not because it was felt to be an event worth chronicling for its +own sake, but because in that year three of the officers note that they +severally expended 1s. 7-1/2_d._ in bread and wine as "exennia"--_i.e._ +a complimentary gift[9]--made to him in honour of the event. We may +suppose that he was then twenty-three years of age; he may have entered +the Convent in or about 1356; and we may take 1338 as the probable year +of his birth. If, as we have assumed, he entered the Convent some +years before his ordination, then he did so during the reign of Simon +Langham, the most eminent of all our Abbots, but it is not possible to +say whether he received priest's orders before or after the election +of Nicholas Litlington to the Abbacy in April, 1362. The Monastery was +still suffering in numbers from the ravages of the Great Pestilence in +1349, and consisted in 1356-7 of only thirty-five monks and two novices. +Colchester was the last of five new members of whom we hear first +in 1361-2. + +Five years later, in 1366-7, he was chosen by the Convent as one of two +of their number whom they thought specially apt to learning, and whom +it was therefore their duty to send up to Oxford to join the other +Benedictine students at Gloucester Hall, an institution established +by the Order in its General Chapter held at Abingdon in 1290.[10] Our +custom was that the Convent Treasurer paid £10 yearly to each Westminster +student for his maintenance,[11] besides the cost of his journeys to +and fro; so that it is possible to compile from the Treasurers' rolls a +fairly complete list of our Oxford scholars from 1356, when I came upon +the first signs of a definite system, until the Dissolution. The plan +tended to the great advantage of the monasteries; it meant that the +likely young men were taken at an impressionable time in their lives +out of the narrow rut of cloistral life, and were associated with the +world of scholarship and of affairs; and it will be found that a large +proportion of those who were sent to Oxford rose quickly to positions +of trust in the Convent. William Colchester remained at Oxford, save for +periodical visits to the Abbey, from 1366 to 1370. It cannot be said that +the Latin prose of which he was capable does credit to his University, +and even monkish Latinity was seldom worse than that in which his few +surviving letters are couched. But it is fair to assume that he learnt how +to deal with men, and we can now go on to see that the Convent which had +supported him at Oxford was satisfied with the product of its expenditure. + + + + +III + +A MAN OF AFFAIRS + + +Soon after his return from the University two things happened, as if to +signify that his competence was recognized. In October, 1371, he was +promoted, as the Westminster phrase went, to sit by the bell--sedere +ad skillam; that is to say, he moved up to the seniors' table in the +Refectory, where was the bell or skyllet which gave the signal for grace +to be said, or for the reader of the week to begin the lection. Like the +day of his first Mass, this promotion, coming as a rule not less than ten +years later, was reckoned to be an occasion for a little addition to the +usually frugal fare, and we can state the date of it because the Sacrist +and the Infirmarer and the Treasurer each sent him bread and wine to the +value of 2_s._ 3-1/2_d._, so that he might make merry with his friends. + +Secondly, he begins to be recognized as an experienced person who can +safely be sent upon missions involving prudence and the management of +men. In the same year, 1371-2, a payment of twenty shillings was made +by the Steward of the Abbot's Household for the expenses of William +Colchester and two valets who were sent to Northampton for the meeting of +the General Chapter of the English Benedictines, probably in attendance +on the Abbot of Westminster, who was frequently one of the Presidents +of the Chapter. + +But the next year, 1372-3, as we learn from the Sacrist, saw Colchester +entrusted with a still more delicate duty. It was on this wise. Among +the precious relics given to the Abbey by Edward the Confessor[12] +was the girdle of the Virgin Mary--zona beate Marie--which she had +made with her own hands and had herself worn.[13] It was regarded as +having especial value in securing a safe delivery to expectant mothers, +and when the Westminster Book of Customs was compiled by Abbot Richard +de Ware about a century before Colchester's admission, it was the rule +that the Sacrist or, as he was sometimes called, the Secretary, should +carry the girdle of the blessed Mother of God to any destination which +it was appointed to reach, or should be at charges with the bearer +of it in his place.[14] So here is our Sacrist paying the expenses of +William Colchester, namely, 13_s._ 4_d._, and the more considerable +price of two horses for the journey, £6 16_s._ 8_d._ But the Sacrist +has something to enter on the other side, an offering of £2 from the +Countess of March, the lady who craved the aid of the girdle. If any +one is churlish enough to say that the bargain seems but a poor one +for the Convent--150_s._ spent on the journey, and only 40_s._ received +from the beneficiary--the answer is that the horses would be sold at the +end of the return journey for almost as much as they cost. If, again, +it is objected that in any case the lady's gift was money thrown away, +it is not so easy to convince the gainsayer. For while it is on record +that on February 12, 1371 (_i.e._ in the year previous to that of the +Sacrist's account), the lady Philippa, granddaughter of Edward III., +did present her husband, the 3rd Earl of March, with a daughter who in +process of time became the wife of Harry Hotspur, yet it does not appear +that she was equally blessed during the year 1372-3. + +Such duties sensibly performed, William Colchester was not long in +attaining to administrative office. To begin with, Abbot Litlington +chose him as his Custos Hospicii; _i.e._ Seneschal or steward of his +household. We have the roll on which the young monk gave an account of +his stewardship for the year Michaelmas to Michaelmas, 1373-4, and as +the doings it records represent his early experience of that conventual +business in which he was to be immersed for nearly half a century, +we may stay by it for a short space in order to get our impressions. + +He found his master in possession of a considerable rent-roll in +various parts of the country, the manors being situate in the counties +of Worcester, Gloucester, Oxford, Surrey, Buckingham, and Middlesex. The +rentals amounted to £696 13_s._ 6_d._, and the sale of stock, including +an ox sold for 18_s._ 4_d._, and a cow--timore pestilencie--for 13_s._, +brought the total to £719 8_s._ 8_d._ Large as this sum sounds, +especially when multiplied to correspond with present values, it was +none too large for the needs of the position. Household expenses, +which are not entered in detail, came to £151 1_s._ 4-1/2_d._ The +purchase of live-stock--grey palfreys, bullocks, cows, steers, sheep, +pigs, swans, poultry, and no less than 966 pigeons at about 1/2_d._ +each--required £63 2_s._ 10_d._, and the outlay on dead stock such as +bacon, salt-fish, five barrels of white herring, fourteen casks of red +herring, and three casks of Scottish red herring, amounted to £31 8_s._ +4_d._ Lest it should be claimed that the Scottish variety was a special +delicacy, we must add that the latter cost only 4_s._ a barrel as against +5_s._ 6_d._ for the other. Nor, if the quantities seem large, must it +be lightly concluded that there was carelessness in the dispensation; +indeed, it was the Seneschal's duty to enter on the back of his roll +a stock-keeping account, from which it may be gleaned that all the +herrings were consumed and eighty pigs; but there was a residue of five +salt-fish and of two out of sixteen bullocks. Altogether in corn and +wine and clothing and gifts to visitors and in other ways there was an +expenditure of £684 to set against a revenue of £719. + +But what we want is an idea of the duties and experiences that came to +the young Seneschal, and this can be obtained from various items. He +gets a pair of my lord's boots mended for twopence, and small sums go in +stringing the great sportman's bows or in buying bags in which to carry +his arrow-heads. That which cost more, and was probably more interesting +to Colchester himself, was the coming and going of personages or their +servants--the squire of the Earl of Cambridge (Edmund Langley, fifth +son of Edward III.), who receives 20_s._ for bringing a letter to the +Abbot from his lord; the Earl of Warwick's steward, who comes to sell +a black palfrey; a monk of his own year, Richard Excestr', who is just +starting on his career at Oxford, and to whom the Abbot gives a fatherly +present of 20_s._; the Bishop of Durham's[15] man, whose master we know +as the builder of Bishop Hatfield Hall, and who is sent with a gift of +two greyhounds to the Abbot. Several messengers arrive from the Prince, +_i.e._ the Black Prince, who is now at Wycombe and now at Kensington, and +Abbot Litlington makes several journeys by boat to call on the Bishop of +Winchester, no less a personage than William of Wykeham, who was in some +disgrace at the time. + +Having in this way served the Abbot efficiently, Colchester received +his next responsibility from the whole Chapter, who chose him as Convent +Treasurer, and "Coquinarius" or Kitchener, for the year 1375-6. Happily +we still possess his compotus as such. I must not describe it at length, +but one feature of it, an entry under the head of "pitancie et flacones," +is of too great interest to be passed by. Pittances were additional +meals on special occasions by way of varying the dreary round of dry +bread and sour wine, which alone could be provided in the Refectory. But +"flacones" seem to be pancakes, and pancakes are a recognized Westminster +institution, though it is no longer the duty of the Convent Treasurer to +provide them for his brethren. I first translate the item as Colchester +entered it: + + "Paid in milk, 'creym,' butter, cheese and eggs bought for the + pancakes in Easter week, on Rogation days and at Pentecost, + 64_s._ 8_d._" + +And now for some further light upon it. In 1389, when Colchester had +occupied the Abbot's chair for three years, the Kitchener was Brother +William Clehungre or Clayhanger, who has left us his bill[16] for +materials, and from this it will appear how the pancake-custom has +developed in the interval. It sets forth his + + "expenses laid out in respect of the pancakes prescribed for the + brethren and delivered to the monastery according to custom during + 56 days each year, namely from Easter Day to Trinity Sunday, + in the 12th year of the reign of King Richard II., as appears + by all the parcels:-- + + £ _s._ _d._ + Milk. First 126 gallons of milk + @ 1_d._ the gallon 10 6 + + Butter. Also 3 gallons 3 qrts of butter + @ 2_s._ 4_d._ the gallon 9 4-1/2 + + Eggs. Also 5816 eggs + @ 10_d._ the hundred 2 8 5-1/4 + + Salt. Also one peck of salt @ 3_d._ 3 + -------------- + Total £3 8 11-3/4" + + +Our Kitchener makes some trifling assumptions in his multiplication as +to the butter and the eggs, and he robs the Convent of fivepence when +he adds up the total. The number of eggs sounds large, but it means +only 103 and a fraction daily, and when it is considered that in 1389 +the Prior and his Brethren numbered forty-nine persons, this works out +at the by no means excessive rate of 2-1/2 eggs daily to each brother. + +[Illustration: THE KITCHENER'S ACCOUNT FOR PANCAKES.] + +But there is a local reason for dwelling on this custom. Westminster +School is admittedly a Tudor foundation, but at the Abbey we cherish +the conviction that its roots penetrate deep down into the monastic +soil. Every Shrove Tuesday the school--in modern times by means of +selected gladiators--makes a furious onset upon a single pancake. +Mr. Sergeaunt[17] speaks of the ceremony as "the sole survivor of the +medieval sports," and adds that "although its origin cannot be traced, +it can hardly have come into being after the date of Elizabeth's +foundation." Is it, then, beyond all likelihood that it arose out of some +ancient protest of our Benedictines against the prospect of being fed +upon pancakes every day for eight weeks? Is it inconceivable that the +successful protestant was conducted at the end of the "greese," as now, +to the Lord Abbot's presence to receive one mark from his lordship's +bounty? All we can say is that the Brethren continued to be similarly +regaled from Easter to Trinity until the Dissolution of the House. + + + + +IV + +A PROCTOR AT ROME + + +William Colchester ceased to be Treasurer in the autumn of 1376, and +within eight months circumstances had arisen in which his capacities were +to be put to a severer and more prolonged test. We are all familiar with +the expression "St. Stephen's," as applied to Parliament House. But it +is not as readily realized that the House of Commons, after sitting for +long years in the Chapter House[18] at the Abbey, removed itself at +the Dissolution to the ancient Chapel of St. Stephen in the Palace of +Westminster. I am only concerned now with the story of that chapel[19] +as it is related to William Colchester's career. Placed where it was, it +stood within the ancient limits of our Abbot's jurisdiction, but its Dean +and his twelve Prebendaries had good grounds for regarding themselves +as a royal foundation, and they craved the kind of ecclesiastical +independence which attaches to-day to St. George's Chapel in Windsor +Castle. Our Convent resisted this claim, which, on the other hand, had +the good will of the Court. In 1377 a suit to test the rights of the +case was entered before the Roman Curia, and it was necessary to appoint +some careful and astute person to take charge in Rome of the Abbey's +interests, and to negotiate their success. I will not go further into +the merits of the case. It lasted for seventeen years, and was ultimately +settled, on the whole, in the Abbey's favour, the College of St. Stephen +agreeing to pay to the Abbey a yearly sum of five marks, and the right +of the Abbot to instal the Dean of St. Stephen's being upheld.[20] +What concerns us is that the Abbot and Convent chose William Colchester +as their proctor at Rome in this suit, and that by good fortune there +survive long statements of his personal and legal costs in carrying out +the task laid upon him. They will serve as a guide-book of his journey +and will give us considerable insight into his adventures.[21] + +He left Westminster on June[22] 10, 1377, and was absent, as he is careful +to record, for two years, twenty-three weeks, and three days. His first +business was to furnish himself with official commendations, and to +this end he sought for royal letters--pro expedicione cause--from the +Keeper of the Privy Seal; he paid 3_s._ 4_d._ to the Keeper's servant to +urge his master to dictate them, and by a like payment he made things +right with the scrivener who would execute them; but the letters were +not ready when he started. Meantime we can watch him as he reckons up +the difficulties of his ordeal. It was arranged that he should go by +way of Avignon, for Master Thomas Southam,[23] Archdeacon of Oxford, +was still there, settling the affairs of Cardinal Langham's will. But +the Pope was no longer there. Gregory XI. had quitted that scene of +luxurious exile and ravenous extortion on September 13, 1376, and had +entered Rome on January 17, 1377.[24] Most Englishmen had resented +the Avignonese sojourn because it threw the Papacy into the hands of +the French, but William Colchester, as he packed his valise, saw the +matter in a different light. Because the Pope had left, there was +no great chance of finding company for the journey;[25] and company +meant so much the more security. There was nothing for it but to hire +a companion, and he found one Gerard of London, who was willing to face +the journey for 20_s._ and his expenses. Colchester is conscious that +this seems an extravagance, but he enters in his account a plea that it +was justified by the variety of language and the dangers of the roads in +foreign parts.[26] For the road to Dover he bought for himself a horse and +saddle which cost 34_s._ 8_d._; but it appears that he rather expected +the man Gerard to walk, for he extenuates a further payment of 26_s._ +8_d._ for a horse, a saddle, and bridle for Gerard, by stating that +the man entirely declined to go afoot. Thus mounted, they reached Dover, +where they wasted five days in waiting for a passage, and all the time +the cost of food was mounting up at the rate of sixpence a day for each +horse, and fivepence a meal for each man. The passage, when they obtained +one, cost 3_s._ 4_d._ each for the men, and double for the horses. At +that cost they reached Calais, and within three days were at Bruges, +where again there was a long halt. For the royal letters had not come. +Edward III. was on his death-bed, and passed away eleven days after +our travellers left London. But Colchester is convinced that an enemy +had done this, and when he insists that the issue of the letters has +been frustrated "per aduersarios," we must remember that the Dean and +College of St. Stephen's were closer to the royal ear than our Abbot and +Convent. Whatever the cause, the result was the entry in his account of +the cost of nine days' commissariat at Bruges, together with a reward +of 10_d._ to the hotel servants, which he at once resents and excuses +as being the custom of the country.[27] In brief, he had already spent +nearly all the £10 which he received at his journey's start from the hands +of Brother John Lakyngheth, his rival for monastic promotion. + +So now he converts his balance of 16_s._ 8_d._ from sterling into florins, +reckoning a florin at 3_s._ 2_d._ To this he adds seven florins by the +sale of his own horse--a creditable bargain, for, having paid 34_s._ +8_d._ for the beast in London, he has ridden it to Bruges, and there +parted with it for 22_s._ 2_d._ On the other hand, Gerard's horse has +turned out badly; the journey has nearly killed it;[28] and it goes for +three florins, or 9_s._ 6_d._ Colchester negotiated a loan of twenty-three +florins, and on they went towards the south, sometimes hiring mounts, +sometimes begging a ride in a cart, often in terror of the Frenchmen, +who laid an ambush for them as they entered Dauphiné, so that our +travellers hired a guide and went through byways. On the 27th day after +leaving Bruges they entered Avignon, and next day they found Master +Southam at his lodgings by the church of Our Lady of Miracles. + +For a moment I lay aside Colchester's ledger and turn to a separate +document; for Southam had with him at Avignon another Westminster monk, +John Farnago, who became Colchester's paymaster and in due course +presented to the Abbey an account[29] of what he had laid out on his +behalf. We are thus furnished with the date of the arrival of Colchester +and Gerard--July 24--and learn that they required bed and board at +Avignon till August 19. Farnago purchased for his Brother a fresh +outfit--cape, tunic, and hood of black Benedictine cloth, a scapular +and cowl, and a plain colobium (or sleeveless tunic), buying the last, +as he says, from Hagyuus, a Jew, whose real name was probably Hayyim. He +also provided a horse for the journey to Marseilles, where Colchester +was to take ship, and put some money in his scrip. So our Proctor turned +his back on Avignon, perhaps not fully realizing that when on August 14, +five days before his departure, he and Farnago witnessed the probate of +Cardinal Langham's will,[30] he had been concerned with a document which +was to have a vast effect on the church and the conventual buildings +of St. Peter, Westminster. + +We turn back to Colchester's own ledger, and note that he does not enter +the actual date of his arrival in Rome; but we can fix it fairly closely. +He says that, having got thus far, he was obliged to move on to Anagni, +some forty miles southward from Rome on the road to Naples; and we know +that Gregory XI., who had spent the summer of 1377 there, returned to +Rome on November 17.[31] Colchester must have found the Papal Court busy +at the packing of its trunks and must have returned with it forthwith +to Rome; for the first date that he mentions is November 20. It would +be wearisome to pursue the details of his activity in engaging counsel, +English and Italian, and in paying their fees; but it is worth while +to notice that there has been no great change since his day in legal +expressions--retinuit duos aduocatos--and perhaps not a complete reform +of illegal practice; for instance, he explains that he gave six florins +to the valet--cubicularius--of the Cardinal of Milan, who was concerned in +the decision of the case, with a view to the man's stirring up his master +to sign a certain document; the object of the gift, says Colchester, +was greater security, because at the moment there was a fierce altercation +between the parties to the suit. + +His expenses, already large, received a sudden addition through the death, +on March 27, 1378, of Gregory XI. Seldom can an observant traveller have +had a more exciting experience than to be in Rome during the session of +the Consistory[32] which set Bartolommeo Prignano, Archbishop of Bari, +upon what Colchester calls "the apex of the chief Apostolate." On personal +grounds our monk must have been pleased at the choice of the electors, +for the new Pope was the special _protégé_ of the French Cardinal of +Pampeluna, Simon Langham's friend and executor. But financially the +effect was provoking. We know that Urban VI. proved himself a man "full +of Neapolitan fire and savagery," who thought "that the Cardinals could +be reduced to absolute obedience by mere rudeness,"[33] and we are quite +prepared for Colchester's statement that between the Pope and the Sacred +College there arose a great dissension. Cardinals and curials fled +secretly, he says, in some numbers, and among the latter the two advocates +whom he had briefed and paid. That money at any rate was a dead loss, but +there was this advantage in Urban's case, that, knowing the preference of +the Cardinals for Anagni as a summer residence, he decided for Tivoli in +their despite, and Colchester could get there in a few hours for a couple +of florins. Six weeks had to be spent within sound of Horace's waterfall +before his business was finished. His return journey led him through Nice, +where he was robbed of his cloak and other property. Then to Avignon +once more, and thence in due course--at least, so he hoped--to the Abbey. + +But he was fated, nevertheless, to turn again and revisit the Roman +Court; for while he tarried in Master Southam's lodgings at Avignon, +in September, 1378, there came news of a notable murder committed in the +church of Westminster while the Gospel was being read at High Mass,[34] +on August, 11. The victim was one Robert Hawle, who had escaped from +the Tower and had taken sanctuary at Westminster. The incident had its +political aspects; it raised various perilous questions; and Southam +advised that Colchester should return to Rome in order to counteract any +plots that might be mooted in behalf of the authors of "that horrible +deed." So again the expenses began to roll up--the journey overland +to Marseilles; a passage by galley to Ostia; a sojourn in Rome for the +greater part of December, 1378; gratuities on several occasions to the +Papal janitors for free entrance to the Chamber and the Consistory, and to +the valets for access to the Pope himself; an expensive struggle by each +faction to extract from the Curia the kind of Bull that each side wanted, +in which our Proctor was apparently successful; and a journey from Rome +to Bruges lasting forty-one days. Colchester waited for three weeks at +Sluis to secure a passage across the Channel, in the belief that the +enemy was watching Calais with the intention of doing him violence;[35] +and when he reached his native shore, he rode up to London by ways that +were devious for the same reason, arriving there in November, 1379. It +was neither easy nor without peril to be the chosen representative of +Westminster at the Roman Court. + + + + +V + +AN ARCHDEACON + + +It is not doubtful that the Abbot and Chapter were well pleased with +Colchester's fulfilment of the duties entrusted to him and that the +large bill of costs was paid, if not with delight, at any rate with +resignation. Of this we have several conclusive indications. First, +within a brief space the Convent again despatched him to Rome, in 1382-3, +doubtless to continue his management of the same suit. This time there +is no record of his payments, nor should we be aware of his journey if +it were not for two documents. One is the Chamberlain's compotus-roll +of 1382-3. These accounts presented a balance of money on the one side, +and a balance of materials on the other side; it was necessary for the +Chamberlain to show, not merely that he had purchased so many outfits, but +that he had distributed these outfits to such and such Brethren. So when +he makes his statement about the habits--panni nigri--he notes that he +did not give these to Brother William Colchester nor to Brother William +Halle, because they were at Rome. No doubt, Colchester had represented +to the Chapter the wisdom of providing him with a companion from the +monastery instead of his hiring a courier as before. The other is a legal +document, whose purport is of some personal interest. When Colchester +left Westminster in 1382-3, Richard Excestr' was about to resign the +Priorship, which he had held only since 1377. Attempts seem to have +been made, perhaps by some of Colchester's Roman friends during his +stay at the Curia, to secure a "provision" of the vacant office for him +from the Pope, and the efforts succeeded. The document in question[36] +bears date January 2, 1384, and is of the nature of a pardon to Colchester +for the prejudice or contempt caused by such efforts to the Crown and +its prerogatives. He denied that he was party to the attempt, and paid +the necessary fee to the Hanaper for his pardon. The Priorship another +took;[37] not, perhaps, because the Brethren thought Colchester unworthy +of promotion or too young for it, but because the interests of the +House required that he should go to Rome, whither he was sent, as the +Treasurers' rolls inform us, both in 1384-5 and 1385-6. The suit against +St. Stephen's Chapel still dragged on, and he alone had the knowledge +and the experience for hastening its delays. + +As a second proof of the confidence reposed in him we may note that in +1382[38] he was Archdeacon of the Convent; it is possible that he held +the post earlier; certainly he held it in 1386; and probably he owed it to +the Abbot personally. The office of Archdeacon is proverbially puzzling +to the lay mind, and it may be that the Archdeaconry of Westminster +creates some wonder in the minds even of other Archdeacons. The fact is +that the Abbot in the exercise of jurisdiction over his Westminster area +required the services of an ecclesiastical jurist in matters of divorce +and of excommunication and the like; he needed also some one who would +serve as his pastoral representative to those denizens of the area who +were not on the foundation of the Convent. For this reason, even in +Abbot Ware's time,[39] the Archdeacon was permitted to walk abroad +to the Palace or elsewhere in the discharge of his duties, which, +indeed, might take him much further afield; for when Abbot Colchester +drew up an indenture[40] appropriating to certain memorial purposes the +revenues of Aldenham church, he inserted a provision that the Archdeacon +of Westminster for the time being should be in charge of the parish, +receiving 40_s._ yearly for his labour therein. We have seen that +Colchester's experience marked him out for juridical duties, and we +must assume that he was not without pastoral zeal and aptitude. + +A letter in Norman French addressed by "William, Conte de Salisbury" +to Abbot Litlington will help us to see that his duties were of a +varied character. The writer of the letter[41] was William de Montacute, +2nd Earl, who fought at Poitiers and in most of the French wars of his +time. Addressing the Abbot as his dear and faithful friend, he thus +unfolds his story. His servant, Nicholas Symcok, of London, has been +robbed in the middle of June by highwaymen, one of whom, Richard Surrey, +is popularly known as Richard atte Belle. The knight of the road has made +off with some silver plate and £40 in coin, and has taken sanctuary at +Westminster, being hotly pursued by his victim, who finds on Surrey's +person all his lost property, less £5 of the stolen money. Symcok has +deposited his recovered goods in the hands of Dan William Colchester, +one of the lord Abbot's monks, who has laid them aside and placed his +seal upon the package. Therefore, my good Lord--asks the Earl--I pray +you have these chattels delivered up to my servant. This letter bears no +date, and there is no proof that the Archdeacon as such was concerned +with the affairs of sanctuary; nor does any title of office accompany +the introduction of his name. But the incident was one which bore a +legal character and Colchester's part in it may possibly be brought +within the vague limits of archidiaconal functions.[42] + +We are fortunate in possessing one unquestionable intimation as to +his personal circumstances while holding this office. It bears date +November 9, 1386, shortly before his promotion to the highest room, +and is an indenture of lease of sheep.[43] It sets forth that Thomas +Charlton, the valet, and Henry Norton, the servant of William Colchester, +Archdeacon of Westminster, leased to John Waryn, butcher, of Westminster, +132 muttons--multones--3 rams, and 168 ewes, of the average value of +20_d._ each, to be fed and kept sound till Ash Wednesday next ensuing; and +there follows a statement of the terms upon which the tenant may acquire +any or all of them. The bargain was apparently made by the Archdeacon's +servants, and the actual document leaves it in doubt whether the sheep +were his or theirs, but the endorsement[44] places the ownership beyond +question and proves the sheep to have been the Archdeacon's. + +The third means adopted by the Convent for marking its sense of +Colchester's services to the House was more exceptional. I give the +statement of it as it stands in the vellum volume called _Liber Niger +Quaternus_, a fifteenth-century copy of an earlier black paper register +compiled by a very active monk called Roger Kyrton, or Cretton,[45] who +entered the Convent in 1384-5, served many offices under Abbot Colchester, +and survived him by about fourteen years:-- + + "On September 25, 1382, there was granted to Brother W. Colchester + Archdeacon of Westminster a chamber, together with that part of + the Garden which belongs to the Lady Chapel; also a pension of six + marks [£4] and an additional monk's allowance--corrodium--such + as is enjoyed by the seniors; but on condition that if the + said William be promoted to any prelacy elsewhere, the pension, + the allowance and the chamber are to revert to the Convent." + +Two questions of topography arise here, the position of the Garden and +that of the chambers, or "camerae." It is not necessary to assume that +they were contiguous. "The part of the Garden which belongs to the Lady +Chapel" cannot be located with certainty, but the Convent Garden lay in +the acres eastward of St. Martin's Church, Charing Cross, which still +retain the name, and are now the scene of the sale of garden-produce +that is grown elsewhere. Our great chartulary called Domesday[46] shows +that the Lady Chapel was given considerable property in this district +during the reign of Henry III., under whom the chapel was built. In +view of our information that within four years the Archdeacon possessed +a flock of 400 sheep, it seems reasonable to suppose that his share of +the Garden included considerable pasturage, and that he sometimes took +his walks abroad in the direction of Charing to see if it was well with +the flocks. + +There is less doubt about the position of the chambers, which are +often mentioned in connexion with the Infirmary, and which were +probably attached to Little Cloisters, then recently rebuilt by Abbot +Litlington. To this day the south side of Little Cloisters shows +an alternation of old doors and old windows that suggests a row of +almshouses. It thus becomes easy to realize that a separate residence, +instead of the usual bed in the Great Dormitory, was a privilege highly +prized and rarely conferred. + +[Illustration: CHAMBERS IN LITTLE CLOISTERS.] + +It is natural to ask in what conditions the tenants of these chambers +lived, and the answer can be given in some detail. We have a long +strip of frail paper,[47] 3 ft. 7 in. × 5-1/2 in., which deals with the +post-mortem distribution of the effects of a monk whom William Colchester +must have known long and well. Richard Excestr' said his first Mass, +as did Colchester himself, in 1361-2; he became Prior quite early in +life, in 1377; but, as we have seen, he resigned the office in 1382, +and we do not know why his tenure of it was so brief. That the reason was +not discreditable to himself may be inferred from the fact that on his +resignation he was given precedence next after the new Prior, receiving +a pension of four marks, a double, or Prior's, assignment of clothing, +and a double share of the pittances that marked certain anniversaries, +till his death in 1397. In this paper, then, his modest effects are +arranged according to the rooms in which they stood, like the items in +an auctioneer's catalogue when the sale is to take place, by order of +the executors, on the premises. We gather that he has a reception-room, +or "aula," where he can entertain a few friends, with a special welcome +for any Brother who can play chess (for among his possessions are a +chess-board and a set of chess-men[48]); a pantry, or "buteleria," +for his little store of plate and crockery and napery, including +a silver cup and cover, thirteen silver spoons (was it a complete +"Apostle" set?), and a table-cloth 3-1/2 yards in length; a bedroom, or +"camera," containing his white bedstead with a tester over it, and a +"parpoynt," as well as his wardrobe; a kitchen, or "coquina," equipped +with "droppyngpannes," "dressyng-Knyues," "flesshhokys," "anndyrons," +a "treuet," and three pans which like the trivet are honestly described +in the catalogue as being the worse for wear;[49] and a library, or +"studium," with ten books and three maps. Among these books there was of +course some scholastic theology and canon law, but there was also the +Latin version of the Book of Messer Marco Polo, as if to signify that the +latest modern literature was by no means excluded. The Provost of King's, +who was kind enough to look through the list for me, takes this to be, +as I suspected,[50] a very early instance of English interest in the +Venetian traveller's adventures; and added that he believes it to be +still more rare that a man of this monk's period should possess a map +of Scotland. + +As there was nothing exceptional in the disposal of the ex-prior's +goods,[51] the incident may be fairly taken as an illustration of Convent +life as Colchester lived it, and we may therefore go on to notice that, +putting together the sum that Excestr' left in cash and that which was +realized by the sale of some of these articles, the Convent was able +to pay the cost of his illness and burial; the items ranged from 2_d._ +for milk to 10_s._ for the fee of the brief-writer who wrote out the +formal announcement of his death on one shilling's worth of parchment +for the information of other Benedictine houses, and £4 13_s._ 4_d._ +for a marble slab with a memorial inscription. As Excestr' died in 1397, +we may think of Abbot Colchester as saying the last words over the open +grave of his former neighbour in Little Cloisters. + + + + +VI + +ABBOT OF WESTMINSTER + + +Our Archdeacon was not destined to remain such for any great time. +On November 29, 1386, there passed away during a meal-time[52] at his +manor house of la Neyte, near Westminster, our great builder, Abbot +Nicholas Litlington, to whom we owe the south and west sides of the Great +Cloister, the Little Cloisters, Jerusalem Chamber, the Abbot's Dining +Hall, and much besides of the present Deanery, and the great Missal.[53] +The vigour of Litlington's character can be realized from what we have +seen of the fight which he maintained through William Colchester for +the privileges of the Abbey, but Colchester must have witnessed a more +remarkable proof of the old man's pluck. In the _Liber Niger_ (f. 87) +there is a record to the effect that a threatened invasion of our +shores by the French King in 1386 caused the Chapter of the Convent to +come to the unanimous opinion that the old Abbot and two of his monks, +John Canterbery and John Burgh, should don full armour and proceed as +far as the coast, on the ground that it was lawful to do so for the +defence of the realm.[54] It is astonishing that Litlington should +have contemplated such an enterprise at his age, for we have a letter +in Norman French, not dated, but clearly referring to this period, +in which he excuses himself on the ground of "age et feblesse" for +not coming to the Abbey "en propre persone" to bring to the King the +famous ring of St. Edward. But Litlington's possession of armour cannot +be doubted. There remains a schedule[55] of his effects at his death, +which shows that those which passed into the hands of his successor +consisted chiefly of various accoutrements, and included six hauberks; +a helmet called a "pisanum"; seven others called basnetts with ventailles +or vizors; a "ketelhat"; a pair of steel gloves; some "leg-harneys"; +fore-braces and back-braces; and four lance-heads. + +[Illustration: THE PERSONAL EFFECTS OF ABBOT LITLINGTON.] + +Though general opinion pointed to his election in Litlington's stead, +Colchester was in some danger of disappointment. He had spent so much +time abroad--a very large proportion of the preceding nine years--being +engaged all the time in a cause which brought him into collision with the +preferences of the Court, that it is not wonderful if the King desired +the election of another. We can thus easily credit the statement of +a Westminster chronicler,[56] whom the Dean of Wells believes to have +been the rival candidate himself, that, when the vacancy occurred, the +King wrote thrice to the Prior and Convent urging them to find their +new Abbot in Brother John Lakyngheth, the very Treasurer whom we have +seen in the act of paying to William Colchester the sums required for +his long journeys and his legal costs, perhaps with a keen satisfaction +at thus facilitating his rival's absence. But the Convent had made up +its mind, and within a fortnight[57] of Litlington's decease, Colchester +was elected Abbot by compromission; that is to say, the Brethren chose +a committee of five or seven of their number and entrusted to them +the choice of the best man. Richard II. was angry, and refused for a +while to receive the nomination. We have the request[58] of the Prior +and Convent to the King, written in French, but not bearing any date, +to give his consent to their choice of "daunz William Colchestre un +de lours commoignes en abbe et pastoure." The letter was written at a +time when Richard could be said to have "graciousement accroiez votre +roial assent al election auantdite," and when it was only necessary to +petition him to make formal announcement of it to the Pope. But there +was considerable delay also on the part of the Pope, who wanted to +quash the election and to appoint by "provision."[59] But the King's +ambassador intervened, and the bulls of confirmation were issued +September 1, 1387. Colchester was installed October 12, and made a great +feast to his friends on St. Edward's Day. His temporalities had been +restored September 10.[60] All this places Richard's attitude towards +him in some doubt, especially as, on November 10, the King, who walked +barefoot from Charing to the Abbey precincts, was there received by +Colchester and his Brethren vested in copes. Almost immediately there +arose a difficult question about sanctuary, as to which the reader may be +again referred to the _Polychronicon_.[61] Words almost fail the scribe +as he pictures the reverence and love of the King for the Church. "There +is not a Bishop on the bench," he says, "who displays as much zeal for +the Church's rights." + +Thus it came to pass that King and Court alike poured upon the Abbey +the benefits of their generosity in spite of Colchester's election, +and in the case of the Court the gifts came quite as readily from +Richard's enemies as from his friends. Within three months of Colchester's +installation, on December 1, 1387, a deed[62] was executed whereby the +Abbot and Convent bound themselves to observe the anniversary of Thomas +of Woodstock, Richard's uncle and at that time his fierce enemy, and of +Eleanor de Bohun, his wife, in return for a splendid gift, which included +vestments of cloth of gold, broidered with their initials, silver-gilt +vessels for the altar, a silver-gilt thurible adorned with images of +the saints, and two silver candlesticks formed of angels bearing the +heraldic shields of the houses of Essex and Hereford.[63] + +Richard's own gifts to the church during Colchester's time were even +more magnifical. On May 28, 1389, there was a royal grant, witnessed by +the Archbishop of Canterbury and many others, conveying to the Convent +a richly adorned chasuble of cloth of gold, two tunicles, three albs, +the orphreys bearing representations of the Holy Trinity, the Virgin Mary, +St. John Baptist, St. Edward the Confessor, St. Edmund the King, and +"a certain Abbess." In 1394, after the death of his beloved Queen, +Anne of Bohemia, came Richard's grant of £200 yearly to maintain an +anniversary for her, and for him when he should depart hence;[64] which +was followed in 1399 by his grant to the Abbey of manors and lands in +Middlesex, Bedfordshire, and Berkshire,[65] whence an equivalent in rents +would be derived in perpetuity. To this gift the Dean and Chapter owe +the advowson of Steventon, Berkshire, which they still retain. On the +other side, it may be admitted that Richard made use of the Abbey's +resources; we have his note of hand for a loan of £100, dated September +11, 1397.[66] To what extent he fostered that building of the Nave, +which our documents speak of as the New Work, has been told in detail +elsewhere.[67] It comes to this, that Colchester's effigy in stained +glass looks into the Nave from a window which probably dates from Henry +III.'s time, but it faces towards Purbeck pillars which were the work +of one of our Abbot's most zealous officers, Peter Coumbe. The portion of +the triforium above his window is also due to Henry III., but in his old +age Colchester may well have seen the workmen busy with the erection of +the corresponding section of the clerestory. + + + + +VII + +THE ABBOT AT HOME + + +As before, if we want to know an Abbot's interests and his manner of +life at home, we shall go to the accounts of his stewards or Seneschals. +His rent-roll is less than Abbot Litlington's, and there are heavier +arrears. The country is greatly unsettled and it is not an easy +time for landholders. We possess a clear "statement[68] of the lands +and apportionments of the lord William by the grace of God Abbot of +Westminster," as audited in the year 1388. The total revenue when fully +paid has fallen to £617 16_s._ 1_d._, but there are arrears amounting to +£104 12_s._ 7_d._ However, if his receipts are less, his stock is still +plentiful; he possesses 58 horses and 19 foals; 351 heads of cattle; +2287 sheep and lambs; and 299 pigs. When he listened to his monks and +lay clerks singing the 144th Psalm, he had every reason to join in the +desire "that our garners may be full and plenteous with all manner of +store: that our sheep may bring forth thousands and ten thousands in +our streets: that our oxen may be strong to labour"; and he knew his +times well enough to ask also that there may be "no complaining in +our streets." + +We have six rolls of his Seneschals between 1388 and 1403, and we may +put together from these the facts that are to be gleaned about him. +At this time, at any rate, he was a man of good health. There is a +slight reference to an indisposition in 1389, and once there is a fee +of one shilling to a doctor for treating his "tibia," which seems to +have been a peculiarly vulnerable part of monkish anatomy. On the other +hand, he does not appear to have been as fond of field sports as his +great predecessor; at least in 1402-3 his steward bought 359 rabbits, 41 +woodcock and a pheasant, which would hardly be necessary if his lordship +were in the habit of inviting the neighbouring gentry to help him keep +down his game. It is evident that his estates are being well managed. +We can tell, for instance, that in 1388-9, on his manors of Eybury, +Denham, Laleham and Pyrford, he sold 215 stone of wool at 1_s._ 9_d._ +a stone. He made red wine at Islip, and his price for it was £2 12_s._ +6_d._ a pipe. The needs of his own establishment were mainly supplied +from Denham and Pyrford, especially the former; for his accounts are +full of small payments to servants who had driven pigs from Denham +to la Neyte. In other words, when he was in town he did not patronize +the Westminster tradesmen, but he purchased supplies from himself as +over-lord of Denham. For these he paid his factor at Denham the current +price, so that the manor could give a good account of its takings at +the end of the year. + +And this careful accountancy went to quite practical lengths. For +instance, the Abbot was wont to receive during each year a large number +of "exennia," which, as we have seen, were complimentary presents +mostly offered in kind. It happens that there is a complete list of +these with the names of the donors for 1388-9. The clergy beneficed +on the estate, such as the rector of Islip, the vicar of Hurley, where +the Abbey had a daughter priory, the rectors of Oddington and Sutton +on the Gloucestershire property, and the vicar of Brailes in Warwickshire; +the heads of the affiliated convents, such as Hurley, Greater Malvern, +Deerhurst, and Pershore; the tenants, such as the miller at Pyrford; +the man who rents the church farm at Longdon; various monks of the +Abbey, such as John Stowe, who brings now a lamb as a peace-offering, now +the results of his skill with the line, a pike or an eel, and now that +which he has taken with his bow, a brace of bittern; and Peter Coumbe, +the Sacrist and warden of the New Work, who offers a swan and a brace +of pheasants. The gifts, in fact, are from all sorts and conditions +of folk. There is the King's larderer with his modest present of fish; +there is Master Thomas Southam, Cardinal Langham's lawyer, who now sends +the Abbot a pipe of red wine, the most costly of all the gifts, in the +hope, no doubt, of continuing to serve his present lordship in a similar +capacity; and, most pathetic of all, there are two women, who claim to +be of the Abbot's kin,[69] and who offer for his acceptance half a dozen +capons. But the point for us is the careful management of his affairs, +which appears in the fact that each of these eighty-three contributions +is entered by the Seneschal at its market-price. The pipe of wine +figures at £2 13_s._ 4_d._; the lamb at 8_d._; the six capons from +the poor relations at 2_s._; and the brace of bittern at 2_s._ 6_d._ +Altogether these tributes towards his maintenance save the expenses +of the mansion by £14 11_s._ 6_d._, and a reference to his steward's +balance-sheet under the head of "outside receipts" shows this exact +sum entered as derived from the "exennia" of divers persons. Prudent +housewifery could scarcely go further. On the other hand, he does not +so treat the presents he receives from the great ones of the earth. When +a stag arrives from Windsor, or a buck from the Baroness Despenser, +the cash value of these compliments is not taken into the account; +there is merely an acknowledgment that certain recognitions in money +have been given to the bearers of the gifts. + +It is natural to ask whether the accounts show signs of luxurious +habits. Certainly not in his furnishing. Thus, in 1401 he was adding to +the accommodation of his London mansion of la Neyte. For his new parlour +he obtained a cupboard for 10_s._, two chairs for 4_s._ 6_d._, six stools +for 4_s._ 4_d._, and a deal table for the same sum. I think (the word +is not quite clear) that he had a curtain provided for his study-window +at a cost of 1_s._ 8_d._; and there was a fireplace in his parlour, +for which his Seneschal laid out 7_d._ upon coal. Certainly not, again, +in wine and strong drink; for his outlay under this head was about a +sixth part of the sum which he spent upon corn and meat. Nor is there +any evidence that he used his position for the enrichment of poor +relations. It may be that we can detect a needy kinsman in one John +Colchester who was granted 3_s._ 4_d._ by my lord's command at la Neyte +in March, 1389, and it was quite possibly for a sister-in-law--the wife of +Thomas Colchester--that he ordered a diamond ring[70] at a cost of 40_s._ +on May 31 of that year, perhaps because it was her birthday. When one of +his servants was sent to Colchester on some personal business of the +Abbot, the man was evidently not expected to comport himself as if his +master's resources were unlimited, for his total expenses were 2_s._ 4_d._ + +The Abbot liked to have one or two of the younger monks around him, +such as John Sandon and Thomas Merke, whom we have met, as Shakespeare +also met him, in the events that gather mysteriously round the end +of Richard II.'s reign. No doubt, they joined him at table in the new +parlour of la Neyte, but the only sign of further bounty towards them was +a gift of 6_s._ 8_d._ to them jointly for a treat--pro gaudiis--a term +which survives in the custom of applying the word "gaudy" to those College +entertainments to which at the moment Oxford is patriotically a stranger. + +When the great man moved about, it was seemingly not with any great +train; otherwise it would hardly be necessary for the Seneschal to +give 1_s._ 8_d._ to a certain man for guiding my lord out of the forest +of Rockingham, as if the Abbot were too lonely to face the possible +appearance of Robin Hood with equanimity. But, of course, there were +exceptional circumstances when he would travel in the dignity of his +position. There was a formal visitation of the manors of Denham, Laleham, +Staines, and Pyrford in 1402-3, which cost over £6, and visits to Henry +IV. in the same year at Ware and Windsor and Berkhamstead, at an expense +of about £4. A short time after, the Abbot had to face a continental +journey, but £4 12_s._ is no great sum to enter as "the expenses of my +lord and his household in setting out for Calais with porterage and the +hire of a boat to take him to the ship, and also the expenses of John +Sandon and John Stowe [two monks] and part of the household on their +way back to London." + +Not a little of his petty expenses arose from the frequency with which he +was officially visited by persons of position who were not too proud to +receive a present of money, and would have resented its absence. They +were mostly content with much less than the 20_s._ imparted to the +Remembrancer of the King's Exchequer, but the gifts of 3_s._ 4_d._ +mounted up when the Abbot must receive now a Herald and his boy, now +the Sheriff of Middlesex and his valet and his boy, now a messenger +with a summons to Parliament, now two criers from the King's Bench, +and all within a brief space of time. + +But Abbot Colchester did indulge one luxury, whether out of a taste for +it or because it was the fashion of the time, I cannot say. He was fond +of being entertained, particularly by musicians; and his Seneschal's +accounts during these six or seven years are full of small payments to +such persons, from a boy who danced before my lord at Walsingham for +6_d._ to Henry the piper--fistulator--who was retained at Pyrford all +Christmas time for 14_s._ He could provide some of this enjoyment from +the resources of the Abbey, as when he made two clerks bring a pair +of organs from Westminster to Pyrford. His chief delight was to have +Master Percyvale and other of the King's minstrels, especially on great +festivals such as St. Peter ad Vincula, and he could listen to Percyvale +for the modest consideration of 2_s._ Evidently it came to be known that +he had tastes of this kind, for William of Wykeham's pipers journeyed +to Pyrford to strut their little hour before the Abbot; Henry Despenser, +the fighting Bishop of Norwich and doughty champion of Richard II., +sent his minstrels to entertain my lord when he was at Birlingham; +the Duke of Gloucester, Thomas of Woodstock, kept a blind harper who +gave a performance at Denham; and the other visitors included the Abbot +of Eynsham's player--lusor--and the musicians of the ill-fated Earl of +Arundel. Even when he was resident for a space in Northampton for the +General Chapter of the Benedictine Order, he was sometimes entertained +by mummers.[71] + +But it would not be fair to think of him as having no desires that +went down to the realities of things. For he lived in troublous times, +and he knew how Christian men should face the serious issues that +then emerged. His duty to the country and to the various properties +for which he stood in trust called him away from Westminster often, +and sometimes for prolonged periods. It is possible by means of the +accounts of his various bailiffs to follow his comings and goings; +for the receipts from the properties must be delivered to the Abbot in +person, and there is thus an entry of the cost of journeying to such +and such a place, wherever he happened to be, and generally of the cost +of one or two horsemen for safety's sake. But the Abbey and the welfare +of his Brethren were in his mind, and he kept a guiding hand upon their +spiritual concerns, particularly in times of trial. There is an instance +of this in a document,[72] which bears no date except August 31, but +which may be assigned with reasonable certainty to Richard II.'s troubled +reign. It is headed in another hand, "W. Abbot of Westminster to the +Prior of the same place"; but this is an error. The Abbot in a quite +exceptional way addresses himself to the officers or obedientiaries +without mentioning the Prior, and I incline to attributing the document to +the latest years of Richard II., because the Prior, John de Wratting,[73] +was then becoming unequal to his duties. It is true that our evidence +for this is dated 1405,[74] but, as Wratting was then over eighty, it +may hold almost as well for seven or eight years earlier. The Abbot's +message is as follows:-- + + "My beloved sons in Christ, + + "The most serene Prince our lord the King has urgently required + of us that in this present time of dire necessity we should be + instant in prayer to the most High with all our hearts for the + good estate of King and country. For enemies without and rebels + within are confederate in their malicious plots to shatter the + peace of the realm. You therefore to whom (under us) belongs the + administration of government in our monastery we hereby urge and + enjoin that, considering what we say above, you should put a + limit upon the Brethren's walks abroad and upon their ridings + into distant parts--except of course in the case of the Monk + Bailiff--until God grants us more peaceful times. Call all and + singular your Brethren to Chapter and bid them from me to be + content with their usual recreation within the house and to give + themselves so much the more earnestly to meditation and prayer as + the distress and wickedness of the times become more pressing. + Go in solemn procession every fourth day round the bounds of the + monastery, and every sixth day through the vill of Westminster, + praying for a successful issue and for the common weal of + the King and the realm--petitions which are already earnestly + commended to the private prayers of all the Brethren. Summon + all the chaplains and clerks dwelling within St. Margaret's + parish to join you, and specially the clerks of our Almonry, + according to custom. Fare you well in Christ now and for ever." + +The Abbot wrote from Denham; but his heart was with his Brethren in a +time of trouble. + +There are also signs that in normal times he was exercising an effect +on the organization of conventual activity. In his roll for 1393-4 the +officer called the Warden of the Churches made entry that he had paid +to Peter Coumbe, as Sacrist, the sum of 32_s._, at the rate of 4_s._ for +each of the Abbey's eight principal feasts, "in accordance with the +recent ordinance of the lord William now Abbot."[75] It is an intimation +that the Abbot was already making his influence felt, and was encouraging +his Brethren to regard the solemnities of divine worship[76] as the +chief care of their monastic life. + + + + +VIII + +THE ABBOT ABROAD + + +But though we may realize that Abbot Colchester loved his Convent and +cherished it, we still have to think of him as being often compelled to +wander far from it. True, he had spent so much time in Rome before his +election, that he was able to escape in 1390 the triennial visit _ad +limina_ which was normally expected of an Abbot. He was represented +on that occasion by John Borewell, an active and efficient monk, who +had succeeded him in the Archdeaconry in 1387; he was also represented +by the gifts of himself and his Brethren on the occasion of the year of +Jubilee, which are carefully recorded in the _Liber Niger_ (f. 92). But +that exemption did not avail to keep him at home, for we are told that on +December 14, 1391, he set out for the Continent on the King's business, +the King being responsible for his travelling charges and his safe +conduct.[77] + +[Illustration: ABBOT COLCHESTER'S SEAL.] + +In 1393 he was commissioned by the Pope to join the Bishop of Salisbury +and the Abbot of Waltham in an inquiry into the statutes and customs of +the Collegiate Chapter of the Chapel in Windsor Castle, and to correct +and reform these, where they seemed to need it.[78] John de Waltham, +Bishop of Salisbury, and our Abbot were there associated not for the +first time or the last. Two years later the Bishop died, and was buried +by Richard's desire in the Confessor's Chapel. Waltham was a successful +favourite, without claim to royal sepulture, and we may assume that +Colchester and the Convent were among the many who protested. It is, +perhaps, not unfair to assert that "the Abbey was well considered for +this," or that the monks' "scruples were overborne by gifts of money and +vestments."[79] Yet it is a fact that, whereas the Bishop was buried +in 1395, the indenture tripartite,[80] which dealt with the use to be +made of the gifts, was not drawn up till July 15, 1412. It recites +that the Bishop, who had served the Kings of England from his boyhood +in their Chancery and in other and higher offices, was buried among +the tombs of the Kings;[81] that at the sight of his bier--we must, +no doubt, think of Abbot Colchester as standing by--Richard II. had +given to the Abbey a rich "Jesse" vestment valued at 1000 marks, and +that the executors had added another vestment valued at £40 and 500 +marks in money. Colchester and the Convent covenanted to observe the +Bishop's obit--September 18--which we know they did to the last. They also +admitted into their company one of the Bishop's executors, Ralph Selby, +Archdeacon of Buckingham, giving him precedence next to the Prior with +corresponding privileges, and granting him, in 1402-3, a yearly pension +of £4. This does not support the notion of the Convent's hostility to +John de Waltham; at the same time it occurs too late to be reckoned +as a bargain entered into for the purpose of securing to the Bishop +a posthumous honour which they were unwilling to accord, even when +Richard II. asked for it. + +I pass by Colchester's part, if he took any, in Richard's journey to +Ireland in 1399;[82] for our records throw no light on what did not +concern the Convent. There appears to be no doubt that he was confederate +with the Earls of Rutland, Huntingdon, Kent, and Salisbury, who were +at first confided to his safe-keeping by Henry IV.; that he took part +on December 17, 1399, in a secret gathering of the conspirators within +the Abbey; that he was arrested, and sent first to Reigate and then, +January 25, 1400, to the Tower; and that he was released, after a trial +there held on February 4.[83] He had, of course, received Henry IV. when +he made his progress to Westminster on October 12, 1399, and had taken +part in the coronation on the following day.[84] + +But inside the Convent there was an evident desire to eschew +partisanships, as any one can realize who reads Roger Cretton's bare +and impartial record in the _Liber Niger_.[85] I therefore pass from +public questions and take up an otherwise undated letter[86] of the Abbot, +written from Cologne on October 10, to two important Westminster monks +whom we have already had before us, Peter Coumbe and John Borewell. +It reveals Colchester's close interest in Abbey affairs, however far +away he might be, and it is even somewhat peremptory in tone. For he +had referred to them some detail of monastic business, and says that +he is daily awaiting their answer, in order that he may take action +accordingly. The Convent, he adds, is to receive with due honour a +relation of the Bishop of Lincoln, remembering that his lordship has +always been gracious to them in matters of conventual concern. + +We must try to fix the date of this journey through Cologne, and some +things can be soon settled. It must be before 1409-10, when John Borewell +died.[87] He was in office as Granger, Kitchener, Cellarer, and Gardener +almost till his death, and he had been in partnership with Peter Coumbe, +as manager of the funds provided for Queen Anne's anniversary,[88] +from 1394 to 1399. But who is the Bishop of Lincoln? It is tempting to +think of the princely Henry Beaufort, the most potent holder of the see +at this period; if so, the journey would fall at some time before 1404, +when Beaufort was translated to Winchester, and thus it might even be +got just within the limits of the partnership above-mentioned, for he +was appointed to Lincoln in 1398. But we have evidence pointing to 1407 +and 1408 as the time with which the visit to Cologne must be connected, +and bringing Henry Beaufort's help and Abbot Colchester's travels into +further association. It is a tattered paper document[89] which states +that when Colchester was in foreign parts in 1407,[90] the collector +of Romescot for the county of Surrey doubled his demand upon the +chapels of Pyrford and Horsell from 12-1/2_d._ each to 25_d._ each, and +laid them under interdict when payment was refused. But the Bishop of +Winchester issued a special mandate to the collector to desist from the +exaction. Beaufort was therefore not abroad at the time with Colchester, +but was defending his interests at home. But both Colchester and Philip +Repingdon, Bishop of Lincoln, were in Italy in 1408. Colchester was at +Lucca and Pisa in May, supporting the Cardinals who were struggling +with Gregory XII.,[91] and his old friend, Bishop Merke, was with +him. At Siena, on September 18, Gregory created ten new Cardinals, +and one of these was Philip Repingdon.[92] It would be natural that he +and Colchester should then meet, possibly travelling homeward together, +and being in Cologne on October 10. + +[Illustration: CORONATION OF HENRY V.] + +The matter of the augmented Romescot was brought to an end at Guildford, +says the document, after the Abbot's return to England, July 22, +1412. This must not be interpreted to mean a continuous absence of five +years, 1407-12, for we have seen the Abbot on his homeward way in 1408, +and know that in July, 1411, he presided alone over the General Chapter +of Benedictines at Northampton.[93] His absence in 1412, which is also +substantiated by his bailiffs' payments to a substitute, was due to one +more journey to Rome; for the account of the "Novum Opus" for 1412-3 +enters payment, by consent of the Prior and the Seniors, of the large +sum of £33 to the Abbot for the acceleration of certain concerns of +the church in the Roman Court. It is possible that this journey took +place in the autumn; for great events at home, in which the Abbot had +some share, marked the months which followed. Early in 1413[94] Henry +IV. had a seizure while at his devotions in the Abbey, and we should like +to know whether the Abbot was in town and gave his instructions for +the King's removal to the noblest apartment in the abbatial residence, +Jerusalem Chamber, where he died on March 20. It does not appear that +Colchester took any part in the royal obsequies, but there is no doubt +that he assisted at the coronation of Henry V. in the Abbey church on +that snowy Passion Sunday, April 9, 1413. For when the King's chantry +was built, about twenty years after Colchester's death, its famous +sculptures included two Coronation groups--perhaps, the acclamation and +the homage[95]--in each of which the Abbot is represented as standing, +in cope and mitre, on the King's left hand, Thomas Arundel, the Archbishop +of Canterbury, being on the King's right hand. We may also assume that +Colchester was at Westminster to receive Henry, when he attended divine +service in the church on Ascension Day and Whitsunday of that year.[96] +The new King's devotion to the Abbey was beyond question, and his zeal +for the immediate resumption of the New Work in the nave would tend to +keep the Abbot at hand. Operations began on July 7, one thousand marks +a year being granted by the Crown;[97] and Colchester would see things +well in train under the hands of Richard Whitington and Brother Richard +Harwden, before he left the precincts once more. + +Possibly he had a rest from travel in the year 1413-4; at least we have +nothing more serious to notice than his Receiver's payment of 8_d._ for +boat hire "when my lord dined with the Archbishop at Lambhyth." But +the autumn of 1414 saw him once more setting out for foreign parts; +for Henry chose him as one of the English delegates to the great +Council of Constance.[98] People spoke of the greatness of his train +as he journeyed. Dr. Wylie remarks that he "was looked upon by the +foreigners as a prince."[99] Perhaps he himself thought sometimes of the +very different circumstances in which he and his man Gerard had crossed +the Channel in fear and trembling, seven and thirty years earlier. He +had been already engaged, as collector of the triennial contribution of +1/2_d._ in the mark imposed on English Benedictine houses, in paying out +loans for their journey to the Abbot of St. Edmundsbury and the Prior of +Worcester, who were the delegates from the Order to the same Council, +and in sending fees to the various counsel who were retained by the +Order at Constance. We have his triennial accounts as collector for 1417 +and 1420,[100] which show that the business of the Council hung about +him for the rest of his days; even in the latter, made up long after +Constance had seen the last of its visitors, he was still reckoning the +cost of a monk of Worcester's journey to Constance and back. + +How long he remained at Constance, and what part he took in the tortuous +proceedings, we do not know. The spring and summer of 1415 were anxious +times in England, and Henry V. would be glad to have so shrewd an adviser +within reach. The Abbot was now about seventy-seven years of age, and the +lust of travel must have long since ceased. The King's writ went forth +in May for the "Array and Munitioning of the Clergy" by July 16,[101] +and the head of our House would be concerned to see that Westminster did +its duty, _per alios_ if not _per se_. Our Treasurers' roll for 1414-5 +shows how Abbot and Convent performed their several parts:-- + + "For one new chariot with six horses in the same, over and above + one [chariot] provided by the lord Abbot, and with a complete set + of harness for the said chariot and for the horses pertaining + thereto--the whole being bought and given to our lord the King + on the occasion of his expedition to France, together with the + wages of a valet, a groom, and a page for the said chariot, + and cloth bought for their livery, besides the maintenance of + the men and the horses aforesaid for three weeks, pending the + King's departure for France this year. xxxiii. li. xii. d." + +If we may take it that the Abbot's expenditure on his chariot was of the +same extent, we have a total outlay of £66, or about £1000 of our money. + +Colchester's generally good health began to fail in 1416, and his +apothecary was called in to apply various remedies at a fee of 16_s._ +8_d._[102] At home he could still find interest in watching the progress +of the New Work, for the north aisle of the nave was being proceeded +with and the pillars of the triforium above it were being put in their +place.[103] If Henry's gifts for the purpose failed to reach Henry's +expectations and the Convent's, that is only another way of saying that +Colchester's aged thoughts were often occupied with the expedition to +France and the scenes that he knew so familiarly. He may have taken part +in the rejoicings over the victory of Agincourt; he certainly received +a special message about the capture of Rouen in 1418.[104] + +He died in 1420 at a good old age, probably fourscore and two, and in +the 34th year of his Abbacy. The exact day is not recorded. We know that +there was much mortality in the Convent during 1419-20. When the Wardens +of Queen Alianore's Manors made up their accounts to Michaelmas (they did +so generally about November), they wrote at the end a sorrowful list of +twelve names with a note that "all these died this year together with the +lord Abbot and Brother Thomas Peuerel." Thus in strictness we might put +his death before September 29. But the rolls were by no means precise in +the matter, and often included those who died at any time before the day +on which the accounts were balanced. Moreover, we have the royal licence +to the Convent to elect a successor,[105] which is dated November 12, +1420. We may therefore suppose that Colchester died late in October or +early in November. He was buried in the Chapel of St. John Baptist, +where his much battered free-stone image lies on an altar-tomb. His +initials still remain, but the heraldry has long since perished, and +his mitre and gloves have lost the jewels that once adorned them. It +adds insult to this injury that his countenance should be described as +"stern and ill-favoured."[106] + +But the character behind the countenance is not difficult to sum up. +In his own day he was reckoned to be a man of shrewd judgment and wide +experience; we have noted the far-travelled uses that were made of him +by the Convent and by the Crown, and we can conclude that his judgment +increased in shrewdness as his experience extended in width. Indeed, +he retained this quality to the last. We have seen that there is still +extant an account of his official disbursements in behalf of the General +Chapter of the Benedictines at Northampton for the last year of his life, +1420.[107] It includes payments made, for special services rendered, +to two Westminster monks, who had been bidden to attend the conference. +They were Richard Harwden and Edmund Kirton, and each was appointed Abbot +of Westminster in his turn. It is not every man of eighty-two who is +shrewd enough to pick out his successors for the next forty years, and +at the same time large-hearted enough to give them every encouragement +to fit themselves for the office which he holds. Indeed, his was the +kind of character to which justice can only be done after a lapse of +time. It is necessary to look back at the men who, noting his shrewdness, +came to a conviction that he was also just and trustworthy--Richard II., +who opposed his election as Abbot, but lived to prove his friendship; +Henry IV., who knew his friendship for Richard, and at first treated +him accordingly, but afterwards found no reason to regret the clemency +shown to him; Henry V., who appreciated his devotion to Richard, and +did not honour him the less because of Henry IV.'s early suspicions; +and the Cardinals and others who met him in the tortuous paths by which +ecclesiastical diplomacy was trying to make its way towards the peace +of the distracted Church. We may leave on William Colchester's memorial +an inscription taken from a letter addressed to him by Thomas Merke, +Bishop of Carlisle, who was conveying to the Abbot a request that he +would use his influence at the Roman Court on behalf of Merton Hall, +Oxford. We shall admit that Merke was his intimate friend, and shall +remember that Colchester showed his own affection for Merke by arranging +that the Bishop should be commemorated at Hurley Priory along with the +Abbot's parents.[108] Merke's witness, however, may still be true. +"Men like," he wrote, "to know your Paternity's views on these matters, +for they observe your solidity, which is a rare virtue in these days, +and they give you their confidence all the more."[109] No other Abbot +ruled our House as long as he; nor could any man of his line desire a +more satisfying verdict on his character. + + + + +INDEX + + + Agincourt, battle of, 10, 85 + Aldenham, Herts, church of, 16, 44 + Alianore, Queen, manors of, 85 + Almonry, clerks of the, 71 + Anagni, 37, 39 + Anne of Bohemia, wife of Richard II., 58, 78 + Armour, an Abbot's, 53 + Arundel, Earl of, 68 + Arundel, Thomas, Archbishop of Canterbury, 81 f. + Atte Belle, Richard, highwayman, 45 + Avignon, 32 f., 35 f., 39 + + + Beaufort, Henry, Bishop of Winchester, 78 f. + Benedictines, general chapters of, 19, 22, 69, 80, 82, 86 + Berkhamstead, 66 + Birlingham, manor of, 68 + Bohun, Eleanor de, Duchess of Gloucester, 57 + Borewell, John, Archdeacon, 73, 77 f. + Briefs, funeral, 51 + Bruges, 32 n., 34 f., 40 + Burgh, John, monk, 53 + + + Calais, 34, 40, 67 + Cambridge, 17 + Cambridge, Earl of, 26 + Canterbery, John, monk, 51 n., 53 + Chamberlain, duties and accounts of, 41 f. + Chambers, or camerae, monks', 47-50 + Chapter House, 30 + Charing Cross, 47 f., 56 + Clehungre, William, monk, 28 + Clergy, Array and Munitioning of the, 83 + Cloisters, Little, 48 + Colchester, 15, 16, 65; + Priory of St. Botolph at, 15 f.; + parish of St. Nicholas, 15; + castle of, 16 + Colchester, John, 65 + Colchester, Thomas, 65 + Colchester, William [de], Abbot, portrait in Nave window, 11, 58; + in Shakespeare's _Richard II._, 14; + native of St. Nicholas' parish, Colchester, 15 f.; + parents and relations, 17, 65; + First Mass, 18; + probable date of birth, 19; + at Oxford, 19 f.; + promoted in Refectory, 20; + at general chapter, Northampton, 22; + Abbot's Seneschal, 24 ff.; + Convent Treasurer, 27; + proctor at Rome, 30 ff., 41 ff.; + attempts to secure Priorship for, 42; + Archdeacon, 43 ff.; + his sheep, 46; + his pension, 47; + election as Abbot, 54 ff.; + installation, 56; + details of his establishment, 60 ff.; + orders prayers in war-time, 70 f.; + ordinance for payment to obedientiaries, 71; + supporter of Richard II., imprisoned by Henry IV., 76; + letter from Cologne, 77-79; + at coronation of Henry V., 81; + at Council of Constance, 82 f.; + chariot provided by, 83; + death of, 85; + tomb of, 86; + character of, 87 f. + Cologne, 77-79 + Compromission, election by, 55 + Constance, Council of, 82 f. + Coumbe, Peter, monk, 59, 63, 71, 77 f. + Covent Garden, 47 f. + Cretton, or Kyrton, Roger, monk, 47, 76 + + + Dauphiné, 35 + Deerhurst, Prior of, 63 + Denham, manor of, 61, 66, 68, 71 + Despenser, Baroness, 64 + Despenser, Henry, Bishop of Norwich, 68 + Domesday chartulary, 48 + Durham, Hatfield, Bishop of, 26 + + + Edmund the King, St., 58 + Edward, Black Prince, 26 f. + Edward the Confessor, St., 22, 56 f.; + chapel of, 74; + ring of, 53 + Edward III., 24, 26, 34 + Excestr', Richard, Prior, 26, 42, 49-51 + Exchequer, Remembrancer of the, 67 + Exennia, given to monks, 18, 21; + to Abbots, 62 ff. + Eybury, manor of, 61 + Eynsham, Abbot of, 68 + + + Farnago, John, monk, 36 + _Flacones_, or pancakes, 27 ff. + + + Gloucester Hall, Oxford, 19 + Gregory XI., Pope, 32, 37 f. + Gregory XII., Pope, 79 + + + Halle, William, monk, 42 + Harwden, Richard, monk, 81; + Abbot, 86 f. + Hatfield, Thomas, Bishop of Durham, 26 + Hawle, Robert, 39 + Henry III., 11 f., 48, 58 f. + Henry IV., 14 f., 66, 76, 80, 87 + Henry V., 10, 80-84, 87 + Horsell, Surrey, 79 + Hotspur, Harry, 24 + Hurley, Berks., Priory of, 17, 62 f., 88 + + + Infirmarer, 78 n. + Infirmary, chambers in the, 48 + Islip, manor of, 62 + + + James, Dr. M. R., Provost of King's, 47 n., 50, 52 n. + Jerusalem Chamber, 52, 80 + + + Kelvin, Lord, 9 f. + Kirton, Edmund, Abbot, 87 + Kitchener or _Coquinarius_, 28, 78 + + + Lakyngheth, John, monk, 35, 54 + Laleham, manor of, 62, 66 + Langham, Simon, Abbot and Cardinal, 19, 32, 36, 38, 63 + Langley, Edmund, Earl of Cambridge, 26 + Lethaby, Prof. W. R., 12 + _Liber Niger Quaternus_, 39 n., 47, 53, 73, 76 + Litlington, Nicholas, Abbot, 19, 24-27, 44 f., 48, 51 n., 52-54 + London, Tower of, 39, 76 + + + Malvern, Prior of, 63 + March, Philippa, Countess of, 23 f. + Marseilles, 36, 39 + Mary, the Virgin, girdle of St., 22 f. + Merke, or Merks, Thomas, Bishop of Carlisle, 14, 66, 79, 87 f. + Merton Hall, Oxford, 88 + Monk-Bailiff, 16 + Musicians, Abbot Colchester's favour to, 67 f. + + + Nave, the New Work in, 58 f., 63, 80 f., 84 + Neyte, la, mansion of, 52, 62, 64, 66 + Northampton, 22, 69, 80, 86 + + + Organs at Westminster, 68 + Oxford, Benedictine students at, 19, 26; + "Gaudies" at, 66; + Merton Hall, 88 + + + Pampeluna, Cardinal of, 38 + Pancakes, monks', 27 ff. + Percyvale, Master, King's musician, 68 + Pershore, 63 + Pestilence, Great, 19 + Peuerel, Thomas, monk, 85 + Poets' Corner, 11 f. + Polo, Marco, Book of, 50 + _Polychronicon_, 55 n., 56 + Pyrford, manor of, 62, 66, 68, 79 + + + Rackham, Rev. R. B., 81 n., 84 n. + Reigate, 76 + Repingdon, Philip, Bishop of Lincoln, 79 + Richard II., 12, 14, 28, 53-58, 66, 68, 70, 74-76, 87 + Robinson, Dr. J. Armitage, Dean of Wells, 10, 32 n., 52 n., + 53 n., 54, 72, 83 + Rome, 31, 33, 37-43, 80, 88 + Romescot, collection of, 79 + Rouen, capture of, 85 + + + Sacrist, 23, 63, 71 + St. Edmundsbury, Abbot of, 82 + St. John Baptist, chapel of, 86 + St. Margaret, Westminster, parish of, 71 + St. Peter ad Vincula, feast of, 68 + St. Stephen's, Westminster, Dean and Canons of, 30 ff., 43 + Salisbury, William de Montacute, Earl of, 44 f. + Sanctuary, 39, 45 + Sandon, John, monk, 65, 67 + Scott, Dr. E., Keeper of Muniments, 13 + Selby, Ralph, Archdeacon of Buckingham, monk, 75 + Seneschal, or steward, the Abbot's, 22, 24, 45 n., 60 ff. + Sergeaunt, John, _Annals of Westminster School_, 29 + Skilla, or Refectory bell, 21 + Southam, Thomas, Archdeacon of Oxford, 32, 35, 39 f., 63 + Staines, manor of, 66 + Stanley, Dr. A. P., Dean of Westminster, 11 n. + Steventon, Berks., 58 + Stowe, John, monk, 63, 67 + Sutton, Gloucs., 62 + + + Tivoli, 39 + + + Urban VI., Pope, 38 f. + + + Waltham, Abbot of, 74 + Waltham, John de, Bishop of Salisbury, 74-76 + Ware, 66 + Ware, Richard de, Abbot, 22, 44 + Warwick, Earl of, 26 + Westminster Abbey, memorial windows, 10; + Muniment room, 11, 13; + Poets' Corner, 11 f.; + Abbot's rent-roll, 24, 60; + pancakes at, 27 ff.; + Monk-Bailiff, 16; Treasurer, 19 f.; + Refectory, 21; + Abbot's Seneschal, 22, 24 ff., 45 n.; + Sacrist, 23; + Kitchener, 27 f.; + Chapter House, 30; + suit against St. Stephen's Chapel, Westminster, 31 ff.; + enriched by Langham's will, 36; + murder in the choir of, 39; + Archdeacon of, 43 ff.; + Lady Chapel, 47; + Convent Garden, 47 f.; + royal gifts to, 57 f.; + New Work in Nave, 58 f., 63, 80 f., 84; + prayers in war-time at, 70 f.; + Confessor's Chapel, 74 f.; + Henry IV.'s death at, 80; + Henry V.'s chantry, 81 + Westminster Abbey, Almonry, clerks of, 71 + Westminster Abbey, _Customary_ of, 18, 22 f., 44 + Westminster Abbey, Monks of, how named, 15; + how admitted, 17 f.; + exennia given to, 18; + Great Pestilence among, 19; + at Oxford, 19 f.; + clothing of, 41 f.; + chambers or camerae for, 47-50; + funerals of, 51; + in armour, 53; + chariot provided by, 83. + Westminster Abbey, parish of St. Margaret, 71 + Westminster Abbey, Sanctuary at, 39, 45 + Westminster School, "greese" at, 29 + Whittington, Richard, 81 + Windsor Castle, 64, 66 + Windsor Castle, St. George's Chapel in, 31, 74 + Woodstock, Thomas of, Duke of Gloucester, 57, 68 + Worcester, Prior of, 82 + Wratting, John de, Prior, 43 n., 70 + Wykeham, William of, 27, 68 + Wylie, Dr. J. H., 79 n., 81 n., 82 + + + * * * * * + +PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED, LONDON AND BECCLES. + + * * * * * + + + + +FOOTNOTES + + + + +[Footnote 1: "Such were the Abbots of Westminster," says Dean +Stanley (_Memorials_, 3rd ed., p. 394), after recording the +little that he knew of them, adding that, "if from the Abbots +we descend to the Monks their names are still more obscure."] + +[Footnote 2: Act iv. sc. 1, ll. 332-3.] + +[Footnote 3: Act v. sc. 6, ll. 19-21.] + +[Footnote 4: _Mun._ 5259.] + +[Footnote 5: _Mun._ 5260, A.] + +[Footnote 6: The reader who wishes to know what parts of this ancient and +interesting church were known to Abbot Colchester may be referred to the +details and the plan given in the Herts. volume of the Royal Commission +on Historical Monuments, 1911, p. 31 f.] + +[Footnote 7: _Mun._ 3571; October 5, 1411.] + +[Footnote 8: _Customary of Canterbury and Westminster_, H.B.S. i. 261, +404.] + +[Footnote 9: This custom will be treated in greater detail in the +introduction to a Register of the Westminster Benedictines, which will +be issued shortly.] + +[Footnote 10: Reyner, _de Antiq. Benedict. in Anglia_, App., p. 55.] + +[Footnote 11: This sum is roughly equivalent to that which an economical +undergraduate spends at the present time.] + +[Footnote 12: Cf. _Flete_, ed. J. Armitage Robinson, p. 70.] + +[Footnote 13: The inventories of the Monasteries imply that the blessed +Virgin was industrious with her needle.] + +[Footnote 14: _Customary_, ii. 49: Idem vero secretarius zonam beatae Dei +genetricis, ubicumque destinetur, sumptibus suis portare vel, si per alios +portatur, expensas eis exhibere tenetur, cum vectura, si forte indigeat.] + +[Footnote 15: Thomas Hatfield, Bishop of Durham, 1345-81.] + +[Footnote 16: _Mun._ 27968.] + +[Footnote 17: John Sergeaunt, _Annals of Westminster School_, pp. 57, +130.] + +[Footnote 18: The building is still in the sole care of His Majesty's +Office of Works.] + +[Footnote 19: Cf. J. T. Smith, _Antiquities of Westminster_, 1807, p. 38, +etc.] + +[Footnote 20: J. T. Smith, _Antiquities of Westminster_, 1807, p. 100; +Widmore, _History of Westminster Abbey_, pp. 103-4.] + +[Footnote 21: _Mun._ 9256, C, D.] + +[Footnote 22: The manuscript actually says July; but what follows shows +this to be an error; _e.g._ he was at Bruges for the two feasts of June +24 and June 29.] + +[Footnote 23: Cf. J. Armitage Robinson, _Simon Langham, Ch. Quart. Rev._, +July, 1908, p. 358.] + +[Footnote 24: Cf. L. Pastor, _Geschichte der Päpste_, i. p. 109.] + +[Footnote 25: Non potuit reperire societatem versus Auinionem.] + +[Footnote 26: Propter diuersitatem lingue et viarum discrimina in +partibus transmarinis.] + +[Footnote 27: Prout modus est patrie.] + +[Footnote 28: Infirmabatur per viam quasi ad mortem.] + +[Footnote 29: _Mun._ 9228.] + +[Footnote 30: Widmore, p. 191; _Mun._ 9225.] + +[Footnote 31: Pastor, _Gesch. d. P._ i. p. 113.] + +[Footnote 32: See the account in Pastor, _Gesch. d. P._; and Creighton, +_Hist. of the Papacy_, i. 61 ff.] + +[Footnote 33: Creighton, _ibid._, p. 67.] + +[Footnote 34: Cf. _Lib. Nig. Quat._ f. 88b, 89; J. C. Cox, _Sanctuaries_, +p. 51 f.; G. M. Trevelyan, _England in the Age of Wycliffe_, p. 87.] + +[Footnote 35: Quod non erat ausus transire per Calis' propter metum +aduersariorum.] + +[Footnote 36: _Mun._ 9503.] + +[Footnote 37: Viz. John de Wratting, Colchester's senior by about +eighteen years.] + +[Footnote 38: Cf. _Mun._ 18478, D.] + +[Footnote 39: _Customary_, ii. 95.] + +[Footnote 40: _Mun._ 5260, A.; December 3, 1407.] + +[Footnote 41: _Mun._ 9615.] + +[Footnote 42: On the other hand, Colchester may have come into the +affair either as Abbot's Seneschal or as Convent Treasurer.] + +[Footnote 43: _Mun._ 5984.] + +[Footnote 44: Indentura Willelmi Colchester de ouibus suis ad firmam +dimissis.] + +[Footnote 45: Cf. Robinson and James, _Manuscripts of Westminster Abbey_, +p. 96 f.] + +[Footnote 46: F. 507-69.] + +[Footnote 47: _Mun._ 6603.] + +[Footnote 48: Tabularium cum familia.] + +[Footnote 49: Debiles.] + +[Footnote 50: Cf. Col. H. Yule, _Marco Polo_, vol. i., Introd., §§ 75-8.] + +[Footnote 51: There are corresponding records in the cases of Abbot +Litlington (_ob._ 1386), _Mun._ 5446, and of John Canterbery (_ob._ +1400), _Mun._ 18883.] + +[Footnote 52: In manerio de la Neyte, hora prandendi (_Lib. Nig. Quat._ +f. 86).] + +[Footnote 53: Cf. J. Armitage Robinson, _The Abbot's House at Westminster_, +chap. ii., and Robinson and James, _Manuscripts of Westminster Abbey_, +pp. 7 ff.] + +[Footnote 54: See an article by the Dean of Wells on the Array of the +Clergy in July, 1415 (_Nineteenth Century and After_, July, 1915, p. 86).] + +[Footnote 55: _Mun._ 5446.] + +[Footnote 56: Cf. J. Armitage Robinson, _An Unrecognised Westminster +Chronicler_, pp. 16, 22.] + +[Footnote 57: _Lib. Nig. Quat._ f. 86, says December 10, 1386; but the +Westminster chronicler in the _Polychronicon_ (see J. Armitage Robinson, +_op. cit._, pp. 9, 22) says December 21. It is suggested that the +difference of eleven days represents the period during which the King +was supporting the cause of Lakyngheth.] + +[Footnote 58: _Mun._ 5431.] + +[Footnote 59: Volens sicut alias cassare electionem et electo postea +providere; Higden, _Polychronicon_, ix. pp. 98, 102; Robinson, _op. cit._, +pp. 9, 23.] + +[Footnote 60: _Flete_, p. 138.] + +[Footnote 61: April 18, 1388, p. 178.] + +[Footnote 62: _Mun._ 9474.] + +[Footnote 63: For the graves of the Duke and his wife, see E. T. Murray +Smith, _Roll Call of W.A._, p. 51 f.] + +[Footnote 64: _Mun._ 5257.] + +[Footnote 65: _Mun._ 7579.] + +[Footnote 66: _Mun._ 5922.] + +[Footnote 67: R. B. Rackham, _Nave of Westminster_, pp. 8-12.] + +[Footnote 68: _Mun._ 6165.] + +[Footnote 69: De consanguinitate domini, ut dicunt.] + +[Footnote 70: Anulus de auro com diamandys.] + +[Footnote 71: Interlusores.] + +[Footnote 72: _Mun._ 6221.] + +[Footnote 73: His record will be given in the Register referred to on +p. 18, note.] + +[Footnote 74: _Mun._ 9500.] + +[Footnote 75: Ex noua ordinacione domini Willelmi nunc Abbatis. The +ordinance applied to other obedientiaries.] + +[Footnote 76: The Dean of Wells edited in 1908, for use in his chapel, +a service of Compline derived from a Bodleian manuscript (Rawl. Liturg. +g 10) which belongs to our Abbot's period.] + +[Footnote 77: _Lib. Nig. Quat._, f. 87b: et dominus Rex suscepit eum et +omnia bona sua in proteccione sua.] + +[Footnote 78: _Kal. Pap. Registers_, iii. 456.] + +[Footnote 79: Widmore, p. 109; E. T. Murray Smith, _Roll Call_, p. 53.] + +[Footnote 80: _Mun._ 5262, A.] + +[Footnote 81: Infra regiam sepulturam.] + +[Footnote 82: Thomas Merke, Bishop of Carlisle, is mentioned, but not +Colchester, in the list of those summoned to attend the King. Rymer, +_Foedera_.] + +[Footnote 83: J. H. Wylie, _Henry IV._, vol. i. pp. 91, 92, 108.] + +[Footnote 84: _Ibid._, p. 44.] + +[Footnote 85: Lib. Nig. Quat., f. 86b:-- + + Anno Domini millesimo ccc xcixº et regni regis Ricardi + secundi xxiii incipiente. In vigilia Nativitatis sancti Johannis + Baptiste venit Henricus dux Herford versus Angliam Et in vigilia + apostolorum petri et pauli venerunt prima noua ad Westm de + aduentu ipsius. Et iiii^{to} die Julij applicuit apud Pylevyng. + + In vigilia sancti petri advincula fugit Rex Ricardus secundus a + facie ducis Henrici Et postea in vigilia Assumpcionis beate marie + captus est et se submisit ordinacioni prelatorum et procerum + Anglie. + + In crastino sancti laurentii feria secunda venerunt Londonienses + ad Inquirendum Regem Ricardum II^{um}.] + +[Footnote 86: _Mun._ 1653.] + +[Footnote 87: Infirmarer's account, 1409-10.] + +[Footnote 88: Administrator participationis Anne Regine.] + +[Footnote 89: _Mun._ 1676.] + +[Footnote 90: There is another means of verifying the Abbot's absence +daring this year. His farm-bailiffs, whose duty was to deliver rents to +him personally, paid them at this time to the Abbot's Receiver instead.] + +[Footnote 91: Widmore, p. 110; J. H. Wylie, _Henry IV._, iii. p. 349; +Creighton, _Hist. of the Papacy_, i. p. 218.] + +[Footnote 92: Wylie, _op. cit._, p. 348.] + +[Footnote 93: _Lib. Nig. Quat._ f. 90.] + +[Footnote 94: About Mid-Lent; J. H. Wylie, _Henry IV._, iv. p. 103.] + +[Footnote 95: Sir W. H. St. John Hope, _Funeral, Monument, and Chantry +Chapel of Henry V._, p. 173.] + +[Footnote 96: Cf. J. H. _Wylie, Henry V._, p. 203.] + +[Footnote 97: The details are given in R. B. Rackham, _Nave of +Westminster_, pp. 13-17.] + +[Footnote 98: Rymer, _Foedera_.] + +[Footnote 99: J. H. Wylie, _The Council of Constance_, p. 80.] + +[Footnote 100: _Mun._ 12395, 12397.] + +[Footnote 101: Cf. J. Armitage Robinson, _Array of the Clergy, Nineteenth +Century and After_, July, 1915, p. 87.] + +[Footnote 102: Abbot's Receiver's roll, 1416-7.] + +[Footnote 103: Rackham, _Nave_, p. 16.] + +[Footnote 104: Et dat' seruienti principalis Baronis portanti noua de +captione ciuitatis Rothemagensis (Abbot's Receiver's roll, 1417-8).] + +[Footnote 105: _Mun._ 5440.] + +[Footnote 106: Neale and Brayley, _Westminster Abbey_, ii. p. 184.] + +[Footnote 107: _Mun._ 12397.] + +[Footnote 108: _Mun._ 3571; _see_ above, p. 17.] + +[Footnote 109: _Mun._ 9240. Vident etenim vestram soliditatem, que rara +virtus est modernis diebus, et illo specialius in vobis confidunt.] + + * * * * * + + + + + PUBLICATIONS OF THE + Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge + + +=Alcuin of York.= + + By the Right Rev. G. F. BROWNE, D.D., D.C.L. With numerous + Illustrations, Small post 8vo, cloth boards. 5_s._ net. + +=Augustine and his Companions.= + + By the Right Rev. G. F. BROWNE, D.D., D.C.L. 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H. Pearce. +</title> +<style type="text/css"> + body { margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; } + p { text-indent: 1em; + margin-top: .75em; + font-size: 100%; + text-align: justify; + margin-bottom: .75em; } + h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 { text-align: center; } + hr { width: 50%; margin: 1.5em auto 1.5em auto; } + hr.full { width: 100%; margin: 1.5em auto 1.5em auto; } + .foot { margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; + text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; } + .poem { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 10%; + margin-bottom: 1em; text-align: left; } + .poem .stanza { margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em; } + .poem p { margin: 0; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em; } + .poem p.i2 { margin-left: 1.5em; } + .quote { margin-left: 6%; margin-right: 6%; + text-indent: 0em; font-size: 90%; } + .figure { margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; + text-indent: 0em; text-align: center; font-size: 90%; } + .center { text-indent: 0; text-align: center; } + .right { text-indent: 0; text-align: right; } + .sc { font-variant: small-caps; } + a,img { text-decoration: none!important; border:none!important; } + table { margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; width: 75%; } + td { padding: 0em .5em 0em .5em; } + ul { list-style: none; } + span.pagenum { position: absolute; left: 1%; right: 91%; + font-size: 8pt; color: gray; background-color: inherit; } + + #triple1,#triple2 { clear:both; overflow: hidden; } + #triple1 li { float: left; display: inline; width: 33.333%; } + #triple2 li { float: left; display: inline; width: 33.333%; } +</style> +<link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" /> +</head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of William de Colchester, by Ernest Harold Pearce + +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: William de Colchester + Abbot of Westminster + +Author: Ernest Harold Pearce + +Release Date: August 3, 2011 [EBook #36968] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WILLIAM DE COLCHESTER *** + + + + +Produced by Louise Pryor, David Garcia and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This +book was produced from scanned images of public domain +material from the Google Print project.) + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<div style="height: 2em;"><br /><br /></div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="nopage1" name="nopage1"></a>[pg]</span></p> + + +<div class="figure"> +<a name="image-0001"><!--IMG--></a> +<a href="images/ill-01.jpg"><img src="images/ill-01-s.jpg" width="200" height="520" +title="Abbot Colchester." +alt="ABBOT COLCHESTER." /></a> +<br /> +ABBOT COLCHESTER. +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page1" name="page1"></a>[1]</span></p> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h1> + WILLIAM DE COLCHESTER +<br /> +ABBOT OF WESTMINSTER +</h1> + +<div style="height: 2em;"><br /><br /></div> + +<p class="center"> +<small>BY<br /> +</small> +<big> +E. H. PEARCE +</big> +<br /> +<small> +CANON OF WESTMINSTER +</small> +</p> + +<div style="height: 2em;"><br /><br /></div> + +<p class="center"> + SOCIETY FOR PROMOTING CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE +<br /> +<small> + <span class="sc">LONDON: Northumberland Avenue, W.C.</span><br /> + <span class="sc">New York: E. S. GORHAM</span><br /> + 1915 +</small> +</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page2" name="page2"></a>[2]</span></p> + +<div style="height: 2em;"><br /><br /></div> + +<p><!--[Blank Page]--><br /></p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page3" name="page3"></a>[3]</span></p> + +<div style="height: 2em;"><br /><br /></div> + +<p class="center"> + TO <br /> +<big> J. D. AND H. R. D.</big> <br /> + WITH AFFECTION +</p> + +<div style="height: 2em;"><br /><br /></div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page4" name="page4"></a>[4]</span></p> + +<div style="height: 2em;"><br /><br /></div> + +<p><!--[Blank Page]--><br /></p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page5" name="page5"></a>[5]</span></p> + +<div><a name="h2H_TOC" id="h2H_TOC"><!-- H2 anchor --></a></div> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + CONTENTS +</h2> + +<table summary="Table of Contents"> +<tr><td></td><td></td> +<td align="right"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr> + +<tr><td align="right">I.</td> +<td><span class="sc">A Window in the Nave</span></td> +<td align="right"><a href="#page9">9</a></td></tr> + +<tr><td align="right">II.</td> +<td><span class="sc">A Novice from Essex</span></td> +<td align="right"><a href="#page14">14</a></td></tr> + +<tr><td align="right">III.</td> +<td><span class="sc">A Man of Affairs</span></td> +<td align="right"><a href="#page21">21</a></td></tr> + +<tr><td align="right">IV.</td> +<td><span class="sc">A Proctor at Rome</span></td> +<td align="right"><a href="#page30">30</a></td></tr> + +<tr><td align="right">V.</td> +<td><span class="sc">An Archdeacon</span></td> +<td align="right"><a href="#page41">41</a></td></tr> + +<tr><td align="right">VI.</td> +<td><span class="sc">Abbot of Westminster</span></td> +<td align="right"><a href="#page52">52</a></td></tr> + +<tr><td align="right">VII.</td> +<td><span class="sc">The Abbot at Home</span></td> +<td align="right"><a href="#page60">60</a></td></tr> + +<tr><td align="right">VIII.</td> +<td><span class="sc">The Abbot Abroad</span></td> +<td align="right"><a href="#page73">73</a></td></tr> +</table> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page6" name="page6"></a>[6]</span></p> + +<p><!--[Blank Page]--><br /></p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page7" name="page7"></a>[7]</span></p> + +<div><a name="h2H_4_0002" id="h2H_4_0002"><!-- H2 anchor --></a></div> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + NOTE +</h2> + +<p> +Having had the honour of an invitation to deliver in May last a "Friday +Evening Discourse" at the Royal Institution on the Archives of Westminster +Abbey, I thought it best to confine what I could say within an hour to +the career of a single man, preferably one whose record had not hitherto +been written. I have here expanded the lecture to some extent, and have +added references. I am indebted to Mr. David Weller, the Dean's Virger, +for some excellent pictures. +</p> +<p class="right"> + E. H. P. +</p> +<p><br /> + <span class="sc">3, Little Cloisters</span>,<br /> + <i>September, 1915.</i> +</p> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page8" name="page8"></a>[8]</span> +</p> + +<div><a name="h2H_LIST" id="h2H_LIST"><!-- H2 anchor --></a></div> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS +</h2> + +<table summary="List of Illustrations"> +<tr><td></td> +<td align="right"><small>TO FACE PAGE</small></td></tr> + +<tr><td><span class="sc">Abbot Colchester</span></td> +<td align="right"><a href="#nopage1"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr> + +<tr><td><span class="sc">The Kitchener's Account for Pancakes</span></td> +<td align="right"><a href="#page28">28</a></td></tr> + +<tr><td><span class="sc">Chambers in Little Cloisters</span></td> +<td align="right"><a href="#page48">48</a></td></tr> + +<tr><td><span class="sc">The Personal Effects of Abbot Litlington</span></td> +<td align="right"><a href="#page54">54</a></td></tr> + +<tr><td><span class="sc">Abbot Colchester's Seal</span></td> +<td align="right"><a href="#page74">74</a></td></tr> + +<tr><td><span class="sc">Coronation of Henry V.</span></td> +<td align="right"><a href="#page79">80</a></td></tr> +</table> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page9" name="page9"></a>[9]</span></p> + +<div><a name="h2H_4_0004" id="h2H_4_0004"><!-- H2 anchor --></a></div> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<p class="center"> +<big> + WILLIAM DE COLCHESTER +</big> +</p> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + I +</h2> +<h3> + A WINDOW IN THE NAVE +</h3> + +<p> +When the body of the late Lord Kelvin was laid to rest, by a right +which there was none to dispute, in the Abbey Church of Westminster, it +was placed, by the same kind of right, close to the grave of Sir Isaac +Newton. In the same corner there are the graves, or the memorials, of +Darwin and Herschel, of Joule and Gabriel Stokes and John Couch Adams, +to be joined shortly by tablets in memory of Alfred Russel Wallace, +of Sir Joseph Hooker, and of another Joseph, who died Lord Lister. It +was not likely that Kelvin would long lack some memorial more impressive +than the slab which covers his remains, and it was a happy and appropriate +impulse which caused the representatives of engineering science on both +sides of the Atlantic to undertake the task of + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page10" name="page10"></a>[10]</span> + + providing one. But what +form could it best take? The walls of the church have been overcrowded, +to the grievous destruction of some precious features. The floor-space, as +the centuries following the Reformation were apt to forget, is intended +to serve the purposes of public worship. But the large windows of the +Nave offer to those who would honour and foster the memory of the great +dead a means of fulfilling their desire, and of adorning the fabric at +the same time. In this case the chance was welcomed, and Kelvin has his +Abbey memorial in stained glass. The window is one of a series projected +in 1907 by Dr. Armitage Robinson, now Dean of Wells, and loyally accepted +by his successor in the Deanery of Westminster—a series in which there +are placed side by side a King of England who contributed either to the +greatness of the foundation or to the majesty of the building, and the +Abbot through whom the King worked his pious will. The King in this case +is Harry of Monmouth, and we are thinking with somewhat mingled feelings +that October 25, 1915, brings us to the 500th anniversary of the battle +of Agincourt. But it is Henry V.'s Abbot who concerns us now; for in such + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page11" name="page11"></a>[11]</span> + + a scheme of windows the Abbots are more difficult to justify to the +ordinary visitor than the monarchs, not because of unworthiness, +but because there has been but little effort made to appraise their +worth as heads of our ancient house, or as conspicuous figures in their +generation.<a href="#note-1" name="noteref-1"><small> 1</small></a> +</p> +<p> +In this case the Abbot is William of Colchester. As we shall see, his +character is depicted by Shakespeare, but he has no article to his credit +in the <i>Dictionary of National Biography</i>. If he is to be brought back +from obscurity, it can only be accomplished by repeated visits to the +Abbey Muniment Room. I shall therefore ask the reader to climb with me +the turret staircase which is approached from a door in the East Cloister, +and to enter a noble apartment of which that cloister is the origin. For +when Henry III.'s builders came to the planning of the South Transept, +known as Poets' Corner, the lines of the Great Cloister had already +been long established, and must not be minished or altered by the new +work. Therefore, whereas the North Transept + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page12" name="page12"></a>[12]</span> + + has aisles on its east side +and on its west, the South Transept is aisled only on the east side. +The East Cloister occupies the space of what would otherwise be the +western aisle, and thus upholds the floor of the apartment which we +enter. We look into the distant recesses of the Abbey eastward, through +three of Henry III.'s bays, across a low wall split up by the bases of +dwarf pillars. There are signs of royalty in the room, such as the crowned +heads at the capitals of the pillars of the colonnade by which we enter, +and on the wooden wall which shuts off the southern section is the outline +of a white hart crowned, the emblem of Richard II. Professor Lethaby has +suggested to me that such a point of vantage from which to see what stones +and what buildings are here, and from which to observe some procession +of State as it arrives from the Palace by Poets' Corner door and makes +its solemn circuit of the church, would naturally be appropriated as a +royal pew. Be that as it may, the room was set apart in very early times +for the storing of muniments; it contains a cupboard which probably dates +from Richard II.'s reign and now stands under Richard II.'s hart; and + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page13" name="page13"></a>[13]</span> + + at +least one of its archive chests, if not more, belongs to the fourteenth +century. We may assume, then, that here, from that century onwards, the +Convent kept its official archives—charters, leases, acquittances, and +the annual account-rolls of its officers. Here, for the last twenty years, +the Dean and Chapter have had the constant service of Dr. Edward Scott, +formerly of the British Museum, as the Keeper of their muniments. He +has written with his own hand over 110,000 descriptions of documents, +and has compiled, and is still steadily compiling, an index of persons and +things. I am merely attempting to construct a life of Abbot Colchester out +of documents which I have spelt out with Dr. Scott's assistance. Any one +who finds the story uninteresting must console himself with the thought +that it has not been told before. +</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page14" name="page14"></a>[14]</span></p> + +<div><a name="h2H_4_0006" id="h2H_4_0006"><!-- H2 anchor --></a></div> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + II +</h2> +<h3> + A NOVICE FROM ESSEX +</h3> + +<p> +In Shakespeare's <i>Tragedy of King Richard II.</i>, there is an Abbot of +Westminster who flits craftily across the scene, generally shadowing a +Bishop of Carlisle, whom we shall meet again. When Bolingbroke announces +that he is about to be crowned King in Richard's stead, this Abbot bids +his friends— +</p> +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> "Come home with me to supper; and I'll lay </p> +<p class="i2"> A plot shall show us all a merry day."<a href="#note-2" name="noteref-2"><small> 2</small></a> </p> +</div> +</div> + +<p> +In the next act<a href="#note-3" name="noteref-3"><small> 3</small></a> it is stated that he is dead— +</p> +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> "The grand conspirator, Abbot of Westminster, </p> +<p class="i2"> With clog of conscience and sour melancholy </p> +<p class="i2"> Hath yielded up his body to the grave." </p> +</div> +</div> + +<p> +As to which it must be sufficient to say that the poet who could not give +the Abbot's name was equally unconscious of the fact that he outlived +his alleged conspiracy by twenty years. +</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page15" name="page15"></a>[15]</span></p> + +<p> +But his name was William Colchester, and we may begin by assuming that, +as his name implies, he was a Colchester man. In and before his time, +and for a considerable space afterwards, the customary designation of +a Brother was his Christian name and a place name, with or without the +copula <i>de</i>; in earlier years he called himself William de Colchester, +but the documents which concern him as Abbot mostly speak of William +Colchester, or William Abbot of Westminster. Nor are we left to +guess-work as to the place of his origin. In later life, according to +the habit of his time, he busied himself with the endowment of obits, +or anniversaries, for the good of his soul. Here is a document,<a href="#note-4" name="noteref-4"><small> 4</small></a> +dated May 20, 1406, in which he bargained with the Prior of St. Botolph, +Colchester, having paid 40<i>s.</i> to Henry IV.'s Clerk of the Hanaper to +seal the bargain, that one of the canon-chaplains of that Priory should +say Mass every week, at sixpence a week, for his soul and for the +souls of his parents; that the Prior and his Brethren should observe +his anniversary, again with a memorial of his parents, in the parish +church of St. Nicholas, Colchester; that a set + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page16" name="page16"></a>[16]</span> + + sum should be distributed +yearly to the vicar of St. Nicholas, to the poor of the parish, and to +the prisoners in Colchester Castle; and that the tomb of his parents +in the parish churchyard should be kept in proper repair. +</p> +<p> +We may conclude, then, that this was his native parish, and that in +his great position as Abbot of Westminster he wished the connexion +to be had in remembrance. But he knew to a mile the distance between +his Abbey and Colchester, and how easy it might be for the Prior of St. +Botolph to accept his bequest and to neglect to fulfil its conditions. +So in 1407 (December 3), when he was completing the arrangements<a href="#note-5" name="noteref-5"><small> 5</small></a> for +maintaining an anniversary at the Abbey out of the revenues of the church +of Aldenham,<a href="#note-6" name="noteref-6"><small> 6</small></a> in Hertfordshire, he inserted an instruction that the +Monk-Bailiff of Westminster, at the time of his annual visit to the +Essex manors, should either proceed or send to Colchester and make +careful inquiry as to the due observance of the covenants, + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page17" name="page17"></a>[17]</span> + + as who should +say, "It is as well not to trust these provincial Priors further than +you can see them." +</p> +<p> +We get to know also from the grant<a href="#note-7" name="noteref-7"><small> 7</small></a> of another anniversary at the +Abbey's daughter Priory of Hurley, in Berkshire, that his father's name +was Reginald, and his mother's Alice. He had a sister who in 1389-90 +was living in Cambridge, for in that year his Receiver entered a gift +of 12<i>d.</i> to a man who came from my lord's sister at that town; and we +shall find that he had other connexions, some poor enough to bring him +a basket of poultry, some rich enough to receive from him a present of +jewelry. Evidently he sprang from a burgher stock of no great eminence, +for whom the Church seemed the sphere in which the career was opened to +the talents. +</p> +<p> +How he came to enter our Monastery we shall never know, for with all the +wealth of our materials there survives not a trace of his or of any other +postulant's testimonials. He came, he was seen, he was admitted. We know +what the requisites were—that he must have examined his conscience as +to the motives which led him to + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page18" name="page18"></a>[18]</span> + + apply, that he must be sound in body, +free in civil status, unburdened by debt or other obligations, and as a +rule not less than eighteen years of age.<a href="#note-8" name="noteref-8"><small> 8</small></a> What steps the Fathers of +the Convent took to secure outside evidence of a candidate's fitness +in these respects must be left to the imagination. He passed muster and +joined their number. +</p> +<p> +Our first trace of William Colchester's name on the books of the House +is in connexion with his ordination as priest. I cannot tell what +Bishop admitted him to the ministry, nor where it took place, but it +can be ascertained that he said Mass for the first time during 1361-2 +(the conventual year was reckoned for administrative purposes, as it +is still, from Michaelmas to Michaelmas), and we are able to discover +this, not because it was felt to be an event worth chronicling for its +own sake, but because in that year three of the officers note that they +severally expended 1s. 7½<i>d.</i> in bread and wine as "exennia"—<i>i.e.</i> +a complimentary gift<a href="#note-9" name="noteref-9"><small> 9</small></a>—made to him in + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page19" name="page19"></a>[19]</span> + + honour of the event. We may +suppose that he was then twenty-three years of age; he may have entered +the Convent in or about 1356; and we may take 1338 as the probable year +of his birth. If, as we have assumed, he entered the Convent some +years before his ordination, then he did so during the reign of Simon +Langham, the most eminent of all our Abbots, but it is not possible to +say whether he received priest's orders before or after the election +of Nicholas Litlington to the Abbacy in April, 1362. The Monastery was +still suffering in numbers from the ravages of the Great Pestilence in +1349, and consisted in 1356-7 of only thirty-five monks and two novices. +Colchester was the last of five new members of whom we hear first +in 1361-2. +</p> +<p> +Five years later, in 1366-7, he was chosen by the Convent as one of two +of their number whom they thought specially apt to learning, and whom +it was therefore their duty to send up to Oxford to join the other +Benedictine students at Gloucester Hall, an institution established +by the Order in its General Chapter held at Abingdon in 1290.<a href="#note-10" name="noteref-10"><small> 10</small></a> Our +custom was that the Convent Treasurer paid + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page20" name="page20"></a>[20]</span> + + £10 yearly to each Westminster +student for his maintenance,<a href="#note-11" name="noteref-11"><small> 11</small></a> besides the cost of his journeys to +and fro; so that it is possible to compile from the Treasurers' rolls a +fairly complete list of our Oxford scholars from 1356, when I came upon +the first signs of a definite system, until the Dissolution. The plan +tended to the great advantage of the monasteries; it meant that the +likely young men were taken at an impressionable time in their lives +out of the narrow rut of cloistral life, and were associated with the +world of scholarship and of affairs; and it will be found that a large +proportion of those who were sent to Oxford rose quickly to positions +of trust in the Convent. William Colchester remained at Oxford, save for +periodical visits to the Abbey, from 1366 to 1370. It cannot be said that +the Latin prose of which he was capable does credit to his University, +and even monkish Latinity was seldom worse than that in which his few +surviving letters are couched. But it is fair to assume that he learnt how +to deal with men, and we can now go on to see that the Convent which had +supported him at Oxford was satisfied with the product of its expenditure. +</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page21" name="page21"></a>[21]</span></p> + +<div><a name="h2H_4_0007" id="h2H_4_0007"><!-- H2 anchor --></a></div> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + III +</h2> +<h3> + A MAN OF AFFAIRS +</h3> + +<p> +Soon after his return from the University two things happened, as if to +signify that his competence was recognized. In October, 1371, he was +promoted, as the Westminster phrase went, to sit by the bell—sedere +ad skillam; that is to say, he moved up to the seniors' table in the +Refectory, where was the bell or skyllet which gave the signal for grace +to be said, or for the reader of the week to begin the lection. Like the +day of his first Mass, this promotion, coming as a rule not less than ten +years later, was reckoned to be an occasion for a little addition to the +usually frugal fare, and we can state the date of it because the Sacrist +and the Infirmarer and the Treasurer each sent him bread and wine to the +value of 2<i>s.</i> 3½<i>d.</i>, so that he might make merry with his friends. +</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page22" name="page22"></a>[22]</span></p> + +<p> +Secondly, he begins to be recognized as an experienced person who can +safely be sent upon missions involving prudence and the management of +men. In the same year, 1371-2, a payment of twenty shillings was made +by the Steward of the Abbot's Household for the expenses of William +Colchester and two valets who were sent to Northampton for the meeting of +the General Chapter of the English Benedictines, probably in attendance +on the Abbot of Westminster, who was frequently one of the Presidents +of the Chapter. +</p> +<p> +But the next year, 1372-3, as we learn from the Sacrist, saw Colchester +entrusted with a still more delicate duty. It was on this wise. Among +the precious relics given to the Abbey by Edward the Confessor<a href="#note-12" name="noteref-12"><small> 12</small></a> +was the girdle of the Virgin Mary—zona beate Marie—which she had +made with her own hands and had herself worn.<a href="#note-13" name="noteref-13"><small> 13</small></a> It was regarded as +having especial value in securing a safe delivery to expectant mothers, +and when the Westminster Book of Customs was compiled by Abbot Richard +de Ware about a century before + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page23" name="page23"></a>[23]</span> + + Colchester's admission, it was the rule +that the Sacrist or, as he was sometimes called, the Secretary, should +carry the girdle of the blessed Mother of God to any destination which +it was appointed to reach, or should be at charges with the bearer +of it in his place.<a href="#note-14" name="noteref-14"><small> 14</small></a> So here is our Sacrist paying the expenses of +William Colchester, namely, 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>, and the more considerable +price of two horses for the journey, £6 16<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> But the Sacrist +has something to enter on the other side, an offering of £2 from the +Countess of March, the lady who craved the aid of the girdle. If any +one is churlish enough to say that the bargain seems but a poor one +for the Convent—150<i>s.</i> spent on the journey, and only 40<i>s.</i> received +from the beneficiary—the answer is that the horses would be sold at the +end of the return journey for almost as much as they cost. If, again, +it is objected that in any case the lady's gift was money thrown away, +it is not so easy to convince the gainsayer. For while it is on record +that on February 12, 1371 (<i>i.e.</i> in the year previous + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page24" name="page24"></a>[24]</span> + + to that of the +Sacrist's account), the lady Philippa, granddaughter of Edward III., +did present her husband, the 3rd Earl of March, with a daughter who in +process of time became the wife of Harry Hotspur, yet it does not appear +that she was equally blessed during the year 1372-3. +</p> +<p> +Such duties sensibly performed, William Colchester was not long in +attaining to administrative office. To begin with, Abbot Litlington +chose him as his Custos Hospicii; <i>i.e.</i> Seneschal or steward of his +household. We have the roll on which the young monk gave an account of +his stewardship for the year Michaelmas to Michaelmas, 1373-4, and as +the doings it records represent his early experience of that conventual +business in which he was to be immersed for nearly half a century, +we may stay by it for a short space in order to get our impressions. +</p> +<p> +He found his master in possession of a considerable rent-roll in +various parts of the country, the manors being situate in the counties +of Worcester, Gloucester, Oxford, Surrey, Buckingham, and Middlesex. The +rentals amounted to £696 13<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, and the sale of stock, including +an ox sold for 18<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>, and a cow—timore pestilencie—for 13<i>s.</i>, + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page25" name="page25"></a>[25]</span> + + brought the total to £719 8<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> Large as this sum sounds, +especially when multiplied to correspond with present values, it was +none too large for the needs of the position. Household expenses, +which are not entered in detail, came to £151 1<i>s.</i> 4½<i>d.</i> The +purchase of live-stock—grey palfreys, bullocks, cows, steers, sheep, +pigs, swans, poultry, and no less than 966 pigeons at about ½<i>d.</i> +each—required £63 2<i>s.</i> 10<i>d.</i>, and the outlay on dead stock such as +bacon, salt-fish, five barrels of white herring, fourteen casks of red +herring, and three casks of Scottish red herring, amounted to £31 8<i>s.</i> +4<i>d.</i> Lest it should be claimed that the Scottish variety was a special +delicacy, we must add that the latter cost only 4<i>s.</i> a barrel as against +5<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> for the other. Nor, if the quantities seem large, must it +be lightly concluded that there was carelessness in the dispensation; +indeed, it was the Seneschal's duty to enter on the back of his roll +a stock-keeping account, from which it may be gleaned that all the +herrings were consumed and eighty pigs; but there was a residue of five +salt-fish and of two out of sixteen bullocks. Altogether in corn and +wine and clothing and gifts to visitors and in + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page26" name="page26"></a>[26]</span> + + other ways there was an +expenditure of £684 to set against a revenue of £719. +</p> +<p> +But what we want is an idea of the duties and experiences that came to +the young Seneschal, and this can be obtained from various items. He +gets a pair of my lord's boots mended for twopence, and small sums go in +stringing the great sportman's bows or in buying bags in which to carry +his arrow-heads. That which cost more, and was probably more interesting +to Colchester himself, was the coming and going of personages or their +servants—the squire of the Earl of Cambridge (Edmund Langley, fifth +son of Edward III.), who receives 20<i>s.</i> for bringing a letter to the +Abbot from his lord; the Earl of Warwick's steward, who comes to sell +a black palfrey; a monk of his own year, Richard Excestr', who is just +starting on his career at Oxford, and to whom the Abbot gives a fatherly +present of 20<i>s.</i>; the Bishop of Durham's<a href="#note-15" name="noteref-15"><small> 15</small></a> man, whose master we know +as the builder of Bishop Hatfield Hall, and who is sent with a gift of +two greyhounds to the Abbot. Several messengers arrive from the Prince, +<i>i.e.</i> the Black Prince, who + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page27" name="page27"></a>[27]</span> + + is now at Wycombe and now at Kensington, and +Abbot Litlington makes several journeys by boat to call on the Bishop of +Winchester, no less a personage than William of Wykeham, who was in some +disgrace at the time. +</p> +<p> +Having in this way served the Abbot efficiently, Colchester received +his next responsibility from the whole Chapter, who chose him as Convent +Treasurer, and "Coquinarius" or Kitchener, for the year 1375-6. Happily +we still possess his compotus as such. I must not describe it at length, +but one feature of it, an entry under the head of "pitancie et flacones," +is of too great interest to be passed by. Pittances were additional +meals on special occasions by way of varying the dreary round of dry +bread and sour wine, which alone could be provided in the Refectory. But +"flacones" seem to be pancakes, and pancakes are a recognized Westminster +institution, though it is no longer the duty of the Convent Treasurer to +provide them for his brethren. I first translate the item as Colchester +entered it: +</p> +<p class="quote"> + "Paid in milk, 'creym,' butter, cheese and eggs bought for the + pancakes in Easter week, on Rogation days and at Pentecost, + 64<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>" +</p> +<p> +And now for some further light upon it. In 1389, + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page28" name="page28"></a>[28]</span> + + when Colchester had +occupied the Abbot's chair for three years, the Kitchener was Brother +William Clehungre or Clayhanger, who has left us his bill<a href="#note-16" name="noteref-16"><small> 16</small></a> for +materials, and from this it will appear how the pancake-custom has +developed in the interval. It sets forth his +</p> +<p class="quote"> + "expenses laid out in respect of the pancakes prescribed for the + brethren and delivered to the monastery according to custom during + 56 days each year, namely from Easter Day to Trinity Sunday, + in the 12th year of the reign of King Richard II., as appears + by all the parcels:— +</p> + +<table summary="Account for Pancakes"> + +<tr><td></td><td></td><td></td> +<td>£</td><td><i>s.</i></td><td><i>d.</i> +</td></tr> +<tr><td>Milk.</td><td colspan="2">First 126 gallons of milk @ 1<i>d.</i> the gallon</td><td></td><td>10</td><td>6</td></tr> + +<tr><td>Butter.</td><td colspan="2">Also 3 gallons 3 qrts of butter @ 2<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> the gallon</td><td></td><td>9</td><td>4½</td></tr> + +<tr><td>Eggs.</td><td colspan="2">Also 5816 eggs @ 10<i>d.</i> the hundred</td><td>2</td><td>8</td><td>5¼</td></tr> + +<tr><td>Salt.</td><td colspan="2">Also one peck of salt @ 3<i>d.</i></td><td></td><td></td><td>3</td></tr> +<tr><td></td><td></td><td></td> +<td colspan="3" align="center">—————————</td></tr> +<tr><td></td><td></td><td>Total</td><td>£3</td><td>8</td><td>11¾"</td></tr> +</table> + +<p style="text-indent: 0;"> +Our Kitchener makes some trifling assumptions in his multiplication as +to the butter and the eggs, and he robs the Convent of fivepence when +he adds up the total. The number of eggs sounds large, but it means +only 103 and a fraction daily, and when it is considered that in 1389 +the Prior and his Brethren numbered forty-nine +<!--following two lines moved up from page 29--> + persons, this works out +at the by no means excessive rate of 2½ eggs daily to each brother. +</p> + +<div class="figure"> +<a name="image-0002"><!--IMG--></a> +<a href="images/ill-02.jpg"><img src="images/ill-02-s.jpg" width="320" height="365" +title="The Kitchener's Account for Pancakes." +alt="THE KITCHENER'S ACCOUNT FOR PANCAKES." /></a> +<br /> +THE KITCHENER'S ACCOUNT FOR PANCAKES. +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page29" name="page29"></a>[29]</span></p> + +<p> +But there is a local reason for dwelling on this custom. Westminster +School is admittedly a Tudor foundation, but at the Abbey we cherish +the conviction that its roots penetrate deep down into the monastic +soil. Every Shrove Tuesday the school—in modern times by means of +selected gladiators—makes a furious onset upon a single pancake. +Mr. Sergeaunt<a href="#note-17" name="noteref-17"><small> 17</small></a> speaks of the ceremony as "the sole survivor of the +medieval sports," and adds that "although its origin cannot be traced, +it can hardly have come into being after the date of Elizabeth's +foundation." Is it, then, beyond all likelihood that it arose out of some +ancient protest of our Benedictines against the prospect of being fed +upon pancakes every day for eight weeks? Is it inconceivable that the +successful protestant was conducted at the end of the "greese," as now, +to the Lord Abbot's presence to receive one mark from his lordship's +bounty? All we can say is that the Brethren continued to be similarly +regaled from Easter to Trinity until the Dissolution of the House. +</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page30" name="page30"></a>[30]</span></p> + +<div><a name="h2H_4_0008" id="h2H_4_0008"><!-- H2 anchor --></a></div> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + IV +</h2> +<h3> + A PROCTOR AT ROME +</h3> + +<p> +William Colchester ceased to be Treasurer in the autumn of 1376, and +within eight months circumstances had arisen in which his capacities were +to be put to a severer and more prolonged test. We are all familiar with +the expression "St. Stephen's," as applied to Parliament House. But it +is not as readily realized that the House of Commons, after sitting for +long years in the Chapter House<a href="#note-18" name="noteref-18"><small> 18</small></a> at the Abbey, removed itself at +the Dissolution to the ancient Chapel of St. Stephen in the Palace of +Westminster. I am only concerned now with the story of that chapel<a href="#note-19" name="noteref-19"><small> 19</small></a> +as it is related to William Colchester's career. Placed where it was, it +stood within the ancient limits of our Abbot's jurisdiction, but its Dean + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page31" name="page31"></a>[31]</span> + + and his twelve Prebendaries had good grounds for regarding themselves +as a royal foundation, and they craved the kind of ecclesiastical +independence which attaches to-day to St. George's Chapel in Windsor +Castle. Our Convent resisted this claim, which, on the other hand, had +the good will of the Court. In 1377 a suit to test the rights of the +case was entered before the Roman Curia, and it was necessary to appoint +some careful and astute person to take charge in Rome of the Abbey's +interests, and to negotiate their success. I will not go further into +the merits of the case. It lasted for seventeen years, and was ultimately +settled, on the whole, in the Abbey's favour, the College of St. Stephen +agreeing to pay to the Abbey a yearly sum of five marks, and the right +of the Abbot to instal the Dean of St. Stephen's being upheld.<a href="#note-20" name="noteref-20"><small> 20</small></a> +What concerns us is that the Abbot and Convent chose William Colchester +as their proctor at Rome in this suit, and that by good fortune there +survive long statements of his personal and legal costs in carrying out +the task laid upon him. They will serve as a guide-book + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page32" name="page32"></a>[32]</span> + + of his journey +and will give us considerable insight into his adventures.<a href="#note-21" name="noteref-21"><small> 21</small></a> +</p> +<p> +He left Westminster on June<a href="#note-22" name="noteref-22"><small> 22</small></a> 10, 1377, and was absent, as he is careful +to record, for two years, twenty-three weeks, and three days. His first +business was to furnish himself with official commendations, and to +this end he sought for royal letters—pro expedicione cause—from the +Keeper of the Privy Seal; he paid 3<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> to the Keeper's servant to +urge his master to dictate them, and by a like payment he made things +right with the scrivener who would execute them; but the letters were +not ready when he started. Meantime we can watch him as he reckons up +the difficulties of his ordeal. It was arranged that he should go by +way of Avignon, for Master Thomas Southam,<a href="#note-23" name="noteref-23"><small> 23</small></a> Archdeacon of Oxford, +was still there, settling the affairs of Cardinal Langham's will. But +the Pope was no longer there. Gregory XI. had quitted that scene of +luxurious exile and ravenous extortion on + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page33" name="page33"></a>[33]</span> + + September 13, 1376, and had +entered Rome on January 17, 1377.<a href="#note-24" name="noteref-24"><small> 24</small></a> Most Englishmen had resented +the Avignonese sojourn because it threw the Papacy into the hands of +the French, but William Colchester, as he packed his valise, saw the +matter in a different light. Because the Pope had left, there was +no great chance of finding company for the journey;<a href="#note-25" name="noteref-25"><small> 25</small></a> and company +meant so much the more security. There was nothing for it but to hire +a companion, and he found one Gerard of London, who was willing to face +the journey for 20<i>s.</i> and his expenses. Colchester is conscious that +this seems an extravagance, but he enters in his account a plea that it +was justified by the variety of language and the dangers of the roads in +foreign parts.<a href="#note-26" name="noteref-26"><small> 26</small></a> For the road to Dover he bought for himself a horse and +saddle which cost 34<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>; but it appears that he rather expected +the man Gerard to walk, for he extenuates a further payment of 26<i>s.</i> +8<i>d.</i> for a horse, a saddle, and bridle for Gerard, by stating that +the man entirely declined to go afoot. Thus + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page34" name="page34"></a>[34]</span> + + mounted, they reached Dover, +where they wasted five days in waiting for a passage, and all the time +the cost of food was mounting up at the rate of sixpence a day for each +horse, and fivepence a meal for each man. The passage, when they obtained +one, cost 3<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> each for the men, and double for the horses. At +that cost they reached Calais, and within three days were at Bruges, +where again there was a long halt. For the royal letters had not come. +Edward III. was on his death-bed, and passed away eleven days after +our travellers left London. But Colchester is convinced that an enemy +had done this, and when he insists that the issue of the letters has +been frustrated "per aduersarios," we must remember that the Dean and +College of St. Stephen's were closer to the royal ear than our Abbot and +Convent. Whatever the cause, the result was the entry in his account of +the cost of nine days' commissariat at Bruges, together with a reward +of 10<i>d.</i> to the hotel servants, which he at once resents and excuses +as being the custom of the country.<a href="#note-27" name="noteref-27"><small> 27</small></a> In brief, he had already spent +nearly all the £10 which he received at + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page35" name="page35"></a>[35]</span> + + his journey's start from the hands +of Brother John Lakyngheth, his rival for monastic promotion. +</p> +<p> +So now he converts his balance of 16<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> from sterling into florins, +reckoning a florin at 3<i>s.</i> 2<i>d.</i> To this he adds seven florins by the +sale of his own horse—a creditable bargain, for, having paid 34<i>s.</i> +8<i>d.</i> for the beast in London, he has ridden it to Bruges, and there +parted with it for 22<i>s.</i> 2<i>d.</i> On the other hand, Gerard's horse has +turned out badly; the journey has nearly killed it;<a href="#note-28" name="noteref-28"><small> 28</small></a> and it goes for +three florins, or 9<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Colchester negotiated a loan of twenty-three +florins, and on they went towards the south, sometimes hiring mounts, +sometimes begging a ride in a cart, often in terror of the Frenchmen, +who laid an ambush for them as they entered Dauphiné, so that our +travellers hired a guide and went through byways. On the 27th day after +leaving Bruges they entered Avignon, and next day they found Master +Southam at his lodgings by the church of Our Lady of Miracles. +</p> +<p> +For a moment I lay aside Colchester's ledger and turn to a separate +document; for Southam + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page36" name="page36"></a>[36]</span> + + had with him at Avignon another Westminster monk, +John Farnago, who became Colchester's paymaster and in due course +presented to the Abbey an account<a href="#note-29" name="noteref-29"><small> 29</small></a> of what he had laid out on his +behalf. We are thus furnished with the date of the arrival of Colchester +and Gerard—July 24—and learn that they required bed and board at +Avignon till August 19. Farnago purchased for his Brother a fresh +outfit—cape, tunic, and hood of black Benedictine cloth, a scapular +and cowl, and a plain colobium (or sleeveless tunic), buying the last, +as he says, from Hagyuus, a Jew, whose real name was probably Hayyim. He +also provided a horse for the journey to Marseilles, where Colchester +was to take ship, and put some money in his scrip. So our Proctor turned +his back on Avignon, perhaps not fully realizing that when on August 14, +five days before his departure, he and Farnago witnessed the probate of +Cardinal Langham's will,<a href="#note-30" name="noteref-30"><small> 30</small></a> he had been concerned with a document which +was to have a vast effect on the church and the conventual buildings +of St. Peter, Westminster. +</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page37" name="page37"></a>[37]</span></p> + +<p> +We turn back to Colchester's own ledger, and note that he does not enter +the actual date of his arrival in Rome; but we can fix it fairly closely. +He says that, having got thus far, he was obliged to move on to Anagni, +some forty miles southward from Rome on the road to Naples; and we know +that Gregory XI., who had spent the summer of 1377 there, returned to +Rome on November 17.<a href="#note-31" name="noteref-31"><small> 31</small></a> Colchester must have found the Papal Court busy +at the packing of its trunks and must have returned with it forthwith +to Rome; for the first date that he mentions is November 20. It would +be wearisome to pursue the details of his activity in engaging counsel, +English and Italian, and in paying their fees; but it is worth while +to notice that there has been no great change since his day in legal +expressions—retinuit duos aduocatos—and perhaps not a complete reform +of illegal practice; for instance, he explains that he gave six florins +to the valet—cubicularius—of the Cardinal of Milan, who was concerned in +the decision of the case, with a view to the man's stirring up his master +to sign a certain document; the object of the gift, says Colchester, +was greater + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page38" name="page38"></a>[38]</span> + + security, because at the moment there was a fierce altercation +between the parties to the suit. +</p> +<p> +His expenses, already large, received a sudden addition through the death, +on March 27, 1378, of Gregory XI. Seldom can an observant traveller have +had a more exciting experience than to be in Rome during the session of +the Consistory<a href="#note-32" name="noteref-32"><small> 32</small></a> which set Bartolommeo Prignano, Archbishop of Bari, +upon what Colchester calls "the apex of the chief Apostolate." On personal +grounds our monk must have been pleased at the choice of the electors, +for the new Pope was the special <i>protégé</i> of the French Cardinal of +Pampeluna, Simon Langham's friend and executor. But financially the +effect was provoking. We know that Urban VI. proved himself a man "full +of Neapolitan fire and savagery," who thought "that the Cardinals could +be reduced to absolute obedience by mere rudeness,"<a href="#note-33" name="noteref-33"><small> 33</small></a> and we are quite +prepared for Colchester's statement that between the Pope and the Sacred +College there arose a great dissension. Cardinals and curials fled +secretly, he says, in some numbers, and among + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page39" name="page39"></a>[39]</span> + + the latter the two advocates +whom he had briefed and paid. That money at any rate was a dead loss, but +there was this advantage in Urban's case, that, knowing the preference of +the Cardinals for Anagni as a summer residence, he decided for Tivoli in +their despite, and Colchester could get there in a few hours for a couple +of florins. Six weeks had to be spent within sound of Horace's waterfall +before his business was finished. His return journey led him through Nice, +where he was robbed of his cloak and other property. Then to Avignon +once more, and thence in due course—at least, so he hoped—to the Abbey. +</p> +<p> +But he was fated, nevertheless, to turn again and revisit the Roman +Court; for while he tarried in Master Southam's lodgings at Avignon, +in September, 1378, there came news of a notable murder committed in the +church of Westminster while the Gospel was being read at High Mass,<a href="#note-34" name="noteref-34"><small> 34</small></a> +on August, 11. The victim was one Robert Hawle, who had escaped from +the Tower and had taken sanctuary at Westminster. The incident had its +political aspects; it raised various perilous + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page40" name="page40"></a>[40]</span> + + questions; and Southam +advised that Colchester should return to Rome in order to counteract any +plots that might be mooted in behalf of the authors of "that horrible +deed." So again the expenses began to roll up—the journey overland +to Marseilles; a passage by galley to Ostia; a sojourn in Rome for the +greater part of December, 1378; gratuities on several occasions to the +Papal janitors for free entrance to the Chamber and the Consistory, and to +the valets for access to the Pope himself; an expensive struggle by each +faction to extract from the Curia the kind of Bull that each side wanted, +in which our Proctor was apparently successful; and a journey from Rome +to Bruges lasting forty-one days. Colchester waited for three weeks at +Sluis to secure a passage across the Channel, in the belief that the +enemy was watching Calais with the intention of doing him violence;<a href="#note-35" name="noteref-35"><small> 35</small></a> +and when he reached his native shore, he rode up to London by ways that +were devious for the same reason, arriving there in November, 1379. It +was neither easy nor without peril to be the chosen representative of +Westminster at the Roman Court. +</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page41" name="page41"></a>[41]</span></p> + +<div><a name="h2H_4_0009" id="h2H_4_0009"><!-- H2 anchor --></a></div> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + V +</h2> +<h3> + AN ARCHDEACON +</h3> + +<p> +It is not doubtful that the Abbot and Chapter were well pleased with +Colchester's fulfilment of the duties entrusted to him and that the +large bill of costs was paid, if not with delight, at any rate with +resignation. Of this we have several conclusive indications. First, +within a brief space the Convent again despatched him to Rome, in 1382-3, +doubtless to continue his management of the same suit. This time there +is no record of his payments, nor should we be aware of his journey if +it were not for two documents. One is the Chamberlain's compotus-roll +of 1382-3. These accounts presented a balance of money on the one side, +and a balance of materials on the other side; it was necessary for the +Chamberlain to show, not merely that he had purchased so many + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page42" name="page42"></a>[42]</span> + + outfits, but +that he had distributed these outfits to such and such Brethren. So when +he makes his statement about the habits—panni nigri—he notes that he +did not give these to Brother William Colchester nor to Brother William +Halle, because they were at Rome. No doubt, Colchester had represented +to the Chapter the wisdom of providing him with a companion from the +monastery instead of his hiring a courier as before. The other is a legal +document, whose purport is of some personal interest. When Colchester +left Westminster in 1382-3, Richard Excestr' was about to resign the +Priorship, which he had held only since 1377. Attempts seem to have +been made, perhaps by some of Colchester's Roman friends during his +stay at the Curia, to secure a "provision" of the vacant office for him +from the Pope, and the efforts succeeded. The document in question<a href="#note-36" name="noteref-36"><small> 36</small></a> +bears date January 2, 1384, and is of the nature of a pardon to Colchester +for the prejudice or contempt caused by such efforts to the Crown and +its prerogatives. He denied that he was party to the attempt, and paid +the necessary fee to the Hanaper for his pardon. The + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page43" name="page43"></a>[43]</span> + + Priorship another +took;<a href="#note-37" name="noteref-37"><small> 37</small></a> not, perhaps, because the Brethren thought Colchester unworthy +of promotion or too young for it, but because the interests of the +House required that he should go to Rome, whither he was sent, as the +Treasurers' rolls inform us, both in 1384-5 and 1385-6. The suit against +St. Stephen's Chapel still dragged on, and he alone had the knowledge +and the experience for hastening its delays. +</p> +<p> +As a second proof of the confidence reposed in him we may note that in +1382<a href="#note-38" name="noteref-38"><small> 38</small></a> he was Archdeacon of the Convent; it is possible that he held +the post earlier; certainly he held it in 1386; and probably he owed it to +the Abbot personally. The office of Archdeacon is proverbially puzzling +to the lay mind, and it may be that the Archdeaconry of Westminster +creates some wonder in the minds even of other Archdeacons. The fact is +that the Abbot in the exercise of jurisdiction over his Westminster area +required the services of an ecclesiastical jurist in matters of divorce +and of excommunication and the like; he needed also some one who would +serve as his pastoral + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page44" name="page44"></a>[44]</span> + + representative to those denizens of the area who +were not on the foundation of the Convent. For this reason, even in +Abbot Ware's time,<a href="#note-39" name="noteref-39"><small> 39</small></a> the Archdeacon was permitted to walk abroad +to the Palace or elsewhere in the discharge of his duties, which, +indeed, might take him much further afield; for when Abbot Colchester +drew up an indenture<a href="#note-40" name="noteref-40"><small> 40</small></a> appropriating to certain memorial purposes the +revenues of Aldenham church, he inserted a provision that the Archdeacon +of Westminster for the time being should be in charge of the parish, +receiving 40<i>s.</i> yearly for his labour therein. We have seen that +Colchester's experience marked him out for juridical duties, and we +must assume that he was not without pastoral zeal and aptitude. +</p> +<p> +A letter in Norman French addressed by "William, Conte de Salisbury" +to Abbot Litlington will help us to see that his duties were of a +varied character. The writer of the letter<a href="#note-41" name="noteref-41"><small> 41</small></a> was William de Montacute, +2nd Earl, who fought at Poitiers and in most of the French wars of his +time. Addressing the Abbot as his dear + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page45" name="page45"></a>[45]</span> + + and faithful friend, he thus +unfolds his story. His servant, Nicholas Symcok, of London, has been +robbed in the middle of June by highwaymen, one of whom, Richard Surrey, +is popularly known as Richard atte Belle. The knight of the road has made +off with some silver plate and £40 in coin, and has taken sanctuary at +Westminster, being hotly pursued by his victim, who finds on Surrey's +person all his lost property, less £5 of the stolen money. Symcok has +deposited his recovered goods in the hands of Dan William Colchester, +one of the lord Abbot's monks, who has laid them aside and placed his +seal upon the package. Therefore, my good Lord—asks the Earl—I pray +you have these chattels delivered up to my servant. This letter bears no +date, and there is no proof that the Archdeacon as such was concerned +with the affairs of sanctuary; nor does any title of office accompany +the introduction of his name. But the incident was one which bore a +legal character and Colchester's part in it may possibly be brought +within the vague limits of archidiaconal functions.<a href="#note-42" name="noteref-42"><small> 42</small></a> +</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page46" name="page46"></a>[46]</span></p> + +<p> +We are fortunate in possessing one unquestionable intimation as to +his personal circumstances while holding this office. It bears date +November 9, 1386, shortly before his promotion to the highest room, +and is an indenture of lease of sheep.<a href="#note-43" name="noteref-43"><small> 43</small></a> It sets forth that Thomas +Charlton, the valet, and Henry Norton, the servant of William Colchester, +Archdeacon of Westminster, leased to John Waryn, butcher, of Westminster, +132 muttons—multones—3 rams, and 168 ewes, of the average value of +20<i>d.</i> each, to be fed and kept sound till Ash Wednesday next ensuing; and +there follows a statement of the terms upon which the tenant may acquire +any or all of them. The bargain was apparently made by the Archdeacon's +servants, and the actual document leaves it in doubt whether the sheep +were his or theirs, but the endorsement<a href="#note-44" name="noteref-44"><small> 44</small></a> places the ownership beyond +question and proves the sheep to have been the Archdeacon's. +</p> +<p> +The third means adopted by the Convent for marking its sense of +Colchester's services to the House was more exceptional. I give the +statement + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page47" name="page47"></a>[47]</span> + + of it as it stands in the vellum volume called <i>Liber Niger +Quaternus</i>, a fifteenth-century copy of an earlier black paper register +compiled by a very active monk called Roger Kyrton, or Cretton,<a href="#note-45" name="noteref-45"><small> 45</small></a> who +entered the Convent in 1384-5, served many offices under Abbot Colchester, +and survived him by about fourteen years:— +</p> +<p class="quote"> + "On September 25, 1382, there was granted to Brother W. Colchester + Archdeacon of Westminster a chamber, together with that part of + the Garden which belongs to the Lady Chapel; also a pension of six + marks [£4] and an additional monk's allowance—corrodium—such + as is enjoyed by the seniors; but on condition that if the + said William be promoted to any prelacy elsewhere, the pension, + the allowance and the chamber are to revert to the Convent." +</p> +<p> +Two questions of topography arise here, the position of the Garden and +that of the chambers, or "camerae." It is not necessary to assume that +they were contiguous. "The part of the Garden which belongs to the Lady +Chapel" cannot be located with certainty, but the Convent Garden lay in +the acres eastward of St. Martin's Church, Charing Cross, which still +retain the name, and are now + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page48" name="page48"></a>[48]</span> + + the scene of the sale of garden-produce +that is grown elsewhere. Our great chartulary called Domesday<a href="#note-46" name="noteref-46"><small> 46</small></a> shows +that the Lady Chapel was given considerable property in this district +during the reign of Henry III., under whom the chapel was built. In +view of our information that within four years the Archdeacon possessed +a flock of 400 sheep, it seems reasonable to suppose that his share of +the Garden included considerable pasturage, and that he sometimes took +his walks abroad in the direction of Charing to see if it was well with +the flocks. +</p> +<p> +There is less doubt about the position of the chambers, which are +often mentioned in connexion with the Infirmary, and which were +probably attached to Little Cloisters, then recently rebuilt by Abbot +Litlington. To this day the south side of Little Cloisters shows +an alternation of old doors and old windows that suggests a row of +almshouses. It thus becomes easy to realize that a separate residence, +instead of the usual bed in the Great Dormitory, was a privilege highly +prized and rarely conferred. +</p> + +<div class="figure"> +<a name="image-0003"><!--IMG--></a> +<a href="images/ill-03.jpg"><img src="images/ill-03-s.jpg" width="325" height="425" +title="Chambers in Little Cloisters." +alt="CHAMBERS IN LITTLE CLOISTERS." /></a> +<br /> +CHAMBERS IN LITTLE CLOISTERS. +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page49" name="page49"></a>[49]</span></p> + +<p> +It is natural to ask in what conditions the +<!--above line moved down from page 48--> + tenants of these chambers +lived, and the answer can be given in some detail. We have a long +strip of frail paper,<a href="#note-47" name="noteref-47"><small> 47</small></a> 3 ft. 7 in. × 5½ in., which deals with the +post-mortem distribution of the effects of a monk whom William Colchester +must have known long and well. Richard Excestr' said his first Mass, +as did Colchester himself, in 1361-2; he became Prior quite early in +life, in 1377; but, as we have seen, he resigned the office in 1382, +and we do not know why his tenure of it was so brief. That the reason was +not discreditable to himself may be inferred from the fact that on his +resignation he was given precedence next after the new Prior, receiving +a pension of four marks, a double, or Prior's, assignment of clothing, +and a double share of the pittances that marked certain anniversaries, +till his death in 1397. In this paper, then, his modest effects are +arranged according to the rooms in which they stood, like the items in +an auctioneer's catalogue when the sale is to take place, by order of +the executors, on the premises. We gather that he has a reception-room, +or "aula," where he can entertain a few friends, with a special welcome + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page50" name="page50"></a>[50]</span> + + for any Brother who can play chess (for among his possessions are a +chess-board and a set of chess-men<a href="#note-48" name="noteref-48"><small> 48</small></a>); a pantry, or "buteleria," +for his little store of plate and crockery and napery, including +a silver cup and cover, thirteen silver spoons (was it a complete +"Apostle" set?), and a table-cloth 3½ yards in length; a bedroom, or +"camera," containing his white bedstead with a tester over it, and a +"parpoynt," as well as his wardrobe; a kitchen, or "coquina," equipped +with "droppyngpannes," "dressyng-Knyues," "flesshhokys," "anndyrons," +a "treuet," and three pans which like the trivet are honestly described +in the catalogue as being the worse for wear;<a href="#note-49" name="noteref-49"><small> 49</small></a> and a library, or +"studium," with ten books and three maps. Among these books there was of +course some scholastic theology and canon law, but there was also the +Latin version of the Book of Messer Marco Polo, as if to signify that the +latest modern literature was by no means excluded. The Provost of King's, +who was kind enough to look through the list for me, takes this to be, +as I suspected,<a href="#note-50" name="noteref-50"><small> 50</small></a> a very early instance of English + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page51" name="page51"></a>[51]</span> + + interest in the +Venetian traveller's adventures; and added that he believes it to be +still more rare that a man of this monk's period should possess a map +of Scotland. +</p> +<p> +As there was nothing exceptional in the disposal of the ex-prior's +goods,<a href="#note-51" name="noteref-51"><small> 51</small></a> the incident may be fairly taken as an illustration of Convent +life as Colchester lived it, and we may therefore go on to notice that, +putting together the sum that Excestr' left in cash and that which was +realized by the sale of some of these articles, the Convent was able +to pay the cost of his illness and burial; the items ranged from 2<i>d.</i> +for milk to 10<i>s.</i> for the fee of the brief-writer who wrote out the +formal announcement of his death on one shilling's worth of parchment +for the information of other Benedictine houses, and £4 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> +for a marble slab with a memorial inscription. As Excestr' died in 1397, +we may think of Abbot Colchester as saying the last words over the open +grave of his former neighbour in Little Cloisters. +</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page52" name="page52"></a>[52]</span></p> + +<div><a name="h2H_4_0010" id="h2H_4_0010"><!-- H2 anchor --></a></div> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + VI +</h2> +<h3> + ABBOT OF WESTMINSTER +</h3> + +<p> +Our Archdeacon was not destined to remain such for any great time. +On November 29, 1386, there passed away during a meal-time<a href="#note-52" name="noteref-52"><small> 52</small></a> at his +manor house of la Neyte, near Westminster, our great builder, Abbot +Nicholas Litlington, to whom we owe the south and west sides of the Great +Cloister, the Little Cloisters, Jerusalem Chamber, the Abbot's Dining +Hall, and much besides of the present Deanery, and the great Missal.<a href="#note-53" name="noteref-53"><small> 53</small></a> +The vigour of Litlington's character can be realized from what we have +seen of the fight which he maintained through William Colchester for +the privileges of the Abbey, but Colchester must have + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page53" name="page53"></a>[53]</span> + + witnessed a more +remarkable proof of the old man's pluck. In the <i>Liber Niger</i> (f. 87) +there is a record to the effect that a threatened invasion of our +shores by the French King in 1386 caused the Chapter of the Convent to +come to the unanimous opinion that the old Abbot and two of his monks, +John Canterbery and John Burgh, should don full armour and proceed as +far as the coast, on the ground that it was lawful to do so for the +defence of the realm.<a href="#note-54" name="noteref-54"><small> 54</small></a> It is astonishing that Litlington should +have contemplated such an enterprise at his age, for we have a letter +in Norman French, not dated, but clearly referring to this period, +in which he excuses himself on the ground of "age et feblesse" for +not coming to the Abbey "en propre persone" to bring to the King the +famous ring of St. Edward. But Litlington's possession of armour cannot +be doubted. There remains a schedule<a href="#note-55" name="noteref-55"><small> 55</small></a> of his effects at his death, +which shows that those which passed into the hands of his successor +consisted chiefly of various accoutrements, and included six hauberks; +a + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page54" name="page54"></a>[54]</span> + + helmet called a "pisanum"; seven others called basnetts with ventailles +or vizors; a "ketelhat"; a pair of steel gloves; some "leg-harneys"; +fore-braces and back-braces; and four lance-heads. +</p> + +<div class="figure"> +<a name="image-0004"><!--IMG--></a> +<a href="images/ill-04.jpg"><img src="images/ill-04-s.jpg" width="325" height="385" +title="The Personal Effects of Abbot Litlington." +alt="THE PERSONAL EFFECTS OF ABBOT LITLINGTON." /></a> +<br /> +THE PERSONAL EFFECTS OF ABBOT LITLINGTON. +</div> + +<p> +Though general opinion pointed to his election in Litlington's stead, +Colchester was in some danger of disappointment. He had spent so much +time abroad—a very large proportion of the preceding nine years—being +engaged all the time in a cause which brought him into collision with the +preferences of the Court, that it is not wonderful if the King desired +the election of another. We can thus easily credit the statement of +a Westminster chronicler,<a href="#note-56" name="noteref-56"><small> 56</small></a> whom the Dean of Wells believes to have +been the rival candidate himself, that, when the vacancy occurred, the +King wrote thrice to the Prior and Convent urging them to find their +new Abbot in Brother John Lakyngheth, the very Treasurer whom we have +seen in the act of paying to William Colchester the sums required for +his long journeys and his legal costs, perhaps with a keen satisfaction +at + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page55" name="page55"></a>[55]</span> + + thus facilitating his rival's absence. But the Convent had made up +its mind, and within a fortnight<a href="#note-57" name="noteref-57"><small> 57</small></a> of Litlington's decease, Colchester +was elected Abbot by compromission; that is to say, the Brethren chose +a committee of five or seven of their number and entrusted to them +the choice of the best man. Richard II. was angry, and refused for a +while to receive the nomination. We have the request<a href="#note-58" name="noteref-58"><small> 58</small></a> of the Prior +and Convent to the King, written in French, but not bearing any date, +to give his consent to their choice of "daunz William Colchestre un +de lours commoignes en abbe et pastoure." The letter was written at a +time when Richard could be said to have "graciousement accroiez votre +roial assent al election auantdite," and when it was only necessary to +petition him to make formal announcement of it to the Pope. But there +was considerable delay also on the part of the Pope, who wanted to +quash the election and to appoint + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page56" name="page56"></a>[56]</span> + + by "provision."<a href="#note-59" name="noteref-59"><small> 59</small></a> But the King's +ambassador intervened, and the bulls of confirmation were issued +September 1, 1387. Colchester was installed October 12, and made a great +feast to his friends on St. Edward's Day. His temporalities had been +restored September 10.<a href="#note-60" name="noteref-60"><small> 60</small></a> All this places Richard's attitude towards +him in some doubt, especially as, on November 10, the King, who walked +barefoot from Charing to the Abbey precincts, was there received by +Colchester and his Brethren vested in copes. Almost immediately there +arose a difficult question about sanctuary, as to which the reader may be +again referred to the <i>Polychronicon</i>.<a href="#note-61" name="noteref-61"><small> 61</small></a> Words almost fail the scribe +as he pictures the reverence and love of the King for the Church. "There +is not a Bishop on the bench," he says, "who displays as much zeal for +the Church's rights." +</p> +<p> +Thus it came to pass that King and Court alike poured upon the Abbey +the benefits of their generosity in spite of Colchester's election, +and in the case of the Court the gifts came quite as + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page57" name="page57"></a>[57]</span> + + readily from +Richard's enemies as from his friends. Within three months of Colchester's +installation, on December 1, 1387, a deed<a href="#note-62" name="noteref-62"><small> 62</small></a> was executed whereby the +Abbot and Convent bound themselves to observe the anniversary of Thomas +of Woodstock, Richard's uncle and at that time his fierce enemy, and of +Eleanor de Bohun, his wife, in return for a splendid gift, which included +vestments of cloth of gold, broidered with their initials, silver-gilt +vessels for the altar, a silver-gilt thurible adorned with images of +the saints, and two silver candlesticks formed of angels bearing the +heraldic shields of the houses of Essex and Hereford.<a href="#note-63" name="noteref-63"><small> 63</small></a> +</p> +<p> +Richard's own gifts to the church during Colchester's time were even +more magnifical. On May 28, 1389, there was a royal grant, witnessed by +the Archbishop of Canterbury and many others, conveying to the Convent +a richly adorned chasuble of cloth of gold, two tunicles, three albs, +the orphreys bearing representations of the Holy Trinity, the Virgin Mary, +St. John Baptist, St. Edward the Confessor, St. Edmund + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page58" name="page58"></a>[58]</span> + + the King, and +"a certain Abbess." In 1394, after the death of his beloved Queen, +Anne of Bohemia, came Richard's grant of £200 yearly to maintain an +anniversary for her, and for him when he should depart hence;<a href="#note-64" name="noteref-64"><small> 64</small></a> which +was followed in 1399 by his grant to the Abbey of manors and lands in +Middlesex, Bedfordshire, and Berkshire,<a href="#note-65" name="noteref-65"><small> 65</small></a> whence an equivalent in rents +would be derived in perpetuity. To this gift the Dean and Chapter owe +the advowson of Steventon, Berkshire, which they still retain. On the +other side, it may be admitted that Richard made use of the Abbey's +resources; we have his note of hand for a loan of £100, dated September +11, 1397.<a href="#note-66" name="noteref-66"><small> 66</small></a> To what extent he fostered that building of the Nave, +which our documents speak of as the New Work, has been told in detail +elsewhere.<a href="#note-67" name="noteref-67"><small> 67</small></a> It comes to this, that Colchester's effigy in stained +glass looks into the Nave from a window which probably dates from Henry +III.'s time, but it faces towards Purbeck pillars which were the work +of one of our Abbot's most zealous officers, + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page59" name="page59"></a>[59]</span> + + Peter Coumbe. The portion of +the triforium above his window is also due to Henry III., but in his old +age Colchester may well have seen the workmen busy with the erection of +the corresponding section of the clerestory. +</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page60" name="page60"></a>[60]</span></p> + +<div><a name="h2H_4_0011" id="h2H_4_0011"><!-- H2 anchor --></a></div> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + VII +</h2> +<h3> + THE ABBOT AT HOME +</h3> + +<p> +As before, if we want to know an Abbot's interests and his manner of +life at home, we shall go to the accounts of his stewards or Seneschals. +His rent-roll is less than Abbot Litlington's, and there are heavier +arrears. The country is greatly unsettled and it is not an easy +time for landholders. We possess a clear "statement<a href="#note-68" name="noteref-68"><small> 68</small></a> of the lands +and apportionments of the lord William by the grace of God Abbot of +Westminster," as audited in the year 1388. The total revenue when fully +paid has fallen to £617 16<i>s.</i> 1<i>d.</i>, but there are arrears amounting to +£104 12<i>s.</i> 7<i>d.</i> However, if his receipts are less, his stock is still +plentiful; he possesses 58 horses and 19 foals; 351 heads of cattle; +2287 sheep and lambs; and 299 pigs. When he listened to his monks and +lay clerks singing the 144th Psalm, he had every reason to + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page61" name="page61"></a>[61]</span> + + join in the +desire "that our garners may be full and plenteous with all manner of +store: that our sheep may bring forth thousands and ten thousands in +our streets: that our oxen may be strong to labour"; and he knew his +times well enough to ask also that there may be "no complaining in +our streets." +</p> +<p> +We have six rolls of his Seneschals between 1388 and 1403, and we may +put together from these the facts that are to be gleaned about him. +At this time, at any rate, he was a man of good health. There is a +slight reference to an indisposition in 1389, and once there is a fee +of one shilling to a doctor for treating his "tibia," which seems to +have been a peculiarly vulnerable part of monkish anatomy. On the other +hand, he does not appear to have been as fond of field sports as his +great predecessor; at least in 1402-3 his steward bought 359 rabbits, 41 +woodcock and a pheasant, which would hardly be necessary if his lordship +were in the habit of inviting the neighbouring gentry to help him keep +down his game. It is evident that his estates are being well managed. We +can tell, for instance, that in 1388-9, on his manors of Eybury, Denham, + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page62" name="page62"></a>[62]</span> + +Laleham and Pyrford, he sold 215 stone of wool at 1<i>s.</i> 9<i>d.</i> a +stone. He made red wine at Islip, and his price for it was £2 12<i>s.</i> +6<i>d.</i> a pipe. The needs of his own establishment were mainly supplied +from Denham and Pyrford, especially the former; for his accounts are +full of small payments to servants who had driven pigs from Denham +to la Neyte. In other words, when he was in town he did not patronize +the Westminster tradesmen, but he purchased supplies from himself as +over-lord of Denham. For these he paid his factor at Denham the current +price, so that the manor could give a good account of its takings at +the end of the year. +</p> +<p> +And this careful accountancy went to quite practical lengths. For +instance, the Abbot was wont to receive during each year a large number +of "exennia," which, as we have seen, were complimentary presents +mostly offered in kind. It happens that there is a complete list of +these with the names of the donors for 1388-9. The clergy beneficed +on the estate, such as the rector of Islip, the vicar of Hurley, where +the Abbey had a daughter priory, the rectors of Oddington and Sutton +on the Gloucestershire property, + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page63" name="page63"></a>[63]</span> + + and the vicar of Brailes in Warwickshire; +the heads of the affiliated convents, such as Hurley, Greater Malvern, +Deerhurst, and Pershore; the tenants, such as the miller at Pyrford; +the man who rents the church farm at Longdon; various monks of the +Abbey, such as John Stowe, who brings now a lamb as a peace-offering, now +the results of his skill with the line, a pike or an eel, and now that +which he has taken with his bow, a brace of bittern; and Peter Coumbe, +the Sacrist and warden of the New Work, who offers a swan and a brace +of pheasants. The gifts, in fact, are from all sorts and conditions +of folk. There is the King's larderer with his modest present of fish; +there is Master Thomas Southam, Cardinal Langham's lawyer, who now sends +the Abbot a pipe of red wine, the most costly of all the gifts, in the +hope, no doubt, of continuing to serve his present lordship in a similar +capacity; and, most pathetic of all, there are two women, who claim to +be of the Abbot's kin,<a href="#note-69" name="noteref-69"><small> 69</small></a> and who offer for his acceptance half a dozen +capons. But the point for us is the careful management of his affairs, +which appears in the fact that each of these eighty-three + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page64" name="page64"></a>[64]</span> + + contributions +is entered by the Seneschal at its market-price. The pipe of wine +figures at £2 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>; the lamb at 8<i>d.</i>; the six capons from +the poor relations at 2<i>s.</i>; and the brace of bittern at 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> +Altogether these tributes towards his maintenance save the expenses +of the mansion by £14 11<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, and a reference to his steward's +balance-sheet under the head of "outside receipts" shows this exact +sum entered as derived from the "exennia" of divers persons. Prudent +housewifery could scarcely go further. On the other hand, he does not +so treat the presents he receives from the great ones of the earth. When +a stag arrives from Windsor, or a buck from the Baroness Despenser, +the cash value of these compliments is not taken into the account; +there is merely an acknowledgment that certain recognitions in money +have been given to the bearers of the gifts. +</p> +<p> +It is natural to ask whether the accounts show signs of luxurious +habits. Certainly not in his furnishing. Thus, in 1401 he was adding to +the accommodation of his London mansion of la Neyte. For his new parlour +he obtained a cupboard for 10<i>s.</i>, two chairs for 4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, six stools + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page65" name="page65"></a>[65]</span> + + for 4<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>, and a deal table for the same sum. I think (the word +is not quite clear) that he had a curtain provided for his study-window +at a cost of 1<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>; and there was a fireplace in his parlour, +for which his Seneschal laid out 7<i>d.</i> upon coal. Certainly not, again, +in wine and strong drink; for his outlay under this head was about a +sixth part of the sum which he spent upon corn and meat. Nor is there +any evidence that he used his position for the enrichment of poor +relations. It may be that we can detect a needy kinsman in one John +Colchester who was granted 3<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> by my lord's command at la Neyte +in March, 1389, and it was quite possibly for a sister-in-law—the wife of +Thomas Colchester—that he ordered a diamond ring<a href="#note-70" name="noteref-70"><small> 70</small></a> at a cost of 40<i>s.</i> +on May 31 of that year, perhaps because it was her birthday. When one of +his servants was sent to Colchester on some personal business of the +Abbot, the man was evidently not expected to comport himself as if his +master's resources were unlimited, for his total expenses were 2<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> +</p> +<p> +The Abbot liked to have one or two of the younger monks around him, +such as John Sandon + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page66" name="page66"></a>[66]</span> + + and Thomas Merke, whom we have met, as Shakespeare +also met him, in the events that gather mysteriously round the end +of Richard II.'s reign. No doubt, they joined him at table in the new +parlour of la Neyte, but the only sign of further bounty towards them was +a gift of 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> to them jointly for a treat—pro gaudiis—a term +which survives in the custom of applying the word "gaudy" to those College +entertainments to which at the moment Oxford is patriotically a stranger. +</p> +<p> +When the great man moved about, it was seemingly not with any great +train; otherwise it would hardly be necessary for the Seneschal to +give 1<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> to a certain man for guiding my lord out of the forest +of Rockingham, as if the Abbot were too lonely to face the possible +appearance of Robin Hood with equanimity. But, of course, there were +exceptional circumstances when he would travel in the dignity of his +position. There was a formal visitation of the manors of Denham, Laleham, +Staines, and Pyrford in 1402-3, which cost over £6, and visits to Henry +IV. in the same year at Ware and Windsor and Berkhamstead, at an expense +of about £4. A short time after, + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page67" name="page67"></a>[67]</span> + + the Abbot had to face a continental +journey, but £4 12<i>s.</i> is no great sum to enter as "the expenses of my +lord and his household in setting out for Calais with porterage and the +hire of a boat to take him to the ship, and also the expenses of John +Sandon and John Stowe [two monks] and part of the household on their +way back to London." +</p> +<p> +Not a little of his petty expenses arose from the frequency with which he +was officially visited by persons of position who were not too proud to +receive a present of money, and would have resented its absence. They +were mostly content with much less than the 20<i>s.</i> imparted to the +Remembrancer of the King's Exchequer, but the gifts of 3<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> +mounted up when the Abbot must receive now a Herald and his boy, now +the Sheriff of Middlesex and his valet and his boy, now a messenger +with a summons to Parliament, now two criers from the King's Bench, +and all within a brief space of time. +</p> +<p> +But Abbot Colchester did indulge one luxury, whether out of a taste for +it or because it was the fashion of the time, I cannot say. He was fond +of being entertained, particularly by musicians; + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page68" name="page68"></a>[68]</span> + + and his Seneschal's +accounts during these six or seven years are full of small payments to +such persons, from a boy who danced before my lord at Walsingham for +6<i>d.</i> to Henry the piper—fistulator—who was retained at Pyrford all +Christmas time for 14<i>s.</i> He could provide some of this enjoyment from +the resources of the Abbey, as when he made two clerks bring a pair +of organs from Westminster to Pyrford. His chief delight was to have +Master Percyvale and other of the King's minstrels, especially on great +festivals such as St. Peter ad Vincula, and he could listen to Percyvale +for the modest consideration of 2<i>s.</i> Evidently it came to be known that +he had tastes of this kind, for William of Wykeham's pipers journeyed +to Pyrford to strut their little hour before the Abbot; Henry Despenser, +the fighting Bishop of Norwich and doughty champion of Richard II., +sent his minstrels to entertain my lord when he was at Birlingham; +the Duke of Gloucester, Thomas of Woodstock, kept a blind harper who +gave a performance at Denham; and the other visitors included the Abbot +of Eynsham's player—lusor—and the musicians of the ill-fated Earl of +Arundel. Even when he was + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page69" name="page69"></a>[69]</span> + + resident for a space in Northampton for the +General Chapter of the Benedictine Order, he was sometimes entertained +by mummers.<a href="#note-71" name="noteref-71"><small> 71</small></a> +</p> +<p> +But it would not be fair to think of him as having no desires that +went down to the realities of things. For he lived in troublous times, +and he knew how Christian men should face the serious issues that +then emerged. His duty to the country and to the various properties +for which he stood in trust called him away from Westminster often, +and sometimes for prolonged periods. It is possible by means of the +accounts of his various bailiffs to follow his comings and goings; +for the receipts from the properties must be delivered to the Abbot in +person, and there is thus an entry of the cost of journeying to such +and such a place, wherever he happened to be, and generally of the cost +of one or two horsemen for safety's sake. But the Abbey and the welfare +of his Brethren were in his mind, and he kept a guiding hand upon their +spiritual concerns, particularly in times of trial. There is an instance +of this in a document,<a href="#note-72" name="noteref-72"><small> 72</small></a> which bears no date except + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page70" name="page70"></a>[70]</span> + + August 31, but +which may be assigned with reasonable certainty to Richard II.'s troubled +reign. It is headed in another hand, "W. Abbot of Westminster to the +Prior of the same place"; but this is an error. The Abbot in a quite +exceptional way addresses himself to the officers or obedientiaries +without mentioning the Prior, and I incline to attributing the document to +the latest years of Richard II., because the Prior, John de Wratting,<a href="#note-73" name="noteref-73"><small> 73</small></a> +was then becoming unequal to his duties. It is true that our evidence +for this is dated 1405,<a href="#note-74" name="noteref-74"><small> 74</small></a> but, as Wratting was then over eighty, it +may hold almost as well for seven or eight years earlier. The Abbot's +message is as follows:— +</p> +<p class="quote"> + "My beloved sons in Christ, +</p> +<p class="quote"> + "The most serene Prince our lord the King has urgently required + of us that in this present time of dire necessity we should be + instant in prayer to the most High with all our hearts for the + good estate of King and country. For enemies without and rebels + within are confederate in their malicious plots to shatter the + peace of the realm. You therefore to whom (under us) belongs the + administration of government in our monastery we hereby urge and + enjoin that, + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page71" name="page71"></a>[71]</span> + + considering what we say above, you should put a + limit upon the Brethren's walks abroad and upon their ridings + into distant parts—except of course in the case of the Monk + Bailiff—until God grants us more peaceful times. Call all and + singular your Brethren to Chapter and bid them from me to be + content with their usual recreation within the house and to give + themselves so much the more earnestly to meditation and prayer as + the distress and wickedness of the times become more pressing. + Go in solemn procession every fourth day round the bounds of the + monastery, and every sixth day through the vill of Westminster, + praying for a successful issue and for the common weal of + the King and the realm—petitions which are already earnestly + commended to the private prayers of all the Brethren. Summon + all the chaplains and clerks dwelling within St. Margaret's + parish to join you, and specially the clerks of our Almonry, + according to custom. Fare you well in Christ now and for ever." +</p> +<p> +The Abbot wrote from Denham; but his heart was with his Brethren in a +time of trouble. +</p> +<p> +There are also signs that in normal times he was exercising an effect +on the organization of conventual activity. In his roll for 1393-4 the +officer called the Warden of the Churches made entry that he had paid +to Peter Coumbe, as Sacrist, the sum of 32<i>s.</i>, at the rate of 4<i>s.</i> for +each + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page72" name="page72"></a>[72]</span> + + of the Abbey's eight principal feasts," in accordance with the +recent ordinance of the lord William now Abbot."<a href="#note-75" name="noteref-75"><small> 75</small></a> It is an intimation +that the Abbot was already making his influence felt, and was encouraging +his Brethren to regard the solemnities of divine worship<a href="#note-76" name="noteref-76"><small> 76</small></a> as the +chief care of their monastic life. +</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page73" name="page73"></a>[73]</span></p> + +<div><a name="h2H_4_0012" id="h2H_4_0012"><!-- H2 anchor --></a></div> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + VIII +</h2> +<h3> + THE ABBOT ABROAD +</h3> + +<p> +But though we may realize that Abbot Colchester loved his Convent and +cherished it, we still have to think of him as being often compelled to +wander far from it. True, he had spent so much time in Rome before his +election, that he was able to escape in 1390 the triennial visit <i>ad +limina</i> which was normally expected of an Abbot. He was represented +on that occasion by John Borewell, an active and efficient monk, who +had succeeded him in the Archdeaconry in 1387; he was also represented +by the gifts of himself and his Brethren on the occasion of the year of +Jubilee, which are carefully recorded in the <i>Liber Niger</i> (f. 92). But +that exemption did not avail to keep him at home, for we are told that on +December 14, 1391, he set out for the Continent + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page74" name="page74"></a>[74]</span> + + on the King's business, +the King being responsible for his travelling charges and his safe +conduct.<a href="#note-77" name="noteref-77"><small> 77</small></a> +</p> + +<div class="figure"> +<a name="image-0005"><!--IMG--></a> +<a href="images/ill-05.jpg"><img src="images/ill-05-s.jpg" width="255" height="380" +title="Abbot Colchester's Seal." +alt="ABBOT COLCHESTER'S SEAL." /></a> +<br /> +ABBOT COLCHESTER'S SEAL. +</div> + +<p> +In 1393 he was commissioned by the Pope to join the Bishop of Salisbury +and the Abbot of Waltham in an inquiry into the statutes and customs of +the Collegiate Chapter of the Chapel in Windsor Castle, and to correct +and reform these, where they seemed to need it.<a href="#note-78" name="noteref-78"><small> 78</small></a> John de Waltham, +Bishop of Salisbury, and our Abbot were there associated not for the +first time or the last. Two years later the Bishop died, and was buried +by Richard's desire in the Confessor's Chapel. Waltham was a successful +favourite, without claim to royal sepulture, and we may assume that +Colchester and the Convent were among the many who protested. It is, +perhaps, not unfair to assert that "the Abbey was well considered for +this," or that the monks' "scruples were overborne by gifts of money and +vestments."<a href="#note-79" name="noteref-79"><small> 79</small></a> Yet it is a fact that, whereas the Bishop was buried +in 1395, the indenture tripartite,<a href="#note-80" name="noteref-80"><small> 80</small></a> which dealt with the use to be +made of the gifts, was + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page75" name="page75"></a>[75]</span> + + not drawn up till July 15, 1412. It recites +that the Bishop, who had served the Kings of England from his boyhood +in their Chancery and in other and higher offices, was buried among +the tombs of the Kings;<a href="#note-81" name="noteref-81"><small> 81</small></a> that at the sight of his bier—we must, +no doubt, think of Abbot Colchester as standing by—Richard II. had +given to the Abbey a rich "Jesse" vestment valued at 1000 marks, and +that the executors had added another vestment valued at £40 and 500 +marks in money. Colchester and the Convent covenanted to observe the +Bishop's obit—September 18—which we know they did to the last. They also +admitted into their company one of the Bishop's executors, Ralph Selby, +Archdeacon of Buckingham, giving him precedence next to the Prior with +corresponding privileges, and granting him, in 1402-3, a yearly pension +of £4. This does not support the notion of the Convent's hostility to +John de Waltham; at the same time it occurs too late to be reckoned +as a bargain entered into for the purpose of securing to the Bishop +a posthumous honour which they were unwilling to accord, even when +Richard II. asked for it. +</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page76" name="page76"></a>[76]</span></p> + +<p> +I pass by Colchester's part, if he took any, in Richard's journey to +Ireland in 1399;<a href="#note-82" name="noteref-82"><small> 82</small></a> for our records throw no light on what did not +concern the Convent. There appears to be no doubt that he was confederate +with the Earls of Rutland, Huntingdon, Kent, and Salisbury, who were +at first confided to his safe-keeping by Henry IV.; that he took part +on December 17, 1399, in a secret gathering of the conspirators within +the Abbey; that he was arrested, and sent first to Reigate and then, +January 25, 1400, to the Tower; and that he was released, after a trial +there held on February 4.<a href="#note-83" name="noteref-83"><small> 83</small></a> He had, of course, received Henry IV. when +he made his progress to Westminster on October 12, 1399, and had taken +part in the coronation on the following day.<a href="#note-84" name="noteref-84"><small> 84</small></a> +</p> +<p> +But inside the Convent there was an evident desire to eschew +partisanships, as any one can realize who reads Roger Cretton's bare +and impartial record in the <i>Liber Niger</i>.<a href="#note-85" name="noteref-85"><small> 85</small></a> I therefore + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page77" name="page77"></a>[77]</span> + + pass from +public questions and take up an otherwise undated letter<a href="#note-86" name="noteref-86"><small> 86</small></a> of the Abbot, +written from Cologne on October 10, to two important Westminster monks +whom we have already had before us, Peter Coumbe and John Borewell. It +reveals Colchester's close interest in Abbey affairs, however far +away he might be, and it is even somewhat peremptory in tone. For he +had referred to them some detail of monastic business, and says that +he is daily awaiting their answer, in order that he may take action +accordingly. The Convent, he adds, is to receive with due honour a +relation of the Bishop of Lincoln, remembering that his lordship has +always been gracious to them in matters of conventual concern. +</p> +<p> +We must try to fix the date of this journey through Cologne, and some +things can be soon + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page78" name="page78"></a>[78]</span> + + settled. It must be before 1409-10, when John Borewell +died.<a href="#note-87" name="noteref-87"><small> 87</small></a> He was in office as Granger, Kitchener, Cellarer, and Gardener +almost till his death, and he had been in partnership with Peter Coumbe, +as manager of the funds provided for Queen Anne's anniversary,<a href="#note-88" name="noteref-88"><small> 88</small></a> +from 1394 to 1399. But who is the Bishop of Lincoln? It is tempting to +think of the princely Henry Beaufort, the most potent holder of the see +at this period; if so, the journey would fall at some time before 1404, +when Beaufort was translated to Winchester, and thus it might even be +got just within the limits of the partnership above-mentioned, for he +was appointed to Lincoln in 1398. But we have evidence pointing to 1407 +and 1408 as the time with which the visit to Cologne must be connected, +and bringing Henry Beaufort's help and Abbot Colchester's travels into +further association. It is a tattered paper document<a href="#note-89" name="noteref-89"><small> 89</small></a> which states +that when Colchester was in foreign parts in 1407,<a href="#note-90" name="noteref-90"><small> 90</small></a> the + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page79" name="page79"></a>[79]</span> + + collector +of Romescot for the county of Surrey doubled his demand upon the +chapels of Pyrford and Horsell from 12½<i>d.</i> each to 25<i>d.</i> each, and +laid them under interdict when payment was refused. But the Bishop of +Winchester issued a special mandate to the collector to desist from the +exaction. Beaufort was therefore not abroad at the time with Colchester, +but was defending his interests at home. But both Colchester and Philip +Repingdon, Bishop of Lincoln, were in Italy in 1408. Colchester was at +Lucca and Pisa in May, supporting the Cardinals who were struggling +with Gregory XII.,<a href="#note-91" name="noteref-91"><small> 91</small></a> and his old friend, Bishop Merke, was with +him. At Siena, on September 18, Gregory created ten new Cardinals, +and one of these was Philip Repingdon.<a href="#note-92" name="noteref-92"><small> 92</small></a> It would be natural that he +and Colchester should then meet, possibly travelling homeward together, +and being in Cologne on October 10. +</p> + +<div class="figure"> +<a name="image-0006"><!--IMG--></a> +<a href="images/ill-06.jpg"><img src="images/ill-06-s.jpg" width="325" height="430" +title="Coronation of Henry V." +alt="CORONATION OF HENRY V." /></a> +<br /> +CORONATION OF HENRY V. +</div> + +<p> +The matter of the augmented Romescot was brought to an end at Guildford, +says the document, after the Abbot's return to England, July 22, +1412. This must not be interpreted to mean a + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page80" name="page80"></a>[80]</span> + + continuous absence of five +years, 1407-12, for we have seen the Abbot on his homeward way in 1408, +and know that in July, 1411, he presided alone over the General Chapter +of Benedictines at Northampton.<a href="#note-93" name="noteref-93"><small> 93</small></a> His absence in 1412, which is also +substantiated by his bailiffs' payments to a substitute, was due to one +more journey to Rome; for the account of the "Novum Opus" for 1412-3 +enters payment, by consent of the Prior and the Seniors, of the large +sum of £33 to the Abbot for the acceleration of certain concerns of +the church in the Roman Court. It is possible that this journey took +place in the autumn; for great events at home, in which the Abbot had +some share, marked the months which followed. Early in 1413<a href="#note-94" name="noteref-94"><small> 94</small></a> Henry +IV. had a seizure while at his devotions in the Abbey, and we should like +to know whether the Abbot was in town and gave his instructions for +the King's removal to the noblest apartment in the abbatial residence, +Jerusalem Chamber, where he died on March 20. It does not appear that +Colchester took any part in the royal obsequies, but there is no doubt +that he assisted at the coronation of Henry V. in the + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page81" name="page81"></a>[81]</span> + + Abbey church on +that snowy Passion Sunday, April 9, 1413. For when the King's chantry +was built, about twenty years after Colchester's death, its famous +sculptures included two Coronation groups—perhaps, the acclamation and +the homage<a href="#note-95" name="noteref-95"><small> 95</small></a>—in each of which the Abbot is represented as standing, +in cope and mitre, on the King's left hand, Thomas Arundel, the Archbishop +of Canterbury, being on the King's right hand. We may also assume that +Colchester was at Westminster to receive Henry, when he attended divine +service in the church on Ascension Day and Whitsunday of that year.<a href="#note-96" name="noteref-96"><small> 96</small></a> +The new King's devotion to the Abbey was beyond question, and his zeal +for the immediate resumption of the New Work in the nave would tend to +keep the Abbot at hand. Operations began on July 7, one thousand marks +a year being granted by the Crown;<a href="#note-97" name="noteref-97"><small> 97</small></a> and Colchester would see things +well in train under the hands of Richard Whitington and Brother Richard +Harwden, before he left the precincts once more. +</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page82" name="page82"></a>[82]</span></p> + +<p> +Possibly he had a rest from travel in the year 1413-4; at least we have +nothing more serious to notice than his Receiver's payment of 8<i>d.</i> for +boat hire "when my lord dined with the Archbishop at Lambhyth." But +the autumn of 1414 saw him once more setting out for foreign parts; +for Henry chose him as one of the English delegates to the great +Council of Constance.<a href="#note-98" name="noteref-98"><small> 98</small></a> People spoke of the greatness of his train +as he journeyed. Dr. Wylie remarks that he "was looked upon by the +foreigners as a prince."<a href="#note-99" name="noteref-99"><small> 99</small></a> Perhaps he himself thought sometimes of the +very different circumstances in which he and his man Gerard had crossed +the Channel in fear and trembling, seven and thirty years earlier. He +had been already engaged, as collector of the triennial contribution of +½<i>d.</i> in the mark imposed on English Benedictine houses, in paying out +loans for their journey to the Abbot of St. Edmundsbury and the Prior of +Worcester, who were the delegates from the Order to the same Council, +and in sending fees to the various counsel who were retained by the +Order at Constance. We have his triennial accounts as + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page83" name="page83"></a>[83]</span> + + collector for 1417 +and 1420,<a href="#note-100" name="noteref-100"><small> 100</small></a> which show that the business of the Council hung about +him for the rest of his days; even in the latter, made up long after +Constance had seen the last of its visitors, he was still reckoning the +cost of a monk of Worcester's journey to Constance and back. +</p> +<p> +How long he remained at Constance, and what part he took in the tortuous +proceedings, we do not know. The spring and summer of 1415 were anxious +times in England, and Henry V. would be glad to have so shrewd an adviser +within reach. The Abbot was now about seventy-seven years of age, and the +lust of travel must have long since ceased. The King's writ went forth +in May for the "Array and Munitioning of the Clergy" by July 16,<a href="#note-101" name="noteref-101"><small> 101</small></a> +and the head of our House would be concerned to see that Westminster did +its duty, <i>per alios</i> if not <i>per se</i>. Our Treasurers' roll for 1414-5 +shows how Abbot and Convent performed their several parts:— +</p> +<p class="quote"> + "For one new chariot with six horses in the same, over and above + one [chariot] provided by the lord Abbot, and with a complete set + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page84" name="page84"></a>[84]</span> + + of harness for the said chariot and for the horses pertaining + thereto—the whole being bought and given to our lord the King + on the occasion of his expedition to France, together with the + wages of a valet, a groom, and a page for the said chariot, + and cloth bought for their livery, besides the maintenance of + the men and the horses aforesaid for three weeks, pending the + King's departure for France this year. xxxiii. li. xii. d." +</p> +<p> +If we may take it that the Abbot's expenditure on his chariot was of the +same extent, we have a total outlay of £66, or about £1000 of our money. +</p> +<p> +Colchester's generally good health began to fail in 1416, and his +apothecary was called in to apply various remedies at a fee of 16<i>s.</i> +8<i>d.</i><a href="#note-102" name="noteref-102"><small> 102</small></a> At home he could still find interest in watching the progress +of the New Work, for the north aisle of the nave was being proceeded +with and the pillars of the triforium above it were being put in their +place.<a href="#note-103" name="noteref-103"><small> 103</small></a> If Henry's gifts for the purpose failed to reach Henry's +expectations and the Convent's, that is only another way of saying that +Colchester's aged thoughts were often occupied with the expedition to +France and the scenes that he knew so familiarly. He may have taken part +in the + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page85" name="page85"></a>[85]</span> + + rejoicings over the victory of Agincourt; he certainly received +a special message about the capture of Rouen in 1418.<a href="#note-104" name="noteref-104"><small> 104</small></a> +</p> +<p> +He died in 1420 at a good old age, probably fourscore and two, and in +the 34th year of his Abbacy. The exact day is not recorded. We know that +there was much mortality in the Convent during 1419-20. When the Wardens +of Queen Alianore's Manors made up their accounts to Michaelmas (they did +so generally about November), they wrote at the end a sorrowful list of +twelve names with a note that "all these died this year together with the +lord Abbot and Brother Thomas Peuerel." Thus in strictness we might put +his death before September 29. But the rolls were by no means precise in +the matter, and often included those who died at any time before the day +on which the accounts were balanced. Moreover, we have the royal licence +to the Convent to elect a successor,<a href="#note-105" name="noteref-105"><small> 105</small></a> which is dated November 12, +1420. We may therefore suppose that Colchester died late in October or + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page86" name="page86"></a>[86]</span> + + early in November. He was buried in the Chapel of St. John Baptist, +where his much battered free-stone image lies on an altar-tomb. His +initials still remain, but the heraldry has long since perished, and +his mitre and gloves have lost the jewels that once adorned them. It +adds insult to this injury that his countenance should be described as +"stern and ill-favoured."<a href="#note-106" name="noteref-106"><small> 106</small></a> +</p> +<p> +But the character behind the countenance is not difficult to sum up. +In his own day he was reckoned to be a man of shrewd judgment and wide +experience; we have noted the far-travelled uses that were made of him +by the Convent and by the Crown, and we can conclude that his judgment +increased in shrewdness as his experience extended in width. Indeed, +he retained this quality to the last. We have seen that there is still +extant an account of his official disbursements in behalf of the General +Chapter of the Benedictines at Northampton for the last year of his life, +1420.<a href="#note-107" name="noteref-107"><small> 107</small></a> It includes payments made, for special services rendered, +to two Westminster monks, who had been bidden to attend the conference. +They were Richard Harwden and + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page87" name="page87"></a>[87]</span> + + Edmund Kirton, and each was appointed Abbot +of Westminster in his turn. It is not every man of eighty-two who is +shrewd enough to pick out his successors for the next forty years, and +at the same time large-hearted enough to give them every encouragement +to fit themselves for the office which he holds. Indeed, his was the +kind of character to which justice can only be done after a lapse of +time. It is necessary to look back at the men who, noting his shrewdness, +came to a conviction that he was also just and trustworthy—Richard II., +who opposed his election as Abbot, but lived to prove his friendship; +Henry IV., who knew his friendship for Richard, and at first treated +him accordingly, but afterwards found no reason to regret the clemency +shown to him; Henry V., who appreciated his devotion to Richard, and +did not honour him the less because of Henry IV.'s early suspicions; +and the Cardinals and others who met him in the tortuous paths by which +ecclesiastical diplomacy was trying to make its way towards the peace +of the distracted Church. We may leave on William Colchester's memorial +an inscription taken from a letter addressed to him by Thomas Merke, + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page88" name="page88"></a>[88]</span> + + Bishop of Carlisle, who was conveying to the Abbot a request that he +would use his influence at the Roman Court on behalf of Merton Hall, +Oxford. We shall admit that Merke was his intimate friend, and shall +remember that Colchester showed his own affection for Merke by arranging +that the Bishop should be commemorated at Hurley Priory along with the +Abbot's parents.<a href="#note-108" name="noteref-108"><small> 108</small></a> Merke's witness, however, may still be true. "Men +like," he wrote, "to know your Paternity's views on these matters, +for they observe your solidity, which is a rare virtue in these days, +and they give you their confidence all the more."<a href="#note-109" name="noteref-109"><small> 109</small></a> No other Abbot +ruled our House as long as he; nor could any man of his line desire a +more satisfying verdict on his character. +</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page89" name="page89"></a>[89]</span></p> + +<div><a name="h2H_4_0013" id="h2H_4_0013"><!-- H2 anchor --></a></div> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + INDEX +</h2> + + +<ul> +<li> Agincourt, battle of, <a href="#page10">10</a>, <a href="#page85">85</a> </li> +<li> Aldenham, Herts, church of, <a href="#page16">16</a>, <a href="#page44">44</a> </li> +<li> Alianore, Queen, manors of, <a href="#page85">85</a> </li> +<li> Almonry, clerks of the, <a href="#page71">71</a> </li> +<li> Anagni, <a href="#page37">37</a>, <a href="#page39">39</a> </li> +<li> Anne of Bohemia, wife of Richard II., <a href="#page58">58</a>, <a href="#page78">78</a> </li> +<li> Armour, an Abbot's, <a href="#page53">53</a> </li> +<li> Arundel, Earl of, <a href="#page68">68</a> </li> +<li> Arundel, Thomas, Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href="#page81">81</a> f. </li> +<li> Atte Belle, Richard, highwayman, <a href="#page45">45</a> </li> +<li> Avignon, <a href="#page32">32</a> f., <a href="#page35">35</a> f., <a href="#page39">39</a> </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Beaufort, Henry, Bishop of Winchester, <a href="#page78">78</a> f. </li> +<li> Benedictines, general chapters of, <a href="#page19">19</a>, <a href="#page22">22</a>, <a href="#page69">69</a>, <a href="#page80">80</a>, <a href="#page82">82</a>, <a href="#page86">86</a> </li> +<li> Berkhamstead, <a href="#page66">66</a> </li> +<li> Birlingham, manor of, <a href="#page68">68</a> </li> +<li> Bohun, Eleanor de, Duchess of Gloucester, <a href="#page57">57</a> </li> +<li> Borewell, John, Archdeacon, <a href="#page73">73</a>, <a href="#page77">77</a> f. </li> +<li> Briefs, funeral, <a href="#page51">51</a> </li> +<li> Bruges, <a href="#page32">32</a> n., <a href="#page34">34</a> f., <a href="#page40">40</a> </li> +<li> Burgh, John, monk, <a href="#page53">53</a> </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Calais, <a href="#page34">34</a>, <a href="#page40">40</a>, <a href="#page67">67</a> </li> +<li> Cambridge, <a href="#page17">17</a> </li> +<li> Cambridge, Earl of, <a href="#page26">26</a> </li> +<li> Canterbery, John, monk, <a href="#page51">51</a> n., <a href="#page53">53</a> </li> +<li> Chamberlain, duties and accounts of, <a href="#page41">41</a> f. </li> +<li> Chambers, or camerae, monks', <a href="#page47">47</a>-<a href="#page50">50</a> </li> +<li> Chapter House, <a href="#page30">30</a> </li> +<li> Charing Cross, <a href="#page47">47</a> f., <a href="#page56">56</a> </li> +<li> Clehungre, William, monk, <a href="#page28">28</a> </li> +<li> Clergy, Array and Munitioning of the, <a href="#page83">83</a> </li> +<li> Cloisters, Little, <a href="#page48">48</a> </li> +<li> Colchester, <a href="#page15">15</a>, <a href="#page16">16</a>, <a href="#page65">65</a>; +<ul> +<li> Priory of St. Botolph at, <a href="#page15">15</a> f.; </li> +<li> parish of St. Nicholas, <a href="#page15">15</a>; </li> +<li> castle of, <a href="#page16">16</a> </li> +</ul></li> +<li> Colchester, John, <a href="#page65">65</a> </li> +<li> Colchester, Thomas, <a href="#page65">65</a> </li> +<li> Colchester, William [de], Abbot, portrait in Nave window, <a href="#page11">11</a>, <a href="#page58">58</a>; +<ul> +<li> in Shakespeare's <i>Richard II.</i>, <a href="#page14">14</a>; </li> +<li> native of St. Nicholas' parish, Colchester, <a href="#page15">15</a> f.; </li> +<li> parents and relations, <a href="#page17">17</a>, <a href="#page65">65</a>; </li> +<li> First Mass, <a href="#page18">18</a>; </li> +<li> probable date of birth, <a href="#page19">19</a>; </li> +<li> at Oxford, <a href="#page19">19</a> f.; </li> +<li> promoted in Refectory, <a href="#page20">20</a>; </li> +<li> at general chapter, Northampton, <a href="#page22">22</a>; </li> +<li> Abbot's Seneschal, <a href="#page24">24</a> ff.; </li> +<li> Convent Treasurer, <a href="#page27">27</a>; </li> +<li> proctor at Rome, <a href="#page30">30</a> ff., <a href="#page41">41</a> ff.; </li> +<li> attempts to secure Priorship for, <a href="#page42">42</a>; </li> +<li> Archdeacon, <a href="#page43">43</a> ff.; </li> +<li> his sheep, <a href="#page46">46</a>; </li> +<li> his pension, <a href="#page47">47</a>; </li> +<li> election as Abbot, <a href="#page54">54</a> ff.; </li> +<li> installation, <a href="#page56">56</a>; </li> +<li> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page90" name="page90"></a>[90]</span> + + details of his establishment, <a href="#page60">60</a> ff.; </li> +<li> orders prayers in war-time, <a href="#page70">70</a> f.; </li> +<li> ordinance for payment to obedientiaries, <a href="#page71">71</a>; </li> +<li> supporter of Richard II., imprisoned by Henry IV., <a href="#page76">76</a>; </li> +<li> letter from Cologne, <a href="#page77">77</a>-<a href="#page79">79</a>; </li> +<li> at coronation of Henry V., <a href="#page81">81</a>; </li> +<li> at Council of Constance, <a href="#page82">82</a> f.; </li> +<li> chariot provided by, <a href="#page83">83</a>; </li> +<li> death of, <a href="#page85">85</a>; </li> +<li> tomb of, <a href="#page86">86</a>; </li> +<li> character of, <a href="#page87">87</a> f. </li> +</ul></li> +<li> Cologne, <a href="#page77">77</a>-<a href="#page79">79</a> </li> +<li> Compromission, election by, <a href="#page55">55</a> </li> +<li> Constance, Council of, <a href="#page82">82</a> f. </li> +<li> Coumbe, Peter, monk, <a href="#page59">59</a>, <a href="#page63">63</a>, <a href="#page71">71</a>, <a href="#page77">77</a> f. </li> +<li> Covent Garden, <a href="#page47">47</a> f. </li> +<li> Cretton, or Kyrton, Roger, monk, <a href="#page47">47</a>, <a href="#page76">76</a> </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Dauphiné, <a href="#page35">35</a> </li> +<li> Deerhurst, Prior of, <a href="#page63">63</a> </li> +<li> Denham, manor of, <a href="#page61">61</a>, <a href="#page66">66</a>, <a href="#page68">68</a>, <a href="#page71">71</a> </li> +<li> Despenser, Baroness, <a href="#page64">64</a> </li> +<li> Despenser, Henry, Bishop of Norwich, <a href="#page68">68</a> </li> +<li> Domesday chartulary, <a href="#page48">48</a> </li> +<li> Durham, Hatfield, Bishop of, <a href="#page26">26</a> </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Edmund the King, St., <a href="#page58">58</a> </li> +<li> Edward, Black Prince, <a href="#page26">26</a> f. </li> +<li> Edward the Confessor, St., <a href="#page22">22</a>, <a href="#page56">56</a> f.; +<ul> +<li> chapel of, <a href="#page74">74</a>; </li> +<li> ring of, <a href="#page53">53</a> </li> +</ul></li> +<li> Edward III., <a href="#page24">24</a>, <a href="#page26">26</a>, <a href="#page34">34</a> </li> +<li> Excestr', Richard, Prior, <a href="#page26">26</a>, <a href="#page42">42</a>, <a href="#page49">49</a>-<a href="#page51">51</a> </li> +<li> Exchequer, Remembrancer of the, <a href="#page67">67</a> </li> +<li> Exennia, given to monks, <a href="#page18">18</a>, <a href="#page21">21</a>; +<ul> +<li> to Abbots, <a href="#page62">62</a> ff. </li> +</ul></li> +<li> Eybury, manor of, <a href="#page61">61</a> </li> +<li> Eynsham, Abbot of, <a href="#page68">68</a> </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Farnago, John, monk, <a href="#page36">36</a> </li> +<li> <i>Flacones</i>, or pancakes, <a href="#page27">27</a> ff. </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Gloucester Hall, Oxford, <a href="#page19">19</a> </li> +<li> Gregory XI., Pope, <a href="#page32">32</a>, <a href="#page37">37</a> f. </li> +<li> Gregory XII., Pope, <a href="#page79">79</a> </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Halle, William, monk, <a href="#page42">42</a> </li> +<li> Harwden, Richard, monk, <a href="#page81">81</a>; +<ul> +<li> Abbot, <a href="#page86">86</a> f. </li> +</ul></li> +<li> Hatfield, Thomas, Bishop of Durham, <a href="#page26">26</a> </li> +<li> Hawle, Robert, <a href="#page39">39</a> </li> +<li> Henry III., <a href="#page11">11</a> f., <a href="#page48">48</a>, <a href="#page58">58</a> f. </li> +<li> Henry IV., <a href="#page14">14</a> f., <a href="#page66">66</a>, <a href="#page76">76</a>, <a href="#page80">80</a>, <a href="#page87">87</a> </li> +<li> Henry V., <a href="#page10">10</a>, <a href="#page80">80</a>-<a href="#page84">84</a>, <a href="#page87">87</a> </li> +<li> Horsell, Surrey, <a href="#page79">79</a> </li> +<li> Hotspur, Harry, <a href="#page24">24</a> </li> +<li> Hurley, Berks., Priory of, <a href="#page17">17</a>, <a href="#page62">62</a> f., <a href="#page88">88</a> </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Infirmarer, <a href="#page78">78</a> n. </li> +<li> Infirmary, chambers in the, <a href="#page48">48</a> </li> +<li> Islip, manor of, <a href="#page62">62</a> </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> James, Dr. M. R., Provost of King's, <a href="#page47">47</a> n., <a href="#page50">50</a>, <a href="#page52">52</a> n. </li> +<li> Jerusalem Chamber, <a href="#page52">52</a>, <a href="#page80">80</a> </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Kelvin, Lord, <a href="#page9">9</a> f. </li> +<li> Kirton, Edmund, Abbot, <a href="#page87">87</a> </li> +<li> Kitchener or <i>Coquinarius</i>, <a href="#page28">28</a>, <a href="#page78">78</a> </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Lakyngheth, John, monk, <a href="#page35">35</a>, <a href="#page54">54</a> </li> +<li> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page91" name="page91"></a>[91]</span> + + Laleham, manor of, <a href="#page62">62</a>, <a href="#page66">66</a> </li> +<li> Langham, Simon, Abbot and Cardinal, <a href="#page19">19</a>, <a href="#page32">32</a>, <a href="#page36">36</a>, <a href="#page38">38</a>, <a href="#page63">63</a> </li> +<li> Langley, Edmund, Earl of Cambridge, <a href="#page26">26</a> </li> +<li> Lethaby, Prof. W. R., <a href="#page12">12</a> </li> +<li> <i>Liber Niger Quaternus</i>, <a href="#page39">39</a> n., <a href="#page47">47</a>, <a href="#page53">53</a>, <a href="#page73">73</a>, <a href="#page76">76</a> </li> +<li> Litlington, Nicholas, Abbot, <a href="#page19">19</a>, <a href="#page24">24</a>-<a href="#page27">27</a>, <a href="#page44">44</a> f., <a href="#page48">48</a>, <a href="#page51">51</a> n., <a href="#page52">52</a>-<a href="#page54">54</a> </li> +<li> London, Tower of, <a href="#page39">39</a>, <a href="#page76">76</a> </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Malvern, Prior of, <a href="#page63">63</a> </li> +<li> March, Philippa, Countess of, <a href="#page23">23</a> f. </li> +<li> Marseilles, <a href="#page36">36</a>, <a href="#page39">39</a> </li> +<li> Mary, the Virgin, girdle of St., <a href="#page22">22</a> f. </li> +<li> Merke, or Merks, Thomas, Bishop of Carlisle, <a href="#page14">14</a>, <a href="#page66">66</a>, <a href="#page79">79</a>, <a href="#page87">87</a> f. </li> +<li> Merton Hall, Oxford, <a href="#page88">88</a> </li> +<li> Monk-Bailiff, <a href="#page16">16</a> </li> +<li> Musicians, Abbot Colchester's favour to, <a href="#page67">67</a> f. </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Nave, the New Work in, <a href="#page58">58</a> f., <a href="#page63">63</a>, <a href="#page80">80</a> f., <a href="#page84">84</a> </li> +<li> Neyte, la, mansion of, <a href="#page52">52</a>, <a href="#page62">62</a>, <a href="#page64">64</a>, <a href="#page66">66</a> </li> +<li> Northampton, <a href="#page22">22</a>, <a href="#page69">69</a>, <a href="#page80">80</a>, <a href="#page86">86</a> </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Organs at Westminster, <a href="#page68">68</a> </li> +<li> Oxford, Benedictine students at, <a href="#page19">19</a>, <a href="#page26">26</a>; +<ul> +<li> "Gaudies" at, <a href="#page66">66</a>; </li> +<li> Merton Hall, <a href="#page88">88</a> </li> +</ul></li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Pampeluna, Cardinal of, <a href="#page38">38</a> </li> +<li> Pancakes, monks', <a href="#page27">27</a> ff. </li> +<li> Percyvale, Master, King's musician, <a href="#page68">68</a> </li> +<li> Pershore, <a href="#page63">63</a> </li> +<li> Pestilence, Great, <a href="#page19">19</a> </li> +<li> Peuerel, Thomas, monk, <a href="#page85">85</a> </li> +<li> Poets' Corner, <a href="#page11">11</a> f. </li> +<li> Polo, Marco, Book of, <a href="#page50">50</a> </li> +<li> <i>Polychronicon</i>, <a href="#page55">55</a> n., <a href="#page56">56</a> </li> +<li> Pyrford, manor of, <a href="#page62">62</a>, <a href="#page66">66</a>, <a href="#page68">68</a>, <a href="#page79">79</a> </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Rackham, Rev. R. B., <a href="#page81">81</a> n., <a href="#page84">84</a> n. </li> +<li> Reigate, <a href="#page76">76</a> </li> +<li> Repingdon, Philip, Bishop of Lincoln, <a href="#page79">79</a> </li> +<li> Richard II., <a href="#page12">12</a>, <a href="#page14">14</a>, <a href="#page28">28</a>, <a href="#page53">53</a>-<a href="#page58">58</a>, <a href="#page66">66</a>, <a href="#page68">68</a>, <a href="#page70">70</a>, <a href="#page74">74</a>-<a href="#page76">76</a>, <a href="#page87">87</a> </li> +<li> Robinson, Dr. J. Armitage, Dean of Wells, <a href="#page10">10</a>, <a href="#page32">32</a> n., <a href="#page52">52</a> n., <a href="#page53">53</a> n., <a href="#page54">54</a>, <a href="#page72">72</a>, <a href="#page83">83</a> </li> +<li> Rome, <a href="#page31">31</a>, <a href="#page33">33</a>, <a href="#page37">37</a>-<a href="#page43">43</a>, <a href="#page80">80</a>, <a href="#page88">88</a> </li> +<li> Romescot, collection of, <a href="#page79">79</a> </li> +<li> Rouen, capture of, <a href="#page85">85</a> </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Sacrist, <a href="#page23">23</a>, <a href="#page63">63</a>, <a href="#page71">71</a> </li> +<li> St. Edmundsbury, Abbot of, <a href="#page82">82</a> </li> +<li> St. John Baptist, chapel of, <a href="#page86">86</a> </li> +<li> St. Margaret, Westminster, parish of, <a href="#page71">71</a> </li> +<li> St. Peter ad Vincula, feast of, <a href="#page68">68</a> </li> +<li> St. Stephen's, Westminster, Dean and Canons of, <a href="#page30">30</a> ff., <a href="#page43">43</a> </li> +<li> Salisbury, William de Montacute, Earl of, <a href="#page44">44</a> f. </li> +<li> Sanctuary, <a href="#page39">39</a>, <a href="#page45">45</a> </li> +<li> Sandon, John, monk, <a href="#page65">65</a>, <a href="#page67">67</a> </li> +<li> Scott, Dr. E., Keeper of Muniments, <a href="#page13">13</a> </li> +<li> Selby, Ralph, Archdeacon of Buckingham, monk, <a href="#page75">75</a> </li> +<li> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page92" name="page92"></a>[92]</span> + + Seneschal, or steward, the Abbot's, <a href="#page22">22</a>, <a href="#page24">24</a>, <a href="#page45">45</a> n., <a href="#page60">60</a> ff. </li> +<li> Sergeaunt, John, <i>Annals of Westminster School</i>, <a href="#page29">29</a> </li> +<li> Skilla, or Refectory bell, <a href="#page21">21</a> </li> +<li> Southam, Thomas, Archdeacon of Oxford, <a href="#page32">32</a>, <a href="#page35">35</a>, <a href="#page39">39</a> f., <a href="#page63">63</a> </li> +<li> Staines, manor of, <a href="#page66">66</a> </li> +<li> Stanley, Dr. A. P., Dean of Westminster, <a href="#page11">11</a> n. </li> +<li> Steventon, Berks., <a href="#page58">58</a> </li> +<li> Stowe, John, monk, <a href="#page63">63</a>, <a href="#page67">67</a> </li> +<li> Sutton, Gloucs., <a href="#page62">62</a> </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Tivoli, <a href="#page39">39</a> </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Urban VI., Pope, <a href="#page38">38</a> f. </li> +</ul> + +<ul> +<li> Waltham, Abbot of, <a href="#page74">74</a> </li> +<li> Waltham, John de, Bishop of Salisbury, <a href="#page74">74</a>-<a href="#page76">76</a> </li> +<li> Ware, <a href="#page66">66</a> </li> +<li> Ware, Richard de, Abbot, <a href="#page22">22</a>, <a href="#page44">44</a> </li> +<li> Warwick, Earl of, <a href="#page26">26</a> </li> +<li> Westminster Abbey, memorial windows, <a href="#page10">10</a>; +<ul> +<li> Muniment room, <a href="#page11">11</a>, <a href="#page13">13</a>; </li> +<li> Poets' Corner, <a href="#page11">11</a> f.; </li> +<li> Abbot's rent-roll, <a href="#page24">24</a>, <a href="#page60">60</a>; </li> +<li> pancakes at, <a href="#page27">27</a> ff.; </li> +<li> Monk-Bailiff, <a href="#page16">16</a>; Treasurer, <a href="#page19">19</a> f.; </li> +<li> Refectory, <a href="#page21">21</a>; </li> +<li> Abbot's Seneschal, <a href="#page22">22</a>, <a href="#page24">24</a> ff., <a href="#page45">45</a> n.; </li> +<li> Sacrist, <a href="#page23">23</a>; </li> +<li> Kitchener, <a href="#page27">27</a> f.; </li> +<li> Chapter House, <a href="#page30">30</a>; </li> +<li> suit against St. Stephen's Chapel, Westminster, <a href="#page31">31</a> ff.; </li> +<li> enriched by Langham's will, <a href="#page36">36</a>; </li> +<li> murder in the choir of, <a href="#page39">39</a>; </li> +<li> Archdeacon of, <a href="#page43">43</a> ff.; </li> +<li> Lady Chapel, <a href="#page47">47</a>; </li> +<li> Convent Garden, <a href="#page47">47</a> f.; </li> +<li> royal gifts to, <a href="#page57">57</a> f.; </li> +<li> New Work in Nave, <a href="#page58">58</a> f., <a href="#page63">63</a>, <a href="#page80">80</a> f., <a href="#page84">84</a>; </li> +<li> prayers in war-time at, <a href="#page70">70</a> f.; </li> +<li> Confessor's Chapel, <a href="#page74">74</a> f.; </li> +<li> Henry IV.'s death at, <a href="#page80">80</a>; </li> +<li> Henry V.'s chantry, <a href="#page81">81</a> </li> +</ul></li> +<li> Westminster Abbey, Almonry, clerks of, <a href="#page71">71</a> </li> +<li> Westminster Abbey, <i>Customary</i> of, <a href="#page18">18</a>, <a href="#page22">22</a> f., <a href="#page44">44</a> </li> +<li> Westminster Abbey, Monks of, how named, <a href="#page15">15</a>; +<ul> +<li> how admitted, <a href="#page17">17</a> f.; </li> +<li> exennia given to, <a href="#page18">18</a>; </li> +<li> Great Pestilence among, <a href="#page19">19</a>; </li> +<li> at Oxford, <a href="#page19">19</a> f.; </li> +<li> clothing of, <a href="#page41">41</a> f.; </li> +<li> chambers or camerae for, <a href="#page47">47</a>-<a href="#page50">50</a>; </li> +<li> funerals of, <a href="#page51">51</a>; </li> +<li> in armour, <a href="#page53">53</a>; </li> +<li> chariot provided by, <a href="#page83">83</a>. </li> +</ul></li> +<li> Westminster Abbey, parish of St. Margaret, <a href="#page71">71</a> </li> +<li> Westminster Abbey, Sanctuary at, <a href="#page39">39</a>, <a href="#page45">45</a> </li> +<li> Westminster School, "greese" at, <a href="#page29">29</a> </li> +<li> Whittington, Richard, <a href="#page81">81</a> </li> +<li> Windsor Castle, <a href="#page64">64</a>, <a href="#page66">66</a> </li> +<li> Windsor Castle, St. George's Chapel in, <a href="#page31">31</a>, <a href="#page74">74</a> </li> +<li> Woodstock, Thomas of, Duke of Gloucester, <a href="#page57">57</a>, <a href="#page68">68</a> </li> +<li> Worcester, Prior of, <a href="#page82">82</a> </li> +<li> Wratting, John de, Prior, <a href="#page43">43</a> n., <a href="#page70">70</a> </li> +<li> Wykeham, William of, <a href="#page27">27</a>, <a href="#page68">68</a> </li> +<li> Wylie, Dr. J. H., <a href="#page79">79</a> n., <a href="#page81">81</a> n., <a href="#page82">82</a> </li> +</ul> + +<hr /> + +<p class="center"> +<small> +PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED, LONDON AND BECCLES. +</small> +</p> + +<hr class="full" /> + +<div><a name="h2H_FOOT" id="h2H_FOOT"><!-- H2 anchor --></a></div> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + FOOTNOTES +</h2> + + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-1"><!--Note--></a> +1 (<a href="#noteref-1"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +"Such were the Abbots of Westminster," says Dean +Stanley (<i>Memorials</i>, 3rd ed., p. 394), after recording the +little that he knew of them, adding that, "if from the Abbots +we descend to the Monks their names are still more obscure." +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-2"><!--Note--></a> +2 (<a href="#noteref-2"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Act iv. sc. 1, ll. 332-3. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-3"><!--Note--></a> +3 (<a href="#noteref-3"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Act v. sc. 6, ll. 19-21. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-4"><!--Note--></a> +4 (<a href="#noteref-4"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 5259. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-5"><!--Note--></a> +5 (<a href="#noteref-5"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 5260, A. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-6"><!--Note--></a> +6 (<a href="#noteref-6"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +The reader who wishes to know what parts of this ancient and +interesting church were known to Abbot Colchester may be referred to the +details and the plan given in the Herts. volume of the Royal Commission +on Historical Monuments, 1911, p. 31 f. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-7"><!--Note--></a> +7 (<a href="#noteref-7"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 3571; October 5, 1411. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-8"><!--Note--></a> +8 (<a href="#noteref-8"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Customary of Canterbury and Westminster</i>, H.B.S. i. 261, +404. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-9"><!--Note--></a> +9 (<a href="#noteref-9"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +This custom will be treated in greater detail in the +introduction to a Register of the Westminster Benedictines, which will +be issued shortly. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-10"><!--Note--></a> +10 (<a href="#noteref-10"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Reyner, <i>de Antiq. Benedict. in Anglia</i>, App., p. 55. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-11"><!--Note--></a> +11 (<a href="#noteref-11"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +This sum is roughly equivalent to that which an economical +undergraduate spends at the present time. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-12"><!--Note--></a> +12 (<a href="#noteref-12"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Cf. <i>Flete</i>, ed. J. Armitage Robinson, p. 70. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-13"><!--Note--></a> +13 (<a href="#noteref-13"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +The inventories of the Monasteries imply that the blessed +Virgin was industrious with her needle. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-14"><!--Note--></a> +14 (<a href="#noteref-14"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Customary</i>, ii. 49: Idem vero secretarius zonam beatae Dei +genetricis, ubicumque destinetur, sumptibus suis portare vel, si per alios +portatur, expensas eis exhibere tenetur, cum vectura, si forte indigeat. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-15"><!--Note--></a> +15 (<a href="#noteref-15"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Thomas Hatfield, Bishop of Durham, 1345-81. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-16"><!--Note--></a> +16 (<a href="#noteref-16"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 27968. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-17"><!--Note--></a> +17 (<a href="#noteref-17"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +John Sergeaunt, <i>Annals of Westminster School</i>, pp. 57, +130. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-18"><!--Note--></a> +18 (<a href="#noteref-18"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +The building is still in the sole care of His Majesty's +Office of Works. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-19"><!--Note--></a> +19 (<a href="#noteref-19"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Cf. J. T. Smith, <i>Antiquities of Westminster</i>, 1807, p. 38, +etc. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-20"><!--Note--></a> +20 (<a href="#noteref-20"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +J. T. Smith, <i>Antiquities of Westminster</i>, 1807, p. 100; +Widmore, <i>History of Westminster Abbey</i>, pp. 103-4. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-21"><!--Note--></a> +21 (<a href="#noteref-21"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 9256, C, D. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-22"><!--Note--></a> +22 (<a href="#noteref-22"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +The manuscript actually says July; but what follows shows +this to be an error; <i>e.g.</i> he was at Bruges for the two feasts of June +24 and June 29. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-23"><!--Note--></a> +23 (<a href="#noteref-23"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Cf. J. Armitage Robinson, <i>Simon Langham, Ch. Quart. Rev.</i>, +July, 1908, p. 358. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-24"><!--Note--></a> +24 (<a href="#noteref-24"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Cf. L. Pastor, <i>Geschichte der Päpste</i>, i. p. 109. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-25"><!--Note--></a> +25 (<a href="#noteref-25"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Non potuit reperire societatem versus Auinionem. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-26"><!--Note--></a> +26 (<a href="#noteref-26"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Propter diuersitatem lingue et viarum discrimina in +partibus transmarinis. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-27"><!--Note--></a> +27 (<a href="#noteref-27"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Prout modus est patrie. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-28"><!--Note--></a> +28 (<a href="#noteref-28"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Infirmabatur per viam quasi ad mortem. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-29"><!--Note--></a> +29 (<a href="#noteref-29"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 9228. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-30"><!--Note--></a> +30 (<a href="#noteref-30"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Widmore, p. 191; <i>Mun.</i> 9225. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-31"><!--Note--></a> +31 (<a href="#noteref-31"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Pastor, <i>Gesch. d. P.</i> i. p. 113. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-32"><!--Note--></a> +32 (<a href="#noteref-32"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +See the account in Pastor, <i>Gesch. d. P.</i>; and Creighton, +<i>Hist. of the Papacy</i>, i. 61 ff. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-33"><!--Note--></a> +33 (<a href="#noteref-33"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Creighton, <i>ibid.</i>, p. 67. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-34"><!--Note--></a> +34 (<a href="#noteref-34"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Cf. <i>Lib. Nig. Quat.</i> f. 88b, 89; J. C. Cox, <i>Sanctuaries</i>, +p. 51 f.; G. M. Trevelyan, <i>England in the Age of Wycliffe</i>, p. 87. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-35"><!--Note--></a> +35 (<a href="#noteref-35"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Quod non erat ausus transire per Calis' propter metum +aduersariorum. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-36"><!--Note--></a> +36 (<a href="#noteref-36"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 9503. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-37"><!--Note--></a> +37 (<a href="#noteref-37"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Viz. John de Wratting, Colchester's senior by about +eighteen years. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-38"><!--Note--></a> +38 (<a href="#noteref-38"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Cf. <i>Mun.</i> 18478, D. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-39"><!--Note--></a> +39 (<a href="#noteref-39"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Customary</i>, ii. 95. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-40"><!--Note--></a> +40 (<a href="#noteref-40"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 5260, A.; December 3, 1407. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-41"><!--Note--></a> +41 (<a href="#noteref-41"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 9615. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-42"><!--Note--></a> +42 (<a href="#noteref-42"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +On the other hand, Colchester may have come into the +affair either as Abbot's Seneschal or as Convent Treasurer. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-43"><!--Note--></a> +43 (<a href="#noteref-43"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 5984. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-44"><!--Note--></a> +44 (<a href="#noteref-44"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Indentura Willelmi Colchester de ouibus suis ad firmam +dimissis. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-45"><!--Note--></a> +45 (<a href="#noteref-45"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Cf. Robinson and James, <i>Manuscripts of Westminster Abbey</i>, +p. 96 f. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-46"><!--Note--></a> +46 (<a href="#noteref-46"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +F. 507-69. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-47"><!--Note--></a> +47 (<a href="#noteref-47"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 6603. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-48"><!--Note--></a> +48 (<a href="#noteref-48"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Tabularium cum familia. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-49"><!--Note--></a> +49 (<a href="#noteref-49"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Debiles. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-50"><!--Note--></a> +50 (<a href="#noteref-50"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Cf. Col. H. Yule, <i>Marco Polo</i>, vol. i., Introd., §§ 75-8. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-51"><!--Note--></a> +51 (<a href="#noteref-51"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +There are corresponding records in the cases of Abbot +Litlington (<i>ob.</i> 1386), <i>Mun.</i> 5446, and of John Canterbery (<i>ob.</i> +1400), <i>Mun.</i> 18883. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-52"><!--Note--></a> +52 (<a href="#noteref-52"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +In manerio de la Neyte, hora prandendi (<i>Lib. Nig. Quat.</i> +f. 86). +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-53"><!--Note--></a> +53 (<a href="#noteref-53"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Cf. J. Armitage Robinson, <i>The Abbot's House at Westminster</i>, +chap. ii., and Robinson and James, <i>Manuscripts of Westminster Abbey</i>, +pp. 7 ff. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-54"><!--Note--></a> +54 (<a href="#noteref-54"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +See an article by the Dean of Wells on the Array of the +Clergy in July, 1415 (<i>Nineteenth Century and After</i>, July, 1915, p. 86). +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-55"><!--Note--></a> +55 (<a href="#noteref-55"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 5446. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-56"><!--Note--></a> +56 (<a href="#noteref-56"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Cf. J. Armitage Robinson, <i>An Unrecognised Westminster +Chronicler</i>, pp. 16, 22. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-57"><!--Note--></a> +57 (<a href="#noteref-57"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Lib. Nig. Quat.</i> f. 86, says December 10, 1386; but the +Westminster chronicler in the <i>Polychronicon</i> (see J. Armitage Robinson, +<i>op. cit.</i>, pp. 9, 22) says December 21. It is suggested that the +difference of eleven days represents the period during which the King +was supporting the cause of Lakyngheth. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-58"><!--Note--></a> +58 (<a href="#noteref-58"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 5431. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-59"><!--Note--></a> +59 (<a href="#noteref-59"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Volens sicut alias cassare electionem et electo postea +providere; Higden, <i>Polychronicon</i>, ix. pp. 98, 102; Robinson, <i>op. cit.</i>, +pp. 9, 23. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-60"><!--Note--></a> +60 (<a href="#noteref-60"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Flete</i>, p. 138. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-61"><!--Note--></a> +61 (<a href="#noteref-61"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +April 18, 1388, p. 178. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-62"><!--Note--></a> +62 (<a href="#noteref-62"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 9474. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-63"><!--Note--></a> +63 (<a href="#noteref-63"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +For the graves of the Duke and his wife, see E. T. Murray +Smith, <i>Roll Call of W.A.</i>, p. 51 f. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-64"><!--Note--></a> +64 (<a href="#noteref-64"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 5257. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-65"><!--Note--></a> +65 (<a href="#noteref-65"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 7579. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-66"><!--Note--></a> +66 (<a href="#noteref-66"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 5922. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-67"><!--Note--></a> +67 (<a href="#noteref-67"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +R. B. Rackham, <i>Nave of Westminster</i>, pp. 8-12. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-68"><!--Note--></a> +68 (<a href="#noteref-68"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 6165. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-69"><!--Note--></a> +69 (<a href="#noteref-69"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +De consanguinitate domini, ut dicunt. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-70"><!--Note--></a> +70 (<a href="#noteref-70"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Anulus de auro com diamandys. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-71"><!--Note--></a> +71 (<a href="#noteref-71"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Interlusores. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-72"><!--Note--></a> +72 (<a href="#noteref-72"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 6221. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-73"><!--Note--></a> +73 (<a href="#noteref-73"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +His record will be given in the Register referred to on +p. 18, note. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-74"><!--Note--></a> +74 (<a href="#noteref-74"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 9500. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-75"><!--Note--></a> +75 (<a href="#noteref-75"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Ex noua ordinacione domini Willelmi nunc Abbatis. The +ordinance applied to other obedientiaries. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-76"><!--Note--></a> +76 (<a href="#noteref-76"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +The Dean of Wells edited in 1908, for use in his chapel, +a service of Compline derived from a Bodleian manuscript (Rawl. Liturg. +g 10) which belongs to our Abbot's period. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-77"><!--Note--></a> +77 (<a href="#noteref-77"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Lib. Nig. Quat.</i>, f. 87b: et dominus Rex suscepit eum et +omnia bona sua in proteccione sua. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-78"><!--Note--></a> +78 (<a href="#noteref-78"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Kal. Pap. Registers</i>, iii. 456. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-79"><!--Note--></a> +79 (<a href="#noteref-79"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Widmore, p. 109; E. T. Murray Smith, <i>Roll Call</i>, p. 53. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-80"><!--Note--></a> +80 (<a href="#noteref-80"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 5262, A. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-81"><!--Note--></a> +81 (<a href="#noteref-81"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Infra regiam sepulturam. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-82"><!--Note--></a> +82 (<a href="#noteref-82"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Thomas Merke, Bishop of Carlisle, is mentioned, but not +Colchester, in the list of those summoned to attend the King. Rymer, +<i>Foedera</i>. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-83"><!--Note--></a> +83 (<a href="#noteref-83"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +J. H. Wylie, <i>Henry IV.</i>, vol. i. pp. 91, 92, 108. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-84"><!--Note--></a> +84 (<a href="#noteref-84"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Ibid.</i>, p. 44. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-85"><!--Note--></a> +85 (<a href="#noteref-85"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Lib. Nig. Quat., f. 86b:— +</p> +<p class="foot"><br /> + Anno Domini millesimo ccc xcixº et regni regis Ricardi + secundi xxiii incipiente. In vigilia Nativitatis sancti Johannis + Baptiste venit Henricus dux Herford versus Angliam Et in vigilia + apostolorum petri et pauli venerunt prima noua ad Westm de + aduentu ipsius. Et iiii<sup>to</sup> die Julij applicuit apud Pylevyng. +</p> +<p class="foot"><br /> + In vigilia sancti petri advincula fugit Rex Ricardus secundus a + facie ducis Henrici Et postea in vigilia Assumpcionis beate marie + captus est et se submisit ordinacioni prelatorum et procerum + Anglie. +</p> +<p class="foot"><br /> + In crastino sancti laurentii feria secunda venerunt Londonienses + ad Inquirendum Regem Ricardum II<sup>um</sup>. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-86"><!--Note--></a> +86 (<a href="#noteref-86"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 1653. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-87"><!--Note--></a> +87 (<a href="#noteref-87"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Infirmarer's account, 1409-10. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-88"><!--Note--></a> +88 (<a href="#noteref-88"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Administrator participationis Anne Regine. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-89"><!--Note--></a> +89 (<a href="#noteref-89"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 1676. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-90"><!--Note--></a> +90 (<a href="#noteref-90"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +There is another means of verifying the Abbot's absence +daring this year. His farm-bailiffs, whose duty was to deliver rents to +him personally, paid them at this time to the Abbot's Receiver instead. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-91"><!--Note--></a> +91 (<a href="#noteref-91"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Widmore, p. 110; J. H. Wylie, <i>Henry IV.</i>, iii. p. 349; +Creighton, <i>Hist. of the Papacy</i>, i. p. 218. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-92"><!--Note--></a> +92 (<a href="#noteref-92"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Wylie, <i>op. cit.</i>, p. 348. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-93"><!--Note--></a> +93 (<a href="#noteref-93"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Lib. Nig. Quat.</i> f. 90. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-94"><!--Note--></a> +94 (<a href="#noteref-94"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +About Mid-Lent; J. H. Wylie, <i>Henry IV.</i>, iv. p. 103. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-95"><!--Note--></a> +95 (<a href="#noteref-95"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Sir W. H. St. John Hope, <i>Funeral, Monument, and Chantry +Chapel of Henry V.</i>, p. 173. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-96"><!--Note--></a> +96 (<a href="#noteref-96"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Cf. J. H. <i>Wylie, Henry V.</i>, p. 203. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-97"><!--Note--></a> +97 (<a href="#noteref-97"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +The details are given in R. B. Rackham, <i>Nave of +Westminster</i>, pp. 13-17. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-98"><!--Note--></a> +98 (<a href="#noteref-98"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Rymer, <i>Foedera</i>. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-99"><!--Note--></a> +99 (<a href="#noteref-99"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +J. H. Wylie, <i>The Council of Constance</i>, p. 80. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-100"><!--Note--></a> +100 (<a href="#noteref-100"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 12395, 12397. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-101"><!--Note--></a> +101 (<a href="#noteref-101"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Cf. J. Armitage Robinson, <i>Array of the Clergy, Nineteenth +Century and After</i>, July, 1915, p. 87. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-102"><!--Note--></a> +102 (<a href="#noteref-102"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Abbot's Receiver's roll, 1416-7. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-103"><!--Note--></a> +103 (<a href="#noteref-103"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Rackham, <i>Nave</i>, p. 16. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-104"><!--Note--></a> +104 (<a href="#noteref-104"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Et dat' seruienti principalis Baronis portanti noua de +captione ciuitatis Rothemagensis (Abbot's Receiver's roll, 1417-8). +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-105"><!--Note--></a> +105 (<a href="#noteref-105"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 5440. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-106"><!--Note--></a> +106 (<a href="#noteref-106"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +Neale and Brayley, <i>Westminster Abbey</i>, ii. p. 184. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-107"><!--Note--></a> +107 (<a href="#noteref-107"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 12397. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-108"><!--Note--></a> +108 (<a href="#noteref-108"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 3571; <i>see</i> above, p. 17. +</p> + +<p class="foot"> +<a name="note-109"><!--Note--></a> +109 (<a href="#noteref-109"><small>return</small></a>)<br /> +<i>Mun.</i> 9240. Vident etenim vestram soliditatem, que rara +virtus est modernis diebus, et illo specialius in vobis confidunt. +</p> + +<hr class="full" /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="nopage2" name="nopage2"></a>[pg]</span></p> + +<div style="height: 2em;"><br /><br /></div> + +<p class="center"> +PUBLICATIONS OF THE +<br /> +<big> + Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge +</big> +</p> + +<div style="height: 2em;"><br /><br /></div> + +<p> +<b>Alcuin of York.</b> +</p> +<p class="quote"> + By the Right Rev. <span class="sc">G. F. Browne</span>, D.D., D.C.L. With numerous + Illustrations, Small post 8vo, cloth boards. 5<i>s.</i> net. +</p> +<p> +<b>Augustine and his Companions.</b> +</p> +<p class="quote"> + By the Right Rev. <span class="sc">G. F. Browne</span>, D.D., D.C.L. Sm. post 8vo, cloth + boards. 2<i>s.</i> net. +</p> +<p> +<b>Christian Biographies through Eighteen Centuries.</b> +</p> +<p class="quote"> + Compiled by the Rev. <span class="sc">F. 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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: William de Colchester + Abbot of Westminster + +Author: Ernest Harold Pearce + +Release Date: August 3, 2011 [EBook #36968] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WILLIAM DE COLCHESTER *** + + + + +Produced by Louise Pryor, David Garcia and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This +book was produced from scanned images of public domain +material from the Google Print project.) + + + + + + +[Illustration: ABBOT COLCHESTER.] + + + + + + +WILLIAM DE COLCHESTER + +ABBOT OF WESTMINSTER + +BY E. H. PEARCE + +CANON OF WESTMINSTER + + + SOCIETY FOR PROMOTING CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE + + LONDON: Northumberland Avenue, W.C. + New York: E. S. GORHAM + 1915 + + + + +TO J. D. AND H. R. D. WITH AFFECTION + + + + +CONTENTS + + + PAGE + + I. A Window in the Nave 9 + II. A Novice from Essex 14 + III. A Man of Affairs 21 + IV. A Proctor at Rome 30 + V. An Archdeacon 41 + VI. Abbot of Westminster 52 + VII. The Abbot at Home 60 + VIII. The Abbot Abroad 73 + + + + +NOTE + + +Having had the honour of an invitation to deliver in May last a "Friday +Evening Discourse" at the Royal Institution on the Archives of Westminster +Abbey, I thought it best to confine what I could say within an hour to +the career of a single man, preferably one whose record had not hitherto +been written. I have here expanded the lecture to some extent, and have +added references. I am indebted to Mr. David Weller, the Dean's Virger, +for some excellent pictures. + + E. H. P. + + 3, Little Cloisters, + _September, 1915._ + + + + +LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS + + + TO FACE PAGE + + Abbot Colchester _Frontispiece_ + The Kitchener's Account for Pancakes 28 + Chambers in Little Cloisters 48 + The Personal Effects of Abbot Litlington 54 + Abbot Colchester's Seal 74 + Coronation of Henry V. 80 + + + + +WILLIAM DE COLCHESTER + + + + +I + +A WINDOW IN THE NAVE + + +When the body of the late Lord Kelvin was laid to rest, by a right +which there was none to dispute, in the Abbey Church of Westminster, it +was placed, by the same kind of right, close to the grave of Sir Isaac +Newton. In the same corner there are the graves, or the memorials, of +Darwin and Herschel, of Joule and Gabriel Stokes and John Couch Adams, +to be joined shortly by tablets in memory of Alfred Russel Wallace, +of Sir Joseph Hooker, and of another Joseph, who died Lord Lister. It +was not likely that Kelvin would long lack some memorial more impressive +than the slab which covers his remains, and it was a happy and appropriate +impulse which caused the representatives of engineering science on both +sides of the Atlantic to undertake the task of providing one. But what +form could it best take? The walls of the church have been overcrowded, +to the grievous destruction of some precious features. The floor-space, as +the centuries following the Reformation were apt to forget, is intended +to serve the purposes of public worship. But the large windows of the +Nave offer to those who would honour and foster the memory of the great +dead a means of fulfilling their desire, and of adorning the fabric at +the same time. In this case the chance was welcomed, and Kelvin has his +Abbey memorial in stained glass. The window is one of a series projected +in 1907 by Dr. Armitage Robinson, now Dean of Wells, and loyally accepted +by his successor in the Deanery of Westminster--a series in which there +are placed side by side a King of England who contributed either to the +greatness of the foundation or to the majesty of the building, and the +Abbot through whom the King worked his pious will. The King in this case +is Harry of Monmouth, and we are thinking with somewhat mingled feelings +that October 25, 1915, brings us to the 500th anniversary of the battle +of Agincourt. But it is Henry V.'s Abbot who concerns us now; for in such +a scheme of windows the Abbots are more difficult to justify to the +ordinary visitor than the monarchs, not because of unworthiness, +but because there has been but little effort made to appraise their +worth as heads of our ancient house, or as conspicuous figures in their +generation.[1] + +In this case the Abbot is William of Colchester. As we shall see, his +character is depicted by Shakespeare, but he has no article to his credit +in the _Dictionary of National Biography_. If he is to be brought back +from obscurity, it can only be accomplished by repeated visits to the +Abbey Muniment Room. I shall therefore ask the reader to climb with me +the turret staircase which is approached from a door in the East Cloister, +and to enter a noble apartment of which that cloister is the origin. For +when Henry III.'s builders came to the planning of the South Transept, +known as Poets' Corner, the lines of the Great Cloister had already +been long established, and must not be minished or altered by the new +work. Therefore, whereas the North Transept has aisles on its east side +and on its west, the South Transept is aisled only on the east side. +The East Cloister occupies the space of what would otherwise be the +western aisle, and thus upholds the floor of the apartment which we +enter. We look into the distant recesses of the Abbey eastward, through +three of Henry III.'s bays, across a low wall split up by the bases of +dwarf pillars. There are signs of royalty in the room, such as the crowned +heads at the capitals of the pillars of the colonnade by which we enter, +and on the wooden wall which shuts off the southern section is the outline +of a white hart crowned, the emblem of Richard II. Professor Lethaby has +suggested to me that such a point of vantage from which to see what stones +and what buildings are here, and from which to observe some procession +of State as it arrives from the Palace by Poets' Corner door and makes +its solemn circuit of the church, would naturally be appropriated as a +royal pew. Be that as it may, the room was set apart in very early times +for the storing of muniments; it contains a cupboard which probably dates +from Richard II.'s reign and now stands under Richard II.'s hart; and at +least one of its archive chests, if not more, belongs to the fourteenth +century. We may assume, then, that here, from that century onwards, the +Convent kept its official archives--charters, leases, acquittances, and +the annual account-rolls of its officers. Here, for the last twenty years, +the Dean and Chapter have had the constant service of Dr. Edward Scott, +formerly of the British Museum, as the Keeper of their muniments. He +has written with his own hand over 110,000 descriptions of documents, +and has compiled, and is still steadily compiling, an index of persons and +things. I am merely attempting to construct a life of Abbot Colchester out +of documents which I have spelt out with Dr. Scott's assistance. Any one +who finds the story uninteresting must console himself with the thought +that it has not been told before. + + + + +II + +A NOVICE FROM ESSEX + + +In Shakespeare's _Tragedy of King Richard II._, there is an Abbot of +Westminster who flits craftily across the scene, generally shadowing a +Bishop of Carlisle, whom we shall meet again. When Bolingbroke announces +that he is about to be crowned King in Richard's stead, this Abbot bids +his friends-- + + "Come home with me to supper; and I'll lay + A plot shall show us all a merry day."[2] + +In the next act[3] it is stated that he is dead-- + + "The grand conspirator, Abbot of Westminster, + With clog of conscience and sour melancholy + Hath yielded up his body to the grave." + +As to which it must be sufficient to say that the poet who could not give +the Abbot's name was equally unconscious of the fact that he outlived +his alleged conspiracy by twenty years. + +But his name was William Colchester, and we may begin by assuming that, +as his name implies, he was a Colchester man. In and before his time, +and for a considerable space afterwards, the customary designation of +a Brother was his Christian name and a place name, with or without the +copula _de_; in earlier years he called himself William de Colchester, +but the documents which concern him as Abbot mostly speak of William +Colchester, or William Abbot of Westminster. Nor are we left to +guess-work as to the place of his origin. In later life, according to +the habit of his time, he busied himself with the endowment of obits, +or anniversaries, for the good of his soul. Here is a document,[4] +dated May 20, 1406, in which he bargained with the Prior of St. Botolph, +Colchester, having paid 40_s._ to Henry IV.'s Clerk of the Hanaper to +seal the bargain, that one of the canon-chaplains of that Priory should +say Mass every week, at sixpence a week, for his soul and for the +souls of his parents; that the Prior and his Brethren should observe +his anniversary, again with a memorial of his parents, in the parish +church of St. Nicholas, Colchester; that a set sum should be distributed +yearly to the vicar of St. Nicholas, to the poor of the parish, and to +the prisoners in Colchester Castle; and that the tomb of his parents +in the parish churchyard should be kept in proper repair. + +We may conclude, then, that this was his native parish, and that in +his great position as Abbot of Westminster he wished the connexion +to be had in remembrance. But he knew to a mile the distance between +his Abbey and Colchester, and how easy it might be for the Prior of St. +Botolph to accept his bequest and to neglect to fulfil its conditions. +So in 1407 (December 3), when he was completing the arrangements[5] for +maintaining an anniversary at the Abbey out of the revenues of the church +of Aldenham,[6] in Hertfordshire, he inserted an instruction that the +Monk-Bailiff of Westminster, at the time of his annual visit to the +Essex manors, should either proceed or send to Colchester and make +careful inquiry as to the due observance of the covenants, as who should +say, "It is as well not to trust these provincial Priors further than +you can see them." + +We get to know also from the grant[7] of another anniversary at the +Abbey's daughter Priory of Hurley, in Berkshire, that his father's name +was Reginald, and his mother's Alice. He had a sister who in 1389-90 +was living in Cambridge, for in that year his Receiver entered a gift +of 12_d._ to a man who came from my lord's sister at that town; and we +shall find that he had other connexions, some poor enough to bring him +a basket of poultry, some rich enough to receive from him a present of +jewelry. Evidently he sprang from a burgher stock of no great eminence, +for whom the Church seemed the sphere in which the career was opened to +the talents. + +How he came to enter our Monastery we shall never know, for with all the +wealth of our materials there survives not a trace of his or of any other +postulant's testimonials. He came, he was seen, he was admitted. We know +what the requisites were--that he must have examined his conscience as +to the motives which led him to apply, that he must be sound in body, +free in civil status, unburdened by debt or other obligations, and as a +rule not less than eighteen years of age.[8] What steps the Fathers of +the Convent took to secure outside evidence of a candidate's fitness +in these respects must be left to the imagination. He passed muster and +joined their number. + +Our first trace of William Colchester's name on the books of the House +is in connexion with his ordination as priest. I cannot tell what +Bishop admitted him to the ministry, nor where it took place, but it +can be ascertained that he said Mass for the first time during 1361-2 +(the conventual year was reckoned for administrative purposes, as it +is still, from Michaelmas to Michaelmas), and we are able to discover +this, not because it was felt to be an event worth chronicling for its +own sake, but because in that year three of the officers note that they +severally expended 1s. 7-1/2_d._ in bread and wine as "exennia"--_i.e._ +a complimentary gift[9]--made to him in honour of the event. We may +suppose that he was then twenty-three years of age; he may have entered +the Convent in or about 1356; and we may take 1338 as the probable year +of his birth. If, as we have assumed, he entered the Convent some +years before his ordination, then he did so during the reign of Simon +Langham, the most eminent of all our Abbots, but it is not possible to +say whether he received priest's orders before or after the election +of Nicholas Litlington to the Abbacy in April, 1362. The Monastery was +still suffering in numbers from the ravages of the Great Pestilence in +1349, and consisted in 1356-7 of only thirty-five monks and two novices. +Colchester was the last of five new members of whom we hear first +in 1361-2. + +Five years later, in 1366-7, he was chosen by the Convent as one of two +of their number whom they thought specially apt to learning, and whom +it was therefore their duty to send up to Oxford to join the other +Benedictine students at Gloucester Hall, an institution established +by the Order in its General Chapter held at Abingdon in 1290.[10] Our +custom was that the Convent Treasurer paid L10 yearly to each Westminster +student for his maintenance,[11] besides the cost of his journeys to +and fro; so that it is possible to compile from the Treasurers' rolls a +fairly complete list of our Oxford scholars from 1356, when I came upon +the first signs of a definite system, until the Dissolution. The plan +tended to the great advantage of the monasteries; it meant that the +likely young men were taken at an impressionable time in their lives +out of the narrow rut of cloistral life, and were associated with the +world of scholarship and of affairs; and it will be found that a large +proportion of those who were sent to Oxford rose quickly to positions +of trust in the Convent. William Colchester remained at Oxford, save for +periodical visits to the Abbey, from 1366 to 1370. It cannot be said that +the Latin prose of which he was capable does credit to his University, +and even monkish Latinity was seldom worse than that in which his few +surviving letters are couched. But it is fair to assume that he learnt how +to deal with men, and we can now go on to see that the Convent which had +supported him at Oxford was satisfied with the product of its expenditure. + + + + +III + +A MAN OF AFFAIRS + + +Soon after his return from the University two things happened, as if to +signify that his competence was recognized. In October, 1371, he was +promoted, as the Westminster phrase went, to sit by the bell--sedere +ad skillam; that is to say, he moved up to the seniors' table in the +Refectory, where was the bell or skyllet which gave the signal for grace +to be said, or for the reader of the week to begin the lection. Like the +day of his first Mass, this promotion, coming as a rule not less than ten +years later, was reckoned to be an occasion for a little addition to the +usually frugal fare, and we can state the date of it because the Sacrist +and the Infirmarer and the Treasurer each sent him bread and wine to the +value of 2_s._ 3-1/2_d._, so that he might make merry with his friends. + +Secondly, he begins to be recognized as an experienced person who can +safely be sent upon missions involving prudence and the management of +men. In the same year, 1371-2, a payment of twenty shillings was made +by the Steward of the Abbot's Household for the expenses of William +Colchester and two valets who were sent to Northampton for the meeting of +the General Chapter of the English Benedictines, probably in attendance +on the Abbot of Westminster, who was frequently one of the Presidents +of the Chapter. + +But the next year, 1372-3, as we learn from the Sacrist, saw Colchester +entrusted with a still more delicate duty. It was on this wise. Among +the precious relics given to the Abbey by Edward the Confessor[12] +was the girdle of the Virgin Mary--zona beate Marie--which she had +made with her own hands and had herself worn.[13] It was regarded as +having especial value in securing a safe delivery to expectant mothers, +and when the Westminster Book of Customs was compiled by Abbot Richard +de Ware about a century before Colchester's admission, it was the rule +that the Sacrist or, as he was sometimes called, the Secretary, should +carry the girdle of the blessed Mother of God to any destination which +it was appointed to reach, or should be at charges with the bearer +of it in his place.[14] So here is our Sacrist paying the expenses of +William Colchester, namely, 13_s._ 4_d._, and the more considerable +price of two horses for the journey, L6 16_s._ 8_d._ But the Sacrist +has something to enter on the other side, an offering of L2 from the +Countess of March, the lady who craved the aid of the girdle. If any +one is churlish enough to say that the bargain seems but a poor one +for the Convent--150_s._ spent on the journey, and only 40_s._ received +from the beneficiary--the answer is that the horses would be sold at the +end of the return journey for almost as much as they cost. If, again, +it is objected that in any case the lady's gift was money thrown away, +it is not so easy to convince the gainsayer. For while it is on record +that on February 12, 1371 (_i.e._ in the year previous to that of the +Sacrist's account), the lady Philippa, granddaughter of Edward III., +did present her husband, the 3rd Earl of March, with a daughter who in +process of time became the wife of Harry Hotspur, yet it does not appear +that she was equally blessed during the year 1372-3. + +Such duties sensibly performed, William Colchester was not long in +attaining to administrative office. To begin with, Abbot Litlington +chose him as his Custos Hospicii; _i.e._ Seneschal or steward of his +household. We have the roll on which the young monk gave an account of +his stewardship for the year Michaelmas to Michaelmas, 1373-4, and as +the doings it records represent his early experience of that conventual +business in which he was to be immersed for nearly half a century, +we may stay by it for a short space in order to get our impressions. + +He found his master in possession of a considerable rent-roll in +various parts of the country, the manors being situate in the counties +of Worcester, Gloucester, Oxford, Surrey, Buckingham, and Middlesex. The +rentals amounted to L696 13_s._ 6_d._, and the sale of stock, including +an ox sold for 18_s._ 4_d._, and a cow--timore pestilencie--for 13_s._, +brought the total to L719 8_s._ 8_d._ Large as this sum sounds, +especially when multiplied to correspond with present values, it was +none too large for the needs of the position. Household expenses, +which are not entered in detail, came to L151 1_s._ 4-1/2_d._ The +purchase of live-stock--grey palfreys, bullocks, cows, steers, sheep, +pigs, swans, poultry, and no less than 966 pigeons at about 1/2_d._ +each--required L63 2_s._ 10_d._, and the outlay on dead stock such as +bacon, salt-fish, five barrels of white herring, fourteen casks of red +herring, and three casks of Scottish red herring, amounted to L31 8_s._ +4_d._ Lest it should be claimed that the Scottish variety was a special +delicacy, we must add that the latter cost only 4_s._ a barrel as against +5_s._ 6_d._ for the other. Nor, if the quantities seem large, must it +be lightly concluded that there was carelessness in the dispensation; +indeed, it was the Seneschal's duty to enter on the back of his roll +a stock-keeping account, from which it may be gleaned that all the +herrings were consumed and eighty pigs; but there was a residue of five +salt-fish and of two out of sixteen bullocks. Altogether in corn and +wine and clothing and gifts to visitors and in other ways there was an +expenditure of L684 to set against a revenue of L719. + +But what we want is an idea of the duties and experiences that came to +the young Seneschal, and this can be obtained from various items. He +gets a pair of my lord's boots mended for twopence, and small sums go in +stringing the great sportman's bows or in buying bags in which to carry +his arrow-heads. That which cost more, and was probably more interesting +to Colchester himself, was the coming and going of personages or their +servants--the squire of the Earl of Cambridge (Edmund Langley, fifth +son of Edward III.), who receives 20_s._ for bringing a letter to the +Abbot from his lord; the Earl of Warwick's steward, who comes to sell +a black palfrey; a monk of his own year, Richard Excestr', who is just +starting on his career at Oxford, and to whom the Abbot gives a fatherly +present of 20_s._; the Bishop of Durham's[15] man, whose master we know +as the builder of Bishop Hatfield Hall, and who is sent with a gift of +two greyhounds to the Abbot. Several messengers arrive from the Prince, +_i.e._ the Black Prince, who is now at Wycombe and now at Kensington, and +Abbot Litlington makes several journeys by boat to call on the Bishop of +Winchester, no less a personage than William of Wykeham, who was in some +disgrace at the time. + +Having in this way served the Abbot efficiently, Colchester received +his next responsibility from the whole Chapter, who chose him as Convent +Treasurer, and "Coquinarius" or Kitchener, for the year 1375-6. Happily +we still possess his compotus as such. I must not describe it at length, +but one feature of it, an entry under the head of "pitancie et flacones," +is of too great interest to be passed by. Pittances were additional +meals on special occasions by way of varying the dreary round of dry +bread and sour wine, which alone could be provided in the Refectory. But +"flacones" seem to be pancakes, and pancakes are a recognized Westminster +institution, though it is no longer the duty of the Convent Treasurer to +provide them for his brethren. I first translate the item as Colchester +entered it: + + "Paid in milk, 'creym,' butter, cheese and eggs bought for the + pancakes in Easter week, on Rogation days and at Pentecost, + 64_s._ 8_d._" + +And now for some further light upon it. In 1389, when Colchester had +occupied the Abbot's chair for three years, the Kitchener was Brother +William Clehungre or Clayhanger, who has left us his bill[16] for +materials, and from this it will appear how the pancake-custom has +developed in the interval. It sets forth his + + "expenses laid out in respect of the pancakes prescribed for the + brethren and delivered to the monastery according to custom during + 56 days each year, namely from Easter Day to Trinity Sunday, + in the 12th year of the reign of King Richard II., as appears + by all the parcels:-- + + L _s._ _d._ + Milk. First 126 gallons of milk + @ 1_d._ the gallon 10 6 + + Butter. Also 3 gallons 3 qrts of butter + @ 2_s._ 4_d._ the gallon 9 4-1/2 + + Eggs. Also 5816 eggs + @ 10_d._ the hundred 2 8 5-1/4 + + Salt. Also one peck of salt @ 3_d._ 3 + -------------- + Total L3 8 11-3/4" + + +Our Kitchener makes some trifling assumptions in his multiplication as +to the butter and the eggs, and he robs the Convent of fivepence when +he adds up the total. The number of eggs sounds large, but it means +only 103 and a fraction daily, and when it is considered that in 1389 +the Prior and his Brethren numbered forty-nine persons, this works out +at the by no means excessive rate of 2-1/2 eggs daily to each brother. + +[Illustration: THE KITCHENER'S ACCOUNT FOR PANCAKES.] + +But there is a local reason for dwelling on this custom. Westminster +School is admittedly a Tudor foundation, but at the Abbey we cherish +the conviction that its roots penetrate deep down into the monastic +soil. Every Shrove Tuesday the school--in modern times by means of +selected gladiators--makes a furious onset upon a single pancake. +Mr. Sergeaunt[17] speaks of the ceremony as "the sole survivor of the +medieval sports," and adds that "although its origin cannot be traced, +it can hardly have come into being after the date of Elizabeth's +foundation." Is it, then, beyond all likelihood that it arose out of some +ancient protest of our Benedictines against the prospect of being fed +upon pancakes every day for eight weeks? Is it inconceivable that the +successful protestant was conducted at the end of the "greese," as now, +to the Lord Abbot's presence to receive one mark from his lordship's +bounty? All we can say is that the Brethren continued to be similarly +regaled from Easter to Trinity until the Dissolution of the House. + + + + +IV + +A PROCTOR AT ROME + + +William Colchester ceased to be Treasurer in the autumn of 1376, and +within eight months circumstances had arisen in which his capacities were +to be put to a severer and more prolonged test. We are all familiar with +the expression "St. Stephen's," as applied to Parliament House. But it +is not as readily realized that the House of Commons, after sitting for +long years in the Chapter House[18] at the Abbey, removed itself at +the Dissolution to the ancient Chapel of St. Stephen in the Palace of +Westminster. I am only concerned now with the story of that chapel[19] +as it is related to William Colchester's career. Placed where it was, it +stood within the ancient limits of our Abbot's jurisdiction, but its Dean +and his twelve Prebendaries had good grounds for regarding themselves +as a royal foundation, and they craved the kind of ecclesiastical +independence which attaches to-day to St. George's Chapel in Windsor +Castle. Our Convent resisted this claim, which, on the other hand, had +the good will of the Court. In 1377 a suit to test the rights of the +case was entered before the Roman Curia, and it was necessary to appoint +some careful and astute person to take charge in Rome of the Abbey's +interests, and to negotiate their success. I will not go further into +the merits of the case. It lasted for seventeen years, and was ultimately +settled, on the whole, in the Abbey's favour, the College of St. Stephen +agreeing to pay to the Abbey a yearly sum of five marks, and the right +of the Abbot to instal the Dean of St. Stephen's being upheld.[20] +What concerns us is that the Abbot and Convent chose William Colchester +as their proctor at Rome in this suit, and that by good fortune there +survive long statements of his personal and legal costs in carrying out +the task laid upon him. They will serve as a guide-book of his journey +and will give us considerable insight into his adventures.[21] + +He left Westminster on June[22] 10, 1377, and was absent, as he is careful +to record, for two years, twenty-three weeks, and three days. His first +business was to furnish himself with official commendations, and to +this end he sought for royal letters--pro expedicione cause--from the +Keeper of the Privy Seal; he paid 3_s._ 4_d._ to the Keeper's servant to +urge his master to dictate them, and by a like payment he made things +right with the scrivener who would execute them; but the letters were +not ready when he started. Meantime we can watch him as he reckons up +the difficulties of his ordeal. It was arranged that he should go by +way of Avignon, for Master Thomas Southam,[23] Archdeacon of Oxford, +was still there, settling the affairs of Cardinal Langham's will. But +the Pope was no longer there. Gregory XI. had quitted that scene of +luxurious exile and ravenous extortion on September 13, 1376, and had +entered Rome on January 17, 1377.[24] Most Englishmen had resented +the Avignonese sojourn because it threw the Papacy into the hands of +the French, but William Colchester, as he packed his valise, saw the +matter in a different light. Because the Pope had left, there was +no great chance of finding company for the journey;[25] and company +meant so much the more security. There was nothing for it but to hire +a companion, and he found one Gerard of London, who was willing to face +the journey for 20_s._ and his expenses. Colchester is conscious that +this seems an extravagance, but he enters in his account a plea that it +was justified by the variety of language and the dangers of the roads in +foreign parts.[26] For the road to Dover he bought for himself a horse and +saddle which cost 34_s._ 8_d._; but it appears that he rather expected +the man Gerard to walk, for he extenuates a further payment of 26_s._ +8_d._ for a horse, a saddle, and bridle for Gerard, by stating that +the man entirely declined to go afoot. Thus mounted, they reached Dover, +where they wasted five days in waiting for a passage, and all the time +the cost of food was mounting up at the rate of sixpence a day for each +horse, and fivepence a meal for each man. The passage, when they obtained +one, cost 3_s._ 4_d._ each for the men, and double for the horses. At +that cost they reached Calais, and within three days were at Bruges, +where again there was a long halt. For the royal letters had not come. +Edward III. was on his death-bed, and passed away eleven days after +our travellers left London. But Colchester is convinced that an enemy +had done this, and when he insists that the issue of the letters has +been frustrated "per aduersarios," we must remember that the Dean and +College of St. Stephen's were closer to the royal ear than our Abbot and +Convent. Whatever the cause, the result was the entry in his account of +the cost of nine days' commissariat at Bruges, together with a reward +of 10_d._ to the hotel servants, which he at once resents and excuses +as being the custom of the country.[27] In brief, he had already spent +nearly all the L10 which he received at his journey's start from the hands +of Brother John Lakyngheth, his rival for monastic promotion. + +So now he converts his balance of 16_s._ 8_d._ from sterling into florins, +reckoning a florin at 3_s._ 2_d._ To this he adds seven florins by the +sale of his own horse--a creditable bargain, for, having paid 34_s._ +8_d._ for the beast in London, he has ridden it to Bruges, and there +parted with it for 22_s._ 2_d._ On the other hand, Gerard's horse has +turned out badly; the journey has nearly killed it;[28] and it goes for +three florins, or 9_s._ 6_d._ Colchester negotiated a loan of twenty-three +florins, and on they went towards the south, sometimes hiring mounts, +sometimes begging a ride in a cart, often in terror of the Frenchmen, +who laid an ambush for them as they entered Dauphine, so that our +travellers hired a guide and went through byways. On the 27th day after +leaving Bruges they entered Avignon, and next day they found Master +Southam at his lodgings by the church of Our Lady of Miracles. + +For a moment I lay aside Colchester's ledger and turn to a separate +document; for Southam had with him at Avignon another Westminster monk, +John Farnago, who became Colchester's paymaster and in due course +presented to the Abbey an account[29] of what he had laid out on his +behalf. We are thus furnished with the date of the arrival of Colchester +and Gerard--July 24--and learn that they required bed and board at +Avignon till August 19. Farnago purchased for his Brother a fresh +outfit--cape, tunic, and hood of black Benedictine cloth, a scapular +and cowl, and a plain colobium (or sleeveless tunic), buying the last, +as he says, from Hagyuus, a Jew, whose real name was probably Hayyim. He +also provided a horse for the journey to Marseilles, where Colchester +was to take ship, and put some money in his scrip. So our Proctor turned +his back on Avignon, perhaps not fully realizing that when on August 14, +five days before his departure, he and Farnago witnessed the probate of +Cardinal Langham's will,[30] he had been concerned with a document which +was to have a vast effect on the church and the conventual buildings +of St. Peter, Westminster. + +We turn back to Colchester's own ledger, and note that he does not enter +the actual date of his arrival in Rome; but we can fix it fairly closely. +He says that, having got thus far, he was obliged to move on to Anagni, +some forty miles southward from Rome on the road to Naples; and we know +that Gregory XI., who had spent the summer of 1377 there, returned to +Rome on November 17.[31] Colchester must have found the Papal Court busy +at the packing of its trunks and must have returned with it forthwith +to Rome; for the first date that he mentions is November 20. It would +be wearisome to pursue the details of his activity in engaging counsel, +English and Italian, and in paying their fees; but it is worth while +to notice that there has been no great change since his day in legal +expressions--retinuit duos aduocatos--and perhaps not a complete reform +of illegal practice; for instance, he explains that he gave six florins +to the valet--cubicularius--of the Cardinal of Milan, who was concerned in +the decision of the case, with a view to the man's stirring up his master +to sign a certain document; the object of the gift, says Colchester, +was greater security, because at the moment there was a fierce altercation +between the parties to the suit. + +His expenses, already large, received a sudden addition through the death, +on March 27, 1378, of Gregory XI. Seldom can an observant traveller have +had a more exciting experience than to be in Rome during the session of +the Consistory[32] which set Bartolommeo Prignano, Archbishop of Bari, +upon what Colchester calls "the apex of the chief Apostolate." On personal +grounds our monk must have been pleased at the choice of the electors, +for the new Pope was the special _protege_ of the French Cardinal of +Pampeluna, Simon Langham's friend and executor. But financially the +effect was provoking. We know that Urban VI. proved himself a man "full +of Neapolitan fire and savagery," who thought "that the Cardinals could +be reduced to absolute obedience by mere rudeness,"[33] and we are quite +prepared for Colchester's statement that between the Pope and the Sacred +College there arose a great dissension. Cardinals and curials fled +secretly, he says, in some numbers, and among the latter the two advocates +whom he had briefed and paid. That money at any rate was a dead loss, but +there was this advantage in Urban's case, that, knowing the preference of +the Cardinals for Anagni as a summer residence, he decided for Tivoli in +their despite, and Colchester could get there in a few hours for a couple +of florins. Six weeks had to be spent within sound of Horace's waterfall +before his business was finished. His return journey led him through Nice, +where he was robbed of his cloak and other property. Then to Avignon +once more, and thence in due course--at least, so he hoped--to the Abbey. + +But he was fated, nevertheless, to turn again and revisit the Roman +Court; for while he tarried in Master Southam's lodgings at Avignon, +in September, 1378, there came news of a notable murder committed in the +church of Westminster while the Gospel was being read at High Mass,[34] +on August, 11. The victim was one Robert Hawle, who had escaped from +the Tower and had taken sanctuary at Westminster. The incident had its +political aspects; it raised various perilous questions; and Southam +advised that Colchester should return to Rome in order to counteract any +plots that might be mooted in behalf of the authors of "that horrible +deed." So again the expenses began to roll up--the journey overland +to Marseilles; a passage by galley to Ostia; a sojourn in Rome for the +greater part of December, 1378; gratuities on several occasions to the +Papal janitors for free entrance to the Chamber and the Consistory, and to +the valets for access to the Pope himself; an expensive struggle by each +faction to extract from the Curia the kind of Bull that each side wanted, +in which our Proctor was apparently successful; and a journey from Rome +to Bruges lasting forty-one days. Colchester waited for three weeks at +Sluis to secure a passage across the Channel, in the belief that the +enemy was watching Calais with the intention of doing him violence;[35] +and when he reached his native shore, he rode up to London by ways that +were devious for the same reason, arriving there in November, 1379. It +was neither easy nor without peril to be the chosen representative of +Westminster at the Roman Court. + + + + +V + +AN ARCHDEACON + + +It is not doubtful that the Abbot and Chapter were well pleased with +Colchester's fulfilment of the duties entrusted to him and that the +large bill of costs was paid, if not with delight, at any rate with +resignation. Of this we have several conclusive indications. First, +within a brief space the Convent again despatched him to Rome, in 1382-3, +doubtless to continue his management of the same suit. This time there +is no record of his payments, nor should we be aware of his journey if +it were not for two documents. One is the Chamberlain's compotus-roll +of 1382-3. These accounts presented a balance of money on the one side, +and a balance of materials on the other side; it was necessary for the +Chamberlain to show, not merely that he had purchased so many outfits, but +that he had distributed these outfits to such and such Brethren. So when +he makes his statement about the habits--panni nigri--he notes that he +did not give these to Brother William Colchester nor to Brother William +Halle, because they were at Rome. No doubt, Colchester had represented +to the Chapter the wisdom of providing him with a companion from the +monastery instead of his hiring a courier as before. The other is a legal +document, whose purport is of some personal interest. When Colchester +left Westminster in 1382-3, Richard Excestr' was about to resign the +Priorship, which he had held only since 1377. Attempts seem to have +been made, perhaps by some of Colchester's Roman friends during his +stay at the Curia, to secure a "provision" of the vacant office for him +from the Pope, and the efforts succeeded. The document in question[36] +bears date January 2, 1384, and is of the nature of a pardon to Colchester +for the prejudice or contempt caused by such efforts to the Crown and +its prerogatives. He denied that he was party to the attempt, and paid +the necessary fee to the Hanaper for his pardon. The Priorship another +took;[37] not, perhaps, because the Brethren thought Colchester unworthy +of promotion or too young for it, but because the interests of the +House required that he should go to Rome, whither he was sent, as the +Treasurers' rolls inform us, both in 1384-5 and 1385-6. The suit against +St. Stephen's Chapel still dragged on, and he alone had the knowledge +and the experience for hastening its delays. + +As a second proof of the confidence reposed in him we may note that in +1382[38] he was Archdeacon of the Convent; it is possible that he held +the post earlier; certainly he held it in 1386; and probably he owed it to +the Abbot personally. The office of Archdeacon is proverbially puzzling +to the lay mind, and it may be that the Archdeaconry of Westminster +creates some wonder in the minds even of other Archdeacons. The fact is +that the Abbot in the exercise of jurisdiction over his Westminster area +required the services of an ecclesiastical jurist in matters of divorce +and of excommunication and the like; he needed also some one who would +serve as his pastoral representative to those denizens of the area who +were not on the foundation of the Convent. For this reason, even in +Abbot Ware's time,[39] the Archdeacon was permitted to walk abroad +to the Palace or elsewhere in the discharge of his duties, which, +indeed, might take him much further afield; for when Abbot Colchester +drew up an indenture[40] appropriating to certain memorial purposes the +revenues of Aldenham church, he inserted a provision that the Archdeacon +of Westminster for the time being should be in charge of the parish, +receiving 40_s._ yearly for his labour therein. We have seen that +Colchester's experience marked him out for juridical duties, and we +must assume that he was not without pastoral zeal and aptitude. + +A letter in Norman French addressed by "William, Conte de Salisbury" +to Abbot Litlington will help us to see that his duties were of a +varied character. The writer of the letter[41] was William de Montacute, +2nd Earl, who fought at Poitiers and in most of the French wars of his +time. Addressing the Abbot as his dear and faithful friend, he thus +unfolds his story. His servant, Nicholas Symcok, of London, has been +robbed in the middle of June by highwaymen, one of whom, Richard Surrey, +is popularly known as Richard atte Belle. The knight of the road has made +off with some silver plate and L40 in coin, and has taken sanctuary at +Westminster, being hotly pursued by his victim, who finds on Surrey's +person all his lost property, less L5 of the stolen money. Symcok has +deposited his recovered goods in the hands of Dan William Colchester, +one of the lord Abbot's monks, who has laid them aside and placed his +seal upon the package. Therefore, my good Lord--asks the Earl--I pray +you have these chattels delivered up to my servant. This letter bears no +date, and there is no proof that the Archdeacon as such was concerned +with the affairs of sanctuary; nor does any title of office accompany +the introduction of his name. But the incident was one which bore a +legal character and Colchester's part in it may possibly be brought +within the vague limits of archidiaconal functions.[42] + +We are fortunate in possessing one unquestionable intimation as to +his personal circumstances while holding this office. It bears date +November 9, 1386, shortly before his promotion to the highest room, +and is an indenture of lease of sheep.[43] It sets forth that Thomas +Charlton, the valet, and Henry Norton, the servant of William Colchester, +Archdeacon of Westminster, leased to John Waryn, butcher, of Westminster, +132 muttons--multones--3 rams, and 168 ewes, of the average value of +20_d._ each, to be fed and kept sound till Ash Wednesday next ensuing; and +there follows a statement of the terms upon which the tenant may acquire +any or all of them. The bargain was apparently made by the Archdeacon's +servants, and the actual document leaves it in doubt whether the sheep +were his or theirs, but the endorsement[44] places the ownership beyond +question and proves the sheep to have been the Archdeacon's. + +The third means adopted by the Convent for marking its sense of +Colchester's services to the House was more exceptional. I give the +statement of it as it stands in the vellum volume called _Liber Niger +Quaternus_, a fifteenth-century copy of an earlier black paper register +compiled by a very active monk called Roger Kyrton, or Cretton,[45] who +entered the Convent in 1384-5, served many offices under Abbot Colchester, +and survived him by about fourteen years:-- + + "On September 25, 1382, there was granted to Brother W. Colchester + Archdeacon of Westminster a chamber, together with that part of + the Garden which belongs to the Lady Chapel; also a pension of six + marks [L4] and an additional monk's allowance--corrodium--such + as is enjoyed by the seniors; but on condition that if the + said William be promoted to any prelacy elsewhere, the pension, + the allowance and the chamber are to revert to the Convent." + +Two questions of topography arise here, the position of the Garden and +that of the chambers, or "camerae." It is not necessary to assume that +they were contiguous. "The part of the Garden which belongs to the Lady +Chapel" cannot be located with certainty, but the Convent Garden lay in +the acres eastward of St. Martin's Church, Charing Cross, which still +retain the name, and are now the scene of the sale of garden-produce +that is grown elsewhere. Our great chartulary called Domesday[46] shows +that the Lady Chapel was given considerable property in this district +during the reign of Henry III., under whom the chapel was built. In +view of our information that within four years the Archdeacon possessed +a flock of 400 sheep, it seems reasonable to suppose that his share of +the Garden included considerable pasturage, and that he sometimes took +his walks abroad in the direction of Charing to see if it was well with +the flocks. + +There is less doubt about the position of the chambers, which are +often mentioned in connexion with the Infirmary, and which were +probably attached to Little Cloisters, then recently rebuilt by Abbot +Litlington. To this day the south side of Little Cloisters shows +an alternation of old doors and old windows that suggests a row of +almshouses. It thus becomes easy to realize that a separate residence, +instead of the usual bed in the Great Dormitory, was a privilege highly +prized and rarely conferred. + +[Illustration: CHAMBERS IN LITTLE CLOISTERS.] + +It is natural to ask in what conditions the tenants of these chambers +lived, and the answer can be given in some detail. We have a long +strip of frail paper,[47] 3 ft. 7 in. x 5-1/2 in., which deals with the +post-mortem distribution of the effects of a monk whom William Colchester +must have known long and well. Richard Excestr' said his first Mass, +as did Colchester himself, in 1361-2; he became Prior quite early in +life, in 1377; but, as we have seen, he resigned the office in 1382, +and we do not know why his tenure of it was so brief. That the reason was +not discreditable to himself may be inferred from the fact that on his +resignation he was given precedence next after the new Prior, receiving +a pension of four marks, a double, or Prior's, assignment of clothing, +and a double share of the pittances that marked certain anniversaries, +till his death in 1397. In this paper, then, his modest effects are +arranged according to the rooms in which they stood, like the items in +an auctioneer's catalogue when the sale is to take place, by order of +the executors, on the premises. We gather that he has a reception-room, +or "aula," where he can entertain a few friends, with a special welcome +for any Brother who can play chess (for among his possessions are a +chess-board and a set of chess-men[48]); a pantry, or "buteleria," +for his little store of plate and crockery and napery, including +a silver cup and cover, thirteen silver spoons (was it a complete +"Apostle" set?), and a table-cloth 3-1/2 yards in length; a bedroom, or +"camera," containing his white bedstead with a tester over it, and a +"parpoynt," as well as his wardrobe; a kitchen, or "coquina," equipped +with "droppyngpannes," "dressyng-Knyues," "flesshhokys," "anndyrons," +a "treuet," and three pans which like the trivet are honestly described +in the catalogue as being the worse for wear;[49] and a library, or +"studium," with ten books and three maps. Among these books there was of +course some scholastic theology and canon law, but there was also the +Latin version of the Book of Messer Marco Polo, as if to signify that the +latest modern literature was by no means excluded. The Provost of King's, +who was kind enough to look through the list for me, takes this to be, +as I suspected,[50] a very early instance of English interest in the +Venetian traveller's adventures; and added that he believes it to be +still more rare that a man of this monk's period should possess a map +of Scotland. + +As there was nothing exceptional in the disposal of the ex-prior's +goods,[51] the incident may be fairly taken as an illustration of Convent +life as Colchester lived it, and we may therefore go on to notice that, +putting together the sum that Excestr' left in cash and that which was +realized by the sale of some of these articles, the Convent was able +to pay the cost of his illness and burial; the items ranged from 2_d._ +for milk to 10_s._ for the fee of the brief-writer who wrote out the +formal announcement of his death on one shilling's worth of parchment +for the information of other Benedictine houses, and L4 13_s._ 4_d._ +for a marble slab with a memorial inscription. As Excestr' died in 1397, +we may think of Abbot Colchester as saying the last words over the open +grave of his former neighbour in Little Cloisters. + + + + +VI + +ABBOT OF WESTMINSTER + + +Our Archdeacon was not destined to remain such for any great time. +On November 29, 1386, there passed away during a meal-time[52] at his +manor house of la Neyte, near Westminster, our great builder, Abbot +Nicholas Litlington, to whom we owe the south and west sides of the Great +Cloister, the Little Cloisters, Jerusalem Chamber, the Abbot's Dining +Hall, and much besides of the present Deanery, and the great Missal.[53] +The vigour of Litlington's character can be realized from what we have +seen of the fight which he maintained through William Colchester for +the privileges of the Abbey, but Colchester must have witnessed a more +remarkable proof of the old man's pluck. In the _Liber Niger_ (f. 87) +there is a record to the effect that a threatened invasion of our +shores by the French King in 1386 caused the Chapter of the Convent to +come to the unanimous opinion that the old Abbot and two of his monks, +John Canterbery and John Burgh, should don full armour and proceed as +far as the coast, on the ground that it was lawful to do so for the +defence of the realm.[54] It is astonishing that Litlington should +have contemplated such an enterprise at his age, for we have a letter +in Norman French, not dated, but clearly referring to this period, +in which he excuses himself on the ground of "age et feblesse" for +not coming to the Abbey "en propre persone" to bring to the King the +famous ring of St. Edward. But Litlington's possession of armour cannot +be doubted. There remains a schedule[55] of his effects at his death, +which shows that those which passed into the hands of his successor +consisted chiefly of various accoutrements, and included six hauberks; +a helmet called a "pisanum"; seven others called basnetts with ventailles +or vizors; a "ketelhat"; a pair of steel gloves; some "leg-harneys"; +fore-braces and back-braces; and four lance-heads. + +[Illustration: THE PERSONAL EFFECTS OF ABBOT LITLINGTON.] + +Though general opinion pointed to his election in Litlington's stead, +Colchester was in some danger of disappointment. He had spent so much +time abroad--a very large proportion of the preceding nine years--being +engaged all the time in a cause which brought him into collision with the +preferences of the Court, that it is not wonderful if the King desired +the election of another. We can thus easily credit the statement of +a Westminster chronicler,[56] whom the Dean of Wells believes to have +been the rival candidate himself, that, when the vacancy occurred, the +King wrote thrice to the Prior and Convent urging them to find their +new Abbot in Brother John Lakyngheth, the very Treasurer whom we have +seen in the act of paying to William Colchester the sums required for +his long journeys and his legal costs, perhaps with a keen satisfaction +at thus facilitating his rival's absence. But the Convent had made up +its mind, and within a fortnight[57] of Litlington's decease, Colchester +was elected Abbot by compromission; that is to say, the Brethren chose +a committee of five or seven of their number and entrusted to them +the choice of the best man. Richard II. was angry, and refused for a +while to receive the nomination. We have the request[58] of the Prior +and Convent to the King, written in French, but not bearing any date, +to give his consent to their choice of "daunz William Colchestre un +de lours commoignes en abbe et pastoure." The letter was written at a +time when Richard could be said to have "graciousement accroiez votre +roial assent al election auantdite," and when it was only necessary to +petition him to make formal announcement of it to the Pope. But there +was considerable delay also on the part of the Pope, who wanted to +quash the election and to appoint by "provision."[59] But the King's +ambassador intervened, and the bulls of confirmation were issued +September 1, 1387. Colchester was installed October 12, and made a great +feast to his friends on St. Edward's Day. His temporalities had been +restored September 10.[60] All this places Richard's attitude towards +him in some doubt, especially as, on November 10, the King, who walked +barefoot from Charing to the Abbey precincts, was there received by +Colchester and his Brethren vested in copes. Almost immediately there +arose a difficult question about sanctuary, as to which the reader may be +again referred to the _Polychronicon_.[61] Words almost fail the scribe +as he pictures the reverence and love of the King for the Church. "There +is not a Bishop on the bench," he says, "who displays as much zeal for +the Church's rights." + +Thus it came to pass that King and Court alike poured upon the Abbey +the benefits of their generosity in spite of Colchester's election, +and in the case of the Court the gifts came quite as readily from +Richard's enemies as from his friends. Within three months of Colchester's +installation, on December 1, 1387, a deed[62] was executed whereby the +Abbot and Convent bound themselves to observe the anniversary of Thomas +of Woodstock, Richard's uncle and at that time his fierce enemy, and of +Eleanor de Bohun, his wife, in return for a splendid gift, which included +vestments of cloth of gold, broidered with their initials, silver-gilt +vessels for the altar, a silver-gilt thurible adorned with images of +the saints, and two silver candlesticks formed of angels bearing the +heraldic shields of the houses of Essex and Hereford.[63] + +Richard's own gifts to the church during Colchester's time were even +more magnifical. On May 28, 1389, there was a royal grant, witnessed by +the Archbishop of Canterbury and many others, conveying to the Convent +a richly adorned chasuble of cloth of gold, two tunicles, three albs, +the orphreys bearing representations of the Holy Trinity, the Virgin Mary, +St. John Baptist, St. Edward the Confessor, St. Edmund the King, and +"a certain Abbess." In 1394, after the death of his beloved Queen, +Anne of Bohemia, came Richard's grant of L200 yearly to maintain an +anniversary for her, and for him when he should depart hence;[64] which +was followed in 1399 by his grant to the Abbey of manors and lands in +Middlesex, Bedfordshire, and Berkshire,[65] whence an equivalent in rents +would be derived in perpetuity. To this gift the Dean and Chapter owe +the advowson of Steventon, Berkshire, which they still retain. On the +other side, it may be admitted that Richard made use of the Abbey's +resources; we have his note of hand for a loan of L100, dated September +11, 1397.[66] To what extent he fostered that building of the Nave, +which our documents speak of as the New Work, has been told in detail +elsewhere.[67] It comes to this, that Colchester's effigy in stained +glass looks into the Nave from a window which probably dates from Henry +III.'s time, but it faces towards Purbeck pillars which were the work +of one of our Abbot's most zealous officers, Peter Coumbe. The portion of +the triforium above his window is also due to Henry III., but in his old +age Colchester may well have seen the workmen busy with the erection of +the corresponding section of the clerestory. + + + + +VII + +THE ABBOT AT HOME + + +As before, if we want to know an Abbot's interests and his manner of +life at home, we shall go to the accounts of his stewards or Seneschals. +His rent-roll is less than Abbot Litlington's, and there are heavier +arrears. The country is greatly unsettled and it is not an easy +time for landholders. We possess a clear "statement[68] of the lands +and apportionments of the lord William by the grace of God Abbot of +Westminster," as audited in the year 1388. The total revenue when fully +paid has fallen to L617 16_s._ 1_d._, but there are arrears amounting to +L104 12_s._ 7_d._ However, if his receipts are less, his stock is still +plentiful; he possesses 58 horses and 19 foals; 351 heads of cattle; +2287 sheep and lambs; and 299 pigs. When he listened to his monks and +lay clerks singing the 144th Psalm, he had every reason to join in the +desire "that our garners may be full and plenteous with all manner of +store: that our sheep may bring forth thousands and ten thousands in +our streets: that our oxen may be strong to labour"; and he knew his +times well enough to ask also that there may be "no complaining in +our streets." + +We have six rolls of his Seneschals between 1388 and 1403, and we may +put together from these the facts that are to be gleaned about him. +At this time, at any rate, he was a man of good health. There is a +slight reference to an indisposition in 1389, and once there is a fee +of one shilling to a doctor for treating his "tibia," which seems to +have been a peculiarly vulnerable part of monkish anatomy. On the other +hand, he does not appear to have been as fond of field sports as his +great predecessor; at least in 1402-3 his steward bought 359 rabbits, 41 +woodcock and a pheasant, which would hardly be necessary if his lordship +were in the habit of inviting the neighbouring gentry to help him keep +down his game. It is evident that his estates are being well managed. +We can tell, for instance, that in 1388-9, on his manors of Eybury, +Denham, Laleham and Pyrford, he sold 215 stone of wool at 1_s._ 9_d._ +a stone. He made red wine at Islip, and his price for it was L2 12_s._ +6_d._ a pipe. The needs of his own establishment were mainly supplied +from Denham and Pyrford, especially the former; for his accounts are +full of small payments to servants who had driven pigs from Denham +to la Neyte. In other words, when he was in town he did not patronize +the Westminster tradesmen, but he purchased supplies from himself as +over-lord of Denham. For these he paid his factor at Denham the current +price, so that the manor could give a good account of its takings at +the end of the year. + +And this careful accountancy went to quite practical lengths. For +instance, the Abbot was wont to receive during each year a large number +of "exennia," which, as we have seen, were complimentary presents +mostly offered in kind. It happens that there is a complete list of +these with the names of the donors for 1388-9. The clergy beneficed +on the estate, such as the rector of Islip, the vicar of Hurley, where +the Abbey had a daughter priory, the rectors of Oddington and Sutton +on the Gloucestershire property, and the vicar of Brailes in Warwickshire; +the heads of the affiliated convents, such as Hurley, Greater Malvern, +Deerhurst, and Pershore; the tenants, such as the miller at Pyrford; +the man who rents the church farm at Longdon; various monks of the +Abbey, such as John Stowe, who brings now a lamb as a peace-offering, now +the results of his skill with the line, a pike or an eel, and now that +which he has taken with his bow, a brace of bittern; and Peter Coumbe, +the Sacrist and warden of the New Work, who offers a swan and a brace +of pheasants. The gifts, in fact, are from all sorts and conditions +of folk. There is the King's larderer with his modest present of fish; +there is Master Thomas Southam, Cardinal Langham's lawyer, who now sends +the Abbot a pipe of red wine, the most costly of all the gifts, in the +hope, no doubt, of continuing to serve his present lordship in a similar +capacity; and, most pathetic of all, there are two women, who claim to +be of the Abbot's kin,[69] and who offer for his acceptance half a dozen +capons. But the point for us is the careful management of his affairs, +which appears in the fact that each of these eighty-three contributions +is entered by the Seneschal at its market-price. The pipe of wine +figures at L2 13_s._ 4_d._; the lamb at 8_d._; the six capons from +the poor relations at 2_s._; and the brace of bittern at 2_s._ 6_d._ +Altogether these tributes towards his maintenance save the expenses +of the mansion by L14 11_s._ 6_d._, and a reference to his steward's +balance-sheet under the head of "outside receipts" shows this exact +sum entered as derived from the "exennia" of divers persons. Prudent +housewifery could scarcely go further. On the other hand, he does not +so treat the presents he receives from the great ones of the earth. When +a stag arrives from Windsor, or a buck from the Baroness Despenser, +the cash value of these compliments is not taken into the account; +there is merely an acknowledgment that certain recognitions in money +have been given to the bearers of the gifts. + +It is natural to ask whether the accounts show signs of luxurious +habits. Certainly not in his furnishing. Thus, in 1401 he was adding to +the accommodation of his London mansion of la Neyte. For his new parlour +he obtained a cupboard for 10_s._, two chairs for 4_s._ 6_d._, six stools +for 4_s._ 4_d._, and a deal table for the same sum. I think (the word +is not quite clear) that he had a curtain provided for his study-window +at a cost of 1_s._ 8_d._; and there was a fireplace in his parlour, +for which his Seneschal laid out 7_d._ upon coal. Certainly not, again, +in wine and strong drink; for his outlay under this head was about a +sixth part of the sum which he spent upon corn and meat. Nor is there +any evidence that he used his position for the enrichment of poor +relations. It may be that we can detect a needy kinsman in one John +Colchester who was granted 3_s._ 4_d._ by my lord's command at la Neyte +in March, 1389, and it was quite possibly for a sister-in-law--the wife of +Thomas Colchester--that he ordered a diamond ring[70] at a cost of 40_s._ +on May 31 of that year, perhaps because it was her birthday. When one of +his servants was sent to Colchester on some personal business of the +Abbot, the man was evidently not expected to comport himself as if his +master's resources were unlimited, for his total expenses were 2_s._ 4_d._ + +The Abbot liked to have one or two of the younger monks around him, +such as John Sandon and Thomas Merke, whom we have met, as Shakespeare +also met him, in the events that gather mysteriously round the end +of Richard II.'s reign. No doubt, they joined him at table in the new +parlour of la Neyte, but the only sign of further bounty towards them was +a gift of 6_s._ 8_d._ to them jointly for a treat--pro gaudiis--a term +which survives in the custom of applying the word "gaudy" to those College +entertainments to which at the moment Oxford is patriotically a stranger. + +When the great man moved about, it was seemingly not with any great +train; otherwise it would hardly be necessary for the Seneschal to +give 1_s._ 8_d._ to a certain man for guiding my lord out of the forest +of Rockingham, as if the Abbot were too lonely to face the possible +appearance of Robin Hood with equanimity. But, of course, there were +exceptional circumstances when he would travel in the dignity of his +position. There was a formal visitation of the manors of Denham, Laleham, +Staines, and Pyrford in 1402-3, which cost over L6, and visits to Henry +IV. in the same year at Ware and Windsor and Berkhamstead, at an expense +of about L4. A short time after, the Abbot had to face a continental +journey, but L4 12_s._ is no great sum to enter as "the expenses of my +lord and his household in setting out for Calais with porterage and the +hire of a boat to take him to the ship, and also the expenses of John +Sandon and John Stowe [two monks] and part of the household on their +way back to London." + +Not a little of his petty expenses arose from the frequency with which he +was officially visited by persons of position who were not too proud to +receive a present of money, and would have resented its absence. They +were mostly content with much less than the 20_s._ imparted to the +Remembrancer of the King's Exchequer, but the gifts of 3_s._ 4_d._ +mounted up when the Abbot must receive now a Herald and his boy, now +the Sheriff of Middlesex and his valet and his boy, now a messenger +with a summons to Parliament, now two criers from the King's Bench, +and all within a brief space of time. + +But Abbot Colchester did indulge one luxury, whether out of a taste for +it or because it was the fashion of the time, I cannot say. He was fond +of being entertained, particularly by musicians; and his Seneschal's +accounts during these six or seven years are full of small payments to +such persons, from a boy who danced before my lord at Walsingham for +6_d._ to Henry the piper--fistulator--who was retained at Pyrford all +Christmas time for 14_s._ He could provide some of this enjoyment from +the resources of the Abbey, as when he made two clerks bring a pair +of organs from Westminster to Pyrford. His chief delight was to have +Master Percyvale and other of the King's minstrels, especially on great +festivals such as St. Peter ad Vincula, and he could listen to Percyvale +for the modest consideration of 2_s._ Evidently it came to be known that +he had tastes of this kind, for William of Wykeham's pipers journeyed +to Pyrford to strut their little hour before the Abbot; Henry Despenser, +the fighting Bishop of Norwich and doughty champion of Richard II., +sent his minstrels to entertain my lord when he was at Birlingham; +the Duke of Gloucester, Thomas of Woodstock, kept a blind harper who +gave a performance at Denham; and the other visitors included the Abbot +of Eynsham's player--lusor--and the musicians of the ill-fated Earl of +Arundel. Even when he was resident for a space in Northampton for the +General Chapter of the Benedictine Order, he was sometimes entertained +by mummers.[71] + +But it would not be fair to think of him as having no desires that +went down to the realities of things. For he lived in troublous times, +and he knew how Christian men should face the serious issues that +then emerged. His duty to the country and to the various properties +for which he stood in trust called him away from Westminster often, +and sometimes for prolonged periods. It is possible by means of the +accounts of his various bailiffs to follow his comings and goings; +for the receipts from the properties must be delivered to the Abbot in +person, and there is thus an entry of the cost of journeying to such +and such a place, wherever he happened to be, and generally of the cost +of one or two horsemen for safety's sake. But the Abbey and the welfare +of his Brethren were in his mind, and he kept a guiding hand upon their +spiritual concerns, particularly in times of trial. There is an instance +of this in a document,[72] which bears no date except August 31, but +which may be assigned with reasonable certainty to Richard II.'s troubled +reign. It is headed in another hand, "W. Abbot of Westminster to the +Prior of the same place"; but this is an error. The Abbot in a quite +exceptional way addresses himself to the officers or obedientiaries +without mentioning the Prior, and I incline to attributing the document to +the latest years of Richard II., because the Prior, John de Wratting,[73] +was then becoming unequal to his duties. It is true that our evidence +for this is dated 1405,[74] but, as Wratting was then over eighty, it +may hold almost as well for seven or eight years earlier. The Abbot's +message is as follows:-- + + "My beloved sons in Christ, + + "The most serene Prince our lord the King has urgently required + of us that in this present time of dire necessity we should be + instant in prayer to the most High with all our hearts for the + good estate of King and country. For enemies without and rebels + within are confederate in their malicious plots to shatter the + peace of the realm. You therefore to whom (under us) belongs the + administration of government in our monastery we hereby urge and + enjoin that, considering what we say above, you should put a + limit upon the Brethren's walks abroad and upon their ridings + into distant parts--except of course in the case of the Monk + Bailiff--until God grants us more peaceful times. Call all and + singular your Brethren to Chapter and bid them from me to be + content with their usual recreation within the house and to give + themselves so much the more earnestly to meditation and prayer as + the distress and wickedness of the times become more pressing. + Go in solemn procession every fourth day round the bounds of the + monastery, and every sixth day through the vill of Westminster, + praying for a successful issue and for the common weal of + the King and the realm--petitions which are already earnestly + commended to the private prayers of all the Brethren. Summon + all the chaplains and clerks dwelling within St. Margaret's + parish to join you, and specially the clerks of our Almonry, + according to custom. Fare you well in Christ now and for ever." + +The Abbot wrote from Denham; but his heart was with his Brethren in a +time of trouble. + +There are also signs that in normal times he was exercising an effect +on the organization of conventual activity. In his roll for 1393-4 the +officer called the Warden of the Churches made entry that he had paid +to Peter Coumbe, as Sacrist, the sum of 32_s._, at the rate of 4_s._ for +each of the Abbey's eight principal feasts, "in accordance with the +recent ordinance of the lord William now Abbot."[75] It is an intimation +that the Abbot was already making his influence felt, and was encouraging +his Brethren to regard the solemnities of divine worship[76] as the +chief care of their monastic life. + + + + +VIII + +THE ABBOT ABROAD + + +But though we may realize that Abbot Colchester loved his Convent and +cherished it, we still have to think of him as being often compelled to +wander far from it. True, he had spent so much time in Rome before his +election, that he was able to escape in 1390 the triennial visit _ad +limina_ which was normally expected of an Abbot. He was represented +on that occasion by John Borewell, an active and efficient monk, who +had succeeded him in the Archdeaconry in 1387; he was also represented +by the gifts of himself and his Brethren on the occasion of the year of +Jubilee, which are carefully recorded in the _Liber Niger_ (f. 92). But +that exemption did not avail to keep him at home, for we are told that on +December 14, 1391, he set out for the Continent on the King's business, +the King being responsible for his travelling charges and his safe +conduct.[77] + +[Illustration: ABBOT COLCHESTER'S SEAL.] + +In 1393 he was commissioned by the Pope to join the Bishop of Salisbury +and the Abbot of Waltham in an inquiry into the statutes and customs of +the Collegiate Chapter of the Chapel in Windsor Castle, and to correct +and reform these, where they seemed to need it.[78] John de Waltham, +Bishop of Salisbury, and our Abbot were there associated not for the +first time or the last. Two years later the Bishop died, and was buried +by Richard's desire in the Confessor's Chapel. Waltham was a successful +favourite, without claim to royal sepulture, and we may assume that +Colchester and the Convent were among the many who protested. It is, +perhaps, not unfair to assert that "the Abbey was well considered for +this," or that the monks' "scruples were overborne by gifts of money and +vestments."[79] Yet it is a fact that, whereas the Bishop was buried +in 1395, the indenture tripartite,[80] which dealt with the use to be +made of the gifts, was not drawn up till July 15, 1412. It recites +that the Bishop, who had served the Kings of England from his boyhood +in their Chancery and in other and higher offices, was buried among +the tombs of the Kings;[81] that at the sight of his bier--we must, +no doubt, think of Abbot Colchester as standing by--Richard II. had +given to the Abbey a rich "Jesse" vestment valued at 1000 marks, and +that the executors had added another vestment valued at L40 and 500 +marks in money. Colchester and the Convent covenanted to observe the +Bishop's obit--September 18--which we know they did to the last. They also +admitted into their company one of the Bishop's executors, Ralph Selby, +Archdeacon of Buckingham, giving him precedence next to the Prior with +corresponding privileges, and granting him, in 1402-3, a yearly pension +of L4. This does not support the notion of the Convent's hostility to +John de Waltham; at the same time it occurs too late to be reckoned +as a bargain entered into for the purpose of securing to the Bishop +a posthumous honour which they were unwilling to accord, even when +Richard II. asked for it. + +I pass by Colchester's part, if he took any, in Richard's journey to +Ireland in 1399;[82] for our records throw no light on what did not +concern the Convent. There appears to be no doubt that he was confederate +with the Earls of Rutland, Huntingdon, Kent, and Salisbury, who were +at first confided to his safe-keeping by Henry IV.; that he took part +on December 17, 1399, in a secret gathering of the conspirators within +the Abbey; that he was arrested, and sent first to Reigate and then, +January 25, 1400, to the Tower; and that he was released, after a trial +there held on February 4.[83] He had, of course, received Henry IV. when +he made his progress to Westminster on October 12, 1399, and had taken +part in the coronation on the following day.[84] + +But inside the Convent there was an evident desire to eschew +partisanships, as any one can realize who reads Roger Cretton's bare +and impartial record in the _Liber Niger_.[85] I therefore pass from +public questions and take up an otherwise undated letter[86] of the Abbot, +written from Cologne on October 10, to two important Westminster monks +whom we have already had before us, Peter Coumbe and John Borewell. +It reveals Colchester's close interest in Abbey affairs, however far +away he might be, and it is even somewhat peremptory in tone. For he +had referred to them some detail of monastic business, and says that +he is daily awaiting their answer, in order that he may take action +accordingly. The Convent, he adds, is to receive with due honour a +relation of the Bishop of Lincoln, remembering that his lordship has +always been gracious to them in matters of conventual concern. + +We must try to fix the date of this journey through Cologne, and some +things can be soon settled. It must be before 1409-10, when John Borewell +died.[87] He was in office as Granger, Kitchener, Cellarer, and Gardener +almost till his death, and he had been in partnership with Peter Coumbe, +as manager of the funds provided for Queen Anne's anniversary,[88] +from 1394 to 1399. But who is the Bishop of Lincoln? It is tempting to +think of the princely Henry Beaufort, the most potent holder of the see +at this period; if so, the journey would fall at some time before 1404, +when Beaufort was translated to Winchester, and thus it might even be +got just within the limits of the partnership above-mentioned, for he +was appointed to Lincoln in 1398. But we have evidence pointing to 1407 +and 1408 as the time with which the visit to Cologne must be connected, +and bringing Henry Beaufort's help and Abbot Colchester's travels into +further association. It is a tattered paper document[89] which states +that when Colchester was in foreign parts in 1407,[90] the collector +of Romescot for the county of Surrey doubled his demand upon the +chapels of Pyrford and Horsell from 12-1/2_d._ each to 25_d._ each, and +laid them under interdict when payment was refused. But the Bishop of +Winchester issued a special mandate to the collector to desist from the +exaction. Beaufort was therefore not abroad at the time with Colchester, +but was defending his interests at home. But both Colchester and Philip +Repingdon, Bishop of Lincoln, were in Italy in 1408. Colchester was at +Lucca and Pisa in May, supporting the Cardinals who were struggling +with Gregory XII.,[91] and his old friend, Bishop Merke, was with +him. At Siena, on September 18, Gregory created ten new Cardinals, +and one of these was Philip Repingdon.[92] It would be natural that he +and Colchester should then meet, possibly travelling homeward together, +and being in Cologne on October 10. + +[Illustration: CORONATION OF HENRY V.] + +The matter of the augmented Romescot was brought to an end at Guildford, +says the document, after the Abbot's return to England, July 22, +1412. This must not be interpreted to mean a continuous absence of five +years, 1407-12, for we have seen the Abbot on his homeward way in 1408, +and know that in July, 1411, he presided alone over the General Chapter +of Benedictines at Northampton.[93] His absence in 1412, which is also +substantiated by his bailiffs' payments to a substitute, was due to one +more journey to Rome; for the account of the "Novum Opus" for 1412-3 +enters payment, by consent of the Prior and the Seniors, of the large +sum of L33 to the Abbot for the acceleration of certain concerns of +the church in the Roman Court. It is possible that this journey took +place in the autumn; for great events at home, in which the Abbot had +some share, marked the months which followed. Early in 1413[94] Henry +IV. had a seizure while at his devotions in the Abbey, and we should like +to know whether the Abbot was in town and gave his instructions for +the King's removal to the noblest apartment in the abbatial residence, +Jerusalem Chamber, where he died on March 20. It does not appear that +Colchester took any part in the royal obsequies, but there is no doubt +that he assisted at the coronation of Henry V. in the Abbey church on +that snowy Passion Sunday, April 9, 1413. For when the King's chantry +was built, about twenty years after Colchester's death, its famous +sculptures included two Coronation groups--perhaps, the acclamation and +the homage[95]--in each of which the Abbot is represented as standing, +in cope and mitre, on the King's left hand, Thomas Arundel, the Archbishop +of Canterbury, being on the King's right hand. We may also assume that +Colchester was at Westminster to receive Henry, when he attended divine +service in the church on Ascension Day and Whitsunday of that year.[96] +The new King's devotion to the Abbey was beyond question, and his zeal +for the immediate resumption of the New Work in the nave would tend to +keep the Abbot at hand. Operations began on July 7, one thousand marks +a year being granted by the Crown;[97] and Colchester would see things +well in train under the hands of Richard Whitington and Brother Richard +Harwden, before he left the precincts once more. + +Possibly he had a rest from travel in the year 1413-4; at least we have +nothing more serious to notice than his Receiver's payment of 8_d._ for +boat hire "when my lord dined with the Archbishop at Lambhyth." But +the autumn of 1414 saw him once more setting out for foreign parts; +for Henry chose him as one of the English delegates to the great +Council of Constance.[98] People spoke of the greatness of his train +as he journeyed. Dr. Wylie remarks that he "was looked upon by the +foreigners as a prince."[99] Perhaps he himself thought sometimes of the +very different circumstances in which he and his man Gerard had crossed +the Channel in fear and trembling, seven and thirty years earlier. He +had been already engaged, as collector of the triennial contribution of +1/2_d._ in the mark imposed on English Benedictine houses, in paying out +loans for their journey to the Abbot of St. Edmundsbury and the Prior of +Worcester, who were the delegates from the Order to the same Council, +and in sending fees to the various counsel who were retained by the +Order at Constance. We have his triennial accounts as collector for 1417 +and 1420,[100] which show that the business of the Council hung about +him for the rest of his days; even in the latter, made up long after +Constance had seen the last of its visitors, he was still reckoning the +cost of a monk of Worcester's journey to Constance and back. + +How long he remained at Constance, and what part he took in the tortuous +proceedings, we do not know. The spring and summer of 1415 were anxious +times in England, and Henry V. would be glad to have so shrewd an adviser +within reach. The Abbot was now about seventy-seven years of age, and the +lust of travel must have long since ceased. The King's writ went forth +in May for the "Array and Munitioning of the Clergy" by July 16,[101] +and the head of our House would be concerned to see that Westminster did +its duty, _per alios_ if not _per se_. Our Treasurers' roll for 1414-5 +shows how Abbot and Convent performed their several parts:-- + + "For one new chariot with six horses in the same, over and above + one [chariot] provided by the lord Abbot, and with a complete set + of harness for the said chariot and for the horses pertaining + thereto--the whole being bought and given to our lord the King + on the occasion of his expedition to France, together with the + wages of a valet, a groom, and a page for the said chariot, + and cloth bought for their livery, besides the maintenance of + the men and the horses aforesaid for three weeks, pending the + King's departure for France this year. xxxiii. li. xii. d." + +If we may take it that the Abbot's expenditure on his chariot was of the +same extent, we have a total outlay of L66, or about L1000 of our money. + +Colchester's generally good health began to fail in 1416, and his +apothecary was called in to apply various remedies at a fee of 16_s._ +8_d._[102] At home he could still find interest in watching the progress +of the New Work, for the north aisle of the nave was being proceeded +with and the pillars of the triforium above it were being put in their +place.[103] If Henry's gifts for the purpose failed to reach Henry's +expectations and the Convent's, that is only another way of saying that +Colchester's aged thoughts were often occupied with the expedition to +France and the scenes that he knew so familiarly. He may have taken part +in the rejoicings over the victory of Agincourt; he certainly received +a special message about the capture of Rouen in 1418.[104] + +He died in 1420 at a good old age, probably fourscore and two, and in +the 34th year of his Abbacy. The exact day is not recorded. We know that +there was much mortality in the Convent during 1419-20. When the Wardens +of Queen Alianore's Manors made up their accounts to Michaelmas (they did +so generally about November), they wrote at the end a sorrowful list of +twelve names with a note that "all these died this year together with the +lord Abbot and Brother Thomas Peuerel." Thus in strictness we might put +his death before September 29. But the rolls were by no means precise in +the matter, and often included those who died at any time before the day +on which the accounts were balanced. Moreover, we have the royal licence +to the Convent to elect a successor,[105] which is dated November 12, +1420. We may therefore suppose that Colchester died late in October or +early in November. He was buried in the Chapel of St. John Baptist, +where his much battered free-stone image lies on an altar-tomb. His +initials still remain, but the heraldry has long since perished, and +his mitre and gloves have lost the jewels that once adorned them. It +adds insult to this injury that his countenance should be described as +"stern and ill-favoured."[106] + +But the character behind the countenance is not difficult to sum up. +In his own day he was reckoned to be a man of shrewd judgment and wide +experience; we have noted the far-travelled uses that were made of him +by the Convent and by the Crown, and we can conclude that his judgment +increased in shrewdness as his experience extended in width. Indeed, +he retained this quality to the last. We have seen that there is still +extant an account of his official disbursements in behalf of the General +Chapter of the Benedictines at Northampton for the last year of his life, +1420.[107] It includes payments made, for special services rendered, +to two Westminster monks, who had been bidden to attend the conference. +They were Richard Harwden and Edmund Kirton, and each was appointed Abbot +of Westminster in his turn. It is not every man of eighty-two who is +shrewd enough to pick out his successors for the next forty years, and +at the same time large-hearted enough to give them every encouragement +to fit themselves for the office which he holds. Indeed, his was the +kind of character to which justice can only be done after a lapse of +time. It is necessary to look back at the men who, noting his shrewdness, +came to a conviction that he was also just and trustworthy--Richard II., +who opposed his election as Abbot, but lived to prove his friendship; +Henry IV., who knew his friendship for Richard, and at first treated +him accordingly, but afterwards found no reason to regret the clemency +shown to him; Henry V., who appreciated his devotion to Richard, and +did not honour him the less because of Henry IV.'s early suspicions; +and the Cardinals and others who met him in the tortuous paths by which +ecclesiastical diplomacy was trying to make its way towards the peace +of the distracted Church. We may leave on William Colchester's memorial +an inscription taken from a letter addressed to him by Thomas Merke, +Bishop of Carlisle, who was conveying to the Abbot a request that he +would use his influence at the Roman Court on behalf of Merton Hall, +Oxford. We shall admit that Merke was his intimate friend, and shall +remember that Colchester showed his own affection for Merke by arranging +that the Bishop should be commemorated at Hurley Priory along with the +Abbot's parents.[108] Merke's witness, however, may still be true. +"Men like," he wrote, "to know your Paternity's views on these matters, +for they observe your solidity, which is a rare virtue in these days, +and they give you their confidence all the more."[109] No other Abbot +ruled our House as long as he; nor could any man of his line desire a +more satisfying verdict on his character. + + + + +INDEX + + + Agincourt, battle of, 10, 85 + Aldenham, Herts, church of, 16, 44 + Alianore, Queen, manors of, 85 + Almonry, clerks of the, 71 + Anagni, 37, 39 + Anne of Bohemia, wife of Richard II., 58, 78 + Armour, an Abbot's, 53 + Arundel, Earl of, 68 + Arundel, Thomas, Archbishop of Canterbury, 81 f. + Atte Belle, Richard, highwayman, 45 + Avignon, 32 f., 35 f., 39 + + + Beaufort, Henry, Bishop of Winchester, 78 f. + Benedictines, general chapters of, 19, 22, 69, 80, 82, 86 + Berkhamstead, 66 + Birlingham, manor of, 68 + Bohun, Eleanor de, Duchess of Gloucester, 57 + Borewell, John, Archdeacon, 73, 77 f. + Briefs, funeral, 51 + Bruges, 32 n., 34 f., 40 + Burgh, John, monk, 53 + + + Calais, 34, 40, 67 + Cambridge, 17 + Cambridge, Earl of, 26 + Canterbery, John, monk, 51 n., 53 + Chamberlain, duties and accounts of, 41 f. + Chambers, or camerae, monks', 47-50 + Chapter House, 30 + Charing Cross, 47 f., 56 + Clehungre, William, monk, 28 + Clergy, Array and Munitioning of the, 83 + Cloisters, Little, 48 + Colchester, 15, 16, 65; + Priory of St. Botolph at, 15 f.; + parish of St. Nicholas, 15; + castle of, 16 + Colchester, John, 65 + Colchester, Thomas, 65 + Colchester, William [de], Abbot, portrait in Nave window, 11, 58; + in Shakespeare's _Richard II._, 14; + native of St. Nicholas' parish, Colchester, 15 f.; + parents and relations, 17, 65; + First Mass, 18; + probable date of birth, 19; + at Oxford, 19 f.; + promoted in Refectory, 20; + at general chapter, Northampton, 22; + Abbot's Seneschal, 24 ff.; + Convent Treasurer, 27; + proctor at Rome, 30 ff., 41 ff.; + attempts to secure Priorship for, 42; + Archdeacon, 43 ff.; + his sheep, 46; + his pension, 47; + election as Abbot, 54 ff.; + installation, 56; + details of his establishment, 60 ff.; + orders prayers in war-time, 70 f.; + ordinance for payment to obedientiaries, 71; + supporter of Richard II., imprisoned by Henry IV., 76; + letter from Cologne, 77-79; + at coronation of Henry V., 81; + at Council of Constance, 82 f.; + chariot provided by, 83; + death of, 85; + tomb of, 86; + character of, 87 f. + Cologne, 77-79 + Compromission, election by, 55 + Constance, Council of, 82 f. + Coumbe, Peter, monk, 59, 63, 71, 77 f. + Covent Garden, 47 f. + Cretton, or Kyrton, Roger, monk, 47, 76 + + + Dauphine, 35 + Deerhurst, Prior of, 63 + Denham, manor of, 61, 66, 68, 71 + Despenser, Baroness, 64 + Despenser, Henry, Bishop of Norwich, 68 + Domesday chartulary, 48 + Durham, Hatfield, Bishop of, 26 + + + Edmund the King, St., 58 + Edward, Black Prince, 26 f. + Edward the Confessor, St., 22, 56 f.; + chapel of, 74; + ring of, 53 + Edward III., 24, 26, 34 + Excestr', Richard, Prior, 26, 42, 49-51 + Exchequer, Remembrancer of the, 67 + Exennia, given to monks, 18, 21; + to Abbots, 62 ff. + Eybury, manor of, 61 + Eynsham, Abbot of, 68 + + + Farnago, John, monk, 36 + _Flacones_, or pancakes, 27 ff. + + + Gloucester Hall, Oxford, 19 + Gregory XI., Pope, 32, 37 f. + Gregory XII., Pope, 79 + + + Halle, William, monk, 42 + Harwden, Richard, monk, 81; + Abbot, 86 f. + Hatfield, Thomas, Bishop of Durham, 26 + Hawle, Robert, 39 + Henry III., 11 f., 48, 58 f. + Henry IV., 14 f., 66, 76, 80, 87 + Henry V., 10, 80-84, 87 + Horsell, Surrey, 79 + Hotspur, Harry, 24 + Hurley, Berks., Priory of, 17, 62 f., 88 + + + Infirmarer, 78 n. + Infirmary, chambers in the, 48 + Islip, manor of, 62 + + + James, Dr. M. R., Provost of King's, 47 n., 50, 52 n. + Jerusalem Chamber, 52, 80 + + + Kelvin, Lord, 9 f. + Kirton, Edmund, Abbot, 87 + Kitchener or _Coquinarius_, 28, 78 + + + Lakyngheth, John, monk, 35, 54 + Laleham, manor of, 62, 66 + Langham, Simon, Abbot and Cardinal, 19, 32, 36, 38, 63 + Langley, Edmund, Earl of Cambridge, 26 + Lethaby, Prof. W. R., 12 + _Liber Niger Quaternus_, 39 n., 47, 53, 73, 76 + Litlington, Nicholas, Abbot, 19, 24-27, 44 f., 48, 51 n., 52-54 + London, Tower of, 39, 76 + + + Malvern, Prior of, 63 + March, Philippa, Countess of, 23 f. + Marseilles, 36, 39 + Mary, the Virgin, girdle of St., 22 f. + Merke, or Merks, Thomas, Bishop of Carlisle, 14, 66, 79, 87 f. + Merton Hall, Oxford, 88 + Monk-Bailiff, 16 + Musicians, Abbot Colchester's favour to, 67 f. + + + Nave, the New Work in, 58 f., 63, 80 f., 84 + Neyte, la, mansion of, 52, 62, 64, 66 + Northampton, 22, 69, 80, 86 + + + Organs at Westminster, 68 + Oxford, Benedictine students at, 19, 26; + "Gaudies" at, 66; + Merton Hall, 88 + + + Pampeluna, Cardinal of, 38 + Pancakes, monks', 27 ff. + Percyvale, Master, King's musician, 68 + Pershore, 63 + Pestilence, Great, 19 + Peuerel, Thomas, monk, 85 + Poets' Corner, 11 f. + Polo, Marco, Book of, 50 + _Polychronicon_, 55 n., 56 + Pyrford, manor of, 62, 66, 68, 79 + + + Rackham, Rev. R. B., 81 n., 84 n. + Reigate, 76 + Repingdon, Philip, Bishop of Lincoln, 79 + Richard II., 12, 14, 28, 53-58, 66, 68, 70, 74-76, 87 + Robinson, Dr. J. Armitage, Dean of Wells, 10, 32 n., 52 n., + 53 n., 54, 72, 83 + Rome, 31, 33, 37-43, 80, 88 + Romescot, collection of, 79 + Rouen, capture of, 85 + + + Sacrist, 23, 63, 71 + St. Edmundsbury, Abbot of, 82 + St. John Baptist, chapel of, 86 + St. Margaret, Westminster, parish of, 71 + St. Peter ad Vincula, feast of, 68 + St. Stephen's, Westminster, Dean and Canons of, 30 ff., 43 + Salisbury, William de Montacute, Earl of, 44 f. + Sanctuary, 39, 45 + Sandon, John, monk, 65, 67 + Scott, Dr. E., Keeper of Muniments, 13 + Selby, Ralph, Archdeacon of Buckingham, monk, 75 + Seneschal, or steward, the Abbot's, 22, 24, 45 n., 60 ff. + Sergeaunt, John, _Annals of Westminster School_, 29 + Skilla, or Refectory bell, 21 + Southam, Thomas, Archdeacon of Oxford, 32, 35, 39 f., 63 + Staines, manor of, 66 + Stanley, Dr. A. P., Dean of Westminster, 11 n. + Steventon, Berks., 58 + Stowe, John, monk, 63, 67 + Sutton, Gloucs., 62 + + + Tivoli, 39 + + + Urban VI., Pope, 38 f. + + + Waltham, Abbot of, 74 + Waltham, John de, Bishop of Salisbury, 74-76 + Ware, 66 + Ware, Richard de, Abbot, 22, 44 + Warwick, Earl of, 26 + Westminster Abbey, memorial windows, 10; + Muniment room, 11, 13; + Poets' Corner, 11 f.; + Abbot's rent-roll, 24, 60; + pancakes at, 27 ff.; + Monk-Bailiff, 16; Treasurer, 19 f.; + Refectory, 21; + Abbot's Seneschal, 22, 24 ff., 45 n.; + Sacrist, 23; + Kitchener, 27 f.; + Chapter House, 30; + suit against St. Stephen's Chapel, Westminster, 31 ff.; + enriched by Langham's will, 36; + murder in the choir of, 39; + Archdeacon of, 43 ff.; + Lady Chapel, 47; + Convent Garden, 47 f.; + royal gifts to, 57 f.; + New Work in Nave, 58 f., 63, 80 f., 84; + prayers in war-time at, 70 f.; + Confessor's Chapel, 74 f.; + Henry IV.'s death at, 80; + Henry V.'s chantry, 81 + Westminster Abbey, Almonry, clerks of, 71 + Westminster Abbey, _Customary_ of, 18, 22 f., 44 + Westminster Abbey, Monks of, how named, 15; + how admitted, 17 f.; + exennia given to, 18; + Great Pestilence among, 19; + at Oxford, 19 f.; + clothing of, 41 f.; + chambers or camerae for, 47-50; + funerals of, 51; + in armour, 53; + chariot provided by, 83. + Westminster Abbey, parish of St. Margaret, 71 + Westminster Abbey, Sanctuary at, 39, 45 + Westminster School, "greese" at, 29 + Whittington, Richard, 81 + Windsor Castle, 64, 66 + Windsor Castle, St. George's Chapel in, 31, 74 + Woodstock, Thomas of, Duke of Gloucester, 57, 68 + Worcester, Prior of, 82 + Wratting, John de, Prior, 43 n., 70 + Wykeham, William of, 27, 68 + Wylie, Dr. J. H., 79 n., 81 n., 82 + + + * * * * * + +PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED, LONDON AND BECCLES. + + * * * * * + + + + +FOOTNOTES + + + + +[Footnote 1: "Such were the Abbots of Westminster," says Dean +Stanley (_Memorials_, 3rd ed., p. 394), after recording the +little that he knew of them, adding that, "if from the Abbots +we descend to the Monks their names are still more obscure."] + +[Footnote 2: Act iv. sc. 1, ll. 332-3.] + +[Footnote 3: Act v. sc. 6, ll. 19-21.] + +[Footnote 4: _Mun._ 5259.] + +[Footnote 5: _Mun._ 5260, A.] + +[Footnote 6: The reader who wishes to know what parts of this ancient and +interesting church were known to Abbot Colchester may be referred to the +details and the plan given in the Herts. volume of the Royal Commission +on Historical Monuments, 1911, p. 31 f.] + +[Footnote 7: _Mun._ 3571; October 5, 1411.] + +[Footnote 8: _Customary of Canterbury and Westminster_, H.B.S. i. 261, +404.] + +[Footnote 9: This custom will be treated in greater detail in the +introduction to a Register of the Westminster Benedictines, which will +be issued shortly.] + +[Footnote 10: Reyner, _de Antiq. Benedict. in Anglia_, App., p. 55.] + +[Footnote 11: This sum is roughly equivalent to that which an economical +undergraduate spends at the present time.] + +[Footnote 12: Cf. _Flete_, ed. J. Armitage Robinson, p. 70.] + +[Footnote 13: The inventories of the Monasteries imply that the blessed +Virgin was industrious with her needle.] + +[Footnote 14: _Customary_, ii. 49: Idem vero secretarius zonam beatae Dei +genetricis, ubicumque destinetur, sumptibus suis portare vel, si per alios +portatur, expensas eis exhibere tenetur, cum vectura, si forte indigeat.] + +[Footnote 15: Thomas Hatfield, Bishop of Durham, 1345-81.] + +[Footnote 16: _Mun._ 27968.] + +[Footnote 17: John Sergeaunt, _Annals of Westminster School_, pp. 57, +130.] + +[Footnote 18: The building is still in the sole care of His Majesty's +Office of Works.] + +[Footnote 19: Cf. J. T. Smith, _Antiquities of Westminster_, 1807, p. 38, +etc.] + +[Footnote 20: J. T. Smith, _Antiquities of Westminster_, 1807, p. 100; +Widmore, _History of Westminster Abbey_, pp. 103-4.] + +[Footnote 21: _Mun._ 9256, C, D.] + +[Footnote 22: The manuscript actually says July; but what follows shows +this to be an error; _e.g._ he was at Bruges for the two feasts of June +24 and June 29.] + +[Footnote 23: Cf. J. Armitage Robinson, _Simon Langham, Ch. Quart. Rev._, +July, 1908, p. 358.] + +[Footnote 24: Cf. L. Pastor, _Geschichte der Paepste_, i. p. 109.] + +[Footnote 25: Non potuit reperire societatem versus Auinionem.] + +[Footnote 26: Propter diuersitatem lingue et viarum discrimina in +partibus transmarinis.] + +[Footnote 27: Prout modus est patrie.] + +[Footnote 28: Infirmabatur per viam quasi ad mortem.] + +[Footnote 29: _Mun._ 9228.] + +[Footnote 30: Widmore, p. 191; _Mun._ 9225.] + +[Footnote 31: Pastor, _Gesch. d. P._ i. p. 113.] + +[Footnote 32: See the account in Pastor, _Gesch. d. P._; and Creighton, +_Hist. of the Papacy_, i. 61 ff.] + +[Footnote 33: Creighton, _ibid._, p. 67.] + +[Footnote 34: Cf. _Lib. Nig. Quat._ f. 88b, 89; J. C. Cox, _Sanctuaries_, +p. 51 f.; G. M. Trevelyan, _England in the Age of Wycliffe_, p. 87.] + +[Footnote 35: Quod non erat ausus transire per Calis' propter metum +aduersariorum.] + +[Footnote 36: _Mun._ 9503.] + +[Footnote 37: Viz. John de Wratting, Colchester's senior by about +eighteen years.] + +[Footnote 38: Cf. _Mun._ 18478, D.] + +[Footnote 39: _Customary_, ii. 95.] + +[Footnote 40: _Mun._ 5260, A.; December 3, 1407.] + +[Footnote 41: _Mun._ 9615.] + +[Footnote 42: On the other hand, Colchester may have come into the +affair either as Abbot's Seneschal or as Convent Treasurer.] + +[Footnote 43: _Mun._ 5984.] + +[Footnote 44: Indentura Willelmi Colchester de ouibus suis ad firmam +dimissis.] + +[Footnote 45: Cf. Robinson and James, _Manuscripts of Westminster Abbey_, +p. 96 f.] + +[Footnote 46: F. 507-69.] + +[Footnote 47: _Mun._ 6603.] + +[Footnote 48: Tabularium cum familia.] + +[Footnote 49: Debiles.] + +[Footnote 50: Cf. Col. H. Yule, _Marco Polo_, vol. i., Introd., Secs. 75-8.] + +[Footnote 51: There are corresponding records in the cases of Abbot +Litlington (_ob._ 1386), _Mun._ 5446, and of John Canterbery (_ob._ +1400), _Mun._ 18883.] + +[Footnote 52: In manerio de la Neyte, hora prandendi (_Lib. Nig. Quat._ +f. 86).] + +[Footnote 53: Cf. J. Armitage Robinson, _The Abbot's House at Westminster_, +chap. ii., and Robinson and James, _Manuscripts of Westminster Abbey_, +pp. 7 ff.] + +[Footnote 54: See an article by the Dean of Wells on the Array of the +Clergy in July, 1415 (_Nineteenth Century and After_, July, 1915, p. 86).] + +[Footnote 55: _Mun._ 5446.] + +[Footnote 56: Cf. J. Armitage Robinson, _An Unrecognised Westminster +Chronicler_, pp. 16, 22.] + +[Footnote 57: _Lib. Nig. Quat._ f. 86, says December 10, 1386; but the +Westminster chronicler in the _Polychronicon_ (see J. Armitage Robinson, +_op. cit._, pp. 9, 22) says December 21. It is suggested that the +difference of eleven days represents the period during which the King +was supporting the cause of Lakyngheth.] + +[Footnote 58: _Mun._ 5431.] + +[Footnote 59: Volens sicut alias cassare electionem et electo postea +providere; Higden, _Polychronicon_, ix. pp. 98, 102; Robinson, _op. cit._, +pp. 9, 23.] + +[Footnote 60: _Flete_, p. 138.] + +[Footnote 61: April 18, 1388, p. 178.] + +[Footnote 62: _Mun._ 9474.] + +[Footnote 63: For the graves of the Duke and his wife, see E. T. Murray +Smith, _Roll Call of W.A._, p. 51 f.] + +[Footnote 64: _Mun._ 5257.] + +[Footnote 65: _Mun._ 7579.] + +[Footnote 66: _Mun._ 5922.] + +[Footnote 67: R. B. Rackham, _Nave of Westminster_, pp. 8-12.] + +[Footnote 68: _Mun._ 6165.] + +[Footnote 69: De consanguinitate domini, ut dicunt.] + +[Footnote 70: Anulus de auro com diamandys.] + +[Footnote 71: Interlusores.] + +[Footnote 72: _Mun._ 6221.] + +[Footnote 73: His record will be given in the Register referred to on +p. 18, note.] + +[Footnote 74: _Mun._ 9500.] + +[Footnote 75: Ex noua ordinacione domini Willelmi nunc Abbatis. The +ordinance applied to other obedientiaries.] + +[Footnote 76: The Dean of Wells edited in 1908, for use in his chapel, +a service of Compline derived from a Bodleian manuscript (Rawl. Liturg. +g 10) which belongs to our Abbot's period.] + +[Footnote 77: _Lib. Nig. Quat._, f. 87b: et dominus Rex suscepit eum et +omnia bona sua in proteccione sua.] + +[Footnote 78: _Kal. Pap. Registers_, iii. 456.] + +[Footnote 79: Widmore, p. 109; E. T. Murray Smith, _Roll Call_, p. 53.] + +[Footnote 80: _Mun._ 5262, A.] + +[Footnote 81: Infra regiam sepulturam.] + +[Footnote 82: Thomas Merke, Bishop of Carlisle, is mentioned, but not +Colchester, in the list of those summoned to attend the King. Rymer, +_Foedera_.] + +[Footnote 83: J. H. Wylie, _Henry IV._, vol. i. pp. 91, 92, 108.] + +[Footnote 84: _Ibid._, p. 44.] + +[Footnote 85: Lib. Nig. Quat., f. 86b:-- + + Anno Domini millesimo ccc xcix^o et regni regis Ricardi + secundi xxiii incipiente. In vigilia Nativitatis sancti Johannis + Baptiste venit Henricus dux Herford versus Angliam Et in vigilia + apostolorum petri et pauli venerunt prima noua ad Westm de + aduentu ipsius. Et iiii^{to} die Julij applicuit apud Pylevyng. + + In vigilia sancti petri advincula fugit Rex Ricardus secundus a + facie ducis Henrici Et postea in vigilia Assumpcionis beate marie + captus est et se submisit ordinacioni prelatorum et procerum + Anglie. + + In crastino sancti laurentii feria secunda venerunt Londonienses + ad Inquirendum Regem Ricardum II^{um}.] + +[Footnote 86: _Mun._ 1653.] + +[Footnote 87: Infirmarer's account, 1409-10.] + +[Footnote 88: Administrator participationis Anne Regine.] + +[Footnote 89: _Mun._ 1676.] + +[Footnote 90: There is another means of verifying the Abbot's absence +daring this year. His farm-bailiffs, whose duty was to deliver rents to +him personally, paid them at this time to the Abbot's Receiver instead.] + +[Footnote 91: Widmore, p. 110; J. H. Wylie, _Henry IV._, iii. p. 349; +Creighton, _Hist. of the Papacy_, i. p. 218.] + +[Footnote 92: Wylie, _op. cit._, p. 348.] + +[Footnote 93: _Lib. Nig. Quat._ f. 90.] + +[Footnote 94: About Mid-Lent; J. H. Wylie, _Henry IV._, iv. p. 103.] + +[Footnote 95: Sir W. H. St. John Hope, _Funeral, Monument, and Chantry +Chapel of Henry V._, p. 173.] + +[Footnote 96: Cf. J. H. _Wylie, Henry V._, p. 203.] + +[Footnote 97: The details are given in R. B. Rackham, _Nave of +Westminster_, pp. 13-17.] + +[Footnote 98: Rymer, _Foedera_.] + +[Footnote 99: J. H. Wylie, _The Council of Constance_, p. 80.] + +[Footnote 100: _Mun._ 12395, 12397.] + +[Footnote 101: Cf. J. Armitage Robinson, _Array of the Clergy, Nineteenth +Century and After_, July, 1915, p. 87.] + +[Footnote 102: Abbot's Receiver's roll, 1416-7.] + +[Footnote 103: Rackham, _Nave_, p. 16.] + +[Footnote 104: Et dat' seruienti principalis Baronis portanti noua de +captione ciuitatis Rothemagensis (Abbot's Receiver's roll, 1417-8).] + +[Footnote 105: _Mun._ 5440.] + +[Footnote 106: Neale and Brayley, _Westminster Abbey_, ii. p. 184.] + +[Footnote 107: _Mun._ 12397.] + +[Footnote 108: _Mun._ 3571; _see_ above, p. 17.] + +[Footnote 109: _Mun._ 9240. Vident etenim vestram soliditatem, que rara +virtus est modernis diebus, et illo specialius in vobis confidunt.] + + * * * * * + + + + + PUBLICATIONS OF THE + Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge + + +=Alcuin of York.= + + By the Right Rev. G. F. BROWNE, D.D., D.C.L. With numerous + Illustrations, Small post 8vo, cloth boards. 5_s._ net. + +=Augustine and his Companions.= + + By the Right Rev. G. F. BROWNE, D.D., D.C.L. 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York. + + +Paper wrappers, each 1_s._ net. + +In four volumes, cloth boards, each 10_s._ 6_d._ net. + +=Westminster Abbey.= + + A portfolio of photo reproductions and Architectural Notes by + ARNOLD FAIRBAIRN. 1_s._ net. + + * * * * * + + SOCIETY FOR PROMOTING CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE, + London: Northumberland Avenue, W.C. + + * * * * * + + +Transcriber's Notes: + +This author sometimes uses the old-style "u" form for "v" in Latin +transcriptions, _e.g._ "noua" for "nova." + + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's William de Colchester, by Ernest Harold Pearce + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WILLIAM DE COLCHESTER *** + +***** This file should be named 36968.txt or 36968.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/3/6/9/6/36968/ + +Produced by Louise Pryor, David Garcia and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This +book was produced from scanned images of public domain +material from the Google Print project.) + + +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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