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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Ecclesiastical Curiosities, by Various
+
+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: Ecclesiastical Curiosities
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: William Andrews
+
+Release Date: December 11, 2011 [EBook #38274]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ECCLESIASTICAL CURIOSITIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Wilson
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ECCLESIASTICAL CURIOSITIES.
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: _From a Photo by A. H. Pitcher, Gloucester._
+ PORCH, GLOUCESTER CATHEDRAL.]
+
+
+
+
+Ecclesiastical
+Curiosities
+
+
+Edited by
+William Andrews
+
+
+LONDON:
+WILLIAM ANDREWS & CO., 5, FARRINGDON AVENUE, E.C.
+
+1899.
+
+
+ [Illustration: William Andrews & Co
+ The Hull Press]
+
+
+
+
+Preface.
+
+
+This volume is on similar lines to some of my previously published
+works, and I trust it will be equally well received by the public and
+the press.
+
+ William Andrews.
+
+The Hull Press,
+ _December 1st, 1898._
+
+
+
+
+Contents.
+
+ PAGE
+ The Church Door. By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, B.A. 1
+
+ Sacrificial Foundations. By England Howlett 30
+
+ The Building of the English Cathedrals. By the Rev.
+ Geo. S. Tyack, B.A. 46
+
+ Ye Chappell of Oure Ladye. By the Rev. J. H. Stamp 76
+
+ Some Famous Spires. By John T. Page 101
+
+ The Five of Spades and the Church of Ashton-under-Lyne.
+ By John Eglington Bailey, F.S.A. 113
+
+ Bells and their Messages. By Edward Bradbury 119
+
+ Stories about Bells. By J. Potter Briscoe, F.R.H.S. 133
+
+ Concerning Font-Lore. By the Rev. P. Oakley Hill 145
+
+ Watching-Chambers in Churches. By the Rev. Geo. S.
+ Tyack, B.A. 153
+
+ Church Chests. By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, B.A. 161
+
+ An Antiquarian Problem: The Leper Window. By William
+ White, F.S.A. 183
+
+ Mazes. By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, B.A. 186
+
+ Churchyard Superstitions. By the Rev. Theodore Johnson 206
+
+ Curious Announcements in the Church. By the Rev. R.
+ Wilkins Rees 216
+
+ Big Bones Preserved in Churches. By the Rev. R. Wilkins
+ Rees 230
+
+ Samuel Pepys at Church. 244
+
+
+
+
+Ecclesiastical Curiosities.
+
+
+
+
+The Church Door.
+
+By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, B.A.
+
+
+That first impressions have no small influence in moulding the opinions
+of most people can scarcely be denied; and therefore in our estimate of
+the architectural value of a church the door is an element of some
+importance. A shabby and undignified entrance raises no expectations of
+a lofty and solemn interior; and that interior must be emphatically
+fine, if we are not to read into it some of the meanness of its portal.
+On the other hand, though the church be but plain and simple--so that
+it lack not a measure of the dignity which may well accompany
+simplicity--our thoughts will be raised and fitted to find in it
+something worthy of its high purpose, if we have been prepared by
+passing through a noble porch, and beneath a doorway that speaks itself
+the entrance to no ordinary dwelling.
+
+ [Illustration: DOOR AT CROWLE CHURCH.]
+
+In primitive times the approach to a church must have been full of
+dignity, the worshippers being warned, by successive gates and doors, of
+the sacredness of the building which they were about to enter. Eusebius
+gives us a full account of a splendid church built at Tyre by Paulinus,
+from which we may gather the plan on which such buildings were erected
+in the primitive ages, when the means were forthcoming, and no
+opposition from the heathen world prevented.
+
+The whole church at Tyre and its precincts were enclosed within a wall,
+at the front of which was a stately porch, known as the "great porch,"
+or the "first entrance." Passing through this the worshipper entered the
+courtyard, or _atrium_, round which ran a covered portico, or cloister,
+and in the centre of which was a fountain, or cistern, of water.
+Opposite the "great porch" was the door into the church itself; at Tyre
+there were (as in many of our cathedrals) three such doors, a large one
+in the centre, flanked by smaller ones at some distance along the wall.
+These opened into a vestibule, or ante-temple, from which admittance was
+gained into the nave of the church by yet another door or gate.
+
+Each of the spaces formed by these several barriers had its special use.
+Within the _atrium_ all the worshippers washed their hands as a
+preparation, both literal and emblematic, for assisting in the sacred
+mysteries; here, too, penitents under censure for the most flagrant sins
+remained during the divine offices, and besought the prayers of their
+brethren as they passed on to those holier courts, from which for a time
+they were themselves excluded. Within this open courtyard, also, as in a
+modern churchyard, burials were sometimes permitted. The portico beyond
+the second entrance was the place for the "hearers," that is for those
+who were not yet sufficiently instructed in the faith to be allowed to
+be present except at the reading of the Scriptures and the sermons
+(these were catechumens in their noviciate and the heathens and Jews),
+and also for those Christians who were degraded temporarily to the same
+position as a penance for some sin. Beyond this portico, the nave was
+still further divided for the separation of different orders of
+penitents; so that the faithful in possession of all their privileges
+had quite a number of doors or gates through which to pass before
+reaching that place, immediately outside the apse, or chancel, which it
+was their right to occupy.
+
+In order that the several classes of persons attending church might be
+kept strictly within those portions of the building which were assigned
+to them, a special order of door-keepers existed in the Church. The keys
+of the church were solemnly delivered to these _ostiarii_, and they were
+accounted to form the lowest in rank of the minor orders. The simple
+words of the commission, uttered by the bishop to the _ostiarius_, were,
+"Behave thyself as one that must give an account to God of the things
+that are kept under these keys." Such was the formula prescribed by the
+fourth Council of Carthage (398 A.D.), and found in the Roman ritual of
+the eighth century. This order of clergy was almost confined to the
+west, however; we find traces of its existence at one time at
+Constantinople, but for the most part the deacons guarded the men's
+entrance, and sub-deacons or deaconesses the women's, in the east.
+
+ [Illustration: WEST DOOR, HOLY TRINITY, COLCHESTER.]
+
+In the earliest English churches the entrance was of a very simple
+nature; for the artistic skill of the people was small, and their ideals
+were unambitious. The buildings consisted of a nave without clerestory,
+and a chancel; the door being placed in the centre of the western wall.
+A curious example of such a door meets us at Holy Trinity, Colchester,
+although in this case it gives admittance not into the nave directly,
+but through the ancient tower. This tower, the oldest part of the
+church, has been constructed of the fragments of buildings older still;
+the Roman bricks of the ruined city of Camulodunum having been used to
+form it. In the western side is a narrow doorway, contained by two
+square shafts with very simple capitals, and having a triangular head
+with an equally simple moulding by way of drip-stone. The date is
+supposed to be between 800 and 1000 A.D. A church perhaps yet older is
+that of S. Lawrence at Bradford-on-Avon, which has a good claim to be
+the veritable structure reared by S. Aldhelm in the first years of the
+eighth century. Here there is a northern porch of unusual size in
+proportion to the rest of the building; the entrance to which is by
+means of an arched doorway, tall and narrow. The narrowness of some of
+these ancient doorways is remarkable. At Sowerford-Keynes is one, now
+built up, which, though nearly nine feet high, is but 1 foot 9 inches
+wide at the springing of the arch, widening towards the base to 2 feet
+5 inches. The jambs are of "short and long" work, and the abacus has a
+very simple zig-zag moulding. The arch itself is not built up, but
+carved out of one stone, which is cut square on the upper side and
+scooped into a parabolic curve on the lower. A double row of cable
+moulding decorates it. This, which has been called "one of the most
+characteristic specimens of Saxon architecture in England," was the
+northern entrance to the church. Another instance of a western door of
+simple design is supplied by Crowle, or Croule, in north Lincolnshire.
+Here we meet with a rectangular doorway, the top of which is formed of
+one long stone, on which is some antique carving and a fragment of a
+runic inscription.[1] Above this is a tympanum filled with
+diamond-shaped stones of small size.
+
+ [Footnote 1: See a full account of this stone in "Bygone
+ Lincolnshire,"--Vol. I, William Andrews & Co.]
+
+With the rise of the so-called Norman style of architecture the doors of
+our churches took a handsomer form; and as the churches themselves were
+now formed on a larger and nobler plan, more than one entrance was often
+required. The usual door for the people was now commonly placed at the
+south side, except in churches connected (as were so many of our
+cathedrals) with monastic foundations. In this latter case the south
+side was generally occupied by the cloisters and other conventual
+buildings, and the people's door was therefore placed upon the north
+side. At this period, too, the church-porch begins its development; for,
+although porches in a strict sense were at any rate not usual, the
+door-way deeply sunk in the massive wall and protected by three, four,
+or even more concentric arches, suggests the more fully developed
+shelter of the porch. Of doors of this kind any of our older
+abbey-churches will supply adequate, and often splendid, examples. The
+great north door of Durham Cathedral, and the smaller, but not less
+beautiful doors into the cloisters there, are fine instances. The west
+and north doors of the little cathedral of Llandaff supply examples in
+another class of building; and even small and obscure parish churches
+are sometimes dignified with the possession of an entrance full of the
+massive solemnity of this Norman work. The village church of Heysham, on
+Morecambe Bay, has a south door well worthy of mention in this
+connection; and the Lincolnshire church already cited, Crowle, has an
+interesting doorway of this kind.
+
+As art progressed in Christendom, and exhibited its growing force
+especially in the churches, the entrances thereto shared in the
+increasing splendour of the whole. The mouldings of the arches and the
+pillars, the elaboration of capitals and bases, all showed the evidence
+of devotion guided by taste and skill. And often something more than
+mere decoration was attempted; the opportunity was seized to add
+instruction, and figures of saints and angels, or complete scenes from
+scriptural or ecclesiastical story, filled the expanse of the tympanum
+or the niches of the columns. About the twelfth century, also, it became
+customary to divide the main entrance into two by means of a pillar, or
+a group of pillars; the two-leaved door being thus made symbolical of
+the two natures of Christ, of Whom, as Durandus tells us, it is itself
+the emblem, "according to that saying in the Gospel, 'I am the Door!'"
+
+The Continent presents some splendid examples of these decorated
+porticoes. The cathedral of Strasburg, preserved as by a series of
+miracles in spite of every danger that can assail a building, fire,
+lightning, earthquake, and cannonade, has a very grand west entrance;
+its tall doors set within a number of receding arches, and the
+sharply-pointed gable which crowns them flanked and crested with
+tapering pinnacles. The French artists of the thirteenth and fourteenth
+centuries were unrivalled in the beauty and wealth of statuary with
+which they adorned their churches, and not least their doors. "The glory
+and the beauty" of the great porch at Amiens has been set forth fully by
+Ruskin, who has woven into one wonderful whole the meaning of the
+statues, which, like "a cloud of witnesses," throng the western front.
+But Amiens is not alone; S. Denis, Paris, Sens, Angoulme, Poictiers,
+Autun, Chartres, Laon, Rheims, Vezelay, Auxerre, and other cathedrals
+are all magnificent in this respect. The principal entrance to Seville
+cathedral is flanked by columns upholding niches filled with figures of
+saints and angels, while the tympanum contains a carving of the entrance
+of the Saviour into Jerusalem on the first Palm Sunday. In the island of
+Majorca, the south door-way of the cathedral of Palma is exceptionally
+beautiful. The statue of the Blessed Virgin crowns the centre column,
+and above is the Last Supper. A record of the architect of this splendid
+piece of work is preserved in an old account book of the cathedral: "On
+January 29th, 1394, Master Pedro Morey, sculptor, master artificer of
+the south door, which was begun by him, passed from this life. Anima
+ejus requiescat in pace. Amen." The entrance in the west front is also a
+fine one, and is inscribed, "Non est factum tale opus in universis
+regnis."
+
+ [Illustration: WEST DOOR, HIGHAM FERRERS CHURCH.]
+
+Although in England we cannot match the gorgeousness of detail exhibited
+by the flamboyant architecture of some of the examples above noticed,
+yet we too have instances of which we may well be proud. The western
+front of Peterborough cathedral, over the partial renovation of which
+there has recently been so much controversy between architects and
+antiquaries, has been pronounced to be "the grandest portico in Europe;"
+but this has reference to the whole faade rather than to the door-way
+in itself. If our subject allowed of our taking so wide a view, the
+splendid west fronts of Exeter, York, and others of our minsters, would
+demand a place of honour in the list. Gloucester cathedral has a
+dignified porch over the south door, in which are the figures of a
+number of saints. The west door of Rochester is also interesting; its
+decorated Norman arches are richly carved, and enclose a tympanum
+covered with characteristic sculpture. Of a different type is the
+graceful west door at Ely, whose pointed arches are upheld by delicately
+cut shafts, the tympanum over the twin doorways being pierced by a
+double trefoil within a vesica. The parish church of Higham Ferrers has
+double western doors, separated by a bold shaft, above which is a niche
+(now unoccupied) for a statue. The tympanum, anciently divided by this
+figure, has five medallions on each side filled with sculptured scenes
+from the New Testament, round which runs a scroll of conventional
+foliage. The neighbouring churches of Rushden and Raunds have also good
+double-leaved doors. To take one instance from the Northern Kingdom,
+S. Giles's, Edinburgh, has a dignified west entrance. Many of the better
+examples of our modern churches have admirable porticoes, of which one
+example must suffice. All Saints' Church, Cheltenham, has double doors
+within receding arches; the tympanum has the figure of Our Lord
+enthroned in glory surrounded by the saints, and the central shaft and
+the side pillars contain other statues.
+
+There is occasionally found in a cathedral, or other large church, a
+porch of unusual depth, known as a Galilee. Here, during Lent, those
+assembled who were bidden to do public penance; the coming of Maundy
+Thursday being the signal for their admission once more into the church
+itself. Ely has a western Galilee entered by an arch, divided by a
+central pillar, and filled in the upper part with tracery. Lincoln has a
+Galilee, deep and dignified in plan, with a vaulted roof. Another
+English cathedral so provided is that of Chichester; and among parish
+churches the Galilee is found at Boxley, Llantwit, Chertsey, and
+S. Woolos.
+
+Of door-ways which, independently of considerations of date, size, or
+form, are noteworthy for their sculpture, there are many that ought to
+be mentioned. At Lincoln, for instance, we have a south door carved with
+a Doom, or Last Judgment, wherein we see the effigy of the Divine Judge
+surrounded by the dead rising from their opening graves. The north door
+at Ely, the whole of the surrounding stone-work of which is elaborately
+carved, is surmounted by the figure of the Lord enthroned within a
+vesica, while adoring angels kneel before Him. At Rougham, in Norfolk,
+the west door is surmounted by a crucifix, round which runs the
+emblematic vine. Founhope church, Hereford, has in the tympanum of the
+arch the Madonna and the Holy Child, a grotesque with birds and beasts
+surrounding the figures. At Elkstone, Gloucestershire, the south
+door-way, a specimen (like the one at Founhope) of Norman work, has some
+interesting sculptures. In the centre of the tympanum is Christ
+enthroned, with the apocalyptic symbols of the evangelists around Him;
+beyond these on the right hand of Christ is the Agnus Dei with the flag,
+an emblem of the Resurrection, while on the left is a wide open pair of
+jaws, known as a Hell-mouth: above all the Father's Hand is seen in the
+attitude of benediction. Elstow church has sculptured figures above the
+north door; not within the containing arch, but within a separate arched
+space divided from the door-way by a string-course. Haltham church, in
+Lincolnshire, has some exceedingly curious designs on the tympanum of
+the south door; they are mostly cruciform figures within circles, and
+are arranged with strange irregularity. The north door of Lutterworth
+church has over it a fresco painting.
+
+ [Illustration: NORTH DOOR, ELSTOW CHURCH.]
+
+Several of the churches in Brussels have door-ways which, though
+otherwise not remarkable, are noteworthy from the beauty of the carving
+of the central post dividing the two leaves of the door. The church of
+Notre Dame de Bon-Secours has the effigy of its patron saint crowned and
+robed, bearing the Infant Saviour; below are the emblems of pilgrimage,
+wallets, gourds, and cockle-shells. The church of La Madeleine has a
+crucifix with a weeping Magdalene at its foot. The old church of
+S. Catharine has its patroness on the door-post, and the Chapelle
+Sainte-Anne similarly has S. Anne holding the Blessed Virgin by the
+hand. Foliage or scrolls in each case fill up the rest of the column,
+which is of wood, and in some instances has been painted.
+
+So far, the doorways have occupied our attention; something must,
+however, be said of the doors themselves. The usual form of the old
+church door is familiar enough to all of us; the massive time-stained
+oak, the heavy iron nails that stud it, and the long broad hinges that
+reach almost across its full breadth. There is dignity in the very
+simplicity of all this; but not seldom far more ornate examples may be
+found.
+
+The most elementary form of decoration consists in merely panelling the
+door, as is the case in numberless instances; occasionally the panels
+themselves are carved, as on the "Thoresby Door," at Lynn, or the door
+of S. Mary's, Bath; or tracery, as in a window, is introduced, as at
+Alford, Lincolnshire. These are but a few of the many instances which
+might be cited. Another striking form of decoration is produced by
+hammering out the long hinges into a design covering, more or less, the
+surface of the door. The west door at Higham Ferrers, already noticed,
+has on each of its leaves three hinges, which are formed into wide
+spreading scrolls. Sempringham Abbey has very fine beaten ironwork
+spread over almost the entire face of the door. A more curious example
+is afforded by Dartmouth church; where a conventional tree with
+spreading branches covers the door, and across this the hinges are laid
+in the form of two heraldic lions. The date is added in the middle of
+the work, 1631.
+
+ [Illustration: DOOR AT LYNN CHURCH.]
+
+In the decoration of the church door the medival blacksmith proves
+himself in a thousand instances, at home and abroad, to have been an
+artist. Free from the hurry of the present age, he could work according
+to that canon of Chaucer's,
+
+ "There is no workman
+ That can both worken well and hastilie,
+ This must be done at leisure, perfectlie."
+
+With him it was not the hand only that wrought, nor even the hand and
+head; but the soul within him gave life to both. Of the contrast between
+old ways and new, few examples are more striking than the hinges of the
+door at S. Mary Key, Ipswich; where we have a simple but graceful scroll
+of ancient date, and a clumsy iron bar of to-day, lying side by side.
+For a beautiful design in beaten iron the doors of Worksop Priory may
+claim to have not many rivals.
+
+ [Illustration: SOUTH PORCH, SEMPRINGHAM ABBEY.]
+
+The most splendid doors in the world are probably the bronze doors of
+the Baptistery at Florence. Other bronze doors there are on the
+Continent, and all of them fine; Aix-la-Chapelle, Mayence, Augsburg,
+Hildesheim, Novgorod, all have doors of this kind; at Verona, too, in
+the church of San Zeno, are ancient examples, whereon are set forth in
+panels a number of subjects from Holy Scripture and from the life of the
+patron saint. All, however, fall into insignificance beside the "Gates
+of Paradise," as the Florentines proudly call their doors.
+
+ [Illustration: DOOR AT DARTMOUTH CHURCH.]
+
+In 1400 the Gild of Cloth Merchants of Florence decided to make a
+thank-offering for the cessation of the plague; and the form which it
+took was a pair of bronze doors for the baptistery of the church of
+S. Giovanni, to correspond with some already there. These earlier ones
+are the work of Pisana and his son Nino, from designs by Giotto; the
+creation of the new ones was thrown open to competition. Many
+competitors appeared, of whom six were asked to submit specimens of
+designs for the panels; and, finally, when the choice lay between two
+only, the elder, Brunellesco, himself advised that the commission should
+be entrusted to Ghiberti, a youth then barely twenty years of age. The
+doors when completed contained twenty scenes from the Saviour's life,
+together with figures of the four Latin Doctors and the four
+Evangelists, set in a frame of exquisite foliage. This splendid work was
+surpassed by a second pair of doors subsequently made for the same
+place. In this there are ten panels setting forth scenes from the Old
+Testament history; and the frame is adorned with niches and medallions
+in which are placed some fifty allegorical figures and portrait heads.
+It was of these last doors, which were only completed in Ghiberti's
+mature age, that no less a judge than Michael Angelo said, "They might
+stand as the gates of Paradise itself."
+
+Aix-en-Provence claims that her doors are as peerless as examples of the
+wood-carver's art, as are the Florentine ones as types of the
+metal-worker's. They have been preserved, it is said, from the sixth
+century, and are still wonderfully fresh and delicate. There are on each
+door six upper panels filled with figures of the twelve Sybils; and
+below one large panel, occupied, in one case, by effigies of the
+prophets Isaiah and Jeremiah, and in the other by Ezekiel and Daniel.
+The carving is only occasionally exhibited, two masking doors having
+been cleverly contrived to protect and cover the real ones.
+
+Many of the doors of our cathedrals and great abbey churches have
+knockers, often of very striking designs. These as a rule indicate that
+the places in question claimed the right of sanctuary; and the knocker
+was to summon an attendant, or watcher, to admit the fugitive from
+justice at night, or at other times when the entrance was closed. A
+curious head holding a ring within its teeth forms the knocker at Durham
+cathedral; a lion's head was not an uncommon form for this to take, as
+at Adel, York (All Saints), and Norwich (S. Gregory's); a singularly
+ferocious lion's head knocker may be seen at Mayence.
+
+The deep porch which we so frequently see over the principal door of the
+church was formerly something more than an ornament, or even a
+protection; it was a recognized portion of the sacred building, and had
+its appointed place in the services of the Church. Baptism was
+frequently administered in the church porch, to symbolize that by that
+Sacrament the infant entered into Holy Church. There are still relics of
+the existence of fonts in some of our porches, as at East Dereham,
+Norfolk. When baptism was thus administered in the south porch, it was
+also customary, so it is alleged, to throw wide open the north door;
+that the devil, formally renounced in that rite, might by that way flee
+"to his own place." The font now usually stands just within the door. In
+the pre-reformation usage of the Church the thanksgiving of a woman
+after child-birth was also made in, or before, the church porch; and
+concluded with the priest's saying, "Enter into the temple of God, that
+thou mayest have eternal life, and live for ever and ever." The first
+prayer-book of Edward VI. ordered the woman to kneel "nigh unto the
+quire door:" the next revision altered the words "to nigh unto the place
+where the table standeth;" and from Elizabeth's days the rubric has
+simply said indefinitely "a convenient place."
+
+ [Illustration: _From a Photo by Albert E. Coe, Norwich._
+ ERPINGHAM GATE, NORWICH.]
+
+The rubric at the commencement of the Order of the Solemnization of Holy
+Matrimony according to the Sarum use began also in this way: "Let the
+man and woman be placed before the door of the church, or in the face of
+the church, before the presence of God, the Priest, and the People"; at
+the end of the actual marriage, and before the benedictory prayers which
+follow it, the rubric says, "Here let them go into the church to the
+step of the altar." Chaucer alludes to this usage when in his
+"Canterbury Tales" he says of the wife of Bath--
+
+ "She was a worthy woman all her live,
+ Husbands at the church dore had she five."
+
+Edward I. was united to Margaret at the door of Canterbury Cathedral on
+September 9th, 1299, and other medival notices of the custom occur.
+
+The first prayer-book of Edward VI. introduced an alteration which has
+been maintained ever since; the new rubric reading that "The persons to
+be married shall come into the body of the Church," just as it does in
+our modern prayer-books. In France the custom survived as late as the
+seventeenth century, at least in some instances, for the marriage of
+Charles I., who was represented by a proxy, and Henrietta Maria was
+performed at the door of Notre Dame in Paris. In Herrick's "Hesperides"
+is a little poem entitled "The Entertainment, or, _A Porch-verse_ at the
+marriage of Mr. Henry Northly and the most witty Mrs. Lettice Yard." It
+commences:--
+
+ "Welcome! but yet no entrance till we blesse
+ First you, then you, then both for white success."
+
+This was published in the midst of the great Civil War, and seems to
+show that the custom of marriage at the church porch was still
+sufficiently known, even if only by tradition, to make allusions to it
+"understanded of the people."
+
+Burials sometimes took place in the church porch, in those days when
+interment within the building was much sought after.
+
+Ecclesiastical Courts were frequently held in church porches, as at the
+south door of Canterbury Cathedral; schools were occasionally
+established in them; and here the dower of the bride was formally
+presented to the bridegroom. This last-named use of the porch is
+illustrated by a deed of the time of Edward I., by which Robert Fitz
+Roger, a gentleman of Northamptonshire, bound himself to marry his son
+within a given time to Hawisia, daughter of Robert de Tybetot, and "to
+endow her at the church door" with property equal to a hundred pounds
+per annum. We still have evidence of the fact that the church door was
+of old considered the most prominent and public place in the parish in
+the continued use of it as the official place for posting legal notices
+of general interest, such as lists of voters, summonses for public
+meetings, and so forth.
+
+There are often in connection with ancient ecclesiastical foundations
+doors and gateways which are of great interest, though they can scarcely
+be called church doors. Of this class are the entrances to the chapter
+houses of cathedrals, many of which are very fine. At York, for
+example, the chapter-house, which proudly asserts in an inscription near
+the entrance that, "as the rose is among the flowers, so is it among
+buildings," has a doorway not unworthy of the beautiful interior.
+
+The gateway which gave admittance to the sacred enclosure of the
+abbey--the garth or close round which were ranged the monastic
+buildings--is in many cases an imposing and elaborate piece of
+architecture. Bristol has an interesting Norman gateway, and that at
+Durham is massive and impressive, as are all the conventual remains
+there. Norwich is specially rich in this respect. The Erpingham Gate was
+the gift of Sir Thomas Erpingham, who died in 1420, and whom the King,
+in Shakespere's play of "King Henry V." (Act iv. sc. I), calls a "good
+old knight;" S. Ethelbert's Gate was built at the cost of Bishop
+Alnwick, who ruled the see from 1426 to 1436.
+
+But to speak of these things is to wander from our present subject, and
+even that is too wide to be dealt with fully in a paper such as this.
+The legends and traditions of the church porch might occupy many a page,
+while we gossiped over the mystic rites of S. John's Eve or of All
+Hallow E'en; or while we told how Ralph, Bishop of Chichester, barred
+his cathedral door with thorns in his anger against the King and his
+friends; or how the skins of marauding Danes have in more than one
+instance been nailed as leather coverings to the doors of English
+churches. Enough, however, has probably been said to show the wealth of
+interest which may often be found to hang about the old church porch, in
+which the village church may often be as rich as the great cathedral or
+the stately abbey.
+
+
+
+
+Sacrificial Foundations.
+
+By England Howlett.
+
+
+In early ages a sacrifice of some sort or other was offered on the
+foundation of nearly every building. In heathen times a sacrifice was
+offered to the god under whose protection the building was placed; in
+Christian times, while many old pagan customs lingered on, the sacrifice
+was continued, but was given another meaning. The foundation of a
+castle, a church, or a house was frequently laid in blood; indeed it was
+said, and commonly believed, that no edifice would stand firmly for long
+unless the foundation was laid in blood. It was a practice frequently to
+place some animal under the corner stone--a dog, a wolf, a goat,
+sometimes even the body of a malefactor who had been executed.
+
+Heinrich Heine says:--"In the middle ages the opinion prevailed that
+when any building was to be erected something living must be killed, in
+the blood of which the foundation had to be laid, by which process the
+building would be secured from falling; and in ballads and traditions
+the remembrance is still preserved how children and animals were
+slaughtered for the purpose of strengthening large buildings with their
+blood."
+
+ "... I repent:
+ There is no sure foundation set on blood,
+ No certain life achiev'd by other's death."
+
+ King John, Act iv., Sc. 2.
+ Shakespeare.
+
+To many of our churches tradition associates some animal and it
+generally goes by the name of the Kirk-grim. These Kirk-grims are of
+course the ghostly apparitions of the beasts that were buried under the
+foundation-stones of the churches, and they are supposed to haunt the
+churchyards and church lanes. A spectre dog which went by the name of
+"Bargest" was said to haunt the churchyard at Northorpe, in
+Lincolnshire, up to the first half of the present century. The black dog
+that haunts Peel Castle, and the bloodhound of Launceston Castle, are
+the spectres of the animals buried under their walls. The apparitions of
+children in certain old mansions are the faded recollections of the
+sacrifices offered when these houses were first erected, not perhaps
+the present buildings, but the original halls or castles prior to the
+conquest, and into the foundations of which children were often built.
+The Cauld Lad of Hilton Castle in the valley of the Wear is well known.
+He is said to wail at night:
+
+ "Wae's me, wae's me,
+ The acorn's not yet
+ Fallen from the tree
+ That's to grow the wood,
+ That's to make the cradle,
+ That's to rock the bairn,
+ That's to grow to a man,
+ That's to lay me."
+
+Afzelius, in his collection of Swedish folk tales, says: "Heathen
+superstition did not fail to show itself in the construction of
+Christian churches. In laying the foundations the people retained
+something of their former religion, and sacrificed to their old deities,
+whom they could not forget, some animal, which they buried alive, either
+under the foundation, or within the wall. A tradition has also been
+preserved that under the altar of the first Christian churches a lamb
+was usually buried, which imparted security and duration to the edifice.
+This was an emblem of the true church lamb--the Saviour, who is the
+corner stone of His church. When anyone enters a church at a time when
+there is no service, he may chance to see a little lamb spring across
+the choir and vanish. This is the church-lamb. When it appears to a
+person in the churchyard, particularly to the grave-digger, it is said
+to forbode the death of a child that shall be next laid in the earth."
+
+The traditions of Copenhagen are, that when the ramparts were being
+raised the earth always sank, so that it was impossible to get it to
+stand firm. They therefore took a little innocent girl, placed her on a
+chair by a table, and gave her playthings and sweetmeats. While she thus
+sat enjoying herself, twelve masons built an arch over her, which when
+completed they covered over with earth, to the sound of music with drums
+and trumpets. By this process they are, it is said, rendered
+immovable.[2]
+
+ [Footnote 2: "Thorpe's Northern Mythology," vol. II., p. 244.]
+
+It is an old saying that there is a skeleton in every house, a saying
+which at one time was practically a fact. Every house in deed and in
+truth had its skeleton, and moreover every house was designed not only
+to have its skeleton, but its ghost also. The idea of providing every
+building with its ghost as a spiritual guard was not of course the
+primary idea; it developed later out of the original pagan belief of a
+sacrifice associated with the beginning of every work of importance.
+Partly with the notion of offering a propitiatory sacrifice to mother
+earth, and partly also with the idea of securing for ever a portion of
+soil by some sacrificial act, the old pagan laid the foundation of his
+house in blood.
+
+The art of building in early ages was not well understood, and the true
+principles of architecture and construction were but little appreciated.
+If the walls of a building showed any signs of settlement the reason was
+supposed to be that the earth had not been sufficiently propitiated, and
+that as a consequence she refused to carry the burden imposed upon her.
+
+It is said that when Romulus was about to found the city of Rome he dug
+a deep pit and cast into it the "first fruits of everything that is
+reckoned good by use, or necessary by nature," and before the pit was
+closed up by a great stone, Faustulus and Quinctilius were killed and
+laid under it. The legend of Romulus slaying his twin brother Remus
+because he jumped the walls of the city to show how poor they were,
+probably arises out of a confusion of the two legends and has become
+associated with the idea of a sacrificial foundation. To the present day
+there is a general Italian belief that whenever any great misfortune is
+going to overtake the city of Rome the giant shadow of Remus may be seen
+walking over the highest buildings in the city, even to the dome of St.
+Peter's.
+
+Sacrifice was not by any means confined to the foundations of buildings
+only. A man starting on a journey or on any new and important work would
+first offer a sacrifice. A ship was never launched without a sacrifice,
+and the christening of a vessel in these days with a bottle of wine is
+undoubtedly a relic of the time when the neck of a human being was
+broken and the prow of the vessel suffused with blood as a sacrificial
+offering.
+
+In our own time the burial of a bottle with coins under a foundation
+stone is the faded memory of the immuring of a human victim. So hard
+does custom and superstition die that even in the prosaic nineteenth
+century days we cannot claim to be altogether free from the bonds and
+fetters with which our ancestors were bound.
+
+Grimm, in his German Mythology, tells us: "It was often considered
+necessary to build living animals, even human beings, into the
+foundations on which any edifice was reared, as an oblation to the earth
+to induce her to bear the superincumbent weight it was proposed to lay
+upon her. By this horrible practice it was supposed that the stability
+of the structure was assured as well as other advantages gained." Of
+course the animal is merely the more modern substitute for the human
+being, just in the same manner as at the present day the bottle and
+coins are the substitute for the living animal. In Germany, after the
+burial of a living being under a foundation was given up, it became
+customary to place an empty coffin under the foundations of a house, and
+this custom lingered on in remote country districts until comparatively
+recent times.
+
+With the spread of Christianity the belief in human sacrifice died out.
+In 1885, Holsworthy Parish Church was restored; during the work of
+restoration it was necessary to take down the south-west angle of the
+wall, and in this wall was found, embedded in the mortar and stone, a
+skeleton. The wall of this part of the church had settled, and from the
+account given by the masons it would seem there was no trace of a tomb,
+but on the contrary every indication that the victim had actually been
+buried alive--a mass of mortar covered the mouth, and the stones around
+the body seemed to have been hastily built. Some few years ago the
+Bridge Gate of the Bremen city walls was taken down, and the skeleton of
+a child was found embedded in the foundations.[3]
+
+ [Footnote 3: "Strange Survivals," Baring Gould.]
+
+The practice of our masons of putting the blood of oxen into mortar was
+no doubt in the first instance associated with the idea of a sacrifice;
+however this may be, the blood had no doubt a real effect in hardening
+the mortar, just the same as treacle, which has been known to be used in
+our days. The use of cement when any extra strength is needed has put
+aside the use of either blood or treacle in the mixing of mortar.
+
+It is a curious instance of the wide spread of the belief in blood as a
+cement for ancient buildings that Al-ud-din Khilji, the King of Delhi,
+A.D. 1296-1315, when enlarging and strengthening the walls of old Delhi,
+is reported to have mingled in the mortar the bones and blood of
+thousands of goat-bearded Moghuls, whom he slaughtered for the purpose.
+A modern instance is furnished by advices which were brought from Accra,
+dated December 8th, 1881, that the King of Ashantee had murdered 200
+girls, for the purpose of using their blood to mix with the mortar
+employed in the building of a new palace.
+
+A foundation sacrifice is suggested by the following curious discovery,
+reported in the _Yorkshire Herald_ of May 31st, 1895: "It was recently
+ascertained that the tower of Darrington Church, about four miles from
+Pontefract, had suffered some damage during the winter gales. The
+foundations were carefully examined, when it was found that under the
+west side of the tower, only about a foot from the surface, the body of
+a man had been placed in a sort of bed in the solid rock, and the west
+wall was actually resting upon his skull. The gentle vibration of the
+tower had opened the skull and caused in it a crack of about
+two-and-a-half inches long. The grave must have been prepared and the
+wall placed with deliberate intention upon the head of the person
+buried, and this was done with such care that all remained as placed for
+at least 600 years."
+
+The majority of the clergy in the early part of the Middle Ages
+doubtless would be very strongly imbued with all the superstitions of
+the people. The medival priest, half believing in many of the old pagan
+customs, would allow them to continue, and it is both curious and
+interesting to notice how heathenism has for so long a period lingered
+on, mixed up with Christian ideas.
+
+It is said that St. Odhran expressed his willingness to be the first to
+be buried in Iona, and, indeed, offered himself to be buried alive for
+sacrifice. Local tradition long afterwards added the still more ghastly
+circumstance that once, when the tomb was opened, he was found still
+alive, and uttered such fearful words that the grave had to be closed
+immediately.
+
+Even at the present day there is a prejudice more or less deeply rooted
+against a first burial in a new churchyard or cemetery. This prejudice
+is doubtless due to the fact that in early ages the first to be buried
+was a victim. Later on in the middle ages the idea seems to have been
+that the first to be buried became the perquisite of the devil, who thus
+seems in the minds of the people to have taken the place of the pagan
+deity. Not in England alone, but all over Northern Europe, there is a
+strong prejudice against being the first to enter a new building, or to
+cross a newly-built bridge. At the least it is considered unlucky, and
+the more superstitious believe it will entail death. All this is the
+outcome of the once general sacrificial foundation, and the lingering
+shadow of a ghastly practice.
+
+Grimm, in his "Teutonic Mythology," tells us that when the new bridge at
+Halle, finished in 1843, was building, the common people got an idea
+that a child was wanted to wall up in the foundations. In the outer wall
+of Reichenfels Castle a child was actually built in alive; a projecting
+stone marks the spot, and it is believed that if this stone were pulled
+out the wall would at once fall down.
+
+Bones, both human and of animals, have been found under hearthstones of
+houses. When we consider that the hearth is the centre, as it were, and
+most sacred spot of a house, and that the chimney above it is the
+highest portion built, and the most difficult to complete, it seems easy
+to understand why the victim was buried under the hearthstone or jamb of
+the chimney.
+
+There is an interesting custom prevailing in Roumania to the present day
+which is clearly a remnant of the old idea of a sacrificial foundation.
+When masons are engaged building a house they try to catch the shadow of
+a stranger passing by and wall it in, and throw in stones and mortar
+whilst his shadow rests on the walls. If no one passes by to throw a
+shadow the masons go in search of a woman or child who does not belong
+to the place, and, unperceived by the person, apply a reed to the shadow
+and this reed is then immured. In Holland frequently there has been
+found in foundations curious looking objects something like ninepins,
+but which in reality are simply rude imitations of babies in their
+swaddling bands--the image representing the child being the modern
+substitute for an actual sacrifice. Carved figures of Christ crucified
+have been found in the foundations of churches. Some few years ago, when
+the north wall of Chulmleigh Church in North Devon was taken down there
+was found a carved figure of Christ crucified to a vine.[4]
+
+ [Footnote 4: "Strange Survivals," Baring Gould.]
+
+A story is told that the walls of Scutari contain the body of a victim.
+In this case it is a woman who is said to have been built in, but an
+opening was left through which her infant might be passed in to be
+suckled by her as long as any life remained in the poor creature, and
+after her death the hole was closed.
+
+The legend of Cologne Cathedral is well known. The architect sold
+himself to the devil for the plan, and gave up his life when the
+building was in progress; that is to say, the man voluntarily gave up
+his life to be buried under the tower to ensure the stability of the
+enormous superstructure, which he believed could not be held up in any
+other way.
+
+It is well known that the extinguished torch is the symbol of departed
+life, and to the present day the superstitious mind always connects the
+soul with flame. It was at one time a common practice to bury a candle
+in a coffin, the explanation being that the dead man needed it to give
+him light on his way to Heaven. It is extremely doubtful, however,
+whether this was the original idea, for most probably the candle in the
+first instance really represented an extinguished life, and was thus a
+substitute for a human sacrifice which, in the pagan times, accompanied
+every burial. The candle, in fact, took the place of a life, human or
+animal, and in many instances candles have been found immured in the
+walls and foundations of churches and houses.
+
+Eggs have often been found built into foundations. The egg had, of
+course life in it--but undeveloped life, so that by its use the old
+belief in the efficacy of a living sacrifice was fully maintained
+without any shock to the feelings of people in days when they were
+beginning to revolt against the practices of the early ages.
+
+Sir Walter Scott speaks of the tradition that the foundation stones of
+Pictish raths were bathed in human blood. In the ballad of the "Cout of
+Keeldar" it is said:
+
+ "And here beside the mountain flood
+ A massy castle frowned;
+ Since first the Pictish race, in blood,
+ The haunted pile did found."
+
+From Thorpe's "Northern Mythology" we learn that in Denmark, in former
+days, before any human being was buried in a churchyard, a living horse
+was first interred. This horse is supposed to re-appear, and is known by
+the name of the "Hel-horse." It has only three legs, and if anyone meets
+it it forebodes death. Hence is derived the saying when anyone has
+survived a dangerous illness: "He gave death a peck of oats" (as an
+offering or bribe). Hel is identical with death, and in times of
+pestilence is supposed to ride about on a three-legged horse and
+strangle people.
+
+The belief still lingers in Germany that good weather may be secured by
+building a live cock into a wall, and it is thought that cattle may be
+prevented from straying by burying a living blind dog under the
+threshold of a stable. Amongst the French peasantry a new farmhouse is
+not entered upon until a cock has been killed and its blood sprinkled in
+the rooms.[5]
+
+ [Footnote 5: "Strange Survivals," Baring Gould.]
+
+It is probable that sacrificial foundations had their origin in the idea
+of a propitiary offering to the Goddess Earth. However this may be, it
+is certain that for centuries, through times of heathenism, and well
+into even advanced Christianity, the people so thoroughly associated the
+foundation of buildings with a sacrifice that in some form or other it
+has lingered on to the present century. Now in our own day the laying
+the foundation of any important building is always attended with a
+ceremony--the form remains, the sacrifice is no longer offered. For
+ecclesiastical buildings, or those having some charitable object, a
+religious ceremony is provided, while for those purely secular the event
+is marked by rejoicings. We cannot bring ourselves to pass over without
+notice the foundation laying of our great buildings, and who shall
+venture to say that superstition is altogether dead, and that we are
+free from the lingering remains of what was once the pagan belief?
+
+
+
+
+The Building of the English Cathedrals.
+
+By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, B.A.
+
+
+Of all the sins of the nineteenth century, the one which most militates
+against its attainment of excellence in art is its impatience. A work
+has been no sooner decided on, than there is a clamour for its
+completion. Our cathedrals were for the most part reared in far other
+times, and are therefore admirable. Growing with the stately, deliberate
+increase of the ponderous oak, they speak of days when art was original,
+sincere, patient, and therefore capable of great deeds; original, not in
+extravagance or eccentricity, but in the realization of the natural
+development of style, advancing from grace to grace, from the perfection
+of solidity to the perfection of adornment, by an unforced growth;
+sincere, in its confidence of its own capacity for fulfilling its
+appointed end, in its grasp of the possibilities in its materials, in
+its choice of the true, rather than the easy, method of working; and
+patient, finally, in its contentment to do in each age a little solidly
+and well, rather than a great deal indifferently, in its aim at
+artistic perfection in preference to material completeness. Thus it is
+that none of our cathedrals are the work of one age, save those of
+Salisbury and London, and even they have details which they owe to
+succeeding times.
+
+The above words are not intended to imply that our medival builders
+made no mistakes. The brief review of some of their work will show us
+proof to the contrary; but the mistakes were rare exceptions. If, for
+instance, a captious critic turns to Peterborough, and points us to the
+defective foundations, which have recently required the rebuilding of
+the central tower, and the supposed necessity of reconstructing the west
+front, all that the case will prove is that our great monastic
+architects' work was not always absolutely eternal. "So there was
+jerry-building in those days too!" someone exclaims, with a note of
+triumph at the dragging down of the great ideals of the past to the
+level of the paltriness of the present. If such be the case, we reply,
+there were indeed giants in those days, the very "jerry building" of
+which rides out the storms of well-nigh seven centuries before revealing
+any fatal weaknesses.
+
+In considering these splendid buildings, of which the present century
+has happily proved itself no unappreciative heir, it will be of interest
+to devote a few lines to the means which were employed to raise funds
+for their construction. Several illustrations of the methods employed in
+the case of cathedrals and other churches have come down to us. The
+story of the foundation of the new buildings at Crowland Abbey in 1112,
+exhibits an outburst of popular enthusiasm which irresistibly recalls
+the free gifts of the Hebrew people for the building of the first
+temple. "The prayers having been said and the antiphons sung," says
+Peter Blesensis, vice-chancellor under Henry II., "the abbot himself
+laid the first corner-stone on the east side. After him every man
+according to his degree laid his stone; some laid money, others writings
+by which they offered their lands, advowsons of livings, tenths of sheep
+and other church tithes; certain measures of wheat, a certain number of
+workmen or masons, etc. On the other side, the common people, as
+officious with emulation and great devotion, offered, some money, some
+one day's work every month till it should be finished, some to build
+whole pillars, others pedestals, and others certain parts of the
+walls."
+
+Indulgences, remitting so many days' penance, were sometimes issued to
+encourage the gifts of the faithful. Thus in the time of Henry VIII. a
+church brief was issued soliciting help towards the repair of Kirby
+Belers Church, in Leicestershire, part of which runs as follows:--"Also
+certayne patriarkes, prymates, &c., unto the nombre of sixtie-five,
+everie one of theym syngularly, unto all theym that put their helpyng
+handes unto the sayd churche, have granted xl dayes of pardon; which
+nombre extendeth unto vij yeres and cc dayes, _totiens quotiens_."
+Sometimes, by way of penance itself, a fine was imposed, which was
+devoted to a local building fund. Gilbert, bishop of Chichester, in
+certain constitutions promulgated in 1289 rules that every priest in the
+diocese who shall be convicted of certain scandalous sins shall "forfeit
+forty shillings, to be applied to the structure of Chichester
+Cathedral." In modern money this fine would amount to something like
+40. Walter, Bishop of Worcester, also ordained in 1240 that beneficed
+priests who dressed unclerically should be fined to the extent of a
+tenth of their annual revenue for the benefit of the building of his
+cathedral. A yet earlier order concerning laity as well as clergy was
+issued by the Witan at Engsham, in Oxfordshire, in the year 1009, which
+decides that "if any pecuniary compensation shall arise out of a mulct
+for sins committed against God, this ought to be applied, according to
+the discretion of the bishop," to one of several pious purposes, of
+which two are "the repair of churches, and the purchase of books, bells,
+and ecclesiastical vestments."
+
+Another way of raising money was to exact a contribution from church
+dignitaries, as a kind of "entrance fee," on their accepting preferment.
+William Heyworth, bishop of Coventry, (a see now owning Chester as its
+mother city), decreed in 1428 that "every canon on commencing his first
+residence should pay a hundred marks towards the structure of the
+cathedral, the purchase of ornaments," and other similar expenses.
+
+In 1247, Bishop Ralph Neville, of Chichester, having died indebted to
+some of the canons of the cathedral, left by will a sufficient sum to
+discharge his obligations. But these ecclesiastical creditors decided
+that it should be devoted to "the completion of a certain stone tower,
+which had remained for a long time unfinished." The same canons bitterly
+complained because the Pope had ordained that all vacant prebends
+throughout the country should remain unoccupied for a year, in order
+that their revenues might be devoted to the erection of the minster at
+Canterbury; whereas they not unnaturally felt that the needs of their
+own cathedral had the first claim upon them.
+
+Those churches which contained the shrines of popular saints drew, for
+the repair or enlargement of the fabric, no small revenue from the
+offerings of pilgrims. The eastern part of Rochester Cathedral was paid
+for by the moneys deposited at the tomb of S. William of Perth; and the
+large sums given by visitors to the shrine of S. Thomas of Canterbury
+materially assisted in keeping the building in repair.
+
+Unquestionably the sums needed for rearing these massive piles were in
+most cases given, either in money or in kind, by the faithful; sometimes
+the princely offerings of a few wealthy men, sometimes the countless
+small gifts of the multitude, have become transmuted into tapering
+spire, or ponderous tower, "long-drawn aisle and fretted vault." The
+poor, in some instances, as we have seen, voluntarily gave their
+labour; in others the hands of the monks themselves raised and cut the
+sculptured stones.
+
+In most cases the cathedrals which we now possess are not the first that
+have occupied their sites. Some humble building, often reared by one of
+the pioneers of the faith, was in the majority of instances the shrine
+that first consecrated the spot to the service of God.
+
+It was in 401, during the visit of Germanus and Lupus, bishops of
+Auxerre and of Troyes, to aid in exterminating the Pelagian heresy, that
+the earliest shrine of S. Alban, a simple wooden oratory, was erected at
+Verulam; S. Deiniol built a little stave-kirk, or timber church, at
+Bangor about 550; and Kentigern, some ten years later, raised the first
+religious establishment at Llanelwy, or S. Asaph; while where now the
+ruined Cathedral of Man rears its weather-beaten gables and sightless
+windows at Peel, tradition says S. Patrick consecrated S. Germain first
+bishop of the Southern Isles in 447.
+
+Many causes, however, combined to sweep away not only all traces of
+these earliest churches, but also in many instances more than one more
+solidly constructed successor. The growth of architectural taste and
+skill made men impatient of the rudeness of their forefathers' simple
+fanes; in a surprising number of instances the lightning-flash or the
+raging fire destroyed the buildings wholly or in part. The cathedrals of
+the north felt more than once the shock of the Border wars; and civil
+strife, or religious fanaticism, wrought mischief in many others. Thus
+it has come to pass that the centuries have seen four cathedrals in
+succession at Hereford, at Gloucester, and at Bangor; and three at a
+multitude of places, Canterbury, London, Winchester, Peterborough,
+Lichfield, Oxford, and half-a-dozen more.
+
+The incursions of the Danes were answerable for the destruction of
+several of the earlier foundations. Canterbury had a cathedral, the most
+ancient part of which had been erected, according to tradition, by
+Lucius, the first Christian King of the Britons, and afterwards restored
+by S. Augustine. To this, about the year 740, Cuthbert, the archbishop,
+added a chapel for the interment of the occupants of the see; and Odo,
+in the tenth century, enlarged and re-roofed it. But in the days of
+saintly Alphege, in 1005, the Danish invaders fell upon the city,
+making of the church a ruin, and of its bishop a martyr. A similar fate
+befell the metropolitan church of the north. On the site where Paulinus
+baptized King Edwin and his two sons into the Christian faith a little
+wooden oratory was raised, over which ere long Edwin commenced to build
+a stone church, which S. Oswald, his successor, completed. This, after
+having been beautified by S. Wilfred, was burnt about 741, but re-built
+shortly afterwards by Archbishop Egbert. It was this latter building
+which fell before the Danes.
+
+At Ely the religious house founded by S. Etheldreda, which was the
+precursor of the modern cathedral, was burnt by the same marauders about
+870. Rochester suffered in the same way; and no trace of the church
+built, so says the Venerable Bede, by King Ethelbert himself now
+remains. Peterborough has been particularly unfortunate in this respect.
+The first building here was begun by Peada, King of Mercia, in the
+seventh century. In the year 870 the Danes, on one of their forays,
+burnt church and monastery to the ground, and massacred the abbot and
+all his monks. In 971 King Edgar raised the place once more from its
+desolation, but again it was seriously damaged, though not absolutely
+destroyed, by the sea-kings shortly before the Norman Conquest. Oxford
+was partially burnt in 1002 owing to the same people, but in a different
+way. A number of Danes took refuge in the tower of S. Frideswide to
+escape the senseless and brutal massacre organised on S. Brice's day in
+that year, and the English fired the structure rather than suffer their
+prey to escape them.
+
+It will be convenient here, although it may take us in some cases away
+from those primitive foundations which so far we have considered, to
+glance at the other instances in which war has left its mark upon our
+cathedrals. Hereford, lying near the Welsh border, felt the storm and
+stress of warfare in 1056. Originally founded at some unknown date in
+very early English times, the church at Hereford was rebuilt about 830
+by a noble Mercian, named Milfrid, and was repaired, if not actually
+renewed, by Athelstan the bishop, who came to the see in 1012. Ten years
+before the Norman Conquest, however, Griffith, prince of Wales, at the
+head of a combined host of Welsh and Irish, crossed the marches and
+plundered and burnt the church and city. In the reign of Hardicanute
+(1039-1041) the citizens of Worcester, having risen against the payment
+of the ship-tax, were severely punished, a military force being sent to
+occupy their city. So thoroughly did it carry out the work of inflicting
+discipline on the malcontents, that the church, amongst other buildings,
+was left in ruins. The original church at Gloucester was built in 681,
+as part of a conventual establishment; this was destroyed, and, after an
+interval, rebuilt by Beornulph, King of Mercia, sometime previous to
+825. This church was looted by the Danes, but restored by S. Edward the
+Confessor. In the year after the Conquest, Gloucester was occupied by
+the Normans, whose entrance was not, however, accepted quite peaceably
+by the citizens; and in the tumult the Cathedral was seriously injured
+by the one or the other party. Exeter provides us with another case.
+Here was a cathedral in early English days, which lasted until the time
+of Bishop William Warelwast, who began the erection of a new one in
+1112. During the stormy reign of Stephen, the city was held for Matilda
+and had to stand a siege by the King, to the great damage of the still
+unfinished church. To quote one further illustration only: Bangor, whose
+wooden church was replaced by a stone one somewhere about 1102, suffered
+grievously in the wars waged between Henry III. of England, and David,
+Prince of Wales, an episode in which was the destruction of the
+Cathedral.
+
+ [Illustration: _From a photo by Albert F. Coe, Norwich_
+ NORWICH CATHEDRAL.]
+
+The conquest of England by William, Duke of Normandy, had a vast
+influence on the ecclesiastical buildings of the country. On the
+continent art had advanced at a pace unknown in this island, and the
+plain and massive churches scattered over the land must have seemed very
+rude structures in the eyes of the prelates who came in the victor's
+train. S. Edward the Confessor, with his Norman predilections, had no
+doubt accustomed his courtiers to some aspects of foreign art, and
+through his influence the so-called Norman architecture preceded the
+Normans in the country; but such instances of it as were to be seen must
+have been few, and probably confined to the southern counties.
+
+Scarcely had the Conqueror's throne been secured before his countrymen,
+placed in the abbeys and sees of England, began to rebuild, on new and
+grander plans, the churches under their charge.
+
+Lanfranc, who ascended the throne of S. Augustine in 1070, set himself
+to the work of rebuilding Canterbury Cathedral, not contenting himself
+with any enlargement or embellishment of the older fane, but making a
+clean sweep of that, and beginning from the foundations. S. Anselm, and
+the prior of the monastery, Ernulph, took up the work and enlarged upon
+Lanfranc's design, pulling down and re-building the choir. Early in the
+next century, namely in 1130, the new Cathedral, completed under the
+supervision of Conrad, successor to Ernulph, was solemnly dedicated with
+great pomp in the presence of the Kings of England and of Scotland.
+
+ [Illustration: RIPON CATHEDRAL.]
+
+Meanwhile, Thomas of Bayeux, who became Archbishop of York in the same
+year as that in which Lanfranc obtained his English see, was busy
+rebuilding his Minster at York. William of Carilef commenced the
+magnificent pile, forming one of the finest Norman churches in
+existence, which crowns the Wear at Durham, in 1093; and Ralph Flambard
+took up the work three years later, completing it in 1128. London was
+deprived of its Cathedral by fire probably about 1088, and the work of
+restoration was at once undertaken by Maurice, its Norman bishop. In
+1079 Bishop Walkelyn began the erection of a cathedral church at
+Winchester, in the place of the old Saxon building which had first been
+founded on the conversion of King Cynegils, about 635. In all parts of
+the land, east and west, north and south, the builders were at work,
+rearing massive temples to the glory and honour of God. The chink of
+chisel and the blow of hammer rang everywhere in the ears of the
+eleventh century in England. Bishop Herbert Losinga laid the first stone
+of Norwich Cathedral in 1096, at which time Remigius of Fescamp had been
+some twenty years at work on that of Lincoln, and had passed away,
+leaving the completion to others. The new Norman Cathedral of Hereford
+was begun by Robert Losinga, who reigned as bishop from 1079 to 1096.
+Abbot Simeon began to build the Minster at Ely about 1092; Worcester was
+commenced by Wulfstan in 1084; five years later the foundation of
+Gloucester was laid; and in 1091 S. Osmund consecrated the church of
+S. Nicholas at Newcastle. Other cathedrals which were built, or
+rebuilt, at about the same date include those of Carlisle, S. Albans,
+Rochester, Chester, Lichfield and Oxford.
+
+Surely never was an age so enthusiastic in building! All these
+cathedrals, many still remaining largely as their Norman builders left
+them, most retaining many relics of their work, were commenced within
+the space of two reigns of by no means great duration, lasting only from
+1066 to 1100.
+
+The energy of the time was not, however, exhausted by the fervour of
+this outburst. The twelfth century took up and vigorously prosecuted the
+tasks handed on to it by the eleventh.
+
+Among cathedrals which were entirely, or almost entirely, rebuilt during
+this century we have Chichester, Rochester, Peterborough, Lincoln,
+Oxford, Bristol, Southwell, S. David's, Llandaff, and Ripon. In the
+first of these a great part of the work was done twice over within this
+period. Ralph de Luffa was bishop of the see when the cathedral was
+consecrated in 1108; two fires, however, did such serious damage to this
+building, the first in 1114, and the second in 1186, that it had
+practically to be re-constructed, and was re-dedicated in the year
+1199. The Cathedral at Rochester was largely re-built by John of
+Canterbury between 1125 and 1137, and like Chichester suffered twice
+during the century from the ravages of fire. Indeed, so frequently do we
+find mention of conflagrations in the cathedrals in the early medival
+days, that it is quite obvious that William I. was fully justified in
+taking such precautions against this enemy as the use of the curfew
+involved. In more than one instance the cathedral went up in flames as
+part only of a fire which destroyed a large portion of the town.
+
+ [Illustration: SOUTHWELL MINSTER.]
+
+The undertaking of new work at Peterborough was the result of a similar
+cause. In the year 1116 fire destroyed almost the whole church and
+monastery, but in two years' time the re-erection had commenced, and was
+continued throughout the remainder of the century. The choir was ready
+for the resumption of the Divine offices in 1143, but the builders did
+not reach the end of their labours until 1237. Re-construction was
+necessitated at Lincoln by the occurrence of an earthquake in 1185,
+following once more upon a fire which took place in 1141. The stone
+vaulting and the western towers were undertaken by Alexander, bishop
+from 1123 to 1147; and in 1192 S. Hugh of Avalon, who held the see from
+1186 to 1203, began a thorough re-building of the pile. This work marks
+an epoch in the progress of architecture in England, as in the choir of
+S. Hugh we meet with the earliest examples of the use of the lancet form
+of arch to which we can assign a known date. About the middle of this
+century a new church, not yet advanced to the dignity of a cathedral,
+was commenced at Oxford, and by the year 1180 it was sufficiently
+advanced to allow of the translation of the relics of S. Frideswide to
+their new shrine. In 1142 was founded the Abbey of Bristol, and its
+church was consecrated on Easter Day, 1148, although the completion of
+the buildings occupied the attention of the abbots for many years after.
+Southwell Minster was also building during the first half of the twelfth
+century; Peter de Leia, who became Bishop of S. David's in 1176,
+commenced the erection of his cathedral four years later, following the
+example of Arban, who entered upon the neighbouring see of Llandaff in
+1107, and reared a mother church for his diocese. Finally, Ripon also
+saw the masons busily at work almost through the century. First
+Thurstan, Archbishop of York in 1114, began the enlargement of the
+Abbey Church, and after him Archbishop Roger (1154-1181) entirely
+rebuilt it.
+
+But the record of the churches re-built during this century by no means
+exhausts the tale of work performed during that time. At Winchester, for
+example, in 1107 the central tower fell, necessitating the building of a
+new one. Lucy, bishop here from 1189 to 1205, erected a new Lady Chapel
+and made other alterations. At Hereford, too, operations were going
+forward almost throughout the century, the bishops Reynelm (1107-1115)
+and Betun (1131-1148) being especially energetic in pressing them on;
+and the closing years of this period saw the rearing of the eastern
+transepts. At this time also the beautiful Galilee Chapel was added to
+Durham Cathedral; Ely was consecrated in 1106, and towards the end of
+the century received its central tower and other additions; and
+S. Albans, moreover, had a faade built on its western front by John
+de Cella.
+
+The chronicle of the damages by fire during the twelfth century is not
+complete without mentioning that S. Paul's, London, which was
+re-building during a large portion of that time, was injured by it in
+1136; and the same foe destroyed the roof of Worcester Cathedral in the
+early days of the century.
+
+The period which our rapid survey has so far covered embraces broadly
+the eras of the Norman and of the so-called Early English architecture.
+In the thirteenth century the Decorated Style came into being, and with
+its rise arose also the desire for greater richness of ornament even in
+those churches which had already, to all appearances, been completed. On
+all hands, therefore, in this new century, we find the pulling down of
+portions of the stern Norman work and the substitution of lighter and
+more graceful designs.
+
+The great work of the thirteenth century, however, was begun before the
+birth of the more florid style, and shows little trace of the dawning of
+its influence. Salisbury Cathedral was begun in 1220, the work
+commencing, as was usual, at the eastern end and advancing westward. The
+whole was proceeded with continuously, and since its completion no
+alteration of any importance has been made in it. Other cathedrals in
+England exhibit in almost every case a conglomerate of several orders of
+architecture, blended generally with great skill, but necessarily
+lacking to some extent in unity of design in consequence. In Salisbury
+we have one complete and splendid example of English architecture of the
+best period, carried out from beginning to end with unbroken unity of
+purpose.
+
+Other churches which then were, or were subsequently to become,
+cathedrals, dating in their present form from the thirteenth century,
+are those of Lichfield, Wells, Manchester, Bangor, and S. Asaph.
+
+A Norman church had been reared at Lichfield of which very few relics
+have survived to the present day, a new building having been begun about
+the year 1200, and the work of construction carried on for the major
+part of the century, the west front being reached about 1275. Bishop
+Joceline was the chief founder of the existing Cathedral at Wells, most
+of the previous work having been taken down in his time, and the new
+church solemnly dedicated by him in 1239. The Church at Manchester was
+probably built about 1220, but the present building is of a later date.
+The Cathedral at S. Asaph suffered from the great medival enemy of such
+foundations, fire, twice during this period. On the first occasion, in
+1247, the troops of Henry III. of England must be held responsible for
+the destruction wrought; on the second, in 1282, the outbreak was
+probably accidental. Repairs, if not actual rebuilding, took place in
+consequence of these injuries towards the end of the century. Bangor
+Cathedral was probably also rebuilt about 1291.
+
+Fire played its old part throughout the century in providing work for
+the ecclesiastical masons, in other instances besides that referred to
+in the Welsh diocese. The choir at Carlisle was rebuilt probably about
+1250 and the following years, but had scarcely been fully completed
+before it fell in a fire which destroyed a large portion of the city. In
+1216, S. Nicholas, Newcastle, was almost destroyed by the same fatal
+agency. Worcester Cathedral was again burnt in 1202, and was rebuilt
+between then and 1218 sufficiently to be re-dedicated; although the
+retro-choir, the choir, the Lady Chapel, and some details were added at
+a later time in the same century.
+
+Imperfections in the work of the preceding age were answerable for a
+certain amount of loss and consequent re-construction (not seldom
+actually a gain) in this. At Lincoln, for instance, the central tower
+fell in 1237, and was replaced by the present one, which has been
+described as one of the finest in Europe. The east end of Ripon had to
+be rebuilt owing to the structure giving way in 1280; and in consequence
+again of the fall of the tower, repairs had to be undertaken at
+S. David's in 1220.
+
+The popular regard for Hugh, the sainted bishop of Lincoln, led to the
+building of one of the most beautiful sections of that Minster, namely
+the Angel-choir, erected as a worthy chapel for the shrine of S. Hugh,
+between 1255 and 1280. At Hereford, the Lady Chapel was built about the
+middle of this century; and at Ely, the presbytery and retro-choir at
+about the same date; at Bristol, the elder Lady Chapel probably a little
+earlier; at Southwell, the choir between 1230 and 1250; and the choir
+also at S. Albans, in 1256.
+
+Several of our cathedral towers, moreover, besides that at Lincoln, date
+from the thirteenth century. York, S. Paul's, Chichester and Gloucester,
+all had the towers erected during this period.
+
+Passing on to the fourteenth century, we meet with the same wide-spread
+activity, but it is expended now rather in additions and embellishments
+to existing buildings than in actual re-constructions. At Ripon, the
+Cathedral was partially burnt by the Scots in 1319, and later in the
+century the tower was struck by lightning. At S. Alban's, part of the
+nave fell in 1323, as did the tower at Ely in 1322. In each of these
+cases repairs were of course rendered needful. More important works were
+the rebuilding of the nave and transepts at Canterbury at the end of the
+century (1378-1410), the erection of the Zouche Chapel at York about
+1350, the addition of both the central and the western towers to Wells,
+the spires to Peterborough, and the towers also to Hereford.
+
+The fifteenth century is specially marked by the growing popularity of
+chantries and side chapels. We find them erected at this time at
+Hereford and elsewhere; but little building on a large scale is done. In
+several cases the vaulting of the roofs dates from this period, and a
+good deal of internal carving in wood or stone was also done. Among the
+latter we may note the high altar screen at S. Alban's, and the stalls
+at Carlisle and Ripon. Of the former work, reference may be made to the
+vaulting of part of the choir and transepts at Norwich.
+
+The sixteenth century is not a pleasant one to contemplate in connection
+with our ancient cathedrals. Ignorance and fanaticism were then
+beginning to show themselves in their treatment of the miracles of art
+bequeathed to the ages, and soon became more obvious than culture or
+reverence. This century saw the nave of Bristol taken down, the spires
+removed from the towers of Ripon, and other precautions against a
+threatened collapse; but steps were not taken to repair the losses thus
+caused. And in view of the nameless horrors perpetrated within the
+hallowed walls of churches and cathedrals, first by the extreme
+reformers, and in the next century by the Puritans, in the name of
+religion, it is only wonderful that so much that is beautiful still
+survives.
+
+The one constructive work of the seventeenth century was, of course, the
+building of the Cathedral of London, S. Paul's, in the place of that
+"Old S. Paul's" which perished in the fire of 1666. This building shares
+with Salisbury the credit of complete unity, but is unique among English
+Cathedrals in being classical in style. However much more admirable the
+Gothic style may be admitted to be for ecclesiastical purposes,
+probably all will admit that the grandeur of St. Paul's grows upon one
+the more familiar one becomes with it; and certainly no tower, or
+collection of towers, could possibly dominate a vast city like London in
+the way that Wren's splendid dome does.
+
+The eighteenth century witnessed, among other things, the removal of
+most of the spires which down to that time had crowned the towers of
+many of the cathedrals. Such was the case with Hereford and Wakefield;
+the same thing was attempted at Lincoln in 1727, but popular tumult
+saved the spires; only, however, until 1807, when they were removed.
+
+Of one work of construction the eighteenth century was also guilty; the
+year 1704 gave birth to that abortion among English cathedrals known as
+S. Peter's, Liverpool; with which, for nearly twenty years, the
+population of one of the wealthiest cities in the empire has been
+content! Something in the way of restoration was attempted in this
+century, but it was for the most part done ignorantly, and no small part
+of the restoration of the nineteenth century has consisted in undoing so
+far as possible the work of the eighteenth.
+
+The present century has seen the commencement, on noble lines, of the
+Cathedral of Truro; and the beautifying of not a few of our old
+minsters, which had been stript almost bare by the destroyers of past
+times. Happily, the guardians of these treasures of art and devotion
+have for the most part been conscious of the greatness of their trust,
+and the fabrics have been dealt with reverently and with judgment.
+Amongst others, Bristol, Chichester, St. Albans, and Peterborough have
+required more or less extensive measures of re-building.
+
+
+
+
+Ye Chappell of Oure Ladye.
+
+By the Rev. J. H. Stamp.
+
+
+The sacred buildings designated by this title were dedicated to the
+service of God, in medival times, in honour of the Mother of our Lord.
+The veneration of S. Mary, the Blessed Virgin, had been growing up in
+the Church from the fifth century, when the reality of the incarnation
+of the Son of God was first called into question by men who professed
+and called themselves Christians. The defence of the true doctrine
+brought clearly into view the high dignity which God had conferred on
+the humble maiden of Nazareth, and so reverence for her memory, as the
+most blessed among women, grew into veneration for her person as the
+Mother of God. The faithful of the Middle Ages were, therefore, not
+content with simply retaining her name at the head of the list of
+saints, but raised the human mother to a position which was almost, if
+not quite, equal to that of her Divine Son. They conferred on her the
+title of "Our Lady," and hailed her as "The Queen of Heaven," just as
+they were accustomed to address the Saviour as "Our Lord" and worship
+Him as "The King of Heaven." This title still survives in the terms
+which are so familiar to us, namely, "Lady Day" and "Lady Chapel."
+
+We see evidences of this growth of the _cultus_ of the Blessed Virgin in
+the erection and elaborate ornamentation of Lady Chapels throughout
+Christendom. It does not seem probable, however, that our pious
+forefathers in the ancient Church of England intended to encourage
+Mariolatry, by the introduction of these buildings into this country;
+for it is a singular and significant fact that in Spain, where this
+heretical and superstitious practice chiefly prevailed, Lady Chapels are
+very rare, because the church itself has been made to serve the purpose.
+English Churchmen, in their desire to honour the Mother of Christ, were
+careful to avoid this evil example. The erection of smaller buildings,
+and the setting apart, for the purpose, of one of the side aisles rather
+than the sanctuary itself, tend to show that they did not assign to the
+Blessed Virgin that _divine_ honour which was due only to her Son and
+Lord. The usual position of the Lady Chapel, beyond the choir, has,
+indeed, been considered as a proof that the honour paid to "Our Lady"
+exceeded that which was rendered unto our Lord, since the altar
+dedicated to her was set up beyond the High Altar in the most sacred
+portion of the church, and, in that position, might be said to
+overshadow it. But the usual situation of the Lady Chapel, at the east
+end of the choir or presbytery, proves nothing of the kind. One
+celebrated writer on the subject disclaims the idea in the following
+words, "Poole principally objects to the position of the Lady Chapel at
+the east end, 'above,' as he expresses it 'the High Altar.' Now we
+believe the Lady Chapel to have occupied the place merely on grounds of
+convenience, and not from any design--which is shocking to imagine--of
+exalting the Blessed Virgin to any participation in the honours of the
+Deity."[6]
+
+ [Footnote 6: Durandus Symbol. lxxxviii.]
+
+It is true that the Lady Chapel was generally erected at the extreme
+east end, or one of the aisles near the choir was used for the purpose,
+because it was considered the most sacred part of the church next to the
+sanctuary. It was erected at the east end of the Abbey Churches of
+Westminster and S. Albans; in the Cathedral Churches of Winchester,
+Salisbury, Chichester, Exeter, Gloucester, Worcester, Wells, Hereford,
+Chester and Manchester; at Christ Church, Hants, where there is a
+chantry above, called S. Michael's Loft, which once served as the
+Chapter House of the Priory, but in modern times has been converted into
+a schoolroom; and also at the parish church of S. Mary Redcliffe,
+Bristol, where it is situated over a thoroughfare, after the example of
+several churches in Exeter. But the ecclesiastics and architects of the
+Middle Ages did not consider themselves bound, by a hard and fast rule,
+to set up the Lady Chapel at the east end. If an available site could be
+found beyond the Choir the Chapel was erected in that position,
+otherwise, the north aisle of the Church, or a convenient site near the
+Choir, was utilised for the purpose. The building has been erected on
+the north or south side of the Choir or Nave, and even at the west end
+when deemed expedient. It was erected on the _north_ side at the
+Cathedrals of Canterbury, Oxford, Bristol, and Peterborough; at the
+Abbeys of Glastonbury, Bury St. Edmunds, Walsingham, Thetford,
+Wymondham, Belvoir, Llanthony, Hulme, and Croyland, where there was a
+second Lady Chapel with a lofty screen, in the south transept.[7] It is
+on the _south_ side at Kilkenny and at Elgin Cathedral. It stands in a
+similar position over the Chapter House at Ripon Minster. Sometimes it
+was placed above the chancel, as in Compton Church, Surrey; Compton
+Martin, Somerset; and Darenth, Kent; or over the porch, as at Fordham,
+Cambs. At Ely Cathedral it is connected with the extremity of the north
+transept. At Wimborne Minster it stands in the south transept, whilst at
+Rochester Cathedral and at Waltham Abbey, Essex, it was erected at the
+west of the south transept. At Durham Cathedral an attempt was made to
+build a Lady Chapel at the east end, but owing, it is said, to the
+supernatural intervention of S. Cuthbert, whose relics were deposited in
+the Choir, the building was erected instead at the west end, where it
+stands under the name of the Galilee Chapel. The original Lady Chapel at
+Canterbury also stood in this unusual position, until the days of
+Archbishop Lanfranc, 1070-1089, when it was removed and the present
+building set up at the east end. The _aisles_ were also frequently used
+as "ye Chappell of oure Ladye," as at Haddenham, Cambs.
+
+ [Footnote 7: "Gough's History of Croyland. 1783."]
+
+The practice of dedicating Chapels to the Blessed Virgin was introduced
+into this country during the twelfth century, shortly after the monastic
+orders had gained the supremacy over the parochial clergy. These
+buildings were generally founded not only to satisfy the spirit of the
+age, which demanded the veneration of the Mother of our Lord, but also
+to afford the necessary accommodation at the east end for the increased
+number of clergy. The founders, moreover, hoped to secure an
+augmentation of the revenues, by the offerings of the faithful at the
+shrines of the new Chapels, as appears to have been the case at
+Walsingham, Norfolk; All Hallows, Barking; and S. Stephen's,
+Westminster. The building, in many instances, became the depository of
+the relics of a saint. The Galilee Chapel at Durham, dedicated to
+S. Mary the Virgin in 1175, contains the bones of the Venerable Bede,
+the earliest historian of the Church of England, who died at
+Jarrow-on-Tyne, on the eve of Ascension Day, A.D. 735. These relics
+were translated, in 1370, from the tomb of S. Cuthbert, and placed in
+the Chapel, in a magnificent shrine of gold and silver. The Lady Chapel
+at Oxford contains the shrine of S. Frideswide, the daughter of the
+founder of the convent, and its first prioress, whose relics were
+translated from the north choir aisle in 1289. This Chapel is now called
+the Dormitory, as the remains of several deans and canons have been laid
+to rest within its walls.
+
+The Lady Chapel has frequently served as the mausoleum of saints,
+princes, noblemen, and dignitaries of the Church. The stately and
+magnificent edifice at Westminster, known as Henry the Seventh's Chapel,
+was built for this purpose in 1502, by the first Tudor monarch, on the
+site of the original Lady Chapel, erected by Henry III. in 1220. The
+royal founder, his wife, and other royal personages now await the
+resurrection in the tomb set up in this famous building. The Lady Chapel
+at S. Mary's, Warwick, which is said to be the chief ornament of that
+church, was also built as a tomb-house in 1443, by Richard Beauchamp,
+Earl of Warwick. Their desire to rest in the chapel, dedicated to the
+blessed Virgin, was closely associated with the idea which chiefly moved
+our forefathers to erect these buildings. They had been taught to
+believe in the invocation of saints, and were anxious to secure, for
+themselves and their dear ones, the mediation and intercession of the
+Mother of our Lord, whose influence with her Divine Son, they supposed,
+was all prevailing. So they founded these chapels in her honour, and
+solicited her good offices on their behalf by frequent services and
+prostrations before her image, which occupied the place of honour above
+"oure Ladye's Altar" crowned as the Queen of Heaven, and profusely
+adorned with splendid jewels and exquisite embroidery. They believed,
+moreover, that as she could succour the living, so she would prevail
+with her Son on behalf of the dead. These sacred buildings were,
+accordingly, used also as chantries, where masses were offered daily,
+and the intervention of "oure Ladye S. Mary" was solicited to secure the
+release of the souls of the faithful departed from the flames of
+purgatory, through which, it was supposed, they must pass, to be
+purified from all the defilements of their earthly course, and "made
+meet for the inheritance of the saints in light." In frescoes on the
+walls, and in paintings on the windows, the Virgin was represented,
+interceding for the souls of the faithful as they came forth to
+judgment.
+
+After the dissolution of monasteries by Henry VIII., and the suppression
+of chantries by Edward VI., many of these buildings shared the fate of
+the conventual churches to which they were attached. In some places the
+Lady Chapel was left to decay, and disappeared in the course of a few
+years, like that at Norwich, which fell into a ruinous condition as
+early as 1569. In other localities it was allowed to stand until the
+turbulent days of the Commonwealth, as at Peterborough, where it was
+taken down to supply materials for the reparation of the Cathedral,
+which had been greatly injured by Cromwell's soldiers. In several places
+it was appropriated to other uses, and even divested of its sacred
+character. The elegant chapel at Ely, erected 1321-49, and said to have
+been one of the most perfect buildings of that age, was assigned at the
+Reformation to the parishioners of Holy Trinity to serve as their Parish
+Church, and is now called Trinity Church. The splendid specimen at
+S. Albans was separated from the presbytery by a public thoroughfare,
+which was made through the antechapel, and a charter of Edward VI.
+transferred the sacred building to the authorities of the ancient
+Grammar School, and it was used as a schoolroom until the restoration in
+1870. At S. Mary Redcliffe, Bristol, the Lady Chapel has also been used
+for scholastic purposes, and at Waltham Abbey it has accommodated not
+only parochial schools but public meetings and petty sessions.
+
+Among existing Lady Chapels, King Henry the Seventh's Chapel occupies
+the first place for magnificence. The first Tudor monarch, in his
+anxiety to make his peace with God before his death, and to commemorate
+the union of the houses of York and Lancaster, determined to found a
+chapel in honour of the blessed Virgin, "in whom," he declares in his
+will, "hath ever been my most singulier trust and confidence, ... and by
+whom I have hitherto in al myne adversities ever had my special comforte
+and relief." He also made due provision for the celebration of masses
+and the distribution of alms "perpetually, for ever, while the world
+shall endure" for the welfare of his soul. The laying of the foundation
+stone is recorded by the ancient chronicler as follows: "On the 24th
+daie of January 1502/3 a quarter of an houre afore three of the clocke
+at after noone of the same daie, the first stone of our Ladie Chapell,
+within the monasterie of Westminster, was laid by the hands of John
+Islip, Abbot of the same monasterie ... and diverse others."[8] After
+its completion it was so universally admired, that Leland the antiquary
+describes it as "_orbis miraculum_"--the wonder of the world. About
+fifty years after its dedication the services, for which it was
+specially designed by its royal founder, were brought to an end by the
+Act of Parliament which suppressed the chantries throughout the kingdom,
+and then followed three centuries of gross neglect which reduced it to
+"an almost shapeless mass of ruins," as it was described in 1803. Four
+years later, in 1807, Dean Vincent obtained a parliamentary grant for
+the restoration of the building, and the necessary repairs were
+completed in 1822. The Chapel still retains much of its ancient
+splendour, and the elegant and elaborate ceiling is a marvel of
+architectural skill. It has been used since the year 1725 for the
+installation of the Knights of the Bath, and their banners are suspended
+over the old carved _misereres_ or _misericordes_ of the monks.
+
+ [Footnote 8: Holinshed.]
+
+"Ye Chappell of oure Ladye" at S. Alban's is also a most elegant
+specimen of the buildings, dedicated to the blessed Virgin. The
+foundations appear to have been laid by John de Hertford, abbot from
+1235 to 1260. But at the election of Hugh de Eversdone, in 1308, the
+walls had only reached the level of the underside of the window sills, a
+height of ten feet above the ground. During his rule he laboured so
+assiduously to complete the work, that in a short time he finished it.
+The building, at its dedication, was so rich in detail that it is
+described by ancient writers as "a magnificent sight." The work of Abbot
+Hugh included the exquisite carvings in stone, which represent about
+seventy different specimens of forms in nature. During its use as a
+Grammar School, from 1553 to 1870, the interior suffered much injury
+from the hands of the schoolboys, and was allowed to fall into a state
+of ruin and decay. Shortly after the removal of the School in 1870, a
+restoration was undertaken by the ladies of Hertfordshire, but their
+good intentions were not carried into effect, through lack of the
+necessary funds. Lord Grimthorp then generously came to the rescue, and
+through his munificence the Chapel has been thoroughly and judiciously
+restored. It now stands once more in all its glory, as a perfect gem of
+architecture and one of the most elegant Lady Chapels in Christendom.
+
+"Ye Chappell of oure Ladye" at Waltham Abbey is said to be one of the
+richest specimens of medival architecture in Essex. The building has
+been greatly defaced since the suppression of chantries, but still bears
+traces of its original glory. "The Lady Chapel," says the late Professor
+Freeman, "must have been a most beautiful specimen of its style, but few
+ancient structures have been more sedulously disfigured." It was erected
+before A.D. 1292, as, during that year, Roger Levenoth, an inhabitant,
+endowed the chantry, with a house and 100 acres of land in Roydon. The
+Chapel was in a flourishing condition in the reign of Edward III., as we
+find from the return made in obedience to the royal order, which was
+issued to the master of the ceremonies of every guild and chantry in the
+King's dominions. In the Court language of that period, which was
+Norman French, Roger Harrof and John de Poley, the chantry priests, are
+described as "meisters de la petit compaignie ordeigne al honor de Dieu
+et ure Donne seyncte Marie en la Ville de Waltham seynte croice." The
+architect selected, as the site of the building, the space formed by the
+easternmost bay of the south aisle of the nave and the western side of
+the south transept. This peculiar position indicates that it was not the
+work of the monks, but that of the parishioners, who were allowed the
+use of the nave as their parish church from the days of King Harold II.,
+the founder. A well-known antiquarian writes: "It seems to have been
+built by the parishioners, and not by the abbot and convent, and its
+position is due to its occupying the only available spot, and where only
+two walls wanted building. A similar case occurs at Rochester. Where the
+Abbey built the Lady Chapel it was usually east of the transept--at the
+east end if there was room, at the north side if otherwise."[9] The
+parishioners could not erect their Lady Chapel at the east end, because
+the choir or presbytery had been used as the monastic church from the
+days of Henry II., who, to atone for the massacre of Thomas Becket,
+Archbishop of Canterbury, changed the secular foundation of Harold, and
+introduced an abbot and monks of the Augustinian order. Another Lady
+Chapel had probably been erected at the east end for the use of the
+monks, in accordance with the custom of the age, but this shared the
+destruction which befell the whole of the eastern portion of the church
+after the dissolution of the monastery in 1540. The preservation of the
+parish Lady Chapel is therefore due to its position at the west of the
+presbytery. In a transcript by Peter le Neve, Norroy King at Arms, 1698,
+it is stated that a chapel was dedicated at Waltham in the year 1188, by
+William de Vere, Bishop of Hereford, "in honore Dei [et glorios
+Virginis Mariae] et B. Martyris atque pontificis Thomae nomine."[10]
+This has led to the conjecture that reference is made to the existing
+building,[11] or to that which formerly stood at the east end.[12] But
+the original Waltham manuscript shows that it does not refer to a Lady
+Chapel at all, but to the Chapel of S. Thomas of Canterbury.[13]
+
+ [Footnote 9: W. H. St. John Hope, F.S.A.]
+ [Footnote 10: Harl. MS. 6974, fol. 106.]
+ [Footnote 11: Gentleman's Magazine, April, 1860, and May, 1864.]
+ [Footnote 12: The Builder, April 2, 1898.]
+ [Footnote 13: Harl. MS. 391, fol. 100.]
+
+The masonry of the exterior of the two walls erected when the Chapel was
+founded, consists of alternating bands of stone, squared bricks, and
+flint, so that it produces a "poly-chromatic effect."[14] There are
+three large buttresses of considerable projection, with pedimented
+sets-off and slopes, one being situated at the south-west angle, and the
+other two on the south of the building. Two smaller buttresses also
+occupy a place on the south. Niches, with pedestals for images, are
+still standing in the primary buttresses.
+
+ [Footnote 14: Professor Freeman.]
+
+The interior of the Chapel measures 41 feet 7 inches in length, 23 feet
+in breadth, and 23 feet in height. It is approached by a steep ascent of
+nine long narrow stone steps, which are situated near the south-west
+buttress. The ancient doorway is beautifully decorated with ball
+flowers. The floor stands at an elevation of nearly five feet above the
+floor of the chancel, an arrangement which appears to be peculiar to
+Waltham. It was apparently built at this high level to add to the
+loftiness of the crypt below, which was a capacious chamber of much
+importance in olden times, and consists of two wide bays of
+quadripartite vaulting. There is no way of access from the interior of
+the Church, but "the chapel is connected with the south aisle by a
+single arch of poor and ordinary architecture, a sad contrast to the
+glorious Romanesque work of the nave."[15] At the west end there is a
+large and beautiful six-light, square-headed window, with a rich and
+peculiar arrangement of a double plane of tracery, the inner plane
+consisting of three arches. This window, and the four elegant windows of
+three lights on the south side, are supposed to have been filled with
+stained glass, like that of the Chapter House at York Minster, and other
+buildings of the same period. At the extreme south-east of the building
+the remains of the ancient sedilia and piscina may still be seen. The
+walls were adorned with distemper paintings, chocolate coloured
+vine-leaves on a yellow ground running round the spandrels and windows.
+This decoration probably included a series of paintings, representing
+scenes in the life of the Mother of our Lord, and concluding with her
+assumption and coronation as the Queen of Heaven. There was also a
+representation of the Last Judgment in which "Our Lady" occupied the
+place of honour near her Divine Son and Lord, interceding for the
+faithful as they appeared before their Judge. On the removal of the
+plaster from the east wall during the restoration in 1875, the remains
+of a fresco of "the Doom" were discovered, and here are depicted the
+Judge of all mankind in the scarlet robes of majesty, the Virgin as
+intercessor, S. Michael the Archangel, presiding over the balances in
+which souls are weighed, the Apostles as assessors, bishops and abbots
+with the keys of S. Peter, admitting the faithful into the Holy Catholic
+Church, human forms emerging from the grave, the path of life, the
+chains of everlasting darkness, demons clothed in flames, and the jaws
+of hell. The space under this fresco was probably occupied by beautiful
+statuary, the image of the blessed Virgin standing in the centre,
+immediately above the altar of "Our Ladye." At the dissolution of the
+monastery "a table of imagery of the xii. apostles," belonging to this
+Chapel, was valued at ten shillings. A few fragments of statuary,
+supposed to have formed part of this decoration, were discovered during
+the restoration of the Abbey Church in 1860, and have been inserted in
+the south-east wall of the chancel. These relics of the splendid past
+include the mutilated stone figures of four saints, probably the
+evangelists, beautifully carved, and a representation of the crucifixion
+in black marble, but the ornament of precious metal, with which it was
+adorned, has long since disappeared.
+
+ [Footnote 15: Professor Freeman.]
+
+The altars, desks, and tables in the Lady Chapel were covered with
+plates of silver, as in the crypt beneath, which was also, in those
+days, a splendid chantry, served by its own priest, who was called "the
+Charnel Priest." The sacramental vessels and plate, which were of great
+value, were sold after the suppression. Dr. Thomas Fuller, Incumbent of
+Waltham Abbey in 1648, gives the following extracts from the
+churchwarden's accounts: "1549. _Imprimis._--Sold the silver plate which
+was on the desk in the charnel, weighing five ounces, for twenty-five
+shillings. Guess," adds the historian, "the gallantry of our church by
+this (presuming all the rest in proportionable equipage) when the desk
+whereon the priest read was inlaid with plate of silver." "1551.
+_Item._--Received for two hundred seventy-one ounces of plate, sold at
+several times for the best advantage, sixty-seven pound fourteen
+shillings and ninepence."[16] The inventory of goods made by order of
+Henry VIII. also mentions "iiii. tables [of oure Ladye] plated with
+sylver and gylte, every one of them with ii. folding leves." The Chapel
+was furnished besides with "a lytell payre of organes," valued at xxs.,
+at the dissolution of the monastery, when Thomas Tallis, the father of
+English church music, was organist of the Abbey Church, and presided at
+the "greate large payre of organes" in the Choir. He was assisted by
+John Boston, of Waltham, who probably performed on the smaller
+instrument in the Lady Chapel. Both names are mentioned in the pension
+list, Tallis receiving xxs. for wages and xxs. reward, and Boston iiis.
+for wages and iiis. reward.
+
+ [Footnote 16: History of Waltham Abbey, cap. 5.]
+
+A large number of wax tapers and candles was consumed annually at the
+various services held in the Lady Chapel and Crypt. In the return made
+by Sir Roger Harrop and Sir John de Poley, masters of the two chantries
+in the reign of Edward III., it is stated that every man and woman in
+this guild paid a yearly subscription of sixpence towards the expenses,
+and at the feasts of "oure Ladye" all "Christiens" of the company gave
+five burning tapers (_tapres ardant_); in honour of our Lord four large
+torches; and on other special occasions fifteen tapers. Lights were also
+kept burning during the solemn requiem and funeral services, when
+prayers were offered that perpetual light might shine upon the souls of
+the departed. It is most likely that this impressive ceremonial had been
+observed in both chantries, when the body of Queen Eleanor rested for
+the night in the Abbey Church on its way to Westminster, and again when
+the remains of her royal consort, Edward I., were deposited for three
+months before the tomb of Harold. The wax in stock for these memorial
+services at the suppression was sold by the churchwardens as follows:
+"_Item._--Sold so much wax as amounts to twenty six shillings."
+Dr. Fuller remarks on this transaction, "So thrifty the wardens that
+they bought not candles and tapers ready made, but bought the wax at the
+best hand and paid poor people for the making of them. Now they sold
+their magazine of wax as useless. Under the Reformation more light and
+fewer candles."[17]
+
+ [Footnote 17: History of Waltham Abbey, cap. v.]
+
+In the days of the chantry, lands, tenements, and other gifts were
+presented and bequeathed that "obits" or prayers for the dead might be
+offered before the altar and image of "oure Ladye." Dr. Fuller gives the
+following account of "obits" at Waltham: "The charge of an obit was two
+shillings and two pence; and, if any be curious to have the particulars
+thereof, it was thus expended: to the parish priest, three pence; to our
+Lady's priest, three pence; to the charnel priest, threepence; to the
+two clerks, four pence; to the children (these I conceive choristers)
+three pence; to the sexton, two pence; to the bellman, two pence; for
+two tapers, two pence; for oblation, two pence. O, the reasonable rates
+at Waltham! Two shillings and two pence for an obit, the price whereof
+in S. Paul's, in London, was forty shillings! For, forsooth, the higher
+the church, the holier the service, the dearer the price, though he had
+given too much that had given but thanks for such vanities. To defray
+the expenses of these obits, the parties prayed for, or their executors,
+left lands, houses, or stock to the churchwardens."[18] These obits were
+abolished when the chantries were suppressed in the first year of the
+reign of King Edward VI. "Now," says Dr. Fuller, "was the brotherhood
+in the church dissolved, consisting as formerly of three priests, three
+choristers, and two sextons; and the rich plate belonging to them was
+sold for the good of the parish. Superstition by degrees being banished
+out of the church, we hear no more of prayers and masses for the dead.
+Every obit now had its own obit, and fully expired; the lands formerly
+given thereunto being employed to more charitable uses."[19]
+
+ [Footnote 18: Cap. iv.]
+ [Footnote 19: Cap. v.]
+
+Since the suppression both chantries have been stripped of almost all
+their glory. The beautiful statuary in the Lady Chapel has disappeared,
+the decorated walls were covered with plaster, the west window blocked
+up, three of the elegant south windows were partly bricked up, and the
+fourth was converted into a door-way. The building was entirely
+separated from the Church by a wall of lath and plaster, and the west
+front obscured by the erection of an unsightly porch, which also
+concealed from view the grand south Norman entrance to the Abbey Church.
+The exterior walls were covered with cement, in imitation of classic
+rustic work. The Chapel has been used during the last three centuries
+for various purposes, some of which were degrading in the extreme to its
+sacred character. It has been used as a vestry, parochial schoolroom and
+lending library, also for public meetings and petty sessions, and, in
+its darkest days, as a store-room. The crypt has also passed through
+many changes, and has been stripped of its original splendour. It
+retained much of its beauty for a century after the suppression, as Dr.
+Fuller writes during his incumbency:--"To the south side of the Church
+is joined a chapel, formerly our Lady's, now a school-house, and under
+it an arched charnel-house, the fairest that I ever saw."[20] This
+beautiful chantry, which is partly underground, has been used since as a
+sepulchre for the dead, a prison cell for the living,[21] a receptacle
+for human bones, a coal cellar and heating chamber.
+
+ [Footnote 20: History of Waltham Abbey, cap. I., 9.]
+ [Footnote 21: The Quakers were incarcerated here during
+ the reign of Charles II.]
+
+The Lady Chapel resumed its sacred character in 1876, after it had been
+carefully restored by Sir T. Fowell Buxton, Bart., K.C.M.G.[22] whose
+seat, Warlies Park, is situated in the parish. The modern porch was
+removed from the west end, the large arch in the south wall of the
+Church re-opened, and the five elegant windows were made good. A
+splendidly carved memorial screen has since been erected under the arch
+by the parishioners, and some beautifully carved altar rails set up at
+the east end. The arms of the Abbey and Parish of Waltham Holy Cross are
+represented on the screen, namely, two angels exalting the Cross. The
+appearance of the interior is, however, still mean and bare, when
+compared with its former magnificence, although so much has been done to
+rescue from a state of degradation and neglect, this interesting relic
+of medival times, "ye Chappell of oure Ladye."
+
+ [Footnote 22: Now Governor General of South Australia.]
+
+
+
+
+Some Famous Spires.
+
+By John T. Page.
+
+
+It is practically impossible to point to the exact date when spires
+first assumed a place in the category of ecclesiastical architecture.
+They belong to the Gothic style, and like the pointed arch were evolved
+rather than created. The low pointed roof of the tower gradually gave
+place to a more tapering finish, but the transition was by no means
+progressive, and cannot be clearly traced. Some of the earliest attempts
+at spire-building were uncouth and ungraceful, and even in these days
+the addition of a spire to a modern church does not necessarily add to
+its beauty. This is nearly always the case where an undue regard is paid
+to ornamentation, either at the base, or on the surface of the spire
+itself. Undoubtedly the most beautiful spires are those which at once
+spring clear from the summit of the tower and gradually rise needle-like
+towards the blue vault of heaven.
+
+By far the greater number of our principal spires date from the
+fourteenth century--a time when spire-building appears to have reached
+the zenith of its glory. Splendour and loftiness combine to render the
+examples of this period distinguished above those of any other.
+
+Northamptonshire has been well termed the county of "Squires and
+Spires," and it is probably within its borders that the largest number
+of really beautiful spires may be found. A journey from Northampton to
+Peterborough along the Nene Valley is never to be forgotten for the
+continually recurring spires which greet the eye of the traveller at
+almost every point. Rushden, Higham Ferrers, Irchester, Raunds,
+Stanwick, Oundle, Finedon, Aldwinckle S. Peter's, Barnwell S. Andrew,
+and many others all combine to render the term "Valley of Spires"
+peculiarly appropriate to this district.
+
+These spires of course cover a wide area. The two finest groups of
+spires are those of Coventry and Lichfield. When the cathedral at
+Coventry, with its three spires, was in existence in immediate proximity
+to the churches of S. Michael's and Holy Trinity, the group formed "a
+picture not to be surpassed in England," and even now, with Christ
+Church added, the "Ladies of the Vale," of Lichfield, suffer somewhat
+in comparison.
+
+In point of height the cathedral spires of Salisbury and Norwich hold
+their own, while for beauty of outline Louth must be mentioned, and for
+elaborateness of detail the spire of Grantham.
+
+It now remains to give a cursory glance at some of our most famous
+spires, and to endeavour to enumerate some of their chief
+characteristics.
+
+The spire of Salisbury Cathedral rises from the centre of the main
+transept to a height of 410 feet. This is, without doubt, the tallest of
+our English spires.[23] It is octagonal in shape, and springs from four
+pinnacles. The surface is enriched with three bands of quatre-foiled
+work, and the angles are decorated throughout with ball-flower ornament.
+From a storm in 1703 it received some damage, and was, under the
+direction of Sir Christopher Wren, braced with ironwork. It does not
+appear to have moved since then, but from experiments made in 1740 it
+was found to be out of the perpendicular 24 inches to the south, and
+16 inches to the west. On the 21st of June, 1741, it was struck by
+lightning and set on fire, but did not receive any great damage, and in
+1827, by means of an ingenious wicker-work contrivance suspended from
+the top, extensive repairs were carried out. The name of the architect
+who conceived this lofty tower is unknown, but the date of its erection
+was probably at the beginning of the fourteenth century.
+
+ [Footnote 23: The spire of Old Saint Paul's, which dated from
+ the thirteenth century, rose to a height of 520 feet.
+ It was destroyed by lightning on the 4th of June, 1561.
+ The spire of Lincoln Cathedral measured 524 feet, and
+ was destroyed in 1548. These are the two highest spires
+ which have ever been erected in England.]
+
+The spire of Norwich Cathedral rises to a height of 315 feet, and on a
+clear day can be seen for a distance of twenty miles. It was probably
+built by Bishop Percy in the latter half of the fourteenth century.
+About one hundred years after, it was struck by lightning, but the
+damage was speedily repaired. In 1629 the upper part was blown down, and
+was re-built in 1633.
+
+The three spires of Coventry are those of S. Michael's, Holy Trinity,
+and Christ Church. Of these, S. Michael's is the chief, being 303 feet
+high. Amongst parish churches, it is therefore the tallest. The base
+consists of a lantern flanked by four pinnacles, to which it is
+connected by flying buttresses. Its erection was commenced in the year
+1373, and completed in 1394. At the restoration of the church, which
+took place in 1885, the tower was found to have been erected on the edge
+of an old quarry, and it cost no less a sum than 17,000 to add a new
+foundation. During the most critical period of the work the structure
+visibly moved, and the apex of the spire now leans 3ft. 5in. out of the
+perpendicular towards the north-west.
+
+ [Illustration: LOUTH CHURCH SPIRE.]
+
+Holy Trinity spire is 237 feet high, and much less ornate than
+S. Michael's. During a violent tempest of "wind, thunder, and
+earthquake," which occurred on the 24th of January, 1665, it was
+overthrown, and much injury was done to the church in consequence. The
+re-building was finished in 1668. It has been completely restored in
+recent years.
+
+The spire of Christ Church is some little distance away from the other
+two. It is octagonal in shape, and rises from an embattled tower to a
+height of 230 feet. It was restored in 1888.
+
+Lichfield Cathedral contains three spires within its precincts. The
+grouping is, therefore, more uniform than that of Coventry, although the
+general effect is not thereby accentuated. The central spire rises to a
+height of 258 feet, and the two which grace the west front are each 183
+feet high. In the time of the great civil war, when Lichfield was
+besieged, the central spire was demolished. After the Restoration, it
+was re-built by good old Dr. Hackett.
+
+The spire of Chichester Cathedral, built in the fourteenth century over
+a rotten sub-structure, was destroyed by its own weight in 1861. It was
+271 feet high, and has now been re-built in its original style on a
+slightly higher tower. The story of its fall has often been told. On the
+night of Wednesday, the 20th of February, 1861, a heavy gale occurred.
+The next day, about twenty minutes past one o'clock, the spire was
+observed to suddenly lean towards the south-west, and then to right
+itself again. Soon after, it disappeared into the body of the cathedral,
+sliding down like the folding of a telescope. Only the coping-stone and
+the weather-vane fell outside, the rest of the masonry formed a huge
+cairn in the centre of the edifice, which was practically cut into four
+portions by the wreck. The present spire was completed in 1867.
+
+In Lincolnshire there are two remarkable spires at Louth and Grantham.
+The one at Louth rises to a height of 294 feet. At the corners of the
+tower are four tall turret pinnacles to which the spire is connected by
+flying buttresses. In 1843 it was struck by lightning; steps were at
+once taken for its restoration, which was completed three years later.
+
+Grantham spire is octagonal in shape, and 285 feet in height. It is very
+light and graceful in appearance, and is richly ornamented with
+sculpture. It suffered from lightning in 1797, and again in 1882. Since
+the latter date sixteen feet of the masonry has been removed from the
+summit and re-built.
+
+The church of S. Mary Redcliffe, Bristol, has been aptly termed by the
+poet Chatterton, "the pride of Bristowe and the Western land." The spire
+rises to a height of 300 feet, and has lately been restored at a cost of
+upwards of 50,000. In 1445, during a storm, the greater part of the
+original spire fell through the roof of the church, and for about four
+centuries it remained in a truncated state, although the damage done to
+the interior was speedily repaired.
+
+The spire of S. Mary's, Shrewsbury, is 220 feet high, and rises from an
+embattled tower, the four corners of which contain crocketed pinnacles.
+During a gale on the night of Sunday, the 11th of February, 1894, about
+50 feet of the masonry of the spire crashed through the church roof and
+did enormous damage. This has, however, since been repaired. A memorial
+stone on the west wall of the tower tells how one Thomas Cadman, was
+killed on the 2nd of February, 1739, when attempting to descend from the
+spire by a rope.
+
+For elaborateness of detail, the spire of S. Mary the Virgin, Oxford,
+surpasses all others in this country. Its apex is some 90 feet from the
+ground, and around the base of the spire clusters a mass of richly
+decorated pinnacles, small spirelets, and canopies containing statues.
+The effect is picturesque in the extreme, and lends to the town of
+Oxford a unique charm. Its conception dates from the fourteenth century,
+but it has been much restored and added to since.
+
+Of the Northamptonshire spires, Oundle is the loftiest, being 210 feet
+high. It bears date 1634, but this evidently refers to a re-building. It
+was partly taken down again and rebuilt in 1874. It is hexagonal in
+shape, and the angles are crocketed. Raunds church is surmounted by an
+octagonal broach spire 186 feet high. It was struck by lightning on the
+31st of July, 1826, and about 30 feet of the masonry was shattered. This
+was at once rebuilt at a cost of 1,737 15s. 3d. The octagonal spire of
+Higham Ferrers is 170 feet high, and was rebuilt after destruction by a
+storm of wind in 1632. Rushden spire is an octagon 192 feet high, and
+richly crocketed. At its base flying buttresses connect it with
+pinnacles at the corners of the tower. The spire at Finedon rises from
+an embattled tower to a height of 133 feet; that of Stanwick is 156 feet
+high, and that of Irchester 152 feet.
+
+Space forbids more than a passing allusion to the fine spires of
+Newcastle Cathedral, S. Mary de Castro, Leicester, Ross, Herefordshire,
+and Olney, Bucks. The latter rises to a height of 185 feet. At its
+summit is a weathercock which, when taken down for regilding in 1884,
+was found to contain the following triplet--
+
+ I never crow,
+ But stand to show
+ Where winds do blow.
+
+Several of the spires which have been mentioned are perceptibly out of
+the perpendicular, but in this respect the "tall twisted spire of
+Chesterfield has no rival either in shape or pose." It is no less than
+230 feet high, and the wonder to many is that it has for so long
+maintained its equilibrium. Various conjectures have been made to
+account for the grotesque twist which the spire assumes; but none of
+these seems so likely as that which accounts for it by the combined
+action of age, wind, and sun. There are those who aver that it never was
+straight, and never will be, and one such person even goes so far as to
+attempt this statement in rhyme as follows:--
+
+ "Whichever way you turn your eye
+ It always seems to be awry,
+ Pray can you tell the reason why?
+ The only reason known of weight
+ Is that the thing was never straight,
+ Nor know the people where to go
+ To find the man to make it so."
+
+However this may be, it is satisfactory to note that a movement has
+recently been set on foot to collect subscriptions towards its much
+needed repair.
+
+When speaking of Salisbury Cathedral spire, allusion was made to the
+repairs being carried out from a wicker-work contrivance suspended from
+the top. This was not the first time that wicker-work had been used for
+such a purpose, for in 1787 the spire at S. Mary's, Islington, was
+entirely encased in a cage composed of willow, hazel, and other sticks,
+while undergoing repair. An ingenious basket-maker of S. Albans, named
+Birch, carried out the work, and constructed a spiral staircase inside
+the cage. His contract was to do the work for 20 paid down, and to be
+allowed to charge sixpence a head to any sightseers who liked to mount
+to the top. It is said that in this way he gained some two or three
+pounds a day above his contract.
+
+People and steeple rhymes are by no means uncommon; perhaps the most
+spiteful is that relating to an Essex village:--
+
+ "Ugley church, Ugley steeple,
+ Ugley parson, Ugley people."
+
+The Yorkshire village of Raskelfe is usually called Rascall, and an old
+rhyme says:--
+
+ "A wooden church, a wooden steeple,
+ Rascally church, rascally people."
+
+Mr. William Andrews, in his "Antiquities and Curiosities of the Church"
+(London, 1897), gives many examples of "People and Steeple Rhymes."
+
+There is a never-ending romance connected with the subject of spires.
+Every one possesses some story or legend. Spirits are supposed to
+inhabit their gloomy recesses, and are even credited with their
+construction. There is certainly an uncanny feeling connected with the
+interior of a spire, even on a sunny summer's day, and given sufficient
+stress of howling winds and gloomy darkness, one can almost imagine a
+situation conducive to the acutest kind of devilry. So much for the
+interior of spires. What sensations may be produced by climbing the
+exterior is given to few to experience. The vast majority of mankind
+must perforce content themselves with a position on _terra firma_,
+whence they may with pleasure and safety combined behold
+
+ "----the spires that glow so bright
+ In front of yonder setting sun."
+
+
+
+
+The Five of Spades and the Church of Ashton-under-Lyne.
+
+By John Eglington Bailey, F.S.A.
+
+
+On the old tower of the church of Ashton-under-Lyne there was formerly
+an old inscription, which incidently testifies to the popularity of
+cards in England at a period when the notices of that fascinating means
+of diversion are both few and of doubtful import. Cards were given to
+Europe by the Saracens at the end of the fourteenth century, and the
+knowledge of their use extended itself from France to Greece. The French
+clergy were so engrossed by the pastime that the Synod of Langres, 1404,
+forbad it as unclerical. At Bologna, in 1420, S. Bernardin of Sienna
+preached with such effect against the gambling which was indulged in,
+that his hearers made on the spot a large bonfire with packs of cards
+taken out of their pockets. Under the word [Greek: Chartia] Du Cange
+quotes extracts from two Greek writers, which show that cards were
+popular in Greece before 1498. Chaucer, who died in 1400, and who
+indirectly depicted much of the every-day life of his countrymen, does
+not once mention cards. But they begin to be noticed about the time of
+Edward IV. and Henry VI. The former king prohibited the importation of
+"cards for playing," in order to protect the English manufacture of
+them. An old ale-wife or brewer, in one of the Chester plays or
+mysteries, is introduced in a scene in Hell, when one of the devils thus
+addresses her:--
+
+ Welcome, deare darlinge, to endless bale,
+ Usinge cardes, dice, and cuppes smale
+ With many false other, to sell thy ale
+ Now thou shalte have a feaste.
+
+A more interesting notice of cards occurs in the _Paston Letters_, where
+Margery Paston, writing on "Crestemes Evyn" of the year 1484, tells her
+husband that she had sent their eldest son to Lady Morley (the widow of
+William Lovel, Lord Morley), "to hav knolage wat sports wer husyd [used]
+in her hows in Kyrstemesse next folloyng aftyr the decysse of my lord,
+her husbond [who died 26th July, 1476]; and sche sayd that ther wer non
+dysgysyngs [guisings], ner harpyng, ner lutyng, ner syngyn, ner non
+lowde dysports; but pleyng at the tabyllys, and schesse, and cards:
+sweche dysports sche gaue her folkys leve to play and non odyr." The
+lady adds that the youth did his errand right well, and that she sent
+the like message by a younger son to Lady Stapleton, whose lord had died
+in 1466. "Sche seyd according to my Lady Morlees seyng in that, and as
+sche hadde seyn husyd in places of worschip [_i.e._, of distinction:
+good families] ther as [= where] sche hath beyn." This letter opens up
+an interesting view of the amusements which at the time were introduced
+into the houses of the nobility and gentry during Christmas-tide. At
+that festival cards from the first formed one of the chief amusements.
+Henry VII., who was a great card player, forbad cards to be used except
+during the Christmas holidays. Their ancient association with Christmas
+is seen in the kindness of Sir Roger de Coverley, who was in the habit
+of sending round to each of his cottagers "a string of hogs'-puddings
+and a pack of cards," that good old squire being doubtless of the
+opinion of Dr. Johnson, who, with a deeper human insight than
+S. Bernardin and Henry VII., could see the usefulness of such a pastime:
+"It generates kindness and consolidates society."
+
+The inscription I have alluded to takes us back to the reign of an
+earlier English king than those named--Henry V., who reigned 1413-1422.
+In his time, it seems, viz., in 1413, the steeple of Ashton Church was
+a-building; when a certain butcher, Alexander Hyll, playing at noddy
+with a companion, doubtless in the neighbourhood of the church, swore
+that if the dealer turned up _the five of spades_ he would build a foot
+of the steeple. The very card was turned up! Hyll, like a good Catholic,
+performed his promise, and had his name carved, a butcher's cleaver
+being put before _Alexander_, and the five of spades before _Hyll_. A
+new tower was erected in 1516, when the church was enlarged; but the
+stone containing the curious inscription was somewhere retained, for it
+was visible in the time of Robert Dodsworth, the industrious Yorkshire
+antiquary, and the projector and co-worker with Dugdale of the
+_Monasticon_. Dodsworth, being at Ashton on the 2nd of April, 1639,
+copied the inscription, stating that it was on the church steeple. He
+wrote down the tradition, adding that its truth was attested by Henry
+Fairfax, then rector there, second son of Thomas Fairfax, Baron de
+Cameron (Dodsworth's MSS. in Bibl. Bodl., vol. 155, fol. 116). The
+eldest son of Lord Fairfax was Ferdinando, the celebrated general of the
+Commonwealth, and the generous patron of Dodsworth. Henry, the younger
+son, at whose rectory-house Dodsworth was entertained on the occasion of
+his Lancashire visit, is described by Oley (in his preface to George
+Herbert's _Country Parson_) as "a regular and sober fellow of Trinity
+College in Cambridge, and afterwards rector of Bolton Percy in
+Yorkshire." He held, besides, the rectory of Ashton from, at least, 1623
+till 1645, when he was forcibly ejected; and that of Newton Kyme. He was
+a correspondent of Daniel King, author of _The Vale Royal_, for he had
+antiquarian tastes like his brother. He died at Bolton Percy 6th April,
+1665. The tower of Ashton Church, as Rector Fairfax knew it, was taken
+down and re-built in 1818, by which time all recollection of that
+ancient piece of cartomancy in connection with the steeple had passed
+out of mind. Let it be hoped that while the tradition was lively,
+pleasanter things were said of Hyll, when the five of spades was thrown
+upon the card tables of Ashton, than assailed the name of Dalrymple when
+the nine of diamonds--the curse of Scotland--came under the view of
+Tory Scotchmen. We may bestow on Hyll the card-player's epitaph:--
+
+ His card is cut--long days he shuffled through
+ The game of life--he dealt as others do:
+ Though he by honours tells not its amount,
+ When the last trump is played his tricks will count.
+
+"Noddy" is, of course, the very attractive game of "cribbage." A great
+aunt of mine still living at Ashbourne, with whom I used to play when a
+boy, always called it by that name. It is one of the Court games,
+_temp._ James I., noticed by Sir John Harrington:--
+
+ Now noddy followed next, as well it might,
+ Although it should have gone before of right;
+ At which I say, I name not anybody,
+ One never had the knave yet laid for noddy.
+
+The same is also alluded to in a satirical poem, 1594, entitled, _Batt
+upon Batt_:--
+
+ Shew me a man can turn up Noddy still,
+ And deal himself three fives, too, when he will;
+ Conclude with one and thirty, and a pair,
+ Never fail ten in Hock, and yet play fair;
+ If Batt be not that night, I lose my aim.
+
+
+
+
+Bells and their Messages.
+
+By Edward Bradbury.
+
+
+Do not imagine that this is an essay on campanology, on change-ringing,
+grandsires, and triple bob-majors. Do not fancy that it will deal with
+carillons, the couvre-feu, or curfew bell, with the solemn Passing bell,
+the bell of the public crier, the jingling sleigh bell, the distant
+sheep bell, the noisy railway bell, the electric call bell, the frantic
+fire bell, the mellow, merry marriage peal, the sobbing muffled peal,
+the devout Angelus, or the silvery convent chimes that ring for prime
+and tierce, sext, nones, vespers, and compline. Do not conclude that it
+will describe bell-founding; and deal with the process of casting, with
+technical references to cope, and crook, and moulding, drawing the
+crucible, or tuning.
+
+It is of bells and their associations and inscriptions that we would
+write, the bells that are linked with our lives, and record the history
+of towns, communities, and nations; announcing feasts and fasts and
+funerals, interpreting with metal tongue rejoicings and sorrowings,
+jubilees and reverses; pans for victories by sea and land; knells for
+the death of kings and the leaders of men. As we write, the bells of our
+collegiate church are announcing with joyous clang the arrival of Her
+Majesty's Judge of Assize. Before many days have passed another bell in
+the same town will tell with solemn toll of the short shrift given by
+him to a pinioned culprit, the only mourner in his own funeral
+procession.
+
+Bells are sentient things. They are alike full of humour and pathos, of
+laughter and tears, of mirth and sadness, of gaiety and grief. One may
+pardon Toby Veck, in Charles Dickens' goblin story, for investing the
+bells in the church near his station with a strange and solemn
+character, and peopling the tower with dwarf phantoms, spirits, elfin
+creatures of the bells, of all aspects, shapes, characters, and
+occupations. "They were so mysterious, often heard and never seen, so
+high up, so far off, so full of such a deep, strong melody, that he
+regarded them with a species of awe; and sometimes, when he looked up at
+the dark, arched windows in the tower, he half expected to be beckoned
+to by something which was not a bell, and yet was what he had heard so
+often sounding in the chimes." The bells! The word carries sound and
+suggestion with it. It fills the air with waves of cadence. "Those
+Evening Bells" of Thomas Moore's song swing out undying echoes from
+Ashbourne Church steeple; Alfred Tennyson's bells "ring out the false,
+ring in the true" across the old year's snow, and his Christmas bells
+answer each other from hill to hill. There are the tragic bells that Sir
+Henry Irving hears as the haunted Mathias; "Les Cloches de Corneville"
+that agitate the morbid mind of the miser Gaspard; and the wild bells
+that Edgar Allen Poe has set ringing in Runic rhyme.
+
+"Bell," says the old German song, "thou soundest merrily when the bridal
+party to the church doth hie; thou soundest solemnly when, on Sabbath
+morn, the fields deserted lie; thou soundest merrily at evening, when
+bed-time draweth nigh; thou soundest mournfully, telling of the bitter
+parting that hath gone by! Say, how canst thou mourn or rejoice, that
+art but metal dull? And yet all our sorrowings and all our rejoicings
+thou art made to express!" In the words of the motto affixed to many
+old bells, they "rejoice with the joyful, and grieve with the
+sorrowful"; or, in the original Latin,
+
+ Gaudemus gaudentibus,
+ Dolemus dolentibus.
+
+An old monkish couplet makes the bell thus describe its uses--
+
+ Laudo Deum verum, plebem voco, congrego clerum:
+ Defuncto ploro, pestum fugo, festa decoro.
+
+"I praise the true God, call the people, convene the clergy; I mourn for
+the dead, drive away pestilence, and grace festivals." Who that
+possesses--to quote from Cowper--a soul "in sympathy with sweet sounds,"
+can listen unmoved to
+
+ ----the music of the village bells
+ Falling at intervals upon the ear,
+ In cadence sweet--now dying all away,
+ Now pealing loud again, and louder still,
+ Clear and sonorous, as the gale comes on.
+
+The same poet makes Alexander Selkirk lament on his solitary isle--
+
+ The sound of the church going bell
+ These valleys and rocks never heard,
+ Ne'er sigh'd at the sound of a knell,
+ Or smiled when a Sabbath appeared.
+
+Longfellow has several tender references to church bells. He sets the
+Bells of Lynn to ring a requiem of the dying day. He mounts the lofty
+tower of "the belfry old and brown" in the market place of Bruges--
+
+ Not a sound rose from the city at that early morning hour,
+ But I heard a heart of iron beating in the ancient tower.
+
+ From their nests beneath the rafters sang the swallows wild and high;
+ And the world, beneath me sleeping, seemed more distant than the sky.
+
+ Then most musical and solemn, bringing back the olden times,
+ With their strange unearthly changes rang the melancholy chimes.
+
+ Like the psalms from some old cloister, when the nuns sing in the
+ choir;
+ And the great bell tolled among them, like the chanting of a friar.
+
+ Visions of the days departed, shadowy phantoms filled my brain;
+ They who live in history only seemed to walk the earth again.
+
+Who does not remember Father Prout's lyric on "The Bells of Shandon"? We
+venture to quote the four delicious verses _in extenso_--
+
+ With deep affection and recollection
+ I often think of the Shandon bells,
+ Whose sounds so wild would, in days of childhood,
+ Fling round my cradle their magic spells--
+ On this I ponder where'er I wander,
+ And thus grow fonder, sweet Cork, of thee;
+ With thy bells of Shandon,
+ That sound so grand on
+ The pleasant waters of the River Lee.
+
+ I have heard bells chiming, full many a chime in
+ Tolling sublime in cathedral shrine;
+ While at a glib rate brass tongues would vibrate,
+ But all their music spoke naught to thine;
+ For memory dwelling on each proud swelling
+ Of thy belfry knelling its bold notes free,
+ Made the bells of Shandon
+ Sound far more grand on
+ The pleasant waters of the River Lee.
+
+ I have heard bells tolling "old Adrian's mole" in
+ Their thunder rolling from the Vatican,
+ With cymbals glorious, swinging uproarious
+ In the gorgeous turrets of Notre Dame;
+ But thy sounds were sweeter than the dome of Peter
+ Flings o'er the Tiber, pealing solemnly.
+ Oh! the bells of Shandon
+ Sound far more grand on
+ The pleasant waters of the River Lee.
+
+ There's a bell in Moscow, while on tower and kiosko,
+ In St. Sophia the Turkman gets,
+ And loud in air, calls men to prayer,
+ From the tapering summits of tall minarets,
+ Such empty phantom I freely grant them,
+ But there's an anthem more dear to me--
+ It's the bells of Shandon
+ That sound so grand on
+ The pleasant waters of the River Lee.
+
+"The curfew tolls the knell of parting day," in Gray's "Elegy," the best
+known, and, in its own line, the best poem in the English language.
+More dramatic is Southey's story of the warning bell that the Abbot of
+Aberbrothock placed on the Inchcape Rock. James Russell Lowell has a
+beautiful thought in his little poem "Masaccio"--
+
+ Out clanged the Ave Mary bells,
+ And to my heart this message came;
+ Each clamorous throat among them tells
+ What strong-souled martyrs died in flame,
+ To make it possible that thou
+ Should'st here with brother sinners bow.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Henceforth, when rings the health to those
+ Who live in story and in song,
+ O, nameless dead, who now repose
+ Safe in Oblivion's chambers strong,
+ One cup of recognition true
+ Shall silently be drained to you!
+
+In the belfry of Tideswell and of Hathersage, in the Peak of Derbyshire,
+are a set of rhymed bell-ringing laws. Those at Hathersage we give
+below; the Tideswell ones are almost word for word similar.
+
+ You gentlemen that here wish to ring,
+ See that these laws you keep in everything;
+ Or else be sure you must without delay
+ The penalty thereof to the ringers pay.
+ First, when you do into the bellhouse come,
+ Look if the ringers have convenient room,
+ For if you do be an hindrance unto them,
+ Fourpence you forfeit unto these gentlemen.
+ Next, if here you do intend to ring,
+ With hat or spur do not touch a string;
+ For if you do, your forfeit is for that
+ Just fourpence down to pay, or lose your hat.
+ If you a bell turn over, without delay
+ Fourpence unto the ringers you must pay;
+ Or, if you strike, miscall, or do abuse,
+ You must pay fourpence for the ringers' use.
+ For every oath here sworn, ere you go hence,
+ Unto the poor then you must pay twelve pence;
+ And if that you desire to be enrolled
+ A ringer here these orders keep and hold.
+ But whoso doth these orders disobey,
+ Unto the stocks we will take him straight way,
+ There to remain until he be willing
+ To pay his forfeit, and the clerk a shilling.
+
+Churchwardens' accounts abound with bell charges. We have before us the
+accounts of the churchwardens of Youlgreave, in the Peak of Derbyshire,
+for a period of a century and a half. Under the year 1604 we have "Item
+to the ringers on the Coronation Day (James I.), 2s. 6d.; for mending
+the Bels agaynst that day, 1s.; and for fatchinge the great bell yoke at
+Stanton hall, 6d." In 1605 there is "Item for a rope for a little bell,
+5d." In the following year is "Item to the Ringers the 5th day of
+August, when thanks was given to God for the delyvering of King James
+from the conspiracye of the Lord Gowyre, 5s." In 1613 we find the sum of
+6d. expended in purchasing "a stirropp for the fyrst bell wheele, 8d."
+The year 1614 is prolific in charges connected with the belfry, as the
+following enumeration will show: "Item for the bellefonder, his dinner,
+and his sonnes, with other chargs at the same time, 10d.; at the second
+coming of the sayd bellfonder, 9d.; at the taking downe of the bell,
+6d.; for castyng the fyrst bell, 4; for the surplus mettall which wee
+bought of the bellfounder because the new bell waeghed more than ye old,
+3 15s. 10d.; to the bellfounder's men, 4d.; for the carryage of our old
+bell to Chesterfield, 3s.; for carrying the great bell clapper to
+Chesterfield, 4d.; for carrying the new bell from Chesterfield, 2s. 8d.;
+to Nicholos Hibbert, for hanging the said bell, 1s. 1d.; to Nicholas
+Hibbert the younger, for amending the great bell yoke and wheele, 6d.;
+spent at Gybs house at the bellfounder's last coming, 3d.; for amending
+the great bell clapper, 10d."
+
+The inscriptions on church bells would make an interesting chapter. On
+the second bell at Aston-on-Trent appears in Lombardic capitals, the
+words, "Jhesus be our spede, 1590," and on the fourth bell is inscribed,
+"All men that heare my mournful sound, repent before you lye in ground,
+1661." The fourth bell of S. Werburgh's at Derby is inscribed--
+
+ My roaring sounde doth warning geve
+ That men cannot heare always lyve.--1605.
+
+The third bell at Allestree bears the words--
+
+ I to the church the living call,
+ And to the grave do summons all.--1781.
+
+The second bell on the old peal at Ashbourne was inscribed--
+
+ Sweetly to sing men do call
+ To feed on meats that feed the soul.
+
+The fifth bell at Dovebridge has the words: "Som rosa polsata monde
+Maria vocata, 1633." This is--according to the Rev. Dr. John Charles
+Cox--a corrupt reading of "Sum Rosa pulsata mundi Maria vocata," a
+legend occasionally found on pre-Reformation bells, and which may be
+thus Englished--
+
+ Rose of the world, I sound
+ Mary, my name, around.
+
+A similar inscription--similarly mis-spelt--occurs on the third bell at
+Ibstock, Leicestershire, the date of which is 1632. Mr. Sankey, of
+Marlborough College, gives it a graceful French rendering--
+
+ Ici je sonne et je m'appelle,
+ Marie, du monde la rose plus belle.
+
+The fourth bell at Coton-in-the-Elms has the inscription--
+
+ The bride and groom we greet
+ In holy wedlock joined,
+ Our sounds are emblems sweet
+ Of hearts in love combined.
+
+The sixth bell is inscribed--
+
+ The fleeting hours I tell,
+ I summon all to pray,
+ I toll the funeral knell,
+ I hail the festal day.
+
+The seventh bell at Castleton has the following legend--
+
+ When of departed hours we toll the knell,
+ Instruction take, and spend the future well.
+ James Harrison, Founder, 1803.
+
+The second bell at Monyash is inscribed: "Sca Maria o. p. n." (Sancta
+Maria ora pro nobis.)
+
+The old curfew custom is still kept up in the Peak district of
+Derbyshire, notably at Winster, where the bell is rung throughout
+November, December, January, and February at eight o'clock every work
+day evening, except on Saturdays, when the hour is seven. There are
+Sanctus bells at Tideswell, Hathersage, Beeley, Ashover, and other
+Derbyshire churches. All Saints' Church, at Derby ("All Saints," _i.e._,
+"the unknown good"), has a melodious set of chimes. They play the
+following tunes: Sunday, "Old One Hundred and Fourth" (Hanover); Monday,
+"The Lass of Patie's Mill"; Tuesday, "The Highland Lassie"; Wednesday,
+"The Shady Bowers"; Thursday, "The National Anthem"; Friday, Handel's
+"March in Scipio"; Saturday, "The Silken Garter." They all date from the
+last century.
+
+Church bells have the subtle charm of sentiment. When they swing in the
+hoary village tower, and send their mellifluous message across the
+country side and down the deep and devious valley, or when they make
+musical with mellow carillon the dreamy atmosphere of moss grown
+cathedral closes, they have a poetical influence. How pleasant it is to
+listen to the chimes which ring out from time to time from the towers
+of Notre Dame, in the city of Rubens, and from the Campanile at Venice!
+
+ Through the balmy air of night
+ How they ring out their delight!
+ From the molten golden notes,
+ And all in tune,
+ What a liquid ditty floats
+ To the turtle dove that listens, while she gloats
+ On the moon!
+
+Church bells in large towns, where one section of the community are
+night workers and seek their rest in the day-time, are by no means
+invested with sentiment. We have in our mind a church which is set in a
+dense population of railwaymen, engine drivers, stokers, guards,
+porters, &c. It possesses a particularly noisy peal of bells. They begin
+their brazen tintinnabulations at breakfast time, and ring on, at
+intervals, until past the supper hour. Sometimes the sound is a dismal
+monotone, as if the bellman had no heart for his work. At other times a
+number of stark mad Quasimodos seem to be pulling at the ropes to
+frighten the gilded cock on the vane into flapping flight. Sunday only
+brings an increase of the din, distracting all thought, destroying all
+conversation, defying all study, turning the blessed sense of hearing
+into a curse, and making you envy the deaf. It is well known that upon
+many persons in health the clangour of bells has a very depressing
+effect; but at night, when narcotics are given and the sick are wearied
+out, it is very easy to imagine how irritating these bells must be both
+to the invalids and their attendants. One is inclined to exclaim with
+the Frenchman--
+
+ Disturbers of the human race,
+ Whose charms are always ringing,
+ I wish the ropes were round your necks,
+ And you about them swinging.
+
+How very wise those Spanish innkeepers were who, in the olden time, used
+to make "ruido" an item in their bills, charging their guests with the
+noise they made!
+
+
+
+
+Stories about Bells.
+
+By J. Potter Briscoe, F.R.H.S.
+
+
+On the eve of the feast of Corpus Christi the choristers of Durham
+Cathedral ascend the tower, and, clad in their fluttering robes of
+white, sing the _Te Deum_. This custom is performed to commemorate the
+miraculous extinguishing of a conflagration on that night in the year
+1429. The legend goes that, whilst the monks were engaged in prayer at
+midnight, the belfry was struck by the electric current and set on fire.
+Though the flames continued to rage until the middle of the next day,
+the tower escaped serious damage, and the bells were uninjured--an
+escape which was imputed to the special interference of the
+incorruptible S. Cuthbert, who was enshrined in that cathedral. These
+are not the bells which now reverberate among the housetops on the steep
+banks of the Wear, they having been cast by Thomas Bartlett during the
+summer of 1631.
+
+The fine peal of bells in Limerick Cathedral were originally brought
+from Italy, having been manufactured by a young native, who devoted
+himself enthusiastically to the work, and who, after the toil of many
+years, succeeded in finishing a splendid peal, which answered all the
+critical requirements of his own musical ear. Upon these bells the
+artist greatly prided himself, and they were at length bought by the
+prior of a neighbouring convent at a very liberal price. With the
+proceeds of that sale the young Italian purchased a little villa, where,
+in the stillness of the evening, he could enjoy the sound of his own
+melodious bells from the convent cliff. Here he grew old in the bosom of
+his family and of domestic happiness. At length, in one of those feuds
+common to the period, the Italian became a sufferer amongst many others.
+He lost his all. After the passing of the storm, he found himself
+preserved alone amid the wreck of fortune, friends, family, and home.
+The bells too--his favourite bells--were carried off from the convent,
+and finally removed to Ireland. For a time their artificer became a
+wanderer over Europe; and at last, in the hope of soothing his troubled
+spirit, he formed the resolution of seeking the land to which those
+treasures of his memory had been conveyed. He sailed for Ireland.
+Proceeding up the Shannon one beautiful evening, which reminded him of
+his native Italy, his own bells suddenly struck upon his ear! Home, and
+all its loving ties, happiness, early recollections, all--all were in
+the sound, and went to his heart. His face was turned towards the
+cathedral in the attitude of intently listening. When the vessel reached
+its destination the Italian bellfounder was found to be a corpse!
+
+Odoceus, Bishop of Llandaff, removed the bells from his cathedral during
+a time of excommunication. Earlier still they are assumed to have been
+in use in Ireland as early as the time of S. Patrick, who died in 493.
+In those days much superstitious feeling, as in later ages, hung around
+the bells, and many sweetly pretty and very curious legends are known
+respecting them. Thus it is said S. Odoceus, of Llandaff, being thirsty
+after undergoing labour, and more accustomed to drink water than
+anything else, came to a fountain in the vale of Llandaff, not far from
+the church, that he might drink. Here he found women washing butter
+after the manner of the country. Sending to them his messengers and
+disciples they requested that they would accommodate them with a vessel
+that their pastor might drink therefrom. These mischievous girls
+replied, "We have no other cup besides that which we hold in our hands,"
+namely, the butter. The man of blessed memory taking it, formed one
+piece into the shape of a small bell, and drank from it. The story goes
+that it permanently remained in that form, so that it appeared to those
+who beheld it to consist altogether of the purest gold. It is preserved
+in the church at Llandaff, and it is said that, by touching it, health
+is given to the diseased.
+
+The bell of S. Mura was formerly regarded with superstitious reverence
+in Ireland, and any liquid drunk from it was believed to have peculiar
+properties in alleviating human suffering; hence the peasant women of
+the district in which it was long preserved particularly used it in
+cases of child-birth, and a serious disturbance was excited on a former
+attempt to sell it by its owner. Its legendary history relates that it
+descended from the sky ringing loudly, but as it approached the
+concourse of people who had assembled at the miraculous warning, the
+tongue detached itself and returned towards the skies; hence it was
+concluded that the bell was never to be profaned by sounding on earth,
+but was to be kept for purposes more holy and beneficent. This is said
+to have happened on the spot where once stood the famous Abbey of Fahan,
+near Innishowen, in county Donegal, founded in the seventh century by
+S. Mura, or Muranus.
+
+Mr. Robert Hunt, F.R.S., tells us that, in days long ago, the
+inhabitants of the parish of Forrabury--which does not cover a square
+mile, but which now includes the chief part of the town of Bocastle and
+its harbour--resolved to have a peal of bells which should rival those
+of the neighbouring church of Tintagel, which are said to have rung
+merrily at the marriage, and tolled solemnly at the death of Arthur. The
+bells were cast. The bells were blessed. The bells were shipped for
+Forrabury. Few voyages were more favourable. The ship glided, with a
+fair wind, along the northern shores of Cornwall, waiting for the tide
+to carry her safely into the harbour of Bottreaux. The vesper bells rang
+out at Tintagel. When he heard the blessed bell, the pilot devoutly
+crossed himself, and bending his knee, thanked God for the safe and
+quick voyage which they had made. The captain laughed at the
+superstition, as he called it, of the pilot, and swore that they had
+only to thank themselves for the speedy voyage, and that, with his own
+arm at the helm, and his judgment to guide them, they would soon have a
+happy landing. The pilot checked this profane speech. The wicked
+captain--and he swore more impiously than ever, that all was due to
+himself and his men--laughed to scorn the pilot's prayer. "May God
+forgive you," was the pilot's reply. Those who are familiar with the
+northern shores of Cornwall will know that sometimes a huge wave,
+generated by some mysterious power in the wide Atlantic, will roll on,
+overpowering everything by its weight and force. While yet the captain's
+oaths were heard, and while the inhabitants on the shore were looking
+out from the cliffs, expecting within an hour to see the vessel charged
+with their bells safe in their harbour, one of those vast swellings of
+the ocean was seen. Onward came the grand billow in all the terror of
+its might! The ship rose not upon the waters as it came onward! She was
+overwhelmed, and sank in an instant close to the land. As the vessel
+sank, the bells were heard tolling with a muffled sound, as if ringing
+the death knell of the ship and sailors, of whom the good pilot alone
+escaped with life. When storms are coming, and only then, the bells of
+Forrabury, with their dull muffled sound, are heard from beneath the
+heaving sea, a warning to the wicked. The tower has remained silent to
+this day.
+
+Passing through Massingham, in Lincolnshire, a long time ago, a
+traveller noticed three men sitting on a stile in the churchyard, and
+saying, "Come to church, Thompson!" "Come to church, Brown!" and so on.
+Surprised at this, the traveller asked what it meant. He was told that,
+having no bells, this was how they called folk to church. The traveller,
+remarking that it was a pity so fine a church should have no bells,
+asked the men if they could make three for the church, promising to pay
+for them himself. This they undertook to do. They were a tinker, a
+carpenter, and a shoemaker respectively. When the visitor came round
+that way again, he found the three men ringing three bells, which said
+"Ting, Tong, Pluff," being made respectively of tin, wood, and leather.
+
+There is a tradition that John Barton, the donor of the third bell at
+Brigstock, Northamptonshire, was one of several plaintiffs against Sir
+John Gouch to recover their rights of common upon certain lands in the
+neighbouring parish of Benefield, and that Sir John threatened to ruin
+him if he persisted in claiming his right. John Barton replied that he
+would leave a cow which, being pulled by the tail, would low three times
+a day, and would be heard all over the common when he (Sir John) and his
+heirs would have nothing to do there. Hence the gift of the bell, which
+was formerly rung at four in the morning, and at eleven at morning and
+at night. He is also said to have left means for paying for this daily
+ringing.
+
+One Christmas Eve the ringers of Witham-on-the-Hill left the bells
+standing for the purpose of partaking of refreshments at a tavern that
+stood opposite the church. One of their number, a little more thirsty
+than the rest, insisted that before going back to ring they should have
+another pitcher of ale. This being at length agreed to by his brother
+bell-ringers, the party remained to duly drain the last draught. Whilst
+they were drinking, the steeple fell. Whether this is merely a tapster's
+tale, or the sober statement of a remarkable fact, we are not in a
+position to state.
+
+From a curious and rare pamphlet on "Catholic Miracles," published in
+1825, we learn that a band of sacrilegious robbers, having broken into
+a monastery, proceeded out of bravado to ring a peal of bells, when,
+through prayers offered up by the "holy fathers," a miracle was wrought,
+and the robbers were unable to leave their hold on the ropes. This state
+of affairs was depicted by the inimitable George Cruikshank in a
+woodcut, impressions of which are given in our "Curiosities of the
+Belfry," (Hamilton).
+
+In the village of Tunstall, a few miles distant from Yarmouth, there is
+a clump of alder trees, familiarly known as "Hell Carr." Not far from
+these trees there is a pool of water having a boggy bottom, that goes by
+the name of "Hell Hole." A succession of bubbles are frequently seen
+floating on the surface of the water in summer time, a circumstance (as
+Mr. Glyde, the Norfolk antiquarian author, truly states) that can be
+accounted for very naturally; but the natives of the district maintain
+that these bubbles are the result of supernatural action, the cause of
+which is thus described. The tower of the church is in ruins. Tradition
+says that it was destroyed by fire, but that the bells were not injured
+by the calamity. The parson and the churchwarden each claimed the
+bells. While they were quarrelling, his Satanic Majesty carried out the
+disputed booty. The clergyman, however, not desiring to lose the booty,
+pursued and overtook the devil, who, in order to evade his clerical
+opponent, dived through the earth to his appointed dwelling-place,
+taking the bells with him. Tradition points to "Hell Hole" as the spot
+where this hurried departure took place. The villagers believe that the
+bubbles on the surface of the pool are caused by the continuous descent
+of the waters to the bottomless pit.
+
+ [Illustration: THE BELL OF ST. FILLAN.]
+
+In 1778 there was a bell belonging to the chapel of S. Fillan, which was
+in high reputation among the votaries of that saint in olden times. It
+was of an oblong shape, about a foot high, and was usually laid on a
+gravestone in the churchyard. Mad people were brought to it to effect a
+cure. They were first dipped into the "Saint's Pool," where certain
+ceremonies were performed, which partook of the character of Druidism
+and Roman Catholicism. The bell was placed in the chapel, where it
+remained, bound with ropes, all night. Next day it was placed upon the
+heads of the lunatics with great solemnity, but with what results
+"deponent sayeth not." It was the popular opinion that, if stolen, this
+bell would extricate itself from the hands of the thief and return home
+ringing all the way! The bell had ultimately to be kept under lock and
+key to prevent its being used for superstitious purposes. This old time
+relic is now in the National Museum, Edinburgh, of the Society of
+Antiquaries of Scotland, and it is described as follows in the
+catalogue: "The 'Bell of S. Fillan,' of cast bronze, square shaped, and
+with double-headed, dragonesque handle. It lay on a gravestone in the
+old churchyard at Strathfillan, Perthshire, where it was superstitiously
+used for the cure of insanity and other diseases till 1798, when it was
+removed by a traveller to England. It was returned to Scotland in 1869,
+and deposited in the Museum by Lord Crawford and the Bishop of Brechin,
+with the consent of the Heritors and Kirk-Session of S. Fillans." Near
+Raleigh there is a valley which is said to have been caused by an
+earthquake several hundred years ago, which convulsion of nature
+swallowed up a whole village, together with the church. Formerly it was
+the custom of the people to assemble in this valley every Christmas Day
+morning to listen to the ringing of the bells of the church beneath
+them. This, it was positively asserted, might be heard by placing the
+ear to the ground and listening attentively. As late as 1827 it was
+usual on this morning for old men and women to tell their children and
+young friends to go to the valley, stoop down, and hear the bells ring
+merrily. The villagers really heard the ringing of the bells of a
+neighbouring church, the sound of which was communicated by the surface
+of the ground, the cause being misconstrued through the ignorance and
+credulity of the listeners.
+
+
+
+
+Concerning Font-Lore.
+
+By the Rev. P. Oakley Hill.
+
+
+When those sermons in stone--the beautiful fonts of the Decorated and
+Perpendicular periods, which preached to a bygone age--come to be
+translated into modern English on an extensive and systematic scale,
+they will be found to be not only sermons theological, but treatises on
+hagiology, music, contemporary history, symbolism, and art of the
+highest order. One of the richest fields in font-lore is to be found in
+East Anglia, and Norfolk alone contains examples of sufficient
+importance and of vivid interest, to fill a whole volume on this
+particular subject. Only to mention a few, that will rapidly occur to a
+Norfolk antiquary, is to conjure up a varied and rich archological
+vision, which can be extended indefinitely at will.
+
+Of canopied fonts perhaps that of S. Peter (Mancroft), Norwich, takes
+the palm. The carved oak canopy is supported by four massive posts,
+giving great dignity to the stone font which it overshadows. The canopy
+at Sall is of a more graceful type, being in the form of a crocketed
+spire, suspended by a pulley from an ancient beam projecting from the
+belfry platform. Elsing, Merton, and Worstead also possess font covers
+of great interest.
+
+Seven Sacrament fonts are numerous, that of New Walsingham being one of
+the finest of its kind in England. It belongs to the Perpendicular
+period, and is richly carved. On seven of its eight panels are
+sculptured figures representing the Seven Sacraments, the eighth
+exhibiting the Crucifixion. The stem carries figures of the four
+Evangelists and other saints, and rests on an elaborately-carved plinth,
+the upper part of which is in the form of a Maltese cross. A copy of
+this magnificent structure has been erected in the Medival Court of the
+Crystal Palace. A counterpart of the Walsingham font (more or less
+exact, though perhaps not so rich in carving) is to be seen at Loddon,
+with similar Maltese cross base, but the Vandal's hand has nearly
+obliterated the figuring of the Sacramental panels. Other instances of
+Seven Sacrament fonts are to be seen in Norwich Cathedral, at Blofield,
+Martham, and elsewhere.
+
+Fonts bearing the date of their erection are found at Acle and Sall, the
+former having the following inscription upon the top step: "Orate pro
+diabus qui huc fontem in honore dei fecerunt fecit anno dni millo cccc
+decimo." An instance of a Posy font with date (sixteenth century) occurs
+in one of the Marshland churches, the Posy being:--
+
+ Thynk and Thank.
+
+The leaden font at Brundall is believed to be one of three only of its
+kind remaining in England; a fourth, somewhat damaged, existed at Great
+Plumstead until a few years ago, when alas! it perished in a disastrous
+fire which practically destroyed the church. Lion fonts are numerous,
+those of Acle and Strumpshaw being excellent examples.
+
+Remarkable examples of carved fonts are those at Toftrees, Blofield,
+Wymondham, Bergh Apton, Aylsham, Ketteringham, Sculthorpe, Walpole
+(S. Peter), etc. At Hemblington, dedicated to All Saints, there is a
+perfect little hagiology around the font-pedestal and upon seven of the
+panels of the basin, the eighth panel shewing the medival presentment
+of the Holy Trinity, the Almighty Father being somewhat blasphemously
+represented as an old man, while the Crucifix rests upon an orb, and
+(what is perhaps somewhat unusual) the Holy Dove appears about to alight
+on the Cross.
+
+ [Illustration: FONT AT UPTON CHURCH, NORFOLK.]
+
+Of Decorated Fonts in the county of Norfolk, that of Upton must be
+accounted _facile princeps_. In beauty of design, in fulness of
+symbolism, in richness of detail, it is a faithful type of the elaborate
+art of the Decorated Period. It was originally coloured, fragments of
+red and blue paint being still visible. A massive base is formed by
+three octagonal steps rising tier upon tier, the upper step divided from
+the second by eight sets of quatrefoils, flanked at the corners by
+sitting dogs with open mouths. Upon the stem of the font there are eight
+figures in _bas relief_, standing upon pediments beneath overhanging
+canopies exquisitely carved. These canopies are adorned with crocketed
+pinnacles, and the interior of each has a groined roof, with rose boss
+in the centre. Some of the pediments are garnished with foliage, others
+exhibit quaint animals, _e.g._, a double dragon with but one head
+connecting the two bodies, two lions linked by their tails, and two dogs
+in the act of biting each other; all, of course, highly symbolical of
+various types of sin. The canopied figures around the pedestal represent
+the two Sacraments, an indication that even in the fourteenth century
+the two Sacraments of the Gospel were esteemed as of the first
+importance. Holy Communion is symbolised by five figures. A bishop in
+eucharistic vestments, his right hand raised in blessing, his left
+holding the pastoral staff, while the double dragon is beneath his feet.
+It is not unlikely that this ecclesiastic was de Spenser, the
+contemporary Bishop of Norwich, of military fame. The bishop is
+supported to right and left by angels robed and girded, circlets and
+crosses on their heads, each holding a candle in a somewhat massive
+candlestick. The graceful lines of the wings suggest the probability of
+the artist having belonged to a continental guild of stone carvers. The
+next two figures are priests, each vested in dalmatic, maniple, stole,
+and alb, acting as deacon and sub-deacon, the first holding an open
+service book, the second the chalice and pyx.
+
+The three remaining figures portray Holy Baptism. Of the two godmothers
+and the godfather in the lay dress of the fourteenth century, the first
+holds a babe in her arms in swaddling clothes, the swathing band being
+crossed again and again. The other sponsors carry each a rosary.
+
+To digress for a moment; here is an interesting deduction. The infant is
+a girl--witness the two godmothers. The font cannot have been made later
+than about 1380, at which time the Decorated merged into the
+Perpendicular. Now the lord of the manor of Upton from 1358 onwards, for
+many years, was one John Buttetourt, or Botetourt, who, with his wife
+Matilda, had an only daughter and heiress, to whom was given the
+baptismal name Jocosa. It appears highly probable that the lord of
+Upton, rejoicing at the birth of his little heiress, caused the font to
+be designed and built as a memorial of her baptism. But it would seem
+that he did not live to see her settled in life, for in 1399 she had
+grown to early womanhood, had won the affection of Sir Hugh Burnell, who
+made her his wife, and by the following year, if not before, she had
+inherited the manor in her own right.
+
+To return to the description of the font. Resting on the canopies above
+described, and supported by eight half-angels with musical instruments,
+etc., is the large and handsome laver. The principal panels are occupied
+by reliefs of the four living creatures of the Revelation--the historic
+emblems of the four Evangelists--the flying lion, the flying bull, the
+man, and the eagle, the last named with scroll facing east. The four
+alternative panels represent angels, two holding instruments of music,
+two with heraldic shields. The panels are separated from each other by
+crocketed buttresses. The musical instruments shewn upon the font are
+of great interest. A kind of rebeck or lute twice occurs, and once a
+curious pair of cymbals. One half-angel is playing on a crowth, an early
+form of the fiddle, consisting of an oblong box, a couple of strings, a
+short straight and round handle, and a bow. Another of the half-angels
+holds an open music book, containing the ancient four-line score.
+
+The font has suffered some amount of mutilation in the five centuries of
+its existence; three or four heads have disappeared, also the right hand
+of the bishop, and the top of the pastoral staff; the chalice has been
+broken off, and the flying lion is fractured. And as a reminder of the
+iconoclastic century which was most likely responsible for the damage,
+these dates are roughly cut into the leaden lining of the bowl: 1641,
+1662, 1696.
+
+
+
+
+Watching Chambers in Churches.
+
+By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, B.A.
+
+
+The smallest acquaintance with the inventories, or the ceremonial, of
+our medival churches is sufficient to show anyone a glimpse of the
+extraordinary wealth of which the larger churches especially were
+possessed in those days. Vestments of velvet and silk and cloth of gold,
+adorned with jewels and the precious metals; crosses and candlesticks of
+gold, studded with gems; reliquaries that were ablaze with gorgeousness
+and beauty; and sometimes shrines and altars that were a complete mass
+of invaluable treasure; such were the contents of the choirs and
+sacristies of our cathedrals and abbey churches. This being the case, it
+is obvious that the greatest care had to be taken of such places. Then,
+even as now, there were desperadoes from whom the sanctity of the shrine
+could not protect it, if they could get a chance of fingering its
+jewels; men who would exclaim, with Falconbridge in the play of "King
+John" (Act III., Sc. 3)--
+
+ "Bell, book, and candle shall not drive me back,
+ When gold and silver beck me to come on."
+
+To protect the wealthier churches from desecration and loss, therefore,
+bands of watchers were organized, who throughout the night should be
+ever on the alert against the attacks of thieves; who would also,
+moreover, be able to raise, if need were, the alarm of fire. At Lincoln
+these guardians patrolled the Minster at nightfall, to assure themselves
+that all was safe. To facilitate the inspection of the whole building
+occasionally squints were made; as at the Cathedral of S. David's, where
+the cross pierced in the east wall behind, and just above, the high
+altar, is supposed by some to have been for this purpose, a view being
+thus obtained of the choir from the Chapel of the Holy Trinity, or _vice
+vers_.
+
+In several instances, however, it was found both more convenient and
+more effective to erect a special chamber, so placed and so elevated as
+to command a good view of the church, or of the portion of the church to
+be watched; and here a constant succession of watchers kept guard. One
+of our most interesting examples of this is at S. Albans. Near the
+site of the shrine of the patron saint (on which the fragments of the
+shattered shrine have been skilfully built up once more) is a structure,
+in two storeys, of carved timber. The lower stage is fitted with
+cupboards, in which were probably preserved relics, or such jewels and
+ornaments as were not kept permanently upon the shrine. A doorway in
+this storey admits to a staircase leading to the gallery above. This is
+the watchers' chamber; the side fronting the shrine being filled with
+perpendicular tracery, whence the monks in charge could easily keep the
+treasures around them under observation. A somewhat similar structure is
+still seen at Christ Church, Oxford, and is sometimes spoken of as the
+shrine of S. Frideswide. It is really the watching-chamber for that
+shrine; and was erected in the fourteenth century upon an ancient tomb,
+supposed to be that of the founder of the _feretrum_ of the saint,
+though popular report describes it as the resting-place of the bodies of
+her parents.
+
+ [Illustration: ABBOT'S PEW, MALMESBURY ABBEY.]
+
+In not a few cases, both in England and abroad, these chambers were
+built in a yet more durable fashion. At Bourges may be seen a stone loft
+on the left side of the altar; at Nuremberg also is one. In addition to
+the wooden chamber, already described, S. Alban's Abbey (now the
+cathedral) has a small one of stone in the transept. Lichfield has a
+gallery over the sacristy door, which served the same purpose; and at
+Worcester an oriel was probably used by the watchers. Westminster Abbey
+has such a chamber over the chantry of King Henry VI., and Worcester
+Cathedral has one in the north aisle; and there are several other
+instances. Many churches had rooms over the north porch, as the
+cathedrals of Exeter and Hereford, the churches of Christchurch
+(Hampshire), Alford (Lincolnshire), and many others; and these in some
+cases, as at Boston, had openings commanding a view of the interior.
+
+Another explanation of the existence of a few watching lofts is
+sometimes given, besides the need of guarding the Church's treasures. It
+is held by some that in the face of the deterioration of monastic
+simplicity and devotion in the later times before the Dissolution in
+England, the abbots felt the need of keeping a stricter eye upon their
+community; and these rooms were consequently constructed to enable them
+to look, unobserved themselves, into their abbey church, and to see
+that all whose duty called for their presence were there, and properly
+occupied. This theory is perhaps supported by the traditional name of
+"the abbot's pew," by which a very simple and substantial
+watching-chamber in the triforium of Malmesbury Abbey is called. With
+this may be compared another example in the priory church of
+S. Bartholomew, Smithfield. In these, and most of the other instances,
+the watching-chamber is an addition to the original structure, dating
+often considerably later than the rest. This is quoted by the believers
+in the rapid spread of monastic depravity in later ages in support of
+the theory just noticed; as is also the fact, that the "pew" is often
+near what formerly constituted the abbot's private apartments within the
+adjoining monastery. It is probable that both explanations are true;
+some of these lofts forming "abbot's pews," as others certainly were for
+the guardian watchers of the shrines. In a large community it would
+certainly be wise for the head to be able at times to survey quietly and
+unobserved the actions of the rest; but this admission no more implies
+that the lives of all monks were scandalous, than does the presence of
+watchers by the shrines prove that all worshippers were thieves.
+
+We have noticed in this paper the chief watching-chambers in this
+country, but no doubt other examples occur which may have special points
+of interest.
+
+
+
+
+Church Chests.
+
+By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, B.A.
+
+
+An interesting article of Church furniture which has scarcely received
+the amount of notice which it deserves, is the Church Chest, the
+receptacle for the registers and records of the parish, and sometimes
+also for the office books, vestments, and other valuables belonging to
+the Church. In recent years attention has frequently been directed to
+the interesting character of our ancient parochial documents, but the
+useful cases which for so many years have shielded them, more or less
+securely, from damage or loss, have been largely overlooked.
+
+The present authority for the provision in every English church of a
+proper repository for its records is the seventieth canon, the latter
+part of which runs in the following words, from which it will be seen
+that some of its details have been suffered to become obsolete: "For the
+safe keeping of the said book (the register of baptisms, weddings, and
+burials), the churchwardens, at the charge of the parish, shall provide
+one sure coffer, and three locks and keys; whereof one to remain with
+the minister, and the other two with the churchwardens severally; so
+that neither the minister without the two churchwardens, nor the
+churchwardens without the minister, shall at any time take that book out
+of the said coffer. And henceforth upon every Sabbath day immediately
+after morning or evening prayer, the minister and the churchwardens
+shall take the said parchment book out of the said coffer, and the
+minister in the presence of the churchwardens shall write and record in
+the said book the names of all persons christened, together with the
+names and surnames of their parents, and also the names of all persons
+married and buried in that parish in the week before, and the day and
+year of every such christening, marriage, and burial; and that done,
+they shall lay up the book in the coffer as before." This Canon, made
+with others in 1603, was a natural sequence to the Act passed in 1538,
+which enjoined the due keeping of parish registers of the kind above
+described. It is, in fact, obvious that the canon only gave additional
+sanction to a practice enforced some years earlier; for Grindal, in his
+"Metropolitical Visitation of the Province of York in 1571," uses
+almost identical terms, requiring, amongst many other things, "That the
+churchwardens in every parish shall, at the costs and charges of the
+parish, provide ... a sure coffer with two locks and keys for keeping
+the register book, and a strong chest or box for the almose of the poor,
+with three locks and keys to the same:" the same demand was made, also
+by Grindal, on the province of Canterbury in 1576.
+
+Church chests did not, however, come into use in consequence of the
+introduction of the regular keeping of registers. The Synod of Exeter,
+held in 1287, ordered that every parish should provide "a chest for the
+books and the vestments," and the convenience and even necessity of some
+such article of furniture, doubtless led to its use in many places from
+yet earlier times.
+
+We have in England several excellent examples of "hutches," or chests,
+which date from the thirteenth, or even from the close of the twelfth
+century. Some there are for which a much earlier date has been claimed.
+These latter are rough coffers formed usually of a single log of wood,
+hollowed out, and fitted with a massive lid, the whole being bound with
+iron bands. Chests of this kind may be seen at Newdigate, Surrey, at
+Hales Owen, Shropshire, and elsewhere; and on the strength of the
+rudeness of the carpentry displayed, it has been asserted that they are
+of Norman, or even of Saxon, workmanship. Roughness of design and work
+are scarcely, however, in themselves sufficient evidence of great
+antiquity; many local causes, especially in small country places, may
+have led the priests and people to be content with a very rude article
+of home manufacture, at a time when far more elaborate ones were
+procurable in return for a little more enterprise or considerably more
+money. The date of these rough coffers must therefore be considered
+doubtful.
+
+Of Early English chests, we have examples at Clymping, Sussex, at
+Saltwood and Graveney, Kent, at Earl Stonham, Suffolk, at Stoke
+D'Abernon, Surrey, and at Newport, Essex. The Decorated Period is
+represented by chests at Brancepeth, Durham, at Huttoft and Haconby,
+Lincolnshire, at Faversham and Withersham, Kent, and at S. Mary
+Magdalene's, Oxford. The workmanship of the Perpendicular Period has
+numerous illustrations among our church chests, such as those at
+S. Michael's, Coventry, S. Mary's, Cambridge, the Chapter House of
+Christchurch Cathedral, Oxford, and others at Frettenham, Norfolk, at
+Guestling, Sussex, at Harty Chapel, Kent, at Southwold, Suffolk, and at
+Stonham Aspel, Suffolk.
+
+ [Illustration: CHEST AT SALTWOOD, KENT.]
+
+In the making of all these coffers, strength was naturally the great
+characteristic which was most obviously aimed at; strength of structure,
+so as to secure durability, and strength of locks and bolts, so as to
+ensure the contents from theft. But in addition to this, artistic beauty
+was not lost sight of, and many chests are excellent illustrations of
+the wood-carvers' taste and skill, and several were originally enriched
+with colour.
+
+ [Illustration: CHEST AT UPTON CHURCH.]
+
+ [Illustration: CHEST AT OVER, CHESHIRE.]
+
+A good example of those in which security has been almost exclusively
+sought, is provided by a chest at S. Peter's, Upton, Northamptonshire.
+The dimensions of this hutch are six feet three inches in length, two
+feet six inches in height, and two feet in width. Its only adornment is
+provided by the wrought iron bands which are attached to it. Four of
+these are laid laterally across each end, and four more, running
+perpendicularly, divide the front into five unequal panels; the bands on
+the front correspond with an equal number laid across the lid, where,
+however, two more are placed at the extreme ends. Each of the panels in
+front and top is filled with a device in beaten iron roughly resembling
+an eight-pointed star, the lowest point of which runs to the bottom of
+the chest. Yet simpler is the chest at S. Mary's, West Horsley, which is
+a long, narrow, oaken box, strengthened by flat iron bands crossing the
+ends and doubled well round the front and back, while six others are
+fastened perpendicularly to the front; there are two large locks, and
+three hinges terminating in long strips of iron running almost the
+complete breadth of the lid. The church of S. Botolph, Church Brampton,
+has a chest equally plain in itself, but the iron bands are in this
+case of a richer character. Elegant scroll-work originally covered the
+front and ends, much still remaining to this day. S. Lawrence's, in the
+Isle of Thanet, possesses an exceedingly rough example, with a curved
+top; seven broad iron bands strengthen the lid, and several
+perpendicular ones, crossed by a lateral one, are affixed to the front,
+the whole being studded with large square-headed nails; a huge lock is
+placed in the middle, with hasps for padlocks to the right and left of
+it. It is raised slightly from the ground by wooden "feet."
+
+ [Illustration: CHEST AT S. LAWRENCE, ISLE OF THANET.]
+
+For security and strength, however, the palm must be awarded to a coffer
+at Stonham Aspel. The following description of this remarkable chest was
+given in the "Journal of the British Archological Society" in
+September, 1872: "This curious example is of chestnut wood, 8 feet in
+length, 2 feet 3 inches in height, and 2 feet 7 inches from front to
+back; and is entirely covered on the outer surface with sheets of iron
+4 inches in width, the joinings being hid by straps. The two lids are
+secured by fourteen hasps; the second from the left locks the first, and
+the hasp simply covers the keyhole; the fourth locks the third, etc.
+After this process is finished, a bar from each angle passes over them,
+and is secured by a curious lock in the centre, which fastens them both.
+The interior of this gigantic chest is divided into two equal
+compartments by a central partition of wood, the one to the left being
+painted red; the other is plain. Each division can be opened separately;
+the rector holding four of the keys, and the churchwardens the others,
+all being of different patterns." The writer of this description (Mr.
+H. Syer Cuming, F.S.A., Scot., V.P.) assigns the chest to the fifteenth
+century.
+
+ [Illustration: CHURCH CHEST, S. MICHAEL'S, COVENTRY.]
+
+Turning now to those chests, whose makers, while not forgetting the
+needful solidity and strength, aimed also at greater decoration, the
+handsome hutch at S. Michael's, Coventry, claims our notice. The front
+of this is carved with a double row of panels having traceried heads,
+the upper row being half the width of the lower one. In the centre are
+two crowned figures, popularly (and not improbably) described as Leofric
+and his wife, the Lady Godiva. At each end of the front is a long panel
+decorated with lozenges enclosing Tudor roses, foliage, and conventional
+animals; while two dragons adorn the bottom, which is cut away so as to
+leave a triangular space beneath the chest. At S. John's, Glastonbury,
+is another fine example, measuring six feet two inches in length, and at
+present lidless. Within six vesica-shaped panels are placed quatrefoil
+ornaments, each divided by a horizontal bar. Above these are five
+shields, three charged with S. George's Cross, and the others, one with
+three lozenges in fess, and the other with three roundles, two and one,
+and a label. The ends, or legs, are elaborately carved with dog-tooth
+figures in squares and circles. Saltwood, Kent, has an ornately carved
+chest, divided (like that of Stonham Aspel) into two parts, the lid
+being correspondingly formed, and opening in sections. One half is
+secured by three locks, and the other by one. The front is carved with
+five geometrical "windows" of four lights each; and the ends of the
+front have three carved square panels, divided by bands of dancette
+ornament. The base has a long narrow panel, with a simple wavy design.
+There is some bold carving on a chest at S. George's, South Acre, in
+Norfolk; a row of cusped arches fills rather more than half the height
+of the front, the rest being taken up with four panels containing roses
+and stars, similar designs on a smaller scale being repeated at the
+ends. The front is cut away at the bottom in a series of curves.
+
+ [Illustration: CHURCH CHEST S. JOHN'S GLASTONBURY]
+
+At Alnwick is a massive coffer, over seven feet long, bearing on its
+front a number of figures of dragons, and heads of birds and beasts,
+amid foliage; above which are two hunting scenes, in which appear men
+with horns, dogs, and deer, amid trees. These two scenes are separated
+by the lock, and are precisely alike, save that the quarry in one is a
+stag, and a hind in the other. Empingham, near Stamford, has a fine
+chest of cedar wood, adorned with incised figures. At S. Mary's,
+Mortlake, is one of walnut, inlaid with boxwood and ebony, and
+ornamented with designs in metal work; the under side of the lid has
+some delicate iron-wrought tracery, which was originally set off with
+red velvet. The Huttoft chest is enriched with traceried arches, which
+were apparently at one time picked out in colour; that of Stoke
+D'Abernon is raised on four substantial legs, and is decorated with
+three circles on the front filled with a kind of tracery; there are
+other interesting specimens at Winchester and at Ewerby. In the old
+castle at Newcastle-on-Tyne is preserved an old church coffer, which was
+probably removed there for safety during the troublous days of the Civil
+War. At Harty Chapel, Kent, we find the figures of two knights in full
+armour, tilting at each other, carved on the front of a chest; the
+legend of S. George and the dragon is illustrated in a similar way at
+Southwold Church, Suffolk, and yet more fully on a chest in the treasury
+of York Minster.
+
+Probably, however, the handsomest example of a carved church chest now
+preserved in England is at Brancepeth, in the county of Durham. This
+beautiful piece of work, which rests in the south chapel of the church,
+has its front completely covered with elaborate carving. At either end
+are three oblong panels, one above another, on each of which is a
+conventional bird or beast; at the base is a series of diamonds filled,
+as are the intervals between them, with tracery; and above this is an
+arcade of six pointed arches, each enclosing three lights surmounted by
+a circle, the six being divided by tall lancets, the crockets of the
+arches and a wealth of foliage filling up the intervening spaces. This
+fine chest dates from the fourteenth century.
+
+The Rev. Francis E. Powell, M.A., in his pleasantly-written work
+entitled "The Story of a Cheshire Parish," gives particulars of the
+parish chest of Over. "The chest," says Mr. Powell, was "the gift of
+Bishop Samuel Peploe to Joseph Maddock, Clerk, April 30th, 1750." It
+probably was an old chest even then. The donor was Bishop of Chester
+from 1726 to 1752. He was a Whig in politics, and a latitudinarian in
+religion, as so many bishops of that time were. That he was a man of
+determined courage may be seen by his loyalty to the House of Hanover,
+even under adverse circumstances. One day, in the year 1715, he was
+reading Morning Prayer at the parish church at Preston. The town was
+occupied by Jacobite troops, some of whom burst into the church during
+the service. Approaching the prayer-desk, with drawn sword, a trooper
+demanded that Peploe should substitute James for George in the prayer
+for the King's Majesty. Peploe merely paused to say, "Soldier, I am
+doing my duty; do you do yours;" and went on with the prayers, whereupon
+the soldiers at once proceeded to eject him from the church. The
+illustration of the chest is kindly lent to us by the Rev. Francis E.
+Powell, vicar of Over.
+
+In the vestry of Lambeth Palace is a curiously painted chest; several of
+an early date are preserved in the triforium of Westminster Abbey; there
+is one at Salisbury Cathedral, and another in the Record Office, having
+been removed from the Pix Chapel.
+
+One of the original uses of these coffers, as we have seen, was to
+preserve the vestments of the church. The copes, however, being larger
+than the other vestments, and in the cathedrals and other important
+churches, being very numerous, frequently had a special receptacle
+provided. At York, Salisbury, Westminster, and Gloucester, ancient
+cope-chests are still preserved. These are triangular in shape, the cope
+being most easily folded into that form.
+
+In not a few instances these large coffers, or sections of them, were
+used as alms boxes, for which a very ancient precedent can be found. At
+the restoration of the Jewish Temple under King Joash, we are told
+(2 Kings xii., 9, 10) that "Jehoiada the priest took a chest, and bored
+a hole in the lid of it, and set it beside the altar, on the right side
+as one cometh into the house of the Lord: and the priests that kept the
+door put therein all the money that was brought into the house of the
+Lord: and it was so, when they saw that there was much money in the
+chest, that the King's scribe and the high priest came up, and they put
+up in bags, and told the money that was found in the house of the Lord."
+
+At Llanaber, near Barmouth in North Wales, is a chest hewn from a single
+block of wood, and pierced to receive coins. At Hatfield, Yorkshire, is
+an ancient example of a similar kind; and others may be seen at
+S. Peter's-in-the-East, Oxford, at Drayton in Berkshire, at Meare
+Church, Somersetshire, at Irchester and Mears Ashby, in
+Northamptonshire, at Hartland, in Devonshire, and in the Isle of Wight
+at Carisbrooke. An interesting chest, with provision for the reception
+of alms, is preserved at Combs Church, Suffolk, where there is also
+another plain hutch, iron-bound and treble-locked. The chest in question
+is strongly, but simply, made, the front being divided into four plain
+panels, with some very slight attempt at decoration in the form of small
+disks and diamonds along the top; and the lid being quite flat and
+plain, and secured by two locks. At one end, however, a long slit has
+been cut in this lid, and beneath it is a till, or trough, to receive
+the money, very similar to the little locker often inserted at one end
+of an old oak chest intended for domestic use, save that in this case
+the compartment has, of course, no second lid of its own. This chest has
+the date 1599 carved upon it, but is supposed to be some half a century
+older, the date perhaps marking the time of some repairs or alterations
+made in it.
+
+Hutches of the kind that we have been considering are not peculiar to
+England, some fine and well-preserved examples being found in several
+of the ancient churches in France. Among ourselves it is obvious that
+great numbers must have disappeared; many doubtless were rough and
+scarcely worthy of long preservation; others by the very beauty of their
+workmanship probably roused the cupidity, or the iconoclastic prejudice,
+of the spoiler. Near Brinkburn Priory a handsome fourteenth century
+chest was found, used for domestic purposes, in a neighbouring
+farm-house; a Tudor chest, belonging to S. Mary's, Newington, lay for
+years in the old rectory house, and subsequently disappeared; and these
+are doubtless typical of many another case. When the strictness at first
+enforced as to the care of the parish registers became culpably relaxed,
+and parish clerks and sextons were left in practically sole charge of
+them, it is but too probable that these men, often illiterate and
+otherwise unsuited to such a trust, were in many instances as careless,
+or as criminal, in regard to the coffers, as we unfortunately know they
+frequently were with respect to their contents.
+
+Few church chests of any interest date from the Jacobean, or any
+subsequent period. Plain deal boxes were then held good enough for the
+purpose of a "church hutch."
+
+
+
+
+An Antiquarian Problem: The Leper Window.
+
+By William White, F.S.A.
+
+
+These windows were called by Parker and other writers of the Gothic
+Revival, "Lychnoscopes;" and then by the ecclesiologists, "Low-side
+Windows." But the name given by the late G. E. Street has now become so
+generally accepted that it seems necessary to look a little further into
+the evidence of the fitness or unfitness of this designation for them.
+
+Behind some stalls in the Royal Chapel were discovered some remains of a
+mural painting, apparently to represent the communicating of a leper
+through some such window, and he at once concluded that it was for this
+very purpose so many of them were introduced into the chancels of our
+medival churches. There seemed, however, nothing to indicate that it
+was at one of these special windows at all that this function was
+performed. And the very fact of the representation itself would seem to
+indicate rather an exceptional instance, or special circumstance, such
+as the communicating of some knight or person of note who might, for
+instance, have brought leprosy in his own person from the Holy Land,
+from whence probably in the first instance it came; and who would not be
+admitted within the church. But the records of the existence of lepers
+would seem to show their numbers to have been very limited, and confined
+to few localities. And in any case this would be no sufficient cause for
+the introduction of these windows as of universal occurrence throughout
+the land, for these windows are found almost everywhere, and in very
+many instances on both sides of the chancel. Moreover, in many cases the
+act of administration through these windows would be exceedingly
+difficult, if not impossible, on account of the position, or the
+arrangement, of the window itself.
+
+To my mind a very much more practical and reasonable supposition would
+be that they were introduced, and used, for burial purposes. At a period
+when the body would not be brought into the church, except in the case
+of some ecclesiastic or other notable person, the priest would here be
+able, _from his stall_, to see the funeral _cortge_ come into the
+churchyard, and then say the first part of the office through this
+window; which was always shuttered and without glass. In some cases
+there is a book-ledge corbelled out on the east jamb of the window
+inside, which has puzzled antiquaries, but which has not otherwise
+received a satisfactory explanation. In immediate proximity to the
+window, at the end of the stalls (and sometimes in the earlier churches
+_through_ them), was the priest's door, out of which he would then
+proceed to the grave to commit the body to the earth. The grave itself
+needs not necessarily be within sight of the window. But in a number of
+instances the churchyard cross was so; and this may have served as the
+recognised place for the mourners, with the body, to assemble.
+
+In the case of Foxton, Leicestershire, the "Lych Window," as I would
+call it, is on the north side. Here the burials are chiefly on the north
+side; a steep slope down towards the church on the south side rendering
+it very difficult and unsuitable for them. At Addisham, Kent, the
+priest's door is, contrary to the usual custom, on the north side, where
+is also a principal portion of the churchyard, and, so far as my own
+observations go, the position of the window would greatly depend upon
+the arrangement of the churchyard, whether north or south.
+
+
+
+
+Mazes.
+
+By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, B.A.
+
+
+Something concerning the construction of labyrinths, or mazes, is known
+even to the most general reader; it needs but a slight acquaintance with
+classical literature to learn of the famous example formed at Crete by
+Ddalus; the legend of the concealment of "fair Rosamond," within a maze
+at Woodstock, is familiar enough; and the existing labyrinth at Hampton
+Court, the work of William III. is well known. But probably few who have
+not looked somewhat into the matter, have any idea of the number of such
+mazes which still exist, or of the yet greater number of which we have
+authentic records. A learned French antiquary, Mons. Bonnin, of Evreux,
+collected two hundred examples, gathered from many lands, and stretching
+in history from classical to modern times.
+
+Of the most ancient labyrinths it will be enough to indicate the
+localities. One is said to have been constructed in Egypt by King
+Minos, and to have served as a model for the one raised by Ddalus at
+Cnossus, in Crete, as a prison for the Minataur. Another Egyptian
+example, which has been noticed by several authors, was near Lake
+Moeris. Lemnos contained a famous labyrinth; and Lar Porsena built one
+at Clusium, in Etruria. These mazes consisted either of a series of
+connected caverns, as it has been supposed was the case in Crete; or, as
+in the other instances, were formed of courts enclosed by walls and
+colonnades.
+
+ [Illustration: LABYRINTH INSCRIBED ON ONE OF THE PORCH PIERS
+ OF LUCCA CATHEDRAL.]
+
+The use of the labyrinth in medival times, has, however, greater
+interest for us in this paper, especially from the fact that such was
+distinctly ecclesiastical. Several continental churches have labyrinths,
+either cut in stone or inlaid in coloured marbles, figured upon their
+walls or elsewhere. At Lucca Cathedral is an example incised upon one of
+the piers of the porch; and others may be seen at Pavia, Aix in
+Provence, and at Poitiers. These are all small, the diameter of the
+Lucca labyrinth being 1 foot 7 inches, which is the dimension also of
+one in an ancient pavement in the church of S. Maria in Aquiro, in Rome.
+That the suggestion for the construction of these arose from the
+mythological legends concerning those of pagan days is proved by the
+fact that in several of them the figures of Theseus and the Minataur
+were placed in the centre. Probably from the first, the Church, in her
+use of the figure, spiritualized the meaning of the heathen story, as we
+know was her wont in other cases; and a labyrinth formed in mosaic on
+the floor of an ancient basilica at Orleansville, Algeria, shows that
+presently the mythological symbols gave place entirely to obviously
+Christian ones. In this last-named instance, the centre is occupied by
+the words _Sancta Ecclesia_.
+
+About the twelfth century these curious figures became very popular, and
+a considerable number dating from that period still exist. They have for
+the most part been constructed in parti-coloured marbles on some portion
+of the floor of the church. One was laid down in 1189 at S. Maria in
+Trastevere, in Rome; S. Vitale, Ravenna, contains another; and the
+parish church of S. Quentin has a third. Others formerly existed at
+Amiens Cathedral (made in 1288 and destroyed in 1825), at Rheims (made
+about 1240 and destroyed in 1779), and at Arras (destroyed at the
+Revolution). These are much larger than the examples before noticed; the
+two Italian examples are each about 11 feet across, but the French ones
+greatly exceed this. Those of S. Quentin and Arras were each over 34
+feet in diameter, and the others were somewhat larger; Amiens possessed
+the largest, measuring 42 feet. France had another example of a similar
+kind at Chartres.
+
+The Christian meaning which was read into these complicated designs was
+more emphatically expressed in these twelfth-century instances. The
+centre is usually occupied by a cross, round which, in some cases, were
+arranged figures of bishops, angels, and others.
+
+The introduction of these large labyrinths, together with the name which
+came at this time to be applied to them in France, namely, _Chemins de
+Jerusalem_, suggests the new use to which such arrangements now began to
+be put. It is well known that in some cases substitutes for the great
+pilgrimage to Jerusalem were allowed to be counted as of almost equal
+merit. Thus the Spaniards, so long as they had not expelled the infidel
+from their own territory, were forbidden to join the Crusades to the
+Holy Land; and were permitted to substitute a journey to the shrine of
+S. Jago, at Compostella, for one to the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. By
+an extension of the same principle, especially when the zeal of
+Christendom for pilgrimages began to cool, easy substitutes for the more
+exacting devotion were found in many ways. The introduction of the
+Stations of the Cross is ascribed to this cause, the devout following in
+imagination of the footsteps of the Saviour in His last sufferings,
+being accounted equivalent to visiting the holy places; and somewhat
+similarly, the maze, or labyrinth, is said to have been pressed into the
+service of religion, the following out (probably upon the knees) of its
+long and tortuous path-way, being reckoned as a simple substitute for a
+longer pilgrimage.
+
+From such a use as this, it was no great step to the employment of the
+maze as a means of penance in other cases. The whole of the intricate
+pathway was intended to remind the penitent of the difficulties which
+beset the Christian course; and the centre, which could only be reached
+by surmounting them, was often called heaven (_Ciel_). Nor could such a
+penance be deemed a light one. Though occupying so small a space of
+ground, the mazy path was so involved as to reach a considerable length,
+whence it was sometimes named the League (_La liue_). The pathway at
+Chartres measures 668 feet; at Sens was a maze which required some 2,000
+steps to gain the centre. An hour is said to have been often needed to
+accomplish the journey, due allowance being made for the prayers which
+had to be recited at certain fixed stations of it, or throughout its
+whole course.
+
+At S. Omer are one or two examples of the labyrinth. One at the Church
+of Notre Dame has figures of towns, mountains, rivers, and wild beasts
+depicted along the pathway, to give, no doubt, greater realism to the
+pilgrimage. The existing drawing of another, which has been destroyed,
+is inscribed, "The way of the road to Jerusalem at one time marked on
+the floor of the Church of S. Bertin." Many of these designs are not
+only ingenious, but beautiful. In the Chapterhouse at Bayeux is one
+enriched with heraldic figures; that at Chartres has its central circle
+relieved with six cusps, while an engrailed border encloses the whole
+work. A circular shape was apparently the most popular; the maze at
+S. Quentin, with some others, however, is octagonal. The pathway is
+usually marked by coloured marbles, sometimes the darker, sometimes the
+lighter shades in the design being used for the purpose; at Sens, lead
+has been employed to indicate it.
+
+The Revolution, as we have seen, led to the destruction of several
+ecclesiastical labyrinths; some, however, became a source of annoyance
+to the worshippers, from children attempting to trace the true pathway
+during the time of service, and they were removed in consequence.
+Labyrinths of this kind do not appear to have been introduced into
+England, the only instance known to the present writer being quite a
+modern one. This is in the church porch at Alkborough, in Lincolnshire,
+where, at the recent restoration, the design of a local maze (to be
+noticed further hereafter) was reproduced.
+
+If England, however, has not imitated the continent in this respect, she
+has struck out a line no less interesting, which has remained almost
+exclusively her own; namely, in the mazes cut in the green turf of her
+meadows. Shakespeare has an allusion to these in the "Midsummer Night's
+Dream," (Act iii., 3) where Titania says,
+
+ "The nine men's morris is fill'd up with mud,
+ And the quaint mazes in the wanton green
+ For lack of tread are indistinguishable."
+
+Some twenty of these rustic labyrinths have been noted as still
+existing, or as recorded by a sound tradition, in England; and no doubt
+there have been others which have disappeared, leaving no trace behind.
+
+ [Illustration: MAZE AT ALKBOROUGH, LINCOLNSHIRE.]
+
+Among those which have been preserved, the following may be noticed. At
+Alkborough, in Lincolnshire, near the confluence of the Trent and the
+Ouse, is a maze, the diameter of which is 44 feet; by a happy
+suggestion, the design of this has been repeated, as was above remarked,
+in the porch of the Parish Church, so that should the original
+unfortunately be destroyed, a permanent record has been provided.
+Hilton, in Huntingdonshire has a maze of exactly the same plan, in the
+centre of which is a stone pillar, bearing an inscription in Latin and
+English, to the effect that the work was constructed in 1660, by William
+Sparrow. Comberton, in Cambridgeshire, possesses a maze, locally known
+as the "Mazles," which is fifty feet in diameter. The pathway is two
+feet wide, and is defined by small trenches, the whole surface being
+gradually hollowed towards the centre. Northamptonshire is represented
+by Boughton Green, which has a labyrinth 37 feet in diameter; and
+Rutland has one at Wing, which measures 40 feet.
+
+ [Illustration: THE MIZE-MAZE ON ST. KATHERINE'S HILL, WINCHESTER.]
+
+At Asenby, in the parish of Topcliffe, Yorkshire, is a maze measuring 51
+feet across, which has been carefully preserved by the local
+authorities. At Chilcombe, near Winchester, a maze is cut in the turf of
+S. Catherine's Hill; it is square in outline, each side being 86 feet.
+It is locally known as the "Mize-maze." One much larger than any yet
+noticed is found near Saffron Waldon, in Essex, its diameter being 110
+feet. There are local records which prove the great antiquity of a maze
+at this place. The design is peculiar, being properly a circle, save
+that at four equal distances along the circumference the pathway sweeps
+out into a horseshoe projection.
+
+ [Illustration: THE MAZE NEAR ST. ANNE'S CHAPEL, NOTTINGHAM.]
+
+A similar plan was followed in cutting a maze, once of some celebrity,
+near S. Anne's Well, at Sneinton, Nottingham. The projections in this
+case are bolder, and within the spaces enclosed by the triple pathway
+which swept around them were cut cross-crosslets. The popular names for
+this maze in the district were the "Shepherd's Maze," and "Robin
+Hood's Race." This was, unfortunately, ploughed up in 1797, at the
+enclosure of the lordship of Sneinton. Nottinghamshire has, however,
+another example in the small square one at Clifton.
+
+ [Illustration: MAZE FORMERLY EXISTING NEAR ST. ANNE'S WELL,
+ SNEINTON, NOTTINGHAMSHIRE.]
+
+Many of these turf-cut labyrinths were destroyed during the
+Commonwealth, before which period, according to Aubrey in his history
+of Surrey, there were many in England. Not a few, however, which
+survived that time of wanton destruction, have been obliterated since.
+
+In 1827 one which was on Ripon Common was ploughed up. Its diameter was
+60 feet. Another existed till comparatively recent times at Hillbury,
+between Farnham and Guildford. At Pimpern, in Dorset, there was formerly
+a maze of a unique design. The outline was roughly a triangle, which
+enclosed nearly an acre of ground; the pathway was marked out by ridges
+of earth about a foot in height, and followed a singularly intricate
+course. The plough destroyed this also in 1730.
+
+The names locally applied to these structures often imply very erroneous
+ideas as to their origin and purpose. In some instances they are
+ascribed to the shepherds, as if cut by them as pastime in their idle
+moments; a suggestion, which a glance at the mazes themselves, with
+their intricate designs and correctly formed curves, will prove to be
+hardly tenable. Two other names of frequent occurrence in England are
+"Troy Town," and "Julian's Bower"; the latter being connected with the
+former, Julius, son of neas being the person alluded to. Some have
+from these titles sought to trace a connection with a very ancient sport
+known as the _Troy Game_, which arose in classic times, and survived
+down to the Middle Ages. It consisted probably in the rhythmic
+performance of certain evolutions, much after the fashion of the
+"Musical Rides" executed by our cavalry. The origin of the idea is to be
+sought in a passage in Virgil's neid (Bk. V., v. 583 _et seq._), which
+has been thus translated by Kennett:--
+
+ "Files facing files their bold companions dare,
+ And wheel, and charge, and urge the sportive war.
+ Now flight they feign, and naked backs expose,
+ Now with turned spears drive headlong on the foes,
+ And now, confederate grown, in peaceful ranks they close.
+ As Crete's fam'd labyrinth, to a thousand ways
+ And endless darken'd walls the guest conveys;
+ Endless, inextricable rounds amuse,
+ And no kind track the doubtful passage shows;
+ So the glad Trojan youth, the winding course
+ Sporting pursue, and charge the rival force."
+
+Tresco, Scilly, has a maze known as Troy-town; and it would seem that
+such were once common in Cornwall, since any intricate arrangement is
+often locally called by that name.
+
+It has, however, been pointed out that most of these mazes date from a
+time when classical knowledge was not widely spread in England; that, in
+fact, the name has probably been given in most instances long after the
+date of the construction of the work.
+
+It would seem rather that the original use of these quaint figures was,
+as with those continental examples before noted, ecclesiastical. No one
+who has had the opportunity of comparing the designs of the English and
+the foreign mazes can fail to be struck with the great similarity
+between them; suggesting, at least, a common origin and purpose. And
+this suggestion is greatly strengthened when we notice that, although
+the English mazes are never (with one modern instance only excepted)
+within churches, as are the continental instances, yet they are almost
+invariably close to a church, or the ancient site of a church. The
+Alkborough and Wing mazes, for instance, are hard by the parish
+churches; and those at Sneinton, Winchester, and Boughton Green are
+beside spots once consecrated by chapels dedicated in honour of St.
+Anne, St. Catherine, and St. John. The most probable conjecture is that
+these were originally formed, and for long years were used, for
+purposes of devotion and penance. Doubtless in later times the children
+often trod those mazy ways in sport and emulation, which had been slowly
+measured countless times before in silent meditation or in penitential
+tears.
+
+A word or two may be added in conclusion on mazes of the more modern
+sort, formed for amusement rather than for use, as a curious feature in
+a scheme of landscape gardening. These _topiary_ mazes, as they are
+called, usually have their paths defined by walls of well-cut box, yew,
+or other suitable shrubs; and they differ from the turf mazes in that
+they are often made purposely puzzling and misleading. In the
+ecclesiastical maze, it is always the patience, not the ingenuity, which
+is tested; there is but one road to follow, and though that one wanders
+in and out with tantalizing curves and coils, yet it leads him who
+follows it unerringly to the centre.
+
+From Tudor times this form of decoration for a large garden has been
+more or less popular. Burleigh formed one at the old palace at
+Theobald's, Hertfordshire, about 1560; and the Maze in Southwark, near a
+spot once occupied by the residence of Queen Mary before coming to the
+throne, and Maze Hill at Greenwich, no doubt mark the sites of
+labyrinths now otherwise forgotten. Lord Fauconbergh had a maze at
+Sutton Court in 1691; and William III. so highly approved of them that,
+having left one behind him at the Palace of the Loo, he had another
+constructed at Hampton Court.
+
+Literature and art have not disdained to interest themselves in this
+somewhat formal method of gardening; for in the sixteenth and
+seventeenth centuries more than one treatise on their construction was
+published; while Holbein and Tintoretto have left behind them designs
+for topiary labyrinths.
+
+The oldest and most famous maze in our history is "Fair Rosamond's
+Bower," already mentioned. Of what kind this was, if indeed it was at
+all, it is difficult to say; authorities disagreeing as to whether it
+was a matter of architectural arrangement, of connected caves, or of
+some other kind. The trend of modern historical criticism in this, as in
+so many other romantic stories from our annals, is to deny its
+genuineness altogether.
+
+Fortunately although so many of our ancient mazes have disappeared, the
+designs of their construction has, in not a few cases, been preserved
+to us by means of contemporary drawings; so that a fairly accurate idea
+of the type most commonly followed may still be obtained.
+
+We have to thank Mr. J. Potter Briscoe, F.R.H.S., editor of "Old
+Nottinghamshire," for kindly placing at our disposal the two
+illustrations relating to the St. Anne's Well Maze.
+
+
+
+
+Churchyard Superstitions.
+
+By the Rev. Theodore Johnson.
+
+
+Among all classes of English people there are mixed feelings relating to
+our churchyards. They are either places of reverence on the one hand, or
+superstition on the other. The sacred plot surrounding the old Parish
+Church carries with it such a host of memories and associations, that to
+the learned and thoughtful it has always been God's Acre, hallowed with
+a tender hush of silent contemplation of the many sad rifts and partings
+among us. We almost vie with each other in proclaiming that deep
+reverence for this one sacred spot, so dear to our family life, and
+affections, by those mementos of love which we raise over the
+resting-places of our lost ones gone before. This is strangely apparent
+in the stately monument, where the carver's art declares the virtues of
+the dead, either by sculptured figure, or verse engraven, as well as in
+the ofttimes more pathetic, and perhaps more beautiful, tribute of the
+floral cross or wreath culled by loving hands, and borne in silence, by
+our poorer brethren, as the only offering, or tribute, their slender
+means allows them to make. Be sure of this one fact, that our English
+Churchyards are better kept--more worthy of the name of God's Acre than
+in the times past, for what is a more beautiful sight, than to see the
+kneeling children around the garden grave of a parent, or a child
+companion, adorning the little mound with flowers for the Eastertide
+festival. Here we have a living illustration of the truth of the
+concluding words of our Great Creed: "I look for the Resurrection of the
+Dead and the Life of the World to come."
+
+On the other hand, to the ignorant, and unlearned in these things, the
+Churchyard often becomes a place of dread, and it may be, some of the
+strange behaviour sometimes seen there arises from this inner feeling of
+awe, which in their ignorant superstition they are wont to carry off in
+the spirit of daring bravado.
+
+From a close study of the subject, I am led to conclude that the common
+unchristian idea, that the churchyard is 'haunted,' whatever that may
+mean to a weak or ignorant person, has much to do with it. The evil
+report, once circulated, will be handed on to generations yet unborn,
+until the simple origin, which at first might have been easily
+explained, becomes clouded in mystery as time goes on, and the deep
+rooted feeling of horror spreads around us, until even the more
+strong-minded among us, feel at times, somewhat doubtful as to whether
+there may not be some truth where the popular testimony is so strong.
+
+In country districts, more than in towns, superstition is rife with
+regard to our Churchyards. The variety and form of this superstition is
+well nigh 'Legion,' and though many of my readers may enjoy an Ingoldsby
+experience when read in a well-lighted room, surrounded by smiling
+companions, few of them, after such an experience would care to pay a
+visit alone to some neighbouring churchyard, renowned for its tale of
+ghostly appearances. This will, I think enable me to show that by far
+the larger number of churchyard superstitions are purely chimerous
+fancies of the brain, and do not owe their origin, or existence, to any
+other source, be that source a wilful fraud, or imposition, designed to
+produce fear, or merely the imaginative delusion of some overstrained,
+or weak brain, which called first it into existence.
+
+Yet there are prevalent ideas or notions, about the churchyard and its
+sleepers, as deep-rooted as any wild superstition, and perhaps as
+difficult to solve, or to trace to any rational source. I would here
+mention one of the most strange, and probably one of the most prejudiced
+notions to be met with relating to burial in the churchyard. I refer to
+the East Anglian prejudice of being buried on the north side of the
+church. That this prejudice is a strong one, among the country people in
+certain parts of England, is proved by the scarcity of graves, nay, in
+many instances the total absence of graves, on the north side of our
+churches.
+
+Some seventeen years ago, shortly after taking charge of a parish in
+Norfolk, I was called upon to select a suitable spot for the burial of a
+poor man, who had been killed by an accident. After several places had
+been suggested by me to the sexton, who claimed for them either a family
+right, or some similar objection; I noticed for the first time, that
+there were no graves upon the north side of the church, and I, in my
+innocence, suggested that there would be plenty of space there;
+whereupon my companion's face at once assumed the most serious
+expression, and I immediately saw that fear had taken hold of his mind,
+as he answered with a somewhat shaky voice, "No, Sir! No, that cannot
+be!" My curiosity was immediately aroused, and I sought for an
+explanation, which I found not from my good and loyal friend, who would
+not trust himself to answer further than "No, Sir! No, that cannot be!"
+The sexton's manner puzzled me greatly, for the man was an upright,
+straightforward, open-hearted, servant of the Church--but I at once saw
+that it would be fruitless to push the matter further with him, so after
+marking out a suitable resting place for the poor unfortunate man, who
+not being a parishoner of long standing, had no family burial place
+awaiting him, I made my way home to think over the whole occurrence.
+
+The cause for non-burial on the north side of the Church was indeed a
+mystery, yet that my parishoners had some valid reason for not being
+laid to rest there, was apparent; so I set about the task of unravelling
+the superstition, if so it may be called.
+
+My library shelves seemed to be the most natural place of research, but
+here after consultation with several volumes of Archology,
+Ecclesiology, and Folk Lore, I could find nothing bearing upon the
+subject, beyond that in certain instances relating to Churchyard
+Parishes on the sea-coast, the north side by reason of its exposure to
+wind and storm, and being the sunless quarter of the burying ground, was
+less used than other parts; but here the reason given was in
+consideration of the living mourners at the time of the interment, and
+not the body sleeping in its last resting place of earth.
+
+After some considerable correspondence with friends likely to be
+interested in such a matter, I was rewarded with information that, in
+some instances, the northern portion of the churchyard was left
+unconsecrated, and only thus occasionally used for the burial of
+suicides, vagrants, highwaymen (after the four cross road graves had
+been discontinued), or for nondescripts and unbaptised persons, for whom
+no religious service was considered necessary. Even this I did not
+accept as a solution of my problem. That there was something more than
+local feeling underlying this superstition, I was certain, but how to
+get to the root of the subject perplexed me.
+
+The Editor of "Notes and Queries" could not satisfy me. His general
+suggestions and kind desire to aid me were well-nigh fruitless, so that
+there remained for me the course of watching and waiting, as none of my
+neighbours could, or would, go beyond the conclusive statement of the
+sexton, "It must not be!" or what was even more indefinite, "I have
+never heard of such a thing."
+
+The subject was a fruitful source of thought for some months, and in
+vain I tried to connect some religious custom of other days, or to find
+some Text of Scripture, which might have given rise to the idea, if
+mistranslated, or twisted by human ingenuity, to serve such a purpose,
+but none occurred to me that in the least would bear of such a
+contortion.
+
+In my intercourse with my older parishoners I sought in vain to test the
+unbaptized or suicidal burying place theory as suggested above, but this
+was entirely foreign to them. At length, the truth of the old saying,
+"_All things come to those who wait_" brought its due reward. I was
+called in to visit an aged parishoner, who was nearing the end of life's
+journey, and among other subjects naturally came the thoughts, and
+wishes, of this old saintly man's last hours on earth. He had been a
+shepherd for well nigh sixty years, and a widower for the past fifteen
+years, and in consequence he had lived and worked much alone. This had
+produced a thoughtful spirit, and a certain slowness of speech, so that
+he was quite the last man I should have consulted for a solution of my
+mystery. Yet, here the secret was unfolded, or to my mind more
+satisfactorily explained, than by any previous consultation with either
+men or books. The grand old labourer, or faithful shepherd, as he was
+laid helpless on his bed, with his life work symbol--the shepherd's
+crook, standing idle in the corner, and his trusty dog, restless and
+perplexed, roaming from room to room, was a wonderful picture of a
+Christian death-bed.
+
+There I learned many a solemn life-lesson never to be forgotten. The
+calm voice, the monosyllabic answers given in response to my questions
+are still fresh to me; and there I learned the source of my Churchyard
+Superstition in the following manner:--
+
+With a strange, weird, unnatural light in the aged man's eyes, which
+portrayed much anxiety of mind, he spoke about his burial-place, and
+particularly emphasising the words "_On the south side, sir, near by the
+wife_." When I ventured to inquire if he knew why such a strong
+objection was held to burial on the north side of the church. He started
+suddenly, and I shall never forget his reproachful, sad look as he more
+readily than usual gave the answer:--"The left side of Christ, sir: we
+don't like to be counted among the goats."
+
+As a flash of lightning illuminates the whole darkness of the country
+side, and reveals for the moment every object in clear outline, so this
+quaint saying of my dying friend dispelled in a moment the mists of the
+past which clouded the truth of my strange superstition.
+
+Here was the best answer to the mystery, pointing with no uncertain
+words to the glorious Resurrection Day, this aged, earthly shepherd at
+the end of his years of toil recognised his Great Master, Jesus, as the
+True Shepherd of mankind, meeting His flock as they arose from their
+long sleep of death, with their faces turned eastward, awaiting His
+appearing.
+
+Then when all had been called and recognised He turned to lead them
+onward, still their True Shepherd and Guide, with the sheep on His right
+hand, and the goats on His left hand, so wonderfully foretold in the
+Gospel story: "When the Son of Man shall come in His glory, and all the
+holy angels with Him, then shall He sit upon the throne of His glory;
+And before Him shall be gathered all nations: and He shall separate them
+one from another, as a shepherd divideth his sheep from the goats: and
+He shall set the sheep on His right hand, but the goats on the
+left."--_S. Matt, xxv., 31, 32, 33._
+
+Surely, the above simple illustration explains much that is difficult
+and mysterious to us in the way of religious superstition. Undoubtedly,
+we have here a good example of how superstitions have arisen, probably
+from a good source, it may be the words of some teacher long since
+passed away. The circumstance has long been forgotten, yet the lesson
+remains, and being handed down by oral tradition only, every vestige of
+its religious nature disappears and but the feeling remains, which, in
+the minds of the ignorant populace, increases in mystery and enfolds
+itself in superstitious awe, without any desire from them to discover
+the origin, or source, of such a strange custom, or event.
+
+
+
+
+Curious Announcements in the Church.
+
+By the Rev. R. Wilkins Rees.
+
+
+Years ago announcements in churches were of a distinctly curious
+character, and the parish clerk in making the intimation seems to have
+been left completely to his own indiscretion. In country districts,
+where proper advertising would be quite impossible, the practical
+advantages of some classes of announcements would be great, but none of
+them accord with our modern sense of the fitness of things, and many can
+only be accounted for on the ground of extraordinary familiarity between
+clergyman, clerk, and congregation. A brief consideration of the subject
+furnishes a few side-lights into the general condition of the church, as
+well as into the laxity of church discipline, about fifty years and more
+ago, especially away from large centres of population.
+
+In certain parts, the custom of crying lost goods in church was
+undoubtedly prevalent, and did not then appear peculiar. The rector, who
+had lost his favourite dog and told the parish clerk to do his best to
+ascertain its whereabouts, may have been astonished to hear him announce
+the loss in church, coupled with a statement that a reward of three
+pounds would be given to the person who should restore the animal to its
+owner. But such surprise was hardly natural when an announcement like
+the following was possible:--"Mislaid on Sunday last! The gold-rimmed
+vicar's spectacles of best glass, taken from his eyes in going into the
+poor box, or put down somewhere when going into the font to fetch the
+water after the christening." What a shock this rare jumble produced by
+a country clerk must have been to the precise and classical vicar can
+only be imagined. The thought, however, of a gold-rimmed vicar
+diminutive enough to enter font or poor box is somewhat staggering!
+Quite as muddled, but much more ingenious, was the clerk who announced,
+in recent years, an accomplished D.Sc. and LL.D. as a Doctor of Schools
+and a Lord Lieutenant of Divinity!
+
+"Lost, stolen, or strayed," shouted the clerk in church one Sunday, with
+the strident voice of a town crier, and the manner of one not
+unaccustomed to the task, "lost, stolen, or strayed. Four fat sheep and
+one lean cow. Whoever will return the same to Mr. ----'s farm will be
+suitably rewarded." It is well that the name of the parish in which it
+was given, is missing from another specimen of this sort of
+announcement, for it seems to indicate that honesty there could be but
+the outcome of an inducement afforded by the promise of substantial
+reward. "Lost," said the clerk, "on Sunday last, when the wearer was
+walking home from this church, and before she reached the Town Hall, a
+lady's gold brooch, set with pearls and other precious stones. The one
+who has found it will consider it worth while to restore it, for the
+reward of a guinea is offered."
+
+It is not a little surprising that the clergyman in charge did not
+supervise more carefully the various announcements, especially when so
+many a _contretemps_ occurred. Once a parish clerk announced in his
+rector's hearing:--"There'll be no service next Sunday as the rector's
+going out grouse shooting." The rector had injudiciously acquainted his
+clerk with the reason of his approaching absence, and this was the
+result. It happened, of course, a half century since, but it illustrates
+an interesting state of things as existing at that period. With it two
+similar incidents may well be mentioned, the first of which occurred in
+Scotland, the second in the Principality. "Next Sawbath," said a worthy
+Scotch beadle, "we shall have no Sawbath, for the meenister's house is
+having spring cleaning, and as the weather is very bad the meenister's
+wife wants the kirk to dry the things in." "Next Sunday," declared the
+unconsciously amusing Welshman, "there'll be no Sunday, as we're going
+to whitewash the church with yellow-ochre." Sometimes the omission of a
+stop caused sore trouble to the clerk, while it hugely delighted the
+congregation. "A man having gone to see his wife desires the prayers of
+this church," was the startling announcement. But had not the clerk been
+near-sighted and mistaken _sea_ for _see_, and had a comma been supplied
+after sea, the notice would have been all right, for it was simply the
+request of a sailor's wife on behalf of her husband.
+
+Once the clerk made the announcement that a parish meeting would be held
+on a given date. "No, no," interrupted the vicar. "D'ye think I'd attend
+to business on the audit day!" The audit days were recognised as times
+of hearty feasting and convivial mirth, in which the vicar played no
+unimportant part. This freedom of speech between clergyman and clerk was
+not seldom fruitful of ill-restrained amusement when the announcements
+were made. A vicar informed his congregation one Sunday morning that he
+would hold the customary service for baptisms in the afternoon, and
+requested the parents to bring their children punctually, so that there
+might be no delay in commencing. Immediately he had said this, the old
+clerk, sleepy and deaf, thinking the parson's announcement had to do
+with a new hymn-book which at that time was being introduced, arose, and
+graciously informed the people that for those who were still without
+them he had a stock in the vestry from which they could be supplied at
+the low charge of eighteenpence each. This is slightly similar:--"I
+publish the banns of marriage between ... between ..." announced a
+clergyman from the pulpit. But here for a moment he stopped, as the book
+in which were the notices was not to be seen. The clerk, seeing his
+vicar's predicament, and catching sight of the whereabouts of the
+missing book, ejaculated:--"Between the cushion and the desk, sir." The
+unique character of another notice will fully justify its inclusion. "I
+am unwell, my friends, very unwell," announced a preacher one Sunday
+evening, "and therefore I shall dispense with my usual gesticulation."
+This happened not very long ago.
+
+So disregarded, indeed, were the proprieties of worship a generation
+since, that the clergyman would sometimes pause during the delivery of
+his sermon and make an announcement which, to say the least of it, had
+no connection with the theme he was pursuing. Thus the Rev. Samuel
+Sherwen, a well-known cleric in Cumberland, announced one morning that
+he had just caught sight, through a window near the pulpit, of some cows
+in a cornfield, and requested that some one would go and drive them out.
+At another time he said there were some pigs in the churchyard which
+were not his, and his servant Peter would do well to expel the
+intruders. Very probably such announcements, though made from a pulpit,
+would be excused because they resulted in a certain benefit. The same
+plea could undoubtedly be put forward for the following trio, each of
+which hails from beyond the Severn. "Take notice!" exclaimed the clerk.
+"A thief is going through the Vale of Glamorgan selling tin ware, false
+gold, trinkets, and rings, and other domestic implements and
+instruments, and robbing houses of hens, chickens, eggs, butter, and
+other portable animals, making all sorts of pretences to get money!"
+Again, "Beware! beware! of a man with one eye, talking like a preacher,
+and a wooden leg, given to begging and stealing!" And once more, "Take
+notice! take notice! there's a mad dog going the round of the parish
+with two crop ears and a very long tail!" Surely the intention of such
+announcements was good, even though the literary form was bad. The last,
+as might be inferred, was made at a time when rabies were prevalent.
+
+The Rev. Samuel Sherwen, already alluded to, was surpassed in this
+direction by another Cumbrian clergyman, the Rev. William Sewell, of
+Troutbeck. One Sunday morning the latter entered the pulpit of the
+little church at Wythburn to preach. The pulpit sadly needed repair,
+and, in leaning out from the wall, left an undesirable opening behind
+it. Into this chink the parson's sermon fell, and the pulpit was so
+ricketty in its broken-down condition that the preacher feared the
+consequences of turning in it. Moreover, the manuscript had fallen so
+far that it could not be reached. Mr. Sewell, bereft of his sermon,
+announced to his congregation in broad dialect: "T' sarmont's slipt down
+i' t' neuk, and I can't git it out; but I'll tell ye what--I'se read ye
+a chapter i' t' Bible 'at's worth three on't." A similar story is told
+in connection with the Rev. Mr. Alcock, who in the middle of the last
+century was rector of Burnsal, near Skipton, in Yorkshire. Of this
+clergyman another story is given which well illustrates the excessive
+familiarity indulged in by occupants of the pulpit in bygone days. One
+of his friends, at whose house he was wont to call previous to entering
+the church on Sundays, seized a chance to unfasten and then misplace the
+leaves of his sermon. In the service the parson had not read far before
+he discovered the trick. "Will," cried he, "thou rascal! what's thou
+been doing with my sermon?" Then turning to his people, he continued:
+"Brethren, Will Thornton's been misplacing the leaves of my sermon; I
+have not time to put them right; I shall read on as I find it, and you
+must make the best of it that you can." He accordingly read to the close
+of the confused mass to the utter astonishment of his congregation.
+
+Of such familiarity Scottish churches furnish well-nigh innumerable
+instances. One or two will, however, be sufficient for my purpose. The
+clergyman who was expected to conduct the morning service had not made
+his appearance at the appointed time. After a dreadful suspense of some
+fifteen minutes the beadle, that much-privileged individual, entered the
+church, marched slowly along the accustomed passage, and mounted the
+pulpit-stair. When half-way up he stopped, turned to the congregation,
+and thus addressed them: "There was one Alexander to hae preached here
+the day, but he's neither come hissel; nor has he sent the scrape o' a
+pen to say what's come owre him. Ye'd better keep your seats for anither
+ten meenits to see whether the body turns up or no. If he disna come,
+there's naething for 't but for ye a' to gang hame again an' say
+naething mair aboot it. The like o' this hasna happened here syne I hae
+been conneckit wi' the place, an' that's mair than four-and-thirty year
+now." As an announcement to the point, and for the purpose, that could
+not easily be beaten. A clergyman of Crossmichael, in Galloway, would
+even intersperse his lessons or sermon with any announcement that might
+at the moment occur to him, or with allusions to the behaviour of his
+hearers. Once, because of this method, a verse from Exodus was hardly
+recognisable. The version given was as follows: "And the Lord said unto
+Moses--shut that door; I'm thinkin' if ye had to sit beside that door
+yersel', ye wadna be sae ready leavin' it open; it was just beside that
+door that Yedam Tamson, the bellman, gat his death o' cauld, an' I'm
+sure, honest man, he didna lat it stey muckle open.--And the Lord said
+unto Moses--put oot that dog; wha is't that brings dogs to the kirk,
+yaff-yaffin'? Lat me never see ye bring yer dogs here ony mair, for, if
+ye do, tak notice, I'll put you an' them baith oot.--And the Lord said
+unto Moses--I see a man aneeth that wast laft wi' his hat on; I'm sure
+ye're cleen oot o' the souch o' the door; keep aff yer bonnet, Tammas,
+an' if yer bare pow be cauld, ye maun jist get a grey worset wig like
+mysel'; they're no sae dear; plenty o' them at Bob Gillespie's for
+tenpence." At last, however, the preacher informed his hearers what was
+said to Moses in a manner at once more accurate and becoming.
+
+It was, indeed, a usual custom for the clergyman publicly to rebuke
+offenders, as when it happened that a young man, sitting in a prominent
+position in the church, pulled out his handkerchief and brought with it
+a bundle of playing cards, which flew in every direction. He had, so it
+turned out, been up late the previous night, and had stuffed the cards
+with which he had been gambling into his pocket, where they had remained
+forgotten. The people were amazed and horrified, but the clergyman
+simply looked at the offender and remarked with quiet, yet most
+withering sarcasm, "Sir, that prayer book of yours has been badly
+bound!" But some times the rebuke was deftly thrust back upon the
+preacher. "You're sleepy, John," said the clergyman, pausing in the
+middle of a drowsy discourse, and looking hard at the man he thus
+addressed. "Take some snuff, John." "Put the snuff in the sermon,"
+ejaculated John; and the faces of the audience showed that the retort
+was fully appreciated.
+
+In fact, such was the freedom tolerated, that this incident in Eskdale
+might be taken as an example. Someone walked noisily up the aisle during
+divine service. "Whaa's tat?" asked the clergyman in a tone quite loud
+enough to rebuke the offender. "It's aad Sharp o' Laa Birker,"
+responded the clerk. "Afooat or o' horseback?" was the significant
+query. "Nay," was the answer, "nobbet afooat, wi' cokert shun" (calkered
+shoes). Frequently the clerk would interrupt the clergyman, and the
+interruption would not enhance the devotional character of the service.
+In a rural parish church a new pitch-pipe was provided, but the clerk
+had not tested it before entering his desk on the Sunday, and when he
+should have given the key-note the instrument could not be adjusted. The
+clerk tugged at it, thrust it in, gave it several thumps, made sundry
+grimaces, but the pipe was obdurate. "My friends," announced the
+impatient parson, "the pitch-pipe will not work, so let us pray."
+"Pray!" snorted the aggrieved official, "pray! no, no, we'll pray none
+till I put this thing aright." And members of the congregation would
+even stand up in their pews to contradict the parson or clerk when
+making the announcement. "There will be a service here as usual on
+Thursday evening next," announced the clerk one Sunday morning. "No,
+there won't," declared the churchwarden as he rose from his seat. "We be
+going to carry hay all day Thursday." "But the service will be held as
+usual," asserted the clerk. But the churchwarden was not to be thwarted.
+"Then there'll be nobody here," said he. "D'ye think we're coming to
+church and leave the hay in the fields? No, no, p'r'aps it'll rain
+Friday."
+
+But of all amusing instances of curious announcements in church those
+given by the Rev. Cuthbert Bede in _All the Year Round_, November 1880,
+may take the palm and fittingly conclude this chapter. "An old rector of
+a small country parish," so runs the story, "had sent his set of false
+teeth to be repaired, on the understanding that they should be returned
+"by Saturday" as there was no Sunday post, and the village was nine
+miles from the post town. The old rector tried to brave out the
+difficulty, but after he had incoherently mumbled through the prayers,
+he decided not to address his congregation on that day. While the hymn
+was being sung, he summoned the clerk to the vestry, and then said to
+him: "It is quite useless for me to attempt to go on. The fact is, that
+my dentist has not sent me back my artificial teeth, and it is
+impossible for me to make myself understood. You must tell the
+congregation that the service is ended for this morning, and that there
+will be no service this afternoon." The old clerk went back to his desk;
+the singing of the hymn was brought to an end; and the rector, from the
+vestry, heard the clerk address the congregation thus: "This is to give
+notice! as there won't be no sarmon nor no more sarvice this mornin', so
+you' better all go whum (home); and there won't be no sarvice this
+aternoon, as the rector ain't got his artful teeth back from the
+dentist!"
+
+
+
+
+Big Bones Preserved in Churches.
+
+By the Rev. R. Wilkins Rees.
+
+
+In a lovely and secluded valley in Montgomeryshire is situated the
+interesting old church of Pennant Melangell, of whose foundation a
+charming legend is told. The romantic glen was in the first instance the
+retreat of a beautiful Irish maiden, Monacella (in Welsh, Melangell),
+who had fled from her father's court rather than wed a noble to whom he
+had promised her hand, that here she might alone "serve God and the
+spotless virgin." Brochwell Yscythrog, Prince of Powys, being one day
+hare-hunting in the locality, pursued his game till he came to a
+thicket, where to his amazement he found a lady of surpassing beauty,
+with the hare he was chasing safely sheltered beneath her robe.
+Notwithstanding all the efforts of the sportsman to make them seize
+their prey, the dogs had retired to a distance, howling as though in
+fear, and even when the huntsman essayed to blow his horn, it stuck to
+his lips. The Prince, learning the lady's story, right royally assigned
+to her the spot as a sanctuary for ever to all who fled there. It
+afterwards became a safe asylum for the oppressed, and an institution
+for the training of female devotees. But how long it so continued cannot
+be said. Monacella's hard bed used to be shown in the cleft of a
+neighbouring rock, while her tomb was in a little oratory adjoining the
+church.
+
+In the church is to be found carved woodwork, which doubtless once
+formed part of the rood-loft, representing the legend of Saint
+Melangell. The protection afforded by the saint to the hare gave such
+animals the name of Wyn Melangell--St. Monacella's lambs--and the
+superstition was so fully credited that no person would kill a hare in
+the parish, while it was also believed that if anyone cried "God and St.
+Monacella be with thee" after a hunted hare, it would surely escape.
+
+The church contains another interesting item in the shape of a large
+bone, more than four feet long, which has been described as the bone of
+the patron saint. Southey visited the church, and in an amusing rhyming
+letter addressed to his daughter, thus refers to it: "'Tis a church in a
+vale, whereby hangs a tale, how a hare being pressed by the dogs was
+much distressed, the hunters coming nigh and the dogs in full cry,
+looked about for someone to defend her, and saw just in time, as it now
+comes pat in rhyme, a saint of the feminine gender. The saint was buried
+there, and a figure carved with care, in the churchyard is shown, as
+being her own; but 'tis used for a whetstone (like a stone at our back
+door), till the pity is the more (I should say the more's the pity, if
+it suited with my ditty), it is whetted half away--lack-a-day,
+lack-a-day! They show a mammoth rib (was there ever such a fib?) as
+belonging to the saint Melangell. It was no use to wrangle, and tell the
+simple people that if this had been her bone, she must certainly have
+grown to be three times as tall as the steeple!"
+
+In Lewis's "Topographical Dictionary of Wales" (1843), we are told that
+on the mountain between Bala and Pennant Melangell was found a large
+bone named the Giant's Rib, perhaps the bone of some fish, now kept in
+the church. But where the bone came from it is quite impossible to say.
+Old superstitions have clung to it, and beyond what tradition furnishes
+there is practically nothing for our guidance.
+
+It is somewhat strange that in the same county, in connection with the
+church at Mallwyd, other bones are exhibited. Of this church, surrounded
+by romantic scenery, the Dr. Davies, who rendered into Welsh the
+Thirty-nine Articles of the Church of England, and assisted Bishop Perry
+in the translation of the Bible, was for many years incumbent. The
+sacred edifice was far-famed for its magnificent yew trees, and for the
+position of the communion table in the centre. Archbishop Laud issued
+orders that it should be placed at the east end, but Dr. Davies defied
+the prelate, and restored it to its old position, where, according to
+Hemmingway's "Panorama of North Wales," in which the church was
+described as a "humble Gothic structure, the floor covered with rushes,"
+it remained till 1848. It is not, however, so placed now. Over the porch
+of this church some bones are suspended, but no palontologist has yet
+decided as to their origin. It has been said that they are the rib and
+part of the spine of a whale caught in the Dovey in bygone days!
+Whatever may be the truth, however, it is not now to be ascertained, but
+must remain shrouded in mystery with that concerning the bones at
+Pennant Melangell. The bones were in their present position in 1816,
+for they are then mentioned by Pugh in his _Cambria Depicta_.
+
+England has several instances of big bones preserved in churches, and
+one story seems to be told regarding almost all. A most interesting
+example is to be found over one of the altar tombs in the Foljambe
+Chapel, Chesterfield Church. This bone, supposed to be the jawbone of a
+small whale, is seven feet four inches in length, and about thirteen
+inches, on an average, in circumference. Near one end is engraved, in
+old English characters, the name "Thomas Fletcher." The Foljambes
+disposed of their manor in 1633 to the Ingrams, who in turn sold it to
+the Fletchers, and thus the name on the bone is accounted for. A
+generally-accepted explanation about this bone--not even disbelieved
+entirely at the present day--was that it formed a rib of the celebrated
+Dun Cow of Dunsmore Heath, killed by the doughty Guy of Warwick, with
+whom local tradition identified the warrior whose marble effigy lies
+beneath the bone, sent to Chesterfield to celebrate the much-appreciated
+victory.
+
+ [Illustration: THE DUN COW, DURHAM CATHEDRAL.]
+
+It is interesting to remember here the legendary story of the foundation
+of Durham Cathedral, which explains certain carving on the north
+front of that majestic pile. While the final resting-place of St.
+Cuthbert was still undetermined, "it was revealed to Eadmer, a virtuous
+man, that he should be carried to Dunholme, where he should find a place
+of rest. His followers were in distress, not knowing where Dunholme lay;
+but as they proceeded, a woman, wanting her cow, called aloud to her
+companion to know if she had seen her, when the other answered that she
+was in Dunholme. This was happy news to the distressed monks, who
+thereby knew that their journey's end was at hand, and the saint's body
+near its resting-place." It has been said that the after riches of the
+See of Durham gave rise to the proverb, "The dun cow's milk makes the
+prebend's wives go in silk."
+
+But to return to the dun cow slain by Guy. That the champion was
+credited of old with having overcome some such animal is evident from
+the matter-of-fact fashion in which it is recorded by ancient
+chroniclers. In Percy's "Reliques of Antient Poetry," occur the
+following verses in a black-letter ballad which sings the exploits of
+Guy:--
+
+ "On Dunsmore heath I alsoe slewe
+ A monstrous wyld and cruell beast,
+ Called the Dun-Cow of Dunsmore heath,
+ Which manye people had opprest.
+
+ Some of her bons in Warwicke yett
+ Still for a monument doe lye;
+ Which unto every lookers viewe
+ As wondrous strange, they may espye."
+
+A circumstantial account is given in the "Noble and Renowned History of
+Guy, Earl of Warwick," as translated from the curious old French
+black-letter volume in Warwick Castle, and of this a somewhat modernised
+version may be submitted. "Fame made known in every corner of the land
+that a dun cow of enormous size, 'at least four yards in height, and six
+in length, and a head proportionable,' was making dreadful devastations,
+and destroying man and beast. The king was at York when he heard of the
+havoc and slaughter which this monstrous animal had made. He offered
+knighthood to anyone who would destroy her, and many lamented the
+absence in Normandy of Guy, who, hearing of the beast, went privately to
+give it battle. With bow and sword and axe he came, and found every
+village desolate, every cottage empty. His heart filled with compassion,
+and he waited for the encounter. The furious beast glared at him with
+her eyes of fire. His arrows flew from her sides as from adamant itself.
+Like the wind from the mountain side the beast came on. Her horns
+pierced his armour of proof, though his mighty battle-axe struck her in
+the forehead. He wheeled his gallant steed about and struck her again.
+He wounded her behind the ear. The monster roared and snorted as she
+felt the anguish of the wound. At last she fell, and Guy, alighting,
+hewed at her until she expired, deluged with her blood. He then rode to
+the next town, and made known the monster's death, and then went to his
+ship, hoping to sail before the king could know of the deed. Fame was
+swifter than Guy. The king sent for him, gave him the honour of
+knighthood, and caused one of the ribs of the cow to be hung up in
+Warwick Castle, where it remains until this day." Old Dr. Caius, of
+Cambridge, writes of having seen an enormous head at Warwick Castle in
+1552, and also "a vertebra of the neck of the same animal, of such great
+size that its circumference is not less than three Roman feet seven
+inches and a half." He thinks also that "the blade-bone, which is to be
+seen hung up by chains form the north gate of Coventry, belongs to the
+same animal. The circumference of the whole bone is not less than eleven
+feet four inches and a half." The same authority further states that "in
+the chapel of the great Guy, Earl of Warwick, which is situated rather
+more than a mile from the town of Warwick (Guy's Cliff), there is hung
+up a rib of the same animal, as I suppose, the girth of which in the
+smallest part is nine inches, the length six feet and a half," and he
+inclines to a half-belief, at any rate, in the Dun-Cow story.
+
+In connection with the legend it should be mentioned that in the
+north-west of Shropshire is the Staple Hill, which has a ring of upright
+stones, about ninety feet in diameter, of the rude pre-historic type.
+"Here the voice of fiction declares there formerly dwelt a giant who
+guarded his cow within this inclosure, like another Apis among the
+ancient Egyptians, a cow who yielded her milk as miraculously as the
+bear Oedumla, whom we read of in Icelandic mythology, filling every
+vessel that could be brought to her, until at length an old crone
+attempted to catch her milk in a sieve, when, furious at the insult, she
+broke out of the magical inclosure and wandered into Warwickshire,
+where her subsequent history and fate are well known under that of the
+Dun Cow, whose death added another wreath of laurel to the immortal Guy,
+Earl of Warwick." The presence of bones at Chesterfield and elsewhere
+is, of course, accounted for by the fact (?) that they were distributed
+over the country so that in various places Guy's marvellous feat might
+be commemorated.
+
+In Queen Elizabeth's "fairest and most famous parish church in England,"
+St. Mary Redcliff, Bristol, is preserved a bone said to have belonged to
+a monster cow which once supplied the whole city with milk. Bristolians,
+proud of their connection with the great discoverer, Cabot, assert that
+it is a whalebone brought to the city by the illustrious voyager on his
+return from Newfoundland. But here the story of Guy of Warwick and the
+cow has also been introduced. The bone, which is now fixed not far from
+the stair leading to the chamber containing the muniment chest where
+Chatterton pretended to have found the Rowley poems, was formerly hung
+within the church, while near to it was suspended a grimy old picture
+now banished to a position on a staircase just where the room in which
+the vestry meetings are held is entered. The picture, so far as it can
+be made out, contains a big figure of a man on the right hand side,
+while in the foreground lies a prostrate man, behind whom stands a cow.
+To the left of the picture are certain human figures in attitudes
+expressive of surprise. This ancient painting was said to refer to Guy's
+exploit, and the rib was pointed out as a positive proof that the daring
+deed was done.
+
+It may be presumed that all, or nearly all, these bones preserved in
+churches are those of whales, though in some instances they have been
+supposed to be those of the wild BONASUS or URUS and most are associated
+in some way or other with the legend of Guy and the Dun-Cow. Indeed, it
+seems almost strange that the story has not been connected even with the
+bone at Pennant Melangell, especially as on the mountain between
+Llanwddyn and the parish is a circular inclosure surrounded by a wall
+called Hn Eglwys, and supposed to be a Druidical relic, which would
+have been just the spot to have lent itself to the statement that there
+the animal was confined.
+
+The late Frank Buckland, in his entertaining chapter on "A Hunt on the
+Sea-Shore," in his second volume of "Curiosities of Natural History,"
+says: "Whale-bones get to odd places," and writes of having seen them
+used for a grotto in Abingdon, and a garden chair in Clapham. Not far
+from Chesterfield there were, until recently, some whale-jaw gate posts
+which formed an arch, and in North Lincolnshire such bones, tall and
+curved, are still to be seen serving similar purposes. But the presence
+of such bones, carefully preserved in churches, though it may occasion
+considerable conjecture, cannot, it seems, be properly explained. As
+yet, at any rate, the riddle remains unsolved.
+
+
+
+
+Samuel Pepys at Church.
+
+
+The Diary of Samuel Pepys, from 1659 to 1669, presents us with a picture
+of London in the days of Charles II. that has perhaps not been equalled
+in any other work dealing with the manners, customs, and the social life
+of the period. We get a good idea from it how Sunday was spent in an age
+largely given to pleasure. Samuel Pepys had strong leanings towards the
+Presbyterians, but was a churchman, and seldom missed going to a place
+of worship on Sunday, and did not neglect to have family prayers in his
+own home. He generally attended his own church in the morning, and after
+dinner in the afternoon would roam about the city, and visit more than
+one place of worship. Take for an example an account of one Sunday.
+After being present at his own church in the forenoon, and dining, he
+says: "I went and ranged and ranged about to many churches, among the
+rest to the Temple, where I heard Dr. Wilkins a _little_."
+
+It is to be feared pretty faces and not powerful preachers often induced
+him to go to the house of prayer. Writing on August 11th, 1661, he
+says: "To our own church in the forenoon, and in the afternoon to
+Clerkenwell Church, only to see the two fair Botelers." He managed to
+obtain a seat where he could have a good view of them, but they did not
+charm him, for he says: "I am now out of conceit with them." Another
+Sunday he writes: "By coach to Greenwich Church, where a good sermon, a
+fine church, and a good company of handsome women." At another church he
+visited he says that his pretty black girl was present.
+
+Pepys has much to say about the sermons he heard, and when they were
+dull he went to sleep. Judging from his frequent records of slumbering
+in church, prosy preachers were by no means rare in his day.
+
+Writing on the 4th August, 1662, he gives us a glimpse of the manners of
+a rustic church. His cousin Roger himself attended the service, and says
+Pepys: "At our coming in, the country people all rose with so much
+reverence; and when the parson begins, he begins, 'Right worshipful and
+dearly beloved' to us."
+
+Conversation appears to have been freely carried on in city churches.
+"In my pew," says Pepys, "both Sir Williams and I had much talk about
+the death of Sir Robert." Laughter was by no means unusual. "Before
+sermon," writes Pepys, "I laughed at the reader, who, in his prayer,
+desired God that he would imprint his Word on the thumbs of our right
+hands and on the right toes of our right feet."
+
+When Pepys remained at home on Sunday he frequently cast up his
+accounts, and there are in his Diary several allusions to this subject.
+
+ [Illustration: THE END]
+
+
+
+
+Index.
+
+ Abbot's Pew, Malmesbury Abbey, 155, 159
+ Addisham, Priest's door at, 185
+ Alkborough Maze, 193, 194
+ All Hallows, Barking, 81
+ Alms boxes, 180
+ Alnwick, chest at, 174
+ Announcing cows in a cornfield, 221
+ Antiquarian Problem: The Leper Window, 183-185
+ Artificial teeth missing, 229
+ Asenby, Maze at, 196
+ Ashbourne bells, 121
+ Ashton-under-Lyne, 113, 116-118
+
+ Bailey, J. E. The Five of Spades and the Church of
+ Ashton-under-Lyne, 113-118
+ Baptisms performed in porches, 24
+ Beadle's announcement, 224
+ Bede, Venerable, 81
+ Bell-ringing laws, 125
+ Bell-robbers, 141
+ Bells and their Messages, 119-132
+ Belvoir, 80
+ Beware of thieves, 221
+ Big Bones Preserved in Churches, 230-243
+ Blacksmith, medival, 19
+ Blood, foundation laid in, 30, 43
+ Bocastle, 137
+ Bottreaux, 137
+ Bradbury, Edward. Bells and their Messages, 119-132
+ Bradford-on-Avon Church, 7
+ Brancepeth, chest at, 178
+ Briefs, 49
+ Brigstock bells, 139
+ Briscoe, J. P. Stories about Bells, 133-144
+ Bristol, 62, 75, 79
+ Bronze-doors, 21
+ Brundall, 147
+ Building of the English Cathedrals, 46-75
+ Burial customs, 26
+ Burial at north side of church, 209-215
+ Buried alive, 40
+ Burials in Lady Chapels, 82-83
+ Bury St. Edmunds, 80
+
+ Candle in a coffin, 42
+ Canterbury, 51, 53, 72, 79
+ Carlisle, 62, 70, 72
+ Carthage, Council of, 4
+ Cauld Lad of Hilton, 32
+ Chantries, 72
+ Chappell of Oure Ladye, 76-100
+ Charm of country bells, 131
+ Chartres, Maze at, 191
+ Cheltenham, All Saints' Church, 14
+ Chester, 62, 79
+ Chesterfield, bones at, 234; spire, 110
+ Chichester, 49, 50, 62, 65, 75, 79
+ Chimes, 130
+ Christening ships, 35
+ Christmas games, 115
+ Christ Church, Hants., 79; Christ Church, Oxford, 157
+ Church Chests, 161-182
+ Church Door, 1-29
+ Churchwardens' accounts, 126-127
+ Churchyard Superstitions, 206-215
+ Cocks, live, built into walls, 44
+ Coins, burial of, 35
+ Colchester, Trinity Church Door, 5, 7
+ Cologne Cathedral, 42
+ Combs, chest at, 181
+ Compton Martin, 80
+ Concerning Font-Lore, 145-152
+ Conversation in church, 245
+ Cope chests, 180
+ Cornish bell-lore, 137
+ Coventry, chest at, 171, 173; spires, 102, 104
+ Courts in the porch, 27
+ Cromwell's soldiers, 84
+ Crowle Church, 1, 8, 10
+ Crowland Abbey, 48
+ Curfew bell, 125, 129
+ Curious Announcements in Church, 216-229
+
+ Danes, incursions of, 53-55
+ Darenth, 80
+ Darrington church, 38
+ Dartmouth Church, 19, 21
+ Decorated Style, 68
+ Dedicating chapels, 81
+ Devil, sold to the, 42
+ Dickens, Charles, on Bells, 120
+ Dissolution of monasteries, 84
+ Dogs haunting churches and castles, 31
+ Doom, 15
+ Door-keepers, 4
+ Dun Cow, 234, 238
+ Durham, 9, 58, 67, 80, 81, 133, 234
+
+ Early Cathedrals, 52
+ Early English chests, 164
+ Earthquake, 65
+ Eggs in foundations, 43
+ Elgin, 80
+ Elkstone Church, 16
+ Elston Church, 16, 17
+ Exeter, 79
+ Ely, 54, 72, 80, 84
+
+ Fair Rosamond, 186
+ Finedon, 109
+ Fire, 65, 67, 70
+ First burial in a churchyard, 39
+ First Prayer Book of Edward VI., 25, 26
+ Fives of Spades and the Church of Ashton-under-Lyne, 113-118
+ Florence, doors at, 22
+ Flowers in churchyards, 207
+ Fordham, 80
+ Forrabury, 137
+ Founhope Church, 16
+ Foxton, 185
+ France, card playing in, 113
+
+ Galilee Chapel, Durham, 67
+ Gambling, sermon against, 113
+ German bell-lore, 121; mythology, 36
+ Gild of Cloth Merchants, 22
+ Glastonbury, 79, 175
+ Gloucester, 13, 56, 61, 79
+ Grantham, 107
+ Guy, Earl of Warwick, 238
+
+ Haddenham, 81
+ Haltham Church, 16
+ Hampton Court, maze at, 186
+ Harold's tomb, 96
+ Harty Chapel, chest at, 177
+ Hearthstones, bones under, 40
+ Hel-horse, 43
+ Henry the Seventh's Chapel, 82, 85
+ Henry VII. a card player, 115
+ Hereford, 61, 72, 74, 79
+ Heysham, 10
+ Higham Ferrers, 13, 14, 18, 109
+ Hill, Rev. P. Oakley. Concerning Font-Lore, 145-152
+ Hillbury maze, 200
+ Hilton maze, 194
+ Holland, 41
+ Holsworthy Church, 36
+ Holy Land, leprosy brought from, 184
+ Horses interred alive, 43
+ Howlett, E. Sacrificial Foundations, 30-45
+ Hulme, 80
+
+ Importation of cards prohibited, 114
+ Indulgences, 49
+ Inscriptions on bells, 128-129
+ Iona, 39
+ Ironwork, 19-20
+ Islington, 111
+
+ Jarrow-on-Tyne, 81
+ Johnson, Rev. T. Churchyard Superstitions, 206-215
+
+ Kilkenny, 80
+ Knockers, 23
+
+ Laughter in church, 246
+ Lambeth Palace, 179
+ Leper-Window, 183-185
+ Lichfield, 62, 68, 104, 107, 158
+ Lights in Lady Chapels, 95
+ Limerick bells, 134
+ Lincoln Cathedral, 15, 65, 70, 71, 154
+ Lion Fonts, 147
+ Liverpool, 74
+ Llanaber, chest at, 180
+ Llandaff, 9, 62, 135
+ Llanthony, 80
+ Lost goods cried in church, 215
+ Louth, 105, 108
+ Low-side windows, 183
+ Lucca Cathedral, maze at, 187, 188
+ Lych window, 185
+ Lynn, Thoresby door, 18, 19
+
+ Malmesbury Abbey, 155, 159
+ Mallwyd, bones at, 233
+ Manchester, 69, 79
+ Mariolatry, 77
+ Marriage customs, 25
+ Massacre of Thomas Becket, 90
+ Massingham bells, 139
+ Maundy Thursday, 15
+ Mazes, 186-205
+ Modern mazes, 203-205
+ Mortar, blood in, 37
+ Mortlake, chest at, 177
+
+ New Walsingham, 146
+ Newcastle-on-Tyne, 70
+ Newington chest lost, 182
+ Norman architecture, 8, 57-68
+ Norman Conquest, 57
+ Northamptonshire spires, 102
+ North side of church, burial at, 209-215
+ Northorpe, 31
+ Norwich, 28, 61, 84, 103, 104, 145
+
+ Old Saint Paul's, 103
+ Olney, 109
+ Oundle, 108
+ Over, chest at, 167, 178
+ Oxford, 62, 66, 79, 82, 108
+
+ Page, Jno. T. Some Famous Spires, 101-112
+ Paris, 11
+ "Paston Letters," 114
+ Penance, 49
+ Pennant Melangell, legend of, 230
+ People and Steeple Rhymes, 111
+ Pepys, Samuel, at Church, 244-246
+ Peterborough, 12, 47, 62, 65, 72, 75, 79, 84
+ Pimpern maze, 200
+ Poetry on bells, 122-125
+ Porches, 24
+ Preferment fee, 50
+
+ Rees, Rev. R. Wilkins. Curious Announcements in Church, 216-229;
+ Big Bones Preserved in Churches, 230-243
+ Relics of a Saint, 81
+ Ripon, 59, 62, 72, 73, 80, 200
+ Rochester, 51, 62, 65, 80
+ Rome, founding of, 34
+ Rooms over porches, 158
+ Rougham Church, 16
+ Roumania, 40
+ Rushden, 109
+
+ Sacrificial Foundations, 30-45
+ Saffron Waldon, maze at, 196
+ Salisbury, 47, 68, 79, 103
+ Samuel Pepys at Church, 244-246
+ Saxon architecture, 8
+ Scutari, 41
+ Sempringham Abbey, 18, 20
+ Sermon lost, 222
+ Seven Sacrament Fonts, 146
+ Seville Cathedral, 11
+ Shakespeare, 28, 31, 193
+ Shandon, bells of, 123
+ Shrewsbury, 107
+ Shrine of St. Frideswide, 82
+ Shrines, 51, 82
+ Skipton, 223
+ Sleeping in church, 245
+ Sneinton, maze at, 196-199
+ Spires, 101-112
+ Some Famous Spires, 101-112
+ Southwell, 62, 63, 66
+ Southwold chest, 165
+ Sowerford-Keynes, 8
+ Stamp, Rev. J. H. Ye Chappell of Oure Ladye, 76-100
+ Stonham Aspel, 170
+ Stories about Bells, 133-144
+ Strasburg Cathedral, 11
+ St. Albans, 52, 62, 72, 75, 79, 85, 87, 154, 158
+ St. Anne's Well and Maze, 196, 197, 199
+ St. Asaph, 69
+ St. Cuthbert, tomb of, 82
+ St. David's, 62, 154
+ St. Fillan's bell, 144
+ St. Frideswide's shrine, 157
+ St. Giles's Cathedral, 14
+ St. Hugh, 66, 71
+ St. Lawrence's, Isle of Thanet, 169
+ St. Mary's Redcliff, 79, 85, 107, 241
+ St. Monacella's lambs, 231
+ St. Mura, bell of, 136
+ St. Odhran, 39
+ St. Paul's, 73
+ St. Peter Mancroft, Norwich, 145
+ St. Quentin, maze at, 192
+ Suicides, Burial of, 211
+ Swedish folk-tales, 32
+
+ Thetford, 80
+ Thorns, barring a door with, 29
+ Tintagel, 137
+ Torch, symbol of, 42
+ Town bells, 131
+ Truro, 75
+ Tunstall, legend of, 141
+ Tyack, Rev. G. S. The Church Door, 1-29; The Building of the
+ English Cathedrals, 46-75; Watching-Chambers, 153-160;
+ Church Chests, 161-182; Mazes, 186-205
+ Tympanum, 5, 12, 14, 16
+ Tyre, church at, 2
+
+ Unclerically dressed, 49
+ Upton chest, 166, 167
+ Upton font, 148
+
+ Vestments 153
+ Voluntary labour, 52
+
+ Wakefield, 74
+ Walsingham, 80
+ Waltham Abbey, 80, 88
+ Warwick, 82
+ Watching-Chambers in Churches, 153-160
+ Weathercock rhyme, 109
+ Wells, 69, 72, 79
+ Welsh border, 55
+ West doors, 13, 14
+ Westminster, 79-81, 82, 179
+ White, William. An Antiquarian Problem: The Leper Window, 183-185
+ Wimborne, 80
+ Winchester, 61, 67, 79, 177, 195, 196
+ Witham-on-the-Hill bells, 140
+ Worcester, 56, 61, 68, 70
+ Wymondham, 80
+
+ York, 71, 72
+
+
+
+
+"Mr. Andrews' books are always interesting."--_Church Bells._
+
+"No student of Mr. Andrews' books can be a dull after-dinner speaker,
+for his writings are full of curious out-of-the-way information and good
+stories."--_Birmingham Daily Gazette._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+England in the Days of Old
+
+By WILLIAM ANDREWS, F.H.R.S.
+
+_Demy 8vo., 7s. 6d. Numerous Illustrations_
+
+
+This volume is one of unusual interest and value to the lover of olden
+days and ways, and can hardly fail to interest and instruct the reader.
+It recalls many forgotten episodes, scenes, characters, manners,
+customs, etc., in the social and domestic life of England.
+
+CONTENTS:--When Wigs were Worn -- Powdering the Hair -- Men Wearing
+Muffs -- Concerning Corporation Customs -- Bribes for the Palate --
+Rebel Heads on City Gates -- Burial at Cross Roads -- Detaining the Dead
+for Debt -- A Nobleman's Household in Tudor Times -- Bread and Baking in
+Bygone Days -- Arise, Mistress, Arise! -- The Turnspit -- A Gossip about
+the Goose -- Bells as Time-Tellers -- The Age of Snuffing -- State
+Lotteries -- Bear-Baiting -- Morris Dancers -- The Folk-Lore of
+Midsummer Eve -- Harvest Home -- Curious Charities -- An Old-Time
+Chronicler.
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS:--The House of Commons in the time of Sir Robert
+Walpole -- Egyptian Wig -- The Earl of Albemarle -- Campaign Wig --
+Periwig with Tail -- Ramillie-Wig -- Pig-tail Wig -- Bag-Wig --
+Archbishop Tilotson -- Heart-Breakers -- A Barber's Shop in the time of
+Queen Elizabeth -- With and Without a Wig -- Stealing a Wig -- Man with
+Muff, 1693 -- Burying the Mace at Nottingham -- The Lord Mayor of York
+escorting Princess Margaret -- The Mayor of Wycombe going to the
+Guildhall -- Woman wearing a Scold's Bridle -- The Brank -- Andrew
+Marvell -- Old London Bridge, shewing heads of rebels on the gate --
+Axe, Block, and Executioner's Mask -- Margaret Roper taking leave of her
+father, Sir Thomas More -- Rebel Heads, from a print published in 1746
+-- Temple Bar in Dr. Johnson's time -- Micklegate Bar, York -- Clock,
+Hampton Court Palace -- Drawing a Lottery in the Guildhall, 1751 --
+Advertising the Last State Lottery -- Partaking of the Pungent Pinch --
+Morris Dance, from a painted window at Betley -- Morris Dance, temp.
+James I. -- A Whitsun Morris Dance -- Bear Garden, or Hope Theatre, 1647
+-- The Globe Theatre, temp. Elizabeth -- Plan of Bankside early in the
+Seventeenth Century -- John Stow's Monument.
+
+A carefully prepared Index enables the reader to refer to the varied and
+interesting contents of the book.
+
+"A very attractive and informing book."--_Birmingham Daily Gazette._
+
+"Mr Andrews has the true art of narration, and contrives to give us the
+results of his learning with considerable freshness of style, whilst his
+subjects are always interesting and picturesque."--_Manchester Courier._
+
+"The book is of unusual interest."--_Eastern Morning News._
+
+"Of the many clever books which Mr. Andrews has written none does him
+greater credit than "England in the Days of Old," and none will be read
+with greater profit."--_Northern Gazette._
+
+"Valuable and interesting."--_The Times._
+
+"Readable as well as instructive."--_The Globe._
+
+"A valuable addition to any library."--_Derbyshire Times._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Bygone Series.
+
+
+In this series the following volumes ate included, and issued at 7s. 6d.
+each. Demy 8vo, cloth gilt.
+
+These books have been favourably reviewed in the leading critical
+journals of England and America.
+
+Carefully written articles by recognised authorities are included on
+history, castles, abbeys, biography, romantic episodes, legendary lore,
+traditional stories, curious customs, folk-lore, etc., etc.
+
+The works are illustrated by eminent artists, and by the reproduction of
+quaint pictures of the olden time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BYGONE BERKSHIRE, edited by Rev. P. H. Ditchfield, M.A., F.S.A.
+
+BYGONE CHESHIRE, edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE DEVONSHIRE, by the Rev. Hilderic Friend.
+
+BYGONE DURHAM, edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE GLOUCESTERSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE HERTFORDSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE LEICESTERSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE LINCOLNSHIRE (2 vols), edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE MIDDLESEX, edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE NORFOLK, edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE NORTHUMBERLAND, edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE NOTTINGHAMSHIRE, by William Stevenson.
+
+BYGONE SCOTLAND, by David Maxwell, C.E.
+
+BYGONE SOMERSETSHIRE, edited by Cuming Walters.
+
+BYGONE SOUTHWARK, by Mrs. E. Boger.
+
+BYGONE SUFFOLK, edited by Cuming Walters.
+
+BYGONE SURREY, edited by George Clinch and S. W. Kershaw, F.S.A.
+
+BYGONE SUSSEX, by W. E. A. Axon.
+
+BYGONE WARWICKSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE YORKSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.
+
+
+
+
+Bygone Punishments.
+
+By William Andrews.
+
+_Demy 8vo, cloth gilt, 7s. 6d. Numerous Illustrations._
+
+
+CONTENTS:--Hanging -- Hanging in Chains -- Hanging, Drawing, and
+Quartering -- Pressing to Death -- Drowning -- Burning to Death --
+Boiling to Death -- Beheading -- The Halifax Gibbet -- The Scottish
+Maiden -- Mutilation -- Branding -- The Pillory -- Punishing Authors and
+Burning Books -- Finger Pillory -- The Jougs -- The Stocks -- The
+Drunkard's Cloak -- Whipping and Whipping-Posts -- Public Penance -- The
+Repentance Stool -- The Ducking Stool -- The Brank, or Scold's Bridle --
+Riding the Stang -- Index.
+
+"A book of great interest."--_Manchester Courier._
+
+"Crowded with extraordinary facts."--_Birmingham Daily Gazette._
+
+"Contains much that is curious and interesting both to the student of
+history and social reformer."--_Lancashire Daily Express._
+
+"Full of curious lore, sought out and arranged with much
+industry."--_The Scotsman._
+
+"Mr. Andrews' volume is admirably produced, and contains a collection of
+curious illustrations, representative of many of the punishments he
+describes, which contribute towards making it one of the most curious
+and entertaining books that we have perused for a long time."--_Norfolk
+Chronicle._
+
+"Those who wish to obtain a good general idea on the subject of criminal
+punishment in days long past, will obtain it in this well-printed and
+stoutly-bound volume."--_Daily Mail._
+
+"Mr. William Andrews, of Hull, is an indefatigable searcher amongst the
+byways of ancient English history, and it would be difficult to name an
+antiquary who, along his chosen lines, has made so thoroughly
+interesting and instructive the mass of facts a painstaking industry has
+brought to light. For twenty-five years he has been delving into the
+subject of Bygone Punishments, and is now one of the best authorities
+upon obsolete systems of jurisdiction and torture, for torture was, in
+various forms, the main characteristic of punishment in the good old
+times. The reformation of the person punished was a far more remote
+object of retribution than it is with us, and even with us reform is
+very much a matter of sentiment. Punishment was intended to be
+punishment to the individual in the first place, and in the second a
+warning to the rest. It is a gruesome study, but Mr Andrews nowhere
+writes for mere effect. As an antiquary ought to do, he has made the
+collection of facts and their preservation for modern students of
+history in a clear, straightforward narrative his main object, and in
+this volume he keeps to it consistently. Every page is therefore full of
+curious, out-of-the-way facts, with authorities and references amply
+quoted."--_Yorkshire Post._
+
+
+
+
+The Church Treasury of History, Custom, Folk-Lore, etc.
+
+Edited by WILLIAM ANDREWS.
+
+_Demy 8vo., 7s. 6d. Numerous Illustrations._
+
+
+CONTENTS:--Stave-Kirks -- Curious Churches of Cornwall -- Holy Wells --
+Hermits and Hermit Cells -- Church Wakes -- Fortified Church Towers --
+The Knight Templars: their Churches and their Privileges -- English
+Medieval Pilgrimages -- Pilgrims' Signs -- Human Skin on Church Doors --
+Animals of the Church in Wood, Stone, and Bronze -- Queries in Stones --
+Pictures in Churches -- Flowers and the Rites of the Church -- Ghost
+Layers and Ghost Laying -- Church Walks -- Westminster Waxworks --
+Index. Numerous Illustrations.
+
+"It is a work that will prove interesting to the clergy and churchmen
+generally, and to all others who have an antiquarian turn of mind, or
+like to be regaled occasionally by reading old-world customs and
+anecdotes."--_Church Family Newspaper._
+
+"Mr. Andrews has given us some excellent volumes of Church lore, but
+none quite so good as this. The subjects are well chosen. They are
+treated brightly and with considerable detail, and they are well
+illustrated. ... Mr. Andrews is himself responsible for some of the most
+interesting papers, but all his helpers have caught his own spirit, and
+the result is a volume full of information well and pleasantly
+put."--_London Quarterly Review._
+
+"Those who seek information regarding curious and quaint relics or
+customs will find much to interest them in this book. The illustrations
+are good."--_Publishers' Circular._
+
+"An excellent and entertaining book."--_Newcastle Daily Leader._
+
+"The book will be welcome to every lover of archological
+lore."--_Liverpool Daily Post._
+
+"The volume is of a most informing and suggestive character, abounding
+in facts not easy of access to the ordinary reader, and enhanced
+with illustrations of a high order of merit, and extremely
+numerous."--_Birmingham Daily Gazette._
+
+"The contents of the volume are very good."--_Leeds Mercury._
+
+"The volume is sure to meet with a cordial reception."--_Manchester
+Courier._
+
+"A fascinating book."--_Stockport Advertiser._
+
+"Mr. Andrews has brought together much curious matter."--_Manchester
+Guardian._
+
+"The book is a very readable one, and will receive a hearty
+welcome."--_Herts. Advertiser._
+
+"Mr. William Andrews has been able to give us a very acceptable and
+useful addition to the books which deal with the curiosities of Church
+lore, and for this deserves our hearty thanks. The manner in which the
+book is printed and illustrated also commands our admiration."--_Norfolk
+Chronicle._
+
+
+
+
+Historic Dress of the Clergy.
+
+By the Rev. GEO. S. TYACK, B.A.,
+
+Author of "The Cross in Ritual, Architecture, and Art."
+
+_Crown, cloth extra, 3s. 6d._
+
+
+The work contains thirty-three illustrations from ancient monuments,
+rare manuscripts, and other sources.
+
+"A very painstaking and very valuable volume on a subject which is just
+now attracting much attention. Mr. Tyack has collected a large amount of
+information from sources not available to the unlearned, and has put
+together his materials in an attractive way. The book deserves and is
+sure to meet with a wide circulation."--_Daily Chronicle._
+
+"This book is written with great care, and with an evident knowledge of
+history. It is well worth the study of all who wish to be better
+informed upon a subject which the author states in his preface gives
+evident signs of a lively and growing interest."--_Manchester Courier._
+
+"Those who are interested in the Dress of the Clergy will find full
+information gathered together here, and set forth in a lucid and
+scholarly way."--_Glasgow Herald._
+
+"We are glad to welcome yet another volume from the author of 'The Cross
+in Ritual, Architecture, and Art.' His subject, chosen widely and
+carried out comprehensively, makes this a valuable book of reference for
+all classes. It is only the antiquary and the ecclesiologist who can
+devote time and talents to research of this kind, and Mr. Tyack has done
+a real and lasting service to the Church of England by collecting so
+much useful and reliable information upon the dress of the clergy in all
+ages, and offering it to the public in such a popular form. We do not
+hesitate to recommend this volume as the most reliable and the most
+comprehensive illustrated guide to the history and origin of the
+canonical vestments and other dress worn by the clergy, whether
+ecclesiastical, academical, or general, while the excellent work in
+typography and binding make it a beautiful gift-book."--_Church Bells._
+
+"A very lucid history of ecclesiastical vestments from Levitical times
+to the present day."--_Pall Mall Gazette._
+
+"The book can be recommended to the undoubtedly large class of persons
+who are seeking information on this and kindred subjects."--_The Times._
+
+"The work may be read either as pastime or for instruction, and is
+worthy of a place in the permanent section of any library. The numerous
+illustrations, extensive contents table and index, and beautiful
+workmanship, both in typography and binding, are all features of
+attraction and utility."--_Dundee Advertiser._
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note
+
+In view of the multiple authors represented, inconsistent spelling and
+hyphenation have been retained.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Ecclesiastical Curiosities, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ECCLESIASTICAL CURIOSITIES ***
+
+***** This file should be named 38274-8.txt or 38274-8.zip *****
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Ecclesiastical Curiosities, by Various
+
+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: Ecclesiastical Curiosities
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: William Andrews
+
+Release Date: December 11, 2011 [EBook #38274]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ECCLESIASTICAL CURIOSITIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Wilson
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<h2 title="" id="bookbegin"><a name="halftitle" id="halftitle"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[</span>half title<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>ECCLESIASTICAL CURIOSITIES.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="frontispiece" id="frontispiece"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[</span>frontispiece<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span><img
+ src="images/frontis.jpg" alt="" title="Frontispiece" id="frontis" /><br
+ /><small><i>From a Photo by A. H. Pitcher, Gloucester.</i><br
+ />PORCH, GLOUCESTER CATHEDRAL.</small>
+</div>
+
+<div class="titlepagetop">
+<h1 title="Ecclesiastical Curiosities"><a name="title" id="title"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[</span>title<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span><big>&nbsp;Ecclesiastical&nbsp;.<br
+ />&nbsp;Curiosities&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</big></h1>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<small>Edited by</small><br
+ /><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;William Andrews&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</span></p>
+
+</div>
+<div class="titlepagebot">
+
+<div class="illo">
+<img src="images/fancya.jpg" alt="illuminated capital A"
+ id="fancya" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="publ"><small>LONDON:<br
+ />WILLIAM ANDREWS &amp; CO., 5, FARRINGDON AVENUE, E.C.<br
+ />1899.</small></p>
+
+
+<div class="illo">
+<img src="images/publisherdevice.jpg" alt="William Andrews &amp; Co
+The Hull Press" title="Publisher's device" id="publisherdevice" />
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="chunk">
+
+<h2 class="chapanon" title="Preface"><a name="pi" id="pi"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>i<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Preface.</h2>
+
+<p class="newchap"><span class="dropcap">This</span> volume is on similar lines to some of
+my previously published works, and I
+trust it will be equally well received by the
+public and the press.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap"> William Andrews.</span>    </p>
+
+
+<p class="prefdate"><small><span class="smcap">The Hull Press</span>,<br
+ />          <i>December 1st, 1898.</i></small></p>
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chapanon" title="Contents"><a name="piii" id="piii"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>iii<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Contents.</h2>
+
+<table class="toc" summary="Table of Contents">
+<tr><th>&nbsp;</th><th> PAGE</th></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption"><p><a class="smcap" href="#p1">The Church Door.</a>
+ By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, <span class="postnomial">B.A.</span></p></td>
+ <td class="no"> <a href="#p1">1</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="caption"><p><a class="smcap" href="#p30">Sacrificial Foundations.</a>
+ By England Howlett</p></td>
+ <td class="no"> <a href="#p30">30</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="caption"><p><a class="smcap" href="#p46">The Building of the English Cathedrals.</a>
+ By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, <span class="postnomial">B.A.</span></p></td>
+ <td class="no"> <a href="#p46">46</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="caption"><p><a class="smcap" href="#p76">Ye Chappell of Oure Ladye.</a>
+ By the Rev. J. H. Stamp</p></td>
+ <td class="no"> <a href="#p76">76</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="caption"><p><a class="smcap" href="#p101">Some Famous Spires.</a>
+ By John T. Page</p></td>
+ <td class="no"> <a href="#p101">101</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="caption"><p><a class="smcap" href="#p113">The Five of Spades and the Church of Ashton-under-Lyne.</a>
+ By John Eglington Bailey, <span class="postnomial">F.S.A.</span></p></td>
+ <td class="no"> <a href="#p113">113</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="caption"><p><a class="smcap" href="#p119">Bells and their Messages.</a>
+ By Edward Bradbury</p></td>
+ <td class="no"> <a href="#p119">119</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="caption"><p><a class="smcap" href="#p133">Stories about Bells.</a>
+ By J. Potter Briscoe, <span class="postnomial">F.R.H.S.</span></p></td>
+ <td class="no"> <a href="#p133">133</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="caption"><p><a class="smcap" href="#p145">Concerning Font-Lore.</a>
+ By the Rev. P. Oakley Hill</p></td>
+ <td class="no"> <a href="#p145">145</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="caption"><p><a class="smcap" href="#p153">Watching-Chambers in Churches.</a>
+ By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, <span class="postnomial">B.A.</span></p></td>
+ <td class="no"> <a href="#p153">153</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="caption"><p><a class="smcap" href="#p161">Church Chests.</a>
+ By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, <span class="postnomial">B.A.</span></p></td>
+ <td class="no"> <a href="#p161">161</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="caption"><p><a class="smcap" href="#p183">An Antiquarian Problem: The Leper Window.</a>
+ By William White, <span class="postnomial">F.S.A.</span></p></td>
+ <td class="no"> <a href="#p183">183</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="caption"><p><a class="smcap" href="#p186">Mazes.</a>
+ By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, <span class="postnomial">B.A.</span></p></td>
+ <td class="no"> <a href="#p186">186</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="caption"><p><a class="smcap" href="#p206">Churchyard Superstitions.</a>
+ By the Rev. Theodore Johnson</p></td>
+ <td class="no"> <a href="#p206">206</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="caption"><p><a class="smcap" href="#p216">Curious Announcements in the Church.</a>
+ By the Rev. R. Wilkins Rees</p></td>
+ <td class="no"> <a href="#p216">216</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="caption"><p><a class="smcap" href="#p230">Big Bones Preserved in Churches.</a>
+ By the Rev. R. Wilkins Rees</p></td>
+ <td class="no"> <a href="#p230">230</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="caption"><p><a class="smcap" href="#p244">Samuel Pepys at Church.</a></p></td>
+ <td class="no"> <a href="#p244">244</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chunk">
+<h1 title=""><a name="p1" id="p1"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>1<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Ecclesiastical Curiosities.<br
+ /><img src="images/rule.jpg" alt="" id="rule" /></h1>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chapi" title="The Church Door">The Church Door.</h2>
+
+<p class="author">By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, <span class="postnomial">B.A.</span></p>
+
+
+<div class="illofltlt">
+<img src="images/p1.jpg" alt="" id="img1" /><br
+ /><small>DOOR AT CROWLE CHURCH.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noindent"><img src="images/fancyt.jpg" alt="" id="fancyt"
+ style="float: left; margin-left: -50px; padding-right: 10px;"
+ /><img src="images/hat.jpg" alt="That" id="hat"
+ style="float: left; margin-left: -10px;" /> first impressions have no
+small influence in moulding
+the opinions of most
+people can scarcely be
+denied; and therefore in
+our estimate of the architectural
+value of a church
+the door is an element
+of some importance. A
+shabby and undignified
+entrance raises no expectations
+of a lofty and solemn
+interior; and that interior
+must be emphatically fine, if we are not to read
+into it some of the meanness of its portal. On
+the other hand, though the church be but plain
+<a name="p2" id="p2"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>2<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>and simple&mdash;so that it lack not a measure of the
+dignity which may well accompany simplicity&mdash;our
+thoughts will be raised and fitted to find in
+it something worthy of its high purpose, if we
+have been prepared by passing through a noble
+porch, and beneath a doorway that speaks itself
+the entrance to no ordinary dwelling.</p>
+
+<p>In primitive times the approach to a church
+must have been full of dignity, the worshippers
+being warned, by successive gates and doors, of
+the sacredness of the building which they were
+about to enter. Eusebius gives us a full account
+of a splendid church built at Tyre by Paulinus,
+from which we may gather the plan on which
+such buildings were erected in the primitive
+ages, when the means were forthcoming, and no
+opposition from the heathen world prevented.</p>
+
+<p>The whole church at Tyre and its precincts
+were enclosed within a wall, at the front of which
+was a stately porch, known as the “great porch,”
+or the “first entrance.” Passing through this
+the worshipper entered the courtyard, or <i>atrium</i>,
+round which ran a covered portico, or cloister,
+and in the centre of which was a fountain, or
+cistern, of water. Opposite the “great porch”
+was the door into the church itself; at Tyre
+<a name="p3" id="p3"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>3<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>there were (as in many of our cathedrals) three
+such doors, a large one in the centre, flanked by
+smaller ones at some distance along the wall.
+These opened into a vestibule, or ante-temple,
+from which admittance was gained into the nave
+of the church by yet another door or gate.</p>
+
+<p>Each of the spaces formed by these several
+barriers had its special use. Within the <i>atrium</i>
+all the worshippers washed their hands as a
+preparation, both literal and emblematic, for
+assisting in the sacred mysteries; here, too,
+penitents under censure for the most flagrant
+sins remained during the divine offices, and
+besought the prayers of their brethren as they
+passed on to those holier courts, from which for
+a time they were themselves excluded. Within
+this open courtyard, also, as in a modern churchyard,
+burials were sometimes permitted. The
+portico beyond the second entrance was the
+place for the “hearers,” that is for those who
+were not yet sufficiently instructed in the faith
+to be allowed to be present except at the reading
+of the Scriptures and the sermons (these were
+catechumens in their noviciate and the heathens
+and Jews), and also for those Christians who
+were degraded temporarily to the same position
+<a name="p4" id="p4"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>4<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>as a penance for some sin. Beyond this portico,
+the nave was still further divided for the separation
+of different orders of penitents; so that the
+faithful in possession of all their privileges had
+quite a number of doors or gates through which
+to pass before reaching that place, immediately
+outside the apse, or chancel, which it was their
+right to occupy.</p>
+
+<p>In order that the several classes of persons
+attending church might be kept strictly within
+those portions of the building which were
+assigned to them, a special order of door-keepers
+existed in the Church. The keys of the church
+were solemnly delivered to these <i>ostiarii</i>, and
+they were accounted to form the lowest in rank
+of the minor orders. The simple words of the
+commission, uttered by the bishop to the
+<i>ostiarius</i>, were, “Behave thyself as one that
+must give an account to God of the things that
+are kept under these keys.” Such was the formula
+prescribed by the fourth Council of Carthage
+(398&nbsp;<span class="postnomial">A.D.</span>), and found in the Roman ritual of the
+eighth century. This order of clergy was almost
+confined to the west, however; we find traces of
+its existence at one time at Constantinople, but
+for the most part the deacons guarded the men’s
+<a name="p7" id="p7"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>7<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>entrance, and sub-deacons or deaconesses the
+women’s, in the east.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="p5" id="p5"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>5<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>
+ <img src="images/p5.jpg" alt="" id="img5" /><br
+ /><small>WEST DOOR, HOLY TRINITY, COLCHESTER.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>In the earliest English churches the entrance
+was of a very simple nature; for the artistic skill
+of the people was small, and their ideals were
+unambitious. The buildings consisted of a nave
+without clerestory, and a chancel; the door
+being placed in the centre of the western wall.
+A curious example of such a door meets us at
+Holy Trinity, Colchester, although in this case
+it gives admittance not into the nave directly,
+but through the ancient tower. This tower, the
+oldest part of the church, has been constructed
+of the fragments of buildings older still; the
+Roman bricks of the ruined city of Camulodunum
+having been used to form it. In the western side
+is a narrow doorway, contained by two square
+shafts with very simple capitals, and having a
+triangular head with an equally simple moulding
+by way of drip-stone. The date is supposed to
+be between 800 and 1000&nbsp;<span class="postnomial">A.D.</span> A church perhaps
+yet older is that of S.&nbsp;Lawrence at Bradford-on-Avon,
+which has a good claim to be the veritable
+structure reared by S.&nbsp;Aldhelm in the first years
+of the eighth century. Here there is a northern
+porch of unusual size in proportion to the rest of
+<a name="p8" id="p8"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>8<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>the building; the entrance to which is by means
+of an arched doorway, tall and narrow. The
+narrowness of some of these ancient doorways is
+remarkable. At Sowerford-Keynes is one, now
+built up, which, though nearly nine feet high, is
+but 1&nbsp;foot 9&nbsp;inches wide at the springing of the
+arch, widening towards the base to 2&nbsp;feet 5½
+inches. The jambs are of “short and long”
+work, and the abacus has a very simple zig-zag
+moulding. The arch itself is not built up, but
+carved out of one stone, which is cut square on
+the upper side and scooped into a parabolic
+curve on the lower. A double row of cable
+moulding decorates it. This, which has been
+called “one of the most characteristic specimens
+of Saxon architecture in England,” was the
+northern entrance to the church. Another
+instance of a western door of simple design is
+supplied by Crowle, or Croule, in north Lincolnshire.
+Here we meet with a rectangular doorway,
+the top of which is formed of one long stone, on
+which is some antique carving and a fragment of
+a runic inscription.<sup><a href="#fn1" name="fnm1" id="fnm1"
+ title="go to footnote 1">1</a></sup> Above this is a tympanum
+filled with diamond-shaped stones of small size.</p>
+
+<p><a name="p9" id="p9"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>9<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>With the rise of the so-called Norman style of
+architecture the doors of our churches took a
+handsomer form; and as the churches themselves
+were now formed on a larger and nobler plan,
+more than one entrance was often required. The
+usual door for the people was now commonly
+placed at the south side, except in churches
+connected (as were so many of our cathedrals)
+with monastic foundations. In this latter case
+the south side was generally occupied by the
+cloisters and other conventual buildings, and the
+people’s door was therefore placed upon the
+north side. At this period, too, the church-porch
+begins its development; for, although porches
+in a strict sense were at any rate not usual, the
+door-way deeply sunk in the massive wall and
+protected by three, four, or even more concentric
+arches, suggests the more fully developed shelter
+of the porch. Of doors of this kind any of our
+older abbey-churches will supply adequate, and
+often splendid, examples. The great north door
+of Durham Cathedral, and the smaller, but not
+less beautiful doors into the cloisters there, are
+fine instances. The west and north doors of the
+little cathedral of Llandaff supply examples in
+another class of building; and even small and
+<a name="p10" id="p10"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>10<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>obscure parish churches are sometimes dignified
+with the possession of an entrance full of the
+massive solemnity of this Norman work. The
+village church of Heysham, on Morecambe Bay,
+has a south door well worthy of mention in
+this connection; and the Lincolnshire church
+already cited, Crowle, has an interesting doorway
+of this kind.</p>
+
+<p>As art progressed in Christendom, and exhibited
+its growing force especially in the
+churches, the entrances thereto shared in the
+increasing splendour of the whole. The mouldings
+of the arches and the pillars, the elaboration
+of capitals and bases, all showed the evidence of
+devotion guided by taste and skill. And often
+something more than mere decoration was
+attempted; the opportunity was seized to add
+instruction, and figures of saints and angels, or
+complete scenes from scriptural or ecclesiastical
+story, filled the expanse of the tympanum or
+the niches of the columns. About the twelfth
+century, also, it became customary to divide the
+main entrance into two by means of a pillar, or
+a group of pillars; the two-leaved door being
+thus made symbolical of the two natures of
+Christ, of Whom, as Durandus tells us, it is itself
+<a name="p11" id="p11"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>11<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>the emblem, “according to that saying in the
+Gospel, ‘I am the Door!’”</p>
+
+<p>The Continent presents some splendid examples
+of these decorated porticoes. The
+cathedral of Strasburg, preserved as by a series
+of miracles in spite of every danger that can
+assail a building, fire, lightning, earthquake,
+and cannonade, has a very grand west entrance;
+its tall doors set within a number of receding
+arches, and the sharply-pointed gable which
+crowns them flanked and crested with tapering
+pinnacles. The French artists of the thirteenth
+and fourteenth centuries were unrivalled in the
+beauty and wealth of statuary with which they
+adorned their churches, and not least their doors.
+“The glory and the beauty” of the great porch
+at Amiens has been set forth fully by Ruskin,
+who has woven into one wonderful whole the
+meaning of the statues, which, like “a cloud of
+witnesses,” throng the western front. But
+Amiens is not alone; S.&nbsp;Denis, Paris, Sens,
+Angouléme, Poictiers,<!-- TN: sic --> Autun, Chartres, Laon,
+Rheims, Vezelay, Auxerre, and other cathedrals
+are all magnificent in this respect. The principal
+entrance to Seville cathedral is flanked by
+columns upholding niches filled with figures of
+<a name="p12" id="p12"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>12<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>saints and angels, while the tympanum contains
+a carving of the entrance of the Saviour into
+Jerusalem on the first Palm Sunday. In the
+island of Majorca, the south door-way of the
+cathedral of Palma is exceptionally beautiful.
+The statue of the Blessed Virgin crowns the
+centre column, and above is the Last Supper.
+A record of the architect of this splendid piece
+of work is preserved in an old account book of
+the cathedral: “On January 29th, 1394, Master
+Pedro Morey, sculptor, master artificer of the
+south door, which was begun by him, passed
+from this life. Anima ejus requiescat in pace.
+Amen.” The entrance in the west front is also
+a fine one, and is inscribed, “Non est factum
+tale opus in universis regnis.”</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<img src="images/p13.jpg" alt="" id="img13" /><br
+ /><small>WEST DOOR, HIGHAM FERRERS CHURCH.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>Although in England we cannot match the
+gorgeousness of detail exhibited by the flamboyant
+architecture of some of the examples above
+noticed, yet we too have instances of which
+we may well be proud. The western front of
+Peterborough cathedral, over the partial renovation
+of which there has recently been so much
+controversy between architects and antiquaries,
+has been pronounced to be “the grandest portico
+in Europe;” but this has reference to the whole
+<a name="p13" id="p13"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>13<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>façade rather than to the door-way in itself. If
+our subject allowed of our taking so wide a view,
+the splendid west fronts of Exeter, York, and
+others of our minsters, would demand a place of
+honour in the list. Gloucester cathedral has a
+dignified porch over the south door, in which are
+the figures of a number of saints. The west door
+<a name="p14" id="p14"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>14<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>of Rochester is also interesting; its decorated
+Norman arches are richly carved, and enclose a
+tympanum covered with characteristic sculpture.
+Of a different type is the graceful west door
+at Ely, whose pointed arches are upheld by
+delicately cut shafts, the tympanum over the
+twin doorways being pierced by a double trefoil
+within a vesica. The parish church of Higham
+Ferrers has double western doors, separated by
+a bold shaft, above which is a niche (now unoccupied)
+for a statue. The tympanum, anciently
+divided by this figure, has five medallions on
+each side filled with sculptured scenes from the
+New Testament, round which runs a scroll of
+conventional foliage. The neighbouring churches
+of Rushden and Raunds have also good double-leaved
+doors. To take one instance from the
+Northern Kingdom, S.&nbsp;Giles’s, Edinburgh, has
+a dignified west entrance. Many of the better
+examples of our modern churches have admirable
+porticoes, of which one example must suffice.
+All Saints’ Church, Cheltenham, has double
+doors within receding arches; the tympanum
+has the figure of Our Lord enthroned in glory
+surrounded by the saints, and the central shaft
+and the side pillars contain other statues.</p>
+
+<p><a name="p15" id="p15"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>15<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>There is occasionally found in a cathedral, or
+other large church, a porch of unusual depth,
+known as a Galilee. Here, during Lent, those
+assembled who were bidden to do public penance;
+the coming of Maundy Thursday being the signal
+for their admission once more into the church
+itself. Ely has a western Galilee entered by an
+arch, divided by a central pillar, and filled in the
+upper part with tracery. Lincoln has a Galilee,
+deep and dignified in plan, with a vaulted roof.
+Another English cathedral so provided is that
+of Chichester; and among parish churches the
+Galilee is found at Boxley, Llantwit, Chertsey,
+and S.&nbsp;Woolos.</p>
+
+<p>Of door-ways which, independently of considerations
+of date, size, or form, are noteworthy
+for their sculpture, there are many that ought to
+be mentioned. At Lincoln, for instance, we
+have a south door carved with a Doom, or Last
+Judgment, wherein we see the effigy of the
+Divine Judge surrounded by the dead rising
+from their opening graves. The north door at
+Ely, the whole of the surrounding stone-work of
+which is elaborately carved, is surmounted by
+the figure of the Lord enthroned within a vesica,
+while adoring angels kneel before Him. At
+<a name="p16" id="p16"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>16<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Rougham, in Norfolk, the west door is surmounted
+by a crucifix, round which runs the
+emblematic vine. Founhope church, Hereford,
+has in the tympanum of the arch the Madonna
+and the Holy Child, a grotesque with birds and
+beasts surrounding the figures. At Elkstone,
+Gloucestershire, the south door-way, a specimen
+(like the one at Founhope) of Norman work, has
+some interesting sculptures. In the centre of
+the tympanum is Christ enthroned, with the
+apocalyptic symbols of the evangelists around
+Him; beyond these on the right hand of Christ
+is the Agnus Dei with the flag, an emblem of the
+Resurrection, while on the left is a wide open
+pair of jaws, known as a Hell-mouth: above all
+the Father’s Hand is seen in the attitude of
+benediction. Elstow church has sculptured
+figures above the north door; not within the
+containing arch, but within a separate arched
+space divided from the door-way by a string-course.
+Haltham church, in Lincolnshire, has
+some exceedingly curious designs on the
+tympanum of the south door; they are mostly
+cruciform figures within circles, and are arranged
+with strange irregularity. The north door of
+Lutterworth church has over it a fresco painting.</p>
+
+<div class="illofltrt">
+<img src="images/p17.jpg" alt="" id="img17" /><br
+ /><small>NORTH DOOR, ELSTOW CHURCH.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="p17" id="p17"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>17<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Several of the churches in Brussels have
+door-ways which, though otherwise not remarkable,
+are noteworthy from the beauty of the
+carving of the central post dividing the two
+leaves of the door. The church of Notre Dame
+de Bon-Secours has the effigy of its patron saint
+crowned and robed,
+bearing the Infant
+Saviour; below are
+the emblems of pilgrimage,
+wallets,
+gourds, and cockle-shells.
+The church
+of La Madeleine
+has a crucifix with
+a weeping Magdalene
+at its foot.
+The old church of
+S.&nbsp;Catharine has
+its patroness on the door-post, and the Chapelle
+Sainte-Anne similarly has S.&nbsp;Anne holding the
+Blessed Virgin by the hand. Foliage or scrolls
+in each case fill up the rest of the column,
+which is of wood, and in some instances has
+been painted.</p>
+
+<p>So far, the doorways have occupied our
+<a name="p18" id="p18"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>18<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>attention; something must, however, be said of
+the doors themselves. The usual form of the old
+church door is familiar enough to all of us; the
+massive time-stained oak, the heavy iron nails
+that stud it, and the long broad hinges that reach
+almost across its full breadth. There is dignity
+in the very simplicity of all this; but not seldom
+far more ornate examples may be found.</p>
+
+<p>The most elementary form of decoration consists
+in merely panelling the door, as is the case
+in numberless instances; occasionally the panels
+themselves are carved, as on the “Thoresby
+Door,” at Lynn, or the door of S.&nbsp;Mary’s, Bath;
+or tracery, as in a window, is introduced, as at
+Alford, Lincolnshire. These are but a few of the
+many instances which might be cited. Another
+striking form of decoration is produced by
+hammering out the long hinges into a design
+covering, more or less, the surface of the door.
+The west door at Higham Ferrers, already
+noticed, has on each of its leaves three hinges,
+which are formed into wide spreading scrolls.
+Sempringham Abbey has very fine beaten ironwork
+spread over almost the entire face of the
+door. A more curious example is afforded by
+Dartmouth church; where a conventional tree
+<a name="p19" id="p19"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>19<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>with spreading branches covers the door, and
+across this the hinges are laid in the form of two
+heraldic lions. The date is added in the middle
+of the work, 1631.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<img src="images/p19.jpg" alt="" id="img19" /><br
+ /><small>DOOR AT LYNN CHURCH.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>In the decoration of the church door the
+mediæval blacksmith proves himself in a thousand
+instances, at home and abroad, to have been an
+artist. Free from the hurry of the present age,
+he could work according to that canon of
+Chaucer’s,</p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width: 22em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i10"><span class="kindle">          </span> “There is no workman</div>
+<div> That can both worken well and hastilie,</div>
+<div> This must be done at leisure, perfectlie.”</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noindent"><a name="p20" id="p20"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>20<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>With him it was not the hand only that wrought,
+nor even the hand and head; but the soul within
+him gave life to both. Of the contrast
+between old ways and new, few examples are
+more striking than the hinges of the door at
+S.&nbsp;Mary Key, Ipswich; where we have a simple
+but graceful scroll of ancient date, and a clumsy
+iron bar of to-day, lying side by side. For a
+beautiful design in beaten iron the doors of
+Worksop Priory may claim to have not many rivals.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<img src="images/p20.jpg" alt="" id="img20" /><br
+ /><small>SOUTH PORCH, SEMPRINGHAM ABBEY.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="p21" id="p21"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>21<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>The most splendid doors in the world are
+probably the bronze doors of the Baptistery at
+Florence. Other bronze doors there are on the
+Continent, and all of them fine; Aix-la-Chapelle,
+Mayence, Augsburg, Hildesheim, Novgorod, all
+have doors of this kind; at Verona, too, in the
+church of San Zeno, are ancient examples,
+whereon are set forth in panels a number of
+subjects from Holy Scripture and from the life
+of the patron saint. All, however, fall into
+<a name="p22" id="p22"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>22<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>insignificance beside the “Gates of Paradise,”
+as the Florentines proudly call their doors.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<img src="images/p21.jpg" alt="" id="img21" /><br
+ /><small>DOOR AT DARTMOUTH CHURCH.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>In 1400 the Gild of Cloth Merchants of
+Florence decided to make a thank-offering for
+the cessation of the plague; and the form which
+it took was a pair of bronze doors for the
+baptistery of the church of S.&nbsp;Giovanni, to
+correspond with some already there. These
+earlier ones are the work of Pisana and his son
+Nino, from designs by Giotto; the creation of
+the new ones was thrown open to competition.
+Many competitors appeared, of whom six were
+asked to submit specimens of designs for the
+panels; and, finally, when the choice lay between
+two only, the elder, Brunellesco, himself advised
+that the commission should be entrusted to
+Ghiberti, a youth then barely twenty years of
+age. The doors when completed contained
+twenty scenes from the Saviour’s life, together
+with figures of the four Latin Doctors and the
+four Evangelists, set in a frame of exquisite
+foliage. This splendid work was surpassed by a
+second pair of doors subsequently made for the
+same place. In this there are ten panels setting
+forth scenes from the Old Testament history;
+and the frame is adorned with niches and
+<a name="p23" id="p23"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>23<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>medallions in which are placed some fifty
+allegorical figures and portrait heads. It was of
+these last doors, which were only completed in
+Ghiberti’s mature age, that no less a judge than
+Michael Angelo said, “They might stand as the
+gates of Paradise itself.”</p>
+
+<p>Aix-en-Provence claims that her doors are as
+peerless as examples of the wood-carver’s art, as
+are the Florentine ones as types of the metal-worker’s.
+They have been preserved, it is said,
+from the sixth century, and are still wonderfully
+fresh and delicate. There are on each door six
+upper panels filled with figures of the twelve
+Sybils; and below one large panel, occupied, in
+one case, by effigies of the prophets Isaiah and
+Jeremiah, and in the other by Ezekiel and
+Daniel. The carving is only occasionally exhibited,
+two masking doors having been cleverly
+contrived to protect and cover the real ones.</p>
+
+<p>Many of the doors of our cathedrals and great
+abbey churches have knockers, often of very
+striking designs. These as a rule indicate that
+the places in question claimed the right of
+sanctuary; and the knocker was to summon an
+attendant, or watcher, to admit the fugitive from
+justice at night, or at other times when the
+<a name="p24" id="p24"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>24<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>entrance was closed. A curious head holding
+a ring within its teeth forms the knocker at
+Durham cathedral; a lion’s head was not an
+uncommon form for this to take, as at Adel,
+York (All Saints), and Norwich (S.&nbsp;Gregory’s);
+a singularly ferocious lion’s head knocker may
+be seen at Mayence.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="p24a" id="p24a"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>24a<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>
+ <img src="images/p24a.jpg" alt="" id="img24a" /><br
+ /><small><i>From a Photo by Albert E. Coe, Norwich.</i><br
+ />ERPINGHAM<!-- TN: original reads "ERINGHAM" --> GATE, NORWICH.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>The deep porch which we so frequently see
+over the principal door of the church was formerly
+something more than an ornament, or even a
+protection; it was a recognized portion of the
+sacred building, and had its appointed place in
+the services of the Church. Baptism was
+frequently administered in the church porch, to
+symbolize that by that Sacrament the infant
+entered into Holy Church. There are still relics
+of the existence of fonts in some of our porches,
+as at East Dereham, Norfolk. When baptism
+was thus administered in the south porch, it was
+also customary, so it is alleged, to throw wide
+open the north door; that the devil, formally
+renounced in that rite, might by that way flee
+“to his own place.” The font now usually
+stands just within the door. In the pre-reformation
+usage of the Church the thanksgiving of a
+woman after child-birth was also made in, or
+<a name="p25" id="p25"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>25<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>before, the church porch; and concluded with
+the priest’s saying, “Enter into the temple of
+God, that thou mayest have eternal life, and live
+for ever and ever.” The first prayer-book of
+Edward&nbsp;VI. ordered the woman to kneel “nigh
+unto the quire door:” the next revision altered
+the words “to nigh unto the place where the
+table standeth;” and from Elizabeth’s days the
+rubric has simply said indefinitely “a convenient
+place.”</p>
+
+<p>The rubric at the commencement of the Order
+of the Solemnization of Holy Matrimony according
+to the Sarum use began also in this way:
+“Let the man and woman be placed before the
+door of the church, or in the face of the church,
+before the presence of God, the Priest, and the
+People”; at the end of the actual marriage, and
+before the benedictory prayers which follow<!-- TN: original reads "foilow" --> it,
+the rubric says, “Here let them go into the
+church to the step of the altar.” Chaucer
+alludes to this usage when in his “Canterbury
+Tales” he says of the wife of <span class="nw">Bath&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:22em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> “She was a worthy woman all her live,</div>
+<div> Husbands at the church dore had she five.”</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noindent">Edward&nbsp;I. was united to Margaret at the door of
+<a name="p26" id="p26"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>26<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Canterbury Cathedral on September 9th, 1299,
+and other mediæval notices of the custom occur.</p>
+
+<p>The first prayer-book of Edward&nbsp;VI. introduced
+an alteration which has been maintained ever
+since; the new rubric reading that “The persons
+to be married shall come into the body of the
+Church,” just as it does in our modern prayer-books.
+In France the custom survived as late
+as the seventeenth century, at least in some
+instances, for the marriage of Charles&nbsp;I., who
+was represented by a proxy, and Henrietta Maria
+was performed at the door of Notre Dame in
+Paris. In Herrick’s “Hesperides” is a little
+poem entitled “The Entertainment, or, <em>A Porch-verse</em>
+at the marriage of Mr. Henry Northly and
+the most witty Mrs. Lettice Yard.” It <span class="nw">commences:&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:24em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> “Welcome! but yet no entrance till we blesse</div>
+<div> First you, then you, then both for white success.”</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noindent">This was published in the midst of the great
+Civil War, and seems to show that the custom
+of marriage at the church porch was still
+sufficiently known, even if only by tradition, to
+make allusions to it “understanded of the
+people.”</p>
+
+<p>Burials sometimes took place in the church
+<a name="p27" id="p27"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>27<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>porch, in those days when interment within the
+building was much sought after.</p>
+
+<p>Ecclesiastical Courts were frequently held
+in church porches, as at the south door of
+Canterbury Cathedral; schools were occasionally
+established in them; and here the dower of the
+bride was formally presented to the bridegroom.
+This last-named use of the porch is illustrated
+by a deed of the time of Edward&nbsp;I., by which
+Robert Fitz Roger, a gentleman of Northamptonshire,
+bound himself to marry his son within a
+given time to Hawisia, daughter of Robert de
+Tybetot, and “to endow her at the church door”
+with property equal to a hundred pounds per
+annum. We still have evidence of the fact that
+the church door was of old considered the most
+prominent and public place in the parish in the
+continued use of it as the official place for posting
+legal notices of general interest, such as lists of
+voters, summonses for public meetings, and so
+forth.</p>
+
+<p>There are often in connection with ancient
+ecclesiastical foundations doors and gateways
+which are of great interest, though they can
+scarcely be called church doors. Of this class
+are the entrances to the chapter houses of
+<a name="p28" id="p28"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>28<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>cathedrals, many of which are very fine. At
+York, for example, the chapter-house, which
+proudly asserts in an inscription near the entrance
+that, “as the rose is among the flowers, so is it
+among buildings,” has a doorway not unworthy
+of the beautiful interior.</p>
+
+<p>The gateway which gave admittance to the
+sacred enclosure of the abbey&mdash;the garth or close
+round which were ranged the monastic buildings&mdash;is
+in many cases an imposing and elaborate
+piece of architecture. Bristol has an interesting
+Norman gateway, and that at Durham is massive
+and impressive, as are all the conventual remains
+there. Norwich is specially rich in this respect.
+The Erpingham Gate was the gift of Sir Thomas
+Erpingham, who died in 1420, and whom the
+King, in Shakespere’s play of “King Henry&nbsp;V.”
+(Act&nbsp;iv. sc.&nbsp;I), calls a “good old knight;”
+S.&nbsp;Ethelbert’s Gate was built at the cost of Bishop
+Alnwick, who ruled the see from 1426 to 1436.</p>
+
+<p>But to speak of these things is to wander from
+our present subject, and even that is too wide to
+be dealt with fully in a paper such as this. The
+legends and traditions of the church porch might
+occupy many a page, while we gossiped over the
+mystic rites of S.&nbsp;John’s Eve or of All Hallow
+<a name="p29" id="p29"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>29<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>E’en; or while we told how Ralph, Bishop of
+Chichester, barred his cathedral door with thorns
+in his anger against the King and his friends; or
+how the skins of marauding Danes have in more
+than one instance been nailed as leather coverings
+to the doors of English churches. Enough,
+however, has probably been said to show the
+wealth of interest which may often be found to
+hang about the old church porch, in which
+the village church may often be as rich as the
+great cathedral or the stately abbey.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p><a href="#fnm1"
+ title="return to text" name="fn1" id="fn1">1</a>. See a full account of this stone in “Bygone Lincolnshire,”&mdash;Vol.&nbsp;I,
+William Andrews &amp; Co.</p>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chunk">
+<h2 class="chap" title="Sacrificial Foundations"><a name="p30" id="p30"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>30<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Sacrificial Foundations.</h2>
+
+<p class="author">By England Howlett.</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchap"><span class="dropcap">In</span> early ages a sacrifice of some sort or other
+was offered on the foundation of nearly
+every building. In heathen times a sacrifice
+was offered to the god under whose protection
+the building was placed; in Christian times,
+while many old pagan customs lingered on, the
+sacrifice was continued, but was given another
+meaning. The foundation of a castle, a church,
+or a house was frequently laid in blood; indeed
+it was said, and commonly believed, that no
+edifice would stand firmly for long unless the
+foundation was laid in blood. It was a practice
+frequently to place some animal under the corner
+stone&mdash;a dog, a wolf, a goat, sometimes even the
+body of a malefactor who had been executed.</p>
+
+<p>Heinrich Heine <span class="nw">says:&mdash;</span>“In the middle ages
+the opinion prevailed that when any building was
+to be erected something living must be killed,
+in the blood of which the foundation had to be
+laid, by which process the building would be
+<a name="p31" id="p31"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>31<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>secured from falling; and in ballads and traditions
+the remembrance is still preserved how
+children and animals were slaughtered for the
+purpose of strengthening large buildings with
+their blood.”</p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:22em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> “ .  .  .  I repent:</div>
+<div> There is no sure foundation set on blood,</div>
+<div> No certain life achiev’d by other’s death.”</div>
+</div>
+<div class="right"> King John, Act&nbsp;iv., Sc.&nbsp;2.    <br
+ /> <span class="smcap">Shakespeare</span>.</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>To many of our churches tradition associates
+some animal and it generally goes by the name
+of the Kirk-grim. These Kirk-grims are of
+course the ghostly apparitions of the beasts that
+were buried under the foundation-stones of the
+churches, and they are supposed to haunt the
+churchyards and church lanes. A spectre dog
+which went by the name of “Bargest” was said
+to haunt the churchyard at Northorpe, in
+Lincolnshire, up to the first half of the present
+century. The black dog that haunts Peel Castle,
+and the bloodhound of Launceston Castle, are
+the spectres of the animals buried under their
+walls. The apparitions of children in certain
+old mansions are the faded recollections of the
+sacrifices offered when these houses were first
+<a name="p32" id="p32"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>32<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>erected, not perhaps the present buildings, but
+the original halls or castles prior to the conquest,
+and into the foundations of which children were
+often built. The Cauld Lad of Hilton Castle in
+the valley of the Wear is well known. He is
+said to wail at night:</p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:14em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> “Wae’s me, wae’s me,</div>
+<div> The acorn’s not yet</div>
+<div> Fallen from the tree</div>
+<div> That’s to grow the wood,</div>
+<div> That’s to make the cradle,</div>
+<div> That’s to rock the bairn,</div>
+<div> That’s to grow to a man,</div>
+<div> That’s to lay me.”</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Afzelius, in his collection of Swedish folk tales,
+says: “Heathen superstition did not fail to
+show itself in the construction of Christian
+churches. In laying the foundations the people
+retained something of their former religion, and
+sacrificed to their old deities, whom they could
+not forget, some animal, which they buried alive,
+either under the foundation, or within the wall.
+A tradition has also been preserved that under
+the altar of the first Christian churches a lamb
+was usually buried, which imparted security
+and duration to the edifice. This was an
+emblem of the true church lamb&mdash;the Saviour,
+<a name="p33" id="p33"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>33<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>who is the corner stone of His church. When
+anyone enters a church at a time when there is
+no service, he may chance to see a little lamb
+spring across the choir and vanish. This is the
+church-lamb. When it appears to a person in
+the churchyard, particularly to the grave-digger,
+it is said to forbode the death of a child that
+shall be next laid in the earth.”</p>
+
+<p>The traditions of Copenhagen are, that when
+the ramparts were being raised the earth always
+sank, so that it was impossible to get it to stand
+firm. They therefore took a little innocent girl,
+placed her on a chair by a table, and gave her
+playthings and sweetmeats. While she thus sat
+enjoying herself, twelve masons built an arch
+over her, which when completed they covered
+over with earth, to the sound of music with
+drums and trumpets. By this process they are,
+it is said, rendered immovable.<sup><a href="#fn2" name="fnm2" id="fnm2"
+ title="go to footnote 2">2</a></sup></p>
+
+<p>It is an old saying that there is a skeleton in
+every house, a saying which at one time was
+practically a fact. Every house in deed and in
+truth had its skeleton, and moreover every house
+was designed not only to have its skeleton, but
+its ghost also. The idea of providing every
+<a name="p34" id="p34"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>34<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>building with its ghost as a spiritual guard was
+not of course the primary idea; it developed later
+out of the original pagan belief of a sacrifice
+associated with the beginning of every work of
+importance. Partly with the notion of offering
+a propitiatory sacrifice to mother earth, and
+partly also with the idea of securing for ever a
+portion of soil by some sacrificial act, the old
+pagan laid the foundation of his house in blood.</p>
+
+<p>The art of building in early ages was not well
+understood, and the true principles of architecture
+and construction were but little appreciated.
+If the walls of a building showed any signs of
+settlement the reason was supposed to be that
+the earth had not been sufficiently propitiated,
+and that as a consequence she refused to carry
+the burden imposed upon her.</p>
+
+<p>It is said that when Romulus was about to
+found the city of Rome he dug a deep pit and
+cast into it the “first fruits of everything that is
+reckoned good by use, or necessary by nature,”
+and before the pit was closed up by a great
+stone, Faustulus and Quinctilius were killed and
+laid under it. The legend of Romulus slaying
+his twin brother Remus because he jumped the
+walls of the city to show how poor they were,
+<a name="p35" id="p35"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>35<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>probably arises out of a confusion of the two
+legends and has become associated with the
+idea of a sacrificial foundation. To the present
+day there is a general Italian belief that whenever
+any great misfortune is going to overtake
+the city of Rome the giant shadow of Remus
+may be seen walking over the highest buildings
+in the city, even to the dome of St. Peter’s.</p>
+
+<p>Sacrifice was not by any means confined to
+the foundations of buildings only. A man
+starting on a journey or on any new and
+important work would first offer a sacrifice. A
+ship was never launched without a sacrifice, and
+the christening of a vessel in these days with a
+bottle of wine is undoubtedly a relic of the time
+when the neck of a human being was broken
+and the prow of the vessel suffused with blood
+as a sacrificial offering.</p>
+
+<p>In our own time the burial of a bottle with
+coins under a foundation stone is the faded
+memory of the immuring of a human victim.
+So hard does custom and superstition die that
+even in the prosaic nineteenth century days we
+cannot claim to be altogether free from the
+bonds and fetters with which our ancestors were
+bound.</p>
+
+<p><a name="p36" id="p36"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>36<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Grimm, in his German Mythology, tells us:
+“It was often considered necessary to build
+living animals, even human beings, into the
+foundations on which any edifice was reared, as
+an oblation to the earth to induce her to bear
+the superincumbent weight it was proposed to
+lay upon her. By this horrible practice it was
+supposed that the stability of the structure was
+assured as well as other advantages gained.”
+Of course the animal is merely the more modern
+substitute for the human being, just in the same
+manner as at the present day the bottle and
+coins are the substitute for the living animal. In
+Germany, after the burial of a living being under
+a foundation was given up, it became customary
+to place an empty coffin under the foundations
+of a house, and this custom lingered on in
+remote country districts until comparatively
+recent times.</p>
+
+<p>With the spread of Christianity the belief in
+human sacrifice died out. In 1885, Holsworthy
+Parish Church was restored; during the work of
+restoration it was necessary to take down the
+south-west angle of the wall, and in this wall
+was found, embedded in the mortar and stone, a
+skeleton. The wall of this part of the church
+<a name="p37" id="p37"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>37<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>had settled, and from the account given by the
+masons it would seem there was no trace of a
+tomb, but on the contrary every indication that
+the victim had actually been buried alive&mdash;a
+mass of mortar covered the mouth, and the
+stones around the body seemed to have been
+hastily built. Some few years ago the Bridge
+Gate of the Bremen city walls was taken down,
+and the skeleton of a child was found embedded
+in the foundations.<sup><a href="#fn3" name="fnm3" id="fnm3"
+ title="go to footnote 3">3</a></sup></p>
+
+<p>The practice of our masons of putting the
+blood of oxen into mortar was no doubt in the
+first instance associated with the idea of a
+sacrifice; however this may be, the blood had no
+doubt a real effect in hardening the mortar, just
+the same as treacle, which has been known to be
+used in our days. The use of cement when any
+extra strength is needed has put aside the use of
+either blood or treacle in the mixing of mortar.</p>
+
+<p>It is a curious instance of the wide spread of
+the belief in blood as a cement for ancient
+buildings that Alá-ud-din Khilji, the King of
+Delhi, <span class="postnomial">A.D.</span>&nbsp;1296&ndash;1315, when enlarging and
+strengthening the walls of old Delhi, is reported
+to have mingled in the mortar the bones and
+<a name="p38" id="p38"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>38<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>blood of thousands of goat-bearded Moghuls,
+whom he slaughtered for the purpose. A modern
+instance is furnished by advices which were
+brought from Accra, dated December 8th, 1881,
+that the King of Ashantee had murdered 200
+girls, for the purpose of using their blood to mix
+with the mortar employed in the building of a
+new palace.</p>
+
+<p>A foundation sacrifice is suggested by the
+following curious discovery, reported in the <cite>Yorkshire
+Herald</cite> of May 31st, 1895: “It was recently
+ascertained that the tower of Darrington Church,
+about four miles from Pontefract, had suffered
+some damage during the winter gales. The
+foundations were carefully examined, when it
+was found that under the west side of the tower,
+only about a foot from the surface, the body of a
+man had been placed in a sort of bed in the solid
+rock, and the west wall was actually resting upon
+his skull. The gentle vibration of the tower had
+opened the skull and caused in it a crack of
+about two-and-a-half inches long. The grave
+must have been prepared and the wall placed
+with deliberate intention upon the head of the person
+buried, and this was done with such care that
+all remained as placed for at least 600 years.”</p>
+
+<p><a name="p39" id="p39"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>39<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>The majority of the clergy in the early part of
+the Middle Ages doubtless would be very strongly
+imbued with all the superstitions of the people.
+The mediæval priest, half believing in many of
+the old pagan customs, would allow them to
+continue, and it is both curious and interesting
+to notice how heathenism has for so long a period
+lingered on, mixed up with Christian ideas.</p>
+
+<p>It is said that St. Odhran expressed his willingness
+to be the first to be buried in Iona, and,
+indeed, offered himself to be buried alive for
+sacrifice. Local tradition long afterwards added
+the still more ghastly circumstance that once,
+when the tomb was opened, he was found still
+alive, and uttered such fearful words that the
+grave had to be closed immediately.</p>
+
+<p>Even at the present day there is a prejudice
+more or less deeply rooted against a first burial
+in a new churchyard or cemetery. This prejudice
+is doubtless due to the fact that in early ages the
+first to be buried was a victim. Later on in the
+middle ages the idea seems to have been that the
+first to be buried became the perquisite of the
+devil, who thus seems in the minds of the people
+to have taken the place of the pagan deity. Not
+in England alone, but all over Northern Europe,
+<a name="p40" id="p40"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>40<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>there is a strong prejudice against being the first
+to enter a new building, or to cross a newly-built
+bridge. At the least it is considered unlucky,
+and the more superstitious believe it will entail
+death. All this is the outcome of the once
+general sacrificial foundation, and the lingering
+shadow of a ghastly practice.</p>
+
+<p>Grimm, in his “Teutonic Mythology,” tells us
+that when the new bridge at Halle, finished in
+1843, was building, the common people got an
+idea that a child was wanted to wall up in the
+foundations. In the outer wall of Reichenfels
+Castle a child was actually built in alive; a
+projecting stone marks the spot, and it is believed
+that if this stone were pulled out the wall would
+at once fall down.</p>
+
+<p>Bones, both human and of animals, have been
+found under hearthstones of houses. When we
+consider that the hearth is the centre, as it were,
+and most sacred spot of a house, and that the
+chimney above it is the highest portion built, and
+the most difficult to complete, it seems easy to
+understand why the victim was buried under the
+hearthstone or jamb of the chimney.</p>
+
+<p>There is an interesting custom prevailing in
+Roumania to the present day which is clearly a
+<a name="p41" id="p41"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>41<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>remnant of the old idea of a sacrificial foundation.
+When masons are engaged building a house they
+try to catch the shadow of a stranger passing by
+and wall it in, and throw in stones and mortar
+whilst his shadow rests on the walls. If no one
+passes by to throw a shadow the masons go in
+search of a woman or child who does not belong
+to the place, and, unperceived by the person,
+apply a reed to the shadow and this reed is then
+immured. In Holland frequently there has been
+found in foundations curious looking objects
+something like ninepins, but which in reality
+are simply rude imitations of babies in their
+swaddling bands&mdash;the image representing the
+child being the modern substitute for an actual
+sacrifice. Carved figures of Christ crucified have
+been found in the foundations of churches.
+Some few years ago, when the north wall of
+Chulmleigh Church in North Devon was taken
+down there was found a carved figure of Christ
+crucified to a vine.<sup><a href="#fn4" name="fnm4" id="fnm4"
+ title="go to footnote 4">4</a></sup></p>
+
+<p>A story is told that the walls of Scutari contain
+the body of a victim. In this case it is a woman
+who is said to have been built in, but an opening
+was left through which her infant might be
+<a name="p42" id="p42"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>42<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>passed in to be suckled by her as long as any life
+remained in the poor creature, and after her
+death the hole was closed.</p>
+
+<p>The legend of Cologne Cathedral is well
+known. The architect sold himself to the devil
+for the plan, and gave up his life when the
+building was in progress; that is to say, the man
+voluntarily gave up his life to be buried under
+the tower to ensure the stability of the enormous
+superstructure, which he believed could not be
+held up in any other way.</p>
+
+<p>It is well known that the extinguished torch is
+the symbol of departed life, and to the present
+day the superstitious mind always connects the
+soul with flame. It was at one time a common
+practice to bury a candle in a coffin, the
+explanation being that the dead man needed it
+to give him light on his way to Heaven. It is
+extremely doubtful, however, whether this was
+the original idea, for most probably the candle
+in the first instance really represented an extinguished
+life, and was thus a substitute for a
+human sacrifice which, in the pagan times,
+accompanied every burial. The candle, in fact,
+took the place of a life, human or animal, and
+in many instances candles have been found
+<a name="p43" id="p43"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>43<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>immured in the walls and foundations of churches
+and houses.</p>
+
+<p>Eggs have often been found built into foundations.
+The egg had, of course life in it&mdash;but
+undeveloped life, so that by its use the old belief
+in the efficacy of a living sacrifice was fully
+maintained without any shock to the feelings of
+people in days when they were beginning to
+revolt against the practices of the early ages.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Walter Scott speaks of the tradition that
+the foundation stones of Pictish raths were
+bathed in human blood. In the ballad of the
+“Cout of Keeldar” it is said:</p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:20em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> “And here beside the mountain flood</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> A massy castle frowned;</div>
+<div> Since first the Pictish race, in blood,</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> The haunted pile did found.”</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>From Thorpe’s “Northern Mythology” we
+learn that in Denmark, in former days, before
+any human being was buried in a churchyard, a
+living horse was first interred. This horse is
+supposed to re-appear, and is known by the
+name of the “Hel-horse.” It has only three
+legs, and if anyone meets it it forebodes death.
+Hence is derived the saying when anyone has
+survived a dangerous illness: “He gave death a
+<a name="p44" id="p44"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>44<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>peck of oats” (as an offering or bribe). Hel is
+identical with death, and in times of pestilence
+is supposed to ride about on a three-legged horse
+and strangle people.</p>
+
+<p>The belief still lingers in Germany that good
+weather may be secured by building a live cock
+into a wall, and it is thought that cattle may be
+prevented from straying by burying a living blind
+dog under the threshold of a stable. Amongst
+the French peasantry a new farmhouse is not
+entered upon until a cock has been killed and its
+blood sprinkled in the rooms.<sup><a href="#fn5" name="fnm5" id="fnm5"
+ title="go to footnote 5">5</a></sup></p>
+
+<p>It is probable that sacrificial foundations had
+their origin in the idea of a propitiary offering to
+the Goddess Earth. However this may be, it
+is certain that for centuries, through times of
+heathenism, and well into even advanced Christianity,
+the people so thoroughly associated the
+foundation of buildings with a sacrifice that in
+some form or other it has lingered on to the
+present century. Now in our own day the
+laying the foundation of any important building
+is always attended with a ceremony&mdash;the form
+remains, the sacrifice is no longer offered. For
+ecclesiastical buildings, or those having some
+<a name="p45" id="p45"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>45<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>charitable object, a religious ceremony is provided,
+while for those purely secular the event
+is marked by rejoicings. We cannot bring ourselves
+to pass over without notice the foundation
+laying of our great buildings, and who shall
+venture to say that superstition is altogether
+dead, and that we are free from the lingering
+remains of what was once the pagan belief?</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a href="#fnm2"
+ title="return to text" name="fn2" id="fn2">2</a>. “Thorpe’s Northern Mythology,” vol.&nbsp;II., p.&nbsp;244.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm3"
+ title="return to text" name="fn3" id="fn3">3</a>. “Strange Survivals,” Baring Gould.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm4"
+ title="return to text" name="fn4" id="fn4">4</a>. “Strange Survivals,” Baring Gould.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm5"
+ title="return to text" name="fn5" id="fn5">5</a>. “Strange Survivals,” Baring Gould.</p>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="chunk">
+<h2 class="chap" title="The Building of the English Cathedrals"><a name="p46" id="p46"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>46<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>The Building of the English Cathedrals.</h2>
+
+<p class="author">By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, <span class="postnomial">B.A.</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="newchap"><span class="dropcap">Of</span> all the sins of the nineteenth century,
+the one which most militates against its
+attainment of excellence in art is its impatience.
+A work has been no sooner decided on, than
+there is a clamour for its completion. Our
+cathedrals were for the most part reared in
+far other times, and are therefore admirable.
+Growing with the stately, deliberate increase
+of the ponderous oak, they speak of days when
+art was original, sincere, patient, and therefore
+capable of great deeds; original, not in extravagance
+or eccentricity, but in the realization of
+the natural development of style, advancing
+from grace to grace, from the perfection of
+solidity to the perfection of adornment, by an
+unforced growth; sincere, in its confidence of its
+own capacity for fulfilling its appointed end, in
+its grasp of the possibilities in its materials, in its
+choice of the true, rather than the easy, method
+of working; and patient, finally, in its contentment
+to do in each age a little solidly and well,
+<a name="p47" id="p47"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>47<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>rather than a great deal indifferently, in its aim
+at artistic perfection in preference to material
+completeness. Thus it is that none of our
+cathedrals are the work of one age, save those of
+Salisbury and London, and even they have
+details which they owe to succeeding times.</p>
+
+<p>The above words are not intended to imply
+that our mediæval builders made no mistakes.
+The brief review of some of their work will show
+us proof to the contrary; but the mistakes were
+rare exceptions. If, for instance, a captious
+critic turns to Peterborough, and points us to
+the defective foundations, which have recently
+required the rebuilding of the central tower, and
+the supposed necessity of reconstructing the west
+front, all that the case will prove is that our
+great monastic architects’ work was not always
+absolutely eternal. “So there was jerry-building
+in those days too!” someone exclaims, with a
+note of triumph at the dragging down of the
+great ideals of the past to the level of the
+paltriness of the present. If such be the case, we
+reply, there were indeed giants in those days,
+the very “jerry building” of which rides out
+the storms of well-nigh seven centuries before
+revealing any fatal weaknesses.</p>
+
+<p><a name="p48" id="p48"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>48<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>In considering these splendid buildings, of
+which the present century has happily proved
+itself no unappreciative heir, it will be of interest
+to devote a few lines to the means which were
+employed to raise funds for their construction.
+Several illustrations of the methods employed in
+the case of cathedrals and other churches have
+come down to us. The story of the foundation
+of the new buildings at Crowland Abbey in 1112,
+exhibits an outburst of popular enthusiasm which
+irresistibly recalls the free gifts of the Hebrew
+people for the building of the first temple. “The
+prayers having been said and the antiphons
+sung,” says Peter Blesensis, vice-chancellor
+under Henry&nbsp;II., “the abbot himself laid the
+first corner-stone on the east side. After him
+every man according to his degree laid his stone;
+some laid money, others writings by which they
+offered their lands, advowsons of livings, tenths
+of sheep and other church tithes; certain
+measures of wheat, a certain number of workmen
+or masons, etc. On the other side, the
+common people, as officious with emulation
+and great devotion, offered, some money, some
+one day’s work every month till it should be
+finished, some to build whole pillars, others
+<a name="p49" id="p49"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>49<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>pedestals, and others certain parts of the walls.”</p>
+
+<p>Indulgences, remitting so many days’ penance,
+were sometimes issued to encourage the gifts of
+the faithful. Thus in the time of Henry&nbsp;VIII. a
+church brief was issued soliciting help towards
+the repair of Kirby Belers Church, in Leicestershire,
+part of which runs as <span class="nw">follows:&mdash;</span>“Also
+certayne patriarkes, prymates, &amp;c., unto the
+nombre of sixtie-five, everie one of theym
+syngularly, unto all theym that put their helpyng
+handes unto the sayd churche, have granted
+xl dayes of pardon; which nombre extendeth
+unto vij yeres and cc dayes, <i>totiens quotiens</i>.”
+Sometimes, by way of penance itself, a fine was
+imposed, which was devoted to a local building
+fund. Gilbert, bishop of Chichester, in certain
+constitutions promulgated in 1289 rules that
+every priest in the diocese who shall be convicted
+of certain scandalous sins shall “forfeit
+forty shillings, to be applied to the structure of
+Chichester Cathedral.” In modern money this
+fine would amount to something like £40.
+Walter, Bishop of Worcester, also ordained in
+1240 that beneficed priests who dressed unclerically
+should be fined to the extent of a tenth
+of their annual revenue for the benefit of the
+<a name="p50" id="p50"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>50<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>building of his cathedral. A yet earlier order
+concerning laity as well as clergy was issued by
+the Witan at Engsham, in Oxfordshire, in the
+year 1009, which decides that “if any pecuniary
+compensation shall arise out of a mulct for sins
+committed against God, this ought to be applied,
+according to the discretion of the bishop,” to one
+of several pious purposes, of which two are “the
+repair of churches, and the purchase of books,
+bells, and ecclesiastical vestments.”</p>
+
+<p>Another way of raising money was to exact a
+contribution from church dignitaries, as a kind
+of “entrance fee,” on their accepting preferment.
+William Heyworth, bishop of Coventry, (a see
+now owning Chester as its mother city), decreed
+in 1428 that “every canon on commencing his
+first residence should pay a hundred marks
+towards the structure of the cathedral, the
+purchase of ornaments,” and other similar
+expenses.</p>
+
+<p>In 1247, Bishop Ralph Neville, of Chichester,
+having died indebted to some of the canons of
+the cathedral, left by will a sufficient sum to
+discharge his obligations. But these ecclesiastical
+creditors decided that it should be devoted
+to “the completion of a certain stone tower,
+<a name="p51" id="p51"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>51<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>which had remained for a long time unfinished.”
+The same canons bitterly complained because
+the Pope had ordained that all vacant prebends
+throughout the country should remain unoccupied
+for a year, in order that their revenues
+might be devoted to the erection of the minster
+at Canterbury; whereas they not unnaturally
+felt that the needs of their own cathedral had
+the first claim upon them.</p>
+
+<p>Those churches which contained the shrines
+of popular saints drew, for the repair or enlargement
+of the fabric, no small revenue from the
+offerings of pilgrims. The eastern part of
+Rochester Cathedral was paid for by the moneys
+deposited at the tomb of S.&nbsp;William of Perth;
+and the large sums given by visitors to the
+shrine of S.&nbsp;Thomas of Canterbury materially
+assisted in keeping the building in repair.</p>
+
+<p>Unquestionably the sums needed for rearing
+these massive piles were in most cases given,
+either in money or in kind, by the faithful;
+sometimes the princely offerings of a few wealthy
+men, sometimes the countless small gifts of the
+multitude, have become transmuted into tapering
+spire, or ponderous tower, “long-drawn aisle
+and fretted vault.” The poor, in some instances,
+<a name="p52" id="p52"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>52<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>as we have seen, voluntarily gave their labour;
+in others the hands of the monks themselves
+raised and cut the sculptured stones.</p>
+
+<p>In most cases the cathedrals which we now
+possess are not the first that have occupied their
+sites. Some humble building, often reared by
+one of the pioneers of the faith, was in the
+majority of instances the shrine that first consecrated
+the spot to the service of God.</p>
+
+<p>It was in 401, during the visit of Germanus
+and Lupus, bishops of Auxerre and of Troyes,
+to aid in exterminating the Pelagian heresy, that
+the earliest shrine of S.&nbsp;Alban, a simple wooden
+oratory, was erected at Verulam; S.&nbsp;Deiniol built
+a little stave-kirk, or timber church, at Bangor
+about 550; and Kentigern, some ten years
+later, raised the first religious establishment at
+Llanelwy, or S.&nbsp;Asaph; while where now the
+ruined Cathedral of Man rears its weather-beaten
+gables and sightless windows at Peel, tradition
+says S.&nbsp;Patrick consecrated S.&nbsp;Germain first
+bishop of the Southern Isles in 447.</p>
+
+<p>Many causes, however, combined to sweep
+away not only all traces of these earliest
+churches, but also in many instances more than
+one more solidly constructed successor. The
+<a name="p53" id="p53"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>53<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>growth of architectural taste and skill made men
+impatient of the rudeness of their forefathers’
+simple fanes; in a surprising number of instances
+the lightning-flash or the raging fire destroyed
+the buildings wholly or in part. The cathedrals
+of the north felt more than once the shock of
+the Border wars; and civil strife, or religious
+fanaticism, wrought mischief in many others.
+Thus it has come to pass that the centuries have
+seen four cathedrals in succession at Hereford,
+at Gloucester, and at Bangor; and three at a
+multitude of places, Canterbury, London, Winchester,
+Peterborough, Lichfield, Oxford, and
+half-a-dozen more.</p>
+
+<p>The incursions of the Danes were answerable
+for the destruction of several of the earlier
+foundations. Canterbury had a cathedral, the
+most ancient part of which had been erected,
+according to tradition, by Lucius, the first
+Christian King of the Britons, and afterwards
+restored by S.&nbsp;Augustine. To this, about the
+year 740, Cuthbert, the archbishop, added a
+chapel for the interment of the occupants of the
+see; and Odo, in the tenth century, enlarged and
+re-roofed it. But in the days of saintly Alphege,
+in 1005, the Danish invaders fell upon the city,
+<a name="p54" id="p54"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>54<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>making of the church a ruin, and of its bishop a
+martyr. A similar fate befell the metropolitan
+church of the north. On the site where Paulinus
+baptized King Edwin and his two sons into the
+Christian faith a little wooden oratory was
+raised, over which ere long Edwin commenced
+to build a stone church, which S.&nbsp;Oswald, his
+successor, completed. This, after having been
+beautified by S.&nbsp;Wilfred, was burnt about 741,
+but re-built shortly afterwards by Archbishop
+Egbert. It was this latter building which fell
+before the Danes.</p>
+
+<p>At Ely the religious house founded by
+S.&nbsp;Etheldreda, which was the precursor of the
+modern cathedral, was burnt by the same
+marauders about 870. Rochester suffered in the
+same way; and no trace of the church built, so
+says the Venerable Bede, by King Ethelbert
+himself now remains. Peterborough has been
+particularly unfortunate in this respect. The
+first building here was begun by Peada, King of
+Mercia, in the seventh century. In the year 870
+the Danes, on one of their forays, burnt church
+and monastery to the ground, and massacred the
+abbot and all his monks. In 971 King Edgar
+raised the place once more from its desolation,
+<a name="p55" id="p55"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>55<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>but again it was seriously damaged, though not
+absolutely destroyed, by the sea-kings shortly
+before the Norman Conquest. Oxford was
+partially burnt in 1002 owing to the same people,
+but in a different way. A number of Danes took
+refuge in the tower of S.&nbsp;Frideswide to escape
+the senseless and brutal massacre organised on
+S.&nbsp;Brice’s day in that year, and the English fired
+the structure rather than suffer their prey to
+escape them.</p>
+
+<p>It will be convenient here, although it may
+take us in some cases away from those primitive
+foundations which so far we have considered, to
+glance at the other instances in which war has
+left its mark upon our cathedrals. Hereford,
+lying near the Welsh border, felt the storm and
+stress of warfare in 1056. Originally founded at
+some unknown date in very early English times,
+the church at Hereford was rebuilt about 830 by
+a noble Mercian, named Milfrid, and was
+repaired, if not actually renewed, by Athelstan
+the bishop, who came to the see in 1012. Ten
+years before the Norman Conquest, however,
+Griffith, prince of Wales, at the head of a
+combined host of Welsh and Irish, crossed the
+marches and plundered and burnt the church
+<a name="p56" id="p56"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>56<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>and city. In the reign of Hardicanute (1039&ndash;1041)
+the citizens of Worcester, having risen
+against the payment of the ship-tax, were severely
+punished, a military force being sent to
+occupy their city. So thoroughly did it carry
+out the work of inflicting discipline on the
+malcontents, that the church, amongst other
+buildings, was left in ruins. The original church
+at Gloucester was built in 681, as part of a
+conventual establishment; this was destroyed,
+and, after an interval, rebuilt by Beornulph,
+King of Mercia, sometime previous to 825.
+This church was looted by the Danes, but
+restored by S.&nbsp;Edward the Confessor. In the
+year after the Conquest, Gloucester was occupied
+by the Normans, whose entrance was not, however,
+accepted quite peaceably by the citizens;
+and in the tumult the Cathedral was seriously
+injured by the one or the other party. Exeter
+provides us with another case. Here was a
+cathedral in early English days, which lasted
+until the time of Bishop William Warelwast,
+who began the erection of a new one in 1112.
+During the stormy reign of Stephen, the city was
+held for Matilda and had to stand a siege by
+the King, to the great damage of the still
+<a name="p57" id="p57"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>57<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>unfinished church. To quote one further
+illustration only: Bangor, whose wooden church
+was replaced by a stone one somewhere about
+1102, suffered grievously in the wars waged
+between Henry&nbsp;III. of England, and David,
+Prince of Wales, an episode in which was the
+destruction of the Cathedral.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="p56a" id="p56a"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>56a<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>
+ <img src="images/p56a.jpg" alt="" id="img56a" /><br
+ /><small><i>From a photo by Albert F. Coe, Norwich</i><br
+ />NORWICH CATHEDRAL.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>The conquest of England by William, Duke
+of Normandy, had a vast influence on the
+ecclesiastical buildings of the country. On the
+continent art had advanced at a pace unknown
+in this island, and the plain and massive
+churches scattered over the land must have
+seemed very rude structures in the eyes of the
+prelates who came in the victor’s train.
+S.&nbsp;Edward the Confessor, with his Norman predilections,
+had no doubt accustomed his courtiers
+to some aspects of foreign art, and through his
+influence the so-called Norman architecture
+preceded the Normans in the country; but
+such instances of it as were to be seen must
+have been few, and probably confined to the
+southern counties.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely had the Conqueror’s throne been
+secured before his countrymen, placed in the
+abbeys and sees of England, began to rebuild, on
+<a name="p58" id="p58"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>58<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>new and grander plans, the churches under their
+charge.</p>
+
+<p>Lanfranc, who ascended the throne of S.&nbsp;Augustine
+in 1070, set himself to the work of
+rebuilding Canterbury Cathedral, not contenting
+himself with any enlargement or embellishment
+of the older fane, but making a clean sweep of
+that, and beginning from the foundations. S.
+Anselm, and the prior of the monastery,
+Ernulph, took up the work and enlarged upon
+Lanfranc’s design, pulling down and re-building
+the choir. Early in the next century, namely in
+1130, the new Cathedral, completed under the
+supervision of Conrad, successor to Ernulph,
+was solemnly dedicated with great pomp in the
+presence of the Kings of England and of Scotland.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="p59" id="p59"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>59<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>
+ <img src="images/p59.jpg" alt="" id="img59" /><br
+ /><small>RIPON CATHEDRAL.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, Thomas of Bayeux, who became
+Archbishop of York in the same year as that in
+which Lanfranc obtained his English see, was
+busy rebuilding his Minster at York. William
+of Carilef commenced the magnificent pile,
+forming one of the finest Norman churches in
+existence, which crowns the Wear at Durham,
+in 1093; and Ralph Flambard took up the work
+three years later, completing it in 1128. London
+<a name="p61" id="p61"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>61<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>was deprived of its Cathedral by fire probably
+about 1088, and the work of restoration was at
+once undertaken by Maurice, its Norman bishop.
+In 1079 Bishop Walkelyn began the erection of
+a cathedral church at Winchester, in the place
+of the old Saxon building which had first been
+founded on the conversion of King Cynegils,
+about 635. In all parts of the land, east and
+west, north and south, the builders were at work,
+rearing massive temples to the glory and honour
+of God. The chink of chisel and the blow of
+hammer rang everywhere in the ears of the
+eleventh century in England. Bishop Herbert
+Losinga laid the first stone of Norwich Cathedral
+in 1096, at which time Remigius of Fescamp
+had been some twenty years at work on that of
+Lincoln, and had passed away, leaving the completion
+to others. The new Norman Cathedral
+of Hereford was begun by Robert Losinga, who
+reigned as bishop from 1079 to 1096. Abbot
+Simeon began to build the Minster at Ely about
+1092; Worcester was commenced by Wulfstan
+in 1084; five years later the foundation of
+Gloucester was laid; and in 1091 S.&nbsp;Osmund
+consecrated the church of S.&nbsp;Nicholas at Newcastle.
+Other cathedrals which were built, or
+<a name="p62" id="p62"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>62<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>rebuilt, at about the same date include those of
+Carlisle, S.&nbsp;Albans, Rochester, Chester, Lichfield
+and Oxford.</p>
+
+<p>Surely never was an age so enthusiastic in
+building! All these cathedrals, many still
+remaining largely as their Norman builders left
+them, most retaining many relics of their work,
+were commenced within the space of two reigns
+of by no means great duration, lasting only from
+1066 to 1100.</p>
+
+<p>The energy of the time was not, however,
+exhausted by the fervour of this outburst. The
+twelfth century took up and vigorously prosecuted
+the tasks handed on to it by the eleventh.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="p63" id="p63"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>63<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>
+ <img src="images/p63.jpg" alt="" id="img63" /><br
+ /><small>SOUTHWELL MINSTER.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>Among cathedrals which were entirely, or
+almost entirely, rebuilt during this century
+we have Chichester, Rochester, Peterborough,
+Lincoln, Oxford, Bristol, Southwell, S.&nbsp;David’s,
+Llandaff, and Ripon. In the first of these a
+great part of the work was done twice over
+within this period. Ralph de Luffa was bishop
+of the see when the cathedral was consecrated
+in 1108; two fires, however, did such serious
+damage to this building, the first in 1114, and
+the second in 1186, that it had practically to be
+re-constructed, and was re-dedicated in the year
+<a name="p65" id="p65"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>65<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>1199. The Cathedral at Rochester was largely
+re-built by John of Canterbury between 1125
+and 1137, and like Chichester suffered twice
+during the century from the ravages of fire.
+Indeed, so frequently do we find mention of
+conflagrations in the cathedrals in the early
+mediæval days, that it is quite obvious that
+William&nbsp;I. was fully justified in taking such
+precautions against this enemy as the use of the
+curfew involved. In more than one instance the
+cathedral went up in flames as part only of a fire
+which destroyed a large portion of the town.</p>
+
+<p>The undertaking of new work at Peterborough
+was the result of a similar cause. In the year
+1116 fire destroyed almost the whole church and
+monastery, but in two years’ time the re-erection
+had commenced, and was continued throughout
+the remainder of the century. The choir was
+ready for the resumption of the Divine offices in
+1143, but the builders did not reach the end of
+their labours until 1237. Re-construction was
+necessitated at Lincoln by the occurrence of an
+earthquake in 1185, following once more upon a
+fire which took place in 1141. The stone
+vaulting and the western towers were undertaken
+by Alexander, bishop from 1123 to 1147; and in
+<a name="p66" id="p66"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>66<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>1192 S.&nbsp;Hugh of Avalon, who held the see from
+1186 to 1203, began a thorough re-building of
+the pile. This work marks an epoch in the
+progress of architecture in England, as in the
+choir of S.&nbsp;Hugh we meet with the earliest
+examples of the use of the lancet form of arch
+to which we can assign a known date. About
+the middle of this century a new church, not yet
+advanced to the dignity of a cathedral, was
+commenced at Oxford, and by the year 1180 it
+was sufficiently advanced to allow of the translation
+of the relics of S.&nbsp;Frideswide to their
+new shrine. In 1142 was founded the Abbey of
+Bristol, and its church was consecrated on
+Easter Day, 1148, although the completion of
+the buildings occupied the attention of the
+abbots for many years after. Southwell Minster
+was also building during the first half of the
+twelfth century; Peter de Leia, who became
+Bishop of S.&nbsp;David’s in 1176, commenced the
+erection of his cathedral four years later, following
+the example of Arban, who entered upon the
+neighbouring see of Llandaff in 1107, and reared
+a mother church for his diocese. Finally, Ripon
+also saw the masons busily at work almost
+through the century. First Thurstan,
+<a name="p67" id="p67"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>67<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Archbishop of York in 1114, began the enlargement
+of the Abbey Church, and after him Archbishop
+Roger (1154&ndash;1181) entirely rebuilt it.</p>
+
+<p>But the record of the churches re-built during
+this century by no means exhausts the tale of
+work performed during that time. At Winchester,
+for example, in 1107 the central tower fell,
+necessitating the building of a new one. Lucy,
+bishop here from 1189 to 1205, erected a new
+Lady Chapel and made other alterations. At
+Hereford, too, operations were going forward
+almost throughout the century, the bishops
+Reynelm (1107&ndash;1115) and Betun (1131&ndash;1148)
+being especially energetic in pressing them on;
+and the closing years of this period saw the
+rearing of the eastern transepts. At this time
+also the beautiful Galilee Chapel was added to
+Durham Cathedral; Ely was consecrated in
+1106, and towards the end of the century
+received its central tower and other additions;
+and S.&nbsp;Albans, moreover, had a façade built on
+its western front by John de&nbsp;Cella.</p>
+
+<p>The chronicle of the damages by fire during
+the twelfth century is not complete without
+mentioning that S.&nbsp;Paul’s, London, which was
+re-building during a large portion of that time,
+<a name="p68" id="p68"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>68<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>was injured by it in 1136; and the same foe
+destroyed the roof of Worcester Cathedral in the
+early days of the century.</p>
+
+<p>The period which our rapid survey has so far
+covered embraces broadly the eras of the Norman
+and of the so-called Early English architecture.
+In the thirteenth century the Decorated Style
+came into being, and with its rise arose also the
+desire for greater richness of ornament even in
+those churches which had already, to all appearances,
+been completed. On all hands, therefore,
+in this new century, we find the pulling down
+of portions of the stern Norman work and the
+substitution of lighter and more graceful designs.</p>
+
+<p>The great work of the thirteenth century,
+however, was begun before the birth of the more
+florid style, and shows little trace of the dawning
+of its influence. Salisbury Cathedral was begun
+in 1220, the work commencing, as was usual, at
+the eastern end and advancing westward. The
+whole was proceeded with continuously, and
+since its completion no alteration of any importance
+has been made in it. Other cathedrals in
+England exhibit in almost every case a conglomerate
+of several orders of architecture,
+blended generally with great skill, but necessarily
+<a name="p69" id="p69"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>69<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>lacking to some extent in unity of design in consequence.
+In Salisbury we have one complete
+and splendid example of English architecture of
+the best period, carried out from beginning to
+end with unbroken unity of purpose.</p>
+
+<p>Other churches which then were, or were
+subsequently to become, cathedrals, dating in
+their present form from the thirteenth century,
+are those of Lichfield, Wells, Manchester,
+Bangor, and S.&nbsp;Asaph.</p>
+
+<p>A Norman church had been reared at Lichfield
+of which very few relics have survived to
+the present day, a new building having been
+begun about the year 1200, and the work of
+construction carried on for the major part of the
+century, the west front being reached about
+1275. Bishop Joceline was the chief founder of
+the existing Cathedral at Wells, most of the
+previous work having been taken down in his
+time, and the new church solemnly dedicated by
+him in 1239. The Church at Manchester was
+probably built about 1220, but the present
+building is of a later date. The Cathedral at
+S.&nbsp;Asaph suffered from the great mediæval
+enemy of such foundations, fire, twice during
+this period. On the first occasion, in 1247, the
+<a name="p70" id="p70"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>70<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>troops of Henry&nbsp;III. of England must be held
+responsible for the destruction wrought; on the
+second, in 1282, the outbreak was probably
+accidental. Repairs, if not actual rebuilding,
+took place in consequence of these injuries
+towards the end of the century. Bangor
+Cathedral was probably also rebuilt about 1291.</p>
+
+<p>Fire played its old part throughout the
+century in providing work for the ecclesiastical
+masons, in other instances besides that referred
+to in the Welsh diocese. The choir at Carlisle
+was rebuilt probably about 1250 and the following
+years, but had scarcely been fully completed
+before it fell in a fire which destroyed a large
+portion of the city. In 1216, S.&nbsp;Nicholas,
+Newcastle, was almost destroyed by the same
+fatal agency. Worcester Cathedral was again
+burnt in 1202, and was rebuilt between then and
+1218 sufficiently to be re-dedicated; although
+the retro-choir, the choir, the Lady Chapel, and
+some details were added at a later time in the
+same century.</p>
+
+<p>Imperfections in the work of the preceding age
+were answerable for a certain amount of loss and
+consequent re-construction (not seldom actually
+a gain) in this. At Lincoln, for instance, the
+<a name="p71" id="p71"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>71<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>central tower fell in 1237, and was replaced by
+the present one, which has been described as
+one of the finest in Europe. The east end of
+Ripon had to be rebuilt owing to the structure
+giving way in 1280; and in consequence again
+of the fall of the tower, repairs had to be undertaken
+at S.&nbsp;David’s in 1220.</p>
+
+<p>The popular regard for Hugh, the sainted
+bishop of Lincoln, led to the building of one of
+the most beautiful sections of that Minster,
+namely the Angel-choir, erected as a worthy
+chapel for the shrine of S.&nbsp;Hugh, between 1255
+and 1280. At Hereford, the Lady Chapel was
+built about the middle of this century; and at
+Ely, the presbytery and retro-choir at about the
+same date; at Bristol, the elder Lady Chapel
+probably a little earlier; at Southwell, the choir
+between 1230 and 1250; and the choir also at
+S.&nbsp;Albans, in 1256.</p>
+
+<p>Several of our cathedral towers, moreover,
+besides that at Lincoln, date from the thirteenth
+century. York, S.&nbsp;Paul’s, Chichester and
+Gloucester, all had the towers erected during
+this period.</p>
+
+<p>Passing on to the fourteenth century, we meet
+with the same wide-spread activity, but it is
+<a name="p72" id="p72"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>72<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>expended now rather in additions and embellishments
+to existing buildings than in actual
+re-constructions. At Ripon, the Cathedral was
+partially burnt by the Scots in 1319, and later in
+the century the tower was struck by lightning.
+At S.&nbsp;Alban’s, part of the nave fell in 1323, as
+did the tower at Ely in 1322. In each of these
+cases repairs were of course rendered needful.
+More important works were the rebuilding of the
+nave and transepts at Canterbury at the end of
+the century (1378&ndash;1410), the erection of the
+Zouche Chapel at York about 1350, the addition
+of both the central and the western towers to
+Wells, the spires to Peterborough, and the
+towers also to Hereford.</p>
+
+<p>The fifteenth century is specially marked by
+the growing popularity of chantries and side
+chapels. We find them erected at this time at
+Hereford and elsewhere; but little building on
+a large scale is done. In several cases the
+vaulting of the roofs dates from this period, and
+a good deal of internal carving in wood or stone
+was also done. Among the latter we may note
+the high altar screen at S.&nbsp;Alban’s, and the
+stalls at Carlisle and Ripon. Of the former
+work, reference may be made to the vaulting
+<a name="p73" id="p73"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>73<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>of part of the choir and transepts at Norwich.</p>
+
+<p>The sixteenth century is not a pleasant one to
+contemplate in connection with our ancient
+cathedrals. Ignorance and fanaticism were then
+beginning to show themselves in their treatment
+of the miracles of art bequeathed to the ages,
+and soon became more obvious than culture or
+reverence. This century saw the nave of Bristol
+taken down, the spires removed from the towers
+of Ripon, and other precautions against a threatened
+collapse; but steps were not taken to repair
+the losses thus caused. And in view of the nameless
+horrors perpetrated within the hallowed walls
+of churches and cathedrals, first by the extreme
+reformers, and in the next century by the Puritans,
+in the name of religion, it is only wonderful that
+so much that is beautiful still survives.</p>
+
+<p>The one constructive work of the seventeenth
+century was, of course, the building of the
+Cathedral of London, S.&nbsp;Paul’s, in the place of
+that “Old S.&nbsp;Paul’s” which perished in the fire
+of 1666. This building shares with Salisbury
+the credit of complete unity, but is unique
+among English Cathedrals in being classical in
+style. However much more admirable the
+Gothic style may be admitted to be for
+<a name="p74" id="p74"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>74<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>ecclesiastical purposes, probably all will admit that the
+grandeur of St. Paul’s grows upon one the more
+familiar one becomes with it; and certainly no
+tower, or collection of towers, could possibly
+dominate a vast city like London in the way
+that Wren’s splendid dome does.</p>
+
+<p>The eighteenth century witnessed, among
+other things, the removal of most of the spires
+which down to that time had crowned the towers
+of many of the cathedrals. Such was the case
+with Hereford and Wakefield; the same thing
+was attempted at Lincoln in 1727, but popular
+tumult saved the spires; only, however, until
+1807, when they were removed.</p>
+
+<p>Of one work of construction the eighteenth
+century was also guilty; the year 1704 gave birth
+to that abortion among English cathedrals known
+as S.&nbsp;Peter’s, Liverpool; with which, for nearly
+twenty years, the population of one of the
+wealthiest cities in the empire has been
+content! Something in the way of restoration
+was attempted in this century, but it was for the
+most part done ignorantly, and no small part of
+the restoration of the nineteenth century has
+consisted in undoing so far as possible the work
+of the eighteenth.</p>
+
+<p><a name="p75" id="p75"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>75<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>The present century has seen the commencement,
+on noble lines, of the Cathedral of Truro;
+and the beautifying of not a few of our old
+minsters, which had been stript almost bare by
+the destroyers of past times. Happily, the
+guardians of these treasures of art and devotion
+have for the most part been conscious of the
+greatness of their trust, and the fabrics have
+been dealt with reverently and with judgment.
+Amongst others, Bristol, Chichester, St. Albans,
+and Peterborough have required more or less
+extensive measures of re-building.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chunk">
+<h2 class="chap" title="Ye Chappell of Oure Ladye"><a name="p76" id="p76"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>76<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Ye Chappell of Oure Ladye.</h2>
+
+<p class="author">By the Rev. J. H. Stamp.</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchap"><span class="dropcap">The</span> sacred buildings designated by this
+title were dedicated to the service of God,
+in mediæval times, in honour of the Mother of
+our Lord. The veneration of S.&nbsp;Mary, the
+Blessed Virgin, had been growing up in the
+Church from the fifth century, when the reality
+of the incarnation of the Son of God was first
+called into question by men who professed and
+called themselves Christians. The defence of
+the true doctrine brought clearly into view the
+high dignity which God had conferred on the
+humble maiden of Nazareth, and so reverence
+for her memory, as the most blessed among
+women, grew into veneration for her person as
+the Mother of God. The faithful of the Middle
+Ages were, therefore, not content with simply
+retaining her name at the head of the list of
+saints, but raised the human mother to a position
+which was almost, if not quite, equal to that of
+her Divine Son. They conferred on her the
+title of “Our Lady,” and hailed her as “The
+<a name="p77" id="p77"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>77<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Queen of Heaven,” just as they were accustomed
+to address the Saviour as “Our Lord” and
+worship Him as “The King of Heaven.” This
+title still survives in the terms which are so
+familiar to us, namely, “Lady Day” and “Lady
+Chapel.”</p>
+
+<p>We see evidences of this growth of the
+<i>cultus</i> of the Blessed Virgin in the erection
+and elaborate ornamentation of Lady Chapels
+throughout Christendom. It does not seem
+probable, however, that our pious forefathers in
+the ancient Church of England intended to
+encourage Mariolatry, by the introduction of
+these buildings into this country; for it is a
+singular and significant fact that in Spain, where
+this heretical and superstitious practice chiefly
+prevailed, Lady Chapels are very rare, because
+the church itself has been made to serve the
+purpose. English Churchmen, in their desire to
+honour the Mother of Christ, were careful to
+avoid this evil example. The erection of smaller
+buildings, and the setting apart, for the purpose,
+of one of the side aisles rather than the sanctuary
+itself, tend to show that they did not assign to
+the Blessed Virgin that <em>divine</em> honour which was
+due only to her Son and Lord. The usual
+<a name="p78" id="p78"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>78<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>position of the Lady Chapel, beyond the choir,
+has, indeed, been considered as a proof that the
+honour paid to “Our Lady” exceeded that
+which was rendered unto our Lord, since the
+altar dedicated to her was set up beyond the
+High Altar in the most sacred portion of the
+church, and, in that position, might be said to
+overshadow it. But the usual situation of the
+Lady Chapel, at the east end of the choir or
+presbytery, proves nothing of the kind. One
+celebrated writer on the subject disclaims the
+idea in the following words, “Poole principally
+objects to the position of the Lady Chapel at the
+east end, ‘above,’ as he expresses it ‘the High
+Altar.’ Now we believe the Lady Chapel to have
+occupied the place merely on grounds of convenience,
+and not from any design&mdash;which is
+shocking to imagine&mdash;of exalting the Blessed
+Virgin to any participation in the honours of the
+Deity.”<sup><a href="#fn6" name="fnm6" id="fnm6"
+ title="go to footnote 6">6</a></sup></p>
+
+<p>It is true that the Lady Chapel was generally
+erected at the extreme east end, or one of the
+aisles near the choir was used for the purpose,
+because it was considered the most sacred part
+of the church next to the sanctuary. It was
+<a name="p79" id="p79"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>79<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>erected at the east end of the Abbey Churches of
+Westminster and S.&nbsp;Albans; in the Cathedral
+Churches of Winchester, Salisbury, Chichester,
+Exeter, Gloucester, Worcester, Wells, Hereford,
+Chester and Manchester; at Christ Church,
+Hants, where there is a chantry above, called
+S.&nbsp;Michael’s Loft, which once served as the
+Chapter House of the Priory, but in modern
+times has been converted into a schoolroom;
+and also at the parish church of S.&nbsp;Mary
+Redcliffe, Bristol, where it is situated over a
+thoroughfare, after the example of several
+churches in Exeter. But the ecclesiastics and
+architects of the Middle Ages did not consider
+themselves bound, by a hard and fast rule, to set
+up the Lady Chapel at the east end. If an
+available site could be found beyond the Choir
+the Chapel was erected in that position, otherwise,
+the north aisle of the Church, or a
+convenient site near the Choir, was utilised for
+the purpose. The building has been erected on
+the north or south side of the Choir or Nave, and
+even at the west end when deemed expedient. It
+was erected on the <em>north</em> side at the Cathedrals
+of Canterbury, Oxford, Bristol, and Peterborough;
+at the Abbeys of Glastonbury, Bury St.
+<a name="p80" id="p80"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>80<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Edmunds, Walsingham, Thetford, Wymondham,
+Belvoir, Llanthony, Hulme, and Croyland,
+where there was a second Lady Chapel with a
+lofty screen, in the south transept.<sup><a href="#fn7" name="fnm7" id="fnm7"
+ title="go to footnote 7">7</a></sup> It is on the
+<em>south</em> side at Kilkenny and at Elgin Cathedral.
+It stands in a similar position over the Chapter
+House at Ripon Minster. Sometimes it was
+placed above the chancel, as in Compton
+Church, Surrey; Compton Martin, Somerset;
+and Darenth, Kent; or over the porch, as at
+Fordham, Cambs. At Ely Cathedral it is
+connected with the extremity of the north
+transept. At Wimborne Minster it stands in
+the south transept, whilst at Rochester Cathedral
+and at Waltham Abbey, Essex, it was erected at
+the west of the south transept. At Durham
+Cathedral an attempt was made to build a Lady
+Chapel at the east end, but owing, it is said, to
+the supernatural intervention of S.&nbsp;Cuthbert,
+whose relics were deposited in the Choir, the
+building was erected instead at the west end,
+where it stands under the name of the Galilee
+Chapel. The original Lady Chapel at Canterbury
+also stood in this unusual position, until the
+days of Archbishop Lanfranc, 1070&ndash;1089, when
+<a name="p81" id="p81"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>81<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>it was removed and the present building set up
+at the east end. The <em>aisles</em> were also frequently
+used as “ye Chappell of oure Ladye,” as at
+Haddenham, Cambs.</p>
+
+<p>The practice of dedicating Chapels to the
+Blessed Virgin was introduced into this
+country during the twelfth century, shortly
+after the monastic orders had gained the
+supremacy over the parochial clergy. These
+buildings were generally founded not only to
+satisfy the spirit of the age, which demanded
+the veneration of the Mother of our Lord, but
+also to afford the necessary accommodation at
+the east end for the increased number of clergy.
+The founders, moreover, hoped to secure an
+augmentation of the revenues, by the offerings
+of the faithful at the shrines of the new Chapels,
+as appears to have been the case at Walsingham,
+Norfolk; All Hallows, Barking; and S.&nbsp;Stephen’s,
+Westminster. The building, in many
+instances, became the depository of the relics of
+a saint. The Galilee Chapel at Durham, dedicated
+to S.&nbsp;Mary the Virgin in 1175, contains
+the bones of the Venerable Bede, the earliest
+historian of the Church of England, who died at
+Jarrow-on-Tyne, on the eve of Ascension Day,
+<a name="p82" id="p82"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>82<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span><span class="postnomial">A.D.</span>&nbsp;735. These relics were translated, in 1370,
+from the tomb of S.&nbsp;Cuthbert, and placed in the
+Chapel, in a magnificent shrine of gold and
+silver. The Lady Chapel at Oxford contains
+the shrine of S.&nbsp;Frideswide, the daughter
+of the founder of the convent, and its first
+prioress, whose relics were translated from the
+north choir aisle in 1289. This Chapel is now
+called the Dormitory, as the remains of several
+deans and canons have been laid to rest within
+its walls.</p>
+
+<p>The Lady Chapel has frequently served as
+the mausoleum of saints, princes, noblemen, and
+dignitaries of the Church. The stately and
+magnificent edifice at Westminster, known as
+Henry the Seventh’s Chapel, was built for this
+purpose in 1502, by the first Tudor monarch, on
+the site of the original Lady Chapel, erected by
+Henry&nbsp;III. in 1220. The royal founder, his
+wife, and other royal personages now await the
+resurrection in the tomb set up in this famous
+building. The Lady Chapel at S.&nbsp;Mary’s,
+Warwick, which is said to be the chief ornament
+of that church, was also built as a tomb-house in
+1443, by Richard Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick.
+Their desire to rest in the chapel, dedicated to
+<a name="p83" id="p83"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>83<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>the blessed Virgin, was closely associated with
+the idea which chiefly moved our forefathers to
+erect these buildings. They had been taught to
+believe in the invocation of saints, and were
+anxious to secure, for themselves and their dear
+ones, the mediation and intercession of the
+Mother of our Lord, whose influence with her
+Divine Son, they supposed, was all prevailing.
+So they founded these chapels in her honour,
+and solicited her good offices on their behalf by
+frequent services and prostrations before her
+image, which occupied the place of honour above
+“oure Ladye’s Altar” crowned as the Queen of
+Heaven, and profusely adorned with splendid
+jewels and exquisite embroidery. They believed,
+moreover, that as she could succour the living,
+so she would prevail with her Son on behalf of
+the dead. These sacred buildings were, accordingly,
+used also as chantries, where masses were
+offered daily, and the intervention of “oure Ladye
+S.&nbsp;Mary” was solicited to secure the release of
+the souls of the faithful departed from the flames
+of purgatory, through which, it was supposed,
+they must pass, to be purified from all the
+defilements of their earthly course, and “made
+meet for the inheritance of the saints in light.”
+<a name="p84" id="p84"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>84<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>In frescoes on the walls, and in paintings on the
+windows, the Virgin was represented, interceding
+for the souls of the faithful as they came forth to
+judgment.</p>
+
+<p>After the dissolution of monasteries by Henry&nbsp;VIII.,
+and the suppression of chantries by
+Edward&nbsp;VI., many of these buildings shared the
+fate of the conventual churches to which they
+were attached. In some places the Lady Chapel
+was left to decay, and disappeared in the course
+of a few years, like that at Norwich, which fell
+into a ruinous condition as early as 1569. In other
+localities it was allowed to stand until the
+turbulent days of the Commonwealth, as at
+Peterborough, where it was taken down to
+supply materials for the reparation of the
+Cathedral, which had been greatly injured
+by Cromwell’s soldiers. In several places it
+was appropriated to other uses, and even
+divested of its sacred character. The elegant
+chapel at Ely, erected 1321&ndash;49, and said to
+have been one of the most perfect buildings of
+that age, was assigned at the Reformation to
+the parishioners of Holy Trinity to serve as their
+Parish Church, and is now called Trinity Church.
+The splendid specimen at S.&nbsp;Albans was
+<a name="p85" id="p85"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>85<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>separated from the presbytery by a public
+thoroughfare, which was made through the antechapel,
+and a charter of Edward&nbsp;VI. transferred
+the sacred building to the authorities of the
+ancient Grammar School, and it was used as a
+schoolroom until the restoration in 1870. At
+S.&nbsp;Mary Redcliffe, Bristol, the Lady Chapel has
+also been used for scholastic purposes, and at
+Waltham Abbey it has accommodated not only
+parochial schools but public meetings and petty
+sessions.</p>
+
+<p>Among existing Lady Chapels, King Henry
+the Seventh’s Chapel occupies the first place for
+magnificence. The first Tudor monarch, in his
+anxiety to make his peace with God before his
+death, and to commemorate the union of the
+houses of York and Lancaster, determined to
+found a chapel in honour of the blessed Virgin,
+“in whom,” he declares in his will, “hath ever
+been my most singulier trust and confidence,
+... and by whom I have hitherto in al
+myne adversities ever had my special comforte
+and relief.” He also made due provision for
+the celebration of masses and the distribution of
+alms “perpetually, for ever, while the world shall
+endure” for the welfare of his soul. The laying
+<a name="p86" id="p86"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>86<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>of the foundation stone is recorded by the ancient
+chronicler as follows: “On the 24th daie of
+January 150⅔ a quarter of an houre afore three
+of the clocke at after noone of the same daie,
+the first stone of our Ladie Chapell, within
+the monasterie of Westminster, was laid by
+the hands of John Islip, Abbot of the same
+monasterie ... and diverse others.”<sup><a href="#fn8" name="fnm8" id="fnm8"
+ title="go to footnote 8">8</a></sup>
+After its completion it was so universally
+admired, that Leland the antiquary describes it
+as “<i>orbis miraculum</i>”&mdash;the wonder of the world.
+About fifty years after its dedication the services,
+for which it was specially designed by its royal
+founder, were brought to an end by the Act
+of Parliament which suppressed the chantries
+throughout the kingdom, and then followed three
+centuries of gross neglect which reduced it to
+“an almost shapeless mass of ruins,” as it was
+described in 1803. Four years later, in 1807,
+Dean Vincent obtained a parliamentary grant
+for the restoration of the building, and the
+necessary repairs were completed in 1822. The
+Chapel still retains much of its ancient splendour,
+and the elegant and elaborate ceiling is a marvel
+of architectural skill. It has been used since the
+<a name="p87" id="p87"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>87<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>year 1725 for the installation of the Knights of
+the Bath, and their banners are suspended over
+the old carved <i>misereres</i> or <i>misericordes</i> of the
+monks.</p>
+
+<p>“Ye Chappell of oure Ladye” at S.&nbsp;Alban’s is
+also a most elegant specimen of the buildings,
+dedicated to the blessed Virgin. The foundations
+appear to have been laid by John de
+Hertford, abbot from 1235 to 1260. But at the
+election of Hugh de Eversdone, in 1308, the
+walls had only reached the level of the underside
+of the window sills, a height of ten feet above
+the ground. During his rule he laboured so
+assiduously to complete the work, that in a short
+time he finished it. The building, at its dedication,
+was so rich in detail that it is described by
+ancient writers as “a magnificent sight.” The
+work of Abbot Hugh included the exquisite
+carvings in stone, which represent about seventy
+different specimens of forms in nature. During
+its use as a Grammar School, from 1553 to 1870,
+the interior suffered much injury from the hands
+of the schoolboys, and was allowed to fall into
+a state of ruin and decay. Shortly after the
+removal of the School in 1870, a restoration was
+undertaken by the ladies of Hertfordshire, but
+<a name="p88" id="p88"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>88<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>their good intentions were not carried into
+effect, through lack of the necessary funds. Lord
+Grimthorp then generously came to the rescue,
+and through his munificence the Chapel has
+been thoroughly and judiciously restored. It
+now stands once more in all its glory, as a
+perfect gem of architecture and one of the most
+elegant Lady Chapels in Christendom.</p>
+
+<p>“Ye Chappell of oure Ladye” at Waltham
+Abbey is said to be one of the richest specimens
+of mediæval architecture in Essex. The building
+has been greatly defaced since the suppression
+of chantries, but still bears traces of its original
+glory. “The Lady Chapel,” says the late
+Professor Freeman, “must have been a most
+beautiful specimen of its style, but few ancient
+structures have been more sedulously disfigured.”
+It was erected before <span class="postnomial">A.D.</span>&nbsp;1292, as, during that
+year, Roger Levenoth, an inhabitant, endowed
+the chantry, with a house and 100 acres of land
+in Roydon. The Chapel was in a flourishing
+condition in the reign of Edward&nbsp;III., as we find
+from the return made in obedience to the royal
+order, which was issued to the master of the
+ceremonies of every guild and chantry in the
+King’s dominions. In the Court language of
+<a name="p89" id="p89"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>89<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>that period, which was Norman French, Roger
+Harrof and John de Poley, the chantry priests,
+are described as “meisters de la petit compaignie
+ordeigne al honor de Dieu et ure Donne seyncte
+Marie en la Ville de Waltham seynte croice.”
+The architect selected, as the site of the building,
+the space formed by the easternmost bay of the
+south aisle of the nave and the western side of
+the south transept. This peculiar position
+indicates that it was not the work of the monks,
+but that of the parishioners, who were allowed
+the use of the nave as their parish church from
+the days of King Harold&nbsp;II., the founder. A
+well-known antiquarian writes: “It seems to
+have been built by the parishioners, and not by
+the abbot and convent, and its position is due to
+its occupying the only available spot, and where
+only two walls wanted building. A similar case
+occurs at Rochester. Where the Abbey built
+the Lady Chapel it was usually east of the
+transept&mdash;at the east end if there was room, at
+the north side if otherwise.”<sup><a href="#fn9" name="fnm9" id="fnm9"
+ title="go to footnote 9">9</a></sup> The parishioners
+could not erect their Lady Chapel at the east
+end, because the choir or presbytery had been
+used as the monastic church from the days of
+<a name="p90" id="p90"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>90<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Henry&nbsp;II., who, to atone for the massacre of
+Thomas à Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury,
+changed the secular foundation of Harold,
+and introduced an abbot and monks of the
+Augustinian order. Another Lady Chapel had
+probably been erected at the east end for the use
+of the monks, in accordance with the custom of
+the age, but this shared the destruction which
+befell the whole of the eastern portion of the
+church after the dissolution of the monastery in
+1540. The preservation of the parish Lady
+Chapel is therefore due to its position at the
+west of the presbytery. In a transcript by Peter
+le Neve, Norroy King at Arms, 1698, it is stated
+that a chapel was dedicated at Waltham in the
+year 1188, by William de Vere, Bishop of
+Hereford, “in honore Dei [et gloriosæ Virginis
+Mariae] et B.&nbsp;Martyris atque pontificis Thomae
+nomine.”<sup><a href="#fn10" name="fnm10" id="fnm10"
+ title="go to footnote 10">10</a></sup> This has led to the conjecture that
+reference is made to the existing building,<sup><a href="#fn11" name="fnm11" id="fnm11"
+ title="go to footnote 11">11</a></sup> or
+to that which formerly stood at the east end.<sup><a href="#fn12" name="fnm12" id="fnm12"
+ title="go to footnote 12">12</a></sup>
+But the original Waltham manuscript shows
+that it does not refer to a Lady Chapel at all,
+but to the Chapel of S.&nbsp;Thomas of Canterbury.<sup><a href="#fn13" name="fnm13" id="fnm13"
+ title="go to footnote 13">13</a></sup></p>
+
+<p><a name="p91" id="p91"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>91<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>The masonry of the exterior of the two walls
+erected when the Chapel was founded, consists
+of alternating bands of stone, squared bricks,
+and flint, so that it produces a “poly-chromatic
+effect.”<sup><a href="#fn14" name="fnm14" id="fnm14"
+ title="go to footnote 14">14</a></sup> There are three large buttresses of
+considerable projection, with pedimented sets-off
+and slopes, one being situated at the south-west
+angle, and the other two on the south of the
+building. Two smaller buttresses also occupy a
+place on the south. Niches, with pedestals
+for images, are still standing in the primary
+buttresses.</p>
+
+<p>The interior of the Chapel measures 41 feet
+7&nbsp;inches in length, 23 feet in breadth, and 23 feet
+in height. It is approached by a steep ascent of
+nine long narrow stone steps, which are situated
+near the south-west buttress. The ancient
+doorway is beautifully decorated with ball flowers.
+The floor stands at an elevation of nearly five
+feet above the floor of the chancel, an arrangement
+which appears to be peculiar to Waltham.
+It was apparently built at this high level to add
+to the loftiness of the crypt below, which was a
+capacious chamber of much importance in olden
+times, and consists of two wide bays of quadripartite
+<a name="p92" id="p92"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>92<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>vaulting. There is no way of access from
+the interior of the Church, but “the chapel is
+connected with the south aisle by a single arch
+of poor and ordinary architecture, a sad contrast
+to the glorious Romanesque work of the nave.”<sup><a href="#fn15" name="fnm15" id="fnm15"
+ title="go to footnote 15">15</a></sup>
+At the west end there is a large and beautiful
+six-light, square-headed window, with a rich and
+peculiar arrangement of a double plane of tracery,
+the inner plane consisting of three arches. This
+window, and the four elegant windows of three
+lights on the south side, are supposed to have
+been filled with stained glass, like that of the
+Chapter House at York Minster, and other
+buildings of the same period. At the extreme
+south-east of the building the remains of the
+ancient sedilia and piscina may still be seen.
+The walls were adorned with distemper paintings,
+chocolate coloured vine-leaves on a yellow
+ground running round the spandrels and
+windows. This decoration probably included a
+series of paintings, representing scenes in the life
+of the Mother of our Lord, and concluding with
+her assumption and coronation as the Queen of
+Heaven. There was also a representation of the
+Last Judgment in which “Our Lady” occupied
+<a name="p93" id="p93"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>93<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>the place of honour near her Divine Son and
+Lord, interceding for the faithful as they
+appeared before their Judge. On the removal of
+the plaster from the east wall during the restoration
+in 1875, the remains of a fresco of “the
+Doom” were discovered, and here are depicted
+the Judge of all mankind in the scarlet robes of
+majesty, the Virgin as intercessor, S.&nbsp;Michael
+the Archangel, presiding over the balances in
+which souls are weighed, the Apostles as assessors,
+bishops and abbots with the keys of S.&nbsp;Peter,
+admitting the faithful into the Holy Catholic
+Church, human forms emerging from the grave,
+the path of life, the chains of everlasting darkness,
+demons clothed in flames, and the jaws of
+hell. The space under this fresco was probably
+occupied by beautiful statuary, the image of
+the blessed Virgin standing in the centre,
+immediately above the altar of “Our Ladye.”
+At the dissolution of the monastery “a table of
+imagery of the xii. apostles,” belonging to this
+Chapel, was valued at ten shillings. A few
+fragments of statuary, supposed to have formed
+part of this decoration, were discovered during the
+restoration of the Abbey Church in 1860, and
+have been inserted in the south-east wall of the
+<a name="p94" id="p94"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>94<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>chancel. These relics of the splendid past
+include the mutilated stone figures of four
+saints, probably the evangelists, beautifully
+carved, and a representation of the crucifixion
+in black marble, but the ornament of precious
+metal, with which it was adorned, has long
+since disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>The altars, desks, and tables in the Lady
+Chapel were covered with plates of silver, as in
+the crypt beneath, which was also, in those days,
+a splendid chantry, served by its own priest,
+who was called “the Charnel Priest.” The
+sacramental vessels and plate, which were of
+great value, were sold after the suppression.
+Dr.&nbsp;Thomas Fuller, Incumbent of Waltham
+Abbey in 1648, gives the following extracts from
+the churchwarden’s accounts: “1549. <i>Imprimis.</i>&mdash;Sold
+the silver plate which was on the desk in
+the charnel, weighing five ounces, for twenty-five
+shillings. Guess,” adds the historian, “the
+gallantry of our church by this (presuming all
+the rest in proportionable equipage) when the
+desk whereon the priest read was inlaid with
+plate of silver.” “1551. <i>Item.</i>&mdash;Received for
+two hundred seventy-one ounces of plate, sold at
+several times for the best advantage, sixty-seven
+<a name="p95" id="p95"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>95<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>pound fourteen shillings and ninepence.”<sup><a href="#fn16" name="fnm16" id="fnm16"
+ title="go to footnote 16">16</a></sup> The
+inventory of goods made by order of Henry&nbsp;VIII.
+also mentions “iiii. tables [of oure Ladye]
+plated with sylver and gylte, every one of them
+with ii. folding leves.” The Chapel was furnished
+besides with “a lytell payre of organes,” valued
+at xxs., at the dissolution of the monastery, when
+Thomas Tallis, the father of English church
+music, was organist of the Abbey Church, and
+presided at the “greate large payre of organes”
+in the Choir. He was assisted by John Boston,
+of Waltham, who probably performed on the
+smaller instrument in the Lady Chapel. Both
+names are mentioned in the pension list, Tallis
+receiving xxs. for wages and xxs. reward, and
+Boston iiis. for wages and iiis. reward.</p>
+
+<p>A large number of wax tapers and candles
+was consumed annually at the various services
+held in the Lady Chapel and Crypt. In the
+return made by Sir Roger Harrop and Sir
+John de Poley, masters of the two chantries in
+the reign of Edward&nbsp;III., it is stated that every
+man and woman in this guild paid a yearly
+subscription of sixpence towards the expenses,
+and at the feasts of “oure Ladye” all
+<a name="p96" id="p96"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>96<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>“Christiens” of the company gave five burning
+tapers (<i>tapres ardant</i>); in honour of our Lord
+four large torches; and on other special occasions
+fifteen tapers. Lights were also kept burning
+during the solemn requiem and funeral services,
+when prayers were offered that perpetual light
+might shine upon the souls of the departed. It
+is most likely that this impressive ceremonial
+had been observed in both chantries, when the
+body of Queen Eleanor rested for the night in
+the Abbey Church on its way to Westminster,
+and again when the remains of her royal consort,
+Edward&nbsp;I., were deposited for three months
+before the tomb of Harold. The wax in stock
+for these memorial services at the suppression
+was sold by the churchwardens as follows:
+“<i>Item.</i>&mdash;Sold so much wax as amounts to twenty
+six shillings.” Dr.&nbsp;Fuller remarks on this transaction,
+“So thrifty the wardens that they
+bought not candles and tapers ready made, but
+bought the wax at the best hand and paid poor
+people for the making of them. Now they sold
+their magazine of wax as useless. Under the
+Reformation more light and fewer candles.”<sup><a href="#fn17" name="fnm17" id="fnm17"
+ title="go to footnote 17">17</a></sup></p>
+
+<p>In the days of the chantry, lands, tenements,
+<a name="p97" id="p97"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>97<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>and other gifts were presented and bequeathed
+that “obits” or prayers for the dead might be
+offered before the altar and image of “oure
+Ladye.” Dr. Fuller gives the following account
+of “obits” at Waltham: “The charge of an obit
+was two shillings and two pence; and, if any be
+curious to have the particulars thereof, it was
+thus expended: to the parish priest, three pence;
+to our Lady’s priest, three pence; to the charnel
+priest, threepence; to the two clerks, four pence;
+to the children (these I conceive choristers) three
+pence; to the sexton, two pence; to the bellman,
+two pence; for two tapers, two pence; for
+oblation, two pence. O, the reasonable rates at
+Waltham! Two shillings and two pence for an
+obit, the price whereof in S.&nbsp;Paul’s, in London,
+was forty shillings! For, forsooth, the higher
+the church, the holier the service, the dearer the
+price, though he had given too much that had
+given but thanks for such vanities. To defray
+the expenses of these obits, the parties prayed
+for, or their executors, left lands, houses, or
+stock to the churchwardens.”<sup><a href="#fn18" name="fnm18" id="fnm18"
+ title="go to footnote 18">18</a></sup> These obits were
+abolished when the chantries were suppressed in
+the first year of the reign of King Edward&nbsp;VI.
+<a name="p98" id="p98"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>98<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>“Now,” says Dr. Fuller, “was the brotherhood
+in the church dissolved, consisting as formerly of
+three priests, three choristers, and two sextons;
+and the rich plate belonging to them was sold for
+the good of the parish. Superstition by degrees
+being banished out of the church, we hear no
+more of prayers and masses for the dead. Every
+obit now had its own obit, and fully expired; the
+lands formerly given thereunto being employed
+to more charitable uses.”<sup><a href="#fn19" name="fnm19" id="fnm19"
+ title="go to footnote 19">19</a></sup></p>
+
+<p>Since the suppression both chantries have been
+stripped of almost all their glory. The beautiful
+statuary in the Lady Chapel has disappeared,
+the decorated walls were covered with plaster,
+the west window blocked up, three of the elegant
+south windows were partly bricked up, and the
+fourth was converted into a door-way. The
+building was entirely separated from the Church
+by a wall of lath and plaster, and the west front
+obscured by the erection of an unsightly porch,
+which also concealed from view the grand south
+Norman entrance to the Abbey Church. The
+exterior walls were covered with cement, in
+imitation of classic rustic work. The Chapel
+has been used during the last three centuries
+<a name="p99" id="p99"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>99<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>for various purposes, some of which were
+degrading in the extreme to its sacred character.
+It has been used as a vestry, parochial
+schoolroom and lending library, also for
+public meetings and petty sessions, and, in its
+darkest days, as a store-room. The crypt has
+also passed through many changes, and has been
+stripped of its original splendour. It retained
+much of its beauty for a century after the
+suppression, as Dr. Fuller writes during his
+<span class="nw">incumbency:&mdash;</span>“To the south side of the Church
+is joined a chapel, formerly our Lady’s, now a
+school-house, and under it an arched charnel-house,
+the fairest that I ever saw.”<sup><a href="#fn20" name="fnm20" id="fnm20"
+ title="go to footnote 20">20</a></sup> This
+beautiful chantry, which is partly underground,
+has been used since as a sepulchre for the dead,
+a prison cell for the living,<sup><a href="#fn21" name="fnm21" id="fnm21"
+ title="go to footnote 21">21</a></sup> a receptacle for
+human bones, a coal cellar and heating chamber.</p>
+
+<p>The Lady Chapel resumed its sacred character
+in 1876, after it had been carefully restored by
+Sir T. Fowell Buxton, Bart., K.C.M.G.<sup><a href="#fn22" name="fnm22" id="fnm22"
+ title="go to footnote 22">22</a></sup> whose
+seat, Warlies Park, is situated in the parish.
+The modern porch was removed from the west
+end, the large arch in the south wall of the
+<a name="p100" id="p100"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>100<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Church re-opened, and the five elegant windows
+were made good. A splendidly carved memorial
+screen has since been erected under the arch by
+the parishioners, and some beautifully carved
+altar rails set up at the east end. The arms of
+the Abbey and Parish of Waltham Holy Cross
+are represented on the screen, namely, two
+angels exalting the Cross. The appearance of
+the interior is, however, still mean and bare,
+when compared with its former magnificence,
+although so much has been done to rescue from
+a state of degradation and neglect, this interesting
+relic of mediæval times, “ye Chappell of
+oure Ladye.”</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a href="#fnm6"
+ title="return to text" name="fn6" id="fn6">6</a>. Durandus Symbol. lxxxviii.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm7"
+ title="return to text" name="fn7" id="fn7">7</a>. “Gough’s History of Croyland. 1783.”</p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm8"
+ title="return to text" name="fn8" id="fn8">8</a>. Holinshed.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm9"
+ title="return to text" name="fn9" id="fn9">9</a>. W. H. St. John Hope, <span class="postnomial">F.S.A.</span></p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm10"
+ title="return to text" name="fn10" id="fn10">10</a>. Harl. MS. 6974, fol. 106.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm11"
+ title="return to text" name="fn11" id="fn11">11</a>. Gentleman’s Magazine, April, 1860, and May, 1864.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm12"
+ title="return to text" name="fn12" id="fn12">12</a>. The Builder, April 2, 1898.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm13"
+ title="return to text" name="fn13" id="fn13">13</a>. Harl. MS. 391, fol. 100.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm14"
+ title="return to text" name="fn14" id="fn14">14</a>. Professor Freeman.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm15"
+ title="return to text" name="fn15" id="fn15">15</a>. Professor Freeman.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm16"
+ title="return to text" name="fn16" id="fn16">16</a>. History of Waltham Abbey, cap.&nbsp;5.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm17"
+ title="return to text" name="fn17" id="fn17">17</a>. History of Waltham Abbey, cap.&nbsp;v.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm18"
+ title="return to text" name="fn18" id="fn18">18</a>. Cap.&nbsp;iv.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm19"
+ title="return to text" name="fn19" id="fn19">19</a>. Cap.&nbsp;v.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm20"
+ title="return to text" name="fn20" id="fn20">20</a>. History of Waltham Abbey, cap.&nbsp;I., 9.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm21"
+ title="return to text" name="fn21" id="fn21">21</a>. The Quakers were incarcerated here during the reign of Charles&nbsp;II.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#fnm22"
+ title="return to text" name="fn22" id="fn22">22</a>. Now Governor General of South Australia.</p>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="chunk">
+<h2 class="chap" title="Some Famous Spires"><a name="p101" id="p101"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>101<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>
+Some Famous Spires.</h2>
+
+<p class="author">By John T. Page.</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchap"><span class="dropcap">It</span> is practically impossible to point to the
+exact date when spires first assumed a place
+in the category of ecclesiastical architecture.
+They belong to the Gothic style, and like the
+pointed arch were evolved rather than created.
+The low pointed roof of the tower gradually gave
+place to a more tapering finish, but the transition
+was by no means progressive, and cannot be
+clearly traced. Some of the earliest attempts at
+spire-building were uncouth and ungraceful, and
+even in these days the addition of a spire to a
+modern church does not necessarily add to its
+beauty. This is nearly always the case where
+an undue regard is paid to ornamentation, either
+at the base, or on the surface of the spire itself.
+Undoubtedly the most beautiful spires are those
+which at once spring clear from the summit of
+the tower and gradually rise needle-like towards
+the blue vault of heaven.</p>
+
+<p>By far the greater number of our principal
+<a name="p102" id="p102"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>102<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>spires date from the fourteenth century&mdash;a time
+when spire-building appears to have reached the
+zenith of its glory. Splendour and loftiness
+combine to render the examples of this period
+distinguished above those of any other.</p>
+
+<p>Northamptonshire has been well termed the
+county of “Squires and Spires,” and it is
+probably within its borders that the largest
+number of really beautiful spires may be found.
+A journey from Northampton to Peterborough
+along the Nene Valley is never to be forgotten
+for the continually recurring spires which greet
+the eye of the traveller at almost every point.
+Rushden, Higham Ferrers, Irchester, Raunds,
+Stanwick, Oundle, Finedon, Aldwinckle S.&nbsp;Peter’s,
+Barnwell S.&nbsp;Andrew, and many others
+all combine to render the term “Valley of
+Spires” peculiarly appropriate to this district.</p>
+
+<p>These spires of course cover a wide area.
+The two finest groups of spires are those of
+Coventry and Lichfield. When the cathedral
+at Coventry, with its three spires, was in existence
+in immediate proximity to the churches of
+S.&nbsp;Michael’s and Holy Trinity, the group formed
+“a picture not to be surpassed in England,” and
+even now, with Christ Church added, the
+<a name="p103" id="p103"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>103<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>“Ladies of the Vale,” of Lichfield, suffer
+somewhat in comparison.</p>
+
+<p>In point of height the cathedral spires of
+Salisbury and Norwich hold their own, while for
+beauty of outline Louth must be mentioned, and
+for elaborateness of detail the spire of Grantham.</p>
+
+<p>It now remains to give a cursory glance at
+some of our most famous spires, and to endeavour
+to enumerate some of their chief characteristics.</p>
+
+<p>The spire of Salisbury Cathedral rises from
+the centre of the main transept to a height of
+410 feet. This is, without doubt, the tallest of
+our English spires.<sup><a href="#fn23" name="fnm23" id="fnm23"
+ title="go to footnote 23">23</a></sup> It is octagonal in shape,
+and springs from four pinnacles. The surface is
+enriched with three bands of quatre-foiled work,
+and the angles are decorated throughout with
+ball-flower ornament. From a storm in 1703 it
+received some damage, and was, under the
+direction of Sir Christopher Wren, braced with
+ironwork. It does not appear to have moved
+since then, but from experiments made in 1740
+it was found to be out of the perpendicular 24½
+inches to the south, and 16¼ inches to the west.
+<a name="p104" id="p104"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>104<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>On the 21st of June, 1741, it was struck by lightning
+and set on fire, but did not receive any great
+damage, and in 1827, by means of an ingenious
+wicker-work contrivance suspended from the top,
+extensive repairs were carried out. The name
+of the architect who conceived this lofty tower is
+unknown, but the date of its erection was
+probably at the beginning of the fourteenth
+century.</p>
+
+<p>The spire of Norwich Cathedral rises to a
+height of 315 feet, and on a clear day can be
+seen for a distance of twenty miles. It was
+probably built by Bishop Percy in the latter half
+of the fourteenth century. About one hundred
+years after, it was struck by lightning, but the
+damage was speedily repaired. In 1629 the
+upper part was blown down, and was re-built
+in 1633.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="p104a" id="p104a"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>104a<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>
+ <img src="images/p104a.jpg" alt="" id="img104a" /><br
+ /><small>LOUTH CHURCH SPIRE.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>The three spires of Coventry are those of
+S.&nbsp;Michael’s, Holy Trinity, and Christ Church.
+Of these, S.&nbsp;Michael’s is the chief, being 303 feet
+high. Amongst parish churches, it is therefore
+the tallest. The base consists of a lantern
+flanked by four pinnacles, to which it is connected
+by flying buttresses. Its erection was commenced
+in the year 1373, and completed in 1394. At
+<a name="p105" id="p105"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>105<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>the restoration of the church, which took place
+in 1885, the tower was found to have been
+erected on the edge of an old quarry, and it cost
+no less a sum than £17,000 to add a new foundation.
+During the most critical period of the
+work the structure visibly moved, and the apex
+of the spire now leans 3ft. 5in. out of the
+perpendicular towards the north-west.</p>
+
+<p>Holy Trinity spire is 237 feet high, and much
+less ornate than S.&nbsp;Michael’s. During a violent
+tempest of “wind, thunder, and earthquake,”
+which occurred<!-- TN: original reads "occured" --> on the 24th of January, 1665, it was
+overthrown, and much injury was done to the
+church in consequence. The re-building was
+finished in 1668. It has been completely restored
+in recent years.</p>
+
+<p>The spire of Christ Church is some little
+distance away from the other two. It is
+octagonal in shape, and rises from an embattled
+tower to a height of 230 feet. It was restored in
+1888.</p>
+
+<p>Lichfield Cathedral contains three spires
+within its precincts. The grouping is, therefore,
+more uniform than that of Coventry, although
+the general effect is not thereby accentuated.
+The central spire rises to a height of 258 feet,
+<a name="p106" id="p106"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>106<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>and the two which grace the west front are each
+183 feet high. In the time of the great civil war,
+when Lichfield was besieged, the central spire
+was demolished. After the Restoration, it was
+re-built by good old Dr.&nbsp;Hackett.</p>
+
+<p>The spire of Chichester Cathedral, built in the
+fourteenth century over a rotten sub-structure,
+was destroyed by its own weight in 1861. It
+was 271 feet high, and has now been re-built in
+its original style on a slightly higher tower. The
+story of its fall has often been told. On the
+night of Wednesday, the 20th of February, 1861,
+a heavy gale occurred. The next day, about
+twenty minutes past one o’clock, the spire was
+observed to suddenly lean towards the south-west,
+and then to right itself again. Soon after,
+it disappeared into the body of the cathedral,
+sliding down like the folding of a telescope.
+Only the coping-stone and the weather-vane fell
+outside, the rest of the masonry formed a huge
+cairn in the centre of the edifice, which was
+practically cut into four portions by the wreck.
+The present spire was completed in 1867.</p>
+
+<p>In Lincolnshire there are two remarkable
+spires at Louth and Grantham. The one at
+Louth rises to a height of 294 feet. At the
+<a name="p107" id="p107"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>107<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>corners of the tower are four tall turret pinnacles
+to which the spire is connected by flying
+buttresses. In 1843 it was struck by lightning;
+steps were at once taken for its restoration,
+which was completed three years later.</p>
+
+<p>Grantham spire is octagonal in shape, and 285
+feet in height. It is very light and graceful in
+appearance, and is richly ornamented with
+sculpture. It suffered from lightning in 1797,
+and again in 1882. Since the latter date sixteen
+feet of the masonry has been removed from the
+summit and re-built.</p>
+
+<p>The church of S.&nbsp;Mary Redcliffe, Bristol, has
+been aptly termed by the poet Chatterton,
+“the pride of Bristowe and the Western land.”
+The spire rises to a height of 300 feet, and has
+lately been restored at a cost of upwards of
+£50,000. In 1445, during a storm, the greater
+part of the original spire fell through the roof of
+the church, and for about four centuries it
+remained in a truncated state, although the
+damage done to the interior was speedily
+repaired.</p>
+
+<p>The spire of S.&nbsp;Mary’s, Shrewsbury, is 220
+feet high, and rises from an embattled tower,
+the four corners of which contain crocketed
+<a name="p108" id="p108"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>108<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>pinnacles. During a gale on the night of Sunday,
+the 11th of February, 1894, about 50 feet of
+the masonry of the spire crashed through the
+church roof and did enormous damage. This
+has, however, since been repaired. A memorial
+stone on the west wall of the tower tells how
+one Thomas Cadman, was killed on the 2nd of
+February, 1739, when attempting to descend
+from the spire by a rope.</p>
+
+<p>For elaborateness of detail, the spire of S.
+Mary the Virgin, Oxford, surpasses all others
+in this country. Its apex is some 90 feet from
+the ground, and around the base of the spire
+clusters a mass of richly decorated pinnacles,
+small spirelets, and canopies containing statues.
+The effect is picturesque in the extreme, and
+lends to the town of Oxford a unique charm. Its
+conception dates from the fourteenth century,
+but it has been much restored and added to
+since.</p>
+
+<p>Of the Northamptonshire spires, Oundle is the
+loftiest, being 210 feet high. It bears date 1634,
+but this evidently refers to a re-building. It was
+partly taken down again and rebuilt in 1874. It
+is hexagonal in shape, and the angles are
+crocketed. Raunds church is surmounted by an
+<a name="p109" id="p109"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>109<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>octagonal broach spire 186 feet high. It was
+struck by lightning on the 31st of July, 1826, and
+about 30 feet of the masonry was shattered.
+This was at once rebuilt at a cost of £1,737 15s.
+3d. The octagonal spire of Higham Ferrers is
+170 feet high, and was rebuilt after destruction
+by a storm of wind in 1632. Rushden spire is
+an octagon 192 feet high, and richly crocketed.
+At its base flying buttresses connect it with
+pinnacles at the corners of the tower. The spire
+at Finedon rises from an embattled tower to a
+height of 133 feet; that of Stanwick is 156 feet
+high, and that of Irchester 152 feet.</p>
+
+<p>Space forbids more than a passing allusion to
+the fine spires of Newcastle Cathedral, S.&nbsp;Mary
+de Castro, Leicester, Ross, Herefordshire, and
+Olney, Bucks. The latter rises to a height of
+185 feet. At its summit is a weathercock which,
+when taken down for regilding in 1884, was
+found to contain the following <span class="nw">triplet&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:14em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> I never crow,</div>
+<div> But stand to show</div>
+<div> Where winds do blow.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Several of the spires which have been
+mentioned are perceptibly out of the perpendicular,
+but in this respect the “tall twisted spire
+<a name="p110" id="p110"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>110<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>of Chesterfield has no rival either in shape or
+pose.” It is no less than 230 feet high, and the
+wonder to many is that it has for so long maintained
+its equilibrium. Various conjectures have
+been made to account for the grotesque twist
+which the spire assumes; but none of these
+seems so likely as that which accounts for it by
+the combined action of age, wind, and sun.
+There are those who aver that it never was
+straight, and never will be, and one such person
+even goes so far as to attempt this statement in
+rhyme as <span class="nw">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:18em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> “Whichever way you turn your eye</div>
+<div> It always seems to be awry,</div>
+<div> Pray can you tell the reason why?</div>
+<div> The only reason known of weight</div>
+<div> Is that the thing was never straight,</div>
+<div> Nor know the people where to go</div>
+<div> To find the man to make it so.”</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>However this may be, it is satisfactory to note
+that a movement has recently been set on foot to
+collect subscriptions towards its much needed
+repair.</p>
+
+<p>When speaking of Salisbury Cathedral spire,
+allusion was made to the repairs being carried
+out from a wicker-work contrivance suspended
+from the top. This was not the first time that
+<a name="p111" id="p111"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>111<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>wicker-work had been used for such a purpose,
+for in 1787 the spire at S.&nbsp;Mary’s, Islington,
+was entirely encased in a cage composed of
+willow, hazel, and other sticks, while undergoing
+repair. An ingenious basket-maker of S.&nbsp;Albans,
+named Birch, carried out the work, and constructed
+a spiral staircase inside the cage. His
+contract was to do the work for £20 paid down,
+and to be allowed to charge sixpence a head to
+any sightseers who liked to mount to the top.
+It is said that in this way he gained some two or
+three pounds a day above his contract.</p>
+
+<p>People and steeple rhymes are by no means
+uncommon; perhaps the most spiteful is that
+relating to an Essex <span class="nw">village:&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:16em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> “Ugley church, Ugley steeple,</div>
+<div> Ugley parson, Ugley people.”</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Yorkshire village of Raskelfe is usually
+called Rascall, and an old rhyme <span class="nw">says:&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:18em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> “A wooden church, a wooden steeple,</div>
+<div> Rascally church, rascally people.”</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Mr. William Andrews, in his “Antiquities
+and Curiosities of the Church” (London, 1897),
+gives many examples of “People and Steeple
+Rhymes.”</p>
+
+<p>There is a never-ending romance connected
+<a name="p112" id="p112"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>112<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>with the subject of spires. Every one possesses
+some story or legend. Spirits are supposed to
+inhabit their gloomy recesses, and are even
+credited with their construction. There is
+certainly an uncanny feeling connected with the
+interior of a spire, even on a sunny summer’s day,
+and given sufficient stress of howling winds and
+gloomy darkness, one can almost imagine a
+situation conducive to the acutest kind of devilry.
+So much for the interior of spires. What sensations
+may be produced by climbing the exterior
+is given to few to experience. The vast majority
+of mankind must perforce content themselves
+with a position on <i>terra firma</i>, whence they may
+with pleasure and safety combined behold</p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:18em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> “<span class="nw">&mdash;&mdash;the</span> spires that glow so bright</div>
+<div> In front of yonder setting sun.”</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a href="#fnm23"
+ title="return to text" name="fn23" id="fn23">23</a>. The spire of Old Saint Paul’s, which dated from the thirteenth
+century, rose to a height of 520 feet. It was destroyed by lightning
+on the 4th of June, 1561. The spire of Lincoln Cathedral measured
+524 feet, and was destroyed in 1548. These are the two highest
+spires which have ever been erected in England.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chunk">
+<h2 class="chap" title="The Five of Spades and the Church of Ashton-under-Lyne"><a name="p113" id="p113"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>113<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>The Five of Spades and the Church of Ashton-under-Lyne.</h2>
+
+<p class="author">By John Eglington Bailey, <span class="postnomial">F.S.A.</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="newchap"><span class="dropcap">On</span> the old tower of the church of Ashton-under-Lyne
+there was formerly an old
+inscription, which incidently testifies to the
+popularity of cards in England at a period when
+the notices of that fascinating means of diversion
+are both few and of doubtful import. Cards
+were given to Europe by the Saracens at the end
+of the fourteenth century, and the knowledge of
+their use extended itself from France to Greece.
+The French clergy were so engrossed by the
+pastime that the Synod of Langres, 1404, forbad
+it as unclerical. At Bologna, in 1420,
+S.&nbsp;Bernardin of Sienna preached with such effect
+against the gambling which was indulged in, that
+his hearers made on the spot a large bonfire with
+packs of cards taken out of their pockets. Under
+the word <span title="Chartia">Χαρτια</span> Du&nbsp;Cange quotes extracts from
+two Greek writers, which show that cards were
+popular in Greece before 1498. Chaucer, who
+died in 1400, and who indirectly depicted much
+<a name="p114" id="p114"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>114<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>of the every-day life of his countrymen, does not
+once mention cards. But they begin to be
+noticed about the time of Edward&nbsp;IV. and
+Henry&nbsp;VI. The former king prohibited the importation
+of “cards for playing,” in order to
+protect the English manufacture of them. An
+old ale-wife or brewer, in one of the Chester
+plays or mysteries, is introduced in a scene in
+Hell, when one of the devils thus addresses
+<span class="nw">her:&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width: 22em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> Welcome, deare darlinge, to endless bale,</div>
+<div> Usinge cardes, dice, and cuppes smale</div>
+<div> With many false other, to sell thy ale</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> Now thou shalte have a feaste.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>A more interesting notice of cards occurs in
+the <cite>Paston Letters</cite>, where Margery Paston, writing
+on “Crestemes Evyn” of the year 1484, tells
+her husband that she had sent their eldest son
+to Lady Morley (the widow of William Lovel,
+Lord Morley), “to hav knolage wat sports wer
+husyd [used] in her hows in Kyrstemesse next
+folloyng aftyr the decysse of my lord, her
+husbond [who died 26th July, 1476]; and sche
+sayd that ther wer non dysgysyngs [guisings],
+ner harpyng, ner lutyng, ner syngyn, ner non
+lowde dysports; but pleyng at the tabyllys, and
+<a name="p115" id="p115"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>115<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>schesse, and cards: sweche dysports sche gaue
+her folkys leve to play and non odyr.” The lady
+adds that the youth did his errand right well,
+and that she sent the like message by a younger
+son to Lady Stapleton, whose lord had died in
+1466. “Sche seyd according to my Lady
+Morlees seyng in that, and as sche hadde seyn
+husyd in places of worschip [<i>i.e.</i>, of distinction:
+good families] ther as [=&nbsp;where] sche hath
+beyn.” This letter opens up an interesting view
+of the amusements which at the time were
+introduced into the houses of the nobility and
+gentry during Christmas-tide. At that festival
+cards from the first formed one of the chief
+amusements. Henry&nbsp;VII., who was a great
+card player, forbad cards to be used except
+during the Christmas holidays. Their ancient
+association with Christmas is seen in the kindness
+of Sir Roger de Coverley, who was in the
+habit of sending round to each of his cottagers
+“a string of hogs’-puddings and a pack of cards,”
+that good old squire being doubtless of the
+opinion of Dr.&nbsp;Johnson, who, with a deeper
+human insight than S.&nbsp;Bernardin and Henry&nbsp;VII.,
+could see the usefulness of such a pastime: “It
+generates kindness and consolidates society.”</p>
+
+<p><a name="p116" id="p116"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>116<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>The inscription I have alluded to takes us
+back to the reign of an earlier English king than
+those named&mdash;Henry&nbsp;V., who reigned 1413&ndash;1422.
+In his time, it seems, viz., in 1413, the steeple of
+Ashton Church was a-building; when a certain
+butcher, Alexander Hyll, playing at noddy with
+a companion, doubtless in the neighbourhood of
+the church, swore that if the dealer turned up
+<em>the five of spades</em> he would build a foot of the
+steeple. The very card was turned up! Hyll,
+like a good Catholic, performed his promise, and
+had his name carved, a butcher’s cleaver being
+put before <cite>Alexander</cite>, and the five of spades
+before <cite>Hyll</cite>. A new tower was erected in 1516,
+when the church was enlarged; but the stone
+containing the curious inscription was somewhere
+retained, for it was visible in the time of Robert
+Dodsworth, the industrious Yorkshire antiquary,
+and the projector and co-worker with Dugdale of
+the <cite>Monasticon</cite>. Dodsworth, being at Ashton on
+the 2nd of April, 1639, copied the inscription,
+stating that it was on the church steeple. He
+wrote down the tradition, adding that its truth
+was attested by Henry Fairfax<!-- TN: original reads "Ffairfax" -->, then rector
+there, second son of Thomas Fairfax, Baron de
+Cameron (Dodsworth’s MSS. in Bibl. Bodl.,
+<a name="p117" id="p117"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>117<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>vol.&nbsp;155, fol.&nbsp;116). The eldest son of Lord
+Fairfax was Ferdinando, the celebrated general
+of the Commonwealth, and the generous patron
+of Dodsworth. Henry, the younger son, at
+whose rectory-house Dodsworth was entertained
+on the occasion of his Lancashire visit, is
+described by Oley (in his preface to George
+Herbert’s <cite>Country Parson</cite>) as “a regular and
+sober fellow of Trinity College in Cambridge, and
+afterwards rector of Bolton Percy in Yorkshire.”
+He held, besides, the rectory of Ashton from, at
+least, 1623 till 1645, when he was forcibly
+ejected; and that of Newton Kyme. He was a
+correspondent of Daniel King, author of <cite>The
+Vale Royal</cite>, for he had antiquarian tastes like his
+brother. He died at Bolton Percy 6th April,
+1665. The tower of Ashton Church, as Rector
+Fairfax knew it, was taken down and re-built in
+1818, by which time all recollection of that
+ancient piece of cartomancy in connection with
+the steeple had passed out of mind. Let it
+be hoped that while the tradition was lively,
+pleasanter things were said of Hyll, when the
+five of spades was thrown upon the card tables
+of Ashton, than assailed the name of Dalrymple
+when the nine of diamonds&mdash;the curse of
+<a name="p118" id="p118"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>118<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Scotland&mdash;came under the view of Tory Scotchmen.
+We may bestow on Hyll the card-player’s
+<span class="nw">epitaph:&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width: 24em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> His card is cut&mdash;long days he shuffled through</div>
+<div> The game of life&mdash;he dealt as others do:</div>
+<div> Though he by honours tells not its amount,</div>
+<div> When the last trump is played his tricks will count.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>“Noddy” is, of course, the very attractive
+game of “cribbage.” A great aunt of mine still
+living at Ashbourne, with whom I used to play
+when a boy, always called it by that name. It
+is one of the Court games, <i>temp.</i> James&nbsp;I.,
+noticed by Sir John <span class="nw">Harrington:&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width: 22em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> Now noddy followed next, as well it might,</div>
+<div> Although it should have gone before of right;</div>
+<div> At which I say, I name not anybody,</div>
+<div> One never had the knave yet laid for noddy.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noindent">The same is also alluded to in a satirical poem,
+1594, entitled, <span class="nw"><cite>Batt upon Batt</cite>:&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width: 22em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> Shew me a man can turn up Noddy still,</div>
+<div> And deal himself three fives, too, when he will;</div>
+<div> Conclude with one and thirty, and a pair,</div>
+<div> Never fail ten in Hock, and yet play fair;</div>
+<div> If Batt be not that night, I lose my aim.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chunk">
+<h2 class="chap" title="Bells and their Messages"><a name="p119" id="p119"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>119<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Bells and their Messages.</h2>
+
+<p class="author">By Edward Bradbury.</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchap"><span class="dropcap">Do</span> not imagine that this is an essay on
+campanology, on change-ringing, grandsires,
+and triple bob-majors. Do not fancy that
+it will deal with carillons, the couvre-feu, or
+curfew bell, with the solemn Passing bell, the
+bell of the public crier, the jingling sleigh bell,
+the distant sheep bell, the noisy railway bell, the
+electric call bell, the frantic fire bell, the mellow,
+merry marriage peal, the sobbing muffled peal,
+the devout Angelus, or the silvery convent
+chimes that ring for prime and tierce, sext,
+nones, vespers, and compline. Do not conclude
+that it will describe bell-founding; and deal with
+the process of casting, with technical references
+to cope, and crook, and moulding, drawing the
+crucible, or tuning.</p>
+
+<p>It is of bells and their associations and
+inscriptions that we would write, the bells that
+are linked with our lives, and record the history
+of towns, communities, and nations; announcing
+feasts and fasts and funerals, interpreting with
+<a name="p120" id="p120"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>120<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>metal tongue rejoicings and sorrowings, jubilees
+and reverses; pæans for victories by sea and
+land; knells for the death of kings and the
+leaders of men. As we write, the bells of our
+collegiate church are announcing with joyous
+clang the arrival of Her Majesty’s Judge of
+Assize. Before many days have passed another
+bell in the same town will tell with solemn toll
+of the short shrift given by him to a pinioned
+culprit, the only mourner in his own funeral
+procession.</p>
+
+<p>Bells are sentient things. They are alike full
+of humour and pathos, of laughter and tears, of
+mirth and sadness, of gaiety and grief. One
+may pardon Toby Veck, in Charles Dickens’<!-- TN: original reads "Dicken's" -->
+goblin story, for investing the bells in the church
+near his station with a strange and solemn
+character, and peopling the tower with dwarf
+phantoms, spirits, elfin creatures of the bells, of
+all aspects, shapes, characters, and occupations.
+“They were so mysterious, often heard and
+never seen, so high up, so far off, so full of such
+a deep, strong melody, that he regarded them
+with a species of awe; and sometimes, when he
+looked up at the dark, arched windows in the
+tower, he half expected to be beckoned to by
+<a name="p121" id="p121"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>121<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>something which was not a bell, and yet was
+what he had heard so often sounding in the
+chimes.” The bells! The word carries sound
+and suggestion with it. It fills the air with
+waves of cadence. “Those Evening Bells”
+of Thomas Moore’s song swing out undying
+echoes from Ashbourne Church steeple; Alfred
+Tennyson’s bells “ring out the false, ring in
+the true” across the old year’s snow, and his
+Christmas bells answer each other from hill to
+hill. There are the tragic bells that Sir Henry
+Irving hears as the haunted Mathias; “Les
+Cloches de Corneville” that agitate the morbid
+mind of the miser Gaspard; and the wild bells
+that Edgar Allen Poe has set ringing in Runic
+rhyme.</p>
+
+<p>“Bell,” says the old German song, “thou
+soundest merrily when the bridal party to the
+church doth hie; thou soundest solemnly when,
+on Sabbath morn, the fields deserted lie; thou
+soundest merrily at evening, when bed-time
+draweth nigh; thou soundest mournfully, telling
+of the bitter parting that hath gone by! Say,
+how canst thou mourn or rejoice, that art but
+metal dull? And yet all our sorrowings and all
+our rejoicings thou art made to express!” In
+<a name="p122" id="p122"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>122<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>the words of the motto affixed to many old bells,
+they “rejoice with the joyful, and grieve with
+the sorrowful”; or, in the original Latin,</p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:14em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> Gaudemus gaudentibus,</div>
+<div> Dolemus dolentibus.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noindent">An old monkish couplet makes the bell thus
+describe its <span class="nw">uses&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:26em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> Laudo Deum verum, plebem voco, congrego clerum:</div>
+<div> Defuncto ploro, pestum fugo, festa decoro.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noindent">“I praise the true God, call the people, convene
+the clergy; I mourn for the dead, drive away
+pestilence, and grace festivals.” Who that
+possesses&mdash;to quote from Cowper&mdash;a soul “in
+sympathy with sweet sounds,” can listen unmoved
+to</p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:20em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> <span class="nw">&mdash;&mdash;the</span> music of the village bells</div>
+<div> Falling at intervals upon the ear,</div>
+<div> In cadence sweet&mdash;now dying all away,</div>
+<div> Now pealing loud again, and louder still,</div>
+<div> Clear and sonorous, as the gale comes on.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The same poet makes Alexander Selkirk
+lament on his solitary <span class="nw">isle&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:20em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> The sound of the church going bell</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> These valleys and rocks never heard,</div>
+<div> Ne’er sigh’d at the sound of a knell,</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> Or smiled when a Sabbath appeared.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Longfellow has several tender references to
+<a name="p123" id="p123"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>123<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>church bells. He sets the Bells of Lynn to ring
+a requiem of the dying day. He mounts the
+lofty tower of “the belfry old and brown” in the
+market place of <span class="nw">Bruges&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:32em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> Not a sound rose from the city at that early morning hour,</div>
+<div> But I heard a heart of iron beating in the ancient tower.</div>
+<br class="kindle" /></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> From their nests beneath the rafters sang the swallows wild and high;</div>
+<div> And the world, beneath me sleeping, seemed more distant than the sky.</div>
+<br class="kindle" /></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> Then most musical and solemn, bringing back the olden times,</div>
+<div> With their strange unearthly changes rang the melancholy chimes.</div>
+<br class="kindle" /></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> Like the psalms from some old cloister, when the nuns sing in the
+ choir;</div>
+<div> And the great bell tolled among them, like the chanting of a friar.</div>
+<br class="kindle" /></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> Visions of the days departed, shadowy phantoms filled my brain;</div>
+<div> They who live in history only seemed to walk the earth again.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Who does not remember Father Prout’s lyric
+on “The Bells of Shandon”? We venture to
+quote the four delicious verses <i class="nw">in extenso&mdash;</i></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:26em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> With deep affection and recollection</div>
+<div> I often think of the Shandon bells,</div>
+<div> Whose sounds so wild would, in days of childhood,</div>
+<div> Fling round my cradle their magic <span class="nw">spells&mdash;</span></div>
+<div><a name="p124" id="p124"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>124<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span> On this I ponder where’er I wander,</div>
+<div> And thus grow fonder, sweet Cork, of thee;</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> With thy bells of Shandon,</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> That sound so grand on</div>
+<div> The pleasant waters of the River Lee.</div>
+<br class="kindle" /></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> I have heard bells chiming, full many a chime in</div>
+<div> Tolling sublime in cathedral shrine;</div>
+<div> While at a glib rate brass tongues would vibrate,</div>
+<div> But all their music spoke naught to thine;</div>
+<div> For memory dwelling on each proud swelling</div>
+<div> Of thy belfry knelling its bold notes free,</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> Made the bells of Shandon</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> Sound far more grand on</div>
+<div> The pleasant waters of the River Lee.</div>
+<br class="kindle" /></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> I have heard bells tolling “old Adrian’s mole” in</div>
+<div> Their thunder rolling from the Vatican,</div>
+<div> With cymbals glorious, swinging uproarious</div>
+<div> In the gorgeous turrets of Notre Dame;</div>
+<div> But thy sounds were sweeter than the dome of Peter</div>
+<div> Flings o’er the Tiber, pealing solemnly.</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> Oh! the bells of Shandon</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> Sound far more grand on</div>
+<div> The pleasant waters of the River Lee.</div>
+<br class="kindle" /></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> There’s a bell in Moscow, while on tower and kiosko,</div>
+<div> In St. Sophia the Turkman gets,</div>
+<div> And loud in air, calls men to prayer,</div>
+<div> From the tapering summits of tall minarets,</div>
+<div> Such empty phantom I freely grant them,</div>
+<div> But there’s an anthem more dear to <span class="nw">me&mdash;</span></div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> It’s the bells of Shandon</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> That sound so grand on</div>
+<div> The pleasant waters of the River Lee.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="p125" id="p125"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>125<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>“The curfew tolls the knell of parting day,”
+in Gray’s “Elegy,” the best known, and, in its<!-- TN: original reads "it's" -->
+own line, the best poem in the English language.
+More dramatic is Southey’s story of the warning
+bell that the Abbot of Aberbrothock placed on
+the Inchcape Rock. James Russell Lowell
+has a beautiful thought in his little poem
+<span class="nw">“Masaccio”&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:22em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> Out clanged the Ave Mary bells,</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> And to my heart this message came;</div>
+<div> Each clamorous throat among them tells</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> What strong-souled martyrs died in flame,</div>
+<div> To make it possible that thou</div>
+<div> Should’st here with brother sinners bow.</div>
+
+<div class="fivestar">· &nbsp; · &nbsp; · &nbsp; · &nbsp; ·</div>
+
+<div> Henceforth, when rings the health to those</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> Who live in story and in song,</div>
+<div> O, nameless dead, who now repose</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> Safe in Oblivion’s chambers strong,</div>
+<div> One cup of recognition true</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> Shall silently be drained to you!</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>In the belfry of Tideswell and of Hathersage,
+in the Peak of Derbyshire, are a set of rhymed
+bell-ringing laws. Those at Hathersage we give
+below; the Tideswell ones are almost word for
+word similar.</p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:24em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> You gentlemen that here wish to ring,</div>
+<div> See that these laws you keep in everything;</div>
+<div><a name="p126" id="p126"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>126<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span> Or else be sure you must without delay</div>
+<div> The penalty thereof to the ringers pay.</div>
+<div> First, when you do into the bellhouse come,</div>
+<div> Look if the ringers have convenient room,</div>
+<div> For if you do be an hindrance unto them,</div>
+<div> Fourpence you forfeit unto these gentlemen.</div>
+<div> Next, if here you do intend to ring,</div>
+<div> With hat or spur do not touch a string;</div>
+<div> For if you do, your forfeit is for that</div>
+<div> Just fourpence down to pay, or lose your hat.</div>
+<div> If you a bell turn over, without delay</div>
+<div> Fourpence unto the ringers you must pay;</div>
+<div> Or, if you strike, miscall, or do abuse,</div>
+<div> You must pay fourpence for the ringers’ use.</div>
+<div> For every oath here sworn, ere you go hence,</div>
+<div> Unto the poor then you must pay twelve pence;</div>
+<div> And if that you desire to be enrolled</div>
+<div> A ringer here these orders keep and hold.</div>
+<div> But whoso doth these orders disobey,</div>
+<div> Unto the stocks we will take him straight way,</div>
+<div> There to remain until he be willing</div>
+<div> To pay his forfeit, and the clerk a shilling.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Churchwardens’ accounts abound with bell
+charges. We have before us the accounts of the
+churchwardens of Youlgreave, in the Peak of
+Derbyshire, for a period of a century and a half.
+Under the year 1604 we have “Item to the
+ringers on the Coronation Day (James&nbsp;I.), 2s. 6d.;
+for mending the Bels agaynst that day, 1s.; and
+for fatchinge the great bell yoke at Stanton hall,
+<a name="p127" id="p127"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>127<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>6d.” In 1605 there is “Item for a rope for a
+little bell, 5d.” In the following year is “Item
+to the Ringers the 5th day of August, when
+thanks was given to God for the delyvering of
+King James from the conspiracye of the Lord
+Gowyre, 5s.” In 1613 we find the sum of 6d.
+expended in purchasing “a stirropp for the fyrst
+bell wheele, 8d.” The year 1614 is prolific in
+charges connected with the belfry, as the
+following enumeration will show: “Item for the
+bellefonder, his dinner, and his sonnes, with
+other chargs at the same time, 10d.; at the
+second coming of the sayd bellfonder, 9d.; at the
+taking downe of the bell, 6d.; for castyng the
+fyrst bell, £4; for the surplus mettall which wee
+bought of the bellfounder because the new bell
+waeghed more than ye old, £3 15s. 10d.; to the
+bellfounder’s men, 4d.; for the carryage of our
+old bell to Chesterfield, 3s.; for carrying the great
+bell clapper to Chesterfield, 4d.; for carrying the
+new bell from Chesterfield, 2s. 8d.; to Nicholos
+Hibbert, for hanging the said bell, 1s. 1d.; to
+Nicholas Hibbert the younger, for amending the
+great bell yoke and wheele, 6d.; spent at Gybs
+house at the bellfounder’s last coming, 3d.; for
+amending the great bell clapper, 10d.”</p>
+
+<p><a name="p128" id="p128"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>128<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>The inscriptions on church bells would make
+an interesting chapter. On the second bell at
+Aston-on-Trent appears in Lombardic capitals,
+the words, “Jhesus be our spede, 1590,” and on
+the fourth bell is inscribed, “All men that heare
+my mournful sound, repent before you lye in
+ground, 1661.” The fourth bell of S.&nbsp;Werburgh’s
+at Derby is <span class="nw">inscribed&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:22em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> My roaring sounde doth warning geve</div>
+<div> That men cannot heare always lyve.&mdash;1605.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The third bell at Allestree bears the <span class="nw">words&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:22em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> I to the church the living call,</div>
+<div> And to the grave do summons all.&mdash;1781.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The second bell on the old peal at Ashbourne
+was <span class="nw">inscribed&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:20em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> Sweetly to sing men do call</div>
+<div> To feed on meats that feed the soul.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The fifth bell at Dovebridge has the words:
+“Som rosa polsata monde Maria vocata, 1633.”
+This is&mdash;according to the Rev. Dr. John Charles
+Cox&mdash;a corrupt reading of “Sum Rosa pulsata
+mundi Maria vocata,” a legend occasionally
+found on pre-Reformation bells, and which may
+be thus <span class="nw">Englished&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:16em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> Rose of the world, I sound</div>
+<div> Mary, my name, around.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="p129" id="p129"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>129<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>A similar inscription&mdash;similarly mis-spelt&mdash;occurs
+on the third bell at Ibstock, Leicestershire,
+the date of which is 1632. Mr. Sankey,
+of Marlborough College, gives it a graceful
+French <span class="nw">rendering&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:18em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> Ici je sonne et je m’appelle,</div>
+<div> Marie, du monde la rose plus belle.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The fourth bell at Coton-in-the-Elms has the
+<span class="nw">inscription&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:16em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> The bride and groom we greet</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> In holy wedlock joined,</div>
+<div> Our sounds are emblems sweet</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> Of hearts in love combined.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The sixth bell is <span class="nw">inscribed&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:14em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> The fleeting hours I tell,</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> I summon all to pray,</div>
+<div> I toll the funeral knell,</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> I hail the festal day.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The seventh bell at Castleton has the following
+<span class="nw">legend&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:24em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> When of departed hours we toll the knell,</div>
+<div> Instruction take, and spend the future well.</div>
+<div class="right"> James Harrison, Founder, 1803.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The second bell at Monyash is inscribed:
+“Sca Maria o.&nbsp;p.&nbsp;n.” (Sancta Maria ora pro
+nobis.)</p>
+
+<p>The old curfew custom is still kept up in the
+<a name="p130" id="p130"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>130<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Peak district of Derbyshire, notably at Winster,
+where the bell is rung throughout November,
+December, January, and February at eight
+o’clock every work day evening, except on
+Saturdays, when the hour is seven. There are
+Sanctus bells at Tideswell, Hathersage, Beeley,
+Ashover, and other Derbyshire churches. All
+Saints’ Church, at Derby (“All Saints,” <i>i.e.</i>,
+“the unknown good”), has a melodious set of
+chimes. They play the following tunes: Sunday,
+“Old One Hundred and Fourth” (Hanover);
+Monday, “The Lass of Patie’s Mill”; Tuesday,
+“The Highland Lassie”; Wednesday, “The
+Shady Bowers”; Thursday, “The National
+Anthem”; Friday, Handel’s “March in Scipio”;
+Saturday, “The Silken Garter.” They all date
+from the last century.</p>
+
+<p>Church bells have the subtle charm of sentiment.
+When they swing in the hoary village
+tower, and send their mellifluous message across
+the country side and down the deep and devious
+valley, or when they make musical with mellow
+carillon the dreamy atmosphere of moss grown
+cathedral closes, they have a poetical influence.
+How pleasant it is to listen to the chimes which
+ring out from time to time from the towers of
+<a name="p131" id="p131"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>131<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Notre Dame, in the city of Rubens, and from the
+Campanile at Venice!</p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:22em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> Through the balmy air of night</div>
+<div> How they ring out their delight!</div>
+<div> From the molten golden notes,</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> And all in tune,</div>
+<div> What a liquid ditty floats</div>
+<div> To the turtle dove that listens, while she gloats</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> On the moon!</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Church bells in large towns, where one section
+of the community are night workers and seek
+their rest in the day-time, are by no means
+invested with sentiment. We have in our mind
+a church which is set in a dense population of
+railwaymen, engine drivers, stokers, guards,
+porters,&nbsp;&amp;c. It possesses a particularly noisy
+peal of bells. They begin their brazen tintinnabulations
+at breakfast time, and ring on, at
+intervals, until past the supper hour. Sometimes
+the sound is a dismal monotone, as if the bellman
+had no heart for his work. At other times a
+number of stark mad Quasimodos seem to be
+pulling at the ropes to frighten the gilded cock
+on the vane into flapping flight. Sunday only
+brings an increase of the din, distracting all
+thought, destroying all conversation, defying all
+study, turning the blessed sense of hearing into a
+<a name="p132" id="p132"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>132<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>curse, and making you envy the deaf. It is well
+known that upon many persons in health the
+clangour of bells has a very depressing effect;
+but at night, when narcotics are given and the
+sick are wearied out, it is very easy to imagine
+how irritating these bells must be both to the
+invalids and their attendants. One is inclined
+to exclaim with the <span class="nw">Frenchman&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:20em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> Disturbers of the human race,</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> Whose charms are always ringing,</div>
+<div> I wish the ropes were round your necks,</div>
+<div class="i2"><span class="kindle">  </span> And you about them swinging.</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>How very wise those Spanish innkeepers were
+who, in the olden time, used to make “ruido” an
+item in their bills, charging their guests with the
+noise they made!</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chunk">
+<h2 class="chap" title="Stories about Bells"><a name="p133" id="p133"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>133<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Stories about Bells.</h2>
+
+<p class="author">By J. Potter Briscoe, <span class="postnomial">F.R.H.S.</span></p>
+
+<p class="newchap"><span class="dropcap">On</span> the eve of the feast of Corpus Christi the
+choristers of Durham Cathedral ascend
+the tower, and, clad in their fluttering robes of
+white, sing the <cite>Te Deum</cite>. This custom is
+performed to commemorate the miraculous extinguishing
+of a conflagration on that night in
+the year 1429. The legend goes that, whilst the
+monks were engaged in prayer at midnight, the
+belfry was struck by the electric current and set
+on fire. Though the flames continued to rage
+until the middle of the next day, the tower
+escaped serious damage, and the bells were
+uninjured&mdash;an escape which was imputed to
+the special interference of the incorruptible
+S.&nbsp;Cuthbert, who was enshrined in that cathedral.
+These are not the bells which now reverberate<!-- TN: original reads "reverbrate" -->
+among the housetops on the steep banks of the
+Wear, they having been cast by Thomas Bartlett
+during the summer of 1631.</p>
+
+<p>The fine peal of bells in Limerick Cathedral
+were originally brought from Italy, having been
+<a name="p134" id="p134"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>134<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>manufactured by a young native, who devoted
+himself enthusiastically to the work, and who,
+after the toil of many years, succeeded in finishing
+a splendid peal, which answered all the critical
+requirements of his own musical ear. Upon
+these bells the artist greatly prided himself, and
+they were at length bought by the prior of a
+neighbouring convent at a very liberal price.
+With the proceeds of that sale the young Italian
+purchased a little villa, where, in the stillness of
+the evening, he could enjoy the sound of his own
+melodious bells from the convent cliff. Here he
+grew old in the bosom of his family and of
+domestic happiness. At length, in one of those
+feuds common to the period, the Italian became
+a sufferer amongst many others. He lost his all.
+After the passing of the storm, he found himself
+preserved alone amid the wreck of fortune,
+friends, family, and home. The bells too&mdash;his
+favourite bells&mdash;were carried off from the convent,
+and finally removed to Ireland. For a time their
+artificer became a wanderer over Europe; and at
+last, in the hope of soothing his troubled spirit,
+he formed the resolution of seeking the land to
+which those treasures of his memory had been
+conveyed. He sailed for Ireland. Proceeding
+<a name="p135" id="p135"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>135<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>up the Shannon one beautiful evening, which
+reminded him of his native Italy, his own bells
+suddenly struck upon his ear! Home, and all
+its loving ties, happiness, early recollections, all&mdash;all
+were in the sound, and went to his heart. His
+face was turned towards the cathedral in the
+attitude of intently listening. When the vessel
+reached its destination the Italian bellfounder
+was found to be a corpse!</p>
+
+<p>Odoceus, Bishop of Llandaff, removed the
+bells from his cathedral during a time of
+excommunication. Earlier still they are assumed
+to have been in use in Ireland as early as the
+time of S.&nbsp;Patrick, who died in 493. In those
+days much superstitious feeling, as in later ages,
+hung around the bells, and many sweetly pretty
+and very curious legends are known respecting
+them. Thus it is said S.&nbsp;Odoceus, of Llandaff,
+being thirsty after undergoing labour, and more
+accustomed to drink water than anything else,
+came to a fountain in the vale of Llandaff, not
+far from the church, that he might drink. Here
+he found women washing butter after the manner
+of the country. Sending to them his messengers
+and disciples they requested that they would
+accommodate them with a vessel that their
+<a name="p136" id="p136"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>136<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>pastor might drink therefrom. These mischievous
+girls replied, “We have no other cup
+besides that which we hold in our hands,”
+namely, the butter. The man of blessed memory
+taking it, formed one piece into the shape of a
+small bell, and drank from it. The story goes
+that it permanently remained in that form, so
+that it appeared to those who beheld it to consist
+altogether of the purest gold. It is preserved in
+the church at Llandaff, and it is said that, by
+touching it, health is given to the diseased.</p>
+
+<p>The bell of S.&nbsp;Mura was formerly regarded
+with superstitious reverence in Ireland, and any
+liquid drunk from it was believed to have peculiar
+properties in alleviating human suffering; hence
+the peasant women of the district in which it was
+long preserved particularly used it in cases of
+child-birth, and a serious disturbance was excited
+on a former attempt to sell it by its owner. Its
+legendary history relates that it descended from
+the sky ringing loudly, but as it approached the
+concourse of people who had assembled at the
+miraculous warning, the tongue detached itself
+and returned towards the skies; hence it was
+concluded that the bell was never to be profaned
+by sounding on earth, but was to be kept for
+<a name="p137" id="p137"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>137<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>purposes more holy and beneficent. This is
+said to have happened on the spot where once
+stood the famous Abbey of Fahan, near Innishowen,
+in county Donegal, founded in the
+seventh century by S.&nbsp;Mura, or Muranus.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Robert Hunt, <span class="postnomial">F.R.S.</span>, tells us that, in days
+long ago, the inhabitants of the parish of Forrabury&mdash;which
+does not cover a square mile, but
+which now includes the chief part of the town of
+Bocastle and its harbour&mdash;resolved to have a
+peal of bells which should rival those of the
+neighbouring church of Tintagel, which are said
+to have rung merrily at the marriage, and tolled
+solemnly at the death of Arthur. The bells were
+cast. The bells were blessed. The bells were
+shipped for Forrabury. Few voyages were more
+favourable. The ship glided, with a fair wind,
+along the northern shores of Cornwall, waiting
+for the tide to carry her safely into the harbour
+of Bottreaux. The vesper bells rang out at
+Tintagel. When he heard the blessed bell, the
+pilot devoutly crossed himself, and bending his
+knee, thanked God for the safe and quick voyage
+which they had made. The captain laughed at
+the superstition, as he called it, of the pilot, and
+swore that they had only to thank themselves for
+<a name="p138" id="p138"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>138<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>the speedy voyage, and that, with his own arm
+at the helm, and his judgment to guide them,
+they would soon have a happy landing. The
+pilot checked this profane speech. The wicked
+captain&mdash;and he swore more impiously than ever,
+that all was due to himself and his men&mdash;laughed
+to scorn the pilot’s prayer. “May God forgive
+you,” was the pilot’s reply. Those who are
+familiar with the northern shores of Cornwall
+will know that sometimes a huge wave, generated
+by some mysterious power in the wide Atlantic,
+will roll on, overpowering everything by its
+weight and force. While yet the captain’s oaths
+were heard, and while the inhabitants on the
+shore were looking out from the cliffs, expecting
+within an hour to see the vessel charged with
+their bells safe in their harbour, one of those vast
+swellings of the ocean was seen. Onward came
+the grand billow in all the terror of its might!
+The ship rose not upon the waters as it came
+onward! She was overwhelmed, and sank in an
+instant close to the land. As the vessel sank,
+the bells were heard tolling with a muffled sound,
+as if ringing the death knell of the ship and
+sailors, of whom the good pilot alone escaped
+with life. When storms are coming, and only
+<a name="p139" id="p139"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>139<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>then, the bells of Forrabury, with their dull
+muffled sound, are heard from beneath the
+heaving sea, a warning to the wicked. The
+tower has remained silent to this day.</p>
+
+<p>Passing through Massingham, in Lincolnshire,
+a long time ago, a traveller noticed three men
+sitting on a stile in the churchyard, and saying,
+“Come to church, Thompson!” “Come to
+church, Brown!” and so on. Surprised at this,
+the traveller asked what it meant. He was told
+that, having no bells, this was how they called
+folk to church. The traveller, remarking that it
+was a pity so fine a church should have no bells,
+asked the men if they could make three for the
+church, promising to pay for them himself. This
+they undertook to do. They were a tinker, a
+carpenter, and a shoemaker respectively. When
+the visitor came round that way again, he found
+the three men ringing three bells, which said
+“Ting, Tong, Pluff,” being made respectively of
+tin, wood, and leather.</p>
+
+<p>There is a tradition that John Barton, the
+donor of the third bell at Brigstock, Northamptonshire,
+was one of several plaintiffs against Sir
+John Gouch to recover their rights of common
+upon certain lands in the neighbouring parish of
+<a name="p140" id="p140"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>140<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Benefield, and that Sir John threatened to ruin
+him if he persisted in claiming his right. John
+Barton replied that he would leave a cow which,
+being pulled by the tail, would low three times a
+day, and would be heard all over the common
+when he (Sir John) and his heirs would have
+nothing to do there. Hence the gift of the bell,
+which was formerly rung at four in the morning,
+and at eleven at morning and at night. He is
+also said to have left means for paying for this
+daily ringing.</p>
+
+<p>One Christmas Eve the ringers of Witham-on-the-Hill
+left the bells standing for the purpose
+of partaking of refreshments at a tavern that
+stood opposite the church. One of their number,
+a little more thirsty than the rest, insisted that
+before going back to ring they should have
+another pitcher of ale. This being at length
+agreed to by his brother bell-ringers, the party
+remained to duly drain the last draught. Whilst
+they were drinking, the steeple fell. Whether
+this is merely a tapster’s tale, or the sober
+statement of a remarkable fact, we are not in a
+position to state.</p>
+
+<p>From a curious and rare pamphlet on
+“Catholic Miracles,” published in 1825, we
+<a name="p141" id="p141"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>141<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>learn that a band of sacrilegious robbers, having
+broken into a monastery, proceeded out of
+bravado to ring a peal of bells, when, through
+prayers offered up by the “holy fathers,” a
+miracle was wrought, and the robbers were
+unable to leave their hold on the ropes. This
+state of affairs was depicted by the inimitable
+George Cruikshank in a woodcut, impressions of
+which are given in our “Curiosities of the
+Belfry,” (Hamilton).</p>
+
+<p>In the village of Tunstall, a few miles distant
+from Yarmouth, there is a clump of alder trees,
+familiarly known as “Hell Carr.” Not far from
+these trees there is a pool of water having a
+boggy bottom, that goes by the name of “Hell
+Hole.” A succession of bubbles are frequently
+seen floating on the surface of the water in
+summer time, a circumstance (as Mr. Glyde,
+the Norfolk antiquarian author, truly states) that
+can be accounted for very naturally; but the
+natives of the district maintain that these
+bubbles are the result of supernatural action, the
+cause of which is thus described. The tower of
+the church is in ruins. Tradition says that it
+was destroyed by fire, but that the bells were not
+injured by the calamity. The parson and the
+<a name="p142" id="p142"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>142<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>churchwarden each claimed the bells. While
+they were quarrelling, his Satanic Majesty
+carried out the disputed booty. The clergyman,
+however, not desiring to lose the booty, pursued
+and overtook the devil, who, in order to evade
+his clerical opponent, dived through the earth to
+his appointed dwelling-place, taking the bells
+with him. Tradition points to “Hell Hole” as
+the spot where this hurried departure took place.
+The villagers believe that the bubbles on the
+surface of the pool are caused by the continuous
+descent of the waters to the bottomless pit.</p>
+
+<div class="illofltrt">
+ <img src="images/p143.jpg" alt="" id="img143" /><br
+ /><small>THE BELL OF ST. FILLAN.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>In 1778 there was a bell belonging to the
+chapel of S.&nbsp;Fillan, which was in high reputation
+among the votaries of that saint in olden times.
+It was of an oblong shape, about a foot high, and
+was usually laid on a gravestone in the churchyard.
+Mad people were brought to it to effect a
+cure. They were first dipped into the “Saint’s
+Pool,” where certain ceremonies were performed,
+which partook of the character of Druidism and
+Roman Catholicism. The bell was placed in the
+chapel, where it remained, bound with ropes, all
+night. Next day it was placed upon the heads
+of the lunatics with great solemnity, but with
+what results “deponent sayeth not.” It was the
+<a name="p143" id="p143"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>143<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>popular opinion that, if stolen, this bell would
+extricate itself from the hands of the thief and
+return home ringing all the way! The bell had
+ultimately to be kept under lock and key to
+prevent its being used for superstitious purposes.
+This old time relic is now in the National
+Museum, Edinburgh,
+of the Society of Antiquaries
+of Scotland,
+and it is described
+as follows in the
+catalogue: “The
+‘Bell of S.&nbsp;Fillan,’
+of cast bronze, square
+shaped, and with
+double-headed, dragonesque
+handle. It
+lay on a gravestone
+in the old churchyard
+at Strathfillan,
+Perthshire, where it was superstitiously used for
+the cure of insanity and other diseases till 1798,
+when it was removed by a traveller to England.
+It was returned to Scotland in 1869, and
+deposited in the Museum by Lord Crawford and
+the Bishop of Brechin, with the consent of the
+<a name="p144" id="p144"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>144<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Heritors and Kirk-Session of S.&nbsp;Fillans.”
+Near Raleigh there is a valley which is said to
+have been caused by an earthquake several
+hundred years ago, which convulsion of nature
+swallowed up a whole village, together with the
+church. Formerly it was the custom of the
+people to assemble in this valley every Christmas
+Day morning to listen to the ringing of the bells
+of the church beneath them. This, it was
+positively asserted, might be heard by placing
+the ear to the ground and listening attentively.
+As late as 1827 it was usual on this morning for
+old men and women to tell their children and
+young friends to go to the valley, stoop down,
+and hear the bells ring merrily. The villagers
+really heard the ringing of the bells of a neighbouring
+church, the sound of which was communicated
+by the surface of the ground, the
+cause being misconstrued through the ignorance
+and credulity of the listeners.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chunk">
+<h2 class="chap" title="Concerning Font-Lore"><a name="p145" id="p145"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>145<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Concerning Font-Lore.</h2>
+
+<p class="author">By the Rev. P. Oakley Hill.</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchap"><span class="dropcap">When</span> those sermons in stone&mdash;the
+beautiful fonts of the Decorated and
+Perpendicular periods, which preached to a
+bygone age&mdash;come to be translated into modern
+English on an extensive and systematic scale,
+they will be found to be not only sermons
+theological, but treatises on hagiology, music,
+contemporary history, symbolism, and art of the
+highest order. One of the richest fields in font-lore
+is to be found in East Anglia, and Norfolk
+alone contains examples of sufficient importance
+and of vivid interest, to fill a whole volume on
+this particular subject. Only to mention a few,
+that will rapidly occur to a Norfolk antiquary, is
+to conjure up a varied and rich archæological
+vision, which can be extended indefinitely at
+will.</p>
+
+<p>Of canopied fonts perhaps that of S.&nbsp;Peter
+(Mancroft), Norwich, takes the palm. The
+carved oak canopy is supported by four massive
+posts, giving great dignity to the stone font
+<a name="p146" id="p146"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>146<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>which it overshadows. The canopy at Sall is of
+a more graceful type, being in the form of a
+crocketed spire, suspended by a pulley from an
+ancient beam projecting from the belfry platform.
+Elsing, Merton, and Worstead also possess font
+covers of great interest.</p>
+
+<p>Seven Sacrament fonts are numerous, that of
+New Walsingham being one of the finest of its
+kind in England. It belongs to the Perpendicular
+period, and is richly carved. On seven
+of its eight panels are sculptured figures representing
+the Seven Sacraments, the eighth
+exhibiting the Crucifixion. The stem carries
+figures of the four Evangelists and other saints,
+and rests on an elaborately-carved plinth, the
+upper part of which is in the form of a Maltese
+cross. A copy of this magnificent structure has
+been erected in the Mediæval Court of the
+Crystal Palace. A counterpart of the Walsingham
+font (more or less exact, though perhaps not
+so rich in carving) is to be seen at Loddon, with
+similar Maltese cross base, but the Vandal’s
+hand has nearly obliterated the figuring of the
+Sacramental panels. Other instances of Seven
+Sacrament fonts are to be seen in Norwich
+Cathedral, at Blofield, Martham, and elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p><a name="p147" id="p147"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>147<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Fonts bearing the date of their erection are
+found at Acle and Sall, the former having the
+following inscription upon the top step: “Orate
+pro diabus qui hūc fontem in honore dei fecerunt
+fecit anno dni millo cccc decimo.” An instance
+of a Posy font with date (sixteenth century)
+occurs in one of the Marshland churches,
+the Posy <span class="nw">being:&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p class="display"><span class="smcap">Thynk and Thank.</span></p>
+
+<p>The leaden font at Brundall is believed to be
+one of three only of its kind remaining in
+England; a fourth, somewhat damaged, existed
+at Great Plumstead until a few years ago, when
+alas! it perished in a disastrous fire which
+practically destroyed the church. Lion fonts
+are numerous, those of Acle and Strumpshaw
+being excellent examples.</p>
+
+<p>Remarkable examples of carved fonts are
+those at Toftrees, Blofield, Wymondham, Bergh
+Apton, Aylsham, Ketteringham, Sculthorpe,
+Walpole (S.&nbsp;Peter), etc. At Hemblington,
+dedicated to All Saints, there is a perfect little
+hagiology around the font-pedestal and upon
+seven of the panels of the basin, the eighth panel
+shewing the mediæval presentment of the Holy
+Trinity, the Almighty Father being somewhat
+<a name="p148" id="p148"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>148<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>blasphemously represented as an old man, while
+the Crucifix rests upon an orb, and (what is
+perhaps somewhat unusual) the Holy Dove
+appears about to alight on the Cross.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+ <img src="images/p148.jpg" alt="" id="img148" /><br
+ /><small>FONT AT UPTON CHURCH, NORFOLK.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>Of Decorated Fonts in the county of Norfolk,
+that of Upton must be accounted <i>facile princeps</i>.
+In beauty of design, in fulness of symbolism, in
+richness of detail, it is a faithful type of the
+elaborate art of the Decorated Period. It was
+originally coloured, fragments of red and blue
+<a name="p149" id="p149"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>149<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>paint being still visible. A massive base is
+formed by three octagonal steps rising tier upon
+tier, the upper step divided from the second by
+eight sets of quatrefoils, flanked at the corners
+by sitting dogs with open mouths. Upon the
+stem of the font there are eight figures in <i>bas
+relief</i>, standing upon pediments beneath overhanging
+canopies exquisitely carved. These
+canopies are adorned with crocketed pinnacles,
+and the interior of each has a groined roof, with
+rose boss in the centre. Some of the pediments
+are garnished with foliage, others exhibit quaint
+animals, <i>e.g.</i>, a double dragon with but one head
+connecting the two bodies, two lions linked by
+their tails, and two dogs in the act of biting each
+other; all, of course, highly symbolical of various
+types of sin. The canopied figures around the
+pedestal represent the two Sacraments, an indication
+that even in the fourteenth century the
+two Sacraments of the Gospel were esteemed as
+of the first importance. Holy Communion is
+symbolised by five figures. A bishop in eucharistic
+vestments, his right hand raised in blessing,
+his left holding the pastoral staff, while the
+double dragon is beneath his feet. It is not
+unlikely that this ecclesiastic was de&nbsp;Spenser, the
+<a name="p150" id="p150"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>150<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>contemporary Bishop of Norwich, of military
+fame. The bishop is supported to right and
+left by angels robed and girded, circlets and
+crosses on their heads, each holding a candle in
+a somewhat massive candlestick. The graceful
+lines of the wings suggest the probability of the
+artist having belonged to a continental guild of
+stone carvers. The next two figures are priests,
+each vested in dalmatic, maniple, stole, and alb,
+acting as deacon and sub-deacon, the first holding
+an open service book, the second the chalice
+and pyx.</p>
+
+<p>The three remaining figures portray<!-- TN: original reads "pourtray" --> Holy
+Baptism. Of the two godmothers and the godfather
+in the lay dress of the fourteenth century,
+the first holds a babe in her arms in swaddling
+clothes, the swathing band being crossed again
+and again. The other sponsors carry each a
+rosary.</p>
+
+<p>To digress for a moment; here is an interesting
+deduction. The infant is a girl&mdash;witness
+the two godmothers. The font cannot
+have been made later than about 1380, at which
+time the Decorated merged into the Perpendicular.
+Now the lord of the manor of Upton
+from 1358 onwards, for many years, was one
+<a name="p151" id="p151"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>151<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>John Buttetourt, or Botetourt, who, with his wife
+Matilda, had an only daughter and heiress, to
+whom was given the baptismal name Jocosa. It
+appears highly probable that the lord of Upton,
+rejoicing at the birth of his little heiress, caused
+the font to be designed and built as a memorial
+of her baptism. But it would seem that he did
+not live to see her settled in life, for in 1399
+she had grown to early womanhood, had won
+the affection of Sir Hugh Burnell, who made
+her his wife, and by the following year, if
+not before, she had inherited the manor in her
+own right.</p>
+
+<p>To return to the description of the font.
+Resting on the canopies above described, and
+supported by eight half-angels with musical
+instruments, etc., is the large and handsome
+laver. The principal panels are occupied by
+reliefs of the four living creatures of the Revelation&mdash;the
+historic emblems of the four Evangelists&mdash;the
+flying lion, the flying bull, the man, and
+the eagle, the last named with scroll facing east.
+The four alternative panels represent angels,
+two holding instruments of music, two with
+heraldic shields. The panels are separated from
+each other by crocketed buttresses. The musical
+<a name="p152" id="p152"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>152<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>instruments shewn upon the font are of great
+interest. A kind of rebeck or lute twice occurs,
+and once a curious pair of cymbals. One half-angel
+is playing on a crowth, an early form of
+the fiddle, consisting of an oblong box, a couple
+of strings, a short straight and round handle,
+and a bow. Another of the half-angels holds
+an open music book, containing the ancient
+four-line score.</p>
+
+<p>The font has suffered some amount of mutilation
+in the five centuries of its existence; three
+or four heads have disappeared, also the right
+hand of the bishop, and the top of the pastoral
+staff; the chalice has been broken off, and the
+flying lion is fractured. And as a reminder of
+the iconoclastic century which was most likely
+responsible for the damage, these dates are
+roughly cut into the leaden lining of the bowl:
+1641, 1662, 1696.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chunk">
+<h2 class="chap" title="Watching Chambers in Churches"><a name="p153" id="p153"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>153<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Watching Chambers in Churches.</h2>
+
+<p class="author">By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, <span class="postnomial">B.A.</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="newchap"><span class="dropcap">The</span> smallest acquaintance with the inventories,
+or the ceremonial, of our mediæval
+churches is sufficient to show anyone a glimpse
+of the extraordinary wealth of which the larger
+churches especially were possessed in those days.
+Vestments of velvet and silk and cloth of gold,
+adorned with jewels and the precious metals;
+crosses and candlesticks of gold, studded with
+gems; reliquaries that were ablaze with gorgeousness
+and beauty; and sometimes shrines and
+altars that were a complete mass of invaluable
+treasure; such were the contents of the choirs
+and sacristies of our cathedrals and abbey
+churches. This being the case, it is obvious
+that the greatest care had to be taken of such
+places. Then, even as now, there were desperadoes
+from whom the sanctity of the shrine could
+not protect it, if they could get a chance of
+fingering its jewels; men who would exclaim,
+with Falconbridge in the play of “King John”
+(Act&nbsp;III., <span class="nw">Sc.&nbsp;3)&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:24em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div><a name="p154" id="p154"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>154<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span> “Bell, book, and candle shall not drive me back,</div>
+<div> When gold and silver beck me to come on.”</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>To protect the wealthier churches from desecration
+and loss, therefore, bands of watchers
+were organized, who throughout the night should
+be ever on the alert against the attacks of
+thieves; who would also, moreover, be able to
+raise, if need were, the alarm of fire. At Lincoln
+these guardians patrolled the Minster at nightfall,
+to assure themselves that all was safe. To
+facilitate the inspection of the whole building
+occasionally squints were made; as at the
+Cathedral of S.&nbsp;David’s, where the cross pierced
+in the east wall behind, and just above, the high
+altar, is supposed by some to have been for this
+purpose, a view being thus obtained of the choir
+from the Chapel of the Holy Trinity, or <i>vice
+versâ</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="illo"><a name="p155" id="p155"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>155<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>
+ <img src="images/p155.jpg" alt="" id="img155" /><br
+ /><small>ABBOT’S PEW, MALMESBURY ABBEY.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>In several instances, however, it was found
+both more convenient and more effective to
+erect a special chamber, so placed and so
+elevated as to command a good view of the
+church, or of the portion of the church to be
+watched; and here a constant succession of
+watchers kept guard. One of our most interesting
+examples of this is at S.&nbsp;Albans. Near the
+<a name="p157" id="p157"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>157<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>site of the shrine of the patron saint (on which
+the fragments of the shattered shrine have been
+skilfully built up once more) is a structure, in
+two storeys, of carved timber. The lower stage
+is fitted with cupboards, in which were probably
+preserved relics, or such jewels and ornaments
+as were not kept permanently upon the shrine.
+A doorway in this storey admits to a staircase
+leading to the gallery above. This is the
+watchers’ chamber; the side fronting the shrine
+being filled with perpendicular tracery, whence
+the monks in charge could easily keep the
+treasures around them under observation. A
+somewhat similar structure is still seen at Christ
+Church, Oxford, and is sometimes spoken of as
+the shrine of S.&nbsp;Frideswide. It is really the
+watching-chamber for that shrine; and was
+erected in the fourteenth century upon an
+ancient tomb, supposed to be that of the
+founder of the <i>feretrum</i> of the saint, though
+popular report describes it as the resting-place
+of the bodies of her parents.</p>
+
+<p>In not a few cases, both in England and
+abroad, these chambers were built in a yet more
+durable fashion. At Bourges may be seen a
+stone loft on the left side of the altar; at
+<a name="p158" id="p158"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>158<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Nuremberg also is one. In addition to the
+wooden chamber, already described, S.&nbsp;Alban’s
+Abbey (now the cathedral) has a small one of
+stone in the transept. Lichfield has a gallery
+over the sacristy door, which served the same
+purpose; and at Worcester an oriel was
+probably used by the watchers. Westminster
+Abbey has such a chamber over the chantry of
+King Henry&nbsp;VI., and Worcester Cathedral has
+one in the north aisle; and there are several
+other instances. Many churches had rooms
+over the north porch, as the cathedrals of
+Exeter and Hereford, the churches of Christchurch
+(Hampshire), Alford (Lincolnshire), and
+many others; and these in some cases, as at
+Boston, had openings commanding a view of the
+interior.</p>
+
+<p>Another explanation of the existence of a few
+watching lofts is sometimes given, besides the
+need of guarding the Church’s treasures. It is
+held by some that in the face of the deterioration
+of monastic simplicity and devotion in the later
+times before the Dissolution in England, the
+abbots felt the need of keeping a stricter eye
+upon their community; and these rooms were
+consequently constructed to enable them to
+<a name="p159" id="p159"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>159<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>look, unobserved themselves, into their abbey
+church, and to see that all whose duty called for
+their presence were there, and properly occupied.
+This theory is perhaps supported by the traditional
+name of “the abbot’s pew,” by which a
+very simple and substantial watching-chamber
+in the triforium of Malmesbury Abbey is called.
+With this may be compared another example in
+the priory church of S.&nbsp;Bartholomew, Smithfield.
+In these, and most of the other instances,
+the watching-chamber is an addition to the
+original structure, dating often considerably
+later than the rest. This is quoted by the
+believers in the rapid spread of monastic depravity
+in later ages in support of the theory
+just noticed; as is also the fact, that the “pew”
+is often near what formerly constituted the
+abbot’s private apartments within the adjoining
+monastery. It is probable that both explanations
+are true; some of these lofts forming
+“abbot’s pews,” as others certainly were for the
+guardian watchers of the shrines. In a large
+community it would certainly be wise for the
+head to be able at times to survey quietly and
+unobserved the actions of the rest; but this
+admission no more implies that the lives of all
+<a name="p160" id="p160"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>160<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>monks were scandalous, than does the presence
+of watchers by the shrines prove that all worshippers
+were thieves.</p>
+
+<p>We have noticed in this paper the chief
+watching-chambers in this country, but no doubt
+other examples occur which may have special
+points of interest.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chunk">
+<h2 class="chap" title="Church Chests"><a name="p161" id="p161"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>161<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Church Chests.</h2>
+
+<p class="author">By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, <span class="postnomial">B.A.</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="newchap"><span class="dropcap">An</span> interesting article of Church furniture
+which has scarcely received the amount
+of notice which it deserves, is the Church Chest,
+the receptacle for the registers and records of the
+parish, and sometimes also for the office books,
+vestments, and other valuables belonging to the
+Church. In recent years attention has frequently
+been directed to the interesting character of our
+ancient parochial documents, but the useful
+cases which for so many years have shielded
+them, more or less securely, from damage or
+loss, have been largely overlooked.</p>
+
+<p>The present authority for the provision in
+every English church of a proper repository for
+its records is the seventieth canon, the latter
+part of which runs in the following words, from
+which it will be seen that some of its details
+have been suffered to become obsolete: “For
+the safe keeping of the said book (the register of
+baptisms, weddings, and burials), the churchwardens,
+at the charge of the parish, shall
+<a name="p162" id="p162"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>162<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>provide one sure coffer, and three locks and
+keys; whereof one to remain with the minister,
+and the other two with the churchwardens severally;
+so that neither the minister without the
+two churchwardens, nor the churchwardens
+without the minister, shall at any time take that
+book out of the said coffer. And henceforth
+upon every Sabbath day immediately after
+morning or evening prayer, the minister and
+the churchwardens shall take the said parchment
+book out of the said coffer, and the minister in
+the presence of the churchwardens shall write
+and record in the said book the names of all
+persons christened, together with the names and
+surnames of their parents, and also the names of
+all persons married and buried in that parish in
+the week before, and the day and year of every
+such christening, marriage, and burial; and that
+done, they shall lay up the book in the coffer as
+before.” This Canon, made with others in 1603,
+was a natural sequence to the Act passed in
+1538, which enjoined the due keeping of parish
+registers of the kind above described. It is, in
+fact, obvious that the canon only gave additional
+sanction to a practice enforced some years
+earlier; for Grindal, in his “Metropolitical
+<a name="p163" id="p163"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>163<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Visitation of the Province of York in 1571,” uses
+almost identical terms, requiring, amongst many
+other things, “That the churchwardens in every
+parish shall, at the costs and charges of the
+parish, provide ... a sure coffer with two locks
+and keys for keeping the register book, and a
+strong chest or box for the almose of the poor,
+with three locks and keys to the same:” the
+same demand was made, also by Grindal, on the
+province of Canterbury in 1576.</p>
+
+<p>Church chests did not, however, come into
+use in consequence of the introduction of the
+regular keeping of registers. The Synod of
+Exeter, held in 1287, ordered that every parish
+should provide “a chest for the books and the
+vestments,” and the convenience and even
+necessity of some such article of furniture,
+doubtless led to its use in many places from yet
+earlier times.</p>
+
+<p>We have in England several excellent examples
+of “hutches,” or chests, which date from the
+thirteenth, or even from the close of the twelfth
+century. Some there are for which a much
+earlier date has been claimed. These latter are
+rough coffers formed usually of a single log of
+wood, hollowed out, and fitted with a massive
+<a name="p164" id="p164"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>164<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>lid, the whole being bound with iron bands.<!-- TN: original has comma -->
+Chests of this kind may be seen at Newdigate,<!-- TN: original has period -->
+Surrey, at Hales Owen, Shropshire, and elsewhere;
+and on the strength of the rudeness of
+the carpentry displayed, it has been asserted
+that they are of Norman, or even of Saxon,
+workmanship. Roughness of design and work
+are scarcely, however, in themselves sufficient
+evidence of great antiquity; many local causes,
+especially in small country places, may have led
+the priests and people to be content with a very
+rude article of home manufacture, at a time when
+far more elaborate ones were procurable in return
+for a little more enterprise or considerably more
+money. The date of these rough coffers must
+therefore be considered doubtful.</p>
+
+<p>Of Early English chests, we have examples at
+Clymping, Sussex, at Saltwood and Graveney,
+Kent, at Earl Stonham, Suffolk, at Stoke
+D’Abernon, Surrey, and at Newport, Essex. The
+Decorated Period is represented by chests at
+Brancepeth, Durham, at Huttoft and Haconby,
+Lincolnshire, at Faversham and Withersham,
+Kent, and at S.&nbsp;Mary Magdalene’s, Oxford.
+The workmanship of the Perpendicular Period
+has numerous illustrations among our church
+<a name="p165" id="p165"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>165<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>chests, such as those at S.&nbsp;Michael’s, Coventry,
+S.&nbsp;Mary’s, Cambridge, the Chapter House of
+Christchurch Cathedral, Oxford, and others at
+Frettenham, Norfolk, at Guestling, Sussex, at
+Harty Chapel, Kent, at Southwold, Suffolk, and
+at Stonham Aspel, Suffolk.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+ <img src="images/p165.jpg" alt="" id="img165" /><br
+ /><small>CHEST AT SALTWOOD, KENT.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>In the making of all these coffers, strength was
+naturally the great characteristic which was
+most obviously aimed at; strength of structure,
+so as to secure durability, and strength of locks
+and bolts, so as to ensure the contents from
+theft. But in addition to this, artistic beauty
+was not lost sight of, and many chests are
+excellent illustrations of the wood-carvers’ taste
+and skill, and several were originally enriched
+with colour.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="p167" id="p167"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>167<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>
+ <img src="images/p167a.jpg" alt="" id="img167a" /><br
+ /><small>CHEST AT UPTON CHURCH.</small><br
+ />&nbsp;<br
+ /><img src="images/p167b.jpg" alt="" id="img167b" /><br
+ /><small>CHEST AT OVER, CHESHIRE.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="p166" id="p166"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>166<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>A good example of those in which security has
+been almost exclusively sought, is provided by a
+chest at S.&nbsp;Peter’s, Upton, Northamptonshire.
+The dimensions of this hutch are six feet three
+inches in length, two feet six inches in height,
+and two feet in width. Its only adornment is
+provided by the wrought iron bands which are
+attached to it. Four of these are laid laterally
+across each end, and four more, running perpendicularly,
+divide the front into five unequal
+panels; the bands on the front correspond with
+an equal number laid across the lid, where,
+however, two more are placed at the extreme
+ends. Each of the panels in front and top is
+filled with a device in beaten iron roughly
+resembling an eight-pointed star, the lowest
+point of which runs to the bottom of the chest.
+Yet simpler is the chest at S.&nbsp;Mary’s, West
+Horsley, which is a long, narrow, oaken box,
+strengthened by flat iron bands crossing the ends
+and doubled well round the front and back,
+while six others are fastened perpendicularly to
+the front; there are two large locks, and three
+hinges terminating in long strips of iron running
+almost the complete breadth of the lid. The
+church of S.&nbsp;Botolph, Church Brampton, has
+<a name="p169" id="p169"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>169<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>a chest equally plain in itself, but the iron bands
+are in this case of a richer character. Elegant
+scroll-work originally covered the front and ends,
+much still remaining to this day. S.&nbsp;Lawrence’s,
+in the Isle of Thanet, possesses an exceedingly
+rough example, with a curved top; seven broad
+iron bands strengthen the lid, and several perpendicular
+ones, crossed by a lateral one, are
+affixed to the front, the whole being studded with
+large square-headed nails; a huge lock is placed
+in the middle, with hasps for padlocks to the
+right and left of it. It is raised slightly from the
+ground by wooden “feet.”</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+ <img src="images/p169.jpg" alt="" id="img169" /><br
+ /><small>CHEST AT S.&nbsp;LAWRENCE, ISLE OF THANET.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="p170" id="p170"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>170<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>For security and strength, however, the palm
+must be awarded to a coffer at Stonham Aspel.
+The following description of this remarkable
+chest was given in the “Journal of the British
+Archæological Society” in September, 1872:
+“This curious example is of chestnut wood,
+8&nbsp;feet in length, 2&nbsp;feet 3&nbsp;inches in height, and
+2&nbsp;feet 7&nbsp;inches from front to back; and is entirely
+covered on the outer surface with sheets of iron
+4½ inches in width, the joinings being hid by
+straps. The two lids are secured by fourteen
+hasps; the second from the left locks the first,
+and the hasp simply covers the keyhole; the
+fourth locks the third, etc. After this process is
+finished, a bar from each angle passes over them,
+and is secured by a curious lock in the centre,
+which fastens them both. The interior of this
+gigantic chest is divided into two equal compartments
+by a central partition of wood, the one to
+the left being painted red; the other is plain.
+Each division can be opened separately; the rector
+holding four of the keys, and the churchwardens
+the others, all being of different patterns.” The
+writer of this description (Mr. H.&nbsp;Syer Cuming,
+<span class="postnomial">F.S.A.</span>, Scot., <span class="postnomial">V.P.</span>) assigns the chest to the fifteenth
+century.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="p171" id="p171"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>171<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>
+ <img src="images/p171.jpg" alt="" id="img171" /><br
+ /><small>CHURCH CHEST, S.&nbsp;MICHAEL’S, COVENTRY.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="p173" id="p173"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>173<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Turning now to those chests, whose makers,
+while not forgetting the needful solidity and
+strength, aimed also at greater decoration, the
+handsome hutch at S.&nbsp;Michael’s, Coventry,
+claims our notice. The front of this is carved
+with a double row of panels having traceried
+heads, the upper row being half the width of the
+lower one. In the centre are two crowned
+figures, popularly (and not improbably) described
+as Leofric and his wife, the Lady Godiva. At
+each end of the front is a long panel decorated
+with lozenges enclosing Tudor roses, foliage, and
+conventional animals; while two dragons adorn
+the bottom, which is cut away so as to leave a
+triangular space beneath the chest. At S.&nbsp;John’s,
+Glastonbury, is another fine example,
+measuring six feet two inches in length, and at
+present lidless. Within six vesica-shaped panels
+are placed quatrefoil ornaments, each divided by
+a horizontal bar. Above these are five shields,
+three charged with S.&nbsp;George’s Cross, and the
+others, one with three lozenges in fess, and the
+other with three roundles, two and one, and a
+label. The ends, or legs, are elaborately carved
+with dog-tooth figures in squares and circles.
+Saltwood, Kent, has an ornately carved chest,
+<a name="p174" id="p174"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>174<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>divided (like that of Stonham Aspel) into two
+parts, the lid being correspondingly formed, and
+opening in sections. One half is secured by
+three locks, and the other by one. The front is
+carved with five geometrical “windows” of four
+lights each; and the ends of the front have three
+carved square panels, divided by bands of
+dancette ornament. The base has a long
+narrow panel, with a simple wavy design. There
+is some bold carving on a chest at S.&nbsp;George’s,
+South Acre, in Norfolk; a row of cusped arches
+fills rather more than half the height of the front,
+the rest being taken up with four panels containing
+roses and stars, similar designs on a smaller
+scale being repeated at the ends. The front is
+cut away at the bottom in a series of curves.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="p175" id="p175"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>175<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>
+ <img src="images/p175.jpg" alt="" id="img175" /><br
+ /><small>CHURCH CHEST S. JOHN’S GLASTONBURY</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>At Alnwick is a massive coffer, over seven feet
+long, bearing on its front a number of figures of
+dragons, and heads of birds and beasts, amid
+foliage; above which are two hunting scenes, in
+which appear men with horns, dogs, and deer,
+amid trees. These two scenes are separated by
+the lock, and are precisely alike, save that the
+quarry in one is a stag, and a hind in the other.
+Empingham, near Stamford, has a fine chest of
+cedar wood, adorned with incised figures. At
+<a name="p177" id="p177"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>177<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>S.&nbsp;Mary’s, Mortlake, is one of walnut, inlaid
+with boxwood and ebony, and ornamented with
+designs in metal work; the under side of the lid
+has some delicate iron-wrought tracery, which
+was originally set off with red velvet. The
+Huttoft chest is enriched with traceried arches,
+which were apparently at one time picked out in
+colour; that of Stoke D’Abernon is raised on
+four substantial legs, and is decorated with three
+circles on the front filled with a kind of tracery;
+there are other interesting specimens at Winchester
+and at Ewerby. In the old castle at
+Newcastle-on-Tyne is preserved an old church
+coffer, which was probably removed there for
+safety during the troublous days of the Civil
+War. At Harty Chapel, Kent, we find the
+figures of two knights in full armour, tilting at
+each other, carved on the front of a chest; the
+legend of S.&nbsp;George and the dragon is illustrated
+in a similar way at Southwold Church,
+Suffolk, and yet more fully on a chest in the
+treasury of York Minster.</p>
+
+<p>Probably, however, the handsomest example
+of a carved church chest now preserved in
+England is at Brancepeth, in the county of
+Durham. This beautiful piece of work, which
+<a name="p178" id="p178"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>178<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>rests in the south chapel of the church, has its
+front completely covered with elaborate carving.
+At either end are three oblong panels, one above
+another, on each of which is a conventional bird
+or beast; at the base is a series of diamonds
+filled, as are the intervals between them, with
+tracery; and above this is an arcade of six
+pointed arches, each enclosing three lights surmounted
+by a circle, the six being divided by
+tall lancets, the crockets of the arches and a
+wealth of foliage filling up the intervening
+spaces. This fine chest dates from the fourteenth
+century.</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. Francis E. Powell, <span class="postnomial">M.A.</span>, in his
+pleasantly-written work entitled “The Story of
+a Cheshire Parish,” gives particulars of the
+parish chest of Over. “The chest,” says Mr.
+Powell, was “the gift of Bishop Samuel Peploe
+to Joseph Maddock, Clerk, April 30th, 1750.”
+It probably was an old chest even then. The
+donor was Bishop of Chester from 1726 to
+1752. He was a Whig in politics, and a
+latitudinarian in religion, as so many bishops of
+that time were. That he was a man of determined
+courage may be seen by his loyalty to the
+House of Hanover, even under adverse
+<a name="p179" id="p179"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>179<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>circumstances. One day, in the year 1715, he was
+reading Morning Prayer at the parish church at
+Preston. The town was occupied by Jacobite
+troops, some of whom burst into the church
+during the service. Approaching the prayer-desk,
+with drawn sword, a trooper demanded
+that Peploe should substitute James for George
+in the prayer for the King’s Majesty. Peploe
+merely paused to say, “Soldier, I am doing my
+duty; do you do yours;” and went on with the
+prayers, whereupon the soldiers at once proceeded
+to eject him from the church. The
+illustration of the chest is kindly lent to us by
+the Rev. Francis E. Powell, vicar of Over.</p>
+
+<p>In the vestry of Lambeth Palace is a curiously
+painted chest; several of an early date are preserved
+in the triforium of Westminster Abbey;
+there is one at Salisbury Cathedral, and another
+in the Record Office, having been removed from
+the Pix Chapel.</p>
+
+<p>One of the original uses of these coffers, as we
+have seen, was to preserve the vestments of the
+church. The copes, however, being larger than
+the other vestments, and in the cathedrals and
+other important churches, being very numerous,
+frequently had a special receptacle provided.
+<a name="p180" id="p180"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>180<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>At York, Salisbury, Westminster, and Gloucester,
+ancient cope-chests are still preserved. These
+are triangular in shape, the cope being most
+easily folded into that form.</p>
+
+<p>In not a few instances these large coffers, or
+sections of them, were used as alms boxes, for
+which a very ancient precedent can be found.
+At the restoration of the Jewish Temple under
+King Joash, we are told (2&nbsp;Kings xii., 9, 10)
+that “Jehoiada the priest took a chest, and
+bored a hole in the lid of it, and set it beside
+the altar, on the right side as one cometh into
+the house of the Lord: and the priests that kept
+the door put therein all the money that was
+brought into the house of the Lord: and it was
+so, when they saw that there was much money
+in the chest, that the King’s scribe and the high
+priest came up, and they put up in bags, and
+told the money that was found in the house of
+the Lord.”</p>
+
+<p>At Llanaber, near Barmouth in North Wales,
+is a chest hewn from a single block of wood, and
+pierced to receive coins. At Hatfield, Yorkshire,
+is an ancient example of a similar kind; and
+others may be seen at S.&nbsp;Peter’s-in-the-East,
+Oxford, at Drayton in Berkshire, at Meare
+<a name="p181" id="p181"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>181<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Church, Somersetshire, at Irchester and Mears
+Ashby, in Northamptonshire, at Hartland, in
+Devonshire, and in the Isle of Wight at Carisbrooke.
+An interesting chest, with provision for
+the reception of alms, is preserved at Combs
+Church, Suffolk, where there is also another
+plain hutch, iron-bound and treble-locked. The
+chest in question is strongly, but simply, made,
+the front being divided into four plain panels,
+with some very slight attempt at decoration in
+the form of small disks and diamonds along the
+top; and the lid being quite flat and plain, and
+secured by two locks. At one end, however, a
+long slit has been cut in this lid, and beneath it
+is a till, or trough, to receive the money, very
+similar to the little locker often inserted at one
+end of an old oak chest intended for domestic
+use, save that in this case the compartment has,
+of course, no second lid of its own. This chest
+has the date 1599 carved upon it, but is supposed
+to be some half a century older, the date perhaps
+marking the time of some repairs or alterations
+made in it.</p>
+
+<p>Hutches of the kind that we have been considering
+are not peculiar to England, some fine
+and well-preserved examples being found in
+<a name="p182" id="p182"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>182<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>several of the ancient churches in France.
+Among ourselves it is obvious that great numbers
+must have disappeared; many doubtless were
+rough and scarcely worthy of long preservation;
+others by the very beauty of their workmanship
+probably roused the cupidity, or the iconoclastic
+prejudice, of the spoiler. Near Brinkburn Priory
+a handsome fourteenth century chest was found,
+used for domestic purposes, in a neighbouring
+farm-house; a Tudor chest, belonging to
+S.&nbsp;Mary’s, Newington, lay for years in the old
+rectory house, and subsequently disappeared;
+and these are doubtless typical of many another
+case. When the strictness at first enforced as
+to the care of the parish registers became
+culpably relaxed, and parish clerks and sextons
+were left in practically sole charge of them, it is
+but too probable that these men, often illiterate
+and otherwise unsuited to such a trust, were in
+many instances as careless, or as criminal, in
+regard to the coffers, as we unfortunately know
+they frequently were with respect to their contents.</p>
+
+<p>Few church chests of any interest date from
+the Jacobean, or any subsequent period. Plain
+deal boxes were then held good enough for the
+purpose of a “church hutch.”</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chunk">
+<h2 class="chap" title="An Antiquarian Problem: The Leper Window"><a name="p183" id="p183"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>183<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>An Antiquarian Problem: The Leper Window.</h2>
+
+<p class="author">By William White, <span class="postnomial">F.S.A.</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="newchap"><span class="dropcap">These</span> windows were called by Parker and
+other writers of the Gothic Revival,
+“Lychnoscopes;” and then by the ecclesiologists,
+“Low-side Windows.” But the name
+given by the late G.&nbsp;E. Street has now become
+so generally accepted that it seems necessary
+to look a little further into the evidence of the
+fitness or unfitness of this designation for them.</p>
+
+<p>Behind some stalls in the Royal Chapel were
+discovered some remains of a mural painting,
+apparently to represent the communicating of a
+leper through some such window, and he at once
+concluded that it was for this very purpose so
+many of them were introduced into the chancels
+of our mediæval churches. There seemed, however,
+nothing to indicate that it was at one of
+these special windows at all that this function
+was performed. And the very fact of the representation
+itself would seem to indicate rather an
+exceptional instance, or special circumstance,
+such as the communicating of some knight or
+<a name="p184" id="p184"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>184<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>person of note who might, for instance, have
+brought leprosy in his own person from the Holy
+Land, from whence probably in the first instance
+it came; and who would not be admitted within
+the church. But the records of the existence of
+lepers would seem to show their numbers to have
+been very limited, and confined to few localities.
+And in any case this would be no sufficient cause
+for the introduction of these windows as of universal
+occurrence throughout the land, for these
+windows are found almost everywhere, and in
+very many instances on both sides of the chancel.
+Moreover, in many cases the act of administration
+through these windows would be exceedingly
+difficult, if not impossible, on account of the
+position, or the arrangement, of the window itself.</p>
+
+<p>To my mind a very much more practical and
+reasonable supposition would be that they were
+introduced, and used, for burial purposes. At
+a period when the body would not be brought
+into the church, except in the case of some
+ecclesiastic or other notable person, the priest
+would here be able, <em>from his stall</em>, to see the
+funeral <i>cortége</i> come into the churchyard, and
+then say the first part of the office through this
+window; which was always shuttered and without
+<a name="p185" id="p185"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>185<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>glass. In some cases there is a book-ledge
+corbelled out on the east jamb of the window
+inside, which has puzzled antiquaries, but which
+has not otherwise received a satisfactory explanation.
+In immediate proximity to the window,
+at the end of the stalls (and sometimes in the
+earlier churches <em>through</em> them), was the priest’s
+door, out of which he would then proceed to the
+grave to commit the body to the earth. The
+grave itself needs not necessarily be within sight
+of the window. But in a number of instances
+the churchyard cross was so; and this may have
+served as the recognised place for the mourners,
+with the body, to assemble.</p>
+
+<p>In the case of Foxton, Leicestershire, the
+“Lych Window,” as I would call it, is on the
+north side. Here the burials are chiefly on
+the north side; a steep slope down towards the
+church on the south side rendering it very
+difficult and unsuitable for them. At Addisham,
+Kent, the priest’s door is, contrary to the usual
+custom, on the north side, where is also a
+principal portion of the churchyard, and, so far
+as my own observations go, the position of the
+window would greatly depend upon the arrangement
+of the churchyard, whether north or south.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chunk">
+<h2 class="chap" title="Mazes"><a name="p186" id="p186"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>186<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Mazes.</h2>
+
+<p class="author">By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, <span class="postnomial">B.A.</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="newchap"><span class="dropcap">Something</span> concerning the construction
+of labyrinths, or mazes, is known even to
+the most general reader; it needs but a slight
+acquaintance with classical literature to learn of
+the famous example formed at Crete by Dædalus;
+the legend of the concealment of “fair Rosamond,”
+within a maze at Woodstock, is familiar
+enough; and the existing labyrinth at Hampton
+Court, the work of William&nbsp;III. is well known.
+But probably few who have not looked somewhat
+into the matter, have any idea of the number
+of such mazes which still exist, or of the yet
+greater number of which we have authentic
+records. A learned French antiquary, Mons.
+Bonnin, of Evreux, collected two hundred
+examples, gathered from many lands, and
+stretching in history from classical to modern
+times.</p>
+
+<p>Of the most ancient labyrinths it will be
+enough to indicate the localities. One is said to
+have been constructed in Egypt by King Minos,
+<a name="p187" id="p187"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>187<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>and to have served as a model for the one raised
+by Dædalus at Cnossus, in Crete, as a prison
+for the Minataur<!-- TN: sic -->. Another Egyptian example,
+which has been noticed by several authors, was
+near Lake Mœris. Lemnos contained a famous
+labyrinth; and Lar Porsena built one at Clusium,
+in Etruria. These mazes consisted either of a
+series of connected caverns, as it has been
+supposed was the case in Crete; or, as in the
+<a name="p188" id="p188"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>188<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>other instances, were formed of courts enclosed
+by walls and colonnades.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+ <img src="images/p187.jpg" alt="" id="img187" /><br
+ /><small>LABYRINTH INSCRIBED ON ONE OF THE PORCH PIERS OF LUCCA CATHEDRAL.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>The use of the labyrinth in mediæval times,
+has, however, greater interest for us in this
+paper, especially from the fact that such was
+distinctly ecclesiastical. Several continental
+churches have labyrinths, either cut in stone or
+inlaid in coloured marbles, figured upon their
+walls or elsewhere. At Lucca Cathedral is an
+example incised upon one of the piers of the
+porch; and others may be seen at Pavia, Aix in
+Provence, and at Poitiers. These are all small,
+the diameter of the Lucca labyrinth being
+1&nbsp;foot 7½ inches, which is the dimension also
+of one in an ancient pavement in the church
+of S.&nbsp;Maria in Aquiro, in Rome. That the
+suggestion for the construction of these arose
+from the mythological legends concerning those
+of pagan days is proved by the fact that in
+several of them the figures of Theseus and the
+Minataur<!-- TN: sic --> were placed in the centre. Probably
+from the first, the Church, in her use of the
+figure, spiritualized the meaning of the heathen
+story, as we know was her wont in other cases;
+and a labyrinth formed in mosaic on the floor of
+an ancient basilica at Orleansville, Algeria, shows
+<a name="p189" id="p189"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>189<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>that presently the mythological symbols gave
+place entirely to obviously Christian ones. In
+this last-named instance, the centre is occupied
+by the words <cite>Sancta Ecclesia</cite>.</p>
+
+<p>About the twelfth century these curious figures
+became very popular, and a considerable number
+dating from that period still exist. They have
+for the most part been constructed in parti-coloured
+marbles on some portion of the floor of
+the church. One was laid down in 1189 at
+S.&nbsp;Maria in Trastevere, in Rome; S.&nbsp;Vitale,
+Ravenna, contains another; and the parish
+church of S.&nbsp;Quentin has a third. Others
+formerly existed at Amiens Cathedral (made in
+1288 and destroyed in 1825), at Rheims (made
+about 1240 and destroyed in 1779), and at Arras
+(destroyed at the Revolution). These are much
+larger than the examples before noticed; the two
+Italian examples are each about 11 feet across,
+but the French ones greatly exceed this. Those
+of S.&nbsp;Quentin and Arras were each over 34 feet
+in diameter, and the others were somewhat
+larger; Amiens possessed the largest, measuring
+42 feet. France had another example of a
+similar kind at Chartres.</p>
+
+<p>The Christian meaning which was read into
+<a name="p190" id="p190"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>190<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>these complicated designs was more emphatically
+expressed in these twelfth-century instances.
+The centre is usually occupied by a cross, round
+which, in some cases, were arranged figures of
+bishops, angels, and others.</p>
+
+<p>The introduction of these large labyrinths,
+together with the name which came at this time
+to be applied to them in France, namely,
+<i>Chemins de Jerusalem</i>, suggests the new use to
+which such arrangements now began to be put.
+It is well known that in some cases substitutes
+for the great pilgrimage to Jerusalem were
+allowed to be counted as of almost equal merit.
+Thus the Spaniards, so long as they had not
+expelled the infidel from their own territory,
+were forbidden to join the Crusades to the Holy
+Land; and were permitted to substitute a journey
+to the shrine of S.&nbsp;Jago, at Compostella, for one
+to the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. By an
+extension of the same principle, especially when
+the zeal of Christendom for pilgrimages began to
+cool, easy substitutes for the more exacting
+devotion were found in many ways. The introduction
+of the Stations of the Cross is ascribed
+to this cause, the devout following in imagination
+of the footsteps of the Saviour in His last sufferings,
+<a name="p191" id="p191"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>191<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>being accounted equivalent to visiting the
+holy places; and somewhat similarly, the maze,
+or labyrinth, is said to have been pressed into the
+service of religion, the following out (probably
+upon the knees) of its long and tortuous path-
+way, being reckoned as a simple substitute for a
+longer pilgrimage.</p>
+
+<p>From such a use as this, it was no great step
+to the employment of the maze as a means of
+penance in other cases. The whole of the
+intricate pathway was intended to remind the
+penitent of the difficulties which beset the
+Christian course; and the centre, which could
+only be reached by surmounting them, was often
+called heaven (<i>Ciel</i>). Nor could such a penance
+be deemed a light one. Though occupying so
+small a space of ground, the mazy path was so
+involved as to reach a considerable length,
+whence it was sometimes named the League
+(<i>La lièue</i>). The pathway at Chartres measures
+668 feet; at Sens was a maze which required
+some 2,000 steps to gain the centre. An hour is
+said to have been often needed to accomplish
+the journey, due allowance being made for the
+prayers which had to be recited at certain fixed
+stations of it, or throughout its whole course.</p>
+
+<p><a name="p192" id="p192"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>192<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>At S.&nbsp;Omer are one or two examples of the
+labyrinth. One at the Church of Notre Dame
+has figures of towns, mountains, rivers, and wild
+beasts depicted along the pathway, to give, no
+doubt, greater realism to the pilgrimage. The
+existing drawing of another, which has been
+destroyed, is inscribed, “The way of the road to
+Jerusalem at one time marked on the floor of the
+Church of S.&nbsp;Bertin.” Many of these designs
+are not only ingenious, but beautiful. In the
+Chapterhouse at Bayeux is one enriched with
+heraldic figures; that at Chartres has its central
+circle relieved with six cusps, while an engrailed
+border encloses the whole work. A circular
+shape was apparently the most popular; the
+maze at S.&nbsp;Quentin, with some others, however,
+is octagonal. The pathway is usually marked
+by coloured marbles, sometimes the darker,
+sometimes the lighter shades in the design being
+used for the purpose; at Sens, lead has been
+employed to indicate it.</p>
+
+<p>The Revolution, as we have seen, led to the
+destruction of several ecclesiastical labyrinths;
+some, however, became a source of annoyance
+to the worshippers, from children attempting
+to trace the true pathway during the time of
+<a name="p193" id="p193"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>193<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>service, and they were removed in consequence.
+Labyrinths of this kind do not appear to have
+been introduced into England, the only instance
+known to the present writer being quite a modern
+one. This is in the church porch at Alkborough,
+in Lincolnshire, where, at the recent restoration,
+the design of a local maze (to be noticed further
+hereafter) was reproduced.</p>
+
+<p>If England, however, has not imitated the
+continent in this respect, she has struck out a
+line no less interesting, which has remained
+almost exclusively her own; namely, in the
+mazes cut in the green turf of her meadows.
+Shakespeare has an allusion to these in the
+“Midsummer Night’s Dream,” (Act iii., 3)
+where Titania says,</p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:22em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> “The nine men’s morris is fill’d up with mud,</div>
+<div> And the quaint mazes in the wanton green</div>
+<div> For lack of tread are indistinguishable.”</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Some twenty of these rustic labyrinths have
+been noted as still existing, or as recorded by
+a sound tradition, in England; and no doubt
+there have been others which have disappeared,
+leaving no trace behind.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+ <img src="images/p194.jpg" alt="" id="img194" /><br
+ /><small>MAZE AT ALKBOROUGH, LINCOLNSHIRE.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>Among those which have been preserved, the
+following may be noticed. At Alkborough, in
+<a name="p194" id="p194"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>194<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Lincolnshire, near the confluence of the Trent
+and the Ouse, is a maze, the diameter of which
+is 44 feet; by a happy suggestion, the design of
+this has been repeated, as was above remarked,
+in the porch of the Parish Church, so that
+should the original unfortunately be destroyed,
+a permanent record has been provided. Hilton,
+in Huntingdonshire has a maze of exactly the
+<a name="p195" id="p195"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>195<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>same plan, in the centre of which is a stone
+pillar, bearing an inscription in Latin and
+English, to the effect that the work was constructed
+in 1660, by William Sparrow. Comberton,
+in Cambridgeshire, possesses a maze,
+locally known as the “Mazles,” which is fifty
+feet in diameter. The pathway is two feet
+wide, and is defined by small trenches, the
+whole surface being gradually hollowed towards
+<a name="p196" id="p196"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>196<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>the centre. Northamptonshire is represented by
+Boughton Green, which has a labyrinth 37 feet
+in diameter; and Rutland has one at Wing,
+which measures 40 feet.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+ <img src="images/p195.jpg" alt="" id="img195" /><br
+ /><small>THE MIZE-MAZE ON ST. KATHERINE’S HILL, WINCHESTER.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>At Asenby, in the parish of Topcliffe, Yorkshire,
+is a maze measuring 51 feet across, which
+has been carefully preserved by the local
+authorities. At Chilcombe, near Winchester, a
+maze is cut in the turf of S.&nbsp;Catherine’s Hill;
+it is square in outline, each side being 86 feet.
+It is locally known as the “Mize-maze.” One
+much larger than any yet noticed is found
+near Saffron Waldon, in Essex, its diameter
+being 110 feet. There are local records which
+prove the great antiquity of a maze at this place.
+The design is peculiar, being properly a circle,
+save that at four equal distances along the circumference
+the pathway sweeps out into a horseshoe
+projection.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="p197" id="p197"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>197<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>
+<img src="images/p197.jpg" alt="" id="img197" /><br
+ /><small>THE MAZE NEAR ST. ANNE’S CHAPEL, NOTTINGHAM.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>A similar plan was followed in cutting a maze,
+once of some celebrity, near S.&nbsp;Anne’s Well, at
+Sneinton, Nottingham. The projections in this
+case are bolder, and within the spaces enclosed
+by the triple pathway which swept around them
+were cut cross-crosslets. The popular names for
+this maze in the district were the “Shepherd’s
+<a name="p199" id="p199"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>199<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Maze,” and “Robin Hood’s Race.” This was,
+unfortunately, ploughed up in 1797, at the enclosure
+of the lordship of Sneinton. Nottinghamshire
+has, however, another example in the small
+square one at Clifton.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<img src="images/p199.jpg" alt="" id="img199" /><br
+ /><small>MAZE FORMERLY EXISTING NEAR ST. ANNE’S WELL, SNEINTON, NOTTINGHAMSHIRE.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>Many of these turf-cut labyrinths were destroyed
+during the Commonwealth, before which
+<a name="p200" id="p200"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>200<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>period, according to Aubrey in his history of
+Surrey, there were many in England. Not a few,
+however, which survived that time of wanton
+destruction, have been obliterated since.</p>
+
+<p>In 1827 one which was on Ripon Common
+was ploughed up. Its diameter was 60 feet.
+Another existed till comparatively recent times
+at Hillbury, between Farnham and Guildford.
+At Pimpern, in Dorset, there was formerly a
+maze of a unique design. The outline was
+roughly a triangle, which enclosed nearly an acre
+of ground; the pathway was marked out by
+ridges of earth about a foot in height, and
+followed a singularly intricate course. The
+plough destroyed this also in 1730.</p>
+
+<p>The names locally applied to these structures
+often imply very erroneous ideas as to their
+origin and purpose. In some instances they are
+ascribed to the shepherds, as if cut by them as
+pastime in their idle moments; a suggestion,
+which a glance at the mazes themselves, with
+their intricate designs and correctly formed
+curves, will prove to be hardly tenable. Two
+other names of frequent occurrence in England
+are “Troy Town,” and “Julian’s Bower”; the
+latter being connected with the former, Julius,
+<a name="p201" id="p201"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>201<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>son of Æneas being the person alluded to.
+Some have from these titles sought to trace a
+connection with a very ancient sport known as
+the <cite>Troy Game</cite>, which arose in classic times,
+and survived down to the Middle Ages. It
+consisted probably in the rhythmic<!-- TN: original reads "rythmic" -->
+ performance
+of certain evolutions, much after the fashion of
+the “Musical Rides” executed by our cavalry.
+The origin of the idea is to be sought in a
+passage in Virgil’s Æneid (Bk.&nbsp;V., v.&nbsp;583 <i>et seq.</i>),
+which has been thus translated by <span class="nw">Kennett:&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:26em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> “Files facing files their bold companions dare,</div>
+<div> And wheel, and charge, and urge the sportive war.</div>
+<div> Now flight they feign, and naked backs expose,</div>
+<div> Now with turned spears drive headlong on the foes,</div>
+<div> And now, confederate grown, in peaceful ranks they close.</div>
+<div> As Crete’s fam’d labyrinth, to a thousand ways</div>
+<div> And endless darken’d walls the guest conveys;</div>
+<div> Endless, inextricable rounds amuse,</div>
+<div> And no kind track the doubtful passage shows;</div>
+<div> So the glad Trojan youth, the winding course</div>
+<div> Sporting pursue, and charge the rival force.”</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Tresco, Scilly, has a maze known as Troy-town;
+and it would seem that such were once
+common in Cornwall, since any intricate arrangement
+is often locally called by that name.</p>
+
+<p>It has, however, been pointed out that
+<a name="p202" id="p202"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>202<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>most of these mazes date from a time when
+classical knowledge was not widely spread in
+England; that, in fact, the name has probably
+been given in most instances long after the date
+of the construction of the work.</p>
+
+<p>It would seem rather that the original use
+of these quaint figures was, as with those
+continental examples before noted, ecclesiastical.
+No one who has had the opportunity of comparing
+the designs of the English and the
+foreign mazes can fail to be struck with the
+great similarity between them; suggesting, at
+least, a common origin and purpose. And this
+suggestion is greatly strengthened when we notice
+that, although the English mazes are never (with
+one modern instance only excepted) within
+churches, as are the continental instances, yet
+they are almost invariably close to a church, or
+the ancient site of a church. The Alkborough
+and Wing mazes, for instance, are hard by the
+parish churches; and those at Sneinton, Winchester,
+and Boughton Green are beside spots
+once consecrated by chapels dedicated in honour
+of St. Anne, St. Catherine, and St. John. The
+most probable conjecture is that these were
+originally formed, and for long years were used,
+<a name="p203" id="p203"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>203<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>for purposes of devotion and penance. Doubtless
+in later times the children often trod those
+mazy ways in sport and emulation, which had
+been slowly measured countless times before in
+silent meditation or in penitential tears.</p>
+
+<p>A word or two may be added in conclusion on
+mazes of the more modern sort, formed for
+amusement rather than for use, as a curious
+feature in a scheme of landscape gardening.
+These <i>topiary</i> mazes, as they are called, usually
+have their paths defined by walls of well-cut
+box, yew, or other suitable shrubs; and they
+differ from the turf mazes in that they are often
+made purposely puzzling and misleading. In
+the ecclesiastical maze, it is always the patience,
+not the ingenuity, which is tested; there is but
+one road to follow, and though that one wanders
+in and out with tantalizing curves and coils, yet
+it leads him who follows it unerringly to the
+centre.</p>
+
+<p>From Tudor times this form of decoration for
+a large garden has been more or less popular.
+Burleigh formed one at the old palace at
+Theobald’s, Hertfordshire, about 1560; and the
+Maze in Southwark, near a spot once occupied
+by the residence of Queen Mary before coming
+<a name="p204" id="p204"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>204<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>to the throne, and Maze Hill at Greenwich, no
+doubt mark the sites of labyrinths now otherwise
+forgotten. Lord Fauconbergh had a maze at
+Sutton Court in 1691; and William&nbsp;III. so
+highly approved of them that, having left one
+behind him at the Palace of the Loo, he had
+another constructed at Hampton Court.</p>
+
+<p>Literature and art have not disdained to
+interest themselves in this somewhat formal
+method of gardening; for in the sixteenth and
+seventeenth centuries more than one treatise on
+their construction was published; while Holbein
+and Tintoretto have left behind them designs
+for topiary labyrinths.</p>
+
+<p>The oldest and most famous maze in our
+history is “Fair Rosamond’s Bower,” already
+mentioned. Of what kind this was, if indeed it
+was at all, it is difficult to say; authorities
+disagreeing as to whether it was a matter of
+architectural arrangement, of connected caves, or
+of some other kind. The trend of modern historical
+criticism in this, as in so many other
+romantic stories from our annals, is to deny its
+genuineness altogether.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately although so many of our ancient
+mazes have disappeared, the designs of their
+<a name="p205" id="p205"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>205<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>construction has, in not a few cases, been
+preserved to us by means of contemporary
+drawings; so that a fairly accurate idea of the
+type most commonly followed may still be
+obtained.</p>
+
+<p>We have to thank Mr. J.&nbsp;Potter Briscoe,
+<span class="postnomial">F.R.H.S.</span>, editor of “Old Nottinghamshire,” for
+kindly placing at our disposal the two illustrations
+relating to the St. Anne’s Well Maze.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chunk">
+<h2 class="chap" title="Churchyard Superstitions"><a name="p206" id="p206"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>206<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Churchyard Superstitions.</h2>
+
+<p class="author">By the Rev. Theodore Johnson.</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchap"><span class="dropcap">Among</span> all classes of English people there
+are mixed feelings relating to our churchyards.
+They are either places of reverence on the
+one hand, or superstition on the other. The sacred
+plot surrounding the old Parish Church carries
+with it such a host of memories and associations,
+that to the learned and thoughtful it has always
+been God’s Acre, hallowed with a tender hush of
+silent contemplation of the many sad rifts and
+partings among us. We almost vie with each
+other in proclaiming that deep reverence for this
+one sacred spot, so dear to our family life, and
+affections, by those mementos of love which we
+raise over the resting-places of our lost ones gone
+before. This is strangely apparent in the stately
+monument, where the carver’s art declares the
+virtues of the dead, either by sculptured figure,
+or verse engraven, as well as in the ofttimes more
+pathetic, and perhaps more beautiful, tribute of
+the floral cross or wreath culled by loving hands,
+and borne in silence, by our poorer brethren, as
+<a name="p207" id="p207"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>207<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>the only offering, or tribute, their slender means
+allows them to make. Be sure of this one fact,
+that our English Churchyards are better kept&mdash;more
+worthy of the name of God’s Acre than
+in the times past, for what is a more beautiful
+sight, than to see the kneeling children around
+the garden grave of a parent, or a child companion,
+adorning the little mound with flowers
+for the Eastertide festival. Here we have
+a living illustration of the truth of the concluding
+words of our Great Creed: “I look for the
+Resurrection of the Dead and the Life of the
+World to come.”</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, to the ignorant, and unlearned
+in these things, the Churchyard often
+becomes a place of dread, and it may be, some of
+the strange behaviour sometimes seen there
+arises from this inner feeling of awe, which in
+their ignorant superstition they are wont to carry
+off in the spirit of daring bravado.</p>
+
+<p>From a close study of the subject, I am led
+to conclude that the common unchristian idea,
+that the churchyard is ‘haunted,’ whatever that
+may mean to a weak or ignorant person, has
+much to do with it. The evil report, once
+circulated, will be handed on to generations yet
+<a name="p208" id="p208"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>208<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>unborn, until the simple origin, which at first
+might have been easily explained, becomes
+clouded in mystery as time goes on, and the
+deep rooted feeling of horror spreads around us,
+until even the more strong-minded among us, feel
+at times, somewhat doubtful as to whether there
+may not be some truth where the popular testimony
+is so strong.</p>
+
+<p>In country districts, more than in towns,
+superstition is rife with regard to our Churchyards.
+The variety and form of this superstition
+is well nigh ‘Legion,’ and though many of my
+readers may enjoy an Ingoldsby experience
+when read in a well-lighted room, surrounded by
+smiling companions, few of them, after such an
+experience would care to pay a visit alone to
+some neighbouring churchyard, renowned for its
+tale of ghostly appearances. This will, I think
+enable me to show that by far the larger number
+of churchyard superstitions are purely chimerous
+fancies of the brain, and do not owe their origin,
+or existence, to any other source, be that source
+a wilful fraud, or imposition, designed to produce
+fear, or merely the imaginative delusion of some
+overstrained, or weak brain, which called first it
+into existence.</p>
+
+
+<p><a name="p209" id="p209"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>209<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Yet there are prevalent ideas or notions, about
+the churchyard and its sleepers, as deep-rooted
+as any wild superstition, and perhaps as difficult
+to solve, or to trace to any rational source. I
+would here mention one of the most strange, and
+probably one of the most prejudiced notions to
+be met with relating to burial in the churchyard.
+I refer to the East Anglian prejudice of being
+buried on the north side of the church. That
+this prejudice is a strong one, among the country
+people in certain parts of England, is proved by
+the scarcity of graves, nay, in many instances the
+total absence of graves, on the north side of our
+churches.</p>
+
+<p>Some seventeen years ago, shortly after taking
+charge of a parish in Norfolk, I was called upon
+to select a suitable spot for the burial of a poor
+man, who had been killed by an accident. After
+several places had been suggested by me to the
+sexton, who claimed for them either a family
+right, or some similar objection; I noticed for the
+first time, that there were no graves upon the
+north side of the church, and I, in my innocence,
+suggested that there would be plenty of space
+there; whereupon my companion’s face at once
+assumed the most serious expression, and I
+<a name="p210" id="p210"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>210<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>immediately saw that fear had taken hold of his
+mind, as he answered with a somewhat shaky
+voice, “No, Sir! No, that cannot be!” My
+curiosity was immediately aroused, and I sought
+for an explanation, which I found not from my
+good and loyal friend, who would not trust
+himself to answer further than “No, Sir! No,
+that cannot be!” The sexton’s manner puzzled
+me greatly, for the man was an upright, straightforward,
+open-hearted, servant of the Church&mdash;but
+I at once saw that it would be fruitless
+to push the matter further with him, so after
+marking out a suitable resting place for the poor
+unfortunate man, who not being a parishoner of
+long standing, had no family burial place awaiting
+him, I made my way home to think over the
+whole occurrence.</p>
+
+<p>The cause for non-burial on the north side of
+the Church was indeed a mystery, yet that my
+parishoners had some valid reason for not being
+laid to rest there, was apparent; so I set about
+the task of unravelling the superstition, if so it
+may be called.</p>
+
+<p>My library shelves seemed to be the most natural
+place of research, but here after consultation
+with several volumes of Archæology, Ecclesiology,
+<a name="p211" id="p211"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>211<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>and Folk Lore, I could find nothing bearing upon
+the subject, beyond that in certain instances
+relating to Churchyard Parishes on the sea-coast,
+the north side by reason of its exposure to wind
+and storm, and being the sunless quarter of the
+burying ground, was less used than other parts;
+but here the reason given was in consideration of
+the living mourners at the time of the interment,
+and not the body sleeping in its last resting
+place of earth.</p>
+
+<p>After some considerable correspondence with
+friends likely to be interested in such a matter,
+I was rewarded with information that, in some
+instances, the northern portion of the churchyard
+was left unconsecrated, and only thus occasionally
+used for the burial of suicides, vagrants,
+highwaymen (after the four cross road graves
+had been discontinued<!-- TN: original reads "discontined" -->), or for nondescripts and
+unbaptised persons, for whom no religious service
+was considered necessary. Even this I did not
+accept as a solution of my problem. That there
+was something more than local feeling underlying
+this superstition, I was certain, but how to
+get to the root of the subject perplexed me.</p>
+
+<p>The Editor of “Notes and Queries” could
+not satisfy me. His general suggestions and
+<a name="p212" id="p212"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>212<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>kind desire to aid me were well-nigh fruitless,
+so that there remained for me the course of
+watching and waiting, as none of my neighbours
+could, or would, go beyond the conclusive
+statement of the sexton, “It must not be!” or
+what was even more indefinite, “I have never
+heard of such a thing.”</p>
+
+<p>The subject was a fruitful source of thought
+for some months, and in vain I tried to connect
+some religious custom of other days, or to find
+some Text of Scripture, which might have given
+rise to the idea, if mistranslated, or twisted by
+human ingenuity, to serve such a purpose, but
+none occurred to me that in the least would bear
+of such a contortion.</p>
+
+<p>In my intercourse with my older parishoners I
+sought in vain to test the unbaptized or suicidal
+burying place theory as suggested above, but
+this was entirely foreign to them. At length, the
+truth of the old saying, “<cite>All things come to those
+who wait</cite>” brought its due reward. I was called
+in to visit an aged parishoner, who was nearing
+the end of life’s journey, and among other
+subjects naturally came the thoughts, and wishes,
+of this old saintly man’s last hours on earth.
+He had been a shepherd for well nigh sixty
+<a name="p213" id="p213"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>213<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>years, and a widower for the past fifteen years,
+and in consequence he had lived and worked
+much alone. This had produced a thoughtful
+spirit, and a certain slowness of speech, so that
+he was quite the last man I should have consulted
+for a solution of my mystery. Yet, here the
+secret was unfolded, or to my mind more
+satisfactorily explained, than by any previous
+consultation with either men or books. The
+grand old labourer, or faithful shepherd, as he
+was laid helpless on his bed, with his life work
+symbol&mdash;the shepherd’s crook, standing idle in
+the corner, and his trusty dog, restless and
+perplexed, roaming from room to room, was a
+wonderful picture of a Christian death-bed.</p>
+
+<p>There I learned many a solemn life-lesson
+never to be forgotten. The calm voice, the monosyllabic
+answers given in response to my questions
+are still fresh to me; and there I learned the
+source of my Churchyard Superstition in the
+following <span class="nw">manner:&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<p>With a strange, weird, unnatural light in the
+aged man’s eyes, which portrayed much anxiety
+of mind, he spoke about his burial-place, and
+particularly emphasising the words “<em>On the south
+side, sir, near by the wife</em>.” When I ventured to
+<a name="p214" id="p214"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>214<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>inquire if he knew why such a strong objection
+was held to burial on the north side of the
+church. He started suddenly, and I shall never
+forget his reproachful, sad look as he more
+readily than usual gave the <span class="nw">answer:&mdash;</span>“The left
+side of Christ, sir: we don’t like to be counted
+among the goats.”</p>
+
+<p>As a flash of lightning illuminates the whole
+darkness of the country side, and reveals for the
+moment every object in clear outline, so this
+quaint saying of my dying friend dispelled in a
+moment the mists of the past which clouded the
+truth of my strange superstition.</p>
+
+<p>Here was the best answer to the mystery,
+pointing with no uncertain words to the glorious
+Resurrection Day, this aged, earthly shepherd at
+the end of his years of toil recognised his Great
+Master, Jesus, as the True Shepherd of mankind,
+meeting His flock as they arose from their long
+sleep of death, with their faces turned eastward,
+awaiting His appearing.</p>
+
+<p>Then when all had been called and recognised
+He turned to lead them onward, still their True
+Shepherd and Guide, with the sheep on His
+right hand, and the goats on His left hand, so
+wonderfully foretold in the Gospel story:
+<a name="p215" id="p215"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>215<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>“When the Son of Man shall come in His glory,
+and all the holy angels with Him, then shall He
+sit upon the throne of His glory; And before
+Him shall be gathered all nations: and He shall
+separate them one from another, as a shepherd
+divideth his sheep from the goats: and He shall
+set the sheep on His right hand, but the goats
+on the left.”&mdash;<i>S.&nbsp;Matt, xxv., 31, 32, 33.</i></p>
+
+<p>Surely, the above simple illustration explains
+much that is difficult and mysterious to us in the
+way of religious superstition. Undoubtedly, we
+have here a good example of how superstitions
+have arisen, probably from a good source, it may
+be the words of some teacher long since passed
+away. The circumstance has long been forgotten,
+yet the lesson remains, and being handed
+down by oral tradition only, every vestige of its
+religious nature disappears and but the feeling
+remains, which, in the minds of the ignorant
+populace, increases in mystery and enfolds itself
+in superstitious awe, without any desire from
+them to discover the origin, or source, of such
+a strange custom, or event.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chunk">
+<h2 class="chap" title="Curious Announcements in the Church"><a name="p216" id="p216"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>216<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Curious Announcements in the Church.</h2>
+
+<p class="author">By the Rev. R. Wilkins Rees.</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchap"><span class="dropcap">Years</span> ago announcements in churches were
+of a distinctly curious character, and the
+parish clerk in making the intimation seems
+to have been left completely to his own indiscretion.
+In country districts, where proper
+advertising would be quite impossible, the
+practical advantages of some classes of announcements
+would be great, but none of them accord
+with our modern sense of the fitness of things,
+and many can only be accounted for on the
+ground of extraordinary familiarity between
+clergyman, clerk, and congregation. A brief
+consideration of the subject furnishes a few
+side-lights into the general condition of the
+church, as well as into the laxity of church
+discipline, about fifty years and more ago, especially
+away from large centres of population.</p>
+
+<p>In certain parts, the custom of crying lost
+goods in church was undoubtedly prevalent, and
+did not then appear peculiar. The rector, who
+had lost his favourite dog and told the parish
+<a name="p217" id="p217"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>217<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>clerk to do his best to ascertain its whereabouts,
+may have been astonished to hear him announce
+the loss in church, coupled with a statement that
+a reward of three pounds would be given to the
+person who should restore the animal to its
+owner. But such surprise was hardly natural
+when an announcement like the following was
+<span class="nw">possible:&mdash;</span>“Mislaid on Sunday last! The gold-rimmed
+vicar’s spectacles of best glass, taken
+from his eyes in going into the poor box, or put
+down somewhere when going into the font to
+fetch the water after the christening.” What a
+shock this rare jumble produced by a country
+clerk must have been to the precise and classical
+vicar can only be imagined. The thought,
+however, of a gold-rimmed vicar diminutive
+enough to enter font or poor box is somewhat
+staggering! Quite as muddled, but much more
+ingenious, was the clerk who announced, in
+recent years, an accomplished D.Sc. and LL.D.
+as a Doctor of Schools and a Lord Lieutenant
+of Divinity!</p>
+
+<p>“Lost, stolen, or strayed,” shouted the clerk
+in church one Sunday, with the strident voice of
+a town crier, and the manner of one not unaccustomed
+to the task, “lost, stolen, or strayed.
+<a name="p218" id="p218"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>218<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Four fat sheep and one lean cow. Whoever will
+return the same to Mr. <span class="nw">&mdash;&mdash;’s</span> farm will be
+suitably rewarded.” It is well that the name of
+the parish in which it was given, is missing from
+another specimen of this sort of announcement,
+for it seems to indicate that honesty there could
+be but the outcome of an inducement afforded
+by the promise of substantial reward. “Lost,”
+said the clerk, “on Sunday last, when the wearer
+was walking home from this church, and before
+she reached the Town Hall, a lady’s gold brooch,
+set with pearls and other precious stones. The
+one who has found it will consider it worth while
+to restore it, for the reward of a guinea is
+offered.”</p>
+
+<p>It is not a little surprising<!-- TN: original reads "suprising" --> that the clergyman
+in charge did not supervise more carefully the
+various announcements, especially when so many
+a <i>contretemps</i> occurred. Once a parish clerk
+announced in his rector’s <span class="nw">hearing:&mdash;</span>“There’ll be
+no service next Sunday as the rector’s going out
+grouse shooting.” The rector had injudiciously
+acquainted his clerk with the reason of his
+approaching absence, and this was the result.
+It happened, of course, a half century since, but
+it illustrates an interesting state of things as
+<a name="p219" id="p219"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>219<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>existing at that period. With it two similar
+incidents may well be mentioned, the first of
+which occurred in Scotland, the second in the
+Principality. “Next Sawbath,” said a worthy
+Scotch beadle, “we shall have no Sawbath, for
+the meenister’s house is having spring cleaning,
+and as the weather is very bad the meenister’s
+wife wants the kirk to dry the things in.” “Next
+Sunday,” declared the unconsciously amusing
+Welshman, “there’ll be no Sunday, as we’re
+going to whitewash the church with yellow-ochre.”
+Sometimes the omission of a stop
+caused sore trouble to the clerk, while it hugely
+delighted the congregation. “A man having
+gone to see his wife desires the prayers of this
+church,” was the startling announcement. But
+had not the clerk been near-sighted and mistaken
+<em>sea</em> for <em>see</em>, and had a comma been supplied after
+sea, the notice would have been all right, for it
+was simply the request of a sailor’s wife on behalf
+of her husband.</p>
+
+<p>Once the clerk made the announcement that a
+parish meeting would be held on a given date.
+“No, no,” interrupted the vicar. “D’ye think
+I’d attend to business on the audit day!” The
+audit days were recognised as times of hearty
+<a name="p220" id="p220"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>220<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>feasting and convivial mirth, in which the vicar
+played no unimportant part. This freedom of
+speech between clergyman and clerk was not
+seldom fruitful of ill-restrained amusement when
+the announcements were made. A vicar informed
+his congregation one Sunday morning that he
+would hold the customary service for baptisms in
+the afternoon, and requested the parents to bring
+their children punctually, so that there might be
+no delay in commencing. Immediately he had
+said this, the old clerk, sleepy and deaf, thinking
+the parson’s announcement had to do with a new
+hymn-book which at that time was being introduced,
+arose, and graciously informed the people
+that for those who were still without them he had
+a stock in the vestry from which they could be
+supplied at the low charge of eighteenpence each.
+This is slightly <span class="nw">similar:&mdash;</span>“I publish the banns
+of marriage between ... between ...”
+announced a clergyman from the pulpit. But
+here for a moment he stopped, as the book in
+which were the notices was not to be seen. The
+clerk, seeing his vicar’s predicament, and catching
+sight of the whereabouts of the missing book,
+<span class="nw">ejaculated:&mdash;</span>“Between the cushion and the
+desk, sir.” The unique character of another
+<a name="p221" id="p221"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>221<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>notice will fully justify its inclusion. “I am
+unwell, my friends, very unwell,” announced a
+preacher one Sunday evening, “and therefore I
+shall dispense with my usual gesticulation.”
+This happened not very long ago.</p>
+
+<p>So disregarded, indeed, were the proprieties of
+worship a generation since, that the clergyman
+would sometimes pause during the delivery of his
+sermon and make an announcement which, to
+say the least of it, had no connection with the
+theme he was pursuing. Thus the Rev. Samuel
+Sherwen, a well-known cleric in Cumberland,
+announced one morning that he had just caught
+sight, through a window near the pulpit, of some
+cows in a cornfield, and requested that some one
+would go and drive them out. At another time
+he said there were some pigs in the churchyard
+which were not his, and his servant Peter would
+do well to expel the intruders. Very probably
+such announcements, though made from a pulpit,
+would be excused because they resulted in a
+certain benefit. The same plea could undoubtedly
+be put forward for the following trio, each
+of which hails from beyond the Severn. “Take
+notice!” exclaimed the clerk. “A thief is going
+through the Vale of Glamorgan selling tin ware,
+<a name="p222" id="p222"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>222<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>false gold, trinkets, and rings, and other domestic
+implements and instruments, and robbing houses
+of hens, chickens, eggs, butter, and other portable
+animals, making all sorts of pretences to get
+money!” Again, “Beware! beware! of a man
+with one eye, talking like a preacher, and a
+wooden leg, given to begging and stealing!”
+And once more, “Take notice! take notice!
+there’s a mad dog going the round of the parish
+with two crop ears and a very long tail!”
+Surely the intention of such announcements was
+good, even though the literary form was bad.
+The last, as might be inferred, was made at a
+time when rabies were prevalent.</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. Samuel Sherwen, already alluded
+to, was surpassed in this direction by another
+Cumbrian clergyman, the Rev. William Sewell,
+of Troutbeck. One Sunday morning the latter
+entered the pulpit of the little church at Wythburn
+to preach. The pulpit sadly needed repair,
+and, in leaning out from the wall, left an undesirable
+opening behind it. Into this chink
+the parson’s sermon fell, and the pulpit was so
+ricketty in its broken-down condition that the
+preacher feared the consequences of turning in
+it. Moreover, the manuscript had fallen so far
+<a name="p223" id="p223"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>223<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>that it could not be reached. Mr. Sewell, bereft
+of his sermon, announced to his congregation in
+broad dialect: “T’ sarmont’s slipt down i’ t’
+neuk, and I can’t git it out; but I’ll tell ye what&mdash;I’se
+read ye a chapter i’ t’ Bible ’at’s worth
+three on’t.” A similar story is told in connection
+with the Rev. Mr. Alcock, who in the middle
+of the last century was rector of Burnsal, near
+Skipton, in Yorkshire. Of this clergyman another
+story is given which well illustrates the excessive
+familiarity indulged in by occupants of the pulpit
+in bygone days. One of his friends, at whose
+house he was wont to call previous to entering
+the church on Sundays, seized a chance to
+unfasten and then misplace the leaves of his
+sermon. In the service the parson had not read
+far before he discovered the trick. “Will,” cried
+he, “thou rascal! what’s thou been doing with
+my sermon?” Then turning to his people, he
+continued: “Brethren, Will Thornton’s been
+misplacing the leaves of my sermon; I have not
+time to put them right; I shall read on as I find
+it, and you must make the best of it that you
+can.” He accordingly read to the close of the
+confused mass to the utter astonishment of his
+congregation.</p>
+
+<p><a name="p224" id="p224"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>224<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Of such familiarity Scottish churches furnish
+well-nigh innumerable instances. One or two
+will, however, be sufficient for my purpose. The
+clergyman who was expected to conduct the
+morning service had not made his appearance at
+the appointed time. After a dreadful suspense
+of some fifteen minutes the beadle, that much-privileged
+individual, entered the church,
+marched slowly along the accustomed passage,
+and mounted the pulpit-stair. When half-way
+up he stopped, turned to the congregation, and
+thus addressed them: “There was one Alexander
+to hae preached here the day, but he’s neither
+come hissel; nor has he sent the scrape o’ a pen
+to say what’s come owre him. Ye’d better keep
+your seats for anither ten meenits to see whether
+the body turns up or no. If he disna come,
+there’s naething for ’t but for ye a’ to gang hame
+again an’ say naething mair aboot it. The like
+o’ this hasna happened here syne I hae been
+conneckit wi’ the place, an’ that’s mair than four-and-thirty
+year now.” As an announcement to
+the point, and for the purpose, that could not
+easily be beaten. A clergyman of Crossmichael,
+in Galloway, would even intersperse his lessons
+or sermon with any announcement that might
+<a name="p225" id="p225"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>225<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>at the moment occur to him, or with allusions to
+the behaviour of his hearers. Once, because of
+this method, a verse from Exodus was hardly
+recognisable. The version given was as follows:
+“And the Lord said unto Moses&mdash;shut that
+door; I’m thinkin’ if ye had to sit beside that
+door yersel’, ye wadna be sae ready leavin’ it
+open; it was just beside that door that Yedam
+Tamson, the bellman, gat his death o’ cauld, an’
+I’m sure, honest man, he didna lat it stey muckle
+open.&mdash;And the Lord said unto Moses&mdash;put oot
+that dog; wha is’t that brings dogs to the kirk,
+yaff-yaffin’? Lat me never see ye bring yer dogs
+here ony mair, for, if ye do, tak notice, I’ll put
+you an’ them baith oot.&mdash;And the Lord said
+unto Moses&mdash;I see a man aneeth that wast laft
+wi’ his hat on; I’m sure ye’re cleen oot o’ the
+souch o’ the door; keep aff yer bonnet, Tammas,
+an’ if yer bare pow be cauld, ye maun jist get a
+grey worset wig like mysel’; they’re no sae dear;
+plenty o’ them at Bob Gillespie’s for tenpence.”
+At last, however, the preacher informed his
+hearers what was said to Moses in a manner at
+once more accurate and becoming.</p>
+
+<p>It was, indeed, a usual custom for the clergyman
+publicly to rebuke offenders, as when it
+<a name="p226" id="p226"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>226<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>happened that a young man, sitting in a prominent
+position in the church, pulled out his
+handkerchief and brought with it a bundle of
+playing cards, which flew in every direction.
+He had, so it turned out, been up late the previous
+night, and had stuffed the cards with which he
+had been gambling into his pocket, where they
+had remained forgotten. The people were
+amazed and horrified, but the clergyman simply
+looked at the offender and remarked with quiet,
+yet most withering sarcasm, “Sir, that prayer
+book of yours has been badly bound!” But
+some times the rebuke was deftly thrust back
+upon the preacher. “You’re sleepy, John,”
+said the clergyman, pausing in the middle of a
+drowsy discourse, and looking hard at the man
+he thus addressed. “Take some snuff, John.”
+“Put the snuff in the sermon,” ejaculated John;
+and the faces of the audience showed that the
+retort was fully appreciated.</p>
+
+<p>In fact, such was the freedom tolerated, that
+this incident in Eskdale might be taken as an
+example. Someone walked noisily up the aisle
+during divine service. “Whaa’s tat?” asked
+the clergyman in a tone quite loud enough to
+rebuke the offender. “It’s aad Sharp o’ Laa
+<a name="p227" id="p227"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>227<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Birker,” responded the clerk. “Afooat or o’
+horseback?” was the significant query. “Nay,”
+was the answer, “nobbet afooat, wi’ cokert shun”
+(calkered shoes). Frequently the clerk would
+interrupt the clergyman, and the interruption
+would not enhance the devotional character of
+the service. In a rural parish church a new
+pitch-pipe was provided, but the clerk had not
+tested it before entering his desk on the Sunday,
+and when he should have given the key-note the
+instrument could not be adjusted. The clerk
+tugged at it, thrust it in, gave it several thumps,
+made sundry grimaces, but the pipe was obdurate.
+“My friends,” announced the impatient
+parson, “the pitch-pipe will not work, so let us
+pray.” “Pray!” snorted the aggrieved official,
+“pray! no, no, we’ll pray none till I put this
+thing aright.” And members of the congregation
+would even stand up in their pews to
+contradict the parson or clerk when making the
+announcement. “There will be a service here
+as usual on Thursday evening next,” announced
+the clerk one Sunday morning. “No, there
+won’t,” declared the churchwarden as he rose
+from his seat. “We be going to carry hay all
+day Thursday.” “But the service will be held
+<a name="p228" id="p228"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>228<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>as usual,” asserted the clerk. But the churchwarden
+was not to be thwarted. “Then there’ll
+be nobody here,” said he. “D’ye think we’re
+coming to church and leave the hay in the fields?
+No, no, p’r’aps it’ll rain Friday.”</p>
+
+<p>But of all amusing instances of curious announcements
+in church those given by the Rev.
+Cuthbert Bede in <cite>All the Year Round</cite>, November
+1880, may take the palm and fittingly conclude
+this chapter. “An old rector of a small country
+parish,” so runs the story, “had sent his
+set of false teeth to be repaired, on the
+understanding that they should be returned
+“by Saturday” as there was no Sunday
+post, and the village was nine miles from the
+post town. The old rector tried to brave out the
+difficulty, but after he had incoherently mumbled
+through the prayers, he decided not to address
+his congregation on that day. While the hymn
+was being sung, he summoned the clerk to the
+vestry, and then said to him: “It is quite useless
+for me to attempt to go on. The fact is,
+that my dentist has not sent me back my artificial
+teeth, and it is impossible for me to make
+myself understood. You must tell the congregation
+that the service is ended for this morning,
+<a name="p229" id="p229"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>229<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>and that there will be no service this afternoon.”
+The old clerk went back to his desk; the singing
+of the hymn was brought to an end; and the
+rector, from the vestry, heard the clerk address
+the congregation thus: “This is to give notice!
+as there won’t be no sarmon nor no more sarvice
+this mornin’, so you’ better all go whum (home);
+and there won’t be no sarvice this aternoon, as
+the rector ain’t got his artful teeth back from the
+dentist!”</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chunk">
+<h2 class="chap" title="Big Bones Preserved in Churches"><a name="p230" id="p230"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>230<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Big Bones Preserved in Churches.</h2>
+
+<p class="author">By the Rev. R. Wilkins Rees.</p>
+
+
+<p class="newchap"><span class="dropcap">In</span> a lovely and secluded valley in Montgomeryshire
+is situated the interesting old
+church of Pennant Melangell, of whose foundation
+a charming legend is told. The romantic
+glen was in the first instance the retreat of a
+beautiful Irish maiden, Monacella (in Welsh,
+Melangell), who had fled from her father’s court
+rather than wed a noble to whom he had promised
+her hand, that here she might alone “serve God
+and the spotless virgin.” Brochwell Yscythrog,
+Prince of Powys, being one day hare-hunting in
+the locality, pursued his game till he came to
+a thicket, where to his amazement he found a
+lady of surpassing beauty, with the hare he was
+chasing safely sheltered beneath her robe. Notwithstanding
+all the efforts of the sportsman to
+make them seize their prey, the dogs had retired
+to a distance, howling as though in fear, and
+even when the huntsman essayed to blow his
+horn, it stuck to his lips. The Prince, learning
+the lady’s story, right royally assigned to her the
+<a name="p231" id="p231"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>231<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>spot as a sanctuary for ever to all who fled there.
+It afterwards became a safe asylum for the
+oppressed, and an institution for the training of
+female devotees. But how long it so continued
+cannot be said. Monacella’s hard bed used to
+be shown in the cleft of a neighbouring rock,
+while her tomb was in a little oratory adjoining
+the church.</p>
+
+<p>In the church is to be found carved woodwork,
+which doubtless once formed part of the rood-loft,
+representing the legend of Saint Melangell.
+The protection afforded by the saint to the hare
+gave such animals the name of Wyn Melangell&mdash;St.
+Monacella’s lambs&mdash;and the superstition was
+so fully credited that no person would kill a hare
+in the parish, while it was also believed that if
+anyone cried “God and St. Monacella be with
+thee” after a hunted hare, it would surely escape.</p>
+
+<p>The church contains another interesting item
+in the shape of a large bone, more than four feet
+long, which has been described as the bone of
+the patron saint. Southey visited the church,
+and in an amusing rhyming letter addressed to
+his daughter, thus refers to it: “’Tis a church
+in a vale, whereby hangs a tale, how a hare being
+pressed by the dogs was much distressed, the
+<a name="p232" id="p232"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>232<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>hunters coming nigh and the dogs in full cry,
+looked about for someone to defend her, and saw
+just in time, as it now comes pat in rhyme, a
+saint of the feminine gender. The saint was
+buried there, and a figure carved with care, in
+the churchyard is shown, as being her own;
+but ’tis used for a whetstone (like a stone at our
+back door), till the pity is the more (I should say
+the more’s the pity, if it suited with my ditty),
+it is whetted half away&mdash;lack-a-day, lack-a-day!
+They show a mammoth rib (was there ever such
+a fib?) as belonging to the saint Melangell. It
+was no use to wrangle, and tell the simple people
+that if this had been her bone, she must certainly
+have grown to be three times as tall as the
+steeple!”</p>
+
+<p>In Lewis’s “Topographical Dictionary of
+Wales” (1843), we are told that on the mountain
+between Bala and Pennant Melangell was
+found a large bone named the Giant’s Rib,
+perhaps the bone of some fish, now kept in the
+church. But where the bone came from it is
+quite impossible to say. Old superstitions have
+clung to it, and beyond what tradition furnishes
+there is practically nothing for our guidance.</p>
+
+<p>It is somewhat strange that in the same
+<a name="p233" id="p233"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>233<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>county, in connection with the church at
+Mallwyd, other bones are exhibited. Of this
+church, surrounded by romantic scenery, the
+Dr.&nbsp;Davies, who rendered into Welsh the
+Thirty-nine Articles of the Church of England,
+and assisted Bishop Perry in the translation of
+the Bible, was for many years incumbent. The
+sacred edifice was far-famed for its magnificent
+yew trees, and for the position of the communion
+table in the centre. Archbishop Laud issued
+orders that it should be placed at the east end,
+but Dr.&nbsp;Davies defied the prelate, and restored
+it to its old position, where, according to
+Hemmingway’s “Panorama of North Wales,”
+in which the church was described as a “humble
+Gothic structure, the floor covered with rushes,”
+it remained till 1848. It is not, however, so placed
+now. Over the porch of this church some bones
+are suspended, but no palæontologist has yet
+decided as to their origin. It has been said that
+they are the rib and part of the spine of a whale
+caught in the Dovey in bygone days! Whatever
+may be the truth, however, it is not now to be
+ascertained, but must remain shrouded in mystery
+with that concerning the bones at Pennant
+Melangell. The bones were in their present
+<a name="p234" id="p234"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>234<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>position in 1816, for they are then mentioned by
+Pugh in his <cite>Cambria Depicta</cite>.</p>
+
+<p>England has several instances of big bones
+preserved in churches, and one story seems to be
+told regarding almost all. A most interesting
+example is to be found over one of the altar
+tombs in the Foljambe Chapel, Chesterfield
+Church. This bone, supposed to be the jawbone
+of a small whale, is seven feet four inches in
+length, and about thirteen inches, on an average,
+in circumference. Near one end is engraved, in
+old English characters, the name “Thomas
+Fletcher.” The Foljambes disposed of their
+manor in 1633 to the Ingrams, who in turn sold
+it to the Fletchers, and thus the name on the
+bone is accounted for. A generally-accepted
+explanation about this bone&mdash;not even disbelieved
+entirely at the present day&mdash;was that it formed a
+rib of the celebrated Dun Cow of Dunsmore
+Heath, killed by the doughty Guy of Warwick,
+with whom local tradition identified the warrior
+whose marble effigy lies beneath the bone, sent
+to Chesterfield to celebrate the much-appreciated
+victory.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<a name="p235" id="p235"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>235<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>
+<img src="images/duncow.jpg" alt="" id="img235" /><br
+ /><small>THE DUN COW, DURHAM CATHEDRAL.</small>
+</div>
+
+<p>It is interesting to remember here the legendary
+story of the foundation of Durham Cathedral,
+<a name="p237" id="p237"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>237<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>which explains certain carving on the north front
+of that majestic pile. While the final resting-place
+of St. Cuthbert was still undetermined,
+“it was revealed to Eadmer, a virtuous man,
+that he should be carried to Dunholme, where
+he should find a place of rest. His followers
+were in distress, not knowing where Dunholme
+lay; but as they proceeded, a woman, wanting
+her cow, called aloud to her companion to know
+if she had seen her, when the other answered
+that she was in Dunholme. This was happy
+news to the distressed monks, who thereby
+knew that their journey’s end was at hand,
+and the saint’s body near its resting-place.”
+It has been said that the after riches of the
+See of Durham gave rise to the proverb, “The
+dun cow’s milk makes the prebend’s wives go
+in silk.”</p>
+
+<p>But to return to the dun cow slain by Guy.
+That the champion was credited of old with
+having overcome some such animal is evident
+from the matter-of-fact fashion in which it is
+recorded by ancient chroniclers. In Percy’s
+“Reliques of Antient Poetry,” occur the following
+verses in a black-letter ballad which sings the
+exploits of <span class="nw">Guy:&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width:20em;">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div><a name="p238" id="p238"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>238<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span> “On Dunsmore heath I alsoe slewe</div>
+<div> A monstrous wyld and cruell beast,</div>
+<div> Called the Dun-Cow of Dunsmore heath,</div>
+<div> Which manye people had opprest.</div>
+<br class="kindle" /></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div> Some of her bons in Warwicke yett</div>
+<div> Still for a monument doe lye;</div>
+<div> Which unto every lookers viewe</div>
+<div> As wondrous strange, they may espye.”</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>A circumstantial account is given in the
+“Noble and Renowned History of Guy, Earl of
+Warwick,” as translated from the curious old
+French black-letter volume in Warwick Castle,
+and of this a somewhat modernised version may
+be submitted. “Fame made known in every
+corner of the land that a dun cow of enormous
+size, ‘at least four yards in height, and six in
+length, and a head proportionable,’ was making
+dreadful devastations, and destroying man and
+beast. The king was at York when he heard of
+the havoc and slaughter which this monstrous
+animal had made. He offered knighthood to
+anyone who would destroy her, and many
+lamented the absence in Normandy of Guy,
+who, hearing of the beast, went privately to give
+it battle. With bow and sword and axe he came,
+and found every village desolate, every cottage
+empty. His heart filled with compassion, and
+<a name="p239" id="p239"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>239<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>he waited for the encounter. The furious beast
+glared at him with her eyes of fire. His arrows
+flew from her sides as from adamant itself. Like
+the wind from the mountain side the beast came
+on. Her horns pierced his armour of proof,
+though his mighty battle-axe struck her in the
+forehead. He wheeled his gallant steed about
+and struck her again. He wounded her behind
+the ear. The monster roared and snorted as she
+felt the anguish of the wound. At last she fell,
+and Guy, alighting, hewed at her until she
+expired, deluged with her blood. He then rode
+to the next town, and made known the monster’s
+death, and then went to his ship, hoping to sail
+before the king could know of the deed. Fame
+was swifter than Guy. The king sent for him,
+gave him the honour of knighthood, and caused
+one of the ribs of the cow to be hung up in
+Warwick Castle, where it remains until this
+day.” Old Dr.&nbsp;Caius, of Cambridge, writes of
+having seen an enormous head at Warwick
+Castle in 1552, and also “a vertebra of the neck
+of the same animal, of such great size that its
+circumference is not less than three Roman
+feet seven inches and a half.” He thinks also
+that “the blade-bone, which is to be seen hung
+<a name="p240" id="p240"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>240<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>up by chains form the north gate of Coventry,
+belongs to the same animal. The circumference
+of the whole bone is not less than eleven feet
+four inches and a half.” The same authority
+further states that “in the chapel of the great
+Guy, Earl of Warwick, which is situated rather
+more than a mile from the town of Warwick
+(Guy’s Cliff), there is hung up a rib of the same
+animal, as I suppose, the girth of which in the
+smallest part is nine inches, the length six feet
+and a half,” and he inclines to a half-belief, at
+any rate, in the Dun-Cow story.</p>
+
+<p>In connection with the legend it should be
+mentioned that in the north-west of Shropshire is
+the Staple Hill, which has a ring of upright
+stones, about ninety feet in diameter, of the rude
+pre-historic type. “Here the voice of fiction
+declares there formerly dwelt a giant who guarded
+his cow within this inclosure, like another Apis
+among the ancient Egyptians, a cow who yielded
+her milk as miraculously as the bear Œdumla,
+whom we read of in Icelandic mythology, filling
+every vessel that could be brought to her, until
+at length an old crone attempted to catch her
+milk in a sieve, when, furious at the insult, she
+broke out of the magical inclosure and wandered
+<a name="p241" id="p241"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>241<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>into Warwickshire, where her subsequent history
+and fate are well known under that of the Dun
+Cow, whose death added another wreath of
+laurel to the immortal Guy, Earl of Warwick.”
+The presence of bones at Chesterfield and elsewhere
+is, of course, accounted for by the fact (?)
+that they were distributed over the country so
+that in various places Guy’s marvellous feat
+might be commemorated.</p>
+
+<p>In Queen Elizabeth’s “fairest and most famous
+parish church in England,” St. Mary Redcliff,
+Bristol, is preserved a bone said to have belonged
+to a monster cow which once supplied the whole
+city with milk. Bristolians, proud of their
+connection with the great discoverer, Cabot,
+assert that it is a whalebone brought to the city
+by the illustrious voyager on his return from
+Newfoundland. But here the story of Guy of
+Warwick and the cow has also been introduced.
+The bone, which is now fixed not far from the
+stair leading to the chamber containing the
+muniment chest where Chatterton pretended to
+have found the Rowley poems, was formerly
+hung within the church, while near to it was
+suspended a grimy old picture now banished to
+a position on a staircase just where the room in
+<a name="p242" id="p242"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>242<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>which the vestry meetings are held is entered.
+The picture, so far as it can be made out,
+contains a big figure of a man on the right hand
+side, while in the foreground lies a prostrate man,
+behind whom stands a cow. To the left of the
+picture are certain human figures in attitudes
+expressive of surprise. This ancient painting
+was said to refer to Guy’s exploit, and the rib
+was pointed out as a positive proof that the
+daring deed was done.</p>
+
+<p>It may be presumed that all, or nearly all,
+these bones preserved in churches are those of
+whales, though in some instances they have been
+supposed to be those of the wild <span class="postnomial">BONASUS</span> or
+<span class="postnomial">URUS</span> and most are associated in some way or
+other with the legend of Guy and the Dun-Cow.
+Indeed, it seems almost strange that the story
+has not been connected even with the bone at
+Pennant Melangell, especially as on the mountain
+between Llanwddyn and the parish is a circular
+inclosure surrounded by a wall called Hên Eglwys,
+and supposed to be a Druidical relic, which would
+have been just the spot to have lent itself to the
+statement that there the animal was confined.</p>
+
+<p>The late Frank Buckland, in his entertaining
+chapter on “A Hunt on the Sea-Shore,” in his
+<a name="p243" id="p243"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>243<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>second volume of “Curiosities of Natural History,”
+says: “Whale-bones get to odd places,”
+and writes of having seen them used for a grotto
+in Abingdon, and a garden chair in Clapham.
+Not far from Chesterfield there were, until recently,
+some whale-jaw gate posts which formed
+an arch, and in North Lincolnshire such bones,
+tall and curved, are still to be seen serving similar
+purposes. But the presence of such bones,
+carefully preserved in churches, though it may
+occasion considerable conjecture, cannot, it
+seems, be properly explained. As yet, at any
+rate, the riddle remains unsolved.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chunk">
+<h2 class="chapanon" title="Samuel Pepys at Church"><a name="p244" id="p244"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>244<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Samuel Pepys at Church.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="newchap"><span class="dropcap">The</span> Diary of Samuel Pepys, from 1659 to
+1669, presents us with a picture of London
+in the days of Charles&nbsp;II. that has perhaps not
+been equalled in any other work dealing with the
+manners, customs, and the social life of the
+period. We get a good idea from it how Sunday
+was spent in an age largely given to pleasure.
+Samuel Pepys had strong leanings towards the
+Presbyterians, but was a churchman, and seldom
+missed going to a place of worship on Sunday,
+and did not neglect to have family prayers in
+his own home. He generally attended his own
+church in the morning, and after dinner in the
+afternoon would roam about the city, and visit
+more than one place of worship. Take for an
+example an account of one Sunday. After being
+present at his own church in the forenoon, and
+dining, he says: “I went and ranged and ranged
+about to many churches, among the rest to the
+Temple, where I heard Dr.&nbsp;Wilkins a <em>little</em>.”</p>
+
+<p>It is to be feared pretty faces and not powerful
+preachers often induced him to go to the house
+<a name="p245" id="p245"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>245<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>of prayer. Writing on August 11th, 1661, he
+says: “To our own church in the forenoon, and
+in the afternoon to Clerkenwell Church, only to
+see the two fair Botelers.” He managed to
+obtain a seat where he could have a good view
+of them, but they did not charm him, for he
+says: “I am now out of conceit with them.”
+Another Sunday he writes: “By coach to
+Greenwich Church, where a good sermon, a
+fine church, and a good company of handsome
+women.” At another church he visited he says
+that his pretty black girl was present.</p>
+
+<p>Pepys has much to say about the sermons he
+heard, and when they were dull he went to sleep.
+Judging from his frequent records of slumbering
+in church, prosy preachers were by no means
+rare in his day.</p>
+
+<p>Writing on the 4th August, 1662, he gives us
+a glimpse of the manners of a rustic church.
+His cousin Roger himself attended the service,
+and says Pepys: “At our coming in, the country
+people all rose with so much reverence; and
+when the parson begins, he begins, ‘Right worshipful
+and dearly beloved’ to us.”</p>
+
+<p>Conversation appears to have been freely
+carried<!-- TN: original reads "carred" --> on in city churches. “In my pew,” says
+<a name="p246" id="p246"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>246<span class="ns">]
+ </span></span>Pepys, “both Sir Williams and I had much talk
+about the death of Sir Robert.” Laughter was
+by no means unusual. “Before sermon,” writes
+Pepys, “I laughed at the reader, who, in his
+prayer, desired God that he would imprint his
+Word on the thumbs of our right hands and on
+the right toes of our right feet.”</p>
+
+<p>When Pepys remained at home on Sunday he
+frequently cast up his accounts, and there are in
+his Diary several allusions to this subject.</p>
+
+<div class="illo">
+<img src="images/theend.jpg" alt="The End" id="img246" />
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="index">
+<h2 class="chapanon" title="Index"><a name="p247" id="p247"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>247<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Index.</h2>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Abbot’s Pew, Malmesbury Abbey, <a href="#p155">155</a>, <a href="#p159">159</a></li>
+ <li>Addisham, Priest’s door at, <a href="#p185">185</a></li>
+ <li>Alkborough Maze, <a href="#p193">193</a>, <a href="#p194">194</a></li>
+ <li>All Hallows, Barking, <a href="#p81">81</a></li>
+ <li>Alms boxes, <a href="#p180">180</a></li>
+ <li>Alnwick<!-- TN: original reads "Alnwich" -->, chest at, <a href="#p174">174</a></li>
+ <li>Announcing cows in a cornfield, <a href="#p221">221</a></li>
+ <li>Antiquarian Problem: The Leper Window, <a href="#p183">183</a>&ndash;185</li>
+ <li>Artificial teeth missing, <a href="#p229">229</a></li>
+ <li>Asenby, Maze at, <a href="#p196">196</a></li>
+ <li>Ashbourne bells, <a href="#p121">121</a></li>
+ <li>Ashton-under-Lyne, <a href="#p113">113</a>, <a href="#p116">116</a>&ndash;118</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Bailey, J. E. The Five of Spades and the Church of
+ Ashton-under-Lyne, <a href="#p113">113</a>&ndash;118</li>
+ <li>Baptisms performed in porches, <a href="#p24">24</a></li>
+ <li>Beadle’s announcement, <a href="#p224">224</a></li>
+ <li>Bede, Venerable, <a href="#p81">81</a></li>
+ <li>Bell-ringing laws, <a href="#p125">125</a></li>
+ <li>Bell-robbers, <a href="#p141">141</a></li>
+ <li>Bells and their Messages, <a href="#p119">119</a>&ndash;132</li>
+ <li>Belvoir, <a href="#p80">80</a></li>
+ <li>Beware of thieves, <a href="#p221">221</a></li>
+ <li>Big Bones Preserved in Churches, <a href="#p230">230</a>&ndash;243</li>
+ <li>Blacksmith, mediæval, <a href="#p19">19</a></li>
+ <li>Blood, foundation laid in, <a href="#p30">30</a>, <a href="#p43">43</a></li>
+ <li>Bocastle, <a href="#p137">137</a></li>
+ <li>Bottreaux, <a href="#p137">137</a></li>
+ <li>Bradbury, Edward. Bells and their Messages, <a href="#p119">119</a>&ndash;132</li>
+ <li>Bradford-on-Avon Church, <a href="#p7">7</a></li>
+ <li>Brancepeth<!-- TN: original reads "Brancepth" -->, chest at, <a href="#p178">178</a></li>
+ <li>Briefs, <a href="#p49">49</a></li>
+ <li>Brigstock bells, <a href="#p139">139</a></li>
+ <li>Briscoe, J. P. Stories about Bells, <a href="#p133">133</a>&ndash;144</li>
+ <li>Bristol, <a href="#p62">62</a>, <a href="#p75">75</a>, <a href="#p79">79</a></li>
+ <li>Bronze-doors, <a href="#p21">21</a></li>
+ <li>Brundall, <a href="#p147">147</a></li>
+ <li>Building of the English Cathedrals, <a href="#p46">46</a>&ndash;75</li>
+ <li>Burial customs, <a href="#p26">26</a></li>
+ <li>Burial at north side of church, <a href="#p209">209</a>&ndash;215</li>
+ <li>Buried alive, <a href="#p40">40</a></li>
+ <li>Burials in Lady Chapels, <a href="#p82">82</a>&ndash;83</li>
+ <li>Bury St. Edmunds, <a href="#p80">80</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Candle in a coffin, <a href="#p42">42</a></li>
+ <li>Canterbury, <a href="#p51">51</a>, <a href="#p53">53</a>, <a href="#p72">72</a>, <a href="#p79">79</a></li>
+ <li>Carlisle, <a href="#p62">62</a>, <a href="#p70">70</a>, <a href="#p72">72</a></li>
+ <li>Carthage, Council of, <a href="#p4">4</a></li>
+ <li>Cauld Lad of Hilton, <a href="#p32">32</a></li>
+ <li>Chantries, <a href="#p72">72</a></li>
+ <li>Chappell of Oure Ladye, <a href="#p76">76</a>&ndash;100</li>
+ <li>Charm of country bells, <a href="#p131">131</a></li>
+ <li>Chartres, Maze at, <a href="#p191">191</a></li>
+ <li>Cheltenham, All Saints’ Church, <a href="#p14">14</a></li>
+ <li>Chester, <a href="#p62">62</a>, <a href="#p79">79</a></li>
+ <li>Chesterfield, bones at, <a href="#p234">234</a>; spire, <a href="#p110">110</a></li>
+ <li>Chichester, <a href="#p49">49</a>, <a href="#p50">50</a>, <a href="#p62">62</a>, <a href="#p65">65</a>, <a href="#p75">75</a>, <a href="#p79">79</a></li>
+ <li>Chimes, <a href="#p130">130</a></li>
+ <li>Christening ships, <a href="#p35">35</a></li>
+ <li>Christmas games, <a href="#p115">115</a></li>
+ <li>Christ Church, Hants., <a href="#p79">79</a>; Christ Church, Oxford, <a href="#p157">157</a></li>
+ <li>Church Chests, <a href="#p161">161</a>&ndash;182</li>
+ <li>Church Door, <a href="#p1">1</a>&ndash;29</li>
+ <li>Churchwardens’ accounts, <a href="#p126">126</a>&ndash;127</li>
+ <li>Churchyard Superstitions, <a href="#p206">206</a>&ndash;215</li>
+ <li>Cocks, live, built into walls, <a href="#p44">44</a></li>
+ <li>Coins, burial of, <a href="#p35">35</a></li>
+ <li>Colchester, Trinity Church Door, <a href="#p5">5</a>, <a href="#p7">7</a></li>
+ <li>Cologne Cathedral, <a href="#p42">42</a></li>
+ <li>Combs, chest at, <a href="#p181">181</a></li>
+ <li>Compton Martin, <a href="#p80">80</a></li>
+ <li>Concerning Font-Lore, <a href="#p145">145</a>&ndash;152</li>
+ <li>Conversation in church, <a href="#p245">245</a></li>
+ <li>Cope chests, <a href="#p180">180</a></li>
+ <li>Cornish bell-lore, <a href="#p137">137</a></li>
+ <li>Coventry, chest at, <a href="#p171">171</a>, <a href="#p173">173</a>; spires, <a href="#p102">102</a>, <a href="#p104">104</a></li>
+ <li>Courts in the porch, <a href="#p27">27</a></li>
+ <li>Cromwell’s soldiers, <a href="#p84">84</a></li>
+ <li>Crowle Church, <a href="#p1">1</a>, <a href="#p8">8</a>, <a href="#p10">10</a></li>
+ <li>Crowland Abbey, <a href="#p48">48</a></li>
+ <li><a name="p248" id="p248"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>248<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Curfew bell, <a href="#p125">125</a>, <a href="#p129">129</a></li>
+ <li>Curious Announcements in Church, <a href="#p216">216</a>&ndash;229</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Danes, incursions of, <a href="#p53">53</a>&ndash;55</li>
+ <li>Darenth, <a href="#p80">80</a></li>
+ <li>Darrington church, <a href="#p38">38</a></li>
+ <li>Dartmouth Church, <a href="#p19">19</a>, <a href="#p21">21</a></li>
+ <li>Decorated Style, <a href="#p68">68</a></li>
+ <li>Dedicating chapels, <a href="#p81">81</a></li>
+ <li>Devil, sold to the, <a href="#p42">42</a></li>
+ <li>Dickens, Charles, on Bells, <a href="#p120">120</a></li>
+ <li>Dissolution of monasteries, <a href="#p84">84</a></li>
+ <li>Dogs haunting churches and castles, <a href="#p31">31</a></li>
+ <li>Doom, <a href="#p15">15</a></li>
+ <li>Door-keepers, <a href="#p4">4</a></li>
+ <li>Dun Cow, <a href="#p234">234</a>, <a href="#p238">238</a></li>
+ <li>Durham, <a href="#p9">9</a>, <a href="#p58">58</a>, <a href="#p67">67</a>, <a href="#p80">80</a>, <a href="#p81">81</a>, <a href="#p133">133</a>, <a href="#p234">234</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Early Cathedrals, <a href="#p52">52</a></li>
+ <li>Early English chests, <a href="#p164">164</a></li>
+ <li>Earthquake, <a href="#p65">65</a></li>
+ <li>Eggs in foundations, <a href="#p43">43</a></li>
+ <li>Elgin<!-- TN: original reads "Elgen" -->, <a href="#p80">80</a></li>
+ <li>Elkstone Church, <a href="#p16">16</a></li>
+ <li>Elston Church, <a href="#p16">16</a>, <a href="#p17">17</a></li>
+ <li>Exeter, <a href="#p79">79</a></li>
+ <li>Ely, <a href="#p54">54</a>, <a href="#p72">72</a>, <a href="#p80">80</a>, <a href="#p84">84</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Fair Rosamond, <a href="#p186">186</a></li>
+ <li>Finedon, <a href="#p109">109</a></li>
+ <li>Fire, <a href="#p65">65</a>, <a href="#p67">67</a>, <a href="#p70">70</a></li>
+ <li>First burial in a churchyard, <a href="#p39">39</a></li>
+ <li>First Prayer Book of Edward&nbsp;VI., <a href="#p25">25</a>, <a href="#p26">26</a></li>
+ <li>Fives of Spades and the Church of Ashton-under-Lyne, <a href="#p113">113</a>&ndash;118</li>
+ <li>Florence, doors at, <a href="#p22">22</a></li>
+ <li>Flowers in churchyards, <a href="#p207">207</a></li>
+ <li>Fordham, <a href="#p80">80</a></li>
+ <li>Forrabury<!-- TN: original reads "Forraby" -->, <a href="#p137">137</a></li>
+ <li>Founhope Church, <a href="#p16">16</a></li>
+ <li>Foxton, <a href="#p185">185</a></li>
+ <li>France, card playing in, <a href="#p113">113</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Galilee Chapel, Durham, <a href="#p67">67</a></li>
+ <li>Gambling, sermon against, <a href="#p113">113</a></li>
+ <li>German bell-lore, <a href="#p121">121</a>; mythology, <a href="#p36">36</a></li>
+ <li>Gild of Cloth Merchants, <a href="#p22">22</a></li>
+ <li>Glastonbury, <a href="#p79">79</a>, <a href="#p175">175</a></li>
+ <li>Gloucester, <a href="#p13">13</a>, <a href="#p56">56</a>, <a href="#p61">61</a>, <a href="#p79">79</a></li>
+ <li>Grantham, <a href="#p107">107</a></li>
+ <li>Guy, Earl of Warwick, <a href="#p238">238</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Haddenham, <a href="#p81">81</a></li>
+ <li>Haltham Church, <a href="#p16">16</a></li>
+ <li>Hampton Court, maze at, <a href="#p186">186</a></li>
+ <li>Harold’s tomb, <a href="#p96">96</a></li>
+ <li>Harty<!-- TN: original reads "Hartly" --> Chapel, chest at, <a href="#p177">177</a></li>
+ <li>Hearthstones, bones under, <a href="#p40">40</a></li>
+ <li>Hel-horse, <a href="#p43">43</a></li>
+ <li>Henry the Seventh’s Chapel, <a href="#p82">82</a>, <a href="#p85">85</a></li>
+ <li>Henry&nbsp;VII. a card player, <a href="#p115">115</a></li>
+ <li>Hereford, <a href="#p61">61</a>, <a href="#p72">72</a>, <a href="#p74">74</a>, <a href="#p79">79</a></li>
+ <li>Heysham, <a href="#p10">10</a></li>
+ <li>Higham Ferrers, <a href="#p13">13</a>, <a href="#p14">14</a>, <a href="#p18">18</a>, <a href="#p109">109</a></li>
+ <li>Hill, Rev. P. Oakley. Concerning Font-Lore, <a href="#p145">145</a>&ndash;152</li>
+ <li>Hillbury maze, <a href="#p200">200</a></li>
+ <li>Hilton maze, <a href="#p194">194</a></li>
+ <li>Holland, <a href="#p41">41</a></li>
+ <li>Holsworthy<!-- TN: original reads "Holsworth" --> Church, <a href="#p36">36</a></li>
+ <li>Holy Land, leprosy brought from, <a href="#p184">184</a></li>
+ <li>Horses interred alive, <a href="#p43">43</a></li>
+ <li>Howlett, E. Sacrificial Foundations, <a href="#p30">30</a>&ndash;45</li>
+ <li>Hulme, <a href="#p80">80</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Importation of cards prohibited, <a href="#p114">114</a></li>
+ <li>Indulgences<!-- TN: original reads "Indulgencies" -->, <a href="#p49">49</a></li>
+ <li>Inscriptions on bells, <a href="#p128">128</a>&ndash;129</li>
+ <li>Iona, <a href="#p39">39</a></li>
+ <li>Ironwork, <a href="#p19">19</a>&ndash;20</li>
+ <li>Islington, <a href="#p111">111</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Jarrow-on-Tyne, <a href="#p81">81</a></li>
+ <li>Johnson, Rev. T. Churchyard Superstitions, <a href="#p206">206</a>&ndash;215</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Kilkenny, <a href="#p80">80</a></li>
+ <li>Knockers, <a href="#p23">23</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Laughter in church, <a href="#p246">246</a></li>
+ <li>Lambeth Palace, <a href="#p179">179</a></li>
+ <li>Leper-Window, <a href="#p183">183</a>&ndash;185</li>
+ <li>Lichfield, <a href="#p62">62</a>, <a href="#p68">68</a>, <a href="#p104">104</a>, <a href="#p107">107</a>, <a href="#p158">158</a></li>
+ <li>Lights in Lady Chapels, <a href="#p95">95</a></li>
+ <li>Limerick bells, <a href="#p134">134</a></li>
+ <li>Lincoln Cathedral, <a href="#p15">15</a>, <a href="#p65">65</a>, <a href="#p70">70</a>, <a href="#p71">71</a>, <a href="#p154">154</a></li>
+ <li>Lion Fonts, <a href="#p147">147</a></li>
+ <li>Liverpool, <a href="#p74">74</a></li>
+ <li>Llanaber, chest at, <a href="#p180">180</a></li>
+ <li>Llandaff, <a href="#p9">9</a>, <a href="#p62">62</a>, <a href="#p135">135</a></li>
+ <li>Llanthony, <a href="#p80">80</a></li>
+ <li>Lost goods cried in church, <a href="#p215">215</a></li>
+ <li>Louth, <a href="#p105">105</a>, <a href="#p108">108</a></li>
+ <li>Low-side windows, <a href="#p183">183</a></li>
+ <li>Lucca Cathedral, maze at, <a href="#p187">187</a>, <a href="#p188">188</a></li>
+ <li><a name="p249" id="p249"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>249<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Lych window, <a href="#p185">185</a></li>
+ <li>Lynn, Thoresby door, <a href="#p18">18</a>, <a href="#p19">19</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Malmesbury Abbey, <a href="#p155">155</a>, <a href="#p159">159</a></li>
+ <li>Mallwyd, bones at, <a href="#p233">233</a></li>
+ <li>Manchester, <a href="#p69">69</a>, <a href="#p79">79</a></li>
+ <li>Mariolatry, <a href="#p77">77</a></li>
+ <li>Marriage customs, <a href="#p25">25</a></li>
+ <li>Massacre of Thomas à Becket, <a href="#p90">90</a></li>
+ <li>Massingham bells, <a href="#p139">139</a></li>
+ <li>Maundy Thursday, <a href="#p15">15</a></li>
+ <li>Mazes, <a href="#p186">186</a>&ndash;205</li>
+ <li>Modern mazes, <a href="#p203">203</a>&ndash;205</li>
+ <li>Mortar, blood in, <a href="#p37">37</a></li>
+ <li>Mortlake, chest at, <a href="#p177">177</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>New Walsingham, <a href="#p146">146</a></li>
+ <li>Newcastle-on-Tyne, <a href="#p70">70</a></li>
+ <li>Newington chest lost, <a href="#p182">182</a></li>
+ <li>Norman architecture, <a href="#p8">8</a>, <a href="#p57">57</a>&ndash;68</li>
+ <li>Norman Conquest, <a href="#p57">57</a></li>
+ <li>Northamptonshire spires, <a href="#p102">102</a></li>
+ <li>North side of church, burial at, <a href="#p209">209</a>&ndash;215</li>
+ <li>Northorpe, <a href="#p31">31</a></li>
+ <li>Norwich, <a href="#p28">28</a>, <a href="#p61">61</a>, <a href="#p84">84</a>, <a href="#p103">103</a>, <a href="#p104">104</a>, <a href="#p145">145</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Old Saint Paul’s, <a href="#p103">103</a></li>
+ <li>Olney, <a href="#p109">109</a></li>
+ <li>Oundle, <a href="#p108">108</a></li>
+ <li>Over, chest at, <a href="#p167">167</a>, <a href="#p178">178</a></li>
+ <li>Oxford, <a href="#p62">62</a>, <a href="#p66">66</a>, <a href="#p79">79</a>, <a href="#p82">82</a>, <a href="#p108">108</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Page, Jno. T. Some Famous Spires, <a href="#p101">101</a>&ndash;112</li>
+ <li>Paris, <a href="#p11">11</a></li>
+ <li>“Paston Letters,” <a href="#p114">114</a></li>
+ <li>Penance, <a href="#p49">49</a></li>
+ <li>Pennant Melangell, legend of, <a href="#p230">230</a></li>
+ <li>People and Steeple Rhymes, <a href="#p111">111</a></li>
+ <li>Pepys, Samuel, at Church, <a href="#p244">244</a>&ndash;246</li>
+ <li>Peterborough, <a href="#p12">12</a>, <a href="#p47">47</a>, <a href="#p62">62</a>, <a href="#p65">65</a>, <a href="#p72">72</a>, <a href="#p75">75</a>, <a href="#p79">79</a>, <a href="#p84">84</a></li>
+ <li>Pimpern maze, <a href="#p200">200</a></li>
+ <li>Poetry on bells, <a href="#p122">122</a>&ndash;125</li>
+ <li>Porches, <a href="#p24">24</a></li>
+ <li>Preferment fee, <a href="#p50">50</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Rees, Rev. R. Wilkins. Curious Announcements in Church, <a href="#p216">216</a>&ndash;229;
+ Big Bones Preserved in Churches, <a href="#p230">230</a>&ndash;243</li>
+ <li>Relics of a Saint, <a href="#p81">81</a></li>
+ <li>Ripon, <a href="#p59">59</a>, <a href="#p62">62</a>, <a href="#p72">72</a>, <a href="#p73">73</a>, <a href="#p80">80</a>, <a href="#p200">200</a></li>
+ <li>Rochester, <a href="#p51">51</a>, <a href="#p62">62</a>, <a href="#p65">65</a>, <a href="#p80">80</a></li>
+ <li>Rome, founding of, <a href="#p34">34</a></li>
+ <li>Rooms over porches, <a href="#p158">158</a></li>
+ <li>Rougham Church, <a href="#p16">16</a></li>
+ <li>Roumania, <a href="#p40">40</a></li>
+ <li>Rushden, <a href="#p109">109</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Sacrificial Foundations, <a href="#p30">30</a>&ndash;45</li>
+ <li>Saffron Waldon, maze at, <a href="#p196">196</a></li>
+ <li>Salisbury, <a href="#p47">47</a>, <a href="#p68">68</a>, <a href="#p79">79</a>, <a href="#p103">103</a></li>
+ <li>Samuel Pepys at Church, <a href="#p244">244</a>&ndash;246</li>
+ <li>Saxon architecture, <a href="#p8">8</a></li>
+ <li>Scutari, <a href="#p41">41</a></li>
+ <li>Sempringham Abbey, <a href="#p18">18</a>, <a href="#p20">20</a></li>
+ <li>Sermon lost, <a href="#p222">222</a></li>
+ <li>Seven Sacrament Fonts, <a href="#p146">146</a></li>
+ <li>Seville Cathedral, <a href="#p11">11</a></li>
+ <li>Shakespeare, <a href="#p28">28</a>, <a href="#p31">31</a>, <a href="#p193">193</a></li>
+ <li>Shandon, bells of, <a href="#p123">123</a></li>
+ <li>Shrewsbury, <a href="#p107">107</a></li>
+ <li>Shrine of St. Frideswide, <a href="#p82">82</a></li>
+ <li>Shrines, <a href="#p51">51</a>, <a href="#p82">82</a></li>
+ <li>Skipton<!-- TN: original reads "Shipton" -->, <a href="#p223">223</a><!-- TN: original reads "56" --></li>
+ <li>Sleeping in church, <a href="#p245">245</a></li>
+ <li>Sneinton, maze at, <a href="#p196">196</a>&ndash;199</li>
+ <li>Spires, <a href="#p101">101</a>&ndash;112</li>
+ <li>Some Famous Spires, <a href="#p101">101</a>&ndash;112</li>
+ <li>Southwell, <a href="#p62">62</a>, <a href="#p63">63</a>, <a href="#p66">66</a></li>
+ <li>Southwold chest, <a href="#p165">165</a></li>
+ <li>Sowerford-Keynes, <a href="#p8">8</a></li>
+ <li>Stamp, Rev. J.&nbsp;H. Ye Chappell of Oure Ladye, <a href="#p76">76</a>&ndash;100</li>
+ <li>Stonham Aspel, <a href="#p170">170</a></li>
+ <li>Stories about Bells, <a href="#p133">133</a>&ndash;144</li>
+ <li>Strasburg Cathedral, <a href="#p11">11</a></li>
+ <li>St. Albans, <a href="#p52">52</a>, <a href="#p62">62</a>, <a href="#p72">72</a>, <a href="#p75">75</a>, <a href="#p79">79</a>, <a href="#p85">85</a>, <a href="#p87">87</a>, <a href="#p154">154</a>, <a href="#p158">158</a></li>
+ <li>St. Anne’s Well and Maze, <a href="#p196">196</a>, <a href="#p197">197</a>, <a href="#p199">199</a></li>
+ <li>St. Asaph, <a href="#p69">69</a></li>
+ <li>St. Cuthbert, tomb of, <a href="#p82">82</a></li>
+ <li>St. David’s, <a href="#p62">62</a>, <a href="#p154">154</a></li>
+ <li>St. Fillan’s bell, <a href="#p144">144</a></li>
+ <li>St. Frideswide’s shrine, <a href="#p157">157</a></li>
+ <li>St. Giles’s Cathedral, <a href="#p14">14</a></li>
+ <li>St. Hugh, <a href="#p66">66</a>, <a href="#p71">71</a></li>
+ <li>St. Lawrence’s, Isle of Thanet, <a href="#p169">169</a></li>
+ <li>St. Mary’s Redcliff, <a href="#p79">79</a>, <a href="#p85">85</a>, <a href="#p107">107</a>, <a href="#p241">241</a></li>
+ <li>St. Monacella’s lambs, <a href="#p231">231</a></li>
+ <li>St. Mura, bell of, <a href="#p136">136</a></li>
+ <li>St. Odhran, <a href="#p39">39</a></li>
+ <li>St. Paul’s, <a href="#p73">73</a></li>
+ <li>St. Peter Mancroft, Norwich, <a href="#p145">145</a></li>
+ <li>St. Quentin, maze at, <a href="#p192">192</a></li>
+ <li><a name="p250" id="p250"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>250<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Suicides, Burial of, <a href="#p211">211</a></li>
+ <li>Swedish folk-tales, <a href="#p32">32</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Thetford, <a href="#p80">80</a></li>
+ <li>Thorns, barring a door with, <a href="#p29">29</a></li>
+ <li>Tintagel, <a href="#p137">137</a></li>
+ <li>Torch, symbol of, <a href="#p42">42</a></li>
+ <li>Town bells, <a href="#p131">131</a></li>
+ <li>Truro, <a href="#p75">75</a></li>
+ <li>Tunstall, legend of, <a href="#p141">141</a></li>
+ <li>Tyack, Rev. G. S. The Church Door, <a href="#p1">1</a>&ndash;29; The Building of the
+ English Cathedrals, <a href="#p46">46</a>&ndash;75; Watching-Chambers, <a href="#p153">153</a>&ndash;160;
+ Church Chests, <a href="#p161">161</a>&ndash;182; Mazes, <a href="#p186">186</a>&ndash;205</li>
+ <li>Tympanum, <a href="#p5">5</a>, <a href="#p12">12</a>, <a href="#p14">14</a>, <a href="#p16">16</a></li>
+ <li>Tyre, church at, <a href="#p2">2</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Unclerically dressed, <a href="#p49">49</a></li>
+ <li>Upton chest, <a href="#p166">166</a>, <a href="#p167">167</a></li>
+ <li>Upton font, <a href="#p148">148</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Vestments <a href="#p153">153</a></li>
+ <li>Voluntary labour, <a href="#p52">52</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Wakefield, <a href="#p74">74</a></li>
+ <li>Walsingham, <a href="#p80">80</a></li>
+ <li>Waltham Abbey, <a href="#p80">80</a>, <a href="#p88">88</a></li>
+ <li>Warwick, <a href="#p82">82</a></li>
+ <li>Watching-Chambers in Churches, <a href="#p153">153</a>&ndash;160</li>
+ <li>Weathercock rhyme, <a href="#p109">109</a></li>
+ <li>Wells, <a href="#p69">69</a>, <a href="#p72">72</a>, <a href="#p79">79</a></li>
+ <li>Welsh border, <a href="#p55">55</a></li>
+ <li>West doors, <a href="#p13">13</a>, <a href="#p14">14</a></li>
+ <li>Westminster, <a href="#p79">79</a>&ndash;81, <a href="#p82">82</a>, <a href="#p179">179</a></li>
+ <li>White, William. An Antiquarian Problem: The Leper Window, <a href="#p183">183</a>&ndash;185</li>
+ <li>Wimborne, <a href="#p80">80</a></li>
+ <li>Winchester, <a href="#p61">61</a>, <a href="#p67">67</a>, <a href="#p79">79</a>, <a href="#p177">177</a>, <a href="#p195">195</a>, <a href="#p196">196</a></li>
+ <li>Witham-on-the-Hill bells, <a href="#p140">140</a></li>
+ <li>Worcester, <a href="#p56">56</a>, <a href="#p61">61</a>, <a href="#p68">68</a>, <a href="#p70">70</a></li>
+ <li>Wymondham, <a href="#p80">80</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>York, <a href="#p71">71</a>, <a href="#p72">72</a></li>
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="backmatter">
+<h2 class="ns">Advertisements</h2>
+<p><a name="cat1" id="cat1"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>I<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>“Mr. Andrews’ books are always interesting.”&mdash;<cite>Church Bells.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“No student of Mr. Andrews’ books can be a dull after-dinner speaker,
+for his writings are full of curious out-of-the-way information and good
+stories.”&mdash;<cite>Birmingham Daily Gazette.</cite></p>
+
+<!-- TN: original has horizontal rule here -->
+
+<h2 class="catalog" title="">England in the Days of Old</h2>
+
+<p class="byline"><span class="smcap">By WILLIAM ANDREWS</span>, <span class="postnomial">F.H.R.S.</span><br
+ /><small><i>Demy 8vo., 7s. 6d.   Numerous Illustrations</i></small></p>
+
+
+<p><big><span class="smcap">This</span> volume is one of unusual interest and value to the lover
+of olden days and ways, and can hardly fail to interest and
+instruct the reader. It recalls many forgotten episodes, scenes,
+characters, manners, customs, etc., in the social and domestic
+life of England.</big></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Contents</span>:&mdash;When Wigs were Worn&mdash;Powdering the Hair&mdash;Men
+Wearing Muffs&mdash;Concerning Corporation Customs&mdash;Bribes for the Palate&mdash;Rebel
+Heads on City Gates&mdash;Burial at Cross Roads&mdash;Detaining the Dead
+for Debt&mdash;A Nobleman’s Household in Tudor Times&mdash;Bread and Baking
+in Bygone Days&mdash;Arise, Mistress, Arise!&mdash;The Turnspit&mdash;A Gossip about
+the Goose&mdash;Bells as Time-Tellers&mdash;The Age of Snuffing&mdash;State
+Lotteries&mdash;Bear-Baiting&mdash;Morris Dancers&mdash;The Folk-Lore of Midsummer
+Eve&mdash;Harvest Home&mdash;Curious Charities&mdash;An Old-Time Chronicler.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">List of Illustrations</span>:&mdash;The House of Commons in the time of Sir
+Robert Walpole&mdash;Egyptian Wig&mdash;The Earl of Albemarle&mdash;Campaign Wig&mdash;Periwig
+with Tail&mdash;Ramillie-Wig&mdash;Pig-tail Wig&mdash;Bag-Wig&mdash;Archbishop
+Tilotson&mdash;Heart-Breakers&mdash;A Barber’s Shop in the time of Queen
+Elizabeth&mdash;With and Without a Wig&mdash;Stealing a Wig&mdash;Man with Muff,
+1693&mdash;Burying the Mace at Nottingham&mdash;The Lord Mayor of York escorting
+Princess Margaret&mdash;The Mayor of Wycombe going to the Guildhall&mdash;Woman
+wearing a Scold’s Bridle&mdash;The Brank&mdash;Andrew Marvell&mdash;Old
+London Bridge, shewing heads of rebels on the gate&mdash;Axe, Block, and
+Executioner’s Mask&mdash;Margaret Roper taking leave of her father, Sir Thomas
+More&mdash;Rebel Heads, from a print published in 1746&mdash;Temple Bar in Dr.
+Johnson’s time&mdash;Micklegate Bar, York&mdash;Clock, Hampton Court Palace&mdash;Drawing
+a Lottery in the Guildhall, 1751&mdash;Advertising the Last State
+Lottery&mdash;Partaking of the Pungent Pinch&mdash;Morris Dance, from a painted
+window at Betley&mdash;Morris Dance, temp. James&nbsp;I.&mdash;A Whitsun Morris
+Dance&mdash;Bear Garden, or Hope Theatre, 1647&mdash;The Globe Theatre, temp.
+Elizabeth&mdash;Plan of Bankside early in the Seventeenth Century&mdash;John Stow’s
+Monument.</p>
+
+<p>A carefully prepared Index enables the reader to refer to the varied and
+interesting contents of the book.</p>
+
+<p>“A very attractive and informing book.”&mdash;<cite>Birmingham Daily Gazette.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“Mr Andrews has the true art of narration, and contrives to give us
+the results of his learning with considerable freshness of style, whilst his
+subjects are always interesting and picturesque.”&mdash;<cite>Manchester Courier.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“The book is of unusual interest.”&mdash;<cite>Eastern Morning News.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“Of the many clever books which Mr.&nbsp;Andrews has written none does
+him greater credit than “England in the Days of Old,” and none will be
+read with greater profit.”&mdash;<cite>Northern Gazette.</cite></p>
+
+<p><a name="cat2" id="cat2"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>II<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>“Valuable and interesting.”&mdash;<cite>The Times.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“Readable as well as instructive.”&mdash;<cite>The Globe.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“A valuable addition to any library.”&mdash;<cite>Derbyshire Times.</cite></p>
+
+<!-- TN: original has horizontal rule here -->
+
+<h2 class="catalog" title=""><big>The Bygone Series.</big></h2>
+
+<p>In this series the following volumes ate included, and issued at 7s. 6d.
+each. Demy 8vo, cloth gilt.</p>
+
+<p>These books have been favourably reviewed in the leading critical
+journals of England and America.</p>
+
+<p>Carefully written articles by recognised authorities are included on
+history, castles, abbeys, biography, romantic episodes, legendary lore,
+traditional stories, curious customs, folk-lore, etc., etc.</p>
+
+<p>The works are illustrated by eminent artists, and by the reproduction of
+quaint pictures of the olden time.</p>
+
+<!-- TN: original has horizontal rule here -->
+
+<ul class="catalog">
+<li>BYGONE BERKSHIRE, edited by Rev. P. H. Ditchfield, <span class="postnomial">M.A.</span>, <span class="postnomial">F.S.A.</span></li>
+
+<li>BYGONE CHESHIRE, edited by William Andrews.</li>
+
+<li>BYGONE DEVONSHIRE, by the Rev. Hilderic Friend.</li>
+
+<li>BYGONE DURHAM, edited by William Andrews.</li>
+
+<li>BYGONE GLOUCESTERSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.</li>
+
+<li>BYGONE HERTFORDSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.</li>
+
+<li>BYGONE LEICESTERSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.</li>
+
+<li>BYGONE LINCOLNSHIRE (2&nbsp;vols), edited by William Andrews.</li>
+
+<li>BYGONE MIDDLESEX, edited by William Andrews.</li>
+
+<li>BYGONE NORFOLK, edited by William Andrews.</li>
+
+<li>BYGONE NORTHUMBERLAND, edited by William Andrews.</li>
+
+<li>BYGONE NOTTINGHAMSHIRE, by William Stevenson.</li>
+
+<li>BYGONE SCOTLAND, by David Maxwell, <span class="postnomial">C.E.</span></li>
+
+<li>BYGONE SOMERSETSHIRE, edited by Cuming Walters.</li>
+
+<li>BYGONE SOUTHWARK, by Mrs. E. Boger.</li>
+
+<li>BYGONE SUFFOLK, edited by Cuming Walters.</li>
+
+<li>BYGONE SURREY, edited by George Clinch and S.&nbsp;W. Kershaw, <span class="postnomial">F.S.A.</span></li>
+
+<li>BYGONE SUSSEX, by W. E. A. Axon.</li>
+
+<li>BYGONE WARWICKSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.</li>
+
+<li>BYGONE YORKSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<h2 class="catalogleft" title=""><a name="cat3" id="cat3"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>III<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Bygone Punishments.</h2>
+
+<p class="byline"><span class="smcap">By William Andrews.</span><br
+ /><small><i>Demy 8vo, cloth gilt, 7s. 6d.   Numerous Illustrations.</i></small></p>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Contents</span>:&mdash;Hanging&mdash;Hanging in Chains&mdash;Hanging, Drawing, and
+Quartering&mdash;Pressing to Death&mdash;Drowning&mdash;Burning to Death&mdash;Boiling to
+Death&mdash;Beheading&mdash;The Halifax Gibbet&mdash;The Scottish
+Maiden&mdash;Mutilation&mdash;Branding&mdash;The Pillory&mdash;Punishing Authors and Burning
+Books&mdash;Finger Pillory&mdash;The Jougs&mdash;The Stocks&mdash;The Drunkard’s
+Cloak&mdash;Whipping and Whipping-Posts&mdash;Public Penance&mdash;The Repentance
+Stool&mdash;The Ducking Stool&mdash;The Brank, or Scold’s Bridle&mdash;Riding the
+Stang&mdash;Index.</p>
+
+<p>“A book of great interest.“&mdash;<cite>Manchester Courier.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“Crowded with extraordinary facts.”&mdash;<cite>Birmingham Daily Gazette.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“Contains much that is curious and interesting both to the student of
+history and social reformer.”&mdash;<cite>Lancashire Daily Express.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“Full of curious lore, sought out and arranged with much
+industry.”&mdash;<cite>The Scotsman.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Andrews’ volume is admirably produced, and contains a collection
+of curious illustrations, representative of many of the punishments he
+describes, which contribute towards making it one of the most curious and
+entertaining books that we have perused for a long time.”&mdash;<cite>Norfolk
+Chronicle.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“Those who wish to obtain a good general idea on the subject of
+criminal punishment in days long past, will obtain it in this well-printed
+and stoutly-bound volume.”&mdash;<cite>Daily Mail.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“Mr. William Andrews, of Hull, is an indefatigable searcher amongst
+the byways of ancient English history, and it would be difficult to name an
+antiquary who, along his chosen lines, has made so thoroughly interesting
+and instructive the mass of facts a painstaking industry has brought to
+light. For twenty-five years he has been delving into the subject of
+Bygone Punishments, and is now one of the best authorities upon obsolete
+systems of jurisdiction and torture, for torture was, in various forms, the
+main characteristic of punishment in the good old times. The reformation
+of the person punished was a far more remote object of retribution than it
+is with us, and even with us reform is very much a matter of sentiment.
+Punishment was intended to be punishment to the individual in the first
+place, and in the second a warning to the rest. It is a gruesome study,
+but Mr Andrews nowhere writes for mere effect. As an antiquary ought
+to do, he has made the collection of facts and their preservation for modern
+students of history in a clear, straightforward narrative his main object, and
+in this volume he keeps to it consistently. Every page is therefore full of
+curious, out-of-the-way facts, with authorities and references amply
+quoted.”&mdash;<cite>Yorkshire Post.</cite></p>
+
+
+
+<h2 class="catalog" title=""><a name="cat4" id="cat4"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>IV<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>The Church Treasury of History, Custom, Folk-Lore, etc.</h2>
+
+<p class="byline"><span class="smcap">Edited by WILLIAM ANDREWS.</span><br
+ /><small><i>Demy 8vo., 7s. 6d.   Numerous Illustrations.</i></small></p>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Contents</span>:&mdash;Stave-Kirks&mdash;Curious Churches of Cornwall&mdash;Holy
+Wells&mdash;Hermits and Hermit Cells&mdash;Church Wakes&mdash;Fortified Church
+Towers&mdash;The Knight Templars: their Churches and their Privileges&mdash;English
+Medieval Pilgrimages&mdash;Pilgrims’ Signs&mdash;Human Skin on Church
+Doors&mdash;Animals of the Church in Wood, Stone, and Bronze&mdash;Queries in
+Stones&mdash;Pictures in Churches&mdash;Flowers and the Rites of the Church&mdash;Ghost
+Layers and Ghost Laying&mdash;Church Walks&mdash;Westminster Waxworks&mdash;Index.
+Numerous Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p>“It is a work that will prove interesting to the clergy and churchmen
+generally, and to all others who have an antiquarian turn of mind, or like
+to be regaled occasionally by reading old-world customs and
+anecdotes.”&mdash;<cite>Church Family Newspaper.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Andrews has given us some excellent volumes of Church lore, but
+none quite so good as this. The subjects are well chosen. They are
+treated brightly and with considerable detail, and they are well illustrated.
+... Mr. Andrews is himself responsible for some of the most
+interesting papers, but all his helpers have caught his own spirit, and the
+result is a volume full of information well and pleasantly put.”&mdash;<cite>London
+Quarterly Review.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“Those who seek information regarding curious and quaint relics or
+customs will find much to interest them in this book. The illustrations
+are good.”&mdash;<cite>Publishers’ Circular.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“An excellent and entertaining book.”&mdash;<cite>Newcastle Daily Leader.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“The book will be welcome to every lover of archæological lore.<!-- TN: period invisible in original -->”&mdash;<cite>Liverpool
+Daily Post.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“The volume is of a most informing and suggestive character, abounding
+in facts not easy of access to the ordinary reader, and enhanced with
+illustrations of a high order of merit, and extremely numerous.”&mdash;<cite>Birmingham
+Daily Gazette.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“The contents of the volume are very good.”&mdash;<cite>Leeds Mercury.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“The volume is sure to meet with a cordial reception.”&mdash;<cite>Manchester
+Courier.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“A fascinating book.”&mdash;<cite>Stockport Advertiser.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Andrews has brought together much curious matter.”&mdash;<cite>Manchester
+Guardian.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“The book is a very readable one, and will receive a hearty
+welcome.”&mdash;<cite>Herts. Advertiser.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“Mr. William Andrews has been able to give us a very acceptable and
+useful addition to the books which deal with the curiosities of Church lore,
+and for this deserves our hearty thanks. The manner in which the book is
+printed and illustrated also commands our admiration.”&mdash;<cite>Norfolk Chronicle.</cite></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="catalogleft" title=""><a name="cat5" id="cat5"></a><span class="pageno"><span
+ class="ns">[p </span>V<span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></span>Historic Dress of the Clergy.</h2>
+
+<p class="byline"><span class="smcap">By the Rev. GEO. S. TYACK</span>, <span class="postnomial">B.A.</span>,<br
+ /><small>Author of “The Cross in Ritual, Architecture, and Art.”<br
+ /><i>Crown, cloth extra, 3s. 6d.</i></small></p>
+
+<p><big>The work contains thirty-three illustrations from ancient
+monuments, rare manuscripts, and other sources.</big></p>
+
+<p>“A very painstaking and very valuable volume on a subject which is just
+now attracting much attention. Mr. Tyack has collected a large amount
+of information from sources not available to the unlearned, and has put
+together his materials in an attractive way. The book deserves and is sure
+to meet with a wide circulation.”&mdash;<cite>Daily Chronicle.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“This book is written with great care, and with an evident knowledge
+of history. It is well worth the study of all who wish to be better informed
+upon a subject which the author states in his preface gives evident signs of
+a lively and growing interest.”&mdash;<cite>Manchester Courier.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“Those who are interested in the Dress of the Clergy will find full
+information gathered together here, and set forth in a lucid and scholarly
+way.”&mdash;<cite>Glasgow Herald.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“We are glad to welcome yet another volume from the author of ‘The
+Cross in Ritual, Architecture, and Art.’ His subject, chosen widely and
+carried out comprehensively, makes this a valuable book of reference for
+all classes. It is only the antiquary and the ecclesiologist who can devote
+time and talents to research of this kind, and Mr. Tyack has done a real
+and lasting service to the Church of England by collecting so much useful
+and reliable information upon the dress of the clergy in all ages, and offering
+it to the public in such a popular form. We do not hesitate to recommend
+this volume as the most reliable and the most comprehensive illustrated
+guide to the history and origin of the canonical vestments and other dress
+worn by the clergy, whether ecclesiastical, academical, or general, while
+the excellent work in typography and binding make it a beautiful
+gift-book.”&mdash;<cite>Church Bells.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“A very lucid history of ecclesiastical vestments from Levitical times to
+the present day.”&mdash;<cite>Pall Mall Gazette.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“The book can be recommended to the undoubtedly large class of
+persons who are seeking information on this and kindred subjects.”&mdash;<cite>The
+Times.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“The work may be read either as pastime or for instruction, and is
+worthy of a place in the permanent section of any library. The numerous
+illustrations, extensive contents table and index, and beautiful workmanship,
+both in typography and binding, are all features of attraction and
+utility.”&mdash;<cite>Dundee Advertiser.</cite></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="tnote">
+<h2>Transcriber’s Note</h2>
+
+<p>In view of the multiple authors represented, inconsistent spelling
+and hyphenation have been retained.</p>
+
+<p class="screenonly">Illustrations that occurred mid-paragraph in the original
+book have here been moved between paragraphs: as a result, page numbers may
+appear out of sequence. Page numbers corresponding to the blank reverse
+of full-page illustrations and plates have been suppressed.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Ecclesiastical Curiosities, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ECCLESIASTICAL CURIOSITIES ***
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Ecclesiastical Curiosities, by Various
+
+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: Ecclesiastical Curiosities
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: William Andrews
+
+Release Date: December 11, 2011 [EBook #38274]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ECCLESIASTICAL CURIOSITIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Wilson
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ECCLESIASTICAL CURIOSITIES.
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: _From a Photo by A. H. Pitcher, Gloucester._
+ PORCH, GLOUCESTER CATHEDRAL.]
+
+
+
+
+Ecclesiastical
+Curiosities
+
+
+Edited by
+William Andrews
+
+
+LONDON:
+WILLIAM ANDREWS & CO., 5, FARRINGDON AVENUE, E.C.
+
+1899.
+
+
+ [Illustration: William Andrews & Co
+ The Hull Press]
+
+
+
+
+Preface.
+
+
+This volume is on similar lines to some of my previously published
+works, and I trust it will be equally well received by the public and
+the press.
+
+ William Andrews.
+
+The Hull Press,
+ _December 1st, 1898._
+
+
+
+
+Contents.
+
+ PAGE
+ The Church Door. By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, B.A. 1
+
+ Sacrificial Foundations. By England Howlett 30
+
+ The Building of the English Cathedrals. By the Rev.
+ Geo. S. Tyack, B.A. 46
+
+ Ye Chappell of Oure Ladye. By the Rev. J. H. Stamp 76
+
+ Some Famous Spires. By John T. Page 101
+
+ The Five of Spades and the Church of Ashton-under-Lyne.
+ By John Eglington Bailey, F.S.A. 113
+
+ Bells and their Messages. By Edward Bradbury 119
+
+ Stories about Bells. By J. Potter Briscoe, F.R.H.S. 133
+
+ Concerning Font-Lore. By the Rev. P. Oakley Hill 145
+
+ Watching-Chambers in Churches. By the Rev. Geo. S.
+ Tyack, B.A. 153
+
+ Church Chests. By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, B.A. 161
+
+ An Antiquarian Problem: The Leper Window. By William
+ White, F.S.A. 183
+
+ Mazes. By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, B.A. 186
+
+ Churchyard Superstitions. By the Rev. Theodore Johnson 206
+
+ Curious Announcements in the Church. By the Rev. R.
+ Wilkins Rees 216
+
+ Big Bones Preserved in Churches. By the Rev. R. Wilkins
+ Rees 230
+
+ Samuel Pepys at Church. 244
+
+
+
+
+Ecclesiastical Curiosities.
+
+
+
+
+The Church Door.
+
+By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, B.A.
+
+
+That first impressions have no small influence in moulding the opinions
+of most people can scarcely be denied; and therefore in our estimate of
+the architectural value of a church the door is an element of some
+importance. A shabby and undignified entrance raises no expectations of
+a lofty and solemn interior; and that interior must be emphatically
+fine, if we are not to read into it some of the meanness of its portal.
+On the other hand, though the church be but plain and simple--so that
+it lack not a measure of the dignity which may well accompany
+simplicity--our thoughts will be raised and fitted to find in it
+something worthy of its high purpose, if we have been prepared by
+passing through a noble porch, and beneath a doorway that speaks itself
+the entrance to no ordinary dwelling.
+
+ [Illustration: DOOR AT CROWLE CHURCH.]
+
+In primitive times the approach to a church must have been full of
+dignity, the worshippers being warned, by successive gates and doors, of
+the sacredness of the building which they were about to enter. Eusebius
+gives us a full account of a splendid church built at Tyre by Paulinus,
+from which we may gather the plan on which such buildings were erected
+in the primitive ages, when the means were forthcoming, and no
+opposition from the heathen world prevented.
+
+The whole church at Tyre and its precincts were enclosed within a wall,
+at the front of which was a stately porch, known as the "great porch,"
+or the "first entrance." Passing through this the worshipper entered the
+courtyard, or _atrium_, round which ran a covered portico, or cloister,
+and in the centre of which was a fountain, or cistern, of water.
+Opposite the "great porch" was the door into the church itself; at Tyre
+there were (as in many of our cathedrals) three such doors, a large one
+in the centre, flanked by smaller ones at some distance along the wall.
+These opened into a vestibule, or ante-temple, from which admittance was
+gained into the nave of the church by yet another door or gate.
+
+Each of the spaces formed by these several barriers had its special use.
+Within the _atrium_ all the worshippers washed their hands as a
+preparation, both literal and emblematic, for assisting in the sacred
+mysteries; here, too, penitents under censure for the most flagrant sins
+remained during the divine offices, and besought the prayers of their
+brethren as they passed on to those holier courts, from which for a time
+they were themselves excluded. Within this open courtyard, also, as in a
+modern churchyard, burials were sometimes permitted. The portico beyond
+the second entrance was the place for the "hearers," that is for those
+who were not yet sufficiently instructed in the faith to be allowed to
+be present except at the reading of the Scriptures and the sermons
+(these were catechumens in their noviciate and the heathens and Jews),
+and also for those Christians who were degraded temporarily to the same
+position as a penance for some sin. Beyond this portico, the nave was
+still further divided for the separation of different orders of
+penitents; so that the faithful in possession of all their privileges
+had quite a number of doors or gates through which to pass before
+reaching that place, immediately outside the apse, or chancel, which it
+was their right to occupy.
+
+In order that the several classes of persons attending church might be
+kept strictly within those portions of the building which were assigned
+to them, a special order of door-keepers existed in the Church. The keys
+of the church were solemnly delivered to these _ostiarii_, and they were
+accounted to form the lowest in rank of the minor orders. The simple
+words of the commission, uttered by the bishop to the _ostiarius_, were,
+"Behave thyself as one that must give an account to God of the things
+that are kept under these keys." Such was the formula prescribed by the
+fourth Council of Carthage (398 A.D.), and found in the Roman ritual of
+the eighth century. This order of clergy was almost confined to the
+west, however; we find traces of its existence at one time at
+Constantinople, but for the most part the deacons guarded the men's
+entrance, and sub-deacons or deaconesses the women's, in the east.
+
+ [Illustration: WEST DOOR, HOLY TRINITY, COLCHESTER.]
+
+In the earliest English churches the entrance was of a very simple
+nature; for the artistic skill of the people was small, and their ideals
+were unambitious. The buildings consisted of a nave without clerestory,
+and a chancel; the door being placed in the centre of the western wall.
+A curious example of such a door meets us at Holy Trinity, Colchester,
+although in this case it gives admittance not into the nave directly,
+but through the ancient tower. This tower, the oldest part of the
+church, has been constructed of the fragments of buildings older still;
+the Roman bricks of the ruined city of Camulodunum having been used to
+form it. In the western side is a narrow doorway, contained by two
+square shafts with very simple capitals, and having a triangular head
+with an equally simple moulding by way of drip-stone. The date is
+supposed to be between 800 and 1000 A.D. A church perhaps yet older is
+that of S. Lawrence at Bradford-on-Avon, which has a good claim to be
+the veritable structure reared by S. Aldhelm in the first years of the
+eighth century. Here there is a northern porch of unusual size in
+proportion to the rest of the building; the entrance to which is by
+means of an arched doorway, tall and narrow. The narrowness of some of
+these ancient doorways is remarkable. At Sowerford-Keynes is one, now
+built up, which, though nearly nine feet high, is but 1 foot 9 inches
+wide at the springing of the arch, widening towards the base to 2 feet
+51/2 inches. The jambs are of "short and long" work, and the abacus has a
+very simple zig-zag moulding. The arch itself is not built up, but
+carved out of one stone, which is cut square on the upper side and
+scooped into a parabolic curve on the lower. A double row of cable
+moulding decorates it. This, which has been called "one of the most
+characteristic specimens of Saxon architecture in England," was the
+northern entrance to the church. Another instance of a western door of
+simple design is supplied by Crowle, or Croule, in north Lincolnshire.
+Here we meet with a rectangular doorway, the top of which is formed of
+one long stone, on which is some antique carving and a fragment of a
+runic inscription.[1] Above this is a tympanum filled with
+diamond-shaped stones of small size.
+
+ [Footnote 1: See a full account of this stone in "Bygone
+ Lincolnshire,"--Vol. I, William Andrews & Co.]
+
+With the rise of the so-called Norman style of architecture the doors of
+our churches took a handsomer form; and as the churches themselves were
+now formed on a larger and nobler plan, more than one entrance was often
+required. The usual door for the people was now commonly placed at the
+south side, except in churches connected (as were so many of our
+cathedrals) with monastic foundations. In this latter case the south
+side was generally occupied by the cloisters and other conventual
+buildings, and the people's door was therefore placed upon the north
+side. At this period, too, the church-porch begins its development; for,
+although porches in a strict sense were at any rate not usual, the
+door-way deeply sunk in the massive wall and protected by three, four,
+or even more concentric arches, suggests the more fully developed
+shelter of the porch. Of doors of this kind any of our older
+abbey-churches will supply adequate, and often splendid, examples. The
+great north door of Durham Cathedral, and the smaller, but not less
+beautiful doors into the cloisters there, are fine instances. The west
+and north doors of the little cathedral of Llandaff supply examples in
+another class of building; and even small and obscure parish churches
+are sometimes dignified with the possession of an entrance full of the
+massive solemnity of this Norman work. The village church of Heysham, on
+Morecambe Bay, has a south door well worthy of mention in this
+connection; and the Lincolnshire church already cited, Crowle, has an
+interesting doorway of this kind.
+
+As art progressed in Christendom, and exhibited its growing force
+especially in the churches, the entrances thereto shared in the
+increasing splendour of the whole. The mouldings of the arches and the
+pillars, the elaboration of capitals and bases, all showed the evidence
+of devotion guided by taste and skill. And often something more than
+mere decoration was attempted; the opportunity was seized to add
+instruction, and figures of saints and angels, or complete scenes from
+scriptural or ecclesiastical story, filled the expanse of the tympanum
+or the niches of the columns. About the twelfth century, also, it became
+customary to divide the main entrance into two by means of a pillar, or
+a group of pillars; the two-leaved door being thus made symbolical of
+the two natures of Christ, of Whom, as Durandus tells us, it is itself
+the emblem, "according to that saying in the Gospel, 'I am the Door!'"
+
+The Continent presents some splendid examples of these decorated
+porticoes. The cathedral of Strasburg, preserved as by a series of
+miracles in spite of every danger that can assail a building, fire,
+lightning, earthquake, and cannonade, has a very grand west entrance;
+its tall doors set within a number of receding arches, and the
+sharply-pointed gable which crowns them flanked and crested with
+tapering pinnacles. The French artists of the thirteenth and fourteenth
+centuries were unrivalled in the beauty and wealth of statuary with
+which they adorned their churches, and not least their doors. "The glory
+and the beauty" of the great porch at Amiens has been set forth fully by
+Ruskin, who has woven into one wonderful whole the meaning of the
+statues, which, like "a cloud of witnesses," throng the western front.
+But Amiens is not alone; S. Denis, Paris, Sens, Angouleme, Poictiers,
+Autun, Chartres, Laon, Rheims, Vezelay, Auxerre, and other cathedrals
+are all magnificent in this respect. The principal entrance to Seville
+cathedral is flanked by columns upholding niches filled with figures of
+saints and angels, while the tympanum contains a carving of the entrance
+of the Saviour into Jerusalem on the first Palm Sunday. In the island of
+Majorca, the south door-way of the cathedral of Palma is exceptionally
+beautiful. The statue of the Blessed Virgin crowns the centre column,
+and above is the Last Supper. A record of the architect of this splendid
+piece of work is preserved in an old account book of the cathedral: "On
+January 29th, 1394, Master Pedro Morey, sculptor, master artificer of
+the south door, which was begun by him, passed from this life. Anima
+ejus requiescat in pace. Amen." The entrance in the west front is also a
+fine one, and is inscribed, "Non est factum tale opus in universis
+regnis."
+
+ [Illustration: WEST DOOR, HIGHAM FERRERS CHURCH.]
+
+Although in England we cannot match the gorgeousness of detail exhibited
+by the flamboyant architecture of some of the examples above noticed,
+yet we too have instances of which we may well be proud. The western
+front of Peterborough cathedral, over the partial renovation of which
+there has recently been so much controversy between architects and
+antiquaries, has been pronounced to be "the grandest portico in Europe;"
+but this has reference to the whole facade rather than to the door-way
+in itself. If our subject allowed of our taking so wide a view, the
+splendid west fronts of Exeter, York, and others of our minsters, would
+demand a place of honour in the list. Gloucester cathedral has a
+dignified porch over the south door, in which are the figures of a
+number of saints. The west door of Rochester is also interesting; its
+decorated Norman arches are richly carved, and enclose a tympanum
+covered with characteristic sculpture. Of a different type is the
+graceful west door at Ely, whose pointed arches are upheld by delicately
+cut shafts, the tympanum over the twin doorways being pierced by a
+double trefoil within a vesica. The parish church of Higham Ferrers has
+double western doors, separated by a bold shaft, above which is a niche
+(now unoccupied) for a statue. The tympanum, anciently divided by this
+figure, has five medallions on each side filled with sculptured scenes
+from the New Testament, round which runs a scroll of conventional
+foliage. The neighbouring churches of Rushden and Raunds have also good
+double-leaved doors. To take one instance from the Northern Kingdom,
+S. Giles's, Edinburgh, has a dignified west entrance. Many of the better
+examples of our modern churches have admirable porticoes, of which one
+example must suffice. All Saints' Church, Cheltenham, has double doors
+within receding arches; the tympanum has the figure of Our Lord
+enthroned in glory surrounded by the saints, and the central shaft and
+the side pillars contain other statues.
+
+There is occasionally found in a cathedral, or other large church, a
+porch of unusual depth, known as a Galilee. Here, during Lent, those
+assembled who were bidden to do public penance; the coming of Maundy
+Thursday being the signal for their admission once more into the church
+itself. Ely has a western Galilee entered by an arch, divided by a
+central pillar, and filled in the upper part with tracery. Lincoln has a
+Galilee, deep and dignified in plan, with a vaulted roof. Another
+English cathedral so provided is that of Chichester; and among parish
+churches the Galilee is found at Boxley, Llantwit, Chertsey, and
+S. Woolos.
+
+Of door-ways which, independently of considerations of date, size, or
+form, are noteworthy for their sculpture, there are many that ought to
+be mentioned. At Lincoln, for instance, we have a south door carved with
+a Doom, or Last Judgment, wherein we see the effigy of the Divine Judge
+surrounded by the dead rising from their opening graves. The north door
+at Ely, the whole of the surrounding stone-work of which is elaborately
+carved, is surmounted by the figure of the Lord enthroned within a
+vesica, while adoring angels kneel before Him. At Rougham, in Norfolk,
+the west door is surmounted by a crucifix, round which runs the
+emblematic vine. Founhope church, Hereford, has in the tympanum of the
+arch the Madonna and the Holy Child, a grotesque with birds and beasts
+surrounding the figures. At Elkstone, Gloucestershire, the south
+door-way, a specimen (like the one at Founhope) of Norman work, has some
+interesting sculptures. In the centre of the tympanum is Christ
+enthroned, with the apocalyptic symbols of the evangelists around Him;
+beyond these on the right hand of Christ is the Agnus Dei with the flag,
+an emblem of the Resurrection, while on the left is a wide open pair of
+jaws, known as a Hell-mouth: above all the Father's Hand is seen in the
+attitude of benediction. Elstow church has sculptured figures above the
+north door; not within the containing arch, but within a separate arched
+space divided from the door-way by a string-course. Haltham church, in
+Lincolnshire, has some exceedingly curious designs on the tympanum of
+the south door; they are mostly cruciform figures within circles, and
+are arranged with strange irregularity. The north door of Lutterworth
+church has over it a fresco painting.
+
+ [Illustration: NORTH DOOR, ELSTOW CHURCH.]
+
+Several of the churches in Brussels have door-ways which, though
+otherwise not remarkable, are noteworthy from the beauty of the carving
+of the central post dividing the two leaves of the door. The church of
+Notre Dame de Bon-Secours has the effigy of its patron saint crowned and
+robed, bearing the Infant Saviour; below are the emblems of pilgrimage,
+wallets, gourds, and cockle-shells. The church of La Madeleine has a
+crucifix with a weeping Magdalene at its foot. The old church of
+S. Catharine has its patroness on the door-post, and the Chapelle
+Sainte-Anne similarly has S. Anne holding the Blessed Virgin by the
+hand. Foliage or scrolls in each case fill up the rest of the column,
+which is of wood, and in some instances has been painted.
+
+So far, the doorways have occupied our attention; something must,
+however, be said of the doors themselves. The usual form of the old
+church door is familiar enough to all of us; the massive time-stained
+oak, the heavy iron nails that stud it, and the long broad hinges that
+reach almost across its full breadth. There is dignity in the very
+simplicity of all this; but not seldom far more ornate examples may be
+found.
+
+The most elementary form of decoration consists in merely panelling the
+door, as is the case in numberless instances; occasionally the panels
+themselves are carved, as on the "Thoresby Door," at Lynn, or the door
+of S. Mary's, Bath; or tracery, as in a window, is introduced, as at
+Alford, Lincolnshire. These are but a few of the many instances which
+might be cited. Another striking form of decoration is produced by
+hammering out the long hinges into a design covering, more or less, the
+surface of the door. The west door at Higham Ferrers, already noticed,
+has on each of its leaves three hinges, which are formed into wide
+spreading scrolls. Sempringham Abbey has very fine beaten ironwork
+spread over almost the entire face of the door. A more curious example
+is afforded by Dartmouth church; where a conventional tree with
+spreading branches covers the door, and across this the hinges are laid
+in the form of two heraldic lions. The date is added in the middle of
+the work, 1631.
+
+ [Illustration: DOOR AT LYNN CHURCH.]
+
+In the decoration of the church door the mediaeval blacksmith proves
+himself in a thousand instances, at home and abroad, to have been an
+artist. Free from the hurry of the present age, he could work according
+to that canon of Chaucer's,
+
+ "There is no workman
+ That can both worken well and hastilie,
+ This must be done at leisure, perfectlie."
+
+With him it was not the hand only that wrought, nor even the hand and
+head; but the soul within him gave life to both. Of the contrast between
+old ways and new, few examples are more striking than the hinges of the
+door at S. Mary Key, Ipswich; where we have a simple but graceful scroll
+of ancient date, and a clumsy iron bar of to-day, lying side by side.
+For a beautiful design in beaten iron the doors of Worksop Priory may
+claim to have not many rivals.
+
+ [Illustration: SOUTH PORCH, SEMPRINGHAM ABBEY.]
+
+The most splendid doors in the world are probably the bronze doors of
+the Baptistery at Florence. Other bronze doors there are on the
+Continent, and all of them fine; Aix-la-Chapelle, Mayence, Augsburg,
+Hildesheim, Novgorod, all have doors of this kind; at Verona, too, in
+the church of San Zeno, are ancient examples, whereon are set forth in
+panels a number of subjects from Holy Scripture and from the life of the
+patron saint. All, however, fall into insignificance beside the "Gates
+of Paradise," as the Florentines proudly call their doors.
+
+ [Illustration: DOOR AT DARTMOUTH CHURCH.]
+
+In 1400 the Gild of Cloth Merchants of Florence decided to make a
+thank-offering for the cessation of the plague; and the form which it
+took was a pair of bronze doors for the baptistery of the church of
+S. Giovanni, to correspond with some already there. These earlier ones
+are the work of Pisana and his son Nino, from designs by Giotto; the
+creation of the new ones was thrown open to competition. Many
+competitors appeared, of whom six were asked to submit specimens of
+designs for the panels; and, finally, when the choice lay between two
+only, the elder, Brunellesco, himself advised that the commission should
+be entrusted to Ghiberti, a youth then barely twenty years of age. The
+doors when completed contained twenty scenes from the Saviour's life,
+together with figures of the four Latin Doctors and the four
+Evangelists, set in a frame of exquisite foliage. This splendid work was
+surpassed by a second pair of doors subsequently made for the same
+place. In this there are ten panels setting forth scenes from the Old
+Testament history; and the frame is adorned with niches and medallions
+in which are placed some fifty allegorical figures and portrait heads.
+It was of these last doors, which were only completed in Ghiberti's
+mature age, that no less a judge than Michael Angelo said, "They might
+stand as the gates of Paradise itself."
+
+Aix-en-Provence claims that her doors are as peerless as examples of the
+wood-carver's art, as are the Florentine ones as types of the
+metal-worker's. They have been preserved, it is said, from the sixth
+century, and are still wonderfully fresh and delicate. There are on each
+door six upper panels filled with figures of the twelve Sybils; and
+below one large panel, occupied, in one case, by effigies of the
+prophets Isaiah and Jeremiah, and in the other by Ezekiel and Daniel.
+The carving is only occasionally exhibited, two masking doors having
+been cleverly contrived to protect and cover the real ones.
+
+Many of the doors of our cathedrals and great abbey churches have
+knockers, often of very striking designs. These as a rule indicate that
+the places in question claimed the right of sanctuary; and the knocker
+was to summon an attendant, or watcher, to admit the fugitive from
+justice at night, or at other times when the entrance was closed. A
+curious head holding a ring within its teeth forms the knocker at Durham
+cathedral; a lion's head was not an uncommon form for this to take, as
+at Adel, York (All Saints), and Norwich (S. Gregory's); a singularly
+ferocious lion's head knocker may be seen at Mayence.
+
+The deep porch which we so frequently see over the principal door of the
+church was formerly something more than an ornament, or even a
+protection; it was a recognized portion of the sacred building, and had
+its appointed place in the services of the Church. Baptism was
+frequently administered in the church porch, to symbolize that by that
+Sacrament the infant entered into Holy Church. There are still relics of
+the existence of fonts in some of our porches, as at East Dereham,
+Norfolk. When baptism was thus administered in the south porch, it was
+also customary, so it is alleged, to throw wide open the north door;
+that the devil, formally renounced in that rite, might by that way flee
+"to his own place." The font now usually stands just within the door. In
+the pre-reformation usage of the Church the thanksgiving of a woman
+after child-birth was also made in, or before, the church porch; and
+concluded with the priest's saying, "Enter into the temple of God, that
+thou mayest have eternal life, and live for ever and ever." The first
+prayer-book of Edward VI. ordered the woman to kneel "nigh unto the
+quire door:" the next revision altered the words "to nigh unto the place
+where the table standeth;" and from Elizabeth's days the rubric has
+simply said indefinitely "a convenient place."
+
+ [Illustration: _From a Photo by Albert E. Coe, Norwich._
+ ERPINGHAM GATE, NORWICH.]
+
+The rubric at the commencement of the Order of the Solemnization of Holy
+Matrimony according to the Sarum use began also in this way: "Let the
+man and woman be placed before the door of the church, or in the face of
+the church, before the presence of God, the Priest, and the People"; at
+the end of the actual marriage, and before the benedictory prayers which
+follow it, the rubric says, "Here let them go into the church to the
+step of the altar." Chaucer alludes to this usage when in his
+"Canterbury Tales" he says of the wife of Bath--
+
+ "She was a worthy woman all her live,
+ Husbands at the church dore had she five."
+
+Edward I. was united to Margaret at the door of Canterbury Cathedral on
+September 9th, 1299, and other mediaeval notices of the custom occur.
+
+The first prayer-book of Edward VI. introduced an alteration which has
+been maintained ever since; the new rubric reading that "The persons to
+be married shall come into the body of the Church," just as it does in
+our modern prayer-books. In France the custom survived as late as the
+seventeenth century, at least in some instances, for the marriage of
+Charles I., who was represented by a proxy, and Henrietta Maria was
+performed at the door of Notre Dame in Paris. In Herrick's "Hesperides"
+is a little poem entitled "The Entertainment, or, _A Porch-verse_ at the
+marriage of Mr. Henry Northly and the most witty Mrs. Lettice Yard." It
+commences:--
+
+ "Welcome! but yet no entrance till we blesse
+ First you, then you, then both for white success."
+
+This was published in the midst of the great Civil War, and seems to
+show that the custom of marriage at the church porch was still
+sufficiently known, even if only by tradition, to make allusions to it
+"understanded of the people."
+
+Burials sometimes took place in the church porch, in those days when
+interment within the building was much sought after.
+
+Ecclesiastical Courts were frequently held in church porches, as at the
+south door of Canterbury Cathedral; schools were occasionally
+established in them; and here the dower of the bride was formally
+presented to the bridegroom. This last-named use of the porch is
+illustrated by a deed of the time of Edward I., by which Robert Fitz
+Roger, a gentleman of Northamptonshire, bound himself to marry his son
+within a given time to Hawisia, daughter of Robert de Tybetot, and "to
+endow her at the church door" with property equal to a hundred pounds
+per annum. We still have evidence of the fact that the church door was
+of old considered the most prominent and public place in the parish in
+the continued use of it as the official place for posting legal notices
+of general interest, such as lists of voters, summonses for public
+meetings, and so forth.
+
+There are often in connection with ancient ecclesiastical foundations
+doors and gateways which are of great interest, though they can scarcely
+be called church doors. Of this class are the entrances to the chapter
+houses of cathedrals, many of which are very fine. At York, for
+example, the chapter-house, which proudly asserts in an inscription near
+the entrance that, "as the rose is among the flowers, so is it among
+buildings," has a doorway not unworthy of the beautiful interior.
+
+The gateway which gave admittance to the sacred enclosure of the
+abbey--the garth or close round which were ranged the monastic
+buildings--is in many cases an imposing and elaborate piece of
+architecture. Bristol has an interesting Norman gateway, and that at
+Durham is massive and impressive, as are all the conventual remains
+there. Norwich is specially rich in this respect. The Erpingham Gate was
+the gift of Sir Thomas Erpingham, who died in 1420, and whom the King,
+in Shakespere's play of "King Henry V." (Act iv. sc. I), calls a "good
+old knight;" S. Ethelbert's Gate was built at the cost of Bishop
+Alnwick, who ruled the see from 1426 to 1436.
+
+But to speak of these things is to wander from our present subject, and
+even that is too wide to be dealt with fully in a paper such as this.
+The legends and traditions of the church porch might occupy many a page,
+while we gossiped over the mystic rites of S. John's Eve or of All
+Hallow E'en; or while we told how Ralph, Bishop of Chichester, barred
+his cathedral door with thorns in his anger against the King and his
+friends; or how the skins of marauding Danes have in more than one
+instance been nailed as leather coverings to the doors of English
+churches. Enough, however, has probably been said to show the wealth of
+interest which may often be found to hang about the old church porch, in
+which the village church may often be as rich as the great cathedral or
+the stately abbey.
+
+
+
+
+Sacrificial Foundations.
+
+By England Howlett.
+
+
+In early ages a sacrifice of some sort or other was offered on the
+foundation of nearly every building. In heathen times a sacrifice was
+offered to the god under whose protection the building was placed; in
+Christian times, while many old pagan customs lingered on, the sacrifice
+was continued, but was given another meaning. The foundation of a
+castle, a church, or a house was frequently laid in blood; indeed it was
+said, and commonly believed, that no edifice would stand firmly for long
+unless the foundation was laid in blood. It was a practice frequently to
+place some animal under the corner stone--a dog, a wolf, a goat,
+sometimes even the body of a malefactor who had been executed.
+
+Heinrich Heine says:--"In the middle ages the opinion prevailed that
+when any building was to be erected something living must be killed, in
+the blood of which the foundation had to be laid, by which process the
+building would be secured from falling; and in ballads and traditions
+the remembrance is still preserved how children and animals were
+slaughtered for the purpose of strengthening large buildings with their
+blood."
+
+ "... I repent:
+ There is no sure foundation set on blood,
+ No certain life achiev'd by other's death."
+
+ King John, Act iv., Sc. 2.
+ Shakespeare.
+
+To many of our churches tradition associates some animal and it
+generally goes by the name of the Kirk-grim. These Kirk-grims are of
+course the ghostly apparitions of the beasts that were buried under the
+foundation-stones of the churches, and they are supposed to haunt the
+churchyards and church lanes. A spectre dog which went by the name of
+"Bargest" was said to haunt the churchyard at Northorpe, in
+Lincolnshire, up to the first half of the present century. The black dog
+that haunts Peel Castle, and the bloodhound of Launceston Castle, are
+the spectres of the animals buried under their walls. The apparitions of
+children in certain old mansions are the faded recollections of the
+sacrifices offered when these houses were first erected, not perhaps
+the present buildings, but the original halls or castles prior to the
+conquest, and into the foundations of which children were often built.
+The Cauld Lad of Hilton Castle in the valley of the Wear is well known.
+He is said to wail at night:
+
+ "Wae's me, wae's me,
+ The acorn's not yet
+ Fallen from the tree
+ That's to grow the wood,
+ That's to make the cradle,
+ That's to rock the bairn,
+ That's to grow to a man,
+ That's to lay me."
+
+Afzelius, in his collection of Swedish folk tales, says: "Heathen
+superstition did not fail to show itself in the construction of
+Christian churches. In laying the foundations the people retained
+something of their former religion, and sacrificed to their old deities,
+whom they could not forget, some animal, which they buried alive, either
+under the foundation, or within the wall. A tradition has also been
+preserved that under the altar of the first Christian churches a lamb
+was usually buried, which imparted security and duration to the edifice.
+This was an emblem of the true church lamb--the Saviour, who is the
+corner stone of His church. When anyone enters a church at a time when
+there is no service, he may chance to see a little lamb spring across
+the choir and vanish. This is the church-lamb. When it appears to a
+person in the churchyard, particularly to the grave-digger, it is said
+to forbode the death of a child that shall be next laid in the earth."
+
+The traditions of Copenhagen are, that when the ramparts were being
+raised the earth always sank, so that it was impossible to get it to
+stand firm. They therefore took a little innocent girl, placed her on a
+chair by a table, and gave her playthings and sweetmeats. While she thus
+sat enjoying herself, twelve masons built an arch over her, which when
+completed they covered over with earth, to the sound of music with drums
+and trumpets. By this process they are, it is said, rendered
+immovable.[2]
+
+ [Footnote 2: "Thorpe's Northern Mythology," vol. II., p. 244.]
+
+It is an old saying that there is a skeleton in every house, a saying
+which at one time was practically a fact. Every house in deed and in
+truth had its skeleton, and moreover every house was designed not only
+to have its skeleton, but its ghost also. The idea of providing every
+building with its ghost as a spiritual guard was not of course the
+primary idea; it developed later out of the original pagan belief of a
+sacrifice associated with the beginning of every work of importance.
+Partly with the notion of offering a propitiatory sacrifice to mother
+earth, and partly also with the idea of securing for ever a portion of
+soil by some sacrificial act, the old pagan laid the foundation of his
+house in blood.
+
+The art of building in early ages was not well understood, and the true
+principles of architecture and construction were but little appreciated.
+If the walls of a building showed any signs of settlement the reason was
+supposed to be that the earth had not been sufficiently propitiated, and
+that as a consequence she refused to carry the burden imposed upon her.
+
+It is said that when Romulus was about to found the city of Rome he dug
+a deep pit and cast into it the "first fruits of everything that is
+reckoned good by use, or necessary by nature," and before the pit was
+closed up by a great stone, Faustulus and Quinctilius were killed and
+laid under it. The legend of Romulus slaying his twin brother Remus
+because he jumped the walls of the city to show how poor they were,
+probably arises out of a confusion of the two legends and has become
+associated with the idea of a sacrificial foundation. To the present day
+there is a general Italian belief that whenever any great misfortune is
+going to overtake the city of Rome the giant shadow of Remus may be seen
+walking over the highest buildings in the city, even to the dome of St.
+Peter's.
+
+Sacrifice was not by any means confined to the foundations of buildings
+only. A man starting on a journey or on any new and important work would
+first offer a sacrifice. A ship was never launched without a sacrifice,
+and the christening of a vessel in these days with a bottle of wine is
+undoubtedly a relic of the time when the neck of a human being was
+broken and the prow of the vessel suffused with blood as a sacrificial
+offering.
+
+In our own time the burial of a bottle with coins under a foundation
+stone is the faded memory of the immuring of a human victim. So hard
+does custom and superstition die that even in the prosaic nineteenth
+century days we cannot claim to be altogether free from the bonds and
+fetters with which our ancestors were bound.
+
+Grimm, in his German Mythology, tells us: "It was often considered
+necessary to build living animals, even human beings, into the
+foundations on which any edifice was reared, as an oblation to the earth
+to induce her to bear the superincumbent weight it was proposed to lay
+upon her. By this horrible practice it was supposed that the stability
+of the structure was assured as well as other advantages gained." Of
+course the animal is merely the more modern substitute for the human
+being, just in the same manner as at the present day the bottle and
+coins are the substitute for the living animal. In Germany, after the
+burial of a living being under a foundation was given up, it became
+customary to place an empty coffin under the foundations of a house, and
+this custom lingered on in remote country districts until comparatively
+recent times.
+
+With the spread of Christianity the belief in human sacrifice died out.
+In 1885, Holsworthy Parish Church was restored; during the work of
+restoration it was necessary to take down the south-west angle of the
+wall, and in this wall was found, embedded in the mortar and stone, a
+skeleton. The wall of this part of the church had settled, and from the
+account given by the masons it would seem there was no trace of a tomb,
+but on the contrary every indication that the victim had actually been
+buried alive--a mass of mortar covered the mouth, and the stones around
+the body seemed to have been hastily built. Some few years ago the
+Bridge Gate of the Bremen city walls was taken down, and the skeleton of
+a child was found embedded in the foundations.[3]
+
+ [Footnote 3: "Strange Survivals," Baring Gould.]
+
+The practice of our masons of putting the blood of oxen into mortar was
+no doubt in the first instance associated with the idea of a sacrifice;
+however this may be, the blood had no doubt a real effect in hardening
+the mortar, just the same as treacle, which has been known to be used in
+our days. The use of cement when any extra strength is needed has put
+aside the use of either blood or treacle in the mixing of mortar.
+
+It is a curious instance of the wide spread of the belief in blood as a
+cement for ancient buildings that Ala-ud-din Khilji, the King of Delhi,
+A.D. 1296-1315, when enlarging and strengthening the walls of old Delhi,
+is reported to have mingled in the mortar the bones and blood of
+thousands of goat-bearded Moghuls, whom he slaughtered for the purpose.
+A modern instance is furnished by advices which were brought from Accra,
+dated December 8th, 1881, that the King of Ashantee had murdered 200
+girls, for the purpose of using their blood to mix with the mortar
+employed in the building of a new palace.
+
+A foundation sacrifice is suggested by the following curious discovery,
+reported in the _Yorkshire Herald_ of May 31st, 1895: "It was recently
+ascertained that the tower of Darrington Church, about four miles from
+Pontefract, had suffered some damage during the winter gales. The
+foundations were carefully examined, when it was found that under the
+west side of the tower, only about a foot from the surface, the body of
+a man had been placed in a sort of bed in the solid rock, and the west
+wall was actually resting upon his skull. The gentle vibration of the
+tower had opened the skull and caused in it a crack of about
+two-and-a-half inches long. The grave must have been prepared and the
+wall placed with deliberate intention upon the head of the person
+buried, and this was done with such care that all remained as placed for
+at least 600 years."
+
+The majority of the clergy in the early part of the Middle Ages
+doubtless would be very strongly imbued with all the superstitions of
+the people. The mediaeval priest, half believing in many of the old pagan
+customs, would allow them to continue, and it is both curious and
+interesting to notice how heathenism has for so long a period lingered
+on, mixed up with Christian ideas.
+
+It is said that St. Odhran expressed his willingness to be the first to
+be buried in Iona, and, indeed, offered himself to be buried alive for
+sacrifice. Local tradition long afterwards added the still more ghastly
+circumstance that once, when the tomb was opened, he was found still
+alive, and uttered such fearful words that the grave had to be closed
+immediately.
+
+Even at the present day there is a prejudice more or less deeply rooted
+against a first burial in a new churchyard or cemetery. This prejudice
+is doubtless due to the fact that in early ages the first to be buried
+was a victim. Later on in the middle ages the idea seems to have been
+that the first to be buried became the perquisite of the devil, who thus
+seems in the minds of the people to have taken the place of the pagan
+deity. Not in England alone, but all over Northern Europe, there is a
+strong prejudice against being the first to enter a new building, or to
+cross a newly-built bridge. At the least it is considered unlucky, and
+the more superstitious believe it will entail death. All this is the
+outcome of the once general sacrificial foundation, and the lingering
+shadow of a ghastly practice.
+
+Grimm, in his "Teutonic Mythology," tells us that when the new bridge at
+Halle, finished in 1843, was building, the common people got an idea
+that a child was wanted to wall up in the foundations. In the outer wall
+of Reichenfels Castle a child was actually built in alive; a projecting
+stone marks the spot, and it is believed that if this stone were pulled
+out the wall would at once fall down.
+
+Bones, both human and of animals, have been found under hearthstones of
+houses. When we consider that the hearth is the centre, as it were, and
+most sacred spot of a house, and that the chimney above it is the
+highest portion built, and the most difficult to complete, it seems easy
+to understand why the victim was buried under the hearthstone or jamb of
+the chimney.
+
+There is an interesting custom prevailing in Roumania to the present day
+which is clearly a remnant of the old idea of a sacrificial foundation.
+When masons are engaged building a house they try to catch the shadow of
+a stranger passing by and wall it in, and throw in stones and mortar
+whilst his shadow rests on the walls. If no one passes by to throw a
+shadow the masons go in search of a woman or child who does not belong
+to the place, and, unperceived by the person, apply a reed to the shadow
+and this reed is then immured. In Holland frequently there has been
+found in foundations curious looking objects something like ninepins,
+but which in reality are simply rude imitations of babies in their
+swaddling bands--the image representing the child being the modern
+substitute for an actual sacrifice. Carved figures of Christ crucified
+have been found in the foundations of churches. Some few years ago, when
+the north wall of Chulmleigh Church in North Devon was taken down there
+was found a carved figure of Christ crucified to a vine.[4]
+
+ [Footnote 4: "Strange Survivals," Baring Gould.]
+
+A story is told that the walls of Scutari contain the body of a victim.
+In this case it is a woman who is said to have been built in, but an
+opening was left through which her infant might be passed in to be
+suckled by her as long as any life remained in the poor creature, and
+after her death the hole was closed.
+
+The legend of Cologne Cathedral is well known. The architect sold
+himself to the devil for the plan, and gave up his life when the
+building was in progress; that is to say, the man voluntarily gave up
+his life to be buried under the tower to ensure the stability of the
+enormous superstructure, which he believed could not be held up in any
+other way.
+
+It is well known that the extinguished torch is the symbol of departed
+life, and to the present day the superstitious mind always connects the
+soul with flame. It was at one time a common practice to bury a candle
+in a coffin, the explanation being that the dead man needed it to give
+him light on his way to Heaven. It is extremely doubtful, however,
+whether this was the original idea, for most probably the candle in the
+first instance really represented an extinguished life, and was thus a
+substitute for a human sacrifice which, in the pagan times, accompanied
+every burial. The candle, in fact, took the place of a life, human or
+animal, and in many instances candles have been found immured in the
+walls and foundations of churches and houses.
+
+Eggs have often been found built into foundations. The egg had, of
+course life in it--but undeveloped life, so that by its use the old
+belief in the efficacy of a living sacrifice was fully maintained
+without any shock to the feelings of people in days when they were
+beginning to revolt against the practices of the early ages.
+
+Sir Walter Scott speaks of the tradition that the foundation stones of
+Pictish raths were bathed in human blood. In the ballad of the "Cout of
+Keeldar" it is said:
+
+ "And here beside the mountain flood
+ A massy castle frowned;
+ Since first the Pictish race, in blood,
+ The haunted pile did found."
+
+From Thorpe's "Northern Mythology" we learn that in Denmark, in former
+days, before any human being was buried in a churchyard, a living horse
+was first interred. This horse is supposed to re-appear, and is known by
+the name of the "Hel-horse." It has only three legs, and if anyone meets
+it it forebodes death. Hence is derived the saying when anyone has
+survived a dangerous illness: "He gave death a peck of oats" (as an
+offering or bribe). Hel is identical with death, and in times of
+pestilence is supposed to ride about on a three-legged horse and
+strangle people.
+
+The belief still lingers in Germany that good weather may be secured by
+building a live cock into a wall, and it is thought that cattle may be
+prevented from straying by burying a living blind dog under the
+threshold of a stable. Amongst the French peasantry a new farmhouse is
+not entered upon until a cock has been killed and its blood sprinkled in
+the rooms.[5]
+
+ [Footnote 5: "Strange Survivals," Baring Gould.]
+
+It is probable that sacrificial foundations had their origin in the idea
+of a propitiary offering to the Goddess Earth. However this may be, it
+is certain that for centuries, through times of heathenism, and well
+into even advanced Christianity, the people so thoroughly associated the
+foundation of buildings with a sacrifice that in some form or other it
+has lingered on to the present century. Now in our own day the laying
+the foundation of any important building is always attended with a
+ceremony--the form remains, the sacrifice is no longer offered. For
+ecclesiastical buildings, or those having some charitable object, a
+religious ceremony is provided, while for those purely secular the event
+is marked by rejoicings. We cannot bring ourselves to pass over without
+notice the foundation laying of our great buildings, and who shall
+venture to say that superstition is altogether dead, and that we are
+free from the lingering remains of what was once the pagan belief?
+
+
+
+
+The Building of the English Cathedrals.
+
+By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, B.A.
+
+
+Of all the sins of the nineteenth century, the one which most militates
+against its attainment of excellence in art is its impatience. A work
+has been no sooner decided on, than there is a clamour for its
+completion. Our cathedrals were for the most part reared in far other
+times, and are therefore admirable. Growing with the stately, deliberate
+increase of the ponderous oak, they speak of days when art was original,
+sincere, patient, and therefore capable of great deeds; original, not in
+extravagance or eccentricity, but in the realization of the natural
+development of style, advancing from grace to grace, from the perfection
+of solidity to the perfection of adornment, by an unforced growth;
+sincere, in its confidence of its own capacity for fulfilling its
+appointed end, in its grasp of the possibilities in its materials, in
+its choice of the true, rather than the easy, method of working; and
+patient, finally, in its contentment to do in each age a little solidly
+and well, rather than a great deal indifferently, in its aim at
+artistic perfection in preference to material completeness. Thus it is
+that none of our cathedrals are the work of one age, save those of
+Salisbury and London, and even they have details which they owe to
+succeeding times.
+
+The above words are not intended to imply that our mediaeval builders
+made no mistakes. The brief review of some of their work will show us
+proof to the contrary; but the mistakes were rare exceptions. If, for
+instance, a captious critic turns to Peterborough, and points us to the
+defective foundations, which have recently required the rebuilding of
+the central tower, and the supposed necessity of reconstructing the west
+front, all that the case will prove is that our great monastic
+architects' work was not always absolutely eternal. "So there was
+jerry-building in those days too!" someone exclaims, with a note of
+triumph at the dragging down of the great ideals of the past to the
+level of the paltriness of the present. If such be the case, we reply,
+there were indeed giants in those days, the very "jerry building" of
+which rides out the storms of well-nigh seven centuries before revealing
+any fatal weaknesses.
+
+In considering these splendid buildings, of which the present century
+has happily proved itself no unappreciative heir, it will be of interest
+to devote a few lines to the means which were employed to raise funds
+for their construction. Several illustrations of the methods employed in
+the case of cathedrals and other churches have come down to us. The
+story of the foundation of the new buildings at Crowland Abbey in 1112,
+exhibits an outburst of popular enthusiasm which irresistibly recalls
+the free gifts of the Hebrew people for the building of the first
+temple. "The prayers having been said and the antiphons sung," says
+Peter Blesensis, vice-chancellor under Henry II., "the abbot himself
+laid the first corner-stone on the east side. After him every man
+according to his degree laid his stone; some laid money, others writings
+by which they offered their lands, advowsons of livings, tenths of sheep
+and other church tithes; certain measures of wheat, a certain number of
+workmen or masons, etc. On the other side, the common people, as
+officious with emulation and great devotion, offered, some money, some
+one day's work every month till it should be finished, some to build
+whole pillars, others pedestals, and others certain parts of the
+walls."
+
+Indulgences, remitting so many days' penance, were sometimes issued to
+encourage the gifts of the faithful. Thus in the time of Henry VIII. a
+church brief was issued soliciting help towards the repair of Kirby
+Belers Church, in Leicestershire, part of which runs as follows:--"Also
+certayne patriarkes, prymates, &c., unto the nombre of sixtie-five,
+everie one of theym syngularly, unto all theym that put their helpyng
+handes unto the sayd churche, have granted xl dayes of pardon; which
+nombre extendeth unto vij yeres and cc dayes, _totiens quotiens_."
+Sometimes, by way of penance itself, a fine was imposed, which was
+devoted to a local building fund. Gilbert, bishop of Chichester, in
+certain constitutions promulgated in 1289 rules that every priest in the
+diocese who shall be convicted of certain scandalous sins shall "forfeit
+forty shillings, to be applied to the structure of Chichester
+Cathedral." In modern money this fine would amount to something like
+L40. Walter, Bishop of Worcester, also ordained in 1240 that beneficed
+priests who dressed unclerically should be fined to the extent of a
+tenth of their annual revenue for the benefit of the building of his
+cathedral. A yet earlier order concerning laity as well as clergy was
+issued by the Witan at Engsham, in Oxfordshire, in the year 1009, which
+decides that "if any pecuniary compensation shall arise out of a mulct
+for sins committed against God, this ought to be applied, according to
+the discretion of the bishop," to one of several pious purposes, of
+which two are "the repair of churches, and the purchase of books, bells,
+and ecclesiastical vestments."
+
+Another way of raising money was to exact a contribution from church
+dignitaries, as a kind of "entrance fee," on their accepting preferment.
+William Heyworth, bishop of Coventry, (a see now owning Chester as its
+mother city), decreed in 1428 that "every canon on commencing his first
+residence should pay a hundred marks towards the structure of the
+cathedral, the purchase of ornaments," and other similar expenses.
+
+In 1247, Bishop Ralph Neville, of Chichester, having died indebted to
+some of the canons of the cathedral, left by will a sufficient sum to
+discharge his obligations. But these ecclesiastical creditors decided
+that it should be devoted to "the completion of a certain stone tower,
+which had remained for a long time unfinished." The same canons bitterly
+complained because the Pope had ordained that all vacant prebends
+throughout the country should remain unoccupied for a year, in order
+that their revenues might be devoted to the erection of the minster at
+Canterbury; whereas they not unnaturally felt that the needs of their
+own cathedral had the first claim upon them.
+
+Those churches which contained the shrines of popular saints drew, for
+the repair or enlargement of the fabric, no small revenue from the
+offerings of pilgrims. The eastern part of Rochester Cathedral was paid
+for by the moneys deposited at the tomb of S. William of Perth; and the
+large sums given by visitors to the shrine of S. Thomas of Canterbury
+materially assisted in keeping the building in repair.
+
+Unquestionably the sums needed for rearing these massive piles were in
+most cases given, either in money or in kind, by the faithful; sometimes
+the princely offerings of a few wealthy men, sometimes the countless
+small gifts of the multitude, have become transmuted into tapering
+spire, or ponderous tower, "long-drawn aisle and fretted vault." The
+poor, in some instances, as we have seen, voluntarily gave their
+labour; in others the hands of the monks themselves raised and cut the
+sculptured stones.
+
+In most cases the cathedrals which we now possess are not the first that
+have occupied their sites. Some humble building, often reared by one of
+the pioneers of the faith, was in the majority of instances the shrine
+that first consecrated the spot to the service of God.
+
+It was in 401, during the visit of Germanus and Lupus, bishops of
+Auxerre and of Troyes, to aid in exterminating the Pelagian heresy, that
+the earliest shrine of S. Alban, a simple wooden oratory, was erected at
+Verulam; S. Deiniol built a little stave-kirk, or timber church, at
+Bangor about 550; and Kentigern, some ten years later, raised the first
+religious establishment at Llanelwy, or S. Asaph; while where now the
+ruined Cathedral of Man rears its weather-beaten gables and sightless
+windows at Peel, tradition says S. Patrick consecrated S. Germain first
+bishop of the Southern Isles in 447.
+
+Many causes, however, combined to sweep away not only all traces of
+these earliest churches, but also in many instances more than one more
+solidly constructed successor. The growth of architectural taste and
+skill made men impatient of the rudeness of their forefathers' simple
+fanes; in a surprising number of instances the lightning-flash or the
+raging fire destroyed the buildings wholly or in part. The cathedrals of
+the north felt more than once the shock of the Border wars; and civil
+strife, or religious fanaticism, wrought mischief in many others. Thus
+it has come to pass that the centuries have seen four cathedrals in
+succession at Hereford, at Gloucester, and at Bangor; and three at a
+multitude of places, Canterbury, London, Winchester, Peterborough,
+Lichfield, Oxford, and half-a-dozen more.
+
+The incursions of the Danes were answerable for the destruction of
+several of the earlier foundations. Canterbury had a cathedral, the most
+ancient part of which had been erected, according to tradition, by
+Lucius, the first Christian King of the Britons, and afterwards restored
+by S. Augustine. To this, about the year 740, Cuthbert, the archbishop,
+added a chapel for the interment of the occupants of the see; and Odo,
+in the tenth century, enlarged and re-roofed it. But in the days of
+saintly Alphege, in 1005, the Danish invaders fell upon the city,
+making of the church a ruin, and of its bishop a martyr. A similar fate
+befell the metropolitan church of the north. On the site where Paulinus
+baptized King Edwin and his two sons into the Christian faith a little
+wooden oratory was raised, over which ere long Edwin commenced to build
+a stone church, which S. Oswald, his successor, completed. This, after
+having been beautified by S. Wilfred, was burnt about 741, but re-built
+shortly afterwards by Archbishop Egbert. It was this latter building
+which fell before the Danes.
+
+At Ely the religious house founded by S. Etheldreda, which was the
+precursor of the modern cathedral, was burnt by the same marauders about
+870. Rochester suffered in the same way; and no trace of the church
+built, so says the Venerable Bede, by King Ethelbert himself now
+remains. Peterborough has been particularly unfortunate in this respect.
+The first building here was begun by Peada, King of Mercia, in the
+seventh century. In the year 870 the Danes, on one of their forays,
+burnt church and monastery to the ground, and massacred the abbot and
+all his monks. In 971 King Edgar raised the place once more from its
+desolation, but again it was seriously damaged, though not absolutely
+destroyed, by the sea-kings shortly before the Norman Conquest. Oxford
+was partially burnt in 1002 owing to the same people, but in a different
+way. A number of Danes took refuge in the tower of S. Frideswide to
+escape the senseless and brutal massacre organised on S. Brice's day in
+that year, and the English fired the structure rather than suffer their
+prey to escape them.
+
+It will be convenient here, although it may take us in some cases away
+from those primitive foundations which so far we have considered, to
+glance at the other instances in which war has left its mark upon our
+cathedrals. Hereford, lying near the Welsh border, felt the storm and
+stress of warfare in 1056. Originally founded at some unknown date in
+very early English times, the church at Hereford was rebuilt about 830
+by a noble Mercian, named Milfrid, and was repaired, if not actually
+renewed, by Athelstan the bishop, who came to the see in 1012. Ten years
+before the Norman Conquest, however, Griffith, prince of Wales, at the
+head of a combined host of Welsh and Irish, crossed the marches and
+plundered and burnt the church and city. In the reign of Hardicanute
+(1039-1041) the citizens of Worcester, having risen against the payment
+of the ship-tax, were severely punished, a military force being sent to
+occupy their city. So thoroughly did it carry out the work of inflicting
+discipline on the malcontents, that the church, amongst other buildings,
+was left in ruins. The original church at Gloucester was built in 681,
+as part of a conventual establishment; this was destroyed, and, after an
+interval, rebuilt by Beornulph, King of Mercia, sometime previous to
+825. This church was looted by the Danes, but restored by S. Edward the
+Confessor. In the year after the Conquest, Gloucester was occupied by
+the Normans, whose entrance was not, however, accepted quite peaceably
+by the citizens; and in the tumult the Cathedral was seriously injured
+by the one or the other party. Exeter provides us with another case.
+Here was a cathedral in early English days, which lasted until the time
+of Bishop William Warelwast, who began the erection of a new one in
+1112. During the stormy reign of Stephen, the city was held for Matilda
+and had to stand a siege by the King, to the great damage of the still
+unfinished church. To quote one further illustration only: Bangor, whose
+wooden church was replaced by a stone one somewhere about 1102, suffered
+grievously in the wars waged between Henry III. of England, and David,
+Prince of Wales, an episode in which was the destruction of the
+Cathedral.
+
+ [Illustration: _From a photo by Albert F. Coe, Norwich_
+ NORWICH CATHEDRAL.]
+
+The conquest of England by William, Duke of Normandy, had a vast
+influence on the ecclesiastical buildings of the country. On the
+continent art had advanced at a pace unknown in this island, and the
+plain and massive churches scattered over the land must have seemed very
+rude structures in the eyes of the prelates who came in the victor's
+train. S. Edward the Confessor, with his Norman predilections, had no
+doubt accustomed his courtiers to some aspects of foreign art, and
+through his influence the so-called Norman architecture preceded the
+Normans in the country; but such instances of it as were to be seen must
+have been few, and probably confined to the southern counties.
+
+Scarcely had the Conqueror's throne been secured before his countrymen,
+placed in the abbeys and sees of England, began to rebuild, on new and
+grander plans, the churches under their charge.
+
+Lanfranc, who ascended the throne of S. Augustine in 1070, set himself
+to the work of rebuilding Canterbury Cathedral, not contenting himself
+with any enlargement or embellishment of the older fane, but making a
+clean sweep of that, and beginning from the foundations. S. Anselm, and
+the prior of the monastery, Ernulph, took up the work and enlarged upon
+Lanfranc's design, pulling down and re-building the choir. Early in the
+next century, namely in 1130, the new Cathedral, completed under the
+supervision of Conrad, successor to Ernulph, was solemnly dedicated with
+great pomp in the presence of the Kings of England and of Scotland.
+
+ [Illustration: RIPON CATHEDRAL.]
+
+Meanwhile, Thomas of Bayeux, who became Archbishop of York in the same
+year as that in which Lanfranc obtained his English see, was busy
+rebuilding his Minster at York. William of Carilef commenced the
+magnificent pile, forming one of the finest Norman churches in
+existence, which crowns the Wear at Durham, in 1093; and Ralph Flambard
+took up the work three years later, completing it in 1128. London was
+deprived of its Cathedral by fire probably about 1088, and the work of
+restoration was at once undertaken by Maurice, its Norman bishop. In
+1079 Bishop Walkelyn began the erection of a cathedral church at
+Winchester, in the place of the old Saxon building which had first been
+founded on the conversion of King Cynegils, about 635. In all parts of
+the land, east and west, north and south, the builders were at work,
+rearing massive temples to the glory and honour of God. The chink of
+chisel and the blow of hammer rang everywhere in the ears of the
+eleventh century in England. Bishop Herbert Losinga laid the first stone
+of Norwich Cathedral in 1096, at which time Remigius of Fescamp had been
+some twenty years at work on that of Lincoln, and had passed away,
+leaving the completion to others. The new Norman Cathedral of Hereford
+was begun by Robert Losinga, who reigned as bishop from 1079 to 1096.
+Abbot Simeon began to build the Minster at Ely about 1092; Worcester was
+commenced by Wulfstan in 1084; five years later the foundation of
+Gloucester was laid; and in 1091 S. Osmund consecrated the church of
+S. Nicholas at Newcastle. Other cathedrals which were built, or
+rebuilt, at about the same date include those of Carlisle, S. Albans,
+Rochester, Chester, Lichfield and Oxford.
+
+Surely never was an age so enthusiastic in building! All these
+cathedrals, many still remaining largely as their Norman builders left
+them, most retaining many relics of their work, were commenced within
+the space of two reigns of by no means great duration, lasting only from
+1066 to 1100.
+
+The energy of the time was not, however, exhausted by the fervour of
+this outburst. The twelfth century took up and vigorously prosecuted the
+tasks handed on to it by the eleventh.
+
+Among cathedrals which were entirely, or almost entirely, rebuilt during
+this century we have Chichester, Rochester, Peterborough, Lincoln,
+Oxford, Bristol, Southwell, S. David's, Llandaff, and Ripon. In the
+first of these a great part of the work was done twice over within this
+period. Ralph de Luffa was bishop of the see when the cathedral was
+consecrated in 1108; two fires, however, did such serious damage to this
+building, the first in 1114, and the second in 1186, that it had
+practically to be re-constructed, and was re-dedicated in the year
+1199. The Cathedral at Rochester was largely re-built by John of
+Canterbury between 1125 and 1137, and like Chichester suffered twice
+during the century from the ravages of fire. Indeed, so frequently do we
+find mention of conflagrations in the cathedrals in the early mediaeval
+days, that it is quite obvious that William I. was fully justified in
+taking such precautions against this enemy as the use of the curfew
+involved. In more than one instance the cathedral went up in flames as
+part only of a fire which destroyed a large portion of the town.
+
+ [Illustration: SOUTHWELL MINSTER.]
+
+The undertaking of new work at Peterborough was the result of a similar
+cause. In the year 1116 fire destroyed almost the whole church and
+monastery, but in two years' time the re-erection had commenced, and was
+continued throughout the remainder of the century. The choir was ready
+for the resumption of the Divine offices in 1143, but the builders did
+not reach the end of their labours until 1237. Re-construction was
+necessitated at Lincoln by the occurrence of an earthquake in 1185,
+following once more upon a fire which took place in 1141. The stone
+vaulting and the western towers were undertaken by Alexander, bishop
+from 1123 to 1147; and in 1192 S. Hugh of Avalon, who held the see from
+1186 to 1203, began a thorough re-building of the pile. This work marks
+an epoch in the progress of architecture in England, as in the choir of
+S. Hugh we meet with the earliest examples of the use of the lancet form
+of arch to which we can assign a known date. About the middle of this
+century a new church, not yet advanced to the dignity of a cathedral,
+was commenced at Oxford, and by the year 1180 it was sufficiently
+advanced to allow of the translation of the relics of S. Frideswide to
+their new shrine. In 1142 was founded the Abbey of Bristol, and its
+church was consecrated on Easter Day, 1148, although the completion of
+the buildings occupied the attention of the abbots for many years after.
+Southwell Minster was also building during the first half of the twelfth
+century; Peter de Leia, who became Bishop of S. David's in 1176,
+commenced the erection of his cathedral four years later, following the
+example of Arban, who entered upon the neighbouring see of Llandaff in
+1107, and reared a mother church for his diocese. Finally, Ripon also
+saw the masons busily at work almost through the century. First
+Thurstan, Archbishop of York in 1114, began the enlargement of the
+Abbey Church, and after him Archbishop Roger (1154-1181) entirely
+rebuilt it.
+
+But the record of the churches re-built during this century by no means
+exhausts the tale of work performed during that time. At Winchester, for
+example, in 1107 the central tower fell, necessitating the building of a
+new one. Lucy, bishop here from 1189 to 1205, erected a new Lady Chapel
+and made other alterations. At Hereford, too, operations were going
+forward almost throughout the century, the bishops Reynelm (1107-1115)
+and Betun (1131-1148) being especially energetic in pressing them on;
+and the closing years of this period saw the rearing of the eastern
+transepts. At this time also the beautiful Galilee Chapel was added to
+Durham Cathedral; Ely was consecrated in 1106, and towards the end of
+the century received its central tower and other additions; and
+S. Albans, moreover, had a facade built on its western front by John
+de Cella.
+
+The chronicle of the damages by fire during the twelfth century is not
+complete without mentioning that S. Paul's, London, which was
+re-building during a large portion of that time, was injured by it in
+1136; and the same foe destroyed the roof of Worcester Cathedral in the
+early days of the century.
+
+The period which our rapid survey has so far covered embraces broadly
+the eras of the Norman and of the so-called Early English architecture.
+In the thirteenth century the Decorated Style came into being, and with
+its rise arose also the desire for greater richness of ornament even in
+those churches which had already, to all appearances, been completed. On
+all hands, therefore, in this new century, we find the pulling down of
+portions of the stern Norman work and the substitution of lighter and
+more graceful designs.
+
+The great work of the thirteenth century, however, was begun before the
+birth of the more florid style, and shows little trace of the dawning of
+its influence. Salisbury Cathedral was begun in 1220, the work
+commencing, as was usual, at the eastern end and advancing westward. The
+whole was proceeded with continuously, and since its completion no
+alteration of any importance has been made in it. Other cathedrals in
+England exhibit in almost every case a conglomerate of several orders of
+architecture, blended generally with great skill, but necessarily
+lacking to some extent in unity of design in consequence. In Salisbury
+we have one complete and splendid example of English architecture of the
+best period, carried out from beginning to end with unbroken unity of
+purpose.
+
+Other churches which then were, or were subsequently to become,
+cathedrals, dating in their present form from the thirteenth century,
+are those of Lichfield, Wells, Manchester, Bangor, and S. Asaph.
+
+A Norman church had been reared at Lichfield of which very few relics
+have survived to the present day, a new building having been begun about
+the year 1200, and the work of construction carried on for the major
+part of the century, the west front being reached about 1275. Bishop
+Joceline was the chief founder of the existing Cathedral at Wells, most
+of the previous work having been taken down in his time, and the new
+church solemnly dedicated by him in 1239. The Church at Manchester was
+probably built about 1220, but the present building is of a later date.
+The Cathedral at S. Asaph suffered from the great mediaeval enemy of such
+foundations, fire, twice during this period. On the first occasion, in
+1247, the troops of Henry III. of England must be held responsible for
+the destruction wrought; on the second, in 1282, the outbreak was
+probably accidental. Repairs, if not actual rebuilding, took place in
+consequence of these injuries towards the end of the century. Bangor
+Cathedral was probably also rebuilt about 1291.
+
+Fire played its old part throughout the century in providing work for
+the ecclesiastical masons, in other instances besides that referred to
+in the Welsh diocese. The choir at Carlisle was rebuilt probably about
+1250 and the following years, but had scarcely been fully completed
+before it fell in a fire which destroyed a large portion of the city. In
+1216, S. Nicholas, Newcastle, was almost destroyed by the same fatal
+agency. Worcester Cathedral was again burnt in 1202, and was rebuilt
+between then and 1218 sufficiently to be re-dedicated; although the
+retro-choir, the choir, the Lady Chapel, and some details were added at
+a later time in the same century.
+
+Imperfections in the work of the preceding age were answerable for a
+certain amount of loss and consequent re-construction (not seldom
+actually a gain) in this. At Lincoln, for instance, the central tower
+fell in 1237, and was replaced by the present one, which has been
+described as one of the finest in Europe. The east end of Ripon had to
+be rebuilt owing to the structure giving way in 1280; and in consequence
+again of the fall of the tower, repairs had to be undertaken at
+S. David's in 1220.
+
+The popular regard for Hugh, the sainted bishop of Lincoln, led to the
+building of one of the most beautiful sections of that Minster, namely
+the Angel-choir, erected as a worthy chapel for the shrine of S. Hugh,
+between 1255 and 1280. At Hereford, the Lady Chapel was built about the
+middle of this century; and at Ely, the presbytery and retro-choir at
+about the same date; at Bristol, the elder Lady Chapel probably a little
+earlier; at Southwell, the choir between 1230 and 1250; and the choir
+also at S. Albans, in 1256.
+
+Several of our cathedral towers, moreover, besides that at Lincoln, date
+from the thirteenth century. York, S. Paul's, Chichester and Gloucester,
+all had the towers erected during this period.
+
+Passing on to the fourteenth century, we meet with the same wide-spread
+activity, but it is expended now rather in additions and embellishments
+to existing buildings than in actual re-constructions. At Ripon, the
+Cathedral was partially burnt by the Scots in 1319, and later in the
+century the tower was struck by lightning. At S. Alban's, part of the
+nave fell in 1323, as did the tower at Ely in 1322. In each of these
+cases repairs were of course rendered needful. More important works were
+the rebuilding of the nave and transepts at Canterbury at the end of the
+century (1378-1410), the erection of the Zouche Chapel at York about
+1350, the addition of both the central and the western towers to Wells,
+the spires to Peterborough, and the towers also to Hereford.
+
+The fifteenth century is specially marked by the growing popularity of
+chantries and side chapels. We find them erected at this time at
+Hereford and elsewhere; but little building on a large scale is done. In
+several cases the vaulting of the roofs dates from this period, and a
+good deal of internal carving in wood or stone was also done. Among the
+latter we may note the high altar screen at S. Alban's, and the stalls
+at Carlisle and Ripon. Of the former work, reference may be made to the
+vaulting of part of the choir and transepts at Norwich.
+
+The sixteenth century is not a pleasant one to contemplate in connection
+with our ancient cathedrals. Ignorance and fanaticism were then
+beginning to show themselves in their treatment of the miracles of art
+bequeathed to the ages, and soon became more obvious than culture or
+reverence. This century saw the nave of Bristol taken down, the spires
+removed from the towers of Ripon, and other precautions against a
+threatened collapse; but steps were not taken to repair the losses thus
+caused. And in view of the nameless horrors perpetrated within the
+hallowed walls of churches and cathedrals, first by the extreme
+reformers, and in the next century by the Puritans, in the name of
+religion, it is only wonderful that so much that is beautiful still
+survives.
+
+The one constructive work of the seventeenth century was, of course, the
+building of the Cathedral of London, S. Paul's, in the place of that
+"Old S. Paul's" which perished in the fire of 1666. This building shares
+with Salisbury the credit of complete unity, but is unique among English
+Cathedrals in being classical in style. However much more admirable the
+Gothic style may be admitted to be for ecclesiastical purposes,
+probably all will admit that the grandeur of St. Paul's grows upon one
+the more familiar one becomes with it; and certainly no tower, or
+collection of towers, could possibly dominate a vast city like London in
+the way that Wren's splendid dome does.
+
+The eighteenth century witnessed, among other things, the removal of
+most of the spires which down to that time had crowned the towers of
+many of the cathedrals. Such was the case with Hereford and Wakefield;
+the same thing was attempted at Lincoln in 1727, but popular tumult
+saved the spires; only, however, until 1807, when they were removed.
+
+Of one work of construction the eighteenth century was also guilty; the
+year 1704 gave birth to that abortion among English cathedrals known as
+S. Peter's, Liverpool; with which, for nearly twenty years, the
+population of one of the wealthiest cities in the empire has been
+content! Something in the way of restoration was attempted in this
+century, but it was for the most part done ignorantly, and no small part
+of the restoration of the nineteenth century has consisted in undoing so
+far as possible the work of the eighteenth.
+
+The present century has seen the commencement, on noble lines, of the
+Cathedral of Truro; and the beautifying of not a few of our old
+minsters, which had been stript almost bare by the destroyers of past
+times. Happily, the guardians of these treasures of art and devotion
+have for the most part been conscious of the greatness of their trust,
+and the fabrics have been dealt with reverently and with judgment.
+Amongst others, Bristol, Chichester, St. Albans, and Peterborough have
+required more or less extensive measures of re-building.
+
+
+
+
+Ye Chappell of Oure Ladye.
+
+By the Rev. J. H. Stamp.
+
+
+The sacred buildings designated by this title were dedicated to the
+service of God, in mediaeval times, in honour of the Mother of our Lord.
+The veneration of S. Mary, the Blessed Virgin, had been growing up in
+the Church from the fifth century, when the reality of the incarnation
+of the Son of God was first called into question by men who professed
+and called themselves Christians. The defence of the true doctrine
+brought clearly into view the high dignity which God had conferred on
+the humble maiden of Nazareth, and so reverence for her memory, as the
+most blessed among women, grew into veneration for her person as the
+Mother of God. The faithful of the Middle Ages were, therefore, not
+content with simply retaining her name at the head of the list of
+saints, but raised the human mother to a position which was almost, if
+not quite, equal to that of her Divine Son. They conferred on her the
+title of "Our Lady," and hailed her as "The Queen of Heaven," just as
+they were accustomed to address the Saviour as "Our Lord" and worship
+Him as "The King of Heaven." This title still survives in the terms
+which are so familiar to us, namely, "Lady Day" and "Lady Chapel."
+
+We see evidences of this growth of the _cultus_ of the Blessed Virgin in
+the erection and elaborate ornamentation of Lady Chapels throughout
+Christendom. It does not seem probable, however, that our pious
+forefathers in the ancient Church of England intended to encourage
+Mariolatry, by the introduction of these buildings into this country;
+for it is a singular and significant fact that in Spain, where this
+heretical and superstitious practice chiefly prevailed, Lady Chapels are
+very rare, because the church itself has been made to serve the purpose.
+English Churchmen, in their desire to honour the Mother of Christ, were
+careful to avoid this evil example. The erection of smaller buildings,
+and the setting apart, for the purpose, of one of the side aisles rather
+than the sanctuary itself, tend to show that they did not assign to the
+Blessed Virgin that _divine_ honour which was due only to her Son and
+Lord. The usual position of the Lady Chapel, beyond the choir, has,
+indeed, been considered as a proof that the honour paid to "Our Lady"
+exceeded that which was rendered unto our Lord, since the altar
+dedicated to her was set up beyond the High Altar in the most sacred
+portion of the church, and, in that position, might be said to
+overshadow it. But the usual situation of the Lady Chapel, at the east
+end of the choir or presbytery, proves nothing of the kind. One
+celebrated writer on the subject disclaims the idea in the following
+words, "Poole principally objects to the position of the Lady Chapel at
+the east end, 'above,' as he expresses it 'the High Altar.' Now we
+believe the Lady Chapel to have occupied the place merely on grounds of
+convenience, and not from any design--which is shocking to imagine--of
+exalting the Blessed Virgin to any participation in the honours of the
+Deity."[6]
+
+ [Footnote 6: Durandus Symbol. lxxxviii.]
+
+It is true that the Lady Chapel was generally erected at the extreme
+east end, or one of the aisles near the choir was used for the purpose,
+because it was considered the most sacred part of the church next to the
+sanctuary. It was erected at the east end of the Abbey Churches of
+Westminster and S. Albans; in the Cathedral Churches of Winchester,
+Salisbury, Chichester, Exeter, Gloucester, Worcester, Wells, Hereford,
+Chester and Manchester; at Christ Church, Hants, where there is a
+chantry above, called S. Michael's Loft, which once served as the
+Chapter House of the Priory, but in modern times has been converted into
+a schoolroom; and also at the parish church of S. Mary Redcliffe,
+Bristol, where it is situated over a thoroughfare, after the example of
+several churches in Exeter. But the ecclesiastics and architects of the
+Middle Ages did not consider themselves bound, by a hard and fast rule,
+to set up the Lady Chapel at the east end. If an available site could be
+found beyond the Choir the Chapel was erected in that position,
+otherwise, the north aisle of the Church, or a convenient site near the
+Choir, was utilised for the purpose. The building has been erected on
+the north or south side of the Choir or Nave, and even at the west end
+when deemed expedient. It was erected on the _north_ side at the
+Cathedrals of Canterbury, Oxford, Bristol, and Peterborough; at the
+Abbeys of Glastonbury, Bury St. Edmunds, Walsingham, Thetford,
+Wymondham, Belvoir, Llanthony, Hulme, and Croyland, where there was a
+second Lady Chapel with a lofty screen, in the south transept.[7] It is
+on the _south_ side at Kilkenny and at Elgin Cathedral. It stands in a
+similar position over the Chapter House at Ripon Minster. Sometimes it
+was placed above the chancel, as in Compton Church, Surrey; Compton
+Martin, Somerset; and Darenth, Kent; or over the porch, as at Fordham,
+Cambs. At Ely Cathedral it is connected with the extremity of the north
+transept. At Wimborne Minster it stands in the south transept, whilst at
+Rochester Cathedral and at Waltham Abbey, Essex, it was erected at the
+west of the south transept. At Durham Cathedral an attempt was made to
+build a Lady Chapel at the east end, but owing, it is said, to the
+supernatural intervention of S. Cuthbert, whose relics were deposited in
+the Choir, the building was erected instead at the west end, where it
+stands under the name of the Galilee Chapel. The original Lady Chapel at
+Canterbury also stood in this unusual position, until the days of
+Archbishop Lanfranc, 1070-1089, when it was removed and the present
+building set up at the east end. The _aisles_ were also frequently used
+as "ye Chappell of oure Ladye," as at Haddenham, Cambs.
+
+ [Footnote 7: "Gough's History of Croyland. 1783."]
+
+The practice of dedicating Chapels to the Blessed Virgin was introduced
+into this country during the twelfth century, shortly after the monastic
+orders had gained the supremacy over the parochial clergy. These
+buildings were generally founded not only to satisfy the spirit of the
+age, which demanded the veneration of the Mother of our Lord, but also
+to afford the necessary accommodation at the east end for the increased
+number of clergy. The founders, moreover, hoped to secure an
+augmentation of the revenues, by the offerings of the faithful at the
+shrines of the new Chapels, as appears to have been the case at
+Walsingham, Norfolk; All Hallows, Barking; and S. Stephen's,
+Westminster. The building, in many instances, became the depository of
+the relics of a saint. The Galilee Chapel at Durham, dedicated to
+S. Mary the Virgin in 1175, contains the bones of the Venerable Bede,
+the earliest historian of the Church of England, who died at
+Jarrow-on-Tyne, on the eve of Ascension Day, A.D. 735. These relics
+were translated, in 1370, from the tomb of S. Cuthbert, and placed in
+the Chapel, in a magnificent shrine of gold and silver. The Lady Chapel
+at Oxford contains the shrine of S. Frideswide, the daughter of the
+founder of the convent, and its first prioress, whose relics were
+translated from the north choir aisle in 1289. This Chapel is now called
+the Dormitory, as the remains of several deans and canons have been laid
+to rest within its walls.
+
+The Lady Chapel has frequently served as the mausoleum of saints,
+princes, noblemen, and dignitaries of the Church. The stately and
+magnificent edifice at Westminster, known as Henry the Seventh's Chapel,
+was built for this purpose in 1502, by the first Tudor monarch, on the
+site of the original Lady Chapel, erected by Henry III. in 1220. The
+royal founder, his wife, and other royal personages now await the
+resurrection in the tomb set up in this famous building. The Lady Chapel
+at S. Mary's, Warwick, which is said to be the chief ornament of that
+church, was also built as a tomb-house in 1443, by Richard Beauchamp,
+Earl of Warwick. Their desire to rest in the chapel, dedicated to the
+blessed Virgin, was closely associated with the idea which chiefly moved
+our forefathers to erect these buildings. They had been taught to
+believe in the invocation of saints, and were anxious to secure, for
+themselves and their dear ones, the mediation and intercession of the
+Mother of our Lord, whose influence with her Divine Son, they supposed,
+was all prevailing. So they founded these chapels in her honour, and
+solicited her good offices on their behalf by frequent services and
+prostrations before her image, which occupied the place of honour above
+"oure Ladye's Altar" crowned as the Queen of Heaven, and profusely
+adorned with splendid jewels and exquisite embroidery. They believed,
+moreover, that as she could succour the living, so she would prevail
+with her Son on behalf of the dead. These sacred buildings were,
+accordingly, used also as chantries, where masses were offered daily,
+and the intervention of "oure Ladye S. Mary" was solicited to secure the
+release of the souls of the faithful departed from the flames of
+purgatory, through which, it was supposed, they must pass, to be
+purified from all the defilements of their earthly course, and "made
+meet for the inheritance of the saints in light." In frescoes on the
+walls, and in paintings on the windows, the Virgin was represented,
+interceding for the souls of the faithful as they came forth to
+judgment.
+
+After the dissolution of monasteries by Henry VIII., and the suppression
+of chantries by Edward VI., many of these buildings shared the fate of
+the conventual churches to which they were attached. In some places the
+Lady Chapel was left to decay, and disappeared in the course of a few
+years, like that at Norwich, which fell into a ruinous condition as
+early as 1569. In other localities it was allowed to stand until the
+turbulent days of the Commonwealth, as at Peterborough, where it was
+taken down to supply materials for the reparation of the Cathedral,
+which had been greatly injured by Cromwell's soldiers. In several places
+it was appropriated to other uses, and even divested of its sacred
+character. The elegant chapel at Ely, erected 1321-49, and said to have
+been one of the most perfect buildings of that age, was assigned at the
+Reformation to the parishioners of Holy Trinity to serve as their Parish
+Church, and is now called Trinity Church. The splendid specimen at
+S. Albans was separated from the presbytery by a public thoroughfare,
+which was made through the antechapel, and a charter of Edward VI.
+transferred the sacred building to the authorities of the ancient
+Grammar School, and it was used as a schoolroom until the restoration in
+1870. At S. Mary Redcliffe, Bristol, the Lady Chapel has also been used
+for scholastic purposes, and at Waltham Abbey it has accommodated not
+only parochial schools but public meetings and petty sessions.
+
+Among existing Lady Chapels, King Henry the Seventh's Chapel occupies
+the first place for magnificence. The first Tudor monarch, in his
+anxiety to make his peace with God before his death, and to commemorate
+the union of the houses of York and Lancaster, determined to found a
+chapel in honour of the blessed Virgin, "in whom," he declares in his
+will, "hath ever been my most singulier trust and confidence, ... and by
+whom I have hitherto in al myne adversities ever had my special comforte
+and relief." He also made due provision for the celebration of masses
+and the distribution of alms "perpetually, for ever, while the world
+shall endure" for the welfare of his soul. The laying of the foundation
+stone is recorded by the ancient chronicler as follows: "On the 24th
+daie of January 1502/3 a quarter of an houre afore three of the clocke
+at after noone of the same daie, the first stone of our Ladie Chapell,
+within the monasterie of Westminster, was laid by the hands of John
+Islip, Abbot of the same monasterie ... and diverse others."[8] After
+its completion it was so universally admired, that Leland the antiquary
+describes it as "_orbis miraculum_"--the wonder of the world. About
+fifty years after its dedication the services, for which it was
+specially designed by its royal founder, were brought to an end by the
+Act of Parliament which suppressed the chantries throughout the kingdom,
+and then followed three centuries of gross neglect which reduced it to
+"an almost shapeless mass of ruins," as it was described in 1803. Four
+years later, in 1807, Dean Vincent obtained a parliamentary grant for
+the restoration of the building, and the necessary repairs were
+completed in 1822. The Chapel still retains much of its ancient
+splendour, and the elegant and elaborate ceiling is a marvel of
+architectural skill. It has been used since the year 1725 for the
+installation of the Knights of the Bath, and their banners are suspended
+over the old carved _misereres_ or _misericordes_ of the monks.
+
+ [Footnote 8: Holinshed.]
+
+"Ye Chappell of oure Ladye" at S. Alban's is also a most elegant
+specimen of the buildings, dedicated to the blessed Virgin. The
+foundations appear to have been laid by John de Hertford, abbot from
+1235 to 1260. But at the election of Hugh de Eversdone, in 1308, the
+walls had only reached the level of the underside of the window sills, a
+height of ten feet above the ground. During his rule he laboured so
+assiduously to complete the work, that in a short time he finished it.
+The building, at its dedication, was so rich in detail that it is
+described by ancient writers as "a magnificent sight." The work of Abbot
+Hugh included the exquisite carvings in stone, which represent about
+seventy different specimens of forms in nature. During its use as a
+Grammar School, from 1553 to 1870, the interior suffered much injury
+from the hands of the schoolboys, and was allowed to fall into a state
+of ruin and decay. Shortly after the removal of the School in 1870, a
+restoration was undertaken by the ladies of Hertfordshire, but their
+good intentions were not carried into effect, through lack of the
+necessary funds. Lord Grimthorp then generously came to the rescue, and
+through his munificence the Chapel has been thoroughly and judiciously
+restored. It now stands once more in all its glory, as a perfect gem of
+architecture and one of the most elegant Lady Chapels in Christendom.
+
+"Ye Chappell of oure Ladye" at Waltham Abbey is said to be one of the
+richest specimens of mediaeval architecture in Essex. The building has
+been greatly defaced since the suppression of chantries, but still bears
+traces of its original glory. "The Lady Chapel," says the late Professor
+Freeman, "must have been a most beautiful specimen of its style, but few
+ancient structures have been more sedulously disfigured." It was erected
+before A.D. 1292, as, during that year, Roger Levenoth, an inhabitant,
+endowed the chantry, with a house and 100 acres of land in Roydon. The
+Chapel was in a flourishing condition in the reign of Edward III., as we
+find from the return made in obedience to the royal order, which was
+issued to the master of the ceremonies of every guild and chantry in the
+King's dominions. In the Court language of that period, which was
+Norman French, Roger Harrof and John de Poley, the chantry priests, are
+described as "meisters de la petit compaignie ordeigne al honor de Dieu
+et ure Donne seyncte Marie en la Ville de Waltham seynte croice." The
+architect selected, as the site of the building, the space formed by the
+easternmost bay of the south aisle of the nave and the western side of
+the south transept. This peculiar position indicates that it was not the
+work of the monks, but that of the parishioners, who were allowed the
+use of the nave as their parish church from the days of King Harold II.,
+the founder. A well-known antiquarian writes: "It seems to have been
+built by the parishioners, and not by the abbot and convent, and its
+position is due to its occupying the only available spot, and where only
+two walls wanted building. A similar case occurs at Rochester. Where the
+Abbey built the Lady Chapel it was usually east of the transept--at the
+east end if there was room, at the north side if otherwise."[9] The
+parishioners could not erect their Lady Chapel at the east end, because
+the choir or presbytery had been used as the monastic church from the
+days of Henry II., who, to atone for the massacre of Thomas a Becket,
+Archbishop of Canterbury, changed the secular foundation of Harold, and
+introduced an abbot and monks of the Augustinian order. Another Lady
+Chapel had probably been erected at the east end for the use of the
+monks, in accordance with the custom of the age, but this shared the
+destruction which befell the whole of the eastern portion of the church
+after the dissolution of the monastery in 1540. The preservation of the
+parish Lady Chapel is therefore due to its position at the west of the
+presbytery. In a transcript by Peter le Neve, Norroy King at Arms, 1698,
+it is stated that a chapel was dedicated at Waltham in the year 1188, by
+William de Vere, Bishop of Hereford, "in honore Dei [et gloriosae
+Virginis Mariae] et B. Martyris atque pontificis Thomae nomine."[10]
+This has led to the conjecture that reference is made to the existing
+building,[11] or to that which formerly stood at the east end.[12] But
+the original Waltham manuscript shows that it does not refer to a Lady
+Chapel at all, but to the Chapel of S. Thomas of Canterbury.[13]
+
+ [Footnote 9: W. H. St. John Hope, F.S.A.]
+ [Footnote 10: Harl. MS. 6974, fol. 106.]
+ [Footnote 11: Gentleman's Magazine, April, 1860, and May, 1864.]
+ [Footnote 12: The Builder, April 2, 1898.]
+ [Footnote 13: Harl. MS. 391, fol. 100.]
+
+The masonry of the exterior of the two walls erected when the Chapel was
+founded, consists of alternating bands of stone, squared bricks, and
+flint, so that it produces a "poly-chromatic effect."[14] There are
+three large buttresses of considerable projection, with pedimented
+sets-off and slopes, one being situated at the south-west angle, and the
+other two on the south of the building. Two smaller buttresses also
+occupy a place on the south. Niches, with pedestals for images, are
+still standing in the primary buttresses.
+
+ [Footnote 14: Professor Freeman.]
+
+The interior of the Chapel measures 41 feet 7 inches in length, 23 feet
+in breadth, and 23 feet in height. It is approached by a steep ascent of
+nine long narrow stone steps, which are situated near the south-west
+buttress. The ancient doorway is beautifully decorated with ball
+flowers. The floor stands at an elevation of nearly five feet above the
+floor of the chancel, an arrangement which appears to be peculiar to
+Waltham. It was apparently built at this high level to add to the
+loftiness of the crypt below, which was a capacious chamber of much
+importance in olden times, and consists of two wide bays of
+quadripartite vaulting. There is no way of access from the interior of
+the Church, but "the chapel is connected with the south aisle by a
+single arch of poor and ordinary architecture, a sad contrast to the
+glorious Romanesque work of the nave."[15] At the west end there is a
+large and beautiful six-light, square-headed window, with a rich and
+peculiar arrangement of a double plane of tracery, the inner plane
+consisting of three arches. This window, and the four elegant windows of
+three lights on the south side, are supposed to have been filled with
+stained glass, like that of the Chapter House at York Minster, and other
+buildings of the same period. At the extreme south-east of the building
+the remains of the ancient sedilia and piscina may still be seen. The
+walls were adorned with distemper paintings, chocolate coloured
+vine-leaves on a yellow ground running round the spandrels and windows.
+This decoration probably included a series of paintings, representing
+scenes in the life of the Mother of our Lord, and concluding with her
+assumption and coronation as the Queen of Heaven. There was also a
+representation of the Last Judgment in which "Our Lady" occupied the
+place of honour near her Divine Son and Lord, interceding for the
+faithful as they appeared before their Judge. On the removal of the
+plaster from the east wall during the restoration in 1875, the remains
+of a fresco of "the Doom" were discovered, and here are depicted the
+Judge of all mankind in the scarlet robes of majesty, the Virgin as
+intercessor, S. Michael the Archangel, presiding over the balances in
+which souls are weighed, the Apostles as assessors, bishops and abbots
+with the keys of S. Peter, admitting the faithful into the Holy Catholic
+Church, human forms emerging from the grave, the path of life, the
+chains of everlasting darkness, demons clothed in flames, and the jaws
+of hell. The space under this fresco was probably occupied by beautiful
+statuary, the image of the blessed Virgin standing in the centre,
+immediately above the altar of "Our Ladye." At the dissolution of the
+monastery "a table of imagery of the xii. apostles," belonging to this
+Chapel, was valued at ten shillings. A few fragments of statuary,
+supposed to have formed part of this decoration, were discovered during
+the restoration of the Abbey Church in 1860, and have been inserted in
+the south-east wall of the chancel. These relics of the splendid past
+include the mutilated stone figures of four saints, probably the
+evangelists, beautifully carved, and a representation of the crucifixion
+in black marble, but the ornament of precious metal, with which it was
+adorned, has long since disappeared.
+
+ [Footnote 15: Professor Freeman.]
+
+The altars, desks, and tables in the Lady Chapel were covered with
+plates of silver, as in the crypt beneath, which was also, in those
+days, a splendid chantry, served by its own priest, who was called "the
+Charnel Priest." The sacramental vessels and plate, which were of great
+value, were sold after the suppression. Dr. Thomas Fuller, Incumbent of
+Waltham Abbey in 1648, gives the following extracts from the
+churchwarden's accounts: "1549. _Imprimis._--Sold the silver plate which
+was on the desk in the charnel, weighing five ounces, for twenty-five
+shillings. Guess," adds the historian, "the gallantry of our church by
+this (presuming all the rest in proportionable equipage) when the desk
+whereon the priest read was inlaid with plate of silver." "1551.
+_Item._--Received for two hundred seventy-one ounces of plate, sold at
+several times for the best advantage, sixty-seven pound fourteen
+shillings and ninepence."[16] The inventory of goods made by order of
+Henry VIII. also mentions "iiii. tables [of oure Ladye] plated with
+sylver and gylte, every one of them with ii. folding leves." The Chapel
+was furnished besides with "a lytell payre of organes," valued at xxs.,
+at the dissolution of the monastery, when Thomas Tallis, the father of
+English church music, was organist of the Abbey Church, and presided at
+the "greate large payre of organes" in the Choir. He was assisted by
+John Boston, of Waltham, who probably performed on the smaller
+instrument in the Lady Chapel. Both names are mentioned in the pension
+list, Tallis receiving xxs. for wages and xxs. reward, and Boston iiis.
+for wages and iiis. reward.
+
+ [Footnote 16: History of Waltham Abbey, cap. 5.]
+
+A large number of wax tapers and candles was consumed annually at the
+various services held in the Lady Chapel and Crypt. In the return made
+by Sir Roger Harrop and Sir John de Poley, masters of the two chantries
+in the reign of Edward III., it is stated that every man and woman in
+this guild paid a yearly subscription of sixpence towards the expenses,
+and at the feasts of "oure Ladye" all "Christiens" of the company gave
+five burning tapers (_tapres ardant_); in honour of our Lord four large
+torches; and on other special occasions fifteen tapers. Lights were also
+kept burning during the solemn requiem and funeral services, when
+prayers were offered that perpetual light might shine upon the souls of
+the departed. It is most likely that this impressive ceremonial had been
+observed in both chantries, when the body of Queen Eleanor rested for
+the night in the Abbey Church on its way to Westminster, and again when
+the remains of her royal consort, Edward I., were deposited for three
+months before the tomb of Harold. The wax in stock for these memorial
+services at the suppression was sold by the churchwardens as follows:
+"_Item._--Sold so much wax as amounts to twenty six shillings."
+Dr. Fuller remarks on this transaction, "So thrifty the wardens that
+they bought not candles and tapers ready made, but bought the wax at the
+best hand and paid poor people for the making of them. Now they sold
+their magazine of wax as useless. Under the Reformation more light and
+fewer candles."[17]
+
+ [Footnote 17: History of Waltham Abbey, cap. v.]
+
+In the days of the chantry, lands, tenements, and other gifts were
+presented and bequeathed that "obits" or prayers for the dead might be
+offered before the altar and image of "oure Ladye." Dr. Fuller gives the
+following account of "obits" at Waltham: "The charge of an obit was two
+shillings and two pence; and, if any be curious to have the particulars
+thereof, it was thus expended: to the parish priest, three pence; to our
+Lady's priest, three pence; to the charnel priest, threepence; to the
+two clerks, four pence; to the children (these I conceive choristers)
+three pence; to the sexton, two pence; to the bellman, two pence; for
+two tapers, two pence; for oblation, two pence. O, the reasonable rates
+at Waltham! Two shillings and two pence for an obit, the price whereof
+in S. Paul's, in London, was forty shillings! For, forsooth, the higher
+the church, the holier the service, the dearer the price, though he had
+given too much that had given but thanks for such vanities. To defray
+the expenses of these obits, the parties prayed for, or their executors,
+left lands, houses, or stock to the churchwardens."[18] These obits were
+abolished when the chantries were suppressed in the first year of the
+reign of King Edward VI. "Now," says Dr. Fuller, "was the brotherhood
+in the church dissolved, consisting as formerly of three priests, three
+choristers, and two sextons; and the rich plate belonging to them was
+sold for the good of the parish. Superstition by degrees being banished
+out of the church, we hear no more of prayers and masses for the dead.
+Every obit now had its own obit, and fully expired; the lands formerly
+given thereunto being employed to more charitable uses."[19]
+
+ [Footnote 18: Cap. iv.]
+ [Footnote 19: Cap. v.]
+
+Since the suppression both chantries have been stripped of almost all
+their glory. The beautiful statuary in the Lady Chapel has disappeared,
+the decorated walls were covered with plaster, the west window blocked
+up, three of the elegant south windows were partly bricked up, and the
+fourth was converted into a door-way. The building was entirely
+separated from the Church by a wall of lath and plaster, and the west
+front obscured by the erection of an unsightly porch, which also
+concealed from view the grand south Norman entrance to the Abbey Church.
+The exterior walls were covered with cement, in imitation of classic
+rustic work. The Chapel has been used during the last three centuries
+for various purposes, some of which were degrading in the extreme to its
+sacred character. It has been used as a vestry, parochial schoolroom and
+lending library, also for public meetings and petty sessions, and, in
+its darkest days, as a store-room. The crypt has also passed through
+many changes, and has been stripped of its original splendour. It
+retained much of its beauty for a century after the suppression, as Dr.
+Fuller writes during his incumbency:--"To the south side of the Church
+is joined a chapel, formerly our Lady's, now a school-house, and under
+it an arched charnel-house, the fairest that I ever saw."[20] This
+beautiful chantry, which is partly underground, has been used since as a
+sepulchre for the dead, a prison cell for the living,[21] a receptacle
+for human bones, a coal cellar and heating chamber.
+
+ [Footnote 20: History of Waltham Abbey, cap. I., 9.]
+ [Footnote 21: The Quakers were incarcerated here during
+ the reign of Charles II.]
+
+The Lady Chapel resumed its sacred character in 1876, after it had been
+carefully restored by Sir T. Fowell Buxton, Bart., K.C.M.G.[22] whose
+seat, Warlies Park, is situated in the parish. The modern porch was
+removed from the west end, the large arch in the south wall of the
+Church re-opened, and the five elegant windows were made good. A
+splendidly carved memorial screen has since been erected under the arch
+by the parishioners, and some beautifully carved altar rails set up at
+the east end. The arms of the Abbey and Parish of Waltham Holy Cross are
+represented on the screen, namely, two angels exalting the Cross. The
+appearance of the interior is, however, still mean and bare, when
+compared with its former magnificence, although so much has been done to
+rescue from a state of degradation and neglect, this interesting relic
+of mediaeval times, "ye Chappell of oure Ladye."
+
+ [Footnote 22: Now Governor General of South Australia.]
+
+
+
+
+Some Famous Spires.
+
+By John T. Page.
+
+
+It is practically impossible to point to the exact date when spires
+first assumed a place in the category of ecclesiastical architecture.
+They belong to the Gothic style, and like the pointed arch were evolved
+rather than created. The low pointed roof of the tower gradually gave
+place to a more tapering finish, but the transition was by no means
+progressive, and cannot be clearly traced. Some of the earliest attempts
+at spire-building were uncouth and ungraceful, and even in these days
+the addition of a spire to a modern church does not necessarily add to
+its beauty. This is nearly always the case where an undue regard is paid
+to ornamentation, either at the base, or on the surface of the spire
+itself. Undoubtedly the most beautiful spires are those which at once
+spring clear from the summit of the tower and gradually rise needle-like
+towards the blue vault of heaven.
+
+By far the greater number of our principal spires date from the
+fourteenth century--a time when spire-building appears to have reached
+the zenith of its glory. Splendour and loftiness combine to render the
+examples of this period distinguished above those of any other.
+
+Northamptonshire has been well termed the county of "Squires and
+Spires," and it is probably within its borders that the largest number
+of really beautiful spires may be found. A journey from Northampton to
+Peterborough along the Nene Valley is never to be forgotten for the
+continually recurring spires which greet the eye of the traveller at
+almost every point. Rushden, Higham Ferrers, Irchester, Raunds,
+Stanwick, Oundle, Finedon, Aldwinckle S. Peter's, Barnwell S. Andrew,
+and many others all combine to render the term "Valley of Spires"
+peculiarly appropriate to this district.
+
+These spires of course cover a wide area. The two finest groups of
+spires are those of Coventry and Lichfield. When the cathedral at
+Coventry, with its three spires, was in existence in immediate proximity
+to the churches of S. Michael's and Holy Trinity, the group formed "a
+picture not to be surpassed in England," and even now, with Christ
+Church added, the "Ladies of the Vale," of Lichfield, suffer somewhat
+in comparison.
+
+In point of height the cathedral spires of Salisbury and Norwich hold
+their own, while for beauty of outline Louth must be mentioned, and for
+elaborateness of detail the spire of Grantham.
+
+It now remains to give a cursory glance at some of our most famous
+spires, and to endeavour to enumerate some of their chief
+characteristics.
+
+The spire of Salisbury Cathedral rises from the centre of the main
+transept to a height of 410 feet. This is, without doubt, the tallest of
+our English spires.[23] It is octagonal in shape, and springs from four
+pinnacles. The surface is enriched with three bands of quatre-foiled
+work, and the angles are decorated throughout with ball-flower ornament.
+From a storm in 1703 it received some damage, and was, under the
+direction of Sir Christopher Wren, braced with ironwork. It does not
+appear to have moved since then, but from experiments made in 1740 it
+was found to be out of the perpendicular 241/2 inches to the south, and
+161/4 inches to the west. On the 21st of June, 1741, it was struck by
+lightning and set on fire, but did not receive any great damage, and in
+1827, by means of an ingenious wicker-work contrivance suspended from
+the top, extensive repairs were carried out. The name of the architect
+who conceived this lofty tower is unknown, but the date of its erection
+was probably at the beginning of the fourteenth century.
+
+ [Footnote 23: The spire of Old Saint Paul's, which dated from
+ the thirteenth century, rose to a height of 520 feet.
+ It was destroyed by lightning on the 4th of June, 1561.
+ The spire of Lincoln Cathedral measured 524 feet, and
+ was destroyed in 1548. These are the two highest spires
+ which have ever been erected in England.]
+
+The spire of Norwich Cathedral rises to a height of 315 feet, and on a
+clear day can be seen for a distance of twenty miles. It was probably
+built by Bishop Percy in the latter half of the fourteenth century.
+About one hundred years after, it was struck by lightning, but the
+damage was speedily repaired. In 1629 the upper part was blown down, and
+was re-built in 1633.
+
+The three spires of Coventry are those of S. Michael's, Holy Trinity,
+and Christ Church. Of these, S. Michael's is the chief, being 303 feet
+high. Amongst parish churches, it is therefore the tallest. The base
+consists of a lantern flanked by four pinnacles, to which it is
+connected by flying buttresses. Its erection was commenced in the year
+1373, and completed in 1394. At the restoration of the church, which
+took place in 1885, the tower was found to have been erected on the edge
+of an old quarry, and it cost no less a sum than L17,000 to add a new
+foundation. During the most critical period of the work the structure
+visibly moved, and the apex of the spire now leans 3ft. 5in. out of the
+perpendicular towards the north-west.
+
+ [Illustration: LOUTH CHURCH SPIRE.]
+
+Holy Trinity spire is 237 feet high, and much less ornate than
+S. Michael's. During a violent tempest of "wind, thunder, and
+earthquake," which occurred on the 24th of January, 1665, it was
+overthrown, and much injury was done to the church in consequence. The
+re-building was finished in 1668. It has been completely restored in
+recent years.
+
+The spire of Christ Church is some little distance away from the other
+two. It is octagonal in shape, and rises from an embattled tower to a
+height of 230 feet. It was restored in 1888.
+
+Lichfield Cathedral contains three spires within its precincts. The
+grouping is, therefore, more uniform than that of Coventry, although the
+general effect is not thereby accentuated. The central spire rises to a
+height of 258 feet, and the two which grace the west front are each 183
+feet high. In the time of the great civil war, when Lichfield was
+besieged, the central spire was demolished. After the Restoration, it
+was re-built by good old Dr. Hackett.
+
+The spire of Chichester Cathedral, built in the fourteenth century over
+a rotten sub-structure, was destroyed by its own weight in 1861. It was
+271 feet high, and has now been re-built in its original style on a
+slightly higher tower. The story of its fall has often been told. On the
+night of Wednesday, the 20th of February, 1861, a heavy gale occurred.
+The next day, about twenty minutes past one o'clock, the spire was
+observed to suddenly lean towards the south-west, and then to right
+itself again. Soon after, it disappeared into the body of the cathedral,
+sliding down like the folding of a telescope. Only the coping-stone and
+the weather-vane fell outside, the rest of the masonry formed a huge
+cairn in the centre of the edifice, which was practically cut into four
+portions by the wreck. The present spire was completed in 1867.
+
+In Lincolnshire there are two remarkable spires at Louth and Grantham.
+The one at Louth rises to a height of 294 feet. At the corners of the
+tower are four tall turret pinnacles to which the spire is connected by
+flying buttresses. In 1843 it was struck by lightning; steps were at
+once taken for its restoration, which was completed three years later.
+
+Grantham spire is octagonal in shape, and 285 feet in height. It is very
+light and graceful in appearance, and is richly ornamented with
+sculpture. It suffered from lightning in 1797, and again in 1882. Since
+the latter date sixteen feet of the masonry has been removed from the
+summit and re-built.
+
+The church of S. Mary Redcliffe, Bristol, has been aptly termed by the
+poet Chatterton, "the pride of Bristowe and the Western land." The spire
+rises to a height of 300 feet, and has lately been restored at a cost of
+upwards of L50,000. In 1445, during a storm, the greater part of the
+original spire fell through the roof of the church, and for about four
+centuries it remained in a truncated state, although the damage done to
+the interior was speedily repaired.
+
+The spire of S. Mary's, Shrewsbury, is 220 feet high, and rises from an
+embattled tower, the four corners of which contain crocketed pinnacles.
+During a gale on the night of Sunday, the 11th of February, 1894, about
+50 feet of the masonry of the spire crashed through the church roof and
+did enormous damage. This has, however, since been repaired. A memorial
+stone on the west wall of the tower tells how one Thomas Cadman, was
+killed on the 2nd of February, 1739, when attempting to descend from the
+spire by a rope.
+
+For elaborateness of detail, the spire of S. Mary the Virgin, Oxford,
+surpasses all others in this country. Its apex is some 90 feet from the
+ground, and around the base of the spire clusters a mass of richly
+decorated pinnacles, small spirelets, and canopies containing statues.
+The effect is picturesque in the extreme, and lends to the town of
+Oxford a unique charm. Its conception dates from the fourteenth century,
+but it has been much restored and added to since.
+
+Of the Northamptonshire spires, Oundle is the loftiest, being 210 feet
+high. It bears date 1634, but this evidently refers to a re-building. It
+was partly taken down again and rebuilt in 1874. It is hexagonal in
+shape, and the angles are crocketed. Raunds church is surmounted by an
+octagonal broach spire 186 feet high. It was struck by lightning on the
+31st of July, 1826, and about 30 feet of the masonry was shattered. This
+was at once rebuilt at a cost of L1,737 15s. 3d. The octagonal spire of
+Higham Ferrers is 170 feet high, and was rebuilt after destruction by a
+storm of wind in 1632. Rushden spire is an octagon 192 feet high, and
+richly crocketed. At its base flying buttresses connect it with
+pinnacles at the corners of the tower. The spire at Finedon rises from
+an embattled tower to a height of 133 feet; that of Stanwick is 156 feet
+high, and that of Irchester 152 feet.
+
+Space forbids more than a passing allusion to the fine spires of
+Newcastle Cathedral, S. Mary de Castro, Leicester, Ross, Herefordshire,
+and Olney, Bucks. The latter rises to a height of 185 feet. At its
+summit is a weathercock which, when taken down for regilding in 1884,
+was found to contain the following triplet--
+
+ I never crow,
+ But stand to show
+ Where winds do blow.
+
+Several of the spires which have been mentioned are perceptibly out of
+the perpendicular, but in this respect the "tall twisted spire of
+Chesterfield has no rival either in shape or pose." It is no less than
+230 feet high, and the wonder to many is that it has for so long
+maintained its equilibrium. Various conjectures have been made to
+account for the grotesque twist which the spire assumes; but none of
+these seems so likely as that which accounts for it by the combined
+action of age, wind, and sun. There are those who aver that it never was
+straight, and never will be, and one such person even goes so far as to
+attempt this statement in rhyme as follows:--
+
+ "Whichever way you turn your eye
+ It always seems to be awry,
+ Pray can you tell the reason why?
+ The only reason known of weight
+ Is that the thing was never straight,
+ Nor know the people where to go
+ To find the man to make it so."
+
+However this may be, it is satisfactory to note that a movement has
+recently been set on foot to collect subscriptions towards its much
+needed repair.
+
+When speaking of Salisbury Cathedral spire, allusion was made to the
+repairs being carried out from a wicker-work contrivance suspended from
+the top. This was not the first time that wicker-work had been used for
+such a purpose, for in 1787 the spire at S. Mary's, Islington, was
+entirely encased in a cage composed of willow, hazel, and other sticks,
+while undergoing repair. An ingenious basket-maker of S. Albans, named
+Birch, carried out the work, and constructed a spiral staircase inside
+the cage. His contract was to do the work for L20 paid down, and to be
+allowed to charge sixpence a head to any sightseers who liked to mount
+to the top. It is said that in this way he gained some two or three
+pounds a day above his contract.
+
+People and steeple rhymes are by no means uncommon; perhaps the most
+spiteful is that relating to an Essex village:--
+
+ "Ugley church, Ugley steeple,
+ Ugley parson, Ugley people."
+
+The Yorkshire village of Raskelfe is usually called Rascall, and an old
+rhyme says:--
+
+ "A wooden church, a wooden steeple,
+ Rascally church, rascally people."
+
+Mr. William Andrews, in his "Antiquities and Curiosities of the Church"
+(London, 1897), gives many examples of "People and Steeple Rhymes."
+
+There is a never-ending romance connected with the subject of spires.
+Every one possesses some story or legend. Spirits are supposed to
+inhabit their gloomy recesses, and are even credited with their
+construction. There is certainly an uncanny feeling connected with the
+interior of a spire, even on a sunny summer's day, and given sufficient
+stress of howling winds and gloomy darkness, one can almost imagine a
+situation conducive to the acutest kind of devilry. So much for the
+interior of spires. What sensations may be produced by climbing the
+exterior is given to few to experience. The vast majority of mankind
+must perforce content themselves with a position on _terra firma_,
+whence they may with pleasure and safety combined behold
+
+ "----the spires that glow so bright
+ In front of yonder setting sun."
+
+
+
+
+The Five of Spades and the Church of Ashton-under-Lyne.
+
+By John Eglington Bailey, F.S.A.
+
+
+On the old tower of the church of Ashton-under-Lyne there was formerly
+an old inscription, which incidently testifies to the popularity of
+cards in England at a period when the notices of that fascinating means
+of diversion are both few and of doubtful import. Cards were given to
+Europe by the Saracens at the end of the fourteenth century, and the
+knowledge of their use extended itself from France to Greece. The French
+clergy were so engrossed by the pastime that the Synod of Langres, 1404,
+forbad it as unclerical. At Bologna, in 1420, S. Bernardin of Sienna
+preached with such effect against the gambling which was indulged in,
+that his hearers made on the spot a large bonfire with packs of cards
+taken out of their pockets. Under the word [Greek: Chartia] Du Cange
+quotes extracts from two Greek writers, which show that cards were
+popular in Greece before 1498. Chaucer, who died in 1400, and who
+indirectly depicted much of the every-day life of his countrymen, does
+not once mention cards. But they begin to be noticed about the time of
+Edward IV. and Henry VI. The former king prohibited the importation of
+"cards for playing," in order to protect the English manufacture of
+them. An old ale-wife or brewer, in one of the Chester plays or
+mysteries, is introduced in a scene in Hell, when one of the devils thus
+addresses her:--
+
+ Welcome, deare darlinge, to endless bale,
+ Usinge cardes, dice, and cuppes smale
+ With many false other, to sell thy ale
+ Now thou shalte have a feaste.
+
+A more interesting notice of cards occurs in the _Paston Letters_, where
+Margery Paston, writing on "Crestemes Evyn" of the year 1484, tells her
+husband that she had sent their eldest son to Lady Morley (the widow of
+William Lovel, Lord Morley), "to hav knolage wat sports wer husyd [used]
+in her hows in Kyrstemesse next folloyng aftyr the decysse of my lord,
+her husbond [who died 26th July, 1476]; and sche sayd that ther wer non
+dysgysyngs [guisings], ner harpyng, ner lutyng, ner syngyn, ner non
+lowde dysports; but pleyng at the tabyllys, and schesse, and cards:
+sweche dysports sche gaue her folkys leve to play and non odyr." The
+lady adds that the youth did his errand right well, and that she sent
+the like message by a younger son to Lady Stapleton, whose lord had died
+in 1466. "Sche seyd according to my Lady Morlees seyng in that, and as
+sche hadde seyn husyd in places of worschip [_i.e._, of distinction:
+good families] ther as [= where] sche hath beyn." This letter opens up
+an interesting view of the amusements which at the time were introduced
+into the houses of the nobility and gentry during Christmas-tide. At
+that festival cards from the first formed one of the chief amusements.
+Henry VII., who was a great card player, forbad cards to be used except
+during the Christmas holidays. Their ancient association with Christmas
+is seen in the kindness of Sir Roger de Coverley, who was in the habit
+of sending round to each of his cottagers "a string of hogs'-puddings
+and a pack of cards," that good old squire being doubtless of the
+opinion of Dr. Johnson, who, with a deeper human insight than
+S. Bernardin and Henry VII., could see the usefulness of such a pastime:
+"It generates kindness and consolidates society."
+
+The inscription I have alluded to takes us back to the reign of an
+earlier English king than those named--Henry V., who reigned 1413-1422.
+In his time, it seems, viz., in 1413, the steeple of Ashton Church was
+a-building; when a certain butcher, Alexander Hyll, playing at noddy
+with a companion, doubtless in the neighbourhood of the church, swore
+that if the dealer turned up _the five of spades_ he would build a foot
+of the steeple. The very card was turned up! Hyll, like a good Catholic,
+performed his promise, and had his name carved, a butcher's cleaver
+being put before _Alexander_, and the five of spades before _Hyll_. A
+new tower was erected in 1516, when the church was enlarged; but the
+stone containing the curious inscription was somewhere retained, for it
+was visible in the time of Robert Dodsworth, the industrious Yorkshire
+antiquary, and the projector and co-worker with Dugdale of the
+_Monasticon_. Dodsworth, being at Ashton on the 2nd of April, 1639,
+copied the inscription, stating that it was on the church steeple. He
+wrote down the tradition, adding that its truth was attested by Henry
+Fairfax, then rector there, second son of Thomas Fairfax, Baron de
+Cameron (Dodsworth's MSS. in Bibl. Bodl., vol. 155, fol. 116). The
+eldest son of Lord Fairfax was Ferdinando, the celebrated general of the
+Commonwealth, and the generous patron of Dodsworth. Henry, the younger
+son, at whose rectory-house Dodsworth was entertained on the occasion of
+his Lancashire visit, is described by Oley (in his preface to George
+Herbert's _Country Parson_) as "a regular and sober fellow of Trinity
+College in Cambridge, and afterwards rector of Bolton Percy in
+Yorkshire." He held, besides, the rectory of Ashton from, at least, 1623
+till 1645, when he was forcibly ejected; and that of Newton Kyme. He was
+a correspondent of Daniel King, author of _The Vale Royal_, for he had
+antiquarian tastes like his brother. He died at Bolton Percy 6th April,
+1665. The tower of Ashton Church, as Rector Fairfax knew it, was taken
+down and re-built in 1818, by which time all recollection of that
+ancient piece of cartomancy in connection with the steeple had passed
+out of mind. Let it be hoped that while the tradition was lively,
+pleasanter things were said of Hyll, when the five of spades was thrown
+upon the card tables of Ashton, than assailed the name of Dalrymple when
+the nine of diamonds--the curse of Scotland--came under the view of
+Tory Scotchmen. We may bestow on Hyll the card-player's epitaph:--
+
+ His card is cut--long days he shuffled through
+ The game of life--he dealt as others do:
+ Though he by honours tells not its amount,
+ When the last trump is played his tricks will count.
+
+"Noddy" is, of course, the very attractive game of "cribbage." A great
+aunt of mine still living at Ashbourne, with whom I used to play when a
+boy, always called it by that name. It is one of the Court games,
+_temp._ James I., noticed by Sir John Harrington:--
+
+ Now noddy followed next, as well it might,
+ Although it should have gone before of right;
+ At which I say, I name not anybody,
+ One never had the knave yet laid for noddy.
+
+The same is also alluded to in a satirical poem, 1594, entitled, _Batt
+upon Batt_:--
+
+ Shew me a man can turn up Noddy still,
+ And deal himself three fives, too, when he will;
+ Conclude with one and thirty, and a pair,
+ Never fail ten in Hock, and yet play fair;
+ If Batt be not that night, I lose my aim.
+
+
+
+
+Bells and their Messages.
+
+By Edward Bradbury.
+
+
+Do not imagine that this is an essay on campanology, on change-ringing,
+grandsires, and triple bob-majors. Do not fancy that it will deal with
+carillons, the couvre-feu, or curfew bell, with the solemn Passing bell,
+the bell of the public crier, the jingling sleigh bell, the distant
+sheep bell, the noisy railway bell, the electric call bell, the frantic
+fire bell, the mellow, merry marriage peal, the sobbing muffled peal,
+the devout Angelus, or the silvery convent chimes that ring for prime
+and tierce, sext, nones, vespers, and compline. Do not conclude that it
+will describe bell-founding; and deal with the process of casting, with
+technical references to cope, and crook, and moulding, drawing the
+crucible, or tuning.
+
+It is of bells and their associations and inscriptions that we would
+write, the bells that are linked with our lives, and record the history
+of towns, communities, and nations; announcing feasts and fasts and
+funerals, interpreting with metal tongue rejoicings and sorrowings,
+jubilees and reverses; paeans for victories by sea and land; knells for
+the death of kings and the leaders of men. As we write, the bells of our
+collegiate church are announcing with joyous clang the arrival of Her
+Majesty's Judge of Assize. Before many days have passed another bell in
+the same town will tell with solemn toll of the short shrift given by
+him to a pinioned culprit, the only mourner in his own funeral
+procession.
+
+Bells are sentient things. They are alike full of humour and pathos, of
+laughter and tears, of mirth and sadness, of gaiety and grief. One may
+pardon Toby Veck, in Charles Dickens' goblin story, for investing the
+bells in the church near his station with a strange and solemn
+character, and peopling the tower with dwarf phantoms, spirits, elfin
+creatures of the bells, of all aspects, shapes, characters, and
+occupations. "They were so mysterious, often heard and never seen, so
+high up, so far off, so full of such a deep, strong melody, that he
+regarded them with a species of awe; and sometimes, when he looked up at
+the dark, arched windows in the tower, he half expected to be beckoned
+to by something which was not a bell, and yet was what he had heard so
+often sounding in the chimes." The bells! The word carries sound and
+suggestion with it. It fills the air with waves of cadence. "Those
+Evening Bells" of Thomas Moore's song swing out undying echoes from
+Ashbourne Church steeple; Alfred Tennyson's bells "ring out the false,
+ring in the true" across the old year's snow, and his Christmas bells
+answer each other from hill to hill. There are the tragic bells that Sir
+Henry Irving hears as the haunted Mathias; "Les Cloches de Corneville"
+that agitate the morbid mind of the miser Gaspard; and the wild bells
+that Edgar Allen Poe has set ringing in Runic rhyme.
+
+"Bell," says the old German song, "thou soundest merrily when the bridal
+party to the church doth hie; thou soundest solemnly when, on Sabbath
+morn, the fields deserted lie; thou soundest merrily at evening, when
+bed-time draweth nigh; thou soundest mournfully, telling of the bitter
+parting that hath gone by! Say, how canst thou mourn or rejoice, that
+art but metal dull? And yet all our sorrowings and all our rejoicings
+thou art made to express!" In the words of the motto affixed to many
+old bells, they "rejoice with the joyful, and grieve with the
+sorrowful"; or, in the original Latin,
+
+ Gaudemus gaudentibus,
+ Dolemus dolentibus.
+
+An old monkish couplet makes the bell thus describe its uses--
+
+ Laudo Deum verum, plebem voco, congrego clerum:
+ Defuncto ploro, pestum fugo, festa decoro.
+
+"I praise the true God, call the people, convene the clergy; I mourn for
+the dead, drive away pestilence, and grace festivals." Who that
+possesses--to quote from Cowper--a soul "in sympathy with sweet sounds,"
+can listen unmoved to
+
+ ----the music of the village bells
+ Falling at intervals upon the ear,
+ In cadence sweet--now dying all away,
+ Now pealing loud again, and louder still,
+ Clear and sonorous, as the gale comes on.
+
+The same poet makes Alexander Selkirk lament on his solitary isle--
+
+ The sound of the church going bell
+ These valleys and rocks never heard,
+ Ne'er sigh'd at the sound of a knell,
+ Or smiled when a Sabbath appeared.
+
+Longfellow has several tender references to church bells. He sets the
+Bells of Lynn to ring a requiem of the dying day. He mounts the lofty
+tower of "the belfry old and brown" in the market place of Bruges--
+
+ Not a sound rose from the city at that early morning hour,
+ But I heard a heart of iron beating in the ancient tower.
+
+ From their nests beneath the rafters sang the swallows wild and high;
+ And the world, beneath me sleeping, seemed more distant than the sky.
+
+ Then most musical and solemn, bringing back the olden times,
+ With their strange unearthly changes rang the melancholy chimes.
+
+ Like the psalms from some old cloister, when the nuns sing in the
+ choir;
+ And the great bell tolled among them, like the chanting of a friar.
+
+ Visions of the days departed, shadowy phantoms filled my brain;
+ They who live in history only seemed to walk the earth again.
+
+Who does not remember Father Prout's lyric on "The Bells of Shandon"? We
+venture to quote the four delicious verses _in extenso_--
+
+ With deep affection and recollection
+ I often think of the Shandon bells,
+ Whose sounds so wild would, in days of childhood,
+ Fling round my cradle their magic spells--
+ On this I ponder where'er I wander,
+ And thus grow fonder, sweet Cork, of thee;
+ With thy bells of Shandon,
+ That sound so grand on
+ The pleasant waters of the River Lee.
+
+ I have heard bells chiming, full many a chime in
+ Tolling sublime in cathedral shrine;
+ While at a glib rate brass tongues would vibrate,
+ But all their music spoke naught to thine;
+ For memory dwelling on each proud swelling
+ Of thy belfry knelling its bold notes free,
+ Made the bells of Shandon
+ Sound far more grand on
+ The pleasant waters of the River Lee.
+
+ I have heard bells tolling "old Adrian's mole" in
+ Their thunder rolling from the Vatican,
+ With cymbals glorious, swinging uproarious
+ In the gorgeous turrets of Notre Dame;
+ But thy sounds were sweeter than the dome of Peter
+ Flings o'er the Tiber, pealing solemnly.
+ Oh! the bells of Shandon
+ Sound far more grand on
+ The pleasant waters of the River Lee.
+
+ There's a bell in Moscow, while on tower and kiosko,
+ In St. Sophia the Turkman gets,
+ And loud in air, calls men to prayer,
+ From the tapering summits of tall minarets,
+ Such empty phantom I freely grant them,
+ But there's an anthem more dear to me--
+ It's the bells of Shandon
+ That sound so grand on
+ The pleasant waters of the River Lee.
+
+"The curfew tolls the knell of parting day," in Gray's "Elegy," the best
+known, and, in its own line, the best poem in the English language.
+More dramatic is Southey's story of the warning bell that the Abbot of
+Aberbrothock placed on the Inchcape Rock. James Russell Lowell has a
+beautiful thought in his little poem "Masaccio"--
+
+ Out clanged the Ave Mary bells,
+ And to my heart this message came;
+ Each clamorous throat among them tells
+ What strong-souled martyrs died in flame,
+ To make it possible that thou
+ Should'st here with brother sinners bow.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Henceforth, when rings the health to those
+ Who live in story and in song,
+ O, nameless dead, who now repose
+ Safe in Oblivion's chambers strong,
+ One cup of recognition true
+ Shall silently be drained to you!
+
+In the belfry of Tideswell and of Hathersage, in the Peak of Derbyshire,
+are a set of rhymed bell-ringing laws. Those at Hathersage we give
+below; the Tideswell ones are almost word for word similar.
+
+ You gentlemen that here wish to ring,
+ See that these laws you keep in everything;
+ Or else be sure you must without delay
+ The penalty thereof to the ringers pay.
+ First, when you do into the bellhouse come,
+ Look if the ringers have convenient room,
+ For if you do be an hindrance unto them,
+ Fourpence you forfeit unto these gentlemen.
+ Next, if here you do intend to ring,
+ With hat or spur do not touch a string;
+ For if you do, your forfeit is for that
+ Just fourpence down to pay, or lose your hat.
+ If you a bell turn over, without delay
+ Fourpence unto the ringers you must pay;
+ Or, if you strike, miscall, or do abuse,
+ You must pay fourpence for the ringers' use.
+ For every oath here sworn, ere you go hence,
+ Unto the poor then you must pay twelve pence;
+ And if that you desire to be enrolled
+ A ringer here these orders keep and hold.
+ But whoso doth these orders disobey,
+ Unto the stocks we will take him straight way,
+ There to remain until he be willing
+ To pay his forfeit, and the clerk a shilling.
+
+Churchwardens' accounts abound with bell charges. We have before us the
+accounts of the churchwardens of Youlgreave, in the Peak of Derbyshire,
+for a period of a century and a half. Under the year 1604 we have "Item
+to the ringers on the Coronation Day (James I.), 2s. 6d.; for mending
+the Bels agaynst that day, 1s.; and for fatchinge the great bell yoke at
+Stanton hall, 6d." In 1605 there is "Item for a rope for a little bell,
+5d." In the following year is "Item to the Ringers the 5th day of
+August, when thanks was given to God for the delyvering of King James
+from the conspiracye of the Lord Gowyre, 5s." In 1613 we find the sum of
+6d. expended in purchasing "a stirropp for the fyrst bell wheele, 8d."
+The year 1614 is prolific in charges connected with the belfry, as the
+following enumeration will show: "Item for the bellefonder, his dinner,
+and his sonnes, with other chargs at the same time, 10d.; at the second
+coming of the sayd bellfonder, 9d.; at the taking downe of the bell,
+6d.; for castyng the fyrst bell, L4; for the surplus mettall which wee
+bought of the bellfounder because the new bell waeghed more than ye old,
+L3 15s. 10d.; to the bellfounder's men, 4d.; for the carryage of our old
+bell to Chesterfield, 3s.; for carrying the great bell clapper to
+Chesterfield, 4d.; for carrying the new bell from Chesterfield, 2s. 8d.;
+to Nicholos Hibbert, for hanging the said bell, 1s. 1d.; to Nicholas
+Hibbert the younger, for amending the great bell yoke and wheele, 6d.;
+spent at Gybs house at the bellfounder's last coming, 3d.; for amending
+the great bell clapper, 10d."
+
+The inscriptions on church bells would make an interesting chapter. On
+the second bell at Aston-on-Trent appears in Lombardic capitals, the
+words, "Jhesus be our spede, 1590," and on the fourth bell is inscribed,
+"All men that heare my mournful sound, repent before you lye in ground,
+1661." The fourth bell of S. Werburgh's at Derby is inscribed--
+
+ My roaring sounde doth warning geve
+ That men cannot heare always lyve.--1605.
+
+The third bell at Allestree bears the words--
+
+ I to the church the living call,
+ And to the grave do summons all.--1781.
+
+The second bell on the old peal at Ashbourne was inscribed--
+
+ Sweetly to sing men do call
+ To feed on meats that feed the soul.
+
+The fifth bell at Dovebridge has the words: "Som rosa polsata monde
+Maria vocata, 1633." This is--according to the Rev. Dr. John Charles
+Cox--a corrupt reading of "Sum Rosa pulsata mundi Maria vocata," a
+legend occasionally found on pre-Reformation bells, and which may be
+thus Englished--
+
+ Rose of the world, I sound
+ Mary, my name, around.
+
+A similar inscription--similarly mis-spelt--occurs on the third bell at
+Ibstock, Leicestershire, the date of which is 1632. Mr. Sankey, of
+Marlborough College, gives it a graceful French rendering--
+
+ Ici je sonne et je m'appelle,
+ Marie, du monde la rose plus belle.
+
+The fourth bell at Coton-in-the-Elms has the inscription--
+
+ The bride and groom we greet
+ In holy wedlock joined,
+ Our sounds are emblems sweet
+ Of hearts in love combined.
+
+The sixth bell is inscribed--
+
+ The fleeting hours I tell,
+ I summon all to pray,
+ I toll the funeral knell,
+ I hail the festal day.
+
+The seventh bell at Castleton has the following legend--
+
+ When of departed hours we toll the knell,
+ Instruction take, and spend the future well.
+ James Harrison, Founder, 1803.
+
+The second bell at Monyash is inscribed: "Sca Maria o. p. n." (Sancta
+Maria ora pro nobis.)
+
+The old curfew custom is still kept up in the Peak district of
+Derbyshire, notably at Winster, where the bell is rung throughout
+November, December, January, and February at eight o'clock every work
+day evening, except on Saturdays, when the hour is seven. There are
+Sanctus bells at Tideswell, Hathersage, Beeley, Ashover, and other
+Derbyshire churches. All Saints' Church, at Derby ("All Saints," _i.e._,
+"the unknown good"), has a melodious set of chimes. They play the
+following tunes: Sunday, "Old One Hundred and Fourth" (Hanover); Monday,
+"The Lass of Patie's Mill"; Tuesday, "The Highland Lassie"; Wednesday,
+"The Shady Bowers"; Thursday, "The National Anthem"; Friday, Handel's
+"March in Scipio"; Saturday, "The Silken Garter." They all date from the
+last century.
+
+Church bells have the subtle charm of sentiment. When they swing in the
+hoary village tower, and send their mellifluous message across the
+country side and down the deep and devious valley, or when they make
+musical with mellow carillon the dreamy atmosphere of moss grown
+cathedral closes, they have a poetical influence. How pleasant it is to
+listen to the chimes which ring out from time to time from the towers
+of Notre Dame, in the city of Rubens, and from the Campanile at Venice!
+
+ Through the balmy air of night
+ How they ring out their delight!
+ From the molten golden notes,
+ And all in tune,
+ What a liquid ditty floats
+ To the turtle dove that listens, while she gloats
+ On the moon!
+
+Church bells in large towns, where one section of the community are
+night workers and seek their rest in the day-time, are by no means
+invested with sentiment. We have in our mind a church which is set in a
+dense population of railwaymen, engine drivers, stokers, guards,
+porters, &c. It possesses a particularly noisy peal of bells. They begin
+their brazen tintinnabulations at breakfast time, and ring on, at
+intervals, until past the supper hour. Sometimes the sound is a dismal
+monotone, as if the bellman had no heart for his work. At other times a
+number of stark mad Quasimodos seem to be pulling at the ropes to
+frighten the gilded cock on the vane into flapping flight. Sunday only
+brings an increase of the din, distracting all thought, destroying all
+conversation, defying all study, turning the blessed sense of hearing
+into a curse, and making you envy the deaf. It is well known that upon
+many persons in health the clangour of bells has a very depressing
+effect; but at night, when narcotics are given and the sick are wearied
+out, it is very easy to imagine how irritating these bells must be both
+to the invalids and their attendants. One is inclined to exclaim with
+the Frenchman--
+
+ Disturbers of the human race,
+ Whose charms are always ringing,
+ I wish the ropes were round your necks,
+ And you about them swinging.
+
+How very wise those Spanish innkeepers were who, in the olden time, used
+to make "ruido" an item in their bills, charging their guests with the
+noise they made!
+
+
+
+
+Stories about Bells.
+
+By J. Potter Briscoe, F.R.H.S.
+
+
+On the eve of the feast of Corpus Christi the choristers of Durham
+Cathedral ascend the tower, and, clad in their fluttering robes of
+white, sing the _Te Deum_. This custom is performed to commemorate the
+miraculous extinguishing of a conflagration on that night in the year
+1429. The legend goes that, whilst the monks were engaged in prayer at
+midnight, the belfry was struck by the electric current and set on fire.
+Though the flames continued to rage until the middle of the next day,
+the tower escaped serious damage, and the bells were uninjured--an
+escape which was imputed to the special interference of the
+incorruptible S. Cuthbert, who was enshrined in that cathedral. These
+are not the bells which now reverberate among the housetops on the steep
+banks of the Wear, they having been cast by Thomas Bartlett during the
+summer of 1631.
+
+The fine peal of bells in Limerick Cathedral were originally brought
+from Italy, having been manufactured by a young native, who devoted
+himself enthusiastically to the work, and who, after the toil of many
+years, succeeded in finishing a splendid peal, which answered all the
+critical requirements of his own musical ear. Upon these bells the
+artist greatly prided himself, and they were at length bought by the
+prior of a neighbouring convent at a very liberal price. With the
+proceeds of that sale the young Italian purchased a little villa, where,
+in the stillness of the evening, he could enjoy the sound of his own
+melodious bells from the convent cliff. Here he grew old in the bosom of
+his family and of domestic happiness. At length, in one of those feuds
+common to the period, the Italian became a sufferer amongst many others.
+He lost his all. After the passing of the storm, he found himself
+preserved alone amid the wreck of fortune, friends, family, and home.
+The bells too--his favourite bells--were carried off from the convent,
+and finally removed to Ireland. For a time their artificer became a
+wanderer over Europe; and at last, in the hope of soothing his troubled
+spirit, he formed the resolution of seeking the land to which those
+treasures of his memory had been conveyed. He sailed for Ireland.
+Proceeding up the Shannon one beautiful evening, which reminded him of
+his native Italy, his own bells suddenly struck upon his ear! Home, and
+all its loving ties, happiness, early recollections, all--all were in
+the sound, and went to his heart. His face was turned towards the
+cathedral in the attitude of intently listening. When the vessel reached
+its destination the Italian bellfounder was found to be a corpse!
+
+Odoceus, Bishop of Llandaff, removed the bells from his cathedral during
+a time of excommunication. Earlier still they are assumed to have been
+in use in Ireland as early as the time of S. Patrick, who died in 493.
+In those days much superstitious feeling, as in later ages, hung around
+the bells, and many sweetly pretty and very curious legends are known
+respecting them. Thus it is said S. Odoceus, of Llandaff, being thirsty
+after undergoing labour, and more accustomed to drink water than
+anything else, came to a fountain in the vale of Llandaff, not far from
+the church, that he might drink. Here he found women washing butter
+after the manner of the country. Sending to them his messengers and
+disciples they requested that they would accommodate them with a vessel
+that their pastor might drink therefrom. These mischievous girls
+replied, "We have no other cup besides that which we hold in our hands,"
+namely, the butter. The man of blessed memory taking it, formed one
+piece into the shape of a small bell, and drank from it. The story goes
+that it permanently remained in that form, so that it appeared to those
+who beheld it to consist altogether of the purest gold. It is preserved
+in the church at Llandaff, and it is said that, by touching it, health
+is given to the diseased.
+
+The bell of S. Mura was formerly regarded with superstitious reverence
+in Ireland, and any liquid drunk from it was believed to have peculiar
+properties in alleviating human suffering; hence the peasant women of
+the district in which it was long preserved particularly used it in
+cases of child-birth, and a serious disturbance was excited on a former
+attempt to sell it by its owner. Its legendary history relates that it
+descended from the sky ringing loudly, but as it approached the
+concourse of people who had assembled at the miraculous warning, the
+tongue detached itself and returned towards the skies; hence it was
+concluded that the bell was never to be profaned by sounding on earth,
+but was to be kept for purposes more holy and beneficent. This is said
+to have happened on the spot where once stood the famous Abbey of Fahan,
+near Innishowen, in county Donegal, founded in the seventh century by
+S. Mura, or Muranus.
+
+Mr. Robert Hunt, F.R.S., tells us that, in days long ago, the
+inhabitants of the parish of Forrabury--which does not cover a square
+mile, but which now includes the chief part of the town of Bocastle and
+its harbour--resolved to have a peal of bells which should rival those
+of the neighbouring church of Tintagel, which are said to have rung
+merrily at the marriage, and tolled solemnly at the death of Arthur. The
+bells were cast. The bells were blessed. The bells were shipped for
+Forrabury. Few voyages were more favourable. The ship glided, with a
+fair wind, along the northern shores of Cornwall, waiting for the tide
+to carry her safely into the harbour of Bottreaux. The vesper bells rang
+out at Tintagel. When he heard the blessed bell, the pilot devoutly
+crossed himself, and bending his knee, thanked God for the safe and
+quick voyage which they had made. The captain laughed at the
+superstition, as he called it, of the pilot, and swore that they had
+only to thank themselves for the speedy voyage, and that, with his own
+arm at the helm, and his judgment to guide them, they would soon have a
+happy landing. The pilot checked this profane speech. The wicked
+captain--and he swore more impiously than ever, that all was due to
+himself and his men--laughed to scorn the pilot's prayer. "May God
+forgive you," was the pilot's reply. Those who are familiar with the
+northern shores of Cornwall will know that sometimes a huge wave,
+generated by some mysterious power in the wide Atlantic, will roll on,
+overpowering everything by its weight and force. While yet the captain's
+oaths were heard, and while the inhabitants on the shore were looking
+out from the cliffs, expecting within an hour to see the vessel charged
+with their bells safe in their harbour, one of those vast swellings of
+the ocean was seen. Onward came the grand billow in all the terror of
+its might! The ship rose not upon the waters as it came onward! She was
+overwhelmed, and sank in an instant close to the land. As the vessel
+sank, the bells were heard tolling with a muffled sound, as if ringing
+the death knell of the ship and sailors, of whom the good pilot alone
+escaped with life. When storms are coming, and only then, the bells of
+Forrabury, with their dull muffled sound, are heard from beneath the
+heaving sea, a warning to the wicked. The tower has remained silent to
+this day.
+
+Passing through Massingham, in Lincolnshire, a long time ago, a
+traveller noticed three men sitting on a stile in the churchyard, and
+saying, "Come to church, Thompson!" "Come to church, Brown!" and so on.
+Surprised at this, the traveller asked what it meant. He was told that,
+having no bells, this was how they called folk to church. The traveller,
+remarking that it was a pity so fine a church should have no bells,
+asked the men if they could make three for the church, promising to pay
+for them himself. This they undertook to do. They were a tinker, a
+carpenter, and a shoemaker respectively. When the visitor came round
+that way again, he found the three men ringing three bells, which said
+"Ting, Tong, Pluff," being made respectively of tin, wood, and leather.
+
+There is a tradition that John Barton, the donor of the third bell at
+Brigstock, Northamptonshire, was one of several plaintiffs against Sir
+John Gouch to recover their rights of common upon certain lands in the
+neighbouring parish of Benefield, and that Sir John threatened to ruin
+him if he persisted in claiming his right. John Barton replied that he
+would leave a cow which, being pulled by the tail, would low three times
+a day, and would be heard all over the common when he (Sir John) and his
+heirs would have nothing to do there. Hence the gift of the bell, which
+was formerly rung at four in the morning, and at eleven at morning and
+at night. He is also said to have left means for paying for this daily
+ringing.
+
+One Christmas Eve the ringers of Witham-on-the-Hill left the bells
+standing for the purpose of partaking of refreshments at a tavern that
+stood opposite the church. One of their number, a little more thirsty
+than the rest, insisted that before going back to ring they should have
+another pitcher of ale. This being at length agreed to by his brother
+bell-ringers, the party remained to duly drain the last draught. Whilst
+they were drinking, the steeple fell. Whether this is merely a tapster's
+tale, or the sober statement of a remarkable fact, we are not in a
+position to state.
+
+From a curious and rare pamphlet on "Catholic Miracles," published in
+1825, we learn that a band of sacrilegious robbers, having broken into
+a monastery, proceeded out of bravado to ring a peal of bells, when,
+through prayers offered up by the "holy fathers," a miracle was wrought,
+and the robbers were unable to leave their hold on the ropes. This state
+of affairs was depicted by the inimitable George Cruikshank in a
+woodcut, impressions of which are given in our "Curiosities of the
+Belfry," (Hamilton).
+
+In the village of Tunstall, a few miles distant from Yarmouth, there is
+a clump of alder trees, familiarly known as "Hell Carr." Not far from
+these trees there is a pool of water having a boggy bottom, that goes by
+the name of "Hell Hole." A succession of bubbles are frequently seen
+floating on the surface of the water in summer time, a circumstance (as
+Mr. Glyde, the Norfolk antiquarian author, truly states) that can be
+accounted for very naturally; but the natives of the district maintain
+that these bubbles are the result of supernatural action, the cause of
+which is thus described. The tower of the church is in ruins. Tradition
+says that it was destroyed by fire, but that the bells were not injured
+by the calamity. The parson and the churchwarden each claimed the
+bells. While they were quarrelling, his Satanic Majesty carried out the
+disputed booty. The clergyman, however, not desiring to lose the booty,
+pursued and overtook the devil, who, in order to evade his clerical
+opponent, dived through the earth to his appointed dwelling-place,
+taking the bells with him. Tradition points to "Hell Hole" as the spot
+where this hurried departure took place. The villagers believe that the
+bubbles on the surface of the pool are caused by the continuous descent
+of the waters to the bottomless pit.
+
+ [Illustration: THE BELL OF ST. FILLAN.]
+
+In 1778 there was a bell belonging to the chapel of S. Fillan, which was
+in high reputation among the votaries of that saint in olden times. It
+was of an oblong shape, about a foot high, and was usually laid on a
+gravestone in the churchyard. Mad people were brought to it to effect a
+cure. They were first dipped into the "Saint's Pool," where certain
+ceremonies were performed, which partook of the character of Druidism
+and Roman Catholicism. The bell was placed in the chapel, where it
+remained, bound with ropes, all night. Next day it was placed upon the
+heads of the lunatics with great solemnity, but with what results
+"deponent sayeth not." It was the popular opinion that, if stolen, this
+bell would extricate itself from the hands of the thief and return home
+ringing all the way! The bell had ultimately to be kept under lock and
+key to prevent its being used for superstitious purposes. This old time
+relic is now in the National Museum, Edinburgh, of the Society of
+Antiquaries of Scotland, and it is described as follows in the
+catalogue: "The 'Bell of S. Fillan,' of cast bronze, square shaped, and
+with double-headed, dragonesque handle. It lay on a gravestone in the
+old churchyard at Strathfillan, Perthshire, where it was superstitiously
+used for the cure of insanity and other diseases till 1798, when it was
+removed by a traveller to England. It was returned to Scotland in 1869,
+and deposited in the Museum by Lord Crawford and the Bishop of Brechin,
+with the consent of the Heritors and Kirk-Session of S. Fillans." Near
+Raleigh there is a valley which is said to have been caused by an
+earthquake several hundred years ago, which convulsion of nature
+swallowed up a whole village, together with the church. Formerly it was
+the custom of the people to assemble in this valley every Christmas Day
+morning to listen to the ringing of the bells of the church beneath
+them. This, it was positively asserted, might be heard by placing the
+ear to the ground and listening attentively. As late as 1827 it was
+usual on this morning for old men and women to tell their children and
+young friends to go to the valley, stoop down, and hear the bells ring
+merrily. The villagers really heard the ringing of the bells of a
+neighbouring church, the sound of which was communicated by the surface
+of the ground, the cause being misconstrued through the ignorance and
+credulity of the listeners.
+
+
+
+
+Concerning Font-Lore.
+
+By the Rev. P. Oakley Hill.
+
+
+When those sermons in stone--the beautiful fonts of the Decorated and
+Perpendicular periods, which preached to a bygone age--come to be
+translated into modern English on an extensive and systematic scale,
+they will be found to be not only sermons theological, but treatises on
+hagiology, music, contemporary history, symbolism, and art of the
+highest order. One of the richest fields in font-lore is to be found in
+East Anglia, and Norfolk alone contains examples of sufficient
+importance and of vivid interest, to fill a whole volume on this
+particular subject. Only to mention a few, that will rapidly occur to a
+Norfolk antiquary, is to conjure up a varied and rich archaeological
+vision, which can be extended indefinitely at will.
+
+Of canopied fonts perhaps that of S. Peter (Mancroft), Norwich, takes
+the palm. The carved oak canopy is supported by four massive posts,
+giving great dignity to the stone font which it overshadows. The canopy
+at Sall is of a more graceful type, being in the form of a crocketed
+spire, suspended by a pulley from an ancient beam projecting from the
+belfry platform. Elsing, Merton, and Worstead also possess font covers
+of great interest.
+
+Seven Sacrament fonts are numerous, that of New Walsingham being one of
+the finest of its kind in England. It belongs to the Perpendicular
+period, and is richly carved. On seven of its eight panels are
+sculptured figures representing the Seven Sacraments, the eighth
+exhibiting the Crucifixion. The stem carries figures of the four
+Evangelists and other saints, and rests on an elaborately-carved plinth,
+the upper part of which is in the form of a Maltese cross. A copy of
+this magnificent structure has been erected in the Mediaeval Court of the
+Crystal Palace. A counterpart of the Walsingham font (more or less
+exact, though perhaps not so rich in carving) is to be seen at Loddon,
+with similar Maltese cross base, but the Vandal's hand has nearly
+obliterated the figuring of the Sacramental panels. Other instances of
+Seven Sacrament fonts are to be seen in Norwich Cathedral, at Blofield,
+Martham, and elsewhere.
+
+Fonts bearing the date of their erection are found at Acle and Sall, the
+former having the following inscription upon the top step: "Orate pro
+diabus qui huc fontem in honore dei fecerunt fecit anno dni millo cccc
+decimo." An instance of a Posy font with date (sixteenth century) occurs
+in one of the Marshland churches, the Posy being:--
+
+ Thynk and Thank.
+
+The leaden font at Brundall is believed to be one of three only of its
+kind remaining in England; a fourth, somewhat damaged, existed at Great
+Plumstead until a few years ago, when alas! it perished in a disastrous
+fire which practically destroyed the church. Lion fonts are numerous,
+those of Acle and Strumpshaw being excellent examples.
+
+Remarkable examples of carved fonts are those at Toftrees, Blofield,
+Wymondham, Bergh Apton, Aylsham, Ketteringham, Sculthorpe, Walpole
+(S. Peter), etc. At Hemblington, dedicated to All Saints, there is a
+perfect little hagiology around the font-pedestal and upon seven of the
+panels of the basin, the eighth panel shewing the mediaeval presentment
+of the Holy Trinity, the Almighty Father being somewhat blasphemously
+represented as an old man, while the Crucifix rests upon an orb, and
+(what is perhaps somewhat unusual) the Holy Dove appears about to alight
+on the Cross.
+
+ [Illustration: FONT AT UPTON CHURCH, NORFOLK.]
+
+Of Decorated Fonts in the county of Norfolk, that of Upton must be
+accounted _facile princeps_. In beauty of design, in fulness of
+symbolism, in richness of detail, it is a faithful type of the elaborate
+art of the Decorated Period. It was originally coloured, fragments of
+red and blue paint being still visible. A massive base is formed by
+three octagonal steps rising tier upon tier, the upper step divided from
+the second by eight sets of quatrefoils, flanked at the corners by
+sitting dogs with open mouths. Upon the stem of the font there are eight
+figures in _bas relief_, standing upon pediments beneath overhanging
+canopies exquisitely carved. These canopies are adorned with crocketed
+pinnacles, and the interior of each has a groined roof, with rose boss
+in the centre. Some of the pediments are garnished with foliage, others
+exhibit quaint animals, _e.g._, a double dragon with but one head
+connecting the two bodies, two lions linked by their tails, and two dogs
+in the act of biting each other; all, of course, highly symbolical of
+various types of sin. The canopied figures around the pedestal represent
+the two Sacraments, an indication that even in the fourteenth century
+the two Sacraments of the Gospel were esteemed as of the first
+importance. Holy Communion is symbolised by five figures. A bishop in
+eucharistic vestments, his right hand raised in blessing, his left
+holding the pastoral staff, while the double dragon is beneath his feet.
+It is not unlikely that this ecclesiastic was de Spenser, the
+contemporary Bishop of Norwich, of military fame. The bishop is
+supported to right and left by angels robed and girded, circlets and
+crosses on their heads, each holding a candle in a somewhat massive
+candlestick. The graceful lines of the wings suggest the probability of
+the artist having belonged to a continental guild of stone carvers. The
+next two figures are priests, each vested in dalmatic, maniple, stole,
+and alb, acting as deacon and sub-deacon, the first holding an open
+service book, the second the chalice and pyx.
+
+The three remaining figures portray Holy Baptism. Of the two godmothers
+and the godfather in the lay dress of the fourteenth century, the first
+holds a babe in her arms in swaddling clothes, the swathing band being
+crossed again and again. The other sponsors carry each a rosary.
+
+To digress for a moment; here is an interesting deduction. The infant is
+a girl--witness the two godmothers. The font cannot have been made later
+than about 1380, at which time the Decorated merged into the
+Perpendicular. Now the lord of the manor of Upton from 1358 onwards, for
+many years, was one John Buttetourt, or Botetourt, who, with his wife
+Matilda, had an only daughter and heiress, to whom was given the
+baptismal name Jocosa. It appears highly probable that the lord of
+Upton, rejoicing at the birth of his little heiress, caused the font to
+be designed and built as a memorial of her baptism. But it would seem
+that he did not live to see her settled in life, for in 1399 she had
+grown to early womanhood, had won the affection of Sir Hugh Burnell, who
+made her his wife, and by the following year, if not before, she had
+inherited the manor in her own right.
+
+To return to the description of the font. Resting on the canopies above
+described, and supported by eight half-angels with musical instruments,
+etc., is the large and handsome laver. The principal panels are occupied
+by reliefs of the four living creatures of the Revelation--the historic
+emblems of the four Evangelists--the flying lion, the flying bull, the
+man, and the eagle, the last named with scroll facing east. The four
+alternative panels represent angels, two holding instruments of music,
+two with heraldic shields. The panels are separated from each other by
+crocketed buttresses. The musical instruments shewn upon the font are
+of great interest. A kind of rebeck or lute twice occurs, and once a
+curious pair of cymbals. One half-angel is playing on a crowth, an early
+form of the fiddle, consisting of an oblong box, a couple of strings, a
+short straight and round handle, and a bow. Another of the half-angels
+holds an open music book, containing the ancient four-line score.
+
+The font has suffered some amount of mutilation in the five centuries of
+its existence; three or four heads have disappeared, also the right hand
+of the bishop, and the top of the pastoral staff; the chalice has been
+broken off, and the flying lion is fractured. And as a reminder of the
+iconoclastic century which was most likely responsible for the damage,
+these dates are roughly cut into the leaden lining of the bowl: 1641,
+1662, 1696.
+
+
+
+
+Watching Chambers in Churches.
+
+By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, B.A.
+
+
+The smallest acquaintance with the inventories, or the ceremonial, of
+our mediaeval churches is sufficient to show anyone a glimpse of the
+extraordinary wealth of which the larger churches especially were
+possessed in those days. Vestments of velvet and silk and cloth of gold,
+adorned with jewels and the precious metals; crosses and candlesticks of
+gold, studded with gems; reliquaries that were ablaze with gorgeousness
+and beauty; and sometimes shrines and altars that were a complete mass
+of invaluable treasure; such were the contents of the choirs and
+sacristies of our cathedrals and abbey churches. This being the case, it
+is obvious that the greatest care had to be taken of such places. Then,
+even as now, there were desperadoes from whom the sanctity of the shrine
+could not protect it, if they could get a chance of fingering its
+jewels; men who would exclaim, with Falconbridge in the play of "King
+John" (Act III., Sc. 3)--
+
+ "Bell, book, and candle shall not drive me back,
+ When gold and silver beck me to come on."
+
+To protect the wealthier churches from desecration and loss, therefore,
+bands of watchers were organized, who throughout the night should be
+ever on the alert against the attacks of thieves; who would also,
+moreover, be able to raise, if need were, the alarm of fire. At Lincoln
+these guardians patrolled the Minster at nightfall, to assure themselves
+that all was safe. To facilitate the inspection of the whole building
+occasionally squints were made; as at the Cathedral of S. David's, where
+the cross pierced in the east wall behind, and just above, the high
+altar, is supposed by some to have been for this purpose, a view being
+thus obtained of the choir from the Chapel of the Holy Trinity, or _vice
+versa_.
+
+In several instances, however, it was found both more convenient and
+more effective to erect a special chamber, so placed and so elevated as
+to command a good view of the church, or of the portion of the church to
+be watched; and here a constant succession of watchers kept guard. One
+of our most interesting examples of this is at S. Albans. Near the
+site of the shrine of the patron saint (on which the fragments of the
+shattered shrine have been skilfully built up once more) is a structure,
+in two storeys, of carved timber. The lower stage is fitted with
+cupboards, in which were probably preserved relics, or such jewels and
+ornaments as were not kept permanently upon the shrine. A doorway in
+this storey admits to a staircase leading to the gallery above. This is
+the watchers' chamber; the side fronting the shrine being filled with
+perpendicular tracery, whence the monks in charge could easily keep the
+treasures around them under observation. A somewhat similar structure is
+still seen at Christ Church, Oxford, and is sometimes spoken of as the
+shrine of S. Frideswide. It is really the watching-chamber for that
+shrine; and was erected in the fourteenth century upon an ancient tomb,
+supposed to be that of the founder of the _feretrum_ of the saint,
+though popular report describes it as the resting-place of the bodies of
+her parents.
+
+ [Illustration: ABBOT'S PEW, MALMESBURY ABBEY.]
+
+In not a few cases, both in England and abroad, these chambers were
+built in a yet more durable fashion. At Bourges may be seen a stone loft
+on the left side of the altar; at Nuremberg also is one. In addition to
+the wooden chamber, already described, S. Alban's Abbey (now the
+cathedral) has a small one of stone in the transept. Lichfield has a
+gallery over the sacristy door, which served the same purpose; and at
+Worcester an oriel was probably used by the watchers. Westminster Abbey
+has such a chamber over the chantry of King Henry VI., and Worcester
+Cathedral has one in the north aisle; and there are several other
+instances. Many churches had rooms over the north porch, as the
+cathedrals of Exeter and Hereford, the churches of Christchurch
+(Hampshire), Alford (Lincolnshire), and many others; and these in some
+cases, as at Boston, had openings commanding a view of the interior.
+
+Another explanation of the existence of a few watching lofts is
+sometimes given, besides the need of guarding the Church's treasures. It
+is held by some that in the face of the deterioration of monastic
+simplicity and devotion in the later times before the Dissolution in
+England, the abbots felt the need of keeping a stricter eye upon their
+community; and these rooms were consequently constructed to enable them
+to look, unobserved themselves, into their abbey church, and to see
+that all whose duty called for their presence were there, and properly
+occupied. This theory is perhaps supported by the traditional name of
+"the abbot's pew," by which a very simple and substantial
+watching-chamber in the triforium of Malmesbury Abbey is called. With
+this may be compared another example in the priory church of
+S. Bartholomew, Smithfield. In these, and most of the other instances,
+the watching-chamber is an addition to the original structure, dating
+often considerably later than the rest. This is quoted by the believers
+in the rapid spread of monastic depravity in later ages in support of
+the theory just noticed; as is also the fact, that the "pew" is often
+near what formerly constituted the abbot's private apartments within the
+adjoining monastery. It is probable that both explanations are true;
+some of these lofts forming "abbot's pews," as others certainly were for
+the guardian watchers of the shrines. In a large community it would
+certainly be wise for the head to be able at times to survey quietly and
+unobserved the actions of the rest; but this admission no more implies
+that the lives of all monks were scandalous, than does the presence of
+watchers by the shrines prove that all worshippers were thieves.
+
+We have noticed in this paper the chief watching-chambers in this
+country, but no doubt other examples occur which may have special points
+of interest.
+
+
+
+
+Church Chests.
+
+By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, B.A.
+
+
+An interesting article of Church furniture which has scarcely received
+the amount of notice which it deserves, is the Church Chest, the
+receptacle for the registers and records of the parish, and sometimes
+also for the office books, vestments, and other valuables belonging to
+the Church. In recent years attention has frequently been directed to
+the interesting character of our ancient parochial documents, but the
+useful cases which for so many years have shielded them, more or less
+securely, from damage or loss, have been largely overlooked.
+
+The present authority for the provision in every English church of a
+proper repository for its records is the seventieth canon, the latter
+part of which runs in the following words, from which it will be seen
+that some of its details have been suffered to become obsolete: "For the
+safe keeping of the said book (the register of baptisms, weddings, and
+burials), the churchwardens, at the charge of the parish, shall provide
+one sure coffer, and three locks and keys; whereof one to remain with
+the minister, and the other two with the churchwardens severally; so
+that neither the minister without the two churchwardens, nor the
+churchwardens without the minister, shall at any time take that book out
+of the said coffer. And henceforth upon every Sabbath day immediately
+after morning or evening prayer, the minister and the churchwardens
+shall take the said parchment book out of the said coffer, and the
+minister in the presence of the churchwardens shall write and record in
+the said book the names of all persons christened, together with the
+names and surnames of their parents, and also the names of all persons
+married and buried in that parish in the week before, and the day and
+year of every such christening, marriage, and burial; and that done,
+they shall lay up the book in the coffer as before." This Canon, made
+with others in 1603, was a natural sequence to the Act passed in 1538,
+which enjoined the due keeping of parish registers of the kind above
+described. It is, in fact, obvious that the canon only gave additional
+sanction to a practice enforced some years earlier; for Grindal, in his
+"Metropolitical Visitation of the Province of York in 1571," uses
+almost identical terms, requiring, amongst many other things, "That the
+churchwardens in every parish shall, at the costs and charges of the
+parish, provide ... a sure coffer with two locks and keys for keeping
+the register book, and a strong chest or box for the almose of the poor,
+with three locks and keys to the same:" the same demand was made, also
+by Grindal, on the province of Canterbury in 1576.
+
+Church chests did not, however, come into use in consequence of the
+introduction of the regular keeping of registers. The Synod of Exeter,
+held in 1287, ordered that every parish should provide "a chest for the
+books and the vestments," and the convenience and even necessity of some
+such article of furniture, doubtless led to its use in many places from
+yet earlier times.
+
+We have in England several excellent examples of "hutches," or chests,
+which date from the thirteenth, or even from the close of the twelfth
+century. Some there are for which a much earlier date has been claimed.
+These latter are rough coffers formed usually of a single log of wood,
+hollowed out, and fitted with a massive lid, the whole being bound with
+iron bands. Chests of this kind may be seen at Newdigate, Surrey, at
+Hales Owen, Shropshire, and elsewhere; and on the strength of the
+rudeness of the carpentry displayed, it has been asserted that they are
+of Norman, or even of Saxon, workmanship. Roughness of design and work
+are scarcely, however, in themselves sufficient evidence of great
+antiquity; many local causes, especially in small country places, may
+have led the priests and people to be content with a very rude article
+of home manufacture, at a time when far more elaborate ones were
+procurable in return for a little more enterprise or considerably more
+money. The date of these rough coffers must therefore be considered
+doubtful.
+
+Of Early English chests, we have examples at Clymping, Sussex, at
+Saltwood and Graveney, Kent, at Earl Stonham, Suffolk, at Stoke
+D'Abernon, Surrey, and at Newport, Essex. The Decorated Period is
+represented by chests at Brancepeth, Durham, at Huttoft and Haconby,
+Lincolnshire, at Faversham and Withersham, Kent, and at S. Mary
+Magdalene's, Oxford. The workmanship of the Perpendicular Period has
+numerous illustrations among our church chests, such as those at
+S. Michael's, Coventry, S. Mary's, Cambridge, the Chapter House of
+Christchurch Cathedral, Oxford, and others at Frettenham, Norfolk, at
+Guestling, Sussex, at Harty Chapel, Kent, at Southwold, Suffolk, and at
+Stonham Aspel, Suffolk.
+
+ [Illustration: CHEST AT SALTWOOD, KENT.]
+
+In the making of all these coffers, strength was naturally the great
+characteristic which was most obviously aimed at; strength of structure,
+so as to secure durability, and strength of locks and bolts, so as to
+ensure the contents from theft. But in addition to this, artistic beauty
+was not lost sight of, and many chests are excellent illustrations of
+the wood-carvers' taste and skill, and several were originally enriched
+with colour.
+
+ [Illustration: CHEST AT UPTON CHURCH.]
+
+ [Illustration: CHEST AT OVER, CHESHIRE.]
+
+A good example of those in which security has been almost exclusively
+sought, is provided by a chest at S. Peter's, Upton, Northamptonshire.
+The dimensions of this hutch are six feet three inches in length, two
+feet six inches in height, and two feet in width. Its only adornment is
+provided by the wrought iron bands which are attached to it. Four of
+these are laid laterally across each end, and four more, running
+perpendicularly, divide the front into five unequal panels; the bands on
+the front correspond with an equal number laid across the lid, where,
+however, two more are placed at the extreme ends. Each of the panels in
+front and top is filled with a device in beaten iron roughly resembling
+an eight-pointed star, the lowest point of which runs to the bottom of
+the chest. Yet simpler is the chest at S. Mary's, West Horsley, which is
+a long, narrow, oaken box, strengthened by flat iron bands crossing the
+ends and doubled well round the front and back, while six others are
+fastened perpendicularly to the front; there are two large locks, and
+three hinges terminating in long strips of iron running almost the
+complete breadth of the lid. The church of S. Botolph, Church Brampton,
+has a chest equally plain in itself, but the iron bands are in this
+case of a richer character. Elegant scroll-work originally covered the
+front and ends, much still remaining to this day. S. Lawrence's, in the
+Isle of Thanet, possesses an exceedingly rough example, with a curved
+top; seven broad iron bands strengthen the lid, and several
+perpendicular ones, crossed by a lateral one, are affixed to the front,
+the whole being studded with large square-headed nails; a huge lock is
+placed in the middle, with hasps for padlocks to the right and left of
+it. It is raised slightly from the ground by wooden "feet."
+
+ [Illustration: CHEST AT S. LAWRENCE, ISLE OF THANET.]
+
+For security and strength, however, the palm must be awarded to a coffer
+at Stonham Aspel. The following description of this remarkable chest was
+given in the "Journal of the British Archaeological Society" in
+September, 1872: "This curious example is of chestnut wood, 8 feet in
+length, 2 feet 3 inches in height, and 2 feet 7 inches from front to
+back; and is entirely covered on the outer surface with sheets of iron
+41/2 inches in width, the joinings being hid by straps. The two lids are
+secured by fourteen hasps; the second from the left locks the first, and
+the hasp simply covers the keyhole; the fourth locks the third, etc.
+After this process is finished, a bar from each angle passes over them,
+and is secured by a curious lock in the centre, which fastens them both.
+The interior of this gigantic chest is divided into two equal
+compartments by a central partition of wood, the one to the left being
+painted red; the other is plain. Each division can be opened separately;
+the rector holding four of the keys, and the churchwardens the others,
+all being of different patterns." The writer of this description (Mr.
+H. Syer Cuming, F.S.A., Scot., V.P.) assigns the chest to the fifteenth
+century.
+
+ [Illustration: CHURCH CHEST, S. MICHAEL'S, COVENTRY.]
+
+Turning now to those chests, whose makers, while not forgetting the
+needful solidity and strength, aimed also at greater decoration, the
+handsome hutch at S. Michael's, Coventry, claims our notice. The front
+of this is carved with a double row of panels having traceried heads,
+the upper row being half the width of the lower one. In the centre are
+two crowned figures, popularly (and not improbably) described as Leofric
+and his wife, the Lady Godiva. At each end of the front is a long panel
+decorated with lozenges enclosing Tudor roses, foliage, and conventional
+animals; while two dragons adorn the bottom, which is cut away so as to
+leave a triangular space beneath the chest. At S. John's, Glastonbury,
+is another fine example, measuring six feet two inches in length, and at
+present lidless. Within six vesica-shaped panels are placed quatrefoil
+ornaments, each divided by a horizontal bar. Above these are five
+shields, three charged with S. George's Cross, and the others, one with
+three lozenges in fess, and the other with three roundles, two and one,
+and a label. The ends, or legs, are elaborately carved with dog-tooth
+figures in squares and circles. Saltwood, Kent, has an ornately carved
+chest, divided (like that of Stonham Aspel) into two parts, the lid
+being correspondingly formed, and opening in sections. One half is
+secured by three locks, and the other by one. The front is carved with
+five geometrical "windows" of four lights each; and the ends of the
+front have three carved square panels, divided by bands of dancette
+ornament. The base has a long narrow panel, with a simple wavy design.
+There is some bold carving on a chest at S. George's, South Acre, in
+Norfolk; a row of cusped arches fills rather more than half the height
+of the front, the rest being taken up with four panels containing roses
+and stars, similar designs on a smaller scale being repeated at the
+ends. The front is cut away at the bottom in a series of curves.
+
+ [Illustration: CHURCH CHEST S. JOHN'S GLASTONBURY]
+
+At Alnwick is a massive coffer, over seven feet long, bearing on its
+front a number of figures of dragons, and heads of birds and beasts,
+amid foliage; above which are two hunting scenes, in which appear men
+with horns, dogs, and deer, amid trees. These two scenes are separated
+by the lock, and are precisely alike, save that the quarry in one is a
+stag, and a hind in the other. Empingham, near Stamford, has a fine
+chest of cedar wood, adorned with incised figures. At S. Mary's,
+Mortlake, is one of walnut, inlaid with boxwood and ebony, and
+ornamented with designs in metal work; the under side of the lid has
+some delicate iron-wrought tracery, which was originally set off with
+red velvet. The Huttoft chest is enriched with traceried arches, which
+were apparently at one time picked out in colour; that of Stoke
+D'Abernon is raised on four substantial legs, and is decorated with
+three circles on the front filled with a kind of tracery; there are
+other interesting specimens at Winchester and at Ewerby. In the old
+castle at Newcastle-on-Tyne is preserved an old church coffer, which was
+probably removed there for safety during the troublous days of the Civil
+War. At Harty Chapel, Kent, we find the figures of two knights in full
+armour, tilting at each other, carved on the front of a chest; the
+legend of S. George and the dragon is illustrated in a similar way at
+Southwold Church, Suffolk, and yet more fully on a chest in the treasury
+of York Minster.
+
+Probably, however, the handsomest example of a carved church chest now
+preserved in England is at Brancepeth, in the county of Durham. This
+beautiful piece of work, which rests in the south chapel of the church,
+has its front completely covered with elaborate carving. At either end
+are three oblong panels, one above another, on each of which is a
+conventional bird or beast; at the base is a series of diamonds filled,
+as are the intervals between them, with tracery; and above this is an
+arcade of six pointed arches, each enclosing three lights surmounted by
+a circle, the six being divided by tall lancets, the crockets of the
+arches and a wealth of foliage filling up the intervening spaces. This
+fine chest dates from the fourteenth century.
+
+The Rev. Francis E. Powell, M.A., in his pleasantly-written work
+entitled "The Story of a Cheshire Parish," gives particulars of the
+parish chest of Over. "The chest," says Mr. Powell, was "the gift of
+Bishop Samuel Peploe to Joseph Maddock, Clerk, April 30th, 1750." It
+probably was an old chest even then. The donor was Bishop of Chester
+from 1726 to 1752. He was a Whig in politics, and a latitudinarian in
+religion, as so many bishops of that time were. That he was a man of
+determined courage may be seen by his loyalty to the House of Hanover,
+even under adverse circumstances. One day, in the year 1715, he was
+reading Morning Prayer at the parish church at Preston. The town was
+occupied by Jacobite troops, some of whom burst into the church during
+the service. Approaching the prayer-desk, with drawn sword, a trooper
+demanded that Peploe should substitute James for George in the prayer
+for the King's Majesty. Peploe merely paused to say, "Soldier, I am
+doing my duty; do you do yours;" and went on with the prayers, whereupon
+the soldiers at once proceeded to eject him from the church. The
+illustration of the chest is kindly lent to us by the Rev. Francis E.
+Powell, vicar of Over.
+
+In the vestry of Lambeth Palace is a curiously painted chest; several of
+an early date are preserved in the triforium of Westminster Abbey; there
+is one at Salisbury Cathedral, and another in the Record Office, having
+been removed from the Pix Chapel.
+
+One of the original uses of these coffers, as we have seen, was to
+preserve the vestments of the church. The copes, however, being larger
+than the other vestments, and in the cathedrals and other important
+churches, being very numerous, frequently had a special receptacle
+provided. At York, Salisbury, Westminster, and Gloucester, ancient
+cope-chests are still preserved. These are triangular in shape, the cope
+being most easily folded into that form.
+
+In not a few instances these large coffers, or sections of them, were
+used as alms boxes, for which a very ancient precedent can be found. At
+the restoration of the Jewish Temple under King Joash, we are told
+(2 Kings xii., 9, 10) that "Jehoiada the priest took a chest, and bored
+a hole in the lid of it, and set it beside the altar, on the right side
+as one cometh into the house of the Lord: and the priests that kept the
+door put therein all the money that was brought into the house of the
+Lord: and it was so, when they saw that there was much money in the
+chest, that the King's scribe and the high priest came up, and they put
+up in bags, and told the money that was found in the house of the Lord."
+
+At Llanaber, near Barmouth in North Wales, is a chest hewn from a single
+block of wood, and pierced to receive coins. At Hatfield, Yorkshire, is
+an ancient example of a similar kind; and others may be seen at
+S. Peter's-in-the-East, Oxford, at Drayton in Berkshire, at Meare
+Church, Somersetshire, at Irchester and Mears Ashby, in
+Northamptonshire, at Hartland, in Devonshire, and in the Isle of Wight
+at Carisbrooke. An interesting chest, with provision for the reception
+of alms, is preserved at Combs Church, Suffolk, where there is also
+another plain hutch, iron-bound and treble-locked. The chest in question
+is strongly, but simply, made, the front being divided into four plain
+panels, with some very slight attempt at decoration in the form of small
+disks and diamonds along the top; and the lid being quite flat and
+plain, and secured by two locks. At one end, however, a long slit has
+been cut in this lid, and beneath it is a till, or trough, to receive
+the money, very similar to the little locker often inserted at one end
+of an old oak chest intended for domestic use, save that in this case
+the compartment has, of course, no second lid of its own. This chest has
+the date 1599 carved upon it, but is supposed to be some half a century
+older, the date perhaps marking the time of some repairs or alterations
+made in it.
+
+Hutches of the kind that we have been considering are not peculiar to
+England, some fine and well-preserved examples being found in several
+of the ancient churches in France. Among ourselves it is obvious that
+great numbers must have disappeared; many doubtless were rough and
+scarcely worthy of long preservation; others by the very beauty of their
+workmanship probably roused the cupidity, or the iconoclastic prejudice,
+of the spoiler. Near Brinkburn Priory a handsome fourteenth century
+chest was found, used for domestic purposes, in a neighbouring
+farm-house; a Tudor chest, belonging to S. Mary's, Newington, lay for
+years in the old rectory house, and subsequently disappeared; and these
+are doubtless typical of many another case. When the strictness at first
+enforced as to the care of the parish registers became culpably relaxed,
+and parish clerks and sextons were left in practically sole charge of
+them, it is but too probable that these men, often illiterate and
+otherwise unsuited to such a trust, were in many instances as careless,
+or as criminal, in regard to the coffers, as we unfortunately know they
+frequently were with respect to their contents.
+
+Few church chests of any interest date from the Jacobean, or any
+subsequent period. Plain deal boxes were then held good enough for the
+purpose of a "church hutch."
+
+
+
+
+An Antiquarian Problem: The Leper Window.
+
+By William White, F.S.A.
+
+
+These windows were called by Parker and other writers of the Gothic
+Revival, "Lychnoscopes;" and then by the ecclesiologists, "Low-side
+Windows." But the name given by the late G. E. Street has now become so
+generally accepted that it seems necessary to look a little further into
+the evidence of the fitness or unfitness of this designation for them.
+
+Behind some stalls in the Royal Chapel were discovered some remains of a
+mural painting, apparently to represent the communicating of a leper
+through some such window, and he at once concluded that it was for this
+very purpose so many of them were introduced into the chancels of our
+mediaeval churches. There seemed, however, nothing to indicate that it
+was at one of these special windows at all that this function was
+performed. And the very fact of the representation itself would seem to
+indicate rather an exceptional instance, or special circumstance, such
+as the communicating of some knight or person of note who might, for
+instance, have brought leprosy in his own person from the Holy Land,
+from whence probably in the first instance it came; and who would not be
+admitted within the church. But the records of the existence of lepers
+would seem to show their numbers to have been very limited, and confined
+to few localities. And in any case this would be no sufficient cause for
+the introduction of these windows as of universal occurrence throughout
+the land, for these windows are found almost everywhere, and in very
+many instances on both sides of the chancel. Moreover, in many cases the
+act of administration through these windows would be exceedingly
+difficult, if not impossible, on account of the position, or the
+arrangement, of the window itself.
+
+To my mind a very much more practical and reasonable supposition would
+be that they were introduced, and used, for burial purposes. At a period
+when the body would not be brought into the church, except in the case
+of some ecclesiastic or other notable person, the priest would here be
+able, _from his stall_, to see the funeral _cortege_ come into the
+churchyard, and then say the first part of the office through this
+window; which was always shuttered and without glass. In some cases
+there is a book-ledge corbelled out on the east jamb of the window
+inside, which has puzzled antiquaries, but which has not otherwise
+received a satisfactory explanation. In immediate proximity to the
+window, at the end of the stalls (and sometimes in the earlier churches
+_through_ them), was the priest's door, out of which he would then
+proceed to the grave to commit the body to the earth. The grave itself
+needs not necessarily be within sight of the window. But in a number of
+instances the churchyard cross was so; and this may have served as the
+recognised place for the mourners, with the body, to assemble.
+
+In the case of Foxton, Leicestershire, the "Lych Window," as I would
+call it, is on the north side. Here the burials are chiefly on the north
+side; a steep slope down towards the church on the south side rendering
+it very difficult and unsuitable for them. At Addisham, Kent, the
+priest's door is, contrary to the usual custom, on the north side, where
+is also a principal portion of the churchyard, and, so far as my own
+observations go, the position of the window would greatly depend upon
+the arrangement of the churchyard, whether north or south.
+
+
+
+
+Mazes.
+
+By the Rev. Geo. S. Tyack, B.A.
+
+
+Something concerning the construction of labyrinths, or mazes, is known
+even to the most general reader; it needs but a slight acquaintance with
+classical literature to learn of the famous example formed at Crete by
+Daedalus; the legend of the concealment of "fair Rosamond," within a maze
+at Woodstock, is familiar enough; and the existing labyrinth at Hampton
+Court, the work of William III. is well known. But probably few who have
+not looked somewhat into the matter, have any idea of the number of such
+mazes which still exist, or of the yet greater number of which we have
+authentic records. A learned French antiquary, Mons. Bonnin, of Evreux,
+collected two hundred examples, gathered from many lands, and stretching
+in history from classical to modern times.
+
+Of the most ancient labyrinths it will be enough to indicate the
+localities. One is said to have been constructed in Egypt by King
+Minos, and to have served as a model for the one raised by Daedalus at
+Cnossus, in Crete, as a prison for the Minataur. Another Egyptian
+example, which has been noticed by several authors, was near Lake
+Moeris. Lemnos contained a famous labyrinth; and Lar Porsena built one
+at Clusium, in Etruria. These mazes consisted either of a series of
+connected caverns, as it has been supposed was the case in Crete; or, as
+in the other instances, were formed of courts enclosed by walls and
+colonnades.
+
+ [Illustration: LABYRINTH INSCRIBED ON ONE OF THE PORCH PIERS
+ OF LUCCA CATHEDRAL.]
+
+The use of the labyrinth in mediaeval times, has, however, greater
+interest for us in this paper, especially from the fact that such was
+distinctly ecclesiastical. Several continental churches have labyrinths,
+either cut in stone or inlaid in coloured marbles, figured upon their
+walls or elsewhere. At Lucca Cathedral is an example incised upon one of
+the piers of the porch; and others may be seen at Pavia, Aix in
+Provence, and at Poitiers. These are all small, the diameter of the
+Lucca labyrinth being 1 foot 71/2 inches, which is the dimension also of
+one in an ancient pavement in the church of S. Maria in Aquiro, in Rome.
+That the suggestion for the construction of these arose from the
+mythological legends concerning those of pagan days is proved by the
+fact that in several of them the figures of Theseus and the Minataur
+were placed in the centre. Probably from the first, the Church, in her
+use of the figure, spiritualized the meaning of the heathen story, as we
+know was her wont in other cases; and a labyrinth formed in mosaic on
+the floor of an ancient basilica at Orleansville, Algeria, shows that
+presently the mythological symbols gave place entirely to obviously
+Christian ones. In this last-named instance, the centre is occupied by
+the words _Sancta Ecclesia_.
+
+About the twelfth century these curious figures became very popular, and
+a considerable number dating from that period still exist. They have for
+the most part been constructed in parti-coloured marbles on some portion
+of the floor of the church. One was laid down in 1189 at S. Maria in
+Trastevere, in Rome; S. Vitale, Ravenna, contains another; and the
+parish church of S. Quentin has a third. Others formerly existed at
+Amiens Cathedral (made in 1288 and destroyed in 1825), at Rheims (made
+about 1240 and destroyed in 1779), and at Arras (destroyed at the
+Revolution). These are much larger than the examples before noticed; the
+two Italian examples are each about 11 feet across, but the French ones
+greatly exceed this. Those of S. Quentin and Arras were each over 34
+feet in diameter, and the others were somewhat larger; Amiens possessed
+the largest, measuring 42 feet. France had another example of a similar
+kind at Chartres.
+
+The Christian meaning which was read into these complicated designs was
+more emphatically expressed in these twelfth-century instances. The
+centre is usually occupied by a cross, round which, in some cases, were
+arranged figures of bishops, angels, and others.
+
+The introduction of these large labyrinths, together with the name which
+came at this time to be applied to them in France, namely, _Chemins de
+Jerusalem_, suggests the new use to which such arrangements now began to
+be put. It is well known that in some cases substitutes for the great
+pilgrimage to Jerusalem were allowed to be counted as of almost equal
+merit. Thus the Spaniards, so long as they had not expelled the infidel
+from their own territory, were forbidden to join the Crusades to the
+Holy Land; and were permitted to substitute a journey to the shrine of
+S. Jago, at Compostella, for one to the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. By
+an extension of the same principle, especially when the zeal of
+Christendom for pilgrimages began to cool, easy substitutes for the more
+exacting devotion were found in many ways. The introduction of the
+Stations of the Cross is ascribed to this cause, the devout following in
+imagination of the footsteps of the Saviour in His last sufferings,
+being accounted equivalent to visiting the holy places; and somewhat
+similarly, the maze, or labyrinth, is said to have been pressed into the
+service of religion, the following out (probably upon the knees) of its
+long and tortuous path-way, being reckoned as a simple substitute for a
+longer pilgrimage.
+
+From such a use as this, it was no great step to the employment of the
+maze as a means of penance in other cases. The whole of the intricate
+pathway was intended to remind the penitent of the difficulties which
+beset the Christian course; and the centre, which could only be reached
+by surmounting them, was often called heaven (_Ciel_). Nor could such a
+penance be deemed a light one. Though occupying so small a space of
+ground, the mazy path was so involved as to reach a considerable length,
+whence it was sometimes named the League (_La lieue_). The pathway at
+Chartres measures 668 feet; at Sens was a maze which required some 2,000
+steps to gain the centre. An hour is said to have been often needed to
+accomplish the journey, due allowance being made for the prayers which
+had to be recited at certain fixed stations of it, or throughout its
+whole course.
+
+At S. Omer are one or two examples of the labyrinth. One at the Church
+of Notre Dame has figures of towns, mountains, rivers, and wild beasts
+depicted along the pathway, to give, no doubt, greater realism to the
+pilgrimage. The existing drawing of another, which has been destroyed,
+is inscribed, "The way of the road to Jerusalem at one time marked on
+the floor of the Church of S. Bertin." Many of these designs are not
+only ingenious, but beautiful. In the Chapterhouse at Bayeux is one
+enriched with heraldic figures; that at Chartres has its central circle
+relieved with six cusps, while an engrailed border encloses the whole
+work. A circular shape was apparently the most popular; the maze at
+S. Quentin, with some others, however, is octagonal. The pathway is
+usually marked by coloured marbles, sometimes the darker, sometimes the
+lighter shades in the design being used for the purpose; at Sens, lead
+has been employed to indicate it.
+
+The Revolution, as we have seen, led to the destruction of several
+ecclesiastical labyrinths; some, however, became a source of annoyance
+to the worshippers, from children attempting to trace the true pathway
+during the time of service, and they were removed in consequence.
+Labyrinths of this kind do not appear to have been introduced into
+England, the only instance known to the present writer being quite a
+modern one. This is in the church porch at Alkborough, in Lincolnshire,
+where, at the recent restoration, the design of a local maze (to be
+noticed further hereafter) was reproduced.
+
+If England, however, has not imitated the continent in this respect, she
+has struck out a line no less interesting, which has remained almost
+exclusively her own; namely, in the mazes cut in the green turf of her
+meadows. Shakespeare has an allusion to these in the "Midsummer Night's
+Dream," (Act iii., 3) where Titania says,
+
+ "The nine men's morris is fill'd up with mud,
+ And the quaint mazes in the wanton green
+ For lack of tread are indistinguishable."
+
+Some twenty of these rustic labyrinths have been noted as still
+existing, or as recorded by a sound tradition, in England; and no doubt
+there have been others which have disappeared, leaving no trace behind.
+
+ [Illustration: MAZE AT ALKBOROUGH, LINCOLNSHIRE.]
+
+Among those which have been preserved, the following may be noticed. At
+Alkborough, in Lincolnshire, near the confluence of the Trent and the
+Ouse, is a maze, the diameter of which is 44 feet; by a happy
+suggestion, the design of this has been repeated, as was above remarked,
+in the porch of the Parish Church, so that should the original
+unfortunately be destroyed, a permanent record has been provided.
+Hilton, in Huntingdonshire has a maze of exactly the same plan, in the
+centre of which is a stone pillar, bearing an inscription in Latin and
+English, to the effect that the work was constructed in 1660, by William
+Sparrow. Comberton, in Cambridgeshire, possesses a maze, locally known
+as the "Mazles," which is fifty feet in diameter. The pathway is two
+feet wide, and is defined by small trenches, the whole surface being
+gradually hollowed towards the centre. Northamptonshire is represented
+by Boughton Green, which has a labyrinth 37 feet in diameter; and
+Rutland has one at Wing, which measures 40 feet.
+
+ [Illustration: THE MIZE-MAZE ON ST. KATHERINE'S HILL, WINCHESTER.]
+
+At Asenby, in the parish of Topcliffe, Yorkshire, is a maze measuring 51
+feet across, which has been carefully preserved by the local
+authorities. At Chilcombe, near Winchester, a maze is cut in the turf of
+S. Catherine's Hill; it is square in outline, each side being 86 feet.
+It is locally known as the "Mize-maze." One much larger than any yet
+noticed is found near Saffron Waldon, in Essex, its diameter being 110
+feet. There are local records which prove the great antiquity of a maze
+at this place. The design is peculiar, being properly a circle, save
+that at four equal distances along the circumference the pathway sweeps
+out into a horseshoe projection.
+
+ [Illustration: THE MAZE NEAR ST. ANNE'S CHAPEL, NOTTINGHAM.]
+
+A similar plan was followed in cutting a maze, once of some celebrity,
+near S. Anne's Well, at Sneinton, Nottingham. The projections in this
+case are bolder, and within the spaces enclosed by the triple pathway
+which swept around them were cut cross-crosslets. The popular names for
+this maze in the district were the "Shepherd's Maze," and "Robin
+Hood's Race." This was, unfortunately, ploughed up in 1797, at the
+enclosure of the lordship of Sneinton. Nottinghamshire has, however,
+another example in the small square one at Clifton.
+
+ [Illustration: MAZE FORMERLY EXISTING NEAR ST. ANNE'S WELL,
+ SNEINTON, NOTTINGHAMSHIRE.]
+
+Many of these turf-cut labyrinths were destroyed during the
+Commonwealth, before which period, according to Aubrey in his history
+of Surrey, there were many in England. Not a few, however, which
+survived that time of wanton destruction, have been obliterated since.
+
+In 1827 one which was on Ripon Common was ploughed up. Its diameter was
+60 feet. Another existed till comparatively recent times at Hillbury,
+between Farnham and Guildford. At Pimpern, in Dorset, there was formerly
+a maze of a unique design. The outline was roughly a triangle, which
+enclosed nearly an acre of ground; the pathway was marked out by ridges
+of earth about a foot in height, and followed a singularly intricate
+course. The plough destroyed this also in 1730.
+
+The names locally applied to these structures often imply very erroneous
+ideas as to their origin and purpose. In some instances they are
+ascribed to the shepherds, as if cut by them as pastime in their idle
+moments; a suggestion, which a glance at the mazes themselves, with
+their intricate designs and correctly formed curves, will prove to be
+hardly tenable. Two other names of frequent occurrence in England are
+"Troy Town," and "Julian's Bower"; the latter being connected with the
+former, Julius, son of AEneas being the person alluded to. Some have
+from these titles sought to trace a connection with a very ancient sport
+known as the _Troy Game_, which arose in classic times, and survived
+down to the Middle Ages. It consisted probably in the rhythmic
+performance of certain evolutions, much after the fashion of the
+"Musical Rides" executed by our cavalry. The origin of the idea is to be
+sought in a passage in Virgil's AEneid (Bk. V., v. 583 _et seq._), which
+has been thus translated by Kennett:--
+
+ "Files facing files their bold companions dare,
+ And wheel, and charge, and urge the sportive war.
+ Now flight they feign, and naked backs expose,
+ Now with turned spears drive headlong on the foes,
+ And now, confederate grown, in peaceful ranks they close.
+ As Crete's fam'd labyrinth, to a thousand ways
+ And endless darken'd walls the guest conveys;
+ Endless, inextricable rounds amuse,
+ And no kind track the doubtful passage shows;
+ So the glad Trojan youth, the winding course
+ Sporting pursue, and charge the rival force."
+
+Tresco, Scilly, has a maze known as Troy-town; and it would seem that
+such were once common in Cornwall, since any intricate arrangement is
+often locally called by that name.
+
+It has, however, been pointed out that most of these mazes date from a
+time when classical knowledge was not widely spread in England; that, in
+fact, the name has probably been given in most instances long after the
+date of the construction of the work.
+
+It would seem rather that the original use of these quaint figures was,
+as with those continental examples before noted, ecclesiastical. No one
+who has had the opportunity of comparing the designs of the English and
+the foreign mazes can fail to be struck with the great similarity
+between them; suggesting, at least, a common origin and purpose. And
+this suggestion is greatly strengthened when we notice that, although
+the English mazes are never (with one modern instance only excepted)
+within churches, as are the continental instances, yet they are almost
+invariably close to a church, or the ancient site of a church. The
+Alkborough and Wing mazes, for instance, are hard by the parish
+churches; and those at Sneinton, Winchester, and Boughton Green are
+beside spots once consecrated by chapels dedicated in honour of St.
+Anne, St. Catherine, and St. John. The most probable conjecture is that
+these were originally formed, and for long years were used, for
+purposes of devotion and penance. Doubtless in later times the children
+often trod those mazy ways in sport and emulation, which had been slowly
+measured countless times before in silent meditation or in penitential
+tears.
+
+A word or two may be added in conclusion on mazes of the more modern
+sort, formed for amusement rather than for use, as a curious feature in
+a scheme of landscape gardening. These _topiary_ mazes, as they are
+called, usually have their paths defined by walls of well-cut box, yew,
+or other suitable shrubs; and they differ from the turf mazes in that
+they are often made purposely puzzling and misleading. In the
+ecclesiastical maze, it is always the patience, not the ingenuity, which
+is tested; there is but one road to follow, and though that one wanders
+in and out with tantalizing curves and coils, yet it leads him who
+follows it unerringly to the centre.
+
+From Tudor times this form of decoration for a large garden has been
+more or less popular. Burleigh formed one at the old palace at
+Theobald's, Hertfordshire, about 1560; and the Maze in Southwark, near a
+spot once occupied by the residence of Queen Mary before coming to the
+throne, and Maze Hill at Greenwich, no doubt mark the sites of
+labyrinths now otherwise forgotten. Lord Fauconbergh had a maze at
+Sutton Court in 1691; and William III. so highly approved of them that,
+having left one behind him at the Palace of the Loo, he had another
+constructed at Hampton Court.
+
+Literature and art have not disdained to interest themselves in this
+somewhat formal method of gardening; for in the sixteenth and
+seventeenth centuries more than one treatise on their construction was
+published; while Holbein and Tintoretto have left behind them designs
+for topiary labyrinths.
+
+The oldest and most famous maze in our history is "Fair Rosamond's
+Bower," already mentioned. Of what kind this was, if indeed it was at
+all, it is difficult to say; authorities disagreeing as to whether it
+was a matter of architectural arrangement, of connected caves, or of
+some other kind. The trend of modern historical criticism in this, as in
+so many other romantic stories from our annals, is to deny its
+genuineness altogether.
+
+Fortunately although so many of our ancient mazes have disappeared, the
+designs of their construction has, in not a few cases, been preserved
+to us by means of contemporary drawings; so that a fairly accurate idea
+of the type most commonly followed may still be obtained.
+
+We have to thank Mr. J. Potter Briscoe, F.R.H.S., editor of "Old
+Nottinghamshire," for kindly placing at our disposal the two
+illustrations relating to the St. Anne's Well Maze.
+
+
+
+
+Churchyard Superstitions.
+
+By the Rev. Theodore Johnson.
+
+
+Among all classes of English people there are mixed feelings relating to
+our churchyards. They are either places of reverence on the one hand, or
+superstition on the other. The sacred plot surrounding the old Parish
+Church carries with it such a host of memories and associations, that to
+the learned and thoughtful it has always been God's Acre, hallowed with
+a tender hush of silent contemplation of the many sad rifts and partings
+among us. We almost vie with each other in proclaiming that deep
+reverence for this one sacred spot, so dear to our family life, and
+affections, by those mementos of love which we raise over the
+resting-places of our lost ones gone before. This is strangely apparent
+in the stately monument, where the carver's art declares the virtues of
+the dead, either by sculptured figure, or verse engraven, as well as in
+the ofttimes more pathetic, and perhaps more beautiful, tribute of the
+floral cross or wreath culled by loving hands, and borne in silence, by
+our poorer brethren, as the only offering, or tribute, their slender
+means allows them to make. Be sure of this one fact, that our English
+Churchyards are better kept--more worthy of the name of God's Acre than
+in the times past, for what is a more beautiful sight, than to see the
+kneeling children around the garden grave of a parent, or a child
+companion, adorning the little mound with flowers for the Eastertide
+festival. Here we have a living illustration of the truth of the
+concluding words of our Great Creed: "I look for the Resurrection of the
+Dead and the Life of the World to come."
+
+On the other hand, to the ignorant, and unlearned in these things, the
+Churchyard often becomes a place of dread, and it may be, some of the
+strange behaviour sometimes seen there arises from this inner feeling of
+awe, which in their ignorant superstition they are wont to carry off in
+the spirit of daring bravado.
+
+From a close study of the subject, I am led to conclude that the common
+unchristian idea, that the churchyard is 'haunted,' whatever that may
+mean to a weak or ignorant person, has much to do with it. The evil
+report, once circulated, will be handed on to generations yet unborn,
+until the simple origin, which at first might have been easily
+explained, becomes clouded in mystery as time goes on, and the deep
+rooted feeling of horror spreads around us, until even the more
+strong-minded among us, feel at times, somewhat doubtful as to whether
+there may not be some truth where the popular testimony is so strong.
+
+In country districts, more than in towns, superstition is rife with
+regard to our Churchyards. The variety and form of this superstition is
+well nigh 'Legion,' and though many of my readers may enjoy an Ingoldsby
+experience when read in a well-lighted room, surrounded by smiling
+companions, few of them, after such an experience would care to pay a
+visit alone to some neighbouring churchyard, renowned for its tale of
+ghostly appearances. This will, I think enable me to show that by far
+the larger number of churchyard superstitions are purely chimerous
+fancies of the brain, and do not owe their origin, or existence, to any
+other source, be that source a wilful fraud, or imposition, designed to
+produce fear, or merely the imaginative delusion of some overstrained,
+or weak brain, which called first it into existence.
+
+Yet there are prevalent ideas or notions, about the churchyard and its
+sleepers, as deep-rooted as any wild superstition, and perhaps as
+difficult to solve, or to trace to any rational source. I would here
+mention one of the most strange, and probably one of the most prejudiced
+notions to be met with relating to burial in the churchyard. I refer to
+the East Anglian prejudice of being buried on the north side of the
+church. That this prejudice is a strong one, among the country people in
+certain parts of England, is proved by the scarcity of graves, nay, in
+many instances the total absence of graves, on the north side of our
+churches.
+
+Some seventeen years ago, shortly after taking charge of a parish in
+Norfolk, I was called upon to select a suitable spot for the burial of a
+poor man, who had been killed by an accident. After several places had
+been suggested by me to the sexton, who claimed for them either a family
+right, or some similar objection; I noticed for the first time, that
+there were no graves upon the north side of the church, and I, in my
+innocence, suggested that there would be plenty of space there;
+whereupon my companion's face at once assumed the most serious
+expression, and I immediately saw that fear had taken hold of his mind,
+as he answered with a somewhat shaky voice, "No, Sir! No, that cannot
+be!" My curiosity was immediately aroused, and I sought for an
+explanation, which I found not from my good and loyal friend, who would
+not trust himself to answer further than "No, Sir! No, that cannot be!"
+The sexton's manner puzzled me greatly, for the man was an upright,
+straightforward, open-hearted, servant of the Church--but I at once saw
+that it would be fruitless to push the matter further with him, so after
+marking out a suitable resting place for the poor unfortunate man, who
+not being a parishoner of long standing, had no family burial place
+awaiting him, I made my way home to think over the whole occurrence.
+
+The cause for non-burial on the north side of the Church was indeed a
+mystery, yet that my parishoners had some valid reason for not being
+laid to rest there, was apparent; so I set about the task of unravelling
+the superstition, if so it may be called.
+
+My library shelves seemed to be the most natural place of research, but
+here after consultation with several volumes of Archaeology,
+Ecclesiology, and Folk Lore, I could find nothing bearing upon the
+subject, beyond that in certain instances relating to Churchyard
+Parishes on the sea-coast, the north side by reason of its exposure to
+wind and storm, and being the sunless quarter of the burying ground, was
+less used than other parts; but here the reason given was in
+consideration of the living mourners at the time of the interment, and
+not the body sleeping in its last resting place of earth.
+
+After some considerable correspondence with friends likely to be
+interested in such a matter, I was rewarded with information that, in
+some instances, the northern portion of the churchyard was left
+unconsecrated, and only thus occasionally used for the burial of
+suicides, vagrants, highwaymen (after the four cross road graves had
+been discontinued), or for nondescripts and unbaptised persons, for whom
+no religious service was considered necessary. Even this I did not
+accept as a solution of my problem. That there was something more than
+local feeling underlying this superstition, I was certain, but how to
+get to the root of the subject perplexed me.
+
+The Editor of "Notes and Queries" could not satisfy me. His general
+suggestions and kind desire to aid me were well-nigh fruitless, so that
+there remained for me the course of watching and waiting, as none of my
+neighbours could, or would, go beyond the conclusive statement of the
+sexton, "It must not be!" or what was even more indefinite, "I have
+never heard of such a thing."
+
+The subject was a fruitful source of thought for some months, and in
+vain I tried to connect some religious custom of other days, or to find
+some Text of Scripture, which might have given rise to the idea, if
+mistranslated, or twisted by human ingenuity, to serve such a purpose,
+but none occurred to me that in the least would bear of such a
+contortion.
+
+In my intercourse with my older parishoners I sought in vain to test the
+unbaptized or suicidal burying place theory as suggested above, but this
+was entirely foreign to them. At length, the truth of the old saying,
+"_All things come to those who wait_" brought its due reward. I was
+called in to visit an aged parishoner, who was nearing the end of life's
+journey, and among other subjects naturally came the thoughts, and
+wishes, of this old saintly man's last hours on earth. He had been a
+shepherd for well nigh sixty years, and a widower for the past fifteen
+years, and in consequence he had lived and worked much alone. This had
+produced a thoughtful spirit, and a certain slowness of speech, so that
+he was quite the last man I should have consulted for a solution of my
+mystery. Yet, here the secret was unfolded, or to my mind more
+satisfactorily explained, than by any previous consultation with either
+men or books. The grand old labourer, or faithful shepherd, as he was
+laid helpless on his bed, with his life work symbol--the shepherd's
+crook, standing idle in the corner, and his trusty dog, restless and
+perplexed, roaming from room to room, was a wonderful picture of a
+Christian death-bed.
+
+There I learned many a solemn life-lesson never to be forgotten. The
+calm voice, the monosyllabic answers given in response to my questions
+are still fresh to me; and there I learned the source of my Churchyard
+Superstition in the following manner:--
+
+With a strange, weird, unnatural light in the aged man's eyes, which
+portrayed much anxiety of mind, he spoke about his burial-place, and
+particularly emphasising the words "_On the south side, sir, near by the
+wife_." When I ventured to inquire if he knew why such a strong
+objection was held to burial on the north side of the church. He started
+suddenly, and I shall never forget his reproachful, sad look as he more
+readily than usual gave the answer:--"The left side of Christ, sir: we
+don't like to be counted among the goats."
+
+As a flash of lightning illuminates the whole darkness of the country
+side, and reveals for the moment every object in clear outline, so this
+quaint saying of my dying friend dispelled in a moment the mists of the
+past which clouded the truth of my strange superstition.
+
+Here was the best answer to the mystery, pointing with no uncertain
+words to the glorious Resurrection Day, this aged, earthly shepherd at
+the end of his years of toil recognised his Great Master, Jesus, as the
+True Shepherd of mankind, meeting His flock as they arose from their
+long sleep of death, with their faces turned eastward, awaiting His
+appearing.
+
+Then when all had been called and recognised He turned to lead them
+onward, still their True Shepherd and Guide, with the sheep on His right
+hand, and the goats on His left hand, so wonderfully foretold in the
+Gospel story: "When the Son of Man shall come in His glory, and all the
+holy angels with Him, then shall He sit upon the throne of His glory;
+And before Him shall be gathered all nations: and He shall separate them
+one from another, as a shepherd divideth his sheep from the goats: and
+He shall set the sheep on His right hand, but the goats on the
+left."--_S. Matt, xxv., 31, 32, 33._
+
+Surely, the above simple illustration explains much that is difficult
+and mysterious to us in the way of religious superstition. Undoubtedly,
+we have here a good example of how superstitions have arisen, probably
+from a good source, it may be the words of some teacher long since
+passed away. The circumstance has long been forgotten, yet the lesson
+remains, and being handed down by oral tradition only, every vestige of
+its religious nature disappears and but the feeling remains, which, in
+the minds of the ignorant populace, increases in mystery and enfolds
+itself in superstitious awe, without any desire from them to discover
+the origin, or source, of such a strange custom, or event.
+
+
+
+
+Curious Announcements in the Church.
+
+By the Rev. R. Wilkins Rees.
+
+
+Years ago announcements in churches were of a distinctly curious
+character, and the parish clerk in making the intimation seems to have
+been left completely to his own indiscretion. In country districts,
+where proper advertising would be quite impossible, the practical
+advantages of some classes of announcements would be great, but none of
+them accord with our modern sense of the fitness of things, and many can
+only be accounted for on the ground of extraordinary familiarity between
+clergyman, clerk, and congregation. A brief consideration of the subject
+furnishes a few side-lights into the general condition of the church, as
+well as into the laxity of church discipline, about fifty years and more
+ago, especially away from large centres of population.
+
+In certain parts, the custom of crying lost goods in church was
+undoubtedly prevalent, and did not then appear peculiar. The rector, who
+had lost his favourite dog and told the parish clerk to do his best to
+ascertain its whereabouts, may have been astonished to hear him announce
+the loss in church, coupled with a statement that a reward of three
+pounds would be given to the person who should restore the animal to its
+owner. But such surprise was hardly natural when an announcement like
+the following was possible:--"Mislaid on Sunday last! The gold-rimmed
+vicar's spectacles of best glass, taken from his eyes in going into the
+poor box, or put down somewhere when going into the font to fetch the
+water after the christening." What a shock this rare jumble produced by
+a country clerk must have been to the precise and classical vicar can
+only be imagined. The thought, however, of a gold-rimmed vicar
+diminutive enough to enter font or poor box is somewhat staggering!
+Quite as muddled, but much more ingenious, was the clerk who announced,
+in recent years, an accomplished D.Sc. and LL.D. as a Doctor of Schools
+and a Lord Lieutenant of Divinity!
+
+"Lost, stolen, or strayed," shouted the clerk in church one Sunday, with
+the strident voice of a town crier, and the manner of one not
+unaccustomed to the task, "lost, stolen, or strayed. Four fat sheep and
+one lean cow. Whoever will return the same to Mr. ----'s farm will be
+suitably rewarded." It is well that the name of the parish in which it
+was given, is missing from another specimen of this sort of
+announcement, for it seems to indicate that honesty there could be but
+the outcome of an inducement afforded by the promise of substantial
+reward. "Lost," said the clerk, "on Sunday last, when the wearer was
+walking home from this church, and before she reached the Town Hall, a
+lady's gold brooch, set with pearls and other precious stones. The one
+who has found it will consider it worth while to restore it, for the
+reward of a guinea is offered."
+
+It is not a little surprising that the clergyman in charge did not
+supervise more carefully the various announcements, especially when so
+many a _contretemps_ occurred. Once a parish clerk announced in his
+rector's hearing:--"There'll be no service next Sunday as the rector's
+going out grouse shooting." The rector had injudiciously acquainted his
+clerk with the reason of his approaching absence, and this was the
+result. It happened, of course, a half century since, but it illustrates
+an interesting state of things as existing at that period. With it two
+similar incidents may well be mentioned, the first of which occurred in
+Scotland, the second in the Principality. "Next Sawbath," said a worthy
+Scotch beadle, "we shall have no Sawbath, for the meenister's house is
+having spring cleaning, and as the weather is very bad the meenister's
+wife wants the kirk to dry the things in." "Next Sunday," declared the
+unconsciously amusing Welshman, "there'll be no Sunday, as we're going
+to whitewash the church with yellow-ochre." Sometimes the omission of a
+stop caused sore trouble to the clerk, while it hugely delighted the
+congregation. "A man having gone to see his wife desires the prayers of
+this church," was the startling announcement. But had not the clerk been
+near-sighted and mistaken _sea_ for _see_, and had a comma been supplied
+after sea, the notice would have been all right, for it was simply the
+request of a sailor's wife on behalf of her husband.
+
+Once the clerk made the announcement that a parish meeting would be held
+on a given date. "No, no," interrupted the vicar. "D'ye think I'd attend
+to business on the audit day!" The audit days were recognised as times
+of hearty feasting and convivial mirth, in which the vicar played no
+unimportant part. This freedom of speech between clergyman and clerk was
+not seldom fruitful of ill-restrained amusement when the announcements
+were made. A vicar informed his congregation one Sunday morning that he
+would hold the customary service for baptisms in the afternoon, and
+requested the parents to bring their children punctually, so that there
+might be no delay in commencing. Immediately he had said this, the old
+clerk, sleepy and deaf, thinking the parson's announcement had to do
+with a new hymn-book which at that time was being introduced, arose, and
+graciously informed the people that for those who were still without
+them he had a stock in the vestry from which they could be supplied at
+the low charge of eighteenpence each. This is slightly similar:--"I
+publish the banns of marriage between ... between ..." announced a
+clergyman from the pulpit. But here for a moment he stopped, as the book
+in which were the notices was not to be seen. The clerk, seeing his
+vicar's predicament, and catching sight of the whereabouts of the
+missing book, ejaculated:--"Between the cushion and the desk, sir." The
+unique character of another notice will fully justify its inclusion. "I
+am unwell, my friends, very unwell," announced a preacher one Sunday
+evening, "and therefore I shall dispense with my usual gesticulation."
+This happened not very long ago.
+
+So disregarded, indeed, were the proprieties of worship a generation
+since, that the clergyman would sometimes pause during the delivery of
+his sermon and make an announcement which, to say the least of it, had
+no connection with the theme he was pursuing. Thus the Rev. Samuel
+Sherwen, a well-known cleric in Cumberland, announced one morning that
+he had just caught sight, through a window near the pulpit, of some cows
+in a cornfield, and requested that some one would go and drive them out.
+At another time he said there were some pigs in the churchyard which
+were not his, and his servant Peter would do well to expel the
+intruders. Very probably such announcements, though made from a pulpit,
+would be excused because they resulted in a certain benefit. The same
+plea could undoubtedly be put forward for the following trio, each of
+which hails from beyond the Severn. "Take notice!" exclaimed the clerk.
+"A thief is going through the Vale of Glamorgan selling tin ware, false
+gold, trinkets, and rings, and other domestic implements and
+instruments, and robbing houses of hens, chickens, eggs, butter, and
+other portable animals, making all sorts of pretences to get money!"
+Again, "Beware! beware! of a man with one eye, talking like a preacher,
+and a wooden leg, given to begging and stealing!" And once more, "Take
+notice! take notice! there's a mad dog going the round of the parish
+with two crop ears and a very long tail!" Surely the intention of such
+announcements was good, even though the literary form was bad. The last,
+as might be inferred, was made at a time when rabies were prevalent.
+
+The Rev. Samuel Sherwen, already alluded to, was surpassed in this
+direction by another Cumbrian clergyman, the Rev. William Sewell, of
+Troutbeck. One Sunday morning the latter entered the pulpit of the
+little church at Wythburn to preach. The pulpit sadly needed repair,
+and, in leaning out from the wall, left an undesirable opening behind
+it. Into this chink the parson's sermon fell, and the pulpit was so
+ricketty in its broken-down condition that the preacher feared the
+consequences of turning in it. Moreover, the manuscript had fallen so
+far that it could not be reached. Mr. Sewell, bereft of his sermon,
+announced to his congregation in broad dialect: "T' sarmont's slipt down
+i' t' neuk, and I can't git it out; but I'll tell ye what--I'se read ye
+a chapter i' t' Bible 'at's worth three on't." A similar story is told
+in connection with the Rev. Mr. Alcock, who in the middle of the last
+century was rector of Burnsal, near Skipton, in Yorkshire. Of this
+clergyman another story is given which well illustrates the excessive
+familiarity indulged in by occupants of the pulpit in bygone days. One
+of his friends, at whose house he was wont to call previous to entering
+the church on Sundays, seized a chance to unfasten and then misplace the
+leaves of his sermon. In the service the parson had not read far before
+he discovered the trick. "Will," cried he, "thou rascal! what's thou
+been doing with my sermon?" Then turning to his people, he continued:
+"Brethren, Will Thornton's been misplacing the leaves of my sermon; I
+have not time to put them right; I shall read on as I find it, and you
+must make the best of it that you can." He accordingly read to the close
+of the confused mass to the utter astonishment of his congregation.
+
+Of such familiarity Scottish churches furnish well-nigh innumerable
+instances. One or two will, however, be sufficient for my purpose. The
+clergyman who was expected to conduct the morning service had not made
+his appearance at the appointed time. After a dreadful suspense of some
+fifteen minutes the beadle, that much-privileged individual, entered the
+church, marched slowly along the accustomed passage, and mounted the
+pulpit-stair. When half-way up he stopped, turned to the congregation,
+and thus addressed them: "There was one Alexander to hae preached here
+the day, but he's neither come hissel; nor has he sent the scrape o' a
+pen to say what's come owre him. Ye'd better keep your seats for anither
+ten meenits to see whether the body turns up or no. If he disna come,
+there's naething for 't but for ye a' to gang hame again an' say
+naething mair aboot it. The like o' this hasna happened here syne I hae
+been conneckit wi' the place, an' that's mair than four-and-thirty year
+now." As an announcement to the point, and for the purpose, that could
+not easily be beaten. A clergyman of Crossmichael, in Galloway, would
+even intersperse his lessons or sermon with any announcement that might
+at the moment occur to him, or with allusions to the behaviour of his
+hearers. Once, because of this method, a verse from Exodus was hardly
+recognisable. The version given was as follows: "And the Lord said unto
+Moses--shut that door; I'm thinkin' if ye had to sit beside that door
+yersel', ye wadna be sae ready leavin' it open; it was just beside that
+door that Yedam Tamson, the bellman, gat his death o' cauld, an' I'm
+sure, honest man, he didna lat it stey muckle open.--And the Lord said
+unto Moses--put oot that dog; wha is't that brings dogs to the kirk,
+yaff-yaffin'? Lat me never see ye bring yer dogs here ony mair, for, if
+ye do, tak notice, I'll put you an' them baith oot.--And the Lord said
+unto Moses--I see a man aneeth that wast laft wi' his hat on; I'm sure
+ye're cleen oot o' the souch o' the door; keep aff yer bonnet, Tammas,
+an' if yer bare pow be cauld, ye maun jist get a grey worset wig like
+mysel'; they're no sae dear; plenty o' them at Bob Gillespie's for
+tenpence." At last, however, the preacher informed his hearers what was
+said to Moses in a manner at once more accurate and becoming.
+
+It was, indeed, a usual custom for the clergyman publicly to rebuke
+offenders, as when it happened that a young man, sitting in a prominent
+position in the church, pulled out his handkerchief and brought with it
+a bundle of playing cards, which flew in every direction. He had, so it
+turned out, been up late the previous night, and had stuffed the cards
+with which he had been gambling into his pocket, where they had remained
+forgotten. The people were amazed and horrified, but the clergyman
+simply looked at the offender and remarked with quiet, yet most
+withering sarcasm, "Sir, that prayer book of yours has been badly
+bound!" But some times the rebuke was deftly thrust back upon the
+preacher. "You're sleepy, John," said the clergyman, pausing in the
+middle of a drowsy discourse, and looking hard at the man he thus
+addressed. "Take some snuff, John." "Put the snuff in the sermon,"
+ejaculated John; and the faces of the audience showed that the retort
+was fully appreciated.
+
+In fact, such was the freedom tolerated, that this incident in Eskdale
+might be taken as an example. Someone walked noisily up the aisle during
+divine service. "Whaa's tat?" asked the clergyman in a tone quite loud
+enough to rebuke the offender. "It's aad Sharp o' Laa Birker,"
+responded the clerk. "Afooat or o' horseback?" was the significant
+query. "Nay," was the answer, "nobbet afooat, wi' cokert shun" (calkered
+shoes). Frequently the clerk would interrupt the clergyman, and the
+interruption would not enhance the devotional character of the service.
+In a rural parish church a new pitch-pipe was provided, but the clerk
+had not tested it before entering his desk on the Sunday, and when he
+should have given the key-note the instrument could not be adjusted. The
+clerk tugged at it, thrust it in, gave it several thumps, made sundry
+grimaces, but the pipe was obdurate. "My friends," announced the
+impatient parson, "the pitch-pipe will not work, so let us pray."
+"Pray!" snorted the aggrieved official, "pray! no, no, we'll pray none
+till I put this thing aright." And members of the congregation would
+even stand up in their pews to contradict the parson or clerk when
+making the announcement. "There will be a service here as usual on
+Thursday evening next," announced the clerk one Sunday morning. "No,
+there won't," declared the churchwarden as he rose from his seat. "We be
+going to carry hay all day Thursday." "But the service will be held as
+usual," asserted the clerk. But the churchwarden was not to be thwarted.
+"Then there'll be nobody here," said he. "D'ye think we're coming to
+church and leave the hay in the fields? No, no, p'r'aps it'll rain
+Friday."
+
+But of all amusing instances of curious announcements in church those
+given by the Rev. Cuthbert Bede in _All the Year Round_, November 1880,
+may take the palm and fittingly conclude this chapter. "An old rector of
+a small country parish," so runs the story, "had sent his set of false
+teeth to be repaired, on the understanding that they should be returned
+"by Saturday" as there was no Sunday post, and the village was nine
+miles from the post town. The old rector tried to brave out the
+difficulty, but after he had incoherently mumbled through the prayers,
+he decided not to address his congregation on that day. While the hymn
+was being sung, he summoned the clerk to the vestry, and then said to
+him: "It is quite useless for me to attempt to go on. The fact is, that
+my dentist has not sent me back my artificial teeth, and it is
+impossible for me to make myself understood. You must tell the
+congregation that the service is ended for this morning, and that there
+will be no service this afternoon." The old clerk went back to his desk;
+the singing of the hymn was brought to an end; and the rector, from the
+vestry, heard the clerk address the congregation thus: "This is to give
+notice! as there won't be no sarmon nor no more sarvice this mornin', so
+you' better all go whum (home); and there won't be no sarvice this
+aternoon, as the rector ain't got his artful teeth back from the
+dentist!"
+
+
+
+
+Big Bones Preserved in Churches.
+
+By the Rev. R. Wilkins Rees.
+
+
+In a lovely and secluded valley in Montgomeryshire is situated the
+interesting old church of Pennant Melangell, of whose foundation a
+charming legend is told. The romantic glen was in the first instance the
+retreat of a beautiful Irish maiden, Monacella (in Welsh, Melangell),
+who had fled from her father's court rather than wed a noble to whom he
+had promised her hand, that here she might alone "serve God and the
+spotless virgin." Brochwell Yscythrog, Prince of Powys, being one day
+hare-hunting in the locality, pursued his game till he came to a
+thicket, where to his amazement he found a lady of surpassing beauty,
+with the hare he was chasing safely sheltered beneath her robe.
+Notwithstanding all the efforts of the sportsman to make them seize
+their prey, the dogs had retired to a distance, howling as though in
+fear, and even when the huntsman essayed to blow his horn, it stuck to
+his lips. The Prince, learning the lady's story, right royally assigned
+to her the spot as a sanctuary for ever to all who fled there. It
+afterwards became a safe asylum for the oppressed, and an institution
+for the training of female devotees. But how long it so continued cannot
+be said. Monacella's hard bed used to be shown in the cleft of a
+neighbouring rock, while her tomb was in a little oratory adjoining the
+church.
+
+In the church is to be found carved woodwork, which doubtless once
+formed part of the rood-loft, representing the legend of Saint
+Melangell. The protection afforded by the saint to the hare gave such
+animals the name of Wyn Melangell--St. Monacella's lambs--and the
+superstition was so fully credited that no person would kill a hare in
+the parish, while it was also believed that if anyone cried "God and St.
+Monacella be with thee" after a hunted hare, it would surely escape.
+
+The church contains another interesting item in the shape of a large
+bone, more than four feet long, which has been described as the bone of
+the patron saint. Southey visited the church, and in an amusing rhyming
+letter addressed to his daughter, thus refers to it: "'Tis a church in a
+vale, whereby hangs a tale, how a hare being pressed by the dogs was
+much distressed, the hunters coming nigh and the dogs in full cry,
+looked about for someone to defend her, and saw just in time, as it now
+comes pat in rhyme, a saint of the feminine gender. The saint was buried
+there, and a figure carved with care, in the churchyard is shown, as
+being her own; but 'tis used for a whetstone (like a stone at our back
+door), till the pity is the more (I should say the more's the pity, if
+it suited with my ditty), it is whetted half away--lack-a-day,
+lack-a-day! They show a mammoth rib (was there ever such a fib?) as
+belonging to the saint Melangell. It was no use to wrangle, and tell the
+simple people that if this had been her bone, she must certainly have
+grown to be three times as tall as the steeple!"
+
+In Lewis's "Topographical Dictionary of Wales" (1843), we are told that
+on the mountain between Bala and Pennant Melangell was found a large
+bone named the Giant's Rib, perhaps the bone of some fish, now kept in
+the church. But where the bone came from it is quite impossible to say.
+Old superstitions have clung to it, and beyond what tradition furnishes
+there is practically nothing for our guidance.
+
+It is somewhat strange that in the same county, in connection with the
+church at Mallwyd, other bones are exhibited. Of this church, surrounded
+by romantic scenery, the Dr. Davies, who rendered into Welsh the
+Thirty-nine Articles of the Church of England, and assisted Bishop Perry
+in the translation of the Bible, was for many years incumbent. The
+sacred edifice was far-famed for its magnificent yew trees, and for the
+position of the communion table in the centre. Archbishop Laud issued
+orders that it should be placed at the east end, but Dr. Davies defied
+the prelate, and restored it to its old position, where, according to
+Hemmingway's "Panorama of North Wales," in which the church was
+described as a "humble Gothic structure, the floor covered with rushes,"
+it remained till 1848. It is not, however, so placed now. Over the porch
+of this church some bones are suspended, but no palaeontologist has yet
+decided as to their origin. It has been said that they are the rib and
+part of the spine of a whale caught in the Dovey in bygone days!
+Whatever may be the truth, however, it is not now to be ascertained, but
+must remain shrouded in mystery with that concerning the bones at
+Pennant Melangell. The bones were in their present position in 1816,
+for they are then mentioned by Pugh in his _Cambria Depicta_.
+
+England has several instances of big bones preserved in churches, and
+one story seems to be told regarding almost all. A most interesting
+example is to be found over one of the altar tombs in the Foljambe
+Chapel, Chesterfield Church. This bone, supposed to be the jawbone of a
+small whale, is seven feet four inches in length, and about thirteen
+inches, on an average, in circumference. Near one end is engraved, in
+old English characters, the name "Thomas Fletcher." The Foljambes
+disposed of their manor in 1633 to the Ingrams, who in turn sold it to
+the Fletchers, and thus the name on the bone is accounted for. A
+generally-accepted explanation about this bone--not even disbelieved
+entirely at the present day--was that it formed a rib of the celebrated
+Dun Cow of Dunsmore Heath, killed by the doughty Guy of Warwick, with
+whom local tradition identified the warrior whose marble effigy lies
+beneath the bone, sent to Chesterfield to celebrate the much-appreciated
+victory.
+
+ [Illustration: THE DUN COW, DURHAM CATHEDRAL.]
+
+It is interesting to remember here the legendary story of the foundation
+of Durham Cathedral, which explains certain carving on the north
+front of that majestic pile. While the final resting-place of St.
+Cuthbert was still undetermined, "it was revealed to Eadmer, a virtuous
+man, that he should be carried to Dunholme, where he should find a place
+of rest. His followers were in distress, not knowing where Dunholme lay;
+but as they proceeded, a woman, wanting her cow, called aloud to her
+companion to know if she had seen her, when the other answered that she
+was in Dunholme. This was happy news to the distressed monks, who
+thereby knew that their journey's end was at hand, and the saint's body
+near its resting-place." It has been said that the after riches of the
+See of Durham gave rise to the proverb, "The dun cow's milk makes the
+prebend's wives go in silk."
+
+But to return to the dun cow slain by Guy. That the champion was
+credited of old with having overcome some such animal is evident from
+the matter-of-fact fashion in which it is recorded by ancient
+chroniclers. In Percy's "Reliques of Antient Poetry," occur the
+following verses in a black-letter ballad which sings the exploits of
+Guy:--
+
+ "On Dunsmore heath I alsoe slewe
+ A monstrous wyld and cruell beast,
+ Called the Dun-Cow of Dunsmore heath,
+ Which manye people had opprest.
+
+ Some of her bons in Warwicke yett
+ Still for a monument doe lye;
+ Which unto every lookers viewe
+ As wondrous strange, they may espye."
+
+A circumstantial account is given in the "Noble and Renowned History of
+Guy, Earl of Warwick," as translated from the curious old French
+black-letter volume in Warwick Castle, and of this a somewhat modernised
+version may be submitted. "Fame made known in every corner of the land
+that a dun cow of enormous size, 'at least four yards in height, and six
+in length, and a head proportionable,' was making dreadful devastations,
+and destroying man and beast. The king was at York when he heard of the
+havoc and slaughter which this monstrous animal had made. He offered
+knighthood to anyone who would destroy her, and many lamented the
+absence in Normandy of Guy, who, hearing of the beast, went privately to
+give it battle. With bow and sword and axe he came, and found every
+village desolate, every cottage empty. His heart filled with compassion,
+and he waited for the encounter. The furious beast glared at him with
+her eyes of fire. His arrows flew from her sides as from adamant itself.
+Like the wind from the mountain side the beast came on. Her horns
+pierced his armour of proof, though his mighty battle-axe struck her in
+the forehead. He wheeled his gallant steed about and struck her again.
+He wounded her behind the ear. The monster roared and snorted as she
+felt the anguish of the wound. At last she fell, and Guy, alighting,
+hewed at her until she expired, deluged with her blood. He then rode to
+the next town, and made known the monster's death, and then went to his
+ship, hoping to sail before the king could know of the deed. Fame was
+swifter than Guy. The king sent for him, gave him the honour of
+knighthood, and caused one of the ribs of the cow to be hung up in
+Warwick Castle, where it remains until this day." Old Dr. Caius, of
+Cambridge, writes of having seen an enormous head at Warwick Castle in
+1552, and also "a vertebra of the neck of the same animal, of such great
+size that its circumference is not less than three Roman feet seven
+inches and a half." He thinks also that "the blade-bone, which is to be
+seen hung up by chains form the north gate of Coventry, belongs to the
+same animal. The circumference of the whole bone is not less than eleven
+feet four inches and a half." The same authority further states that "in
+the chapel of the great Guy, Earl of Warwick, which is situated rather
+more than a mile from the town of Warwick (Guy's Cliff), there is hung
+up a rib of the same animal, as I suppose, the girth of which in the
+smallest part is nine inches, the length six feet and a half," and he
+inclines to a half-belief, at any rate, in the Dun-Cow story.
+
+In connection with the legend it should be mentioned that in the
+north-west of Shropshire is the Staple Hill, which has a ring of upright
+stones, about ninety feet in diameter, of the rude pre-historic type.
+"Here the voice of fiction declares there formerly dwelt a giant who
+guarded his cow within this inclosure, like another Apis among the
+ancient Egyptians, a cow who yielded her milk as miraculously as the
+bear Oedumla, whom we read of in Icelandic mythology, filling every
+vessel that could be brought to her, until at length an old crone
+attempted to catch her milk in a sieve, when, furious at the insult, she
+broke out of the magical inclosure and wandered into Warwickshire,
+where her subsequent history and fate are well known under that of the
+Dun Cow, whose death added another wreath of laurel to the immortal Guy,
+Earl of Warwick." The presence of bones at Chesterfield and elsewhere
+is, of course, accounted for by the fact (?) that they were distributed
+over the country so that in various places Guy's marvellous feat might
+be commemorated.
+
+In Queen Elizabeth's "fairest and most famous parish church in England,"
+St. Mary Redcliff, Bristol, is preserved a bone said to have belonged to
+a monster cow which once supplied the whole city with milk. Bristolians,
+proud of their connection with the great discoverer, Cabot, assert that
+it is a whalebone brought to the city by the illustrious voyager on his
+return from Newfoundland. But here the story of Guy of Warwick and the
+cow has also been introduced. The bone, which is now fixed not far from
+the stair leading to the chamber containing the muniment chest where
+Chatterton pretended to have found the Rowley poems, was formerly hung
+within the church, while near to it was suspended a grimy old picture
+now banished to a position on a staircase just where the room in which
+the vestry meetings are held is entered. The picture, so far as it can
+be made out, contains a big figure of a man on the right hand side,
+while in the foreground lies a prostrate man, behind whom stands a cow.
+To the left of the picture are certain human figures in attitudes
+expressive of surprise. This ancient painting was said to refer to Guy's
+exploit, and the rib was pointed out as a positive proof that the daring
+deed was done.
+
+It may be presumed that all, or nearly all, these bones preserved in
+churches are those of whales, though in some instances they have been
+supposed to be those of the wild BONASUS or URUS and most are associated
+in some way or other with the legend of Guy and the Dun-Cow. Indeed, it
+seems almost strange that the story has not been connected even with the
+bone at Pennant Melangell, especially as on the mountain between
+Llanwddyn and the parish is a circular inclosure surrounded by a wall
+called Hen Eglwys, and supposed to be a Druidical relic, which would
+have been just the spot to have lent itself to the statement that there
+the animal was confined.
+
+The late Frank Buckland, in his entertaining chapter on "A Hunt on the
+Sea-Shore," in his second volume of "Curiosities of Natural History,"
+says: "Whale-bones get to odd places," and writes of having seen them
+used for a grotto in Abingdon, and a garden chair in Clapham. Not far
+from Chesterfield there were, until recently, some whale-jaw gate posts
+which formed an arch, and in North Lincolnshire such bones, tall and
+curved, are still to be seen serving similar purposes. But the presence
+of such bones, carefully preserved in churches, though it may occasion
+considerable conjecture, cannot, it seems, be properly explained. As
+yet, at any rate, the riddle remains unsolved.
+
+
+
+
+Samuel Pepys at Church.
+
+
+The Diary of Samuel Pepys, from 1659 to 1669, presents us with a picture
+of London in the days of Charles II. that has perhaps not been equalled
+in any other work dealing with the manners, customs, and the social life
+of the period. We get a good idea from it how Sunday was spent in an age
+largely given to pleasure. Samuel Pepys had strong leanings towards the
+Presbyterians, but was a churchman, and seldom missed going to a place
+of worship on Sunday, and did not neglect to have family prayers in his
+own home. He generally attended his own church in the morning, and after
+dinner in the afternoon would roam about the city, and visit more than
+one place of worship. Take for an example an account of one Sunday.
+After being present at his own church in the forenoon, and dining, he
+says: "I went and ranged and ranged about to many churches, among the
+rest to the Temple, where I heard Dr. Wilkins a _little_."
+
+It is to be feared pretty faces and not powerful preachers often induced
+him to go to the house of prayer. Writing on August 11th, 1661, he
+says: "To our own church in the forenoon, and in the afternoon to
+Clerkenwell Church, only to see the two fair Botelers." He managed to
+obtain a seat where he could have a good view of them, but they did not
+charm him, for he says: "I am now out of conceit with them." Another
+Sunday he writes: "By coach to Greenwich Church, where a good sermon, a
+fine church, and a good company of handsome women." At another church he
+visited he says that his pretty black girl was present.
+
+Pepys has much to say about the sermons he heard, and when they were
+dull he went to sleep. Judging from his frequent records of slumbering
+in church, prosy preachers were by no means rare in his day.
+
+Writing on the 4th August, 1662, he gives us a glimpse of the manners of
+a rustic church. His cousin Roger himself attended the service, and says
+Pepys: "At our coming in, the country people all rose with so much
+reverence; and when the parson begins, he begins, 'Right worshipful and
+dearly beloved' to us."
+
+Conversation appears to have been freely carried on in city churches.
+"In my pew," says Pepys, "both Sir Williams and I had much talk about
+the death of Sir Robert." Laughter was by no means unusual. "Before
+sermon," writes Pepys, "I laughed at the reader, who, in his prayer,
+desired God that he would imprint his Word on the thumbs of our right
+hands and on the right toes of our right feet."
+
+When Pepys remained at home on Sunday he frequently cast up his
+accounts, and there are in his Diary several allusions to this subject.
+
+ [Illustration: THE END]
+
+
+
+
+Index.
+
+ Abbot's Pew, Malmesbury Abbey, 155, 159
+ Addisham, Priest's door at, 185
+ Alkborough Maze, 193, 194
+ All Hallows, Barking, 81
+ Alms boxes, 180
+ Alnwick, chest at, 174
+ Announcing cows in a cornfield, 221
+ Antiquarian Problem: The Leper Window, 183-185
+ Artificial teeth missing, 229
+ Asenby, Maze at, 196
+ Ashbourne bells, 121
+ Ashton-under-Lyne, 113, 116-118
+
+ Bailey, J. E. The Five of Spades and the Church of
+ Ashton-under-Lyne, 113-118
+ Baptisms performed in porches, 24
+ Beadle's announcement, 224
+ Bede, Venerable, 81
+ Bell-ringing laws, 125
+ Bell-robbers, 141
+ Bells and their Messages, 119-132
+ Belvoir, 80
+ Beware of thieves, 221
+ Big Bones Preserved in Churches, 230-243
+ Blacksmith, mediaeval, 19
+ Blood, foundation laid in, 30, 43
+ Bocastle, 137
+ Bottreaux, 137
+ Bradbury, Edward. Bells and their Messages, 119-132
+ Bradford-on-Avon Church, 7
+ Brancepeth, chest at, 178
+ Briefs, 49
+ Brigstock bells, 139
+ Briscoe, J. P. Stories about Bells, 133-144
+ Bristol, 62, 75, 79
+ Bronze-doors, 21
+ Brundall, 147
+ Building of the English Cathedrals, 46-75
+ Burial customs, 26
+ Burial at north side of church, 209-215
+ Buried alive, 40
+ Burials in Lady Chapels, 82-83
+ Bury St. Edmunds, 80
+
+ Candle in a coffin, 42
+ Canterbury, 51, 53, 72, 79
+ Carlisle, 62, 70, 72
+ Carthage, Council of, 4
+ Cauld Lad of Hilton, 32
+ Chantries, 72
+ Chappell of Oure Ladye, 76-100
+ Charm of country bells, 131
+ Chartres, Maze at, 191
+ Cheltenham, All Saints' Church, 14
+ Chester, 62, 79
+ Chesterfield, bones at, 234; spire, 110
+ Chichester, 49, 50, 62, 65, 75, 79
+ Chimes, 130
+ Christening ships, 35
+ Christmas games, 115
+ Christ Church, Hants., 79; Christ Church, Oxford, 157
+ Church Chests, 161-182
+ Church Door, 1-29
+ Churchwardens' accounts, 126-127
+ Churchyard Superstitions, 206-215
+ Cocks, live, built into walls, 44
+ Coins, burial of, 35
+ Colchester, Trinity Church Door, 5, 7
+ Cologne Cathedral, 42
+ Combs, chest at, 181
+ Compton Martin, 80
+ Concerning Font-Lore, 145-152
+ Conversation in church, 245
+ Cope chests, 180
+ Cornish bell-lore, 137
+ Coventry, chest at, 171, 173; spires, 102, 104
+ Courts in the porch, 27
+ Cromwell's soldiers, 84
+ Crowle Church, 1, 8, 10
+ Crowland Abbey, 48
+ Curfew bell, 125, 129
+ Curious Announcements in Church, 216-229
+
+ Danes, incursions of, 53-55
+ Darenth, 80
+ Darrington church, 38
+ Dartmouth Church, 19, 21
+ Decorated Style, 68
+ Dedicating chapels, 81
+ Devil, sold to the, 42
+ Dickens, Charles, on Bells, 120
+ Dissolution of monasteries, 84
+ Dogs haunting churches and castles, 31
+ Doom, 15
+ Door-keepers, 4
+ Dun Cow, 234, 238
+ Durham, 9, 58, 67, 80, 81, 133, 234
+
+ Early Cathedrals, 52
+ Early English chests, 164
+ Earthquake, 65
+ Eggs in foundations, 43
+ Elgin, 80
+ Elkstone Church, 16
+ Elston Church, 16, 17
+ Exeter, 79
+ Ely, 54, 72, 80, 84
+
+ Fair Rosamond, 186
+ Finedon, 109
+ Fire, 65, 67, 70
+ First burial in a churchyard, 39
+ First Prayer Book of Edward VI., 25, 26
+ Fives of Spades and the Church of Ashton-under-Lyne, 113-118
+ Florence, doors at, 22
+ Flowers in churchyards, 207
+ Fordham, 80
+ Forrabury, 137
+ Founhope Church, 16
+ Foxton, 185
+ France, card playing in, 113
+
+ Galilee Chapel, Durham, 67
+ Gambling, sermon against, 113
+ German bell-lore, 121; mythology, 36
+ Gild of Cloth Merchants, 22
+ Glastonbury, 79, 175
+ Gloucester, 13, 56, 61, 79
+ Grantham, 107
+ Guy, Earl of Warwick, 238
+
+ Haddenham, 81
+ Haltham Church, 16
+ Hampton Court, maze at, 186
+ Harold's tomb, 96
+ Harty Chapel, chest at, 177
+ Hearthstones, bones under, 40
+ Hel-horse, 43
+ Henry the Seventh's Chapel, 82, 85
+ Henry VII. a card player, 115
+ Hereford, 61, 72, 74, 79
+ Heysham, 10
+ Higham Ferrers, 13, 14, 18, 109
+ Hill, Rev. P. Oakley. Concerning Font-Lore, 145-152
+ Hillbury maze, 200
+ Hilton maze, 194
+ Holland, 41
+ Holsworthy Church, 36
+ Holy Land, leprosy brought from, 184
+ Horses interred alive, 43
+ Howlett, E. Sacrificial Foundations, 30-45
+ Hulme, 80
+
+ Importation of cards prohibited, 114
+ Indulgences, 49
+ Inscriptions on bells, 128-129
+ Iona, 39
+ Ironwork, 19-20
+ Islington, 111
+
+ Jarrow-on-Tyne, 81
+ Johnson, Rev. T. Churchyard Superstitions, 206-215
+
+ Kilkenny, 80
+ Knockers, 23
+
+ Laughter in church, 246
+ Lambeth Palace, 179
+ Leper-Window, 183-185
+ Lichfield, 62, 68, 104, 107, 158
+ Lights in Lady Chapels, 95
+ Limerick bells, 134
+ Lincoln Cathedral, 15, 65, 70, 71, 154
+ Lion Fonts, 147
+ Liverpool, 74
+ Llanaber, chest at, 180
+ Llandaff, 9, 62, 135
+ Llanthony, 80
+ Lost goods cried in church, 215
+ Louth, 105, 108
+ Low-side windows, 183
+ Lucca Cathedral, maze at, 187, 188
+ Lych window, 185
+ Lynn, Thoresby door, 18, 19
+
+ Malmesbury Abbey, 155, 159
+ Mallwyd, bones at, 233
+ Manchester, 69, 79
+ Mariolatry, 77
+ Marriage customs, 25
+ Massacre of Thomas a Becket, 90
+ Massingham bells, 139
+ Maundy Thursday, 15
+ Mazes, 186-205
+ Modern mazes, 203-205
+ Mortar, blood in, 37
+ Mortlake, chest at, 177
+
+ New Walsingham, 146
+ Newcastle-on-Tyne, 70
+ Newington chest lost, 182
+ Norman architecture, 8, 57-68
+ Norman Conquest, 57
+ Northamptonshire spires, 102
+ North side of church, burial at, 209-215
+ Northorpe, 31
+ Norwich, 28, 61, 84, 103, 104, 145
+
+ Old Saint Paul's, 103
+ Olney, 109
+ Oundle, 108
+ Over, chest at, 167, 178
+ Oxford, 62, 66, 79, 82, 108
+
+ Page, Jno. T. Some Famous Spires, 101-112
+ Paris, 11
+ "Paston Letters," 114
+ Penance, 49
+ Pennant Melangell, legend of, 230
+ People and Steeple Rhymes, 111
+ Pepys, Samuel, at Church, 244-246
+ Peterborough, 12, 47, 62, 65, 72, 75, 79, 84
+ Pimpern maze, 200
+ Poetry on bells, 122-125
+ Porches, 24
+ Preferment fee, 50
+
+ Rees, Rev. R. Wilkins. Curious Announcements in Church, 216-229;
+ Big Bones Preserved in Churches, 230-243
+ Relics of a Saint, 81
+ Ripon, 59, 62, 72, 73, 80, 200
+ Rochester, 51, 62, 65, 80
+ Rome, founding of, 34
+ Rooms over porches, 158
+ Rougham Church, 16
+ Roumania, 40
+ Rushden, 109
+
+ Sacrificial Foundations, 30-45
+ Saffron Waldon, maze at, 196
+ Salisbury, 47, 68, 79, 103
+ Samuel Pepys at Church, 244-246
+ Saxon architecture, 8
+ Scutari, 41
+ Sempringham Abbey, 18, 20
+ Sermon lost, 222
+ Seven Sacrament Fonts, 146
+ Seville Cathedral, 11
+ Shakespeare, 28, 31, 193
+ Shandon, bells of, 123
+ Shrewsbury, 107
+ Shrine of St. Frideswide, 82
+ Shrines, 51, 82
+ Skipton, 223
+ Sleeping in church, 245
+ Sneinton, maze at, 196-199
+ Spires, 101-112
+ Some Famous Spires, 101-112
+ Southwell, 62, 63, 66
+ Southwold chest, 165
+ Sowerford-Keynes, 8
+ Stamp, Rev. J. H. Ye Chappell of Oure Ladye, 76-100
+ Stonham Aspel, 170
+ Stories about Bells, 133-144
+ Strasburg Cathedral, 11
+ St. Albans, 52, 62, 72, 75, 79, 85, 87, 154, 158
+ St. Anne's Well and Maze, 196, 197, 199
+ St. Asaph, 69
+ St. Cuthbert, tomb of, 82
+ St. David's, 62, 154
+ St. Fillan's bell, 144
+ St. Frideswide's shrine, 157
+ St. Giles's Cathedral, 14
+ St. Hugh, 66, 71
+ St. Lawrence's, Isle of Thanet, 169
+ St. Mary's Redcliff, 79, 85, 107, 241
+ St. Monacella's lambs, 231
+ St. Mura, bell of, 136
+ St. Odhran, 39
+ St. Paul's, 73
+ St. Peter Mancroft, Norwich, 145
+ St. Quentin, maze at, 192
+ Suicides, Burial of, 211
+ Swedish folk-tales, 32
+
+ Thetford, 80
+ Thorns, barring a door with, 29
+ Tintagel, 137
+ Torch, symbol of, 42
+ Town bells, 131
+ Truro, 75
+ Tunstall, legend of, 141
+ Tyack, Rev. G. S. The Church Door, 1-29; The Building of the
+ English Cathedrals, 46-75; Watching-Chambers, 153-160;
+ Church Chests, 161-182; Mazes, 186-205
+ Tympanum, 5, 12, 14, 16
+ Tyre, church at, 2
+
+ Unclerically dressed, 49
+ Upton chest, 166, 167
+ Upton font, 148
+
+ Vestments 153
+ Voluntary labour, 52
+
+ Wakefield, 74
+ Walsingham, 80
+ Waltham Abbey, 80, 88
+ Warwick, 82
+ Watching-Chambers in Churches, 153-160
+ Weathercock rhyme, 109
+ Wells, 69, 72, 79
+ Welsh border, 55
+ West doors, 13, 14
+ Westminster, 79-81, 82, 179
+ White, William. An Antiquarian Problem: The Leper Window, 183-185
+ Wimborne, 80
+ Winchester, 61, 67, 79, 177, 195, 196
+ Witham-on-the-Hill bells, 140
+ Worcester, 56, 61, 68, 70
+ Wymondham, 80
+
+ York, 71, 72
+
+
+
+
+"Mr. Andrews' books are always interesting."--_Church Bells._
+
+"No student of Mr. Andrews' books can be a dull after-dinner speaker,
+for his writings are full of curious out-of-the-way information and good
+stories."--_Birmingham Daily Gazette._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+England in the Days of Old
+
+By WILLIAM ANDREWS, F.H.R.S.
+
+_Demy 8vo., 7s. 6d. Numerous Illustrations_
+
+
+This volume is one of unusual interest and value to the lover of olden
+days and ways, and can hardly fail to interest and instruct the reader.
+It recalls many forgotten episodes, scenes, characters, manners,
+customs, etc., in the social and domestic life of England.
+
+CONTENTS:--When Wigs were Worn -- Powdering the Hair -- Men Wearing
+Muffs -- Concerning Corporation Customs -- Bribes for the Palate --
+Rebel Heads on City Gates -- Burial at Cross Roads -- Detaining the Dead
+for Debt -- A Nobleman's Household in Tudor Times -- Bread and Baking in
+Bygone Days -- Arise, Mistress, Arise! -- The Turnspit -- A Gossip about
+the Goose -- Bells as Time-Tellers -- The Age of Snuffing -- State
+Lotteries -- Bear-Baiting -- Morris Dancers -- The Folk-Lore of
+Midsummer Eve -- Harvest Home -- Curious Charities -- An Old-Time
+Chronicler.
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS:--The House of Commons in the time of Sir Robert
+Walpole -- Egyptian Wig -- The Earl of Albemarle -- Campaign Wig --
+Periwig with Tail -- Ramillie-Wig -- Pig-tail Wig -- Bag-Wig --
+Archbishop Tilotson -- Heart-Breakers -- A Barber's Shop in the time of
+Queen Elizabeth -- With and Without a Wig -- Stealing a Wig -- Man with
+Muff, 1693 -- Burying the Mace at Nottingham -- The Lord Mayor of York
+escorting Princess Margaret -- The Mayor of Wycombe going to the
+Guildhall -- Woman wearing a Scold's Bridle -- The Brank -- Andrew
+Marvell -- Old London Bridge, shewing heads of rebels on the gate --
+Axe, Block, and Executioner's Mask -- Margaret Roper taking leave of her
+father, Sir Thomas More -- Rebel Heads, from a print published in 1746
+-- Temple Bar in Dr. Johnson's time -- Micklegate Bar, York -- Clock,
+Hampton Court Palace -- Drawing a Lottery in the Guildhall, 1751 --
+Advertising the Last State Lottery -- Partaking of the Pungent Pinch --
+Morris Dance, from a painted window at Betley -- Morris Dance, temp.
+James I. -- A Whitsun Morris Dance -- Bear Garden, or Hope Theatre, 1647
+-- The Globe Theatre, temp. Elizabeth -- Plan of Bankside early in the
+Seventeenth Century -- John Stow's Monument.
+
+A carefully prepared Index enables the reader to refer to the varied and
+interesting contents of the book.
+
+"A very attractive and informing book."--_Birmingham Daily Gazette._
+
+"Mr Andrews has the true art of narration, and contrives to give us the
+results of his learning with considerable freshness of style, whilst his
+subjects are always interesting and picturesque."--_Manchester Courier._
+
+"The book is of unusual interest."--_Eastern Morning News._
+
+"Of the many clever books which Mr. Andrews has written none does him
+greater credit than "England in the Days of Old," and none will be read
+with greater profit."--_Northern Gazette._
+
+"Valuable and interesting."--_The Times._
+
+"Readable as well as instructive."--_The Globe._
+
+"A valuable addition to any library."--_Derbyshire Times._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Bygone Series.
+
+
+In this series the following volumes ate included, and issued at 7s. 6d.
+each. Demy 8vo, cloth gilt.
+
+These books have been favourably reviewed in the leading critical
+journals of England and America.
+
+Carefully written articles by recognised authorities are included on
+history, castles, abbeys, biography, romantic episodes, legendary lore,
+traditional stories, curious customs, folk-lore, etc., etc.
+
+The works are illustrated by eminent artists, and by the reproduction of
+quaint pictures of the olden time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BYGONE BERKSHIRE, edited by Rev. P. H. Ditchfield, M.A., F.S.A.
+
+BYGONE CHESHIRE, edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE DEVONSHIRE, by the Rev. Hilderic Friend.
+
+BYGONE DURHAM, edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE GLOUCESTERSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE HERTFORDSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE LEICESTERSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE LINCOLNSHIRE (2 vols), edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE MIDDLESEX, edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE NORFOLK, edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE NORTHUMBERLAND, edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE NOTTINGHAMSHIRE, by William Stevenson.
+
+BYGONE SCOTLAND, by David Maxwell, C.E.
+
+BYGONE SOMERSETSHIRE, edited by Cuming Walters.
+
+BYGONE SOUTHWARK, by Mrs. E. Boger.
+
+BYGONE SUFFOLK, edited by Cuming Walters.
+
+BYGONE SURREY, edited by George Clinch and S. W. Kershaw, F.S.A.
+
+BYGONE SUSSEX, by W. E. A. Axon.
+
+BYGONE WARWICKSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.
+
+BYGONE YORKSHIRE, edited by William Andrews.
+
+
+
+
+Bygone Punishments.
+
+By William Andrews.
+
+_Demy 8vo, cloth gilt, 7s. 6d. Numerous Illustrations._
+
+
+CONTENTS:--Hanging -- Hanging in Chains -- Hanging, Drawing, and
+Quartering -- Pressing to Death -- Drowning -- Burning to Death --
+Boiling to Death -- Beheading -- The Halifax Gibbet -- The Scottish
+Maiden -- Mutilation -- Branding -- The Pillory -- Punishing Authors and
+Burning Books -- Finger Pillory -- The Jougs -- The Stocks -- The
+Drunkard's Cloak -- Whipping and Whipping-Posts -- Public Penance -- The
+Repentance Stool -- The Ducking Stool -- The Brank, or Scold's Bridle --
+Riding the Stang -- Index.
+
+"A book of great interest."--_Manchester Courier._
+
+"Crowded with extraordinary facts."--_Birmingham Daily Gazette._
+
+"Contains much that is curious and interesting both to the student of
+history and social reformer."--_Lancashire Daily Express._
+
+"Full of curious lore, sought out and arranged with much
+industry."--_The Scotsman._
+
+"Mr. Andrews' volume is admirably produced, and contains a collection of
+curious illustrations, representative of many of the punishments he
+describes, which contribute towards making it one of the most curious
+and entertaining books that we have perused for a long time."--_Norfolk
+Chronicle._
+
+"Those who wish to obtain a good general idea on the subject of criminal
+punishment in days long past, will obtain it in this well-printed and
+stoutly-bound volume."--_Daily Mail._
+
+"Mr. William Andrews, of Hull, is an indefatigable searcher amongst the
+byways of ancient English history, and it would be difficult to name an
+antiquary who, along his chosen lines, has made so thoroughly
+interesting and instructive the mass of facts a painstaking industry has
+brought to light. For twenty-five years he has been delving into the
+subject of Bygone Punishments, and is now one of the best authorities
+upon obsolete systems of jurisdiction and torture, for torture was, in
+various forms, the main characteristic of punishment in the good old
+times. The reformation of the person punished was a far more remote
+object of retribution than it is with us, and even with us reform is
+very much a matter of sentiment. Punishment was intended to be
+punishment to the individual in the first place, and in the second a
+warning to the rest. It is a gruesome study, but Mr Andrews nowhere
+writes for mere effect. As an antiquary ought to do, he has made the
+collection of facts and their preservation for modern students of
+history in a clear, straightforward narrative his main object, and in
+this volume he keeps to it consistently. Every page is therefore full of
+curious, out-of-the-way facts, with authorities and references amply
+quoted."--_Yorkshire Post._
+
+
+
+
+The Church Treasury of History, Custom, Folk-Lore, etc.
+
+Edited by WILLIAM ANDREWS.
+
+_Demy 8vo., 7s. 6d. Numerous Illustrations._
+
+
+CONTENTS:--Stave-Kirks -- Curious Churches of Cornwall -- Holy Wells --
+Hermits and Hermit Cells -- Church Wakes -- Fortified Church Towers --
+The Knight Templars: their Churches and their Privileges -- English
+Medieval Pilgrimages -- Pilgrims' Signs -- Human Skin on Church Doors --
+Animals of the Church in Wood, Stone, and Bronze -- Queries in Stones --
+Pictures in Churches -- Flowers and the Rites of the Church -- Ghost
+Layers and Ghost Laying -- Church Walks -- Westminster Waxworks --
+Index. Numerous Illustrations.
+
+"It is a work that will prove interesting to the clergy and churchmen
+generally, and to all others who have an antiquarian turn of mind, or
+like to be regaled occasionally by reading old-world customs and
+anecdotes."--_Church Family Newspaper._
+
+"Mr. Andrews has given us some excellent volumes of Church lore, but
+none quite so good as this. The subjects are well chosen. They are
+treated brightly and with considerable detail, and they are well
+illustrated. ... Mr. Andrews is himself responsible for some of the most
+interesting papers, but all his helpers have caught his own spirit, and
+the result is a volume full of information well and pleasantly
+put."--_London Quarterly Review._
+
+"Those who seek information regarding curious and quaint relics or
+customs will find much to interest them in this book. The illustrations
+are good."--_Publishers' Circular._
+
+"An excellent and entertaining book."--_Newcastle Daily Leader._
+
+"The book will be welcome to every lover of archaeological
+lore."--_Liverpool Daily Post._
+
+"The volume is of a most informing and suggestive character, abounding
+in facts not easy of access to the ordinary reader, and enhanced
+with illustrations of a high order of merit, and extremely
+numerous."--_Birmingham Daily Gazette._
+
+"The contents of the volume are very good."--_Leeds Mercury._
+
+"The volume is sure to meet with a cordial reception."--_Manchester
+Courier._
+
+"A fascinating book."--_Stockport Advertiser._
+
+"Mr. Andrews has brought together much curious matter."--_Manchester
+Guardian._
+
+"The book is a very readable one, and will receive a hearty
+welcome."--_Herts. Advertiser._
+
+"Mr. William Andrews has been able to give us a very acceptable and
+useful addition to the books which deal with the curiosities of Church
+lore, and for this deserves our hearty thanks. The manner in which the
+book is printed and illustrated also commands our admiration."--_Norfolk
+Chronicle._
+
+
+
+
+Historic Dress of the Clergy.
+
+By the Rev. GEO. S. TYACK, B.A.,
+
+Author of "The Cross in Ritual, Architecture, and Art."
+
+_Crown, cloth extra, 3s. 6d._
+
+
+The work contains thirty-three illustrations from ancient monuments,
+rare manuscripts, and other sources.
+
+"A very painstaking and very valuable volume on a subject which is just
+now attracting much attention. Mr. Tyack has collected a large amount of
+information from sources not available to the unlearned, and has put
+together his materials in an attractive way. The book deserves and is
+sure to meet with a wide circulation."--_Daily Chronicle._
+
+"This book is written with great care, and with an evident knowledge of
+history. It is well worth the study of all who wish to be better
+informed upon a subject which the author states in his preface gives
+evident signs of a lively and growing interest."--_Manchester Courier._
+
+"Those who are interested in the Dress of the Clergy will find full
+information gathered together here, and set forth in a lucid and
+scholarly way."--_Glasgow Herald._
+
+"We are glad to welcome yet another volume from the author of 'The Cross
+in Ritual, Architecture, and Art.' His subject, chosen widely and
+carried out comprehensively, makes this a valuable book of reference for
+all classes. It is only the antiquary and the ecclesiologist who can
+devote time and talents to research of this kind, and Mr. Tyack has done
+a real and lasting service to the Church of England by collecting so
+much useful and reliable information upon the dress of the clergy in all
+ages, and offering it to the public in such a popular form. We do not
+hesitate to recommend this volume as the most reliable and the most
+comprehensive illustrated guide to the history and origin of the
+canonical vestments and other dress worn by the clergy, whether
+ecclesiastical, academical, or general, while the excellent work in
+typography and binding make it a beautiful gift-book."--_Church Bells._
+
+"A very lucid history of ecclesiastical vestments from Levitical times
+to the present day."--_Pall Mall Gazette._
+
+"The book can be recommended to the undoubtedly large class of persons
+who are seeking information on this and kindred subjects."--_The Times._
+
+"The work may be read either as pastime or for instruction, and is
+worthy of a place in the permanent section of any library. The numerous
+illustrations, extensive contents table and index, and beautiful
+workmanship, both in typography and binding, are all features of
+attraction and utility."--_Dundee Advertiser._
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note
+
+In view of the multiple authors represented, inconsistent spelling and
+hyphenation have been retained.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Ecclesiastical Curiosities, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ECCLESIASTICAL CURIOSITIES ***
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