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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Haunted London, by Walter Thornbury
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-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
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-Title: Haunted London
-
-Author: Walter Thornbury
-
-Editor: Edward Walford
-
-Illustrator: F. W. Fairholt
-
-Release Date: December 8, 2012 [EBook #41580]
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-Language: English
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HAUNTED LONDON ***
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 41580 ***
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Haunted London, by Walter Thornbury
-
-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: Haunted London
-
-Author: Walter Thornbury
-
-Editor: Edward Walford
-
-Illustrator: F. W. Fairholt
-
-Release Date: December 8, 2012 [EBook #41580]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HAUNTED LONDON ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-HAUNTED LONDON
-
-
-
-
-DR. JOHNSON'S OPINIONS OF LONDON.--"It is not in the showy evolution of
-buildings, but in the multiplicity of human habitations, that the
-wonderful immensity of London consists.... The happiness of London is not
-to be conceived but by those who have been in it. I will venture to say
-there is more learning and science within the circumference of where we
-now sit than in all the rest of the kingdom.... A man stores his mind [in
-London] better than anywhere else.... No place cures a man's vanity or
-arrogance so well as London, for no man is either great or good, _per se_,
-but as compared with others, not so good or great, and he is sure to find
-in the metropolis many his equals and some his superiors.... No man of
-letters leaves London without regret.... By seeing London I have seen as
-much of life as the world can show.... When a man is tired of London he is
-tired of life, for there is in London all life can afford, and [London] is
-the fountain of intelligence and pleasure."--_Boswell's Life of Johnson._
-
-BOSWELL'S OPINION OF LONDON.--"I have often amused myself with thinking
-how different a place London is to different people. They whose narrow
-minds are contracted to the consideration of some one particular pursuit,
-view it only through that medium, a politician thinks of it merely as the
-seat of government, etc.; but the intellectual man is struck with it _as
-comprehending the whole of human life in all its variety, the
-contemplation of which is inexhaustible_."--_Boswell's Life of Johnson_
-(Croker, 1848), p. 144.
-
-
-
-
- HAUNTED LONDON
-
-
- BY WALTER THORNBURY
-
- EDITED BY EDWARD WALFORD, M.A.
-
-
- [Illustration: TEMPLE BAR, 1761.]
-
-
- _ILLUSTRATED BY F. W. FAIRHOLT, F.S.A._
-
-
- London
- CHATTO & WINDUS, PICCADILLY
- 1880
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-This book deals less with the London of the ghost-stories, the scratching
-impostor in Cock Lane, or the apparition of Parson Ford at the Hummums,
-than with the London consecrated by manifold traditions--a city every
-street and alley of which teems with interesting associations, every
-paving-stone of which marks, as it were, the abiding-place of some ancient
-legend or biographical story; in short, this London of the present haunted
-by the memories of the past.
-
-The slow changes of time, the swifter destructions of improvement, and the
-inevitable necessities of modern civilisation, are rapidly remodelling
-London.
-
-It took centuries to turn the bright, swift little rivulet of the Fleet
-into a foetid sewer, years to transform the palace at Bridewell into a
-prison; but events now move faster: the alliance of money with enterprise,
-and the absence of any organised resistance to needful though sometimes
-reckless improvements, all combine to hurry forward modern changes.
-
-If an alderman of the last century could arise from his sleep, he would
-shudder to see the scars and wounds from which London is now suffering.
-Viaducts stalk over our chief roads; great square tubes of iron lie heavy
-as nightmares on the breast of Ludgate Hill. In Finsbury and Blackfriars
-there are now to be seen yawning chasms as large and ghastly as any that
-breaching cannon ever effected in the walls of a besieged city. On every
-hand legendary houses, great men's birthplaces, the haunts of poets, the
-scenes of martyrdoms, and the battle-fields of old factions, heave and
-totter around us. The tombs of great men, in the chinks of which the
-nettles have grown undisturbed ever since the Great Fire, are now being
-uprooted. Milton's house has become part of the _Punch_ office. A printing
-machine clanks where Chatterton was buried. Almost every moment some
-building worthy of record is shattered by the pickaxes of ruthless
-labourers. The noise of falling houses and uprooted streets even now in my
-ears tells me how busily Time, the Destroyer and the Improver, is working;
-erasing tombstones, blotting out names on street-doors, battering down
-narrow thoroughfares, and effacing one by one the memories of the good,
-the bad, the illustrious, and the infamous.
-
-A sincere love of the subject, and a strong conviction of the importance
-of the preservation of such facts as I have dredged up from the Sea of
-Oblivion, have given me heart for my work. The gradual changes of Old
-London, and the progress of civilisation westward, are worth noting by all
-students of the social history of England. It will be found that many
-traits of character, many anecdotes of interest, as illustrating
-biography, are essentially connected with the habitations of the great men
-who have either been born in London, or have resorted to it as the centre
-of progress, art, commerce, government, learning, and culture. The fact of
-the residence of a poet, a painter, a lawyer, or even a rogue, at any
-definite date, will often serve to point out the social status he either
-aimed at or had acquired. It helps also to show the exact relative
-distinctions in fashion and popularity of different parts of London at
-particular epochs, and contributes to form an illustrated history of
-London, proceeding not by mere progression of time, and dealing with the
-abstract city--the whole entity of London--but marching through street
-after street, and detailing local history by districts at a time.
-
-A century after the martyrs of the Covenant had shed their blood for the
-good old cause, an aged man, mounted on a little rough pony, used
-periodically to make the tour of their graves; with a humble and pious
-care he would scrape out the damp green moss that filled up the letters
-once so sharp and clear, cut away the thorny arches of the brambles, tread
-down the thick, prickly undergrowth of nettles, and leave the brave names
-of the dead men open to the sunlight. It is something like this that I
-have sought to do with London traditions.
-
-I have especially avoided, in every case, mixing truth with fiction. I
-have never failed to give, where it was practicable, the actual words of
-my authorities, rather than run the risk of warping or distorting a
-quotation even by accident, or losing the flavour and charm of original
-testimony. Aware of the paramount value of sound and verified facts, I
-have not stopped to play with words and colours, nor to sketch imaginary
-groups and processions. Such pictures are often false and only mislead;
-but a fact proved, illustrated, and rendered accessible by index and
-heading, is, however unpretentious, a contribution to history, and has
-with certain inquirers a value that no time can lesson.
-
-In a comprehensive work, dealing with so many thousand dates, and
-introducing on the stage so many human beings, it is almost impossible to
-have escaped errors. I can only plead for myself that I have spared no
-pains to discover the truth. I have had but one object in view, that of
-rendering a walk through London a journey of interest and of pilgrimage to
-many shrines.
-
-In some cases I have intentionally passed over, or all but passed over,
-outlying streets that I thought belonged more especially to districts
-alien to my present plan. Maiden Lane, for example, with its memories of
-Voltaire, Marvell, and Turner, belongs rather to a chapter on Covent
-Garden, of which it is a palpable appanage; and Chancery Lane I have left
-till I come to Fleet Street.
-
-I should be ungrateful indeed if, in conclusion, I did not thank Mr.
-Fairholt warmly for his careful and valuable drawings on wood. To that
-accomplished antiquary I am indebted, as my readers will see, for several
-original sketches of bygone places, and for many curious illustrations
-which I should certainly not have obtained without the aid of his learning
-and research.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION pp. 1-3
-
-
- CHAPTER II. TEMPLE BAR.
-
- The Devil Tavern--London Bankers and Goldsmiths--A Whim
- of John Bushnell, the Sculptor--Irritating Processions--
- The Bonfire at Inner Temple Gate--A Barbarous Custom--
- Called to the Bar--A Curious Old Print of 1746--The
- White Cockades--An Execution on Kennington Common--
- Shenstone's "Jemmy Dawson"--Counsellor Layer--Dr.
- Johnson in the Abbey--The Proclamation of the Peace of
- Amiens--The Dispersion of the Armada--City Pageants and
- Festivities--The Guildhall--The Guildhall Twin Giants--
- Proclamation of War--A Reflection pp. 4-24
-
-
- CHAPTER III. THE STRAND (SOUTH SIDE).
-
- Essex Street--Beheading a Bishop--Exeter Place--The
- Gipsy Earl--Running a-muck--Lettice Knollys--A Portrait
- of Essex--Robert, Earl of Essex, the Parliamentary
- General--The Poisoning of Overbury--An Epicurean
- Doctor--Clubable Men--The Grecian--The Templar's
- Lounge--Tom's Coffee-house--A Princely Collector--"The
- Long Strand"--"Honest Shippen"--Boswell's Enthusiasm--
- Sale and the Koran--The Infamous Lord Mohun--A fine
- Rebuke--Jacob Tonson pp. 25-55
-
-
- CHAPTER IV. SOMERSET HOUSE.
-
- The Protector Somerset--Denmark House--The Queen's
- French Servants--The Lying-in-State of Cromwell--Scenes
- at Somerset House--Sir Edmondbury Godfrey--Old Somerset
- House--Erection of the Modern Building--Carlini's
- Grandeur--A Hive of Red Tapists--Expensive Auditing--The
- Royal Society--The Geological and the Antiquarian
- Societies--A Legend of Somerset House--St. Martin's Lane
- Academy--An Insult to Engravers--Rebecca's Practical
- Jokes--A Fashionable Man actually Surprised--Lying in
- State pp. 56-81
-
-
- CHAPTER V. THE STRAND (SOUTH SIDE, CONTINUED).
-
- The Folly--Fountain Court and Tavern--The Coal-hole--The
- Kit-cat Club--Coutts's Bank--The Eccentric Philosopher--
- Old Salisbury House--Robert the Devil--Little Salisbury
- House--Toby Matthew--Ivy Bridge--The Strand Exchange--
- Durham House--Poor Lady Jane--The Parochial Mind--A
- Strange Coalition--Garrick's Haunt--Shipley's School of
- Art--Barry's Temper--The Celestial Bed--Sir William
- Curtis pp. 82-105
-
-
- CHAPTER VI. THE SAVOY.
-
- The Earl of Savoy--John Wickliffe--A French King
- Prisoner--The Kentish Rebellion--John of Gaunt--The
- Hospital of St. John--Cowley's Regrets--Secret
- Marriages--Conference between Church of England and
- Presbyterian Divines--An Illegal Sanctuary--A Lampooned
- General--A Fat Adonis--John Rennie--Waterloo Bridge--The
- Duchy of Lancaster pp. 106-125
-
-
- CHAPTER VII. FROM THE SAVOY TO CHARING CROSS.
-
- York House--Lord Bacon--"To the Man with an Orchard give
- an Apple"--"Steenie"--Buckingham Street--Zimri--York
- Stairs--Pepys and Etty--Scenery on the Banks of the
- Thames--The London Lodging of Peter the Great--The Czar
- and the Quakers--The Hungerford Family--The Suspension
- Bridge--Grinling Gibbons--The Two Smiths--Cross
- Readings--Northumberland Street--Armed Clergymen pp. 126-145
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII. THE NORTH SIDE OF THE STRAND (FROM TEMPLE BAR TO CHARING
- CROSS).
-
- Faithorne, the Engraver--The Stupendous Arch--The Murder
- of Miss Ray--One of Wren's Churches--Thomas Rymer--Dr.
- Johnson at Church--Shallow's Revelry--Low Comedy
- Preachers--New Inn--Alas! poor Yorick!--The first
- Hackney Coaches--Doyley--The Beef-steak Club--Beef and
- Liberty--Madame Vestris--Old Thomson--Irene in a
- Garret--Mathews at the Adelphi--The Bad Points of
- Mathew's Acting--The Old Adelphi--A Riot in a Theatre--
- Dr. Johnson's Eccentricities pp. 146-189
-
-
- CHAPTER IX. CHARING CROSS.
-
- The Gunpowder Plot--Lord Herbert's Chivalry--A Schoolboy
- Legend--Goldsmith's Audience--Dobson Buried in a
- Garret--Charing--Queen Eleanor--A Brave Ending--
- Great-hearted Colonel Jones--King Charles at Charing
- Cross--A Turncoat--A Trick of Curll's--The Cock Lane
- Ghost--Savage the Poet--The Mews--The Nelson Column--The
- Trafalgar Square Fountains--Want of Pictures of the
- English School--Turner's Pictures--Mrs. Centlivre of
- Spring Gardens--Maginn's Verses--The Hermitage at
- Charing Cross--Ben Jonson's Grace--The Promised Land pp. 190-238
-
-
- CHAPTER X. ST. MARTIN'S LANE.
-
- A Certain Proof of Insanity--An Eccentric Character--
- Experimentum Crucis--St. Martin's-in-the-Fields--Gibb's
- Opportunity--St. Martin's Church--Good Company--The
- Thames Watermen--Copper Holmes--Old Slaughter's--
- Gardelle the Murderer--Hogarth's Quack--St. Martin's
- Lane Academy--Hayman's Jokes--The Old Watch-house and
- Stocks--Garrick's Tricks--An Encourager of Art--John
- Wilkes--The Royal Society of Literature--The Artist
- Quarter pp. 239-261
-
-
- CHAPTER XI. LONG ACRE AND ITS TRIBUTARIES.
-
- The Plague--Great Queen Street--Burning Panama--Lord
- Herbert's Poetry--Kneller's Vanity--Conway House--
- Winchester House--Ryan the Actor--An Eminent Scholar and
- Antiquary--Miss Pope--The Freemasons' Hall--Gentleman
- Lewis--Franklin's Self-denial--The Gordon Riots--Colonel
- Cromwell--An Eccentric Poetaster--Black Will's Rough
- Repartee--Ned Ward--Prior's Humble Cell--Stothard--The
- Mug-houses--Charles Lamb pp. 262-286
-
-
- CHAPTER XII. DRURY LANE.
-
- Drury House--Donne's Vision--Donne in his Shroud--The
- Queen of Bohemia--Brave Lord Craven--An Anecdote of
- Gondomar--Drury Lane Poets--Nell Gwynn--Zoffany--The
- King's Company--Memoranda by Pepys--Anecdotes of Joe
- Haines--Mrs. Oldfield's Good Sense--The Wonder of the
- Town--Quin and Garrick--Barry and Garrick--The Bellamy--
- The Siddons--Dicky Suett--Liston's Hypochondria--The
- First Play--Elliston's Tears--The End of a Man about
- Town--Edmund Kean--Grimaldi--Kelly and Malibran--Keeley
- and Harley--Scenes at Drury Lane--"Wicked Will
- Whiston"--Henley's Butchers--"Il faut vivre"--Henley's
- Sermons--The Leaden Seals pp. 287-348
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII. ST. GILES'S.
-
- The Lollards--Cobham's Death--The Lazar House--Holborn
- First Paved--The Mud Deluge--French Protestants--The
- Plague Cart--The Plague Time--Brought to his Knees--The
- New Church--The Grave of Flaxman--The Thorntons--Hog
- Lane--The Tyburn Bowl--The Swan on the Hop--The Irish
- Deluge--Sham Abraham--Simon and his Dog--Hiring Babies--
- Pavement Chalkers--Monmouth Street pp. 349-386
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV. LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS.
-
- The Earl of Lincoln's Garden--The Headless Chancellor--
- Spelman a late Ripener--Denham and Wither--Lord
- Lyndhurst--Warburton and Heber--Ben Jonson the
- Bricklayer--A Murder in Whetstone Park--The Dangers of
- Lincoln's Inn Fields--Shelter in St. John's Wood--Lord
- William Russell--A Brave Wife--Pelham--The Caricature of
- a Duke--Wilde and Best--Lindsey House--The Dukes of
- Ancaster--Skeletons--Lady Fanshawe--Lord Kenyon's
- Latin--The Belzoni Sarcophagus--Sir John Soane--Worthy
- Mrs. Chapone--The Duke's House--Betterton--Mrs.
- Bracegirdle--A Riot--Rich's Pantomime--The Jump pp. 387-442
-
- APPENDIX pp. 443-465
-
- INDEX pp. 467-476
-
-
-
-
-DESCRIPTIVE LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
- TEMPLE BAR, 1761, from a drawing by S. Wale. The view is
- taken from the City side of the Bar, looking through the
- arch to Butcher Row and St. Clement's Church. The sign
- projecting from the house to the spectator's left is that
- of the famous Devil Tavern _Vignette on Title_
-
- PAGE
-
- OLD HOUSES, SHIP YARD, TEMPLE BAR, circa 1761, from a plate
- in Wilkinson's _Londina Illustrata_ 4
-
- THE LORD MAYOR'S SHOW. From the picture by Hogarth 19
-
- TEMPLE BAR, 1746, copied from an undated print published soon
- after the execution of the rebel adherents of the young
- Pretender. The view is surrounded by an emblematic framework,
- and contains representations of the heads of Townley and
- Fletcher, remarkable as the last so exposed; they remained
- there till 1772 23
-
- ST. CLEMENT'S CHURCH AND THE STRAND IN 1753, from a print by
- I. Maurer 25
-
-
- TWO VIEWS OF ARUNDEL HOUSE, 1646, after Hollar. These views,
- unique of their kind, are particularly valuable for the
- clear idea they give of a noble London mansion of the period.
- Arundel House retains many ancient features, particularly in
- its dining-hall, which, with the brick residence for the
- noble owner, is the only dignified portion of the building.
- The rest has the character of an inn-yard--a mere collection
- of ill-connected outhouses and stabling. The shed with the
- tall square window in the roof was the depository of the
- famous collection of pictures and antiques made by the
- renowned Earl, part of which still forms the Arundel
- Collection at Oxford 40, 41
-
- PENN'S HOUSE, NORFOLK STREET, 1749, from a view by J. Buck.
- The view is taken from the river, looking up Norfolk Street
- to a range of old houses, still standing, in the Strand.
- Penn's house was the last on the west side of the street (to
- the spectator's left), overlooking the water 55
-
- SOMERSET HOUSE FROM THE RIVER, 1746, from an engraving by I.
- Knyff. Upon a barge moored in the river is seen the famous
- coffee-house known as "The Folly," which, originally used as
- a musical summer-house, ended in being the resort of depravity 56
-
- STRAND FRONT OF SOMERSET HOUSE, 1777, from a large engraving
- after I. Moss 80
-
- JACOB TONSON'S BOOK-SHOP, 1742, from an etching by Benoist.
- The shop of this famous bibliopole was opposite Catherine
- Street. The view is obtained from the background of the
- print representing a burlesque procession of Masons, got up
- by some humourist in ridicule of the craft 82
-
- OLD HOUSES IN THE STRAND, 1742, copied from the same print as
- the preceding view. These houses stood on the site of the
- present Wellington Street 104
-
- THE SAVOY, FROM THE THAMES, IN 1650, after Hollar 106
-
- THE SAVOY CHAPEL, from an original drawing 119
-
- THE SAVOY PRISON, 1793, from an etching by J. T. Smith 125
-
- DURHAM HOUSE, 1790, from an etching by J. T. Smith 126
-
- THE WATER GATE, 1860, from a Sketch 133
-
- YORK STAIRS AND SURROUNDING BUILDINGS, circa 1745, after an
- original drawing by Canaletti in the British Museum. This is
- one of the few interesting views of Old London sketched by
- Canaletti during his short stay in England. It comprises the
- famous water-gate designed by Inigo Jones, and the tall
- wooden tower of the York Buildings Water Company. The large
- mansion behind this (at the south-west corner of Buckingham
- Street) was that inhabited by Pepys from 1684, and in which
- he entertained the members of the Royal Society during his
- presidency. The house at the opposite corner (seen above the
- trees) is that in which the Czar Peter the Great resided for
- some time, when he visited England for instruction in
- shipbuilding 144
-
- CROCKFORD'S FISH-SHOP, from an original sketch 146
-
- THE OLD ROMAN BATH, from a drawing 169
-
- EXETER CHANGE, 1821, from an etching by Cooke 188
-
- TITUS OATES IN THE PILLORY, from an anonymous contemporary
- Dutch engraving 190
-
- THE KING'S MEWS, 1750, from a print by I. Maurer. This
- building, erected in 1732 at the expense of King George II.,
- was pulled down in 1830. In the foreground of this view the
- King is represented returning to his carriage after
- inspecting his horses 238
-
- BARRACK AND OLD HOUSES on the site of Trafalgar Square in
- 1826, from an original sketch by F. W. Fairholt. The view is
- taken from St. Martin's Church, looking toward Pall Mall;
- the building in the distance, to the left, is the College of
- Physicians 239
-
- OLD SLAUGHTER'S COFFEE-HOUSE, 1826, from an original sketch
- by F. W. Fairholt 260
-
- SALISBURY AND WORCESTER HOUSES IN 1630, from a drawing by
- Hollar in the Pepysian Library, Cambridge 262
-
- LYON'S INN, 1804, from an engraving in Herbert's _History of
- the Inns of Court_ 286
-
- CRAVEN HOUSE, 1790, from an original drawing in the British
- Museum 287
-
- DRURY LANE THEATRE, 1806, from an original drawing by Pugin.
- This was the _third_ theatre, succeeding Garrick's. It was
- built by Henry Holland, opened March 12, 1794, and burnt down
- Feb. 24, 1809. It was never properly finished on the side
- toward Catherine Street, where this view was taken 347
-
- CHURCH LANE AND DYOT STREET, from an original sketch by F. W.
- Fairholt 349
-
- THE SEVEN DIALS, from an original sketch by F. W. Fairholt 386
-
- LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS THEATRE IN 1821, from an original sketch
- by F. W. Fairholt 387
-
- THE BLACK JACK, Portsmouth Street, Lincoln's Inn Fields, from
- an original sketch by F. W. Fairholt. This public-house was
- the resort of the actors from the theatre, and among them Joe
- Miller, who was buried in the graveyard close by, where the
- hospital now stands. The house was also frequented by Jack
- Sheppard, and was sometimes termed "The Jump," from the
- circumstance of his having once jumped from one of the
- first-floor windows to escape from officers of justice 441
-
-
-
-
-HAUNTED LONDON.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-INTRODUCTION.
-
-
-One day when Fuseli and Haydon were walking together, they reached the
-summit of a hill whence they could catch a glimpse of St. Paul's.
-
-There was the grey dome looming out by fits through rolling drifts of
-murky smoke. The two little lion-like men stood watching "the sublime
-canopy that shrouds the city of the world."[1] Now it spread and seethed
-like the incense from Moloch's furnace; now it lifted and thinned into the
-purer blue, like the waft of some great sacrifice, or settled down to
-deeper and gloomier grandeur over "the vastness of modern Babylon." That
-brown cloud hid a huge ants' nest teeming with three millions of people.
-That dome, with its golden coronet and cross, rose like the globe in an
-emperor's hand--a type of the civilisation, and power, and Christianity of
-England.
-
-The hearts of the two men beat faster at the great sight.
-
-"Be George!" said Fuseli, shaking his white hair and stamping his little
-foot, "be George! sir, it's like the smoke of the Israelites making bricks
-for the Egyptians."
-
-"It is grander, Fuseli," said Haydon, "for it is the smoke of a people who
-would _have made the Egyptians make bricks for them_."
-
-It is of the multitudinous streets of this more than Egyptian city, their
-traditions, and their past and present inhabitants, that I would now
-write. I shall not pass by many houses where any eminent men dwell or
-dwelt, without some biographical anecdote, some epigram, some
-illustration; yet I will not stop long at any door, because so many others
-await me. I have "set down," I hope, "nought in malice." Truth I trust has
-been, and truth alone shall be, my object. I shall stay at Charing Cross
-to point out the heroism of the dying regicides; I shall pause at
-Whitehall to narrate some redeeming traits even in the character of a
-wilful king.
-
-The growth of London, and its conquest of suburb after suburb, has roused
-the imagination of poets and essayists ever since the days of Queen
-Elizabeth.
-
-When James I. forbade the building of fresh houses outside London walls,
-he little foresaw the time when the City would become almost impassable;
-when practical men would burrow roads under ground, or make subterranean
-railways to drain off the choking traffic; when cool-headed people would
-seriously propose to have flying bridges thrown over the chief
-thoroughfares; when new manners and customs, new diseases, new follies,
-new social complications would arise, from the fact of three millions of
-men silently agreeing to live together on only eleven square miles of
-land; when fish would cease to inhabit the poisoned river; when the roar
-of the traffic would render it almost impossible to converse; when, in
-fact, London would grow too large for comfort, safety, pleasure, or even
-social intercourse.
-
-It is difficult to select from what centre to commence a pilgrimage. For
-old Roman London we might start from the Exchange or the Tower; for
-mediæval London from Chepe or Aldermanbury; for fashionable London from
-Charing Cross; for Shaksperean London from the Globe or Blackfriars. Even
-then our tours would be circuitous, and sometimes retrograde, and we
-should turn and double like hares before the hounds.
-
-I have for several reasons, therefore, and after some consideration,
-decided to start from Temple Bar, and walk westward along the Strand to
-Charing Cross; then to turn up St. Martin's Lane, and return by Longacre
-and Drury Lane to Lincoln's-Inn-Fields.
-
-That walk embraces the long line of palaces which once adorned the Strand,
-or river-bank street, the countless haunts of artists in St. Martin's
-Lane, the legends of Longacre, the theatrical reminiscences of Drury Lane,
-and the old noblemen's houses in Lincoln's-Inn-Fields. It comprises a
-period not so remote as East London, and not so modern as that of the West
-End. It brings us acquainted not only with many of the contemporaries of
-Shakspere and Dryden, but also with many celebrities of Garrick's time and
-of Dr. Johnson's age.
-
-If this is not the best point of departure, it has at least much to be
-said in its favour, as the loop I have drawn includes nothing intramural,
-and comprises a part of London inhabited by persons who lived more within
-the times of memoir-writing than those in the farther East,--a district,
-too, more within the range of the antiquary than the newer region of the
-West.
-
-I trust that in these remarks I have in some degree explained why I have
-spent so much time in pouring "old wine into new bottles."
-
-A preface is too often a pillory made by an author, in which he exposes
-himself to a shower of the most unsavoury missiles. I trust that mine may
-be considered only as a wayside stone on which I stand to offer a fitting
-apology for what I trust is a venial fault.
-
-It is the glory of my old foster-mother, London, I would celebrate; it is
-her virtues and her crimes I would record. Her miles of red-tiled roofs,
-her quiet green squares, her vast black mountain of a cathedral, her
-silver belt of a river, her acres and acres of stony terraces, her
-beautiful parks, her tributary fleets, seem to me as so many episodes in
-one great epic, the true delineation of which would form a new chapter in
-the HISTORY OF MANKIND.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: SHIP YARD, TEMPLE BAR, 1761.]
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-TEMPLE BAR.
-
-
-Temple Bar, that old dingy gateway of blackened Portland stone which
-separates the Strand from Fleet Street, the City from the Shire, and the
-Freedom of the City of London from the Liberty of the City of Westminster,
-was built by Sir Christopher Wren in the year 1670, four years after the
-Great Fire, and ten after the Restoration.
-
-In earlier days there were at this spot only posts, rails, and a chain, as
-at Holborn, Smithfield, and Whitechapel. In later times, however, a house
-of timber was erected, with a narrow gateway and one passage on the south
-side.[2]
-
-The original Bar seems to have crossed Fleet Street, several yards farther
-to the east of its successor. In the time of James I. it consisted of an
-iron railing with a gate in the middle. A man sat on the spot for many
-years after the erection of the new gate, to take toll from all carts
-which had not the City arms painted on them.
-
-Temple Bar, if described now in an architect's catalogue, would be noted
-as pierced with two side posterns for foot passengers, and having a
-central flattened archway for carriages. In the upper story is an
-apartment with semicircular arched windows on the eastern and western
-sides, and the whole is crowned with a sweeping pediment.
-
-On the western or Westminster side there are two niches, in which are
-placed mean statues of Charles I. and Charles II. in fluttering Roman
-robes, and on the east or Fleet Street side there are statues of James I.
-and Queen Elizabeth. They are all remarkable for their small feeble heads,
-their affected and crinkled drapery, and the piebald look produced by
-their projecting hands and feet being washed white by years of rain, while
-the rest of their bodies remains a sooty black.
-
-The upper room is held of the City by the partners of the very ancient
-firm of Messrs. Child, bankers. There they store their books and records,
-as in an old muniment-chamber. The north side ground floor, next to Shire
-Lane, was occupied as a barber's shop from the days of Steele and the
-_Tatler_.
-
-The centre slab on the east side of Temple Bar once contained the
-following inscription, now all but obliterated:--"Erected in the year
-1670, Sir Samuel Sterling, Mayor; continued in the year 1671, Sir Richard
-Ford, Lord Mayor; and finished in the year 1672, Sir George Waterman,
-Lord Mayor." It is probable that the corresponding western slab, and also
-the smaller one over the postern, once bore inscriptions.
-
-Temple Bar was doomed to destruction by the City as early as 1790, through
-the exertions of Alderman Picket. "Threatened men live long," says an old
-Italian proverb. Temple Bar still stands[3] a narrow neck to an immense
-decanter; an impeder of traffic, a venerable nuisance, with nothing
-interesting but its associations and its dirt. But then let us remember
-that as Holborn Hill has tormented horses and drivers ever since the
-Conquest, and its steepness is not yet in any way mitigated,[4] we must
-not expect hasty reforms in London.
-
-It does not enter into my purpose (unless I walked like a crab, backwards)
-to give the history of Child's bank. Suffice it for me to say that it
-stands on part of the site of the old Devil Tavern, kept by old Simon
-Wadloe, where Ben Jonson held his club. It was taken down in 1788, and
-Child's Place built in its stead.[5] Alderman Backwell, who was ruined by
-the shutting up of the Exchequer in the reign of Charles II., and became a
-partner in this, the oldest banking-house in London, was the agent for
-Government in the sale of Dunkirk to the French.
-
-Pepys makes frequent allusions to his friend Child, probably one of the
-founders of this bank. The Duke of York opposed his interference in
-Admiralty matters, and had a quarrel with a gentleman who declared that
-whoever impugned Child's honesty must be a knave. Child wrote an
-enlightened work on Indian trade, supporting the interests of the East
-India Company.
-
-Apollo Court, exactly opposite the bank, marks a passage that once faced
-the Apollo room, from whose windows Ben Jonson must have often glowered
-and Herrick laughed.
-
-Archenholz says that in his day there were forty-eight bankers in London.
-"The Duke of Marlborough," writes the Prussian traveller, "had some years
-ago in the hands of Child the banker, a fund of ten, fifteen, or twenty
-thousand pounds. Drummond had often in his hands several hundred thousand
-pounds at one time belonging to the Government."[6]
-
-In the earliest London Directory (1677),[7] among "the goldsmiths that
-keep running cashes," we find "Richard Blanchard and Child, at the
-Marygold in Fleet Street." The huge marigold (really a sun in full shine),
-above four feet high, the original street-sign of the old goldsmiths at
-Temple Bar, is still preserved in one of the rooms of Child's bank.
-
-John Bushnell, the sculptor who executed the statues on Temple Bar, being
-compelled by his master, Burman, of St. Martin's-in-the-Fields, to marry a
-discarded servant-maid, went to Italy, and resided in Rome and Venice, and
-in the latter place executed a monument to a Procuratore, representing a
-naval engagement between the Venetians and the Turks. His best works are
-Cowley's monument, that of Sir Palmes Fairborne in Westminster Abbey, and
-Lord Mordaunt's statue in Fulham church. He also executed the statues of
-Charles I., Charles II., and Sir Thomas Gresham for the Royal Exchange. He
-had agreed to complete the set of kings, but Cibber being also engaged,
-Bushnell would not finish the six or seven he had begun. Being told by
-rival sculptors that he could carve only drapery, and not the naked
-figure, he produced a very despicable Alexander the Great.
-
-The next whim of this vain, fantastic, and crazy man, was to prove that
-the Trojan Horse could really have been constructed.[8] He therefore had a
-wooden horse built with huge timbers, which he proposed to cover with
-stucco. The head held twelve men and a table; the eyes served as windows.
-Before it was half completed, however, it was demolished by a storm of
-wind, and no entreaties of the two vintners who had contracted to use the
-horse for a drinking booth could induce the mortified projector to rebuild
-the monster, which had already cost him £500. A wiser plan of his, that of
-bringing coal to London by sea, also miscarried; and the loss of an estate
-in Kent, through an unsuccessful lawsuit, completed the overthrow of
-Bushnell's never very well-balanced brain. He died in 1701, and was buried
-at Paddington. His two sons (to one of whom he left £100 a year, and to
-the other £60) became recluses, moping in an unfinished house of their
-father's, facing Hyde Park, in the lane leading from Piccadilly to Tyburn,
-now Park Lane. This strange abode had neither staircase nor doors, but
-there they brooded, sordid and impracticable, saying that the world had
-not been worthy of their father. Vertue, in 1728, describes a visit to the
-house, which was then choked with unfinished statues and pictures. There
-was a ruined cast of an intended brass equestrian statue of Charles II.:
-an Alexander and other unfinished kings completed the disconsolate
-brotherhood. Against the wall leant a great picture of a classic triumph,
-almost obliterated; and on the floor lay a bar of iron, as thick as a
-man's wrist, that had been broken by some forgotten invention of
-Bushnell's.
-
-After the discovery of the absurd Meal-Tub Plot, in 1679, the 17th of
-November, the anniversary of the accession of Queen Elizabeth was kept,
-according to custom, as a high Protestant festival, and celebrated by an
-extraordinary procession, at the expense of the Green-Ribbon Club, a few
-citizens, and some gentlemen of the Temple. The bells began to ring out at
-three o'clock in the morning; at dusk the procession began at Moorgate,
-and passed through Cheapside and Fleet Street, where it ended with a huge
-bonfire, "just over against the Inner Temple gate."[9]
-
-The stormy procession was thus constituted:--
-
-1. Six whifflers, in pioneer caps and red waistcoats, who cleared the
-way. 2. A bellman, ringing his bell, and with a doleful voice crying,
-"Remember Justice Godfrey." 3. A dead body, representing the wood-merchant
-of Hartshorne Lane (Sir E. Godfrey), in a decent black habit, white
-gloves, and the cravat wherewith he was murdered about his neck, with
-spots of blood on his wrists, breast, and shirt. This figure was held on a
-white horse by a man representing one of the murderers. 4. A priest in a
-surplice and cope, embroidered with bones, skulls, and skeletons. He
-handed pardons to all who would meritoriously murder Protestants. 5. A
-priest, bearing a great silver cross. 6. Four Carmelite friars, in white
-and black robes. 7. Four Grey Friars. 8. Six Jesuits with bloody daggers.
-9. The waits, playing all the way. 10. Four bishops in purple, with lawn
-sleeves, golden crosses on their breasts, and croziers in their hands. 11.
-Four other bishops, in full pontificals (copes and surplices), wearing
-gilt mitres. 12. Six cardinals, in scarlet robes and caps. 13. The Pope's
-chief physician, with Jesuits' powder and other still more grotesque
-badges of his office. 14. Two priests in surplices, bearing golden
-crosses. 15. Then came the centre of all this pageant, the Pope himself,
-sitting in a scarlet and gilt fringed chair of state. His feet were on a
-cushion, supported by two boys in surplices, with censers and white silk
-banners, painted with red crosses and bloody consecrated daggers. His
-Holiness wore a scarlet gown, lined with ermine and daubed with gold and
-silver lace. On his head he had the triple tiara, and round his neck a
-gilt collar, strung with precious stones, beads, Agnus Dei's, and St.
-Peter's keys. At the back of his chair climbed and whispered the devil,
-who hugged and caressed him, and sometimes urged him aloud to kill King
-Charles, or to forge a Protestant plot and to fire the city again, for
-which purpose he kept a torch ready lit.
-
-The number of spectators in the balconies and windows was computed at two
-hundred thousand. A hundred and fifty flambeaux followed the procession by
-order, and as many more came as volunteers.
-
-Roger North also describes a fellow with a stentorophonic tube (a
-speaking-trumpet), who kept bellowing out--"Abhorrers! abhorrers!"[10]
-
-Lastly came a complaisant, civil gentleman, who was meant to represent
-either Sir Roger l'Estrange, or the King of France, or the Duke of York.
-"Taking all in good part, he went on his way to the fire."
-
-At Temple Bar some of the mob had crowned the statue of Elizabeth with
-gilt laurel, and placed in her hand a gilt shield with the motto, "The
-Protestant Religion and Magna Charta." A spear leant against her arm, and
-the niche was lit with candles and flambeaux, so that, as North said, she
-looked like the goddess Pallas, the object of some solemn worship and
-sacrifice.
-
-All this time perpetual battles and skirmishes went on between the Whigs
-and Tories at the different windows, and thousands of volleys of squibs
-were discharged.
-
-When the pope was at last toppled into the fire a prodigious shout was
-raised, that spread as far as Somerset House, where the queen then was,
-and, as a pamphleteer of the time says, before it ceased, reached
-Scotland, France, and even Rome.
-
-From these processions the word MOB (_mobile vulgus_) became introduced
-into our language.[11] In 1682, Charles II. tried to prohibit this annual
-festival, but it continued nevertheless till the reign of Queen Anne, or
-even later.[12]
-
-At Temple Bar, where the houses seemed turned into mountains of heads, and
-many fireworks were let off, a man representing the English cardinal
-(Philip Howard, brother of the Duke of Norfolk) sang a rude part-song with
-other men who personated the people of England. The cardinal first
-began:--
-
- "From York to London town we come
- To talk of Popish ire,
- To reconcile you all to Rome,
- And prevent Smithfield fire."
-
-To which the people replied, valorously:--
-
- "Cease, cease, thou Norfolk cardinal,
- See! yonder stands Queen Bess,
- Who saved our souls from Popish thrall:
- Oh, Bess! Queen Bess! Queen Bess!
-
- "Your Popish plot, and Smithfield threat,
- We do not fear at all,
- For, lo! beneath Queen Bess's feet,
- You fall! you fall! you fall!
-
- "'Tis true our king's on t'other side,
- A looking t'wards Whitehall,
- But could we bring him round about,
- He'd counterplot you all.
-
- "Then down with James and up with Charles,
- On good Queen Bess's side,
- That all true commons, lords, and earls
- May wish him a fruitful bride.
-
- "Now God preserve great Charles our king,
- And eke all honest men,
- And traitors all to justice bring:
- Amen! Amen! Amen!"
-
-It was formerly the barbarous and brutal custom to place the heads and
-quarters of traitors upon Temple Bar as scarecrows to all persons who did
-not consider William of Orange, or the Elector of Hanover, the rightful
-possessors of the English crown.
-
-Sir Thomas Armstrong was the first to help to deck Wren's new arch. When
-Shaftesbury fled in 1683, and the Court had partly discovered his
-intrigues with Monmouth and the Duke of Argyle, the more desperate men of
-the Exclusion Party plotted to stop the king's coach as he returned from
-Newmarket to London, at the Rye House, a lonely mansion near Hoddesden.
-The plot was discovered, and Monmouth escaped to Holland. In the meantime
-the informers dragged Russell and Sydney into the scheme, for which they
-were falsely put to death. Sir Thomas Armstrong, who had been taken at
-Leyden and delivered up to the English Ambassador at the Hague, claimed a
-trial as a surrendered outlaw, according to the 6th Edward VI. But Judge
-Jeffreys refused him his request, as he had not surrendered voluntarily,
-but had been brought by force. Armstrong still claiming the benefit of the
-law, the brutal judge replied:--"And the benefit of the law you shall
-have, by the grace of God. See that execution be done on Friday next,
-according to law."
-
-Armstrong had sinned deeply against the king. He had sold himself to the
-French ambassador, he had urged Monmouth on in his undutiful conduct to
-his father, and he had been an active agent in the Rye House Plot. Charles
-would listen to no voice in his favour. On the scaffold he denied any
-intention of assassinating the king or changing the form of
-government.[13]
-
-Sir William Perkins and Sir John Friend were the next unfortunate
-gentlemen who lent their heads to crown the Bar. They were rash,
-hot-headed Jacobites, who, too eagerly adopting the "ultima ratio" of
-political partisans, had planned, in 1696, to stop King William's coach in
-a deep lane between Brentford and Turnham Green, as he returned from
-hunting at Richmond. Sir John Friend was a person who had acquired wealth
-and credit from mean beginnings, but Perkins was a man of fortune,
-violently attached to King James, though as one of the six clerks of
-Chancery he had taken the oath to the new Government. Friend owned that he
-had been at a treasonable meeting at the King's Head Tavern in Leadenhall
-Street, but denied connivance in the assassination-plot. Perkins made an
-artful and vigorous defence, but the judge acted as counsel for the Crown
-and guided the jury. They both suffered at Tyburn, three nonjuring
-clergymen absolving them, much to the indignation of the loyal
-bystanders.[14]
-
-John Evelyn calls the sight of Temple Bar "a dismal sight."[15] Thank God,
-this revolting spectacle of traitors' heads will never be seen here again.
-
-In 1716 Colonel Henry Oxburgh's head was added to the quarters of Sir
-John Friend (a brewer) and the skull of Sir William Perkins. Oxburgh was a
-Lancashire gentleman, who had served in the French army. General Foster
-(who escaped from Newgate, in 1716) had made him colonel directly he
-joined the Pretender's army. To him, too, had been entrusted the
-humiliating task of proposing capitulation to the king's troops at
-Preston, when the Highlanders, frenzied with despair, were eager to sally
-out and cut their way through the enemy's dragoons. He met death with a
-serene temper. A fellow-prisoner described his words as coming "like a
-gleam from God. You received comfort," he says, "from the man you came to
-comfort." Oxburgh was executed at Tyburn, May 14; his body was buried at
-St. Giles', all but his head, and that was placed on Temple Bar two days
-afterwards.
-
-A curious print of 1746 represents Temple Bar with the three heads raised
-on tall poles or iron rods. The devil looks down in triumph and waves the
-rebel banner, on which are three crowns and a coffin, with the motto, "A
-crown or a grave." Underneath are written these wretched verses:
-
- "Observe the banner which would all enslave,
- Which ruined traytors did so proudly wave.
- The devil seems the project to despise;
- A fiend confused from off the trophy flies.
-
- "While trembling rebels at the fabrick gaze,
- And dread their fate with horror and amaze,
- Let Briton's sons the _emblematick_ view,
- And plainly see what to rebellion's due."
-
-A curious little book "by a member of the Inner Temple," which has
-preserved this print, has also embalmed the following stupid and
-cold-blooded impromptu on the heads of Oxburgh, Townley, and Fletcher:--
-
- "Three heads here I spy,
- Which the glass did draw nigh,
- The better to have a good sight;
- Triangle they're placed,
- Old, bald, and barefaced,
- Not one of them e'er was upright."[16]
-
-The heads of Fletcher and Townley were put up on Temple Bar August 2,
-1746. On August 16, Walpole writes to Montague to say that he had "passed
-under the new heads at Temple Bar, where people made a trade of letting
-spying-glasses at a halfpenny a look."
-
-Townley was a young officer about thirty-eight years of age, born at
-Wigan, and of a good family. His uncle had been out in 1715, but was
-acquitted on his trial. Townley had been fifteen years abroad in the
-French army, and was close to the Duke of Berwick when the duke's head was
-shot off at the siege of Philipsburgh. When the Highlanders came into
-England he met them near Preston, and received from the young Pretender a
-commission to raise a regiment of foot. He had been also commandant at
-Carlisle, and directed the sallies from thence.
-
-Fletcher, a young linen chapman at Salford, had been seen pulling off his
-hat and shouting when a sergeant and a drummer were beating up for
-volunteers at the Manchester Exchange. He had been seen also at Carlisle,
-dressed as an officer, with a white cockade in his hat and a plaid sash
-round his waist.[17]
-
-Seven other Jacobites were executed on Kennington Common with Fletcher and
-Townley. They were unchained from the floor of their room in Southwark new
-gaol early in the morning, and having taken coffee, had their irons
-knocked off. They were then, at about ten o'clock, put into three sledges,
-each drawn by three horses. The executioner, with a drawn scimitar, sat in
-the first sledge with Townley; a party of dragoons and a detachment of
-foot-guards conducted him to the gallows, near which a pile of faggots and
-a block had been placed. While the prisoners were stepping from their
-sledges into a cart drawn up beneath a tree, the wood was set on fire, and
-the guards formed a circle round the place of execution. The prisoners had
-no clergyman, but Mr. Morgan, one of their number, put on his spectacles
-and read prayers to them, which they listened and responded to with
-devoutness. This lasted above an hour. Each one then threw his
-prayer-book and some written papers among the spectators; they also
-delivered notes to the sheriff, and then flung their hats into the crowd.
-"Six of the hats," says the quaint contemporary account, "were laced with
-gold,--all of these prisoners having been genteelly dressed." Immediately
-after, the executioner took a white cap from each man's pocket and drew it
-over his eyes; then they were turned off. When they had hung about three
-minutes, the executioner pulled off their shoes, white stockings, and
-breeches, a butcher removing their other clothes. The body of Mr. Townley
-was then cut down and laid upon a block, and the butcher seeing some signs
-of life remaining, struck it on the breast, then took out the bowels and
-the heart, and threw them into the fire. Afterwards, with a cleaver, they
-severed the head and placed it with the body in the coffin. When the last
-heart, which was Mr. Dawson's, was tossed into the fire, the executioner
-cried, "God save King George!" and the immense multitude gave a great
-shout. The heads and bodies were then removed to Southwark gaol to await
-the king's pleasure.
-
-According to another account the bodies were cloven into quarters; and as
-the butcher held up each heart he cried, "Behold the heart of a traitor!"
-
-Mr. James Dawson, one of the unhappy men thus cruelly punished, was a
-young Lancashire gentleman of fortune, just engaged to be married. The
-unhappy lady followed his sledge to the place of execution, and approached
-near enough to see the fire kindled and all the other dreadful
-preparations. She bore it well till she heard her lover was no more, but
-then drew her head back into the coach, and crying out, "My dear, I follow
-thee!--I follow thee! Sweet Jesus, receive our souls together!" fell on
-the neck of a companion and expired. Shenstone commemorated this
-occurrence in a plaintive ballad called "Jemmy Dawson."
-
-Mr. Dawson is described as "a mighty gay gentleman, who frequented much
-the company of the ladies, and was well respected by all his acquaintance
-of either sex for his genteel deportment. He was as strenuous for their
-vile cause as any one in the rebel army. When he was condemned and double
-fettered, he said he did not care if they were to put a ton weight of iron
-on him; it would not in the least daunt his resolution."[18]
-
-On January 20 (between 2 and 3 A.M.), 1766, a man was taken up for
-discharging musket-bullets from a steel crossbow at the two remaining
-heads upon Temple Bar. On being examined he affected a disorder in his
-senses, and said his reason for doing so was "his strong attachment to the
-present Government, and that he thought it was not sufficient that a
-traitor should merely suffer death; that this provoked his indignation,
-and that it had been his constant practice for three nights past to amuse
-himself in the same manner. And it is much to be feared," says the
-recorder of the event, "that he is a near relation to one of the unhappy
-sufferers."[19] Upon searching this man, about fifty musket-bullets were
-found on him, wrapped up in a paper with a motto--"Eripuit ille vitam."
-
-"Yesterday," says a news-writer of the 1st of April, 1772, "one of the
-rebel heads on Temple Bar fell down. There is only one head now
-remaining."
-
-The head that fell was probably that of Councillor Layer, executed for
-high treason in 1723. The blackened head was blown off the spike during a
-violent storm. It was picked up by Mr. John Pearce, an attorney, one of
-the Nonjurors of the neighbourhood, who showed it to some friends at a
-public-house, under the floor of which it was buried. In the meanwhile Dr.
-Rawlinson, a Jacobite antiquarian, having begged for the relic, was
-imposed on with another. In his will the doctor desired to be buried with
-this head in his right hand,[20] and the request was complied with.
-
-This Dr. Rawlinson, one of the first promoters of the Society of
-Antiquaries, and son of a lord mayor of London, died in 1755. His body was
-buried in St. Giles' churchyard, Oxford, and his heart in St. John's
-College. The sale of his effects lasted several days, and produced £1164.
-He left upwards of 20,000 pamphlets; his coins he bequeathed to Oxford.
-
-The last of the iron poles or spikes on which the heads of the unfortunate
-Jacobite gentlemen were fixed, was removed only at the commencement of the
-present century.[21]
-
-The above-named Christopher Layer was a barrister, living in Old
-Southampton Buildings, who had engaged in a plot to seize the Bank and the
-Tower, to arm the Minters in Southwark, to seize the king, Walpole, and
-Lord Cadogan, to place cannon on the terrace of Lincoln's-Inn-Fields
-gardens, and to draw a force of armed men together at the Exchange. The
-prisoner had received blank promissory-notes signed in the Pretender's own
-hand, and also treasonable letters full of cant words of the party in
-disguised names--such as Mr. Atkins for the Pretender, Mrs. Barbara Smith
-for the army, and Mr. Fountaine for himself.
-
-It was proved that, at an audience in Rome, Layer had assured the
-Pretender that the South Sea losses had done good to his cause; and the
-Pretender and the Pretender's wife (through their proxies, Lord North and
-Grey, and the Duchess of Ormond) had stood as godfather and godmother to
-his (Layer's) daughter's child.
-
-He was executed at Tyburn in May 1723, and avowed his principles even
-under the gallows. His head was taken to Newgate, and the next day fixed
-upon Temple Bar; but his quarters were delivered to his relations to be
-decently interred.
-
-In April 1773 Boswell dined at Mr. Beauclerk's with Dr. Johnson, Lord
-Charlemont, Sir Joshua Reynolds, and some other members of the Literary
-Club--it being the evening when Boswell was to be balloted for as
-candidate for admission into that distinguished society.[22] The
-conversation turned on Westminster Abbey, and on the new and commendable
-practice of erecting monuments to great men in St. Paul's; upon which the
-doctor observed--
-
-"I remember once being with Goldsmith in Westminster Abbey. While we
-surveyed the Poets' Corner, I said to him--
-
- 'Forsitan et nostrum nomen miscebitur illis.'
-
-When we got to Temple Bar he stopped me, pointed to the heads upon it, and
-slily whispered--
-
- 'Forsitan et nostrum nomen miscebitur _istis_.'"[23]
-
-This walk must have taken place a year or two before 1773, for in 1772, as
-we have seen, the last head but one fell.
-
-O'Keefe, the dramatist, who arrived in England on August 12, 1762, the day
-on which the Prince of Wales (afterwards George IV.) was born, describes
-the heads of poor Townley and Fletcher as stuck up on high poles, not over
-the central archway, but over the side posterns. Parenthetically he
-mentions that he had also seen the walls of Cork gaol garnished with
-heads, like the ramparts of the seraglio at Constantinople.[24]
-
-O'Keefe tells us that he heard the unpopular peace of 1763 proclaimed at
-Temple Bar, and witnessed the heralds in the Strand knock at the city
-gate. The duke of Nivernois, the French ambassador on that occasion, was a
-very little man, who wore a coat of richly-embroidered blue velvet, and a
-small _chapeau_, which set the fashion of the Nivernois hat.[25]
-
-At the proclamation of the short peace of Amiens, the king's marshal, with
-his officers, having ridden down the Strand from Westminster, stopped at
-Temple Bar, which was kept shut to show that there commenced the Lord
-Mayor's jurisdiction. The herald's trumpets were blown thrice; the junior
-officer then tapped at the gate with his cane, upon which the City
-marshal, in the most unconscious way possible, answered, "Who is there?"
-The herald replied, "The officers-of-arms, who seek entrance into the City
-to publish his majesty's proclamation of peace." On this the gates were
-flung open, and the herald alone was admitted, and conducted to the Lord
-Mayor. The latter then read the royal warrant, and returning it to the
-bearer, ordered the City marshal to open the gate for the whole
-procession. The Lord Mayor and aldermen then joined it, and proceeded to
-the Royal Exchange, where the proclamation, that was to bid the cannon
-cease and chain up the dogs of war, was read for the last time.
-
-[Illustration: THE LORD MAYOR'S SHOW. AFTER HOGARTH.]
-
-The timber work and doors of Temple Bar have been often renewed since
-1672. New doors were hung for Nelson's funeral, when the Bar was to be
-closed; and again at the funeral of Wellington, when the plumes and
-trophies had to be removed in order that the car might pass through the
-gate, which was covered with dull theatrical finery.[26]
-
-The old, black, mud-splashed gates of Temple Bar are also shut whenever
-the sovereign has occasion to enter the City. This is an old custom, a
-tradition of the times when the city was proud of its privileges, and
-sometimes even jealous of royalty. When the cavalcade approaches, a
-herald, in his tabard of crimson and gold lace, sounds a trumpet before
-the portal of the City; another herald knocks; a parley ensues; the gates
-are then thrown open, and the Lord Mayor appearing, kneels and hands the
-sword of the city to his sovereign, who graciously returns it.
-
-Stow describes a scene like this in the old days of the "timber house,"
-when Queen Elizabeth was on her way to old St. Paul's to return thanks to
-God for the discomfiture of the Armada. The City waits fluted, trumpeted,
-and fiddled from the roof of the gate; while below, the Lord Mayor and his
-brethren, in scarlet gowns, received and welcomed their brave queen,
-delivering up the sword which, after certain speeches, she re-delivered to
-the mayor, who, then taking horse, rode onward to St. Paul's bearing it in
-its shining sheath before her.[27]
-
-In the June after the execution of Charles I., when Cromwell had dispersed
-the mutinous regiments with his horse, and pistolled or hanged their
-leaders, a day of thanksgiving was appointed, and the Parliament, the
-Council of State, and the Council of the Army, after endless sermons,
-dined together at Grocers' Hall; on that day Lenthall, the Speaker,
-received the sword of state from the mayor at the Bar, and assumed the
-functions of royalty.
-
-The same ceremony took place when Queen Anne went to St. Paul's to return
-thanks for the Duke of Marlborough's victories, and again when George III.
-came to return thanks for a recovery from his fit of insanity, and when
-Queen Victoria passed on her way to Cornhill to open the Royal Exchange.
-
-Temple Bar naturally does not figure much in the early City pageants,
-because, after proceeding to Westminster by water, the mayor and aldermen
-usually landed at St. Paul's Stairs.
-
-It is, we believe, first mentioned in the great festivities when the City
-brought poor Anne Boleyn, in 1533, from Greenwich to the Tower, and on the
-second day after conducted her through the chief streets and honoured her
-with shows. On that day the Fleet Street conduit ran claret, and Temple
-Bar was newly painted and repaired; there also stood singing men and
-children, till the company rode on to Westminster Hall. The next day was
-the coronation.[28]
-
-On the 19th of February 1546-7 the young King Edward VI. passed through
-London, the day before his coronation. At the Fleet Street conduit two
-hogsheads of wine were given to the people. The gate at Temple Bar was
-also painted and fashioned with varicoloured battlements and buttresses,
-richly hung with cloth of arras, and garnished with fourteen standards.
-There were eight French trumpeters blowing their best, besides a pair of
-"regals," with children singing to the same.[29]
-
-In September 1553 Queen Mary rode through London, the day before her
-coronation, in a chariot covered with cloth of tissue, and drawn by six
-horses draped with the same. Minstrels played at Ludgate, and the Temple
-Bar was newly painted and hung.[30]
-
-But even a greater time came for the old City boundary in January 1558-9,
-when Queen Elizabeth went from the Tower to Westminster. Temple Bar was
-"finely dressed" up with the two giants--Gog and Magog (now in the
-Guildhall)--who held between them a poetical recapitulation of all the
-other pageantries, both in Latin and English. On the south side was a
-noise of singing children, one of whom, richly attired as a poet, gave the
-queen farewell in the name of the whole city.[31]
-
-In 1603 King James, Queen Anne of Denmark, and Prince Henry Frederick
-passed through "the honourable City and Chamber" of London, and were
-welcomed with pageants. The last arch, that of Temple Bar, represented a
-temple of Janus. The principal character was Peace, with War grovelling at
-her feet; by her stood Wealth; below sat the four handmaids of
-Peace,--Quiet treading on Tumult, Liberty on Servitude, Safety on Danger,
-and Felicity on Unhappiness. There was then recited a poetical dialogue by
-the Flamen Martialis and the Genius Urbis, written by Ben Jonson.
-
-Here, hitherto, the pageantry had always ceased, but the Strand suburbs
-having now greatly increased, there was an additional pageant beyond
-Temple Bar, which had been thought of and perfected in only twelve days.
-The invention was a rainbow; and the moon, sun, and pleiades advanced
-between two magnificent pyramids seventy feet high, on which were drawn
-out the king's pedigrees through both the English and the Scottish
-monarchs. A speech composed by Ben Jonson was delivered by Electra.[32]
-
-When Charles II. came through London, according to custom, the day before
-his coronation, I suspect that "the fourth arch in Fleet Street" was close
-to Temple Bar. It was of the Doric and Ionic orders, and was dedicated to
-Plenty, who made a speech, surrounded by Bacchus, Ceres, Flora, Pomona,
-and the Winds; but whether the latter were alive or only dummies, I cannot
-say.
-
-The _London Gazette_ of February 8, 1665-6, announces the proclamation of
-war against France; and Pepys mentions this as also the day on which they
-went into mourning at court for the King of Spain. War was proclaimed by
-the herald-at-arms and two of his brethren, his majesty's
-sergeants-at-arms, and trumpeters, with the other usual officers before
-Whitehall, and afterwards (the Lord Mayor and his brethren assisting) at
-Temple Bar, and in other usual parts of the City.
-
-James II., in 1687, honoured Sir John Shorter as Lord Mayor with his
-presence at an inaugurative banquet at Guildhall. The king was accompanied
-by Prince George of Denmark, and was met by the two sheriffs at Temple
-Bar.
-
-[Illustration: TEMPLE BAR, 1746.]
-
-On Lord Mayor's Day, 1689, when King William and Queen Mary came to the
-City to see the show, the City militia regiments lined the street as far
-as Temple Bar, and beyond came the red and blue regiments of Middlesex and
-Westminster; the soldiers, at regulated distances, holding lighted
-flambeaux in their hands, and all the houses being illuminated.[33]
-
-In 1697, when Macaulay's hero, William III., made a triumphant entry into
-London to celebrate the conclusion of the peace of Ryswick, the procession
-included fourscore state coaches, each with six horses; the three City
-regiments guarded Temple Bar, and beyond them came the liveries of the
-several companies, with their banners and ensigns displayed.[34]
-
-George III. in his day, and Queen Victoria in her and our own, passed
-through Temple Bar in state more than once, on their way into the City;
-the last occasion was on February 1872, when the Queen proceeded to St.
-Paul's to offer thanks for the recovery of her son the Prince of Wales.
-Through it also the bodies of Nelson and of Wellington were borne to their
-last resting place in St. Paul's.
-
-On the auspicious entrance into London of the fair Princess Alexandra, the
-old gate was hung with tapestry of gold tissue, powdered with crimson
-hearts; and very mediæval and gorgeous it looked; but the real days of
-pageants are gone by. We shall never again see fountains running wine, nor
-maidens blowing gold-leaf into the air, as in the luxurious days of our
-Plantagenet kings.
-
-There are many portals in the world loftier and more beautiful than our
-dull, black arch of Temple Bar. The Vatican has grander doorways, the
-Louvre more stately entrances, but through no gateway in the world have
-surely passed onwards to death so many millions of wise and brave men, or
-so many thinkers who have urged forward learning and civilisation, and
-carried the standard of struggling humanity farther into space.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: ST. CLEMENT'S CHURCH IN THE STRAND, 1753.]
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE STRAND (SOUTH SIDE).
-
-
-Essex Street was formerly part of the Outer Temple, the western wing of
-the Knight Templars' quarter. The outer district of these proud and
-wealthy Crusaders stretched as far as the present Devereux Court; those
-gentler spoilers, the mediæval lawyers, having extended their frontiers
-quite as far as their rooted-out predecessors. From the Prior and Canons
-of the Holy Sepulchre[35] it was transferred, in the reign of Edward II.
-to the Bishops of Exeter, who built a palace here and occupied it till the
-reign of Henry VII. or Henry VIII.
-
-The first tenant of Exeter House was the ill-fated Walter Stapleton, Lord
-Treasurer of England, a firm adherent to the luckless Edward II., against
-his queen and the turbulent barons. In 1326, when Isabella landed from
-France to chase the Spensers from her husband's side, and advanced on
-London, the weak king and his evil counsellors fled to the Welsh frontier;
-but the bishop held out stoutly for his king, and, as custos of the City
-of London, demanded the keys from the Lord Mayor, Hammond Chickwell, to
-prevent the treachery of the disaffected city. The watchful populace,
-roused by Isabella's proclamation that had been hung on the new cross in
-Cheapside, rose in arms, seized the vacillating mayor, and took the keys.
-They next ran to Exeter House, then newly erected, fired the gates, and
-burnt all the plate, jewels, money, and goods. The bishop, at that time in
-the fields, being almost too proud to show fear, rode straight to the
-northern door of St. Paul's to take sanctuary. There the mob tore him from
-his horse, stripped him of his armour, and dragging him to Cheapside,
-proclaimed him a traitor, a seducer of the king, and an enemy of their
-liberties, and lopping off his head, set it on a pole. The corpse was
-buried without funeral service in an old churchyard of the Pied
-Friars.[36] His brother and some servants were also beheaded, and their
-bleeding and naked bodies thrown on a heap of rubbish by the river side.
-
-Exeter Place was shortly afterwards rebuilt, but the new house seemed a
-doomed place, and brought no better fortune to its new owners. Lord Paget,
-who changed its name to Paget House, fought at Boulogne under the poet
-Earl of Surrey, was ambassador at the court of Charles V., and on his
-return obtained a peerage and the garter. He fell with the Protector
-Somerset, being accused of having planned the assassination of the Duke of
-Northumberland at Paget House. Released from the Tower, he was deprived of
-the garter upon the malicious pretence that he was not a gentleman by
-blood. Queen Mary, however, restored the fallen man to honour, made him
-Lord Privy Seal, and sent him on an embassy.
-
-The next occupier of the unlucky house, Thomas Howard, fourth Duke of
-Norfolk, and son of the poet Earl of Surrey, maintained in its chambers an
-almost royal magnificence. It was here he was arrested for conspiring,
-with the aid of Mary Queen of Scots, the Pope, and the King of Spain, to
-marry Mary and restore the Popish religion.
-
-The duke's ambition and treason were fully proved by his own intercepted
-letters; indeed, he himself confessed his guilt, though he had denounced
-Mary to Elizabeth as a "notorious adulteress and murderer." To crown his
-rashness, meanness, and treason, he wrote from the Tower the most abject
-letters to Elizabeth, imploring her clemency. He was privately beheaded in
-1572, but his estates were restored to his children.[37] It was under the
-mat, hard by a window in the entry towards the duke's bedchamber, that the
-celebrated alphabet in cipher[38] was hidden, which the duke afterwards
-concealed under a roof tile, where it was found, unmasking all his plans.
-
-In the Tower the unhappy plotter had written affecting letters to his son
-Philip, bidding him worship God, avoid courts, and beware of ambition.[39]
-The warning of the man whose eyes had been opened too late is touching.
-The writer, speaking of court life, remarks, "It hath no certainty. Either
-a man, by following thereof, hath too much worldly pomp, which in the end
-throws him down headlong, or else he liveth there unsatisfied, either that
-he cannot obtain to himself that he would, or else that he cannot do for
-his friends as his heart desireth."
-
-Poor Philip did not benefit much by these lessons, but remained simple
-Earl of Arundel, was repeatedly committed to the Tower, as by necessity an
-ill-wisher to Elizabeth, and eventually died there after ten weary years
-of imprisonment. His initials are still to be found on the walls of one of
-the chambers in the Beauchamp Tower.
-
-Fools never learn the lessons which Time tries so hard to beat into them.
-Plotter succeeds plotter, and the rough lesson of the headsman seldom
-teaches the conspirator's successor to cease from conspiring.
-
-To the Norfolks succeeded Dudley, the false Earl of Leicester, the black
-or gipsy earl, as he was called from his swarthy Italian complexion.
-Leicester, like the duke before him, plotted with Mary's Jesuits and
-assassins, and at the same time contrived to keep in favour with his own
-jealous queen, in spite of all his failures and schemings in Holland, and
-his suspected assassinations of his enemies in England. Leicester died of
-fever the year of the Armada (1588), on his return from the camp at
-Tilbury, leaving Leicester Place to Robert Devereux, his step-son, the
-Earl of Essex,[40] who succeeded to his favour at court, but was doomed to
-an untimely death.
-
-It was to the great Lord of Kenilworth--that dark, mysterious man, who
-perhaps deserved more praise than historians usually give him--that
-Spenser dedicated his poem of "Virgil's Gnat." In his beautiful
-"Prothalamion" on the marriage of Lady Elizabeth and Lady Catherine
-Somerset, he speaks somewhat abjectly of Leicester, ingeniously contriving
-to remind Essex of his father-in-law's bounty. "Near to the Temple," the
-needy poet says,
-
- "Stands a stately place,
- _Where I gayned giftes_ and the goodly grace
- Of that great lord who there was wont to dwell,
- Whose want too well now feels my friendless case;
- But, ah! here fits not well
- Old woes."
-
-Then the poet goes on to eulogise Essex, who, however, it is supposed,
-after all allowed him to die in want. But there is a mystery about
-Spenser's death. He returned from Ireland, beggared and almost
-broken-hearted, in October or November 1599, and died in the January
-following, just as Essex was preparing to start to Ireland. In that whirl
-of ambition, the poor poet may perhaps have been rather overlooked than
-wilfully slighted. This at least is certain, that he was buried in
-Westminster Abbey, near Chaucer's tomb, the Earl of Essex defraying the
-expenses of his public funeral.
-
-It was in his prison-house near the Temple that the hair-brained Earl of
-Essex shut himself sulkily up, when Queen Elizabeth had given him a box on
-the ears, after a dispute about the new deputy for Ireland, in which the
-earl had shown a petulant violence unworthy of the pupil of Burleigh.
-
-Far too much sympathy has been shown with this rash, imperious, and
-unbearable young noble. He was sent to Ireland, and there concluded a
-disgraceful, wilful, and traitorous treaty with one of England's most
-inveterate and dangerous enemies. He returned from that "cursedest of all
-islands," as he called it, against express command, and was with
-difficulty dissuaded from landing in open rebellion. Generous and frank he
-may have been, but his submission to the mild and well-deserved punishment
-of confinement to his own house was as base and abject as it was false and
-hypocritical.
-
-Alarmed, mortified, and enraged at the duration of his banishment from
-court, and at the refusal of a renewed grant for the monopoly of sweet
-wines, Essex betook himself to open rebellion, urged on by ill-advisers
-and his own reckless impatient spirit. He invited the Puritan preachers to
-prayers and sermons; he plotted with the King of Scotland. It was arranged
-at secret meetings at Drury House (then Sir Charles Daver's) to seize
-Whitehall and compel the queen to dismiss Cecil and other ministers
-hostile to Essex.
-
-Sir Christopher Blount was to seize the palace gates, Davies the hall,
-Davers the guard-room and presence-chamber, while Essex, rushing in from
-the Mews with some hundred and twenty adherents, was to compel the queen
-to assemble a parliament to dismiss his enemies, and to fix the
-succession. All these plans were proposed to Essex in writing--the
-arch-conspirator was never himself present.
-
-The delay of letters from Scotland led to the premature outbreak of the
-plot. An order was at once sent summoning Essex to the council, and the
-palace guards were doubled.
-
-On Sunday, February 7, 1601, Essex, fearing instant arrest, assembled his
-friends, and determined to arm and sally forth to St. Paul's Cross, where
-the Lord Mayor and aldermen were hearing the sermon, and urge them to
-follow him to the palace. On the Lord Keeper and other noblemen coming to
-the house to know the cause of the assembly, Essex locked them into a back
-parlour, guarded by musketeers, and followed by two hundred gentlemen,
-drew his sword and rushed into the street like a madman "running a-muck."
-
-Temple Bar was opened for him; but at St. Paul's Cross he found no
-meeting. The citizens crowded round him, but did not join his band. When
-he reached the house of Sheriff Smith, the crafty Sheriff had stolen away.
-
-In the meantime Lord Burleigh and the Earl of Cumberland, with a herald,
-had entered the City and proclaimed Essex a traitor; a thousand pounds
-being offered for his apprehension. Despairing of success, the mad earl
-then turned towards his own house, and finding Ludgate barricaded by a
-strong party of citizens under Sir John Levison, attempted to force his
-way, killing two or three citizens, and losing Tracy, a young friend of
-his own. Then striking down to Queenhithe, the earl and some fifty
-followers who were left took boat for Essex Gardens.
-
-On entering his house, he found that his treacherous confidant, Sir
-Ferdinand Gorges, had made terms with the court and released the hostages.
-Essex then, by the advice of Lord Sandys, resolved to fortify the place,
-hold out to the last extremity, and die sword in hand. In a few minutes,
-however, the Lord Admiral's troops surrounded the building. A parley
-ensued between Sir Robert Sidney in the garden, and Essex and his rash
-ally, Shakspere's patron, the Earl of Southampton, who were on the roof.
-The earl's demands were proudly refused, but a respite of two hours was
-given him, that the ladies and female servants might retire. About six
-the battering train arrived from the Tower, and Essex then wisely
-surrendered at discretion.[41]
-
-The night being very dark, and the tide not serving to pass the dangers of
-London Bridge, Essex and Southampton were taken by boat to Lambeth Palace,
-and the next morning to the Tower.
-
-Essex had fully deserved death. He was executed privately, by his own
-request, at the Tower, February 25, 1601. Meyrick, his steward, and Cuffe,
-his secretary, were hanged and quartered at Tyburn. Sir Charles Davers and
-Sir Christopher Blount perished on Tower Hill. Other prisoners were fined
-and imprisoned, and the Earl of Southampton pined in durance till the
-accession of James I. (1603).
-
-Among the even older tenants of Essex House, we must not forget that
-unhappy woman, the earl's mother, who, first as Lettice Knollys, then as
-Countess of Essex, afterwards as Lady Leicester, and next as wife of Sir
-Christopher Blount, was a barb in Elizabeth's side for thirty years.
-Married as a girl to a noble husband, she gave up her honour to a seducer,
-and there is reason to think that she consented to the taking of his life.
-While Devereux lived, she deceived the queen by a scandalous amour, and,
-after his death, by a clandestine marriage with the Earl of Leicester.
-While Dudley lived, she wallowed in licentious love with Christopher
-Blount, his groom of the horse. When her second husband expired in agony
-at Cornbury, not an hour's gallop from the place in which Amy Robsart
-died, she again mortified the queen by a secret union with her last
-seducer, Blount. Her children rioted in the same vices. Essex himself,
-with his ring of favourites, was not more profligate than his sister
-Penelope, Lady Rich.[42]
-
-This sister was the (Platonic?) mistress of Sydney, whose stolen love for
-her is pictured in his most voluptuous verse. On his death at Zütphen, she
-lived with Lord Montjoy, though her husband, Lord Rich, was still alive.
-Nor was her sister Dorothy one whit better. After marrying one husband
-secretly and against the canon, she wedded Percy, the wizard Earl of
-Northumberland, whom she led the life of a dog, until he indignantly
-turned her out of doors.[43] It is not easy, observes Mr. Dixon, except in
-Italian story, to find a group of women so depraved and so detestable as
-the mother and sisters of the Earl of Essex.
-
-Essex, the rash noble, who died at the untimely age of thirty-three, had a
-dangerous, ill-tempered face, if we may judge by More's portrait of him.
-He stooped in walking, danced badly, and was slovenly in his dress;[44]
-yet being a generous, frank friend, an impetuous and chivalrous if not
-wise soldier, and an enemy of Spain and the Cecils, he became a favourite
-of the people. The legend of the ring sent by Essex to the queen,[45] and
-maliciously detained by the Countess of Nottingham, we shall presently
-discuss. No applications for mercy by Essex (and he made many during his
-trial) affect the question of his deserving death. That the queen
-consented with regret to the death of Essex, on the other hand, needs no
-doubtful legend to serve as proof.
-
-Elizabeth had forgiven the earl's joining the Cadiz fleet against her
-wish, she forgave his secret marriage, she forgave his shameful
-abandonment of his Irish command and even his dishonourable treaty with
-Tyrone, but she could not forgive an open and flagrant rebellion at a time
-when she was so surrounded by enemies.
-
-An historical writer, gifted with an eminently analytical mind, Mr.
-Hepworth Dixon, has lately, with great ingenuity, endeavoured to refute
-the charges of ingratitude brought against Bacon for his time serving and
-(to say the least) undue eagerness in aggravating the crimes of his old
-and generous friend. There can be, however, no doubt that Bacon too soon
-abandoned the unfortunate Essex, and, moreover, threw the weight of much
-misapplied learning into the scale against the prisoner. No minimising of
-the favours received by him from Essex can in my mind remove this stain
-from Bacon's reputation.
-
-In Essex House was born a less brilliant but a happier and a more prudent
-man--Robert, Earl of Essex, afterwards the well-known Parliamentary
-general. A child when his father died on the scaffold, he was placed under
-the care of his grandmother, Lady Walsingham, and was afterwards at Eton
-under the severe Saville. A good, worthy, heavy lad, brought up a
-Presbyterian, he was betrothed when only fourteen to Lady Frances Howard,
-daughter of the Earl of Suffolk, who was herself only thirteen.
-
-The earl travelled on the Continent for four years, and on his return was
-married at Essex House. It was for this inauspicious marriage that Ben
-Jonson wrote one of his most beautiful and gorgeous masques, Inigo Jones
-contributing the machinery, and Ferrabosco the music. The rough-grained
-poet seems to have been delighted with the success of the entertainment,
-for he says, "Nor was there wanting whatsoever might give to the furniture
-a complement, either in riches or strangeness of the habits, delicacy of
-dances, magnificence of the scene, or divine rapture of music."[46]
-
-The countess was already, even at this time, the mistress of Robert Carr,
-the handsome minion of James I. She obtained a divorce from her husband in
-1613, and espoused her infamous lover. The cruel poisoning of Sir Thomas
-Overbury for opposing the new marriage followed; and the earl and
-countess, found guilty, but spared by the weak king, lingered out their
-lives in mutual reproaches and contempt, loathed and neglected by all.
-Fate often runs in sequences--the earl was unhappy with his second wife,
-from whom he also was divorced.
-
-Essex emerged from a country retirement to turn general for the
-Parliament. Just, affable, and prudent, he was a popular man till he
-became marked as a moderatist desirous for peace, and was ousted by the
-artful "Self-denying Ordinance." If he had lived it is probable he would
-either have lost his head or have fled to France and turned cavalier. His
-death during the time that Charles I. remained a prisoner with the Scotch
-army at Newcastle saved him from either fate. With him the Presbyterian
-moderatists and the House of Peers finally lost even their little
-remaining power.
-
-When the earl resigned his commission, the House of Commons went to Essex
-House to return their ex-general thanks for his great services. A year
-later they followed him to the grave (1646), little perhaps thinking how
-bitterly the earl had reproached them for ingratitude, and what plans he
-had devised to reform the army and to check Cromwell and Fairfax.[47]
-
-On the earl's death, his Royalist brother-in-law, the Marquis of Hertford,
-attempted to seize his ready money and papers, but was frustrated by the
-Parliament.[48]
-
-Whether the next earl, who on being arrested for sharing in the Rye-House
-plot destroyed himself at the Tower, lived in his father's house, I do not
-know, but the mansion, so unlucky to its owners, was occupied by families
-of rank for some time after the Restoration, and then falling into neglect
-and ruin, as fashion began to flow westward, was subdivided, and a street,
-called Essex Street, was built on part of its site.
-
-Samuel Patterson, the bookseller and auctioneer, lived in Essex Street, in
-1775, in rooms formerly the residence of Sir Orlando Bridgeman. He was
-originally a bag-maker. Afterwards Charles Dibdin commenced his
-entertainments in these rooms, and here his fine song of "Poor Jack"
-became famous.[49] Patterson's youngest child was Dr. Johnson's godson,
-and became a pupil of Ozias Humphrey.[50] Patterson wrote a book of
-travels in Sterne's manner, but claimed a priority to that strange writer.
-
-George Fordyce, a celebrated epicurean doctor of the eighteenth century,
-lived in the same street. For twenty years he dined daily at Dolly's
-Chop-house, and at his solitary meal he always took a tankard of strong
-ale, a quarter of a pint of brandy, and a bottle of port. After these
-potations, he walked to his house and gave a lecture to his pupils.[51]
-
-Dr. Johnson, the year before he died, formed a club in Essex Street, at
-the Essex Head, a tavern kept by an old servant of his friend, Thrale, the
-brewer. It was less select than the Literary Club, but cheaper. Johnson,
-writing to Sir Joshua Reynolds to join it, says, "the terms are lax and
-the expences light--we meet thrice a week, and he who misses forfeits
-twopence."[52] Sir John Hawkins spitefully calls it "a low ale-house
-association;" but Windham, Daines Barrington, Horsley, Boswell, and
-Brocklesby were members of it; for rich men were less luxurious than they
-are now, and enjoyed the sociable freedom of a tavern. Sir Joshua refused
-to join, probably because Barry, who had insulted him, and was very
-pugnacious, had become a member.[53] It went on happily for many years,
-says Boswell, whom Johnson, when he proposed him for election, called "a
-clubable man." Towards the end of his life the great lexicographer grew
-more and more afraid of solitude, and a club so near his home was probably
-a great convenience to him.
-
-Near Devereux Court are the premises of the well-known tea-dealers,
-Messrs. Twining. The graceful recumbent stone figures of Chinamen over the
-Strand front have much elegance, and must have come from some good hand.
-One of this family was a Colchester rector, and a translator of
-Aristotle's _Poetics_. He was an excellent man, a good linguist and
-musician, and a witty companion. He was contemporary with Gray and Mason,
-the poets, at Cambridge. In the back parlour is a portrait of the founder
-of the house. A century and a half ago ladies used to drive to the door of
-Twining's and drink tiny cups of the new and fashionable beverage as they
-sat in their coaches. There is an epigram extant, written either by
-Theodore Hook or one of the Smiths; the point of it is, that if you took
-away his T, Twining would be Wining.
-
-In 1652 Constantine, the Greek servant of a Levant merchant, opened in
-Devereux Court a coffee-house, which became known as "The Grecian." In
-1664-5 advertised his Turkey "coffee bery," chocolate, "sherbet," and tea,
-as good and cheap, and announced his readiness to give gratuitous
-instructions in the art of preparing the said liquors.[54]
-
-In the same year, a Greek named Pasqua Rosee had also established a house
-in St. Michael's Alley, Cornhill, for the sale of "the coffee drink."[55]
-
-John Evelyn describes a Greek fellow-student, afterwards Bishop of Smyrna,
-drinking coffee when he was at college in about 1637.[56]
-
-In April 1709 Steele, in No. 1 of the _Tatler_, announces that he shall
-date all learned articles from the "Grecian," all gallantry from
-"White's," all poetry from "Wills's," all foreign and domestic news from
-"St. James's."
-
-In 1710-11 Addison, starting the "_Spectator_ along with Steele," tells us
-his own grave face was well known at the Grecian; and in No. 49 (April
-1711), the _Spectator_ describes the spleen and inward laughter with which
-he views at the Grecian the young Templars come in, about 8 A.M., either
-dressed for Westminster, and with the preoccupied air of assumed business,
-or in gay cap, slippers, and particoloured dressing-gowns, rising early to
-publish their laziness, and being displaced by busier men towards noon.
-Dr. King relates a story of two hot-blooded young gentlemen quarrelling
-one evening at this coffee-house about the accent of a Greek word.
-Stepping out into Devereux Court, they fought, and one of them being run
-through the body, died on the spot.[57] This Dr. King was principal of St.
-Mary's Hall, Oxford, and a staunch Tory. It is he who relates the secret
-visit of the Pretender to London. He died in 1763.
-
-Ralph Thoresby, the Leeds topographer, met Dr. Sloane, the secretary of
-the Royal Society, by appointment at the Grecian in May 1712; and again in
-June he describes retiring to the Grecian after a meeting of the Royal
-Society, of which he was a fellow, with the president, Sir Isaac
-Newton,[58] Dr. Halley, who published the _Principia_ for Newton, and
-Keill, who opposed Leibnitz about the invention of Fluxions, and defended
-Newton's doctrines against the Cartesians. (The Royal Society held its
-meetings at this time in Crane Court, Fleet Street.) Roger North,
-Attorney-General under James II., who died in 1733, describes in his
-_Examen_ the Privy Council Board, as held at the Grecian coffee-house. The
-Grecian was closed in 1843, and has been since turned into the Grecian
-Chambers. On what was once the front of the coffee-house frequented by
-Steele and Addison, there is a bust of Essex, with the date 1676.
-
-In this court, at the house of one Kedder, in 1678, died Marchmont
-Needham, a vigorous but unprincipled turncoat and newspaper writer, who
-three times during the civil wars changed his principles to save his
-worthless neck. He was alternately the author of the _Mercurius
-Britannicus_ for the Presbyterians, _Mercurius Pragmaticus_ for the king,
-and _Mercurius Politicus_ for the Independents. The great champion of the
-late usurper, as the Cavaliers called him, "whose pen, compared with
-others', was as a weaver's beam," latterly practised as a physician, but
-with small success.[59]
-
-There is a letter of Pope addressed to Fortescue, his "counsel learned in
-the law," at Tom's coffee-house, in Devereux Court. Fortescue, the poet's
-kind, unpaid lawyer, was afterwards (in 1738) Master of the Rolls. Pope's
-imitation of the first satire of Horace, suggested by Bolingbroke, was
-addressed to Mr. Fortescue, and published in 1733. This lawyer was the
-author of the droll report in _Scriblerus_ of "Stradling _versus_ Styles,"
-wherein Sir John Swale leaves all his black and white horses to one
-Stradling, but the question is whether this bequest includes Swale's
-piebald horses. It is finally proved that the horses are all mares.[60]
-
-Dr. Birch, the antiquary, the dull writer but good talker, frequented
-Tom's; and there Akenside--short, thin, pale, strumous, and lame,
-scrupulously neat, and somewhat petulant, vain, and irritable--spent his
-winter evenings, entangled in disputes and altercations, chiefly on
-subjects of literature and politics, that fixed on his character the stamp
-of haughtiness and self-conceit, and drew him into disagreeable
-situations.[61] Akenside was a contradictory man. By turns he was placid,
-irritable; simple, affected; gracious, haughty; magnanimous, mean;
-benevolent, yet harsh, and sometimes even brutal. At times he manifested a
-childlike docility, and at other times his vanity and arrogance made him
-seem almost a madman.[62]
-
-Gay, in his _Trivia_, describes Milford Lane so faithfully that it might
-pass for a yesterday's sketch of the same place. He writes--
-
- "Where the fair columns of St. Clement stand,
- Whose straitened bounds incroach upon the Strand;
- Where the low pent-house bows the walker's head,
- And the rough pavement wounds the yielding tread;
- Where not a post protects the narrow space,
- And strung in twines combs dangle in thy face.
- Summon at once thy courage--rouse thy care;
- Stand firm, look back, be resolute, beware!
- Forth issuing from steep lanes, the collier's steeds
- Drag the black load; another cart succeeds;
- Team follows team, crowds heap'd on crowds appear."
-
-Stow mentions Milford Lane, but gives no derivation for its name.[63] The
-coarse poem by Henry Savill, commonly attributed to the witty Earl of
-Dorset, beginning--
-
- "In Milford Lane, near to St. Clement's steeple."[64]
-
-gave the street for a time such a disagreeable notoriety as the pillory
-gives to a rogue.
-
-Arundel House, in the Strand, was the old inn or town-house of the Bishops
-of Bath, stolen by force in the rough, greedy times of Edward VI., by the
-bad Lord Thomas Seymour, the admiral, and the brother of the Protector;
-from him it derived the name of Seymour Place, and must have been
-conveniently near to the ambitious kinsman who afterwards beheaded him.
-This Admiral had married Henry VIII.'s widow, Catherine Parr; and she
-dying in childbed, he began to woo, in his coarse boisterous way, the
-young Princess Elizabeth, who had been living under the protection of her
-mother-in-law, who was indeed generally supposed to have been poisoned by
-the admiral. His marriage with Elizabeth would have smoothed his way to
-the throne in spite of her father's cautious will. It was said that
-Elizabeth always blushed when she heard his name. He died on the scaffold.
-Old Bishop Latimer, in a sermon, declared "he was a wicked man, and the
-realm is well rid of him."[65] It is certain that, whatever were his
-plots, he had projected a marriage between Lady Jane Grey and the young
-king.
-
-The admiral's house was bought, on its owner's fall, by Henry Fitz-Alan,
-Earl of Arundel, for the nominal sum of £41: 6: 8, with several other
-messuages and lands adjoining.[66] The earl dying in 1579, was succeeded
-by his grandson, Philip Howard, son of the Duke of Norfolk, the owner of
-Essex House adjoining, who was beheaded for his intrigues with Mary of
-Scotland. He died in the Tower in 1598. The house then passed into the
-keeping of Robert Cary, Earl of Monmouth,[67] during the minority of
-Thomas Howard, Philip's son.
-
-In Arundel Palace, in 1603, died the Countess of Nottingham, sister of Sir
-Robert Cary;[68] she was buried at Chelsea. It is of this countess that
-Lady Spelman, a granddaughter of Sir Robert Cary, used to tell the
-doubtful legend of the ring[69] given by Queen Elizabeth to Lord Essex,
-which an acute writer of the present day believes to be a pure fabrication
-of the times of James I.
-
-[Illustration: ARUNDEL HOUSE, 1646.]
-
-The story runs thus:--When the Countess Catherine was dying, she sent to
-the Queen to tell her that she had a secret to reveal, without disclosing
-which she could not die in peace. The Queen came, and the countess then
-told her that when Essex was in the Tower, under sentence of death, he one
-morning threw a ring from his window to a boy passing underneath, hiring
-him to carry it to his friend Lady Scrope, the countess's sister, and beg
-of her to present it in his name to the queen, who had promised to protect
-him whenever he sent her that keepsake, and who was then waiting for some
-such sign of his submission. The boy not clearly understanding the
-message, brought the ring to the countess, who showed it to her husband,
-and he insisted on her keeping it. The countess, having made this
-disclosure, begged her majesty's forgiveness; but the queen answered,
-"God may forgive you, but I never can!" and burst from the room in a
-paroxysm of rage and grief. From that time Elizabeth became perturbed in
-mind, refused to eat or sleep, and died a fortnight after the countess.
-Now this is absurd. The queen never repented the death of that wrongheaded
-traitor, and really died of a long-standing disease which had well-defined
-symptoms.[70]
-
-At Arundel House lodged that grave, wise minister of Henry IV. of France,
-the Duc de Sully, then only the Marquis de Rosny. He describes the house
-with complacency as fine and commodious, and having a great number of
-apartments on the same floor. It was really a mean and low building, but
-commanding a fine prospect of the river and Westminster, so fine, indeed,
-that Hollar took a view of London from the roof. The first night of his
-arrival Sully slept at the French ambassador's house in Butcher Row
-adjoining, a poor house with low rooms, a well staircase lit by a
-skylight, and small casements.[71]
-
-[Illustration: ARUNDEL HOUSE, 1646.]
-
-In the time of James I., in whose reign the earldom was restored to Thomas
-Howard, Arundel House became a treasury of art. The travelled earl's
-collection comprised thirty-seven statues, one hundred and twenty-eight
-busts, and two-hundred and fifty inscribed marbles, exclusive of
-sarcophagi, altars, medals, gems, and fragments. Some of his noblest
-relics, however, he was not allowed to remove from Rome. Of this proud and
-princely amateur of art Lord Clarendon speaks with too obvious prejudice.
-He describes him as living in a world of his own, surrounded by strangers,
-and though illiterate, willing to be thought a scholar because he was a
-collector of works of art. Yet the historian admits that he had an air of
-gravity and greatness in his face and bearing. He affected an ancient and
-grave dress; but Clarendon asserts that this was all outside, and that his
-real disposition was "one of levity," as he was fond of childish and
-despicable amusements. Vansomer's portraits of the earl and countess
-contain views of the statue and picture galleries.[72] This illustrious
-nobleman, whom the excellent Evelyn calls "my noble friend," died in 1646.
-At the Restoration his house and marbles were restored to his grandson,
-Mr. Henry Howard; the antiquities were then lying scattered about Arundel
-Gardens, and were neglected and corroding, blanching with rain, and green
-with damp, much to the horror of Evelyn and other antiquaries, who
-regarded their fate with alarm and pity.
-
-The old Earl of Arundel (whom Clarendon disliked) had been a collector of
-art in a magnificent and princely way. He despatched artist-agents to
-Italy, and even to Asia Minor, to buy pictures, drawings, statues, votive
-slabs, and gems. William Petty collected sculpture for him at Paros and
-Delos, but the collections were lost off Samos in a storm. He collected
-Holbein's and Albert Dürer's drawings, discovered the genius of Inigo
-Jones, and brought Hollar from Prague. He left England just before the
-troubles, having received many affronts from Charles's ministers, who had
-neglected to restore his ancient titles, went to Padua, and there died.
-The marbles Mr. Evelyn induced Mr. Howard, in 1667, to send to the
-University of Oxford; the statues were also given to Oxford by a later
-descendant; and the earl's library (originally part of that of the King of
-Hungary) Mr. Evelyn persuaded the Duke of Norfolk to bestow on the Royal
-Society.[73]
-
-The old earl was, I suspect, a proud, soured, and a rather arrogant,
-formal person. In a certain dispute about a rectory, he once said to King
-Charles I.: "Sir, this rectory was an appendant and a manour of mine until
-my grandfather unfortunately lost both his life and seven lordships, for
-the love he bore to your grandmother."[74]
-
-After the Great Fire of London, Mr. Howard lent the Royal Society rooms in
-his house. In 1678 the palace was taken down, and the present Arundel,
-Surrey, Howard, and Norfolk streets were erected in its stead. The few
-marbles that remained were removed to Tart Hall, Westminster, and to
-Cuper's Gardens across the river.[75] Tart Hall was the residence of the
-Countess of Arundel: Cuper's Gardens belonged to a gardener of the Earl of
-Arundel. The Duke of Norfolk originally intended to build a more
-magnificent house on the old site, and even obtained an act of Parliament
-for the purpose; but fashion was already setting westward, and the design
-was abandoned.[76]
-
-In Arundel Street lived Rymer, the historical antiquary, who died here in
-1715; John Anstis, the Garter king-at-arms, resided here in 1715-16;[77]
-also Mrs. Porter, the actress, "over against the Blue Ball."
-
-Gay, in his delightful _Trivia_ sketches the "long Strand," and pauses to
-mourn over the glories of Arundel House. His walk is from "the Temple's
-silent walls," and he stays to look down at the site of the earl's
-mansion--
-
- ----"That narrow street, which steep descends,
- Whose building to the shining shore extends;
- Here Arundel's famed structure rear'd its frame--
- The street alone retains an empty name;
- Where Titian's glowing paint the canvas warm'd,
- And Raphael's fair design with judgment charm'd,
- Now hangs the bellman's song, and pasted here
- The coloured prints of Overton appear;
- Where statues breathed, the work of Phidias' hands,
- A wooden pump or lonely watch-house stands;
- There Essex' stately pile adorned the shore;
- There Cecil's, Bedford's, Villiers'--now no more."
-
-In the Strand, between Arundel and Norfolk Streets, in the year 1698,
-lived Sir Thomas Lyttelton, Speaker of the House of Commons, and father of
-Pope's friend, and the author of the _History of Henry the Second_, a
-ponderous and pompous work.
-
-Next door to him lived the father of Bishop Burnet--a remarkable person,
-for he was a poor but honest lawyer, born at Edinburgh in 1643. A
-bookseller of the same name--a collateral descendant of the bishop whom
-Swift hated so cordially--afterwards occupied the house.
-
-At the south-west corner of Norfolk Street, near the river, in his wild
-days lodged the Quaker Penn, son of Cromwell's stout Bristol admiral. He
-had been twice beaten and turned out of doors by his father for his
-fondness for Nonconformist society and prayer-meetings, and for refusing
-to stand uncovered in the presence of Charles II. or of the Duke of York,
-of whom later he became the suspected favourite. We do not generally
-associate the grave and fanatic Penn with a gay and licentious court, nor
-do we portray him to ourselves as slinking away from hawk-eyed bailiffs;
-and yet the venerated founder of repudiating Pennsylvania chose this house
-when he was sued for debts, as being convenient for slipping unobserved
-into a boat. In the eastern entrance he had a peep-hole, through which he
-could reconnoitre any suspicious visitor. On one occasion a dun, having
-sent in his name and waited an unconscionable time, knocked again. "Will
-not thy master see me?" he said to the servant. The knave was at least
-candid, for he replied: "Friend, he _has_ seen thee, and he does not like
-thee."[78]
-
-In Norfolk Street, in Penn's old house, afterwards resided for thirty
-years that truly good man, Dr. Richard Brocklesby, who in early life,
-during the Seven Years' War, had practised as an army surgeon. He was a
-friend of Burke and Dr. Johnson. To the former he left, or rather gave, a
-thousand pounds, and to the latter he offered an annuity of a hundred
-pounds a year, to enable him to travel for his health, and also apartments
-in his own house for the sake of medical advice, which Johnson
-affectionately and gratefully declined. The doctor was one of the most
-generous and amiable of men; he attended the poor for nothing, and had
-many pensioners. He died the day after returning from a visit to Burke at
-Beaconsfield. He had been warned against the fatigue of this journey, but
-had replied with true Christian philosophy, "My good friend, where's the
-difference whether I die at a friend's house, at an inn, or in a
-post-chaise? I hope I am prepared for such an event, and perhaps it would
-be as well to elude the anticipation of it."
-
-Dr. Brocklesby was ridiculed by Foote, but Foote attacked virtue quite as
-often as vice. He was the physician who had attended Lord Chatham when he
-was struck down by illness in the House of Lords, a short time before his
-death.
-
-In January 1698 Peter the Great arrived from Holland, and went straight to
-a house prepared for him in Norfolk Street, near the water side. On the
-following day he was visited by King William and the principal nobility.
-Incommoded here by visitors, the Czar removed to Admiral Benbow's house at
-Deptford, where he could live more retired. This Deptford house was Sayes
-Place, afterwards the Victualling Office, and had once belonged to the
-celebrated John Evelyn.
-
-The "Honest Shippen" of Pope--William Shippen, M.P.--lived also in Norfolk
-Street: a brave, honest man, in an age when nearly every politician had
-his price. It was of him Sir Robert Walpole remarked "that he would not
-say who was corrupted, but he would say who was not corruptible, and that
-was Shippen."
-
-Mortimer, a rough, picturesque painter, who was called "the English
-Salvator Rosa," and imitated that unsatisfactory artist in a coarse,
-sketchy kind of way, dwelt in this street.
-
-At No. 21 lived Albany Wallis, a friend and executor of Garrick. In this
-street also Addison makes that delightful old country gentleman, Sir Roger
-de Coverley, put up before he goes to Soho Square.[79]
-
-At No. 8, in 1795, lived Samuel Ireland, the father of the celebrated
-literary impostor; and here were shown to George Chalmers, John Kemble,
-and other Shaksperian scholars, the forged plays which the public
-ultimately scented out as ridiculous.
-
-In 1796 Mr. W. H. Ireland published a full confession of his forgeries,
-fully exonerating his father from all connivance in his foolish fraud,
-claiming forgiveness for a boyish deception begun without evil intention
-and without any thought of danger. "I should never have gone so far," he
-says, "but that the world praised the papers too much, and thereby
-flattered my vanity."[80] After the failure of "Vortigern," the father,
-Mr. S. Ireland, still credulous, had written a pamphlet, accusing Malone,
-his son's chief assailant, of mean malice and unbearable arrogance.
-
-The true story of the forgery is this. W. H. Ireland, then only eighteen,
-was articled to a solicitor in New Inn, where he practised Elizabethan
-handwriting for the sake of deceiving credulous antiquaries. A forged deed
-exciting the admiration of his father, who was a collector of old tracts
-and a worshipper of Shakspere, led him to continue his deceptions, and to
-pretend to have discovered a hoard of Shaksperian MSS. A fellow clerk, one
-Talbot, afterwards an actor, discovering the forgeries, Ireland made him
-an accomplice. They then produced a "Profession of Faith," signed by
-Shakspere, which Dr. Parr and Dr. Warton (brother of the poet) declared
-contained "finer things" than all the Church Service. This foolish praise
-set the secretive lawyer's clerk on writing original verse,--a poem to
-Anne Hathaway, and the play of "Vortigern," the most recklessly impudent
-of all his impostures. Boswell was the first to propose a certificate to
-be signed by all believers in the productions. Dr. Parr, thinking
-Boswell's writing too feeble, drew up another, which was signed by
-twenty-one noblemen, authors, and "celebrated literary characters."
-Boswell, characteristically enough, previous to signing his name, fell on
-his knees, and, "in a tone of enthusiasm and exultation, thanked God that
-he had lived to witness this discovery, and exclaimed that he could now
-die in peace."[81] Lords Kinnaird, Somerset, and Lauderdale were the
-noblemen. There were also present Bindley, Valpy, Pinkerton, Pye the poet
-laureate, Matthew Wyatt, and the present author's grandfather, the Rev.
-Nathaniel Thornbury, an intimate friend of Jenner and of Dr. Johnson, who
-had at this time been twelve years dead. The elder Ireland, in his
-pamphlet, alludes to the solemn and awful manner in which, before crowds
-of eminent characters, his son attested the genuineness of his forgeries.
-"I could not," says the honest fellow, "suffer myself to cherish the
-slightest suspicion of his veracity."[82]
-
-Singularly enough Mr. Albany Wallis--(a solicitor, I believe), of Norfolk
-Street,--who had given to Garrick a mortgage deed bearing Shakspere's
-signature, became the most ardent believer in the unprincipled young
-clerk's deceptions.
-
-The terms agreed upon for Ireland's forgery of "Vortigern" was £300 down,
-and a division of the receipts, deducting charges, for sixty nights. The
-play, however, lived only one night, for which the Irelands received their
-half, £103. The commentators Malone and Steevens remained sceptical, and
-Kemble was suspicious and cold in the cause, though he was to be the hero;
-but the gulls and quidnuncs were numerous enough to cram the house, and
-that most commonplace of poets, Sir James Bland Burges, wrote the
-prologue. The final damnation of the play was secured by a rhapsody of
-Vortigern's, a patch-work thing from "Richard II." and "Henry IV." The
-fatal line--
-
- "And when the solemn mockery is o'er,"
-
-convulsed the house.[83] Mr. W. H. Ireland in later life was editor of the
-_York Herald_, and died in 1835.[84]
-
-Another eminent historical antiquary, Dr. Birch, lived in Norfolk Street.
-The son of a Quaker tradesman at Clerkenwell, he became a London clergyman
-and an historian, famous for his Sunday evenings' conversaziones, and was
-killed by a fall from his horse in 1766. He seems to have been a most
-pleasant, generous, and honest man. He edited Bacon's _Letters and
-Speeches_, and Thurloe's _State Papers_, etc. His chief work was his
-_Memoirs of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth_. He left books, manuscripts, and
-money to the British Museum, for which let all scholars bless the good
-man's memory. He appears to have been a student of boundless industry, as
-from the Lambeth Library alone he transcribed with his own hand sixteen
-quarto volumes. He was rector of St. Margaret Pattens in Fenchurch Street.
-Dr. Birch must have been a kind husband, for his wife on her deathbed
-wrote him the following tender letter:--
-
- "This day I return you, my dearest life, my sincere, hearty thanks for
- every favour bestowed on your most faithful and obedient wife,
-
- HANNAH BIRCH."
-
-We leave it to the watchful cynic to remark that the doctor had been
-married only one year. It was of this worthy book-worm that Johnson
-said--"Yes, sir, he is brisk in conversation, but when he takes up the pen
-it benumbs him like a torpedo."
-
-Strype describes Surrey Street as replenished with good buildings,
-especially that of Nevison Fox, Esq., towards the Strand, "which is a
-fine, large, and curious house of his own building," and the two houses
-that front the Thames, that on the east side being the Hon. Charles
-Howard's, brother to the Duke of Norfolk. Both of these houses had
-pleasant though small gardens towards the Thames.[85]
-
-In 1736 died here George Sale, the useful translator of the Mohammedan
-Bible, the Koran, that strange compound of pure prayers and impure
-plagiarisms from the laws of Moses. Sale had published his Koran in 1734,
-and in the year of his death he joined Paul Whitehead, Dr. Birch, and Mr.
-Strutt, in founding a "Society for the Encouragement of Learning." He
-spent many years in writing for the _Universal History_, in which Bayle's
-ten folio volumes were included.
-
-Edward Pierce, a sculptor, son of a painter of altar-pieces and
-church-ceilings, and a pupil of Vandyke, lived at the corner of Surrey
-Street, and was buried in the Savoy. He helped Sir Christopher Wren to
-build St. Clement's church, and carved the four guardian dragons on the
-Monument of London. The statue of Sir William Walworth at the fishmongers'
-Hall is from his hand, and so is the bust of Thomas Evans in the hall of
-the painters and stainers. He executed also busts of Cromwell, Wren, and
-Milton.[86]
-
-The charming actress, Mrs. Bracegirdle, lived in Howard Street. She was
-the belle and toast of London; every young man of mode was, or pretended
-to be, in love with her; and the wits wrote verses upon her beauty, in
-imitation of Sedley and Waller. Congreve tells us that it was the fashion
-to avow a tenderness for her. Rowe, in an imitation of an ode of Horace,
-urges the Earl of Scarsdale to marry her (though he had a wife living) and
-set the town at defiance.
-
-Among this crowd of admirers was a Captain Hill, a half-cracked
-man-about-town, a drunken, profligate bully, of low character, and a
-friend of the infamous duellist, Lord Mohun. One of Mrs. Bracegirdle's
-favourite parts was Statira, her lover Alexander being her friend and
-neighbour, the eminent actor Mountfort. Cibber describes him in this
-character as "great, tender, persistent, despairing, transported,
-amiable." Hill, "that dark-souled fellow in the pit," as Leigh Hunt calls
-him, mistook the frantic extravagance of stage-passion for real love, and
-in a fit of mad jealousy swore to be revenged on Mountfort, and to carry
-off the lady by force. Lord Mohun, always ready for any desperate
-mischief, agreed to help him in his design. On the night appointed the
-friends dined together, and having changed clothes, went to Drury Lane
-Theatre at six o'clock; but as Mrs. Bracegirdle did not act that night,
-they next took a coach and drove to her lodgings in Howard Street. They
-then, finding that she had gone to supper with a Mr. Page, in Princes
-Street, Drury Lane, went to his house and waited till she came out. She
-appeared at last at the door, with her mother and brother, Mr. Page
-lighting them out.
-
-Hill immediately seized her, and endeavoured, with the aid of some hired
-ruffians, to drag her into the coach, where Lord Mohun sat with a loaded
-pistol in each hand; but her brother and Mr. Page rushing to the rescue,
-and an angry crowd gathering, Hill was forced to let go his hold and
-decamp. Mrs. Bracegirdle and her escort then proceeded to her lodgings in
-Howard Street, followed by Captain Hill and Lord Mohun on foot. On
-knocking at the door, as it was said, to beg Mrs. Bracegirdle's pardon,
-they were refused admittance; upon which they sent for a bottle of wine to
-a neighbouring tavern, which they drank in the street, and then began to
-patrol up and down with swords drawn, declaring they were waiting to be
-revenged on Mountfort the actor. Messengers were instantly despatched to
-warn Mountfort, both by Mrs. Bracegirdle's landlady and his own wife, but
-he could not be found. The watch were also sent for, and they begged the
-two ruffians to depart peaceably. Lord Mohun replied, "He was a peer of
-the realm, that he had been drinking a bottle of wine, but that he was
-ready to put up his sword if they particularly desired it: but as for his
-friend, he had lost his scabbard." The cautious watch then went away.
-
-In the meantime the unlucky Mountfort, suspecting no evil, passed down the
-street on his way home, heedless of warnings. On coming up to the
-swordsmen, a female servant heard the following conversation:--
-
-Lord Mohun embraced Mountfort, and said--
-
-"Mr. Mountfort, your humble servant. I am glad to see you."
-
-"Who is this?--Lord Mohun?" said Mountfort.
-
-"Yes, it is."
-
-"What brings your lordship here at this time of night?"
-
-Lord Mohun replied--
-
-"I suppose you were sent for, Mr. Mountfort?"
-
-"No, indeed, I came by chance."
-
-"Have you not heard of the business of Mrs. Bracegirdle?"
-
-"Pray, my lord," said Hill, breaking in, "hold your tongue. This is not a
-convenient time to discuss this business."
-
-Hill seemed desirous to go away, and pulled Lord Mohun's sleeve; but
-Mountfort, taking no notice of Hill, continued to address Lord Mohun,
-saying he was sorry to see him assisting Captain Hill in such an evil
-action, and begging him to forbear.
-
-Hill instantly gave the actor a box on the ear, and on Mountfort demanding
-what that was for, attacked him sword in hand, and ran him through before
-he had time to draw his weapon. Mountfort died the next day of the wound,
-declaring with his last breath that Lord Mohun had offered him no
-violence. Hill fled from justice, and Lord Mohun was tried for murder, but
-unfortunately acquitted for want of evidence.
-
-That fortunate poet, Congreve, whom Pope declared to be one of the three
-most honest-hearted and really good men in the Kit-cat Club, lived for
-some time in Howard Street, where he was a neighbour and frequent guest of
-Mrs. Bracegirdle.
-
-Congreve, on becoming acquainted with the Duchess of Marlborough, removed
-from Howard Street to a better house in Surrey Street, where he died,
-January 19, 1729. The career of this son of a Yorkshire officer had been
-one long undisturbed triumph. His first play had been revised by Dryden
-and praised by Southerne. Besides being commissioner of hackney-coach and
-wine licences, he also held a place in the Pipe Office, a post in the
-Custom House, and a secretaryship in Jamaica. He never quarrelled with the
-wits: both Addison and Steele admired and praised him, and Voltaire
-eulogises his comedies.
-
-It was here that Voltaire, while lodging in Maiden Lane, visited the gouty
-and nearly blind dramatist, then infirm and on the verge of life. "Mr.
-Congreve," he says, "had one defect, which was his entertaining too mean
-an idea of his profession--that of a writer--though it was to this he owed
-his fame and fortune. He spoke of his works as of trifles that were
-beneath him, and hinted to me in our first conversation that I should
-visit him upon no other footing than that of a gentleman who led a life of
-plainness and simplicity. I answered, that _had he been so unfortunate as
-to be a mere gentleman_ I should never have come to see him; and I was
-very much disgusted at so unseasonable a piece of vanity."
-
-The body of Congreve lay in state in the Jerusalem Chamber, and was
-afterwards interred with great solemnity in Henry VII.'s Chapel. The Duke
-of Bridgewater and the Earl of Godolphin were amongst those who bore the
-pall. The monument was erected by the Duchess of Marlborough, to whom the
-favoured poet had left £10,000. Above his body--
-
- "The ancient pillars rear their marble heads
- To bear aloft the arch'd and pond'rous roof,
- By its own weight made steadfast and immoveable."[87]
-
-Congreve's bequest to the duchess of all his property, except £1000,
-including £200 to Mrs. Bracegirdle (a legacy afterwards cancelled),
-created much scandal. The shameless bookseller, Curll, instantly launched
-forth a life of Congreve, professing to be written by one Charles Wilson,
-Esq., but generally attributed to Oldmixon. The duchess's friends were
-alarmed, and Arbuthnot interfered. Upon being told that some genuine
-letters and essays were to be published in the work, Mrs. Bracegirdle or
-the duchess[88] cried out with defiant affectation and a dramatic drawl,
-"Not one single sheet of paper, I dare to swear."
-
-The duchess, who raised a monument in the Abbey to her brilliant but
-artificial friend, is said to have had a wax image of him made to place on
-her toilette table. "To this she would talk as to the living Mr. Congreve,
-with all the freedom of the most _polite_ and unreserved
-conversation."[89]
-
-Strand Lane used formerly to lead to a small landing-pier for wherries,
-called Strand Bridge. In Stow's time the lane passed under a bridge down
-to the landing-place.[90] A writer in the _Spectator_ describes how he
-landed here on a summer morning, arriving with ten sail of apricot boats,
-consigned to Covent Garden,[91] after having first touched at Nine Elms
-for melons. In this lane there is a fine Roman bath which, if indeed
-Roman, is the most western relic of Roman London, the centre of which was
-on the east end of the Royal Exchange.
-
-No. 165 has been long used as a warehouse for the sale of Dr. Anderson's
-pills. Dr. Patrick Anderson was physician to Charles I., and as early as
-1649 a man named Inglis sold these quack pills at the Golden Unicorn, over
-against the Maypole in the Strand. Tom Brown says, "There are at least a
-score of pretenders to Anderson's Scotch pills, and the Lord knows who has
-the true preparation." Brown died in 1704. Sir Walter Scott used to tell
-one of his best stories about these pills. It dwelt on the passion for
-them entertained by a certain hypochondriacal Lowland laird. Bland or
-rough, old or young, no visitor at his house escaped a dose--"joost ane
-leetle Anderson;" and his toady "the doer" used always to swallow a
-brace.[92]
-
-The Turk's Head Coffee-house stood on the site of No. 142 Strand. Dr.
-Johnson used to sup at this house to encourage the hostess, who was a
-good civil woman, and had not too much business. July 28, 1763, Boswell
-mentions supping there with Dr. Johnson; and again, on August 3, in the
-same year, just before he set out for his wildgoose chase in Corsica.[93]
-No. 132 was the shop of a bookseller named Bathoe. The first circulating
-library in London was established here in 1740.
-
-Jacob Tonson, Dryden's grinding publisher and bookseller, lived at the
-Shakspere's Head, over against Catherine Street, now No. 141 Strand, from
-about 1712 till he died, in 1735-6. Tonson seems to have been rough, hard,
-and penurious. The poet and publisher were perpetually squabbling, and
-Dryden was especially vexed at his trying to force him to dedicate his
-translation of Virgil to King William, and when he refused, making the
-engraver of the frontispiece aggravate the nose of Æneas till it became "a
-hooked promontory," like that of the Protestant king. It was to Tonson's
-shop at Gray's Inn, however, that Dryden, on being refused money, probably
-sent that terrible triplet to the obdurate bibliopole:--
-
- "With leering looks, bull-faced, and freckled fair,
- With two left legs, and Judas-colour'd hair,
- And frowsy pores that taint the ambient air."[94]
-
-"Tell the dog," said Dryden to his messenger, "that he who wrote those can
-write more." But Tonson was perfectly satisfied with this first shot, and
-surrendered at discretion. The irascible poet afterwards accused him of
-intercepting his letters to his sons at Rome, and he confessed to
-Bolingbroke on one occasion that he was afraid of Tonson's tongue.[95]
-
-Tonson's house, since rebuilt, was afterwards occupied by Andrew Millar,
-the publisher and friend of Thomson, Fielding, Hume, and Robertson, and
-after his death by Thomas Cadell, his apprentice, and the friend and
-publisher of Gibbon the historian. The _Seasons_, _Tom Jones_, and the
-Histories of Hume, Robertson, and Gibbon were first published at this
-house. Millar was a Scotchman, and distinguished his shop by the sign of
-Buchanan's Head, afterwards the badge of Messrs. Blackwood.
-
-The _Illustrated London News_, whose office is near Somerset House, was
-started in 1842 by Mr. Herbert Ingram, originally a humble newsvendor at
-Northampton; an industrious man, who would run five miles with a newspaper
-to oblige an old customer. In the first year he sold a million copies; in
-the second, two; and in 1848, three millions. Dr. Mackay, the song-writer,
-wrote leaders; Mr. Mark Lemon aided him; Mr. Peter Cunningham collected
-his column of weekly chat; Thomas Miller, the basket-maker poet, was also
-on his staff. Mr. Ingram obtained a seat in Parliament, and was eventually
-drowned in a steamboat collision on Lake Michigan.
-
-[Illustration: PENN'S HOUSE, NORFOLK STREET, 1749.]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: SOMERSET HOUSE FROM THE RIVER, 1746.]
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-SOMERSET HOUSE.
-
- "And every day there passes by my side,
- Up to its western reach, the London tide--
- The spring tides of the term. My front looks down
- On all the pride and business of the town;
- My other fair and more majestic face
- For ever gazes on itself below,
- In the best mirror that the world can show."
- COWLEY.
-
-
-That ambitious and rapacious noble the Protector Somerset, brother of
-Queen Jane Seymour, and maternal uncle of Edward VI., the owner of more
-than two hundred manors,[96] and who boasted that his own friends and
-retainers made up an army of ten thousand men, determined to build a
-palace in the Strand. For this purpose he demolished the parish church of
-St. Mary, and pulled down the houses of the Bishops of Worcester,
-Llandaff, and Lichfield. He also began to remove St. Margaret's, at
-Westminster, for building materials, till his masons were driven away by
-rioters. He destroyed a chapel in St. Paul's Churchyard, with a cloister
-containing the "Dance of Death," and a charnel-house, the bones of which
-he buried in unconsecrated ground,[97] and finally stole the stones of the
-church of St. John of Jerusalem, near Smithfield,[98] and those of Strand
-Inn (belonging to the Temple), where Occleve the poet, a contemporary of
-Gower and Chaucer, had studied law.
-
-The unwise Protector determined in this building to rival Whitehall and
-Hampton Court. It was begun probably about 1549, and no doubt remained
-unfinished at his death. He had at that time lavished on it £50,000 of our
-present money.
-
-The architect was John of Padua,[99] Henry VIII.'s architect, who built
-Longleat, in Wiltshire, the seat of the Marquis of Bath, a magnificent
-specimen of the Italian-Elizabethan style, and also the gates of Caius
-College, at Cambridge. The Protector is said to have spent at one time
-£100 a day in building, every stone he laid bringing him nearer to his own
-narrow home. A plan of the house is still preserved in the Soane
-Museum.[100]
-
-After the attainder of the duke, when the new palace became the property
-of the crown, little was done to complete the building. The screen
-prepared for the hall was bought for St. Bride's, where it was probably
-destroyed in the Great Fire.[101] The Protector was a good friend to the
-people, but he was weak and ambitious, and the plotters of Ely House had
-no difficulty in dragging him to the scaffold. The minority of Edward
-brought many of the Strand noblemen to the axe, but the fate of the
-admiral and his brother did not deter their neighbours Northumberland,
-Raleigh, Norfolk, and Essex.
-
-Elizabeth granted the keeping of Somerset House to her faithful cousin
-Lord Hunsdon, for life,[102] and here she frequently would visit him, in a
-jewelled farthingale, with Raleigh and Essex in her train.
-
-In 1616 that Scotch Solomon, James I., commanded the place to be called
-Denmark House; and his queen kept her gay and not very decent court here,
-so that Ben Jonson must have often seen his glorious masques acted in this
-palace, to which his coadjutor Inigo Jones built a chapel, and made other
-additions. Anne of Denmark and her maids-of-honour kept up here a
-continual masquerade,[103] appearing in various dresses, and transforming
-themselves to the delight of all whose interest it was to be delighted.
-
-Here too that impetuous queen, Henrietta Maria, resided with her wilful
-and extravagant French household, whose insolence irritated and disgusted
-the people and offended Charles the First. The king at last, losing
-patience, summoned them together one evening and dismissed them all. They
-behaved like sutlers at the sack of a town. They claimed fictitious debts;
-they invented exorbitant bills; they greedily divided among each other the
-queen's wardrobe and jewels, scarcely leaving her a change of linen. The
-king paid nearly £50,000 to get rid of them; Madame St. George alone
-claiming several thousand pounds besides jewels.[104] They still delayed
-their departure; on which the king, at last roused, wrote the following
-imperative letter to Buckingham:--
-
- "STEENIE--I have received your letter by Dick Greame. This is my
- answer. I command you to send all the French away to-morrow out of the
- town, if you can by fair means (but stick not long in disputing),
- otherways force them away--driving them away like so many wild beasts
- until ye have shipped them; and the devil go with them. Let me hear no
- answer, but of the performance of my command. So I rest
-
- "Your faithful, constant, loving friend,
- "C. R.
-
- "Oaking, the seventh of August, 1626."
-
-As the French invented all sorts of vexatious delays, the yeomen of the
-guard at last jostled them out, carting them off in nearly forty coaches.
-They arrived at Dover after four days' tedious travelling, wrangling, and
-bewailing. The squib did not burn out without one final detonation. As the
-vivacious Madame St. George stepped into the boat, with perhaps some
-insolent gesture of adieu, a man in the mob flung a stone at her French
-cap. A gallant Englishman who was escorting her instantly quitted his
-charge, ran the fellow through the body, and returned to the boat. The man
-died on the spot, but no notice, it appears, was taken of the murderer.
-
-In Somerset House, at the Christmas masque of 1632-3, Charles's
-high-spirited queen took part for the last time in a masque. Unfortunately
-for Prynne, the next day out came his _Histriomastix_, with a scurrilous
-marginal note, "Women actors notorious whores!" for which the stubborn
-fanatic lost his ears.
-
-Queen Henrietta had, in Somerset House, an ostentatiously magnificent
-Catholic chapel built by Inigo Jones, which became the scene of spectacles
-that were gall and wormwood to the Puritans, who were already couching for
-their spring.
-
-Their time came in March 1643, when Roundheads, grimly rejoicing, burnt
-all the pictures, images, Jesuitical books, and tapestry.[105]
-
-Five of the unhappy queen's French Roman Catholic servants are entombed in
-the cellars of the present building, under the great quiet square.[106]
-
-Here, close to his own handiwork, that distinguished architect, Inigo
-Jones, who had lodgings in the palace, died in 1652.
-
-About the same time the House of Peers permitted the Protestant service to
-be held in Somerset House instead of in Durham House. This drove out the
-Quakers and Anabaptists, and prevented the pulling down of the palace and
-the making of a street from the garden through the chapel and back-yard up
-into the Strand.[107]
-
-The Protector's palace was the scene of a great and sad event in November
-1658; for the body of Cromwell, who had died at Whitehall, lay in state
-here for several days. He lay in effigy on a bed of royal crimson velvet,
-covered with a velvet gown, a sceptre in his hand, and a crown upon his
-head. The Cavaliers, whose spirits were recovering, were very angry at
-this foolish display,[108] forgetting that it was not poor Oliver's own
-doing; and the baser people, who follow any impulse of the day, threw dirt
-in the night upon the blazoned escutcheon that was displayed over the
-great gate of Somerset House.
-
-The year after, an Act was passed to sell all royal property, and Somerset
-House was disposed of for £10,000. The Restoration soon stepped in and
-annulled the bargain. After the return of the son who so completely
-revenged upon us the death of his father, the luckless palace became the
-residence of its former inhabitant, now older and gentler--the
-queen-mother. She improved and beautified it. The old courtier, Waller,
-only fifty-seven at the time, wrote some fulsome verses on the occasion.
-He talks of her adorning the town as with a brave revenge, to show--
-
- "That glory came and went with you."
-
-He mentions also the view from the palace:--
-
- "The fair view her window yields,
- The town, the river, and the fields."
-
-Cowley, the son of a Fleet Street grocer, flew still higher, larded his
-flattery with perverted texts, like a Puritanised Cavalier time-server,
-and wrote--
-
- "On either side dwells Safety and Delight;
- Wealth on the left and Power sits on the right."
-
-In May 1665, when the queen-mother, who had lived in Somerset House with
-her supposed husband, the Earl of St. Albans, took her farewell of England
-for a gayer court, Cowley wrote these verses to the setting sun, in hopes
-to propitiate the rising sun; for here, too, lived Catherine of Braganza,
-the unhappy wife of Charles II.
-
-There were strange scenes at Somerset House even during the queen-mother's
-residence, for the old court gossip Pepys describes being taken one day to
-the Presence-chamber.[109] He found the queen not very charming, but still
-modest and engaging. Lady Castlemaine was there, Mr. Crofts, a pretty
-young spark of fifteen (her illegitimate child), and many great ladies. By
-and by in came the king and the Duke and Duchess of York. The conversation
-was not a very decorous one; and the young queen said to Charles, "You
-lie!" which made good sport, as the chuckling and delighted Pepys remarks,
-those being the first English words he had heard her say; and the king
-then tried to make her reply, "Confess and be hanged."
-
-In another place Pepys indignantly describes "a little proud, ugly,
-talkative lady crying up the queen-mother's court as more decorous than
-the king's;" yet the diary-keeper confesses that the former was the better
-attended, the old nobility dreading, I suppose, the scandal of
-Whitehall.[110]
-
-In 1670 Monk, Duke of Albemarle, having died at his lodgings in the
-Cockpit, at Whitehall, lay in state in Somerset House, and was afterwards
-buried with almost regal pomp in Henry VII.'s Chapel.
-
-In October 1678, the infamous devisers of the Popish plot connected
-Somerset House and the attendants in the Queen's Chapel with the murder of
-a City magistrate, the supposed Protestant martyr, Sir Edmondbury Godfrey,
-who was found murdered in a field near Primrose Hill, "between Kilburn and
-Hampstead," as it was then thought necessary to specify. The lying
-witnesses, Prance and Bedloe, swore that the justice had been inveigled
-into Somerset House under pretence of being wanted to keep the peace
-between two servants who were fighting in the yard; that he was then
-strangled, his neck broken, and his own sword run through his body. The
-corpse was kept four days, then carried in a sedan-chair to Soho, and
-afterwards on a horse to Primrose Hill, nearly three miles off. The
-secrecy and convenient neighbourhood of the river for hiding a murdered
-man seem never to have struck the rogues, who forgot even to "lie like
-truth," so credulous and excited was the multitude.
-
-Waller, says Aubrey, though usually very temperate, was once made drunk at
-Somerset House by some courtiers, and had a cruel fall when taking boat at
-the water stairs, "'Twas a pity to use such a sweet man so
-inhumanly."[111] Saville used to say that "nobody should keep him company
-without drinking but Mr. Waller."
-
-In 1692 that poor ill-used woman and unhappy wife, Catherine of Braganza,
-left Somerset House, and returned thence to Portugal, the home of her
-happy childhood and happier youth.
-
-The palace, never the home of very happy inmates, then became a lodging
-for foreign kings and ambassadors, and a home for a few noblemen and poor
-retainers of the court, much as Hampton Court is now. Lewis de Duras, Earl
-of Feversham, the incompetent commander at Sedgemoor, who lies buried at
-the Savoy, lived here in 1708; and so did Lady Arlington, the widow of
-Secretary Bennet, that butt of Killigrew and Rochester. In the reign of
-George III., Charlotte Lennox, the authoress of the _Female Quixote_, had
-apartments in Somerset House.
-
-Houses, like men, run their allotted courses. In 1775 the old palace,
-which had been settled on the queen-consort in the event of her surviving
-the king, was exchanged for Buckingham House; and the Government instantly
-began to pull down the river-side palace, and erect new public offices
-designed by Sir William Chambers, a Scotch architect, who had given
-instruction in his art to George III., when Prince of Wales.
-
-In 1630, a row of fishmongers' stalls, in the middle of the street, over
-against Denmark House (Somerset House), was broken down by order of
-Government to prevent stalls from growing into sheds, and sheds into
-dwelling houses, as had been the case in Old Fish Street, Saint Nicholas
-Shambles, and other places.[112]
-
-On the 2d of February, 1659-60, Pepys tells us in his diary, that having
-£60 with him of his lord's money, on his way from London Bridge, and
-hearing the noise of guns, he landed at Somerset House, and found the
-Strand full of soldiers. Going upstairs to a window, Pepys looked out and
-saw the foot face the horse and beat them back, all the while bawling for
-a free parliament and money. By and by a drum was heard to sound a march
-towards them, and they all got ready again, but the new comers proving of
-the same mind, they "made a great deal of joy to see one another."[113]
-This was the beginning of Monk's change, for the king returned in the
-following May. On the 18th of February two soldiers were hanged opposite
-Somerset House for a mutiny, of which Pepys was an eye-witness.
-
-The prints of old Somerset House show a long line of battlemented wall
-facing the river, and a turreted and partially arcaded front. There is
-also a scarce view of the place by Hollar.[114] The river front has two
-porticos. The chapel is to the left, and near it are the cloisters of the
-Capuchins. The bowling-green seems to be to the right, between the two
-rows of trees. The garden is formal. The royal apartments were on the
-river side. The only memorial left of the outhouses of the old palace was
-the sign of a lion in the wall of a house in the Strand, that is mentioned
-in old records.[115]
-
-Dryden describes his two friends, Eugenius and Neander, landing at
-Somerset Stairs, and gives us a pleasant picture of the summer evening,
-the water on which the moonbeams played looked like floating quicksilver,
-and some French people dancing merrily in the open air as the friends walk
-onwards to the Piazza.[116]
-
-Of the old views of Somerset House, that of Moss is considered the best.
-There is also an early and curious one by Knyff. A picture in Dulwich
-Gallery (engraved by Wilkinson) represents the river front before Inigo
-Jones had added a chapel for the queen of Charles I.[117]
-
-Sir William Chambers built the present Somerset House. The old palace,
-when the clearance for the demolition began, presented a singular
-spectacle.[118] At the extremity of the royal apartments two large
-folding-doors joined Inigo Jones's additions to John of Padua's work. They
-opened into a long gallery on the first floor of the water garden wing, at
-the lower end of which was another gallery, making an angle which formed
-the original river front, and extended to Strand Lane. This old part had
-been long shut up, and was supposed to be haunted. The gallery was
-panelled and floored with oak. The chandelier chains still hung from the
-stucco ceilings. The furniture of the royal apartment was removed into
-lumber-rooms by the Royal Academy. There were relics of a throne and
-canopy; the crimson velvet curtains for the audience-chamber had faded to
-olive colour; and the fringe and lace were there, but a few threads and
-spangles had been peeled off them. There were also scattered about in
-disorder, broken chairs, stools, couches, screens, and fire-dogs.
-
-In the older apartments much of Edward VI.'s furniture still remained. The
-silk hangings of the audience-chamber were in tatters, and so were the
-curtains, gilt-leather covers, and painted screens; one gilt chandelier
-also remained, and so did the sconces. A door beyond, with difficulty
-opened, led into a small tower on the first floor, built by Inigo Jones,
-and used as a breakfast-room or dressing-room by Queen Catherine. It was a
-beautiful octagonal domed apartment, with a tasteful cornice. The walls
-were frescoed, and there were pictures on the ceiling. A door from this
-place opened on the staircase and led to a bath-room, lined with marble,
-on the ground floor.
-
-The painters of the day compared the ruined palace, characteristically
-enough, to the gloomy precincts of the dilapidated castles in Mrs.
-Radcliffe's wax-work romances.
-
-Sir William Chambers completed his work in about five years, clearing two
-thousand a year. It cost more than half a million of money. The Strand
-front is 135 feet long; the quadrangle 210 feet wide and 296 feet deep.
-The main buildings are 54 feet deep and six stories high. They are faced
-with Portland stone, now partly sooty black, partly blanched white with
-the weather. The basement is adorned with rustic work, Corinthian
-pilasters, balustrades, statues, masks, and medallions. The river terrace
-was intended in anticipation of the possible embankment of the Thames.
-Some critics think Chambers's great work heavy, others elegant but timid.
-There is too much rustic work, and the whole is rather "cut up." The vases
-and niches are unmeaning, and it was a great structural fault to make the
-portico columns of the fine river side stand on a brittle-looking arch.
-
-It was to Somerset House that the Royal Academy came after the split in
-the St. Martin's Lane Society. Here West exhibited his respectable
-platitudes, Reynolds his grand portraits, and Lawrence his graceful,
-brilliant, but meretricious pictures. In the great room of the Academy, at
-the top of the building, Reynolds, Opie, Barrie, and Fuseli lectured.
-Through the doorway to the right of the vestibule, Reynolds, Wilkie,
-Turner, Flaxman, and Chantrey have often stepped. Under that bust of
-Michael Angelo almost all our great men from Johnson to Scott must have
-passed.
-
-Carlini, an Italian friend of Cipriani, executed the two central statues
-on the Strand front of Somerset House, and also three of the nine colossal
-key-stone masks--the rivers Dee, Tyne, and Severn. Carlini was one of the
-unsuccessful candidates for the Beckford monument in Guildhall. When
-Carlini was keeper of the Academy, he used to walk from his house in Soho
-to Somerset Place, dressed in a deplorable greatcoat, and with a broken
-tobacco pipe in his mouth; but when he went to the great annual Academy
-dinner, he would make his way into a chair, full dressed in a purple silk
-coat, and scarlet gold-laced waistcoat, with point-lace ruffles, and a
-sword and bag.[119] Wilton, the sculptor, executed the two outer figures.
-
-Giuseppe Ceracchi, who carved some of the heads of the river gods for the
-key-stones of the windows of the Strand front of Somerset House, was an
-Italian, but it is uncertain whether he was born at Rome or in Corsica. He
-gave the accomplished Mrs. Damer (General Conway's daughter) her first
-lessons in sculpture, an art which she afterwards perfected in the studio
-of the elder Bacon. Ceracchi executed the only bust in marble that
-Reynolds ever sat for. A statue of Mrs. Damer, from a model by him, is now
-in the British Museum. This sculptor was guillotined in 1801, for a plot
-against Napoleon.[120] He is said to have lost his wits in prison, and to
-have mounted the scaffold dressed as a Roman emperor. It was to Mrs. Damer
-(the daughter of his old friend) that Horace Walpole, our most French of
-memoir-writers, bequeathed his fantastic villa at Strawberry Hill, and its
-incongruous but valuable curiosities. She is said to have sent a bust of
-Nelson to the Rajah of Tanjore, who wished to spread a taste for English
-art in India.
-
-The rooms round the quadrangle are hives of red-tapists. There are about
-nine hundred Government clerks nestled away in them, and maintained at an
-annual cost to us of about £275,000. There is the office of the Duchy of
-Cornwall, and there are the Legacy Duty, the Stamps, Taxes, and Excise
-Offices, the Inland Revenue Office, the Registrar General's Office
-(created pursuant to 6 and 7 Will. IV., c. 86), part of the Admiralty and
-the Audit Office, and lastly the Will Office.
-
-The east wing of Somerset House, used as King's College, was built in
-1829. The bronze statue of George III., and the fine recumbent figure of
-Father Thames, in the chief court, were cast by John Bacon, R.A.
-
-The office for auditing the public accounts existed, under the name of the
-Office of the Auditors of the Imprests, as far back as the time of Henry
-VIII. The present commission was established in 1785, and the salaries
-formerly paid for the passing of accounts are now paid out of the Civil
-List, all fees being abolished. The average annual cost of the office for
-auditing some three hundred and fifty accounts is £50,000. There are six
-commissioners, a secretary, and upwards of a hundred clerks. Almost all
-the home and colonial expenditure is examined at this office. Edward
-Harley and Arthur Maynwaring (the wit of the Kit-Cat Club) were the two
-Auditors of the Imprests in the reign of Queen Anne. The Earl of Oxford,
-the collector of MSS., obtained many curious public documents from his
-brother. If he had taken the whole the nation would have been a gainer;
-for the Government bought his collection for the British Museum, and all
-that he left (except what Sir William Musgrave, a commissioner, scraped
-together and gave to the British Museum) were barbarously destroyed by
-Government, heedless of their historical value. Maynwaring's fees were
-about £2000 a year. The present salary of a commissioner is £1200; the
-chairman's salary is £500. In 1867 the western front of Somerset House was
-added; it is from the designs of Pennethorne, to accommodate the clerks of
-the Inland Revenue Department.
-
-The Astronomical Society, Geographical Society, and Geological Society,
-were for many years sheltered in Somerset House, before removing
-westwards.
-
-Hither, in 1782, from Crane Court, came the Royal Society. The entrance
-door to the society's rooms, to the left of the vestibule, is marked out
-by the bust of Sir Isaac Newton; Herschel, Davy, and Wollaston, as well as
-Walpole and Hallam, must have passed here, for the same door leads to the
-apartments of the Society of Antiquaries.
-
-This society, when burnt out of Aldersgate Street by the Great Fire, held
-its meetings for a time in Arundel House. At first its doings were
-trifling and sometimes absurd. Enthusiasts and pedants often made the
-society ludicrous by their aberrations. Charles II. pretended to admire
-their Baconic inductions, but must have laughed at Boyle's essays and
-platitudes, and the hope of Wilkins, the Bishop of Chester, of flying to
-the moon. Evelyn's suggestions were unpractical and dilettantish, and
-Pepys's ramblings not over wise. We may be sure that there was food for
-laughter, when Butler could thus sketch the occupations of these
-philosophers:--
-
- "To measure wind and weigh the air,
- To turn a circle to a square,
- And in the braying of an ass
- Find out the treble and the bass,
- If mares neigh _alto_, and a cow
- In double diapason low."
-
-Yet how can we wonder that in the vast gold mines of the new philosophy
-our wise men hesitated where first to sink their shafts? Cowley
-chivalrously sprang forward to ward off from them the laughter and scorn
-of the Rochesters and the Killigrews of the day, and to prove that these
-initiative studies were not "impertinent and vain and small," nothing in
-nature being worthless. He ends his fine, rambling ode with the following
-noble simile:--
-
- "Lo! when by various turns of the celestial dance,
- In many thousand years,
- A star so long unknown appears,
- Though Heaven itself more beauteous by it grow,
- It troubles and alarms the world below;
- Does to the wise a star, to fools a meteor show."[121]
-
-The Royal Society's traditions belong more to Gresham College than to
-Somerset House, the later home of our wise men. It originated in 1645, in
-meetings held in Wood Street and Gresham College, suggested by Theodore
-Hank, a German of the Palatinate. During the Civil War its discussions
-were continued at Oxford. The present entrance-money is £10, and the
-annual subscription is £4. The society consists at present of between 700
-and 800 fellows, and the anniversary is held every 30th of November, being
-St. Andrew's Day. The Transactions of the society fill upwards of 150
-quarto volumes. The first president was Viscount Brouncker, and the
-second Sir Joseph Williamson. Mr. William Spottiswoode is the present
-president. The society possesses some valuable pictures, including three
-portraits of Sir Isaac Newton--one by C. Jervas, presented by the great
-philosopher himself, and hung over the president's chair; a second by D.
-C. Marchand, and a third by Vanderbank; two portraits of Halley, by Thomas
-Murray and Dahl; two of Hobbes, the great advocate of despotism--one taken
-in 1663 (three years after the Restoration), and the other by Gaspars,
-presented by Aubrey; Sir Christopher Wren, by Kneller; Wallis, by West;
-Flamstead, by Gibson; Robert Boyle, by F. Kerseboom (a good likeness, says
-Boyle); Pepys, the cruel expositor of his own weaknesses, by Kneller; Sir
-A. Southwell, by the same portrait-painter; Dr. Birch, the great
-historical compiler, by Wills (the original of the mezzotint done by Faber
-in 1741, and bequeathed by Dr. Birch); Martin Folkes, the great
-antiquarian, by Hogarth; Dr. Wollaston, the eccentric discoverer, by
-Jackson; and Sir Humphrey Davy, by Sir Thomas Lawrence.
-
-Amongst the curiosities of the society are the silver-gilt mace presented
-to the society by Charles II. in 1662--(long supposed to be the bauble
-which Cromwell treated with such contempt); a solar dial, made by Sir
-Isaac Newton himself when a boy; a reflecting telescope, made by Newton in
-1671; the precious MS. of the _Principia_ in Newton's handwriting; a
-silvery lock of Newton's hair; the MS. of the _Parentalia, or Memoirs of
-the Family of the Wrens_, written by young Wren; the charter-book of the
-society, bound in crimson velvet, and containing the signatures of the
-founder and fellows; a Rumford fireplace, one of the earliest in use; and
-a marble bust of Mrs. Somerville, the great mathematician and philosopher,
-by Chantrey. The society gives annually two gold medals--one the Rumford,
-the other the Copley medal, called by Sir Humphrey Davy "the ancient olive
-crown of the Royal Society."
-
-The Geological Society has a museum of specimens and fossils from all
-quarters of the globe. The number of its fellows is about 875, and the
-time of meeting alternate Wednesday evenings from November till June. It
-also publishes a quarterly journal. The entrance-money is six guineas, the
-annual subscription two.
-
-The Society of Antiquaries was fairly started in 1707, by Wanley, Bagford,
-and Talman, who agreed to meet together every Friday under penalty of
-sixpence. It had originated about 1580, when it held its first sittings in
-the Heralds' College; but it did not obtain a charter till 1751, both
-Elizabeth and James being afraid of its meddling with royal prerogatives
-and illustrious genealogies, and the Civil War having interrupted its
-proceedings. Its first meeting was at the Bear Tavern, in the Strand. In
-1739 the members were limited to one hundred, and the terms were one
-guinea entrance and twelve shillings annually. The society agreed to
-discuss antiquarian subjects, and chiefly those relating to English
-history prior to James I. In 1751 George II. granted its members a
-charter, and in 1777 George III. gave them apartments in Somerset House,
-where they continued till their recent removal to Burlington House. The
-terms now are eight guineas admission, and four guineas annually. The
-_Archæologia_, a journal of the society's proceedings, commenced in 1770.
-The meetings are every Thursday evening from November to June, and the
-anniversary meeting is the 23d of April.
-
-The museum of this society contains, among other treasures, the _Household
-Book_ of the Duke of Norfolk; a large and valuable collection of early
-proclamations and ballads; T. Porter's unique map of London (Charles I.);
-a folding picture in panel, of the "Preaching at Old St. Paul's in 1616;"
-early portraits of Edward IV. and Richard III., engraved for the third
-series of _Ellis's Letters_; a three-quarter portrait of Mary I. with the
-monogram of Lucas de Heere, and the date 1546; a curious portrait of the
-Marquis of Winchester (who died 1571); the portrait by Sir Antonio More,
-of Schorel, a Dutch painter; portraits of antiquaries--Burton, the
-Leicestershire antiquary, Peter le Neve, Humphrey Wanley Baker, of St.
-John's College, William Stukeley, George Vertue, and Edward, Earl of
-Oxford, presented by Vertue; a Bohemian astronomical clock of gilt brass,
-made in 1525 for Sigismund, King of Poland, and bought at the sale of the
-effects of James Ferguson, the astronomer; and a spur of gilt brass, found
-on Towton field, the scene of the bloody conflict between Edward IV. and
-the Lancastrian forces. Upon the shank is engraved the following
-posey--"En loial amour tout mon coer."[122]
-
-The Astronomical Society was instituted in 1820, and received the royal
-charter in 1st William IV. The entrance-money is two guineas, and the
-annual subscription the same amount. The annual general meeting is the
-second Friday in February. A medal is awarded every year. The society has
-a small but good mathematical library, and a few astronomical instruments.
-
-A little above the entrance door to "the Stamps and Taxes" there is a
-white watch-face let into the wall. Local tradition declares it was left
-there in votive gratitude by a labourer who fell from a scaffolding and
-was saved by the ribbon of his watch catching in some ornament. It was
-really placed there by the Royal Society as a meridian mark for a portable
-transit instrument in a window of an ante-room.[123]
-
-A tradition of Nelson belongs to this quiet square. An old clerk at
-Somerset House used to describe seeing the hero of the Nile pass on his
-way to the Admiralty. Thin and frail, with only one arm, he would enter
-the vestibule at a smart pace, and make direct for his goal, pushing
-across the rough round stones of the quadrangle, instead of taking, like
-others, the smooth pavement. Nelson always took the nearest way to the
-object he wished to attain.[124]
-
-The Royal Academy soon found a home in Somerset House. Germs of this
-institution are to be found as early as the reign of Charles I., when Sir
-Francis Kynaston, a translator of Chaucer into Latin (_circa_ 1636), was
-chosen regent of an academy in Covent Garden.[125]
-
-In 1643 that shifty adventurer, Sir Balthazar Gerbier, who had been fellow
-ambassador with Rubens in Spain, started some quack establishment of the
-same kind at Bethnal Green. He afterwards went to Surinam, was turned out
-by the Dutch, came back, designed an ugly house at Hampstead Marshal, in
-Berks, and died in 1667.
-
-In 1711 Sir Godfrey Kneller instituted a private art academy, of which he
-became president. Hogarth, writing about 1760, says, that sixty years
-before some artists had started an academy, but their leaders assuming too
-much pomposity, a caricature procession was drawn on the walls of the
-studio, upon which the society broke up in dudgeon. Sir James Thornhill,
-in 1724, then set up an academy at his own house in Covent Garden, while
-others, under Vanderbank, turned a neighbouring meeting-house into a
-studio; but these rival confederations broke up at Sir James's death in
-1734.
-
-Hogarth, his son-in-law, opened an academy, under the direction of Mr.
-Moser, at the house of a painter named Peter Hyde, in Greyhound Court,
-Arundel Street. In 1739 these artists removed to a more commodious house
-in Peter's Court, St. Martin's Lane, where they continued till 1767, when
-they removed to Pall Mall.
-
-In 1738 the Duke of Richmond threw open to art-students his gallery at
-Whitehall, closed it again when his absence in the German war prevented
-the paying of the premiums, was laughed at, and then re-opened it again.
-It lasted some years, and Edwards, author of the _Anecdotes_, studied
-there.
-
-In 1753 some artists meeting at the Turk's Head, Gerrard Street, Soho,
-tried ineffectually to organise an academy; but in 1765 they obtained a
-charter, and appointed Mr. Lambert president.
-
-In 1760 their first exhibition of pictures was held in the rooms of the
-Society of Arts, and in 1761 there were two exhibitions, one at Spring
-Gardens: for the latter Hogarth illustrated a catalogue, with a compliment
-to the young king and a caricature of rich connoisseurs.
-
-In 1768 eight of the directors of the Spring Gardens Society, indignant at
-Mr. Kirby being made president of the society in the place of Mr. Hayman,
-resigned; and, co-operating with sixteen others who had been ejected,
-secretly founded a new society. Wilton, Chambers, West, Cotes, and Moser,
-were the leaders in this scheme, and Reynolds soon joined them, tempted,
-it is supposed, by a promise of knighthood.
-
-West was the chief mover in this intrigue. The Archbishop of York, who had
-tried to raise £3000 to enable the American artist to abandon
-portrait-painting, had gained the royal ear, and West was painting the
-"Departure of Regulus" for the king, who was even persuaded and flattered
-into drawing up several of the laws of the new society with his own
-hand.[126] The king, in the meantime, with unworthy dissimulation,
-affected outwardly a complete neutrality between the two camps, presented
-the Spring Gardens Society with £100, and even attended their exhibition.
-
-The king's patronage of the new society was disclosed to honest Mr. Kirby
-(father of Mrs. Trimmer, and the artist who had taught the king
-perspective) in a very malicious and mortifying manner, and the story was
-related to Mr. Galt by West, with a quiet, cold spite, peculiarly his own.
-Mr. Kirby came to the palace just as West was submitting his sketch for
-"Regulus" to the king. West was a true courtier, and knew well how to make
-a patron suggest his own subject. Kirby praised the picture, and hoped Mr.
-West intended to exhibit it. The Quaker slily replied that that depended
-on his majesty's pleasure. The king, like a true confederate, immediately
-said, "Assuredly I shall be happy to let the work be shown to the public."
-"Then, Mr. West," said the perhaps too arrogant president, "you will send
-it to my exhibition?" "No!" said the king, and the words must have been
-thunderbolts to poor Kirby; "it must go to _my_ exhibition."[127] "Poor
-Kirby," says West, "only two nights before, had declared that the design
-of forming such an institution was not contemplated. His colour forsook
-him--his countenance became yellow with mortification--he bowed with
-profound humility, and instantly retired, _nor did he long survive the
-shock_!"
-
-Mr. West is wrong, however, in the last statement, for his rival did not
-die till 1774. Mr. Kirby, a most estimable man, was originally a
-house-painter at Ipswich. He became acquainted with Gainsborough, was
-introduced by Lord Bute to the king, and wrote and edited some valuable
-works on perspective, to one of which Hogarth contributed an inimitable
-frontispiece.
-
-Sir Robert Strange says that much of this intrigue was carried out by Mr.
-Dalton,[128] a print seller in Pall Mall, and the king's librarian, in
-whose rooms the exhibition was held in 1767 and 1768.
-
-Thus an American Quaker, a Swiss, and a Swede--(a gold-chaser, a
-coach-painter, an architect, and a third-rate painter, West)--ignobly
-established the Royal Academy. Many eminent men refused to join the new
-society. Allan Ramsay, Hudson, Scott the marine-painter, and Romney were
-opposed to it. Engravers (much to the disgrace of the Academy) were
-excluded; and worst of all, one of the new laws forbade any artist to be
-eligible to academic honours who did not exhibit his works in the
-Academy's rooms: thus depriving for ever every English artist of the right
-to earn money by exhibiting his own works.[129]
-
-The proportion of foreigners in the Academy was very large. The two ladies
-who became members (Angelica Kauffmann and Mrs. Moser) were both
-Swiss.[130]
-
-The other unlucky society, deprived of its share of the St. Martin's Lane
-casts, etc., and shut out from the Academy, furnished a studio over the
-Cyder Cellars in Maiden Lane, struggled on till 1807, and then ceased to
-exist.[131]
-
-The Academy, with all its tyranny and injustice, has still been useful to
-English art in perpetuating annual exhibitions which attract purchasers.
-But what did more good to English art than twenty academies was the king's
-patronage of West, the spread of engraving, and the rise of middle-class
-purchasers, who rendered it no longer necessary for artists to depend on
-the caprice and folly of rich aristocratic patrons.
-
-One word more about the art oligarchy. The first officers of the new
-society were--Reynolds, president; Moser, keeper; Newton, secretary;
-Penny, professor of painting; Sandby, professor of architecture; Wale,
-professor of perspective; W. Hunter, professor of anatomy; Chambers,
-treasurer; and Wilson, librarian. Goldsmith was chosen professor of
-history at a later period.
-
-The catalogue of the first exhibition of the Royal Academy contains the
-names of only one hundred and thirty pictures: Hayman exhibited scenes
-from _Don Quixote_; Rooker some Liverpool views; Reynolds some allegorised
-portraits; Miss Kauffmann some of her tame Homeric figures; West his
-"Regulus" (that killed Kirby), and a Venus and Adonis; Zuccarelli two
-landscapes.
-
-In 1838, the first year after the opening of the National Gallery, 1382
-works of art, including busts and architectural designs, were exhibited.
-Among the pictures then shown were--Stanfield's "Chasse Marée off the
-Gulf-stream Light," "The Privy Council," by Wilkie; portraits of men and
-dogs, by Landseer; "The Pifferari," "Phryne," and "Banishment of Ovid," by
-Turner; "A Bacchante," by Etty; "Gaston de Foix," by Eastlake; Allan's
-"Slave Market," Leslie's "Dinner Scene from the Merry Wives of Windsor;"
-"A View on the Rhine," by Callcott; Shee's portrait of Sir Francis
-Burdett; portraits by Pickersgill; Maclise's "Christmas in the Olden
-Time," and "Olivia and Sophia fitting out Moses for the Fair;" "The
-Massacre of the Innocents," by Hilton; and a picture by Uwins.[132]
-
-Angelica Kauffmann and Biaggio Rebecca helped to decorate the Academy's
-old council-chamber at Somerset House. The paintings still exist. Rebecca
-was an eccentric, conceited Italian artist, who decorated several rooms at
-Windsor, and offended the worthy precise old king by his practical jokes.
-On one occasion, knowing he would meet the king on his way to Windsor with
-West, he stuck a paper star on his coat. The next time West came, the king
-was curious to know who the foreign nobleman was he had seen--"Person of
-distinction, eh? eh?"--and was doubtless vexed at the joke.
-
-Rebecca's favourite trick was to draw a half-crown on paper, and place it
-on the floor of one of the ante-rooms at Windsor, laughing immoderately at
-the eagerness with which some fat courtier in full dress, sword and bag,
-would run and scuffle to pick it up.[133]
-
-Fuseli took his place as Keeper of the Academy in 1805. Smirke had been
-elected, but George III., hearing that he was a democrat, refused to
-confirm the appointment. Haydon, who called on Fuseli in Berners Street in
-1805, when he had left his father the bookseller at Plymouth, describes
-him as "a little white-headed, lion-faced man, in an old flannel
-dressing-gown tied round his waist with a piece of rope, and upon his head
-the bottom of Mrs. Fuseli's work-basket." His gallery was full of
-galvanised devils, malicious witches brewing incantations, Satan bridging
-chaos or springing upwards like a pyramid of fire, Lady Macbeth, Paolo and
-Francesca, Falstaff and Mrs. Quickly.
-
-Elsewhere the impetuous Haydon sketches him vigorously. Fuseli was about
-five feet five inches high, had a compact little form, stood firmly at his
-easel, painted with his left hand, never held his palette upon his thumb,
-but kept it upon his stone slab, and being very near-sighted and too vain
-to wear glasses, used to dab his beastly brush into the oil, and sweeping
-round the palette in the dark, take up a great lump of white, red, or
-blue, and plaster it over a shoulder or a face; then prying close in, he
-would turn round and say, "By Gode! dat's a fine purple! it's very like
-Correggio, by Gode!" and then all of a sudden burst out with a quotation
-from Homer, Tasso, Dante, Ovid, Virgil, or the Niebelungen, and say,
-"Paint dat!" "I found him," says Haydon, "a most grotesque mixture of
-literature, art, scepticism, indelicacy, profanity, and kindness. He put
-me in mind of Archimago in Spenser."[134]
-
-When Haydon came first to town from Plymouth, he lodged at 342
-Strand,[135] near Charing Cross, and close to his fellow-student, the
-good-natured, indolent, clever Jackson. The very morning he arrived he
-hurried off to the Exhibition, and mistaking the new church in the Strand
-for Somerset House, ran up the steps and offered his shilling to a beadle.
-When he at last found the right house, Opie's _Gil Blas_ and Westall's
-_Shipwrecked Sailor Boy_ were all the historical pictures he could find.
-
-Sir Joshua read his first discourse before the Academy in 1769. Barry
-commenced his lectures in 1784, ended them in 1798, and was expelled the
-Academy in 1799. Opie delivered his lectures in 1807, the year in which he
-died. Fuseli began in 1801, and delivered but twelve lectures in all.
-
-It was on St. George's Day, 1771, that Sir Joshua Reynolds took the chair
-at the first annual dinner of the Royal Academy. Dr. Johnson was there,
-with Goldsmith and Horace Walpole. Goldsmith got the ear of the company,
-but was laughed at by Johnson for professing his enthusiastic belief in
-Chatterton's discovery of ancient poems. Walpole, who had believed in the
-poet of Bristol till he was laughed at by Mason and Gray, began to banter
-Goldsmith on his opinions, when, as he says, to his surprise and concern,
-and the dashing of his mirth, he first heard that the poor lad had been to
-London and had destroyed himself. Goldsmith had afterwards a quarrel with
-Dr. Percy on the same subject.
-
-One day, while Reynolds was lecturing at Somerset House, the floor
-suddenly began to give way. Turner, then a boy, was standing near the
-lecturer. Reynolds remained calm, and said afterwards that his only
-thought was what a loss to English art the death of that roomful would
-have been.
-
-On the death of Mr. Wale, the Professor of Perspective, Sir Joshua was
-anxious to have Mr. Bonomi elected to the post, but he was treated with
-great disrespect by Mr. Copley and others, who refused to look at Bonomi's
-drawings, which Sir Joshua (as some maintained, contrary to rule) had
-produced at Fuseli's election as Academician. Reynolds at first threatened
-to resign the presidency; but thought better of it afterwards.
-
-In the catalogues in 1808 Turner's name first appeared with the title of
-Professor of Perspective attached to it. His lectures were bad, from his
-utter want of language, but he took great pains with his diagrams, and his
-ideas were often original. On one celebrated occasion Turner arrived in
-the lecture-room late, and much perturbed. He dived first into one pocket,
-and then into another; at last he ejaculated these memorable words:
-"Gentlemen, I've been and left my lecture in the hackney-coach!"[136]
-
-In 1779 O'Keefe describes a visit paid to Somerset House to hear Dr.
-William Hunter lecture on anatomy. He describes him as a jocose little
-man, in "a handsome modest" wig. A skeleton hung on a pivot by his side,
-and on his other hand stood a young man half stripped. Every now and then
-he paused, to turn to the dead or the living example.[137]
-
-In 1765, when Fuseli was living humbly in Cranbourn Alley, and translating
-Winckelmann, he used to visit Smollett, whose _Peregrine Pickle_ he was
-then illustrating; and also Falconer, the author of _The Shipwreck_, who,
-being poor, was allowed to occupy apartments in Somerset House.[138] The
-poet was a mild, inoffensive man, the son of an Edinburgh barber. He had
-been apprenticed on board a merchant vessel, after which he entered the
-royal navy. In 1762 he published his well-known poem. He went out to India
-in 1769, in the _Aurora_, which is supposed to have foundered in the
-Mozambique Channel.[139] Falconer was a short thin man, with a
-hard-featured, weather-beaten face and a forbidding manner; but he was
-cheerful and generous, and much liked by his messmates. That hearty
-sea-song, "Cease, rude Boreas," has been attributed to him.
-
-Fuseli succeeded Barry as Lecturer on Painting in 1799, and became Keeper
-on the death of Wilton, the sculptor, in 1803. He died in 1825, aged
-eighty-four, and was buried in St. Paul's, between Reynolds and Opie.
-Lawrence, Beechey, Reinagle, Chalon, Jones, and Mulready followed him to
-his stately grave. The body had previously been laid in state in Somerset
-House, his pictures of "The Lazar House" and "The Bridging of Chaos" being
-hung over the coffin.
-
-When Sir Joshua died, in 1792, his body lay in state in a velvet coffin,
-in a room hung with sable, in Somerset House. Burke and Barry, Boswell and
-Langton, Kemble and John Hunter, Towneley and Angerstein came to witness
-the ceremony.
-
-Where events are so interwoven as they are in topographical history, I
-hope to be pardoned if I am not always chronological in my arrangement,
-for it must be remembered that I have anecdotes to attend to as well as
-dates. Let me here, then, dilate on a cruel instance of misused academic
-power. My story relates to a young genius as unfortunate as Chatterton,
-yet guiltless of his lies and forgeries, who died heart-broken by neglect
-more than half a century ago.
-
-[Illustration: SOMERSET HOUSE FROM THE STRAND, 1777.]
-
-Procter, a young Yorkshire clerk, came up to London in 1777, and became a
-student of the Royal Academy. In 1783 he carried off a silver medal, and
-the next year won the gold medal for an historical picture. When Procter
-gained this last prize, his fellow-students, raising him on their
-shoulders, bore him downstairs, and then round the quadrangle of Somerset
-House, shouting out, "Procter! Procter!" Barry was delighted at this, and
-exclaimed with an oath, "Bedad! the lads have caught the true spirit of
-the ould Greeks." Sir Abraham Hume bought Procter's "Ixion," which was
-praised by Reynolds. His colossal "Diomede" the poor fellow had to break
-up, as he had no place to keep it in, and no one would buy it. In 1794 Mr.
-West, wishing that Procter should go to Rome as the travelling student,
-discovered him, after much inquiry, in poor lodgings in Maiden Lane. A day
-or two afterwards he was found dead in his bed. The Academicians had been,
-perhaps, just a little too late with their patronage.[140]
-
-And now, when through grey twilight glooms I steal a glance as I pass by
-at that grave black figure of the river god, presiding solemn as
-Rhadamanthus over the central quadrangle of Somerset House, I sometimes
-dream I see little leonine Fuseli, stormy Barry, and courtly Reynolds
-pacing together the dim quadrangle that on these autumnal evenings, when
-the rifle drills are over, wears so lonely and purgatorial an aspect; and
-far away from them, in murky corners, I fancy I hear muttering the ghosts
-of Portuguese monks, while scowling at them, stalks by pale Sir
-Edmondbury, with a sword run through his shadowy body.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: JACOB TONSON'S BOOK-SHOP, 1742.]
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE STRAND (SOUTH SIDE, CONTINUED).
-
-
-On the Thames, off Somerset House, was a timber shed built on a strong
-barge, and called "the Folly." In William III.'s reign it was anchored
-higher up the stream, near the Savoy. Tom Brown calls it "a musical
-summer-house." Its real name was "The Royal Diversion." Queen Mary
-honoured it with her presence.[141] It was at first frequented by "persons
-of quality," but latterly it became disreputable, and its orchestra and
-refreshment alcoves were haunted by thieves, gamesters, and courtesans.
-
-Near the Savoy stood the palace of the bishops of Carlisle, which was
-obtained by exchange with Henry VIII. for Rochester Place at Lambeth. The
-English sultan gave it to his lucky favourite, Bedford, who took it as his
-residence. In the reign of James I. the Earl of Worcester bought it; and
-in 1627 the Duke of Beaufort let it to Lord Clarendon, while his ill-fated
-house was building in Piccadilly. It was then rebuilt on a smaller scale
-by the duke, and eventually burnt down in 1695.[142] The present Beaufort
-Buildings were then erected. Beaufort House, which occupies the site of
-one in which Cardinal Beaufort died, is now a printing-office.
-
-Blake, the mystical painter, died in 1828, at No. 3 Fountain Court, after
-five years' residence there. In these dim rooms he believed he saw the
-ghost of a flea, Satan himself looking through the bars of the staircase
-window, to say nothing of hosts of saints, angels, evil spirits, and
-fairies. Here also he wrote verse passionate as Shelley's and pure and
-simple-hearted as Wordsworth's. Here he engraved, tinted, railed at
-Woollett, and raved over his Dante illustrations; for though poor and
-unknown, he was yet regal in his exulting self-confidence. Here, just
-before his death, the old man sat up in bed, painting, singing, and
-rejoicing. He died without a struggle.[143]
-
-The office of the _Sun_ is on this side the Strand. This paper was
-established in 1792. Mr. Jerdan left the _Sun_ in 1816, selling his share
-for £300. He had quarrelled with the co-proprietor, Mr. John Taylor, who
-aspired to a control over him. In 1817 he set up the _Literary Gazette_,
-the first exclusive organ of literary men.[144] The first editor of the
-_Sun_ got an appointment in the West Indies. The paper was then edited by
-Robert Clark, printer of the _London Gazette_, and afterwards by Jerdan,
-assisted by Fladgate the facetious lawyer, Mulloch, and John Taylor. After
-getting his sop in the pan of £300 a year from Government, that
-low-principled satirist, Dr. Wolcot (Peter Pindar), wrote epigrams for it.
-
-Fountain Court was in Strype's time famous for an adjacent tavern from
-which it derived its name. It was well paved, and its houses were
-respectably inhabited.[145] The Fountain Tavern was renowned for its good
-rooms, excellent vaults, "curious kitchen," and old wine. The Fountain
-Club, of which Pulteney was a member (circa 1737), held its meetings in
-this tavern, to oppose that fine old Whig gentleman Sir Robert
-Walpole.[146] Sir Charles Hanbury Williams thus mentions it in one of his
-lampoons:--
-
- "Then enlarge on his cunning and wit,
- Say how he harangued at the Fountain,
- Say how the old patriots were bit,
- And a mouse was produced by a mountain."
-
-Here Pulteney may have planned the _Craftsman_ with Bolingbroke, and
-perhaps have arranged his duel with Lord Hervey, the "Sporus" of Pope.
-
-Dennis, the critic, mentions in his _Letters_ dining here with Loggen, the
-painter, and Wilson, a writer praised by poor Otway in Tonson's first
-_Miscellany_. "After supper," he says, "we drank Mr. Wycherly's health by
-the name of Captain Wycherly."[147] This was the dramatist, the celebrated
-author of _The Plain Dealer_ and _The Country Wife_.
-
-The great room of the Fountain Tavern was afterwards Akermann's well-known
-picture shop; and is now Simpson's cigar divan.
-
-Charles Lillie, the perfumer recommended by Steele in the _Tatler_ (Nos.
-92, 94), lived next door to the Fountain Tavern. He was burnt out and went
-to the east corner of Beaufort Buildings in 1709. Good-natured Steele,
-pitying him probably for his losses, praised his Barcelona snuff, and his
-orange-flower water prepared according to the Royal Society's receipt.
-
-The Coal Hole, in this court, was so named by Rhodes, its first landlord,
-from its having been originally the resort of coal-heavers. In his and
-Edmund Kean's time it was respectably frequented. It was once the
-"Evans's" of London, famous for steaks and ale; afterwards it sank to a
-low den with _poses plastiques_ and ribald sham trials, that used to be
-conducted by "Baron" Nicholson, a fat gross man, but not without a certain
-unctuous humour, who is now dead.
-
-Edmund Kean, always low in his tastes, used to fly the society of men like
-Lord Byron to come hither and smoke and drink. The dress, the ceremony,
-and the compulsory good behaviour of respectable society made him silent
-and melancholy.[148] He used to say that noblemen talked such nonsense
-about the stage, and that only literary men understood the subject.
-
-The Kit-Cat Club was instituted in 1700, and died away about the year
-1720. There were originally thirty-nine members, and they increased
-gradually to the forty-eight whose portraits Kneller painted for their
-secretary, Jacob Tonson, Dryden's bookseller. Their earliest rendezvous
-was at the house of a pastry-cook, one Christopher Cat, in Shire Lane,
-near Temple Bar. When he grew wealthier, the club removed with him to the
-Fountain Tavern in the Strand. The club derived its name from the
-celebrated mutton pie,[149] which had been christened after its
-maker.[150] The first members were those Whig patriots who brought about
-the Revolution and drove out King James. Their object was the
-encouragement of literature and the fine arts, and the diffusion of
-loyalty to the House of Hanover. They elected their "toast" for the year
-by ballot. The lady's name, when chosen, was written on the club
-drinking-glasses with a diamond. Among the more celebrated of the members
-of this club were Kneller, Vanbrugh, Congreve, Addison, Garth, Steele,
-Lord Mohun, the Duke of Wharton, Sir Robert Walpole, the Earl of
-Burlington, the Earl of Bath, the Earl of Dorset, the Earl of Halifax, the
-proud Duke of Somerset, and the Duke of Newcastle.
-
-In summer the Club met at Tonson's house at Barn Elms in Surrey, or at the
-Upper Flask Tavern at Hampstead.[151] There seems to have been always some
-doubt about the derivation of the name of the club; for an epigram still
-extant, written either by Pope or Arbuthnot, attributes the name to the
-fact of the members toasting "old Cats and young kits." Mr. Defoe mentions
-the landlord's name as Christopher Catt,[152] while Ned Ward says that
-though his name was Christopher, he lived at the sign of the Cat and
-Fiddle.
-
-Lady Mary Wortley Montagu was once brought by her father to this club when
-a child, and made the toast for the year. "Petted, praised, fondled, and
-fed with sweetmeats," she used to say in her old age that it was the
-happiest day of her life![153]
-
-No. 59 is Coutts's Bank. It was built for Mr. Coutts, in 1768, by the Adam
-brothers--to whom we are indebted for the Adelphi. The old house of the
-firm, of the date of Queen Anne, was situated in St. Martin's Lane. The
-present house contains some fine marble chimney-pieces of the Cipriani and
-Bacon school. The dining-room is hung with quaint Chinese subjects on
-paper, sent to Mr. Coutts by Lord Macartney, while on his embassy to
-China, in 1792-95. In another room hang portraits of some early friends of
-this son of Mammon, including Dr. Armstrong, the poet and physician,
-Fuseli's friend, by Reynolds. The strong rooms consist of cloistered
-vaults, wherein the noblemen and rich commoners who bank in the house
-deposit patents, title-deeds, and plate of fabulous value.
-
-Mr. Coutts was the son of a Dundee merchant. His first wife was a servant,
-a Lancashire labourer's offspring. He had three daughters, one of whom
-became the wife of Sir Francis Burdett, a second Countess of Guilford, and
-a third Marchioness of Bute. On becoming acquainted with Miss Mellon, and
-inducing her to leave the stage to avoid perpetual insults, Mr. Coutts
-bought for her of Sir W. Vane Tempest, a small villa called Holly Lodge,
-at the foot of Highgate Hill, for which he gave £25,000. His banking-house
-strong rooms alone cost £10,000 building. The first deposit in the
-enlarged house was the diamond aigrette that the Grand Signor had placed
-in Nelson's hat. Mr. Coutts, though very charitable, was precise and
-exact. On one occasion, there being a deficit of 2s. 10d. in the day's
-accounts, the clerks were detained for hours, or, as is said, all night.
-One of Coutts's clerks, who took the western walk, was discovered to be
-missing with £17,000.[154] Rewards were offered, and the town placarded,
-but all in vain. The next day, however, the note-case arrived from
-Southampton. The clerk's story was, that on his way through Piccadilly,
-being seized with a stupor, he had got into a coach in order to secure the
-money. He had remained insensible the whole journey, and had awoke at
-Southampton. Mr. Coutts gave him a handsome sum from his private purse,
-but dismissed him.
-
-Coutts's Bank stands on nearly the centre of the site of the "New
-Exchange." When the Adelphi was built in Durham Gardens, Mr. Coutts
-purchased a vista to prevent his view being interrupted, stipulating that
-the new street leading to the entrance should face this opening; and on
-this space, up to the level of the Strand, he built his strong rooms. Some
-years after, wishing to enlarge them, he erected over the office a
-counting-house and a set of offices extending from William Street to
-Robert Street, and threw a stone bridge over William Street to connect the
-front and back premises.
-
-Mr. Coutts, late in life, married Harriet Mellon, who, after his death,
-became the wife of the Duke of St. Albans, a descendant of Nell Gwynn,
-that light-hearted wanton, whom nobody could hate. "Miss Mellon," says
-Leigh Hunt, "was arch and agreeable on the stage; she had no genius; but
-then she had fine eyes and a good-humoured mouth." The same gay writer
-describes her when young as bustling about at sea-ports, selling tickets
-for her benefit-night; but then, says the kindly apologist for everybody,
-she had been left with a mother to support.[155]
-
-Edmund Kean, the great tragedian, was lodging at 21 Cecil Street when,
-poor and unknown, he made his first great triumph as Shylock, at Drury
-Lane; a few days after, his mantelpiece was strewn with bank-notes, and
-his son Charles was seen sitting on the floor playing with a heap of
-guineas.[156] This great actor brought the theatre, in sixty-eight nights
-of 1814, no less than twenty thousand pounds.
-
-The last house on the west side of Cecil Street was inhabited in 1706 by
-Lord Gray, and in 1721-4 by the Archbishop of York. In the opposite house
-lived for many years Major-General Sir William Congreve, the inventor of
-the rockets which bear his name, and a great friend and companion of
-George IV., to whom he is said to have borne a striking personal
-resemblance. Sir William was a descendant of Congreve the dramatist; and
-he was the inventor of a number of successful projects and contrivances,
-among which may be mentioned the engines employed in dredging the Thames.
-The east side of Cecil Street is in the Savoy precinct, the west in the
-parish of St. Martin's-in-the-Fields.
-
-Dr. Wollaston was living in Cecil Street (No. 28) in the year 1800. This
-eccentric philosopher, originally a physician, was born in 1766, and died
-of brain disease in 1828. He discovered two new metals--palladium and
-rhodium--and acquired more than £30,000, by inventing a plan to make
-platinum malleable. He improved and invented the camera lucida, and was
-the first to demonstrate the identity of galvanism and common
-electricity. He carried on his experiments with the simplest instruments,
-and never allowed even his most intimate friends to enter his laboratory.
-When a foreign philosopher once called on him and asked to see his study,
-he instantly produced, in his strange way, a small tray, on which were
-some glass tubes and a twopenny blow-pipe. Once, shortly after inspecting
-a grand galvanic battery, on meeting a brother philosopher in the street
-he led him by the button into a mysterious corner, took from his pocket a
-tailor's thimble, poured into it some liquid from a small phial, and
-instantly heated a platinum wire to a white heat.[157]
-
-Salisbury Street, in the Strand, was originally built about 1678, but was
-extensively rebuilt by Payne in the early part of the reign of George III.
-
-Old Salisbury House stood on the sites of Salisbury and Cecil Streets,
-between Worcester House, now Beaufort Buildings, and Durham House, now the
-Adelphi. It was so called after Sir Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, and
-Lord High Treasurer to James I., who died 1612. Queen Elizabeth was
-present at the house-warming. This Cecil was the bad minister of a bad
-king. He was Raleigh's enemy and Bacon's; he was the foe of reform, and
-the friend of Spain, from whom he received bribes, and the slave of vice.
-Bacon painted this vicious hunchback in his _Essay on Deformity_. The
-house was divided subsequently into Great and Little Salisbury House--the
-latter being let to persons of quality. About 1678 it was pulled down, and
-Salisbury Street built; but it proved too steep and narrow, and was not a
-successful speculation.[158] The other part, next to Great Salisbury House
-and over the Long Gallery, was turned into the "Middle Exchange." This
-eventually gave way to Cecil Street,--a fair street, with very good
-houses, fit for persons of repute.[159]
-
-On the death of Sackville the poet, Cecil took the white staff, being
-already Premier-Secretary. His ambition stretched into every department of
-the State. "He built a new palace at Hatfield, and a new Exchange in the
-Strand. Countesses intrigued for him. His son married a Howard, his
-daughter a Clifford. Ambassadors started for Italy, less to see Doges and
-Grand Dukes than to pick up pictures and statues, and bronzes and
-hangings, for his vast establishment at Hatfield Chase. His gardeners
-travelled through France to buy up mulberries and vines. Salisbury House,
-on the Thames, almost rivalled the luxurious villas of the Roman
-cardinals; yet, under this blaze of worldly success, Cecil was the most
-miserable of men. Friends grudged his rise; his health was broken; the
-reins which his ambition drew into his hands were beyond the powers of a
-single man to grasp; and the vigour of his frame, wasted by years of
-voluptuous licence, failed him at the moment when the strain on his
-faculties was at the full."[160]
-
-In Little Salisbury House lived William Cavendish, third Earl of
-Devonshire, and father of the first Duke of Devonshire, one of the leaders
-of the great revolution that drove out the Stuarts. Two or three days
-after the Restoration, King Charles, passing in his coach through the
-Strand, espied Hobbes, that mischievous writer in favour of absolute
-power, standing at the door of his patron the earl. The king took off his
-hat very kindly to the old man, gave him his hand to kiss, asked after his
-health, ordered Cooper to take his portrait, and settled on him a pension
-of £100 a year. Hobbes had been an assistant of Bacon, and a friend of Ben
-Jonson and of Lord Herbert of Cherbury. He had taught Charles II.
-mathematics, and corresponded with Descartes.
-
-In the street standing on the site of Sir Robert Cecil's house was the
-residence of the famous Partridge, the cobbler, impudent sham-almanac
-maker, and predecessor of our own Moore and Zadkiel, who had foretold the
-death of the French king. To expose this noisy charlatan and upset his
-ridiculous hap-hazard predictions, Swift with cruel and trenchant malice
-reported and lamented his decease in the _Tatler_ (1708), to which he
-contributed under the name of Bickerstaff. The article raised a laugh
-that has not even quite died away in the present day. Partridge, furious
-at his losses and the extinguishing of his ill-earned fame, knocked down a
-hawker who passed his stall crying an account of his death. This happening
-just as the joke was fading, revived it again, and finally ruined the
-almanac of poor Partridge.[161] "The villain," says the poor outwitted
-astrologer, "told the world I was dead, and how I died, and that he was
-with me at the time of my death. I thank God, by whose mercy I have my
-being, that I am still alive, and, excepting my age, as well as ever I was
-in my life." He actually died in 1715.
-
-A little beyond Cecil Street formerly stood Ivy Bridge, under which there
-was a narrow passage to the Thames, once forming a boundary line between
-the Duchy of Lancaster and the City of Westminster. Near Ivy Bridge stood
-the mansion of the Earls of Rutland. Opposite this spot Old Parr had
-lodgings when he came to court to be shown to Charles I., and died of the
-visit. Parr was a Shropshire labourer. He was born in 1483, and died aged
-152. His grandson lived to 120, and in the year of his death had married a
-widow. Parr's London lodging became afterwards the Queen's Head
-public-house.[162]
-
-Mrs. Siddons was living at 149 Strand, during the time of her earlier
-successes. Probably she returned there on that glorious October night of
-1782, when she achieved her first great triumph in Southerne's tragedy of
-_Isabella_, when her younger son, who acted with her, burst into tears,
-overcome by the reality of the dying scene. "I never heard," she says,
-"such peals of applause in all my life." She returned home solemnly and
-calmly, and sat down to a frugal, neat supper with her father and husband,
-in silence uninterrupted, except by exclamations of gladness from Mr.
-Siddons.
-
-Durham Street marks the site of old Durham House, built by Hatfield,
-Bishop of Durham, in 1345. In Henry IV.'s time wild Prince Hal lodged
-there for some nights.
-
-In the reign of Henry VIII. Bishop Tunstall exchanged the house with the
-king for one in Thames Street. Here, in 1550, lodged the French
-ambassador, M. de Chastillon, and his colleagues.
-
-Edward VI. granted the house to his sister Elizabeth for life, and here
-that princess bore the scorn and persecution of Bonner and his spies. On
-Mary coming to the throne and finding Tunstall driven from the Strand and
-without a shelter, she restored to him Durham House. This Tunstall led a
-life of great vicissitudes. Henry VIII. had moved him from London to
-Durham; Edward VI. had dissolved his bishopric altogether; Mary had
-restored it; and Elizabeth again stripped him in 1559, the year in which
-he died.
-
-The virgin queen kept the house some time in her own tenacious hands, but
-in 1583 granted it to Raleigh, whom she had loaded with favours, and who,
-in 1591, was Captain of the Guard, Lord Warden of the Stannaries, and
-Lieutenant of Cornwall.
-
-On the death of Queen Elizabeth Raleigh's sun of fortune set for ever, and
-that sly time-server Toby Matthew, Bishop of Durham, claimed the old town
-house of the see, relying on Cecil's help and King James's dislike to the
-great enemy of Spain. Sir Walter opposed him, but the king in council,
-1603, recognised the claim, and stripped Raleigh of his possession. The
-aggrieved man, in a letter of remonstrance to the Lord Keeper Egerton,
-states that he had occupied the house about twenty years, and had expended
-on it £2000 out of his own purse.[163] Raleigh did not die at Tower Hill
-till 1618; but Durham House was never occupied again either by bishop or
-noble, and five years after the stables of the house came down to make way
-for the New Exchange.
-
-In Charles I.'s reign the Earl of Pembroke bought Durham Yard from the
-Bishop of Durham for £200 a year, and built a handsome street leading to
-the river.[164] The river front and the stables remained in ruins till the
-Messrs. Adam built the Adelphi on the site of Raleigh's old turret study.
-Ivy Street had been the eastward boundary of the bishop's domain.[165]
-
-The New Exchange was opened April 11, 1609, in the presence of King James
-and his Danish queen. It was built principally through the intervention of
-Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, who lived close by. It was called by the king
-"Britain's Bourse," but it could not at first compete with the Royal
-Exchange. At the Restoration, however, when Covent Garden grew into a
-fashionable quarter, the New Exchange became more frequented than
-Gresham's building in the city.
-
-In the year 1653 (Cromwell), the New Exchange was the scene of a tragedy.
-Don Pantaleon de Saa, brother of the Portuguese ambassador, quarrelled
-with a gentleman named Giraud, who was flirting with the milliners, and
-who had used some contemptuous expression. The Portuguese, bent on
-revenge, hired some bravos, who the next day stabbed to death a gentleman
-whom they mistook for Mr. Giraud. They were instantly seized, and Don
-Pantaleon was found guilty and executed. Singularly enough, the intended
-victim perished on the same day on the same scaffold, having in the
-meantime been condemned for a plot against the Protector.
-
-There are many legends existing about the New Exchange. Thomas Duffet, an
-actor of Charles II.'s time, kept originally a milliner's shop here. At
-the Eagle and Child, in Britain's Bourse, the first edition of _Othello_
-was sold in 1622. At the sign of the "Three Spanish Gypsies" lived Thomas
-Radford, who sold wash-balls, powder, and gloves, and taught sempstresses.
-His wife, the daughter of John Clarges, a farrier in the Savoy before or
-after Radford's death, married General Monk, became the vulgar Duchess of
-Albemarle, and was eventually buried in Westminster Abbey. At the sign of
-the Fop's Head lived, in 1674, Will Cademan, a player and
-play-publisher.[166] Henry Herringham, the chief London publisher before
-Dryden's petty tyrant, Tonson, had his shop at the Blue Anchor in the
-Lower Walk. Mr. and Mrs. Pepys frequented the New Exchange. Here the
-Admiralty clerk's wife had "a mind to" a petticoat of sarcenet bordered
-with black lace, and probably purchased it. Here also, in April, 1664,
-Pepys and his friend Creed partook of "a most delicate dish of curds and
-cream."[167] Both Wycherly and Etherege have laid scenes of their comedies
-at the New Exchange; and here, too, Dryden's intriguing Mrs. Brainsick
-pretends to visit her "tailor" to try on her new stays.
-
-This Strand Bazaar, in the time of William and Mary, was the scene of the
-pretty story of the "White Widow." For several weeks a sempstress appeared
-at one of the stalls, clothed in white, and wearing a white mask. She
-excited great curiosity, and all the fashionable world thronged her stall.
-This mysterious milliner was at last discovered to be no less a person
-than the Duchess of Tyrconnel, widow of Talbot, the Lord Deputy of Ireland
-under James II. Unable to obtain a secret access to her family, and almost
-starving, she had been compelled to turn shopwoman. Her relatives provided
-for her directly the story became known.[168] This duchess was the Frances
-Jennings mentioned by Grammont, and sister to Sarah, Duchess of
-Marlborough.
-
-This long arcade, leading from the Strand to the water stairs, was divided
-into four parts--the outward walk below stairs, the inner walk below
-stairs, the outward walk above stairs, and the inner walk above stairs.
-The lower walk was a place of assignations. In the upper walk the air rang
-with cries of "Gloves or ribands, sir?" "Very good gloves or ribands."
-"Choice of fine essences."[169] Here Addison used to pace, watching the
-fops and fools with a kindly malice.[170] The houses in the Strand, over
-against the Exchange door, were often let to rich country families, who
-glared from the balconies and stared from the windows.[171]
-
-Soon after the death of Queen Anne the New Exchange became disreputable.
-No one would take stalls, so it was pulled down in 1737, and a frontage of
-dwelling-houses and shops made to the Strand, facing what is now the
-Adelphi Theatre. But we must return for a moment to old Durham House and a
-few more of its earlier tenants.
-
-In Henry VIII.'s time Durham House had been the scene of great banquets
-given by the challengers after the six days' tournament that celebrated
-the butcher king's ill-omened marriage with that "Flemish mare," as he
-used ungallantly to call Anne of Cleves. To these sumptuous feasts the
-bruised and battered champions, together with all the House of Commons and
-Corporation of London, were invited. To reward the challengers, among whom
-was Oliver Cromwell's ancestor, Dick o' the Diamond, the burly king gave
-them each a yearly pension of one hundred marks out of the plundered
-revenues of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem.
-
-Later a mint was established at Durham House by Sir William Sherrington,
-to aid the Lord Admiral Seymour in his treasonable efforts against his
-brother, the Protector, who finally offered him up a victim to his
-ambition. Sherrington, however, escaped, and worked the mint for the
-equally unfortunate Protector.
-
-But no loss of heads could warn the Strand noblemen. It was here that the
-ambitious Duke of Northumberland married his son, Lord Guildford Dudley,
-to poor meek-hearted Lady Jane Grey, who, the luckless queen of an hour,
-longed only for her Greek books, her good old tutor Ascham, and the quiet
-country house where she had been so happy. On that great day for the duke,
-Lady Jane's sister also married Lord Herbert, and Lord Hastings espoused
-Lady Catherine Dudley. It was from Durham House that the poor martyr of
-ambition, Lady Jane, was escorted in pomp to the Tower, which was so soon
-to be her grave.
-
-In 1560 Jean Nicot, a French ambassador, had carried tobacco from Lisbon
-to Paris. In 1586[172] Drake brought tobacco from Raleigh's colony in
-Virginia. Raleigh was fond of smoking over his books. His tobacco-box
-still existed in 1715; it was of gilt leather, as large as a muff-case,
-and contained cases for sixteen pipes.[173] There is a doubtful legend
-about Raleigh's first pipe, the scene of which may be not unfairly laid at
-Durham House, where Raleigh then lived.
-
-One day his servant, bringing in a tankard of spiced ale as usual into the
-turret study, found Raleigh (it is said) smoking a pipe over his folios.
-The clown, seeing smoke issue in clouds from his master's mouth, dropped
-the tankard in a fright, and ran downstairs to shout to the family that
-"master was on fire, and that he would be burnt to ashes if they did not
-run directly to his help."[174]
-
-The stalwart, sour-faced Raleigh disported himself at Durham House in a
-suit of clothes beset with jewels and valued at sixty thousand
-pounds,[175] and in diamond court-shoes valued at six thousand six hundred
-pieces of gold. Here he lived with his wife Elizabeth, and his two unlucky
-sons Walter and Carew. Here, as he sat in his study in the little turret
-that looked over the Thames,[176] he must have written against the
-Spaniards, told his adventures in Virginia, and described his discovery of
-the gold country of Guiana, his quarrel with Essex at Fayal, and the
-capture of the rich caracks laden with gold, pearls, and cochineal.
-
-The estate of Durham Place was purchased from the Earl of Pembroke, about
-1760, by four brothers of the name of Adam, sons of an architect at
-Kirkaldy, who were patronised by the handsome and much-abused Earl of
-Bute, and who built Caen Wood House, near Hampstead, afterwards the wise
-Lord Mansfield's. Robert, the ablest of the brothers, had visited Palmyra,
-and was supposed from those gigantic ruins to have borrowed his grand
-spirit of construction, as well as much of that trivial ornament which he
-might surely have found nearer home. When the brothers Adam began their
-work, Durham Yard (the court-yard of Raleigh's old house) was a tangle of
-small sheds, coal-stores, wine-vaults, and lay-stalls. They resolved to
-leave the wharves, throw some huge arches over the declivity, connect the
-river with the Strand, and over these vaults erect a series of well-built
-streets, a noble river terrace, and lofty rooms for the newly-established
-Society of Arts.
-
-In July 1768,[177] when the Adelphi Buildings were commenced, the Court
-and City were at war, and the citizens, wishing to vex Bute, applied to
-Parliament to prevent the brothers encroaching on the river, of which
-sable stream the Lord Mayor of London is the conservator, but not the
-purifier; but they lost their cause, and the worthy Scotchmen
-triumphed.[178]
-
-The Scotch are a patriotic people, and stand bravely by their own folk.
-The Adams sent to Scotland for workmen, whose labours they stimulated by
-countless bagpipes; but the canny men, finding the bagpipes played their
-tunes rather too quick, threw up the work, and Irishmen were then
-employed. The joke of the day was, that the Scotchmen took their bagpipes
-away with them, but left their _fiddles_![179]
-
-The Adelphi at once became fashionable. Garrick, then getting old, left
-his house in Southampton Street to occupy No. 5, the centre building of
-the terrace, and lived there till his death in 1779. Singularly enough,
-this great and versatile actor had, on first coming to London with his
-friend Johnson, started as a wine merchant below in Durham Yard. Here he
-must have raved in "Richard," and wheedled as Abel Drugger; and in the
-rooms at No. 5 half the celebrities of his century must have met. He died
-in the "first floor back," and his widow died in the same house as long
-after as 1822. The ceiling in the front drawing-room was painted by
-Antonio Zucchi. A white marble chimney-piece in the same room is said to
-have cost £300.[180] Garrick died after only nine years' residence in the
-new terrace; but his sprightly widow, a theatrical critic to the last,
-lived till she was past ninety, still an enthusiast about her husband's
-genius. The first time she re-opened the house after Davy's death, Dr.
-Johnson, Boswell, Sir Joshua, Mrs. Carter, and Mrs. Boscawen were present.
-"She looked well," says Boswell; "and while she cast her eyes on her
-husband's portrait, which was hung over the chimney-piece, said, that
-death was now the most agreeable object to her." Worthy woman! and so she
-honestly thought at the time; but she lived exactly forty-three years
-longer in the same house.
-
-If there is a spot in London which Johnson's ghost might be expected to
-revisit, it is that quiet and lonely Adelphi Terrace. At night no sound
-comes to you but a shout from some passing barge, or the creak of a ship's
-windlass. Here Johnson and Boswell once leant over, looking at the Thames.
-The latter said, "I was thinking of two friends we had lost, who once
-lived in the buildings behind us, Beauclerk and Garrick." "Ay, sir,"
-replied Johnson, seriously, "and two _such_ friends as cannot be
-supplied." This is a recollection that should for ever hallow the Adelphi
-Terrace to us.
-
-The Beauclerk above mentioned was one of the few rakes whom Johnson loved.
-He was a friend of Langton, and as such had become intimate with the great
-doctor. Topham Beauclerk was a man of acute mind and elegant manners, and
-ardently fond of literature. He was of the St. Albans family, and had a
-resemblance to swarthy Charles II., a point which pleased his elder
-friend. The doctor liked his gay, young manner, and flattered himself much
-as women do who marry rakes, that he should reform him in time.
-
-"What a coalition!" said Garrick, when he heard of the friendship; "why, I
-shall have my old friend to bail out of the Round House." Beauclerk, says
-Boswell, "could take more liberties with Johnson than any one I ever saw
-him with;"[181] but, on the other hand, Beauclerk was not spared. On one
-occasion Johnson said to him, "You never open your mouth, sir, without an
-intention to give pain, and you have often given me pain--not from the
-power of what you said, but from seeing your intention." At another time
-he said, "Thy body is all vice, and thy mind all virtue."
-
-When the Adelphi was building, Garrick applied for the corner house of
-Adam Street for his friend Andrew Beckett, the bookseller in the Strand,
-and he obtained it. In this letter he calls the architects "the dear
-Adelphi," and the western house "the corner blessing." Garrick's house was
-for some years occupied by the Royal Literary Fund, but is now a Club.
-
-Garrick promised the brothers, if the request was granted, to make the
-shop, as old Jacob Tonson's once was, the rendezvous of the first people
-in England. "I have," he says, "a little selfishness in this request. I
-never go to coffee-houses, seldom to taverns, and should constantly (if
-this scheme takes place), be at Beckett's at one at noon and six at
-night."[182]
-
-Garrick was a frequent visitor at the house of Mr. Thomas Beckett, the
-bookseller, in Pall Mall, and he obtained the appointment of sub-librarian
-at Carlton Palace for the son Andrew, who had written a comedy on the
-_Emile_ of Rousseau at the age of fourteen, and produced a poem called
-_Theodosius and Constantia_. For nearly ten years he wrote for the British
-and Monthly Reviews. He was born in 1749, and died in 1843. His most
-useful work is called _Shakspere Himself Again_, in which he released the
-original text from much muddy nonsense of commentators. He complained
-bitterly of Griffiths, of the _Monthly Review_, having given him only £45
-for four or five years' work--280 articles, produced after reading and
-condensing 590 volumes; Mr. Griffiths' annual profit by the _Monthly_
-being no less than £2000.
-
-Into a house in John Street the Society of Arts, established in 1753 by
-Mr. Shipley, an artist, moved, about 1772. This society still give
-lectures and rewards, and does about as much good as ever it did. Art
-must grow wild--it will not thrive in hot-houses. The great room is still
-adorned with the six large pictures illustrating the "Progress of
-Society," painted by poor, half-crazed Barry, the ill-educated artist,
-who, too proud to paint cabinet pictures, could yet paint nothing larger
-sound or well.
-
-Shipley, who established the society of Arts in imitation of one already
-established at Dublin, was originally a drawing-master at Northampton.
-From its commencement in 1753-4 to 1778 the society distributed in
-premiums and bounties £24,616. A year after its foundation Josiah Wedgwood
-began to infuse a classical and purer taste among the proprietors of the
-Staffordshire potteries,[183] and employed Flaxman to draw some of his
-designs, and was the first to improve the shape and character of our
-simplest articles of use.
-
-Mr. Shipley was a brother of the Bishop of St. Asaph, and had studied
-under a portrait-painter named Phillips. In 1738 the Society of Arts voted
-their founder a gold medal for his public spirit. His school was continued
-by a Mr. Pars. He died, aged upwards of ninety, in 1784.[184]
-
-Nollekens, the sculptor, learned drawing there, and Cosway, afterwards the
-fashionable miniature-painter, was the errand-boy. The house was
-subsequently inhabited by Rawle, the antiquary, a friend of fat, coarse,
-clever Captain Grose.[185]
-
-Dr. Ward, the inventor of "Friar's Balsam," a celebrated quack doctor
-ridiculed by Hogarth, left his statue by Carlini to the Society of Arts.
-The doctor allowed Carlini £100 a year, so that he should work at this
-statue for life.[186]
-
-This Joshua Ward, celebrated for his drop and pill, by which and his
-balsam he made a fortune, was the son of a drysalter in Thames Street.
-Praised by General Churchill and Lord Chief Baron Reynolds, he was called
-in to prescribe for King George. The king recovering in spite of the
-quack, "Spot" Ward was rewarded by a solemn vote of a credulous House of
-Commons, and he obtained the privilege of being allowed to drive his
-carriage through St. James's Park. Ward is conspicuous in one of Hogarth's
-caricatures by a claret mark covering half his brazen face.
-
-The housekeeper at the Society of Arts in Haydon's time (1842) remembered
-Barry at work on the frescoes that are so deficient in colour and taste,
-but show such a fine grasp of mind. She said his violence was dreadful,
-his oaths horrid, and his temper like insanity. In summer he came at five
-and worked till dark; he then lit his lamp and went on etching till eleven
-at night. He was seven years at his task. Burke and Johnson called once;
-but no artist came to see him. He would have almost shot any painter who
-dared to do so. He had his tea boiled in a quart pot, dined in Porridge
-Island, and took milk for supper.[187]
-
-Years after Barry lay in state in the great room which his own genius had
-adorned, and was buried in the Abbey; but few of the Academicians attended
-his funeral. The Adelphi pictures have been recently lined and restored.
-
-Barry having vainly attempted to decorate St. Paul's, executed the
-paintings now at the Society of Arts for his mere expenses, but
-eventually, one way and another, cleared a considerable sum by them. He
-painted them, as he said, to prove that Englishmen had a genius for high
-art, music, and other refinements of life. They are fairly drawn, often
-elegantly and reasonably well grouped, but bad in colour. The
-heterogeneous dresses are jumbled together with bad taste--Dr. Burney in a
-toupee floats among water-nymphs, and William Penn's wig and hat are
-ludicrously obtrusive. The perspective is often "out," and the attitudes
-are stiff; still, historically speaking, the pictures are large-minded and
-interesting; and, in spite of his faults, one likes to think of the brave
-Irishman busy on his scaffold, railing at Reynolds and defying everybody.
-Barry was really a self-deceiver, like Haydon, and aimed far beyond his
-powers.
-
-At Osborne's Hotel, in John Street, the King and Queen of the Sandwich
-Islands resided while on a visit to England in the reign of George IV. A
-comic song written on their arrival was once popular, though now
-forgotten; and Theodore Hook produced a quaint epigram on their death by
-small-pox, the point of which was, that one day Death, being hungry,
-called for "two Sandwiches." The epigram was not without the unfeeling wit
-peculiar to that heartless lounger at the clubs, who spent his life
-amusing the great people, and who died at last a worn-out spendthrift,
-_sans_ character, _sans_ everything.
-
-Of all London's charlatans, perhaps the most impudent was Dr. Graham, a
-Scotchman, whose brother married Catherine Macaulay, the author of a
-forgotten History of England, much vaunted by Horace Walpole. In or about
-1780 this plausible cheat opened what he called a "Temple of Health," in a
-central house in the Adelphi Terrace. His rooms were stuffed with glass
-globes, marble statues, medico-electric apparatus, figures of dragons,
-stained glass, and other theatrical properties. The air was drugged with
-incense and strains of music. The priestess of this temple was said to be
-no less a person than Emma Lyons, afterwards Lady Hamilton, the fatal
-Cleopatra of Lord Nelson. She had been first a housemaid and afterwards a
-painter's model. She was as beautiful as she was vulgar and abandoned. The
-house was hung with crutches, ear-trumpets, and other trophies.[188] For
-one night in the celestial bed, that secured a beautiful progeny, this
-impostor obtained £100; for a supply of his elixir of life £1000 in
-advance, and for his earth-baths a guinea each. Yet this arrant knave and
-hypocrite was patronised by half the English nobility. Archenholz, a
-German traveller, writing about 1784, describes Dr. Graham and his £60,000
-celestial bed. He dilates on the vari-coloured transparent glasses, and
-the rich vases of perfume that filled the impudent quack's temple, the
-half-guinea treatises on health, the _moonshine_ admitted into the rooms,
-and the divine balm at a guinea a bottle.
-
-A magneto-electric bed, to be slept in for the small sum of £50 a night,
-was on the second floor, on the right hand of the orchestra, and near the
-hermitage. Electricity and perfumes were laid on in glass tubes from
-adjoining reservoirs. The beds (there were two or three at least) rested
-on six massy transparent columns. The perfumed curtains were of purple and
-celestial blue, like those of the Grand Turk. Graham was blasphemous
-enough to call this chamber his "Holy of Holies." His chief customers were
-captains of privateers, nabobs, spendthrifts, and old noblemen. The farce
-concluded in March 1784, when the rooms were shut for ever, and the temple
-of Apollo, the immense electrical machine, the self-playing organ, and the
-celestial bed, were sold in open daylight by a ruthless auctioneer.[189]
-
-Bannister "took off" Graham in a farce called _The Genius of Nonsense_,
-produced at the Haymarket in 1780. His satin sofas on glass legs, his
-celestial bed, his two porters in long tawdry greatcoats and immense
-gold-laced cocked hats, distributing handbills at the door, while his
-goddess of health was dying of a sore-throat from squalling songs at the
-top of the staircase, were all hit off by a speaking harlequin, who also
-caricatured the doctor's sliding walk and bobbing bows. The younger Colman
-and Bannister had been to the Temple of Health on purpose to take the
-quack's portrait.[190]
-
-Mr. Thomas Hill, the fussy, good-natured Hull of Theodore Hook's _Gilbert
-Gurney_, lived for many years and finally died in the second floor of No.
-1 James Street, Adelphi. He was the supposed prototype of the obtrusive
-Paul Pry. It was Hill's boast always to have what you wanted. "Cards, sir?
-Pooh! pooh! Nonsense! thousands of packs in the house." Liston made the
-name of Paul Pry proverbial and world-wide.
-
-The names of the four Scotch brothers, John, Robert, James, and William
-Adam, are preserved by the existing Adelphi Streets. When will any of our
-streets be named after great thinkers? It is a disgrace to us to allow new
-districts to be christened, without Government supervision, by worthless,
-ignoble, and ridiculous names, confusing in their vulgar repetition.
-Indifferent kings, and nobles not much better, give their names to half
-the suburbs of London, while Shakespere is unremembered by the builders,
-and Spenser and Byron have as yet no brick-and-mortar godchildren.
-
-[Illustration: OLD HOUSES ON THE SITE OF WELLINGTON STREET, 1742.]
-
-The eldest of the brothers, Robert Adam, died in 1792, and was buried in
-the south aisle of Westminster Abbey. His pall was supported by the Duke
-of Buccleuch, the Earl of Coventry, the Earl of Lauderdale, Lord Stormont,
-Lord Frederick Campbell, and Mr. Pulteney.
-
-It was told as a joke invented against that fat butt, Sir William Curtis,
-that at a public dinner some lover of royalty and Terence proposed the
-healths of George IV. and the Duke of York as "the Adelphi," upon which
-the alderman, who followed with the next toast, determining that the East
-should not be far behind the West, rose and said that "as they were now on
-the subject of streets, he would beg to propose Finsbury Square." But,
-after all, why should we laugh at the poor alderman because he did not
-happen to know Greek? That surely is a venial sin.
-
-And here, retracing our steps, we must make an episode and turn back down
-the Savoy.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: THE SAVOY FROM THE THAMES, 1650.]
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE SAVOY.
-
- "Their leaders, John Ball, Jack Straw, and Wat Tyler, then marched
- through London, attended by more than twenty thousand men, to the
- PALACE OF THE SAVOY, which is a handsome building on the road to
- Westminster, situated on the banks of the Thames, and belonging to the
- Duke of Lancaster. They immediately killed the porters, pressed into
- the house, and set it on fire."--_Froissart's Chronicles._
-
-
-A minute's walk down a turning on the south side of the Strand, and we are
-in the precinct of an old palace, and standing on royal property.
-
-In a ramble by moonlight one cannot fail to meet under the churchyard
-trees in the Savoy, John of Gaunt, who once lived there; John, King of
-France, who died there; George Wither, the poet, and sweet Mistress Anne
-Killigrew, who are buried there, and Chaucer, who was married there.
-
-Down that steep, dray-traversed street, now so dull and lonely, kings and
-bishops, knights and ladies, have paced, and mobs have hurried with sword
-and fire. Now it is a congeries of pickle warehouses, printing offices,
-and glass manufactories.
-
-Simon de Montfort, that ambitious Earl of Leicester who married the sister
-of Henry III., and whose father persecuted the Albigenses, dwelt in the
-Savoy. Here he must have first won the barons, the people, and the humbler
-clergy by his opposition to the extortions of the king and the bishops.
-Here for a time he must have all but reigned, till that fatal August day
-when he fell at Evesham. Simon was a friend of the monks, and after his
-death endless miracles were said to have been wrought at his grave,[191]
-as might have been expected.
-
-The Savoy derives its foreign name from a certain Peter, Earl of Savoy,
-uncle of Eleanor, the daughter of Raymond, Count of Provence, and queen of
-that good man, but weak monarch, Henry III. This earl was the leader of
-that rapacious and insolent train of Frenchmen and Savoyards which
-followed Queen Eleanor to England, and drove Simon de Montfort and his
-impetuous barons to rebellion by their hunger for titles, lands, and
-benefices. In 30 Henry III. the king granted to Peter, Earl of Richmond
-and Savoy, all those houses in the Strand, adjoining the river, formerly
-belonging to Brian de Lisle, upon paying yearly to the king's exchequer,
-at the Feast of St. Michael, three barbed arrows for all services.
-
-In 1322 an Earl of Lancaster, then master of the Savoy, on the return of
-the Spensers, formed an alliance with the Scots, and broke out into open
-rebellion against Edward II. He was taken at Boroughbridge, led to
-Pontefract, and there beheaded. As he was led to execution on a bridleless
-pony, the mob pelted him with mud, taunting him as King Arthur--the royal
-name he had assumed in his treasonable letters to the Scots.[192]
-
-Earl Peter, in due time growing weary of stormy England, and sighing for
-his cool Savoy mountains, transferred his mansion to the provost and
-chapter of Montjoy (Fratres de Monte Jovis) at Havering-atte-Bower, a
-small village in Essex. At the death of the foolish king, his widow
-purchased the palace of the Savoy of the Montjoy chapter, as a residence
-for her son Edmund, afterwards Earl of Lancaster, to whom had been given
-the chief estates of the defeated Montfort.
-
-His son Henry, Duke of Lancaster, repaired and partly rebuilt the palace,
-at an expense of upwards of 50,000 marks. From this potent lord it
-descended to Edward III.'s son, John of Gaunt (Ghent), who lived here in
-the splendour befitting the son of Edward III., the uncle of Richard II.,
-and the father of a prince hereafter to become Henry IV.
-
-It was in the chapel of this river-side palace (about 1360, Edward III.)
-that our great poet, Geoffrey Chaucer, married Philippa, daughter of a
-knight of Hainault and sister to a mistress of the Duke's. He mentions his
-marriage in his poem of _The Dream_.[193] He says harmoniously--
-
- "On the morrow,
- When every thought and every sorrow
- Dislodg'd was out of mine heart,
- With every woe and every smart,
- Unto a tent prince and princess
- Methought brought me and my mistress.
-
- * * * * *
-
- With ladies, knighten, and squiers,
- And a great host of ministers,
- Which tent was church parochial."
-
-Those marriage bells have long since rung, the smoke of that incense has
-long since risen to heaven, yet we seldom pass the Savoy without thinking
-how the poet and his fair Philippa went
-
- "To holy church's ordinance,
- And after that to dine and dance,
- ... and divers plays."
-
-It was to his great patron--"time-honoured" Lancaster, claimant, through
-his wife, of the throne of Castile--that Chaucer owed all his court
-favours, his Genoese embassy, his daily pitcher of wine, his wardship, his
-controllership, and his annuity of twenty marks. It was in this palace he
-must have imbibed his attachment to Wickliffe, and his hatred of all proud
-and hypocritical priests.
-
-Buildings seem, like men, to be born under special stars. It was the fate
-of the Savoy to enjoy a hundred and forty years of splendour, and then to
-sink into changeless poverty and desolation. It was also its ill fate to
-be once sacked and once burnt. In 1378, under Richard II., its first
-punishment overtook it. John Wickliffe, a Yorkshireman, had been appointed
-rector of Lutterworth, in Leicestershire, by the favour of John of Ghent,
-who was delighted with a speech of Wickliffe in Parliament denying that
-King John's tribute to the Pope necessarily bound King Edward III. The
-Papal bull for Wickliffe's prosecution did not reach England till the
-king's death, but Wickliffe was cited on the 19th of February, 1378, to
-appear before the Bishop of London at St. Paul's. In the interval before
-his appearance he had promised the Parliament, at their request, to prove
-the legality of its refusal to pay tribute to the Pope.
-
-On the day appointed Wickliffe appeared in Our Lady's Chapel, accompanied
-by the Earl Marshall, Percy, and the Duke of Lancaster, who openly
-encouraged him, to the horror of the populace and the bitter rage of the
-priests. A quarrel instantly began by Courtenay, the Bishop of London,
-opposing a motion of the Earl Marshall that Wickliffe should be allowed a
-seat. The proud duke, pale with anger, whispered fiercely to the bishop
-that, "rather than take such language from him, he would drag him out of
-the church by the hair of his head." The threat was heard by an unfriendly
-bystander, and it passed round the church in whispers. Rumour, with her
-thousand babbling tongues, was soon busy in the churchyard, where the
-people had assembled, eager for the reformer's condemnation. They
-instantly broke forth like hounds which have recovered a scent. It was at
-once proposed to break into the church and pull the duke from the
-judgment-seat. When he appeared at the door, he was received with ominous
-yells, and was chased and pelted by the mob. Furious and beside himself
-with rage, he instantly proceeded to Westminster, where the Parliament was
-sitting, and moved that from that day forth all the privileges of the
-citizens of London should be annulled, that they should no longer elect a
-mayor or sheriff, and that Lord Percy should possess the entire
-jurisdiction over them--a severe penalty, it must be owned, for pelting a
-duke with mud.
-
-The following day, the citizens, hearing of this insolent proposal,
-snatched up their arms, and swore to take the proud duke's life. After
-pillaging the Marshalsea, where Lord Percy resided, they poured down on
-the Savoy and killed a priest whom they took to be Percy in disguise. They
-then broke all the furniture and threw it into the Thames, leaving only
-the bare walls standing. While the mob were shouting at the windows,
-feeding the river with torrents of spoiled wealth, or cutting the beds and
-tapestry to pieces, the duke and Lord Percy, who had been dining with John
-of Ypres, a merchant in the City, escaped in disguise by rowing up the
-river to Kingston in an open boat. Eventually, at the entreaties of the
-Bishop of London, who pleaded the sanctity of Lent, the rioters dispersed,
-having first hung up the duke's arms in a public place as those of a
-traitor. The Londoners finally appeased their opponent by carrying to St.
-Paul's a huge taper of wax, blazoned with the duke's arms, which was to
-burn continually before the image of Our Lady in token of reconciliation.
-
-This John of Gaunt, fourth son[194] of Edward III., married Blanche,
-daughter of Henry, Duke of Lancaster, who died of the plague in 1360, John
-succeeding to the title in right of his wife. He married his daughter
-Philippa to the King of Portugal, and his daughter Catharine to the Infant
-of Spain. From Henry Plantagenet, fourth Earl and first Duke of
-Lancaster, the Savoy descended to this John of Ghent, who married that
-amiable princess, Blanche Plantagenet, daughter and co-heir of Earl Henry.
-
-Into this same king-haunted precinct John of France, after the slaughter
-at Poitiers, was brought with chivalrous and almost ostentatious humility
-by the Black Prince. One thousand nine hundred English lances had routed
-with great slaughter eight thousand French. The lanes and moors of
-Maupertuis were choked with dead knights; the French king had been
-wounded, beaten to the ground, and taken prisoner, together with his son
-Philip, by a gentleman of Artois.[195] Sailing from Bordeaux, the Black
-Prince arrived at Sandwich with his prisoner, and was received at
-Southwark by the citizens of London on May 5, 1357. Triumphal arches were
-erected, and tapestry hung from every window. The King of France rode like
-a conqueror on a richly trapped cream-coloured horse, while by his side
-sat the young prince on a small black palfrey. Some hours elapsed before
-the procession could reach Westminster Hall, where King Edward was
-surrounded by his prelates, knights, and barons. When John entered, our
-king arose, embraced him, and led him to a splendid banquet prepared for
-him. The palace of the Savoy was allotted to King John and his son, till
-his removal to Windsor.
-
-Here the royal Frenchman may have been when he heard the tidings of the
-ferocity of the Jacquerie, and of the dreadful riots in his capital. To
-the Savoy he returned when his son, the Duke of Anjou, broke his parole
-and fled to Paris, desirous to exculpate himself of this dishonour, and to
-arrange for a crusade to recover Cyprus from the Turk.[196] To his
-council, dissuading him from returning, like a second Regulus, to
-captivity and perhaps death, the king addressed these memorable words--"If
-honour were banished from every other place, it should at least find an
-asylum in the breast of kings."
-
-John was affectionately received by the chivalrous Edward, and again
-returned to his old quarters in the Savoy, with his hostages of the blood
-royal--"the three lords of the fleur-de-lys." Here he spent several weeks
-in giving and receiving entertainments; but before he could proceed to
-business, he was attacked with a dangerous illness, and expired in 1364.
-His obsequies were performed with regal magnificence, and his corpse was
-sent with a splendid retinue to be interred at St. Denis.
-
-When treaties are broken by statesmen, or unjust wars declared, let the
-reader go to the Savoy, and think of that brave promise-keeper, King John
-of France.
-
-During the latter years of King Edward III., John of Gaunt became very
-unpopular. "The good Parliament" (1376) remonstrated against the expense
-of his unsuccessful wars in Spain, Scotland, and France, and against the
-excessive taxation. The duke imprisoned the Speaker, and banished wise
-William of Wyckeham from the king's person, but in vain attempted to alter
-the law of succession.
-
-In Wat Tyler's rebellion the duke's palace was the first to be destroyed.
-A refusal to pay oppressive poll-tax led to a riot at Fobbing, a village
-in Essex; from this place the flame spread like wildfire through the whole
-county, and the people rose, led by a priest named Jack Straw. At
-Dartford, a tiler bravely beat out the brains of a tax-collector who had
-insulted his daughter. Kent instantly rose, took Rochester Castle, and
-massed together at Maidstone, under Wat, a tiler, and Ball, a preacher. In
-a few days a hundred thousand men, rudely armed with clubs, bills, and
-bows, poured over Blackheath and hurried on to London.[197] In Southwark
-they demolished the Marshalsea and the King's Bench; then they sacked
-Lambeth Palace, destroyed Newgate, fired the house of the Knights
-Hospitallers at Clerkenwell, and that of the Knights of St. John at
-Highbury, and seizing the Tower, beheaded an archbishop and several
-knights. All Flemings hidden in churches were dragged out and put to
-death. Yet, with all this intoxication of new liberty, the claims of
-these Kentish men were simple and just. They demanded--The abolition of
-slavery; the reduction of rent to fourpence an acre; the free liberty of
-buying and selling in all fairs and markets; and lastly a general pardon.
-
-At the great bivouacs at Mile End and on Tower Hill, Wat Tyler's men
-required all recruits to swear to be true to King Richard and the Commons,
-and to admit no monarch of the name of John.[198] This last clause of the
-oath was aimed at John of Gaunt, to whom the people attributed all their
-misery. On June 13, 1381, a deluge of billmen, bowmen, artisans, and
-ploughmen rolled down on the Savoy. The duke was at the time negotiating
-with the Scots on the Borders, while his castles of Leicester and Tutbury
-were being plundered. The attack was sudden, and there was no defence. A
-proclamation had previously been made by Wat Tyler, that, as the common
-object was justice and not plunder, any one found stealing would be put to
-death.
-
-For beauty and stateliness of building, as well as all manner of princely
-furniture, there was, says Holinshed, no palace in the realm comparable to
-the duke's house that the Kentish and Essex men burnt and marred. They
-tore the silken and velvet hangings; they beat up the gold and silver
-plate, and threw it into the Thames; they crushed the jewels and mortars,
-and poured the dust into the river. One of the men--unfortunate
-rogue!--being seen to slip a silver cup into the breast of his doublet,
-was tossed into the fire and burnt to death, amid shouts and "fell
-cries."[199] The cellars were ruthlessly plundered, probably in spite of
-Wat Tyler, and thirty-two of the poor wretches, buried under beams and
-stones, were either starved or suffocated. In the wildest of the storm,
-some barrels were at last found which were supposed to contain money. They
-were flung into the huge bonfire; in an instant they exploded, blew up the
-great hall, shook down several houses, killed many men, and reduced the
-palace to ruins. That was on the 13th; on the 15th, the Essex men had
-dispersed; and Wat Tyler, the impetuous reformer, during a conference
-with the king in Smithfield, was slain by a sudden blow from the sword of
-Lord Mayor Walworth.
-
-John of Gaunt died at the Bishop of Ely's palace in Holborn, at Christmas
-1398--his old home being now a ruin--and he was buried on the north side
-of the high altar of Saint Paul's, beside the Lady Blanche, his first
-wife. Instantly on his death, the wilful young king, to the rage of the
-people, seized on all his uncle's lands, rents, and revenues, and banished
-the duke's attorney, who resisted his shameless theft. Amongst this pile
-of plunder the Savoy must have also passed.
-
-The Savoy had bloomed, and after the bloom came in its due time the "sere
-and yellow leaf." The precinct must have remained a waste during the Wars
-of the Roses;[200] but its blackened ruins preached their silent lesson in
-vain to the turbulent and tormented Londoners.
-
-In the reign of that dark and wily king, Henry VII., sunshine again fell
-on the Savoy. That prince, who was fond of erecting convents, founded on
-the old site a hospital, intended to shelter one hundred poor almsmen. It
-was not, however, finished when he died, nor was it completed till the
-fifteenth year of his son's reign (1524), the year in which the French
-were driven out of Italy.
-
-The hospital, which was dedicated to John the Baptist, was in the form of
-a cross, and over the entrance-gate, facing the Strand, was the following
-insipid inscription:--
-
- "_Hospitium hoc inopi turba Savoia vocatum,
- Septimus Henricus solo fundavit ab imo._"
-
-The master and four brethren were to be priests and to officiate in turns,
-standing day and night at the gate to invite in and feed any poor or
-distressed persons who passed down the river-side road. If those so
-received were pilgrims or travellers, they were to be dismissed the next
-morning with a letter of recommendation to the next hospital, and with
-money to defray their expenses on the journey.
-
-In the reign of Edward VI., part of the revenues of the new hospital, to
-the value of six hundred pounds, was transferred to Bridewell prison and
-Christ's Hospital school for poor orphan children; for already abuses had
-crept in, and indiscriminate charity had led to its usual melancholy
-results. The old palace had become no mere shelter for the deserving poor,
-but a den of loiterers, sham cripples, and vagabonds of either sex, who
-begged all day in the fields and came to the Savoy to sleep and sup.[201]
-
-Queen Mary, whose Spanish blood made her a friend to all monastic
-institutions, re-endowed the unlucky place with fresh lands; but it went
-on in its old courses till the twelfth year of Elizabeth, who suddenly
-pounced in her own stern way on the nest of rogues, and, to the terror of
-sinecurists, deprived Thomas Thurland, then master, of his office, for
-corruption and embezzlement of the hospital estates.
-
-We hear nothing more of the unlucky and neglected Hospital of St. John
-till the Restoration, when Dr. Henry Killigrew was appointed master, much
-to the chagrin and disappointment of the poet Cowley, to whom the sinecure
-had been promised by Charles I. and Charles II.
-
-Cowley, the clever son of a London stationer, had been secretary to the
-queen-mother, but returning as a spy to England, was apprehended, and upon
-that made his peace with Cromwell. This latter fact the Royalists never
-forgave, and considering his play of _The Cutter of Colman Street_ as
-caricaturing the old roystering Cavalier officers, they damned his comedy,
-lampooned him, and gave the Savoy to Killigrew, father of the court wit.
-Upon this the mortified poet wrote his poem of "The Complaint,"[202]
-wherein he calls the Savoy the Rachel he had served with "faith and labour
-for twice seven years and more," and querulously describes himself as left
-alone gasping on the naked beach, while all his fellow voyagers had
-marched up to possess the promised land. The poem, though ludicrously
-querulous, contains some lines, such as the following, which are truly
-beautiful. The muse is reproaching the truant poet.
-
- "Art thou returned at last," said she,
- "To this forsaken place and me,
- Thou prodigal who didst so loosely waste,
- Of all thy youthful years, the good estate?
- Art thou return'd here to repent too late,
- And gather husks of learning up at last,
- Now the rich harvest-time of life is past,
- And winter marches on so fast?"
-
-With this farewell lament Cowley withdrew "from the tumult and business of
-the world," to his long-coveted retirement[203] at pleasant, green
-Chertsey, where, seven years after, he died.
-
-The Savoy, always an abused sinecure, that made the master a rogue and its
-inmates professional beggars, was finally suppressed in the reign of Queen
-Anne.[204] It was then used as a barrack for five hundred soldiers, and as
-a deserters' prison, till the approaches to Waterloo Bridge rendered its
-removal necessary.
-
-Savoy Street occupies the site of the old central Henry VII.'s Tudor gate.
-Coal wharves cover the site of the ancient front of the hospital, and the
-houses in Lancaster Place, leading to Waterloo Bridge, another part of its
-area.
-
-In 1661, the year after the restoration of Charles II., a celebrated
-conference between the Church of England bishops and the Presbyterian
-divines took place, with very small result, in the Bishop of London's
-lodgings in the Savoy. Among the twelve bishops were Sheldon and Gauden,
-the author of _Ikon Basilike_: among the Presbyterians Baxter, Calamy, and
-Reynolds. They were to revise the Liturgy, and to discuss rules and forms
-of prayer; but there was so much distrust and reserve on both sides, that
-at the end of two months the conference came to an untimely end.[205] It
-was the bishops' hour of triumph, and no concessions could be expected
-from them after their many mortifications. In the same year Charles II.
-established a French church in the Savoy, and Dr. Durel preached the first
-sermon to the foreign residents in London, July 14, 1661.[206]
-
-In Queen Anne's time, after its suppression, the Savoy became, like the
-Clink and Whitefriars, a sanctuary for fraudulent debtors. On one
-occasion, in 1696, a creditor entering that nest of thieves to demand a
-debt, was tarred and feathered, carried in a wheelbarrow into the Strand,
-and there bound to the May-pole; but some constables coming up dispersed
-the rabble and rescued the tormented man from his persecutors.[207]
-
-Strype, writing about 1720 (George I.), describes the Savoy as a great
-ruinous building, divided into several apartments. In one a cooper stored
-his hoops and butts; in another there were rooms for deserters, pressed
-men, Dutch recruits, and military prisoners. Within the precinct there was
-the king's printing-press, where gazettes, proclamations, and Acts of
-Parliament were printed; and also a German Lutheran church, a French
-Protestant church, and a Dissenting chapel; besides "harbours for refugees
-and poor people."[208] The worthy writer thus describes the hall of the
-old hospital:--
-
-"In the midst of its buildings is a very spacious hall, the walls three
-foot broad, of stone without and brick and stone inward. The ceiling is
-very curiously built with wood, having knobs in one place hanging down,
-and images of angels holding before their breasts coats of arms, but
-hardly discoverable. One is a cross gules between four stars, or else
-mullets. It is covered with lead, but in divers places open to the
-weather. Towards the east end of the hall is a fair cupola with glass
-windows, but all broken, which makes it probable the hall was as long
-again, since cupolas are wont to be built about the middle of great
-halls."
-
-In 1754 (George II.) clandestine marriages were performed at the Savoy
-church; and the advantages of secrecy, privacy, and access by water were
-boldly advertised in the papers of the day. The _Public Advertiser_ of
-January 2, 1754, contains the following impudent and touting
-advertisement:--
-
-"BY AUTHORITY.--Marriages performed with the utmost privacy, secrecy, and
-regularity, at the ancient royal chapel of St. John the Baptist in the
-Savoy, where regular and authentic registers have been kept from the time
-of the Reformation (being two hundred years and upwards) to this day. The
-expense not more than one guinea, the five shilling stamp included. There
-are five private ways by land to this chapel, and two by water."
-
-At this time the Savoy was still a large cruciform building, with two rows
-of mullioned windows facing the Thames; a court to the north of it was
-called the Friary. The north front, the most ornamented, had large pointed
-windows and embattled parapets, lozenged with flint.
-
-At the west end, in 1816, stood the guard-house, or military prison, its
-gateway secured by a strong buttress, and embellished with Henry VII.'s
-arms and the badges of the rose and the portcullis: above these were two
-hexagonal oriel windows.
-
-In 1816, when the ruins were to be removed, crowds thronged to see the
-remains of John of Gaunt's old palace.[209] The workmen found it difficult
-to destroy the mossy and ivy-covered walls and the large north window; the
-masses of flint, stone, and brick being eight or ten feet thick. The
-screw-jack was powerless to destroy the work of Chaucer's time. The masons
-had to dig, pickaxe holes, and loosen the foundations, then to drive
-crowbars into the windows and fasten ropes to them, so as to pull the
-stones inwards. The outer buttresses would in any other way have defied
-armies.
-
-Some of the stone was soft and white. This, according to tradition, was
-that brought from Caen by Queen Mary. The industrious costermongers
-discovered this, and cut it into blocks to sell as hearthstones. A fire
-about 1777 had thrown down much of the hospital, so that the old level was
-fifteen or twenty feet deeper. The vaults and subterranean passages were
-unexplored. The wells were filled up. The workmen then pulled down the
-German chapel, which stood next Somerset House, and the red-brick house in
-the Savoy Square that was used for barracks. "The entrance," says a writer
-of 1816, "to the Strand or Waterloo Bridge will be spacious, and the
-houses in the Strand now only stop the opening."[210]
-
-The Chapel of St. Mary, Savoy, is a late and plain Perpendicular
-structure, with a fine coloured ceiling. This small, quiet chapel holds a
-silent congregation of illustrious dead.
-
-[Illustration: THE SAVOY CHAPEL.]
-
-Here are interred Sir Robert and Lady Douglas (temp. James I.); the
-Countess of Dalhousie, daughter of Sir Allen Apsley, Lieutenant of the
-Tower, and sister to that admirable wife, Mrs. Hutchinson, who died in
-1663; William Chaworth, who died in 1582, a member of that Nottinghamshire
-family, one of whom, Lord Byron's predecessor, killed in a tavern duel;
-and Mrs. Anne Killigrew, who died in 1685, the paintress and poetess on
-whom Dryden wrote an extravagant but glorious ode, beginning--
-
- "That youngest virgin daughter of the skies,
- Made in the last promotion of the blest."[211]
-
-This accomplished young lady was daughter of Dr. Henry Killigrew, and
-niece of Thomas Killigrew the wit, of whom Denham, the poet, bitterly
-said--
-
- "Had Cowley ne'er spoke, Killigrew ne'er writ,
- Combined in one they'd made a matchless wit."
-
-The father of Mistress Killigrew was author of a tragedy called _The
-Conspiracy_, which both Ben Jonson and Lord Falkland eulogised. Even old
-Anthony Wood says, in his own quaint way, that this lady "was a Grace for
-beauty, and a Muse for wit."[212]
-
-We must add to this list Sir Richard and Lady Rokeby, who died in 1523,
-and Gawin Douglas, that good Bishop of Dunkeld who first translated Virgil
-into Lowland Scotch. He was pensioned by Henry VIII., was a friend of
-Polydore Virgil, and died of the plague in London in 1521. The brass is on
-the floor, about three feet south of the stove in the centre of the
-chapel.[213]
-
-Dr. Cameron, the last victim executed for the daring rebellion of 1745,
-lies here also in good company among knights and bishops. His monument, by
-M. L. Watson, was not erected till 1846. Here, too, is that great admiral
-of Elizabeth--George, third Earl of Cumberland, who used to wear the glove
-which his queen had given him, set in diamonds, in his tilting helmet. He
-died in the Duchy House in the Savoy, October 3, 1605; but his bowels
-alone were buried here, the rest of his body lies at Skipton. He was the
-father of the brave, proud Countess, who, when Charles II.'s secretary
-pressed on her notice a candidate for Appleby, wrote that celebrated
-cannon-shot of a letter:--
-
- "I have been bullied by an usurper; I have been neglected by a court,
- but I will not be dictated to by a subject. Your man shan't stand.
-
- "ANNE, DORSET, PEMBROKE, AND MONTGOMERY."
-
-Here also there is a tablet to the memory of Richard Lander, the
-traveller, originally a servant of that energetic discoverer Captain
-Clapperton, who was the first to cross Africa from Tripoli and Benin.
-Lander had the honour also of first discovering the course of the Niger.
-He died in February 1834, from a gunshot-wound, at Fernando Po, aged only
-thirty-one. Such are the lion-men who extend the frontiers of English
-commerce.
-
-In the Savoy reposes a true poet, but an unhappy man--George Wither, the
-satirist and idyllist, who died in 1667, and lies here between the east
-door and the south end of the chapel.[214] He was one of Cromwell's
-major-generals, and had a hard time of it after the Restoration. It was to
-save Wither's life that Denham used that humorous petition--"As long as
-Wither lives I should not be considered the worst poet in England."
-
-Wither anticipated Wordsworth in simple earnestness and a regard for the
-humblest subjects. The soldier-poet himself says--
-
- "In my former days of bliss,
- Her divine skill taught me this:
- That from everything I saw
- I could some invention draw,
- And raise pleasure to her height
- Through the meanest object's sight,
- By the murmur of a spring,
- By the least bough's rustling."[215]
-
-These charming lines were written when Wither lay in the Marshalsea,
-imprisoned for writing a satire--_Abuses stripped and whipped_.
-
-In the same church lies one of the smallest of military heroes--Lewis de
-Duras, Earl of Feversham, who died in the reign of Queen Anne. He was
-nephew of the great Turenne, and was one of the few persons present when
-Charles II. received extreme unction. He commanded, or rather followed,
-King James II.'s troops at Sedgemoor, in 1685, and at that momentous
-crisis "thought only of eating and sleeping."[216] Upon this shambling
-general the Duke of Buckingham wrote one of his latest lampoons.[217]
-
-In 1552 the first manufactory of glass in England was established at the
-old Savoy House. It was here that, in 1658, the Independents met and drew
-up their famous Declaration of Faith. In 1671 the Royal Society's
-publications were printed here. In Dryden's time, the wounded English
-sailors who had been mangled by Van Tromp's and De Ruyter's shot were
-nursed here. The good and witty Fuller, who wrote the _Worthies_ lectured
-here. Half-crazed Alexander Cruden, who compiled the laborious Concordance
-to the Bible, lived here; and here grinding Jacob Tonson had a warehouse.
-
-In 1843 the Queen repaired the Savoy Chapel, in virtue of her being the
-patron of it. The duty, indeed, fell upon the Crown, for the chapel stood
-in the Liberty of the Duchy of Lancaster, and the office of the Duchy is
-in Lancaster Place, to the right as you approach Waterloo Bridge.
-
-In July 1864 the Savoy Chapel was unfortunately destroyed by a fire
-occasioned by an explosion of gas. The coloured ceiling, the altar window,
-containing a figure of St. John the Baptist, and a solitary niche with
-some tabernacle work at the east end, all perished. It was shortly
-afterwards restored and decorated afresh throughout, at the cost of Her
-Majesty.
-
-Mr. George Augustus Sala has admirably sketched the present condition of
-the Precinct,--its almost solemn silence and its gravity,--its loneliness,
-as of Juan Fernandez, Norfolk Island, or Key West,[218] although on the
-very verge of the roaring world of London, and but five minutes' walk from
-Temple Bar.
-
-The royal property is chiefly covered now by shops, public-houses, and
-printing-offices. The Precinct still retains traditions of the vagabond
-squatters who, till about the middle of the last century, assumed
-possession of the ruinous tenements in the Savoy, till the Footguards
-turned them out, and the houses were pulled down, rebuilt, and let to
-respectable tenants.
-
-The old churchyard has long since been sealed up by the Board of Health,
-but the trees and grass still flourish round the old stones. Clean-shaved,
-nattily dressed actors come to this quiet purlieu to study their parts.
-Musicians of theatrical orchestras, penny-a-liners, and printers haunt the
-bar of the Savoy tavern. Those quiet houses with the white door-steps,
-shining brass plates and green blinds, are inhabited by accountants'
-clerks, retired and retiring small tradesmen, and commission agents
-interested in pale ale, pickles, and Wallsend coals.
-
-"So," says Mr. Sala, "run the sands of life through this quiet hour-glass;
-so glides the life away in the old Precinct. At its base a river runs for
-all the world; at its summit is the brawling, raging Strand; on either
-side are darkness and poverty and vice, the gloomy Adelphi arches, the
-Bridge of Sighs that men call Waterloo. But the Precinct troubles itself
-little with the noise and tumult; it sleeps well through life without its
-fitful fever."
-
-Wearied of its old grandeur, pondering, as old men ponder, over its dead
-kings--for Wat Tyler and his Kentish men need no Riot Act to quiet them
-now--the Savoy and its crowned ghosts drift on with our methodical planet,
-meekly awaiting the death-blow that time must some day inflict.
-
-Tait Wilkinson's father was a minister of the Savoy. Garrick helped to
-transport him by informing against him for illegally performing the
-marriage ceremony. In return, Garrick helped forward the son--"an exotic,"
-as he called him, rather than an actor--but a wonderful mimic, not only of
-voice and manner, but even of features. He used to reproduce Foote's
-imitations of the older actors--as Mathews afterward imitated Wilkinson,
-who in his time had imitated Foote, to that impudent buffoon's great
-vexation.
-
-The _Examiner_, whose office is near Waterloo Bridge, was started by Leigh
-Hunt and his brother John in 1808. It began by boldly asserting the
-necessity for reform, lampooning the Regent, and attacking the cant and
-excesses of Methodism. In 1812 both the Hunts were found guilty of having
-called the Prince Regent "the Prince of Whales" and "a fat Adonis of
-fifty," and were sentenced to two years' imprisonment in Horsemonger Lane
-gaol, and to pay a fine of £500. At a later period, Hazlitt joined the
-paper, and wrote for it the essays reprinted (in 1817) under the title of
-_The Round Table_.[219] Close to it is the office of the _Spectator_,
-another paper of the same calibre and class, and more important than the
-_Examiner_ now, though its early history is not so interesting.
-
-Waterloo Bridge, one of those marvels built by the industrious
-simple-hearted John Rennie, was opened by the Prince Regent in 1817. Dupin
-declared it was a colossal monument worthy of Sesostris or the Cæsars; and
-what most struck Canova in England was that the foolish Chinese Bridge
-then in St. James's Park should be the production of the Government, while
-Waterloo Bridge was the result of mere private enterprise.[220] The bridge
-did not settle more than a few inches after the centres were struck.
-
-The project of erecting the Strand Bridge, as it was first called, was
-started by a company in 1809, a joint-stock-fever year. Rennie received
-£1000 a year for himself and assistants, or £7: 7s. a day, and expenses.
-The bridge consists of nine arches, of 120 feet span, with piers 20 feet
-thick, the arches being plain semi-ellipses, with their crowns 30 feet
-above high water. Over the points of each pier are placed Doric column
-pilasters, after a design taken from the Temple of Segesta in Sicily. In
-the construction of the bridge the chief features of Rennie's management
-were the following:--The employment of coffer-dams in founding the piers;
-new methods of constructing, floating, and fixing the centres; the
-introduction and working of Aberdeen granite to an extent before unknown;
-and the adoption of elliptical stone arches of an unusual width.
-
-Nearly all the bur stone was brought to the bridge by one horse, called
-"Old Jack." On one occasion the driver, a steady man, but too fond of his
-morning dram, kept "Old Jack" waiting a longer time than usual at the
-public-house, upon which he poked his head in at the open door, and gently
-drew out his master by the coat collar.[221]
-
-Rennie, the architect of the three great London bridges, the engineer of
-the Plymouth Breakwater and of the London and East India Docks, and a
-drainer of the Fens, was the son of a small farmer in East Lothian, and
-was born in 1761.[222]
-
-[Illustration: THE SAVOY PRISON, 1793.]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: DURHAM HOUSE, 1790.]
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-FROM THE SAVOY TO CHARING CROSS.
-
-
-Old York House stood on the site of Buckingham and Villiers Streets. In
-ancient times, York House had been the inn of the Bishops of Norwich.
-Abandoned to the crown, King Henry VIII. gave the place to that gay knight
-Charles Brandon, the husband of his beautiful sister Mary, the Queen of
-France. When the Church rose again and resumed its scarlet pomp, the house
-was given to Queen Mary's Lord Chancellor, Nicholas Heath, Archbishop of
-York, in exchange for Suffolk House in Southwark, which was presented by
-Queen Mary to the see of York in recompense for York House, Whitehall,
-taken from Wolsey by her father. On the fall of that minister, once more a
-change took place, and the house passed to the Lord Keeper, Sir Nicholas
-Bacon, who rented it of the see of York.
-
-In this house the great Francis Bacon was born, on the 22d of January,
-1561. York House stood near the royal palace, from which it was parted by
-lanes and fields. Its courtyard and great gates opened to the street. The
-main front, with its turrets and water stair, faced the river. The garden,
-falling by an easy slope to the Thames, commanded a view as far south as
-the Lollards' Tower at Lambeth, as far east as London Bridge. "All the gay
-river life[223] swept past the lawn, the salmon-fishers spreading their
-nets, the watermen paddling gallants to Bankside, and Shakspere's theatre,
-the city barges rowing past in procession, and the queen herself, with her
-train of lords and ladies, shooting by in her journeys from the Tower to
-Whitehall Stairs. From the lattice out of which he gazed, the child could
-see over the palace roof the pinnacles and crosses of the old abbey."
-
-The Lord Keeper Pickering died at York House in 1596, and Lord Chancellor
-Egerton in 1616 or 1617. In 1588 it is supposed the Earl of Essex tried to
-obtain the house, as Archbishop Sandys wrote to Burghley begging him to
-resist some such demand. Essex was in ward here for six months, fretting
-under the care of Lord Keeper Egerton.
-
-"York House was the scene," says a clever pleader for a great man's good
-fame, "of Bacon's gayest hours, and of his sharpest griefs--of his highest
-magnificence, and of his profoundest prostration. In it his studious
-childhood passed away. In it his father died. On going into France, to the
-court of Henry IV., he left it a lively, splendid home; on his return from
-that country, he found it a house of misery and death. From its gates he
-wandered forth with his widowed mother into the world. Though it passed
-into other hands, his connection with it never ceased. Under Egerton its
-gates again opened to him. It was the scene of that inquiry into the Irish
-treason when he was the queen's historian. During his courtship of Alice
-Barnham, York House was his second home. In one of its chambers he watched
-by the sick-bed of Ellesmere, and on Ellesmere's surrender of the Seals,
-presented the dying Chancellor with the coronet of Brackley. It became his
-own during his reign as Keeper and Chancellor. From it he dated his great
-Instauration; in its banqueting-hall he feasted poets and scholars; from
-one of its bed-rooms he wrote his Submission and Confession; in the same
-room he received the Earls of Arundel, Pembroke, and Southampton, as
-messengers from the House of Lords; there he surrendered the Great Seal.
-To regain York House, when it had passed into other hands, was one of the
-warmest passions of his heart, and the resolution to retain it against the
-eager desires of Buckingham was one of the secret causes of his fall."
-
-"No," said the fallen great man; "York House is the house wherein my
-father died and wherein I first breathed, and there will I yield my last
-breath, if it so please God, and the king will give me leave."[224]
-
-Some of the saddest and some of the happiest events of Bacon's life must
-have happened in the Strand. From thence he rode, sumptuous in purple
-velvet from cap to shoe, along the lanes to Marylebone Chapel, to wed his
-bride Alice Barnham.
-
-York House was famous for its aviary, on which Bacon had expended £300. It
-was in the garden here that we are told the Chancellor once stood looking
-at the fishers below throwing their nets. Bacon offered them so much for a
-draught, but they refused. Up came the net with only two or three little
-fish; upon which his lordship told them that "hope was a good breakfast,
-but an ill supper."[225]
-
-It was on the death of his friend, Lord Chancellor Ellesmere, and on his
-own installation, that Bacon bought the lease of York House from the
-former's son, the first Earl of Bridgewater. He found the rooms vast and
-naked. His friends and votaries furnished the house, giving him books and
-drawings, stands of arms, cabinets, jewels, rings, and boxes of money.
-Lady Cæsar contributed a massive gold chain, and Prince Charles a diamond
-ring.
-
-Bacon, when young, had been often taken to court by his father; and the
-queen, delighting in the gravity and wisdom of the boy, used to call him
-her "young Lord Keeper." Even then his mind was philosophically observant;
-and it is said that he used to leave his playmates in St. James's Fields
-to try and discover the cause of the echo in a certain brick conduit.[226]
-
-At Durham House, on January 22, 1620, the year in which he published his
-_magnum opus_, the _Novum Organon_, and a twelvemonth before his disgrace,
-Bacon gave a grand banquet to his friends. Ben Jonson was one of the
-guests, and is supposed to have himself recited a set of verses, in which
-he says--
-
- "Hail th' happy genius of the ancient pile!
- How comes it that all things so about thee smile,--
- The fire, the wine, the men?--and in the midst
- Thou stand'st as if some mystery thou didst.
-
- "England's High Chancellor, the destined heir,
- In his soft cradle to his father's chair,
- Whose even thread the Fates spin round and full,
- Out of their choicest and their richest wool.
- 'Tis a brave cause of joy. * *
- Give me a deep-crowned bowl, that I may sing,
- In raising him, the wisdom of my king."
-
-Who till he dies can boast of having been happy? The year after, the
-king's anger fell like an axe upon the great courtier. Solitary and
-comfortless at Gorhambury, Bacon petitioned the Lords in almost abject
-terms to be allowed to return to York House, where he could advance his
-studies and consult his physicians, creditors, and friends, so that "out
-of the carcass of dead and rotten greatness, as out of Samson's lion,
-there may be honey gathered for future times." Sir Edward Sackville prayed
-him in vain to remove his straitest shackles by surrendering York House to
-the king's favourite; and so did his creditor, Mr. Meautys, who, says
-Bacon, used him "coarsely," and meant "to saw him asunder." "The great
-lords," says Meautys, "long to be in York House. I know your lordship
-cannot forget they have such a savage word among them as _fleecing_." This
-word has grown tame in modern times, but it had a terrible significance in
-those days, when it hinted at flaying.
-
-An episode about Bacon's younger days may be pardoned here. The Gray's Inn
-Chambers occupied by Bacon were in Coney Court, looking over the gardens
-and past St. Pancras Church to Hampstead Hill. They are no longer
-standing. The site of them was No. 1 Gray's Inn Square. Bacon began to
-keep his terms at the age of eighteen, in June 1579. His uncle Burleigh
-was bencher in this inn, and his cousins, Robert, Cecil, and Nicholas
-Trott, students. In his latter days, when Attorney-General, and even when
-Lord Chancellor, he retained a lease of his old rooms in Coney Court. He
-was called to the bar when he was twenty-one, in 1582; and as soon as he
-was called he appeared in Fleet Street in his serge and bands, as a sign
-that he was going to practise for his bread. At the close of his first
-session, however, he was raised to the bench. Bacon always remained
-attached to Gray's Inn; he laid out the gardens, planted the elm-trees,
-raised the terrace, pulled down and rebuilt the chambers, dressed the dumb
-show, led off the dances, and invented the masques.[227]
-
-After Lord Bacon's disgrace, the first Duke of Buckingham of the Villiers
-family borrowed the house from Toby Mathew, the courtly archbishop of
-York, in hopes of a final exchange, which did eventually take place.[228]
-In 1624, two years before Bacon's death, a bill was passed to enable the
-king to exchange some lands for York House, so coveted by his proud
-favourite. Buckingham soon partially pulled down the old mansion, and
-lined the walls of his temporary structure with huge mirrors. Here he
-entertained the foreign ambassadors. Of all his splendour, the only relic
-left is the water gate usually ascribed to Inigo Jones.
-
-This Duke of Buckingham, the "Steenie" of King James, and of Scott's
-_Fortunes of Nigel_, was the younger son of a poor knight, who won James
-I. by his personal beauty, vivacity, and accomplishments--by his dancing,
-jousting, leaping, and masquerading. At first page, cupbearer, and
-gentleman of the bedchamber, he rose to power on the disgrace of Carr.
-
-It was at York House--"Yorschaux," as he calls it, with the usual
-insolence and carelessness of his nation--that Bassompierre visited the
-duke in 1626. He praises the mansion as more richly fitted up than any
-other he had ever seen.[229] Yet the duke did not live here, but at
-Wallingford House, on the site of the Admiralty, keeping York House for
-pageants and levees, till Felton's knife severed his evil soul from his
-body, August 23, 1628. His son, the Zimri of Dryden, was born at
-Wallingford House.
-
-The "superstitious pictures" at York House were sold in 1645,[230] and the
-house given by Cromwell to General Fairfax, whose daughter married the
-second and last Duke of Buckingham, of the Villiers line, the favourite of
-Charles II., the rival of Rochester, the plotter with Shaftesbury, the
-selfish profligate who drove Lee into Bedlam and starved Samuel Butler.
-
-In 1661 the galleries of York House were famous for the antique busts and
-statues that had belonged to Rubens on his visit to this country, when he
-painted James I. in jackboots being hauled heavenward by a flock of
-angels. In the riverside gardens--not far, I presume, from the water
-gate--stood John of Bologna's "Cain and Abel," which the King of Spain had
-given to Prince Charles on his luckless visit to Madrid, and which Charles
-had bestowed on his dangerous favourite.[231]
-
-The great rooms, even then emblazoned with the lions and peacocks of the
-Villiers and Manners families, were traversed by Evelyn, who describes the
-house and gardens as much ruined through neglect. Pepys also, who thrust
-his nose into every show-place, went to York House when the Russian
-ambassador was there, and rapturously and poetically vows he saw "the
-remains of the noble soul of the late Duke of Buckingham appearing in the
-house in every place, in the door-cases and the windows,"[232]--odd places
-for a noble soul to make its abode!
-
-The Duke of Buckingham, in King Charles's days, had turned York House into
-a treasury of art. He bought Rubens's private collection of pictures for
-£10,000, Sir Henry Wotten having purchased them for him at Venice. He had
-seventeen Tintorets, and thirteen works of Paul Veronese. For an "Ecce
-Homo" by Titian, containing nineteen figures as large as life, he refused
-£7000 from the Earl of Arundel. During the Civil Wars the pictures were
-removed by his son to Antwerp, and there sold by auction.
-
-Who can look down Buckingham Street in the twilight, and see the pediment
-of the old water gate of the duke's house, without repeating to himself
-the scourging lines of Dryden when he drew Buckingham as Zimri?--
-
- "A man so various that he seem'd to be
- Not one but all mankind's epitome;
- Stiff in opinions, always in the wrong;
- Was everything by turns, and nothing long;
- But, in the course of one revolving moon,
- Was chemist, fiddler, statesman, and buffoon."[233]
-
-In vain Settle eulogised the mercurial and licentious spendthrift.
-Settle's verse is forgotten, but we all remember Pope's ghastly but
-exaggerated picture of the rake's death in "the worst inn's worst room"--
-
- "No wit to flatter left of all his store,
- No fool to laugh at, which he valued more,
- There, victor of his health, of fortune, friends,
- And fame, this lord of useless thousand ends."
-
-The first Duke of Buckingham, to judge by Clarendon, who was the friend of
-all friends of absolutism, must have been a man of magnificent generosity
-and "flowing courtesy," a staunch friend, and a desperate and unrelenting
-hater; but he was an enemy of the people; and had he survived the knife of
-Felton he must have been the first of a faithless king's bad counsellors
-to perish on the scaffold.
-
-[Illustration: THE WATER GATE, 1860.]
-
-The second duke was a base-tempered, shameless profligate, a fickle,
-dishonest intriguer, who perished at last, a poor worn-out man, in a
-farmer's house in Yorkshire, from a cold caught while hunting. He was the
-author of several obscene lampoons, from which Swift took some hints; and
-he was the godfather of a mock tragedy, _The Rehearsal_, in which he was
-helped by Martin Clifford and Butler, the author of _Hudibras_, the latter
-of whom he left to starve. Baxter, it is true, drops a redeeming word or
-two on behalf of the gay scoundrel; but then Buckingham had intrigued with
-the Puritans.
-
-York Stairs, the only monument of Zimri's splendour left, stand now in the
-middle of the gardens of the new Embankment. Till the Embankment was made,
-the gate was approached by a small enclosed terrace planted with lime
-trees. The water gate consists of a central archway and two side windows.
-Four rusticated columns support an arched pediment and two couchant lions
-holding shields. On a scroll are the Villiers arms. On the street side
-rise three arches, flanked by pilasters and an entablature, on which are
-four stone globes. Above the keystone of the arches are shields and
-anchors. In the centre are the arms of Villiers impaling those of Manners.
-The Villiers' motto, _Fidei coticula crux_, "The cross is the whetstone of
-faith," is inscribed on the frieze. The gate, as it now stands, is
-ridiculous, and is almost buried in the soil. It would be a charity to
-remove it to a water-side position.
-
-In 1661, on the day of the great affray at the Tower Wharf between the
-retinues of the French and Spanish ambassadors, arising out of a dispute
-for precedence, Pepys saw the latter return to York House in triumph,
-guarded with fifty drawn swords, having killed several Frenchmen. "It is
-strange," says the amusing quidnunc, "to see how all the city did rejoice,
-and, indeed, we do naturally all love the Spanish and hate the French."
-Worthy man! the fact was, all time-servers were then agog about the queen
-who was expected from Portugal. From York House Pepys went peering about
-the French ambassador's, and found his retainers all like dead men and
-shaking their heads. "There are no men in the world," he says, "of a more
-insolent spirit when they do well, and more abject if they miscarry, than
-these people are."[234]
-
-In 1683 the learned and amiable John Evelyn, being then on the Board of
-Trade, took a house in Villiers Street for the winter, partly for business
-purposes, partly to educate his daughters.[235] Evelyn's works gave a
-valuable impetus to art and agriculture.
-
-Addison's jovial friend, that delightful writer, Sir Richard Steele, lived
-in Villiers Street from 1721 to 1724, after the death of his wife, the
-jealous "Prue." Here he wrote his _Conscious Lovers_. The big,
-swarthy-faced ex-trooper, so contrasting with his grave and colder friend
-Addison, is a salient personage in the English Temple of Fame.
-
-Duke Street, built circa 1675,[236] was named from the last Duke of
-Buckingham. Humphrey Wanley, the great Harleian librarian, lived here, and
-the son of Shadwell, the poet and Dryden's enemy, who was an eminent
-physician, and inherited much of his father's excellent sense.
-
-In 1672 the "chemyst, statesman, and buffoon" Duke of Buckingham sold York
-House and gardens for £30,000 to a brewer and woodmonger, who pulled it
-down and laid out the present streets, naming them, with due respect to
-rank and wealth, even in a rascal, George Street, Villiers Street, Duke
-Street, and Buckingham Street. In 1668 their rental was £1359: 10s.[237]
-
-In Charles II.'s time waterworks were started at York Buildings by a
-company chartered to supply the West end with water, but they failed,
-being in advance of the time. The company, however, did not concentrate
-its energies on waterworks; it gave concerts, bought up forfeited estates
-in Scotland, and started many wild and eccentric projects, in some of
-which Steele figured prominently. The company has long been forgotten,
-though kept in memory by a tall water tower, which was standing in the
-reign of George III.
-
-In Buckingham Street, built in 1675, Samuel Pepys, the diarist, came to
-live in 1684. The house, since rebuilt, was the last on the west side, and
-looked on the Thames. It had been his friend Hewer's before him. A view of
-the library shows us the tall plain book-cases, and a central window
-looking on the river. Pepys, the son of an army tailor, and as fond of
-dress and great people as might be expected of a tailor's son, was for a
-long time Secretary of the Admiralty under Charles II. He was President of
-the Royal Society; and it is largely to his five folio books of ballads
-that we owe Dr. Percy's useful compilation, _The Relics of Ancient
-Poetry_. Pepys died in 1703, at the house of his friend Hewer, at Clapham.
-
-Pepys's house (No. 14) became afterwards, in the summer of 1824, the home
-of Etty, the painter, and remained so till within a few months of his
-death in 1849. Etty first took the ground floor (afterwards occupied by
-Mr. Stanfield), then the top floor; the special object of his ambition
-being to watch sunsets over the river, which he loved as much as Turner
-did, who frequently said, "There is finer scenery on its banks than on
-those of any river in Italy." Its ebb and flow, Etty used to declare, was
-like life, and "the view from Lambeth to the Abbey not unlike Venice." In
-those river-side rooms the artists of two generations have
-assembled--Fuseli, Flaxman, Holland, Constable, and Hilton--then Turner,
-Maclise, Dyce, Herbert, and all the younger race. Etty's rooms looked on
-to a terrace, with a small cottage at one end; the keeper once was a man
-named Hewson, supposed to be the original Strap of _Roderick Random_.[238]
-An amiable, dreamy genius was the son of the miller and gingerbread-maker
-of York.
-
-The witty Earl of Dorset lived in this street in 1681.
-
-Opposite Pepys's house, and on the east side (left-hand corner), was a
-house where Peter the Great lodged when in England. Here, after rowing
-about the Thames, watching the boat-building, or pulling to Deptford and
-back, this brave half-savage used to return and spend his rough evenings
-with Lord Caermarthen, drinking a pint of hot brandy and pepper, after
-endless flasks of wine. It was certainly "brandy for heroes" in this case.
-
-Lord Caermarthen was at this time Lord President of the Council, and had
-been appointed Peter's cicerone by King William. The Russian czar was a
-hard drinker, and on one occasion is said to have drunk a pint of brandy,
-a bottle of sherry, and eight flasks of sack, after which he calmly went
-to the play. While in York Buildings, the rough czar was so annoyed with
-the vulgar curiosity of intrusive citizens, that he would sometimes rise
-from his dinner and leave the room in a rage. Here the Quakers forced
-themselves upon him, and presented him with _Barclay's Apology_, after
-which the czar attended their meeting in Gracechurch Street. He once asked
-them of what use they were in any kingdom, since they would not bear arms.
-On taking his farewell of King William, Peter drew a rough ruby, valued at
-£10,000, from his waistcoat pocket, and presented it to him screwed up in
-brown paper.[239] He went back just in time to crush the Strelitzes,
-imprison his sister Sophia, and wage war on Charles XII. The great
-reformer was only twenty-six years old when he visited England.
-
-In 1706 Robert Harley, Esq., afterwards Swift's great patron and Earl of
-Oxford, lived here;[240] and (1785) John Henderson, the actor, died in
-this street.
-
-Walter, Lord Hungerford, of Farleigh Castle, Somerset, took the Duke of
-Orleans prisoner at Agincourt. He was Lord High Steward of Henry V. and
-one of the executors to his will, and Lord High Treasurer in the reign of
-Henry VI. This illustrious noble was the son of Sir Thomas de Hungerforde,
-who in 51 Edward III. was the first to take the chair as Speaker of the
-House of Commons.
-
-Hungerford Market covered the site of the seat of the Hungerford family.
-Pepys mentions a fire at the house of old Lady Hungerford in Charles II.'s
-time.
-
-Sir Edward (her husband), created a Knight of the Bath at the coronation
-of Charles II., pulled down the old mansion and divided it in 1680 into
-several houses, enclosing also a market-place. On the north side of the
-market-house was a bust of one of the family in a full-bottomed wig.[241]
-It grew a disused and ill-favoured place before 1833. When a new market
-(Fowler, architect) was opened, it was intended to put an end to the
-monopoly of Billingsgate. The old market had at first answered well for
-fruit and vegetables, as there was no need of porters from the water side;
-but by 1720 Covent Garden had beaten it off.[242] It attempted too much in
-rivalling at once Leadenhall and Billingsgate, and failed--only a few
-fishmongers lingering on to the last.
-
-In 1845 a suspension bridge, crossing from Hungerford to Lambeth (built
-under Mr. I. K. Brunel's supervision), was opened. It consisted of three
-spans, and two brick towers in the Italian style; the main span, at the
-time of its erection, was larger than that of any other in the country,
-and only second to that of the bridge at Fribourg. It cost £110,000, and
-consumed more than 10,000 tons of iron.[243]
-
-In the same year the bridge was sold to the original proprietors for
-£226,000, but the purchase was never carried out. It was replaced in 1864
-by a railway bridge, and the market itself was filled up by an enormous
-railway station. The market had sunk to zero years before. In 1850 some
-rogue of a speculator had opened in it a pretended exhibition of the
-surplus articles rejected for want of room from the glass palace in Hyde
-Park. It proved a total failure, and swallowed up a vast sum of money and
-a fine northern estate or two. Latterly it had become a gratuitous
-music-hall, a billiard-room, and a penny-ice house, conducted by an
-Italian.
-
-The railway station, built by Mr. Barry, the son of the architect of the
-New Houses of Parliament, faces the Strand. It is of a most creditable
-design, and the high Mansard roofs, which surmounted the hotel which forms
-its front, are of a freer and grander character than those of any modern
-London building. A model of the Eleanor Cross has been erected in the
-courtyard in front of it. This building is one of the first omens of
-better things that we have yet seen in our still terribly mean and ugly
-city.
-
-Craven Street was called Spur Alley till 1742.[244] Grinling Gibbons, the
-great wood-carver, born at Rotterdam, and whose genius John Evelyn
-discovered, lived here after leaving the Belle Sauvage Yard. Here he must
-have fashioned those fragile strings of birds and fruit and flowers that
-adorn so many city churches, and the houses of so many English noblemen.
-At No. 7, in 1775, lodged the great Benjamin Franklin, then no longer a
-poor printer, but the envoy of the American colonies. Here Lords Howe and
-Stanhope visited him to propose terms from Lords Camden and Chatham, but
-unfortunately only in vain.[245] That weak and unfortunate man, the Rev.
-Mr. Hackman, who shot Miss Ray, the actress and the mistress of Lord
-Sandwich, who had encouraged his suit, lived in this street.
-
-James Smith, one of the authors of the _Rejected Addresses_,--a series of
-parodies rivalled only by those of _Bon Gaultier_, lived at No. 27. It was
-on his own street that he wrote the well-known epigram--[246]
-
- "In Craven Street, Strand, the attorneys find place,
- And ten dark coal barges are moor'd at its base.
- Fly, Honesty, fly! seek some safer retreat:
- There's _craft_ in the river and _craft_ in the street."
-
-But Sir George Rose capped this in return, retorting in extemporaneous
-lines, written after dinner:--
-
- "Why should Honesty fly to some safer retreat,
- From attorneys and barges?--'od rot 'em!
- For the lawyers are _just_ at the top of the street,
- And the barges are _just_ at the bottom."
-
-James Smith, the intellectual hero of this street, the son of a solicitor
-to the Ordnance, was born in 1775. In 1802 he joined the staff of the
-_Pic-Nic_ newspaper, with Combe, Croker, Cumberland, and that mediocre
-poet, Sir James Bland Burgess. It changed its name to the _Cabinet_, and
-died in 1803. From 1807 to 1817 James Smith contributed to the _Monthly
-Mirror_ his "Horace in London." In 1812 came out the _Rejected Addresses_,
-inimitable parodies by himself and his brother, not merely of the manner
-but of the very mode of thought of Wordsworth, Cobbett, Southey,
-Coleridge, Crabbe, Lord Byron, Scott, etc. The copyright, originally
-offered to Mr. Murray for £20, but declined, was purchased by him in 1819,
-after the sixteenth edition, for £131; so much for the foresight of
-publishers. The book has since deservedly gone through endless editions,
-and has not been approached even by the talented parody writers of
-_Punch_. Those who wish to see the story of this publication in detail,
-must hunt it up in the edition of the _Addresses_ illustrated by George
-Cruickshank.
-
-Mr. Smith was the chief deviser of the substance of the _Entertainments_
-of the elder Charles Mathews. He wrote the _Country Cousins_ in 1820, and
-in the two succeeding years the _Trip to France_ and the _Trip to
-America_. For these last two works the author received a thousand pounds.
-"A thousand pounds!" he used to ejaculate, shrugging his shoulders, "and
-all for nonsense."[247]
-
-James Smith was just the man for Mathews, with his slight frameworks of
-stories filled up with songs, jokes, puns, wild farcical fancies, and
-merry conceits, and here and there among the motley, with true touches of
-wit, pathos, and comedy, and faithful traits of life and character, such
-as only a close observer of society and a sound thinker could pen.
-
-He was lucky enough to obtain a legacy of £300 for a complimentary epigram
-on Mr. Strahan, the king's printer. Being patted on the head when a boy by
-Chief-Justice Mansfield, in Highgate churchyard, and once seeing Horace
-Walpole on his lawn at Twickenham, were the two chief historical events of
-Mr. Smith's quiet life. The four reasons that kept so clever a man
-employed on mere amateur trifling were these--an indolent disinclination
-to sustained work, a fear of failure, a dislike to risk a well-earned
-fame, and a foreboding that literary success might injure his practice as
-a lawyer. His favourite visits were to Lord Mulgrave's, Mr. Croker's,
-Lord Abinger's, Lady Blessington's, and Lord Harrington's.
-
-Pretty Lady Blessington used to say of him, that "James Smith, if he had
-not been a _witty_ man, must have been a _great_ man." He died in his
-house in Craven Street, with the calmness of a philosopher, on the 24th of
-December 1839, in the sixty-fifth year of his age.[248] Fond of society,
-witty without giving pain, a bachelor, and therefore glad to escape from a
-solitary home, James Smith seems to have been the model of a diner-out.
-
-Caleb Whitefoord, a wine merchant in Craven Street, and an excellent
-connoisseur in old pictures, was one of the legacy-hunters who infested
-the studio of Nollekens, the miserly sculptor of Mortimer Street. He was a
-foppish dresser, and was remarkable for a dashing three-cornered hat, with
-a sparkling black button and a loop upon a rosette. He wore a wig with
-five tiers of curls, of the Garrick cut, and he was one of the last to
-wear such a monstrosity. This crafty wine merchant used to distribute
-privately the most whimsical of his _Cross Readings_, _Ship News_, and
-_Mistakes of the Press_--things in their day very popular, though now
-surpassed in every number of _Punch_. Some of the best were the
-following:--"Yesterday Dr. Pretyman preached at St. James's,--and
-performed it with ease in less than sixteen minutes." "Several changes are
-talked of at Court,--consisting of 9050 triple bob-majors." "Dr. Solander
-will, by Her Majesty's command, undertake a voyage--round the head-dress
-of the present month." "Sunday night.--Many noble families were
-alarmed--by the constable of the ward, who apprehended them at cards." A
-simple-hearted age could laugh heartily at these things: would that we
-could!
-
-It has often been asserted that Goldsmith's epitaph on Whitefoord was
-written by the wine merchant himself, and sent to the editor of the fifth
-edition of the Poems by a convenient common friend. It is not very
-pointed, and the length of the epitaph is certainly singular,
-considering that the poet dismissed Burke and Reynolds in less than
-eighteen lines.
-
-Adam built an octagon room in Whitefoord's house in order to give his
-pictures an equal light; and Mr. Christie adopted the idea when he fitted
-up his large room in King Street, St. James's.[249]
-
-Goldsmith is said to have been intimate with witty, punning Caleb
-Whitefoord, and certain it is his name is found in the postscript to the
-poem of _Retaliation_, written by Oliver on some of his friends at the St.
-James's Coffee-house. These were the Burkes, fretful Cumberland, Reynolds,
-Garrick, and Canon Douglas. In this poem Goldsmith laments that Whitefoord
-should have confined himself to newspaper essays, and contented himself
-with the praise of the printer of the _Public Advertiser_; he thus sums
-him up:--
-
- "Rare compound of oddity, frolic, and fun,
- Who relish'd a joke and rejoiced in a pun;
- Whose temper was generous, open, sincere;
- A stranger to flattery, a stranger to fear.
-
- * * * * *
-
- "Merry Whitefoord, farewell! for thy sake I admit
- That a Scot may have humour--I'd almost said wit;
- This debt to thy memory I cannot refuse,
- Thou best-humour'd man with the worst-humour'd Muse."
-
-Whitefoord became Vice-President of the Society of Arts.
-
-Anthony Pasquin (Williams), a celebrated art critic and satirist of Dr.
-Johnson's time, was articled to Matt Darley, the famous caricaturist of
-the Strand, to learn engraving.[250]
-
-The old name of Northumberland Street was Hartshorne Lane or Christopher
-Alley.[251] Here Ben Jonson lived when he was a child, and after his
-mother had taken a bricklayer for her second husband.
-
-At the bottom of this lane Sir Edmondbury Godfrey had his wood wharf. This
-fact shows how much history is illustrated by topography, for the
-residence of the unfortunate justice explains why it should have been
-supposed that he had been inveigled into Somerset House.
-
-In 1829 Mr. Wood, who kept a coal wharf, resided in Sir Edmondbury's old
-premises at the bottom of Northumberland Street. It was here the court
-justice's wood-wharf was, but his house was in Green's Lane, near
-Hungerford Market.[252] During the Great Plague Sir Edmondbury had been
-very active; on one occasion, when his men refused to act, he entered a
-pest-house alone to apprehend a wretch who had stolen at least a thousand
-winding-sheets. Four medals were struck on his death. There is also a
-portrait of the unlucky woodmonger in the waiting-room adjoining the
-Vestry of St. Martin's-in-the-Fields.[253] He wore, it seems, a full black
-wig, like Charles II.
-
-Three men were tried for his murder--the cushion-man at the Queen's
-Chapel, the servant of the treasurer of the chapel, and the porter of
-Somerset House. The truculent Scroggs tried the accused, and those
-infamous men, Oates, Prance, and Bedloe, were the false witnesses who
-murdered them. The prisoners were all executed. Sir Edmondbury's corpse
-was embalmed and borne to its funeral at St. Martin's from Bridewell. The
-pall was supported by eight knights, all justices of the peace, and the
-aldermen of London followed the coffin. Twenty-two ministers marched
-before the body, and a great Protestant mob followed. Dr. William Lloyd
-preached the funeral sermon from the text 2 Sam. iii. 24. The preacher was
-guarded in the pulpit by two clergymen armed with "Protestant flails."
-
-[Illustration: YORK STAIRS, WITH THE HOUSES OF PEPYS AND PETER THE GREAT,
-AFTER CANALETTI (CIRCA 1745).]
-
-In July 1861, No. 16 Northumberland Street, then an old-fashioned,
-dingy-looking house, with narrow windows, which had been divided into
-chambers, was the scene of a fight for life and death between Major Murray
-and Mr. Roberts, a solicitor and bill-discounter; the latter attempted the
-life of the former for the sake of getting possession of his mistress, to
-whom he had lent money. Under pretext of advancing a loan to the Grosvenor
-Hotel Company, of which the major was a promoter, he decoyed him into a
-back room on the first floor of No. 16, then shot him in the back of the
-neck, and immediately after in the right temple. The major, feigning to be
-dead, waited till Roberts's back was turned, then springing to his feet
-attacked him with a pair of tongs, which he broke to pieces over his
-assailant's head. He then knocked him down with a bottle which lay near,
-and escaped through the window, and from thence by a water-pipe to the
-ground. Roberts died soon afterwards, but Major Murray recovered, and the
-jury returning a verdict of "Justifiable Homicide," he was released. The
-papers described Roberts's rooms as crowded with dusty Buhl cabinets,
-inlaid tables, statuettes, and drawings. These were smeared with blood and
-wine, while on the glass shades of the ornaments a rain of blood seemed
-to have fallen.
-
-The embankment, which here is very wide, and includes several acres of
-garden on the spot where the Thames once flowed, has largely altered the
-character of the streets below the Strand and the river, destroying the
-picturesque wharves and spoiling the appearance of the Water Gate, which
-is half buried in gravel and flowers, like the Sphynx in Egypt. Between it
-and the Thames now stands Cleopatra's Needle, brought over to England at
-great cost of money and life, and set up here in 1878.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: CROCKFORD'S FISH SHOP.]
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
- THE NORTH SIDE OF THE STRAND, FROM TEMPLE BAR TO CHARING CROSS, WITH
- DIGRESSIONS ON THE SOUTH.
-
-
-The upper stratum of the Strand soil is composed of a reddish yellow
-earth, containing coprolites. Below this runs a seam of leaden-coloured
-clay, mixed with a few martial pyrites, calcined-looking lumps of iron
-and sulphur with a bright silvery fracture.
-
-A petition of the inhabitants of the vicinity of the King's Palace at
-Westminster (8 Edward II.) represents the footway from Temple Bar to their
-neighbourhood as so bad that both rich and poor men received constant
-damage, especially in the rainy season, the footway being interrupted by
-_bushes and thickets_. A tax was accordingly levied for the purpose, and
-the mayor and sheriffs of London and the bailiff of Westminster were
-appointed overseers of the repairs.
-
-In the 27th of Edward III. the Knights Templars were called upon to
-repair[254] "the bridge of the new Temple," where the lords who attended
-Parliament took water on their way from the City. Workmen constructing a
-new sewer in the Strand, in 1802, discovered, eastward of St.
-Clement's,[255] a small, one-arched stone bridge, supposed to be the one
-above alluded to, unless it was an arch thrown over some gully when the
-Strand was a mere bridle-road.
-
-In James I.'s time, Middleton, the dramatist, describes a lawyer as
-embracing a young spendthrift, and urging him to riot and excess, telling
-him to make acquaintance with the Inns of Court gallants, and keep rank
-with those that spent most; to be lofty and liberal; to lodge in the
-Strand; in any case, to be remote from the handicraft scent of the
-City.[256]
-
-It is but right to remind the reader that within the last few years the
-whole of that part of the north side of the Strand lying between Temple
-Bar and St. Clement's Inn, including what was once known as Pickett
-Street, and extending backward almost as far as Lincoln's Inn, has been
-demolished, in order to make room for the new Law Courts, which are now
-fast rising towards completion.
-
-The house which immediately adjoined Temple Bar on the north side, to the
-last a bookseller's, stood on the site of a small pent-house of lath and
-plaster, occupied for many years by Crockford as a shell-fish shop. Here
-this man made a large sum of money, with which he established a gambling
-club, called by his name, on the west side of St. James's Street. It was
-shut up at Crockford's death in 1844, and, having passed through sundry
-phases, is now the Devonshire Club. Crockford would never alter his shop
-in his lifetime; but at his death the quaint pent-house and James I.
-gable[257] were removed, and a yellow brick front erected.
-
-That great engraver, William Faithorne, after being taken prisoner as a
-Royalist at Basing in the Civil Wars, went to France, where he was
-patronised by the Abbé de Marolles. He returned about 1650, and set up a
-shop--where he sold Italian, Dutch, and English prints, and worked for
-booksellers--without Temple Bar, at the sign of the Ship, next the Drake
-and opposite the Palsgrave Head Tavern. He lived here till after 1680.
-Grief for his son's misfortunes induced consumption, of which he died in
-1691. Flatman wrote verses to his memory. _Lady Paston_ is thought his
-_chef d'oeuvre_.[258]
-
-Ship Yard, now swept away, had been granted to Sir Christopher Hatton in
-1571. Wilkinson gives a fine sketch of an old gable-ended house in Ship
-Yard, supposed to have been the residence of Elias Ashmole, the celebrated
-antiquarian. Here, probably, he stored his alchemic books and those
-treasures of the Tradescants which he gave to Oxford.
-
-In 1813 sundry improvements projected by Alderman Pickett led to the
-removal of one of the greatest eye-sores in London--Butcher Row. This
-street of ragged lazar-houses extended in a line from Wych Street to
-Temple Bar. They were overhanging, drunken-looking, tottering
-tenements,[259] receptacles of filth, and invitations to the cholera. In
-Dr. Johnson's time they were mostly eating-houses.
-
-This stack of buildings on the west side of Temple Bar was in the form of
-an acute-angled triangle; the eastern point, nearest the Bar, was formed
-latterly by a shoemaker's and a fishmonger's shop, with wide fronts; its
-western point being blunted by the intersection of St. Clement's
-vestry-room and almshouse. On both sides of it resided bakers, dyers,
-smiths, combmakers, and tinplate-workers.
-
-The decayed street had been a flesh-market since Queen Elizabeth's time,
-when it flourished. A scalemaker's, a fine-drawer's, and Betty's
-chophouse, were all to be found there.[260] The whole stack was built of
-wood, and was probably of about the age of Edward VI. The ceilings were
-low, traversed by huge unwrought beams, and dimly lit by small casement
-windows. The upper stories overhung the lower, according to the old London
-plan of widening the footway.
-
-It was at Clifton's Eating-house, in Butcher Row, in 1763, that that
-admirable gossip and useful parasite, Boswell, with a tremor of foolish
-horror, heard Dr. Johnson disputing with a petulant Irishman about the
-cause of negroes being black.
-
-"Why, sir," said Johnson, with judicial grandeur, "it has been accounted
-for in three ways--either by supposing that they were the posterity of
-Ham, who was cursed; or that God first created two kinds of men, one black
-and the other white; or that by the heat of the sun the skin is scorched,
-and so acquires a sooty hue. This matter has been much canvassed among
-naturalists, but has never been brought to any certain issue."[261]
-
-What the Irishman's arguments were, Boswell of course forgot, but as his
-antagonist became warm and intemperate, Johnson rose and quietly walked
-away. When he had retired, the Irishman said--"He has a most ungainly
-figure, and an affectation of pomposity unworthy of a man of genius."
-(This very same evening Boswell and his deity first supped together at the
-Mitre.) It was here, many years later, that Johnson spent pleasant
-evenings with his old college friend Edwards,[262] whom he had not seen
-since the golden days of youth. Edwards, a good, dull, simple-hearted
-fellow, talked of their age. "Don't let us discourage one another," said
-Johnson, with quiet reproof. It was this same worthy fellow who amused
-Burke at the club by saying--"You are a philosopher, Dr. Johnson. I have
-tried in my time to be a philosopher too, but I don't know how it was,
-cheerfulness was always breaking in." This was a wise blunder, worthy of
-Goldsmith, the prince of wise blunderers.
-
-It was in staggering home from the Bear and Harrow in Butcher Row, through
-Clare Market, that Lee, the poet, lay down or fell on a bulk, and was
-stifled in the snow (1692).
-
-Nat Lee was the son of a Hertfordshire rector; a pupil of Dr. Busby, a
-coadjutor of Dryden, and an unsuccessful actor. He drank himself into
-Bedlam, where, says Oldys, he wrote a play in twenty-five acts.[263] Two
-of his maddest lines were--
-
- "I've seen an unscrewed spider spin a thought
- And walk away upon the wings of angels."
-
-The Duke of Buckingham, who brought Lee up to town,[264] neglected him,
-and his extreme poverty no doubt drove him faster to Moorfields. Poor
-fellow! he was only thirty-five when he died. He is described as
-stout,[265] handsome, and red faced. The Earl of Pembroke, whose daughter
-married a son of the brutal Judge Jefferies, was Lee's chief patron. The
-poet, when visiting him at Wilton, drank so hard that the butler is said
-to have been afraid he would empty the cellar. Lee's poetry, though noisy
-and ranting, is full of true poetic fire,[266] and in tenderness and
-passion the critics of his time compared him to Ovid and Otway.
-
-Thanks to the alderman, whose name is forgotten, though it well deserved
-to live,--the streets, lanes, and alleys which once blocked up St.
-Clement's Church, like so many beggars crowding round a rich man's door,
-were swept away, and the present oval railing erected. The enlightened
-Corporation at the same time built the big, dingy gateway of Clement's
-Inn--people at the time called it "stupendous;"[267] and to it were added
-the restored vestry-room and almshouse. The south side of the Strand was
-also rebuilt, with loftier and more spacious shops. In the reign of Edward
-VI. this beginning of the Strand had been a mere loosely-built suburban
-street, the southern houses, then well inhabited, boasting large gardens.
-
-There is a fatality attending some parts of London. In spite of Alderman
-Pickett and his stupendous arch of stucco, the new houses on the north
-side did not take well. They were found to be too large and expensive;
-they became under-let,[268] and began by degrees to relapse into their old
-Butcher Row squalor; the tide of humanity setting in towards Westminster
-flowing away from them to the left. As in some rivers the current, for no
-obvious reason, sometimes bends away to the one side, leaving on the other
-a broad bare reach of grey pebble, so the human tide in the Strand has
-always, in order to avoid the detour of the twin streets (Holywell and
-Wych), borne away to the left.
-
-It is probable that Palsgrave Place, on the south side, just beyond
-Child's bank, in Temple Bar without, marks the site of the Old Palsgrave's
-Head Tavern. The Palsgrave was that German prince who was afterwards King
-of Bohemia, and who married the daughter of James I.
-
-No. 217 Strand, on the south side, was Snow's, the goldsmith. Gay has
-preserved his memory in some pleasant verses. It was, a few years ago, the
-bank of those most decent of defrauders, Strachan, Paul, and Bates, and
-through them proved the grave of many a fortune. Next to it, westwards,
-is Messrs. Twinings bank, and their still more ancient tea shop.
-
-The Crown and Anchor Tavern in the Strand (south side), afterwards the
-Whittington Club, and now the Temple Club, is described by Strype as a
-"large and curious house," with good rooms and other conveniences for
-entertainments.[269] Here Dr. Johnson occasionally supped with Boswell,
-and bartered his wisdom for the flattering Scotchman's inanity. In this
-same tavern the sultan of literature quarrelled with amiable but
-high-spirited Percy about old Dr. Mounsey; and here, when Sir Joshua
-Reynolds was gravely and calmly upholding the advantages of wine in
-stimulating and inspiring conversation, Johnson said, with good-natured
-irony, "I have heard none of these drunken--nay, drunken is a coarse
-word--none of these _vinous flights_!"[270]
-
-St. Clement's is one of Wren's fifty churches, and it was built by Edward
-Pierce, under Wren's superintendence.[271] It took the place of an old
-church mentioned by Stow, that had become old and ruinous, and was taken
-down circa 1682, during the epidemic for church-building after the Great
-Fire.
-
-This church has many enemies and few friends. One of its bitterest haters
-calls it a "disgusting fabric," obtruded dangerously and inconveniently
-upon the street. A second opponent describes the steeple as fantastic, the
-portico clumsy and heavy, and the whole pile poor and unmeaning. Even
-Leigh Hunt abuses it as "incongruous and ungainly."[272]
-
-There have been great antiquarian discussions as to why the church is
-called St. Clement's "Danes." Some think there was once a massacre of the
-Danes in this part of the road to Westminster; others declare that Harold
-Harefoot was buried in the old church; some assert that the Danes, driven
-out of London by Alfred, were allowed to settle between Thorney Island
-(Westminster) and Ludgate, and built a church in the Strand; so, at
-least, we learn, Recorder Fleetwood told Treasurer Burleigh. The name of
-Saint Clement was taken from the patron saint of Pope Clement III., the
-friend of the Templars, who dwelt on the frontier line of the City.
-
-In 1725 there was a great ferment in the parish of St. Clement's, in
-consequence of an order from Dr. Gibson, Bishop of London, to remove at
-once an expensive new altar-piece painted by Kent, a fashionable
-architectural quack of that day; who, however, with "Capability Brown,"
-had helped to wean us from the taste for yew trees cut into shapes, Dutch
-canals, formal avenues, and geometric flower-beds.
-
-Kent was originally a coach-painter in Yorkshire, and was patronised by
-the Queen, the Duke of Newcastle, and Lord Burlington. He helped to adorn
-Stowe, Holkham, and Houghton. He was at once architect, painter, and
-landscape gardener. In the altar-piece, the vile drawing of which even
-Hogarth found it hard to caricature, the painter was said to have
-introduced portraits of the Pretender's wife and children. The "blue
-print," published in 1725, was followed by another representing Kent
-painting Burlington Gate. The altar-piece was removed, but the nobility
-patronised Kent till he died, twenty years or so afterwards. We owe him,
-however, some gratitude, if, according to Walpole, he was the father of
-modern gardening.
-
-The long-limbed picture caricatured by Hogarth was for some years one of
-the ornaments of the coffee-room of the Crown and Anchor in the Strand.
-Thence it was removed to the vestry-room of the church, over the old
-almshouses in the churchyard. After 1803 it was transported to the new
-vestry-room on the north side of the churchyard.[273]
-
-In the old church Sir Robert Cecil, the first Earl of Salisbury, was
-baptized, 1563; as were Sir Charles Sedley, the delightful song-writer and
-the oracle of the licentious wits of his day, 1638-9; and the Earl of
-Shaftesbury, the son of that troublous spirit "Little Sincerity," and
-himself the author of the _Characteristics_.
-
-The church holds some hallowed earth: in St. Clement's was buried Sir John
-Roe, who was a friend of Ben Jonson, and died of the plague in the sturdy
-poet's arms.
-
-Dr. Donne's wife, the daughter of Sir George More, and who died in
-childbed during her husband's absence at the court of Henri Quatre, was
-buried here. Her tomb, by Nicholas Stone, was destroyed when the church
-was rebuilt. Donne, on his return, preached a sermon here on her death,
-taking the text--"Lo! I am the man that has seen affliction." John Lowin,
-the great Shaksperean actor, lies here. He died in 1653. He acted in Ben
-Jonson's "Sejanus" in 1605, with Burbage and Shakspere. Tradition reports
-him to have been the favourite Falstaff, Hamlet, and Henry VIII. of his
-day.[274] Burbage was the greatest of the Shaksperean tragedians, and
-Tarleton the drollest of the comedians; but Lowin must have been as
-versatile as Garrick if he could represent Hamlet's vacillations, and also
-convey a sense of Falstaff's unctuous humour. Poor mad Nat Lee, who died
-on a bulk in Clare Market close by, was buried at St. Clement's, 1692; and
-here also lies poor beggared Otway, who died in 1685. In the same year as
-Lee, Mountfort, the actor, whom Captain Hill stabbed in a fit of jealousy
-in Howard Street adjoining, was interred here.
-
-In 1713 Thomas Rymer, the historiographer of William III. and the compiler
-of the _Foedera_ and fifty-eight manuscript volumes now in the British
-Museum, was interred here. He had lived in Arundel Street. In 1729 James
-Spiller, the comedian of Hogarth's time, was buried at St. Clement's. A
-butcher in Clare Market wrote his epitaph, which was never used. Spiller
-was the original Mat of the Mint in the "Beggars' Opera." His portrait, by
-Laguerre, was the sign of a public-house in Clare Market.[275]
-
-In this church was probably buried, at the time of the Plague, Thomas
-Simon, Cromwell's celebrated medallist. His name, however, is not on the
-register.[276]
-
-Mr. Needham, who was buried at St. Clement's with far better men, was an
-attorney's clerk in Gray's Inn, who, in 1643, commenced a weekly paper. He
-seems to have been a mischievous, unprincipled hireling, always ready to
-sell his pen to the best bidder.
-
-It is not for us in these later days to praise a church of the Corinthian
-order, even though its southern portico be crowned by a dome and propped
-up with Ionic pillars. Its steeple of the three orders, in spite of its
-vases and pilasters, does not move me; nor can I, as writers thought it
-necessary to do thirty years ago,[277] waste a churchwarden's unreasoning
-admiration on the wooden cherubim, palm-branches, and shields of the
-chancel; nor can even the veneered pulpit and cumbrous galleries, or the
-Tuscan carved wainscot of the altar draw any praise from my reluctant
-lips.
-
-The arms of the Dukes of Norfolk and the Earls of Arundel and Salisbury,
-in the south gallery, are worthy of notice, because they show that these
-noblemen were once inhabitants of the parish.
-
-Among the eminent rectors of St. Clement's was Dr. George Berkeley, son of
-the Platonist bishop, the friend of Swift, to whom Pope attributed "every
-virtue under heaven." He died in 1798. It was of his father that Atterbury
-said, he did not think that so much knowledge and so much humility existed
-in any but the angels and Berkeley.[278]
-
-Dr. Johnson, the great and good, often attended service at St. Clement's
-Church. They still point out his seat in the north gallery, near the
-pulpit. On Good Friday, 1773, Boswell tells us he breakfasted with his
-tremendous friend (Dr. Levett making tea), and was then taken to church by
-him. "Dr. Johnson's behaviour," he says, "was solemnly devout. I never
-shall forget the tremulous earnestness with which he pronounced the awful
-petition in the Litany, 'In the hour of death and in the day of judgment,
-good Lord, deliver us.'"[279]
-
-Eleven years later the doctor writes to Mrs. Thrale, "after a confinement
-of 129 days, more than the third part of a year, and no inconsiderable
-part of human life, I this day returned thanks to God in St. Clement's
-Church for my recovery--a recovery, in my 75th year, from a distemper
-which few in the vigour of youth are known to surmount."
-
-Clement's Inn (of Chancery), a vassal of the Inner Temple, derives its
-name from the neighbouring church, and the "fair fountain called Clement's
-Well,"[280] the Holy Well of the neighbouring street pump.
-
-Over the gate is graven in stone an anchor without a stock and a capital C
-couchant upon it.[281] This device has reference to the martyrdom of the
-guardian saint of the inn, who was tied to an anchor and thrown into the
-sea by order of the emperor Trajan. Dugdale states that there was an inn
-here in the reign of Edward II.
-
-There is, indeed, a tradition among antiquaries, that as far back as the
-Saxon kings there was an inn here for the reception of penitents who came
-to the Holy Well of St. Clement's; that a religious house was first
-established, and finally a church. The Holy Lamb, an inn at the west end
-of the lane, was perhaps the old Pilgrims' Inn. In the Tudor times the
-Clare family, who had a mansion in Clare Market, appears to have occupied
-the site. From their hands it reverted to the lawyers. As for the well, a
-pump now enshrines it, and a low dirty street leads up to it. This is
-mentioned in Henry II.'s time[282] as one of the excellent springs at a
-small distance from London, whose waters are "sweet, healthful, and clear,
-and whose runnels murmur over the shining pebbles: they are much
-frequented," says the friend of Archbishop Becket, "both by the scholars
-from the school (Westminster) and the youth from the City, when on a
-summer's evening they are disposed to take an airing." It was seven
-centuries ago that the hooded boys used to play round this spring, and at
-this very moment their descendants are drinking from the ladle or
-splashing each other with the water, as they fill their great brown
-pitchers. The spring still feeds the Roman Bath in the Strand already
-mentioned.
-
- "For men may come, and men may go,
- But I flow on for ever."[283]
-
-The hall of St. Clement's Inn is situated on the south side of a neat
-small quadrangle. It is a small Tuscan building, with a large florid
-Corinthian door and arched windows, and was built in 1715. In the second
-irregular area there is a garden, with a statue of a kneeling black figure
-supporting a sun-dial on the east side.[284] It was given to the inn by an
-Earl of Clare, but when is unknown. It was brought from Italy, and is said
-to be of bronze, but ingenious persons having determined on making it a
-blackamoor, it has been painted black. A stupid, ill-rhymed, cumbrous old
-epigram sneers at the sable son of woe flying from cannibals and seeking
-mercy in a lawyers' inn. The first would not have eaten him till they had
-slain him; but lawyers, it is well known, will eat any man alive.[285]
-
-Poor Hollar, the great German engraver, lived in 1661 just outside the
-back door of St. Clement's, "as soon as you come off the steps, and out of
-that house and dore at your left hand, two payre of stairs, into a little
-passage right before you." He was known for "reasons' sake" to the people
-of the house only as "the Frenchman limner." Such was the direction he
-sent to that gossiping Wiltshire gentleman, John Aubrey.
-
-The inn has very probably reared up a great many clever men; but it is
-chiefly renowned for having fostered that inimitable old bragging twaddler
-and country magistrate, the immortal Justice Shallow. Those chimes that
-"in a ghostly way by moonlight still bungle through Handel's psalm tunes,
-hoarse with age and long vigils"[286] as they are, must surely be the same
-that Shallow heard. How deliciously the old fellow vapours about his wild
-times!
-
-"Ha, Cousin Silence, that thou hadst seen that that this knight and I have
-seen!--Ha, Sir John, said I well?"
-
-_Falstaff_--"We have heard the chimes at midnight, Master Shallow."
-
-_Shal._--"That we have, that we have, that we have; in faith, Sir John, we
-have; our watchword was--Hem, boys!--Come, let's to dinner; come, let's to
-dinner. Oh, the days that we have seen!--Come, come."[287]
-
-And before that, how he glories in the impossibility of being detected
-after bragging fifty-five years! This man, as Falstaff says, "lean as a
-man cut after supper out of a cheese-paring," was once mad Shallow, lusty
-Shallow, as Cousin Silence, his toady, reminds him.
-
-"By the mass," says again the old country gentleman, "I was called
-anything, and I would have done anything, indeed, and roundly too. There
-was I and little John Doit of Staffordshire, and black George Barnes of
-Staffordshire, and Francis Pickbone, and Will Squele, a Cotswold man: you
-had not four such swinge-bucklers in all the inns of court again."
-
-And thus he goes maundering on with dull vivacity about how he played Sir
-Dagonet in Arthur's Show at Mile End, and once remained all night
-revelling in a windmill in St. George's Fields.
-
-A curious record of Shakspere's times serves admirably to illustrate
-Shallow's boast. In Elizabeth's time the eastern end of the Strand was the
-scene of frequent disturbances occasioned by the riotous and unruly
-students of the inns of court, who paraded the streets at night to the
-danger of peaceable passengers. One night in 1582, the Recorder himself,
-with six of the honest inhabitants, stood by St. Clement's Church to see
-the lanterns hung out, and to try and meet some of the brawlers, the
-Shallows of that time. About seven at night they saw young Mr. Robert
-Cecil, the Treasurer's son, pass by the church and salute them civilly, on
-which they said, "Lo, you may see how a nobleman's son can use himself,
-and how he pulleth off his cap to poor men--our Lord bless him!" Upon
-which the Recorder wrote to his father, like a true courtier, making
-capital of everything, and said, "Your lordship hath cause to thank God
-for so virtuous a child."
-
-Through the gateway in Pickett Street, a narrow street led to New Court,
-where stood the Independent Meeting House in which the witty Daniel
-Burgess once preached. The celebrated Lord Bolingbroke was his pupil, and
-the Earl of Orrery his patron. He died 1712, after being much ridiculed by
-Swift and Steele for his sermon of _The Golden Snuffers_, and for his
-pulpit puns in the manner followed by Rowland Hill and Whitfield. This
-chapel was gutted during the Sacheverell riots, and repaired by the
-Government. Two examples of Burgess's grotesque style will suffice. On one
-occasion, when he had taken his text from Job, and discoursed on the "Robe
-of Righteousness," he said--
-
-"If any of you would have a good and cheap suit, you will go to Monmouth
-Street; if you want a suit for life, you will go to the Court of Chancery;
-but if you wish for a suit that will last to eternity, you must go to the
-Lord Jesus Christ and put on His robe of righteousness."[288] On another
-occasion, in the reign of King William, he assigned as a motive for the
-descendants of Jacob being called Israelites, that God did not choose that
-His people should be called _Jacobites_.
-
-Daniel Burgess was succeeded in his chapel by Winter and Bradbury, both
-celebrated Nonconformists. The latter of these was also a comic preacher,
-or rather a "buffoon," as one of Dr. Doddridge's correspondents called
-him. It was said of his sermons that he seemed to consider the Bible to be
-written only to prove the right of William III. to the throne. He used to
-deride Dr. Watts's hymns from the pulpit, and when he gave them out always
-said--
-
- "Let us sing one of Watts's whims."
-
-Bat Pidgeon, the celebrated barber of Addison's time, lived nearly
-opposite Norfolk Street. His house bore the sign of the Three Pigeons.
-This was the corner house of St. Clement's churchyard, and there Bat, in
-1740, cut the boyish locks of Pennant[289]. In those days of wigs there
-were very few hair-cutters in London.
-
-The father of Miss Ray, the singer, and mistress of old Lord Sandwich, is
-said to have been a well-known staymaker in Holywell Street, now
-Booksellers' Row. His daughter was apprenticed in Clerkenwell, from whence
-the musical lord took her to load her with a splendid shame. On the day
-she went to sing at Covent Garden in "Love in a Village," Hackman, who had
-left the army for the church, waited for her carriage at the Cannon
-Coffee-house in Cockspur Street. At the door of the theatre, by the side
-of the Bedford Coffee-house, Hackman rushed out, and as Miss Ray was being
-handed from her carriage he shot her through the head, and then attempted
-his own life[290]. Hackman was hanged at Tyburn, and he died declaring
-that shooting Miss Ray was the result of a sudden burst of frenzy, for he
-had planned only suicide in her presence.
-
-The Strand Maypole stood on the site of the present church of St. Mary le
-Strand, or a little northward towards Maypole Alley, behind the Olympic
-Theatre. In the thirteenth century a cross had stood on this spot, and
-there the itinerant justices had sat to administer justice outside the
-walls. A Maypole stood here as early as 1634[291]. Tradition says it was
-set up by John Clarges, the Drury Lane blacksmith, and father of General
-Monk's vulgar wife.
-
-The Maypole was Satan's flag-staff in the eyes of the stern Puritans, who
-dreaded Christmas pies, cards, and dances. Down it came when Cromwell went
-up. The Strand Maypole was reared again with exulting ceremony the first
-May day after the Restoration. The parishioners bought a pole 134 feet
-high, and the Duke of York, the Lord High Admiral, lent them twelve seamen
-to help to raise it. It was brought from Scotland Yard with drums, music,
-and the shouts of the multitude; flags flying, and three men bare-headed
-carrying crowns.[292] The two halves being joined together with iron
-bands, and the gilt crown and vane and king's arms placed on the top, it
-was raised in about four hours by means of tackle and pulleys. The Strand
-rang with the people's shouts, for to them the Maypole was an emblem of
-the good old times. Then there was a morris dance, with tabor and pipe,
-the dancers wearing purple scarfs and "half-shirts." The children laughed,
-and the old people clapped their hands, for there was not a taller Maypole
-in Europe. From its summit floated a royal purple streamer; and half way
-down was a sort of cross-trees or balcony adorned with four crowns and the
-king's arms. It bore also a garland of vari-coloured favours, and beneath
-three great lanterns in honour of the three admirals and all seamen, to
-give light in dark nights. On this spot, a year before, the butchers of
-Clare Market had rung a peal with their knives as they burnt an
-emblematical Rump.[293]
-
-In the year 1677 a fatal duel was fought under the Maypole, which had been
-snapped by a tempest in 1672.[294] One daybreak Mr. Robert Percival, a
-notorious duellist, only nineteen years of age, was found dead under the
-Maypole, with a deep wound in his left breast. His drawn and bloody sword
-lay beside him. His antagonist was never discovered, though great rewards
-were offered. The only clue was a hat with a bunch of ribbons in it,
-suspected to belong to the celebrated Beau Fielding, but it was never
-traced home to him. The elder brother, Sir Philip Percival, long after,
-violently attacked a total stranger whom he met in the streets of Dublin.
-The spectators parted them. Sir Philip could account for his conduct only
-by saying he felt urged on by an irresistible conviction that the man he
-struck at was his brother's murderer.[295]
-
-The Maypole, disused and decaying, was pulled down in 1713, when a new
-one, adorned with two gilt balls and a vane, was erected in its stead. In
-1718 the pole, being found in the way of the new church, was given to Sir
-Isaac Newton as a stand for a large French telescope that belonged to his
-friend Mr. Pound, the rector of Wanstead.
-
-Saint Mary-le-Strand was begun in 1714, and consecrated in 1723-4.[296] It
-was one of the fifty ordered to be built in Queen Anne's reign. The old
-church, pulled down by that Ahab, the Protector Somerset, to make room for
-his ill-omened new palace, stood considerably nearer to the river.
-
-Gibbs, the shrewd Aberdeen architect, who succeeded to Wren and Vanbrugh,
-and became famous by building St. Martin's Church, reared also St. Mary's.
-Gibbs, according to Walpole, was a mere plodding mechanic. He certainly
-wanted originality, simplicity, and grace. St. Mary's is broken up by
-unmeaning ornament; the pagoda-like steeple is too high,[297] and crushes
-the church, instead of as it were blossoming from it. One critic (Mr.
-Malton) alone is found to call St. Mary's pleasant and picturesque; but I
-confess to having looked on it so long that I begin almost to forget its
-ugliness.
-
-Gibbs himself tells us how he set to work upon this church. It was his
-first commission after his return from Rome. As the site was a very public
-one, he was desired to spare no cost in the ornamentation, so he framed it
-of two orders, making the lower walls (but for the absurd niches to hold
-nothing) solid, so as to keep out the noises of the street. There was at
-first no steeple intended, only a small western campanile, or bell-turret;
-but, eighty feet from the west front, there was to be erected a column 250
-feet high, crowned by a statue of Queen Anne. This absurdity was forgotten
-at the death of that rather insipid queen, and the stone still lying
-there, the thrifty parish authorities, unwilling to waste the materials,
-resolved to build a steeple. The church being already twenty feet from the
-ground, it was necessary to spread it north and south, and so the church,
-originally square, became oblong.
-
-Pope calls St. Mary's Church bitterly the church that--
-
- Collects "the _saints_ of Drury Lane."[298]
-
-Addison describes his Tory fox-hunter's horror on seeing a church
-apparently being demolished, and his agreeable surprise when he found it
-was really a church being built.[299]
-
-St. Mary's was the scene of a tragedy during the proclamation of the short
-peace in 1802. Just as the heralds came abreast of Somerset House, a man
-on the roof of the church pressed forward too strongly against one of the
-stone urns, which gave way and fell into the street, striking down three
-persons: one of these died on the spot; the second, on his way to the
-hospital; and the third, two days afterwards. A young woman and several
-others were also seriously injured. The urn, which weighed two hundred
-pounds, carried away part of the cornice, broke a flag-stone below, and
-buried itself a foot deep in the earth. The unhappy cause of this mischief
-fell back on the roof and fainted when he saw the urn fall. He was
-discharged, no blame being attached to him. It was found that the urn had
-been fastened by a wooden spike, instead of being clamped with iron.[300]
-
-The church has been lately refitted in an ecclesiastical style, and filled
-with painted windows. There are no galleries in its interior. The ceiling
-is encrusted with ornament. It contains a tablet to the memory of James
-Bindley, who died in 1818. He was the father of the Society of
-Antiquaries, and was a great collector of books, prints, and medals.
-
-New Inn, in Wych Street, is an inn of Chancery, appertaining to the Middle
-Temple. It was originally a public inn, bearing the sign of Our Lady the
-Virgin, and was bought by Sir John Fineux, Chief Justice of the King's
-Bench, in the reign of King Edward IV., to place therein the students of
-the law then lodged in St. George's Inn, in the little Old Bailey, which
-was reputed to have been the most ancient of all the inns of
-Chancery.[301]
-
-Sir Thomas More, the luckless minister of Henry VIII., was a member of
-this inn till he removed to Lincoln's Inn. When the Great Seal was taken
-from this wise man, he talked of descending to "New Inn fare, wherewith
-many an honest man is well contented."[302] Addison makes the second best
-man of his band of friends (after Sir Roger de Coverley) a bachelor
-Templar; an excellent critic, with whom the time of the play is an hour of
-business. "Exactly at five he passes through New Inn, crosses through
-Russell Court, and takes a turn at Wills's till the play begins. He has
-his shoes rubbed and his periwig powdered at the barber's as you go into
-the Rose."[303]
-
-Wych Street derives its name from the old name for Drury Lane--_via de
-Aldewych_. Till some recent improvements were effected in its tenants, it
-bore an infamous character, and was one of the disgraces of London.
-
-The Olympic Theatre, in Wych Street, was built in 1805 by Philip Astley, a
-light horseman, who founded the first amphitheatre in London on the garden
-ground of old Craven House. It was opened September 18, 1806, as the
-Olympic Pavilion, and burnt to the ground March 29, 1849. It was built out
-of the timbers of the captured French man-of-war, _La Ville de Paris_, in
-which William IV. went out as midshipman. The masts of the vessel formed
-the flies, and were seen still standing amidst the fire after the roof
-fell in. In 1813 it was leased by Elliston, and called the Little Drury
-Lane Theatre. Its great days were under the rule of Madame Vestris,[304]
-who, both as a singer and an actress, contributed to its success. More
-recently it was under the able and successful management of the late Mr.
-Frederick Robson. Born at Margate in 1821, he was early in life
-apprenticed to a copperplate engraver in Bedfordbury. He appeared first,
-unsuccessfully, at a private theatre in Catherine Street, and played at
-the Grecian Saloon as a comic singer and low comedian from 1846 to 1849.
-In 1853 he joined Mr. Farren at the Olympic. He there acquired a great
-reputation in various pieces--"The Yellow Dwarf," "To oblige Benson," "The
-Lottery Ticket," and "The Wandering Minstrel,"--the last being an old
-farce originally written to ridicule the vagaries of Mr. Cochrane.
-
-Lyon's Inn, an inn of Chancery belonging to the Inner Temple, was
-originally a hostelry with the sign of the Lion. It was purchased by
-gentlemen students in Henry VIII.'s time, and converted into an inn of
-Chancery.[305]
-
-It degenerated into a haunt of bill-discounters and Bohemians of all
-kinds, good and bad, clever and rascally, and remained a dim, mouldy place
-till 1861, when it was pulled down. Its site is now occupied by the Globe
-Theatre. Just before the demolition of the inn, when I visited it, a
-washerwoman was hanging out wet and flopping clothes on the site of Mr.
-William Weare's chambers.
-
-On Friday, 24th of October 1823, Mr. William Weare, of No. 2 Lyon's Inn,
-was murdered in Gill's Hill Lane, Hertfordshire, between Edgware and St.
-Alban's. His murderer was Mr. John Thurtell, son of the Mayor of Norwich,
-and a well-known gambler, betting man, and colleague of prize-fighters.
-Under pretence of driving him down for a shooting excursion, Thurtell shot
-Weare with a pistol, and when he leaped out of the chaise, pursued him
-and cut his throat. He then sank the body in a pond in the garden of his
-friend and probable accomplice, Probert, a spirit merchant, and afterwards
-removed it to a slough on the St. Alban's road. His confederate, Hunt, a
-public singer, turned king's evidence, and was transported for life.
-Thurtell was hanged at Hertford. He pleaded that Weare had robbed him of
-£300 with false cards at Blind Hookey, and he had sworn revenge; but it
-appeared that he had planned several other murders, and all for money.
-Probert was afterwards hanged in Gloucestershire for horse-stealing.
-
-At the sale of the building materials some Jews were observed to be very
-eager to acquire the figure of the lion that adorned one of the walls.
-There were various causes assigned for this eagerness. Some said that a
-Jew named Lyons had originally founded the inn; others declared that the
-lion was considered to be an emblem of the Lion of the tribe of Judah.
-Directly the auctioneer knocked it down the Jewish purchaser drew a knife,
-mounted the ladder, and struck his weapon into the lion. "S'help me, Bob!"
-said he, in a tone of disgust, "if they didn't tell me it was lead, and
-it's only stone arter all!"
-
-Gay, who speaks of the dangers of "mazy Drury Lane," gives Catherine
-Street a very bad character. He describes the courtesans, with their
-new-scoured manteaus and riding-hoods or muffled pinners, standing near
-the tavern doors, or carrying empty bandboxes, and feigning errands to the
-Change.[306] The street is now almost entirely occupied by newspaper
-publishers. The _Morning Herald_, the _Court Journal_, the _Naval and
-Military Gazette_, the _Gardener's Gazette_, the _Builder_, the _Weekly
-Register_, and the _Court Gazette_, all either are or have been published
-in Catherine Street. Scott's Sanspareil Theatre was opened here about 1810
-for the performance of operettas, dancing, and pantomimes.[307] In
-September 1741 a man named James Hall was executed at the end of Catherine
-Street.
-
-The Maypole close to St. Mary's Church is said to have been the first
-place in London where hackney coaches were allowed to stand. Coaches were
-first introduced into England from Hungary in 1580 by Fitzalan, Earl of
-Arundel; but for a time they were thought effeminate. The Thames watermen
-especially railed against them, as might be expected. In the year 1634, a
-Captain Baily who had accompanied Raleigh in his famous expedition to
-Guiana, started four hackney coaches, with drivers in liveries, at the
-Maypole; but as, in the year 1613, sixty hackney coaches from London[308]
-plied at Stourbridge fair, perhaps there had been coach-stands in the
-streets before Baily's time. In 1625 there were only twenty coaches in
-London; in 1666, under Charles II., the number had so increased that the
-king issued a proclamation complaining of the coaches blocking up the
-narrow streets and breaking up the pavement, and forbade coach-stands
-altogether.
-
-Peter Molyn Tempest, the engraver of "The Cries of London," published at
-the end of King William's reign, lived in the Strand opposite Somerset
-House. "The Cries" were designed by Marcellus Laroon, a Dutch painter
-(1653-1702), who painted draperies for Kneller.[309] He was celebrated for
-his conversation pieces and his knack of imitating the old masters.
-Tempest's quaint advertisement of the "Cries" in the _London Gazette_, May
-28 and 31, 1688, runs thus:--
-
-"There is now published the Cryes and Habits of London, lately drawn after
-the life in great variety of actions, curiously engraved upon fifty
-copper-plates, fit for the ingenious and lovers of art. Printed and sold
-by P. Tempest, over against Somerset House, in the Strand."
-
-The _Morning Chronicle_, whose office was opposite Somerset House, was
-started in 1770. It was to Perry, of the _Morning Chronicle_, that
-Coleridge, when penniless and about to enlist in a cavalry regiment, sent
-a poem and a request for a guinea, which he got. Hazlitt was theatrical
-critic to this paper, succeeding Lord Campbell in the post. In 1810 David
-Ricardo began his letters on the depreciation of the currency in the
-_Chronicle_. James Perry, whose career we have no room to follow, lived in
-great style at Tavistock House, the house afterwards occupied for many
-years by Mr. Charles Dickens. _The Sketches by Boz_ of Charles Dickens
-first appeared in the columns of the _Chronicle_. The last _Morning
-Chronicle_ appeared on Wednesday, March 19, 1862. Latterly the paper was
-said to have been in the pay of the Emperor of France.
-
-No. 346, at the east corner of Wellington Street, now the office of the
-_Law Times_, the _Queen_, and the _Field_, was Doyley's celebrated
-warehouse for woollen articles. Dryden, in his _Kind Keeper_, speaks of
-"Doyley" petticoats; Steele, in his _Guardian_,[310] of his "Doyley" suit;
-while Gay, in the _Trivia_, describes a "Doyley" as a poor defence against
-the cold.
-
-Doyley's warehouse stood on the ancient site of Wimbledon House, built by
-Sir Edward Cecil, son to the first Earl of Exeter, and created Viscount
-Wimbledon by Charles I. The house was burnt to the ground in 1628, and the
-day before the viscount had had part of his house at Wimbledon
-accidentally blown up by gunpowder. Pennant, when a boy, was brought by
-his mother to a large glass shop, a little beyond Wimbledon House; the old
-man who kept it remembered Nell Gwynne coming to the shop when he was an
-apprentice; her footman, a country lad, got fighting in the street with
-some men who had abused his mistress.[311]
-
-Mr. Doyley was a much respected warehouseman of Dr. Johnson's time, whose
-family had resided in their great old house, next to Hodsall the banker's,
-at the corner of Wellington Street, ever since Queen Anne's time. The
-dessert napkins called Doyleys derived their name from this firm. Mr.
-Doyley's house was built by Inigo Jones, and forms a prominent feature in
-old engravings of the Strand, as it had a covered entrance that ran out
-like a promontory into the carriage-way. It was pulled down about
-1782.[312] Mr. Doyley, a man of humour and a friend of Garrick and
-Sterne, was a frequenter of the Precinct Club, held at the Turk's Head,
-opposite his own house. The rector of St. Mary's attended the same club,
-and enjoyed the seat of honour next the fire.
-
-[Illustration: THE OLD ROMAN BATH, STRAND.]
-
-Not far from this stood the Strand Bridge, which crossed the street, and
-received the streams flowing from the higher grounds down Catharine Street
-to the Thames. Strand Lane, hard by on the south, famous still for its old
-Roman bath, passed under the arch, and led to a water stair or landing
-pier. Addison, in his bright pleasant way, describes landing there one
-morning with ten sail of apricot boats, after having put in at Nine Elms
-for melons, consigned by Mr. Cuffe of that place to Sarah Sewell and
-Company at their stall in Covent Garden.[313]
-
-The _Morning Post_, whose office is in Wellington Street, was started in
-1772; when almost defunct it was bought in 1796 by Daniel Stuart, and
-Christie the auctioneer, who gave only £600 for copyright, house, and
-plant. Coleridge, Southey, Lamb, Wordsworth, and Mackintosh all wrote for
-Stuart's paper. Coleridge commenced his political papers in 1797, and on
-his return from Germany (November 1799) joined the badly-paid staff, but
-refused to become a parliamentary reporter. Fox declared in the House of
-Commons that Coleridge's essays had led to the rupture of the peace of
-Amiens, an announcement which led to a pursuit by a French frigate, when
-the poet left Rome, where he then was, and sailed from Leghorn. Lamb wrote
-facetious paragraphs at sixpence a-piece.[314] The _Morning Post_ soon
-became second only to the _Chronicle_, and the great paper for
-booksellers' advertisements. It is mentioned by Byron as the organ of the
-aristocracy and of West End society, and it has maintained that position
-to the present time with little change.
-
-The _Athenæum_, whose office is in Wellington Street, is identified with
-the name of Mr. (afterwards) Sir C. Wentworth Dilke. He was born in 1789,
-and was originally in the Navy Pay Office. He bought the paper, which had
-been unsuccessful since 1828 under its originator, that shifty adventurer,
-Mr. J. S. Buckingham, and also under Mr. John Sterling. Under his care it
-gradually grew into a sound property, and became what it now is, the
-_Times_ of weekly papers. Its editor, Mr. Hervey, the author of many
-well-known poems, was replaced in 1853 by Mr. Hepworth Dixon, under whom
-it steadily throve, till his retirement in 1871.
-
-A little farther up the street is the office of _All the Year Round_, a
-weekly periodical which, in 1859, took the place of _Household Words_,
-started by Mr. Charles Dickens in 1850. It contains essays by the best
-writers of the day, graphic descriptions of current events, and continuous
-stories. Mrs. Gaskell, Mr. Wilkie Collins, Charles Reade, Lord Lytton,
-Mr. Sala, and Mr. Dickens himself, are among those who have published
-novels in its pages.
-
-The original Lyceum was built in 1765 as an exhibition-room for the
-Society of Arts, by Mr. James Payne, an architect, on ground once
-belonging to Exeter House. The society splitting, and the Royal Academy
-being founded at Somerset House in 1768, the Lyceum Society became
-insolvent. Mr. Lingham, a breeches-maker, then purchased the room, and let
-it out to Flockton for his Puppet-show and other amusements. About 1794
-Dr. Arnold partly rebuilt it as a theatre, but could not obtain a licence
-through the opposition of the winter houses.[315] It was next door to the
-shop of Millar the publisher.
-
-The Lyceum in 1789-94 was the arena of all experimenters--of Charles
-Dibdin and his "Sans Souci," of the ex-soldier Astley's feats of
-horsemanship, of Cartwright's "Musical Glasses," of Philipstal's
-successful "Phantasmagoria." Lonsdale's "Egyptiana" (paintings of Egyptian
-scenes, by Porter, Mulready, Pugh, and Cristall), with a lecture, was a
-failure. Here Ker Porter exhibited his large pictures of Lodi, Acre, and
-the siege of Seringapatam. Then came Palmer with his "Portraits," Collins
-with his "Evening Brush," Incledon with his "Voyage to India," Bologna
-with his "Phantascopia," and Lloyd with his "Astronomical Exhibition."
-Subscription concerts, amateur theatricals, debating societies, and
-schools of defence were also tried here. One day it was a Roman Catholic
-chapel; next day the "Panther Mare and Colt," the "White Negro Girl," or
-the "Porcupine Man" held their levee of dupes and gapers in its changeful
-rooms.[316]
-
-In 1809 Dr. Arnold's son obtained a licence for an English opera-house.
-Shortly afterwards the Drury Lane company commenced performing here, their
-own theatre having been burnt. Mr. T. Sheridan was then manager. In 1815
-Mr. Arnold erected the predecessor of the present theatre, on an enlarged
-scale, at an expense of nearly £80,000, and it was opened in 1816. In 1817
-the experiment of two short performances on the same evening was
-unsuccessfully tried. On April 1, 1818, Mr. Mathews, the great comedian,
-began here his entertainment called "Mail-coach Adventures," which ran
-forty nights.
-
-The Beef-steak Club was established in the reign of Queen Anne (before
-1709).[317] The _Spectator_ mentions it, 1710-11. The club met in a noble
-room at the top of Covent Garden Theatre, and never partook of any dish
-but beef-steaks. Their Providore was their president and wore their badge,
-a small gold gridiron, hung round his neck by a green silk riband.[318]
-Estcourt had been a tavern-keeper, and is mentioned in a poem of
-Parnell's, who was himself too fond of wine. He died in 1712. Steele gives
-a delightful sketch of him. He had an excellent judgment, he was a great
-mimic, and he told an anecdote perfectly well. His well-turned compliments
-were as fine as his smart repartees. "It is to Estcourt's exquisite talent
-more than to philosophy," says Steele, "that I owe the fact that my person
-is very little of my care, and it is indifferent to me what is said of my
-shape, my air, my manner, my speech, or my address. It is to poor Estcourt
-I chiefly owe that I am arrived at the happiness of thinking nothing a
-diminution of myself but what argues a depravity of my will."
-
-The kindly essay ends beautifully. "None of those," says the true-hearted
-man, "will read this without giving him some sorrow for their abundant
-mirth, and one gush of tears for so many bursts of laughter. I wish it
-were any honour to the pleasant creature's memory that my eyes are too
-much suffused to let me go on."
-
-Later, Churchill and Wilkes, those partners in dissoluteness and satire,
-were members of this social club. After Estcourt, that jolly companion,
-Beard the singer, became president of this jovial and agreeable company.
-
-It was an old custom at theatres to have a Beef-steak Club that met every
-Saturday, and to which authors and wits were invited. In 1749 Mr.
-Sheridan, the manager, founded one at Dublin. There were fifty or sixty
-members, chiefly noblemen and members of Parliament, and no performer was
-admitted but witty Peg Woffington, who wore man's dress, and was president
-for a whole season.[319]
-
-A Beef-steak Society was founded in 1735 by John Rich, the great
-harlequin, and manager of Covent Garden Theatre, and George Lambert, the
-scene-painter.[320] Lambert, being much visited by authors, wits, and
-noblemen, whilst painting, and being too hurried to go to a tavern, used
-to have a steak cooked in the room, inviting his guests to share his snug
-and savoury but hurried meal. The fun of these accidental and impromptu
-dinners led to a club being started, which afterwards moved to a more
-convenient room in the theatre. After many years the place of meeting was
-changed to the Shakspere Tavern, where Mr. Lambert's portrait, painted by
-Hudson, Reynolds's pompous master, was one of the decorations of the
-club-room.[321] They then returned to the theatre, but being burned out in
-1812, adjourned to the Bedford. Lambert was the merriest of fellows, yet
-without buffoonery or coarseness. His manners were most engaging, he was
-social with his equals, and perfectly easy with richer men.[322] He was
-also a great leader of fun at old Slaughter's artist-club.
-
-The club throve down to about 1869, when it was dissolved; steaks were
-perennial as a dish, whatever the wit may have been, to the last.
-Twenty-four noblemen and gentlemen, each of whom might bring a friend,
-partook of a five o'clock dinner of steaks in a room of their own behind
-the scenes at the Lyceum Theatre every Saturday from November till June.
-They called themselves "The Steaks," disclaimed the name of "Club," and
-dedicated their hours to "Beef and Liberty," as their ancestors did in the
-anti-Walpole days.[323]
-
-Their room was a little typical Escurial. The doors, wainscot, and floor,
-were of stout oak, emblazoned with gridirons, like a chapel of St.
-Laurence. The cook was seen at his office through the bars of a vast
-gridiron, and the original gridiron of the society (the survivor of two
-terrific fires) held a conspicuous position in the centre of the ceiling.
-This club descended lineally from Wilkes's and from Lambert's. To the end
-there was Attic salt enough to sprinkle over "the Steaks," and to justify
-the old epicure's lines to the club:--
-
- "He that of honour, wit, and mirth partakes,
- May be a fit companion o'er beef-steaks;
- His name may be to future times enrolled
- In Estcourt's book, whose gridiron's framed of gold."[324]
-
-Its gridiron and other treasures were sold by auction, and fetched
-fabulous prices.
-
-Dr. William King, the author of the above quoted verses, was an indolent,
-wrong-headed genius. Some three years after the Restoration he took part
-against the irascible Bentley in the dispute about the Epistles of
-Phalaris, satirised Sir Hans Sloane, and supported Sacheverell. He wrote
-_The Art of Cookery_, _Dialogues of the Dead_, _The Art of Love_, and
-_Greek Mythology for Schools_. Recklessly throwing up his Irish Government
-appointment, he came to London. There Swift got him appointed manager of
-the _Gazette_; but being idle, and fond of the bottle, he resigned his
-office in six months, and went to live at a friend's house in the garden
-grounds between Lambeth and Vauxhall. He died in 1712, in lodgings
-opposite Somerset House, procured for him by his relation, Lord Clarendon.
-He was buried in the north cloisters of Westminster Abbey, close to his
-master, Dr. Knipe, to whom he had dedicated his _School Mythology_.
-
-Mr. T. P. Cooke obtained some of his early triumphs at the Lyceum as
-Frankenstein, and at the Adelphi as Long Tom Coffin. His serious pantomime
-in the fantastic monster of Mrs. Shelley's novel is said to have been
-highly poetical. He made his début in 1804, at the Royalty Theatre, and
-soon afterwards left Astley's to join Laurent, the manager of the Lyceum.
-This best of stage seamen since Bannister's time was born in 1780, and
-died only recently.
-
-Madame Lucia Elizabeth Vestris had the Lyceum in 1847. This fascinating
-actress was the daughter of Francesco Bartolozzi, the engraver, and was
-born in 1797. She married the celebrated dancer, Vestris, in 1813, and in
-1813 appeared at the King's Theatre, in Winter's opera of "Proserpina." In
-1820, after a wild and disgraceful life in Paris, she appeared at Drury
-Lane as Lilla, Adela, and Artaxerxes, and exhibited the archness, and
-vivacity of Storace without her grossness. In a burlesque of "Don
-Giovanni," as "Paul" and as "Apollo," she was much abused by the critics
-for her wantonness of manner and dress, but she still won her audiences by
-her sweet and powerful contralto, and by her songs, "The Light Guitar" and
-"Rise, gentle Moon." Harley played Leporello to her under Mr. Elliston's
-management. After this she took to "first light comedy" and melodrama, and
-married Mr. Charles Mathews. The theatre was burnt down in 1830, and
-rebuilt soon afterwards. Madame Vestris herself died in 1856.
-
-"That little crowded nest" of shops and wild beasts,[325] Exeter Change,
-stood where Burleigh Street now stands, but extended into the main road,
-so that the footpath of the north side of the Strand ran directly through
-it.[326] It was built about 1681,[327] and contained two walks below and
-two walks above stairs, with shops on each side for sempsters, milliners,
-hosiers, etc. The builders were very sanguine, but the fame of the New
-Exchange (now the Adelphi) blighted it from the beginning;[328] the shops
-next the street alone could be let; the rest lay unoccupied. The Land Bank
-had rooms here. The body of the poet Gay lay in state in an upper room,
-afterwards used for auctions. In 1721 a Mr. Normand Corry exhibited here a
-damask bed, with curtains woven by himself; admission two shillings and
-sixpence. About 1780 Lord Baltimore's body lay here in state, preparatory
-to its interment at Epsom.
-
-This infamous lord, of unsavoury reputation, had married a daughter of the
-Duke of Bridgewater: he lived on the east side of Russell Square, and was
-notorious for an unscrupulous profligacy, rivalling even that of the
-detestable Colonel Charteris. In 1767 his agents decoyed to his house a
-young woman named Woodcock, a milliner on Tower Hill. After suffering all
-the cruelty which Lovelace showed to Clarissa, the poor girl was taken to
-Lord Baltimore's house at Epsom, where her disgrace was consummated. The
-rascal and his accomplices were tried at Kingston in 1768, but
-unfortunately acquitted through an informality in Miss Woodcock's
-deposition. The disgraced title has since become extinct.
-
-The last tenants of the upper rooms were Mr. Cross and his wild beasts.
-The Royal Menagerie was a great show in our fathers' days. Leigh Hunt
-mentions that one day at feeding time, passing by the Change, he saw a
-fine horse pawing the ground, startled at the roar of Cross's lions and
-tigers.[329] The vast skeleton of Chunee, the famous elephant, brought to
-England in 1810, and exhibited here, is to be seen at the College of
-Surgeons in Lincoln's Inn Fields. In 1826, after a return of an annual
-paroxysm, aggravated by inflammation of the large pulp of one of his
-tusks, Chunee became dangerous, and it was necessary to kill him. His
-keeper first threw him buns steeped in prussic acid, but these produced no
-effect. A company of soldiers was then sent for, and the monster died
-after upwards of a hundred bullets had pierced him. In the midst of the
-shower of lead, the poor docile animal knelt down at the well-known voice
-of his keeper, to turn a vulnerable point to the soldiers. At the College
-of Surgeons the base of his tusk is still shown, with a spicula of ivory
-pressing into the pulp.
-
-De Loutherbourg, after Garrick's retirement, left Covent Garden and
-exhibited his _Eidophusikon_ in a room over Exeter Change. The stage was
-about six feet wide and eight feet deep. The first scene was the view
-from One-tree Hill in Greenwich Park. The lamps were above the proscenium,
-and had screens of coloured glass which could be rapidly changed. His best
-scenes were the loss of the _Halsewell_ East Indiaman and the rising of
-Pandemonium. A real thunder-storm once breaking out when the shipwreck
-scene was going on, some of the audience left the room, saying that "the
-exhibition was presumptuous." Gainsborough was such a passionate admirer
-of the _Eidophusikon_ that for a time he spent every evening at
-Loutherbourg's exhibition.[330]
-
-Mr. William Clarke, a seller of hardware (steel buttons, buckles, and
-cutlery), was proprietor of Exeter Change for nearly half a century. He
-was an honest and kind man, much beloved by his friends, and known to
-everybody in Johnson's time. When he became infirm he was allowed by King
-George the special privilege of riding across St. James's Park to
-Buckingham Gate, his house being in Pimlico. He died rich.
-
-Another character of Clarke's age was old Thomson, a music-seller, and a
-good-natured humourist. He was deputy organist at St. Michael's, Cornhill,
-and had been a pupil of Boyce. His shop was a mere sloping stall, with a
-little platform behind it for a desk, rows of shelves for old pamphlets
-and plays, and a chair or two for a crony. Thomson furnished Burney and
-Hawkins with materials for their histories of music. It was said that
-there was not an air from the time of Bird that he could not sing. Poor
-soured Wilson used to be fond of sitting with Thomson and railing at the
-times. Garrick and Dr. Arne also frequented the shop.[331]
-
-The nine o'clock drum at old Somerset House and the bell rung as a signal
-for closing Exeter Change were once familiar sounds to old Strand
-residents: but alas! times are changed; and they are heard no more.
-
-It was in Thomson's shop that the elder Dibdin (Charles), together with
-Hubert Stoppelaer, an actor, singer, and painter, planned the Patagonian
-Theatre, which was opened in the rooms above. The stage was six feet wide,
-the puppet actors only ten inches high. Dibdin wrote the pieces, composed
-the music, helped in the recitations, and accompanied the singers on a
-small organ. His partner spoke for the puppets and painted the scenes.
-They brought out "The Padlock" here. The miniature theatre held about 200
-people.[332]
-
-Exeter Hall was built by Mr. Deering, in 1831, for various charitable and
-religious societies that had scruples about holding their meetings in
-taverns or theatres. It stands a little west of the site of the "old
-Change." The front, with its two massy plain Greek pillars, is a good
-instance of making the most of space, though it still looks as if it were
-riding "bodkin" between the larger houses. The building contains two
-halls--one that will hold eight hundred persons, and another, on the upper
-floor, able to hold three thousand. The latter is a noble room, 131 feet
-long by 76 wide, and contains the Sacred Harmonic Society's gigantic
-organ. There are also nests of offices and committee-rooms. In May the
-white neckcloths pour into Exeter Hall in perfect regiments.
-
-In the Strand, near Exeter House, lived the beautiful Countess of
-Carlisle, a beauty of Charles I.'s court, immortalised by Vandyke,
-Suckling, and Carew. She paid £150 a year rent, equal to £600 of our
-current money.[333]
-
-Exeter Street had no western outlet when first built; for where the street
-ends was the back wall of old Bedford House. Dr. Johnson, after his
-arrival with Garrick from Lichfield, lodged here, in a garret, at the
-house of Norris, a staymaker. In this garret Johnson wrote part at least
-of that sonorous tragedy, "Irene." He used to say he dined well and with
-good company for eightpence, at the Pine Apple in the street close by.
-Several of the guests had travelled. They met every day, but did not know
-each other's names. The others paid a shilling, and had wine. Johnson paid
-sixpence for a cut of meat (a penny for bread, a penny to the waiter),
-and was served better than the rest, for the waiter that is forgotten is
-apt also to forget.
-
-In Cecil's time Bedford House became known as Exeter House. From hence, in
-1651, Cromwell, the Council of State, and the House of Commons followed
-General Popham's body to its resting-place at Westminster.[334] It was
-while receiving the sacrament on Christmas Day at the chapel of Exeter
-House that that excellent gentleman, Evelyn, and his wife were seized by
-soldiers, warned not to observe any longer the "superstitious time of the
-Nativity," and dismissed with pity.
-
-In Exeter House lived that shifty and unscrupulous turncoat, Antony Ashley
-Cooper, Earl of Shaftesbury, the great tormentor of Charles II., and the
-father of the author of the _Characteristics_, who was born here 1670-1,
-and educated by the amiable philosopher Locke. "The wickedest fellow in my
-dominions," as Charles II. once called "Little Sincerity," afterwards
-removed hence about the time of the Great Fire to Aldersgate Street, in
-order to be near his City intriguers. After the Great Fire, till new
-offices could be built, the Court of Arches, the Admiralty Court, etc.,
-were held in Exeter House. The property still belongs to the Cecil family.
-
-That great statesman, Burleigh, Bacon's uncle, lived on the site of the
-present Burleigh Street. He was of birth so humble that his father could
-only be entitled a gentleman by courtesy. Slow but sure of judgment,
-silent, distrustful of brilliant men, such as Essex and Raleigh, he made
-himself, by unremitting skill, assiduity, and fidelity, the most trusted
-and powerful person in Queen Elizabeth's privy council. Here, fresh from
-his frets with the rash Essex, the old wily statesman pondered over the
-fate of Mary of Scotland, or strove for means to foil Philip of Spain and
-his Armada. Here also lived his eldest son, Sir Thomas Cecil, subsequently
-the second Lord Burleigh and Earl of Exeter, who died 1622, whose daughter
-married the heir of Lord Chancellor Hatton, the dancing chancellor.
-Burleigh Street replaced the old house in 1678, when Salisbury Street was
-built.
-
-The "Little Adelphi" Theatre was opened in 1806 under the name of the
-"Sans Souci" by Mr. John Scott, a celebrated colour-maker, famous for a
-certain fashionable blue dye. The entertainments (optical and mechanical)
-were varied by songs, recitations, and dances, the proprietor's daughter
-being a clever amateur actress. Its real success did not begin till 1821,
-when Pierce Egan's dull and rather vulgar book of London low life, _Tom
-and Jerry_, was dramatised--Wrench as Tom, Reeve as Jerry. Subsequently
-Power, the best Irishman that trod the boards in London, appeared here in
-melodrama. In 1826 Terry and Yates became joint lessees and managers.
-Ballantyne and Scott backed up Terry, Sir Walter being always eager for
-money. Scott eventually had to pay £1750 for the speculative printer; he
-seems from the outset to have entertained fears of Terry's failure.[335]
-Here Keely too made his first hit as Jemmy Green.
-
-In 1839 Mr. Rice, "the original Jim Crow," was playing at the
-Adelphi.[336] This Mr. Rice was an American actor who had studied the
-drolleries of the Negro singers and dancers, especially those of one Jim
-Crow, an old boatman who hung about the wharfs of Vicksburg, the same town
-on the Mississippi that has lately stood so severe a siege. He initiated
-among us negro tunes and negro dances. This was the fatal beginning of
-those "negro entertainments," falsely so called.
-
-In 1808 Mr. Mathews gave his first entertainment, "The Mail-coach
-Adventures," at Hull. Mr. James Smith had strung together some sketches of
-character, and written for him those two celebrated comic songs, "The Mail
-Coach" and "Bartholomew Fair." In 1818 Mr. Mathews, unfortunately for his
-peace of mind, sold himself for seven years to a very sharp practiser, Mr.
-Arnold, of the Lyceum, for £1000 a year, liable to the deduction of £200
-fine for any non-appearance. This becoming unbearable, Mr. Arnold made a
-new agreement, by which he took to himself £40 every night, and shared the
-rest with Mr. Mathews, who also paid half the expenses.[337] The shrewd
-manager made £30,000 by this first speculation. Rivalling Mr. Dibdin, the
-wonderful mimic appeared in plain evening dress with no other apparent
-preparation than a drawing-room scene, a small table covered with a green
-cloth, and two lamps. His first entertainment included "Fond Barney, the
-Yorkshire Idiot" and the "Song of the Royal Visitors," full of droll
-Russian names. In 1819 he produced "The Trip to Paris." In 1820 he brought
-out "The Country Cousins," with the two celebrated comic songs, "The White
-Horse Cellar," and "O, what a Town!--what a Wonderful Metropolis!" both
-full of the most honest and boisterous fun. In 1821 Peake wrote for him
-the "Polly Packet," introducing a caricature of Major Thornton, the great
-sportsman, as Major Longbow. The entertainment was called "Earth, Air, and
-Water," and contained the song of "The Steam-Boat."
-
-In 1824 Mr. Mathews gave his "Trip to America," with Yankee songs, negro
-imitations, and that fine bit of pathos, "M. Mallet at the Post-Office."
-In 1825 appeared his "memorandum Book," and in 1826 his "Invitations,"
-with the "Ruined Yorkshire Gambler (Harry Ardourly)," and "A Civic Water
-Party."
-
-In 1828 he opened the Adelphi Theatre in partnership with Mr. Yates,
-playing the drunken Tinker in Mr. Buckstone's "May Queen," and singing
-that prince of comic songs, "The Humours of a Country Fair," written for
-him by his son Charles. Mr. Moncrief wrote his "Spring Meeting for 1829,"
-and Mr. Peake his "Comic Annual for 1830." In 1831 his son Charles aided
-Mr. Peake in producing an entertainment, and again in 1832. In 1833 his
-health began to fail; he lost much money in bubble companies, and had an
-action brought against him for £30,000. In 1833 Mr. Peake and Mr. Charles
-Mathews wrote the "At Home." Subsequently the great mimic went to
-America, whence he returned in 1838, only to die a few months after.[338]
-
-Leigh Hunt praises Mr. Mathews's valets and old men, but condemns his
-nervous restlessness and redundance of bodily action. While Munden,
-Liston, and Fawcett could not conceal their voices, Mathews rivalled
-Bannister in his powers of mimicry. His delineation of old age was
-remarkable for its truthfulness and variety. Leigh Hunt confesses that
-till Mathews acted Sir Fretful Plagiary, he had ranked him as an actor of
-habits and not of passions, and far inferior to Bannister and Dowton; but
-the extraordinary blending of vexation and conceit in Sheridan's
-caricature of Cumberland proved Mathews, Mr. Hunt allowed, to be an actor
-who knew the human heart.[339]
-
-In 1820 Hazlitt criticised Mathews's third entertainment, "The Country
-Cousins," a mélange of songs, narrative, ventriloquism, imitations, and
-character stories. He had left Covent Garden on the ground that he had not
-sufficiently frequent opportunities for appearing in legitimate comedy.
-The severe critic says, "Mr. Mathews shines particularly neither as an
-actor nor a mimic of actors; but his forte is a certain general tact and
-versatility of comic power. You would say he is a clever performer--you
-would guess he is a cleverer man. His talents are not pure, but mixed. He
-is best when he is his own prompter, manager, performer, orchestra, and
-scene-shifter."[340]
-
-Hazlitt then goes on to accuse his "subject" of a want of taste, of his
-gross and often superficial surprises, and of his too restless disquietude
-to please. "Take from him," says Hazlitt, "his odd shuffle in the gait, a
-restless volubility of speech and motion, a sudden suppression of
-features, or the continued repetition of a cant phrase with unabated
-vigour, and you reduce him to almost total insignificance." It should be
-said that his "shuffle" was rather a "limp."
-
-As a mimic of other actors, the same writer says Mathews often failed. He
-gabbled like Incledon, entangled himself like Tait Wilkinson, croaked like
-Suett, lisped like Young, but he could make nothing of John Kemble's
-"expressive, silver-tongued cadences." He blames him more especially for
-turning nature into pantomime and grimace, and dealing too much with
-worn-out topics, like Cockneyisms, French blunders, or the ignorance of
-country people in stage-coaches, Margate hoys, and Dover packet-boats. In
-another place the severe critic, who could be ill-tempered if he chose,
-blames Mathews for many of his songs, for his meagre jokes, dry as
-scrapings of "Shabsuger cheese," and for his immature ventriloquism. "His
-best imitations," says Hazlitt, "were founded on his own observation, and
-on the absurd characteristics of chattering footmen, drunken coachmen,
-surly travellers, and garrulous old men. His old Scotchwoman, with her
-pointless story, was a portrait equal to Wilkie or Teniers, as faithful,
-as simple, as delicately humorous, with a slight dash of pathos, but
-without one particle of caricature, vulgarity, or ill-nature." His best
-broad jokes were these: the abrupt proposal of a mutton-chop to a man who
-was sea-sick, and the convulsive marks of abhorrence with which he
-received it; and the tavern beau who was about to swallow a lighted candle
-for a glass of brandy-and-water as he was going drunk to bed. Poor
-Wiggins, the fat, hen-pecked husband, who, unwieldy and helpless, is
-pursued by a rabble of boys, was one of his best characters. Hazlitt
-mentions also as a stroke of true genius his imitation of a German family,
-the wife grumbling at her husband returning drunk, and the little child's
-paddling across the room to its own bed at its father's approach.[341]
-
-Terry, who in 1825 joined partnership with Yates, and died in 1829, was a
-quiet, sensible actor, praised in his Mephistopheles, and even in King
-Lear. His Peter Teazle was inferior to Farren's, and his Dr. Cantwell came
-after Dowton's.
-
-Yates was born in 1797. He made his début at Covent Garden as Iago in
-1818. He was very versatile, and triumphed alternately in tragedy,
-comedy, farce, and melodrama. A critic of 1834 says, "Mr. Yates is
-occasionally capital, and always respectable. In burlesque he is
-excellent, but a little too broad, and given to an exaggeration which is
-sometimes vulgar. He is a better buck than fop, and a better rake than
-either, were he more refined."
-
-John Reeve was another of the Adelphi celebrities. He was born in 1799,
-and was originally a clerk at a Fleet Street banking-house. He appeared
-first at Drury Lane in 1819 as Sylvester Daggerwood. His imitations were
-pronounced perfect, and he soon rose to great celebrity in broad farce,
-burlesque, and the comic parts of melodrama. Lord Grizzle, Bombastes, and
-Pedrillo, were favourite early characters of his. He was considered too
-heavy for Caleb Quotem, and not quiet enough for Paul Pry. Liston excelled
-him in the one, and Harley in the other.
-
-Benjamin Webster was born at Bath in 1800. He took the management of the
-Haymarket in 1837, and built the New Adelphi Theatre in 1858. In melodrama
-Mr. Webster excels. His best parts are--Lavater, Tartuffe, Belphegor,
-Triplet, and Pierre Leroux in "The Poor Stroller." He is excellent in poor
-authors and strolling players, and achieved a great triumph in Mr. Watts
-Philips's play of "The Dead Heart." He is energetic and forcible, but he
-has a bad hoarse voice, and he protracts and details his part so
-elaborately as often to become tedious.
-
-In 1844 Madame Celeste, who in 1837 had appeared at Drury Lane on her
-return from America, was directress of the Adelphi. She then left and took
-the Lyceum, which she held until the close of 1860-1.
-
-The old Adelphi closed in June 1858. Although a small and incommodious
-house, it had long earned a special fame of its own. It began its career
-with "True Blue Scott," and went on with Rodwell and Jones during the "Tom
-and Jerry" mania, when young men about town wrenched off knockers, knocked
-down old men who were paid to apprehend thieves, and attended beggars'
-suppers. Under Terry and Yates, Buckstone and Fitzball produced pieces in
-which T. P. Cooke, O. Smith, Wilkinson, and Tyrone Power shone (this
-actor was drowned in 1841). There also flourished Wright, Paul Bedford,
-Mrs. Yates, and Mrs. Keeley, in "The Pilot," "The Flying Dutchman," "The
-Wreck Ashore," "Victorine," "Rory O'More," and "Jack Sheppard,"[342]--the
-last of these a play to be branded as a demoralising apotheosis of a
-clever thief.
-
-In 1844 Mr. Webster became proprietor of the Adelphi, and Madame Celeste,
-a good melodramatic actress, became the directress. Then was brought out
-that crowning triumph of the theatre, "The Green Bushes," by Mr.
-Buckstone--a tremendous success.
-
-Among the greatest "hits" at the Adelphi have been of later years Mr.
-Watts Philips's "Dead Heart," a powerful melodrama of the French
-Revolution period, Miss Bateman's "Leah," an American-German play of the
-old school, and "The Colleen Bawn," Mr. Boucicault's clever dramatic
-version of poor Gerald Griffin's novel, full of fine melodramatic
-situations.
-
-The old town house of the Earls of Bedford stood on the site of the
-present Southampton Street, and was taken down in 1704, in Queen Anne's
-reign. It was a large house with a courtyard before it, and a spacious
-garden with a terrace walk.[343] Before this house was built the Bedford
-family lived at the opposite side of the Strand, in the Bishop of
-Carlisle's inn, which, in 1598, was called Russell or Bedford House.[344]
-In 1704 the family removed to Bloomsbury. The neighbouring streets were
-christened by this family. Russell Street bears their family name, and
-Tavistock Street their second title.
-
-Garrick lived at No. 36 Southampton Street before he went to the Adelphi.
-In 1755, to give himself some rest, he brought out a magnificent ballet
-pantomime, called "The Chinese Festival," composed by "the great Noverre."
-Unfortunately for Garrick, war had just broken out between England and
-France, and the pit and gallery condemned the Popish dancers in spite of
-King George II. and the quality. Gentlemen in the boxes drew their swords,
-leaped down into the pit, and were bruised and beaten. The galleries
-looked on and pelted both sides. The ladies urged fresh recruits against
-the pit, and each fresh levy was mauled. The pit broke up benches, tore
-down hangings, smashed mirrors, split the harpsichords, and storming the
-stage, cut and slashed the scenery.[345] The rioters then sallied out to
-Mr. Garrick's house (now Eastey's Hotel) in Southampton Street, and broke
-every window from basement to garret.
-
-Mrs. Oldfield, who lived in Southampton Street, was the daughter of an
-officer, and so reduced as to be obliged to live with a relation who kept
-the Mitre Tavern in St. James's Market. She was overheard by Mr. Farquhar
-reading a comedy, and recommended by him to Sir John Vanbrugh. She was
-excellent as Lady Brute and also as Lady Townley. She died in 1730; her
-body lay in state in the Jerusalem Chamber, and was afterwards buried in
-the Abbey. Lord Hervey and Bubb Doddington supported her pall. Her corpse,
-by her own request, was richly adorned with lace--a vanity which Pope
-ridiculed in those bitter lines--
-
- "One would not sure be ugly when one's dead;
- And, Betty, give this cheek a little red."
-
-In 1712 Arthur Maynwaring, in his will, describes this street as New
-Southampton Street.
-
-Bedford Street was first so named in 1766 by the Paving Commissioners. The
-lower part of the street was called Half-Moon Street; after the fire of
-London it became fashionable with mercers, lacemen, and drapers.[346] The
-lower part of the street is in the parish of St. Martin's in the Fields,
-the upper in that of St. Paul's, Covent Garden. In the overseers' accounts
-of St. Martin's mention is made of the names of persons who were fined in
-1665 for drinking on the Lord's Day at the Half-Moon Tavern in this
-street, also for carrying linen, for shaving customers, for carrying home
-venison or a pair of shoes, and for swearing. Sir Charles Sedley and the
-Duke of Buckingham were fined by the Puritans in 1657-58 for riding in
-their coaches on that day.[347] Ned Ward, the witty publican, in his
-_London Spy_, mentions the Half-Moon Tavern in this street.
-
-On the eastern side of the same street, in 1645, lived Remigius van
-Limput, a Dutch painter, who, at the sale of King Charles's pictures,
-bought Vandyke's florid masterpiece, now at Windsor, of the king on
-horseback. After the Restoration he was compelled to disgorge it. Had this
-grand picture been the portrait of any better king, Cromwell would not
-have parted with it.
-
-The witty bulky Quin lived here from 1749 to 1752. It was in 1749 that
-this great tragedian, reappearing after a retirement, performed in his
-friend Thomson's posthumous play of "Coriolanus." Good-natured Quin had
-once rescued the fat lazy poet from a sponging-house. It was about this
-time that the great elocutionist was instructing Prince George in
-recitation. When, afterwards, as king, he delivered his first speech
-successfully in Parliament, the actor exclaimed triumphantly, "Sir, it was
-I taught the boy."
-
-On the west side, at No. 15, lived Chief "Justice" Richardson, the
-humourist. He died in 1635. The interior of the house is ancient. Sir
-Francis Kynaston, an esquire of the body to Charles I., and author of
-_Leoline and Sydanis_, lived in this street in 1637. He died in 1642. The
-Earl of Chesterfield, one of Grammont's gay and heartless gallants, lived
-in Bedford Street in 1656. In the same street, in his old age, at the
-house of his son, a rich silk-mercer, dwelt Kynaston, the great actor of
-Charles II.'s time, so well known for his female characters. Thomas
-Sheridan, the lecturer on elocution, the son of Swift's friend, and the
-father of the wit and orator, lived in Bedford Street, facing Henrietta
-Street and the south side of Covent Garden. Here Dr. Johnson often visited
-him. "One day," says Mr. Whyte, "we were standing together at the
-drawing-room window expecting Johnson, who was to dine with us.[348] Mr.
-Sheridan asked me could I see the length of the garden. 'No, sir.' 'Take
-out your opera-glass then: Johnson is coming, you may know him by his
-gait.' I perceived him at a good distance, walking along with a peculiar
-solemnity of deportment, and an awkward, measured sort of step. At that
-time the broad flagging at each side of the streets was not universally
-adopted, and stone posts were in fashion to prevent the annoyance of
-carriages. Upon every post, as he passed along, I could observe he
-deliberately laid his hand; but missing one of them, when he had got to
-some distance he seemed suddenly to recollect himself, and immediately
-returning back, carefully performed the accustomed ceremony, and resumed
-his former course, not omitting one, till he gained the crossing. This,
-Mr. Sheridan assured me, however odd it might appear, was his constant
-practice, but why or wherefore he could not inform me." This eccentric
-habit of Johnson, the result of hypochondriacal nervousness, is also
-mentioned by Boswell.
-
-[Illustration: EXETER CHANGE, 1821.]
-
-Richard Wilson, the great landscape-painter--"Red-nosed Dick," as he was
-familiarly called--was a great ally of Mortimer, "the English Salvator."
-They used to meet over a pot of porter at the Constitution, Bedford
-Street. Mortimer, who was a coarse joker, used to make Dr. Arne, the
-composer of "Rule Britannia," who had a red face and staring eyes, very
-angry by telling him that his eyes looked like two oysters just opened for
-sauce, and put on an oval side dish of beetroot.
-
-Close to the Lowther Arcade there is one of those large cafés that are
-becoming features in modern London. It was started by an Italian named
-Carlo Gatti. There you may see refugees of all countries, playing at
-dominoes, sipping coffee, or groaning over the wrongs of their native land
-and their own exile. No music is allowed in this large hall, because it
-might interfere with the week-day services at St. Martin's Church.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: TITUS OATES IN THE PILLORY.]
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-CHARING CROSS.
-
-
-On July 20, 1864, was laid the first stone of the great Thames Embankment,
-which now forms the wall of our river from Blackfriars to Westminster. A
-couple of flags fluttered lazily over the stone as a straggling procession
-of the members of the Metropolitan Board of Works moved down to the
-wooden causeway leading to the river. For two years about a thousand men
-were at work on it night and day. Iron caissons were sunk below the mud,
-deep in the gravel, and within ten feet of the clay which is the real
-foundation of London, and the Victoria Embankment rose gradually into
-being. It was opened by Royalty in the summer of 1870. This scheme,
-originally sketched out by Wren, was designed by Colonel Trench, M.P., and
-also by Martin the painter; but it was never carried out until the days of
-Lord Palmerston and the Metropolitan Board of Works. Its piers, its
-flights of steps, its broad highway covering a railway, its gardens, its
-terraces, are complete; and when the buildings along it are finished
-London may for the first time claim to compare itself in architectural
-grandeur with Nineveh, Rome, or modern Paris.
-
-Northumberland House, which faced Charing Cross, covering the site of
-Northumberland Avenue, was a good but dull specimen of Jacobean
-architecture; it was built by Henry Howard, Earl of Northampton, son of
-the poet Earl of Surrey, about 1605.[349] Walpole attributes the building
-to Bernard Jansen, a Fleming, and an imitator of Dieterling, and to Gerard
-Christmas, the designer of Aldersgate. Jansen probably built the house,
-which was of brick, and Christmas added the stone frontispiece, which was
-profusely ornamented with rich carved scrolls, and an open parapet worked
-into letters and other devices. John Thorpe is also supposed to have been
-associated in the work; and plans of both the quadrangles of this enormous
-palace are preserved among the _Soane MSS._[350] Jansen was the architect
-of Audley End, in Essex, one of the wonders of the age. Thorpe built
-Burghley. The front was originally 162 feet long, the court 82 feet
-square; as Inigo Jones has noted in a copy of _Palladio_ preserved at
-Worcester College, Oxford.
-
-The Earl of Northampton left the house by his will, in 1614, to his
-nephew, Thomas Howard, Earl of Suffolk, who died in 1626. This was the
-father of the memorable Frances, Countess of Essex and Somerset; and from
-him the house took the name of Suffolk House, till the marriage in 1642 of
-Elizabeth, daughter of Theophilus, second Earl of Suffolk, with Algernon
-Percy, tenth Earl of Northumberland, when it changed its name accordingly.
-
-Dorothy, sister of the rash and ungrateful Earl of Essex, whose violence
-and follies nothing less than the executioner's axe could cure, married
-the "wizard" Earl of Northumberland, as he was called, whom "she led the
-life of a dog, till he indignantly turned her out of doors." He was
-afterwards engaged in the Gunpowder Plot, being angry with the Government
-that had overlooked him. "His name was used and his money spent by the
-conspirators; one of his servants hired the vault, and procured the lease
-of Vineyard House. Thomas Percy, his kinsman and steward, supped with him
-on the very night of the plot. His servant, Sir Dudley Carleton, who hired
-the house, was thrust into the Tower, and the earl joined him there not
-long after; but Cecil was either unable or unwilling to touch his
-life."[351] Northumberland, with Cobham and Raleigh, had before this
-engaged in schemes with the French against the Government. Thomas Percy
-had been beheaded for plotting with Mary. Henry Percy had shot himself
-while in the Tower, on account of the Throckmorton Conspiracy. Compounding
-for a fine of £11,000, the earl devoted himself in the Tower to scientific
-and literary pursuits, and gave annuities to six or seven eminent
-mathematicians, who ate at his table. In 1611 he was again examined, and
-finally released in 1617. The king's favourite, Hay, afterwards Earl of
-Carlisle, had married the earl's daughter Lucy against his will, which so
-irritated him that he was with difficulty persuaded to accept his own
-release, because it was obtained through the intercession of Hay.
-
-Joceline Percy, son of Algernon, dying in 1670, without issue male,
-Northumberland House became the property of his only daughter Elizabeth
-Percy, the heiress of the Percy estates. Her first husband was Henry
-Cavendish, Earl of Ogle; her second, Thomas Thynne, of Longleat, in
-Wilts, who was shot in his coach in Pall Mall, on Sunday, February 12,
-1681-2; her third husband was Charles Seymour, the _proud_ Duke of
-Somerset, who married her in 1682. This lady was twice a widow and three
-times a wife before the age of seventeen.
-
-The "proud" duke and duchess lived in great state and magnificence at
-Northumberland House. The duchess died in 1722, and the duke followed in
-1748. He was succeeded by his eldest son, Algernon, Earl of Hertford, and
-the seventh Duke of Somerset, who was created Earl of Northumberland in
-1749, with remainder, failing issue male, to his son-in-law, Sir Hugh
-Smithson, who in 1766 was raised to the dukedom. The lion which country
-cousins for two centuries remember to have crowned the central gateway of
-the duke's house, represented the Percy crest. It is of this stiff-tailed
-animal, for the exact angle of the tail is treated by heralds as a matter
-of the most vital importance, that the old story imputed to Sheridan is
-told. Probably some audacious wit did once collect a London crowd by
-declaring that its tail wagged--but certainly it was not Sheridan.
-
-Tom Thynne, or, as he was called, "Tom of Ten Thousand," was shot at the
-east end of Pall Mall, opposite the Opera Arcade, by Borosky, a Polish
-soldier urged on by Count Königsmark, a Swedish adventurer, son of one of
-Gustavus's old generals, and who was enraged with Thynne for having just
-married the youthful widow of the Earl of Ogle, Lady Elizabeth Percy.
-Thynne was a favourite of the Duke of Monmouth. Shaftesbury had been
-lately released from the Tower, in spite of Dryden's onslaught on him as
-"Achitophel," on the foolish duke as "Absalom," and on Thynne as
-"Issachar," his wealthy western friend. The three murderers were hanged in
-Pall Mall, but their master strangely escaped, partly owing to the
-influence of Charles II. The count, who had shown great courage at Tangier
-against the Moors, and had boarded a Turkish galley at his eminent peril,
-died in 1686, at the battle of Argos in the Morea. His younger brother was
-assassinated at Hanover, on suspicion of an intrigue with Sophia of Zell,
-the young and beautiful wife of the Elector, afterwards George I. of
-England.[352]
-
-The Earl of Northampton, Surrey's son, who built Northumberland House (as
-Osborne, who loved scandal, says with Spanish gold), seems to have been an
-unscrupulous time-server, flatterer, and parasite. In 1596 he wrote to
-Burleigh, and spoke of his reverend awe at his lordship's "piercing
-judgment;" yet a year after he writes a plotting letter to Burleigh's
-great enemy, Essex, and says: "Your lordship by your last purchase hath
-almost enraged the dromedary that would have won the Queen of Sheba's
-favour by bringing pearls. If you could once be so fortunate in dragging
-old Leviathan (Burghley) and his rich tortuosum colubrum (Sir Robert
-Cecil), as the prophet termeth them, out of their den of mischievous
-device, the better part of the world would prefer your virtue to that of
-Hercules." The earl became a toady and creature of the infamous Carr, Earl
-of Somerset, and is thought to have died just in time to escape
-prosecution for the poisoning of Sir Thomas Overbury in the Tower.[353]
-
-It was shortly before Suffolk House changed its name that it became the
-scene of one of Lord Herbert of Cherbury's mad Quixotic quarrels. His
-chivalrous lordship had had sundry ague fits, which had made him so lean
-and yellow that scarce any man could recognise him. Walking towards
-Whitehall he one day met a Mr. Emerson, who had spoken very disgraceful
-words of Lord Herbert's friend, Sir Robert Harley. Lord Herbert therefore,
-sensible of the dishonour, took Emerson by his long beard, and then,
-stepping aside, drew his sword; Captain Thomas Scriven being with Lord
-Herbert, and divers friends with Mr. Emerson. All who saw the quarrel
-wondered at the Welsh nobleman, weak and "consumed" as he was, offering to
-fight; however, Emerson ran and took shelter in Suffolk House, and
-afterwards complained to the Lords in Council, who sent for Lord Herbert,
-the lean, yellow Welsh Quixote, but did not so much reprehend him for
-defending the honour of his friend as for adventuring to fight, being at
-the same time in such weak health.[354]
-
-Algernon, the tenth Earl of Northumberland, is called by Clarendon "the
-proudest man alive." He had been Lord High Admiral to King Charles I., and
-was appointed general against the Scotch Covenanters, but, being unable to
-take the command from ill health, gave up his commission. He gradually
-fell away from the king's cause, but nevertheless refused to continue High
-Admiral against the king's wish. He treated the Dukes of York and
-Gloucester and the Princess Elizabeth with "such consideration" that they
-were removed from his care, and from that time he turned Royalist again.
-
-Sir John Suckling refers to Suffolk House in his exquisite little poem on
-the wedding of Roger Boyle, Lord Broghill, with Lady Margaret Howard,
-daughter of the Earl of Suffolk. The well known poem begins--
-
- "At Charing-cross, hard by the way
- Where we (thou know'st) do sell our hay,
- There is a house with stairs."
-
-And then the gay and graceful poet goes on to sketch Lady Margaret--
-
- "Her lips were red, and one was thin,
- Compared with that was next her chin.
- Some bee had stung it newly."
-
-And then follows that delightful, fantastic simile, comparing her feet to
-little mice creeping in and out her petticoat.[355] Sir John was born in
-1609.
-
-The oldest part of Northumberland House was the Strand entrance. This was
-crowned, as stated above, by a frieze or balustrade of large stone
-letters, probably including the name and titles of the earl and the
-glorified name of the architect. At the funeral of Anne of Denmark, 1619,
-a young man, named Appleyard, was killed by the fall of the letter S[356]
-from the house, which was then occupied by the Earl of Strafford, Lord
-Treasurer. The house was originally only three sides of a quadrangle, the
-river side remaining open to the gardens; but traffic and noise
-increasing, the quadrangle was completed along the river side and the
-principal apartments. There is a drawing by Hollar of the house in his
-time, and another, a century later, by Canaletti. The new front towards
-the gardens was spoiled by a clumsy stone staircase, which was attributed
-to Inigo Jones, but probably incorrectly.
-
-The date, 1746, on the façade referred to the repairs made in that year,
-and the letters "A. S. P. N." stood for Algernon Somerset, Princeps
-Northumbriæ. The lion over the gateway was said to be a copy of one by
-Michael Angelo; it is now at Sion House, Isleworth. The gateway was
-covered with ornaments and trophies. Double ranges of grotesque pilasters
-enclosed eight niches on the sides, and there was a bow window and an open
-arch above the chief gate. Between each of the fourteen niches in the
-front there were trophies of crossed weapons, and the upper stories had
-twenty-four windows, in two ranges, and pierced battlements. Each wing
-terminated in a little cupola, and the angles had rustic quoins. The
-quadrangle within the gate was simpler and in better taste, and the house
-was screened from the river by elm trees.[357]
-
-There used to be a schoolboy tradition, prevalent at King's College in the
-author's time, that one of the niches in the front of Northumberland House
-was of copper and movable. So far the story was true; but the tradition
-went on to relate how, once upon a time, a certain enemy of the house of
-Percy obtained secret admission by this niche and murdered one of the
-dukes, his enemy. History is, however, fortunately, quite silent on this
-subject.
-
-In February 1762 Horace Walpole and a party of quality set out from
-Northumberland House to hear the ghost in Cock Lane that Dr. Johnson
-exposed, and that Hogarth and Churchill ridiculed with pen and pencil.
-The Duke of York, Lady Northumberland, Lady Mary Coke, and Lord Hertford,
-all returned from the Opera with Horace Walpole, then changed their dress,
-and set out in a hackney coach. It rained hard, and the lane and house
-were "full of mob." The room of the haunted house, small and miserable,
-was stuffed with eighty persons, and there was no light but one tallow
-candle. As clothes-lines hung from the ceiling, Walpole asked drily if
-there was going to be rope-dancing between the acts. They said the ghost
-would not come till 7 A.M., when only 'prentices and old women remained.
-The party stayed till half-past one. The Methodists had promised
-contributions, provisions were sent in like forage, and the neighbouring
-taverns and ale-houses were making their fortunes.[358]
-
-On May 14, 1770, poor Chatterton, who suffered so terribly for the
-deceptions of his ambitious boyhood, writes from the King's Bench (for the
-present) that a gentleman who knew him at the Chapter coffee-house, in
-Paternoster Row--frequented by authors and publishers--would have
-introduced him to the young Duke of Northumberland as a companion in his
-intended general tour, "but, alas! I spake no tongue but my own."[359] But
-this is taken from a most questionable work, full of fictions and
-forgeries. Its author was a Bristol man, who afterwards fled to America.
-He also wrote a series of Conversations with the poets of the Lake school,
-many of which are too obviously imaginary.
-
-On March 18, 1780, the Strand front of Northumberland House was totally
-destroyed by fire. The apartments of Dr. Percy, the Duke's kinsman and
-chaplain, afterwards Bishop of Dromore and editor of the _Reliques of
-Ancient Poetry_ were consumed; but great part of his library escaped.
-
-Goldsmith's simple-hearted ballad of _Edwin and Angelina_ was originally
-"printed for the amusement of the Countess of Northumberland." Two years
-after, Kenrick accused him in the papers of plagiarising it from Percy's
-pasticcio from Shakspere in the _Reliques_, which was probably written in
-1765.[360]
-
-It is probable that Goldsmith often visited Percy, when acting as chaplain
-at Northumberland House. Sir John Hawkins, indeed, describes meeting the
-poet waiting for an audience in an outer room. At his own audience Hawkins
-mentioned that the doctor was waiting. On their way home together,
-Goldsmith told Hawkins that his lordship said that he had read the
-_Traveller_ with delight, that he was going as Lord Lieutenant to Ireland,
-and should be glad, as Goldsmith was an Irishman, to do him any kindness.
-Hawkins was enraptured at the rich man's graciousness. But Goldsmith had
-mentioned only his brother, a clergyman there, who needed help. "As for
-myself," he added, bitterly, "I have no dependence on the promises of
-great men. I look to the booksellers for support; they are my best
-friends, and I am not inclined to forsake them for others." "Thus," says
-Hawkins, "did this idiot in the affairs of the world trifle with his
-fortunes and put back the hand that was held out to assist him." The earl
-told Percy, after Goldsmith's death, that had he known how to help the
-poet he would have done so, or he would have procured him a salary on the
-Irish establishment that would have allowed him to travel. Let men of the
-world remember that the poet a few days before had been forced to borrow
-15s. 6d. to meet his own wants.
-
-This conversation took place in 1765. In 1771, when Goldsmith was stopping
-at Bath with his good-natured friend Lord Clare, he blundered by mistake
-at breakfast time into the next door on the same Parade, where the Duke
-and Duchess of Northumberland were staying. As he took no notice of them,
-but threw himself carelessly on a sofa, they supposed there was some
-mistake, and therefore entered into conversation with him, and when
-breakfast was served up, invited him to stay and partake of it. The poet,
-hot, stammering, and irrecoverably confused, withdrew with profuse
-apologies for his mistake, but not till he had accepted an invitation to
-dinner. This story, a parallel to the laughable blunder in _She Stoops to
-Conquer_, was told by the duchess herself to Dr. Percy.
-
-It was probably of the first of these interviews that Goldsmith used to
-give the following account:--
-
-"I dressed myself in the best manner I could, and, after studying some
-compliments I thought necessary on such an occasion, proceeded to
-Northumberland House, and acquainted the servants that I had particular
-business with the duke. They showed me into an ante-chamber, where, after
-waiting some time, a gentleman, very elegantly dressed, made his
-appearance. Taking him for the duke, I delivered all the fine things I had
-composed, in order to compliment him on the honour he had done me; when to
-my fear and astonishment, he told me I had mistaken him for his master,
-who would see me immediately. At that instant the duke came into the
-apartment, and I was so confounded on the occasion that I wanted words
-barely sufficient to express the sense I entertained of the duke's
-politeness, and went away exceedingly chagrined at the blunder I had
-committed."[361]
-
-Dr. Waagen, the picture critic, seems to have been rather dazzled at the
-splendour of Northumberland House. He praises the magnificent staircase,
-lighted from above and reaching up through three stories, the white marble
-floors, the balustrades and chandeliers of gilt bronze, the cabinets of
-Florentine mosaic, and the arabesques of the drawing-room.[362] The great
-picture of the duke's collection was the Cornaro family, by Titian; I
-believe from the Duke of Buckingham's collection. It is a splendid
-specimen of the painter's middle period and golden tone. The faces of the
-kneeling Cornari are grand, simple, senatorial, and devout. There was also
-a Saint Sebastian, by Guercino, "clear and careful," and large as life; a
-fine Snyders and Vandyke; many copies by Mengs (particularly "The School
-of Athens"); and a good Schalcken, with his usual candlelight effect. The
-gem of all the English pictures was one by Dobson, Vandyke's noble pupil.
-It contained the portrait of the painter and those of Sir Balthasar
-Gerbier, the architect, and Sir Charles Cotterell. The colour is as rich
-and juicy as Titian's, the drapery learned and graceful, the faces are
-full of fire and spirit. Dobson died at the age of thirty-six. Sir Charles
-was his patron.[363] Vandyke is said to have disinterred Dobson from a
-garret, and recommended him to the king. Gerbier was a native of Antwerp,
-a painter, architect, and ambassador. This picture of Dobson was bought at
-Betterton's sale for £44.[364] The gallery of the Duke of Northumberland
-was removed in 1875, when the house was demolished, to Sion House.
-
-Northumberland House was connected with, at all events, one period of
-English history. In the year 1660, when General Monk was in quarters at
-Whitehall, the Earl of Northumberland, in the name of the nobility and
-gentry of England, invited him here to the first conference in which the
-restoration of the Stuarts was publicly talked of. Algernon Percy, the
-tenth earl, had been Lord High Admiral under Charles I.
-
-That staunch, brave, crotchety man, Sir Harry Vane the younger (the son of
-Lord Strafford's enemy), lived next door to Northumberland House,
-eastwards, in the Strand. The house in Charles II.'s time became the
-official residence of the Secretary of State, and Mr. Secretary Nicholas
-dwelt there, when meetings were held to found a commonwealth and put down
-that foolish, good-natured, incompetent Richard Cromwell. To the great
-Protector, Vane was a thorn in the flesh, for he wanted a republic when
-the nation required a stronger and more compact government. Oliver's
-exclamation, "Oh, Sir Harry Vane! Sir Harry Vane!--The Lord deliver me
-from Sir Harry Vane!" expresses infinite vexation with an impracticable
-person. Vane was a "Fifth-monarchy man," and believed in universal
-salvation. He must have been a good man, or Milton would never have
-addressed the sonnet to him in which he says--
-
- "Therefore, on thy firm hand Religion leans
- In peace, and reckons thee her eldest son."
-
-Sir Harry left behind him some very tough and dark treatises on prophecy,
-and other profound matters that few but angels or fools dare to meddle
-with.
-
-There is a foolish tradition that Charing Cross was so named originally by
-Edward I. in memory of his _chère reine_. Peele, one of the glorious band
-of Elizabethan dramatists, helped to spread this tradition. He makes King
-Edward say--
-
- "Erect a rich and stately carved cross,
- Whereon her statue shall with glory shine;
- And henceforth see you call it Charing Cross.
- For why?--the _chariest_ and the choicest queen
- That ever did delight my royal eyes
- There dwells in darkness."[365]
-
-The inconsolable widower, however, in spite of his costly grief, soon
-married again.
-
-The truth is, there are in England one or two Charings; one of them is a
-village thirteen miles from Maidstone. "_Ing_" means meadow in Saxon.[366]
-The meaning of "_Char_" is uncertain; it may be the contraction of the
-name of some long-forgotten landowner, "rich in the possession of
-dirt."[367] The Anglo-Saxon word _cerre_--a turn (says Mr. Robert
-Ferguson, an excellent authority), is retained in the name given in
-Carlisle and other northern towns to the chares, or _wynds_--small
-streets. In King Edward's time Charing was bounded by fields, both north
-and west. There has been a good deal of nonsense, however, written about
-"the pleasant village of Charing." In Aggas's map, published under
-Elizabeth, Hedge Lane (now Whitcombe Street) is a country lane bordered
-with fields; so is the Haymarket, and all behind the Mews up to St.
-Martin's Lane is equally rural.
-
-Horne Tooke[368] derives the word Charing from the Saxon verb _charan_--to
-turn; but the etymology is still doubtful, however much the river may bend
-on its way to Westminster. However, doubtless, the place was named
-Charing as far back as the Saxon times.
-
-It was Peele also who kept alive the old tradition of Queen Eleanor
-sinking at Charing Cross and rising again at Queenhithe. When falsely
-accused of _her crimes_, his heroine replies in the words of a rude old
-ballad well known in Elizabeth's time--
-
- "If that upon so vile a thing
- Her heart did ever think,
- She wished the ground might open wide,
- And therein she might sink.
-
- With that at Charing Cross she sank
- Into the ground alive,
- And after rose with life again,
- In London at Queenhithe."[369]
-
-The Eleanor crosses were erected at Lincoln, Geddington, Northampton,
-Stony Stratford, Woburn, Dunstable, St. Albans, Waltham, Cheap, and
-Charing. Three only now remain,--Northampton, Geddington, and Waltham.
-Charing Cross was probably the most costly; it was octagonal, and was
-adorned with statues in tiers of niches, which were crowned with
-pinnacles. It was begun by Master Richard de Crundale, "cementarius," but
-he died about 1293, before it was finished, and the work went on under the
-supervision of Roger de Crundale. Richard received about £500 for his
-work, exclusive of materials furnished him, and Roger £90: 7: 5. The stone
-was brought from Caen, and the marble steps from Corfe in Dorsetshire.
-Only one foreigner was employed on all the crosses, and he was a
-Frenchman. The Abbot Ware brought mosaics, porphyry, and perhaps designs
-from Italy, but there is no proof that he brought over Cavallini. A
-replica of the original cross, designed by Mr. Barry, has been erected at
-the west end of the Strand, opposite the Charing Cross Railway Station and
-Hotel.
-
-The cluster of houses at Charing acquired the name of Cross from the
-monument set up by Edward I. to the memory of his gentle, pious, and
-brave wife Eleanor, the sister of Alphonso, King of Castille. This good
-woman was the daughter of Ferdinand III., and after the death of her
-mother, heiress of Ponthieu. She bore to her fond husband four sons and
-eleven daughters, of whom only three are supposed to have survived their
-father.
-
-Queen Eleanor died at Hardley, near Lincoln, in 1290. The king followed
-the funeral to Westminster, and afterwards erected a cross to his wife's
-memory at every place where the corpse rested for the night. In the
-circular which the king sent on the occasion to his prelates and nobles,
-he trusts that prayers may be offered for her soul at these crosses, so
-that any stains not purged from her, either from forgetfulness or other
-causes, may through the plenitude of the Divine grace be removed.[370] It
-was Queen Eleanor who, when Edward was stabbed at Acre, by an emissary of
-the Emir of Joppa, according to a Spanish historian,[371] sucked the
-poison from the wounds at the risk of her own life.
-
-This warlike king, who subdued Wales and Scotland, who expelled the Jews
-from England, who hunted Bruce, hanged Wallace, and who finally died on
-his march to crush Scotland, had a deep affection for his wife, and strove
-by all that art could do to preserve her memory.
-
-Old Charing Cross was long supposed to have been built from the designs of
-Pietro Cavallini, a contemporary of Giotto. He is said to have assisted
-that painter in the great mosaic picture over the chief entrance of St.
-Peter's. But there is little ground for accepting the tradition as true,
-though asserted by Vertue, as we learn from Horace Walpole's 'Anecdotes.'
-Cavallini was born in 1279, and died in 1364. The monument to Henry III.
-at the Abbey, and the old paintings round the chapel of St. Edward are
-also attributed to this patriarch of art by Vertue.[372]
-
-Queen Eleanor had three tombs--one in Lincoln Cathedral, over her viscera;
-another in the church of the Blackfriars in London, over her heart; a
-third in Westminster Abbey, over the rest of her body. The first was
-destroyed by the Parliamentarians; the second probably perished at the
-dissolution of the monasteries; the third has escaped. It is a valuable
-example of the thirteenth century beau-ideal. The tomb was the work of
-William Torel, a London goldsmith. The statue is not a portrait statue any
-more than the statue of Henry III. by the same artist. Torel seems to have
-received for his whole work about £1700 of our money.[373]
-
-The beautiful cross, with its pinnacles and statues, was demolished in
-1647 under an order of the House of Commons, which had remained dormant
-for three years; and at the same time fell its brother cross in Cheapside.
-
-The Royalist ballad-mongers, eager to catch the Puritans tripping,
-produced a lively street song on the occasion, beginning--
-
- "Undone, undone the lawyers are,
- They wander about the town,
- Nor can find the way to Westminster,
- Now Charing Cross is down.
- At the end of the Strand they make a stand,
- Swearing they are at a loss,
- And chaffing say that's not the way,
- They must go by Charing Cross."
-
-The ballad-writer goes on to deny that the Cross ever spoke a word against
-the Parliament, though he confesses it might have inclined to Popery; for
-certain it was that it "never went to church."
-
-The workmen were engaged for three months in pulling down the Cross.[374]
-Some of the stones went to form the pavement before Whitehall; others were
-polished to look like marble, and were sold to antiquaries for
-knife-handles. The site remained vacant for thirty-one years.
-
-After the Restoration Charing Cross was turned into a place of execution.
-Here Hugh Peters, Cromwell's chaplain, and Major-General Harrison, the
-sturdy Anabaptist, Colonel Jones, and Colonel Scrope were executed. They
-all died bravely, without a doubt or a fear.
-
-Harrison was the son of a Staffordshire farmer, and had fought bravely at
-the siege of Basing; he had been major-general in Scotland; had helped
-Cromwell at the disbanding of the Rump; had served in the Council of
-State; and finally having expressed honest Anabaptist scruples about the
-Protectorate, had been imprisoned to prevent rebellion. Cromwell's son
-Oliver had been captain in Harrison's regiment.[375] As he was led to the
-scaffold some base scullion called out to the brave old Ironside, "Where
-is your good _old_ cause now?" Harrison replied with a cheerful smile,
-clapping his hand on his breast, "Here it is, and I am going to seal it
-with my blood." When he came in sight of the gallows he was transported
-with joy; his servant asked him how he did? He answered, "Never better in
-my life." His servant told him, "Sir, there is a crown of glory prepared
-for you."[376] "Yes," replied he, "I see." When he was taken off the
-sledge, the hangman desired him to forgive him. "I do forgive thee," said
-he, "with all my heart, as it is a sin against me," and told him he wished
-him all happiness; and further said, "Alas, poor man, thou dost it
-ignorantly; the Lord grant that this sin may not be laid to thy charge!"
-and putting his hand into his pocket he gave him all the money he had; and
-so parting with his servant, hugging him in his arms, he went up the
-ladder with an undaunted countenance. The cruel rabble observing him
-tremble in his hands and legs, he took notice of it, and said, "Gentlemen,
-by reason of some scoffing that I do hear, I judge that some do think I am
-afraid to die by the shaking I have in my hands and knees. I tell you
-_No_; but it is by reason of much blood I have lost in the wars, and many
-wounds I have received in my body, which caused this shaking and weakness
-in my nerves. I have had it this twelve years. I speak this to the praise
-and glory of God. He hath carried me above the fear of death, and I value
-not my life, because I go to my Father, and I am assured I shall take it
-again. Gentlemen, take notice, that for being an instrument in that cause
-(an instrument of the Son of God) which hath been pleaded amongst us, and
-which God hath witnessed to by many appeals and wonderful victories, I am
-brought to this place to suffer death this day, and if I had ten thousand
-lives I could freely and cheerfully lay them down all to witness to this
-matter."
-
-Then he prayed to himself with tears, and having ended, the hangman pulled
-down his cap, but he thrust it up and said, "I have one word more to the
-Lord's people. Let them not think hardly of any of the good ways of God
-for all this, for I have found the way of God to be a perfect way, and He
-hath covered my head many times in the day of battle. By my God I have
-leaped over a wall, by my God I have run through a troop, and by my God I
-will go through this death, and He will make it easy to me. Now, into thy
-hands, O Lord Jesus, I commit my spirit."
-
-After he was hanged they cut down this true martyr, and stripping him,
-slashed him open in order to disembowel him. In the last rigour of his
-agony this staunch soldier is said to have risen up and struck the
-executioner.
-
-Three days after, Carew and Cook were hanged at the same place, rejoicing
-and praying cheerfully to the last. As Cook parted from his wife he said
-to her, "I am going to be married in glory this day. Why weepest
-thou?--let them weep who part and shall never meet again."
-
-On the 17th, Thomas Scot perished at the same place. His last words
-were--"God engaged me in a cause not to be repented of--I say, in a cause
-not to be repented of."
-
-Jones and Scrope (both old men) were drawn in one sledge. Their grave yet
-cheerful and courageous countenances caused great admiration and
-compassion among the crowd. Observing one of his friend's children weeping
-at Newgate, Colonel Jones took her by the hand. He said, "Suppose your
-father were to-morrow to be King of France, and you were to tarry a little
-behind, would you weep so? Why, he is going to reign with the King of
-kings." When he saw the sledge, he said, "It is like Elijah's fiery
-chariot, only it goes through Fleet Street." The night before he suffered,
-he told a friend the only temptation he had was lest he should be too much
-transported, and so neglect and slight his life, so greatly was he
-satisfied to die in such a cause. Another friend he grasped in his arms
-and said, "Farewell! I could wish thee in the same condition as myself,
-that our souls might mount up to heaven together and share in eternal
-joys." To another friend he said, "Ah, dear heart! if we had perished
-together in that storm going to Ireland, we had been in heaven to welcome
-honest Harrison and Carew; but we will be content to go after them--we
-will go after." It is added that "the executioner, having done his part
-upon three others that day, was so surfeited with blood and sick, that he
-sent his boy to finish the tragedy on Colonel Jones."
-
-Hugh Peters was much afraid while in Newgate lest his spirits should fail
-him when he saw the gibbet and the fire, but his courage did not fail him
-in that hour of great need. On his way to execution he looked about and
-espied a man to whom he gave a piece of gold, having bowed it first, and
-desired him to carry that as a token to his daughter, and to let her know
-that her father's heart was as full of comfort as it could be, and that
-before the piece should come into her hands he should be with God in
-glory.
-
-While Cook was being hanged they made Peters sit within the rails to
-behold his death. While sitting thus, one came to him and upbraided the
-old preacher with the king's death, and bade him repent. Peters replied,
-"Friend, you do not well to trample upon a dying man: you are greatly
-mistaken--I had nothing to do in the death of the king."
-
-When Mr. Cook was cut down and about to be quartered, Colonel Turner told
-the sheriff's men to bring Mr. Peters nearer to see the body. By and by
-the hangman came to him, rubbing his bloody hands, and tauntingly asked
-him, "Come, how do you like this--how do you like this work?" To whom Mr.
-Peters calmly replied, "I am not, I thank God, terrified at it--you may do
-your worst."
-
-Being upon the ladder, he spoke to the sheriff and said, "Sir, you have
-here slain one of the servants of God before mine eyes, and have made me
-to behold it on purpose to terrify and discourage me, but God hath made it
-an ordinance to me for my strengthening and encouragement."
-
-When he was going to die, he said, "What, flesh! art thou unwilling to go
-to God through the fire and jaws of death? Oh! this is a good day. He is
-come that I have long looked for, and I shall soon be with Him in glory."
-And he smiled when he went away. "What Mr. Peters said further it could
-not be taken, in regard his voice was low at the time and the people
-uncivil."
-
-In May 1685 that consummate scoundrel Titus Oates came to the pillory at
-Charing Cross. He had been condemned to pay a thousand marks fine, to be
-stripped of his gown, to be whipped from Newgate to Tyburn, from Aldgate
-to Newgate, and to stand in the pillory at the Royal Exchange and before
-Westminster Hall. He was also condemned to stand one hour in the pillory
-at Charing Cross every 10th of August, and there an eye-witness describes
-seeing him in 1688.[377]
-
-In 1666 and 1667 an Italian puppet-player set up his booth at Charing
-Cross, and there and then probably introduced "Punch and Judy" into
-England. He paid a small rent to the overseers of St. Martin's parish, and
-is called in their books "Punchinello." In 1668 we learn that a Mr. Devone
-erected a small playhouse in the same place.[378]
-
-There is still extant a song written to ridicule the long delay in setting
-up the king's statue, and it contains an allusion to "Punch"--
-
- "What can the mistry be, why Charing Cross
- These five months continues still blinded with board?
- Dear Wheeler, impart--wee are all att a loss,
- Unless Punchinello is to be restored."[379]
-
-The royal statue at Charing Cross is the work of Hubert Le Soeur, a
-Frenchman and a pupil of the famous John of Bologna, the sculptor of the
-"Rape of the Sabines" in the Loggia at Florence. Le Soeur's copy of the
-"Fighting Gladiator," which is praised by Peacham in his "Compleat
-Gentleman," once at the head of the canal in St. James's Park, is now at
-Hampton Court. Le Soeur also executed the monuments of Sir George
-Villiers, and Sir Thomas Richardson the judge, in Westminster Abbey.
-
-The original contract for the brazen equestrian statue, a foot larger than
-life, is dated 1630. The sculptor was to receive £600. The agreement was
-drawn up by Sir Balthasar Gerbier for the purchaser, the Lord High
-Treasurer Weston. Yet the existing statue was not cast till 1633, and the
-above-mentioned agreement speaks of it as to be erected in the Lord
-Treasurer's garden at Roehampton; so that the agreement may not refer to
-the same work, although it certainly specifies that the sculptor shall
-"take advice of his Maj. riders of greate horses, as well for the shape of
-the horse and action as for the graceful shape and action of his Maj.
-figure on the same."[380]
-
-The present statue was cast in 1633, on a piece of ground near the church
-in Covent Garden, and not being actually erected when the Civil War broke
-out, it was sold by the Parliament to John Rivet, a brazier, living at
-"the Dial, near Holburn Conduit," with strict orders to break it up. But
-the man, being a shrewd Royalist, produced some fragments of old brass,
-and hid the statue underground till the Restoration. Rivet refusing to
-deliver up the statue after Charles's return, a replevin was served upon
-him to compel its surrender. The dispute, however, lasted many years, and
-he probably pleaded compensation. The statue was erected in its present
-position about 1674, by an order from the Earl of Danby, afterwards Duke
-of Leeds. Le Soeur died, it is supposed, before the statue was erected.
-
-Horace Walpole, who praises the "commanding grace of the figure," and the
-"exquisite form of the horse,"[381] incorrectly says, "The statue was made
-at the expense of the family of Howard, Lord Arundel, who have still the
-receipt to show by whom and for whom it was cast."
-
-There is still extant a very rare large sheet print of the statue,
-engraved in the manner and time of Faithorne, but without name or date.
-The inscription beneath it describes the statue as almost ten feet high,
-and as "preserved underground," with great hazard, charge, and care, by
-John Rivet, a brazier.[382]
-
-John Rivet may have been a patriot, but he was certainly a shrewd one. To
-secure his concealed treasure he had manufactured a large quantity of
-brass handles for knives and forks, and advertised them as being forged
-from the destroyed statue. They sold well; the Royalists bought them as
-sad and precious relics; the Puritans as mementos of their triumph. He
-doubled his prices, and still his shop was crowded with eager customers,
-so that in a short time he realised a considerable fortune.[383]
-
-The brazier, or the brazier's family, probably sold the statue to Charles
-II. at his restoration. The Parliament voted £70,000 for solemnising the
-funeral of Charles I., and for erecting a monument to his memory.[384]
-Part of this sum went for the pedestal, but whether the brazier or his kin
-were rewarded is not known. Charles II. probably spent most of the money
-on his pleasures.
-
-There is a fatality attending the verses of most time-serving poets.
-Waller never wrote a court poem well but when he lauded that great man,
-the Protector. When the statue of "the Martyr" was set up, _fourteen
-years_ after the Restoration--so tardy was filial affection--Waller wrote
-the following dull and unworthy lines about the statue of a faithless
-king:--
-
- "That the first Charles does here in triumph ride,
- See his son reign where he a martyr died,
- And people pay that reverence as they pass
- (Which then he wanted) to the sacred brass
- Is not th' effect of gratitude alone,
- To which we owe the statue and the stone;
- But Heaven this lasting monument has wrought,
- That mortals may eternally be taught
- Rebellion, though successful, is but vain,
- And kings so kill'd rise conquerors again.
- This truth the royal image does proclaim
- Loud as the trumpet of surviving fame."
-
-Andrew Marvell, one of the most powerful of lampoon writers, and the very
-Gillray of political satirists, wrote some bitter lines on the statue of
-the so-called Martyr at Charing Cross, lines which in an earlier reign
-would have cost the honest daring poet his ears, if not his head.
-
-There was an equestrian stone statue of Charles II. at Woolchurch
-(Woolwich?), and the poet imagines the two horses, the one of stone and
-the other of brass, talking together one evening, when the two riders,
-weary of sitting all day, had stolen away together for a chat.
-
- "WOOLCHURCH.--To see Dei gratia writ on the throne,
- And the king's wicked life says God there is none.
-
- CHARING.--That he should be styled Defender of the Faith
- Who believes not a word what the Word of God saith.
-
- WOOLCHURCH.--That the Duke should turn Papist and that church defy
- For which his own father a martyr did die.
-
- CHARING.--Tho' he changed his religion, I hope he's so civil
- Not to think his own father has gone to the devil."
-
-Upon the brazen horse being asked his opinion of the Duke of York, it
-replies with terrible truth and force:--
-
- "The same that the frogs had of Jupiter's stork.
- With the Turk in his head and the Pope in his heart,
- Father Patrick's disciple will make England smart.
- If e'er he be king, I know Britain's doom:
- We must all to the stake or be converts to Rome.
- Ah! Tudor! ah! Tudor! of Stuarts enough.
- None ever reigned like old Bess in her ruff.
-
- * * * * *
-
- WOOLCHURCH.--But can'st thou devise when kings will be mended?
-
- CHARING.--When the reign of the line of the Stuarts is ended."
-
-In April 1810 the sword, buckles, and straps fell from the statue.[385]
-The king's sword was stolen on the day on which Queen Victoria went to
-open the Royal Exchange.
-
-London has its local traditions as well as the smallest village. There is
-a foolish story that the sculptor of Charles I. and his steed committed
-suicide in vexation at having forgotten to put a girth to the horse. The
-myth has arisen from the supposition of there being no girth, and
-retailers of such stories, Mr. Leigh Hunt included, did not take the
-trouble to ascertain whether there was or was not a girth. Unfortunately
-for the story there is a girth, and it is clearly visible.
-
-The pedestal, by some assigned to Marshal, by others to Grinling Gibbons,
-the great wood-carver, and a Dutchman by birth, is seventeen feet high,
-and is enriched with the arms of England, trophies of armour, cupids, and
-palm-branches. It is erected in the centre of a circular area, thirty feet
-in diameter, raised one step from the roadway, and enclosed with iron
-rails. The lion and unicorn are much mutilated, and the trophies are
-honeycombed and corroded by the weather. It has not been generally
-observed that on the south side of the pedestal two weeping children
-support a crown of thorns, and that the same emblem is repeated on the
-opposite side, below the royal arms.
-
-In 1727 (1st George II.) that infamous rogue, Edmund Curll, the publisher
-of all the filth and slander of his age, stood in the pillory at Charing
-Cross for printing a vile work called _Venus in a Cloyster_. He was not,
-however, pelted or ill-used; for, with the usual lying and cunning of his
-reptile nature, he had circulated printed papers telling the people that
-he stood there for daring to vindicate the memory of Queen Anne. The mob
-allowed no one to touch him; and when he was taken down they carried him
-off in triumph to a neighbouring tavern.[386]
-
-Archenholz, an observant Prussian officer who was in England in 1784,
-tells a curious anecdote of the statue at Charing Cross. During the war in
-which General Braddock was defeated by the French in America, about the
-time when Minorca was in the enemy's hands, and poor Byng had just fallen
-a victim to popular fury, an unhappy Spaniard, who did not know a word of
-English, and had just arrived in England, was surrounded by a mob near
-Whitehall, who took him by his dress for a French spy. One of the rabble
-instantly proposed to mount him on the king's horse. The idea was adopted.
-A ladder was brought, and the miserable Spaniard was forced upon its back,
-to be loaded with insults and pelted with mud. Luckily for the stranger,
-at that moment a cabinet minister happening to pass by, stopped to inquire
-the cause of the crowd. On addressing the man in French he discovered the
-mistake, and informed the mob. They instantly helped the man down, and the
-minister, taking him in his coach to the Spanish ambassador, apologised in
-the name of the nation for a mistake that might have been fatal.[387]
-
-In June 1731 Japhet Crook, _alias_ Sir Peter Stranger, who had been found
-guilty of forging the writings to an estate, was sentenced to imprisonment
-for life.[388] He was condemned to stand for one hour in the pillory at
-Charing Cross. He was then seated in an elbow-chair; the common hangman
-cut off both his ears with an incision knife, and then delivered them to
-Mr. Watson, a sheriff's officer. He also slit both Crook's nostrils with a
-pair of scissors, and seared them with a hot iron, pursuant to the
-sentence. A surgeon attended on the pillory and instantly applied styptics
-to prevent the effusion of blood. The man bore the operations with
-undaunted courage. He laughed on the pillory, and denied the fact to the
-last. He was then removed to the Ship Tavern at Charing Cross, and thence
-taken back to the King's Bench prison, to be confined there for life.[389]
-
-This Crook had forged the conveyance, to himself, of an estate, upon which
-he took up several thousand pounds. He was at the same time sued in
-Chancery for having fraudulently obtained a will and wrongfully gained an
-estate. In spite of losing his ears, he enjoyed the ill-gained money in
-prison till the day of his death, and then quietly left it to his
-executor. He is mentioned by Pope in his 3d epistle, written in 1732.
-Talking of riches, he says--
-
- "What can they give?--to dying Hopkins heirs?
- To Chartres vigour? Japhet nose and ears?"[390]
-
-It was in this essay that, having been accused of attacking the Duke of
-Chandos, Pope first began to attack vices instead of follies, and, in
-order to prevent mistakes, boldly to publish the names of the malefactors
-whom he gibbeted.
-
-Crook had been a brewer on Tower Hill. The 2d George II., c. 25, made
-forgery a felony; and the first sufferer under the new law was Richard
-Cooper, a Stepney victualler, who was hanged at Tyburn, in June 1731, six
-days only after the older and luckier thief had stood in the pillory.
-
-In 1763 Parsons, the parish-clerk of St. Sepulchre's, and the impudent
-contriver of the "Cock Lane ghost" deception, mounted here to the same bad
-eminence. Parsons's child, a cunning little girl of twelve years, had
-contrived to tap on her bed in a way that served to convey what were
-supposed to be supernatural messages. It proved to be a plot devised by
-Parsons out of malice against a gentleman of Norfolk who had sued him for
-a debt. This gentleman was a widower, who had taken his wife's sister as
-his mistress--a marriage with her being forbidden by law--and had brought
-her to lodge with Parsons, from whence he had removed her to other
-lodgings, where she had died suddenly of small-pox. The object of Parsons
-was to obtain the ghost's declaration that she had been poisoned by
-Parsons's creditor. The rascal was set three times in the pillory and
-imprisoned for a year in the King's Bench. The people, however, singularly
-enough, did not pelt the impudent rogue, but actually collected money for
-him.
-
-There is a rare sheet-print of Charing Cross by Sutton Nicholls, in the
-reign of Queen Anne. It shows about forty small square stone posts
-surrounding the pedestal of the statue. The spot seems to have been a
-favourite standing-place for hackney coaches and sedan chairs. Every house
-has a long stepping-stone for horsemen at a regulated distance from the
-front.
-
-In 1737 Hogarth published his four prints of the "Times of the Day."[391]
-The scene of _Night_ is laid at Charing Cross; it is an
-illumination-night. Some drunken Freemasons and the Salisbury "High-flyer"
-coach upset over a street bonfire near the Rummer Tavern, fill up the
-picture, which is curious as showing the roadway much narrower than it is
-now, and impeded with projecting signs above and bulkheads below.
-
-The place is still further immortalised in the old song--
-
- "I cry my matches by Charing Cross,
- Where sits a black man on a black horse."
-
-In a sixpenny book for children, published about 1756, the absurd figure
-of King George impaled on the top of Bloomsbury Church is contrasted with
-that of King Charles at the Cross.
-
- "No longer stand staring,
- My friend, at Cross Charing,
- Amidst such a number of people;
- For a man on a horse
- Is a matter of course,
- But look! here's a king on a steeple."[392]
-
-It was at Robinson's coffee-house, at Charing Cross, that that clever
-scamp, vigorous versifier, and, as I think, great impostor, Richard
-Savage, stabbed to death a Mr. Sinclair in a drunken brawl. Savage had
-come up from Richmond to settle a claim for lodgings, when, meeting two
-friends, he spent the night in drinking, till it was too late to get a
-bed. As the three revellers passed Robinson's, a place of no very good
-name, they saw a light, knocked at the door, and were admitted. It was a
-cold, raw, November night; and hearing that the company in the parlour
-were about to leave, and that there was a fire there, they pushed in and
-kicked down the table. A quarrel ensued, swords were drawn, and Mr.
-Sinclair received a mortal wound. The three brawlers then fled, and were
-discovered lurking in a back-court by the soldiers who came to stop the
-fray. The three men were taken to the Gate House at Westminster, and the
-next morning to Newgate. That cruel and bullying judge, Page, hounded on
-the jury at the trial in the following violent summing up:--"Gentlemen of
-the jury, you are to consider that Mr. Savage is a very great man, a much
-greater man than you or I, gentlemen of the jury; that he wears very fine
-clothes, much finer than you or I, gentlemen of the jury; that he has
-abundance of money in his pocket, much more money than you or I, gentlemen
-of the jury; but, gentlemen of the jury, is it not a very hard case,
-gentlemen of the jury, that Mr. Savage should therefore kill you or me,
-gentlemen of the jury?"
-
-The verdict was of course "Guilty," for these homicides during tavern
-brawls had become frightfully common, and quiet citizens were never sure
-of their lives. Sentence of death was recorded against him. Eventually a
-lady at court interceded for the poet, who escaped with six months'
-imprisonment in Newgate, which he certainly well deserved.
-
-There is every reason to suppose from the researches of Mr. W. Moy Thomas,
-that Savage was an impostor. He claimed to be the illegitimate son of the
-Countess of Macclesfield by Lord Rivers. The lady had an illegitimate
-child born in Fox Court, Gray's Inn Lane in 1697; but this child, there
-is reason to think, died in 1698.[393] Savage imposed on Dr. Johnson and
-other friends with stories of being placed at school and apprenticed to a
-shoemaker in Holborn by his countess mother, until among his nurse's old
-letters he one day accidentally discovered the secret of his birth. There
-is no proof at all of his being persecuted by the countess, whose life he
-rendered miserable by insults, lampoons, abuse, slander, and begging
-letters.
-
-Pope has embalmed Page in the _Dunciad_ just as a scorpion is preserved in
-a spirit-bottle:--
-
- "Morality by her false guardians drawn,
- Chicane in furs, and Casuistry in lawn,
- Gasps as they straighten at each end the cord,
- And dies when Dulness gives her _Page_ the word."[394]
-
-And again, with equal bitterness and truth, in his _Imitations of
-Horace_:--
-
- "Slander or poison dread from Delia's rage,
- Hard words or hanging if your judge be Page."
-
-This "hanging judge," who enjoyed his ermine and his infamy till he was
-eighty, first obtained preferment by writing political pamphlets. He was
-made a Baron of the Exchequer in 1718, a Justice of the Common Pleas in
-1726, and in 1727 transferred to the Court of King's Bench. Page was so
-illiterate that he commenced one of his charges to the grand jury of
-Middlesex with this remarkable statement: "I dare venture to affirm,
-gentlemen, on my own knowledge, that England never was so happy, both _at
-home and abroad_, as it now is." Horace Walpole mentions that when Crowle,
-the punning lawyer, was once entering an assize court, some one asked him
-if Judge Page was not "just behind." Crowle replied, "I don't know, but I
-am sure he never was just before."[395]
-
-The various mews, now stables, about London, derive their name from the
-enclosure where falcons in the Middle Ages were kept to mew (_mutare_,
-Minshew) their feathers. The King's Mews stood on the site of the present
-Trafalgar Square. In the 13th Edward II. John de la Becke had the custody
-of the Mews "apud Charing, juxta Westminster." In the 10th Edward III.
-John de St. Albans succeeded Becke. In Richard II.'s time the office of
-king's falconer, a post of importance, was held by Sir Simon Burley, who
-was constable of the castles of Windsor, Wigmore, and Guilford, and also
-of the royal manor of Kennington. This Sir Simon had been selected by the
-Black Prince as guardian of Richard II., and he also negotiated his
-marriage. One of the complaints of Wat Tyler and his party was that he had
-thrown a burgher of Gravesend into Rochester Castle. The Duke of
-Gloucester had him executed in 1388, in spite of Richard's queen praying
-upon her knees for his life. At the end of this reign or in the first year
-of Henry IV., the poet Chaucer was clerk of the king's works and also of
-the Mews at Charing; and here, from his fluttering, angry little feathered
-subjects, he must have drawn many of those allusions to the brave sport of
-hawking to be found in the immortal _Canterbury Tales_.
-
-The falconry continued at Charing till 1534 (26th Henry VIII.), when the
-king's fine stabling, with many horses and a great store of hay, being
-destroyed by fire, the Mews was rebuilt and turned into royal stables, in
-the reigns of Edward VI. and Mary.[396]
-
-M. St. Antoine, the riding-master, whose portrait Vandyke painted,
-performed his caracoles and demi-tours at the Mews. Here Cromwell
-imprisoned Lieut.-Colonel George Joyce, who, when plain cornet, had
-arrested the king at Holmby. An angry little Puritan pamphlet of four
-pages, published in 1659, gives an account of Cromwell's troubles with the
-fractious Joyce, and how he had resolved to cashier him and destroy his
-estate.
-
-The colonel was carried by musqueteers to the common Dutch prison at the
-Mews, and seems to have been much tormented by Cavalier vermin. There he
-remained ten days, and was then removed to another close room, where he
-fell sick from the "evil smells," and remained so for ten weeks, refusing
-all the time to lay down his commission, declaring that he had been
-unworthily dealt with, and that all that had been sworn against him was
-false.
-
-There was at the Mews gate a celebrated old book shop, opened in 1750 by
-Mr. Thomas Payne, who kept it alive for forty years. It was the rendezvous
-of all noblemen and scholars who sought rare books. It may be remarked, by
-the way, that booksellers' shops have always been the haunts of wits and
-poets. Dodsley, the ex-footman, gathered round him the wisest men of his
-age, as Tonson had also done before him; while, as for John Murray's back
-parlour, it was in Byron's and Moore's days a very temple of the Muses.
-
-In Charles II.'s time the famous but ugly horse Rowley lived at the Mews,
-and gave a nickname to his swarthy royal master.
-
-In 1732 that impudent charlatan, Kent, rebuilt the Mews, which was only
-remarkable after that for sheltering for a time Mr. Cross's menagerie,
-when first removed from Exeter Change in 1829.
-
-The National Gallery, one of the poorest buildings in London (which is
-saying a good deal), was built between 1832 and 1838, from the designs of
-a certain unfortunate Mr. Wilkins, R.A. It is not often that Fortune is so
-malicious as to give an inferior artist such ample room to show his
-inability. The vote for founding the Gallery passed in Parliament in April
-1824. The columns of the portico were part of the screen of Carlton
-House--interesting memorials of a debasing regency, and, if possible, of a
-worse reign. The site has been called "the finest in Europe:" it is,
-however, a fine site, which is more than can be said of the building that
-covers it. The front is 500 feet long. In the centre is a portico, on
-stilts, with eight Corinthian columns approached by a double flight of
-steps; a low squat dome not much larger than a washing basin; and two
-pepper-castor turrets that crown the eyesore of London. Though on high
-ground--very high ground for a rather flat city--the architect, pinched
-for money, contrived to make the building lower than the grand portico of
-St. Martin's Church, and even than the houses of Suffolk Place.
-
-One of the last occasions on which William IV. appeared in public was in
-1837, before the opening of the first Academy Exhibition here in May. The
-good-natured king is said to have suggested calling the square
-"Trafalgar," and erecting a Nelson monument. A subscription was opened,
-and the Duke of Buccleuch was appointed chairman.
-
-The square was commenced in 1829, but was not completed till after 1849.
-The Nelson column was begun in 1837, and the statue set up in November
-1843. Three premiums were offered for the three best designs, and Mr.
-Railton carried off the palm. Upwards of £20,480 were subscribed, and,
-£12,000 it was thought would be required to complete the monument.[397] It
-was originally intended to expend only £30,000 upon the whole.[398] Alas
-for estimates so sanguine, so fallacious! the granite work alone cost
-upwards of £10,000.
-
-Mr. Railton chose a column, after mature reflection; although triumphal
-columns are bad art, and the invention of a barbarous people and a corrupt
-age.[399] He rejected a temple, as too expensive and too much in the way;
-a group of figures he condemned as not visible at a distance; he finally
-chose a Corinthian column as new, as harmonious, and as uniting the
-labours of sculptor and architect.
-
-The column, with its base and pedestal, measures 193 feet. The fluted
-shaft has a torus of oak leaves. The capital is copied from the fine
-example of Mars Ultor at Rome; from it rises a circular pedestal wreathed
-with laurel, and surmounted by a statue of Nelson, eighteen feet high, and
-formed of two blocks of stone from the Granton quarry. The great pedestal
-is adorned with four bassi-relievi, eighteen feet square each,
-representing four of Nelson's great victories. It is difficult to say
-which is tamest of the four. That of "Trafalgar" is by Mr. Carew; the
-"Nile," by Mr. Woodington; "St. Vincent," by Mr. Watson; and "Copenhagen,"
-by Mr. Ternouth.
-
-The pedestal is raised on a flight of fifteen steps, at the angles of
-which are placed couchant lions from the designs of Sir Edwin Landseer.
-They are forged out of French cannon. The capital is of the same costly
-material, which, considering the brave English blood it has cost, should
-have been painted crimson. Many years passed by after the commission was
-given to Sir Edwin Landseer before they were placed _in situ_.
-
-The cocked hat on Mr. Baily's statue has been somewhat unjustly ridiculed,
-and so has the coil of rope or pigtail supporting the hero.
-
-The bronze equestrian statue of George IV., at the north-east end of the
-square, is by Chantrey. It was ordered by the king in 1829. The price was
-to be 9000 guineas, but the worthy monarch never paid the sculptor more
-than a third of that sum; the rest was given by the Woods and Forests out
-of the national taxes, and the third instalment in 1843, after Chantrey's
-death, by the Lords of the Treasury. It is a sprightly and clever statue,
-but of no great merit. It should have been paid for by William IV., just
-as the Nelson statue should have been erected by Parliament, the honour
-being one due to Nelson from an ungrateful nation. This statue of George
-IV. was originally intended to crown the arch in front of Buckingham
-Palace--an arch that cost £80,000, and that was hung with gates that cost
-3000 guineas. The so-called Chartist riots of 1848 were commenced by boys
-destroying the hoarding round the base of the Nelson monument.
-
-The fountains in the centre of the Square are of Peterhead granite, and
-were made at Aberdeen. They are mean, despicable, and unworthy of the
-noble position which they occupy. Some years ago there was a fuss about an
-Artesian well that was to feed these stone punch-bowls with inexhaustible
-gushes of silvery water. This supply has dwindled down to a sort of
-overflow of a ginger-beer bottle once a day. I blush when I take a
-foreigner to see Trafalgar Square, with its squat domes, its mean statues,
-its tame bassi-relievi, and its disgraceful fountains.
-
-I will not trust myself to criticise the statues of Napier and Havelock.
-The figures are poor, and unworthy of the fiery soldier and the Christian
-hero they misrepresent. They should be in the Abbey. Why has the Abbey
-grown, like the Court, less receptive than ever? What passport is there
-into the Abbey, where such strange people sleep, if the conquest of Scinde
-and the relief of Lucknow will not take a body there.
-
-But to return to the National Gallery. Mr. G. Agar-Ellis, afterwards Lord
-Dover, first proposed a National Gallery in Parliament in 1824; Government
-having previously purchased thirty-eight pictures from Mr. Angerstein for
-£57,000. This collection included "The Raising of Lazarus," by Del Piombo.
-It is supposed that Michael Angelo, jealous of Raphael's
-"Transfiguration," helped Sebastian in the drawing of his cartoon, which
-was to be a companion picture for Narbonne Cathedral. It was purchased
-from the Orleans Gallery for 3500 guineas.[400]
-
-In 1825 some pictures were purchased for the Gallery from Mr. Hamlet.
-These included the "Bacchus and Ariadne" of Titian, for £5000. This golden
-picture (extolled by Vasari) was painted about 1514 for the Duke of
-Ferrara. Titian was then in the full vigour of his thirty-seventh
-year.[401]
-
-In the same year "La Vierge au Panier" of Correggio was purchased from Mr.
-Nieuwenhuy, a picture-dealer, for £3800. It is a late picture, and hurt in
-cleaning. It was one of the gems of the Madrid Gallery.
-
-In 1826, Sir George Beaumont presented sixteen pictures, valued at 7500
-guineas. These included one of the finest landscapes of Rubens, "The
-Chateau," which originally cost £1500, and Wilkie's _chef-d'oeuvre_, that
-fine Raphaelesque composition, "The Blind Fiddler."
-
-In 1834 the Rev. William Holwell Carr left the nation thirty-five
-pictures, including fine specimens of the Caracci, Titian, Luini,
-Garofalo, Claude, Poussin, and Rubens.
-
-Another important donation was that of the great "Peace and War," bought
-for £3000 by the Marquis of Stafford, and given to the nation. It was
-originally presented to Charles I., by Rubens, who gave unto the king not
-as a painter but as almost a king.
-
-The British Institution also gave three esteemed pictures by Reynolds,
-Gainsborough, and West, and a fine Parmigiano.
-
-But the greatest addition to the collection was made in 1834, when
-£11,500[402] were given for the two great Correggios, the "Ecce Homo" and
-the "Education of Cupid," from the Marquis of Londonderry's collection. To
-the "Ecce Homo" Pungileoni assigns the date 1520, when the great master
-was only twenty-six. It once belonged to Murat. The "Education of Cupid,"
-which once belonged to Charles I., has been a good deal retouched.[403]
-
-In 1836 King William IV. presented to the gallery six pictures; in 1837
-Colonel Harvey Ollney gave seventeen; in 1838 Lord Farnborough bequeathed
-fifteen, and R. Simmons, Esq., fourteen. The last pictures were chiefly of
-the Netherlands school. In 1854 the nation possessed two hundred and
-sixteen pictures, and of these seventy only had been purchased.
-
-In 1857 that greatest of all landscape-painters, Joseph M. W. Turner, left
-the nation 362 oil-paintings, and about 19,000 sketches (including 1757
-water-colour drawings of value). In his will this eccentric man
-particularly desired that two of his pictures--a Dutch coast-scene and
-"Dido Building Carthage"--should be hung between Claude's "Sea-Port" and
-"Mill."
-
-The will was disputed, and the engravings and the money, all but £20,000,
-went to the next of kin.
-
-The diploma pictures (that formerly were annually exhibited to the public)
-are of great interest. They were given by various members of the Royal
-Academy at their elections. That of the parsimonious Wilkie--"Boys digging
-for Rats" (fine as Teniers)--is remarkably small. There is a very fine
-graceful portrait of Sir William Chambers, the architect, by Reynolds, and
-one still more robust and glowing of Sir Joshua by himself. He is in his
-doctor's robes. There is a splendid but rather pale Etty--"A Satyr
-surprising a Nymph;" and a fine vigorous picture by Briggs, of "Blood
-stealing the Crown."
-
-In 1849, Robert Vernon, Esq., nobly left the nation one hundred and
-sixty-two fine examples of the English school. These are now removed to
-the Kensington Museum.
-
-Of the pictures given by Turner to the nation, the masterpieces are the
-"Téméraire" and the "Escape of Ulysses,"--both triumphs of colour and
-imagination. The one is a scene from the _Odyssey_; the other represents
-an old man-of-war being towed to its last berth--a scene witnessed by the
-artist himself while boating near Greenwich. The works of Turner may be
-divided very fairly into three eras: those in which he imitated the Dutch
-landscape-painters, the period when he copied idealised Nature, and the
-time when he resorted from eccentricity or indifference to reckless
-experiments in colour and effect--most of them quite unworthy of his
-genius. Not in drawing the figure, but in aërial perspective, did Turner
-excel. The great portfolios of drawings that he left the nation show with
-what untiring and laborious industry he toiled. In habits sordid and mean,
-in tastes low and debased, this great genius, the son of a humble
-hairdresser in Maiden Lane, succeeded in attaining an excellence in
-landscape, fitful and unequal it is true, but often rising to poetic
-regions unknown to Claude, Ruysdael, Vandervelde, Salvator, or Backhuysen.
-
-Ever since the modern pictures were removed to South Kensington, there has
-been a constant effort to transfer the ancient pictures and to abandon the
-National Gallery to the Royal Academy--a rich society, making £5000 or
-£6000 a year, which its members cannot spend, and which tenants the
-national building only by permission. To remove the pictures from the
-centre of London is to remove them from those who cannot go far to see
-them, to the neighbourhood of rich people who do not need their teaching,
-and who have picture-galleries of their own.
-
-In 1859, twenty pictures were bequeathed to the gallery by Mr. Jacob Bell,
-and a few years later twenty-two others were added as a gift by Her
-Majesty. The last great addition is the presentation of ninety-four
-pictures by Mr. Wynn Ellis. But in spite of all these treasures, acquired
-by purchase or by bequest, the nation cannot boast that its gallery does
-justice to our taste or national wealth. It is still lamentably deficient
-in more than one department; and there are not wanting those who assert
-that the Royal Academy stifles art rather than promotes it. It is regarded
-by the outside world as a close-borough, in which the interests of the
-public and of students are postponed to those of its Associates and
-Members, the A.R.A.'s and R.A.'s of the age.
-
-The building in which the collection is deposited was erected at the
-national expense, from the designs of Mr. William Wilkins, R.A., and
-opened to the public in 1838. It was considerably altered and enlarged in
-1860, and in 1869 five other rooms were added by the surrender to the
-Trustees of those hitherto appropriated by the Royal Academy. In 1876 a
-new wing was added, after a design by Mr. E. M. Barry, R.A., and the whole
-collection is now under one roof.
-
-The Royal College of Physicians is a large classic building at the
-north-west corner of Trafalgar Square. It was built in 1823 from the
-designs of Sir Robert Smirke. The college was founded in 1518 by Dr.
-Linacre, the successor to Shakspeare's Dr. Butts, and physician to Henry
-VII. From Knightrider Street the doctors moved to Amen Corner, and thence
-to Warwick Lane, between Newgate Street and Paternoster Row. The number of
-fellows, originally thirty, is now as unlimited as the "dira cohors" of
-diseases that the college has to encounter.
-
-In the gallery above the library there are seven preparations made by the
-celebrated Harvey when at Padua--"learned Padua." There are also some
-excellent portraits--Harvey, by Jansen; Sir Thomas Browne, the author of
-_Religio Medici_; Sir Theodore Mayerne, the physician of James I.; Sir
-Edmund King, who, on his own responsibility, bled Charles II. during a
-fit; Dr. Sydenham, by Mary Beale; Doctor Radcliffe, William III.'s doctor,
-by Kneller; Sir Hans Sloane, the founder of the British Museum, by
-Richardson, whom Hogarth rather unjustly ridiculed; honest Garth (of the
-"Dispensary"), by Kneller; Dr. Freind, Dr. Mead, Dr. Warren (by
-Gainsborough); William Hunter, and Dr. Heberden.
-
-There are also some valuable and interesting busts--George IV., by
-Chantrey (a _chef-d'oeuvre_); Dr. Mead, by the vivacious Roubilliac; Dr.
-Sydenham, by Wilton; Harvey, by Scheemakers; Dr. Baillie, by Chantrey,
-from a model by Nollekens; Dr. Babington, by poor Behnes. One of the
-treasures of the place is Dr. Radcliffe's gold-headed cane, which was
-successively carried by Drs. Mead, Askew, Pitcairn, and Baillie. There is
-also a portrait-picture by Zoffany of Hunter delivering a lecture on
-anatomy to the Royal Academy. Any fellow can give an order to see this
-hoarded collection, which should be thrown open to the public on certain
-days. It is selfish and utterly wanting in public spirit to keep such
-treasures in the dark.
-
-The wits buzzed about Charing Cross between 1680 and 1730 as thick as bees
-round May flowers. In this district, between those years, stood "The
-Elephant," "The Sugarloaf," "The Old Man's Coffee-house," "The Old Vine,"
-"The Three Flower de Luces," "The British Coffee-house," "The Young Man's
-Coffee-house," and "The Three Queens."
-
-There is an erroneous tradition that Cromwell had a house on the site of
-Drummond's bank. He really lived farther south, in King Street. When the
-bank was built, the houses were set back full forty yards more to the
-west, upon an open square place called "Cromwell's Yard."[405]
-
-Drummond's is said to have gained its fame by advancing money secretly to
-the Pretender. Upon this being known, the Court withdrew all their
-deposits. The result was that the Scotch Tory noblemen rallied round the
-house and brought in so much money that the firm soon became leading
-bankers, dividing the West End custom with Messrs. Coutts.
-
-Craig's Court, on the east side of Charing Cross, was built in 1702. It is
-generally supposed to have been named after the father of Mr. Secretary
-Craggs, the friend of Pope and Addison: Mr. Cunningham, an excellent and
-reliable authority, says that as early as the year 1658 there was a James
-Cragg living on the "water side," in the Charing Cross division of St.
-Martin's-in-the-Fields. The Sun Fire-office was established in this court
-in 1726; and here is Cox and Greenwood's, the largest army agency office
-in Great Britain.
-
-Locket's, the famous ordinary, so called from Adam Locket, the landlord in
-1674, stood on the site of Drummond's bank. An Edward Locket succeeded to
-him in 1688, and remained till 1702.[406] In 1693 the second Locket took
-the Bowling-green House at Putney Heath. That fair, slender, genteel Sir
-George Etherege, whom Rochester praises for "fancy, sense, judgment, and
-wit," frequented Locket's, and displayed there his courtly foppery, which
-served as a model for his own Dorimant, and that prince and patriarch of
-fops Sir Fopling Flutter. Sir George was always gentle and courtly, and
-was compared in this to Sedley.
-
-He once got into a violent passion at the ordinary, and abused the
-"drawers" for some neglect. This brought in Mrs. Locket, hot and fuming.
-"We are so provoked," said Sir George, "that even I could find it in my
-heart to pull the nosegay out of your bosom, and fling the flowers in your
-face." This mild and courteous threat turned his friends' anger into a
-general laugh.
-
-Sir George having run up a long score at Locket's, added to the injury by
-ceasing to frequent the house. Mrs. Locket began to dun and threaten him.
-He sent word back by the messenger that he would kiss her if she stirred a
-step in it. When Mrs. Locket heard this, she bridled up, called for her
-hood and scarf, and told her anxious husband that she'd see if there was
-any fellow alive who had the impudence! "Prythee, my dear, don't be so
-rash," said her milder husband; "you don't know what a man may do in his
-passion."[407]
-
-Wycherly, that favourite of Charles II. till he married his titled wife,
-writes in one of his plays (1675), "Why, thou art as shy of my kindness as
-a Lombard Street alderman of a courtier's civility at Locket's."[408]
-Shadwell too, Dryden's surly and clever foe, says (1691), "I'll answer you
-in a couple of brimmers of claret at Locket's at dinner, where I have
-bespoke an admirable good one."[409]
-
-A poet of 1697 describes the sparks, dressed by noon hurrying to the Mall,
-and from thence to Locket's.[410] Prior proposes to dine at a crown a head
-on ragouts washed down with champagne; then to go to court; and lastly he
-says[411]--
-
- "With evening wheels we'll drive about the Park,
- Finish at Locket's, and reel home i' the dark."
-
-In 1708, Vanbrugh makes Lord Foppington doubtful whether he shall return
-to dinner, as the noble peer says--"As Gad shall judge me I can't tell,
-for 'tis possible I may dine with some of our House at Lacket's."[412]
-
-And in the same play the very energetic nobleman remarks--"From thence
-(the Park) I go to dinner at Lacket's, where you are so nicely and
-delicately served that, stap my vitals! they shall compose you a dish no
-bigger than a saucer shall come to fifty shillings. Between eating my
-dinner and washing my mouth, ladies, I spend my time till I go to the
-play."
-
-In 1709 the epicurean and ill-fated Dr. King, talking of the changes in
-St. James's Park, says--
-
- "For Locket's stands where gardens once did spring,
- And wild ducks quack where grasshoppers did sing."[413]
-
-Tom Brown also mentions Locket's, for he writes--"We as naturally went
-from Mann's Coffee-house to the Parade as a coachman drives from Locket's
-to the play-house."
-
-Prior, the poet, when his father the joiner died, was taken care of by his
-uncle, who kept the Rummer Tavern at the back of No. 14 Charing Cross, two
-doors from Locket's. It was a well-frequented house, and in 1685 the
-annual feast of the nobility and gentry of St. Martin's parish was held
-there. Prior was sent by the honest vintner to study under the great Dr.
-Busby at Westminster: and in a window-seat at the Rummer the future poet
-and diplomatist was found reading Horace, according to Bishop Burnet, by
-the witty Earl of Dorset, who is said to have educated him. Prior, in the
-dedication of his poems to the earl's son, proves his patron to have been
-a paragon. Waller and Sprat consulted Dorset about their writings. Dryden,
-Congreve, and Addison praised him. He made the court read _Hudibras_, the
-town praise Wycherly's "Plain Dealer," and Buckingham delay his
-"Rehearsal" till he knew his opinion. Pope imitated his "Dorinda," and
-King Charles took his advice upon Lely's portraits.
-
-One of Prior's gayest and pleasantest poems seems to prove, however, that
-Fleetwood Shepherd was a more essential patron than even the earl. The
-poet writes--
-
- "Now, as you took me up when little,
- Gave me my learning and my vittle,
- Asked for me from my lord things fitting,
- Kind as I'd been your own begetting,
- Confirm what formerly you've given,
- Nor leave me now at six and seven,
- As Sunderland has left Mun Stephen."
-
-And again, still more gaily--
-
- "My uncle, rest his soul! when living,
- Might have contrived me ways of thriving,
- Taught me with cider to replenish
- My vats or ebbing tide of Rhenish;
- So when for hock I drew pricked white-wine,
- Swear't had the flavour, and was right wine;
- Or sent me with ten pounds to Furni-
- val's Inn, to some good rogue attorney,
- Where now, by forging deeds and cheating,
- I'd found some handsome ways of getting.
- All this you made me quit to follow
- That sneaking, whey-faced god, Apollo;
- Sent me among a fiddling crew
- Of folks I'd neither seen nor knew,
- Calliope and God knows who,
- I add no more invectives to it:
- You spoiled the youth to make a poet."
-
-That rascally housebreaker, Jack Sheppard, made his first step towards the
-gallows by the robbery of two silver spoons at the Rummer Tavern. This
-young rogue, whose deeds Mr. Ainsworth has so mischievously recorded, was
-born in 1701, and ended his short career at Tyburn in 1724.[414] The
-Rummer Tavern is introduced by Hogarth into his engraving of "Night." The
-business was removed to the water side of Charing Cross in 1710, and the
-new house burnt down in 1750. In 1688, Samuel Prior offered ten guineas
-reward for the discovery of some persons who had accused him of clipping
-coin.[415]
-
-Mrs. Centlivre, whom Pope pilloried in the _Dunciad_[416] was the daughter
-of a Lincolnshire gentleman, who, being a Nonconformist, fled to Ireland
-at the Restoration to escape persecution. Being left an orphan at the age
-of twelve, she travelled to London on foot to seek her fortune. In her
-sixteenth year she married a nephew of Sir Stephen Fox, who, however, did
-not live more than a twelvemonth after. She afterwards wedded an officer
-named Carrol, who was killed in a duel soon after their marriage. Left a
-second time a widow, she then took to dramatic writing for a subsistence,
-and from 1700 to 1705 produced six comedies, to one of which--"The
-Gamester"--the poet Rowe contributed a prologue. She next tried the stage;
-and while performing Alexander the Great, at Windsor, won the heart of Mr.
-Centlivre, "a Yeoman of the Mouth," or principal cook to Queen Anne, who
-married her. She lived happily with her husband for eighteen years, and
-wrote some good, bustling, but licentious plays. "The Busybody," and
-"Wonder; a Woman keeps a Secret," act well.
-
-In May, 1716, Mrs. Centlivre visited her native town of Holbeach for her
-health, and on King George's birthday[417] invited all the pauper widows
-of the place to a tavern supper. The windows were illuminated, the
-church-bells were set ringing, there were musicians playing in the room,
-the old women danced, and most probably got drunk, the enthusiastic
-loyalist making them all fall on their knees and drink the healths of the
-royal family, the Duke of Marlborough, Mr. Walpole, the Duke of Argyle,
-General Cadogan, etc. etc. She ended the feast by sending the ringers a
-copy of stirring verses denouncing the Jacobites;--
-
- "Disdain the artifice they use
- To bring in mass and wooden shoes
- With transubstantiation:
- Remember James the Second's reign,
- When glorious William broke the chain
- Rome had put on this nation."
-
-This clever but not too virtuous woman died at her house in Buckingham
-Court, Spring Gardens, December 1, 1723.[418]
-
-Pope's dislike to Mrs. Centlivre is best explained by one of his own notes
-to the _Dunciad_:--"She (Mrs. C.) wrote many plays and a song before she
-was seven years old: she also wrote a ballad against Mr. Pope's _Homer_
-before he began it." And why should not an authoress have expressed her
-opinion of Mr. Pope's inability to translate Homer?
-
-Mrs. Centlivre is rather bitterly treated by Leigh Hunt, who says that
-she, "without doubt, wrote the most entertaining dramas of intrigue, with
-a genius infinitely greater, and a modesty infinitely less, than that of
-her sex in general; and she delighted, whenever she could not be obscene,
-to be improbable."[419]
-
-Milton lodged at one Thomson's, next door to the Bull-head Tavern at
-Charing Cross, close to the opening to the Spring Gardens, during the time
-he was writing his book _Joannis Philippi Angli Defensio_.[420]
-
-The Golden Cross ran up beside the King's Mews a little east of its
-present site; it was the "Bull and Mouth" of the West End till railways
-drew travellers from the old roads; it then became a railway parcel
-office. Poor reckless Dr. Maginn wrote a ballad lamenting the change, in
-which he mourned the Mews Gate public-house, Tom Bish and his lotteries,
-and the barrack-yard. He curses Nash and Wyatville, and then bursts
-forth--
-
- "No more I'll eat the juicy steak
- Within its boxes pent,
- When in the mail my place I take,
- For Bath or Brighton bent.
-
- "No more the coaches I shall see
- Come trundling from the yard,
- Nor hear the horn blown cheerily
- By brandy-sipping guard.
- King Charles, I think, must sorrow sore,
- E'en were he made of stone,
- When left by all his friends of yore
- (Like Tom Moore's rose) alone.
-
- "No wonder the triumphant Turk
- O'er Missolonghi treads,
- Roasts bishops, and in bloody work
- Snips off some thousand heads!
- No wonder that the Crescent gains,
- When we the fact can't gloss,
- That we ourselves are at such pains
- To trample down the Cross!
-
- "Oh! London won't be London long,
- For 'twill be all pulled down,
- And I shall sing a funeral song
- O'er that time-honoured town.
- One parting curse I here shall make,
- And then lay down my quill,
- Hoping Old Nick himself may take
- Both Nash and Wyatville."[421]
-
-Till late in the last century a lofty straddling sign-post and a long
-water-trough, just such as still adorn country towns, stood before this
-inn.[422]
-
-Charing Cross Hospital, one of those great charities that atone for so
-many of the sins of London, relieved, in the year 1878, 15,854 necessitous
-persons, including more than 1000 cases of severe accident, while above
-1500 persons were admitted on the recommendation of governors and
-subscribers.[423] Surely, if anything can redeem our national vices, our
-selfishness, our commercial dishonesty, our unjust wars, and our
-unrighteous conquests, it must be such vast charities as these.
-
-One authority represents that great scholar and divine, Dr. Isaac Barrow,
-the friend of Newton, as having died "in mean lodgings at a saddler's near
-Charing Cross, an old, low, ill-built house, which he had used for many
-years." Barrow was then Master of Trinity College, Cambridge. Roger North,
-however, says that he died of an overdose of opium, and "ended his days in
-London in a prebendary's house that had a little stair to it out of the
-cloisters, which made him call it a _man's nest_."[424] Barrow died in
-1677, and was buried in the Abbey. Rhodes, the bookseller and actor, lived
-at the Ship at Charing Cross. He had been wardrobe-keeper at the
-Blackfriars Theatre; and in 1659 he reopened the Cockpit Theatre in Drury
-Lane.
-
-On September 7, 1650, as that dull, learned man, Bulstrode Whitelock, one
-of the Commissioners for the Great Seal, was going in his coach towards
-Chelsea, a messenger from Scotland stopped him about Charing Cross, and
-cried, "Oh, my lord, God hath appeared gloriously to us in Scotland; a
-glorious day, my lord, at Dunbar in Scotland." "I asked him," says
-Whitelock, "how it was. He said that the General had routed all the Scots
-army, but that he could not stay to tell me the particulars, being in
-haste to go to the House."[425]
-
-Lord Dartmouth relates a story in Burnet of Sir Edward Seymour the
-Speaker's coach breaking down at Charing Cross, in Charles II.'s time. He
-instantly, with proud coolness, ordered the beadles to stop the next
-gentleman's coach that passed and bring it to him. The expelled gentleman
-was naturally both surprised and angry; but Sir Edward gravely assured him
-that it was far more proper for him than for the Speaker of the House of
-Commons to walk the streets, and accordingly left him to do so without any
-further apology.[426]
-
-Horace Walpole was a diligent attender at the State Trials of 1746. The
-day "poor brave old" Balmerino retracted his plea, asked pardon, and
-desired the Peers to intercede for mercy, Walpole tells us that his
-lordship stopped the coach at Charing Cross as he returned to the Tower,
-carelessly to buy "honey-blobs," as the Scotch call gooseberries.
-
-But we must not leave Charing Cross without specially remembering that
-when Boswell dared to praise Fleet Street as crowded and cheerful, Dr.
-Johnson replied in a voice of thunder, "Why, sir, Fleet Street _has_ a
-very animated appearance; but I think the full tide of existence is at
-Charing Cross."[427]
-
-Nearly where the Post Office at Charing Cross now stands, there was once
-(of all things in the world) a hermitage. Even Prince George of Denmark
-might have been pardoned by James II., his sour father-in-law, for making
-his invariable reply, "Est-il possible?" to this statement. Yet the patent
-rolls of the 47th Henry III. grant permission to William de Radnor, Bishop
-of Llandaff, to lodge, with all his retainers, within the precinct of the
-Hermitage at Charing, whenever he came to London.[428]
-
-Opposite this stood the ancient Hospital of St. Mary Roncevalles. It was
-founded by William Marechal, Earl of Pembroke, a son, I believe, of the
-early English conqueror of Ireland. It was suppressed by Henry V. as an
-alien priory, restored by Edward IV., and finally suppressed by Edward
-VI., who granted it to Sir Thomas Carwarden, to be held in free soccage of
-the honour of Westminster.
-
-The mesh and labyrinth of obscure alleys and lanes running between the
-bottom of St. Martin's Lane and Bedford Street, towards Bedfordbury, with
-old Round Court, so called in mockery, for its centre, were swept away by
-the besom of improvement in 1829, when Trafalgar Square was begun, never
-to be finished. In Elizabeth's or James's time, gallants who had cruised
-in search of Spanish galleons wittily nicknamed these Straits "the
-Bermudas," from their narrow and intricate channels. Here the valorous
-Captain Bobadill must have lived in Barmecidal splendour, and have taught
-his dupes the true conduct of the weapon. Justice Overdo mentions the
-Bermudas with a righteous indignation. "Look," says that great legal
-functionary, "into any angle of the town, the Streights or the Bermudas,
-where the quarrelling lesson is read, and how do they entertain the time
-but with bottled ale and tobacco?"[429] How natural for Drake's men to
-give such a name to a labyrinth of devious alleys! At a subsequent period
-the cluster of avenues exchanged the title of _Bermudas_ for that of the
-_C'ribbee Islands_, the learned possessors corrupting the name into a
-happy allusion to the arts cultivated there.[430]
-
-Gay, writing in 1715, describes the small streets branching from Charing
-Cross as resounding with the shoeblacks' cry, "Clean your honour's shoes?"
-Great improvements were made in 1829-30, when the present arcade leading
-from West Strand to St. Martin's Church, and inhabited chiefly by German
-toymen, was built and named after Lord Lowther then Chief Commissioner of
-the Woods and Forests.[431] The Strand was also widened, and many old
-tottering houses were removed.
-
-Porridge Island was the cant name for a paved alley near St. Martin's
-Church, originally a congeries of cookshops erected for the workmen at the
-new church, and destroyed when the great rookery there was pulled down in
-1829. It was a part of Bedfordbury, and derived its name from being full
-of cookshops, or "slap-bangs," as street boys called such odorous places.
-A writer in _The World_, in 1753, describes a man like Beau Tibbs, who had
-his dinner in a pewter plate from a cookshop in Porridge Island, and with
-only £100 a year was foolish enough to wear a laced suit, go every evening
-in a chair to a rout, and return to his bedroom on foot, shivering and
-supperless, vain enough to glory in having rubbed elbows with the quality
-of Brentford.[432]
-
-It was in Round Court, in the centre of the key shops, herb shops, and
-furniture warehouses of Bedfordbury that, in 1836, Robson the actor was
-apprenticed to a Mr. Smellie, a copperplate engraver, and the printer of
-the humorous caricatures of Mr. George Cruikshank.[433]
-
-The Swan at Charing Cross, over against the Mews, flourished in 1665, when
-Marke Rider was the landlord. The token of the house bore the figure of a
-swan holding a sprig in its mouth. Its memory is embalmed in a curious
-extempore grace once said by Ben Jonson before King James. These are the
-verses:--
-
- "Our king and queen the Lord God bless,
- The Palsgrave and the Lady Besse;
- And God bless every living thing
- That lives and breathes, and loves the king;
- God bless the Council of Estate,
- And Buckingham the fortunate;
- God bless them all, and keep them safe,
- And God bless me, and God bless Ralph."
-
-The schoolmaster king being mighty inquisitive to know who this Ralph was,
-Ben told him it was the drawer at the Swan Tavern, who drew him good
-canary. For this drollery the king gave Ben a hundred pounds.[434] The
-story is probably true, for it is confirmed by Powell the actor.[435]
-
-The street signs of London were condemned in the second year of George
-III.'s reign; but the sweeping Act for their final removal was not passed
-till nine years later. In 1762, Bonnel Thornton (aided by Hogarth) opened
-an exhibition of street signs in Bow Street[436] in ridicule of the Spring
-Gardens exhibition. But as early as 1761 the street signs seem to have
-been partially removed as dangerous obstructions. A writer in a
-contemporary paper says,[437] "My master yesterday sent me to take a place
-in the Canterbury stage; he said that when I came to Charing Cross I
-should see which was the proper inn by the words on the sign. I rambled
-about, but could see no sign at all. At last I was told that there used to
-be such a sign under a little golden cross which I saw at a two pair of
-stairs window. I entered and found the waiter swearing about innovations.
-He said that the members of Parliament were unaccountable enemies to signs
-which used to show trades; that, for his master's part, he might put on
-sackcloth, for nobody came to buy sack. 'If,' said he, 'any of the signs
-were too large, could they not have limited their size without pulling
-down the sign-posts and destroying the painted ornaments of the Strand?'
-On my return I saw some men pulling with ropes at a curious sign-iron,
-which seemed to have cost some pounds: along with the iron down came the
-leaden cover to the pent-house, which will cost at least some pounds to
-repair."
-
-This was written the year of the first Act (2d George III.), and was
-probably a groan from some one interested in the existence of the abuse.
-The inferior artists gained much money from this source. Mr. Wale, one of
-the first Academicians, painted a Shakspere five feet high[438] for a
-public-house at the north-west corner of Little Russell Street, Covent
-Garden. The picture was enclosed in a sumptuous carved gilt frame, and was
-suspended by rich foliated ironwork. A London street a hundred years ago
-must have been one long grotesque picture-gallery.
-
-When the meat is all good it is difficult to know where to insert the
-knife. In travelling, how hard it is to turn back almost in sight of some
-Promised Land of which one has often dreamed! Like that traveller I feel,
-when I find it necessary in this chapter to confine myself strictly to the
-legends, traditions, and history of Charing Cross proper, leaving for
-other opportunities Spring Gardens, the story of the greater part of which
-belongs more to St. James's Park, Whitehall, and Scotland Yard.
-
-[Illustration: THE KING'S MEWS, 1750.]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: BARRACK AND OLD HOUSES ON SITE OF TRAFALGAR SQUARE, 1826.]
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-ST. MARTIN'S LANE.
-
-
-Saint Martin's Lane, extending from Long Acre to Charing Cross, was built
-before 1613, and then called the West Church Lane. The first church was
-built here by Henry VIII. The district was first called St. Martin's Lane
-about 1617-18.[439]
-
-Sir Theodore Mayerne, physician to James I., lived on the west side of
-this lane. Mayerne was the godson of Beza, the great Calvinist reformer,
-and one of Henry IV.'s physicians. He came to England after that king's
-death. He then became James I.'s doctor, and was blamed for his treatment
-of Prince Henry, whom many thought to have been poisoned. He was
-afterwards physician to Charles I., and nominally to Charles II.; but he
-died in 1655, five years before the Restoration. He gave his library to
-the College of Physicians, and is said to have disclosed some of his
-chemical secrets to the great enameller, Petitot.[440] Mayerne died of
-drinking bad wine at a Strand tavern, and foretold the time of his death.
-
-A good story is told of Sir Theodore, which is the more curious because it
-records the fashionable fee of those days. A friend consulting Mayerne,
-and expecting to have the fee refused, ostentatiously placed on the table
-two gold broad pieces (value six-and-thirty shillings each). Looking
-rather mortified when Mayerne swept them into his pouch, "Sir." said Sir
-Theodore, gravely, "I made my will this morning, and if it should become
-known that I refused a fee the same afternoon I might be deemed _non
-compos_."[441]
-
-Near this fortunate doctor, honoured by kings, lived Sir John Finett, a
-wit and a song-writer, of Italian extraction. He became Master of the
-Ceremonies to Charles I., and wrote a pedantic book on the treatment of
-ambassadors, and other questions of precedency, of the gravest importance
-to courtiers, but to no one else. He died in 1641.
-
-Two doors from Mayerne and five from Finett, from 1622 to 1634, lived
-Daniel Mytens, the Dutch painter. On Vandyke's arrival Mytens grew jealous
-and asked leave to return to the Hague. But the king persuaded him to
-stay, and he became friendly with his rival, who painted his portrait.
-There are pictures by this artist at Hampton Court. Prince Charles gave
-him his house in the lane for twelve years at the peppercorn rent of 6d. a
-year.
-
-Next to Sir John Finett lived Sir Benjamin Rudyer, and on the same side
-Abraham Vanderoort, keeper of the pictures to Charles I., and necessarily
-an acquaintance of Mytens and Vandyke.
-
-Carew Raleigh, son of the great enemy of Spain, and born in the Tower,
-lived in this lane, on the west side, from 1636 to 1638, and again in
-1664. This unfortunate man spent all his life in writing to vindicate his
-father's memory, and in efforts to recover his Sherborne estate. In 1659,
-by the influence of General Monk, he was made Governor of Jersey.
-
-The chivalrous wit, Sir John Suckling, dwelt in St. Martin's-in-the-Fields
-in 1641, the year in which he joined in a rash plot to rescue Strafford
-from the Tower. He fled to France, and died there in poverty the same
-year, in the thirty-second year of his age. Suckling had served in the
-army of Gustavus Adolphus, and was famous for his sparkling repartee.
-There is an exquisite quaint grace about his poem of "The Wedding," which
-has its scene at Charing Cross.
-
-Dr. Thomas Willis, a great physician of his day, who died here in 1678,
-was grandfather of Browne Willis, the antiquary. Dr. Willis was a friend
-of Wren, and a great anatomist and chemist. He mapped out the nerves very
-industriously, and in his _Cerebri Anatome_ forestalled many future
-phrenological discoveries.[442]
-
-In the same year that eccentric charlatan, Sir Kenelm Digby, was living in
-the lane. The son of one of the gunpowder conspirators, and the
-"Mirandola" of his age, he was one of Ben Jonson's adopted sons.[443] He
-was generous to the poets; he understood ten or twelve languages; he
-shattered the Venetian galleys at Scanderoon; he studied chemistry, and
-professed to cure wounds with sympathetic powder. He held offices of
-honour under Charles I., in France became a friend of Descartes, and after
-the Restoration was an active member of the Royal Society. He was born,
-won his naval victory, and died on the same day of the month. Ben Jonson,
-in a poem on him, calls him "prudent, valiant, just, and temperate," and
-adds quaintly--
-
- "His breast is a brave palace, a broad street,
- Where all heroic ample thoughts do meet,
- Where Nature such a large survey hath ta'en,
- As others' souls to _his dwelt in a lane_."
-
-I cannot here help observing that the ridiculous story about Ben Jonson in
-his old age refusing money from Charles I., and rudely sending back word
-"that the king's soul dwelt in a lane," must have originated in some
-careless or malicious perversion of this line of the rough old poet's.
-
-"Immortal Ben" wrote ten poems on the death of Sir Kenelm's wife, who was
-the daughter of Sir Edward Stanley, and, it is supposed, the mistress of
-the Earl of Dorset. Randolph, Habington, and Feltham also wrote elegies on
-this beautiful woman, who was found dead in her bed, accidentally
-poisoned, it is supposed, by viper wine, or some philtre or cosmetic given
-her by her experimentalising husband in order to heighten her beauty.[444]
-In one of Ben Jonson's poems there are the following incomparable verses
-about Lady Venetia:--
-
- "Draw first a cloud, all save her neck,
- And out of that make day to break,
- Till like her face it do appear,
- And men may think all light rose there."
-
-And again--
-
- "Not swelling like the ocean proud,
- But stooping gently as a cloud,
- As smooth as oil pour'd forth, and calm
- As showers, and sweet as drops of balm."
-
-Sir Kenelm, when imprisoned in Winchester House, in Southwark, wrote an
-attack on Sir Thomas Browne's sceptical work _Religio Medici_. He also
-produced a book on cookery, and a commentary on the _Faerie Queen_. This
-strange being was buried in Christ Church, Newgate Street.
-
-St. Martin's-in-the-Fields is an ancient parish, but it was first made
-independent of St. Margaret's, Westminster, in 1535, by that tyrant Henry
-VIII., who, justly afraid of death, disliked the ceaseless black funeral
-processions of the outlying people of St. Martin's passing the courtly
-gate of Whitehall, and who therefore erected a church near Charing Cross,
-and constituted its neighbourhood into a parish.[445] In 1607, that
-unfortunate youth of promise, Henry Prince of Wales, added a chancel to
-the very small church, which soon proved insufficient for the growing and
-populous suburb. But though so modern, this parish formerly included in
-its vast circle St. Paul's Covent Garden, St. James's Piccadilly, St.
-Anne's Soho, and St. George's Hanover Square. It extended its princely
-circle as far north as Marylebone, as far south as Whitehall, as far east
-as the Savoy, and as far west as Chelsea and Kensington. When first rated
-to the poor in Queen Elizabeth's time it contained less than a hundred
-rateable persons. The chief inhabitants lived by the river side or close
-to the church. Pall Mall and Piccadilly were then unnamed, and beyond the
-church westward were St. James's Fields, Hay-hill Farm, Ebury Farm, and
-the Neat houses about Chelsea.[446]
-
-In 1638 this overgrown parish, had carved out of it the district of St.
-Paul's, Covent Garden; in 1684, St. James's, Westminster; and in 1686, St.
-Anne's, Soho. But even in 1680, Richard Baxter, with brave fervour,
-denounced what he called "the greatest cure in England,"[447] with its
-population of forty thousand more persons than the church could
-hold--people who "lived like Americans, without hearing a sermon for many
-years." From such parishes of course crept forth Dissenters of all creeds
-and colours. In 1826 the churchyard was removed to Camden Town, and the
-street widened, pursuant to 7 George IV. c. 77.
-
-That shrewd native of Aberdeen, Gibbs--a not unworthy successor of
-Wren--came to London at a fortunate time. Wren was fast dying; Vanbrugh
-was neglected; there was room for a new architect, and no fear of
-competition. His first church, St. Martin's, was a great success. Though
-its steeple was heavy and misplaced, and the exterior flat and without
-light or shade,[448] the portico was foolishly compared to that of the
-Parthenon, and was considered unique for dignity and unity of combination.
-The interior was so constructed as to render the introduction of further
-ornaments or of monuments impossible. Savage did but express the general
-opinion when he wrote with fine pathos--
-
- "O Gibbs! whose art the solemn fanes can raise,
- Where God delights to dwell and man to praise."
-
-The church was commenced in 1721 and finished in 1726, at a cost of
-£36,891: 10: 4, including £1500 for an organ.
-
-With all its faults, it is certainly one of the finest buildings in
-London, next to St. Paul's and the British Museum; but its cardinal fault
-is the unnatural union of the Gothic steeple and the Grecian portico. The
-one style is Pagan, the other Christian; the one expresses a sensuous
-contentment with this earth, the other mounts towards heaven with an
-eternal aspiration. The steeple leaps like a fountain from among lesser
-pinnacles that all point upwards. The Grecian portico is a cave of level
-shadow and of philosophic content.
-
-St. Martin's Church enshrines the dust of some illustrious persons. Here
-lies Nicholas Hilliard, the miniature-painter to Queen Elizabeth, and who
-died in 1619. He was a very careful painter, in the manner of Holbein. The
-great Isaac Oliver was his pupil. He must have had some trouble with the
-manly queen when she began to turn into a hag and to object to any shadow
-in her portraits. Near him, in 1621, was buried Paul Vansomer, a Flemish
-painter, celebrated for his portraits of James I. and his Danish queen.
-And here rests, too, a third and greater painter, William Dobson,
-Vandyke's protégé, who, born in an unlucky age, and forgotten amid the
-tumult of the Civil War, died in 1646, in poverty, in his house in St.
-Martin's Lane. Dobson had been apprenticed to a picture-dealer, and was
-discovered in his obscurity by Vandyke, whose style he imitated, giving
-it, however, a richer colour and more solidity. Charles I. and Prince
-Rupert both sat to him for their portraits. In this church reposes Sir
-Theodore Mayerne, an old court physician. His conserve of bats and
-scrapings of human skulls could not keep him from the earthy bed it seems.
-Nicholas Stone, the sculptor, who died 1647, sleeps here (Stone's son was
-Cibber's master), all unknown to the learned Thomas Stanley, who died in
-1678, and was known for his _History of Philosophy_ and translation of
-Æschylus. Here, also, is John Lacey--first a dancing-master, afterwards a
-trooper, lastly a comedian. He died in 1681. Charles II. was a great
-admirer of Lacey, but unfortunately more so of Nell Gwynn, who also came
-to sleep here in 1687. Poor Nell! with her good-nature and simple
-frankness, she stands out, wanton and extravagant as she was, in pleasant
-contrast with the proud painted wantons of that infamous court.
-
-If the dead could shudder, Secretary Coventry, who was buried here the
-year before Nell, must have shuddered at the neighbourhood in which he
-found himself; for he was the son of Lord Keeper Coventry, who died at
-Durham House in 1639-40. He had been Commissioner to the Treasury, and had
-given his name to Coventry Street. This great person became a precedent of
-burial to the Hon. Robert Boyle. This wise and good man, whom Swift
-ridiculed, was the inventor of the air-pump, and one of the great
-promoters of the Royal Society and of the Society for the Propagation of
-the Gospel. He died in 1691, and his funeral sermon was preached by
-Swift's _bête noir_, that fussy time-server, Bishop Burnet.
-
-In the churchyard lies a far inferior man, Sir John Birkenhead, who died
-in 1679. He was a great pamphlet-writer for the Royalists, and Lawes set
-some of his verses to music.[449] He left directions that he should not be
-buried within the church, as coffins were often removed. In or out of the
-church was buried Rose, Charles II.'s gardener, the first man to grow a
-pine-apple in England--a slice of which the king graciously handed to Mr.
-Evelyn.
-
-Worst of all--a scoundrel, and fool among sensible men--here lies the
-bully and murderer, Lord Mohun, who fell in a duel in Hyde Park with the
-Duke of Hamilton, immortalised in Mr. Thackeray's _Esmond_. Mohun died
-in 1712. Here also, in 1721, came that vile and pretentious French
-painter, Louis Laguerre, whom Pope justly satirised. He was brought over
-by Verrio, and painted the "sprawling" "Labours of Hercules" at Hampton
-Court. He died of apoplexy at Drury Lane Theatre. That clever and
-determined burglar, Jack Sheppard, is said to have been buried in St.
-Martin's in 1724. Farquhar, the Irish dramatist, author of "The Beaux'
-Stratagem," was interred here in 1707. Roubilliac, the French sculptor,
-who lived close by, was also buried in this spot, and Hogarth attended his
-funeral.
-
-Mr. J. T. Smith, author of the _Life of Nollekens_, speaking of his own
-visits to the vaults of St. Martin's Church, says, "It is a curious fact
-that Mrs. Rudd requested to be placed near the coffins of the Perreaus.
-Melancholy as my visits to this vault have been, I frankly own that
-pleasant recollections have almost invited me to sing, 'Did you ne'er hear
-of a jolly young waterman?' when passing by the coffin of my father's old
-friend, Charles Bannister."[450]
-
-Mr. F. Buckland that delightful writer on natural history, who visited the
-same charnel-house in his search for the body of the great John Hunter,
-describes the vaults as piled with heaps of leaden coffins, horrible to
-every sense; but as I write from memory, I will not give the ghastly
-details.
-
-That indefatigable and too restless exposer of abuses, Daniel Defoe, wrote
-a pamphlet in 1720 entitled "Parochial Tyranny; or, the Housekeeper's
-Complaint against the Exactions of Select Vestries." In this pamphlet he
-published one of the bills of the vestry of St. Martin's in 1713, which
-contains the following impudent items:--
-
- "Spent at May meetings or visitation £65 0 4
-
- Ditto at taverns, with ministers, justices,
- overseers, &c. 72 19 7
-
- Sacrament bread and wine 88 10 0
-
- Paid towards a robbery 21 14 0
-
- Spent for dinner at the Mulberry Gardens 49 13 4"
-
-In 1818 the churchwardens' dinner cost £56: 18s. Archdeacon Potts' sermon
-on the death of Queen Charlotte not selling, the parish paid the loss,
-£48: 12: 9. In 1813 the vestry charged the parish £5 for petitioning
-against the Roman Catholics.
-
-The Thames watermen have a plot set apart for themselves in St. Martin's
-Churchyard. These amphibious and pugnacious beings were formerly notorious
-for their powers of sarcasm, though Dr. Johnson on a celebrated occasion
-put one of them out of countenance. In spite of coaches and sedan
-chairs--their horror in the times of the "Water Poet," who must often have
-ferried Shakspere over to the Globe Theatre at the Bankside--they
-continued till the days of omnibuses and cheap cabs, rowing and singing,
-rejoicing in their scarlet tunics, and skimming to and fro over the Thames
-like swallows.
-
-There is a Westminster tradition of a waterman who pretended to be deaf,
-and who was much employed by lovers, barristers who wished to air their
-eloquence, and young M.P.s who wanted to recite their speeches
-undisturbed.
-
-In 1821 died Copper Holms, a well-known character on the river. He lived,
-with his wife and children, somewhere along the shore in an ark, which he
-had artfully framed from a West-country vessel, and which, coppers and
-all, cost him £150. The City brought an action to compel him to remove the
-obstruction. The honest fellow was buried in "The Waterman's Churchyard,"
-on the south side of St. Martin's Church.[451]
-
-In 1683 Dr. Thomas Tenison, vicar of the parish, afterwards Archbishop of
-Canterbury, lived in this street; he died at Lambeth in 1715. He founded
-in this parish a school and library. Though Swift did say he was "hot and
-heavy as a tailor's iron," he seems to have been one of the best and most
-tolerant of men, notwithstanding he attacked Hobbes and Bellarmine with
-his pen. He worked bravely during the plague, and was princely in his
-charities during the dreadful winter of 1683. It was he who prepared
-Monmouth for death, and smoothed Queen Mary's dying pillow. He was a
-steady friend of William of Orange.
-
-Two doors from Slaughter's, on the west side, but lower down, lived
-Ambrose Philips, from 1720 to 1724. Pope laughed at his "Pastorals," which
-had been overpraised by Tickell. Though a friend of Addison and Steele,
-his sprightly but effeminate copies of verses procured him from Henry
-Carey the name of "Namby Pamby." His "Winter Scene," a sketch of a Danish
-winter, is, however, admirable.
-
-Ambrose Philips was laughed at for advertising in the _London Gazette_, of
-January 1714, for contributions to a _Poetical Miscellany_. He was a
-Leicestershire man, and chiefly remarkable for translating Racine's
-"Distressed Mother." When the Whigs came into power under George I. he was
-put into the commission of the peace, and made a Commissioner of the
-Lottery. He afterwards became Registrar of the Prerogative Court at
-Dublin, wrote in the _Free Thinker_, and died in 1749. Pope laughed at the
-small poet as--
-
- "The bard whom pilfered Pastorals renown,
- Who turns a Persian tale for half-a-crown,
- Just writes to make his barrenness appear,
- And strains from hide-bound brains eight lines a year."[452]
-
-It was always one of Pope's keenest strokes to call a man poor. Philips,
-in 1714, had industriously translated the _Thousand and One Days_, a
-series of Persian tales, and gained very honourably earned money. The wasp
-of Twickenham, whose malice never grew old, sketched Philips again as
-"Macer," a simple, harmless fellow, who borrowed ends of verse, and whose
-highest ambition was "to wear red stockings and to dine with Steele."
-Ambrose, naturally indignant to hear himself accused of stealing the
-little fame he had, very spiritedly hung up a birch at the bar of Button's
-Coffee-house, with which he threatened to chastise the Æsop of the age if
-he dared show himself, but Pope wisely stayed at home.[453]
-
-The first house from the corner of Newport Street, on the right hand going
-to Charing Cross, was occupied by Beard, the celebrated public singer, who
-in 1738-9 married Lady Henrietta Herbert, the only daughter of the Earl
-Waldegrave. After her death the widower married the daughter of Mr. John
-Rich, the inventor of English pantomime, the best harlequin that probably
-ever lived, and the patentee of Covent Garden Theatre from 1732 to 1762.
-The parlour of the house had two windows facing the south towards Charing
-Cross. Here Mr. J. T. Smith describes his father smoking a pipe with Beard
-and George Lambert, the latter the founder of the Beef-steak Club and the
-clever scene-painter of Covent Garden Theatre. The fire of 1808 destroyed
-most of Lambert's work with the theatre.[454]
-
-Next to this house stood "Old Slaughter's" Coffee-house, the great haunt
-of artists from Hogarth to Wilkie. Towards the end of its existence it was
-the head-quarters of naval and military officers before the establishment
-of West End Clubs. It was pulled down in 1844 to make way for the new
-street between Long Acre and Leicester Square. The original landlord, John
-Slaughter, started it in 1692, and died about 1740.[455] It first became
-known as "Old Slaughter's" in 1760, when an opposition set up in the
-street under the name of "Young" or "New Slaughter's."
-
-There is a foolish tradition that the coffee-house derived its name from
-being frequented by the butchers of Newport Market. Mr. Smith gives a
-charming chapter on the frequenters of this old haunt of Dryden and
-afterwards of Pope. The first he mentions was Mr. Ware, the architect, who
-published a folio edition of Palladio, the great Italian architect of
-Elizabeth's time. Ware was originally a chimney-sweeper's boy in Charles
-Court, Strand; but being one day seen chalking houses on the front of
-Whitehall, a gentleman passing became his patron, educated him, and sent
-him to Italy. His bust was one of Roubilliac's best works. His skin is
-said to have retained the stain of soot to the day of his death.[456]
-
-Gravelot, who kept a drawing-school in the Strand, nearly opposite
-Southampton Street, was another frequenter of Old Slaughter's. Henri
-François Bourignon Gravelot was born in Paris in 1699, and died in that
-city in 1773. His drawings were always minutely finished, and his designs
-tasteful, particularly those which he etched himself for Sir John Hanmer's
-small edition of Shakspere. He found an excellent engraver in poor Charles
-Grignon, Le Bas' pupil, who in his old age was driven off the field, fell
-into poverty, and so remained till he died in 1810, aged 94.
-
-John Gwynn, the architect, who lived in Little Court, Castle Street,
-Leicester Fields, also frequented this house. He built the bridge at
-Shrewsbury, and wrote a work on London improvements, which his friend Dr.
-Johnson revised and prefaced. The doctor also wrote strongly in favour of
-Gwynn's talent and integrity when he was unsuccessfully competing with
-Mylne for the erection of old Blackfriars Bridge.
-
-Hogarth, too, "used" Slaughter's, and came there to rail at the "black old
-masters," the follies of patrons, and the knavery of dealers. Here he
-would banter and brag, and sketch odd faces on his thumb-nail. Perhaps the
-"Midnight Conversation" was partly derived from convivial scenes in St.
-Martin's Lane.
-
-Roubilliac, the eccentric French sculptor, was another habitué of the
-place. His house and studio were opposite on the east side of the lane,
-and were approached by a long passage and gateway. Here his friends must
-have listened to his rhapsodies in broken English about his great statues
-of Handel, Sir Isaac Newton, and that of Shakspere now at the British
-Museum, which cost Garrick, who left it to the nation, three hundred
-guineas.[457]
-
-That pompous and wretched portrait-painter, Hudson, Reynolds's master and
-Richardson's pupil, used also to frequent Slaughter's. Hudson was the most
-ignorant of painters, yet he was for a time the fashion. He painted the
-portraits of the members of the Dilettanti Society, and was a great and
-ignorant collector of Rembrandt etchings. Hogarth used to call him, in his
-brusque way, "a fat-headed fellow."
-
-Here Hogarth would meet his own engraver, M'Ardell, who lived in Henrietta
-Street. One of the finest English mezzotints in respect of brilliancy is
-Hogarth's portrait of Captain Coram, the brave old originator of the
-Foundling Hospital, by M'Ardell. His engravings after Reynolds are superb.
-That painter himself said that they would immortalise him.[458]
-
-Here, also, came Luke Sullivan, another of Hogarth's engravers, from the
-White Bear, Piccadilly. His etching of "The March to Finchley" is
-considered exquisite.[459] Sullivan was also an exquisite
-miniature-painter, particularly of female heads. He was a handsome,
-lively, reckless fellow, and died in miserable poverty.
-
-At Slaughter's, too, Hogarth must have met the unhappy Theodore Gardelle,
-the miniature-painter, who afterwards murdered his landlady in the
-Haymarket and burnt her body. Hogarth is said to have sketched him in his
-ghostly white cap on the day of his execution. Gardelle, like Greenacre,
-pleaded that he killed the woman by an accidental blow, and then destroyed
-the body in fear. Foote notices his gibbet in _The Mayor of Garratt_.
-
-Old Moser, keeper of the drawing academy in Peter's Court--Roubilliac's
-old rooms--was often to be seen at the same haunt. Moser was a German
-Swiss, a gold-chaser and enameller; he became keeper of the Royal Academy
-in 1768. His daughter painted flowers.
-
-That great painter, poor old Richard Wilson, neglected and almost starved
-by the senseless art-patrons of his day, occasionally came to Slaughter's,
-probably to meet his countryman, blind Parry, the Welsh harper and great
-draught-player.
-
-And, last of all, we must mention Nathanael Smith, the engraver, and Mr.
-Rawle, the accoutrement maker in the Strand, and the inseparable companion
-of Captain Grose, the great antiquary, on whom Burns wrote poems--a
-learned, fat, jovial Falstaff of a man, who compiled an indecorous but
-clever slang dictionary. It was at Rawle's sale that Dickey Suett bought
-Charles II.'s black wig, which he wore for years in "Tom Thumb."
-
-Nos. 76 and 77 St. Martin's Lane were originally one house, built by
-Payne, the architect of Salisbury Street and the original Lyceum. He built
-two small houses in his garden for his friends Gwynn, the competitor for
-Blackfriars Bridge, and Wale, the Royal Academy lecturer on perspective,
-and well-known book-illustrator. The entrances were in Little Court,
-Castle Street. In old times the street on this side, from Beard's Court,
-to St. Martin's Court, was called the Pavement; but the road has since
-been heightened three feet.
-
-Below Payne's, in Hogarth's time, lived a bookseller named Harding, a
-seller of old prints, and author of a little book on the _Monograms of Old
-Engravers_. It was to this shop that Wilson, the sergeant painter, took an
-etching of his own, which was sold to Hudson as a genuine Rembrandt. That
-same night, by agreement, Wilson invited Hogarth and Hudson to supper.
-When the cold sirloin came in, Scott, the marine-painter, called out, "A
-sail, a sail!" for the beef was stuck with skewers bearing impressions of
-the new Rembrandt, of which Hudson was so proud.[460]
-
-Nos. 88 and 89 were built on the site of a large mansion, the staircase of
-which was adorned with allegorical figures. It was here that Hogarth's
-particular friend, John Pine, lived. Pine was the engraver and publisher
-of the scenes from the Armada tapestry in the House of Lords, now
-destroyed. He was a round, fat, oily man; and Hogarth drew him, much to
-his annoyance, as the fat friar eyeing the beef at the "Gate of Calais."
-His son Robert, who painted one of the best portraits of Garrick, and
-carried off the hundred guinea prize of the Society of Arts for his
-picture of the "Siege of Calais," also lived here, and, after him, Dr.
-Gartshore.
-
-The house No. 96, on the west side, was Powell the colourman's in 1828; it
-had then a Queen Anne door-frame, with spread-eagle and carved foliage and
-flowers, like the houses in Carey Street and Great Ormond Street, and a
-shutter sliding in grooves in the old-fashioned way. Mr. Powell's mother
-made for many years annually a pipe of wine from the produce of a vine
-nearly a hundred feet long.[461] This house had a large staircase, painted
-with figures in procession, by a French artist named Clermont, who claimed
-one thousand guineas for his work, and received five hundred. Behind the
-house was the room which Hogarth has painted in "Marriage à la Mode." The
-quack is Dr. Misaubin, whose vile portrait the satirist has given. The
-savage fat woman is his Irish wife. Dr. Misaubin, who lived in this house,
-was the son of a pastor of the Spitalfields French Church. The quack
-realised a great fortune by a famous pill. His son was murdered; his
-grandson squandered his money, and died in St. Martin's Workhouse.
-
-No. 104 was at one time the residence of Sir James Thornhill, Hogarth's
-august father-in-law, a poor yet pretentious painter, who decorated St.
-Paul's. He painted the staircase wall with allegories that were existing
-some years since in good condition. The junior Van Nost, the sculptor,
-afterwards lived here--the same artist who took that mask of Garrick's
-face which afterwards belonged to the elder Mathews. After him, before
-1768, came Hogarth's convivial artist-friend, Francis Hayman, who
-decorated Vauxhall and illustrated countless books. Perhaps it was here
-that the Marquis of Granby, before sitting to the painter, had a round or
-two of sparring. Sir Joshua Reynolds, too, a graver and colder man, came
-to live here before he went to Great Newport Street.
-
-New Slaughter's, at No. 82 in 1828, was established about 1760, and was
-demolished in 1843-44, when the new avenue of Garrick Street was made
-between Long Acre and Leicester Square. It was much frequented by artists
-who wished cheap fare and good society. Roubilliac was often to be found
-here. Wilkie long after enjoyed his frugal dinners here at a small cost.
-He was always the last dropper-in, and was never seen to dine in the house
-before dark. The fact is, the patient young Scotchman always slaved at his
-art till the last glimpse of daylight had disappeared below the red roofs.
-
-Upon the site of the present Quakers' Meeting-house in St. Peter's Court,
-St. Martin's Lane, stood Roubilliac's first studio after he left Cheere.
-Here he executed, with ecstatic raptures at his own genius, his great
-statue of Handel for Vauxhall. Here afterwards a drawing academy was
-started, Mr. Michael Moser being chosen the keeper. Reynolds, Mortimer,
-Nollekens, and M'Ardell were among the earliest members. Hogarth presented
-to it some of his father-in-law's casts, but opposed the principle of
-cheap education to young artists, declaring that every foolish father
-would send his boy there to keep him out of the streets, and so the
-profession would be overstocked. In this academy the students sat to each
-other for drapery, and had also male and female models--sometimes in
-groups.
-
-Amongst the early members of the St. Martin's Lane Academy were the
-following:--Moser, afterwards keeper of the Academy; Hayman, Hogarth's
-friend; Wale, the book-illustrator; Cipriani, famous for his book-prints;
-Allan Ramsay, Reynolds's rival; F. M. Newton; Charles Catton, the prince
-of coach-painters; Zoffany, the dramatic portrait-painter; Collins, the
-sculptor, who modelled Hayman's "Don Quixote;" Jeremy Meyer; William
-Woollett, the great engraver; Anthony Walker, also an engraver; Linnel, a
-carver in wood; John Mortimer, the Salvator Rosa of that day; Rubinstein,
-a drapery-painter and drudge to the portrait-painters; James Paine, son of
-the architect of the Lyceum; Tilly Kettle, who went to the East, painted
-several rajahs, and then died near Aleppo; William Pars, who was sent to
-Greece by the Dilettanti Society; Vandergutch, a painter who turned
-picture-dealer; Charles Grignon, the engraver; C. Norton, Charles
-Sherlock, and Charles Bibb, also engravers; Richmond, Keeble, Evans,
-Roper, Parsons, and Black, now forgotten; Russell, the crayon-painter;
-Richmond Cosway, the miniature-painter, a fop and a mystic; W. Marlowe, a
-landscape-painter; Messrs. Griggs, Rowe, Dubourg, Taylor, Dance, and
-Ratcliffe, pupils of gay Frank Hayman; Richard Earlom, engraver of the
-"Liber Veritatis" of Claude for the Duke of Richmond; J. A. Gresse, a fat
-artist who taught the queen and princesses drawing; Giuseppe Marchi, an
-assistant of Reynolds; Thomas Beech; Lambert, a sculptor, and pupil of
-Roubilliac; Reed, another pupil of the same great artist, who aided in
-executing the skeleton on Mrs. Nightingale's monument, and was famous for
-his pancake clouds; Biaggio Rebecca, the decorator; Richard Wilson, the
-great landscape-painter; Terry, Lewis Lattifere, John Seton, David Martin,
-Burgess; Burch, the medallist; John Collett, an imitator of Hogarth;
-Nollekens, the sculptor; Reynolds, and, of course, Hogarth himself, the
-_primum mobile_.[462]
-
-No. 112 was in old times one of those apothecaries' shops with bottled
-snakes in the windows. It was kept by Leake, the inventor of a
-"diet-drink" once as famous as Lockyer's pill.
-
-Frank Hayman, one of these St. Martin's Lane worthies, was originally a
-scene-painter at Drury Lane. He was with Hogarth at Moll King's when
-Hogarth drew the girl squirting brandy at the other for his picture in the
-_Rake's Progress_. Hayman was a Devonshire man, and a pupil of Brown. When
-he buried his wife, a friend asked him why he spent so much money on the
-funeral. "Oh, sir," replied the droll, revelling fellow, "she would have
-done as much or more for me with pleasure."
-
-Quin and Hayman were inseparable boon companions. One night, after
-"beating the rounds," they both fell into the kennel. Presently Hayman,
-sprawling out his shambling legs, kicked his bedfellow Quin. "Hallo! what
-are you at now?" growled the Welsh actor. "At? why, endeavouring to get
-up, to be sure, for this don't suit my palate." "Pooh!" replied Quin,
-"remain where you are; the watchman will come by shortly, and he will
-_take us both up_!"[463]
-
-No. 113 was occupied by Thomas Major, a die-engraver to the Stamp Office,
-a pupil of Le Bas, and an excellent reproducer of subjects from Teniers.
-He was also an engraver of landscapes after pictures by Ferg, one of the
-artists employed with Sir James Thornhill at the Chelsea china
-manufactory.
-
-The old watch-house or round-house used to stand exactly opposite the
-centre of the portico of Gibbs's church.[464] There is a rare etching
-which represents its front during a riot. Stocks, elaborately carved with
-vigorous figures of a man being whipped by the hangman, stood near the
-wall of the watch-house. The carving, much mutilated, was preserved in the
-vaults under the church.
-
-Near the stocks, with an entrance from the King's Mews, stood "the Barn,"
-afterwards called "the Canteen," which was a great resort of the chess,
-draught, and whist players of the City.
-
-At the south-west corner of St. Martin's Lane was the shop of Jefferys,
-the geographer to King George III.
-
-No. 20 was a public-house, latterly the Portobello, with Admiral Vernon's
-ship, well painted by Monamy, for its sign. The date, 1638, was on the
-front of this house, now removed.
-
-No. 114 stands on the site of the old house of the Earls of Salisbury.
-Before the alterations of 1827 there were vestiges of the old building
-remaining. It has been a constant tradition in the lane, that in this
-house, in James II.'s reign, the seven bishops were lodged before they
-were conveyed to the Tower.
-
-Opposite old Salisbury House stood a turnpike, and the tradition in the
-lane is that the Earl of Salisbury obtained its removal as a nuisance. At
-that time the church was literally in the fields. The turnpike-house
-stood (circa 1760) on the site of No. 28, afterwards (in 1828) Pullen's
-wine-vaults. The Westminster Fire Office was first established in St.
-Martin's Lane, between Chandos Street and May's Buildings.
-
-The White Horse livery-stables were originally tea-gardens,[465] and south
-of these was a hop-garden. The oldest house in the lane overhung the White
-Horse stables, and was standing in 1828.
-
-No. 60 was formerly Chippendale's, the great upholsterer and
-cabinet-maker, whose folio work was the great authority in the trade
-before Mr. Hope's classic style overthrew for a time that of Louis
-Quatorze.
-
-No. 63 formerly led to Roubilliac's studio. Here, in 1828, the Sunday
-paper _The Watchman_, was printed.
-
-It must have been here, in the sculptor's time, that Garrick, coming to
-see how his Shakspere statue progressed, drew out a two-foot rule, and put
-on a tragic and threatening face to frighten a great red-headed
-Yorkshireman, who was sawing marble for Roubilliac; but who, to his
-surprise, merely rolled his quid, and coolly said, "What trick are you
-after next, my little master?" Upon the honest sculptor's death, Read, one
-of his pupils, a conceited pretender, took the premises in 1762, and
-advertised himself as "Mr. Roubilliac's successor."
-
-Read executed the poor monuments of the Duchess of Northumberland and of
-Admiral Tyrrell, now in Westminster Abbey. His master used to say to Read
-when he was bragging, "Ven you do de monument, den de varld vill see vot
-von d-- ting you vill make." Nollekens used to say of the admiral's
-monument, "That figure going to heaven out of the sea looks for all the
-world as if it were hanging from a gallows with a rope round its
-neck."[466]
-
-No. 70 was formerly the house where Mr. Hone held his exhibition when his
-picture of "The Conjuror," intended to ridicule Sir Joshua Reynolds as a
-plagiarist, and to insult Miss Angelica Kaufmann, was refused admittance
-at Somerset House. Mr. Nathanael Hone was a miniature-painter on enamel,
-who attempted oil pictures and grew envious of Reynolds. Hone was a tall,
-pompous, big, erect man, who wore a broad brimmed hat and a lapelled coat,
-punctiliously buttoned up to his chin. He walked with a measured, stately
-step, and spoke with an air of great self-importance--in this sort of way:
-"Joseph Nollekens, Esq., R.A., how--do--you--do?"[467]
-
-The corner house of Long Acre, now 72, formed part of the extensive
-premises of Mr. Cobb, George III.'s upholsterer--a proud, pompous man, who
-always strutted about his workshops in full dress. It was Dance's portrait
-of Mr. Cobb, given in exchange for a table, that led to Dance's
-acquaintance with Garrick. One day in the library at Buckingham House, old
-King George asked Cobb to hand him a certain book. Instead of doing so,
-mistaken Cobb called to a man who was at work on a ladder, and said,
-"Fellow, give me that book." The king instantly rose and asked the man's
-name. "Jenkins," replied the astonished upholsterer. "Then," observed the
-good old king, "Jenkins shall hand me the book."[468]
-
-Alderman Boydell, the great encourager of art, when he first began with
-half a shop, used to etch small plates of landscapes in sets of six for
-sixpence. As there were few print-shops then in London, he prevailed upon
-the proprietors of toy-shops to put them in their windows for sale. Every
-Saturday he went the round of the shops to see what had been done, or to
-take more. His most successful shop was "The Cricket-Bat," in Duke's
-Court, St. Martin's Lane.[469]
-
-Abraham Raimbach, the engraver, was born in Cecil Court, St. Martin's
-Lane, in 1776. Sir Joshua Reynolds, in his early period, lived nearly
-opposite May's Buildings. He afterwards went to Great Newport Street,
-where he first met Dr. Johnson.
-
-O'Keefe describes being in a coffee-house in St. Martin's Lane on the very
-morning when the famous No. 45 came out. The unconscious newsman came in,
-and, as a matter of course, laid the paper on the table before him. About
-the year 1777 O'Keefe was standing talking with his brother at Charing
-Cross, when a slender figure in a scarlet coat with a large bag, and
-fierce three-cocked hat, crossed the way, carefully choosing his steps,
-the weather being wet--it was John Wilkes.[470]
-
-When Fuseli returned to London in 1779, after his foreign tour, he resided
-with a portrait painter named Cartwright, at No. 100 St. Martin's
-Lane,[471] and he remained there till his marriage with Miss Rawlins in
-1788, when he removed to Foley Street. Here he commenced his acquaintance
-with Professor Bonnycastle, and produced his popular picture of "The
-Nightmare" (1781), by which the publisher of the print realised £500. Here
-also he revised Cowper's version of the _Iliad_, and became acquainted
-with Sir Joshua Reynolds and Dr. Moore, the author of _Zeluco_.
-
-May's Buildings bear the date of 1739. Mr. May, who built them, lived at
-No. 43, which he ornamented with pilasters and a cornice. This house used
-to be thought a good specimen of architectural brickwork.
-
-The club of "The Eccentrics," in May's Buildings, was, in 1812, much
-frequented by the eloquent Richard Lalor Sheil, by William Mudford, the
-editor of the _Courier_, a man of logical and sarcastic power,--and by
-"Pope Davis," an artist, in later years a great friend of the unfortunate
-Haydon. "Pope Davis" was so called from having painted, when in Rome, a
-large picture of the "Presentation of the Shrewsbury Family to the
-Pope."[472]
-
-The Royal Society of Literature, at 4 St. Martin's Place, Charing Cross,
-was founded in 1823, "for the advancement of literature," on which at
-present it has certainly had no very perceptible influence. It was
-incorporated by royal charter Sept. 13, 1826. George IV. gave 1000 guineas
-a year to this body, which rescued the last years of Coleridge's wasted
-life from utter dependence, and placed Dr. Jamieson above want. William
-IV. discontinued the lavish grant of a king who was generous only with
-other people's money, and was always in debt; and since that the somewhat
-effete society has sunk into a Transaction Publishing Society, or rather a
-club with an improving library. Sir Walter Scott's opposition to the
-society was as determined as Hogarth's against the Royal Academy. "The
-immediate and direct favour of the sovereign," said Scott, who had a
-superstitious respect for any monarch, "is worth the patronage of ten
-thousand societies." Literature wants no patronage now, thank God, but
-only intelligent purchasers; and whether a king does or does not read an
-author's work, is of small consequence to any writer.
-
-[Illustration: OLD SLAUGHTER'S COFFEE-HOUSE.]
-
-Admission to the Royal Society of Literature is obtained by a certificate,
-signed by three members, and an election by ballot. Ordinary members pay
-three guineas on admission, and two guineas annually, or compound by a
-payment of twenty guineas. The society devotes itself for the most part to
-the study of Greek and Latin inscriptions and Egyptian literature.[473]
-This learned body also professes to fix the standard of the English
-language; to read papers on history, poetry, philosophy, and philology; to
-correspond with learned men in foreign countries; to reward literary
-merit; and to publish unedited remains of ancient literature.
-
-St. Martin's Lane has seen many changes. Cranbourne Alley is gone with all
-its bonnet-shops, and the Mews and C'ribbee Islands are no more, but there
-still remain a few old houses, with brick pilasters and semi-Grecian
-pediments, to remind us of the days of Fuseli and Reynolds, Hayman and Old
-Slaughter's, Hogarth and Roubilliac. I can assure my readers that a most
-respectable class of ghosts haunts the artist quarter in St. Martin's
-Lane.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: SALISBURY AND WORCESTER HOUSES, 1630.]
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-LONG ACRE AND ITS TRIBUTARIES.
-
-
-At the latter end of 1664, says Defoe, two men, said to be Frenchmen, died
-of the plague at the Drury Lane end of Long Acre. Dr. Hodges, however, a
-greater authority than Defoe, who wrote fifty-seven years after the event,
-says merely that the pestilence broke out in Westminster, and that two or
-three persons dying, the frightened neighbours removed into the City, and
-there carried the contagion. He, however, distinctly states that the pest
-came to us from Holland, and most probably in a parcel of infected goods
-from Smyrna.[474]
-
-According to Defoe, the family with which the Frenchmen had lodged
-endeavoured to conceal the deaths; but the rumour growing, the Secretary
-of State heard of it, and sent two physicians and a surgeon to inspect the
-bodies. They certifying that the men had really died of the plague, the
-parish clerk returned the deaths to "the Hall," and they were printed in
-the weekly bill of mortality. "The people showed a great concern at this,
-and began to be alarmed all over the town."[475] At Christmas Dr. Hodges
-attended a case of plague, and shortly afterwards a proclamation was
-issued for placing watchmen day and night at the doors of infected houses,
-which were to be marked with a red St. Andrew cross and the subscription
-"Lord have mercy upon us!"[476] By the next September the terrible disease
-had risen to its height, and the deaths ranged as high as 12,000 a week,
-and in the worst night after the bonfires had been burned in the street,
-to 4000 in the twelve hours.[477]
-
-Great Queen Street, so called after Henrietta Maria, the imprudent but
-brave wife of Charles I., was built about 1629, before the troubles. Howes
-(editor of Stow) speaks in 1631, of "the new fair buildings leading into
-Drury Lane."[478] Many of the houses were built by Webb, one of Inigo
-Jones's scholars. The south was the fashionable side, looking towards the
-Pancras fields; most of the north side houses must, therefore, be of a
-later date. According to one authority Inigo Jones himself built Queen
-Street, at the cost of the Jesuits, designing it for a square, and leaving
-in the middle a niche for the statue of Queen Henrietta. "The stately and
-magnificent houses," begun on the other side near Little Queen Street,
-were not continued. There were fleurs-de-luce placed on the walls in
-honour of the queen.[479]
-
-George Digby, the second Earl of Bristol, lived in Great Queen Street, in
-a large house with seven rooms on a floor, a long gallery, and gardens.
-Evelyn describes going to see him (probably there), to consult about the
-site of Greenwich Hospital, with Denham the poet and surveyor, and one of
-Inigo Jones's clerks. Digby was a Knight of the Garter, who first wrote
-against Popery and then converted himself. He persecuted Lord Strafford,
-yet then turning courtier, lived long enough to persecute Lord Clarendon.
-Grammont, Bussy, and Clarendon all decry the earl; and Horace Walpole
-writes wittily of him--"With great parts, he always hurt himself and his
-friends; with romantic bravery, he was always an unsuccessful commander.
-He spoke for the Test Act, though a Roman Catholic, and addicted himself
-to astrology on the birthday of true philosophy."[480]
-
-In 1671 Evelyn describes the earl's house as taken by the Commissioners of
-Trade and Plantations, of which he was one, and furnished with tapestry
-"of the king's." The Duke of Buckingham, the earl of Sandwich (Pepys's
-patron), the Earl of Lauderdale, Sir John Finch, Waller the poet, and
-saturnine Colonel Titus (the author of the terrible pamphlet against
-Cromwell, _Killing no Murder_) were the new occupants.
-
-They sat, says Evelyn, at the board in the council chamber, a very large
-room furnished with atlases, maps, charts, and globes. The first day's
-debate was an ominous one: it related to the condition of New England,
-which had grown rich, strong, and "very independent as to their regard to
-Old England or his majesty. The colony was able to contest with all the
-other plantations,[481] and there was fear of her breaking from her
-dependence. Some of the council were for sending a menacing letter, but
-others who better understood the peevish and touchy humour of that colony
-were utterly against it." A few weeks afterwards Evelyn was at the
-council, when a letter was read from Jamaica, describing how Morgan, the
-Welsh buccaneer, had sacked and burned Panama; the bravest thing of the
-kind done since Drake. Morgan, who cheated his companions and stole their
-spoil, afterwards came to England, and was, like detestable Blood,
-received at court.
-
-Lord Chancellor Finch, Earl of Nottingham, who lived in Great Queen
-Street, presided as Lord High Steward at Lord Strafford's trial, at which
-Evelyn was present, noticing the ill-bred impudence of Titus Oates.[482]
-Finch was the son of a recorder of London, and died in 1681. He was living
-here when that impudent thief, Sadler, stole the mace and purse, and
-carried them off in procession.
-
-The choleric and Quixotic Lord Herbert of Cherbury lived in Great Queen
-Street, in a house on the south side, a few doors east of Great Wyld
-Street. Here he began his wild Deistic work, _De Veritate_, published in
-Paris in 1624, and in London three years before his death. He says that he
-finished this rhapsody in France, where it was praised by Tilenus, an
-Arminian professor at Sedan, and an opponent of the Calvinists, which
-procured him a pension from James I., and also from the learned Grotius
-when he came to Paris, after his escape in a linen-chest from the
-Calvinist fortress of Louvestein. Urged to publish by friends, Lord
-Herbert, afraid of the censure his book might receive, was relieved from
-his doubts by what his vanity and heated imagination pleased to consider a
-vision from heaven.
-
-This Welsh Quixote says, "Being thus doubtful in my chamber one fair day
-in the summer, my casement being open towards the south, the sun shining
-clear and no wind stirring, I took my book, _De Veritate_, in my hand, and
-kneeling on my knees, devoutly said these words: 'Oh, thou eternal God,
-author of the light which now shines upon me, and giver of all inward
-illuminations, I do beseech thee of thy infinite goodness to pardon a
-greater request than a sinner ought to make. I am not satisfied enough
-whether I shall publish this book, _De Veritate_. If it be for thy glory,
-I beseech thee to give me some sign from heaven; if not, I shall suppress
-it!' I had no sooner spoken these words, but a _loud though gentle
-noise_[483] came from the heavens (for it was like nothing on earth),
-which did so comfort and cheer me that I took my petition as granted. And
-this (however strange it may seem) I protest before the eternal God is
-true. Neither am I in any way superstitiously deceived herein, since I did
-not only hear the noise, but in the serenest sky that ever I saw--being
-without _all_ cloud--did, to my thinking, see the place from whence it
-came."
-
-The noise was probably some child falling from a chair overhead, or a
-chest of drawers being moved in an upper room; and if it _had_ been
-thunder in a clear sky, it was no more than Horace once heard. Heaven does
-not often express its approval of Deistical books. Lord Herbert, doubted
-of general, and yet believed in individual revelation. What crazy vanity,
-to think the work of an amateur philosopher of sufficient importance for a
-special revelation,[484] that (in his own opinion) had been denied to a
-neglected world! Lord Herbert, though refused the sacrament by Usher, bore
-it very serenely, asked what o'clock it was, then said, "An hour hence I
-shall depart," turned his head to the other side, and expired.[485] He had
-moved to this quarter from King Street. Lord Herbert, though he wrote a
-Life to vindicate that brutal tyrant Henry VIII., was inconsistent enough
-to join the Parliament against a less wise but more illegal king, Charles
-I. When I pass down Queen Street, wondering whether that southern window
-of the Welsh knight's vision was on the front of the south side, or on the
-back of the southern side of the street, I sometimes think of those soft
-lines of his upon the question "whether love should continue for ever?"
-
- "Having interr'd her infant birth,
- The watery ground that late did mourn
- Was strew'd with flowers for the return
- Of the wish'd bridegroom of the earth.
-
- "The well-accorded birds did sing
- Their hymns unto the pleasant time,
- And in a sweet consorted chime,
- Did welcome in the cheerful spring."
-
-And then on my return home, I get out brave old Ben Jonson, and read his
-lines addressed to this last of the knights:--
-
- "... and on whose every part
- Truth might spend all her voice, Fame all her art.
- Whether thy learning they would take, or wit,
- Or valour, or thy judgment seasoning it,
- Thy standing upright to thyself, thy ends
- Like straight, thy piety to God and friends."
-
-Sir Thomas Fairfax, general of the Parliament, probably lived here, as he
-dated from this street a printed proclamation of the 12th of February
-1648.
-
-Sir Godfrey Kneller, the great portrait painter of William and Mary's
-reign, but more especially of Queen Anne's time, once lived in a house in
-this street. Sir Godfrey, though a humorist, was the vainest of men, and
-was made rather a butt by his friends Pope and Gay. Kneller was the son of
-a surveyor at Lübeck, and intended for the army. King George I., who
-created him a baronet, was the last of the sovereigns who sat to him. Sir
-Godfrey was the successor of Sir Peter Lely in England, but was still more
-slight and careless in manner. His portraits may be often known by the
-curls being thrown behind the back, while in Lely's portraits they fall
-over the shoulders and chest. Kneller was a humorist, but very vain, as a
-man might well be whom Dryden, Pope, Addison, Prior, Tickell, and Steele
-had eulogised in verse. On one occasion, when Pope was sitting watching
-Kneller paint, he determined to fool him "to the top of his bent." "Do you
-not think, Sir Godfrey," said the little poet, slily, "that, if God had
-had your advice at the creation, he would have made a much better world?"
-The painter turned round sharply from his easel, fixed his eyes on Pope,
-and laying one hand on his deformed shoulder, replied, "Fore Gott, Mister
-Pope, I theenk I shoode."
-
-There was wit in all Kneller's banter, and even when his quaint sayings
-told against himself, they seemed to reflect the humour of a man conscious
-of the ludicrous side of his own vanity. To his tailor who brought him his
-son to offer him as an apprentice emulative of Annibale Caracci, whose
-father had also sat cross-legged, Sir Godfrey said, grandly, "Dost thou
-think, man, I can make thy son a painter? No; God Almighty only makes
-painters." To a low fellow whom he overheard cursing himself he said, "God
-damn you? No, God may damn the Duke of Marlborough, and perhaps Sir
-Godfrey Kneller; but do you think he will take the trouble of damning such
-a scoundrel as you?"[486]
-
-Gay on one occasion read some verses to Sir Godfrey (probably those
-describing Pope's imaginary welcome from Greece) in which these outrageous
-lines occur--
-
- "What can the extent of his vast soul confine--
- A painter, critic, engineer, divine?"
-
-Upon which Kneller, remembering that he had been intended for a soldier,
-and perhaps scenting out the joke, said, "Ay, Mr. Gay, all vot you 'ave
-said is very faine and very true, but you 'ave forgot von theeng, my good
-friend. Egad, I should have been a general of an army, for ven I vos in
-Venice there vos a _girandole_, and all the Place of St. Mark vos in a
-smoke of gunpowder, and I did like the smell, Mr. Gay--should have been a
-great general, Mr. Gay."[487]
-
-His dream, too, was related by Pope to Spence as a good story of the
-German's droll vanity. Kneller thought he had ascended by a very high hill
-to heaven, and there found St. Peter at the gate, dealing with a vast
-crowd of applicants. To one he said, "Of what sect was you?" "I was a
-Papist." "Go you there." "What was you?" "A Protestant." "Go you there."
-"And you?" "A Turk." "Go you there." In the meantime St. Luke had descried
-the painter, and asking if he was not the famous Sir Godfrey Kneller,
-entered into conversation with him about his beloved art, so that Sir
-Godfrey quite forgot about St. Peter till he heard a voice behind him--St.
-Peter's--call out, "Come in, Sir Godfrey, and take whatever place you
-like."[488]
-
-Pope is said to have ridiculed his friend under the name of Helluo.[489]
-He certainly laughed at his justice in dismissing a soldier who had stolen
-a joint of meat, and blaming the butcher who had put it in the rogue's
-way. Whenever he saw a constable, followed by a mob, coming up to his
-house at Whitton, he would call out to him, "Mr. Constable, you see that
-turning; go that way; you will find an ale-house, the sign of the King's
-Head: go and make it up."[490]
-
-Jacob Tonson got pictures out of Kneller, covetous as he was, by praising
-him extravagantly, and sending him haunches of fat venison and dozens of
-cool claret. Sir Godfrey used to say to Vandergucht, "Oh, my goot man,
-this old Jacob loves me. He is a very goot man, for you see he loves me,
-he sends me goot things. The venison vos fat." Old Geckie, the surgeon,
-however, got a picture or two even cheaper, for he sent no present, but
-then his praises were as fat as Jacob's venison.[491]
-
-Sir Godfrey used to get very angry if any doubt was expressed as to the
-legitimacy of the Pretender. "His father and mother have sat to me about
-thirty-six times a-piece, and I know every line and bit of their faces.
-Mine Gott, I could paint King James _now_ by memory. I say the child is so
-like both, that there is not a feature in his face but what belongs to
-either father or mother--nay, the nails of his fingers are his
-mother's--the queen that was. Doctor, you may be out in your letters, but
-I cannot be out in my lines."[492]
-
-Kneller had intended Hogarth's father-in-law, Sir James Thornhill, to
-paint his staircase at Whitton, but hearing that Newton was sitting to
-him, he was in dudgeon, declared that no portrait-painter should paint
-his house, and employed "sprawling" Laguerre instead.
-
-Kneller's prices were fifteen guineas for a head, twenty if with only one
-hand, thirty for a half, and sixty for a whole length. He painted much too
-fast and flimsily, and far too much by the help of foreign assistants--in
-fact, avowedly to fill his kitchen. In thirty years he made a large
-fortune, in spite of losing £20,000 in the South Sea Bubble. His wigs,
-drapery, and backgrounds were all painted for him. He is said to have left
-at his death 500 unfinished portraits.[493] His favourite work, the
-portrait of a Chinese converted and brought over by Couplet, a Jesuit, is
-at Windsor. But Walpole preferred his Grinling Gibbons at Houghton.
-
-Kneller left his house in Great Queen Street to his wife, and after her
-decease to his godson Godfrey Huckle, who took the name of Kneller.
-Amongst the celebrated persons painted by Kneller in his best manner were
-Bolingbroke, Wren, Lady Wortley Montague, Pope, Locke, Burnet, Addison,
-Evelyn, and the Earl of Peterborough. The brittleness of this man's fame
-is another proof that he who paints merely for his time must perish with
-his time.
-
-Conway House was in Great Queen Street. Lord Conway, an able soldier,
-brought up by Lord Vere, his uncle, was an epicure, who by his agreeable
-conversation was very acceptable at the court of Charles I.[494] He had
-the misfortune to be utterly routed by the Scotch at Newburn--a defeat
-which gave them Newcastle. The previous Lord Conway was that Secretary of
-State of whom James I. said, "Steenie has given me two proper servants--a
-secretary (Conway) who can neither write nor read, and a groom of the
-bedchamber (Mr. Clarke, a one-handed man) who cannot truss my
-points."[495] It had been well for England if this sottish pedant had had
-no worse servants than Conway and Clarke. Raleigh might then have been
-spared, and Overbuy would not have been poisoned.
-
-Lord Conway, whose son, General Conway, was such an idol of Horace
-Walpole, lived in the family house in Great Queen Street.
-
-Winchester House was not far off. Lord Pawlet figures in all the early
-scenes of the Civil War. He was one of the first nobles to raise forces in
-the West for the wrong-headed king. On one occasion Basing House was all
-but lost by a plot hatched between Waller and the Marquis of Winchester's
-brother, but it was detected in time to save that important place. Basing,
-after three months' siege by a conjunction of Parliament troops from
-Hampshire and Essex, was gallantly succoured by Colonel Gage. The
-Marchioness, a lady of great honour and alliance, being sister to the Earl
-of Essex and to the lady Marchioness of Hertford, enlisted all the Roman
-Catholics in Oxford in this dashing adventure.[496] Basing was, however,
-eventually stormed and taken by Cromwell, who put most of the garrison to
-the sword. William, the fourth marquis, died 1628, and was succeeded by
-his son, who was the father of Charles, created in 1689 Duke of Bolton, a
-title that became extinct in 1794.
-
-John Greenhill, a Long Acre celebrity, was one of the most promising of
-Lely's scholars. He painted portraits, among others, of Locke,
-Shaftesbury, and Davenant. He also drew in crayons, and engraved. It is
-said that Lely was jealous of him, and would not let his pupil see him
-paint, till Greenhill's handsome wife was sent to Sir Peter to sit for her
-portrait, which cost twelve broad pieces or £15. Greenhill, at first
-industrious, became acquainted with the players, and fell into debauched
-courses. Coming home drunk late one night from the Vine Tavern, he fell
-into the kennel in Long Acre, and was carried to Perrey Walton's, the
-royal picture-cleaner, in Lincoln's Inn Fields, where he had been lodging,
-and died in his bed that night (1676), in the flower of his age. He was
-buried at St. Giles's, and shameless Mrs. Aphra Behn, who admired his
-person and his paintings, wrote a long elegy on his death. Sir Peter is
-said to have settled £40 a year on Greenhill's widow and children, but she
-died mad soon after her husband.[497]
-
-In June 1718 Ryan, an actor of Lincoln's Inn Theatre, was supping at the
-Sun in Long Acre, and had placed his sword quietly in the window, when a
-bully named Kelly came up and made passes at him, provoking him to a duel.
-The young actor took his sword, drew it, and passed it through the
-rascal's body. The act being one of obvious self-defence, he was not
-called to serious account for it. This Ryan had acted with Betterton.
-Addison especially selected him as Marcus in his "Cato," and Garrick
-confessed he took Ryan's Richard as his model.[498]
-
-Some years after, Ryan, by this time the Orestes, Macduff, Iago, Cassio,
-and Captain Plume of the Lincoln's Inn Fields Theatre, in passing down
-Great Queen Street, after playing Scipio in "Sophonisba," was fired at by
-a footpad, and had his jaw shattered. "Friend," moaned the wounded man,
-"you have killed me, but I forgive you." The actor, however, recovered to
-resume his place upon the boards, and generous Quin gave him £1000 in
-advance that he had put him down for in his will. He died in 1760.
-
-Hudson, a wretched portrait-painter, although the master of Sir Joshua
-Reynolds, lived in a house now divided into two, Nos. 55 and 56.
-Portrait-painting, being unable to sink lower than Hudson, turned and
-began to rise again. When Reynolds in later years took a villa on Richmond
-Hill, somewhat above that of Hudson, he said, "I never thought I should
-live to look down on my old master." Hudson's house was afterwards
-occupied by that insipid poet, Hoole, the translator of Tasso and of
-Ariosto.
-
-The old West End entrance of this street, a narrow passage known as the
-"Devil's Gap," was taken down in 1765.
-
-Martin Folkes, an eminent scholar and antiquarian, was born in Great Queen
-Street in 1690. He was made vice-president of the Royal Society by Newton
-in 1723, and in 1727, on Sir Isaac's death, disputed the presidentship
-with Sir Hans Sloane,--a post which he eventually obtained in 1741, on the
-resignation of Sir Hans. Folkes was a great numismatist, and seems to
-have been a generous, pleasant man. He died in 1784. The sale of his
-library, prints, and coins lasted fifty-six days. He was, as Leigh Hunt
-remarks, one of "the earliest persons among the gentry to marry an
-actress,"[499] setting by that means an excellent example. His wife's name
-was Lucretia Bradshaw.
-
-Miss Pope, of Queen Street, had a face grave and unpromising, but her
-humour was dry and racy as old sherry. Churchill, in the "Rosciad,"
-mentions her as vivaciously advancing in a jig to perform as Cherry and
-Polly Honeycomb. Later she grew into an excellent Mrs. Malaprop.[500]
-
-This good woman, well-bred lady, and finished actress, lived for forty
-years in Queen Street, two doors east of Freemasons' Tavern; there, the
-Miss Prue, and Cherry, and Jacinta, and Miss Biddy of years before, the
-friend of Garrick and the praised of Churchill, sat, surrounded by
-portraits of Lord Nuneham, General Churchill, Garrick, and Holland, and
-told the story of her first love to Horace Smith.
-
-An attachment had sprung up between her and Holland, but Garrick had
-warned her of the man's waywardness and instability. Miss Pope would not
-believe the accusations till one day, on her way to see Mrs. Clive at
-Twickenham, she beheld the unfaithful Holland in a boat with Mrs.
-Baddeley, near the Eel-pie Island. She accused him at the next rehearsal,
-he would confess no wrong, and she never spoke to him again but on the
-stage. "But I have reason to know," said the old lady, shedding tears as
-she looked up at her cruel lover's portrait, "that he never was really
-happy."
-
-Miss Pope left Queen Street at last, finding the Freemasons too noisy
-neighbours, especially after dinner. "Miss Pope," says Hazlitt, "was the
-very picture of a duenna or an antiquated dowager in the latter spring of
-beauty--the second childhood of vanity; more quaint, fantastic, and
-old-fashioned, more pert, frothy, and light-headed than can be
-imagined."[501]
-
-It was not very easy to please poor soured Hazlitt, whose opinion of women
-had not been improved by his having been jilted by a servant girl. This
-good woman, Miss Pope, died at Hadley in 1801, her latter life having been
-embittered by the loss of her brother and favourite niece.
-
-The Freemasons' Hall, built by T. Sandby, architect, was opened in 1776,
-by Lord Petre, a Roman Catholic nobleman, with the usual mysterious
-ceremonials of the order. The annual assemblies of the lodges had
-previously been held in the halls of the City's companies. The tavern was
-built in 1786, by William Tyler, and has since been enlarged. In the
-tavern public meetings and dinners take place, chiefly in May and June.
-Here a farewell banquet was given to John Philip Kemble, and a public
-dinner on his birthday, to James Hogg, the Ettrick Shepherd. All the
-waiters in this tavern are Masons. The house has been lately enlarged. Its
-new great Hall was inaugurated by the dinner given to Charles Dickens by
-his friends on his departure for America in November 1857.
-
-Isaac Sparkes, a famous Irish comedian about 1774, was an old, fat,
-unwieldy man, with a vast double chin, and large, bushy, prominent
-eyebrows. When in London, he established in Long Acre a Club, which was
-frequented by Lord Townshend, Lord Effingham, Lord Lindore, Captain
-Mulcaster, Mr. Crewe of Cheshire, and "other nobles and fashionables."
-Sparkes, who dressed well and had a commanding presence, probably presided
-over it, as he did at Dublin clubs, dressed in robes as Lord Chief Justice
-Joker.[502]
-
-In one of the grand old houses in Great Queen Street, on the right hand as
-one goes towards Lincoln's Inn Fields, occupied before 1830 by Messrs.
-Allman the booksellers, died Lewis the comedian, famous to the last, as
-Leigh Hunt tells us, for his invincible airiness and juvenility. "Mr.
-Lewis," says the same veteran play-goer, "displayed a combination rarely
-to be found in acting--that of the fop and the real gentleman. With a
-voice, a manner, and a person all equally graceful and light, with
-features at once whimsical and genteel, he played on the top of his
-profession like a plume. He was the Mercutio of the age, in every sense of
-the word mercurial. His airy, breathless voice, thrown to the audience
-before he appeared, was the signal of his winged animal spirits; and when
-he gave a glance of his eye or touched with his finger another man's ribs,
-it was the very _punctum saliens_ of playfulness and innuendo. We saw him
-take leave of the public, a man of sixty-five, looking not more than half
-the age, in the character of the Copper Captain; and heard him say, in a
-voice broken with emotion, that for the space of thirty years he had not
-once incurred their displeasure."[503]
-
-Benjamin Franklin, when first in England, worked at the printing-office of
-Mr. Watts, in Little Wild Street, after being employed for twelve months
-at one Palmer's, in Bartholomew Close. He lodged close by in Duke Street,
-opposite the Roman Catholic Chapel, with a widow, to whom he paid
-three-and-sixpence weekly. His landlady was a clergyman's daughter, who
-had married a Catholic, and abjured Protestantism. She and Franklin were
-much together, as he kept good hours and she was lame and almost confined
-to her room. Their frugal supper often consisted of nothing but half an
-anchovy, a small slice of bread and butter each, and half a pint of ale
-between them. On Franklin proposing to leave for cheaper lodgings, she
-consented to let him retain his room at two shillings a week. In the attic
-of the house lived a voluntary nun. She was a lady who early in life had
-been sent to the Continent for her health, but unable to bear the climate,
-had returned home to live in seclusion on £12 a year, devoting the rest of
-her income to charity, and subsisting, healthy and cheerful, on nothing
-but water-gruel. Her presence was thought a blessing to the house, and
-several tenants in succession had charged her no rent. She permitted the
-occasional visits of Franklin and his landlady; and the brave American
-lad, while he pitied her superstition, felt confirmed in his frugality by
-her example.
-
-During his first weeks with Mr. Watts, Franklin worked as a pressman,
-drinking only water while his companions had their five pints of porter
-daily. The "Water American," as he was called, was, however, stronger than
-his colleagues, and tried to persuade some of them that strong beer was
-not necessary for strong work. His argument was that bread contained more
-materials of strength than beer, and that it was only corn in the beer
-that produced the strength in the liquid.
-
-Born to be a reformer, Franklin persuaded the _chapel_ to alter some of
-their laws; he resisted impositions, and conciliated the respect of his
-fellows. He worked as a pressman, as he had done in America, for the sake
-of the exercise. He used, he tells us, to carry up and down stairs with
-one hand a large _form_ of type, while the other fifty men required both
-hands to do the same work.
-
-Franklin's fellow pressman drank every day a pint of beer before
-breakfast, a pint with bread and cheese for breakfast, a pint between
-breakfast and dinner, one at dinner, one again at six in the afternoon,
-and another after his day's work; and all this he declared to be necessary
-to give him strength for the press. "This custom," said the King of Common
-Sense, "seemed to me abominable." Franklin, however, failed to make a
-convert of this man, and he went on paying his four or five shillings a
-week for the "cursed beverage," destined probably, poor devil, to remain
-all his life in a state of voluntary wretchedness, serfdom, and poverty.
-
-A few of the men consented to follow Franklin's example, and renouncing
-beer and cheese, to take for breakfast a basin of warm gruel, with butter,
-toast, and nutmeg. This did not cost more than a pint of beer--"namely,
-three halfpence"--and at the same time was more nourishing and kept the
-head clearer. Those who gorged themselves with beer would sometimes run up
-a score and come to the Water American for credit, "their light being
-out." Franklin attended at the great stone table every Saturday evening to
-take up the little debts, which sometimes amounted to thirty shillings a
-week. "This circumstance," says Franklin in his autobiography, "added to
-the reputation of my being a tolerable _gabber_--or, in other words,
-skilful in the art of burlesque--kept up my importance in the 'chapel.' I
-had, besides, recommended myself to the esteem of my master by my
-assiduous application to business, never observing 'Saint' Monday. My
-extraordinary quickness in composing always procured me such work as was
-most urgent, and which is commonly best paid; and thus my time passed away
-in a very pleasant manner."[504]
-
-Franklin, like a truly great man, was quietly proud of the humble origin
-from which he had risen; and when he came to England as the agent and
-ambassador of Massachusetts, he paid a visit to his work-room in Wild
-Street, and going to his old friend the press, said to the two workmen
-busy at it, "Come, my friends, we will drink together; it is now forty
-years since I worked like you at this very press as a journeyman printer."
-
-Wild House stood on the site of Little Wild Street. The Duchess of Ormond
-was living there in 1655.[505]
-
-On the day when King James II. escaped from London the mob grew unruly,
-and assembled in great force to pull down houses where either mass was
-said or priests lodged. Don Pietro Ronguillo, the Spanish ambassador, who
-lived at Wild House, and whom Evelyn mentions as having received him with
-"extraordinary civility" (March 26, 1681), had not thought it necessary to
-ask for soldiers, though the rich Roman Catholics had sent him their money
-and plate as to a sanctuary, and the plate of the Chapel Royal was also in
-his care. But the house was sacked without mercy; his noble library
-perished in the flames; the chapel was demolished; the pictures, rich
-beds, and furniture were destroyed,--the poor Spaniard making his escape
-by a back door.[506] His only comfort was that the sacred Host in his
-chapel was rescued.[507]
-
-In 1780 another savage and thievish Protestant mob, under Lord George
-Gordon, assembled in St. George's Fields to petition Parliament against
-the Test Act, which relieved Roman Catholics from many vexatious penalties
-and unjust disabilities on condition of their taking their oaths of
-allegiance and disbelief in the infamous doctrines of the Jesuits. The mob
-assembled on the 2d of June, and jostled and insulted the Peers going to
-the House of Lords. The same evening the people demolished the greater
-part of the Roman Catholic Chapel in Duke Street. On Monday they stripped
-the house and shop of Mr. Maberly, of Little Queen Street, who had been a
-witness at the trial of some rioters. On Tuesday they passed through Long
-Acre and burnt Newgate, releasing three hundred prisoners, and the same
-day destroyed the house of Justice Cox in Great Queen Street.[508] In
-these street riots seventy-two private houses and four public gaols were
-burnt, and more than four hundred rioters perished.
-
-At the above-named chapel Nollekens, the eminent sculptor, was baptized in
-1737. The present chapel is much resorted to on Sundays by the Irish poor
-and foreigners, who live about Drury Lane.
-
-Nicholas Stone, the great monumental sculptor, lived in Long Acre. In 1619
-Inigo Jones began the new Banqueting House at Whitehall, and replaced the
-one destroyed by fire six months before. This master mason was Nicholas
-Stone,[509] the sculptor of the fine monument to Sir Francis Vere in
-Westminster Abbey. His pay was 4s. 10d. a day. Stone also designed Dr.
-Donne's splendid monument in St. Paul's. Roubilliac was a great admirer of
-the kneeling knight at the north-west corner of Vere's tomb. He used to
-stand and watch it, and say, "Hush! hush! he vill speak presently." Mr. J.
-T. Smith seems to think that the Shakspere monument at Stratford is in
-this sculptor's manner.[510] Inigo Jones, who had been fined for having
-borne arms at the siege of Basing House, joined with Nicholas Stone in
-burying their money near Inigo's house in Scotland Yard; but as the
-Parliament encouraged servants to betray such hidden treasures, the
-partners removed their money and hid it again with their own hands in
-Lambeth Marsh.
-
-Oliver Cromwell, when member for Cambridge, lived from 1637 to 1643, on
-the south side of Long Acre, two doors from Nicholas Stone the sculptor.
-
-John Taylor, the "Water-Poet" an eccentric poetaster, kept a public-house
-in Phoenix Alley, now Hanover Court, near Long Acre. He was a Thames
-waterman, who had fought at the taking of Cadiz, and afterwards travelled
-to Germany and Scotland as a servant to Sir William Waade. He was then
-made collector of the wine-dues for the lieutenant of the Tower, and wrote
-a life of Old Parr, and sixty-three volumes of satire and jingling
-doggerel, not altogether without vivacity and vigour. He called himself
-"the King's Water Poet" and "the Queen's Waterman;" and in 1623 wrote a
-tract called "The World runs on Wheels"--a violent attack on the use of
-coaches. "I dare truly affirm," says the writer, "that every day in any
-term (especially if the court be at Whitehall) they do rob us of our
-livings and carry five hundred and sixty fares daily from us." In this
-quaint pamphlet Taylor gives a humorous account of his once riding in his
-master's coach from Whitehall to the Tower. "Before I had been drawn
-twenty yards," he says, "such a timpany of pride puft me up that I was
-ready to burst with the wind-cholic of vaine glory." He complains
-particularly of the streets and lanes being blocked with carriages,
-especially Blackfriars and Fleet Street or the Strand after a masque or
-play at court; the noise deafening every one and souring the beer, to the
-injury of the public health. It is Taylor who mentions that William
-Boonen, a Dutchman, first introduced coaches into England in 1564, and
-became Queen Elizabeth's coachman. "It is," he says, "a doubtful question
-whether the devil brought tobacco into England in a coach, or brought a
-coach in a fog or mist of tobacco." Nor did Taylor rest there, for he
-presented a petition to James I., which was submitted to Sir Francis
-Bacon and other commissioners, to compel all play-houses to stand on the
-Bankside, so as to give more work to watermen. In the Civil War, Taylor
-went to Oxford and wrote ballads for the king. On his return to London, he
-settled in Long Acre with a mourning crown for a sign;[511] but the
-Puritans resenting this emblem, he had his own portrait painted instead
-with this motto--
-
- "There's many a head stands for a sign:
- Then, gentle reader, why not mine?"
-
-Taylor was born in 1580, and died in 1654; and the following epitaph was
-written on the vain, honest fellow, who was buried at St.
-Martin's-in-the-Fields:--
-
- "Here lies the Water-poet, honest John,
- Who rowed on the streams of Helicon;
- Where having many rocks and dangers past,
- He at the haven of Heaven arrived at last."[512]
-
-From 1682 to 1686 John Dryden lived in Long Acre, on the north side, in a
-house facing what formerly was Rose Street. His name appears in the
-rate-books as "John Dryden, Esq."--an unusual distinction--and the sum he
-paid to the poor varied from 18s. to £1.[513] It was here he resided when
-he was beaten, one December evening in 1679, by three ruffians hired by
-the Earl of Rochester and the Duchess of Portsmouth. Sir Walter Scott
-makes the poet live at the time in Gerard Street; but no part of Gerard
-Street was built in 1679. Rochester had the year before ridiculed Dryden
-as "Poet Squab," and believed that Dryden had helped Mulgrave in
-ridiculing him in his clumsy "Essay on Satire." The best lines of this
-dull poem are these:--
-
- "Of fighting sparks Fame may her pleasure say,
- But 'tis a bolder thing to run away.
- The world may well forgive him all his ill,
- For every fault does prove his penance still;
- Falsely he falls into some dangerous noose,
- And then as meanly labours to get loose."
-
-A letter from Rochester to a friend, dated November 21, in the above year,
-is still extant, in which he names Dryden as the author of the satire, and
-concludes with the following threat:--"If he (Dryden) falls on me at the
-blunt, which is his very good weapon in wit, I will forgive him, if you
-please, and _leave the repartee to Black Will with a cudgel_."[514]
-
-Dryden offered a reward of fifty pounds for the discovery of the men who
-cudgelled him, depositing the money in the hands of "Mr. Blanchard,
-goldsmith, next door to Temple Bar," but all in vain. The Rose Alley
-satire, the Rose Alley ambuscade, and the Dryden salutation, became
-established jokes with Dryden's countless enemies. Even Mulgrave himself,
-in his _Art of Poetry_ said of Dryden coldly--
-
- "Though praised and punished for another's rhymes,
- His own deserve as great applause sometimes."
-
-And, in a conceited note, the amateur poet described the libel as one for
-which Dryden had been unjustly "_applauded and wounded_." But these lines
-and this note Mulgrave afterwards suppressed.
-
-Poor Otway, whom Rochester had satirised, and who had accused Dryden of
-saying of his _Don Carlos_ that, "Egad, there was not a line in it he
-would be author of," stood up bravely for Dryden as an honest satirist in
-these vigorous verses:--
-
- "Poets in honour of the truth should write,
- With the same spirit brave men for it fight.
-
- * * * * *
-
- From any private cause where malice reigns,
- Or general pique all blockheads have to brains."
-
-Dryden never took any poetical revenge on Rochester, and in the prefatory
-essay to his _Juvenal_ he takes credit for that forbearance.[515]
-
-Edward (more generally known as Ned) Ward was the landlord of
-public-houses alternately in Moorfields, Clerkenwell, Fulwood's Rents, and
-Long Acre. He was born in 1667, and died 1731. He was a High Tory, and
-fond of the society of poets and authors.[516] Attacked in the _Dunciad_,
-he turned _Don Quixote_ into Hudibrastic verse, and wrote endless songs,
-lampoons, coarse clever satires, and _Dialogues on Matrimony_ (1710).
-
-The father of Pepys's long-suffering wife lived in Long Acre; and the
-bustling official describes, with a stultifying exactitude, his horror at
-a visit which he found himself forced to pay to a house surrounded by
-taverns.
-
-Dr. Arbuthnot, in a letter to Mr. Watkins, gives Bessy Cox--a woman in
-Long Acre whom Prior would have married when her husband died--a
-detestable character. The infatuated poet left his estate between his old
-servant Jonathan Drift, and this woman, who boasted that she was the
-poet's Emma,--another virago, Flanders Jane, being his Chloe.[517]
-
-It is said of this careless, pleasant poet, that after spending an
-intellectual evening with Oxford, Bolingbroke, Pope, and Swift, in order
-to unbend, he would smoke a pipe and drink a bottle of ale with a common
-soldier and his wife in Long Acre. Cibber calls the man a butcher;[518]
-other writers make him a cobbler or a tavern-keeper, which is more likely.
-The shameless husband is said to have been proud of the poet's preference
-for his wife. Pope, who was remorseless at the failings of friends, calls
-the woman a wretch, and said to Spence, "Prior was not a right good man;
-he used to bury himself for whole days and nights together with this poor
-mean creature, and often drank hard." This person, who perhaps is
-misrepresented--and where there is a doubt the prisoner at the bar should
-always have the benefit of it--was the Venus of the poet's verse. To her
-Prior wrote, after Walpole tried to impeach him:--
-
- "From public noise and faction's strife,
- From all the busy ills of life,
- Take me, my Chloe, to thy breast,
- And lull my wearied soul to rest.
-
- "For ever in this humble cell [ale-house]
- Let thee and I [me], my fair one, dwell;
- None enter else but Love, and he
- Shall bar the door and keep the key."
-
-Prior was the son of a joiner,[519] and was brought up, as before
-mentioned, by his uncle, a tavern-keeper at Charing Cross, where the
-clever waiter's knowledge of Horace led to his being sent to college by
-the Earl of Dorset. Abandoning literature, he finally became our
-ambassador to France. He died in retirement in 1721.
-
-It was in a poor shoemaker's small window in Long Acre,--half of it
-devoted to boots, half to pictures--that poor starving Wilson's fine
-classical landscapes were exposed, often vainly, for sale. Here, from his
-miserable garret in Tottenham Court Road, the great painter, peevish and
-soured by neglect, would come swearing at his rivals Barret and Smith of
-Chichester. I can imagine him, with his tall, burly figure, his red face,
-and his enormous nose, striding out of the shop, thirsting for porter, and
-muttering that, if the pictures of Wright of Derby had fire, his had air.
-Yet this great painter, whose works are so majestic and glowing, so fresh,
-airy, broad, and harmonious, was all but starved. The king refused to
-purchase his "Kew Gardens," and the very pawnbrokers grew weary of taking
-his Tivolis and Niobes as pledges, far preferring violins, flat-irons, or
-telescopes.
-
-It was in Long Acre that that delightful idyllic painter, Stothard, was
-born in 1755. His father, a Yorkshireman, kept an inn in the street.[520]
-Sent for his health into Yorkshire, and placed with an old lady who had
-some choice engravings, he began to draw. The first subject that he ever
-painted was executed with an oyster-shell full of black paint, borrowed
-from the village plumber and glazier. This little man was the father of
-many a Watteau lover and tripping Boccaccio nymph. That genial and
-graceful artist, who illustrated Chaucer, _Robinson Crusoe_, and _The
-Pilgrim's Progress_, had the road to fame pointed out to him first by
-that little black man.
-
-On the accession of King George I. the Tories had such sway over the
-London mobs, that the friends of the Protestant succession resolved to
-found cheap tavern clubs in various parts of the City in order that
-well-affected tradesmen might meet to keep up their spirit of loyalty, and
-serve as focus-points of resistance in case of Tory tumults.
-
-Defoe, a staunch Whig, describes one of these assemblies in Long Acre,
-which probably suggested the rest. At the Mughouse Club in Long Acre,
-about a hundred gentlemen, lawyers, and tradesmen met in a large room, at
-seven o'clock on Wednesday and Saturday evenings in the winter, and broke
-up soon after ten. A grave old gentleman, "in his own grey hairs,"[521]
-and within a few months of ninety, was the president, and sat in an
-"armed" chair, raised some steps above the rest of the company, to keep
-the room in order. A harp was played all the time at the lower end of the
-room, and every now and then one of the company rose and entertained the
-rest with a song. Nothing was drunk but ale, and every one chalked his
-score on the table beside him. What with the songs and drinking healths
-from one table to another, there was no room for politics or anything that
-could sour conversation. The members of these clubs retired when they
-pleased, as from a coffee-house.
-
-Old Sir Hans Sloane's coach, made by John Aubrey, Queen Anne's coachmaker,
-in Long Acre, and given to him by her for curing her of a fit of the gout,
-was given by Sir Hans to his old butler, who set up the White Horse Inn
-behind Chelsea Church, where it remained for half a century.[522]
-
-Charles Catton, one of the early Academicians, was originally a coach and
-sign painter. He painted a lion as a sign for his friend, a celebrated
-coachmaker, at that time living in Long Acre.[523] A sign painted by
-Clarkson, that hung at the north-east corner of Little Russell Street
-about 1780, was said to have cost £500, and crowds used to collect to
-look at it.
-
-Lord William Russell was led from Holborn into Little Queen Street on his
-way to the scaffold in Lincoln's Inn Fields. As the coach turned into this
-street, Lord Russell said to Tillotson, "I have often turned to the other
-hand with great comfort, but I now turn to this with greater." He referred
-to Southampton House, on the opposite side of Holborn, which he inherited
-through his brave and good wife, the grand-daughter of Shakspere's early
-patron.
-
-In the year 1796 Charles Lamb resided with his father, mother, aunt, and
-sister in lodgings at No. 7 Little Queen Street, a house, I believe,
-removed to make way for the church. Southey describes a call which he made
-on them there in 1794-5. The father had once published a small quarto
-volume of poetry, of which "The Sparrow's Wedding" was his favourite, and
-Charles used to delight him by reading this to him when he was in his
-dotage. In 1797 Lamb published his first verses. His father, the
-ex-servant and companion of an old Bencher in the Temple, was sinking into
-the grave; his mother had lost the use of her limbs, and his sister was
-employed by day in needlework, and by night in watching her mother. Lamb,
-just twenty-one years old, was a clerk in the India House. On the 22d of
-September[524] Miss Lamb, who had been deranged some years before by
-nervous fatigue, seized a case-knife while dinner was preparing, chased a
-little girl, her apprentice, round the room, and on her mother calling to
-her to forbear, stabbed her to the heart. Lamb arrived only in time to
-snatch the knife from his sister's hand. He had that morning been to
-consult a doctor, but had not found him at home. The verdict at the
-inquest was "Insanity," and Mary Lamb was sent to a mad-house, where she
-soon recovered her reason. Poor Lamb's father and aunt did not long
-survive. Not long after, Lamb himself was for six weeks confined in an
-asylum. There is extant a terrible letter in which he describes rushing
-from a party of friends who were supping with him soon after the horrible
-catastrophe, and in an agony of regret falling on his knees by his
-mother's coffin, asking forgiveness of Heaven for forgetting her so
-soon.[525]
-
-There is no doubt that poor Lamb played the sot over his nightly grog; but
-he had a noble soul, and let us be lenient with such a man--
-
- "Be to his faults a little blind,
- And to his virtues very kind."
-
-He abandoned her whom he loved, together with all meaner ambitions, and
-drudged his years away as a poor, ignoble clerk, in order to maintain his
-half-crazed sister; for this purpose--true knight that he was, though he
-never drew sword--he gave all that he had--HIS LIFE! Peace, then! peace be
-to his ashes!
-
-[Illustration: LYON'S INN, 1804.]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: CRAVEN HOUSE, 1790]
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-DRURY LANE.
-
-
-The Roll of Battle Abbey tells us that the founder of the Drury family
-came into England with that brave Norman robber, the Conqueror, and
-settled in Suffolk.[526]
-
-From this house branched off the Druries of Hawstead, in the same county,
-who built Drury House in the time of Elizabeth. It stood a little behind
-the site of the present Olympic Theatre. Of another branch of the same
-family was that Sir Drue Drury, who, together with Sir Amias Powlett, had
-at one time the custody of Mary, Queen of Scots.
-
-Drury Lane takes its name from a house probably built by Sir William
-Drury, a Knight of the Garter, and a most able commander in the desultory
-Irish wars during the reign of Elizabeth, who fell in a duel with John
-Burroughs, fought to settle a foolish quarrel about some punctilio of
-precedency.[527] In this house, in 1600, the imprudent friends of rash
-Essex resolved on the fatal outbreak that ended so lamentably at Ludgate.
-The Earl of Southampton then resided there.[528] The plots of Blount,
-Davis, Davers, etc., were communicated to Essex by letter. It was noticed
-that at his trial the earl betrayed agitation at the mention of Drury
-House, though he had carefully destroyed all suspicious papers.
-
-Sir William's son Robert was a patron of Dr. Donne, the religious poet and
-satirist, who in 1611 had apartments assigned to him and his wife in Drury
-House. Donne, though the son of a man of some fortune, was foolish enough
-to squander his money when young, and in advanced life was so wanting in
-self-respect as to live about in other men's houses, paying for his food
-and lodging by his wit and conversation. He lived first with Lord
-Chancellor Egerton, Bacon's predecessor, afterwards at Drury House and
-with Sir Francis Wooley at Pitford, in Surrey. After his clandestine
-marriage with Lady Ellesmere's niece, Donne's life was for some time a
-hard and troublesome one.
-
-"Sir Robert Drury," says Isaac Walton, "a gentleman of a very noble estate
-and a more liberal mind, assigned Donne and his wife a useful apartment in
-his own large house in Drury Lane, and rent free; he was also a cherisher
-of his studies, and such a friend as sympathised with him and his in all
-their joys and sorrows."[529]
-
-Sir Robert, wishing to attend Lord Hay as King James's ambassador at his
-audiences in Paris with Henry IV., begged Donne to accompany him. But the
-poet refused, his wife being at the time near her confinement and in poor
-health, and saying that "her divining soul boded some ill in his absence."
-But Sir Robert growing more urgent, and Donne unwilling to refuse his
-generous friend a request, at last obtained from his wife a faint consent
-for a two months' absence. On the twelfth day the party reached Paris. Two
-days afterwards Donne was left alone in the room where Sir Robert and
-other friends had dined. Half an hour afterwards Sir Robert returned, and
-found Mr. Donne still alone, "but in such an ecstasy, and so altered in
-his looks," as amazed him. After a long and perplexed pause, Donne said,
-"I have had a dreadful vision since I saw you; I have seen my dear wife
-pass by me twice in this room with her hair hanging about her shoulders
-and a dead child in her arms;" to which Sir Robert replied, "Sure, sir,
-you have slept since I saw you, and this is the result of some melancholy
-dream, which I desire you to forget, for you are now awake." Donne assured
-his friend that he had not been asleep, and that on the second appearance
-his wife stopped, looked him in the face, and then vanished.
-
-The next day, however, neither rest nor sleep had altered Mr. Donne's
-opinion, and he repeated the story with only a more deliberate and
-confirmed confidence. All this inclining Sir Robert to some faint belief,
-he instantly sent off a servant to Drury House to bring him word in what
-condition Mrs. Donne was. The messenger returned in due time, saying that
-he had found Mrs. Donne very sad and sick in bed, and that after a long
-and dangerous labour she had been delivered of a dead child; and upon
-examination, the delivery proved to have been at the very day and hour in
-which Donne had seen the vision. Walton is proud of this late miracle, so
-easily explainable by natural causes; and illustrates the sympathy of
-souls by the story of two lutes, one of which, if both are tuned to the
-same pitch, will, though untouched, echo the other when it is played.
-
-Far be it from me to wish to ridicule any man's belief in the
-supernatural; but still, as a lover of truth, wishing to believe what
-_is_, whether natural or supernatural, without confusing the former with
-the latter, let me analyse this pictured presentiment. An imaginative man,
-against his sick wife's wish, undertakes a perilous journey. Absent from
-her--alone--after wine and friendly revel feeling still more lonely--in
-the twilight he thinks of home and the wife he loves so much. Dreaming,
-though awake, his fears resolve themselves into a vision, seen by the
-mind, and to the eye apparently vivid as reality. The day and hour happen
-to correspond, or he persuades himself afterwards that they do correspond
-with the result, and the day-dream is henceforward ranked among
-supernatural visions. Who is there candid enough to write down the
-presentiments that do not come true? And after all, the vision, to be
-consistent, should have been followed by the death of Mrs. Donne as well
-as the child.
-
-Some verses are pointed out by Isaac Walton as those written by Donne on
-parting from her for this journey. But there is internal evidence in them
-to the contrary; for they refer to Italy, not to Paris, and to a lady who
-would accompany him as a page, which a lady in Mrs. Donne's condition
-could scarcely have done. I have myself no doubt that the verses cited
-were written to his wife long before, when their marriage was as yet
-concealed. With what a fine vigour the poem commences!--
-
- "By our first strange and fatal interview,
- By all desires which thereof did ensue,
- By our long-striving hopes, by that remorse
- Which my words' masculine persuasive force
- Begot in thee, and by the memory
- Of hurts which spies and rivals threaten me!"
-
- * * * * *
-
-And how full of true feeling and passionate tenderness is the dramatic
-close!--
-
- "When I am gone dream me some happiness,
- Nor let thy looks our long-hid love confess;
- Nor praise nor dispraise me; nor bless nor curse
- Openly love's force; nor in bed fright thy nurse
- With midnight startings, crying out, 'Oh! oh!
- Nurse! oh, my love is slain! I saw him go
- O'er the white Alps alone; I saw him, I,
- Assailed, taken, fight, stabbed, bleed, and die.'"
-
-The verses really written on Donne's leaving for Paris begin with four
-exquisite lines--
-
- "As virtuous men pass mild away,
- And whisper to their souls to go,
- Whilst some of their sad friends do say,
- 'The breath goes now,' and some say 'No!'"
-
-A later verse contains a strange conceit, beaten out into pin-wire a page
-long by a modern poet--[530]
-
- "If we be two, we are two so
- As stiff twin compasses are two;
- Thy soul, the fix'd foot, makes no show
- To move, but does if t'other do."
-
-Donne was the chief of what Dr. Johnson unwisely called "the metaphysical
-school of poetry." Dryden accuses Donne of perplexing the fair sex with
-nice speculations.[531] His poems, often pious and beautiful, are
-sometimes distorted with strange conceits. He has a poem on a flea; and in
-his lines on Good Friday he thus whimsically expresses himself:--
-
- "Who sees God's face--that is, self-life--must die:
- What a death were it then to see God die!
- It made his own lieutenant, Nature, shrink;
- It made his footstool crack and the sun wink.
- Could I behold those hands, which span the Poles,
- And tune all sphears at once, pierced with those holes!"[532]
-
-This imitator of the worst faults of Marini was made Dean of St. Paul's by
-King James I., who delighted to converse with him. The king used to say,
-"I always rejoice when I think that by my means Donne became a divine." He
-gave the poet the deanery one day as he sat at dinner, saying "that he
-would carve to him of a dish he loved well, and that he might take the
-dish (the deanery) home to his study and say grace there to himself, and
-much good might it do him."
-
-Shortly before his death Donne dressed himself in his shroud, and standing
-there, with his eyes shut and the sheet opened, "To discover his thin,
-pale, and death-like face," he caused a curious painter to take his
-picture. This picture he kept near his bed as a ghostly remembrance, and
-from this Nicholas Stone, the sculptor, carved his effigy, which still
-exists in St. Paul's, having survived the Great Fire, though the rest of
-his tomb and monument has perished.
-
-Drury House took the name of Craven House when rebuilt by Lord Craven.
-There is a tradition in Yorkshire, where the deanery of Craven is
-situated, that this chivalrous nobleman's father was sent up to London by
-the carrier, and there became a mercer or draper. His son was not unworthy
-of the staunch old Yorkshire stock. He fought under Gustavus Adolphus
-against Wallenstein and Tilly, and afterwards attached himself to the
-service of the unfortunate King and Queen of Bohemia, and won wealth and a
-title for his family, which the Wars of the Roses had first reduced to
-indigence.
-
-The Queen of Bohemia had been married in 1613 to Frederic, Count Palatine
-of the Rhine, only a few months after the death of Prince Henry her
-brother. The young King of Spain had been her suitor, and the Pope had
-opposed her match with a Protestant. She was married on St. Valentine's
-Day; and Donne, from his study in Drury Lane, celebrated the occasion by a
-most extravagant epithalamion in which is to be found this outrageous
-line--
-
- "Here lies a She sun, and a He moon there."
-
-The poem opens prettily enough with these lines--
-
- "Hail, Bishop Valentine, whose day this is!
- All the air is thy diocese;
- And all the chirping choristers
- And other birds are thy parishioners.
- Thou marry'st every year
- The lyrique lark and the grave whispering dove."
-
-At seventeen Sir William Craven had entered the service of the Prince of
-Orange. On the accession of Charles I. he was ennobled. At the storming of
-Creuzenach he was the first of the English Cavaliers to mount the breach
-and plant the flag. It was then that Gustavus said smilingly to him, "I
-perceive, sir, you are willing to give a younger brother a chance of
-coming to your title and estate." At Donauwert the young Englishman again
-distinguished himself. In the same month that Gustavus fell at Lutzen, the
-Elector Palatine died at Mentz. While Grotius interceded for the Queen of
-Bohemia, Lord Craven fought for her in the vineyards of the
-Palatinate.[533] In consequence, perhaps, of Richelieu's intrigues, four
-years elapsed before Charles I. took compassion on the children of his
-widowed sister, whose cause the Puritans had loudly advocated. When
-Charles and Rupert did go to England, they went under the care of the
-trusty Lord Craven, who was to try to recover the arrears of the widow's
-pension. On their return to Germany, to campaign in Westphalia, Rupert and
-Lord Craven were taken prisoners and thrown into the castle at Vienna--a
-confinement that lasted three years, a long time for brave young soldiers
-who, like the Douglas, "preferred the lark's song to the mouse's squeak."
-
-Later in the Civil War we find this same generous nobleman giving £50,000
-to King Charles, at a time when he was a beggar and a fugitive. Cromwell,
-enraged at the aid thus ministered to an enemy, accused the Cavalier of
-enlisting volunteers for the Stuart, and instantly, with stern
-promptitude, sequestered all his English estates except Combe Abbey. In
-the meantime Lord Craven served the State and his queen bravely, and
-waited for better times. It was this faithful servant who consoled the
-royal widow for her son's ill-treatment, the slander heaped upon her
-daughter, and the incessant vexations of importunate creditors.
-
-The Restoration brought no good news for the unfortunate queen. Charles,
-afraid of her claims for a pension, delayed her return to England, till
-the Earl of Craven generously offered her a house next his own in Drury
-Lane. She found there a pleasant and commodious mansion, surrounded by a
-delightful garden.[534] It does not appear that she went publicly to
-court, or joined in the royal revelries; but she visited the theatres with
-her nephew Charles and her good old friend and host, and she was reunited
-to her son Rupert.
-
-In the autumn of 1661, the year after the Restoration, she removed to
-Leicester House, then the property of Sir Robert Sydney, Earl of
-Leicester, and in the next February she died.[535] Evelyn mentions a
-violent tempestuous wind that followed her death, as a sign from Heaven to
-show that the troubles and calamities of this princess and of the royal
-family in general had now all blown over, and were, like the ex-queen, to
-rest in repose.
-
-She left all her books, pictures, and papers to her incomparable old
-friend and benefactor. The Earl of Leicester wrote to the Earl of
-Northumberland a cold and flippant letter to announce the departure of
-"his royal tenant;" and adds, "It seems the Fates did not think it fit I
-should have the honour, which indeed I never much desired, to be the
-landlord of a queen." Charles, who had grudged the dethroned queen even
-her subsistence, gave her a royal funeral in Westminster Abbey.
-
-At the very time when she died Lord Craven was building a miniature
-Heidelberg for her at Hampstead Marshall, in Berkshire, under the advice
-of that eminent architect and charlatan, Sir Balthasar Gerbier. But the
-palace was ill-fated, like the poor queen, for it was consumed by an
-accidental fire before it could be tenanted. The arrival of the Portuguese
-Infanta, a princess scarcely less unfortunate than the queen just dead,
-soon erased all recollections of King James's ill-starred daughter.
-
-The biographers of the Queen of Bohemia do not claim for her beauty, wit,
-learning, or accomplishments; but she seems to have been an affectionate,
-romantic girl, full of vivacity and ambition, who was ripened by sorrow
-and disappointment into an amiable and high-souled woman.
-
-It was always supposed that the Queen of Bohemia was secretly married to
-Lord Craven, as Bassompierre was to a princess of Lorraine. A base and
-abandoned court could not otherwise account for a friendship so
-unchangeable and so unselfish. There is also a story that when Craven
-House was pulled down, a subterranean passage was discovered joining the
-eastern and western sides. Similar passages have been found joining
-convents to monasteries; but, unfortunately for the scandalmongers, they
-are generally proved to have been either sewers or conduits. The "Queen of
-Hearts," as she was called--the princess to whose cause the chivalrous
-Christian of Brunswick, the knight with the silver arm, had solemnly
-devoted his life and fortunes--the "royal mistress" to whom shifty Sir
-Henry Wotton had written those beautiful lines--
-
- "You meaner beauties of the night,
- That poorly entertain our eyes
- More by your number than your light,
- What are ye when the moon doth rise?"
-
-was at "last gone to dust." Her faithful servant, the old soldier of
-Gustavus, survived her thirty-five years, and lived to follow to the grave
-his foster-child in arms, Prince Rupert, whose daughter Ruperta was left
-to his trusty guardianship.
-
-In 1670, on the death of the stolid and drunken Duke of Albemarle, Charles
-II. constituted Lord Craven colonel of the Coldstreams. Energetic,
-simple-hearted, benevolent, this good servant of a bad race became a
-member of the Royal Society, lived in familiar intimacy with Evelyn and
-Ray, improved his property, and employed himself in gardening.
-
-Although he had many estates, Lord Craven always showed the most
-predilection for Combe Abbey, the residence of the Queen of Bohemia in her
-youth. To judge by the numerous dedications to which his name is prefixed,
-he would appear to have been a munificent patron of letters, especially
-of those authors who had been favourites of Elizabeth of Bohemia.[536]
-
-On the accession of James, Lord Craven, true as ever, was sworn of the
-Privy Council; but soon after, on some mean suspicion of the king, was
-threatened with the loss of his regiment. "If they take away my regiment,"
-said the staunch old soldier, "they had as good take away my life, since I
-have nothing else to divert myself with." In the hurry of the Popish
-catastrophe it was not taken away. But King William proved Craven's
-loyalty to the Stuarts by giving his regiment to General Talmash.
-
-The unemployed officer now expended his activity in attending riots and
-fires. Long before, when the Puritan prentices had pulled down the houses
-of ill-fame in Whettone Park and in Moorfields, Pepys had described the
-colonel as riding up and down like a madman, giving orders to his men.
-Later Lord Dorset had spoken of the old soldier's energy in a gay ballad
-on his mistress--
-
- "The people's hearts leap wherever she comes,
- And beat day and night like my Lord Craven's drums."
-
-In King William's reign the veteran was so prompt in attending fires that
-it used to be said his horse smelt a fire as soon as it broke out.
-
-Lord Craven died unmarried in 1697, aged 88, and was buried at Binley,
-near Coventry. The grandson of a Wharfdale peasant had ended a well-spent
-life. His biographer, Miss Benger, well remarks:--"If his claims to
-disinterestedness be contemned of men, let his cause be (left) to female
-judges,--to whose honour be it averred, examples of nobleness, generosity
-and magnanimity are ever delightful, because to their purer and more
-susceptible souls they are (never) incredible."[537]
-
-Drury House was rebuilt by Lord Craven after the Queen's death. It
-occupied the site of Craven Buildings and the Olympic Theatre. Pennant,
-ever curious and energetic, went to find it, and describes it in his
-pleasant way as a "large brick pile," then turned into a public-house
-bearing the sign of the Queen of Bohemia, faithful still to the worship of
-its old master.
-
-The house was taken down in 1809, when the Olympic Pavilion was built on
-part of its gardens. The cellars, once stored with good Rhenish from the
-Palatinate, and sack from Cadiz, still exist, but have been blocked up.
-Palsgrave Place, near Temple Bar, perpetuates the memory of the unlucky
-husband of the brave princess.
-
-It was Lord Craven who generously founded pest-houses in Carnaby Street,
-soon after the Great Plague. There were thirty-six small houses and a
-cemetery. They were sold in 1772 to William, third Earl of Craven, for
-£1200. It may be remembered that in the _Memoirs of Scriblerus_ a room is
-hired for the dissection of the purchased body of a malefactor, near the
-St. Giles's pest-fields, and not far from Tyburn Road, Oxford Street. The
-Earl was their founder.
-
-On the end wall at the bottom of Craven Buildings there was formerly a
-large fresco-painting of the Earl of Craven, who was represented in
-armour, mounted on a charger, and with a truncheon in his hand. This
-portrait had been twice or thrice repainted in oil, but in Brayley's time
-was entirely obliterated.[538] This fresco is said to have been the work
-of Paul Vansomer, a painter who came to England from Antwerp about 1606,
-and died in 1621. He painted the Earl and Countess of Arundel, and there
-are pictures by him at Hampton Court. He also executed the pleasant and
-quaint hunting scene, with portraits of Prince Henry and the young Earl of
-Essex, now at St. James's Palace.[539]
-
-Mr. Moser, keeper of the Royal Academy, a chaser of plate, cane-heads, and
-watch-cases, afterwards an enameller of watch-trinkets, necklaces, and
-bracelets, lived in Craven Buildings, which were built in 1723 on part of
-the site of Craven House. He died in his apartments in Somerset House in
-1783.
-
-It was in Short's Gardens, Drury Lane, "in a hole," that Charles Mathews
-the elder made one of his first attempts as an actor.
-
-Clare House Court, on the left hand going up Drury Lane, derived its name
-from John Holles, second Earl of Clare, whose town house stood at the end
-of this court. His son Gilbert, the third Earl, died in 1689, and was
-succeeded by his son, John Holles, created Marquis of Clare and Duke of
-Newcastle in 1694. He died in 1711, when all his honours became extinct.
-The corner house has upon it the date 1693.[540]
-
-In the reign of James I., when Gondomar, the Spanish ambassador, lived at
-Ely House, in Holborn, he used to pass through Drury Lane in his litter on
-his way to Whitehall, Covent Garden being then an enclosed field, and this
-district and the Strand the chief resorts of the gentry. The ladies,
-knowing his hours, would appear in their balconies or windows to present
-their civilities to the old man, who would bend himself as well as he
-could to the humblest posture of respect. One day, as he passed by the
-house of Lady Jacob in Drury Lane, she presented herself: he bowed to her,
-but she only gaped at him. Curious to see if this yawning was intentional
-or accidental, he passed the next day at the same hour, and with the same
-result. Upon which he sent a gentleman to her to let her know that the
-ladies of England were usually more gracious to him than to encounter his
-respects with such affronts. She answered that she had a mouth to be
-stopped as well as others. Gondomar, finding the cause of her distemper,
-sent her a present, an antidote which soon cured her of her strange
-complaint.[541] This Lady Jacob became the wife of the poet Brooke.
-
-That credulous gossip, the Wiltshire gentleman, Aubrey, tells a quaint
-story of a duel in Drury Lane, in probably Charles II.'s time, which is a
-good picture of such rencontres amongst the hot-blooded bravos of that
-wild period.
-
-"Captain Carlo Fantom, a Croatian," he says, "who spoke thirteen
-languages, was a captain under the Earl of Essex. He had a world of cuts
-about his body with swords, and was very quarrelsome. He met, coming late
-at night out of the Horseshoe Tavern in Drury Lane, with a lieutenant of
-Colonel Rossiter, who had great jingling spurs on. Said he, 'The noise of
-your spurs doe offend me; you must come over the kennel and give me
-satisfaction.' They drew and passed at each other, and the lieutenant was
-runne through, and died in an hour or two, and 'twas not known who killed
-him."[542]
-
-About this time John Lacy, Charles II.'s favourite comedian, the Falstaff
-of Dryden's time, lived in Drury Lane from 1665 till his death in 1681.
-The ex-dancing-master and lieutenant dwelt near Cradle Alley and only two
-doors from Lord Anglesey.
-
-Drury Lane, though it soon began to deteriorate, had fashionable
-inhabitants in Charles II.'s time. Evelyn, that delightful type of the
-English gentleman, mentions in his _Diary_ the marriage of his niece to
-the eldest son of Mr. Attorney Montague at Southampton Chapel, and talks
-of a magnificent entertainment at his sister's "lodgings" in Drury Lane.
-Steele, however, branded its disreputable districts; Gay[543] warned us
-against "Drury's mazy courts and dark abodes;" and Pope laughed at
-building a church for "the saints of Drury Lane," and derided its proud
-and paltry "drabs." The little sour poet, snugly off and well housed,
-delighted to sneer, with a cruel and ungenerous contempt, at the poverty
-of the poor Drury Lane poet who wrote for instant bread:--
-
- "'Nine years!' cries he, who, high in Drury Lane,
- Lull'd by soft zephyrs through the broken pane,
- Rhymes ere he wakes, and prints before Term ends,
- Obliged by hunger and request of friends."
-
-To ridicule poverty, and to treat misfortune as a punishable crime, is the
-special opprobrium of too many of the heroes of English literature.
-
-Hogarth has shown us the poor poet of Drury Lane; Goldsmith has painted
-for us the poor author, but in a kindlier way, for he must have
-remembered how poor he himself and Dr. Johnson, Savage, Otway, and Lee had
-been. Pope, in his notes to the _Dunciad_, expressly says that the poverty
-of his enemies is the cause of all their slander. Poverty with him is
-another name for vice and all uncleanness. Goldsmith only laughs as he
-describes the poor poet in Drury Lane in a garret, snug from the Bailiff,
-and opposite a public-house famous for Calvert's beer and Parsons's "black
-champagne." The windows are dim and patched; the floor is sanded. The damp
-walls are hung with the royal game of goose, the twelve rules of King
-Charles, and a black profile of the Duke of Cumberland. The rusty grate
-has no fire. The mantelpiece is chalked with long unpaid scores of beer
-and milk. There are five cracked teacups on the chimney-board; and the
-poet meditates over his epics and his finances with a stocking round his
-brows "instead of bay."
-
-Early in the reign of William III. Drury Lane finally lost all traces of
-its aristocratic character.
-
-Vinegar Yard, in Drury Lane, was originally called Vine Garden Yard. Vine
-Street, Piccadilly, Vine Street, Westminster, and Vine Street, Saffron
-Hill, all derived their names from the vineyards they displaced; but there
-is great reason to suppose that in the Middle Ages orchards and
-herb-gardens were often classified carelessly as "vineyards." English
-grapes might produce a sour, thin wine, but there was never a time when
-home-made wine superseded the produce of Montvoisin, Bordeaux, or Gascony.
-Vinegar Yard was built about 1621.[544] In St Martin's Burial Register
-there is an entry, "1624, Feb. 4: Buried Blind John out of Vinagre Yard."
-Clayrender's letter in Smollett's _Roderick Random_ is written to her
-"dear kreetur" from "Winegar Yard, Droory Lane." This fair charmer must
-surely have lived not far from Mr. Dickens's inimitable Mrs. Megby. The
-nearness of Vinegar Yard to the theatre is alluded to by James Smith in
-his parody on Sir Walter Scott in the _Rejected Addresses_.
-
-General Monk's gross and violent wife was the daughter of his servant,
-John Clarges, a farrier in the Savoy. Her mother, says Aubrey, was one of
-the five women-barbers[545] that lived in Drury Lane. She kept a
-glove-shop in the New Exchange before her marriage, and as a seamstress
-used to carry the general's linen to him when he was in the Tower.
-
-Pepys hated her, because she was jealous of his patron, Lord Sandwich, and
-called him a coward. He calls her "ill-looking" and "a plain, homely
-dowdy," and says that one day, when Monk was drunk, and sitting with
-Troutbeck, a disreputable fellow, the duke was wondering that Nan Hyde, a
-brewer's daughter, should ever have come to be Duchess of York. "Nay,"
-said Troutbeck, "ne'er wonder at that, for if you will give me another
-bottle of wine I will tell you as great if not a greater miracle, and that
-was that our Dirty Bess should come to be Duchess of Albemarle."[546]
-
-Nell Gwynn was born in Coal Yard, on the east side of Drury Lane,[547] the
-next turning to the infamous Lewknor Lane, which used to be inhabited by
-the orange-girls who attended the theatres in Charles II.'s reign. It was
-in this same lane that Jonathan Wild, the thief-taker, whom Fielding
-immortalises, afterwards lived. In a coarse and ruthless satire written by
-Sir George Etherege after Nell's death, the poet calls her a "scoundrel
-lass," raised from a dunghill, born in a cellar, and brought up as a
-cinder-wench in a coalyard.[548]
-
-Nelly was the vagabond daughter of a poor Cavalier captain and fruiterer,
-who is said to have died in prison at Oxford. She began life by selling
-fish in the street, then turned orange-girl at the theatres, was promoted
-to be an actress, and finally became a mistress of Charles II. Though not
-as savage-tempered as the infamous Lady Castlemaine, Nelly was almost as
-mischievous, and quite as shameless. She obtained from the king £60,000
-in four years.[549] She bought a pearl necklace at Prince Rupert's sale
-for £4000. She drank, swore, gambled, and squandered money as wildly as
-her rivals. Nelly was small, with a good-humoured face, and "eyes that
-winked when she laughed."[550] She was witty, reckless, and good-natured.
-The portrait of her by Lely, with the lamb under her arm, shows us a very
-arch, pretty, dimply little actress. The present Duke of St. Alban's is
-descended from her.[551]
-
-In 1667 Nell Gwynn was living in Drury Lane, for on May day of that year
-Pepys says--"To Westminster, in the way meeting many milkmaids with
-garlands upon their pails, dancing with a fiddler between them; and saw
-pretty Nelly standing at her lodging's door in Drury Lane, in her
-smock-sleeves and boddice, looking upon one. She seemed a mighty pretty
-creature." Nelly had not then been long on the stage, and Pepys had hissed
-her a few months before being introduced to her by dangerous Mrs. Knipp.
-In 1671 Evelyn saw Nelly, then living in Pall Mall, "looking out of her
-garden on a terrace at the top of the wall," and talking too familiarly to
-the king, who stood on the green walk in the park below.[552]
-
-Poor Nell was not "allowed to starve," but ended an ill life by dying of
-apoplexy. There is no authority for the name of "Nell Gwynn's Dairy" given
-to a house near the Adelphi.
-
-That infamous and perjured scoundrel, and the murderer of so many innocent
-men, Titus Oates, was the son of a popular Baptist preacher in Ratcliffe
-Highway, and was educated at Merchant Taylor's. Dismissed from the Fleet,
-of which he was chaplain, for infamous practices, he became a Jesuit at
-St. Omer's, and came back to disclose the sham Popish plot, for which
-atrocious lie he received of the Roman Catholic king, Charles II., £1200 a
-year, an escort of guards, and a lodging in Whitehall. Oates died in
-1705. He lodged for some time in Cockpit Alley, now called Pitt Place.
-
-It was in the Crown Tavern, next the Whistling Oyster, and close to the
-south side of Drury Lane Theatre, that _Punch_ was first projected by Mr.
-Mark Lemon and Mr. Henry Mayhew in 1841; and its first number was
-"prepared for press" in a back room in Newcastle Street, Strand. Great
-rivers often have their sources in swampy and obscure places, and our
-good-natured satirist has not much to boast of in its birthplace. To
-_Punch_ Tom Hood contributed his immortal "Song of the Shirt," and
-Tennyson his scorching satire against Bulwer and his "New Timon;" almost
-from the first, Leech devoted to it his humorous pencil, and Albert Smith
-his perennial store of good humour and drollery. Amongst its other early
-contributors should be mentioned Mr. Gilbert A. à Beckett, Mr. W. H.
-Wills, and Douglas Jerrold.
-
-Zoffany, the artist, lived for some time in poverty in Drury Lane. Mr.
-Audinet, father of Philip Audinet the engraver, served his time with the
-celebrated clockmaker, Rimbault, who lived in Great St. Andrew's Street,
-Seven Dials. This worthy excelled in the construction of the clocks called
-at that time "Twelve-tuned Dutchmen," which were contrived with moving
-figures, engaged in a variety of employments. The pricking of the barrels
-of those clocks was performed by Bellodi, an Italian, who lived hard by,
-in Short's Gardens, Drury Lane. This person solicited Rimbault in favour
-of a starving artist who dwelt in a garret in his house. "Let him come to
-me," said Rimbault. Accordingly Zoffany waited upon the clockmaker, and
-produced some specimens of his art, which were so satisfactory that he was
-immediately set to work to embellish clock-faces, and paint appropriate
-backgrounds to the puppets upon them. From clock-faces the young painter
-proceeded to the human face divine, and at last resolved to try his hand
-upon the visage of the worthy clockmaker himself. He hit off the likeness
-of the patron so successfully, that Rimbault exerted himself to serve and
-promote him. Benjamin Wilson, the portrait-painter, who at that time lived
-at 56 Great Russell Street, a house afterwards inhabited by Philip
-Audinet, being desirous of procuring an assistant who could draw the
-figure well, and being, like Lawrence, deficient in all but the head,
-found out the ingenious painter of clock-faces, and engaged him at the
-moderate salary of forty pounds a year, with an especial injunction to
-secrecy. In this capacity he worked upon a picture of Garrick and Miss
-Bellamy in "Romeo and Juliet," which was exhibited under the name of
-Wilson. Garrick's keen eye satisfied him that another hand was in the
-work; so he resolved to discover the unknown painter. This discovery he
-effected by perseverance: he made the acquaintance of Zoffany and became
-his patron, employing him himself and introducing him to his friends; and
-in this way his bias to theatrical portraiture became established.
-Garrick's favour met with an ample return in the admirable portraits of
-himself and contemporaries, which have rendered their personal appearance
-so speakingly familiar to posterity both in his pictures and the admirable
-mezzotinto scrapings of Earlom. Zoffany was elected among the first
-members of the Royal Academy in 1768.
-
-The old Cockpit, or Phoenix Theatre, stood on the site of what is now
-called Pitt Place. Early in James I.'s reign it had been turned into a
-playhouse, and probably rebuilt.[553]
-
-On Shrove Tuesday 1616-17 the London prentices, roused to their annual
-zeal by a love of mischief and probably a Puritan fervour, sacked the
-building, to the discomfiture of the harmless players. Bitter,
-narrow-headed Prynne, who notes with horror and anger the forty thousand
-plays printed in two years for the five Devil's chapels in London,[554]
-describes the Cockpit as demoralising Drury Lane, then no doubt wealthy,
-and therefore supposed to be respectable. In 1647 the Cockpit Theatre was
-turned into a schoolroom; in 1649 Puritan soldiers broke into the house,
-which had again become a theatre, captured the actors, dispersed the
-audience, broke up the seats and stage, and carried off the dramatic
-criminals in open day, in all their stage finery, to the Gate House at
-Westminster.
-
-Rhodes, the old prompter at Blackfriars, who had turned bookseller,
-reopened the Cockpit on the Restoration. The new Theatre in Drury Lane
-opened in 1663 with the "Humorous Lieutenant" of Beaumont and Fletcher.
-This was the King's Company under Killigrew. Davenant and the Duke of
-York's company found a home first in the Cockpit, and afterwards in
-Salisbury Court, Fleet Street.
-
-The first Drury Lane Theatre was burnt down in 1672. Wren built the new
-house, which opened in 1674 with a prologue by Dryden. Cibber gives a
-careful account of Wren's Drury Lane, the chief entrance to which was down
-Playhouse Passage. Pepys blamed it for the distance of the stage from the
-boxes, and for the narrowness of the pit entrances.[555] The platform of
-the stage projected very forward, and the lower doors of entrance for the
-actors were in the place of the stage-boxes.[556]
-
-In 1681 the two companies united, leaving Portugal Street to the lithe
-tennis-players and Dorset Gardens to the brawny wrestlers. Wren's theatre
-was taken down in 1791; its successor, built by Holland, was opened in
-1794, and destroyed in 1809. The present edifice, the fourth in
-succession, is the work of Wyatt, and was opened in 1812.[557]
-
-Hart, Mohun, Burt, and Clun were all actors in Killigrew's company. Hart,
-who had been a captain in the army, was dignified as Alexander,
-incomparable as Catiline, and excellent as Othello. He died in 1683.
-Mohun, whom Nat Lee wrote parts for, and who had been a major in the Civil
-War, was much applauded in heroic parts, and was a favourite of
-Rochester's. Burt played Cicero in Ben Jonson's "Catiline;" and poor Clun,
-who was murdered by footpads in Kentish Town, was great as Iago, and as
-Subtle in "The Alchymist."
-
-From Pepys's memoranda of visits to Drury Lane we gather a few facts about
-the licentious theatre-goers of his day. After the Plague, when Drury Lane
-had been deserted, the old gossip went there, half-ashamed to be seen, and
-with his cloak thrown up round his face.[558] The king flaunts about with
-his mistresses, and Pepys goes into an upper box to chat with the
-actresses and see a rehearsal, which seems then to have followed and not
-preceded the daily performance.[559] He describes Sir Charles Sedley, in
-the pit, exchanging banter with a lady in a mask. Three o'clock seems to
-have been about the time for theatres opening.[560] The king was angry, he
-says, with Ned Howard for writing a play called "The Change of Crowns," in
-which Lacy acted a country gentleman who is astonished at the corruption
-of the court. For this Lacy was committed to the porter's lodge; on being
-released, he called the author a fool, and having a glove thrown in his
-face, returned the compliment with a blow on Howard's pate with a cane;
-upon which the pit wondered that Howard did not run the mean fellow
-through; and the king closed the house, which the gentry thought had grown
-too insolent.
-
-August 15, 1667, Pepys goes to see the "Merry Wives of Windsor," which
-pleased our great Admiralty official "in no part of it." Two days after he
-weeps at the troubles of Queen Elizabeth, but revives when that dangerous
-Mrs. Knipp dances among the milkmaids, and comes out in her nightgown to
-sing a song. Another day he goes at three o'clock to see Beaumont and
-Fletcher's "Scornful Lady," but does not remain, as there is no one in the
-pit. In September of the same year he finds his wife and servant in an
-eighteenpenny seat. In October 1667 he ventures into the tiring-room where
-Nell was dressing, and then had fruit in the scene-room, and heard Mrs.
-Knipp read her part in "Flora's Vagaries," Nell cursing because there were
-so few people in the pit. A fortnight after he contrives to see a new
-play, "The Black Prince," by Lord Orrery; and though he goes at two, finds
-no room in the pit, and has for the first time in his life to take an
-upper four-shilling-box. November 1, he proclaims the "Taming of the
-Shrew" "a silly old play." November 2, the house was full of Parliament
-men, the House being up. One of them choking himself while eating some
-fruit, Orange Moll thrust her finger down his throat and brought him to
-life again.
-
-Pepys condemns Nell Gwynn as unbearable in serious parts, but considers
-her beyond imitation as a madwoman. In December 1667 he describes a poor
-woman who had lent her child to the actors, but hearing him cry, forced
-her way on to the stage and bore it off from Hart.
-
-It would seem from subsequent notes in the _Diary_, that to a man who
-stopped only for one act at a theatre, and took no seat, no charge was
-made.
-
-In February 1668 Pepys sees at Drury Lane "The Virgin Martyr," by
-Massinger, which he pronounces not to be worth much but for Becky
-Marshall's acting; yet the wind music when the angel descended "wrapped
-up" his soul so, that, remarkably enough, it made him as sick as when he
-was first in love, and he determined to go home and make his wife learn
-wind music. May 1, 1668, he mentions that the pit was thrown into disorder
-by the rain coming in at the cupola. May 7 of the same year, he calls for
-Knipp when the play is over, and sees "Nell in her boy's clothes, mighty
-pretty." "But, Lord!" he says, "their confidence! and how many men do
-hover about them as soon as they come off the stage! and how confident
-they are in their talk!"
-
-On May 18, 1668, Pepys goes as early as twelve o'clock to see the first
-performance of that poor play, Sir Charles Sedley's "Mulberry Garden," at
-which the king, queen, and court did not laugh. While waiting for the
-curtain to pull up, Pepys hires a boy to keep his place, slips out to the
-Rose Tavern in Russell Street, and dines off a breast of mutton from the
-spit.
-
-On September 15, 1668, there is a play--"The Ladies à la Mode"--so bad
-that the actor who announced the piece to be repeated fell a-laughing, as
-did the pit. Four days after Pepys sits next Shadwell, the poet,
-admiring Ben Jonson's extravagant comedy, "The Silent Woman."
-
-In January 1669 he sat in a box near "that merry jade Nell," who, with a
-comrade from the Duke's House, "lay there laughing upon people."
-
-"Les Horaces" of Corneille he found "a silly tragedy." February 1669
-Beetson, one of the actors, read his part, Kynaston having been beaten and
-disabled by order of Sir Charles Sedley, whom he had ridiculed. The same
-month Pepys went to the King's House to see "The Faithful Shepherdess,"
-and found not more than £10 in the house.
-
-A great leader in the Drury Lane troop was Lacy, the Falstaff of his day.
-He was a handsome, audacious fellow, who delighted the town as "Frenchman,
-Scot, or Irishman, fine gentleman or fool, honest simpleton or rogue,
-Tartuffe or Drench, old man or loquacious woman." He was King Charles's
-favourite actor as Teague in "The Committee," or mimicking Dryden as Bayes
-in "The Rehearsal."
-
-The greatest rascal in the company was Goodman--"Scum Goodman," as he was
-called--admirable as Alexander and Julius Cæsar. He was a dashing,
-shameless, impudent rogue, who used to boast that he had once taken "an
-airing" on the road to recruit his purse. He was expelled Cambridge for
-slashing a picture of the Duke of Monmouth. He hired an Italian quack to
-poison two children of his mistress, the infamous Duchess of Cleveland,
-joined in the Fenwick plot to kill King William, and would have turned
-traitor against his fellow conspirators had he not been bought off for
-£500 a year, and sent to Paris, where he disappeared.
-
-Haines, one of Killigrew's band, was an impudent but clever low comedian.
-In Sparkish, in "The Country Wife," he was the very model of airy
-gentlemen. His great successes were as Captain Bluff in Congreve's "Old
-Bachelor," Roger in "Æsop," and "the lively, impudent, and irresistible
-Tom Errand" in Farquhar's "Constant Couple," "that most triumphant comedy
-of a whole century."[561]
-
-The stories told of Joe Haines are good. He once engaged a simple-minded
-clergyman as "chaplain to the Theatre Royal," and sent him behind the
-scenes ringing a big bell to call the actors to prayers. "Count" Haines
-was once arrested by two bailiffs on Holborn Hill at the very moment that
-the Bishop of Ely passed in his carriage. "Here comes my cousin, he will
-satisfy you," said the ready-witted actor, who instantly stepped to the
-carriage window and whispered Bishop Patrick--"Here are two Romanists, my
-lord, inclined to become Protestants, but yet with some scruples of
-conscience." The anxious bishop instantly beckoned to the bailiffs to
-follow him to Ely Place, and Joe escaped; the mortified bishop paying the
-money out of sheer shame. Haines died in 1701.
-
-Amongst the actresses at this house were pretty but frail Mrs. Hughes, the
-mistress of Prince Rupert, and Mrs. Knipp, Pepys's dangerous friend, who
-acted rakish fine ladies and rattling ladies'-maids, and came on to sing
-as priestess, nun, or milkmaid. Anne Marshall, the daughter of a
-Presbyterian divine, acquired a reputation as Dorothea in "The Virgin
-Martyr," and as the Queen of Sicily in Dryden's "Secret Love."
-
-But Nell Gwynn was the chief "toast" of the town. Little, pretty,
-impudent, and witty, she danced well, and was a good actress in comedy and
-in characters where "natural emotion bordering on insanity" was to be
-represented.[562] Her last original part was that of Almahide in Dryden's
-"Conquest of Granada," where she spoke the prologue in a straw hat as
-large as a waggon-wheel.
-
-Leigh Hunt says that "Nineteen out of twenty of Dryden's plays were
-produced at Drury Lane, and seven out of Lee's eleven; all the good plays
-of Wycherly, except 'The Gentleman Dancing Master;' two of
-Congreve's--'The Old Bachelor' and 'The Double Dealer;' and all
-Farquhar's, except 'The Beau's Stratagem.'"[563] Dryden's impurity and
-daring bombast were the attractions to Drury Lane, as Otway's
-sentimentalism and real pathos were to the rival house. Lee's splendid
-bombast was succeeded by Farquhar's gay rakes and not too virtuous women.
-
-Doggett, who was before the public from 1691 to 1713, was a little lively
-Irishman, for whom Congreve wrote the characters of Fondlewife, Sir Paul
-Pliant, and Ben. He was partner in the theatre with Cibber and Wilkes from
-1709 to 1712, but left when Booth was taken into the firm. He was a
-staunch Whig, and left an orange livery and a badge to be rowed for yearly
-by six London watermen.
-
-The queen of comedy, Mrs. Oldfield, flashed upon the town first as Lady
-Betty Modish in Cibber's "Careless Husband," in 1704-5. When quite a girl
-she was overheard by Farquhar reading "The Scornful Lady" of Beaumont and
-Fletcher to her aunt, who kept the Mitre Tavern in St. James's Market.
-Farquhar introduced her to Vanbrugh, and Vanbrugh to Rich. "She excelled
-all actresses," says Davies, "in sprightliness of wit and elegance of
-manner, and was greatly superior in the clear, sonorous, and harmonious
-tones of her voice." Her eyes were large and speaking, and when intended
-to give special archness to some brilliant or gay thought, she kept them
-mischievously half shut. Cibber praises Mrs. Oldfield for her unpresuming
-modesty, and her good sense in not rejecting advice--"A mark of good
-sense," says the shrewd old manager, "rarely known in any actor of either
-sex but herself. Yet it was a hard matter to give her any hint that she
-was not able to take or improve."[564] With all this merit, she was
-tractable and less presuming in her station than several that had not half
-her pretensions to be troublesome. This excellent actress was not fond of
-tragedy, but she still played Marcia in "Cato;" Swift, who attended the
-rehearsals with Addison, railed at her for her good-humoured carelessness
-and indifference; and Pope sneered at her vanity in her last moments. It
-is true that she was buried in kid gloves, tucker, and ruffles of best
-lace. Mrs. Oldfield lived first with a Mr. Maynwaring, a rough,
-hard-drinking Whig writer, to whom Addison dedicated one of the volumes of
-the _Spectator_; and after his death with General Churchill, one of the
-Marlborough family. Nevertheless, she went to court and habitually
-associated with ladies of the highest rank. Society is cruel and
-inconsistent in these matters. Open scandal it detests, but to secret vice
-it is indifferent.
-
-Mrs. Oldfield died in 1730, lay in state in the Jerusalem Chamber, and
-when she was borne to her grave in the Abbey, Lord Hervey (Pope's
-"Sporus"), Lord Delawarr, and that toady Bubb Doddington, supported her
-pall. The late Earl of Cadogan was the great-grandson of Anne
-Oldfield.[565] This actress, so majestic in tragedy, so irresistible in
-comedy, was generous enough to give an annuity to poor, hopeless, scampish
-Savage.
-
-Robert Wilkes, a young Irish Government clerk, obtained great successes as
-Farquhar's heroes, Sir Harry Wildair, Mirabel, Captain Plume, and Archer.
-He played equally well the light gentlemen of Cibber's comedies. Genest
-describes him as buoyant and graceful on the stage, irreproachable in
-dress, his every movement marked by "an ease of breeding and manner." This
-actor also excelled in plaintive and tender parts. Cibber hints, however,
-at his professional conceit and overbearing temper. Wilkes on one occasion
-read "George Barnwell" to Queen Anne at the Court at St. James's. He died
-in 1732.
-
-Barton Booth, who was at Westminster School with Rowe the poet, identified
-himself with Addison's Cato. His dignity, pathos, and energy as that lover
-of liberty led Bolingbroke to present him on the first night with a purse
-of fifty guineas. The play was translated into four languages; Pope gave
-it a prologue; Garth decked it with an epilogue; while Denis proved it, to
-his own satisfaction, to be worthless. Aaron Hill tells us that statistics
-proved that Booth could always obtain from eighteen to twenty rounds of
-applause during the evening. When playing the Ghost to Betterton's Hamlet,
-Booth is said to have been once so horror-stricken as to be unable to
-proceed with his part. He often took inferior Shaksperean parts, and was
-frequently indolent; but if he saw a man whose opinion he valued among the
-audience he fired up and played to him. This petted actor and manager died
-in 1733.
-
-Colley Cibber, to judge from Steele's criticisms, must have been admirable
-as a beau, whether rallying pleasantly, scorning artfully, ridiculing, or
-neglecting.[566] Wilkes surpassed him in beseeching gracefully,
-approaching respectfully, pitying, mourning, and loving. In the part of
-Sir Fopling Flutter in "The Fool of Fashion," played in 1695, Cibber wore
-a fair, full-bottomed periwig which was so much admired that it used to be
-brought on the stage in a sedan and put on publicly. To this wonder of the
-town Colonel Brett, who married Savage's mother, took a special fancy.
-"The beaux of those days," says Cibber, "had more of the stateliness of
-the peacock than the pert of the lapwing." The colonel came behind the
-scenes, first praised the wig, and then offered to purchase it. On
-Cibber's bantering him about his anxiety for such a trifle, the gay
-colonel began to rally himself with such humour that he fairly won Cibber,
-and they sat down at once, laughing, to finish their bargain over a
-bottle.
-
-Quin's career began at Dublin in 1714, and ended at Bath in 1753. From
-1736 to 1741 he was at Drury Lane. From Booth's retirement till the coming
-of Garrick, Quin had no rival as Cato, Brutus, Volpone, Falstaff, Zanga,
-etc. His Macbeth, Othello, and Lear were inferior. Davies says, the tender
-and the violent were beyond his reach, but he gave words weight and
-dignity by his sensible elocution and well-regulated voice. His movements
-were ponderous and his action languid. Quin was generous, witty, a great
-epicure, and a careless dresser. It was his hard fate, though a
-warm-hearted man, to be equally warm in temper, and to kill two
-adversaries in duels that were forced upon him. Quin was a friend of
-Garrick and of Thomson the poet, and a frequent visitor at Allen's house
-at Prior Park, near Bath, where Pope, Warburton, and Fielding visited.
-
-Some of Quin's jests were perfect. When Warburton said, "By what law can
-the execution of Charles I. be justified?" Quin replied, "By all the laws
-he had left them." No wonder Walpole applauded him. The bishop bade the
-player remember that the regicides came to violent ends, but Quin gave him
-a worse blow. "That, your lordship," he said, "if I am not mistaken, was
-also the case with the twelve apostles." Quin could overthrow even Foote.
-They had at one time had a quarrel, and were reconciled, but Foote was
-still a little sore. "Jemmy," said he, "you should not have said that I
-had but one shirt, and that I lay in bed while it was washed." "Sammy,"
-replied the actor, "I never _could_ have said so, for I never knew that
-you had a shirt to wash." Quin died in 1766, and Garrick wrote an epitaph
-on his tomb in Bath Abbey, ending with the line--
-
- "To this complexion we must come at last."
-
-Garrick appeared first at Goodman's Fields Theatre, in 1741, as King
-Richard. In eight days the west flocked eastward, and, as Davies tells us,
-"the coaches of the nobility filled up the space from Temple Bar to
-Whitechapel." Pope came up from Twickenham to see if the young man was
-equal to Betterton. Garrick revolutionised the stage. Tragedians had
-fallen into a pompous "rhythmical, mechanical sing-song,"[567] fit only
-for dull orators. Their style was overlaboured with art--it was mere
-declamation. The actor had long ceased to imitate nature. Garrick's first
-appearance at Drury Lane was in 1742. Cumberland, then at Westminster
-School, describes his sight of Quin and Garrick, and the first impressions
-they produced on him. Garrick was Lothario, Mrs. Cibber Calista, Quin
-Horatio, and Mrs. Pritchard Lavinia. Quin, when the curtain drew up,
-presented himself in a green velvet coat, embroidered down the seams, an
-enormous full-bottomed periwig, rolled stockings, and high-heeled square
-shoes.[568] "With very little variation of cadence, and in a deep full
-tone, accompanied by a sawing kind of action which had more of the senate
-than the stage in it, he rolled out his heroics with an air of dignified
-indifference that seemed to disdain the plaudits that were bestowed upon
-him. Mrs. Cibber, in a key high-pitched but sweet withal, sang or rather
-recitatived Rowe's harmonious strains. But when, after long and anxious
-expectation, I first beheld little Garrick, then young and light and alive
-in every muscle and every feature, come bounding on the stage and pointing
-at the wittol Altamont and heavy-paced Horatio, heavens! what a
-transition!--it seemed as if a whole century had been swept over in the
-passage of a single scene." And yet, according to fretful Cumberland, "the
-show of hands" was for Quin, though, according to Davies, the best judges
-were for Garrick. And when Quin was slow in answering the challenge,
-somebody in the gallery called out, "Why don't you tell the gentleman
-whether you will meet him or not?" Garrick's repertory extended to one
-hundred characters, of which he was the original representative of
-thirty-six. Of his comic characters, Ranger and Abel Drugger were the
-best--one was irresistibly vivacious, the other comically stupid.
-
-Garrick, who mutilated Shakespere and wrote clever verses and useful
-theatrical adaptations, was a vain, sprightly man, who got the reputation
-of reforming stage costume, although it was Macklin, pugnacious and
-courageous, who first dared to act Macbeth dressed as a Highland chief,
-and felt proud of his own anachronism. Garrick had, in fact, a dislike to
-really truthful costume. He dared to play Hotspur in laced frock and
-Ramillies wig.[569] In truth, it was neither Garrick nor Macklin who
-originated this reform, but the change of public opinion and the widening
-of education. West, in spite of ridicule and condemnation, dared to dress
-the soldiers in his "Death of Wolfe" in English uniform, instead of in the
-armour of stage Romans. Burke said of Garrick that he was the most acute
-observer of nature he had ever known. Garrick could assume any passion at
-the moment, and could act off-hand Scrub or Richard, Brute or Macbeth. He
-oscillated between tragedy and comedy; he danced to perfection; he was
-laborious at rehearsals, and yet all that he did seemed spontaneous. In
-Fribble he imitated no fewer than eleven men of fashion so that every one
-recognised them. Garrick died in 1779, and was buried in _the_ Abbey.
-"Chatham," says Dr. Doran, the actor's admirable biographer, "had
-addressed him living in verse, and peers sought for the honour of
-supporting the pall at his funeral."[570] That he was vain and
-over-sensitive there can be no doubt; but there can be also no doubt that
-he was generous, often charitable, delightful in society, and never, like
-Foote, eager to give pain by the exercise of his talent. As an actor,
-Garrick has not since been equalled in versatility and equal balance of
-power; nor has any subsequent actor attained so high a rank among the
-intellect of his age.
-
-Kitty Clive, born in 1711, took leave of the stage in 1769. She was one of
-the best-natured, wittiest, happiest, and most versatile of actresses,
-whether as "roguish chambermaid, fierce virago, chuckling hoyden, brazen
-romp, stolid country girl, affected fine lady, or thoroughly natural old
-woman."[571] Fielding, Garrick, and Walpole delighted in Kitty Clive.
-After years of quadrille at Purcell's, and cards and music at the villa at
-Teddington which Horace Walpole lent her, Kitty Clive died suddenly,
-without a groan, in 1785.
-
-Woodward was excellent in fops, rascals, simpletons, and Shakesperean
-light characters. His Bobadil, Marplot, and Touchstone were beyond
-approach. Shuter, originally a billiard-marker, came on the stage in 1744,
-and quitted it in 1776. His grimace and impromptu were much praised.
-
-Samuel Foote, born at Truro in 1720, having failed in tragedy, and not
-been very successful in comedy, started his entertainments at the
-Haymarket in 1747. He died in 1777. His history belongs to the records of
-another theatre.
-
-Spanger Barry in 1748-9 acted Hamlet and Macbeth alternately with Garrick.
-Davies says that Barry could not perform such characters as Richard and
-Macbeth, but he made a capital Alexander. "He charmed the ladies by the
-soft melody of his love complaints and the noble ardour of his courtship."
-Only Mrs. Cibber excelled him in the expression of love, grief,
-tenderness, and jealous rage. Tall, handsome, and dignified, Barry
-undoubtedly ran Garrick close in the part of Romeo, artificial as
-Churchill in the _Rosciad_ declares him to have been. A lady once said,
-"that had she been Juliet she should have expected Garrick to have stormed
-the balcony, he was so impassioned; but that Barry was so eloquent,
-tender, and seductive, that she should have come down to him."[572] In
-Lear, the town said that Barry "was every inch a king" but Garrick "every
-inch King Lear." Barry was amorous and extravagant. He delighted in giving
-magnificent entertainments, and treated Mr. Pelham in so princely a style
-that that minister (with not the finest taste) rebuked him for his lavish
-hospitality.
-
-The brilliant and witching Peg Woffington was the daughter of a small
-huckster in Dublin, and became a pupil of Madame Violante, a rope-dancer.
-In 1740 she came out at Covent Garden, and soon won the town as Sir Harry
-Wildair. She played Lady Townley and Lady Betty Modish with "happy ease
-and gaiety."[573] She rendered the most audacious absurdities pleasing by
-her beautiful bright face and her vivacity of expression. Peg quarrelled
-with Kitty Clive and Mrs. Cibber, and detested that reckless woman George
-Anne Bellamy. This witty and enchanting actress, as generous and
-charitable as Nell Gwynn with all her faults, was struck by paralysis
-while acting Rosalind at Covent Garden, and died in 1760.
-
-During his career from 1691 to his retirement in 1733, clever, careless
-Colley Cibber originated nearly eighty characters, chiefly grand old fops,
-inane old men, dashing soldiers, and impudent lacqueys. His Fondlewife,
-Sir Courtly Nice, and Shallow were his best parts. "Of all English
-managers," says Dr. Doran, "Cibber was the most successful. Of the English
-actors, he is the only one who was ever promoted to the laureateship or
-elected a member of White's Club." Even Pope, who hated him and got some
-hard blows from him, praised "The Careless Husband;" Walpole, who despised
-players, praised Colley; and Dr. Johnson approved of his admirably written
-_Apology_.
-
-Cibber's daughter, Mrs. Clarke, led a wild and disreputable life, became a
-waitress at Marylebone, and died in poverty in 1760. Colley's son
-Theophilus, the best Pistol ever seen on the stage, and the original
-George Barnwell, was drowned in crossing the Irish Sea.
-
-His wife was a sister of Dr. Arne, the composer. In tragedy she was
-remarkable for her artless sensibility and exquisite variety of
-expression. As Ophelia she moved even Tate Wilkinson. She was one of the
-first actresses to make the woes of the grand tragedy queen natural. She
-died in 1766, and was buried in the cloisters of Westminster Abbey.
-
-Mrs. Pritchard, that "inspired idiot," as Dr. Johnson called her in his
-contempt for her ignorance, seems to have been a virtuous woman. She left
-the stage in 1768. Though plain, and in later years very stout, Mrs.
-Pritchard was admired in tragedy for her perfect pronunciation and her
-force and dignity as the Queen in "Hamlet," and as Lady Macbeth. She was
-also a good comedian in playful and witty parts. She was, however, not
-very graceful, and inclined to rant.
-
-When Mrs. Cibber died in 1765, Mrs. Yates succeeded to her fame, with Mrs.
-Barry for a rival, till Mrs. Siddons came from Bath and unseated both.
-Mrs. Yates was wanting in pathos, but in pride and scorn as Medea, or in
-hopeless grief as Constance, she was unapproachable. She died in 1787.
-
-George Anne Bellamy, the reckless and the unfortunate, was the daughter of
-a Quakeress, with whom Lord Tyrawley ran away from school. Dr. Doran says,
-"What with the loves, caprices, charms, extravagances, and sufferings of
-Mrs. Bellamy, she excited the wonder, admiration, pity, and contempt of
-the town for thirty years."[574] Now she was squandering money like a
-Cleopatra; now she was crouching on the wet steps of Westminster Bridge,
-brooding over suicide. "The Bellamy," says the critic, was only equal to
-"the Cibber" in expressing the ecstasy of love. This follower of the old
-school of intoners was the original Volumnia of Thomson, the Erixene of
-Dr. Young, and the Cleone of the honest footman poet and publisher
-Dodsley. She took her farewell benefit in 1784.
-
-In 1778 Miss Farren appeared at Drury Lane. She was the daughter of a poor
-vagabond strolling player. Walpole says she was the most perfect actress
-he had ever seen; and he spoke well of her fine ladies, of whom he was a
-judge. Adolphus, not easily appeased, praised her irresistible graces and
-"all the indescribable little charms which give fascination to the women
-of birth and fashion." She was gay as Lady Betty Modish, sentimental as
-Cecilia or Indiana, and playful as Rosara in the "Barber of Seville." In
-1797 the little girl who had been helped over the ice to the lock-up at
-Salisbury, to hand up a bowl of milk to her father when a prisoner
-there,[575] took leave of the stage in the part of Lady Teazle, and
-married the Earl of Derby, who had buried his wife just six weeks before.
-
-In 1798 Mrs. Abington, "the best affected fine lady of her time," retired
-from the stage of Drury Lane. She was the daughter of a common soldier,
-and as a girl was known as "Nosegay Fan," and had sold flowers in St.
-James's Park. She first appeared at Drury Lane in 1756-7.
-
-Poor Mrs. Robinson, the "Perdita" so heartlessly betrayed by the Prince of
-Wales, was driven on to the stage in 1776 by her husband, a handsome
-scapegrace who had run through his fortune. She passed from the stage in
-1780, and died, forgotten, poor, and paralytic, in 1800.
-
-In 1767 Samuel Reddish, Canning's stepfather, first appeared at Drury Lane
-as Lord Townley. He was a reasonably good Edgar and Posthumus, but failed
-in parts of passion. He went mad in 1779. In this group of minor actors we
-may include Gentleman Smith, a good Charles Surface, who retired from the
-stage in 1786; Yates, whose forte was old men and Shakspere's fools
-(1736-1780); Dodd, who, from 1765 to 1796, was the prince of fops and old
-men (Master Slender and Master Stephen were said to die with him); and
-lastly, that great comic actor, John Palmer, who died on the stage in
-1798, as he was playing the Stranger. He was the original representative
-of plausible Joseph Surface. "Plausible," he used to say, "am I? You rate
-me too highly. The utmost I ever did in that way was that I once persuaded
-a bailiff who had arrested me to bail me." Once when making friends with
-Sheridan after a quarrel, Palmer said to the author, "If you could but see
-my heart, Mr. Sheridan!" to which Sheridan replied, "Why, Jack, you forgot
-I wrote it." "Jack Palmer," says Lamb, "was a gentleman with a slight
-infusion of the footman."[576] He had two voices, both plausible,
-hypocritical, and insinuating.
-
-Henderson was engaged by Sheridan for Drury Lane in 1777. As Falstaff this
-humorous friend of Gainsborough was seldom equalled. His defects were a
-woolly voice and a habit of sawing the air. Dr. Doran says, "he was the
-first actor who, with Sheridan, gave public readings" at Freemasons' Hall;
-and his recitation of "John Gilpin" gave impetus to the sale of the
-narrative of that adventurous ride.[577] Henderson died in 1785, aged only
-thirty-eight, and was buried in Westminster Abbey.
-
-Mrs. Siddons, the daughter of an itinerant actor, was born in 1755. After
-strolling and becoming a lady's-maid, she married a poor second-rate actor
-of Birmingham. She appeared first at Drury Lane in 1775 as Portia. Her
-first real triumph was in 1780, as Isabella in Southerne's tragedy. The
-management gave her Garrick's dressing-room, and some legal admirers
-presented her with a purse of a hundred guineas. Soon afterwards, as Jane
-Shore, she sent many ladies in the audience into fainting fits. This great
-actress closed her career in 1812 with Lady Macbeth, her greatest triumph.
-She is said to have made King George III. shed tears. He admired her
-especially for her repose. "Garrick," he used to say, "could never stand
-still. He was a great fidget." No actress received more homage in her time
-than Mrs. Siddons. Reynolds painted his name on the hem of her garment in
-his portrait of her as the Tragic Muse. Dr. Johnson kissed her hand and
-admired her genius. In comedy Mrs. Siddons failed; her rigorous Grecian
-face was not arch. "In comedy" says Colman, "she was only a frisking
-grig." "Those who knew her best," says Dr. Doran, "have recorded her
-grace, her noble carriage, divine elocution and solemn earnestness, her
-grandeur, her pathos, her correct judgment." Erskine studied her cadences
-and tones. According to Campbell, she increased the heart's capacity for
-tender, intense, and lofty feelings. This lofty-minded actress, as Young
-calls her, died in 1831.
-
-Her elder brother, John Kemble, first appeared at Drury Lane, in 1783, as
-Hamlet. In 1788-9 he succeeded King as manager of the theatre, and
-continued so till 1801. In Coriolanus and Cato, Kemble was pre-eminent,
-but his Richard and Sir Giles were inferior to Cook's and Kean's. In
-comedy he failed, except in snatches of dignity or pathos. As an actor
-Kemble was sometimes heavy and monotonous. He had not the fire or
-versatility of Garrick, or the wild passion of Edmund Kean. As Hamlet he
-was romantic, dignified, and philosophic. In his Rolla he delighted
-Sheridan and Pitt; in Octavian he drew tears from all eyes. He excelled
-also in Coeur de Lion, Penruddock, and the Stranger. In private life he
-was always majestic and gravely convivial. When Covent Garden was burnt
-down in 1808, he bore the loss bravely, and on the night of the opening
-the generous Duke of Northumberland sent him back his bond for £10,000 to
-be committed to the flames. Walpole, who saw Kemble, preferred him to
-Garrick in Benedick, and to Quin in Maskwell. Kemble took his solemn
-farewell of the stage in 1817 as Coriolanus, and died at Lausanne in 1823.
-Leigh Hunt, an excellent dramatic critic, paints the following picture of
-Kemble: "A figure of melancholy dignity, dealing out a most measured
-speech in sepulchral tones and a pedantic pronunciation, and injuring
-what he has made you feel by the want of feeling it himself."[578] John
-Kemble's brother Charles acted well in Mercutio, Young Mirabel, and
-Benedick. He remained on the stage till 1836.
-
-George Frederick Cooke, whose life was one perpetual debauch, and whose
-career on the stage extended from 1801 to 1812, when he died at Boston,
-did not, I think, appear at Drury Lane. His laurels were won chiefly at
-Covent Garden.
-
-Master Betty, born in 1791 at Shrewsbury, elegant, and quick of memory,
-appeared at Drury Lane in 1804, fretted his little hour upon the stage,
-and earned a fortune with which he prudently retired in 1808. He lived
-till 1876.
-
-King, the original representative of Sir Peter Teazle, Lord Ogleby, Puff,
-and Dr. Cantwell, began his London career at Drury Lane in 1748. He left
-the stage in 1802. His best characters were Touchstone and Ranger, and in
-these parts he was always arch, rapid, and versatile. Hazlitt discourses
-on King's old, hard, rough face, and his shrewd hints and tart replies.
-
-Dickey Suett was a favourite low comedian from 1780 to 1805, when he died.
-He was a tall, thin, ungainly man, too much addicted to grimace,
-interpolations, and practical jokes. He drank hard, and suffered from
-mental depression. Hazlitt calls him "the delightful old croaker, the
-everlasting Dickey Gossip of the stage."[579] Lamb describes his "Oh, la!"
-as irresistible; "he drolled upon the stock of those two syllables richer
-than the cuckoo." Shakspere's jesters "have all the true Suett stamp--a
-loose and shambling gait, and a slippery tongue."[580]
-
-Miss Pope, who left the stage in 1808, had played with Garrick and Mrs.
-Clive. She was the original Polly Honeycomb, Miss Sterling, Mrs. Candour,
-and Tilburina. In youth she played hoydens, chambermaids, and half-bred
-ladies, with a dash and good-humour free from all vulgarity, and in old
-age she took to duennas and Mrs. Heidelburg. In 1761 Churchill mentions
-her as "lively Pope," and in 1807 Horace Smith describes her as "a bulky
-person with a duplicity of chin."
-
-In 1741 the theatre, which had been rebuilt by Wren in 1674, in a cheap
-and plain manner, became ruinous, and was enlarged and almost rebuilt by
-the Adams. In 1747 Garrick became the manager, and Dr. Johnson, as a
-friend, wrote the celebrated address beginning with the often-quoted
-lines--
-
- "When Learning's triumph o'er her barbarous foes
- First reared the stage, immortal Shakspere rose.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Each change of many-coloured life he drew,
- Exhausted worlds, and then imagined new;
- Existence saw him spurn her bounded reign,
- And panting Time toiled after him in vain."
-
-In 1775, the year in which "The Duenna" was brought out at Covent Garden,
-Garrick made known his wish to sell a moiety of the patent of this
-theatre. In June 1776 a contract was signed, Mr. Sheridan taking
-two-fourteenths of the whole for £10,000, Mr. Linley the same, and Dr.
-Ford three-fourteenths at £15,000.[581] How Sheridan raised the money no
-one ever knew.
-
-Sheridan's first contribution to this new stage was an alteration of
-Vanbrugh's licentious comedy of "The Relapse," which he called "A Trip to
-Scarborough," and brought out in 1777. The same year the brilliant
-manager, then only six-and-twenty, produced the finest and most popular
-comedy in the English language, "The School for Scandal." On the last slip
-of this miracle of wit and dramatic construction Sheridan wrote--"Finished
-at last, thank God!--R. B. SHERIDAN." Below this the prompter added his
-devout response--"Amen.--W. HOPKINS."[582] Garrick was proud of the new
-manager, and boasted of his budding genius.[583]
-
-In 1778 Sheridan bought out Mr. Lacy for more than £45,000, and Dr. Ford
-for £77,000. In 1779 Garrick died, and Sheridan wrote a monody to his
-memory, which was delivered by Mrs. Yates after the play of "The West
-Indian." Slander attributed the finest passage in this monody to Tickell,
-just as it had before attributed Tickell's bad farce to Sheridan.
-
-Dowton, who appeared in 1796 as Sheva, was felicitous in good-natured
-testy old men, and also in crabbed and degraded old villains. His Dr.
-Cantwell and Sir Anthony Absolute were in the true spirit of old comedy.
-Leigh Hunt praises Dowton's changes from the irritable to the yielding,
-and from the angry to the tender.
-
-Willy Blanchard was natural and unaffected, but mannered.
-
-Mathews first appeared in London in 1803. He excelled in valets and old
-men, and drew tears as M. Mallet, the poor emigré who is disappointed
-about a letter.
-
-Liston made his début at the Haymarket in 1805 as Sheepface. Leigh Hunt
-praises his ignorant rustics, and condemns his old men. He sets him down
-as a painter of emotions, and therefore more intellectual than Fawcett and
-less farcical than Munden. Liston was a hypochondriac; below his fun there
-was always an under-current of melancholy, "as though," says Dr. Doran,
-mysteriously, "he had killed a boy when, under the name of Williams, he
-was usher at the Rev. Dr. Burney's at Gosport."[584]
-
-In 1807 Jones and Young made their first appearances, but not at Drury
-Lane. Young originated Rienzi, and played Hamlet, Falstaff, and Captain
-Macheath. Jones was a stage rake of great excellence.
-
-Among the actresses before Kean, we may mention Miss Brunton, afterwards
-Countess of Craven, and Mrs. Davison, a good Lady Teazle.
-
-Lewis, who left the stage in 1809, was a draper's son. He died in 1813,
-and out of part of his fortune the new church at Ealing was erected. He
-played Young Rapid and Jeremy Diddler, and created the Hon. Tom
-Shuffleton in "John Bull." His restless style suited Morton and Reynolds's
-comedies, and he succeeded in "all that was frolic, gay, humorous,
-whimsical, eccentric, and yet elegant." He was manager of Covent Garden
-for twenty-one years, and made everyone do his duty by kindness and good
-treatment. Leigh Hunt sketches Lewis admirably, with his "easy
-flutter,"[585] short knowing respiration, and complacent liveliness. Lewis
-played the gentleman with more heart than Elliston. He seemed polite, not
-from vanity, but rather from a natural irresistible wish to please. He had
-all the laborious carelessness of action, important indifference of voice,
-and natural vacuity of look that are requisite for the lounger.[586] His
-defects were a habit of shaking his head and drawing in of the breath. His
-"flippant airiness," "vivacious importance," and "French flutter" must
-have been in their way perfect. "Gay, fluttering, hair-brained Lewis!"
-says Hazlitt; "nobody could break open a door, or jump over a table, or
-scale a ladder, or twirl a cocked hat, or dangle a cane, or play a
-jockey-nobleman or a nobleman's jockey like him."[587]
-
-Here a moment's pause for an anecdote. When a riot took place at Drury
-Lane in 1740 about the non-appearance of a French dancer, the first
-symptoms of the outbreak were the ushering of ladies out of the pit. A
-noble marquis gallantly proposed to fire the house. The proposal was
-considered, but not adopted. The bucks and bloods then proceeded to
-destroy the musical instruments and fittings, to break the panels and
-partitions, and pull down the royal arms. The offence was finally condoned
-by the ringleading marquis sending £100 to the manager.
-
-Charles Lamb describes Drury Lane in his own delightful way. The first
-play he ever saw was in 1781-2, when he was six years old. "A portal, now
-the entrance," he writes, "to a printing-office, at the north end of Cross
-Court was the pit entrance to old Drury; and I never pass it without
-shaking some forty years from off my shoulders, recurring to the evening
-when I passed through it to see my first play. The afternoon was wet: with
-what a beating heart did I watch from the window the puddles!
-
-"It was the custom then to cry, ''Chase some oranges, 'chase some
-nonpareils, 'chase a bill of the play?' But when we got in, and I beheld
-the green curtain that veiled a heaven to my imagination, the breathless
-anticipations I endured! The boxes, full of well-dressed women of quality,
-projected over the pit. The orchestra lights arose--the bell sounded
-once--it rang the second time--the curtain drew up, and the play was
-'Artaxerxes;' 'Harlequin's Invasion' followed."
-
-The next play Lamb went to was "The Lady of the Manor," followed by a
-pantomime called "Lunn's Ghost." Rich was not long dead. His third play
-was "The Way of the World" and "Robinson Crusoe." Six or seven years after
-he went (with what changed feelings!) to see Mrs. Siddons in Isabella.
-"Comparison and retrospection," he says, "soon yielded to the present
-attraction of the scene, and the theatre became to me, upon a new stock,
-the most delightful of all recreations."[588]
-
-Handsome Jack Bannister, who played in youth with Garrick, and in later
-years with Edmund Kean, was the model for the Uncle Toby in Leslie's
-picture. Natural, honest, as Hamlet, he was also good as Walter in "The
-Children of the Wood." Inimitable "in depicting heartiness," says Dr.
-Doran, "ludicrous distress, grave or affected indifference, honest
-bravery, insurmountable cowardice, a spirited young or an enfeebled yet
-impatient old fellow, mischievous boyishness, good-humoured vulgarity,
-there was no one of his time who could equal him."[589] Bannister left the
-stage with a handsome fortune. Hazlitt says finely of him that his
-"gaiety, good-humour, cordial feeling, and natural spirits shone through
-his characters and lighted them up like a transparency."[590] His kind
-heart and honest face were as well known as his good-humoured smile and
-buoyant activity. "Jack," says Lamb, "was beloved for his sweet,
-good-natured moral pretensions." He gave us "a downright concretion of a
-Wapping sailor, a jolly warm-hearted Jack Tar."
-
-Mrs. Jordan's mother was the daughter of a Welsh clergyman who had eloped
-with an officer. The débutante came out at Drury Lane in 1785 as the
-heroine of "The Country Girl." In 1789 she became the mistress of the Duke
-of Clarence. Good-natured, and endowed with a sweet clear voice, she
-played rakes with the airiest grace, and excelled in representing arch,
-buoyant girls, spirited, buxom, lovable women, and handsome hoydens. The
-critics complained of her as vulgar. Late in life she retired to France,
-and died in 1815. "Her wealth," says Dr. Doran, "was lavished on the Duke
-of Clarence, who left her to die untended; but when he became king he
-ennobled all her children, the eldest being made Earl of Munster."
-Hazlitt, speaking of Mrs. Jordan, says eloquently, her voice "was a
-cordial to the heart, because it came from it full, like the luscious
-juice of the rich grape. To hear her laugh was to drink nectar. Her smile
-was sunshine; her talking far above singing; her singing was like the
-twanging of Cupid's bow. Her body was large, soft, and generous like the
-rose. Miss Kelly, if we may accept the judgment of Hazlitt, was in
-comparison a mere dexterous, knowing chambermaid. Jordan was all
-exuberance and grace. It was her capacity for enjoyment, and the contrast
-she presented to everything sharp, angular, and peevish, that delighted
-the spectator. She was Cleopatra turned into an oyster wench."[591]
-Charles Lamb praises Mrs. Jordan for her tenderness in such parts as
-Ophelia, Helena, and Viola, and for her "steady, melting eye."[592]
-
-Robert William Elliston was the son of a Bloomsbury watchmaker, and was
-born in 1774. He appeared in London first in 1797, and obtained a triumph
-as Sir Edward Mortimer, a part in which Kemble had failed. He is praised
-by Dr. Doran as one of the best of stage gentlemen, not being so reserved
-and languid as Charles Kemble. All the qualities that go to the making of
-a gallant were conspicuous in his Duke Aranza--self-command, kindness,
-dignity, good-humour, a dash of satire, and true amatory fire; but then
-his voice was too pompously deep in soliloquy, and he was too genteel in
-low comedy. As a stage lover he was impassioned, tender, and courteous,
-yet he would persist in one uniform dress--blue coat, white waistcoat, and
-white knee-breeches. Yet, though a self-deceiving and pompous humbug,
-Charles Lamb reverenced him and Leigh Hunt admired his acting. In turn
-proprietor of the Olympic, the Surrey, and Drury Lane theatres, Elliston
-outlived his fame and fortune. When acting George IV. in a sham coronation
-procession, having taken too much preliminary wine, he became so affected
-at the delight of the audience that he gave them his grandest benediction
-in these affecting words, "Bless you, my people!" When Douglas Jerrold
-saved the Surrey Theatre by his "Black-eyed Susan," Elliston declared such
-services should be acknowledged by a presentation of plate--not by
-himself, however, but by Jerrold's own friends. Elliston's last appearance
-was in 1826, and he died in 1831.
-
-Hull, a heavy, useful, and intelligent actor, left the stage in 1807.
-Holman, an exaggerating actor, had a career that lasted from 1784 to 1800.
-Munden, the broadest of farceurs and drollest of grimacers, appeared first
-in 1790 as Sir Francis Gripe, and last, in 1823, as Sir Robert Bramble and
-Dozey. His Crack in "The Turnpike Gate" was one of his greatest parts; but
-I am afraid he would be now thought too much of the buffoon. Charles Lamb
-devotes a whole essay to the subject of Munden's acting as Cockletop, Sir
-Christopher Curry, Old Dornton, and the Cobbler of Preston. He says of
-him: "When you think he has exhausted his battery of looks in
-unaccountable warfare with your gravity, suddenly he sprouts out an
-entirely new set of features, like Hydra. He, and he alone, makes faces.
-In the grand grotesque of farce, Munden stands out as single and
-unaccompanied as Hogarth. Can any man wonder like him, any man see ghosts
-like him, or fight with his own shadow?"[593]
-
-Lamb praises Dodd for a face formally flat in Foppington, frothily pert in
-Fattle, and blankly expressive of no meaning in Acres and Fribble.[594]
-
-In 1792 Sheridan's affairs began to get entangled. The surveyors reported
-the theatre unsafe and incapable of repair, and it was therefore resolved
-to build a new one at a cost of £150,000 by means of 300 shares at £500
-each. In the meantime, while Sheridan was paying interest for his loan,
-the company was playing at an enormous expense on borrowed stages; and the
-careless and profuse manager, his prudent wife now dead, was maintaining
-three establishments--one at Wanstead, one at Isleworth, and one in Jermyn
-Street. In 1794 a new Theatre was built by Henry Holland.
-
-In 1798 that masterpiece of false, hysterical German sentiment, "The
-Stranger" (translated from Kotzebue), was rewritten by Sheridan, and
-brought out at his own theatre. This was one of the earliest importations
-of the Germanism that Canning afterwards, for political purposes, so
-pungently denounced in the _Anti-Jacobin_. The great success of "The
-Stranger," and the false taste it had implanted, induced Sheridan, in
-1799, to bring out the play of "Pizarro." He wrote scarcely anything in it
-but the speech of Rolla, which is itself an amplification of a few lines
-of the original.
-
-The new theatre was to have cost £75,000, and the £150,000 subscribed for
-was to have paid the architect and defrayed the mortgage debts. The
-theatre, however, cost more than £150,000; only part of the debt was paid
-off, and a claim of £70,000 remained upon the property.[595]
-
-On the 24th of February 1809, while the House of Commons was occupied with
-Mr. Ponsonby's motion on the conduct of the war in Spain, the debate was
-interrupted by a great glare of light through the windows. When the cause
-was ascertained, so much sympathy was felt for Sheridan that it was
-proposed to adjourn; but Sheridan calmly rose and said, "that whatever
-might be the extent of his private calamity, he hoped it would not
-interfere with the public business of the country." He then left the
-house, and is said to have reached Drury Lane just in time to find all
-hope of saving his property abandoned. According to one story he coolly
-proceeded to the Piazza Coffee-house and discussed a bottle of wine,
-replying to a friend who praised his philosophic calmness, "Why, a man may
-surely be allowed to take a glass of wine _at his own fireside_."[596] He
-is said to have been most grieved at the loss of a harpsichord that had
-belonged to his wife.
-
-Encouraged by the opening presented, and at the tardiness of shareholders
-to rebuild, speculators now proposed to erect a third theatre; but this
-design Sheridan and his friends defeated, and Mr. Whitbread, the great
-brewer of Chiswell Street, Finsbury, who afterwards destroyed himself,
-exerted his energies in the rebuilding of it.
-
-By the new agreement of 1811, Sheridan was to receive for his moiety
-£24,000, and an additional sum of £4000 for the property of the
-fruit-offices and the reversion of boxes and shares; his son also
-receiving his quarter of the patent property. Out of this sum the claims
-of the Linley family and other creditors were to be satisfied.
-
-Overwhelmed with debt, dogged by bailiffs, hurried to and from
-sponging-houses, Sheridan, now a broken-down man, died in 1816,
-reproaching the committee with his last breath for refusing to lend him
-more money.
-
-The new theatre, built by Mr. B. Wyatt, had been opened in October 1812,
-the performances consisting of "Hamlet" and "The Devil to Pay." The house
-held 800 persons less than its predecessor. The proprietors being anxious
-to have an opening address equal to that of Dr. Johnson, advertised for a
-suitable poem, and professed a desire for an open and free competition.
-The verses were, like Oxford competition poems, to be marked with a word,
-number, or motto, and the appended sealed paper containing the name of
-the writer was not to be opened unless the poem was successful. They
-offered twenty guineas as the prize, and extended the time for sending in
-the poems. The result was an avalanche of mediocrity, till the secretary's
-desk and the treasury-office ran over with poems. The proprietors were in
-despair, when Lord Holland prevailed on Lord Byron to write an address, at
-the risk, as the poet feared, "of offending a hundred rival scribblers and
-a discerning public." The poem was written and accepted, and delivered on
-the special night by Mr. Elliston, who performed the part of Hamlet. The
-address was voted tame by the newspapers, with the exception of the
-following passage--
-
- "As soars this fane to emulate the last,
- Oh, might we draw our omens from the past?
- Some hour propitious to our prayers, may boast
- Names such as hallow still the dome we lost.
- On Drury first your Siddons' thrilling art
- O'erwhelmed the gentlest, stormed the sternest heart;
- On Drury Garrick's latest laurels grew;
- Here your last tears retiring Roscius drew,
- Sigh'd his last thanks, and wept his last adieu."
-
-The brothers Smith eagerly seized this fine opportunity for parody, and
-the "Rejected Addresses" made all London shake with laughter.
-
-The leaden statue of Shakspere over the entrance of old Drury Lane was
-executed by Cheere of Hyde Park Corner--"the leaden figure man" formerly
-so celebrated--from a design by Scheemakers, a native of Antwerp and the
-master of Nollekens. When this sculptor first went to Rome to study, he
-travelled on foot, and had to sell his shirts by the way in order to
-procure funds. Mr. Whitbread, one of Sheridan's creditors, gave the figure
-to the theatre.[597]
-
-Mr. Whitbread and a committee had erected the house and purchased the old
-patent rights by means of a subscription of £400,000. Of this £20,000 was
-paid to Sheridan, and a like sum to the other holders of the patent. The
-creditors of the old house took a quarter of what they claimed in full
-payment, and the Duke of Bedford abandoned a claim of £12,000. The company
-consisted of Elliston, Dowton, Bannister, Rae, Wallack, Wewitzer, Miss
-Smith, Mrs. Davison, Mrs. Glover, Miss Kelly, and Miss Mellon. Mr. C.
-Kemble and Grimaldi were at the other house, that the next season boasted
-a strong company--John and Charles Kemble, Conway, Terry, and Matthews. At
-Drury Lane no new piece was brought out except Coleridge's "Remorse." At
-Covent Garden there was played "Aladdin, or the Wonderful Lamp."
-
-At Drury Lane, says Dr. Doran, neither new pieces nor new players
-succeeded, till on the 20th of January 1814, the play-bills announced the
-first appearance of an actor from Exeter, whose coming changed the evil
-fortunes of the house, scared the old correct, dignified, and classical
-school of actors, and brought again to the memories of those who could
-look back as far as Garrick the fire, nature, impulse, and terrible
-earnestness--all, in short, but the versatility, of that great master in
-his art. This player was Edmund Kean.
-
-Kean was born in 1787. He was the son of a low and worthless actress,
-whose father, George Saville Carey, a poor singer, reciter, and mimic,
-hanged himself. The father of Carey was a dramatist and song-writer, the
-natural son of the great Lord Halifax, who died in 1695. Kean's father is
-unknown: he may have been Aaron Kean the tailor, or Moses Kean the
-builder. In early life the genius was cabin-boy, strolling player, dancer
-on the tight-rope, and elocutionist at country fairs. His first
-appearance, as Shylock, in 1814, was a triumph. That night he came home
-and promised his wife a carriage, and his son Charles (then in his cradle)
-an education at Eton. In Richard III. he soon attained great triumphs. He
-was audacious, sneering, devilish, almost supernatural in his cruelty and
-hypocrisy. His Hamlet, though graceful and earnest, was inferior to his
-Othello; but Kemble thought that the latter was a mistake, Othello being
-palpably "a slow man." When Southey saw Kean and Young, he said, "It is
-the arch-fiend himself." When Kean played Sir Giles Overreach, and
-removed it from Kemble's repertory, his wife received him on his return
-from the theatre with the anxious question, "What did Lord Essex think of
-it?" The triumphant reply is well known: "D---- Lord Essex, Mary! the pit
-rose at me."
-
-In 1822, after a visit to America, Kean appeared with his rival Young in a
-series of characters, though he never liked "the Jesuit," as he used to
-call Young. In 1827, Kean's son Charles appeared as Norval at Drury Lane,
-while his father, now sinking fast, was acting at Covent Garden. In 1833
-Kean, shattered and exhausted, played Othello to his son's Iago, and died
-two months after.
-
-Hazlitt has a fine comparison between Kean and Mrs. Siddons. Mrs. Siddons
-never seemed to task her powers to the utmost. Her least word seemed to
-float to the end of the stage; the least motion of her hand commanded
-obedience. "Mr. Kean," he says, "is all effort, all violence, all extreme
-passion; he is possessed with a fury and demon that leaves him no repose,
-no time for thought, nor room for imagination.[598] Mr. Kean's imagination
-appears not to have the principles of joy or hope or love in it. He seems
-chiefly sensible to pain and to the passion that springs from it, and to
-the terrible energies of mind or body which are necessary to grapple with
-or to avert it."[599]
-
-The new theatre had small success under its committee of proprietors, and
-soon became involved in debt and unable to pay the performers. In 1814 it
-was let to the highest bidder, Elliston, who took it at the yearly rental
-of £10,300, and expended £15,000 on repairs. Captain Polhill afterwards
-became the lessee, and sunk in it large sums of money. The two next
-lessees, Messrs. Bunn and Hammond, became bankrupts. Towards the middle of
-1840 the house was reopened, after a closing of some months, for the then
-new entertainments of promenade concerts.
-
-Grimaldi, the son of Queen Charlotte's dentist, was born in 1779. He made
-his début at Drury lane in a "Robinson Crusoe" pantomime in 1781, and
-retired from the stage in 1828. His first part of any importance was
-Orson. He remained at Drury Lane for nearly five-and-twenty years, and
-then played alternately at Covent Garden and Sadler's Wells every night.
-"He was the very beau-ideal of thieves," says a critic of the time:
-"robbery became a science in his hand; you forgave the larceny from the
-humour with which Joe indulged his irresistible weakness."[600] He was
-famous for his rich ringing laugh, his complacent chuckle, the roll of his
-eyes, the drop of his chin, and his elongated respiration. But we must go
-back to the singers.
-
-Mrs. Crouch, the great singer, and the daughter of a Gray's Inn Lane
-attorney, was articled to Mr. Linley, patentee of Drury Lane, in 1779, and
-in 1780 made her début as Mandane. In 1785 she married a lieutenant in the
-navy, but returned to the stage in 1786, to be eclipsed by Mrs.
-Billington. In 1787 she acted with Kelly at Drury Lane in the opera of
-"Richard Coeur de Lion," and in the same year, in the character of Selima,
-sang the once popular song of "No Flower that blows is like the Rose." In
-1788 she played Lady Elinor in "The Haunted Tower" at Drury Lane. She died
-in 1804.
-
-Mrs. Billington, the daughter of a German musician, was born in London in
-1765. In 1801-2 she sang alternately at Drury Lane and Covent Garden. She
-died in 1818. Bianchi wrote for this lady the opera of "Inez de Castro."
-She is said to have played and sung at sight Mozart's "Clemenza di Tito;"
-her voice ranged from D to G in altissimo. She indulged too much in
-ornament, but was especially celebrated for her "Soldier tired of War's
-Alarms."
-
-John Braham, a Jew pencil-boy--so the musical _on dit_ goes--was brought
-up by a singer at the Duke's Place Synagogue. He made his début in 1787.
-He appeared first, in 1796, in Storace's opera of "Mahmoud," at Drury
-Lane. The compass of his song, "Let Glory's Clarion," extended over
-seventeen notes. He died in 1856.
-
-Storace, born in 1763, died in 1796. He was the son of an Italian
-double-bass player, was engaged by Linley to compose for Drury Lane, and
-for that theatre wrote the following operas:--"The Siege of Belgrade,"
-1792: "Lodoiska," 1794; and "The Iron Chest," 1796. This brilliant young
-man wrote chiefly for Braham and Kelly.
-
-Madame Storace made her début at Drury Lane, in 1789, in her brother's
-comic opera of "The Haunted Tower."
-
-Bishop, who was born about 1780, produced his opera of "The Mysterious
-Bride" at Drury Lane in 1808. In 1809, the night preceding the fire,
-Bishop produced his first great success, "The Circassian Bride," the score
-of which was burnt. After being long at Covent Garden, Bishop, in 1826,
-produced his "Aladdin" at Drury Lane to compete with Weber's "Oberon" at
-Covent Garden. In 1827 he adapted Rossini's "Turco in Italia;" and in
-1830, for Drury Lane, he adapted Rossini's "William Tell."
-
-Michael Kelly, born in 1762, made his first appearance at Drury Lane in
-1787. In his jovial career Kelly composed "The Castle Spectre," "Blue
-Beard" (the march in which is very pompously oriental and fine), "Of Age
-To-morrow," "Deaf and Dumb," etc. He also wrote many Italian, English, and
-French songs, and had a good tenor voice. He became superintendent of
-music at the Drury Lane Theatre, and died in 1826. He was an agreeable
-man, and much esteemed by George IV. Parkes accuses him of a want of
-knowledge of harmony, and of stealing from the Italians.
-
-In May 1836 Madame Malibran (de Beriot) appeared at Drury Lane as Isolina
-in Balfe's "Maid of Artois," which was a great success. At the close of
-the season she went abroad. Returned in September, she sang at the
-Manchester Festival, and after a duet with Madame Caradori Allen, was
-taken ill, and died a few days after. This gifted woman, the daughter of a
-Spanish Jew (an opera-singer), was born in 1808.
-
-To return to our last batch of actors. James Wallack, born in 1792, began
-to be known about 1816, and in 1820 was principal tragedian at Drury
-Lane. His Hamlet, Rolla, and Romeo were very manly and bearable. He
-afterwards became stage-manager at Drury Lane, and was praised for his
-light comedy.
-
-Charles Young, who played with Kean at Drury Lane, was a dignified but
-rather cold actor. Booth appeared also with Kean in 1817, and again in
-1820 with Wallack and Cooper.
-
-Mrs. Mardyn (the supposed mistress of Lord Byron) appeared on the Drury
-Lane stage in 1815. She was boisterous, but so full of girlish gaiety and
-reckless wildness that she became for a short time the favourite of the
-town. She failed, however, when she reappeared in 1833 in a tragic part.
-
-Charming Mrs. Nisbett, "that peach of a woman," as Douglas Jerrold used to
-call her, died in 1858, aged forty-five. The daughter of a drunken Irish
-officer who took to the stage, she married an officer in the Life Guards
-in 1831; but on the death of her husband by an accident, she returned to
-her first love in 1832, and reappeared at Drury Lane. Her great triumph
-was "The Love Chase," which was produced at the Haymarket in 1837, and ran
-for nearly one hundred nights. It was worth going a hundred miles to hear
-Mrs. Nisbett's merry, ringing, silvery laugh.
-
-Irish Johnstone, who died in 1828, is described by Hazlitt as acting at
-Drury Lane, "with his supple knees, his hat twisted round in his hand, his
-good-humoured laugh, his arched eyebrows, his insinuating leer, and his
-lubricated brogue curling round the ear like a well-oiled
-moustachio."[601]
-
-Oxberry quitted Drury Lane with Elliston in 1820. In 1821 he took the
-Craven's Head Chop-house in Drury Lane, where he used to say to his
-guests, "We vocalise on a Friday, conversationalise on a Sunday, and
-chopise every day." His best characters were Leo Luminati, Slender, and
-Abel Day. Emery surpassed him in Tyke, Little Knight, and Robin Roughhead.
-
-Farren, who was born about 1787, made his début at Covent Garden in 1818.
-He was for some time at Drury Lane, and latterly manager of the Olympic.
-In old men he took the place of Dowton. His finest performance was Lord
-Ogleby, but in his prime he excelled also in Sir Peter Teazle, Sir Anthony
-Absolute, Sir Fretful Plagiary, and the Bailie Nicol Jarvie.
-
-John Pritt Harley was the son of a silk-mercer, and originally a clerk in
-Chancery Lane. He was born in 1786 or 1790. He made his début at the
-Lyceum in 1815, in "The Devil's Bridge." His first appearance at Drury
-Lane was in 1815, as Lissardo in "The Wonder." In farce he was
-good-humoured, bustling, and droll; and he excelled in Caleb Quotem, Peter
-Fidget, Bottom, and many Shaksperean characters. He died only a year or
-two ago, repeating, it is said, this line of one of his old parts: "I have
-an exposition of sleep come upon me."
-
-Miss Kelly, born in 1790, was at the Lyceum in 1808, and went from thence
-to Drury Lane. She sang in operas, and was admirable in genteel comedy and
-domestic tragedy. Her romps were scarcely inferior to Mrs. Jordan's; her
-waiting-maids were equal to Mrs. Orger's. Charles Lamb, writing in 1818,
-says of her--
-
- "Your tears have passion in them, and a grace,
- A genuine freshness which our hearts avow;
- Your smiles are winds whose ways we cannot trace,
- That vanish and return we know not how."
-
-Miss Kelly was twice shot at while acting. In both cases the cruel
-assailants were rejected admirers.
-
-In 1850 Mrs. Glover took her farewell benefit at Drury Lane; Farren and
-Madame Vestris taking parts in the performance--Mrs. Glover playing Mrs.
-Malaprop. She was born in 1779, and had made her first appearance as
-Elvina in good Hannah More's dull tragedy, at Covent Garden, in 1797.
-Beautiful in youth, Mrs. Glover had gracefully passed from sighing Juliets
-and maundering Elvinas into Mrs. Heidelbergs, Mrs. Candours, and the Nurse
-in "Romeo and Juliet."
-
-Robert Keeley, who was brought up a compositor, was born in Grange Court,
-Carey Street, in 1794. He acted at Drury Lane as early as 1819, and at the
-Adelphi as early as 1826 as Jemmy Green in "Tom and Jerry." In 1834 we
-find the critics ranking him below Liston and Reeve, but he was very
-popular in his representations of cowardly fear and stupid chuckling
-astonishment. He left the stage for several years before his death. Miss
-Helen Faucit, born in 1816, was the original heroine of Sir Bulwer
-Lytton's and Mr. Browning's plays. Her Beatrice, Imogen, and Rosalind were
-admirable, and her Antigone was a great success. She retired from the
-stage in 1851, when she married Mr. Theodore Martin, the accomplished
-translator of Horace and Catullus, and the joint author with Professor
-Aytoun of those admirable burlesque ballads of "Bon Gaultier."
-
-William Charles Macready, the son of a Dublin upholsterer, appeared in
-London first in 1816. Kean approved his Orestes, and he soon advanced to
-Rob Roy, Virginius, and Coriolanus. He then removed to Drury Lane, and
-distinguished himself as Caius Gracchus and William Tell, in two of Mr.
-Sheridan Knowles's plays. He reappeared at Drury Lane in 1826. The critics
-said that he failed in Rolla and Hamlet, but excelled in Rob Roy,
-Coriolanus, and Richard. He himself preferred his own Hamlet. They
-complained that he had a burr in his enunciation, and a catching of the
-breath--that he was too fond of declamation and violent transitions;
-others thought him too heavy and colloquial. In 1826 he went to America,
-where the fatal riot of Forrest's partisans occurred, and twenty-two men
-were killed. His season closed at Drury Lane in 1843. His benefit took
-place in 1851, and he then retired from the stage to live the life of a
-quiet, useful country gentleman in the west of England. He died in 1873,
-and lies buried at Kensal Green.
-
-Mr. Charles Kean, struggling with a bad voice and a mean figure, had a
-hard fight for success, and won it only by the most dauntless
-perseverance. Born in 1811, he appeared for the first time upon the boards
-as Norval, in 1827. After repeated failures in London and much success in
-the provinces and America, Mr. Kean accepted an engagement at Drury Lane
-in 1838--Mr. Bunn offering him £50 a night. He succeeded in Hamlet, and
-was presented with a silver vase of the value of £200. In Richard and Sir
-Giles Overreach he also triumphed. In 1843 Mr. Kean renewed his engagement
-with Mr. Bunn. Before retiring from the stage and starting for Australia,
-Mr. and Mrs. Kean performed for many nights at Drury Lane. Charles Kean
-died in 1868.
-
-Miss Ellen Tree first performed at Drury Lane as Violante in "The Wonder."
-She married Mr. C. Kean in 1842, and aided him in those
-antiquarianly-correct spectacles that for a time rendered a scholarly,
-careful, but scarcely first-rate actor popular in the metropolis.
-
-We have room in this brief and imperfect _résumé_ of theatrical history
-for only two pictures of Drury Lane. One is in 1800, when George III. was
-fired at by Hatfield as he entered the house to witness Cribber's comedy
-of "She Would and She Would Not." When the Marquis of Salisbury would have
-drawn him away, the brave, obstinate king said--"Sir, you discompose me as
-well as yourself: I shall not stir one step." The queen and princesses
-were in tears all the evening, but George III. sat calm and collected,
-staring through his single-barrel opera-glass. In 1783 the king, queen,
-and Prince of Wales went to Drury Lane to see Mrs. Siddons play Isabella.
-They sat under a dome of crimson velvet and gold. The king wore a
-Quaker-coloured dress with gold buttons, while the handsome scapegrace
-prince was adorned in blue Genoa velvet.
-
-Mr. Planché, the accomplished writer of extravaganzas and the _Somerset
-Herald_, brought out his burlesque of "Amoroso, King of Little Britain,"
-at Drury Lane in 1818. He afterwards wrote the libretto of "Maid Marian"
-for Mr. Bishop, and that of "Oberon" for Weber. In 1828 his "Charles XII."
-was produced at Drury Lane.
-
-On Mr. Falconer's clever imitative experiments we have no room to dilate.
-The "Peep o' Day," a piece which reproduced all the "Colleen Bawn"
-effects, was the best.
-
-And now leaving the theatres for meaner places, we pass on to the district
-of the butchers. Clare Market stands on a spot formerly called Clement's
-Inn Fields, and was built by the Earl of Clare, who lived close by, in
-1657. The family names, Denzil, Holles, etc., are retained in the
-neighbouring streets.
-
-This market became notorious in Pope's time for the buffoonery, noisy
-impudence, and extravagances of Orator Henley, a sort of ecclesiastical
-outlaw of a not very religious age, who tried to make his impudence and
-conceit pass for genius. This street-orator, the son of a Leicestershire
-vicar, was born in 1692. After going to St. John's College, Cambridge, he
-returned home, kept a school, wrote a poem called "Esther," and began a
-Universal Grammar in ten languages. Heated by an itch for reforming, and
-tired of the country, or driven away, as some say, by a scandalous
-embarrassment, he hurried to London, and for a short time did duty at a
-chapel in Bedford Row. During this time, under the Earl of Macclesfield's
-patronage, he translated Pliny's epistles, Vertot's works, and
-Montfaucon's Italian travels. He then competed for a lecturership in
-Bloomsbury, but failed, the parishioners not disliking his language or his
-doctrine, but complaining that he threw himself about too much in the
-pulpit.
-
-Now, "regular action" was one of Henley's peculiar prides. The rejection
-hurt his vanity and nearly drove him crazy. Losing his temper, he rushed
-into the vestry-room. "Blockheads!" he roared, "are _you_ qualified to
-judge of the degree of action necessary for a preacher of God's Word? Were
-you able to read, or had got sufficient sense, you sorry knaves, to
-understand the renowned orator of antiquity, he would tell you almost the
-only requisite of a public speaker was ACTION, ACTION, ACTION. But I
-despise and defy you: _provoco ad populum_; the public shall decide
-between us." He then hurried from the room, soon afterwards published his
-probationary discourse, and taking a room in Newport Market, started as
-quack divine and public lecturer.
-
-But he first consulted the eccentric and heretical Whiston, whom Swift
-bantered so ruthlessly--Whiston being, like Henley, a Leicestershire
-man--as to whether he should incur any legal penalties by officiating as a
-separatist from the Church of England. Whiston, himself an expelled
-professor, tried to dissuade the Orator from his wild project.
-Disagreement and abuse followed, and the correspondence ended with the
-following final bomb-shell from the violent demagogue:--
-
- "To Mr. WILLIAM WHISTON,
-
- "Take notice that I give you warning not to enter my room in Newport
- Market, at your peril.
-
- "JOHN HENLEY."[602]
-
-The Orator patronised divinity on Sundays, and secular subjects on
-Wednesdays and Fridays. The admittance was one shilling. He also published
-outrageous pamphlets and a weekly farrago called The _Hyp-Doctor_,
-intended to antidote _The Craftsman_, and for which pompous nonsense Sir
-Robert Walpole is said to have given him £100 a year. He also attacked
-eminent persons, even Pope, from his pulpit. Every Saturday an
-advertisement of the subject of his next week's oration appeared in the
-_Daily Advertiser_, preceded by a sarcastic or libellous motto, and
-sometimes an offer that if any one at home or abroad could be found to
-surpass him, he would surrender his Oratory at once to his conqueror.
-
-In 1729 Henley, growing perhaps more popular, removed to Clare Market,
-where the butchers became his warm partisans and served as his body-guard.
-The following are two of his shameless advertisements:--
-
-"At the Oratory in Newport Market, to-morrow, at half an hour after ten,
-the sermon will be on the Witch of Endor. At half an hour after five, the
-theological lecture will be on the conversion and original of the Scottish
-nation and of the Picts and Caledonians, St. Andrew's relics and
-panegyric, and the character and mission of the Apostles.
-
-"On Wednesday, at six or near the matter, take your chance, will be a
-medley oration on the history, merits, and praise of confusion and of
-confounders, in the road and out of the way.
-
-"On Friday will be that on Dr. Faustus and Fortunatus and conjuration.
-After each the Chimes of the Times, Nos. 23 and 24."
-
-Very shortly afterwards he advertised from Clare Market:--
-
-1. "The postil will be on the turning of Lot's wife into a pillar of salt.
-2. The sermon will be on the necessary power and attractive force which
-religion gives the spirit of a man with God and good spirits.
-
-2. "At five--1. The postil will be on this point:--In what language our
-Saviour will speak the last sentence to mankind.
-
-3. "The lecture will be on Jesus Christ's sitting at the right hand of
-God; where that is; the honours and lustre of his inauguration; the
-learning, criticism, and piety of that glorious article.
-
-"The Monday's orations will shortly be resumed. On Wednesday the oration
-will be on the skits of the fashions, or a live gallery of family pictures
-in all ages; ruffs, muffs, puffs manifold; shoes, wedding-shoes,
-two-shoes, slip-shoes, heels, clocks, pantofles, buskins, pantaloons,
-garters, shoulder-knots, periwigs, head-dresses, modesties, tuckers,
-farthingales, corkins, minnikins, slammakins, ruffles, round-robins, fans,
-patches; dame, forsooth, madam, my lady, the wit and beauty of my granmum;
-Winnifred, Joan, Bridget, compared with our Winny, Jenny, and Biddy: fine
-ladies and pretty gentlewomen; being a general view of the _beau monde_
-from before Noah's flood to the year '29. On Friday will be something
-better than last Tuesday. After each a bob at the times."
-
-This very year, 1729, the _Dunciad_ was published, and in it this Rabelais
-of the pulpit had, of course, his niche. Pope had been accused of taking
-the bread out of people's mouths. He denies this, and asks if "Colley
-(Cibber) has not still his lord, and Henley his butchers;" and ends with
-these lines, which, however, had no effect, for Henley went on ranting for
-eighteen years longer--
-
- "But where each science lifts its modern type,
- History her pot, Divinity his pipe;
- While proud Philosophy repines to show,
- Dishonest sight! his breeches rent below,--
- Imbrown'd with native bronze, lo! Henley stands,
- Tuning his voice and balancing his hands.
- How fluent nonsense trickles from his tongue!
- How sweet the periods, neither said nor sung!
- Still break the benches, Henley, with thy strain,
- While Sherlock, Hare, and Gibson preach in vain.
- O great restorer of the good old stage,
- Preacher at once and zany of the age!
- O worthy thou of Egypt's wise abodes!
- A decent priest when monkeys were the gods.
- But Fate with butchers placed thy priestly stall,
- Meek modern faith to murder, hack, and maul,
- And bade thee live to crown Britannia's praise
- In Toland's, Tindal's, and in Woolston's days."[603]
-
-In another place he says--
-
- "Henley lay inspired beside a sink,
- And to mere mortals seemed a priest in drink."
-
-Pope often attacked Henley in the _Grub Street Journal_, and the Orator
-retaliated. A year or two after the _Essay on Man_ was published, Henley
-(Dec. 1737) announced a lecture, "Whether Mr. Pope be a man of sense, in
-one argument--'Whatever is is right.'" If whatever is is right, Henley
-thought that nothing could be wrong; ergo, he himself was not a proper
-object of satire.
-
-Henley's pulpit was covered with velvet and gold lace, and over his altar
-was written, "The PRIMITIVE Eucharist." A contemporary journalist
-describes him entering his pulpit suddenly, like a harlequin, through a
-sort of trap-door at the back, and "at one large leap jumping into it and
-falling to work," beating his notions into the butcher-audience
-simultaneously with his hands, arms, legs, and head.
-
-In one of his arrogant puffs, he boasts that he has singly executed what
-"would sprain a dozen of modern doctors of the tribe of Issachar;" that no
-one dares to answer his challenges; that he can write, read, and study
-twelve hours a day and not feel the yoke; and write three dissertations a
-week without help, and put the Church in danger. He struck medals for his
-tickets, with a star rising to the meridian upon them, and the vain
-superscription "Ad summa" ("To the heights"), and below, "Inveniam viam
-aut faciam" ("I will find a way or make one").
-
-When the Orator's funds grew low, his audacity and impudence rose to their
-climax. He once filled his chapel with shoemakers, whom he had attracted
-by advertising that he could teach a method of making shoes with wonderful
-celerity. His secret consisted in cutting the tops off old boots. His
-motto to this advertisement was "Omne majus continet in se minus" ("The
-greater includes the less").
-
-In 1745 Henley was cited before the Privy Council for having used
-seditious expressions in one of his lectures. Herring, then Archbishop of
-York, had been arming his clergy, and urging every one to volunteer
-against the Pretender. The Earl of Chesterfield, then Secretary of State,
-urged on Henley the impropriety of ridiculing such honest exertions at a
-time when rebellion actually raged in the very heart of the kingdom. "I
-thought, my lord," said Henley, "that there was no harm in cracking a joke
-on a _red herring_."
-
-During his examination, the restorer of ancient eloquence requested
-permission to sit, on account of a rheumatism that was generally supposed
-to be imaginary. The earl tried to turn the outlaw divine into ridicule;
-but Henley's eccentric answers, odd gestures, hearty laughs, strong voice,
-magisterial air, and self-possessed face were a match for his somewhat
-heartless lordship.
-
-Being cautioned about his disrespectful remarks on certain ministers,
-Henley answered gravely, "My lords, I must live." Lord Chesterfield
-replied, "I don't see the necessity," and the council laughed. Upon this
-Henley, remembering that the joke was Voltaire's, was somewhat irritated.
-"That is a good thing, my lord," he exclaimed, "but it has been said
-before." A few days after the Orator, being reprimanded and cautioned, was
-dismissed as an impudent but entertaining fellow.[604]
-
-Dr. Herring whom the rogue ridiculed was a worthy man, who in 1747, on the
-death of Potter, became Archbishop of Canterbury, and died in 1757. Swift
-hated Herring for condemning the "Beggars' Opera" in a sermon at Lincoln's
-Inn, and wrote accordingly: "The 'Beggars' Opera' will probably do more
-good than a thousand sermons of so stupid, so injudicious, and so
-prostitute a divine."[605]
-
-In 1748 Dr. Cobden, the Court chaplain, an odd but worthy man, incurred
-the resentment of King George II. by preaching before him a sermon
-entitled "A Persuasive to Chastity"--a virtue not popular then at St.
-James's. He resigned his post in 1752. The text of this obnoxious sermon
-was, "Take away the wicked from before the king." Henley's next Saturday's
-motto was--
-
- "Away with the wicked before the king,
- Away with the wicked behind him;
- His throne it will bless
- With righteousness,
- And we shall know where to find him."
-
-If any of the Orator's old Bloomsbury friends ever caught his eye among
-the audience, he would gratify his vanity and rankling resentment by a
-pause. He would then say, "You see, sir, all mankind are not exactly of
-your opinion; there are, you perceive, a few sensible persons in the world
-who consider me as not totally unqualified for the office I have
-undertaken." His abashed adversaries, hot and confused, and with all eyes
-turned on them, would retreat precipitately, and sometimes were pushed out
-of the room by Henley's violent butchers.
-
-The Orator figures in two caricatures, attributed, as Mr. Steevens thinks,
-wrongly to Hogarth. In one he is christening a child; in another he is on
-a scaffold with a monkey by his side. A parson takes the money at the
-door, while a butcher is porter. Modesty is in a cloud, Folly in a coach,
-and there is a gibbet prepared for poor Merit.
-
-Henley, who latterly grew coarse, brutal, and drunken, died October 14,
-1756. The _Gentleman's Magazine_ merely announces his death thus:--"Rev.
-Orator Henley, aged 64." "Nollekens" Smith says that he died mad.
-
-It is somewhat uncertain where his Oratory stood: some say in Duke Street;
-others, in the market. It was probably in Davenant's old theatre, at the
-Tennis Court in Vere Street.[606]
-
-The beginning of one of this buffoon's ribald sermons has been preserved,
-and is worth quoting to prove the miserable claptrap with which he amused
-his rude audience. The text is taken from Jeremiah xvi. 16, "I will send
-for many fishers, saith the Lord, and they shall fish them; and after that
-I will send many hunters, and they shall hunt."
-
-"The former part of the text seems, as Scripture is written for our
-admonition, on whom the ends of the world are come (an end of all we have
-in the world), to relate to the _Dutch_, who are to be fished by us
-according to Act of Parliament; for the word 'herrings' in the Act has a
-figurative as well as a literal sense, and by a metaphor means Dutchmen,
-who are the greatest stealers of herrings in the world; so that the drift
-of the statute is, that we are to fish for Dutchmen, and catch them,
-either by nets or fishing-rods in return for their repeated catching of
-Englishmen, then transport them in some of Jonathan Forward's close
-lighters and sell them in the West Indies, to repair the loss which our
-South Sea Company endure by the Spaniards denying them the assiento, or
-sale of negroes."[607]
-
-Among other wild sermons of Henley, we find discourses on "The Tears of
-Magdalen," "St. Paul's Cloak," and "The Last Wills of the Patriarchs." He
-left behind him 600 MSS., which he valued at one guinea a-piece, and 150
-volumes of commonplaces and other scholarly memoranda. They were sold for
-less than £100. They had been written with great care. When Henley was
-once accused that he _did all_ for lucre, he retorted "that some do
-nothing for it." He once filled his room by advertising an oration on
-marriage. When he got into his pulpit he shook his head at the ladies, and
-said "he was afraid they oftener came to church to get husbands than to
-hear the preacher." On one occasion two Oxonians whom he challenged came
-followed by such a strong party that the butchers were overawed, and
-Henley silently slunk away by a door behind the rostrum.[608]
-
-There are still popular preachers in London as greedy of praise and as
-basely eager for applause as Orator Henley. Equally great buffoons, and
-men equally low in moral tone, still fill some pulpits, and point the way
-to a path they may never themselves take. To such unhappy self-deceivers
-we can advise no better cure than a moonlight walk in Clare Market in
-search of the ghost of Orator Henley.
-
-There was in Hogarth's time an artists' club at the Bull's Head, Clare
-Market. Boitard etched some of the characters. Hogarth, Jack Laguerre,
-Colley Cibber, Denis the critic (?), Boitard, Spiller the comedian, and
-George Lambert, were members. Laguerre gave Spiller's portrait to the
-landlord, and drew a caricature procession of his "chums." The inn was
-afterwards called the "Spiller's Head." One of the wags of the club wrote
-an epitaph on Spiller, beginning--
-
- "The butchers' wives fall in hysteric fits,
- For sure as they're alive, poor Spiller's dead;
- But, thanks to Jack Laguerre, we've got his head.
-
- * * * * *
-
- He was an inoffensive, merry fellow,
- When sober hipped, blithe as a bird when mellow."[609]
-
-The Bull's Head Tavern in Clare Market, the same place in which Hogarth's
-club was held, had previously been the favourite resort of that
-illustrious Jacobite, Dr. Radcliffe, who is said to have killed two
-queens. Swift did not like this overbearing, ignorant, and surly humorist,
-who, however, rejoiced in doing good, and left a vast sum of money to the
-University of Oxford. When Bathurst, the head of Trinity College, asked
-Radcliffe where his library was, he pointed to a few vials, a skeleton,
-and a herbal, and replied, "There is Radcliffe's library."[610]
-
-[Illustration: DRURY LANE THEATRE, 1806.]
-
-Mrs. Bracegirdle, that excellent and virtuous actress, used to be in the
-habit (says Tony Ashton) of frequently going into Clare market and giving
-money to the poor unemployed basketwomen, insomuch that she could not pass
-that neighbourhood without thankful acclamations from people of all
-degrees.
-
-In 1846 there were in and about Clare Market, about 26 butchers who
-slaughtered from 350 to 400 sheep weekly in the stalls and cellars. The
-number killed was from 50 to 60 weekly--but in winter sometimes as many as
-200. But the butchers' market has now become almost a thing of the past.
-
-Joe Miller formerly lay buried in a graveyard on the south side of
-Portugal Street, but the graveyard is now turned to other purposes. At the
-corner of Portugal Street and Lincoln's Inn Fields is the "Black Jack"
-Inn, a hostelry whose name is connected with some of Jack Sheppard's
-feats.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: OLD ST. GILES'S--CHURCH LANE AND DYOT STREET, 1869.]
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-ST. GILES'S.
-
-
-That ancient Roman military road (the Watling Street) came from Edgeware,
-and passing over Hyde Park and through St. James's Park by Old Palace
-Yard, once the Wool Staple, it reached the Thames. Thence it was continued
-to Canterbury and the three great seaports.
-
-Another Roman road, the _Via Trinobantica_, which began at Southampton and
-ended at Aldborough, ran through London, crossed the Watling Street at
-Tyburn, and passed along Oxford Street. In latter times, says Dr.
-Stukeley, the road was changed to a more southerly direction, and Holborn
-was formed, leading to Newgate or the Chamberlain's Gate.
-
-One of the earliest tolls ever imposed in England is said to have had its
-origin in St. Giles's.[611] In 1346 Edward III. granted to the Master of
-the Hospital of St. Giles and to John de Holborne, a commission empowering
-them to levy tolls for two years (one penny in the pound on their value)
-on all cattle and merchandise passing along the public highways leading
-from the old Temple, _i.e._ Holborn Bars, to the Hospital of St. Giles's,
-and also along the Charing Road and another highway called Portpool, now
-Gray's Inn Lane. The money was to be used in repairing the roads, which,
-by the frequent passing of carts, wains, horses, and cattle, had become so
-miry and deep as to be nearly impassable. The only persons exempted were
-to be lords, ladies, and persons belonging to religious
-establishments.[612]
-
-Henry V. ascended the throne in 1413, and astonished his subjects by
-suddenly casting off his slough of vice, and becoming a self-restrained,
-virtuous, and high-spirited king. His first care was to forget party
-distinctions, and to put down the Lollards, or disciples of Wickliffe,
-whom the clergy denounced as dangerous to the civil power. As a good
-general secures the rear of his army before he advances, so the young king
-was probably desirous to guard himself against this growing danger before
-he invaded Normandy and made a clutch at the French crown.
-
-Arundel, the primate, urged him to indict Sir John Oldcastle, Lord Cobham,
-the head of the Lollard sect. The king was averse to a prosecution, and
-suggested milder means. At a conference, therefore, appointed before the
-bishops and doctors in 1414, the following articles were handed Oldcastle
-as tests, and the unorthodox lord was allowed two days to retract his
-heresies. He was required to confess that at the sacrament the material
-bread and wine are turned into Christ's very body and Christ's very
-blood; that every Christian man ought to confess to an ordained priest;
-that Christ ordained St. Peter and his successors as his vicars on earth;
-that Christian men ought to obey the priest; and that it is profitable to
-go on pilgrimages and to worship the relics and images of saints. "This is
-determination of Holy Church. _How feel ye this article?_" With these
-stern words ended every dogma proposed by the primate.
-
-Lord Cobham, who was much esteemed by the king, and had been a good
-soldier under his father, repeatedly refused to profess his belief in
-these tenets. The archbishop then delivered the heretic to the secular
-arm, to be put to death, according to the usage of the times. The night
-previous to his execution, however, Lord Cobham escaped from the Tower and
-fled to Wales, where he lay hid for four years while Agincourt was being
-fought, and where he must have longed to have been present with his true
-sword.
-
-Soon after his escape, the frightened clergy spread a report that he was
-in St. Giles's Fields, at the head of twenty thousand Lollards, who were
-resolved to seize the king and his two brothers, the Dukes of Bedford and
-Gloucester. For this imaginary plot thirty-six persons were hanged or
-burnt; but the names of only three are recorded, and of these Sir Roger
-Acton is the only person of distinction.
-
-A reward of a thousand marks was offered for Lord Cobham, and other
-inducements were held out by Chicheley, the Primate Arundel's successor.
-Four years, however, elapsed before the premature Protestant was
-discovered and taken by Lord Powis in Wales.[613] After some blows and
-blood a country-woman in the fray breaking Cobham's leg with a stool, he
-was secured and sent up to London in a horse-litter. He was sentenced to
-be drawn on a hurdle to the gallows in St. Giles's Fields, and to be
-hanged over a fire, in order to inflict on him the utmost pain.
-
-He was brought from the Tower on the 25th of December 1418, and his arms
-bound behind him. He kept a very cheerful countenance as he was drawn to
-the field where his assumed treason had been committed. When he reached
-the gallows, he fell devoutly on his knees and piously prayed God to
-forgive his enemies. The cruel preparations for his torment struck no
-terror in him, nor shook the constancy of the martyr. He bore everything
-bravely as a soldier, and with the resignation of a Christian. Then he was
-hung by the middle with chains and consumed alive in the fire, praising
-God's name as long as his life lasted.
-
-He was accused by his enemies of holding that there was no such thing as
-free will; that all sin was inevitable; and that God could not have
-prevented Adam's sin, nor have pardoned it without the satisfaction of
-Christ.[614]
-
-Fuller says of him: "Stage-poets have themselves been very bold with, and
-others very merry at, the memory of Sir John Oldcastle (Lord Cobham), whom
-they have fancied a boon companion or jovial roysterer, and yet a coward
-to boot, contrary to the credit of the chronicles, owning him to be a
-martial man of merit. Sir John Falstaff hath derided the memory of Sir
-John Oldcastle, and of late is substituted buffoon in his place; but it
-matters us little what petulant priests or what malicious poets have
-written against him."
-
-The gallows had been removed from the Elms at Smithfield in 1413, the
-first year of Henry V.; but Tyburn was a place of execution as early as
-1388.[615] The St. Giles's gallows was set up at the north corner of the
-hospital wall, between the termination of High Street and Crown Street,
-opposite to where the Pound stood.
-
-The manor of St. Giles was anciently divided from Bloomsbury by a great
-fosse called Blemund's Ditch. The Doomsday Book contains no mention of
-this district, nor indeed of London at all, except of ten acres of land
-nigh Bishopsgate, belonging to St. Paul's, and a vineyard in Holborn,
-belonging to the Crown. This yard is supposed to have stood on the site of
-the Vine Tavern (now destroyed), a little to the east of Kingsgate
-Street.[616]
-
-Blemund's Ditch was a line of defence running nearly parallel with the
-north side of Holborn, and connecting itself to the east with the Fleet
-brook. It was probably of British origin.[617] On the north-west of
-London, in the Roman times, there were marshes and forests, and even as
-late as Elizabeth, Marylebone and St. John's Wood were almost all chase.
-
-The manor was crown property in the Norman times, for Matilda, daughter of
-Malcolm king of Scotland and the queen of Henry I., built a leper hospital
-there, and dedicated it to St. Giles. The same good woman erected a
-hospital at Cripplegate, and another at St. Katharine's, near the Tower,
-and founded a priory within Aldgate. The hospital of St. Giles sheltered
-forty lepers, one clerk, a messenger, the master, and several matrons; the
-queen gave 60s. a year to each leper. The inmates of lazar hospitals were
-in the habit of begging in the market-places.
-
-The patron saint, St. Giles, was an Athenian of the seventh century, who
-lived as a hermit in a forest near Nismes. One day some hunters, pursuing
-a hind that he had tamed, struck the Greek with an arrow as he protected
-it, but the good man still went on praying, and refused all recompense for
-the injury. The French king in vain attempted to entice the saint from his
-cell, which in time, however, grew first into a monastery, and then into a
-town.[618]
-
-This hospital was built on the site of the old parish church, and it
-occupied eight acres. It stood a little to the west of the present church,
-where Lloyd's Court stands or stood; and its gardens reached between High
-Street and Hog Lane, now Crown Street, to the Pound, which used to stand
-nearly opposite to the west end of Meux's Brewhouse. It was surrounded by
-a triangular wall, running in a line with Crown Street to somewhere near
-the Cock and Pye Fields (afterwards the Seven Dials), in a line with
-Monmouth Street, and thence east and west up High Street, joining near the
-Pound.
-
-Unwholesome diet and the absence of linen seem to have encouraged
-leprosy, which was probably a disease of Eastern origin. In 1179 the
-Lateran Council decreed that lepers should keep apart, and have churches
-and churchyards of their own. It was therefore natural to build hospitals
-for lepers outside large towns. King Henry II., for the health of the
-souls of his grandfather and grandmother, granted the poor lepers a second
-60s. each to be paid yearly at the feast of St. Michael, and 30s. more out
-of his Surrey rents to buy them lights. He also confirmed to them the
-grant of a church at Feltham, near Hounslow. In Henry III.'s reign, Pope
-Alexander IV. issued a bull to confirm these privileges. Edward I. granted
-the hospital two charters in 1300 and 1303; and in Edward II.'s reign so
-many estates were granted to it that it became very rich. Edward III. made
-St. Giles a cell of Burton St. Lazar in Leicestershire. This annexation
-led to quarrels, and to armed resistance against the visitations of Robert
-Archbishop of Canterbury. In this reign the great plague broke out, and
-the king commanded the wards of the city to issue proclamations and remove
-all lepers. It is strange that St. Giles's should have been the resort of
-pariahs from the very beginning.
-
-Burton St. Lazar (a manor sold in 1828 for £30,000) is still celebrated
-for its cheeses. It remained a flourishing hospital from the reign of
-Stephen till Henry VIII. suppressed it. St. Giles's sank in importance
-after this absorption, and finally fell in 1537 with its larger brother.
-By a deed of exchange the greedy king obtained forty-eight acres of land,
-some marshes, and two inns. Six years after the king gave St. Giles's to
-John Dudley, Viscount Lisle, High Admiral of England, who fitted up the
-principal part of the hospital for his own residence. Two years after Lord
-Lisle sold the manor to Wymond Carew, Esq. The mansion was situated
-westward of the church and facing it. It was afterwards occupied by the
-celebrated Alice, Duchess of Dudley, who died there in the reign of
-Charles II., aged ninety. This house was subsequently the residence of
-Lord Wharton. It divided Lloyd's Court from Denmark Street.
-
-The master's house, "The White House," stood on the site of Dudley Court,
-and was given by the duchess to the parish as a rectory-house. The wall
-which surrounded the hospital gardens and orchards was not entirely
-removed till 1639.
-
-Early in the fourteenth century the parish of St. Giles, including the
-hospital inmates, numbered only one hundred inhabitants. In King John's
-reign it was laid out in garden plots and cottages. In Henry III.'s reign
-it was a scattered country village, with a few shops and a stone cross,
-where the High Street now is. As far back as 1225 a blacksmith's shop
-stood at the north-west end of Drury Lane, and remained there till its
-removal in 1575.
-
-In Queen Elizabeth's reign the Holborn houses did not run farther than Red
-Lion Street; the road was then open as far as the present Hart Street,
-where a garden wall commenced near Broad Street, St. Giles's, and the end
-of Drury Lane, where a cluster of houses on the right formed the chief
-part of the village, the rest being scattered houses. The hospital
-precincts were at this time surrounded by trees. Beyond this, north and
-south, all was country; and avenues of trees marked out the Oxford and
-other roads. There was no house from Broad Street, St. Giles's, to Drury
-House at the top of Wych Street.[619]
-
-The lower part of Holborn was paved in the reign of Henry VI., in 1417;
-and in 1542 (33d Henry VIII.) it was completed as far as St. Giles's,
-being very full of pits and sloughs, and perilous and noisome to all on
-foot or horseback. The first increase of buildings in this district was on
-the north side of Broad Street. Three edicts of 1582, 1593, and 1602
-evince the alarm of Government at the increase of inhabitants and prohibit
-further building under severe penalties. The first proclamation, dated
-from Nonsuch Palace, in Surrey, assigns the reason of these
-prohibitions:--1. The difficulty of governing more people without new
-officers and fresh jurisdictions. 2. The difficulty of supplying them with
-food and fuel at reasonable rates. 3. The danger of plague and the injury
-to agriculture. Regulations were also issued to prevent the further
-resort of country people to town, and the lord mayor took oaths to enforce
-these proclamations. But London burst through these foolish and petty
-restraints as Samson burst the green withs. In 1580 the resident
-foreigners in the capital had increased from 3762 to 6462 persons, the
-majority being Dutch who had fled from the Spaniards, and Huguenots who
-had escaped from France after the massacre of St. Bartholomew. St. Giles's
-grew, especially to the east and west, round the hospital. The girdle wall
-was mostly demolished soon after 1595. Holborn, stretching westward, with
-its fair houses, lodgings for gentlemen, and inns for travellers,[620] had
-nearly reached it. In Aggas's map, cattle graze amid intersecting
-footpaths, where Great Queen Street now is. There were then only two or
-three houses in Covent Garden, but in 1606 the east side of Drury Lane was
-built; in the assessment of 1623 upwards of twenty courtyards and alleys
-are mentioned; and 100 houses were added on the north side of St. Giles's
-Street, 136 in Bloomsbury, 56 on the west side of Drury Lane, and 71 on
-the south side of Holborn.[621] The south and east sides of the hospital
-site had been the slowest in their growth. After the Great Fire, these
-still remained gardens, but the north side, nearer Oxford Road, was
-already occupied. The first inhabitants of importance were Mr. Abraham
-Speckart and Mr. Breads, in the reigns of James I. and Charles I., and
-afterwards Sir William Stiddolph. New Compton Street was originally called
-Stiddolph Street, but afterwards changed its name when Charles II. gave
-the adjoining marsh-land to Mr. Francis Compton, who built on the old
-hospital land a continuation of Old Compton Street. Monmouth Street,
-probably named after the foolish and unfortunate duke, was also built in
-this reign.
-
-In 1694, in the reign of William III., a Mr. Neale, a lottery promoter,
-took on lease the Cock and Pye Fields--then the resort of gambling boys,
-thieves, and beggars, and a sink of filth and cesspools--and built the
-neighbouring streets, placing in the centre a Doric pillar with seven
-dials on it; afterwards a clock was added.[622] This same Mr. Thomas Neale
-took a large piece of ground on the north side of Piccadilly from Sir
-Thomas Clarges, agreeing to lay out £10,000 in building; but he failed to
-carry out his design, and Sir Walter Clarges, after great trouble, got the
-lease out of his hands, and Clarges Street was then built.[623]
-
-In 1697 many hundreds of the 14,000 French refugees who fled from Louis
-XIV.'s dragoons after the cruel revocation of the Edict of Nantes settled
-about Long Acre, the Seven Dials, and Soho. In Strype's time (Queen Anne's
-reign), Stacie Street, Kendrick Yard, Vinegar Yard, and Phoenix Street,
-were mostly occupied by poor French people; indigent marquises and
-starving countesses.
-
-In the reign of Queen Anne, St. Giles's increased with great rapidity--St.
-Giles's Street and Broad Street from the Pound to Drury Lane, the
-south-east side of Tottenham Court Road, Crown Street, the Seven Dials,
-and Castle Street were completed; the south side of Holborn was also
-finished from Broad Street to a little east of Great Turnstile, and, on
-the north side, the street spread to two doors east of the Vine
-Tavern.[624] The Irish had already begun to debase St. Giles's; the French
-refugees completed the degradation and hopelessness, and spread like a mud
-deluge towards Soho.
-
-In 1640 there are in the parish books several entries of money paid to
-soldiers and distressed men who had lost everything they had in Ireland:--
-
- Paid to a poor Irishman, and to a prisoner come
- over from Dunkirk £0 1 0
-
- Paid for a shroud for an Irishman that died at
- Brickils 0 2 6
-
-In 1640, 1642, and 1647, there constantly occur donations to poor Irish
-ministers and plundered Irish. Clothes were sent by the parish into
-Ireland. There is one entry--
-
- Paid to a poor gentleman undone by the burning of a city
- in Ireland; having licence from the lords to collect £0 3 0
-
-The following entries are also curious and characteristic:--
-
- 1642.--To Mrs. Mabb, a poet's wife, her husband being
- dead £0 1 0
-
- Paid to Goody Parish, to buy her boys two
- shirts; and Charles, their father, a waterman
- at Chiswick, to keep him at £20 a
- year from Christmas 0 3 0
-
- 1648.--Gave to the Lady Pigot, in Lincoln's Inn
- Fields, poor and deserving relief 0 2 6
-
- 1670.--Given to the Lady Thornbury, being poor
- and indigent 0 10 0
-
- 1641.--To old Goodman Street and old Goody
- Malthus, very poor ------
-
- 1645.--To Mother Cole and Mother Johnson, xiid.
- a-piece 0 2 0
-
- 1646.--To William Burnett, in a cellar in Raggedstaff
- Yard, being poor and very sick 0 1 6
-
- To Goody Sherlock, in Maidenhead-fields
- Lane, one linen-wheel, and gave her
- money to buy flax 0 1 0
-
-There are also some interesting entries showing what a sink for the
-poverty of all the world the St. Giles's cellars had become, even before
-the Restoration.
-
- 1640.--Gave to Signor Lifecatha, a distressed
- Grecian ------
-
- 1642.--To Laylish Milchitaire, of Chimaica, in
- Armenia, to pass him to his own country,
- and to redeem his sons in slavery under
- the Turks £0 5 0
-
- 1654.--Paid towards the relief of the mariners,
- maimed soldiers, widows and orphans of
- such as have died in the service of Parliament 4 11 0
-
-These were for Cromwell's soldiers; and this year Oliver himself gave £40
-to the parish to buy coals for the poor.
-
- 1666.--Collected at several times towards the relief
- of the poor sufferers burnt out by the late
- dreadful fire of London £25 8 4
-
-In 1670 nearly £185 was collected in this parish towards the redemption of
-slaves.
-
-After 1648 the Irish are seldom mentioned by name. They had grown by this
-time part and parcel of the district, and dragged all round them down to
-poverty. In 1653 an assistant beadle was appointed specially to search out
-and report all new arrivals of chargeable persons. In 1659 a monthly
-vestry-meeting was instituted to receive the constable's report as to new
-vagrants.
-
-In 1675 French refugees began to increase, and in 1679-1680, 1690 and 1692
-fresh efforts were made to search out and investigate the cases of all
-new-comers. In 1710 the churchwardens reported to the commissioners for
-building new churches, that "a great number of French Protestants were
-inhabitants of the parish."
-
-Well-known beggars of the day are frequently mentioned in the parish
-accounts, as for instance--
-
- 1640.--Gave to Tottenham Court Meg, being very
- sick £0 1 0
-
- 1642.--Gave to the ballad-singing cobbler 0 1 0
-
- 1646.--Gave to old Friz-wig 1 6 0
-
- 1657.--Paid the collectors for a shroud for old Guy,
- the poet 0 2 6
-
- 1658.--Paid a year's rent for Mad Bess 1 4 6
-
- 1642.--Paid to one Thomas, a traveller 0 0 6
-
- To a poor woman and her children, almost
- starved 0 5 6
-
- 1645.--For a shroud for Hunter's child, the blind
- beggar-man 0 1 6
-
- 1646.--Paid and given to a poor wretch, name forgot 0 1 0
-
- Given to old Osborn, a troublesome fellow 0 1 3
-
- Paid to Rotton, the lame glazier, to carry
- him towards Bath 0 3 0
-
- 1647.--To old Osborne and his blind wife 0 0 6
-
- To the old mud-wall maker 0 0 6
-
-In 1665 the plague fell heavily on St. Giles's, already dirty and
-overcrowded. The pest had already broken out five times within the eighty
-years beginning in 1592; but no outbreak of this Oriental pest in London
-had carried off more than 36,000 persons. The disease in 1665, however,
-slew no fewer than 97,306 in ten months.[625] In St. Giles's the plague of
-1592 carried off 894 persons; in 1625 there died of the plague about 1333;
-but in 1665 there were swept off from this parish alone 3216. The plague
-of 1625 seemed to have alarmed London quite as much as its successor, for
-we find that in St. Giles's no assessment could be made, as the richer
-people had all fled into the country. A pest-house was fitted up in
-Bloomsbury for the nine adjoining parishes, and this was afterwards taken
-by St. Giles's for itself. The vestry appointed two examiners to inspect
-infected houses. Mr. Pratt, the churchwarden, who advanced money to
-succour the poor when the rich deserted them, was afterwards paid forty
-pounds for the sums he had generously disbursed at his own risk. In 1642
-the entries in the parish books show that the disease had again become
-virulent and threatening. The bodies were collected in carts by
-torchlight, and thrown without burial service into large pits. Infected
-houses were padlocked up, and watchmen placed to admit doctors or persons
-bringing food to the searchers, who at night brought out the dead.
-
-The following entries (for 1642) in the parish books seem to me even more
-terrible than Defoe's romance written fifty years after the events:--
-
- Paid for the two padlocks and hasps for visited
- houses £0 2 6
-
- Paid Mr. Hyde for candles for the bearers 0 10 0
-
- " to the same for the night-cart and cover 7 9 0
-
- " to Mr. Mann for links and candles for the
- night-bearers 0 10 0
-
-The next year the plague still raged, and the same precautions seem to
-have been taken as afterwards in 1665, showing that the terrible details
-of that punishment of filth and neglect were not new to London citizens.
-
-The entries go on:--
-
- To the bearers for carrying out of Crown Court a woman
- that died of the plague £0 1 6
-
- Sent to a poor man shut up in Crown Yard of the plague 0 1 6
-
-Then follow sums paid for padlocks and staples, graves and links:--
-
- Paid and given Mr. Lyn, the beadle, for a piece of good
- service to the parish in conveying away of a visited
- household to Lord's Pest House, forth of Mr. Higgins's
- house at Bloomsbury £0 1 6
-
- Received of Mr. Hearle (Dr. Temple's gift) to be given
- to Mrs. Hockey, a minister's widow, shut up in the
- Crache Yard of the plague 0 10 0
-
-But now came the awful pestilence of 1665; the streets were so deserted
-that grass grew in them, and nothing was to be seen but coffins,
-pest-carts, link-men, and red-crossed doors. The air resounded with the
-tolling of bells, the screams of distracted mourners crying from the
-windows, "Pray for us!" and the dismal call of the searchers, "Bring out
-your dead!"[626]
-
-The plague broke out in its most malignant form among the poor of St.
-Giles's;[627] and Dr. Hodges and Sir Richard Manningham, both first-rate
-authorities on this subject, agree in this assertion.
-
-In August 1665 an additional rate to the amount of £600 was levied.
-Independent of this, very large sums were subscribed by persons resident
-in, or interested in, the parish. The following are a few of the items:--
-
- Mr. Williams, from the Earl of Clare £10 0 0
-
- Mr. Justice (Sir Edmondbury) Godfrey, from the
- Lord Treasurer 50 0 0
-
- Earl Craven and the rest of the justices, towards
- the visited poor, at various times 449 16 10
-
- Earl Craven towards the visited poor 40 3 0
-
-There are also these ominous entries:--
-
- August.--Paid the searchers for viewing the corpse
- of Goodwife Phillips, who died of the
- plague £0 0 6
-
- Laid out for Goodman Phillips and his
- children, being shut up and visited 0 5 0
-
- Laid out for Lylla Lewis, 3 Crane Court,
- being shut up of the plague; and laid
- out for the nurse, and for the nurse and
- burial 0 18 6
-
-In July 1666 the constables, etc. were ordered to make an account of all
-new inmates coming to the parish, and to take security that they would not
-become burdensome. They were also directed to be careful to prevent the
-infection spreading for the future by a timely guard of all "that are or
-hereafter may happen to be visited."
-
-"During the plague time," says an eye-witness, "nobody put on black or
-formal mourning, yet London was all in tears. The shrieks of women and
-children at the doors and windows of their houses where their dearest
-relations were dying, or perhaps dead, were enough to pierce the stoutest
-hearts. At the west end of the town it was a surprising thing to see those
-streets which were usually thronged now grown desolate; so that I have
-sometimes gone the length of a whole street (I mean bye streets), and have
-seen nobody to direct me but watchmen[628] sitting at the doors of such
-houses as were shut up; and one day I particularly observed that even in
-Holborn the people walked in the middle of the street, and not at the
-sides--not to mingle, as I supposed, with anybody that came out of
-infected houses, or meet with smells and scents from them."
-
-Dr. Hodges, a great physician, who shunned no danger, describes even more
-vividly the horrors of that period. "In the streets," he says, "might be
-seen persons seized with the sickness, staggering like drunken men; here
-lay some dozing and almost dead; there others were met fatigued with
-excessive vomiting, as if they had drunk poison; in the midst of the
-market, persons in full health fell suddenly down as if the contagion was
-there exposed to sale. It was not uncommon to see an inheritance pass to
-three heirs within the space of four days. The bearers were not sufficient
-to inter the dead."[629]
-
-It is supposed that till the Leper Hospital was suppressed, the St.
-Giles's people used the oratory there as their parish church. Leland does
-not mention any other church, although he lived and wrote about the time
-of the suppression, and even made an effort to save the monastic MSS. by
-proposing to have them placed in the king's library. The oratory had
-probably a screen walling off the lepers from the rest of the
-congregation. It boasted several chantry chapels, and a high altar at the
-east end, dedicated to St. Giles, before which burnt a great taper called
-"St. Giles's light," and towards which, about A.D. 1200, one William
-Christemas bequeathed an annual sum of twelvepence. There was also a
-Chapel of St. Michael, appropriated to the infirm, and which had its own
-special priest.
-
-In the reign of Charles I. the south aisle of the hospital church was full
-of rubbish, lumber, and coffin-boards; and Lady Dudley put up a screen to
-divide the nave from the chancel. In 1623 the church became so ruinous
-that it had to be rebuilt at an expense of £2068: 7: 2. Among the
-subscribers appear the names of the Duchess of Lennox, Sir Anthony
-Ashleye, Sir John Cotton, and the players at "the Cockpit playhouse." The
-415 householders of the parish subscribed £1065: 9s., the donations
-ranging from the £250 of the Duchess of Dudley to Mother Parker's
-twopence.
-
-Nearly five years elapsed before the new church was consecrated. On the
-9th of June 1628 Pym brought a charge against the rector, Dr. Mainwaring,
-for having preached two obnoxious sermons, entitled "Religion" and
-"Allegiance," and accused the imprudent time-server of persuading citizens
-to obey illegal commands on pain of damnation, and framing, like Guy Faux,
-a mischievous plot to alter and subvert the Government.[630] The third
-sermon in which Mainwaring defended his two first, the stern Commons found
-upon inquiry[631] had been printed by special command of the king. It was
-as full of mischief as a bomb-shell. It held that on any exigency all
-property was transferred to the sovereign; that the consent of Parliament
-was not necessary for the imposition of taxes; and that the divine laws
-required compliance with every demand which a prince should make upon his
-subjects. For these doctrines the Commons impeached Mainwaring; the
-sentence pronounced on him was, that he should be imprisoned during the
-pleasure of the House, that he should be fined £1000, to the king, make
-submission of his offence, be suspended from lay and ecclesiastical office
-for three years, and that his sermons be called in and burnt.
-
-On June 20 the courtly preacher came to the House, and on his knees
-submitted himself in sorrow and repentance for the errors and
-indiscretions he had been guilty of in preaching the sermons "rashly,
-scandalously, and unadvisedly." He further acknowledged the three sermons
-to be full of dangerous passages and aspersions, and craved pardon for
-them of God and the king. No sooner was the session over than the wilful
-king pardoned him, promoted him to the deanery of Winchester, and some
-years after to the bishopric of St. David's.[632]
-
-The new church was consecrated on the 26th of January 1630. Bishop Laud
-performed the ceremony, and was entertained at the house of a Mr.
-Speckart, near the church. There were two tables sufficient to seat
-thirty-two persons. The broken churchyard wall was fenced up with boards,
-the altar hung with green velvet, a rail made to keep the mob from the
-west door, and a train of constables, armed with bills and halberts,
-appointed to maintain order if the Puritans became threatening. The new
-rector, Dr. Heywood, had been chaplain to Laud, and was probably of the
-High Church party. Like his expelled predecessor, he had been chaplain to
-one of the most arbitrary of kings. In 1640 the Puritans, gaining
-strength, petitioned Parliament against him, stating that he had set up
-crucifixes and images of saints, likewise organs, "with other confused
-music, etc., hindering devotion and maintained at the great and needless
-charge of the parish." They described the carved screen as particularly
-obnoxious, and they objected to the altar rail, the chancel carpet, the
-purple velvet in the desk, the needlework covers of the books, the
-tapestry, the lawn cloth, the bone lace of the altar cloths, and the
-taffeta curtains on the walls. These "popish and superstitious" ornaments
-were sold by order of Parliament, all but the plate and the great bell.
-The surplices were given away. The twelve apostles were washed off the
-organ-loft, and the painted glass was taken down from the windows. The
-screen was sold for forty shillings, and the money given to the poor. The
-Covenant was framed and hung up in the church, and five shillings given to
-a pewterer for a new basin cut square on one side for baptisms. The blue
-velvet carpet, embroidered cushions, and blue curtains were sold, and so
-were the communion rails. In 1647 Lady Dudley's pew was lined with green
-baize and supplied with two straw mats. In 1650 the king's arms were taken
-out of the windows, and a sun-dial was substituted. The organ-loft was let
-as a pew.
-
-The Restoration soon followed on these paltry excesses of a low-bred
-fanaticism. The ringers of St. Giles's rang a peal for three days running.
-The king's arms in the vestry and the windows were restored. Galleries
-were erected for the nobility. In 1670 a brass chandelier of sixteen
-branches was bought for the church, and an hour-glass for the pulpit.
-
-In 1718 the old hospital church had become damp and unwholesome. The
-grave-ground had risen eight feet, so that the church lay in a pit.
-Parliament was therefore petitioned that St. Giles's should be one of the
-fifty new churches. It was urged that a good church facing the High
-Street, the chief thoroughfare for all persons who travelled the Oxford
-or Hampstead roads, would be a great ornament. The petitioners also
-contended that St. Giles's already spent £5300 a year on the poor, and
-that a new rate would impoverish many industrious persons. The Duke of
-Newcastle, the Lord Chancellor, and other eminent parishioners strenuously
-supported the petition, which, on the other hand, was warmly opposed by
-the Archbishop of York, five bishops, and eleven temporal peers. The
-opposition contended that the parish was well able to repair the present
-church; that the fund given for building new churches was never meant to
-be devoted to rebuilding old ones; and that so far from the parish not
-requiring church accommodation, St. Giles's contained 40,000 persons, a
-number for which three new churches would be barely sufficient.[633]
-Eleven years longer the church remained a ruin, when in 1729 the
-commissioners granted £8000 for a new church, provided that the parish
-would settle £350 a year on the rector of the new parish of Bloomsbury.
-
-The architect of the new church, opened in 1734, was Henry Flitcroft. The
-roof is supported by Ionic pillars of Portland stone. The steeple is 160
-feet high, and consists of a rustic pedestal supporting Doric pilasters;
-over the clock is an octangular tower, with three-quarter Ionic columns
-supporting a balustrade with vases. The spire is octangular and belled.
-This hideous production of Greek rules was much praised by the critics of
-1736. They called it "simple and elegant." They considered the east end as
-"pleasing and majestic," and found nothing in the west to object to but
-the smallness and poverty of the doors. The steeple they described as
-"light, airy, and genteel."[634] whether taken with the body of the church
-or considered as a _separate building_.
-
-In 1827 the clock of St. Giles's Church was illuminated with gas, and the
-novelty and utility of the plan "attracted crowds to visit it from the
-remotest parts of the metropolis."[635]
-
-St. Giles's Churchyard was enlarged in 1628, and again soon after the
-Restoration. The garden plot from which the new part was divided was
-called Brown's Gardens. In 1670 we find the sexton agreeing, on condition
-of certain windows he had been allowed to introduce into the side of his
-house, facing the churchyard, to furnish the rector and churchwardens,
-every Tuesday se'nnight after Easter, with two fat capons ready dressed.
-
-In 1687 the Resurrection Gate, or Lich Gate, as it was called, and which
-still exists, was erected at a cost of £185: 14: 6. It stood for many
-years farther to the west than the old gate, and contains a heap of
-dully-carved figures in relievo, abridged from Michael Angelo's "Last
-Judgment," and crowded under a large "compass pediment." It has lately,
-however, been replaced in its old position. This work was much admired and
-celebrated, but "Nollekens" Smith says that it is poor stuff.
-
-Pennant, always shrewd and vivacious, was one of the first writers who
-exposed the disgraceful and dangerous condition of the London churchyards.
-He describes seeing at St Giles's a great square pit with rows of coffins
-piled one upon the other, exposed to sight and smell, awaiting the
-mortality of the night. "I turned away," he says, "disgusted at the scene,
-and scandalised at the want of police which so little regards the health
-of the living as to permit so many putrid corpses, packed between some
-slight boards, dispersing their dangerous effluvia over the capital."[636]
-
-In 1808 a new burial-ground for St. Giles's parish was consecrated in St.
-Pancras's. It stands in grim loneliness between the Hampstead Road and
-College Street, Camden Town.
-
-The graves of John Flaxman, the sculptor, and his wife and sister, are
-marked by an altar tomb of brick, surmounted by a thick slab of Portland
-stone. Near it is the ruinous tomb of ingenious, faddling Sir John Soane,
-the architect to the Bank of England. It is a work of great pretension,
-"but cut up into toy-shop prettiness, with all the peculiar defects of
-his style and manner." Two black cypresses mark the grave.[637]
-
-A few eminent persons are buried in the old St. Giles's Churchyard.
-Amongst these, the most illustrious is George Chapman, who produced a fine
-though rugged translation of the _Iliad_ which is to Pope's what heart of
-oak is to veneer, and who died in 1634 aged seventy-seven, and lies buried
-here. Inigo Jones generously erected an altar tomb to his memory at his
-own expense; it is still to be seen in the external southern wall of the
-church. The monument is old; but the inscription is only a copy of all
-that remained visible of the old writing. That chivalrous visionary, Lord
-Herbert of Cherbury, was also buried here, and so was James Shirley, the
-dramatist, who died in 1666. The latter was the last of the great
-ante-Restoration play-writers, and of a thinner fibre than any of the
-rest, except melancholy Ford.
-
-Richard Pendrell, the Staffordshire farmer, "the preserver and conductor
-of King Charles II. after his escape from Worcester Fight," has an altar
-tomb to his memory raised in this churchyard. After the Restoration,
-Richard came to town, to be in the way, I suppose, of the good things then
-falling into Cavaliers' mouths, and probably settled in St. Giles's to be
-near the Court. The story of the Boscobel oak was one with which the
-swarthy king delighted to buttonhole his courtiers. Pendrell died in 1671,
-and had a monument erected to his memory on the south-east side of the
-church. The black marble slab of the old tomb forms the base of the
-present one. The epitaph is in a strain of fulsome bombast, considering
-the king who was preserved showed his gratitude to Heaven only by a long
-career of unblushing vice, and by impoverishing and disgracing the foolish
-country that called him home. It begins thus:--
-
- "Hold, passenger! here's shrouded in this hearse
- Unparalleled Pendrell thro' the universe.
- Like when the eastern star from heaven gave light
- To three lost kings, so he in such dark night
- To Britain's monarch, lost by adverse war,
- On earth appeared a second eastern star."
-
-The dismal poet ends by assuring the world that Pendrell, the king's
-pilot, had gone to heaven to be rewarded for his good steering. In 1702 a
-Pendrell was overseer in this parish. About 1827 a granddaughter of this
-Richard lived near Covent Garden, and still enjoyed part of the family
-pension. In 1827 Mr. John Pendrell, another descendant of Richard, died at
-Eastbourne.[638] His son kept an inn at Lewes, and was afterwards clerk at
-a Brighton hotel.
-
-The only monument at present of interest in the church is a recumbent
-figure of the Duchess Dudley, the great benefactor of the parish, created
-a duchess in her own right by Charles I. She died 1669. The monument was
-preserved by parochial gratitude when the church was rebuilt, in
-consideration of the duchess's numerous bequests to the parish. She was
-buried at Stoneleigh in Warwickshire. This pious and charitable lady was
-the daughter of Sir Thomas Leigh of Stoneleigh, and she married Sir Robert
-Dudley, son of the great Earl of Leicester, who deserted her and his five
-daughters, and went and settled in Florence, where he became chamberlain
-to the Grand Duchess. Clever and unprincipled as his father, Sir Robert
-devised plans for draining the country round Pisa, and improving the port
-of Leghorn. He was outlawed, and his estates at Kenilworth, etc. were
-confiscated and sold for a small sum to Prince Henry; but Charles I.
-generously gave them back to the duchess.
-
-In her funeral sermon, Dr. Boreman says of this good woman: "She was a
-magazine of experience.... I have often said she was a living chronicle
-bound up with the thread of a long-spun age. And in divers incidents and
-things relating to our parish, I have often appealed to her stupendous
-memory as to an ancient record.... In short, I would say to any desirous
-to attain some degree of perfection, 'Vade ad Sancti Egidii oppidum, et
-disce Ducinam Dudleyam'--('Come to St. Giles, and inquire the character of
-Lady Dudley')."[639]
-
-The oldest monument remaining in the churchyard in 1708 was dated 1611. It
-was a tombstone, "close to the wall on the south side, and near the west
-end," and was to the memory of a Mrs. Thornton.[640] Her husband was the
-builder of Thornton Alley, which was probably his estate. The following
-painful lines were round the margin of the stone:--
-
- "Full south this stone four foot doth lie
- His father John and grandsire Henry
- Thornton, of Thornton, in Yorkshire bred,
- Where lives the fame of Thornton's being dead."
-
-Against the east end of the north aisle of the church was the tombstone of
-Eleanor Steward, who died 1725, aged 123 years and five months.
-
-That good and inflexible patriot, Andrew Marvell, the most poignant
-satirist of King Charles II., died in 1678, and is buried in St. Giles's.
-Marvell was Latin secretary to Milton, and in the school of that good
-man's house learnt how a true patriot should live. It is recorded that one
-day when he was dining in Maiden Lane, one of Charles II.'s courtiers came
-to offer him £1000 as a bribe for his silence. Marvell refused the gift,
-took off the dish-cover, and showed his visitor the humble half-picked
-mutton-bone on which he was about to dine. He was member for
-Kingston-upon-Hull for nearly twenty years, and was buried at last at the
-expense of his constituents. They also voted a sum of money to erect a
-monument to him with a harmless epitaph; to this, however, the rector of
-the time, to his own disgrace, refused admittance. Thompson, the editor of
-Marvell's works, searched in vain in 1774 for the patriot's coffin. He
-could find no plate earlier than 1722.
-
-In the same church with this fixed star rests that comet, Sir Roger
-l'Estrange. His monument was said to be the grandest in the church. Sir
-Roger died in 1704, aged eighty-eight.
-
-In 1721, after an ineffectual treaty for Dudley Court, where the
-parsonage-house had once stood, a piece of ground called Vinegar Yard was
-purchased for the sum of £2252: 10s. as a burial-ground, hospital, and
-workhouse for the parish of St. Giles's. At that time St. Giles's relieved
-about 840 persons, at the cost of £4000 a year. Of this number there were
-162 over seventy years of age, 126 parents overburthened with children,
-183 deserted children and orphans, 70 sick at parish nurses', and 300 men
-lame, blind, and mad.
-
-The Earl of Southampton granted land for five almshouses in St. Giles's in
-1656.[641] The site was in Broad Street, nearly at the north end of
-Monmouth and King Streets, where they stood until 1782, at which period
-they were pulled down to widen the road. The new almshouses were erected
-in a close, low, and unhealthy spot in Lewknor's Lane.
-
-In the year 1661 Mr. William Shelton left lands for a school for fifty
-children in Parker's Lane, between Drury Lane and Little Queen Street. The
-tenements, before he bought them, had been in the occupation of the Dutch
-ambassador. The premises were poor houses, and a coach-house and stables
-in the occupation of Lord Halifax. In 1687, the funds proving inadequate,
-the school was discontinued; but in 1815, after being in abeyance for
-fifty-three years, it was re-opened in Lloyd's Court.[642]
-
-The select vestry of St. Giles's was much badgered in 1828 by the excluded
-parishioners. There were endless errors in the accounts, and items
-amounting to £90,000 were found entered only in pencil. The special pleas
-put in by the attorneys of the vestry covered 175 folios of writing.
-
-Hog Lane, built in 1680, was rechristened in 1762 Crown Street, as an
-inscription on a stone let into the wall of a house at the corner of Rose
-Street intimates.[643] Strype calls it a "place not over well built or
-inhabited." The Greeks had a church here, afterwards a French refugee
-place of worship, and subsequently an Independent chapel. It stood on the
-west side of the lane, a few doors from Compton Street; and its site is
-now occupied by St. Mary's Church and clergy-house. Hogarth laid the scene
-of his "Noon" in Hog Lane, at the door of this chapel; but the houses
-being reversed in the engraving, the truth of the picture is destroyed.
-The background contains a view of St. Giles's Church. The painter
-delighted in ridiculing the fantastic airs of the poor French gentry, and
-showed no kindly sympathy with their honest poverty and their sufferings.
-It was to St. Giles's that Hogarth came to study poverty and also vice. A
-scene of his "Harlot's Progress" is in Drury Lane, close by. Tom Nero, in
-the "Four Stages of Cruelty," is a St. Giles's charity-boy, and we see him
-in the first stage tormenting a dog near the church. Hogarth's "Gin
-Street" is situated in St. Giles's. The scenes of all the most hideous and
-painful of his works are in this district.
-
-"Nollekens" Smith, writing of St. Giles's, says: "I recollect the building
-of most of the houses at the north end of New Compton Street--so named in
-compliment to Bishop Compton, Dean of St. Paul's. I also remember a row of
-six small almshouses, surrounded by a dwarf brick wall, standing in the
-middle of High Street. On the left hand of High Street, passing into
-Tottenham Court Road, there were four handsome brick houses, probably of
-Queen Anne's time, with grotesque masks as keystones to the first-floor
-windows. Nearly on the site of the new "Resurrection Gate," in which the
-basso-relievo is, stood a very small old house towards Denmark Street,
-which used to totter, to the terror of passers by, whenever a heavy
-carriage rolled through the street."[644]
-
-Exactly where Oxford Street and Tottenham Court Road meet in a right
-angle, a large circular boundary-stone was let into the pavement. Here
-when the charity-boys of St. Giles's walked the boundaries, those who
-deserved flogging were whipped, in order to impress the parish frontier on
-their memories.
-
-The Pound originally stood in the middle of the High Street, whence it was
-removed in 1656 to make way for the almshouses. It had stood there when
-the village really required a place to imprison straying cattle. The
-latest pound stood in the broad space where the High Street, Tottenham
-Court Road, and Oxford Street meet; it occupied a space of about
-thirty-feet, and was removed in 1768. It must have faced Meux's Brewery.
-An old song that celebrates this locality begins--
-
- "At Newgate steps Jack Chance was found,
- And bred up near St. Giles's Pound."
-
-Criminals on their way to Tyburn used to "halt at the great gate of St.
-Giles's Hospital, where a bowl of ale was provided as their last
-refreshment in this life."[645] A similar custom prevailed at York, which
-gave rise to the proverb, "The saddler of Bawtry was hung for leaving his
-liquor," meaning that if the impatient man had stopped to drink, his
-reprieve would have arrived in time.[646]
-
-Bowl Yard was built about 1623, and was then surrounded by gardens. It is
-a narrow court on the south side of High Street, over against Dyot Street,
-now George Street. There was probably here a public-house, the Bowl, at
-which in later time ale was handed to the passing thieves.
-
-Swift, in a spirited ballad describes "clever Tom Clinch," who rode
-"stately through Holborn to die in his calling," stopping at the George
-for a bottle of sack, and promising to pay for it "_when he came back_."
-No one has sketched the highwayman more perfectly than the Irish prelate.
-Tom Clinch wears waistcoat, stockings, and breeches of white, and his cap
-is tied with cherry ribbon. He bows like a beau at the theatre to the
-ladies in the doors and to the maids in the balconies, who cry, "Lackaday,
-he's a proper young man." He swears at the hawkers crying his last speech,
-kicks the hangman when he kneels to ask his pardon, makes a short speech
-exhorting his comrades to ply their calling, and so carelessly and
-defiantly takes his leave of an ungrateful world.
-
-"Rainy Day" Smith describes,[647] when a boy of eight years old, being
-taken by Nollekens, the sculptor, to see that notorious highwayman John
-Rann, alias "Sixteen-string Jack," on his way to execution at Tyburn, for
-robbing Dr. Bell, chaplain to the Princess Amelia, in Gunnersbury Lane,
-near Brentford, in 1774. Rann was a smart fellow, and had been a coachman
-to Lord Sandwich, who then lived at the south-east corner of Bedford Row,
-Covent Garden. The undaunted malefactor wore a bright pea-green coat, and
-carried an immense nosegay, which some mistress of the highwayman had
-handed him, according to custom, as a last token, from the steps of St.
-Sepulchre's Church. The sixteen strings worn by this freebooter at his
-knees were reported to be in ironical allusion to the number of times he
-had been acquitted. On their return home, Nollekens, stooping to the boy's
-ear, assured him that had his father-in-law, Mr. Justice Welch, been then
-High Constable, they could have walked all the way to Tyburn beside the
-cart.[648]
-
-Holborn used to be called "the Heavy Hill" because it led thieves from
-Newgate to Tyburn. Old fat Ursula, the roast-pig seller in Ben Jonson's
-_Bartholomew Fair_ talks of ambling afoot to hear Knockhem the footpad
-groan out of a cart up the Heavy Hill. This was in James I.'s time. Dryden
-alludes to it in the same way in 1678,[649] and in 1695 Congreve's Sir
-Sampson[650] mentions the same doleful procession. In 1709 (Queen Anne)
-Tom Browne mentions a wily old counsellor in Holborn who used to turn out
-his clerks every execution day for a profitable holiday, saying, "Go, you
-young rogues, go to school and improve."
-
-St. Giles's was always famous for its inns.[651] One of the oldest of
-these was the Croche House, or Croche Hose (Cross Hose), so called from
-its sign--the Crossed Stockings. The sign, still used by hosiers, was a
-red and white stocking forming a St. Andrew's Cross. This inn belonged to
-the hospital cook in 1300, and was given by him to the hospital. It stood
-at the north of the present entrance to Compton Street, and was probably
-destroyed before the reign of Henry VIII.
-
-The Swan on the Hop was an inn of Edward III.'s time; it stood eastward of
-Drury Lane and on the south side of Holborn.[652]
-
-The White Hart is described in Henry VIII.'s time as possessing eighteen
-acres of pasture. It stood near the Holborn end of Drury Lane, and existed
-till 1720. In Aggas's Plan it appears surrounded on three sides by a wall.
-It was bounded on the east by Little Queen Street, and was divided from
-Holborn by an embankment. A court afterwards stood on its site.
-
-The Rose is mentioned as early as Edward III.'s reign. It was near
-Lewknor's Lane, and stood not far from the White Hart.
-
-The Vine was an inn till 1816. It was on the north side of Holborn, a
-little to the east of Kingsgate Street. It is supposed to have stood on
-the site of a vineyard mentioned in Doomsday Book. It was originally a
-country roadside inn, with fields at the back. It became an infamous
-nuisance. The house that replaced it was first occupied by a
-timber-merchant, and afterwards by Probert, the accomplice of Thurtell,
-who, escaping death for the murder of Mr. Weare, was soon after hanged for
-horse-stealing in Gloucestershire. It was at this trial that the
-prisoner's keeping a gig was adduced as an incontestible proof of his
-respectability--a fact immortalised, almost to the weariness of a
-degenerate age, by Mr. Thomas Carlyle. The inn was once called the
-Kingsgate Tavern, from its having stood near the king's gate or turnpike
-in the adjoining street.
-
-The Cock and Pye Inn stood at the west corner of what was once a mere or
-marshland. The fields surrounding it, now Seven Dials, were called from
-it the Cock and Pye Fields.
-
-The Maidenhead Inn stood in Dyot Street, and formed part of Lord
-Mountjoy's estates in Elizabeth's time. It was the house for parish
-meetings in Charles II.'s reign. It then became a resort for mealmen and
-farmers, and latterly a brandy-shop and beggars' haunt of the vilest sort.
-It was finally turned into a stoneyard. Dyot Street, so called after Sir
-John Dyot, who left it by wish to the poor, though it was afterwards a
-poor and even dangerous locality, must have been respectable in 1662, when
-a Presbyterian chapel was built there for Joseph Read, Baxter's friend, an
-ejected minister from Worcestershire. Read was taken up under the
-Conventicles Act in 1677, and endured much persecution, but was restored
-to his congregation on the accession of James II. From 1684 to 1708 the
-building was used as a chapel of ease to St. Giles's Church. At the close
-of the last century men would hurry along Dyot Street as through a
-dangerous defile. There was a legend current of a banker's clerk who,
-returning from his round, with his book of notes and bills fastened by the
-usual chain, as he passed down Dyot Street felt a cellar door sinking
-under him. Conscious of his danger, he made a spring forward, dashed down
-the street, and escaped the trap set for him by the thieves. It may be
-added that Dyot Street gave the name to a song sung by Liston in the
-admirable burlesque of "Bombastes Furioso."
-
-Irish mendicants--the poorest, dirtiest, and most unimprovable of all
-beggars--began to crowd into St. Giles's about the time of Queen
-Elizabeth.[653]
-
-The increase of London soon attracted country artisans and country
-beggars. The closing of the monasteries had filled England with herds of
-sturdy and dangerous vagrants not willing to work, and by no means
-inclined to starve. The new-comers resorting to the suburbs of London to
-escape the penalties of infringing the City jurisdiction, the
-stout-hearted queen ordered all persons within three miles of London
-gates to forbear from allowing any house to be occupied by more than one
-family.
-
-A proclamation of 1583 alludes to the very poor and the beggars, who lived
-"heaped up" in small tenements and let lodgings. A subsequent warning
-orders the suppression of the great multitude of Irish vagrants, many of
-whom haunted the courts under pretence of suits; by day they mixed with
-disbanded soldiers from the Low Countries and other impostors and beggars,
-and at night committed robberies and outrages. St. Giles's was then one of
-the great harbours for these "misdemeaned persons." On one occasion a mob
-of these rogues surrounded the queen as she was riding out in the evening
-to Islington to take the air. That same night Fleetwood, the Recorder,
-issued warrants, and in the morning went out himself and took seventy-four
-rogues, including some blind rich usurers, who were all sent to Bridewell
-for speedy punishment.
-
-James I. pursued the same crusade against vagrants, forbidding new
-buildings in the suburbs, and ordering all newly raised structures to be
-pulled down. The beadles had to attend every Sunday at the vestry to
-report all new inmates, and who lodged them, and to take up all idlers;
-the constables in 1630 were also required to give notice of such persons
-to the churchwardens every month. In an entry in St. Giles's parish books
-in 1637 "families in cellars" are first mentioned.[654] The locality
-afterwards became noted for these dens, and "a cellar in St. Giles's"
-became a proverbial phrase to signify the lowest poverty.
-
-In 1640 Irishmen are first mentioned by name, and money was paid to take
-them back again to their native land.
-
-Sir John Fielding, brother of the great novelist, who was an active
-Westminster magistrate in his time and a great hunter down of highwaymen,
-in a pamphlet on the increase of crime in London, lays special stress on
-the vicious poverty of St. Giles's. He gives a statement on the authority
-of Mr. Welch, the High Constable of Holborn, of the overcrowding of the
-miserable lodgings where idle persons and vagabonds were sheltered for
-twopence a night. One woman alone owned seven of these houses, which were
-crowded with twopenny beds from cellar to garret. In these beds both
-sexes, strangers or not, lay promiscuously, the double bed being a
-halfpenny cheaper. To still more wed vice to poverty, these lodging-house
-keepers sold gin at a penny a quartern, so that no beggar was so poor that
-he could not get drunk. No fewer than seventy of these vile houses were
-found open at all hours, and in one alone, and not the largest, there were
-counted fifty-eight persons sleeping in an atmosphere loathsome if not
-actually poisonous.
-
-This Judge Welch was the father of Mrs. Nollekens, and a brave and
-benevolent man. He was a friend of Dr. Johnson and of Fielding, whom he
-succeeded in his justiceship, Mr. Welch having on one occasion heard that
-a notorious highwayman who infested the Marylebone lanes was sleeping in
-the first floor of a house in Rose Street, Long Acre, he hired the tallest
-hackney-coach he could find, drove under the thief's window, ascended the
-roof, threw up the sash, entered the room, actually dragged the fellow
-naked out of bed on to the roof of the coach, and in that way carried him
-down New Street and up St. Martin's Lane, amidst the huzzas of an immense
-throng which followed him, to Litchfield Street, Soho.[655]
-
-Archenholz, the German traveller, writing circa 1784, describes the
-streets of London as crowded with beggars. "These idle people," says this
-curious observer, "receive in alms three, four, and even five shillings a
-day. They have their clubs in the parish of St. Giles's, where they meet,
-drink and feed well, read the papers, and talk politics. One of my friends
-put on one day a ragged coat, and promised a handsome reward to a beggar
-to introduce him to his club. He found the beggars gay and familiar, and
-poor only in their rags. One threw down his crutch, another untied a
-wooden leg, a third took off a grey wig or removed a plaister from a sound
-eye; then they related their adventures, and planned fresh schemes. The
-female beggars hire children for sixpence and sometimes even two
-shillings a day: a very deformed child is worth four shillings." In the
-same parish the pickpockets met to dine and exchange or sell snuff-boxes,
-handkerchiefs, and other stolen property.
-
-About fifty years before, says Archenholz, there had been a pickpockets'
-club in St. Giles's, where the knives and forks were chained to the table
-and the cloth was nailed on. Rules were, however, decorously observed, and
-chairmen chosen at their meetings. Not far from this house was a
-celebrated gin-shop, on the sign-post of which was written, "Here you may
-get drunk for a penny, dead drunk for twopence, and straw for nothing."
-The cellars of this public-spirited man were never empty.
-
-Archenholz also sketches the conjurors who told fortunes for a shilling.
-They wore black gowns and false beards, advertised in the newspapers, and
-painted their houses with magical figures and planetary emblems.[656]
-
-In 1783 Mr. J. T. Smith describes how he made for Mr. Crowle, the
-illustrator of Pennant, a sketch of Old Simon, a well-known character, who
-took his station daily under one of the gate piers of the old red and
-brown brick gateway at the northern end of St. Giles's Churchyard, which
-then faced Mr. Remnent's timber-yard. This man wore several hats, and was
-remarkable for a long, dirty, yellowish white beard. His chapped fingers
-were adorned with brass rings. He had several coats and waistcoats--the
-upper wrap-rascle covering bundles of rags, parcels of books, canisters of
-bread and cheese, matches, a tinder-box, meat for his dog, scraps from
-_Fox's Book of Martyrs_, and three or four dog's-eared, thumbed, and
-greasy numbers of the _Gentleman's Magazine_. From these random leaves he
-gathered much information, which he retailed to persons who stopped to
-look at him. Simon and his dog lodged under a staircase in an old
-shattered building in Dyot Street, known as "Rat's Castle." It was in this
-beggars' rendezvous that Nollekens the sculptor used to seek models for
-his Grecian Venuses. Rowlandson etched Simon several times in his usual
-gross but droll manner.[657] There was also a whole-length print of him
-published by John Seago, with this monumental inscription--"Simon Edy,
-born at Woodford, near Thrapston, Northamptonshire, in 1709. Died May
-18th, 1783."
-
-Simon had had several dogs, which, one after the other, were stolen, and
-sent for sale at Islington, or killed for their teeth by men employed by
-the dentists. The following anecdote is told of his last and most faithful
-dog:--Rover had been a shepherd's dog at Harrow, and having its left eye
-struck out by a bullock's horn, was left with Simon by its master, a
-Smithfield drover. The beggar tied him to his arm with a long string,
-cured him, and then restored him to the drover. After that, the dog would
-stop at St. Giles's porch every market-day on its way after the drover to
-the slaughter-house in Union Street, and receive caresses from the hand
-which had bathed its wound. Rover would then yelp for joy and gratitude,
-and scamper off to get up with the erring bullocks. At last poor Simon
-missed the dog for several weeks; at the end of that time it appeared one
-morning at his feet, and with its one sorrowful and uplifted eye implored
-Simon's protection by licking his tawny beard. His master the drover was
-dead. Simon was only too glad to adopt Rover, who eventually followed him
-to his last home.
-
-There was an elegy printed for good-natured, inoffensive old Simon, with a
-woodcut portrait attached. The Hon. Daines Barrington is said to have
-never passed the old mendicant without giving him sixpence.
-
-Mr. J. T. Smith, himself afterwards Curator of the Prints at the British
-Museum, published some curious etchings of beggars and street characters
-in 1815. Amongst them are ragged men carrying placards of "The Grand
-Golden Lottery;" strange old-clothesmen in cocked hats and two-tier wigs;
-itinerant wood-merchants; sellers of toys, such as "young lambs" or live
-haddock; flying piemen in pig tails and shorts; women in gipsy hats;
-door-mat sellers; vendors of hot peas, pickled cucumbers, lemons,
-windmills (toys); and, last and least, Sir Harry Dimsdale, the dwarf Mayor
-of Garratt.
-
-The condition of the beggars of St. Giles in 1815 we gather pretty
-accurately from the evidence given by Mr. Sampson Stevenson, overseer of
-the parish, and by trade an ironmonger at No. 11 King Street, Seven Dials,
-before a committee of the House of Commons, the Right Honourable George
-Rose in the chair.
-
-Mr. Stevenson's shop was not more than a few yards from one of the
-beggars' chief rendezvous, and he had therefore been enabled to closely
-study their habits. The inn had lost its licence, as the landlord
-encouraged thieves; and he had made inquiries of petition-writers, the
-highest class of mendicants. He had gone frequently into the bar of the
-Fountain in King Street, another of their haunts, to watch their
-goings-on. The pretended sailors never carried anything on their backs, as
-they only begged or extorted money; but the other rogues, who made it
-their practice to ask for food and clothing, always carried a knapsack to
-put it in. They returned laden with shoes and clothes, which they would
-sell in Monmouth Street. They had been heard to say that they had made
-three or four shillings a day by begging shoes alone.[658] Their mode of
-obtaining charity was to go barefoot and scarify their heels so that the
-blood might show. They went out two or three together, or more, and
-invariably changed their routes each day. Mr. Stevenson had seen them pull
-out their money and share it. Victuals, he believed, they threw away; but
-everything else they sold. They would stop at the Fountain till the house
-closed, or till they got drunk, began to fight, and were turned out by the
-publican, who feared the losing his licence. They probably went to even
-lower places to finish their revel.
-
-"They teach other," he said, "different modes of extortion. They are of
-the worst character, and overwhelm you with cursing and abuse if you
-refuse them money. There is one special rascal, Gannee Manos, who is
-scarcely three months in the year out of gaol. He always goes barefoot,
-and scratches his ankles to make them bleed. He is the greatest collector
-of shoes and clothes, as he goes the most naked to excite compassion."
-Another man had been known in the streets for fifteen or twenty years. He
-generally limped or passed as a cripple; but Mr. Stevenson has seen him
-fencing and jumping about like a pugilist. He went without a hat, with
-bare arms, and a canvas bag on his back. He generally began by singing a
-song, and he carried primroses or something in his hand. He pretended to
-be scarcely able to move one foot before the other; but if a Bow Street
-officer or a beadle came in sight, he was off as quick as any one. There
-was another man, an Irishman who had had a good education, and had been in
-the medical line; he wrote a beautiful hand, and drew up petitions for
-beggars at sixpence or a shilling each.
-
-"These men come out by twenties and thirties from the bottom of Dyot
-Street, and then branch off five or six together. The one who has still
-some money left starts them with a pint or half a pint of gin. They have
-all their divisions, and they quarter the town into sections. Some of them
-collect three, four, or five children, paying sixpence a day for each, and
-then they go begging in gangs, setting the children crying to excite
-people's sympathies. The Irish sometimes have the impudence to bring these
-children to the board and claim relief, and swear the children are their
-own. In a short time they are found out; but till the discovery their
-landlords will swear their story is true. Sometimes, by giving their own
-country people something, the landlords help to detect them. But even in
-cases where the children are their own, they will not work when they have
-once got into the habit of begging. If they will not come into the
-workhouse, their relief is instantly stopped.
-
-"They spend their evenings drinking, after dining at an eating-house.
-Deserving people never beg: they are ashamed of it. They do not eat broken
-victuals. They have seldom any lodgings. There are houses where forty or
-fifty of them sleep. A porter stands at the door and takes the money. In
-the morning there is a general muster to see they have stolen nothing, and
-then the doors are unlocked. For threepence they have clean straw, for
-fourpence something more decent, and for sixpence a bed. These are all
-professional beggars; they beg every day, even Sundays. They will not
-work; they get more money by begging. Sometimes during hard frosts they
-pretend to beg for work; but their children are sent out early by their
-parents to certain prescribed stations to beg, sometimes with a broom. If
-they do not bring home more or less according to their size, they are
-beaten. A large family of children is a revenue to these people."
-
-When beggars did not get enough for their subsistence, Mr. Stevenson
-believed that they had a fund amongst themselves, as they so seldom
-applied for relief. The Irish were generally afraid to apply, for fear of
-being returned to their own country. Beggars had been heard to brag of
-getting six, seven, and eight shillings a day, or more; and if one got
-more than the others, he divided it with the rest. Mr. Stevenson concluded
-his evidence by saying that there were so many low Irish in St. Giles's,
-that out of £30,000 a year collected in that parish by poor-rate, £20,000
-went to this low and shifting population, that decreased in summer and
-increased in winter.
-
-From one or two specimens culled from the London newspapers in 1829 we do
-not augur much improvement in the character and habits of the St. Giles's
-beggars. On the 12th of July 1829 John Driscoll, an old professional
-mendicant, was brought up at the Marylebone Police-office, charged with
-begging, annoying respectable persons, and even following fashionably
-dressed ladies into shops. In his pockets were found a small sum of money,
-some ham sandwiches, and an invitation ticket signed "Car Durre,
-chairman." It requested the favour of Mr. Driscoll's company on Monday
-evening next, at seven o'clock, at the Robin Hood, Church Street, St.
-Giles's, for the purpose of taking supper with others in his line of
-calling or profession. Mr. Rawlinson said he supposed that an alderman in
-chains would grace the beggars' festive board, but he would at least
-prevent the prisoner forming one of the party on Monday, and sent him to
-the House of Correction for fourteen days.[659]
-
-The same day one of those men who chalk "I am starving" on the pavement
-was also sent to the treadmill for fourteen days. Francis Fisher, the
-prisoner in question, was one of a gang of forty pavement chalkers. In the
-evening, "after work," these men changed their dress, and with their
-ladies enjoyed themselves over a good supper, brandy and water, and
-cigars. In the winter time, when they excited more compassion, their
-average earnings were ten shillings a day. This would make £20 a day for
-the gang, and no less than £7300 a year.
-
-Monmouth Street is generally supposed to have derived its name from the
-Duke of Monmouth, Charles II.'s natural son, whose town house stood close
-by in Soho Square. It was perhaps named from Carey, Earl of Monmouth, who
-died in 1626, and his son, who died in 1661: they were both parishioners
-of St. Giles's.[660] It was early known as the great mart for old clothes,
-but was superseded in later times by Holy Well Street, which in its turn
-was displaced by the Minories. Lady Mary Wortley alludes to the lace coats
-hung up for sale in Monmouth Street like Irish patents. Even Prior, in his
-pleasant metaphysical poem of "Alma," says--
-
- "This looks, friend Dick, as Nature had
- But exercised the salesman's trade,
- As if she haply had sat down
- And cut out clothes for all the town,
- Then sent them out to Monmouth Street,
- To try what persons they would fit."
-
-Gay also alludes to this Jewish street in the following distich in his
-"Trivia"--
-
- "Thames Street gives cheeses, Covent Garden fruits,
- Moorfields old books, and Monmouth Street old suits."
-
-Most of the shops in Monmouth Street were occupied by Jew dealers in 1849,
-and horse-shoes were then to be seen nailed under the door-steps of the
-cellars to scare away witches.[661]
-
-Mr. Charles Dickens in his _Sketches by Boz_, published in 1836-7,
-describes Seven Dials and Monmouth Street as they then appeared. The maze
-of streets, the unwholesome atmosphere, the men in fustian spotted with
-brickdust or whitewash, and chronically leaning against posts, are all
-painted by this great artist with the accuracy of a Dutch painter. The
-writer boldly plunges into the region of "first effusions and last dying
-speeches, hallowed by the names of Catnach and of Pitts," and carries us
-at once into a fight between two half-drunk Irish termagants outside a
-gin-shop. He then takes us to the dirty straggling houses, the dark
-chandler's shop, the rag and bone stores, the broker's den, the
-bird-fancier's room as full as Noah's ark, and completes the picture with
-a background of dirty men, filthy women, squalid children, fluttering
-shuttlecocks, noisy battledores, reeking pipes, bad fruit, more than
-doubtful oysters, attenuated cats, depressed dogs, and anatomised fowls.
-Every house has, he says, at least a dozen tenants. The man in the shop is
-in the "baked jemmy" line, or deals in firewood and hearthstones. An Irish
-labourer and his family occupy the back kitchen, while a jobbing
-carpet-beater is in the front. In the front one pair there's another
-family, and in the back one pair a young woman who takes in tambour-work.
-In the back attic is a mysterious man who never buys anything but coffee,
-penny loaves, and ink, and is supposed to write poems for Mr. Warren.[662]
-
-The Monmouth Street inhabitants Mr. Dickens describes as a peaceable,
-thoughtful, and dirty race, who immure themselves in deep cellars or small
-back parlours, and seldom come forth till the dusk and cool of the
-evening, when, seated in chairs on the pavement, smoking their pipes, they
-watch the gambols of their children as they revel in the gutter, a happy
-troop of infantine scavengers.
-
-"A Monmouth Street laced coat" was a byword a century ago, but still we
-find Monmouth Street the same. Pilot coats, double-breasted check
-waistcoats, low broad-brimmed coachmen's hats, and skeleton suits, have
-usurped the place of the old attire; but Monmouth Street, said Charles
-Dickens, is still "the burial-place of the fashions, and we love to walk
-among these extensive groves of the illustrious dead, and indulge in the
-speculations to which they give rise."[663]
-
-In 1816 there were said to be 2348 Irish people resident in St. Giles's;
-but an Irish witness before a committee of the House declared there were
-6000 Irish, and 3000 children in the neighbourhood of George Street alone.
-In 1815 there were 14,164 Irish in the whole of London.[664] The Irish
-portion of the parish of St. Giles's was known by the name of the Holy
-Land in 1829.
-
-[Illustration: THE SEVEN DIALS.]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS THEATRE, 1821.]
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS.
-
-
-Lincoln's Inn, originally belonging to the Black Friars before they
-removed Thames-ward, derives its name from Henry de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln,
-to whom it was given by Edward I., and whose town house or inn stood on
-the same site in the reign of Edward I. Earl Henry died in 1312, the year
-in which Gaveston was killed, and his monument was one of the stateliest
-in the old church. His arms are still those of the inn and of its
-tributaries, Furnival's and Thavies inns. There is yet extant an old
-account of the earl's bailiff, relating to the sale of the fruit of his
-master's garden. The noble's table was supplied and the residue sold. The
-apples, pears, large nuts, and cherries, the beans, onions, garlic, and
-leeks, produced a profit of £9: 2: 3 (about £135 in modern money). The
-only flowers were roses. The bailiff, it appears, expended 8s. a year in
-purchasing small fry, frogs, and eels, to feed the pike in the pond or
-vivary.[665]
-
-Part of the Chancery Lane side of Lincoln's Inn was in 1217 and 1272 "the
-mansion house" of William de Haverhill, treasurer to King Henry III. He
-was attainted for treason, and his house and lands were confiscated to the
-king, who then gave his house to Ralph Neville, Chancellor of England and
-Bishop of Chichester, who built there "a fair house;" and the Bishops of
-Chichester inhabited it there till Henry VII.'s time, when they let it to
-law students, reserving lodgings for themselves, and it fell into the
-hands of Judge Sulyard and other feoffees. This family held it till
-Elizabeth's time, when Sir Edward Sulyard, of Essex, sold the estate to
-the Benchers,[666] who then began enlarging their frontier and building.
-
-The plain Tudor gateway with the two side towers soaked with black smoke,
-the oldest part of the existing structure, was built in 1518 by Sir Thomas
-Lovell, a member of this inn and treasurer of the household to Henry VII.,
-when great alterations took place in the inn. What thousands of wise men
-and rogues have passed under its murky shadow! None of the original
-building is left. The Black Friars' House fronted the Holborn end of the
-Bishop's Palace.[667] The chambers adjoining the Gate House are of a later
-date and it was at these that Mr. Cunningham thinks Ben Jonson
-worked.[668]
-
-The chapel, of debased Perpendicular Gothic, was built by Inigo Jones, and
-consecrated in 1623, Dr. Donne the poet preaching the consecration sermon.
-The stained glass was the work of a Mr. Hale of Fetter Lane. The twelve
-apostles, Moses, and the prophets still glow like immortal flowers,
-bright as when Donne, or Ussher, watched the light they shed. One of the
-windows bears the name of Bernard van Linge, the same man probably who
-executed the windows at Wadham College, Oxford.[669] Noy, the
-Attorney-General and creature of Charles I., a friend of Laud, and the
-proposer of the writ for ship-money, put up the window representing John
-the Baptist, rather an ominous saint, surely, in Charles's time. Noy died
-in 1634, before the storm which would certainly have carried his head off.
-He left his money to a prodigal son, who was afterwards killed in a
-duel,--"Left to be squandered, and I hope no better from him," says the
-dying man, bitterly. It was Noy who decided the curious case of the three
-graziers who left their money with their hostess. One of them afterwards
-returned and ran off with the money; upon which the other two sued the
-woman, denying their consent. Mr. Noy pleaded that the money was ready to
-be given up directly the three men came together and claimed it.[670]
-Rogers tells this story in his poem of "Italy," and gives it a romantic
-turn.
-
-Laud, always restless for novelties that could look like Rome, and yet not
-be Rome, referred to the Lincoln's Inn windows at his trial. He wondered
-at a Mr. Brown objecting to such things, considering he was not of
-Lincoln's Inn, "where Mr. Prynne's zeal had not yet beaten down the images
-of the apostles in the fair windows of that chapel, which windows were set
-up new long since the statute of Edward VI.; and it is well known," says
-that enemy of the Puritans, "that I was once resolved to have returned
-this upon Mr. Brown in the House of Commons, but changed my mind, lest
-thereby I might have set some furious spirit at work to destroy those
-harmless goodly windows, to the just dislike of that worthy society."[671]
-
-The crypt under the chapel rests on many pillars and strong-backed arches,
-and, like the cloisters in the Temple, was intended as a place for
-student-lawyers to walk in and exchange learning. Butler describes
-witnesses of the straw-bail species waiting here for customers,[672] just
-as half a century ago they used to haunt the doors of Chancery Lane
-gin-shops. On a June day in 1663 Pepys came to walk under the chapel by
-appointment, after pacing up and down and admiring the new garden then
-constructing.
-
-The great Sir Thomas More, Chancellor of England in Henry VIII.'s time,
-had chambers at Lincoln's Inn when he was living in Bucklersbury after his
-marriage. This was about 1506. He wrote his _Utopia_ in 1516. King Henry
-grew so fond of More's learned and witty conversation, that he used to
-constantly send for him to supper, and would walk in the garden at Chelsea
-with his arm round his neck. More was beheaded in 1535 for refusing to
-take the oath of succession and acknowledge the legality of the king's
-divorce from Catherine of Arragon. Erasmus, who knew More well, inscribed
-the "Nux" of Ovid to his son. More's skull is still preserved, it is said,
-in the vault of St. Dunstan's Church at Canterbury.[673] More's daughter,
-Margaret Roper, was buried with it in her arms.
-
-Dr. Donne, the divine and poet, whose mother was distantly related to Sir
-Thomas More and to Heywood the epigrammatist, was a student at Lincoln's
-Inn in his seventeenth year, but left it to squander his father's fortune.
-He was a friend of Bacon, with whom he lived for five years, and also of
-Ben Jonson, who corresponded with him. When young, Donne had written a
-thesis to prove that suicide is no sin. "That," he used to say in later
-years, "was written by Jack Donne, not by Dr. Donne."
-
-This same poet was for two years preacher at Lincoln's Inn; so was the
-charitable and amiable Tillotson in 1663. The latter, after preaching the
-doctrine of non-resistance before King Charles II., was nicknamed "Hobbes
-in the pulpit;" he and Dr. Burnet both tried in vain to force the same
-doctrine on Lord William Russell when he was preparing for death.
-Tillotson, who was made Archbishop of Canterbury in 1691 by King William,
-was a valued friend of Locke. Addison considered Tillotson's three folio
-volumes of sermons to be the standard of English, and meant to make them
-the ground-work of a dictionary which he had projected. Warburton, a
-sterner critic, denies that the sermons are oratorical like Jeremy
-Taylor's, or thoughtful like Barrow's, but yet confesses them to be clear,
-rational, equable,[674] and certainly not without a noble simplicity.
-
-Among the most eminent students of Lincoln's Inn we must remember Sir
-Matthew Hale. After a wild and vain youth, Hale suddenly commenced
-studying sixteen hours a day,[675] and became so careless of dress that he
-was once seized by a pressgang. The sight of a friend who fell down in a
-fit from excessive drinking led to this honest man's renouncing all
-revelry and becoming unchangeably religious. Noy directed him in his
-studies; he became a friend of Selden, and was one of the counsel for
-Strafford, Laud, and the king himself. Nevertheless, he obtained the
-esteem of Cromwell, who was tolerant of all shades of goodness. He died
-1675-6. When a nobleman once complained to Charles II. that Hale would not
-discuss with him the arguments in his cause then before him, Charles
-replied, "Ods fish, man! he would have treated me just the same."
-
-Lord Chancellor Egerton, afterwards Lord Ellesmere, was of Lincoln's Inn.
-His son became Earl of Bridgewater. He was a friend of Lord Bacon, and had
-a celebrated dispute with Chief Justice Coke as to whether "the Chancery
-can relieve by subpoena after a judgment at law in the same cause."
-Prudent, discreet, and honest, Ellesmere was esteemed by both Elizabeth
-and James, and died at York House in 1617. Bishop Hacket says of him that
-"He neither did, spoke, nor thought anything in his life but what deserved
-praise."[676] It is said that many persons used to go to the Chancery
-Court only to see and admire his venerable presence.
-
-Sir Henry Spelman was admitted of Lincoln's Inn. He was a friend of
-Dugdale, and one of our earliest students of Anglo-Saxon. He wrote much
-on civil law, sacrilege, and tithes. Aubrey tells us that he was thought a
-dunce at school, and did not seriously sit down to hard study till he was
-about forty. This eminent scholar died in 1641, and was interred with
-great solemnity in Westminster Abbey.
-
-Shaftesbury, the subtle and dangerous, and one of the restorers of the
-king he afterwards worked so hard to depose, was of Lincoln's Inn.
-
-Ashmole, the great herald, antiquary, and numismatist, originally a London
-attorney, was married in Lincoln's Inn Chapel, in 1668, to the daughter of
-his great colleague in topography and heraldry, Sir William Dugdale, the
-part compiler of the _Monasticon_.
-
-In the chapel was buried Alexander Brome, a Royalist attorney, a
-translator of Horace, and a great writer of sharp songs against "The
-Rump," who died in 1666. Here also--in loving companionship with him only
-because dead--rests that irritable Puritan lawyer, William Prynne. He
-twice lost an ear in the pillory, besides being branded on the cheek. He
-ultimately opposed Cromwell and aided the return of Charles, for which he
-was made Keeper of the Tower Records. His works amount to forty folio and
-quarto volumes. He left copies of them to the Lincoln's Inn library.
-Needham calls him "the greatest paper-worm that ever crept into a
-library." He died in his Lincoln's Inn chambers in 1669. Wood computes
-that Prynne wrote as much as would amount to a sheet for every day of his
-life. His epitaph had been erased when Wood wrote the _Athenæ Oxonienses_
-in 1691.
-
-In the same chapel lies Secretary Thurloe, the son of an Essex rector and
-the faithful servant of Cromwell. He was admitted of Lincoln's Inn in
-1647, and in 1654 was chosen one of the masters of the upper bench. He
-died suddenly in his chambers in Lincoln's Inn in 1668. Dr. Birch
-published several folio volumes of his _State Papers_. He seems to have
-been an honest, dull, plodding man. Thurloe's chambers were at No. 24 in
-the south angle of the great court leading out of Chancery Lane, formerly
-called the Gatehouse Court, but now Old Buildings--the rooms on the left
-hand of the ground-floor. Here Thurloe had chambers from 1645 to 1659.
-Cromwell must have often come here to discuss dissolutions of Parliament
-and Dutch treaties. State papers sufficient to fill sixty-seven folio
-volumes were discovered in a false ceiling in the garret by a clergyman
-who had borrowed the chambers of a friend during the long vacation. He
-disposed of them to Lord Chancellor Somers.[677] Cautious old Thurloe had
-perhaps sown these papers, hoping to reap the harvest under some new
-Cromwellian dynasty that never came.
-
-Rushworth the historian was a barrister of Lincoln's Inn. During the Civil
-Wars he was assistant clerk to the House of Commons. After the Restoration
-he became secretary to the Lord Keeper, but falling into distress, died in
-the King's Bench in 1690. His eight folio volumes of _Historical
-Collections_ are specially valuable.[678]
-
-Sir John Denham also studied in this pasturing-ground of English genius;
-and here, after squandering all his money in gaming, he wrote an essay
-upon the vice that brings its own punishment. In 1641, when his tragedy of
-"The Sophy" appeared, Waller said that Denham had broken out like the
-Irish rebellion, threescore thousand strong. In 1643 appeared his
-"Cooper's Hill" which the lampooners declared the author had bought of a
-vicar for forty pounds.[679] He became mad for a short time at the close
-of life, and was then ridiculed by Butler, so says Dr. Johnson. He died in
-1668, and was interred in Westminster Abbey. Denham and Waller smoothed
-the way for Dryden,[680] and founded the Pope school of highly polished
-artificial verse. Denham's noble apostrophe to the river Thames is all but
-perfect.
-
-George Wither, one of our fine old poets of a true school, rougher but
-more natural than Denham's, the son of a Hampshire farmer, entered at
-Lincoln's Inn. Sent to the Marshalsea for his just but indiscreet satires,
-he turned soldier, fought against the Royalists, and became one of
-Cromwell's dreaded major-generals. He was in Newgate for a long time after
-the Restoration, and died in 1667. When taken prisoner by Charles, Sir
-John Denham obtained his release on the humorous pretext that, while
-Wither lived, he (Denham) would not be the worst poet in England.[681]
-
-In No. 1 New Square, Arthur Murphy, the friend of Dr. Johnson, resided for
-twenty-three years. He became a member of the inn in 1757. In 1788 he sold
-his chambers, and retired from the bar. As a journalist he was ridiculed
-by Wilkes and Churchill. His plays, "The Grecian Daughter" and "Three
-Weeks after Marriage," were successful. He also translated Tacitus and
-Sallust. He died in 1805.[682]
-
-Judge Fortescue, a great English lawyer of the time of Henry VI., was a
-student of this inn. He wrote his great work, _De Laudibus Legum Angliæ_
-to educate Prince Edward when in banishment in Lorraine. This pious,
-loyal, and learned man, after being nominal Chancellor, returned to
-retirement in England, and acknowledged Edward IV.
-
-The Earl of Mansfield belonged to the same illustrious inn. For elegance
-of mind, for honesty and industry, and for eloquence, he stands
-unrivalled. The proceedings against Wilkes, and the destruction of his
-house in Bloomsbury by the fanatical mob of 1780, were the chief events of
-his useful life.
-
-Spencer Perceval was of Lincoln's Inn. A son of the Earl of Egmont, he
-became a student here in 1782. In Parliament he supported Pitt and the war
-against Napoleon. In 1801, under the Addington ministry, he became
-Attorney-General, and persecuted Peltier for a libel on Bonaparte during
-the peace of Amiens. On the death of the Duke of Portland he was raised to
-the head of the Treasury, where he continued till May 1812, when he was
-shot through the heart in the lobby of the House of Commons by Bellingham,
-a bankrupt merchant of Archangel, who considered himself aggrieved because
-ministers had not taken his part and claimed redress for his losses from
-the Russian Government. Perceval was a shrewd, even-tempered lawyer,
-fluent and industrious, who, had time been permitted him, might possibly
-have proved more completely than he did his incapacity for high
-ministerial command.
-
-George Canning became a student at Lincoln's Inn in 1781. His father was a
-bankrupt wine-merchant who died of a broken heart. His mother was a
-provincial actress. His relation, Sheridan, introduced him to Fox, Grey,
-and Burke, the latter of whom, it is said, induced him to make politics
-his profession. He made his maiden speech, attacking Fox and supporting
-Pitt, in 1794. Late in life he gradually began to support some liberal
-measures. In 1827 he became First Lord of the Treasury, and died a few
-months afterwards in the zenith of his power.
-
-Lord Lyndhurst was also one of the glories of this inn. The trial of Dr.
-Watson for treason, in 1817, first gained for this son of an American
-painter a reputation which, joined with his prudent conduct in the trial
-of Cashman the rioter led to his being appointed Solicitor-General in
-1818. From that he rose in rapid succession, to the posts of
-Attorney-General, Master of the Rolls, Lord Chancellor, and Lord
-Lyndhurst. Old, eccentric, "irrepressible" Sir Charles Wetherell was
-Copley's fellow-advocate in Watson's case, that ended in the prisoner's
-acquittal.[683] In 1827, when Abbott became Lord Tenterden, Copley
-accepted the Great Seal, displacing Lord Eldon, and joined Canning's
-cabinet, becoming Lord Lyndhurst. In 1830 he became Chief Baron of the
-Exchequer.
-
-Charles Pepys, Lord Cottenham, born 1781, was called to the bar by the
-Society of Lincoln's Inn in 1804. He was appointed King's Counsel in 1826,
-was made Solicitor-General in 1834, succeeded Sir John Leach as Master of
-the Rolls in the same year, and was elevated to the woolsack in 1836. This
-Chancellor, who was a very excellent lawyer, was descended from a branch
-of the family of Samuel Pepys, author of the celebrated _Diary_.
-
-Sir E. Sugden was a member of Lincoln's Inn. He was born in the year 1781.
-He was the son of a Westminster hairdresser who became rich by inventing a
-substitute for hair-powder. He was created Lord St. Leonards on the
-formation of a Conservative ministry in 1852, when he accepted the Great
-Seal.
-
-Lord Brougham also studied in Lincoln's Inn. He was born in 1778, and
-started the _Edinburgh Review_ in 1802. In 1820 he defended Queen
-Caroline; but it would take a volume to follow the career of this
-impetuous and versatile genius. His struggles for law-reform, for Catholic
-emancipation, for abolition of slavery, for the education of the people,
-and for Parliamentary reform, are matters of history. In his old age,
-though still vigorous, Lord Brougham grew tamer, and condemned the armed
-emancipation of slaves practised by the Northern States in the present
-American war. He died at his residence at Cannes in the South of France in
-1868.
-
-Cottenham and Campbell were students in Lincoln's Inn; so was that
-eccentric reformer Jeremy Bentham, who was called to the bar in 1722, and
-was the son of a Houndsditch attorney; and so was Penn, the founder of
-Pennsylvania.
-
-That "luminary of the Irish Church,"[684] Archbishop Ussher, was preacher
-at Lincoln's Inn in 1647, the society giving the good man handsome rooms
-ready furnished. He continued to preach there for eight years, till his
-eyesight began to fail. He died in 1655, and was buried, by Cromwell's
-permission, with great magnificence, in Erasmus's chapel in Westminster
-Abbey. His library of 10,000 volumes, bought of him by Cromwell's
-officers, was given by Charles II. to Dublin College. Ussher, when only
-eighteen, was the David who discomfited in public dispute the learned
-Jesuit Fitz-Simons. He saw Charles beheaded from the roof of a house on
-the site of the Admiralty.
-
-Dr. Langhorne, the joint translator with his brother of the _Lives of
-Plutarch_, was assistant preacher at Lincoln's Inn. An imitator of
-Sterne, and a writer in Griffiths's _Monthly Review_, he was praised by
-Smollett and abused by Churchill. Langhorne's amiable poem, _The Country
-Justice_, was praised by Scott. He died in 1779.
-
-That fiery controversialist Warburton was preacher at Lincoln's Inn in
-1746, and the same year preached and published a sermon on the Highland
-rebellion. He was the son of an attorney at Newark-upon-Trent. His _Divine
-Legation_ was an effort to show that the absence of allusions in the
-writings of Moses to a system of rewards and punishments was a proof of
-their divine origin. The book is full of perverse digressions. His edition
-of Shakspere is, perhaps, to use a fine expression of Burke, "one of the
-poorest maggots that ever crept from the great man's carcase." Pope left
-half his library to Warburton, who had suggested to him the conclusion of
-the _Dunciad_. Wilkes, Bolingbroke, Dr. Louth, and Churchill were all by
-turns attacked by this arrogant knight-errant. Warburton died in 1779.
-
-Reginald Heber, afterwards the excellent Bishop of Calcutta, was appointed
-preacher at Lincoln's Inn in 1822, the year before he sailed for India. In
-1826 this good man was found dead in his bath at Trichinopoly. The sudden
-death of this energetic missionary was a great loss to East Indian
-Christianity. In the "company of the preachers" we must not forget the
-excellent Dr. Van Mildert, afterwards Bishop of Durham, and Dr. Thomson
-the present Archbishop of York.
-
-In the old times the Lord Chancellor held his sittings in the great hall
-of Lincoln's Inn. Here, too, at the Christmas revels, the King of the
-Cockneys administered _his_ laws. Jack Straw, a sort of rebellious rival,
-was put down, with all his adherents, as a bad precedent for the Essexes
-and Norfolks of the inn, by wary Queen Elizabeth, who always kept a firm
-grip on her prerogative. In the same reign absurd sumptuary laws, vainly
-trying to fix the quicksilver of fashion, forbade the students to wear
-long hair, long beards, large ruffs, huge cloaks, or big spurs. The fine
-for wearing a beard of more than a fortnight's growth was three shillings
-and fourpence.[685] In her father's time beards had been prohibited under
-pain of double commons.
-
-In the old hall, replaced by the new Tudor building, stood one of
-Hogarth's most pretentious but worst pictures, "Paul preaching before
-Felix," an ill-drawn and ludicrous caricature of epic work. The society
-paid for it. It is now rolled up and hid away with as much contumely as
-Kent's absurdity at St. Clement's when Hogarth parodied it.
-
-The new hall of Lincoln's Inn was built by Mr. P. Hardwick, the architect
-of the St. Katherine Docks, and was opened by the Queen in person in 1845.
-It is a fine Tudor building of red brick, with stone dressings. The hall
-is 120 feet, the library 80 feet long. The contract was taken for £55,000,
-but its cost exceeded that sum. The library contains the unique fourth
-volume of Prynne's _Records_, which the society bought for £335 at the
-Stow sale in 1849, and all Sir Matthew Hale's bequests of books and MSS.:
-"a treasure," says that "excellent good man," as Evelyn calls him[686] in
-his will, "that is not fit for every man's view." The hall contains a
-fresco representing the "Lawgivers of the World," by Watts. The gardens
-were much curtailed by the erection of the hall, and their quietude
-destroyed. Ben Jonson talks of the walks under the elms.[687] Steele seems
-to have been fond of this garden when he felt meditative. In May 1709, he
-says much hurry and business having perplexed him into a mood too
-thoughtful for company, instead of the tavern "I went into Lincoln's Inn
-Walk, and having taken a round or two, I sat down, according to the
-allowed familiarity of these places, on a bench." In a more thoughtful
-month (November) of the same year he goes again for a solitary walk in the
-garden, "a favour that is indulged me by several of the benchers, who are
-very intimate friends, and grown old in the neighbourhood." It was this
-bright frosty night, when the whole body of air had been purified into
-"bright transparent æther," that Steele imagined his vision of "The
-Return of the Golden Age."
-
-Brave old Ben Jonson was the son of a Scotch gentleman in Henry VIII.'s
-service, who, impoverished by the persecutions of Queen Mary, took orders
-late in life. His mother married for the second time a small builder or
-master bricklayer. He went to Westminster school, where Camden, the great
-antiquary, was his master. A kind patron sent him to Cambridge.[688] He
-seems to have left college prematurely, and have come back to London to
-work with his father-in-law.[689]
-
-There is an old tradition that he worked at the garden-wall of Lincoln's
-Inn next to Chancery Lane, and that a knight or bencher (Sutton, or
-Camden), walking by, hearing him repeat a passage of Homer, entered into
-conversation with him, and finding him to have extraordinary wit, sent him
-back to college; or, as Fuller quaintly puts it, "some gentlemen pitying
-that his parts should be buried under the rubbish of so mean a calling,
-did by their bounty manumise him freely to follow his own ingenious
-inclinations."[690]
-
-Gifford sneers at the story, for the poet's own words to Drummond of
-Hawthornden were simply these:--"He could not endure the occupation of a
-bricklayer," and therefore joined Vere in Flanders, probably going with
-reinforcements to Ostend in 1591-2.[691] He there fought and slew an
-enemy, and stripped him in sight of both armies. On his return, he became
-an actor at a Shoreditch theatre. His enemies, the rival satirists,
-frequently sneer at the quondam profession of Ben Jonson, and describe him
-stamping on the stage as if he were treading mortar. For myself, I admire
-brave, truculent old Ben, and delight even in his most crabbed and
-pedantic verse, and therefore never pass Lincoln's Inn garden without
-thinking of Shakspere's honest but rugged friend--"a bear only in the
-coat."
-
-On June 27, 1752, there was a dreadful fire in New Square, which
-destroyed countless historical treasures, including Lord Somers's original
-letters and papers.
-
-At No. 2 and afterwards at No. 6 New Square, Lincoln's Inn, which is built
-on Little Lincoln's Inn Fields, and forms no part of the Inn of court,
-lived Sir Samuel Romilly. This "great and amiable man," as Tom Moore calls
-him, killed himself in a fit of melancholy produced by overwork joined to
-the loss of his wife, "a simple, gay, unlearned woman." Sir Samuel was a
-stern, reserved man, and she was the only person in the world to whom he
-could unbosom himself. When he lost her, he said, "the very vent of his
-heart was stopped up."[692]
-
-It was in Old Square, Lincoln's Inn, that Benjamin Disraeli, born in
-December 1805, much too erratic for Plowden and Coke, used to come to
-study conveyancing at the chambers of Mr. Bassevi. He is described as
-often arriving with Spenser's _Faerie Queen_ under his arm, stopping an
-hour or two to read, and then leaving. This led, as might be expected, not
-to the woolsack but to the authorship of _Coningsby_. His Premiership and
-his Patent of Peerage as Lord Beaconsfield, are due to other causes.
-
-Whetstone Park, now a small quiet passage, full of printing-offices and
-stables, between Great Turnstile and Gate Street, derived its name from a
-vestryman of the time of Charles I. It is now chiefly occupied by mews,
-but was once filled by infamous houses and low brandy-shops.
-
-In 1671, the Duke of Monmouth, the Duke of Grafton, and the Duke of St.
-Alban's, three of King Charles II.'s illegitimate sons, killed here a
-beadle in a drunken brawl. A street-ballad was written on the occasion,
-more full of spite against the corrupt court than of sympathy with the
-slain man. In poor doggerel the Catnach of 1671 describes the watch coming
-in, disturbed from sleep, to appease their graces--
-
- "Straight rose mortal jars,
- 'Twixt the night blackguard and (the) silver stars;
- Then fell the beadle by a ducal hand,
- For daring to pronounce the saucy 'Stand!'"
-
-Sadly enough, the silly fellow's death led to a dance at Whitehall being
-put off,--
-
- "Disappoints the queen, 'poor little chuck!'"[693]
-
-and all the brisk courtiers in their gay coats bought with the nation's
-subsidies.
-
-The last two lines are vigorous, sarcastic, and worthy of a humble
-imitator of Dryden. The poet sums up--
-
- "Yet shall Whitehall, the innocent and good,
- See these men dance, all daubed with lace and blood."
-
-In 1682 the misnamed "Park" grew so infamous, that a countryman, having
-been decoyed into one of the houses and robbed, went into Smithfield and
-collected an angry mob of about 500 apprentices, who marched on Whetstone
-Park, broke open the houses, and destroyed the furniture. The constables
-and watchmen, being outnumbered, sent for the king's guard, who dispersed
-them and took eleven of them. Nevertheless, the next night another mob
-stormed the place, again broke in the doors, smashed the windows, and cut
-the feather-beds to pieces.
-
-Lincoln's Inn Fields formed part of the ancient Fickett's Fields, a plot
-of ground of about ten acres, extending formerly from Bell Yard to
-Portugal Street and Carey Street. It seems to have been used in the Middle
-Ages for jousts and tournaments by the Templars and Knights of St. John of
-Jerusalem, to the priory of which last order it belonged till Henry VIII.
-dissolved the monasteries, when it was granted to Anthony Stringer. In an
-inquest of the time of James I. it is described as having two gates for
-horses and carriages at the east end--one gate leading into Chancery Lane,
-the other gate at the western end.[694]
-
-Queen Elizabeth, afraid that London was growing unwieldly, issued several
-proclamations against further building. James I., still more timid and
-conservative, and not thoroughly acquainted with his own capital, issued a
-like absurd ukase in 1612, by the desire of the benchers and students of
-Lincoln's Inn, forbidding the erection of new houses in these fields. But
-no royal edict can prevent a demand for creating a supply, and as the
-building still went on, a commission was appointed in 1618 to lay out the
-square in a regular plan. Bacon, then Lord Chancellor, and many noblemen,
-judges, and masters in Chancery, were on this commission, and Inigo Jones,
-the king's Surveyor-General, drew up the scheme. The report of this body,
-given by Rymer, sets out that in the last sixteen years there had been
-more building near and about the City of London than in ages before, and
-that as these fields were much surrounded by the dwellings and lodgings of
-noblemen and gentlemen of quality, "all small cottages and closes shall be
-paid for and removed, and the square shall be reduced," both for
-sweetness, uniformity, and comeliness, as an ornament to the City, and for
-the health and recreation of the inhabitants, into walks and partitions,
-as Mr. Inigo Jones should in his map devise.[695]
-
-There is a tradition that the area of the square, according to Inigo
-Jones's plan, was to have been made the exact dimensions of the base of
-the great pyramid of Geezeh. The tradition is probably true, for the area
-of the pyramid is 535,824 square feet, and that of Lincoln's Inn Fields
-550,000.[696] The height of the pyramid was 756 feet.
-
-The plan proved too costly, and the subscriptions began probably to fail;
-but in the course of time noblemen and others began to build for
-themselves, but without much regard to uniformity.
-
-The elevation of Inigo's plan for the Fields, painted in oil colours, is
-still preserved at Wilton House, near Salisbury. The view is taken from
-the south, and the principal feature in the elevation is Lindsey House in
-the centre of the west side, whose stone façade, still existing, stands
-boldly out from the brick houses which support it on either side. The
-internal accommodation of Lindsey House was never good.[697]
-
-These fields in Charles I.'s time became the haunt of wrestlers, bowlers,
-beggars, and idle boys; and here, in 1624, Lilly the astrologer, then
-servant to a mantua-maker in the Strand, spent his time in bowling with
-Wat the cobbler, Dick the blacksmith, and such idle apprentices. Hither,
-after the Restoration, came every sort of villain--the Rufflers, or maimed
-soldiers, who told lies of Edgehill and Naseby, and who surrounded the
-coaches of charitable lords; "Dommerers," or sham dumb men; "Mumpers," or
-sham broken gentlemen; "Whipjacks," or sham seamen with bound-up legs;
-"Abram-men," or sham idiots; "Fraters," or rogues with forged patents;
-"Anglers," wild rogues, "Clapper-dudgeons,"[698] and men with gambling
-wheels of fortune.
-
-In Queen Anne's reign Gay sketches the dangers of night in these fields;
-he warns his readers to avoid the lurking thief, by day a beggar, or
-else--
-
- "The crutch, which late compassion moved, shall wound
- Thy bleeding head, and fell thee to the ground.
-
-Nor trust the linkman," he adds, "along the lonely wall, or he'll put out
-his light and rob you, but--
-
- "Still keep the public streets where oily rays
- That from the crystal lamp o'erspread the ways."
-
-The south side of Lincoln's Inn Fields was built and named three years
-before the Restoration, by Sir William Cowper, James Cowper, and Robert
-Henley. In 1668 Portugal Row, as it was called, but not from Charles's
-queen,[699] was extremely fashionable. There were then living here such
-noble and noted persons as Lady Arden, William Perpoint, Esq., Sir Charles
-Waldegrave, Lady Fitzharding, Lady Diana Curzon, Serjeant Maynard, Lord
-Cardigan, Mrs. Anne Heron, Lady Mordant, Richard Adams, Esq., Lady Carr,
-Lady Wentworth, Mr. Attorney Montagu, Lady Coventry, Judge Welch, and Lady
-Davenant.[700]
-
-Mr. Serjeant Maynard was the brave old Presbyterian lawyer, then
-eighty-seven, who replied to the Prince of Orange, when he said that he
-must have outlived all the men of law of his time--"Sir, I should have
-outlived the law itself had not your highness come over."
-
-Lady Davenant was the widow of Sir William Davenant, the Oxford
-innkeeper's son, the poet and manager, who, aided by Whitlocke and
-Maynard, was allowed in Cromwell's time to perform operas at a theatre in
-Charterhouse Square. After the Restoration he had the theatre in Portugal
-Street. He died in 1668, insolvent. His poems were published by his widow,
-and dedicated to the Duke of York in 1673.
-
-Lord Cardigan was the father of the infamous Countess of Shrewsbury, who
-is said, disguised as a page, to have held her lover the Duke of
-Buckingham's horse while he killed her husband in a duel near Barn Elms.
-The Earl of Rochester lived in the house next the Duke's Theatre,[701]
-which stood behind the present College of Surgeons, as Davenant says in
-one of his epilogues--
-
- "The prospect of the sea cannot be shown,
- Therefore be pleased to think that you are all
- Behind the row which men call Portugal."
-
-In September 1586 Ballard, Babington, and other conspirators against the
-life of Queen Elizabeth were put to death in Lincoln's Inn Fields.
-Babington was a young man of good family, who had been a page to the Earl
-of Shrewsbury, and had plotted to rescue Mary and assassinate Elizabeth.
-His plot discovered, he had fled to St. John's Wood for concealment. Seven
-of these plotters were hanged on the first day, and seven on the second.
-The last seven were allowed to die, by special grace, before being
-disembowelled by the executioner.
-
-It was through these fields that, one spring night in 1676-7, Thomas
-Sadler, an impudent and well-known thief, rivalling the audacity of Blood,
-having with some confederates stolen the mace and purse of Lord Chancellor
-Finch from his house in Great Queen Street, bore them in mock procession
-on their way to their lodgings in Knightrider Street, Doctors' Commons.
-Sadler was hanged at Tyburn for this theft.
-
-Lord William Russell was son of William, Earl of Bedford, by Lady Ann
-Carr, daughter of Carr, Earl of Somerset. He was beheaded in the centre of
-Lincoln's Inn Fields, July 21, 1683, the last year but two of the reign of
-King Charles II., for being, as it was alleged, engaged in a plot to
-attack the guards and kill the king, on his return from Newmarket races,
-at the Rye House Farm, in a by-road near Hoddesdon in Hertfordshire, about
-seventeen miles north-east of London.
-
-The Whig party, in their eagerness to restrain the Papists and exclude the
-Duke of York from the throne, had gone too far, and their zeal for the
-Dissenters had produced a violent reaction in the High Church party.
-Charles and the Duke, taking advantage of the return tide, began to
-persecute the Dissenters, denounce Shaftesbury, assail the liberties of
-the City, and finally dissolved the Parliament. Soon after this, that
-subtle politician, Shaftesbury, finding it impossible to rouse the Duke of
-Monmouth, Essex, or Lord Russell, denounced them all as sold and deceived,
-and fled to Holland.
-
-After his flight, meetings of his creatures were held at the chambers of
-one West, an active talking man. Keeling, a vintner of decaying business,
-betrayed the plot, as also did Lord Howard, a man so infamous that Charles
-himself said "he would not hang the worst dog he had upon his evidence."
-Keeling and his brother swore that forty men were hired to intercept the
-king, but that a fire at Newmarket, which had hastened Charles's return,
-had defeated their plans. Goodenough, an ex-sheriff, had told them that
-the Duke of Monmouth and other great men were to raise 4000 soldiers and
-£20,000. The brothers also swore that Goodenough had told them that Lord
-Russell had joined in the design of killing the king and the duke.
-
-Lord Russell acted with great composure. He would not fly, refused to let
-his friends surrender themselves to share his fortunes, and told an
-acquaintance that "he was very sensible he should fall a sacrifice."[702]
-When he appeared at the council, the king himself said that "nobody
-suspected Lord Russell of any design against his own person, but that he
-had good evidence of his being in designs against his government." The
-prisoner denied all knowledge of the intended insurrection, or of the
-attempt to surprise the guards.
-
-The infamous Jeffries was one of the counsel for his prosecution. Lord
-Russell argued at his trial, that, allowing he had compassed the king's
-death, which he denied, he had been guilty only of a conspiracy to levy
-war, which was not treason except by a recent statute of Charles II., the
-prosecutions upon which were limited to a certain time, which had
-elapsed,[703] so that both law and justice were in this case violated.
-
-The truth seems to be that Lord Russell was a true patriot, of a slow and
-sober judgment, a taciturn, good man, of not the quickest intelligence,
-who had allowed himself to listen to dangerous and random talk for the
-sake of political purposes. He wished to debar the duke from the throne,
-but he had never dreamt of accomplishing his purpose by murder. It has
-since been discovered that Sidney, doing evil that good might come, had
-accepted secret-service money from France, and that Russell himself had
-interviews with French agents. Lord John Russell explains away this charge
-very well. Charles was degraded enough to take money from France. The
-patriots, told that Louis XIV. wished to avoid a war, intrigued with the
-French king to maintain peace, fearing that if Charles once raised an army
-under any pretence, he would first employ it to obtain absolute power at
-home, which it is most probable he would have done.[704] On the whole,
-these disingenuous interviews must be lamented; they could not and they
-did not lead to good. It has been justly regretted also that Lord Russell
-on his trial did not boldly denounce the tyranny of the court, and show
-the necessity that had existed for active opposition.
-
-After sentence the condemned man wrote petitions to the king and duke,
-which were unjustly sneered at as abject. They really, however, contain no
-promise but that of living beyond sea and meddling no more in English
-affairs. Of one of them at least, Burnet says it was written at the
-earnest solicitation of Lady Rachel; and Lord Russell himself said, with
-regret, "This will be printed and sold about the streets as my submission
-when I am led out to be hanged." He lamented to Burnet that his wife beat
-every bush and ran about so for his preservation; but he acquiesced in
-what she did when he thought it would be afterwards a mitigation of her
-sorrow.
-
-When his brave and excellent wife, the daughter of Charles I.'s loyal
-servant, Southampton, who was the son of Shakspere's friend, begged for
-her husband's life, the king replied, "How can I grant that man six weeks,
-who would not have granted me six hours?"[705]
-
-There is no scene in history that "goes more directly to the heart," says
-Fox, "than the story of the last days of this excellent man." The night
-before his death it rained hard, and he said, "Such a rain to-morrow will
-spoil a great show," which was a dull thing on a rainy day. He thought a
-violent death only the pain of a minute, not equal to that of drawing a
-tooth; and he was still of opinion _that the king was limited by law, and
-that when he broke through those limits, his subjects might defend
-themselves and restrain him_.[706] He then received the sacrament from
-Tillotson with much devotion, and parted from his wife with a composed
-silence; as soon as she was gone he exclaimed, "The bitterness of death is
-past," saying what a blessing she had been to him, and what a misery it
-had been if she had tried to induce him to turn an informer. He slept
-soundly that night and rose in a few hours, but would take no care in
-dressing. He prayed six or seven times by himself, and drank a little tea
-and some sherry. He then wound up his watch, and said, "Now I have done
-with time and shall go into eternity." When told that he should give the
-executioner ten guineas, he said, with a smile, that it was a pretty thing
-to give a fee to have his head cut off. When the sheriffs came at ten
-o'clock, Lord Russell embraced Lord Cavendish, who had offered to change
-clothes with him and stay in his place in prison, or to attack the coach
-with a troop of horse and carry off his friend; but the noble man would
-not listen to either proposal.
-
-In the street some in the crowd wept, while others insulted him. He said,
-"I hope I shall quickly see a better assembly." He then sang, half to
-himself, the beginning of the 149th Psalm. As the coach turned into Little
-Queen Street, he said, looking at his own house, "I have often turned to
-the one hand with great comfort, but now I turn to this with greater," and
-then a tear or two fell from his eyes. As they entered Lincoln's Inn
-Fields he said, "This has been to me a place of sinning, and God now makes
-it the place of my punishment." When he came to the scaffold, he walked
-about it four or five times: then he prayed by himself, and also with
-Tillotson; then he partly undressed himself, laid his head down without
-any change of countenance, and it was cut off in two strokes. Lord
-William's walking-stick and a cotemporary account of his death are kept at
-Woburn Abbey.
-
-Lady Rachel Russell, the excellent wife of this patriot, had been his
-secretary during the trial. She spent her after-life, not in unwisely
-lamenting the inevitable past, but in doing good works, and in educating
-her children. Writing two months after the execution to Dr. Fritzwilliams,
-this noble woman says:[707] "_Secretly_, my heart mourns and cannot be
-comforted, because I have not the dear companion and sharer of all my joys
-and sorrows. I want him to talk with, to walk with, to eat and sleep with.
-All these things are irksome to me now; all company and meals I could
-avoid, if it might be.... When I see my children before me, I remember
-the pleasure he took in them: this makes my heart shrink."
-
-In 1692 Lady Russell appears to have regained her composure. But she had
-other trials in store: for in 1711 she lost her only son, the Duke of
-Bedford, in the flower of his age, and six months afterwards one of her
-daughters died in childbed.
-
-It is said that, in his hour of need, James II. was mean enough to say to
-the Duke of Bedford, "My lord, you are an honest man, have great credit,
-and can do me signal service." "Ah, sir," replied the duke, with a grave
-severity, "I am old and feeble now, but I once had a _son_."
-
-The Sacheverell riots culminated in these now quiet Fields. In 1710 Daniel
-Dommaree, a queen's waterman, Francis Willis, a footman, and George
-Purchase, were tried at the Old Bailey for heading a riot during the
-Sacheverell trial and pulling down meeting-houses. This Sacheverell was an
-ignorant, impudent incendiary, the adopted son of a Marlborough
-apothecary, and was impeached by the House of Commons for preaching at St.
-Andrew's, Holborn, sermons denouncing the Revolution of 1688. His sermons
-were ordered to be burnt, and he was sentenced to be suspended for three
-years. Atterbury helped the mischievous firebrand in his ineffectual
-defence, and Swift wrote a most scurrilous letter to Bishop Fleetwood, who
-had lamented the excesses of the mob. Sacheverell had been at Oxford with
-Addison, who inscribed a poem to him. During the trial, a mob marched from
-the Temple, whither they had escorted Sacheverell, pulled down Dr.
-Burgess's meeting-house, and threw the pulpit, sconces, and gallery pews
-into a fire in Lincoln's Inn Fields, some waving curtains on poles,
-shouting, "High Church standard!" "Huzza! High Church and Sacheverell!"
-"We will have them all down!" They also burnt other meeting-houses in
-Leather Lane, Drury Lane, and Fetter Lane, and made bonfires of the
-woodwork in the streets. They were eventually dispersed by the
-horse-grenadiers and horse-guards and foot. Dommaree was sentenced to
-death, but pardoned; Willis was acquitted; and Purchase was pardoned.[708]
-
-Wooden posts and rails stood round the Fields till 1735, when an Act was
-passed to enable the inhabitants to make improvements, to put an iron gate
-at each corner, and to erect dwarf walls and iron palisades.[709] Before
-this time grooms used to break in horses on this spot. One day while
-looking at these centaurs, Sir Joseph Jekyll, who had brought a very
-obnoxious bill into Parliament in 1736 in order to raise the price of gin,
-was mobbed, thrown down, and dangerously trampled on. His initials, "J.
-J.," figure under a gibbet chalked on a wall in one of Hogarth's
-prints.[710] Macaulay's _History_ contains a very highly coloured picture
-of these Fields. A comparison of the passage with the facts from which it
-is drawn would be a useful lesson to all historical students who love
-truth in its severity.[711]
-
-Newcastle House stands at the north-west angle of the Fields, at the
-south-eastern corner of Great Queen Street. It derived its name from John
-Holles, Duke of Newcastle, a relative of the noble families of Vere,
-Cavendish, and Holles. This duke bought the house before 1708, but died in
-1711 without issue, and was succeeded in the house by his nephew, the
-leader of the Pelham administration under George II.
-
-The house had been bought by Lord Powis about 1686. It was built for him
-by Captain William Winde, a scholar of Webbe's, the pupil and executor of
-Inigo Jones.[712] William Herbert, first Marquis of Powis, was outlawed
-and fled to St. Germain's to James II., who made him Duke of Powis.
-Government had thought of buying the house when it was inhabited by the
-Lord Keeper, Sir Nathan Wright,[713] and to have settled it officially on
-the Great Seal. It was once the residence of Sir John Somers, the Lord
-Chancellor.
-
-In 1739 Lady Henrietta Herbert, widow of Lord William Herbert, second son
-of the Marquis of Powis, and daughter of James, first Earl of Waldegrave,
-was married to Mr. John Beard,[714] who seems to have been a fine singer
-and a most charitable, estimable man. Lady Henrietta's grandmother was the
-daughter of James II. by the sister of the great Duke of Marlborough. Dr.
-Burner speaks of Beard's great knowledge of music and of his intelligence
-as an actor.[715] In an epitaph on him, still extant, the writer says--
-
- "Whence had that voice such magic to control?
- 'Twas but the echo of a well-tuned soul;
- Through life his morals and his music ran
- In symphony, and spoke the virtuous man.
- ... Go, gentle harmonist! our hopes approve,
- To meet and hear thy sacred songs above;
- When taught by thee, the stage of life well trod,
- We rise to raptures round the throne of God."
-
-Beard, excellent both in oratorios and serious and comic operas, became
-part proprietor of Covent Garden Theatre, and died in 1791.
-
-The Duke of Newcastle's crowded levées were his pleasure and his triumph.
-He generally made people of business wait two or three hours in the
-ante-chamber while he trifled with insignificant favourites in his closet.
-When at last he entered the levée room, he accosted, hugged, embraced, and
-promised everything to everybody with an assumed cordiality and a
-degrading familiarity.[716]
-
-"Long" Sir Thomas Robertson was a great intruder on the duke's time; if
-told that he was out, he would come in to look at the clock or play with
-the monkey, in hopes of the great man relenting. The servants, at last
-tired out with Sir Thomas, concocted a formula of repulses, and the next
-time he came the porter, without waiting for his question, began--"Sir,
-his grace is gone out, the fire has gone out, the clock stands, and the
-monkey is dead."[717]
-
-Sir Timothy Waldo, on his way from the duke's dinner-table to his own
-carriage, once gave the cook, who was waiting in the hall, a crown. The
-rogue returned it, saying he did not take silver. "Oh, don't you, indeed?"
-said Sir Timothy, coolly replacing it in his pocket; "then I don't give
-gold." Jonas Hanway, the great opponent of tea-drinking, published eight
-letters to the duke on this subject,[718] and the custom began from that
-time to decline. But Hogarth had already condemned the exaction.
-
-The duke was very profuse in his promises, and a good story is told of the
-result of his insincerity. At a Cornish election, the duke had obtained
-the turning vote for his candidate by his usual assurances. The elector,
-wishing to secure something definite, had asked for a supervisorship of
-excise for his son-in-law on the present holder's death. "The moment he
-dies," said the premier, "set out post-haste for London; drive directly to
-my house in the Fields: night or day, sleeping or waking, dead or alive,
-thunder at the door; the porter will show you upstairs directly; and the
-place is yours." A few months after the old supervisor died, and up to
-London rushed the Cornish elector.
-
-Now that very night the duke had been expecting news of the death of the
-King of Spain, and had left orders before he went to bed to have the
-courier sent up directly he arrived. The Cornish man, mistaken for this
-important messenger, was instantly, to his great delight, shown up to the
-duke's bedroom. "Is he dead?--is he dead?" cried the duke. "Yes, my lord,
-yes," answered the aspirant, promptly. "When did he die?" "The day before
-yesterday, at half-past one o'clock, after three weeks in his bed, and
-taking a power of doctor's stuff; and I hope your grace will be as good as
-your word, and let my son-in-law succeed him." "_Succeed him!_" shouted
-the duke; "is the man drunk or mad? Where are your despatches?" he
-exclaimed, tearing back the bed-curtains; and there, to his vexation,
-stood the blundering elector, hat in hand, his stupid red face beaming
-with smiles as he kept bowing like a joss. The duke sank back in a
-violent fit of laughter, which, like the electric fluid, was in a moment
-communicated to his attendants.[719] It is not stated whether the Cornish
-man obtained his petition.
-
-There is an agreement in all the stories of the duke, who was thirty years
-Secretary of State, and nearly ten years First Lord of the Treasury,
-"whether told," says Macaulay, "by people who were perpetually seeing him
-in Parliament and attending his levées in Lincoln's Inn Fields, or by Grub
-Street writers, who had never more than a glimpse of his star through the
-windows of his gilded coach."[720] Smollett and Walpole mixed in different
-society, yet they both sketch the duke with the same colours. Smollett's
-Newcastle runs out of his dressing-room with his face covered with
-soapsuds to embrace the Moorish envoy. Walpole's Newcastle pushes his way
-into the Duke of Grafton's sick-room to kiss the old nobleman's plaisters.
-"He was a living, moving, talking caricature. His gait was a shuffling
-trot, his utterance a rapid stutter. He was always in a hurry--he was
-never in time; he abounded in fulsome caresses and in hysterical tears.
-His oratory resembled that of Justice Shallow--it was nonsense
-effervescent with animal spirits and impertinence. 'Oh yes, yes, to be
-sure--Annapolis must be defended; troops must be sent to Annapolis. Pray,
-where is Annapolis?'--'Cape Breton an island! Wonderful! Show it me on the
-map. So it is, sure enough. My dear sir, you always bring us good news. I
-must go and tell the king that Cape Breton is an island.' His success is a
-proof of what may be done by a man who devotes his whole heart and soul to
-one object. His love of power was so intense a passion, that it almost
-supplied the place of talent. He was jealous even of his own brother.
-Under the guise of levity, he was false beyond all example." "All the able
-men of his time ridiculed him as a dunce, a driveller, a child, who never
-knew his own mind for an hour together, and yet he overreached them all
-round." If the country had remained at peace, this man might have been at
-the head of affairs till a new king came with fresh favourites and a
-strong will; "but the inauspicious commencement of the Seven Years' War
-brought on a crisis to which Newcastle was altogether unequal. After a
-calm of fifteen years, the spirit of the nation was again stirred to its
-inmost depths."
-
-This is strongly etched, but Macaulay was too fond of caricature for a
-real lover of truth. Walpole, recounting this greedy imbecile's disgrace,
-reviews his career much more forcibly, for in a few words he shows us how
-great had been the power which this chatterer's fixed purpose had
-attained. The memoir-writer describes the duke as the man "who had begun
-the world by heading mobs against the ministers of Queen Anne; who had
-braved the heir-apparent, afterwards George I., and forced himself upon
-him as godfather to his son; who had recovered that prince's favour, and
-preserved power under him, at the expense of every minister whom that
-prince preferred; who had been a rival of another Prince of Wales for the
-chancellorship of Cambridge; and who was now buffeted from a fourth court
-by a very suitable competitor (Lord Bute), and reduced in his tottery old
-age to have recourse to those mobs and that popularity which had raised
-him fifty years before."
-
-Lord Bute was mean enough to compliment the old duke on his retirement.
-The duke replied, with a spirit that showed the vitality of his ambition:
-"Yes, yes, my lord, I am an old man, but yesterday was my birthday, and I
-recollected that Cardinal Fleury _began_ to be prime-minister of France
-just at my age."[721]
-
-Newcastle House, now occupied by the Society for Promoting Christian
-Knowledge, was, for forty years or more, inhabited by Sir Alan Chambre,
-one of King George III.'s judges. The society, then lodged in Bartlett's
-Buildings, in Holborn, derived its first name from that place, and at Sir
-Alan's death they purchased the house and site.
-
-About the centre of the west side of the square, in Sir Alan's time, lived
-the Earl and Countess of Portsmouth. The earl was half-witted, but was
-always well-conducted and quite producible in society under the guidance
-of his countess, a daughter of Lord Grantley.
-
-Near Surgeons' Hall, at the same epoch, lived the first Lord Wynford, Lord
-Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, better known as Serjeant Best. A
-quarrel between this irritable lawyer and Serjeant Wilde, afterwards Lord
-Chancellor Truro, one of the most stalwart gladiators who ever won a name
-and title in the legal arena, gave rise to an epigram, the point of which
-was--"That Best was wild, and Wilde was best."
-
-In 1774, when Lord Clive had rewarded Wedderburn, his defender, with lacs
-of rupees and a villa at Mitcham, the lawyer had an elegant house in
-Lincoln's Inn Fields, not far from the Duke of Newcastle's,--"a quarter,"
-says Lord Campbell, "which I recollect still the envied resort of legal
-magnates."
-
-Wedderburn, afterwards better known as Lord Chancellor Loughborough, had a
-special hatred for Franklin, and loaded him with abuse before a committee
-of the Privy Council, for having sent to America letters from the
-Lieutenant-Governor of Massachusetts, urging the Government to employ
-military force to suppress the discontents in New England.[722] The effect
-of Wedderburn's brilliant oratory in Parliament was ruined, says Lord
-Campbell, by "his character for insincerity."[723] When George III. heard
-of his death, he is reported to have said, "He has not left a greater
-knave behind him in my dominions;" upon which Lord Thurlow savagely said,
-with his usual oath, "I perceive that his majesty is quite sane at
-present." Wedderburn was a friend of David Hume; his humanity was
-eulogised by Dr. Parr, but he was satirised by Churchill in the _Rosciad_.
-
-Montague, Earl of Sandwich, the great patron of Pepys, lived in Lincoln's
-Inn Fields, paying £250 a year rent.[724] Pepys calls it "a fine house,
-but deadly dear."[725] He visits him, February 10, 1663-4, and finds my
-lord very high and strange and stately, although Pepys had been bound for
-£1000 with him, and the shrewd cit naturally enough did not like my lord
-being angry with him and in debt to him at the same time. The earl was a
-distant cousin of Pepys, and on his marriage received him and his wife
-into his house, and took Pepys with him when he went to bring home Charles
-II., when he was elected one of the Council of State and General at Sea.
-He brought the queen-mother to England and took her back again. He also
-brought the ill-fated queen from Portugal, and became a privy-councillor,
-and was sent as ambassador to Spain. He seems to have been not untainted
-with the vices of the age. He was in the great battle where Van Tromp was
-killed, and in 1668 he took forty-five sail from the Dutch at sea, and
-that is the best thing known of him. He died in 1672, and was buried in
-great state.
-
-Inigo Jones built only the west side of the square. No. 55 was the
-residence of Robert Bertie, Earl of Lindsey, a general of King Charles. It
-is described in 1708 as a handsome building of the Ionic order, with a
-beautiful and strong Court Gate, formed of six spacious brick piers, with
-curious ironwork between them, and on the piers large and beautiful
-vases.[726] The open balustrade at the top bore six urns.
-
-The Earl of Lindsey was shot at Edgehill in 1642, when a reckless and
-intemperate charge of Rupert had led to the total defeat of the
-unsupported foot. His son, Lord Willoughby, was taken in endeavouring to
-rescue his father. Clarendon describes the earl as a lavish, generous, yet
-punctilious man, of great honour and experience in foreign war. He was
-surrounded by Lincolnshire gentlemen, who served in his regiment out of
-personal regard for him. He was jealous of Prince Rupert's interference,
-and had made up his mind to die. As he lay bleeding to death he reproved
-the officers of the Earl of Essex, many of them his old friends, for their
-ingratitude and "foul rebellion."[727]
-
-The fourth Earl of Lindsey was created Duke of Ancaster, and the house
-henceforward bore that now forgotten name. It was subsequently sold to the
-proud Duke of Somerset, the same who married the widow of the Mr. Thynne
-whom Count Königsmarck murdered.
-
-In the early part of George III.'s reign Lindsey House became a sort of
-lodging-house for foreign members of the Moravian persuasion. The
-staircase, about 1772, was painted with scenes from the history of the
-Herrnhuthers. The most conspicuous figures were those of a negro
-catechumen in a white shirt, and a missionary who went over to Algiers to
-preach to the galley-slaves, and died in Africa of the plague. There was
-also a painting of a Moravian clergyman being saved from a desert rock on
-which he had been cast.[728]
-
-Repeated mention of the Berties is made in Horace Walpole's pleasant
-_Letters_. Lord Robert Bertie was third son of Robert the first Duke of
-Ancaster and Kesteven. He was a general in the army, a colonel in the
-Guards, and a lord of the bedchamber. He married Lady Raymond in 1762, and
-died in 1782.
-
-The proud Duke of Somerset, in 1748, left to his eldest daughter, Lady
-Frances, married to the Marquis of Granby, three thousand a year, and the
-fine house built by Inigo Jones in Lincoln's Inn Fields, which he had
-bought of the Duke of Ancaster for the Duchess, hoping that his daughter
-would let her mother live with her.[729] In July 1779 the Duke of
-Ancaster, dying of drinking and rioting at two-and-twenty, recalls much
-scandal to Walpole's mind. He had been in love with Lady Honoria,
-Walpole's niece; but Horace does not regret the match dropping through,
-for he says the duke was of a turbulent nature, and, though of a fine
-figure, not noble in manners. Lady Priscilla Elizabeth Bertie, eldest
-sister of the duke, married the grandson of Peter Burrell, a merchant, who
-became husband of the Lady Great Chamberlain of England, and inherited a
-barony and half the Ancaster estate.[730] "The three last duchesses,"
-goes on the cruel gossip, "were never sober." "The present
-duchess-dowager," he adds, "was natural daughter of Panton, a disreputable
-horse-jockey of Newmarket. The other duchess was some lady's woman, or
-young lady's governess." Mr. Burrell's daughters married Lord Percy and
-the Duke of Hamilton.
-
-In 1791 Walpole writes to Miss Berry to describe the marriage of Lord
-Cholmondeley with Lady Georgiana Charlotte Bertie: "The men were in frocks
-and white waistcoats. The endowing purse, I believe, has been left off
-ever since broad pieces were called in and melted down. We were but
-eighteen persons in all.... The poor duchess-mother wept excessively; she
-is now left quite alone,--her two daughters married, and her other
-children dead. She herself, I fear, is in a very dangerous way. She goes
-directly to Spa, where the new married pair are to meet her. We all
-separated in an hour and a half."[731]
-
-Alfred Tennyson in early life had fourth-floor chambers at No. 55, and
-there probably his friend Hallam, whose early death he laments in his _In
-Memoriam_ spent many an hour with him. There, in the airy regions of
-Attica, in a low-roofed room, the single window of which is darkened by a
-huge stone balustrade--a gloomy relic of past grandeur--the young poet may
-have recited the majestic lines of his "King Arthur," or the exquisite
-lament of "Mariana," and there he may have immortalised the "plump
-head-waiter of the Cock," in Fleet Street. Mr. John Foster, the author of
-many sound and delightful historical biographies, had also chambers in
-this house.
-
-No. 68, on the west side, stands on the site of the approach to the
-stables of old Newcastle House. Here Judge Le Blanc lived, and at his
-death the house was occupied by Mr. Thomas Le Blanc, Master of Trinity
-Hall, Cambridge.
-
-At No. 33, on the same side as the Insolvent Debtors' Court, dwelt Judge
-Park, a man much beloved by his friends; in his early days, as a young
-and poor Scotch barrister, he had lived in Carey Street till his house
-there was burnt down. He used to say that his great ambition in youth had
-been to one day live at No. 33 in the Fields, at that time occupied by
-Chief Justice Willis; but in later days, as a judge, leaving the former
-goal of his ambition, he migrated to Bedford Square, where he died.
-
-Nos. 40 and 42, on the south side, form the Museum of the College of
-Surgeons, incorporated in 1800. The Grecian front is a most clever
-contrivance by Sir John Soane. The building contains the incomparable
-anatomical collection of the eminent John Hunter, bought by the Government
-for £15,000 and given to the College of Surgeons on condition of its being
-opened to the public. John Hunter died in 1793; and the first courses of
-lectures in the new building were delivered by Sir Everard Home and Sir
-William Blizard, in 1810. The Museum was built by Barry in 1835, and cost
-about £40,000.[732] It is divided into two rooms, the normal and abnormal.
-The total number of specimens is upwards of 23,000. The collection is
-unequalled in many respects; every article is authentic and in perfect
-preservation. The largest human skeleton is that of Charles O'Brien, the
-Irish giant, who died in Cockspur Street, Charing Cross, in 1783, aged
-twenty-two. It measures eight feet four inches. By its side, in ghastly
-contrast, is the bony sketch of Caroline Crachami, a Sicilian dwarf who
-died in 1824, aged ten years. There is also a cast of the hand of Patrick
-Cotter, another Irish giant, who measured eight feet seven and a half
-inches. Nor must we overlook the vast framework of Chunee, the elephant
-that went mad with toothache at Exeter Change, and was shot by a company
-of riflemen in 1826. The sawn base of the inflamed tusk shows a spicula of
-ivory pressing into the nervous pulp. Toothache is always terrible, but
-only imagine a square foot of it!
-
-Very curious too, are the jaw of the extinct sabre-toothed tiger, and the
-skeleton of a gigantic extinct Irish deer found under a bed of shell-marl
-in a peat bog near Limerick. The antlers are seven feet long, eight feet
-across, and weigh seventy-six pounds. The height of the animal (measured
-from his skull) was seven feet six inches. Amongst other horrors, there is
-a cast of the fleshy band that united the Siamese twins, and one of a
-woman with a long curved horn growing from her forehead. There are also
-many skulls of soldiers perforated and torn with bullets, the lead still
-adhering to some of the bony plates of the crania. But the wonder of
-wonders is the iron pivot of a trysail-mast that was driven clean through
-the chest of a Scarborough lad. The boy recovered in five months, and not
-long after went to work again. It is a tough race that rules the sea.
-
-There are also fragments of the skeleton of a rhinoceros discovered in a
-limestone cavern at Oreston during the formation of the Plymouth
-Breakwater. In a recess from the gallery stands the embalmed body of the
-wife of Martin Van Butchell, an impudent Dutch quack doctor. It is
-coarsely preserved, and is very loathsome to look at. It was prepared in
-1775 by Dr. W. Hunter and Mr. Cruikshank, the vascular system being
-injected with oil of turpentine and camphorated spirits of wine, and
-powdered nitre and camphor being introduced into the cavities. On the case
-containing the body is an advertisement cut from an old newspaper, stating
-the conditions which Dr. Van Butchell required of those who came to see
-the body of his wife. At the feet of Mrs. Van Butchell is the shrunken
-mummy of her pet parrot.
-
-The pictures include the portrait of John Hunter by Reynolds, which Sharp
-engraved: it has much faded. There is also a posthumous bust of Hunter by
-Flaxman, and one of Clive by Chantrey. Any Fellow of the College can
-introduce a visitor, either personally or by written order, the first four
-days of the week. In September the Museum is closed. It would be much more
-convenient for students if some small sum were charged for admission. It
-is now visited but by two or three people a day, when it should be
-inspected by hundreds.
-
-That great surgeon, John Hunter, was the son of a small farmer in
-Lanarkshire. He was born in 1728, and died in 1793. In early life he went
-abroad as an army-surgeon to study gunshot-wounds; and in 1786 he was
-appointed deputy surgeon-general to the army. In 1772 he made discoveries
-as to the property of the gastric juice. He was the first to use cutting
-as a cure for hydrophobia, and to distinguish the various species of
-cancer. He kept at his house at Brompton a variety of wild animals for the
-purposes of comparative anatomy, was often in danger from their violence,
-and as often saved by his own intrepidity. Sir Joseph Banks divided his
-collection between Hunter and the British Museum. Unequalled in the
-dissecting-room, Hunter was a bad lecturer. He was an irritable man, and
-died suddenly during a disputation at St. George's Hospital which vexed
-him. His death is said to have been hastened by fear of death from
-hydrophobia, he having cut his hand while dissecting a man who had died of
-that mysterious disease. Hunter used to call an operation "opprobrium
-medici."
-
-In Portugal Row, as the southern side of the square used to be called,
-lived Sir Richard Fanshawe, the translator of the _Lusiad_ of Camoens, and
-of Guarini's _Pastor Fido_. Sir Richard was our ambassador in Spain; but
-Charles, wishing to get rid of Lord Sandwich from the navy, recalled
-Fanshawe, on the plea that he had ventured to sign a treaty without
-authority. He died in 1666, on the intended day of his return, of a
-violent fever, probably caused by vexation at his unmerited disgrace. Sir
-Richard appears to have been a religious, faithful man and a good scholar,
-but born in unhappy times and to an ill fate. Charles I. had very justly a
-great respect for him. His wife was a brave, determined woman, full of
-affection, good sense, and equally full of hatred and contempt for Lord
-Sandwich, Pepys's friend, who had supplanted her husband in the embassy.
-
-On one occasion, on their way to Malaga, the Dutch trading vessel in which
-she and her husband were was threatened by a Turkish galley which bore
-down on them in full sail. The captain, who had rendered his sixty guns
-useless by lumbering them up with cargo, resolved to fight for his £30,000
-worth of goods, and therefore armed his two hundred men and plied them
-with brandy. The decks were partially cleared, and the women ordered below
-for fear the Turks might think the vessel a merchant-ship and board it.
-Sir Richard, taking his gun, bandolier, and sword, stood with the ship's
-company waiting for the Turks.[733] But we must quote the brave wife's own
-simple words:--"The beast the captain had locked me up in the cabin. I
-knocked and called long to no purpose, until at length the cabin-boy came
-and opened the door. I, all in tears, desired him to be so good as to give
-me the blue thrum cap he wore and his tarred coat, which he did, and I
-gave him half-a-crown; and putting them on, and flinging away my
-night-clothes, I crept up softly and stood upon the deck by my husband's
-side, as free from fear as, I confess, from discretion; but it was the
-effect of that passion which I could never master. By this time the two
-vessels were engaged in parley, and so well satisfied with speech and
-sight of each other's forces, that the Turks' man-of-war tacked about and
-we continued our course. But when your father saw me retreat, looking upon
-me, he blessed himself and snatched me up in his arms, saying, 'Good God!
-that love can make this change!' and though he seemingly chid me, he would
-laugh at it as often as he remembered that journey." This same vessel, a
-short time after, was blown up in the harbour with the loss of more than a
-hundred men and all the lading.[734]
-
-This brave, good woman showed still greater fortitude when her husband
-died and left her almost penniless in a strange country. She had only
-twenty-eight doubloons with which to bring home her children, and sixty
-servants, and the dead body of her husband. She, however, instantly sold
-her carriages and a thousand pounds' worth of plate, and setting apart the
-queen's present of two thousand doubloons for travelling expenses, started
-for England. "God," she says, in her brave, pious way, "did hear, and
-see, and help me, and brought my soul out of trouble."
-
-In 1677 Lady Fanshawe took a house in Holborn Row, the north side of the
-square, and spent a year lamenting "the dear remembrances of her past
-happiness and fortune; and though she had great graces and favours from
-the king and queen and whole court, yet she found at the present no
-remedy."[735]
-
-Lord Kenyon lived at No. 35 in 1805. Jekyll was fond of joking about
-Kenyon's stinginess, and used to say he died of eating apple-pie crust at
-breakfast to save the expense of muffins; and that Lord Ellenborough, who
-succeeded on Kenyon's death to the Chief Justiceship, always used to bow
-to apple-pie ever afterwards which Jekyll called his "apple-pie-ety." The
-princesses Augusta and Sophia once told Tom Moore, at Lady Donegall's that
-the king used to play tricks on Kenyon and send the despatch-box to him at
-a quarter past seven, when it was known the learned lord was in bed to
-save candlelight.[736] Lord Ellenborough used to say that the final word
-in "Mors janua vitæ" was mis-spelled _vita_ on Kenyon's tomb to save the
-extra cost of the diphthong.[737] George III. used to say to Kenyon, "My
-Lord, let us have a little more of your good law, and less of your bad
-Latin."
-
-Lord Campbell, who gives a very pleasant sketch of Chief Justice Kenyon,
-with his bad temper and bad Latin, his hatred of newspaper writers and
-gamblers, and his wrath against pettifoggers, describes his being taken in
-by Horne Tooke, and laughs at his ignorantly-mixed metaphors. He seems to
-have been a respectable second-rate lawyer, conscientious and upright. "He
-occupied," says Lord Campbell, "a large gloomy house, in which I have seen
-merry doings when it was afterwards transferred to the Verulam Club." The
-tradition of this house was that "it was always Lent in the kitchen and
-Passion Week in the parlour." On some one mentioning the spits in Lord
-Kenyon's kitchen, Jekyll said, "It is irrelevant to talk about the spits,
-for nothing _turns_ upon them." The judge's ignorance was profound. It is
-reported that in a trial for blasphemy the Chief Justice, after citing the
-names of several remarkable early Christians, said, "Above all, gentlemen,
-need I name to you the Emperor Julian, who was so celebrated for the
-practice of every Christian virtue that he was called Julian the
-Apostle?"[738] On another occasion, talking of a false witness, he is
-supposed to have said, "The allegation is as far from truth as 'old
-Boterium from the northern main'--a line I have heard or met with, God
-knows where."[739]
-
-Lord Erskine lived at No. 36, in 1805, the year before he rose at once to
-the peerage and the woolsack, and presided at Lord Melville's trial. He
-did not hold the seals many months, and died in 1823. This great Whig
-orator was the youngest son of the Earl of Buchan. He was a midshipman and
-an ensign before he became a student at Lincoln's Inn. He began to be
-known in 1778; in 1781 he defended Lord George Gordon, in 1794 Horne
-Tooke, Hardy, Thelwall, and afterwards Tom Paine.
-
-The house that contains the Soane Museum, No. 13 on the north side, was
-built in 1812, and, consisting of twenty-four small apartments crammed
-with curiosities, is in itself a marvel of fantastic ingenuity. Every inch
-of space is turned to account. On one side of the picture-room are
-cabinets, and on the other movable shutters or screens, on which pictures
-are also hung; so that a small area, only thirteen feet long and twelve
-broad, contains as much as a gallery forty-five feet long and twenty feet
-broad. A Roman altar once stood in the outer court.
-
-It is a disgrace to the trustees that this curious museum is kept so
-private, and that such impediments are thrown in the way of visitors. It
-is open only two days a week in April, May, and June, but at certain
-seasons a third day is granted to foreigners, artists, and people from the
-country. To obtain tickets, you are obliged to get, some days before you
-visit, a letter from a trustee, or to write to the curator, enter your
-name in a book, and leave your card. All this vexatious hindrance and
-fuss has the desired effect of preventing many persons from visiting a
-museum left, not to the trustees or the curator, but to the nation--to
-every Englishman. In order to read the books, copy the pictures, or
-examine the plans and drawings, the same tedious and humiliating form must
-be gone through.
-
-The gem of all the Soane treasures is an enormous transparent alabaster
-sarcophagus, discovered by Belzoni in 1816 in a tomb in the valley of
-Beban el Molook, near Thebes. It is nine feet four inches long, three feet
-eight inches wide, two feet eight inches deep, and is covered without and
-within with beautifully-cut hieroglyphics. It was the greatest discovery
-of the runaway Paduan Monk, and was undoubtedly the cenotaph or
-sarcophagus of a Pharaoh or Ptolemy. It was discovered in an enormous tomb
-of endless chambers, which the Arabs still call "Belzoni's tomb." On the
-bottom of the case is a full-length figure in relief, of Isis, the
-guardian of the dead. Sir John Soane gave £2000 for this sarcophagus to
-Mr. Salt, Consul General of Egypt and Belzoni's employer. The raised lid
-is broken into nineteen pieces. The late Sir Gardner Wilkinson considered
-this to be the cenotaph of Osirei, the father of Rameses the Great. But
-the forgotten king for whom the Soane sarcophagus was really executed was
-Seti, surnamed Meni-en-Ptah, the father of Rameses the Great; he is called
-by Manetho Séthos.[740] Dr. Lepsius dates the commencement of his reign
-B.C. 1439. Dr. Brugsch places it twenty years earlier. Mr. Sharpe, with
-that delightful uncertainty characteristic of Egyptian antiquaries, drags
-the epoch down two hundred years later. Seti was the father of the Pharaoh
-who persecuted the Israelites, and he made war against Syria. His son was
-the famous Rameses. All three kings were descended from the Shepherd
-Chiefs. The most beautiful fragment in Karnak represents this monarch,
-Seti, in his chariot, with a sword like a fish-slice in one hand, while in
-the other he clutches the topknots of a group of conquered enemies,
-Nubian, Syrian, and Jewish. The work is full of an almost Raphaelesque
-grace.
-
-After this come some of Flaxman's and Banks's sketches and models, a cast
-of the shield of Achilles by the former, and one of the Boothby monument
-by the latter. There is also a fine collection of ancient gems and
-intaglios, pure in taste and exquisitely cut, and a set of the Napoleon
-medals, selected by Denon for the Empress Josephine, and in the finest
-possible state. We may also mention Sir Christopher Wren's watch, some
-ivory chairs, and a table from Tippoo Saib's devastated palace at
-Seringapatam, and a richly-mounted pistol taken by Peter the Great from a
-Turkish general at Azof in 1696. The latter was given to Napoleon by the
-Russian emperor at the treaty of Tilsit in 1807, and was presented by him
-to a French officer at St. Helena. The books, too, are of great interest.
-Here is the original MS. copy of the _Gierusalemme Liberata_, published at
-Ferrara in 1581, and in Tasso's own handwriting; the first four folio
-editions of Shakspere, once the property of that great actor and
-Shaksperean student John Philip Kemble; a folio of designs for Elizabethan
-and Jacobean houses by the celebrated architect John Thorpe; Fauntleroy
-the forger's illustrated copy of Pennant's _London_, purchased for six
-hundred and fifty guineas; a Commentary on Paul's Epistles, illuminated by
-the laborious Croatian, Giulio Clovio (who died in 1578), for Cardinal
-Grimani. Vasari raves about the minute finish of this painter.
-
-The pictures, too, are good. There are three Canalettis full of that Dutch
-Venetian's clear common sense; the finest, a view on the Grand Canal--his
-favourite subject--and "The Snake in the Grass," better known as "Love
-unloosing the Zone of Beauty," by Reynolds. There is a sadly faded replica
-of this in the Winter Palace at St. Petersburg. This one was purchased at
-the Marchioness of Thomond's sale for £500. The "Rake's Progress," by
-Hogarth, in eight pictures, was purchased by Sir John in 1802 for £598.
-These inimitable pictures are incomparable, and display the fine, pure,
-sober colour of the great artist, and his broad touch so like that of Jan
-Steen.
-
-The Soane collection also boasts of Hogarth's four "Election" pictures,
-purchased at Garrick's sale for £1732 10s. They are rather dark in tone.
-There is also a fine but curious Turner, "Van Tromp's Barge entering the
-Texel;" a portrait by Goma of Napoleon in 1797, when emaciated and
-haggard, and a fine miniature of him in 1814, when fat and already on the
-decline, both physically and mentally, by Isabey the great
-miniature-painter, taken at Elba in 1814. In the dining-room is a portrait
-of Soane by Sir Thomas Lawrence, and in the gallery under the dome a bust
-of him by Chantrey.
-
-Sir John Soane was the son of a humble Reading bricklayer, and brought up
-in Mr. Dance's office. Carrying off a gold and silver medal at the
-Academy, he was sent as travelling student to Rome. In 1791 he obtained a
-Government employment, in 1800 enlarged the Bank of England, and in 1806
-became Professor of Architecture at the Royal Academy. He built the
-Dulwich Gallery, and in 1826 the Masonic Hall in Great Queen Street. In
-1827 he gave £1000 to the Duke of York's monument. At the close of his
-life he left his collection of works of art, valued at £50,000, to the
-nation, and died in 1837,[741] leaving his son penniless. In 1835 the
-English architects presented Sir John with a splendid medal in token of
-their approbation of his conduct and talents.
-
-The Literary Fund Society, instituted in 1790, and incorporated in 1818,
-had formerly rooms at No. 4 Lincoln's Inn Fields. The society was
-established in order to aid authors of merit and good character who might
-be reduced to poverty by unavoidable circumstances, or be deprived of the
-power of exertion by enfeebled faculties or old age. George IV. and
-William IV. both contributed one hundred guineas a year to its funds, and
-this subscription is continued by our present Queen. The society
-distributed £1407 in 1846. The average annual amount of subscriptions and
-donations is about £1100. The Literary Fund Society moved afterwards to
-73 Great Russell Street. Some years ago a split occurred in this society.
-Charles Dickens and Mr. C. W. Dilke, the proprietor of the _Athenæum_,
-objecting to the wasteful expense of the management, seceded from it; the
-result of this secession was the founding of the Guild of Literature, and
-the collection of £4000 by means of private theatricals--a sum which,
-unfortunately, still lies partly dormant. The Fund is now domiciled in
-Bloomsbury.
-
-Both Pepys and Evelyn praise the house of Mr. Povey in Lincoln's Inn
-Fields as a prodigy of elegant comfort and ingenuity. The marqueterie
-floors, "the perspective picture in the little closet," the grotto
-cellars, with a well for the wine, the fountains and imitation porphyry
-vases, his pictures and the bath at the top of the house, seem to have
-been the abstract of all luxurious ease.
-
-Names were first put on doors in London in 1760, some years before the
-street-signs were removed. In 1764 houses were first numbered; the
-numbering commenced in New Burlington Street, and Lincoln's Inn Fields was
-the second place numbered.
-
-In Carey Street lived that excellent woman Mrs. Hester Chapone, who
-afterwards removed to Arundel Street. She was a friend of Mrs. Carter, who
-translated Epictetus, and of Mrs. Montagu, the Queen of the Blue
-Stockings. She was one of the female admirers who thronged round
-Richardson the novelist, and she married a young Templar whom he had
-introduced to her. It was a love match, and she had the misfortune of
-losing him in less than ten months after their marriage. Her celebrated
-letters on _The Improvement of the Mind_, published in 1773, were written
-for a favourite niece, who married a Westminster Clergyman and died in
-childbed. Though Mrs. Chapone's letters are now rather dry and
-old-fashioned, reminding us of the backboards of a too punctilious age,
-they contain some sensible and well-expressed thoughts. Here is a sound
-passage:--"Those ladies who pique themselves on the particular excellence
-of neatness are very apt to forget that the decent order of the house
-should be designed to promote the convenience and pleasure of those who
-are to be in it; and that if it is converted into a cause of trouble and
-constraint, their husbands' guests would be happier without it."[742]
-
-Gibbons's Tennis Court stood in Vere Street, Clare Market; it was turned
-into a theatre by Thomas Killigrew. Ogilby the poet, started a lottery of
-books at "the old theatre" in June 1668. He describes the books in his
-advertisements as "all of his own designment and composure."
-
-"The Duke's Theatre" stood in Portugal Street, at the back of Portugal
-Row. It was pulled down in 1835 to make room for the enlargement of the
-Museum of the College of Surgeons. Before that it had been the china
-warehouse of Messrs. Spode and Copeland.[743] There had been, however,
-frailer things than china in the house in Pepys's time. Here, the year of
-the Restoration, came Killigrew with the actors from the Red Bull,
-Clerkenwell, and took the name of the King's Company. Three years later
-they moved to Drury Lane. Davenant's company then came to Portugal Street
-in 1662, deserting their theatre, once a granary, in Salisbury Court. They
-played here till 1671, when they returned to their old theatre, then
-renovated under the management of Charles Davenant and the celebrated
-Betterton, the great tragedian. They afterwards united in Drury Lane, and
-again fell apart. In 1695 a company, headed by Betterton, with Congreve
-for a partner, re-opened the theatre in Lincoln's Inn Fields. It then
-became celebrated for pantomimes under Rich, the excellent harlequin. On
-his removal to Covent Garden it was deserted, re-opened by Gifford from
-Goodman's Fields, and finally ceased to be a theatre about 1737, so that
-its whole life did not extend to more than one generation.
-
-Actresses first appeared in London in Prynne's time. Soon after the
-Restoration a lady of Killigrew's company took the part of Desdemona. In
-January 1661 Pepys saw women on the stage at the Cockpit Theatre: the play
-was Beaumont and Fletcher's "Beggars' Bush." The prologue to "Othello" in
-1660 contains the following line:[744]--
-
- "Our women are defective and so sized,
- You'd think they were some of the guard disguised;
- For, to speak truth, men act that are between
- Forty and fifty, wenches of fifteen,
- With bone so large, and nerve so uncompliant,
- That, when you call Desdemona, enter giant."
-
-The Puritans were now happily in the minority, and so the attempt
-succeeded. Davenant did not bring forward his actresses till June 1661,
-when he produced his "Siege of Rhodes." Kynaston, Hart, Burt, and Clun,
-famous actors of Charles II.'s time, were all excellent representatives of
-female characters.
-
-It was at the Duke's Theatre, in 1680, that Nell Gwynn who was present,
-being reviled by one of the audience, and William Herbert, who had married
-a sister of one of the king's mistresses, taking up Nell's quarrel--a
-sword fight took place between the two factions in the house. This
-hot-blooded young gallant Herbert grew up to be Earl of Pembroke and first
-plenipotentiary at Ryswick.
-
-The chief ladies at the Duke's House were Mrs. Davenport, Mrs. Davies, and
-Mrs. Saunderson. The first of these ladies, generally known as "Roxalana,"
-from a character of that name in the "Siege of Rhodes," resisted for a
-long time the addresses of Aubrey de Vere, the last Earl of Oxford, a
-wicked brawling roysterer, and a disgrace to his name, who at last
-obtained her hand by the cruel deception of a sham marriage. The pretended
-priest was a trumpeter, the witness a kettle-drummer in the king's
-regiment. The poor creature threw herself in vain at the king's feet and
-demanded justice, but gradually grew more composed upon an annuity of a
-thousand crowns a year.[745]
-
-As for Mrs. Davies, who danced well and played ill, she won the
-susceptible heart of Charles II. by her singing the song, "My lodging is
-on the cold, cold ground." "Through the marriage of the daughter of Lord
-Derwentwater with the eighth Lord Petre," says Dr. Doran, "the blood of
-the Stuarts and of Moll Davies still runs in their lineal descendant, the
-present and twelfth lord."[746]
-
-Mrs. Saunderson became the excellent wife of the great actor Betterton.
-For about thirty years she played the chief female characters, especially
-in Shakspere's plays, with great success. She taught Queen Anne and her
-sister Mary elocution, and after her husband's death received a pension of
-£500 a year from her royal pupil.
-
-In 1664 Pepys went to Portugal Street to see that clever but impudent
-impostor, the German Princess, appear after her acquittal at the Old
-Bailey for inveigling a young citizen into a marriage, acting her own
-character in a comedy immortalising her exploit.
-
-In February 1666-7 Pepys goes again to the Duke's Playhouse, and observes
-there Rochester the wit and Mrs. Stewart, afterwards Duchess of Richmond,
-the same lady whose portrait we retain as Britannia on the old
-halfpennies. "It was pleasant," says the tuft-hunting gossip, "to see how
-everybody rose up when my Lord John Butler, the Duke of Ormond's son, came
-into the pit, towards the end of the play, who was a servant to Mrs.
-Mallett, and now smiled upon her and she on him."[747]
-
-The same month, 1667-8, Pepys revisits the Duke's House to see Etherege's
-new play, "She Would if She Could." He was there by two o'clock, and yet
-already a thousand people had been refused at the pit. The fussy
-public-office man, not being able to find his wife, who was there, got
-into an eighteenpenny box, and could hardly see or hear. The play done, it
-being dark and rainy, Pepys stays in the pit looking for his wife and
-waiting for the weather to clear up. And there for an hour and a half sat
-also the Duke of Buckingham, Sedley, and Etherege talking; all abusing the
-play as silly, dull, and insipid, except the author, who complained of the
-actors for not knowing their parts.
-
-In May 1668 Pepys is again at this theatre in the balcony box, where sit
-the shameless Lady Castlemaine and her ladies and women; on another
-occasion he sits below the same group, and sees the proud lady look like
-fire when Moll Davies ogles the king her lover. In another place he
-observes how full the pit is, though the seats are two shillings and
-sixpence a piece, whereas in his youth he had never gone higher than
-twelvepence or eighteenpence.[748]
-
-Kynaston, the greatest of the "boy-actresses," was chiefly on this stage
-from 1659 to 1699. Evadne was his favourite female part. Later in life he
-took to heroic characters. Cibber says of him: "He had something of a
-formal gravity in his mien, which was attributed to the stately step he
-had been so early confined to. But even that in characters of superiority
-had its proper graces; it misbecame him not in the part of Leon in
-Fletcher's 'Rule a Wife,' which he executed with a determined manliness
-and honest authority. He had a piercing eye, and in characters of heroic
-life a quick imperious vivacity in his tone of voice that painted the
-tyrant truly terrible. There were two plays of Dryden in which he shone
-with uncommon lustre; in 'Arungzebe,' he played Morat, and in 'Don
-Sebastian' Muley Moloch. In both these parts he had a fierce lion-like
-majesty in his port and utterance that gave the spectator a kind of
-trembling admiration."[749] Kynaston died in 1712, and left a fortune to
-his son, a mercer in Covent Garden, whose son became rector of Aldgate.
-
-James Nokes was Kynaston's contemporary in Portugal Street. Leigh Hunt
-calls him something between Liston and Munden. Dryden mentions him, in a
-political epistle to Southerne, as indispensable to a play. Cibber says,
-"The ridiculous solemnity of his features was enough to have set the whole
-bench of Bishops into a titter." In his ludicrous distresses he sank into
-such piteous pusilanimity that one almost pitied him. "When he debated any
-matter by himself he would shut up his mouth with a dumb, studious pout,
-and roll his full eye into a vacant amazement."[750] He died in 1692,
-leaving a fortune and an estate near Barnet.
-
-But the great star of Portugal Street was Betterton, the Garrick of his
-age. His most admired part was Hamlet; but Steele especially dilates on
-his Othello. He acted his Hamlet from traditions handed down by Davenant
-of Taylor, whom Shakspere himself is said to have instructed. Cibber says
-that there was such enchantment in his voice alone that no one cared for
-the sense of the words; and he adds, "I never heard a line in tragedy come
-from Betterton wherein my judgment, my ear, and my imagination, were not
-fully satisfied." This great man, who created no fewer than 130
-characters, was a friend of Dryden, Pope, and Tillotson. Kneller's
-portrait of him is at Knowle;[751] A copy of it by Pope is preserved in
-Lord Mansfield's gallery at Caen Wood. When he died, in 1710, Steele wrote
-a "Tatler" upon him, in which he says "he laboured incessantly, and lived
-irreproachably. He was the jewel of the English stage." He killed himself
-by driving back the gout in order to perform on his benefit night, and his
-widow went mad from grief. Betterton acted as Colonel Jolly in Colman's
-"Cutter of Coleman Street," as Jaffier in Otway's _chef d'oeuvre_, as fine
-gentlemen in Congreve's vicious but gay comedies, as a hero in Rowe's
-flatulent plays, and as Sir John Brute in Vanbrugh's great comedy.
-
-Mrs. Barry was one of the best actresses in Portugal Street. She was the
-daughter of an old Cavalier colonel, and was instructed for the stage by
-Rochester, whose mistress she became. Dryden pronounced her the best
-actress he had ever seen. Her face and colour varied with each passion,
-whether heroic or tender. "Her mien and motion," says Cibber, "were superb
-and gracefully majestic, her voice full, clear, and strong." In scenes of
-anger, defiance, or resentment, while she was impetuous and terrible, she
-poured out the sentiment with an enchanting harmony. She was so versatile
-that she played Lady Brute as well as Zara or Belvidera. For her King
-James II. originated the custom of actors' benefits. After a career of
-thirty-eight years on the boards, she died at Acton in 1713. Kneller's
-picture represents her with beautiful eyes, fine hair drawn back from her
-forehead, "the face full, fair, and rippling with intellect,"[752] but her
-mouth a little awry.[753]
-
-Mrs. Mountfort also appeared in Portugal Street before the two companies
-united at Drury Lane in 1682. She was the best of male coxcombs, stage
-coquettes, and country dowdies, a vivacious mimic, and of the most
-versatile humour. Cibber sketches her admirably as Melantha in "Marriage à
-la Mode:"--"She is a fluttering, finished impertinent, with a whole
-artillery of airs, eyes, and motions. When the gallant recommended by her
-father brings his letter of introduction, down goes her dainty diving body
-to the ground, as if she were sinking under the conscious load of her own
-attractions; then she launches into a flood of fine language and
-compliment, still playing her chest forward in fifty falls, and rising
-like a swan upon waving water; and to complete her impertinence, she is so
-rapidly fond of her own wit that she will not give her lover leave to
-praise it;[754] and at last she swims from him with a promise to return in
-a twinkling."
-
-The virtuous, good, and discreet Mrs. Bracegirdle was another favourite in
-Portugal Street. For her Congreve, who affected to be her lover, wrote his
-Araminta and Cynthia, his Angelica, his Almeria, and his Millamant in "The
-way of the world." All the town was in love with her youth, cheerful
-gaiety, musical voice, the happy graces of her manner, her dark eyes,
-brown hair, and expressive, rosy-brown face. Her Statira justified Nat
-Lee's frantic Alexander for all his rant; and "when she acted Millamant,
-all the faults, follies, and affectation of that agreeable tyrant were
-venially melted down into so many charms and attractions of a conscious
-beauty." Mrs. Bracegirdle was on the stage from 1680 to 1707. She lived
-long enough to warn Cibber against envy of Garrick, and died in 1748.
-
-Three of Congreve's plays, "Love for Love," "The Mourning Bride," and "The
-Way of the World," came out in Portugal Street. Steele, in the _Tatler_,
-No. 1, mentions "Love for Love" as being acted for Betterton's
-benefit--Mrs. Barry, Mrs. Bracegirdle, and Doggett taking parts. He
-describes the stage as covered with gentlemen and ladies, "so that when
-the curtain was drawn it discovered even there a very splendid audience."
-"In Dryden's time," says Steele, "You used to see songs, epigrams, and
-satires in the hands of every person you met [at the theatre]; now you
-have only a pack of cards, and instead of the cavils about the turn of the
-expression, the elegance of style and the like, the learned now dispute
-only about the truth of the game."
-
-Poor Mountfort, the most handsome, graceful, and ardent of stage lovers,
-the most admirable of courtly fops, and the best dancer and singer of the
-day, strutted his little hour in Portugal Street till run through the body
-by Lord Mohun's infamous boon companion. His career extended from 1682 to
-1695. He was only thirty-three when he died.
-
-The last proprietor of the theatre was Rich, an actor who, failing in
-tragedy, turned harlequin and manager, and became celebrated for producing
-spectacles, ballets, and pantomimes. Under the name of Lun he revelled as
-harlequin, and was admirable in a scene where he was hatched from an egg.
-
-Pope, always sore about theatrical matters, describes this manager's
-pompousness in the _Dunciad_ (book iii.):--
-
- "At ease
- 'Midst storm of paper fierce hail of pease,
- And proud his mistress' order to perform,
- Rides in the whirlwind and directs the storm."
-
-Rich's great success was the production of Gay's _Beggars' Opera_ in
-1727-8. This piece brought £2000 to the author, and for a time drove the
-Italian Opera into the shade. It ran sixty-three nights the first season,
-and then spread to all the great towns in Great Britain. Ladies carried
-about the favourite songs engraved on their fan-mounts, and they were also
-printed on fire-screens and other furniture. Miss Lavinia Fenton, who
-acted Polly, became the idol of the town; engravings of her were sold by
-thousands: her life was written, and collections were made of her
-jests.[755] Eventually she married the Duke of Bolton. Sir Robert Walpole
-laughed at the satire against himself, and "Gay grew rich, and Rich gay,"
-as the popular epigram went. Hogarth drew the chief scene with Walker as
-Macheath, and Spiller as Mat o' the Mint. Swift was vexed to find his
-Gulliver for the time forgotten.
-
-The custom of allowing young men of fashion to have chairs upon the stage
-was an intolerable nuisance to the actors before Garrick. In 1721 it led
-to a desperate riot at the Lincoln's Inn Fields Theatre. Half-a-dozen
-beaux, headed by a tipsy earl, were gathered round the wings, when the
-earl reeled across the stage where Macbeth and his lady were then acting,
-to speak to a boon companion at the opposite side. Rich the manager, vexed
-at the interruption, forbade the earl the house, upon which the earl
-struck Rich and Rich the earl. Half-a-dozen swords at once sprang out and
-decreed that Rich must die; but Quin and his brother actors rushed to the
-rescue with bare blades, charged the coxcombs, and drove them through the
-stage-door into the kennel. The beaux returning to the front, rushed into
-the boxes, broke the sconces, slashed the hangings, and threatened to burn
-the house; upon which doughty Quin and a party of constables and watchmen
-flung themselves on the rioters and haled them to prison. The actors,
-intimidated, refused to re-open the house till the king granted them a
-guard of soldiers, a custom that has not long been discontinued. It was
-not till 1780 that the habit of admitting the vulgar, noisy, and turbulent
-footmen gratis was abandoned.[756]
-
-Macklin, afterwards the inimitable Shylock and Sir Pertinax, played small
-parts at Lincoln's Inn Fields Theatre till 1731, when a short speech as
-Brazencourt, in Fielding's "Coffee-house Politicians," betrayed the true
-actor. He lived till over a hundred, so long that he did not leave Covent
-Garden till after Braham's appearance, and Braham many of our elder
-readers have seen.[757]
-
-Macklin, an Irishman, and in early life a Dragoon officer, was irritable,
-restless, and pugnacious; he obtained his first triumph at Drury Lane, as
-Shylock in 1741. In stern malignity, no one has surpassed Macklin. His
-acting was hard, but manly and weighty, though his features were rather
-rigid. He naturally condemned Garrick's action and gesture as
-superabundant. His Sir Pertinax was excellent in its sly and deadly
-suppleness. He was also admirable in Lovegold, Scrub, Peachem, Polonius,
-and many Irish characters.
-
-Quin was at Portugal Street as early as 1718-19. There he first "delighted
-the town by his chivalry as Hotspur, his bluntness as Clytus, his
-fieriness as Bajazet, his grandeur as Macbeth, his calm dignity as Brutus,
-his unctuousness as Falstaff, his duplicity as Maskwell, and his coarse
-drollery as Sir John Brute."[758] It was just before this, that locked in
-a room and compelled to fight, he had killed Bowen, who was jealous of his
-acting as Bajazet. When Rich refused to give Quin more than £300 a year,
-he joined the Drury Lane company, where he instantly got £500 per annum.
-
-When Rich grew wealthy enough to hire a new theatre in Covent Garden, he
-left Portugal Street. Almost the last play acted there was "The
-Anatomist," by Ravenscroft, a second-rate author of Dryden's time.
-
-The mob attributed the flight of Rich from the old theatre to the
-appearance of a devil during the performance of the pantomime of
-"Harlequin and Dr. Faustus," a play in which demons abound. The
-supernumerary spirit ascending by the roof instead of leaving by the door
-with his paid companions, was believed to have so frightened manager Rich
-that, taking the warning against theatrical profanity to heart, he never
-had the courage to open the theatre again.[759] The legend is curious, as
-it proves that even in 1732 the old Puritan horror of theatricals had not
-quite died out, and that at that period the poorer part of the audience
-was still ignorant enough to attribute mechanical tricks to supernatural
-interference.
-
-Garrick, in one of his prologues, speaks of Rich, under the name of Lun--
-
- "When Lun appeared with matchless art and whim,
- He gave the power of speech to every limb;
- Though masked and mute, convey'd his quick intent,
- And told in frolic gestures all he meant;
- But now the motley coat and sword of wood
- Require a tongue to make them understood."
-
-Every motion of Rich meant something. His "statue scene" and "catching the
-butterfly" were moving pictures. His "harlequin hatched from an egg by
-sun-heat" is highly spoken of; Jackson calls it "a masterpiece of dumb
-show." From the first chipping of the egg, his receiving of motion, his
-feeling the ground, his standing upright, to his quick harlequin trip
-round the broken egg, every limb had its tongue. Walpole says, "His
-pantomimes were full of wit, and coherent, and carried on a story." Yet
-Rich was so ignorant that he called a 'turban' a 'turbot,' and an
-'adjective' an 'adjutant.'
-
-Spiller, who died of apoplexy in Portugal Street, in 1729-30 as he was
-playing in the "Rape of Proserpine," was inimitable in old men. This was
-the year that Quin played Macheath for his benefit, and Fielding brought
-out his inimitable "Tom Thumb" at the Haymarket, to ridicule the bombast
-of Thomson and Young.
-
-King's College Hospital, which occupies a large portion of the southern
-side of Carey Street, is connected with the medical school of King's
-College, and is supported by voluntary contributions. For each guinea a
-year a subscriber may recommend one in and two out patients. Contributors
-acquire the same right for every donation of ten guineas. Annual
-subscribers of three guineas, or donors of thirty guineas, are governors
-of the hospital. The house is surrounded by a population of nearly 400,000
-persons, of whom about 20,000 annually receive relief. In one year 363
-poor married women have been attended in confinements at their own houses.
-
-The last memorial of a gay generation, passed like last year's swallows,
-was a headstone that used to stand in the burial-ground belonging to St.
-Clement's, now the site of King's College Hospital. The slab rose from
-rank green grass that was sprinkled with dead cats, worn-out shoes, and
-fragments of tramps' bonnets; in summer it was half hid by a clump of
-sunflowers.[760] It kept dimly alive the memory of Joe Miller, a taciturn
-actor, in whose mouth Mottley, the poet put his volume of jokes that had
-been raked from every corner of the town. Mottley was a place-seeker and a
-writer of stilted tragedies and a bad comedy, for whose benefit night
-Queen Caroline, wife of George II., condescended to sell tickets at her
-own drawing-room.[761] Miller appears to have been an honest, and stupid
-fellow, but some good sayings are embalmed in the rather coarse book which
-bears his name. His portrait represents Joe as a broad-nosed man with
-large saucer eyes, a big absurd mouth, and a look of comic stolid
-surprise. He died in 1738, and the Jest Book was published the year after,
-price one shilling.
-
-Joe Miller made his first appearance on the stage in 1715, at Drury Lane,
-in Farquhar's comedy of "A trip to the Jubilee." He also played Clodpole
-in Betterton's "Amorous Widow," Sir H. Gubbin in Steele's "Tender
-Husband," La Foole in Ben Jonson's "Epicene," and above all Sir Joseph
-Whittol in Congreve's "Old Bachelor." Hogarth designed a benefit ticket
-for this play. As Ben in "Love for Love," Cibber cut out Joe Miller. In
-1721 Joe opened a booth at Bartholomew Fair with Pinkethman. His last
-great success was as the Miller in Dodsley's farce of "The King and the
-Miller of Mansfield." Stephen Duck, the Wiltshire thresher, afterwards a
-popular preacher, wrote his epitaph. Joe Miller's monument is still
-carefully preserved in one of the rooms in King's College Hospital. John
-Mottley, his editor, was the son of a Colonel Mottley, a Jacobite who
-followed James into France. His son was placed in the Excise Office, and
-grew up a place-hunter. He wrote a bad tragedy called "The Imperial
-Captives," and was promised a commissionership of wine licenses by Lord
-Halifax, and a place in the Exchequer by Sir Robert Walpole, but received
-nothing from either. He compiled the Jest-Book, it is said partly from the
-recollection of the comedian's conversations,[762] but it is doubtful if
-this is true. The compilation (once so useful to diners-out) went through
-three editions in 1739, and at about the thirteenth edition was reprinted,
-after thirty years, by Barker, of Russell Street, Covent Garden.[763]
-
-The Grange public-house close by, with its picturesque old courtyard, is
-mentioned by Davenant, in his "Playhouse to Let," as an inn patronised by
-poets and actors.
-
-The Black Jack public-house in Portsmouth Street was Joe Miller's
-favourite haunt. Some paintings on its walls still testify to the
-occasional presence of artists of the last century. This inn used to be
-called "The Jump," from that adroit young scoundrel Jack Sheppard having
-once jumped from one of its first-floor windows to escape the armed
-emissaries of that still greater thief, the thief-taker, Mr. Jonathan
-Wild.
-
-When paviours dig deep under the Strand they find the fossil remains of
-antediluvian monsters. A church in the street bears a name that carries us
-back to the times of the Saxons and the Danes. In one lane there is a
-Roman bath, in another there are the nodding gable-ends of houses at which
-Beaumont and Fletcher may have looked, and which Shakspere and Ben Jonson
-must have visited. So the Present is built out of the Past. The Strand
-teems with associations of every period of history. The story of St.
-Giles's parish alone should embrace the whole records of London vagrancy.
-The chronicle of Lincoln's Inn Fields embraces reminiscences of half our
-great lawyers. In the chapter on St. Martin's Lane I have been glad to
-note down some interesting incidents in the careers of many of our
-greatest painters. Long Acre leads us to Dryden, Cromwell, Wilson, and
-Stothard. At Charing Cross we have stopped to see how brave men can die
-for a good cause.
-
-A thorough history of our great city, considered in every aspect, would
-almost be a condensed history of the world. I offer these pages to my
-readers only as a humble contribution to the history of London.
-
-[Illustration: THE BLACK JACK, PORTSMOUTH STREET, LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS.]
-
-Our commercial wealth and the vastness of our maritime enterprise is shown
-in nothing more than by the distance from which we fetch our commonest
-articles of consumption--tea from China, sugar from the West Indies,
-coffee from Ceylon, oil from the farthest nooks of Italy, chocolate from
-Mexico. An Englishman need not be very rich in order to consume samples
-of all these productions of different hemispheres at a single meal.
-
-In the same manner many books of far-divided ages have gone to form the
-patchwork of the present volume; I am like the merchant who sends his
-ships to collect in different harbours, and across wide and adverse seas,
-the materials that he needs. In this busy and overworked age there are
-many persons who have no time themselves to make such voyages, no patience
-to traverse such seas, even if they possessed the charts: it is for them I
-have written, and it is from them I hope for some kind approval.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX.
-
- "The West End seems to me one vast cemetery. Hardly a street but has
- in it a house once occupied by dear friends with whom I had daily
- intercourse: if I stopped and knocked now, who would know or take
- interest in me? _The streets to me are peopled with shadows: the city
- is as a city of the dead._"
-
- SAMUEL ROGERS.
-
-
-THE STRAND (SOUTH SIDE).--p. 25.
-
- "I often shed tears in the motley Strand for fulness of joy at such
- multitude of life."--CHARLES LAMB'S _Letters_, vol. i.
-
-The Strand is three-quarters of a mile long. Van de Wyngerede's view,
-1543, shows straggling houses on the south side, but on the north side all
-is open to Covent Garden. There were three water-courses, crossed by
-bridges. Haycock's Ordinary, near Palsgrave Place, was much frequented in
-the seventeenth century by Parliament men and town gallants. No. 217 was
-the shop of Snow, a wealthy goldsmith who withstood the South Sea Bubble
-without injury. Gay describes him during the panic with black pen behind
-his ear. He says to Snow--
-
- "Thou stoodst (an Indian king in size and hue);
- Thy unexhausted shop was our Peru."
-
-The Robin Hood Debating Society held its meetings in Essex Street. Burke
-spoke here, and Goldsmith was a member. The great Cottonian Library was
-kept in Essex House from 1712 to 1730, on the site of the Unitarian
-Chapel, built about 1774. Mr. Lindsey, Dr. Disney, Mr. Belsham
-(Priestley's successor) preached here, and after Mr. Belsham the Rev.
-Thomas Madge. At George's Coffee-house, now 213 Strand, Foote describes
-the town wits meeting in 1751. Shenstone was a frequenter of this house,
-and came here to read pamphlets--the subscription being one shilling. The
-Grecian Coffee-house was used by Goldsmith and the Irish and Lancashire
-Templars. Milford Lane was so named from an adjacent ford over the Thames.
-A windmill stood near St. Mary's Church, temp. James I. Sir Richard Baker,
-the worthy old chronicler whom Sir Roger de Coverley so admired, lived in
-this lane in 1632-9. The old houses were taken down in 1852. No. 191 was
-the shop of William Godwin, bookseller, the author of _Caleb Williams_,
-and the friend of Lamb and Shelley.--Strype mentions the Crown and Anchor
-Tavern. Here, in 1710, was instituted the Academy of Ancient Music. Here,
-on Fox's birthday, in 1798, 2000 guests were feasted. Johnson and Boswell
-occasionally supped here, and here the Royal Societies were held. In
-Surrey Street, in a large garden-house at the east end fronting the river,
-lived the Hon. Charles Howard, the eminent chemist who discovered the
-process of sugar-refining _in vacuo_.
-
-At No. 169, now the Strand Theatre, Barker, an artist, exhibited the
-panorama--his own invention--suggested to him when sketching under an
-umbrella on the Calton Hill. No. 217, now a branch of the London and
-Westminster Bank, was formerly Paul, Strahan, and Bates's,[764] who in
-1858 disposed of their customers' securities to the amount of £113,625,
-and were sentenced to fourteen years' penal servitude. The drinking
-fountain opposite St. Mary's Church is a product of a most useful
-association. The first fountain erected under its auspices was opened in
-April 1859, by Lord John Russell, Lord Carlisle, and Mr. Gurney.--At No.
-147 was published the _Sphinx_, and Jan. 2, 1828, No. 1 of the _Athenæum_.
-No. 149 is the shop once belonging to Mr. Mawe, the mineralogist, who was
-succeeded by James Tennant, Professor of Mineralogy at King's College. At
-No. 132 Strand (site of Wellington Street), the first circulating library
-in London was started by a Mr. Wright, in 1740. Opposite Southampton
-Street, from 1686 to late in the last century, lived Vaillant, the eminent
-foreign bookseller. No. 143 was the site of the first office of the
-_Morning Chronicle_ (Perry succeeding Woodfall in 1789). Lord Campbell and
-Hazlitt were theatrical critics to this paper. Mr. Dickens was a
-parliamentary reporter, Mr. Serjeant Spankie an editor, Campbell the poet
-a contributor. On Perry's death, in 1821, it was purchased by Mr. Clement
-for £42,000. The _Mirror_, the first cheap illustrated periodical was also
-published at this office. At No. 1 lived Rudolph Ackermann, the German
-printseller, who introduced lithography and annuals. He illuminated his
-gallery when gas was a novelty. Aaron Hill was born in a dwelling on the
-site of the present Beaufort House; Lord Clarendon lived here while his
-unlucky western house was building; and here, in 1660, the Duke of York
-married the chancellor's daughter.
-
-The York Buildings Water Company failed in 1731. Hungerford Hall and its
-panoramic pictures were burnt in 1854. At No. 18 Strand, in 1776, the
-elder Mathews the comedian was born; Dr. Adam Clarke and Rowland Hill used
-to visit his father, who was a religious bookseller. No. 7 Craven Street
-(Franklin's old house) was long occupied by the Society for the Relief of
-Persons imprisoned for Small Debts. In Northumberland Court, once known as
-"Lieutenants' Lodgings," Nelson once lodged.
-
-
-NORFOLK STREET.--p. 44.
-
-Mr. Dickens has sketched Norfolk Street in his own inimitable way.
-"Norfolk is a delightful street to lodge in, provided you don't go lower
-down (Mrs. Lirriper dates from No. 81); but of a summer evening, when the
-dust and waste paper lie in it, and stray children play in it, and a kind
-of gritty calm and bake settles on it, and a peal of church-bells is
-practising in the neighbourhood, it is a trifle dull; and never have I
-seen it since at such a time, and never shall I see it ever more at such a
-time, without seeing the dull June evening when that forlorn young
-creature sat at her open corner window on the second, and me at my open
-corner window (the other corner) on the third."[765]
-
-
-THE STRAND THEATRE.--p. 53.
-
-The Strand Theatre, No. 169, formerly called Punch's Playhouse, was
-altered in 1831 for Rayner, the low comedian, and Mrs. Waylett, the
-singer. Here were produced many of Douglas Jerrold's early plays. Under
-Miss Swanborough's management, Miss Marie Wilton, arch and witty as
-Shakspere's Maria, delighted the town. Here poor Rogers, now dead, was
-inimitable in burlesque female characters.
-
-
-THE SOMERSET COFFEE-HOUSE.--p. 56.
-
-The bold and redoubtable Junius (now pretty well ascertained, after much
-inkshed, to be Sir Philip Francis) occasionally left his letters for
-Woodfall at the bar of the Somerset Coffee-house at the east corner of the
-entrance to King's College. His other houses of call were the bar of the
-New Exchange, and now and then Munday's in Maiden Lane.
-
-
-SOMERSET HOUSE.--p. 56.
-
-The School of Design, formerly located in Somerset House, was established
-in 1857, under the superintendence of the Board of Trade, for the
-improvement of ornamental art, with regard more especially to our staple
-English manufactures. The school is now incorporated with the Science and
-Art Schools at South Kensington, which have been established, under
-Government, in connection with South Kensington Museum.
-
-
-KING'S COLLEGE.--p. 56.
-
-King's College and School (to the latter of which the author owes some
-gratitude for a portion of his education) form a proprietary institution
-that occupies an east wing of Somerset House which was built to receive
-it. The college was founded in 1828; its fundamental principle is, that
-instruction in religion is an indispensable part of instruction, without
-which knowledge "will be conducive neither to the happiness of the
-individual nor the welfare of the State." The college education is divided
-into five departments:--1. Theology. 2. General Literature and Science. 3.
-Applied Sciences. 4. Medicine. 5. The School. A certificate of good
-conduct, signed by his last instructor, is required of each pupil on
-entry. The age for admission is from nine to sixteen years. A limited
-number of matriculated students can live within the walls. Each proprietor
-can nominate two pupils--one to the school, and one to the college. The
-museum once contained the celebrated calculating machine of the late Mr.
-Charles Babbage. This scientific toy was given by the Commissioners of the
-Woods and Forests. It is now at South Kensington. The collection of
-mechanical models and philosophical instruments was formed by George III.
-and presented to the college by Queen Victoria.
-
-
-HELMET COURT.--p. 56.
-
-Helmet Court-so called from the Helmet Inn-is over against Somerset House.
-The inn is enumerated in a list of houses and taverns made in the reign of
-James I.[766] When the King of Denmark came to see his daughter, he was
-lodged in Somerset House, and new kitchen-ranges were set up at the Helmet
-and the Swan at the expense of the Crown. Henry Condell, a fellow-actor
-with Shakspere, left his houses in Helmet Court to "Elizabeth, his
-well-beloved wife."[767]
-
-
-BEAUFORT BUILDINGS.--p. 83.
-
-Charles Dibdin, born 1745, the author of 1300 songs, gave his musical
-entertainments at the Lyceum, and at Scott and Idle's premises in the
-Strand. Latterly, assisted by his pupils, he conducted public musical
-soirees at Beaufort Buildings.
-
-
-COUTTS'S BANK.--p. 86.
-
-Mr. Coutts died in 1822. He was a pallid, sickly, thin old gentleman, who
-wore a shabby coat and a brown scratch-wig.[768] He was once stopped in
-the street by a good-natured man, who insisted on giving him a guinea. The
-banker, however, declined the present with thanks, saying he was in no
-"immediate want." Miss Harriet Mellon first appeared at Drury Lane in
-1795, as Lydia Languish. Mr. Coutts married Miss Mellon in 1815. She made
-her last appearance at Drury Lane, early in the same year, as Audrey. She
-left the bulk of her fortune to Miss Angela Burdett-Coutts, whose gold the
-_Morning Herald_ once computed at 13 tons, or 107 flour-sacks full. The
-sum, £1,800,000, was the exact sum also left by old Jemmy Wood of
-Gloucester. Counting a sovereign a minute, it would take ten weeks to
-count; and placed sovereign to sovereign, it would reach 24 miles 260
-yards.
-
-Coutts's Bank was founded by George Middleton. Till Coutts's time it stood
-near St. Martin's Church. Good-natured Gay banked there, and afterwards
-Dr. Johnson, Sir Walter Scott, and the Duke of Wellington. The Royal
-Family have banked at Coutts's ever since the reign of Queen Anne.
-
-
-THE DARK ARCHES.--p. 97.
-
-"The Adelphi arches, many of which are used for cellars and coal-wharfs,
-remind one in their grim vastness," says Mr. Timbs, "of the Etruscan
-Cloaca of old Rome." Beneath the "dry arches" the most abandoned
-characters used to lurk; outcasts and vagrants came there to sleep, and
-many a street thief escaped from his pursuers in those subterranean haunts
-before the introduction of gas-light and a vigilant police. Mr. Egg, that
-tragic painter, placed the scene of one of his most pathetic pictures by
-this part of what was once the river-bank.
-
-
-SOCIETY OF ARTS.--p. 99.
-
-Lord Folkestone and Mr. Shipley founded the Society of Arts, at a meeting
-at Rawthmell's Coffee-house, in Catharine Street, in March 1754. It was
-proposed to give rewards for the discovery of cobalt and the cultivation
-of madder in England. Premiums were also to be given for the best drawings
-to a certain number of boys and girls under the age of sixteen. The first
-prize, £15, was adjudged by the society to Cosway, then a boy of fifteen.
-The society was initiated in Crane Court; from thence it removed to
-Craig's Court, Charing Cross; from there to the Strand, opposite Beaufort
-Buildings; and from thence, in 1774, to the Adelphi.
-
-The subjects of Barry's six pictures in the Council Room are the following
-(beginning on the left as you enter):--1. "Orpheus." The figure of Orpheus
-and the heads of the two reclining women are thought fine. 2. "A Grecian
-Harvest Home" (the best of the series). 3. "Crowning the Victors at
-Olympia." 4. "Commerce, or the Triumph of the Thames." (Dr. Burney, the
-composer, is composedly floating among tritons and sea-nymphs in his grand
-tie-wig and queue.) 5. "The Distribution of Premiums by the Society of
-Arts." (This picture contains a portrait of Dr. Johnson, for which he
-sat.) 6. "Elysium, or the State of Final Retribution."
-
-Barry did pretty well with this work, which occupied him from 1777 to
-1783. The society gave him £300 and a gold medal, and also £500, the
-profit of two exhibitions-total, £800.
-
-In 1776 the society had proposed to the Academy to decorate the Council
-Room, and be reimbursed by the exhibition of the works. Reynolds and the
-rest refused, but Barry soon afterwards obtained permission to execute the
-whole, stipulating to be paid for his colours and models. Barry at the
-time had only sixteen shillings in his pocket. During the progress of the
-work the painter, being in want, applied for a small subscription through
-Sir George Savile, but in vain. An insolent secretary even objected to his
-charge for colours and models. The society afterwards relented and
-advanced £100. Barry died poor, neglected, and half crazy, in 1806, aged
-sixty-five.
-
-The Adelphi Rooms contain three poor statues (Mars, Venus, and Narcissus)
-by Bacon, R.A., a portrait of Lord Romney by Reynolds, and a full-length
-portrait of Jacob, Lord Folkestone, the first president, by Gainsborough.
-In the ante-room, in a bad light, hangs a characteristic likeness of poor,
-wrongheaded Barry. The pictures are to be seen between ten and four any
-day but Wednesday and Saturday. The society meets every Wednesday at eight
-from October 31 to July 31.
-
-In the Council Room, that parade-ground of learned men, Goldsmith once
-made an attempt at a speech, but was obliged to sit down in confusion. Dr.
-Johnson once spoke there on "Mechanics," "with a propriety, perspicuity,
-and energy which excited general admiration."[769]
-
-Jonas Hanway, that worthy old Russian merchant, when he came to see
-Barry's pictures, insisted on leaving a guinea instead of the customary
-shilling. The Prince of Wales gave Barry sittings. Timothy Hollis left him
-£100. Lord Aldborough declared that the painter had surpassed Raphael.
-Lord Romney gave him 100 guineas for a copy of one of the heads, and Dr.
-Johnson praised the "grasping mind" in the six pictures.[770]
-
-
-DUCHY OF LANCASTER.--p. 110.
-
-The Duchy of Lancaster is a liberty (whatever that means) in the Strand.
-It belongs to the Crown, the Queen being "Duchess of Lancaster." It begins
-without Temple Bar and runs as far as Cecil Street. The annual revenue of
-the duchy is about £75,000.
-
-
-WATERLOO BRIDGE.--p. 124.
-
-Hood's exquisite poem, "The Bridge of Sighs," appeared in "Hood's
-Magazine" in May 1844. The poet's son informs me that he believes that the
-poem was not suggested by any special incident, but that a great many
-suicides had been reported in the papers about that time.
-
- "The bleak wind of _March_
- Made her tremble and shiver"
-
-marks the date of the writing,
-
- "But not the dark arch
- Of the black flowing river."
-
-The dark arch is that of Waterloo Bridge, a spot frequently selected by
-unfortunate women who meditate suicide, on account of its solitude and
-privacy.
-
-
-YORK HOUSE.--p. 135.
-
-After the death of Buckingham, York House was entrusted to the
-guardianship of that Flemish adventurer and quack in art, Sir Balthasar
-Gerbier, who here quarrelled and would have fought with Gentilleschi, a
-Pisan artist who had been invited over by Charles I., and of whom he was
-intolerably jealous. Some of Gentilleschi's work is still preserved at
-Marlborough House. The York Buildings Waterworks Company was started in
-the 27th year of Charles II. In 1688 there were forty-eight shares. After
-the Scotch rebellion in 1715, the company invested large sums in
-purchasing forfeited estates, which no Scotchman would buy. The concern
-became bankrupt. The residue of the Scotch estates was sold in 1783 for
-£102,537.[771]
-
-
-BUCKINGHAM STREET.--p. 135.
-
-It is always pleasant to recall any scenes on which the light of Mr.
-Dickens's fancy has even momentarily rested. It was to Buckingham Street
-that Mr. David Copperfield went with his aunt to take chambers commanding
-a view of the river. They were at the top of the house, very near the
-fire-escape, with a half-blind entry and a stone-blind pantry.[772]
-
-
-HUNGERFORD BRIDGE.--p. 138.
-
-The Hungerford Suspension Bridge was purchased in 1860 by a company of
-gentlemen, and used in the construction of the bridge across the Avon at
-Clifton. This aerial roadway has a span of 703 feet, and is built at the
-height of 245 feet. It cost little short of £100,000. A bridge at Clifton
-was first suggested in 1753 by Alderman Vick of Bristol, who left a
-nest-egg of £1000. The bridge was completed and opened in 1864.
-
-
-THE GAIETY THEATRE, STRAND (NORTH SIDE).--p. 147.
-
-This elegant and well-appointed theatre, near the corner of Wellington
-Street, was built in 1868, from the designs of Mr. C. J. Phillips. It
-occupies the site of the Strand Music Hall, a large building which had
-been erected in the place of an arcade which the late Lord Exeter had
-built here in order to resuscitate the glories of old Exeter 'Change. Both
-the arcade and music hall proved disastrous failures, whilst the Gaiety
-Theatre, on the other hand, has turned out immensely successful, under the
-management of Mr. John Hollingshead.
-
-
-THE STRAND (NORTH SIDE).--p. 147.
-
-Sir John Denham, the poet, when a student at Lincoln's Inn, in 1638, in a
-drunken frolic blotted out with ink all the Strand signs from Temple Bar
-to Charing Cross.
-
-In a house in Butcher Row, Winter, Catesby, Wright, and Guy Fawkes met and
-took the sacrament together. Raleigh's widow lived in Boswell Court, and
-also Lord Chief Justice Lyttelton and Sir Richard and Lady Fanshawe; and
-in Clement's Lane resided Sir John Trevor, cousin to Judge Jeffries and
-Speaker to the House of Commons. Dr. Johnson's pew at St. Clement's is No.
-18 in the north gallery; Dr. Croly put up a tablet to his memory. The
-_Tatler_, 1710, announces a stage-coach from the One Bell in the Strand
-(No. 313) to Dorchester.
-
-No. 317 was the forge kept by the Duchess of Albemarle's father, and it
-faced the Maypole; Aubrey describes it as the corner shop, the first
-turning to the right as you come out of the Strand into Drury Lane. Dr.
-King died at No. 332, once the _Morning Chronicle_ office. The New Exeter
-Change--the site of which is now covered by the Gaiety Theatre and
-Restaurant--was designed by Sydney Smirke, with Jacobean frontage. East of
-Exeter Change stood the Canary House, mentioned by Dryden as famous for
-its sack with the "abricot" flavour. Pepys mentions Cary House, probably
-the same place. At No. 352 was born, in 1798, Henry Neale the poet, son of
-the map and heraldic engraver. In Exeter Change No. 1 of the _Literary
-Gazette_ was published, January 25, 1817. Old Parr lodged at No. 405, the
-Queen's Head public-house. No. 429, built for an insurance office by Mr.
-Cockerell, has a fine façade. At No. 448 is the Electric Telegraph Office;
-the time signal-ball, liberated by a galvanic current sent from Greenwich,
-falls exactly at one, and drops ten feet. The old Golden Cross Hotel stood
-farther west than the present. The Lowther Arcade, designed by Witherden
-Young, is 245 feet long and 20 feet broad. Here the electric eel and
-Perkin's steam-gun were exhibited about 1838. In 1832 a Society for the
-Exhibition of Models had been formed here. In 1831 the skeleton of a whale
-was exhibited in a tent in Trafalgar Square; it was 98 feet long, and
-Cuvier had estimated it to be nearly a thousand years old.
-
-It should be added that for most of the facts in this note the author is
-indebted to that treasure-house of topographical anecdote, _Curiosities of
-London_, by J. Timbs, Esq., F.S.A., a book displaying an almost boundless
-industry.
-
-
-THE CROWN AND ANCHOR TAVERN.--p. 152.
-
-The Crown and Anchor Tavern, at the corner of Arundel Street, was for some
-years the Whittington Club. Before the alterations it had an entrance from
-the Strand, which is now closed, its door being now in Arundel Street.
-Douglas Jerrold was one of the earliest promoters of this club, which was
-much used by young men of business. In 1873, after having been closed for
-some time, it was re-opened as the Temple Club. The King of Clubs was
-started about 1801 by Mr. Robert (Bobus) Smith, brother of Sydney, a
-friend of Canning's, and Advocate-General of Calcutta. It sat every
-Saturday at the Crown and Anchor Tavern, at that time famous for its
-dinners and wine, and a great resort for clubs. Politics were excluded.
-One of the chief members was Mr. Richard Sharpe, a partner in a West India
-house, and a Parliamentary speaker during Addington's and Perceval's
-administrations. Mackintosh, Scarlett, Rogers the poetical banker, John
-Allen, and M. Dumont, an emigré and friend of the Abbé de Lisle, were also
-members. Erskine, too, often dropped in to spend an hour stolen from his
-immense and overflowing business. He there told his story of Lord
-Loughborough trying to persuade him not to take Tom Paine's brief. He once
-met Curran there. A member of the club describes the ape's face of the
-Irish orator, with the sunken and diminutive eyes that flashed lightning
-as he compared poor wronged Ireland to "Niobe palsied with sorrow and
-despair over her freedom, and her prosperity struck dead before her."[773]
-
-
-WYCH STREET.--p. 164.
-
-"In a horrible little court, branching northward from Wych Street," writes
-Mr. Sala, in an essay written in America, "good old George Cruikshank once
-showed me the house where Jack Sheppard, the robber and prison-breaker,
-served his apprenticeship to Mr. Wood, the carpenter; and on a beam in the
-loft of this house Jack is said to have carved his name. * * * Theodore
-Hook used to say that "he never passed through Wych Street in a
-hackney-coach without being blocked up by a hearse and a coal waggon in
-the van, and a mud-cart and the Lord Mayor's carriage in the rear."
-
-
-NEWSPAPER OFFICES.--p. 167.
-
-It is almost impossible to enumerate all the Strand newspaper offices,
-present and past. It is, perhaps, sufficient to mention _The Spectator_ (a
-very able paper,--office in Waterloo Place); _The London Journal_ (a
-cheap, well-conducted paper with an enormous circulation); _The Family
-Herald_ (the house formerly of Mr. Leigh, bookseller, a relation of the
-elder Mathews, and the first introducer of the _Guides_ that Mr. Murray
-has now rendered so complete); _The Illustrated Times_, _The Morning
-Post_, _Notes and Queries_, _The Queen_, _Law Times_, _Athenæum_, and
-_Field_ (in Wellington Street); _Bell's Life_, _The Globe_, _Bell's
-Messenger_, _The Observer_, and lastly, _The Pall Mall Gazette_, and _The
-Saturday Review_.
-
-
-THE BEEF-STEAK CLUB.--p. 172.
-
-Bubb Doddington, Aaron Hill, "Leonidas" Glover, Sir Peere Williams (a
-youth of promise, shot at the siege of Belleisle), Hoadly, and the elder
-Colman (the author of _The Suspicious Husband_), were either guests or
-members of this illustrious club, whose origin dates back to Rich's days
-in 1735. Then came the days of Lord Sandwich, Wilkes, Bonnell Thornton,
-Arthur Murphy, Churchill, and Tickell. In 1785 the Prince of Wales
-(afterwards George IV.) became the twenty-fifth member.
-
-Churchill resigned when the club began to receive him coldly after his
-desertion of his wife. Wilkes never visited the club after the
-contemptuous rejection of his infamous poem, the _Essay on Woman_. Garrick
-was a great ornament of the club; he once dined there dressed in the
-character of Ranger. Little Serjeant Prime was another club celebrity of
-that period. An anonymous writer describes a meeting of the club in or
-about 1799. There were present John Kemble, Cobb of the India House, the
-Duke of Clarence, Sir John Cox Hippisley, Charles Morris (the writer of
-our best convivial songs), Ferguson of Aberdeen, Mingay, and the Duke of
-Norfolk. As the clock struck five, a curtain drew up, discovering the
-kitchen through a gridiron grating, over which was inscribed this motto--
-
- "If it were done, when 'tis done, then 'twere well
- It were done quickly."
-
-The Duke of Norfolk ate at least three steaks, and then when the cloth was
-removed, took the chair on a dais, elevated some steps above the table,
-and above which hung the small cocked-hat in which Garrick played Ranger,
-and other insignia of the society. He was also invested with an orange
-ribbon, to which a silver gridiron was appended. The sound motto "Beef and
-Liberty" is inscribed on the buttons of the members. It is the duty of the
-junior member at this club to bring up the wine. The writer before quoted
-describes seeing Lord Brougham and the Duke of Leinster performing this
-subordinate duty. Sir John Hippisley was the man who Windham used to say
-was very _nearly_ a clever fellow. Cobb was the author of "First Floor" (a
-farce) and of three comic operas--"The Haunted Tower," "The Siege of
-Belgrade," and "Ramah Drûg." To the two former Storace set his finest
-music.
-
-"Captain" Morris, the author of those delightful songs, "The Town and
-Country Life" and "When the Fancy-stirring Bowl wakes the Soul to
-Pleasure," used to brew punch and "out-watch the Bear" at this club till
-after his seventy-eighth year. The Duke of Norfolk, at Kemble's
-solicitation, gave the veteran bard a pleasant little Sabine retreat near
-Dorking. Jack Richards, the presbyter of the club, was famous for
-inflicting long verbal harangues on condemned social culprits.
-
-Another much respected member was old William Linley, Sheridan's
-brother-in-law; nor must we forget Richard Wilson, Lord Eldon's secretary,
-and Mr. Walsh, who had been in early life valet to Lord Chesterfield. The
-club secretary, in 1828, was Mr. Henry Stephenson, comptroller to the Duke
-of Sussex; and about this time also flourished, either as guests or
-members, Lord Viscount Kirkwall, Rowland Stephenson the banker, and Mr.
-Denison, then M.P. for Surrey.[774]
-
-A literary friend tells me that the last time he saw Mr. Thackeray was one
-evening in Exeter Street. The eminent satirist of snobs was peering about
-for the stage door of the Lyceum Theatre, or some other means of entrance
-to the Beef-steak Club, with whose members he had been invited to dine.
-
-
-EXETER CHANGE.--p. 175.
-
-Thomas Clark, "the King of Exeter Change," took a cutler's stall here in
-1765 with £100 lent him by a stranger. By trade and thrift he grew so rich
-that he once returned his income at £6000 a year, and before his death in
-1816 he rented the whole ground-floor of the Change. He left nearly half a
-million of money, and one of his daughters married Mr. Hamlet, the
-celebrated jeweller. Some of the old materials of Exeter House, including
-a pair of large Corinthian columns at the east end, were used in building
-the Change, which was the speculation of a Dr. Barbon, in the reign of
-William and Mary.
-
-
-TRAFALGAR SQUARE.--p. 221.
-
-The fountains were constructed in 1845, after designs from Sir Charles
-Barry.
-
-Morley's Hotel (1 to 3 at the south-east corner) is much frequented by
-American travellers, who may be seen on summer evenings calmly smoking
-their cigars outside the chief entrance. The late proprietor, who died a
-few years since, left nearly a hundred thousand pounds to the Foundling
-and other charities.
-
-
-THE UNION CLUB.--p. 226.
-
-The Union Club House, which stands on the south-west of Trafalgar Square
-and faces Cockspur Street, was built by Sir Robert Smirke, R.A. The club,
-consisting of 1000 members, has been in existence forty-four years; its
-expenditure is about £10,000 a year. Its trustees are the Earl of
-Lonsdale, Viscount Gage, Lord Trimleston, and Sir John Henry Lowther,
-Bart. The entrance money is thirty guineas, the annual subscription six
-guineas. Mr. Peter Cunningham, writing in 1849, describes the club as "the
-resort chiefly of mercantile men of eminence;" but its present members are
-of all the professions.
-
-
-DRUMMOND'S BANK.--p. 227.
-
-This bank is older than Coutts's. Pope banked there. The Duke of
-Sutherland and many of the Scottish nobility bank there.
-
-
-ST. MARTIN'S LANE.--p. 252.
-
-Roger Payne was a celebrated bookbinder in Duke's Court, St. Martin's
-Lane, London. This ingenious artist, a native of Windsor Forest, was born
-in 1739, and first became initiated into the rudiments of his business
-under the auspices of Mr. Pote, bookseller to Eton College. On settling in
-the metropolis, about the year 1766, he worked for a short time for Thomas
-Osborne, bookseller in Holborn, but principally for _honest_ Thomas Payne,
-of the Mews Gate, who, although of the same name, was not related to him.
-His talents as an artist, particularly in the finishing department, were
-of the first order, and such as, up to his time, had not been developed by
-any other of his countrymen. "Roger Payne," says Dr. Dibdin, "rose like a
-star, diffusing lustre on all sides, and rejoicing the hearts of all true
-sons of bibliomania." He succeeded in executing binding with such artistic
-taste as to command the admiration and patronage of many noblemen. His
-_chef-d'oeuvre_ is a large paper copy of Æschylus, translated by the Rev.
-Robert Potter, the ornaments and decorations of which are most splendid
-and classical. The binding of this book cost Earl Spencer fifteen guineas.
-
-It was by his artistic talents alone that Roger Payne became so celebrated
-in his day; for, owing to his excessive indulgence in strong ale, he was
-in person a deplorable specimen of humanity. As evidence of this
-propensity, his account-book contains the following memorandum of one
-day's expenditure: "For bacon, one halfpenny; for liquor, one shilling."
-Even his trade bills are literary curiosities in their way, and frequently
-illustrate his unfortunate propensity. On one delivered to Mr. Evans for
-binding Barry's work on _The Wines of the Ancients_, he wrote:--
-
- "Homer the bard, who sung in highest strains,
- Had, festive gift, a goblet for his pains:
- Falernian gave Horace, Virgil fire,
- And barley-wine my British muse inspire;
- Barley-wine, first from Egypt's learned shore,
- Be this the gift to me from Calvert's store!"
-
-During the latter part of his life, as might have been expected, Roger
-Payne was the victim of poverty and disease. He closed his earthly career
-at his residence in Duke's Court on Nov. 20, 1787, and was interred in the
-burial-ground of St. Martin's-in-the-Fields, at the expense of his worthy
-patron, Mr. Thomas Payne. This excellent man had also a portrait taken and
-engraved of his namesake at his work in his miserable den, under which Mr.
-Bindley wrote the following lines:--
-
- "ROGERUS PAYNE: Natus Vindesor. MDCCXXXIX.; denatus Londin.
- MDCCLXXXVII. Effigiem hanc graphicam solertis BIBLIOPEGI [Greek:
- Mnêmosunon] meritis BIBLIOPOLA dedit. Sumptibus Thomæ Payne. [Etch'd
- and published by S. Harding, No. 127 Pall Mall, March 1, 1800."][775]
-
-
-HEMINGS' ROW.--p. 252.
-
-Hemings' Row, St. Martin's Lane, was originally called Dirty Lane.[776]
-The place probably derived its name from John Hemings, an apothecary
-living there in 1679. Peter Cunningham writes in 1849: "Upon an old wooden
-house at the west end of this street, near the second-floor window, is the
-name given above, and the date 1680."[777]
-
-
-BEDFORDBURY.--p. 261.
-
-Mr. James Payne, a bookseller of Bedfordbury (perhaps the son of Thomas
-Payne), died in Paris in 1809. Mr. Burnet describes him as remarkable for
-amenity as for probity and learning. Repeated journeys to Italy, France,
-and Germany had enabled him to collect a great number of precious MSS. and
-rare first editions, most of which went to enrich Lord Spencer's
-library--the most splendid collection ever made by a private person.[778]
-
-
-EARL OF BRISTOL.--p. 264.
-
-Digby, Earl of Bristol, whom Pepys accuses of losing King Charles his head
-by breaking off the treaty of Uxbridge, lived in Lincoln's Inn Fields. His
-second daughter, Lady Ann, married the evil Earl of Sutherland. It was
-Bristol who was base enough to impeach Lord Clarendon for selling Dunkirk
-and making Charles marry a barren queen. Burnet describes the earl as
-having become a Roman Catholic in order to be qualified for serving under
-Don John in Flanders. He was an astrologer,[779] and had the impudence to
-tell the king he was in danger from his brother. He renounced his new
-religion openly at Wimbledon,[780] and then fled to France.
-
-
-WILD HOUSE.--p. 277.
-
-Wild House, Drury Lane, was formerly the town mansion of the Welds of
-Lulworth Castle. Short's Gardens were so called from Dudley Short, Esq.,
-who had a mansion here with fine gardens in the reign of Charles II. In
-Parker Street, Philip Parker, Esq., had a mansion in 1623.
-
-
-CRAVEN HOUSE, DRURY LANE.--p. 292.
-
-Pepys frequently mentions Lord Craven as attending the meetings at the
-Trinity House upon Admiralty business. The old veteran, whom he
-irreverently calls "a coxcomb," complimented him on several occasions upon
-his popularity with the Duke of York. Pennant says that Lord Craven and
-the Duke of Albemarle "heroically stayed in town during the dreadful
-pestilence, and, at the hazard of their lives, preserved order in the
-midst of the terrors of the time."[781] This fine old Don Quixote happened
-to be on duty at St. James's when William's Dutch troops were coming
-across the park to take possession. Lord Craven would have opposed their
-entrance, but his timid master forbidding him to resist, he marched away
-"with sullen dignity." The date of the sale of the pest-houses should be
-1722, not 1772.
-
-
-DRURY LANE.--p. 299.
-
-In the Regency time, and before, Drury Lane was what the Haymarket is now.
-Oyster shops, low taverns, and singing-rooms of the worst description
-surrounded the theatre. One of the worst of these, even down to our own
-times, was "Jessop's" ("The Finish")--a great resort of low
-prize-fighters, gamblers, sporting men, swindlers, spendthrifts, and
-drunkards. "_H.'s_" (I veil the infamous name), described in a MS. of
-Horace Walpole, is now a small, dingy theatrical tailor's, and in the
-besmirched back-shop shreds of gilding and smears of colour still show
-where Colonel Hanger knocked off the heads of champagne bottles, and
-afterwards, Lord Waterford and such "bloods" squandered their money and
-their health.
-
-
-THE SAVAGE CLUB.--p. 303.
-
-The Savage Club, which was started at the Crown Tavern in Drury Lane, and
-then removed to rooms next the Lyceum, and said to have been those once
-occupied by the Beef-steak Club, is now moored at Evans's Hotel, Covent
-Garden. The name of the club has a duplex signification; it refers to
-Richard Savage the poet, and also to the Bohemian freedom of its members.
-It includes in its number no small share of the literary talent of the
-London newspaper and dramatic world.
-
-
-CLARE MARKET.--p. 339.
-
-Denzil Street was so called by the Earl of Clare in 1682, in memory of his
-uncle Denzil, Lord Holles, who died 1679-80. He was one of the five
-members of Parliament whom Charles I. so despotically and so unwisely
-attempted to seize. The inscription on the south-west wall of the street
-was renewed in 1796.
-
-
-STREET CHARACTERS.--p. 381.
-
-It would be impossible to recapitulate the street celebrities from
-Hogarth's time to the present day which St. Giles's has harboured. A
-writer in _Notes and Queries_ mentions a man who used to sell dolls'
-bedsteads, and who was always said to have been the king's evidence
-against the Cato Street conspirators. Charles Lamb describes, in his own
-inimitable way, an old sailor without legs who used to propel his
-mutilated body about the streets on a wooden framework supported on
-wheels. He was said to have been maimed during the Gordon riots. But I
-have now myself to add to the list the most remarkable relic of all. There
-is (1868?) to be seen any day in the London streets a gaunt grey-haired
-old blind beggar, with hard strongly-marked features and bushy eyebrows.
-This is no less a person than Hare the murderer, who years ago aided Burke
-in murdering poor mendicants and houseless people in Edinburgh, and
-selling their bodies to the surgeons for dissection. Hare, a young man
-then, turned king's evidence and received a pardon. He came to London with
-his blood money, and entered himself as a labourer under an assumed name
-at a tannery in the suburbs. The men discovering him, threw the wretch
-into a steeping-pit, from which he escaped, but with loss of both eyes.
-
-
-THE SEVEN DIALS.--p. 385.
-
-Evelyn describes going (Oct. 5, 1694) to see the seven new streets in St.
-Giles's, then building by Mr. Neale, who had introduced lotteries in
-imitation of those of Venice. The Doric column was removed in July 1773,
-in the hope of finding a sum of money supposed to be concealed under the
-base. The search was ineffectual; the pillar now ornaments the common at
-Weybridge. Gay describes Seven Dials, in his own pleasant, inimitable way
-(circa 1712).
-
- "Where fam'd St. Giles's ancient limits spread,
- An inrailed column rears its lofty head,
- Here to seven streets seven dials count the day,
- And from each other catch the circling ray;
- Here oft the peasant, with inquiring face,
- Bewildered trudges on from place to place;
- He dwells on every sign with stupid gaze,
- Enters the narrow alley's doubtful maze,
- Tries every winding court and street in vain,
- And doubles o'er his weary steps again."[782]
-
-Martinus Scriblerus is supposed to have been born in Seven Dials. Horace
-Walpole describes the progress of family portraits from the drawing-room
-to the parlour, from the parlour to the counting-house, from the
-housekeeper's room to the garret, and from thence to flutter in rags
-before a broker's shop in the Seven Dials.[783] Here Taylor laid the scene
-of "Monsieur Tonson."
-
- "Be gar! there's Monsieur Tonson come again!"
-
-The celebrated Mr. Catnach, the printer of street ballads, lived in Seven
-Dials. He died about 1847.
-
-
-STREETS IN ST. GILES'S.--p. 385.
-
-In Dyot Street lived Curll's "Corinna," Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas, and her
-mother.[784] At the Black Horse and Turk's Head public-houses in this
-street, those wretches Haggerty and Holloway, in November 1802, planned
-the murder of Mr. Steele on Hounslow Heath, and here they returned after
-the perpetration of the crime. At the execution of these murderers at the
-Old Bailey, in 1807, twenty-eight persons were trampled to death. The
-street was immortalised by a song in _Bombastes Furioso_, an excellent and
-boisterous burlesque tragic opera, written by William Barnes Rhodes, a
-clerk in the Bank of England. Bainbridge and Breckridge Streets, St.
-Giles's, now no more, were built prior to 1672, and derived their names
-from the owners, eminent parishioners in the reign of Charles II. Dyot
-Street was inhabited as late as 1803 by Philip Dyot, Esq., a descendant of
-Richard Dyot, from whom it derived its name. In 1710 there was a
-"Mendicants' Convivial Club" held at the Welsh's Head in this street. The
-club was founded in 1660, when its meetings were held at the Three Crowns
-in the Poultry. Denmark Street was probably built in 1689. Zoffany lived
-at No. 9. Bunbury, the caricaturist, laid the scene of his "Sunday Evening
-Conversation" in this street. In July 1771 Sir John Murray, the
-Pretender's secretary, was carried off in a coach from his house near St.
-Giles's Church by armed men.[785]
-
-
-SAINT GILES.--p. 385.
-
-This saint has some scurvy worshippers. Pierce Egan, in his _Life in
-London_ (1820), afterwards dramatised, describes the thieves' kitchens and
-beggars' revels, which men about town in those days thought it "the
-correct thing," as the slang goes, to see and share. "The Rookery" was a
-triangular mass of buildings, bounded by Bainbridge, George, and High
-Streets. It was swept away by New Oxford Street. The lodgings were
-threepence a night. Sir Henry Ellis, in 1813, counted seventeen
-horse-shoes nailed to thresholds in Monmouth Street as antidotes against
-witches. Jews preponderate in this unsavoury street. Mr. Henry Mayhew
-describes a conversation with a St. Giles's poet who wrote Newgate
-ballads, Courvousier's Lamentation, and elegies. He was paid one shilling
-each for them. A parliamentary report of 1848 describes Seven Dials as in
-a degraded state. "Vagrants, thieves, sharpers, scavengers, basket-women,
-charwomen, army seamstresses, and prostitutes, compose its mass. Infidels,
-chartists, socialists, and blasphemers have their head-quarters there.
-There are a hundred and fifty shops open on the Sunday. The ragged-school
-there is badly situated and uninviting." Mr. Albert Smith says gin shops
-are the only guides in "the dirty labyrinth" of the Seven Dials. The
-author once accompanied a Scripture-reader to some of the lowest and
-poorest courts and alleys of St. Giles's. In one bare room, he remembers,
-on an earth floor, sat a blind beggar waiting for the return of his boy, a
-sweeper, who had been sent out to a street-crossing to try and earn some
-bread. In another room there was a poor old lonely woman who had made a
-pet of an immense ram. We ended our tour by visiting an Irishwoman who had
-been converted from "Popery." While we were there, some Irish boys
-surrounded the house and shouted in at the key-hole, threatening to
-denounce her to the priest. When we emerged from this den we were received
-with a shower of peculiarly hard small potatoes, a penance which the
-author bore somewhat impatiently, while the Scripture-reader, who seemed
-accustomed to such rough compliments, took the blows like an early
-Christian martyr.
-
-
-LINCOLN'S INN HALL.--p. 398.
-
-In 1800 or 1801 Mackintosh delivered lectures in the old Lincoln's Inn
-Hall on the "Laws of Nature and Nations." They were attended by Canning,
-Lord Liverpool, and a brilliant audience. They contained a panegyric on
-Grotius. In style Mackintosh was measured and monotonous--of the school of
-Robertson and Gilbert Stuart. He made one mistake in imputing the doctrine
-of the association of ideas to Hobbes, which Coleridge corrected. He
-refuted the theories of Godwin in a masterly way.[786]
-
-
-SERLE STREET, LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS.--p. 401.
-
-This street derived its name from a Mr. Henry Serle, who died intestate
-circa 1690, much in debt, and with lands heavily mortgaged. He purchased
-the property from the executors of Sir John Birkenhead, the conductor of
-the Royalist paper, _Mercurius Aulicus_, during the Civil War, a writer
-whose poetry Lawes set to music, and who died in 1679. New Square was
-formerly called Serle's Court, and the arms of Serle are over the Carey
-Street gateway. The second edition of _Barnaby's Journal_ was printed in
-1716, for one Illidge, under Serle's Gate, Lincoln's Inn, New Square.[787]
-Addison seems to have visited Serle's Coffee-house, to study from some
-quiet nook the "humours" of the young barristers. There is a letter extant
-from Akenside, the poet, addressed to Jeremiah Dyson, that excellent
-friend and patron who defended him from the attacks of Warburton at
-Serle's Coffee-house.
-
-
-CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE SOCIETY.--p. 414.
-
-The Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, now at 66 Lincoln's Inn
-Fields, had apartments in 1714 at No. 6 Serle's Court. This society was
-founded by Dr. Bray and four friends on the 8th of March 1699, and it
-celebrated its third jubilee, or 150th anniversary, in 1849. The society
-assists schools and colonial churches, and is said to have distributed
-more than a hundred millions of Bibles and Prayer-books since its
-foundation.
-
-
-THE SOANE MUSEUM.--p. 424.
-
-The following squib is said to have been placed under the plates at an
-Academic dinner:--
-
- "THE MODERN GOTH.
-
- "Glory to thee, great artist soul of taste
- For mending pigsties where a plank's displaced,
- Whose towering genius plans from deep research
- Houses and temples fit for Master Birch
- To grace his shop on that important day
- When huge twelfth-cakes are raised in bright array.
- Each pastry pillar shows thy vast design;
- Hail! then, to thee, and all great works of thine.
- Come, let me place thee in the foremost rank
- With him whose dulness discomposed the Bank."
-
-The writer then, apostrophising Wren, adds--
-
- "Oh, had he lived to see thy blessed work,
- To see pilasters scored like loins of pork,
- To see the orders in confusion move,
- Scrolls fixed below and pedestals above,
- To see defiance hurled at Rome and Greece,
- Old Wren had never left the world in peace.
- Look where I will--above, below is shown
- A pure disordered order of thy own;
- Where lines and circles curiously unite
- A base compounded, compound composite,
- A thing from which in turn it may be said,
- Each lab'ring mason turns abash'd his head;
- Which Holland reprobates and Dance derides,
- While tasteful Wyatt holds his aching sides."[788]
-
-Soane foolishly brought an action against the bitter writer; but Lord
-Kenyon directed the jury to find for the defendant on the ground that the
-satire was not personal.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
- Abingdon, Mrs., "Nosegay Fan," 318
-
- Adam, the Brothers, their design, 96;
- joke against their Scotch workmen, 103
-
- Adam, Robert, death and funeral of, 104
-
- Addison, the "Cato" of, 311;
- Booth's representation of "Cato," _ib._
-
- Adelphi, site of the, 97;
- the residence of Garrick, _ib._;
- Johnson and Boswell at, 98;
- prowlers in its arches, 448
-
- Adelphi Rooms, the, 449
-
- Adelphi Theatre, first success of, 180;
- Terry and Yates as its lessees, _ib._;
- appearance of "Jim Crow" in, _ib._;
- the elder Mathews manager of, _ib._;
- last great successes at, 185
-
- Akenside, at Tom's Coffee-house, 38
-
- Albemarle, Duke of. _See_ Monk
-
- Albemarle, Duchess of, 93;
- anecdotes of, 301
-
- "All the Year Round," 170
-
- Ambassador, Spanish, attack of an anti-Catholic mob on his house, 277
-
- Ambassadors, French and Spanish, affray between the retainers of, 134
-
- Amiens, proclamation of peace of, 18
-
- Anderson, Dr. Patrick, his Scotch pills, 53;
- story of Sir Walter Scott relating to, _ib._
-
- Anne of Denmark, her masques and masquerades in Somerset House, 58;
- accident at the funeral of, 195
-
- Anstis, John, Garter King at Arms, 43
-
- Antiquaries, Society of, 70
-
- Apollo Court and Room, 6
-
- Armstrong, Sir Thomas, 11
-
- Arnold, Dr., and the Lyceum, 171
-
- Art, English, institutions for promoting, 75
-
- Arts, the Society of, its place of meeting, 99;
- Barry's paintings, 100, 449;
- premiums and bounties distributed by, _ib._;
- Barry at work on its frescoes, 101;
- foundation and object of, 449;
- Barry's application to, _ib._
-
- Artists' Club in Clare Market, 346
-
- Arundel House, Strand, 39;
- occupants of, 40;
- death of the Countess of Nottingham in, 41;
- the Marquis of Rosney's description of, _ib._;
- Thomas Howard's treasures of art in, 42;
- neglect of antiquities in, _ib._;
- rooms lent to the Royal Society in, 43;
- streets erected on the site of, _ib._;
- Gay's remarks on its glories, _ib._
-
- Arundel Street, Strand, its residents, 43, 164
-
- Astronomical Society, 71
-
- "Athenæum" (Newspaper), 170
-
- Atterbury, Bishop, 155
-
-
- Bacon, Lord, his ingratitude, 32;
- birthplace of, 127;
- events of his life connected with York House, 127-8;
- anecdotes of his early life, 128;
- verses addressed to him at Durham House, 129;
- his early legal studies, 130
-
- Balmerino, Lord, an anecdote of, 234
-
- Baltimore, Lord, infamous conduct of, 176
-
- Banks. _See_ Coutts, Child, and Drummond
-
- Bannister, Jack, 325
-
- Barrow, Dr. Isaac, the death of, 232
-
- Barry, his violence, 101;
- his diligence at work, _ib._;
- his paintings in the Council Room of the Society of Arts, _ib._;
- effect produced by his paintings, 449;
- his poverty and death, _ib._
-
- Barry, Mrs., her theatrical career, 433
-
- Barry, Spanger, an actor, 315
-
- Basing House, an adventure at, 279
-
- Beard, singer and actor, 249
-
- Beauclerk, Topham, 98
-
- Beaufort, House, Strand, 83, 447
-
- Beckett, Andrew, works of, 99
-
- Beckett, Thomas, bookseller, 99
-
- Bedford, the Earls of, the old town house of, 185;
- streets named after his family, _ib._
-
- Bedford Street once fashionable, 186;
- Half Moon Tavern in, _ib._;
- residents of, 187;
- Constitution Tavern in, 197
-
- Bedfordbury, 236, 459
-
- Beefsteak Club, 172;
- badge of, _ib._;
- members of, 173;
- Peg Woffington, president of one at Dublin, _ib._;
- another started by Rich and Lambert, _ib._;
- its place of meeting, _ib._;
- distinguished members of, 454;
- sale of its effects, 174
-
- Bell, Mr. Jacob, 225
-
- Bellamy, George Anne, actress, 317
-
- Berkeley, Dr., 155
-
- Bermudas, the Justice Overdo's allusion to, 235
-
- Berties, the, 417
-
- Betterton, the "Garrick" of his age, 433;
- the parts he represented, _ib._;
- his death, _ib._
-
- Betty, Master, 321
-
- Billington, Mrs., 333
-
- Bindley, James, father of the Society of Antiquaries, his burial-place,
- 164
-
- Birch, Dr., the antiquary, 36;
- his books and literary remains, 48;
- Dr. Johnson's remark on, _ib._
-
- Birkenhead, Sir John, 245
-
- Bishop, operas produced by, 334
-
- Black Jack, 348, 440
-
- Blake, the mystical painter, 83
-
- Blemund's Ditch, 353
-
- Bohemia, the Queen of, 293;
- reports concerning, 295;
- Sir Henry Wotton's lines to, _ib._;
- memorial of her husband, 296
-
- Boleyn, Anne, at Temple Bar, 21
-
- Bonomi, 78
-
- Booksellers, their shops the haunts of wits and poets, 219
-
- Booth, Barton, 311
-
- Boswell, James, admitted into the Literary Club, 17;
- the supposed Shaksperean MSS., 47.
-
- Bowl-yard, its name, 373
-
- Boydell, Alderman, 258
-
- Bracegirdle, Mrs., 49;
- her abduction, 50;
- her charity, 347;
- her popularity, 434
-
- Braham, John, 333
-
- Bristol, Earl of, 264;
- particulars concerning, 459
-
- Britain's Bourse. _See_ Exchange
-
- Brocklesby, Dr. Richard, friend of Burke and Johnson, 45;
- attends Lord Chatham when he fainted in the House of Lords, _ib._
-
- Brougham, Lord, 396
-
- Buckingham, the first Duke of, 130;
- his residences, _ib._;
- patronage of art, 131;
- Dryden's lines on, 132;
- Pope's lines on, _ib._;
- Clarendon's view of his character, 133
-
- Buckingham, the second Duke of, 133
-
- Buckingham Street, 135;
- distinguished residents in, 136, 137;
- Mr. David Copperfield's visit to, 451
-
- Bull's Head, the, Clare Market, 346
-
- Burgess, Dr., a witty preacher, 159;
- successors of, _ib._
-
- Burleigh, Lord, his residence, 179
-
- Burleigh Street, site of, 179
-
- Burley, Sir Simon, 218
-
- Burnet, Bishop, 44
-
- Burton St. Lazar, 350
-
- Bushnell, John, the sculptor, 7, 8
-
- Butcher Row, 148;
- Lee's death in, 150
-
-
- "Cabinet" Newspaper, _see_ "Pic-Nic"
-
- Caermarthan, Lord, 136
-
- Cameron, Dr., burial place of, 120
-
- Canary House, 452
-
- Canning, George, 395
-
- Carey Street, 428
-
- Carlini, 65
-
- Carlisle, the Countess of, 178
-
- Catherine of Braganza, 61;
- her return to Portugal, 62
-
- Catherine Street, its newspapers and theatre in, 166;
- Gay's description of, _ib._
-
- Cavalini Pietro, works attributed to, 203
-
- Cavendish, William, Earl of Devonshire, 90
-
- Cecil, Robert, Earl of Salisbury, 89, 153
-
- Cecil Street, its residents, 88
-
- Celeste, Madam, 184
-
- Centlivre, Mrs., 230;
- her hatred to the Jacobites, 231;
- Pope's dislike to, _ib._;
- Leigh Hunt's treatment of, 232
-
- Ceracchi, Giuseppe, 66
-
- Chambers, Sir William, 65
-
- Chapone, Mrs. Hester, 428
-
- Charing, village of, 201;
- population under Edward I., _ib._;
- the Falconry or Mews at, 218
-
- Charing Cross, tradition concerning, 201;
- Peele's lines on, 202;
- tradition of Queen Eleanor connected with, _ib._;
- erection and demolition of, 204;
- a Royalist ballad on, _ib._;
- executions at, 205;
- introduction of Punch into England at, 208;
- Titus Oates, in the pillory at, _ib._;
- the royal statue at, 209;
- Waller's lines on the statue, 210;
- Andrew Marvell's lines on the Cross, 211;
- loss of parts of, 212;
- a tradition concerning, _ib._;
- the pedestal of, _ib._;
- a rogue exposed in the pillory at, _ib._;
- punishment of Japhet Crook at, 213;
- old prints of, 215;
- poetical eulogiums of, _ib._;
- coffee-houses in the neighbourhood of, 226;
- Locket's ordinary at, 227;
- Milton's lodging at, 232;
- other memoranda, 248;
- a strange scene at, _ib._;
- a remark of Dr. Johnson's on, 234;
- site of the post office at, _ib._;
- ancient hospital at, 235;
- former improvements at, _ib._;
- the "Swan," and verses by Johnson, 236
-
- Charing Cross Hospital, 233
-
- Charles I., letter written by, 58;
- his statue at Charing Cross, 209;
- strange story regarding the statue of, 212
-
- Charles II., his progress through London, his coronation, 22;
- the two courts in the reign of, 61
-
- Chatterton, 80;
- story concerning, 197
-
- Chaucer, his marriage, 108;
- favours obtained, 109;
- royal post held by, 218
-
- Chesterfield, Earl of, 187
-
- Child's Bank, 6
-
- Christian Knowledge, Society for Promoting, 414, 464
-
- Chunee, the elephant, 95, 419
-
- Cibber, Colley, 312;
- characters originated by, 316;
- his success as actor and manager, _ib._
-
- Cibber, Theophilus, his fate, 317;
- his wife, _ib._
-
- Clare House Court, 298
-
- Clare Market, 339;
- Orator Henley's appearances in, _ib._;
- artists' club at the Bull's Head in, 346;
- Mrs. Bracegirdle's visits to, 347
-
- Clarges, John, farrier, 93, 301
-
- Clarke, William, proprietor of Exeter Change, 177
-
- Clement's Inn, 156;
- a tradition concerning, _ib._;
- the hall of, 157;
- the New Court and Independent Meeting-house in, 159
-
- Clement's, St., Church, improvements round, 152;
- general dislike to, _ib._;
- a ferment in the parish of, 153;
- distinguished men baptized and buried in, _ib._;
- adornments of, 155;
- Dr. Johnson's attendance in, _ib._
-
- Clement's, St., Well, 156;
- Cleopatra's Needle, 145
-
- Clifton, bridge over the Avon at, 451
-
- Clifton's Eating-house, 149
-
- Clinch, Tom, the highwayman, 373
-
- Clive, Kitty, 315
-
- Coaches and coach-stands, 166, 167
-
- Coal Hole, the, 85
-
- Cobb, the upholsterer, anecdote of, 258
-
- Cock and Pye Fields, 356
-
- Cock Lane ghost, the, 196;
- the contriver of, 214
-
- Cockpit, or Phoenix Theatre, its site, 304;
- Puritan violence against, _ib._;
- its reopening at the Restoration, 305
-
- Coffee, 36
-
- Coffee-houses, 36;
- mentioned by Steele in the _Tatler_, _ib._
-
- Coleridge, S. T., 170
-
- Commons, House of, 101
-
- Congreve, William, 53;
- Pope's declaration regarding, 51;
- the successful career of, _ib._;
- Voltaire's visit to, _ib._;
- Curll's life of, 52
-
- Congreve, Sir William, 88
-
- Conway, Lord, memoranda of, 270
-
- Cooke, George Frederick, 321
-
- Cooke, T. P., 174
-
- Cottenham, Lord, 395
-
- Coutts's Bank, the strong room of, 86, 87;
- the first deposit in, 87;
- story of one of the clerks of, _ib._;
- the site of, and additions to, _ib._
-
- Coutts, Thomas, his origin, and marriage, 86;
- anecdote of, 448
-
- Covent Garden, 93
-
- Covent Garden Theatre and Sheridan, 328
-
- Coventry, Secretary, 245
-
- Cowley, enmity of the Royalists to, 115;
- occasion of "The Complaint" by, _ib._;
- beautiful lines by, 116;
- his death at Chertsey, _ib._
-
- Cox, Bessy, 282
-
- Craig's Court, Charing Cross, 227
-
- Craven, Lord, his life, etc., 294;
- miniature Heidelberg erected by, _ib._;
- his services to the Queen of Bohemia, 295;
- patronage of literature, _ib._;
- employment in King William's reign, 296;
- Miss Benger's estimate of, _ib._;
- Quixotic character of, 460
-
- Craven Buildings, fresco portrait at, 297
-
- Craven House, 292, 459
-
- Craven Street, residents of, 139;
- diplomatic consultation in, _ib._;
- epigrams by James Smith and Sir George Rose on it, _ib._
-
- "Cries of London," the, 167
-
- Crockford, his shop in the Strand, 148;
- his club, _ib._
-
- Cromwell, Oliver, residences of, 226, 279
-
- Crook, Japhet, his punishment, 213;
- lines by Pope on, 214
-
- Crouch, Mrs., the singer, 333
-
- Crowle, _bon mot_ on Judge Page by, 217
-
- Crown and Anchor, the, 152, 153;
- the great room of, 444
-
- Cumberland, George, Earl of, 120
-
- Cuper's Gardens, 43
-
- Curl, Edmund, 212
-
- Curtis, Mrs., visits Mrs. Siddons, 91
-
-
- Davenant, Lady, 404
-
- Davenant, the actor, 429
-
- Davies, Moll, 430
-
- Dawson, Jemmy, 15
-
- Denham, Sir John, works written by, 393;
- a drunken frolic of, 452
-
- Denzil Street, 460
-
- Deptford, and Peter the Great in, 45
-
- Design, the School of, 446
-
- De Sully, Duc, 41
-
- Devereux Court, 36;
- duel in, _ib._;
- death of Marchmont Needham in, 37;
- relic of Pope at Tom's Coffee-house, _ib._
-
- Devereux, Robert, Earl of Essex, 28;
- Spenser's relation to, _ib._;
- his house near the Temple, 29;
- his plot against Elizabeth, _ib._;
- his running a-muck in the City, and flight to Essex Gardens, 30;
- his capture and death 31;
- his mother and sister, 32;
- his crimes, 34
-
- Devonshire Club, 148
-
- Dibdin, Charles, his entertainments, 34
-
- Dickens, Charles, 170;
- on Seven Dials and Monmouth Street, 385;
-
- Digby, Sir Kenelm, 241;
- Ben Jonson's lines on, _ib._
-
- Dilke, Sir C. Wentworth, 170
-
- Disraeli, B., 400
-
- Dobson, Vandyke's protégé, 200
-
- Dodd, the actor, 328
-
- Doggett, the actor, 310
-
- Donne, Dr., the tomb of his wife, 154;
- his want of self-respect, 289;
- strange circumstance recorded, 290;
- vision seen by, _ib._;
- conceits of, 291;
- his picture in his shroud, 292;
- a divine and a poet, 390
-
- Dowton, the actor, 323
-
- Doyley, 168
-
- Drinking-fountains, the first, 445
-
- Drummond's Bank, 227, 457
-
- Drury family, 288
-
- Drury House, secret meetings there arranged by Essex, 29;
- outbreak decided on at, 288;
- site of, 237
-
- Drury Lane, origin of its name, 288;
- residents in, 297 _et seq._;
- a strange scene in, 298;
- a duel in, _ib._;
- pictures of, 299;
- the poor poet's home in, _ib._;
- its bad repute during the Regency, 460
-
- Drury Lane Theatre, 305;
- Pepys's visits to, 306;
- scuffle in the king's presence in, _ib._;
- distinguished actresses of, 309 _et seq._;
- plays produced at, _ib._;
- Garrick's first appearance at, 313;
- Dr. Johnson's address on its re-opening, 322;
- a riot in 1740 in, 324;
- Charles Lamb's description of, 324, 325;
- the rebuilding of, 329;
- competitive poems for the opening of, 330;
- Byron's opening address at, _ib._;
- statue over its entrance, _ib._;
- pecuniary statements relating to, _ib._;
- revival of its fortunes by Edmund Kean, 331;
- Grimaldi at, 334;
- various actors of, _ib._;
- pictures of royalty at, 338;
- recent productions at, _ib._
-
- Drury, Sir Robert, 288
-
- Dryden, his lines on the death of Buckingham, 132;
- his squabbles with Jacob Tonson, 54;
- attack on, 280;
- established jokes against, _ib._;
- Mulgrave's lines on, 281;
- Otway's defence of, _ib._
-
- Dudley, Sir Robert, 369
-
- Dudley, Duchess of, 369
-
- Duke Street, 135
-
- Duke's Theatre, 429
-
- Durham House, residents of, 92;
- sufferings of the Princess Elizabeth in, _ib._;
- its last occupants, _ib._;
- banquets given by Henry VII. at, _ib._;
- mint established at, 95;
- Lady Jane Grey's marriage in, _ib._;
- the scene of an old legend, 96;
- Raleigh in his turret study at, _ib._;
- purchased by the brothers Adam, _ib._
-
- Durham Street, 91
-
- Dyot Street, 462
-
-
- Eccentrics, club of, 259
-
- Edward III., 110;
- his conduct on the death of John of Gaunt, 114
-
- Edward VI. at Temple Bar, 21
-
- Egerton, Lord Chancellor, 391
-
- Eleanor Cross, model of, 138
-
- Eleanor, Queen, crosses in memory of, 138, 202;
- tombs of, 203;
- the preservation of her body, 204
-
- Elizabeth, Queen, procession on the anniversary of her accession, 9;
- adornment of her statue at Temple Bar, 10;
- her reception at Temple Bar, 21;
- the plot of Essex against, 29;
- her relations with Admiral Seymour, 39;
- story of the Essex ring, 40;
- her favour for Raleigh, 92
-
- Ellesmere. _See_ Egerton
-
- Elliston, Robert William, 326;
- stories told of, 327
-
- Epigram, an, a legacy gained by, 139
-
- Erskine, Lord, 424
-
- Essex House, 29;
- occupants of, 31;
- the Parliamentary general a resident in, 33
-
- Essex, Robert, Earl of, Ben Jonson's masque on his marriage, 33;
- divorce of his countess, and her marriage with Robert Carr, _ib._;
- general for the Parliament, _ib._;
- attempts to seize his papers, 34
-
- Essex Street, Strand, 25;
- residents in, 34;
- Johnson's club at the Essex Head, 35;
- Unitarian chapel in, 443;
- memoranda of, _ib._
-
- Estcourt, 452;
- Steele's compliments to, 180
-
- Etherage, Sir George, 301;
- play by, 431
-
- Etty, residence of, 136
-
- Evans's Hotel, Covent Garden, 460
-
- Evelyn, John, 134
-
- "Examiner," the, 123
-
- Exchange, the New, 93;
- a tragedy in, _ib._;
- legends about, _ib._;
- the White Widow, 94;
- the walks of, _ib._;
- a frequenter of, _ib._;
- its destruction, 95
-
- Exeter Change, 175;
- exhibitions in, _ib._;
- last tenants of, 176
-
- Exeter Hall, 178
-
- Exeter House, 179
-
- Exeter Place, 261
-
- Exeter Street, 178
-
-
- Faithorne, William, 148
-
- Fanshawe, Lady, 423
-
- Fanshawe, Sir Richard, 421
-
- Farren, Miss, the actress, 318
-
- Farren, the actor, 335
-
- Faucit, Helen (Mrs. T. Martin), 337
-
- "Field" newspaper, 168
-
- Finch, Lord Chancellor, 265
-
- Finett, Sir John, 240
-
- Fletcher, his execution, 14
-
- Folkes, Martin, 272
-
- Folly, the, 82
-
- Foote, the actor, 315
-
- Fordyce, George, 34
-
- Fortescue, Judge, 394
-
- Fortescue, Pope's lawyer, 37
-
- Fountain Club, the, 84
-
- Fountain Court Tavern, 84;
- the Coal Hole in, 85
-
- Fountain, the, King Street, 381
-
- Franklin, Benjamin, 139;
- his landlady and the charitable nun, 275;
- extravagance of his fellow-pressmen, 276;
- his visit as ambassador of Massachusetts, 277
-
- Freemasons' Hall, the, 274
-
- Friend, Sir John, 13
-
- Fuseli, 76;
- his residence, 259
-
-
- Gaiety Theatre, 452
-
- Gardelle, the artist and murderer, 251
-
- Garrick, David, 96, 99;
- Johnson's esteem for, _ib._;
- his "Chinese Festival," 185, 186;
- anecdote of, 273;
- Zoffany's portrait of, 304;
- his career, 313;
- his first appearance at Drury Lane, _ib._;
- his varied talent, 314;
- appears on the stage with Quin, _ib._;
- his death, 315
-
- Gatti's café, 189
-
- George, Madame St., 59
-
- Geological Society, the, 69
-
- George III., his patronage of art, 73;
- his coolness, 338
-
- George IV., Chantrey's statue of, 226
-
- Gerbier, Sir Balthasar, 72
-
- Gibbons, Grinling, 139
-
- Gibbons's Tennis Court, 429
-
- Gibbs, the architect, 162
-
- Giles, St., tradition of, 353;
- a scurvy worshipper of, 463
-
- Giles's, St., ancient toll in, 350;
- hospital for lepers in, 350;
- death of Sir John Oldcastle in, 351;
- the gallows in, 352;
- site of the hospital, 353;
- the manor of, 352-3;
- gradual growth of, 355, 356;
- its progress after the Great Fire, 356;
- settlement of foreigners in, 357;
- its increase in Queen Anne's reign, _ib._;
- resort of Irish to, _ib._;
- entries in the parish records of, _ib._;
- increase of French refugees in, 357;
- relief to well-known mendicants in, 359;
- the plague in, 360;
- the plague-cart of, _ib._;
- rates levied in consequence of the plague, 361;
- hospital church of, 363;
- Dr. Mainwaring rector of, _ib._;
- new church of, 364;
- Dr. Heywood, the rector of, _ib._;
- celebration of the Restoration in, 365;
- church extension in, _ib._;
- a sexton's bargain with the rector of, 367;
- the Resurrection Gate in the churchyard of, _ib._;
- churchyard of, 367, 368;
- new burial-ground of, 368;
- celebrated persons buried in the churchyard of, 369, 370;
- the oldest monument in the burial-ground of, 370;
- persons relieved in, 371;
- erection of the new almshouses and school for, _ib._;
- Hogarth's studies and scenes in, 372;
- Nollekens Smith's description of, _ib._;
- the whipping-stone of, _ib._;
- the Pound in, 373;
- the inns of, 374;
- resort of Irish beggars to, 376, 377;
- the cellars of, 378;
- lodgings in, _ib._;
- beggars, conjurors, and pickpockets of, 379;
- the mendicants of, 381;
- low Irish in, 385, 386;
- persons connected with several streets in, 463;
- the author's visit with a missionary to houses in, 463
-
- Giles's, St., Hospital, criminals at its gate, on their way to Tyburn,
- 373
-
- Giraud, his quarrel, 93;
- execution, _ib._
-
- Globe Theatre, 165
-
- Glover, Mrs., as an actress, 336
-
- Godfrey, Sir E., murder of, 61;
- residence of, 142
-
- Godwin, William, 444
-
- Golden Cross, the, 232
-
- Goldsmith, Oliver, a quotation of Dr. Johnson's cleverly capped by, 18;
- lines on Caleb Whitefoord by, 141;
- his friends, 197;
- an earl's patronage of, 198;
- anecdote of, _ib._;
- his visit to Northumberland House, _ib._
-
- Gondomar, Spanish ambassador, 298
-
- Goodman, and the Drury Lane Company, 308
-
- Gordon, Lord George, 278
-
- Gorges, Sir Ferdinand, 30
-
- Graham, Dr., a London Cagliostro, his rooms and their chief priestess,
- 102;
- his "celestial bed" and "elixir of life," 103
-
- Grange Inn, 440
-
- Gravelot, the drawing-master, 250
-
- Gray's Inn, Bacon's chambers in, 130
-
- Grecian, the, Addison's description of, 36;
- a quarrel at, _ib._;
- meetings of savans at, 37;
- the privy-council held at, _ib._
-
- Greenhill, John, 271
-
- Green Ribbon Club, the, 8
-
- Gresham College, 68
-
- Grimaldi at Drury Lane, 334
-
- Gwynn, Nell, her last resting-place, 244;
- the birthplace, life, and character of, 301;
- a descendant of, 302;
- Pepys's allusion in his "Diary" to, _ib._;
- her death, _ib._;
- a memorandum of Evelyn's regarding, _ib._;
- Pepys's estimate of the other actresses associated with, 307;
- her last original part, 308
-
-
- Hackman, the Rev. Mr., the murderer of Miss Ray, 160;
- his execution, _ib._
-
- Haines, Joe, a clever actor, 308
-
- Hale, Sir Matthew, an eminent student of Lincoln's Inn, 390
-
- Hare, the murderer, the lamentable condition of, 461
-
- Harley, John Pritt, actor, 336
-
- Harrison, General, the Anabaptist, the brave end of, 205
-
- Haverhill, William de, Henry III.'s treasurer, his mansion and the
- various uses to which it was put, 388
-
- Haycock's Ordinary, 443
-
- Haydon, anecdote of, 1;
- another, of his early life in London, 77
-
- Hayman, Frank, a St. Martin's Lane worthy, amusing anecdotes of, 255
-
- Haymarket Theatre, the, Fielding's "Tom Thumb" brought out at, 438
-
- Hazlitt, William, his criticism of the elder Mathews, 182
-
- Heber, Bishop, 397
-
- Helmet Court, memoranda of, 447
-
- Hemings' Row, St. Martin's Lane, origin of its name, 458
-
- Henderson, the actor, 319
-
- Henley, Orator, sketch of his life, 339;
- his defence of action in a preacher, _ib._;
- his correspondence with William Whiston, 340;
- the shameless advertisements issued by, 340, 341;
- lines by Pope in the "Dunciad" on, 342;
- his controversy with Pope, _ib._;
- a contemporary description of, _ib._;
- his plans for raising money, 343;
- a joke on Archbishop Herring by, _ib._;
- his appearance before the privy-council, _ib._;
- Hogarth's two caricatures of, 344;
- beginning of one of his sermons, 345;
- overawed by two Oxonians, 346
-
- Henrietta Maria, queen of Charles I., the insolent conduct of her French
- household, and the king's difficulty in getting rid of them, 58;
- her last masques at Somerset House, 59
-
- Henry VII., hospital founded on the site of the Savoy by, 114
-
- Herbert, Lord, of Cherbury, a Quixotic quarrel of, 194;
- commencement of his work, "De Veritate," 265;
- a remarkable vision which is said to have appeared to, _ib._;
- reflections on passing the residence of, 266
-
- Herring, Archbishop, Swift's opposition to, 344
-
- Hewson, the supposed original Strap of "Roderick Random," 136
-
- Heywood, Dr., rector of St. Giles's, Puritan petition against, 365
-
- Hill, Captain, a well-known profligate bully, his drunken jealousy of
- Mountfort the actor, 49;
- his attempt to carry off Mrs. Bracegirdle, 50;
- cowardly murder of Mountfort, by, 51
-
- Hill, Mr. Thomas, the supposed prototype of Paul Pry, 103
-
- Hilliard, Nicholas, Queen Elizabeth's miniature-painter, 244
-
- "Histriomastix," the, Prynne's punishment for a scurrilous note in, 59
-
- Hodges, Dr., his account of the commencement and progress of the plague,
- 262
-
- Hogarth, 72;
- his picture of "Noon," 372
-
- Hog Lane, St. Giles's (now Crown Street), 371
-
- Holborn, gradual extension and first pavement of, 355;
- allusions to a doleful procession up the Heavy Hill of, 374
-
- Hollar, the German engraver, description of a scarce view of Somerset
- House by, 63;
- the residence of, 157
-
- Holmes, Copper, a well-known character on the river, 247
-
- Holy Land, the, a part of St. Giles's, 386
-
- Hone, Nathaniel, 258
-
- Hood, Thomas, his "Bridge of Sighs," 450
-
- Hook, Theodore, 102
-
- Howard, Lady Margaret, Sir John Suckling's fantastic simile in lines on
- her feet, 195
-
- Howard, Thomas, Duke of Norfolk, discovery of the cipher used by--his
- treason and death, 27
-
- Howard, Thomas, Earl of Arundel, an amateur of art, Clarendon's
- description of, 42;
- Vansomer's portrait of, _ib._;
- his devotion in the pursuit of objects of art, 43;
- disposal of his statues, marbles, and library, _ib._;
- remarks made by him in a dispute with Charles I., _ib._
-
- Howard, Philip, Earl of Arundel, a letter to, 27;
- memorial in the Tower of, _ib._
-
- Hudson, the portrait-painter, 272
-
- Hungerford, Lord Walter, first Speaker of the House of Commons, 137
-
- Hungerford, Sir Edward, founder of Hungerford Market, 137
-
- Hungerford Market, the site of, 137;
- the origin and object of, 138;
- vicissitudes of, _ib._;
- an unlucky speculation at, _ib._
-
- Hungerford Suspension Bridge, 138;
- the purchase of, 451;
- the new railway bridge in place of, 138;
- the railway station at, _ib._
-
- Hunter, Dr. William, O'Keefe's description of him lecturing on anatomy,
- 78
-
- Hunter, Dr. John, particulars of his professional life, 420, 421
-
- Hunt, Leigh, the imprisonment of, 123;
- his critical remarks on the elder Mathews, 182
-
-
- "Illustrated London News," the proprietor and staff of, 55
-
- Ingram, Mr. Herbert, proprietor of the "Illustrated London News," career
- and death of, 55
-
- Ireland, Samuel, father of the celebrated literary impostor, the
- residence of, 46;
- his belief in the genuineness of "Vortigern" as a work of Shakspere's,
- 47
-
- Ireland, W. H., the true story of the Shakspere forgery committed by, 46;
- effect of the extraordinary praise lavished on, 47;
- supporters and opponents of, _ib._;
- damnation of his play of "Vortigern," _ib._
-
- "Isabella," Southerne's tragedy of, effect of Mrs. Siddons's acting in,
- 91
-
- Ivy Bridge, narrow passage to the Thames under, and mansion near, 91
-
-
- Jacobites, the cant words used by, 15
-
- James I., pageants on his passage through the city, 21
-
- James Street, Adelphi, No. 2, the residence of Mr. Thomas Hill, the Hull
- of "Gilbert Gurney," 103
-
- Jansen, an architect, works by, 191
-
- Jekyll, Sir Joseph, his obnoxious bill, and the fury of the mob against,
- 410;
- his _bon-mot_ on Lord Kenyon's spits, 423
-
- Jennings, Frances. _See_ Widow, the White
-
- Jerdan, William, 83
-
- John, King of France, his entrance as a captive into London, 112;
- his honourable return to England after having been liberated on
- parole, _ib._;
- his death at the Savoy, _ib._
-
- John of Padua, Henry VIII.'s architect, 57
-
- John, Saint, the foundation of the hospital of, 114;
- abuses of, transference of its funds, etc., 115;
- Dr. John Killigrew appointed master of, _ib._;
- Strype's description of the old hall of, 117
-
- John Street, Adelphi, 99
-
- Johnson, Dr., his conversation with Goldsmith on Westminster Abbey, 17;
- club formed at the Essex Head by--its principal members, 35;
- his high estimation for Garrick, 97;
- Garrick's remark on the philosopher's friendship for Beauclerk, 98;
- his three reasons for the black skin of the negro race, 149;
- an Irishman's opinion of, _ib._;
- his pleasant evenings at the Mitre with an old college friend, 150;
- Boswell's account of his solemn devotion during divine service, 155;
- extract from a letter written to Mrs. Thrale by, 156;
- his first residence in London, 178;
- an eccentric habit of, 187;
- beginning of his address for the re-opening of Drury Lane Theatre, 322
-
- Johnstone, Irish, 335
-
- Jones, Colonel, his execution, 205
-
- Jones, Inigo, his plan for laying out Lincoln's Inn Fields, 402
-
- Jones, the actor, 323
-
- Jonson, Ben, dialogues, speeches, and masques by, 22, 33;
- his residence when a child, 142;
- a story of, 251;
- early life of, 399;
- tradition of, _ib._;
- his exploit in Flanders, _ib._
-
- Jordan, Mrs., 326
-
-
- Kauffman, Angelica, 76
-
- Kean, Charles, 338
-
- Kean, Mrs. Charles (Miss Ellen Tree), 338
-
- Kean, Edmund, habits of, 85;
- his early success in London, 88;
- his origin, early life, and first triumphs in London, 331;
- Hazlitt's remarks on, 332
-
- Keeley, Robert, the actor, 337
-
- Keelings the, 405
-
- Kelly, Michael, 334
-
- Kelly, Miss, actress, 336;
- attacks on, _ib._
-
- Kemble, Charles, 321
-
- Kemble, John, 320;
- generous act of the Duke of Northumberland to, _ib._;
- Leigh Hunt's picture of, _ib._
-
- Kenilworth, Lord of, 28
-
- Kennington Common, execution of Jacobites on, 14
-
- Kensington, South, transfer of pictures from the National Gallery to, 224
-
- Kent, the rising under Wat Tyler, 112
-
- Kenyon, Lord, jokes on, 423;
- his stinginess and bad Latin, _ib._
-
- Killigrew, Dr. Henry, 119
-
- Killigrew, Mrs. Anne, 119
-
- Killigrew, Thomas, 119;
- actors in his company, 308
-
- King, Dr., Principal of St. Mary's Hall, Oxford, 36
-
- King, Dr. William, lines on the Beefsteak Club by, 174
-
- King, the original Sir Peter Teazle, 321
-
- King's College and its museum, 66, 447;
- models and instruments presented by Queen Victoria, _ib._
-
- King's College Hospital, 438
-
- Kirby, Mr., 73, 74
-
- Kit Cat Club, 51;
- institution of the, 85;
- origin of its name, _ib._;
- the summer rendezvous of, 86;
- Lady Mary Wortley Montague the toast of, _ib._
-
- Kneller, Sir Godfrey, 72;
- his life and character, 267;
- the witty banter of, 268;
- his vanity, 269;
- how Jacob Tonson got pictures out of, _ib._;
- his conviction of the legitimacy of the Pretender, _ib._
-
- Knight Templars, the, 25
-
- Knollys, Lettice, Countess of Essex, afterwards Lady Leicester, 31
-
- Knowledge, Christian, the Society for Promoting, 461
-
- Königsmark, Count, 193
-
- Kynaston, Sir Francis, 71, 187
-
- Kynaston, the actor, 187, 432
-
-
- Lacy, a favourite actor, 308
-
- Laguerre, the French painter, 246
-
- Lamb, Charles, tragedy in his family, 285;
- his devotion to his sister, 286
-
- Lancaster, the Earl of, 107
-
- Lancaster, John, Duke of, favours Wickliffe, 109;
- his peril from the London mob, 110;
- his escape, _ib._;
- _amende_ of the Londoners to, _ib._;
- his marriage and connections, _ib._;
- his unpopularity and violence, 119;
- clause aimed by Wat Tyler against, 112;
- destruction of his London palace, etc., 113;
- his death and burial, 114
-
- Lancaster, the Duchy of, 122, 450
-
- Lander, Richard, 120
-
- Langhorne, Dr., 396
-
- Law Courts, new, 147
-
- "Law Times," Office, 168
-
- Layer, Christopher, 17
-
- Learning, Society for the encouragement of, 49
-
- Lee, the poet, his death, 154
-
- Lepers, 354
-
- Lewis, the comedian, 274;
- his acting, 323, 324
-
- Lillie, Charles, the perfumer, 84
-
- Limput, Remigius van, 187
-
- Liston, the comedian, 323
-
- Lincoln's Inn, origin of its name, 387;
- the Chancery Lane side of, 388;
- the gateway of, _ib._;
- the chapel, 388, 389;
- distinguished students of, 390 _et seq._;
- persons buried in the chapel, 392 _et seq._;
- old customs and laws of, 397, 398;
- disposal of Hogarth's picture, "Preaching before Felix," at, 398;
- the new hall, library, and garden of, _ib._, 464;
- Mr. Disraeli's studies at, 400
-
- Lincoln's Inn Field, part of Fickett's field, 401;
- King James regulates building in, 401, 402;
- Inigo Jones's plan for laying out and building, 402;
- state in the time of Charles I. and Charles II.;
- Gay's sketch of its dangers, 403;
- Earl of Rochester's house in, 404;
- execution of plotters against Elizabeth in, _ib._;
- procession of Thomas Sadler, the thief, through, _ib._;
- Lord Russell's death in, 405;
- improvements in 1735 in, 410;
- Macaulay's picture of, _ib._;
- distinguished inhabitants of, 414 _et seq._;
- Tennyson's chambers in, 418;
- Mr. Povey's house in, 428
-
- Lindsey, Earl, 416, 417
-
- Lindsey House, 417
-
- Literary Club, Boswell and Johnson at, 17
-
- Literary Fund Society, 427
-
- Literature, Royal Society of, 259
-
- Locket's Ordinary, 227
-
- London, growth and changes of, 2;
- points of departure for tours in, _ib._;
- start for the author's tour in, 3;
- banks in, 7;
- the rebels under Tyler in, 112;
- King William at the celebration of the peace of Ryswick in, 23, 24;
- a bishop beheaded by the mob of, 26;
- cruel treatment of a Spaniard by the mob of, 213;
- the street signs of, 237;
- foreigners in 1580 in, 356;
- a glance at an ancient map of, 356, 357;
- Pennant on its churchyards, 367;
- crusade against Irish and other vagrants, 377;
- royal fears as to its increase, 401;
- its history an epitome of that of the world, 441;
- its newspapers and periodicals, 454
-
- Long Acre, the plague in, 262;
- Oliver Cromwell's residence in, 279;
- Tory tavern Club in, 284
-
- Lord Mayor's Day, 23
-
- Loutherberg, De, 167
-
- Lowin, John, 154
-
- Lyceum, the, 171;
- exhibitions in, _ib._;
- experiment in, 172;
- Mathew's entertainment in, _ib._;
- Beefsteak Club meet in, _ib._;
- Mr. T. P. Cooke's early triumphs in, 174
-
- Lyndhurst, Lord, 395
-
- Lyons, Emma (afterwards Lady Hamilton), 102
-
- Lyon's Inn, 165;
- sale of its materials, _ib._;
- murder of Mr. Weare, _ib._
-
- Lyttelton, Sir Thomas, 44
-
-
- M'Ardell, Hogarth's engraver, 251
-
- Mackintosh, Sir James, 464
-
- Macklin, the actor, 436
-
- Macready, William Charles, 337
-
- Maginn, Dr., ballad by, 232
-
- Malibran, Madame, 334
-
- Manos, Gannee, and other beggars, 382
-
- Mansfield, the Earl of, 394
-
- Mardyn, Mrs., the actress, 335
-
- Marlborough, the Duchess of, Congreve's legacy to, 52;
- her regard for Congreve, 53
-
- Martin's St., Lane, residents of, 239 _et seq._;
- Beard, the singer, 249;
- Old Slaughter's Coffee-house, _ib._;
- houses built by Payne in, 252;
- curious staircase in No. 96, 253;
- a house favoured by artists in, _ib._;
- Roubilliac's first studio in, 257;
- old house of the Earls of Salisbury in, 256;
- changes in, 261
-
- Martin's-in-the-Fields, St., 242;
- the church of, 244;
- the dust enshrined in, _ib._;
- J. T. Smith's visit to the vaults of, 246;
- the parochial abuses of, _ib._;
- the old watch and stocks of, 256
-
- Marvell, Andrew, 209;
- the grave of, 370
-
- Mary, Queen, 21
-
- Mary, St. Savoy, the Chapel of, the dead interred in, 121;
- its destruction by fire, 122;
- its restoration, _ib._
-
- Mary, St., Roncevalles, the hospital of, 235
-
- Mary-le-Strand, St., 162;
- construction of, _ib._;
- allusions by Pope and Addison to, 163;
- tragedy at, _ib._;
- interior of, _ib._
-
- Mathews, his entertainment, 140;
- his "Mail-coach Adventures," 172;
- his bargains with Mr. Arnold, 181;
- his various entertainments, _ib._;
- failure of his health, and death, 182;
- his first attempts as an actor, 298;
- his first appearance in London, 323
-
- Matthews, Bishop of Durham, 98
-
- Mayerne, Sir Theodore, 239;
- story of, 240;
- his death, 260
-
- Maynard, Mr. Serjeant, 404
-
- Mainwaring, Dr., 363, 364
-
- Maypole in the Strand, the, 160;
- its fall and restoration, 161;
- removal of, 162
-
- May's Buildings, 259
-
- Mellon, Miss, the actress, 87;
- her first and second marriages, 88;
- her first appearance at Drury Lane, 448;
- leaves her fortune to Miss Burdett Coutts, _ib._
-
- Mendicants' Convivial Club, 462
-
- Mews, origin of the name, 217;
- notes concerning, 218;
- old bookshop at the gate of one, 219
-
- Michael's, St., Alley, Cornhill, 36
-
- Milford Lane, 38
-
- Millar, the publisher, 56
-
- Miller, Joe, his burial-place, 348;
- his début on the stage, 439;
- his last success, _ib._;
- his haunt, 440
-
- Milton, John, 232
-
- Misaubin, Dr., 253
-
- Mitre, the, 150
-
- Mohun, Lord, 50, 245
-
- Monk, General, his death, 65;
- the Restoration effected by, 61;
- his vulgar wife, 301;
- invited to a conference by the Earl of Northumberland, 200
-
- Monmouth Street, 385;
- Mr. Dickens's description of, _ib._;
- modern civilisation in, 463
-
- Montague, Lady M. W., 86
-
- Montfort, Simon de, 107
-
- More, Sir Thomas, 164
-
- Morgan, the Welsh buccaneer, 264
-
- Morley's Hotel, 456
-
- "Morning Chronicle," 167;
- the end of, 168
-
- "Morning Post," 170
-
- Mortimer, the English Salvator, 46
-
- Moss, the engraver, 63
-
- Mottley, the actor, 439;
- origin of his jest book, 440
-
- Mountfort, Mrs., 434
-
- Mountfort, the actor, 50;
- his career, 435
-
- Munden, Charles Lamb on, 327
-
- Murphy, Arthur, 394
-
- Murray, Major, 143
-
- Mytens, Daniel, 240
-
-
- National Gallery, opening of, 219;
- the paltry design of, 75;
- the first purchase of pictures for, 222;
- the gems of, 223, 224;
- purchases and donations for, _ib._;
- Turner's bequest to, 224;
- proposed removal of the pictures from, _ib._;
- Jacob Bell's bequest, 225;
- enlargement of the, _ib._
-
- Needham, Marchmont, 37;
- his burial-place, 155
-
- Nelson, Admiral, a tradition of, 71
-
- Nelson Column, the, original estimate for, 220;
- bassi relievi on, _ib._;
- adornment of the pedestal of, 221
-
- Newcastle, the Duke of, his house in Lincoln's Inn Fields, 410;
- his levees, _ib._;
- the porter's reply to an intruder on, 411;
- impertinence of his cook, 412;
- anecdote of, _ib._;
- Smollett's and Walpole's sketches of, 413;
- Walpole's review of his career, _ib._;
- his reply to Lord Bute, 414
-
- Newgate ballads, 463
-
- New Inn, 164
-
- Newspaper offices, 454
-
- Nisbett, Mrs., 335
-
- Nivernois, the Duc de, 18
-
- Nokes, James, 432
-
- Nollekens, the sculptor, 379
-
- Norfolk Street, 44 _et seq._;
- Charles Dickens's sketch of, 445
-
- Northampton, the Earl of, 191
-
- Northampton, Algernon, tenth Earl of, 192, 195
-
- Northumberland, the wizard Earl of, his marriage 192;
- treason, etc., _ib._
-
- Northumberland, the Duke of, 192
-
- Northumberland House, 191;
- the oldest part of, 195;
- accident at, _ib._;
- the letters and date on its façade, 196;
- destruction of the Strand front by fire, 197;
- Sir John Hawkins's and Goldsmith's visit to Mr. Percy at, 198;
- Goldsmith's account of a visit to, 199;
- pictures in the gallery of, _ib._
-
- Northumberland Street, 142;
- demolition of, 200
-
- Nottingham, the Countess of, 39, 40
-
- Noy, Attorney-general, 389
-
-
- Oates, Titus, 208, 302
-
- O'Keefe, the dramatist, 18, 258
-
- Oldcastle, Sir John, Lord Cobham, 352;
- his imprisonment, escape, and death, _ib._
-
- Oldfield, Mrs., actress, 186;
- her merits as a comedian, 310;
- her death, 311
-
- "Old Slaughter's," the frequenters of, 249;
- Hogarth and Roubilliac at, _ib._
-
- Olympic, the, 164;
- Mr. Robson's representations at, 165
-
- Oratory, Henley's, 339
-
- Oxberry, the actor, 335
-
- Oxburgh, Sir John, 13
-
- Oxford, the Earl of, 137
-
-
- Page, Judge, 217;
- the "Dunciad" on, _ib._
-
- Paget, Lord, 26
-
- Paintings, the first exhibition in London of, 75
-
- Palsgrave Head Tavern, 148, 151
-
- Parr, Dr., 47
-
- Parr, Old, 91
-
- Parsons, parish-clerk of St. Sepulchre's, 214
-
- Partridge, the charlatan cobbler, 90
-
- Pasquin (Williams), Anthony, 142
-
- Patterson, Samuel, bookseller, 34
-
- Payne, Mr. James, collector of MSS., 459
-
- Payne, Roger, bookbinder, 457
-
- Pendrell, Richard, his tomb and epitaph, 368
-
- Penn, the Quaker, 44
-
- Pepys, residence of, 135;
- his career, 136;
- residence of his father-in-law, 282;
- visits Drury Lane Theatre, 302;
- Lord Cottenham, a descendant of the author of the "Diary," 395
-
- Perceval, Spencer, 394
-
- Percy, the Earl Marshal, 109
-
- Percy, Elizabeth, her marriages, 192
-
- Perkins, Sir William, 12
-
- Perry, James, 167
-
- Pest-houses, 297
-
- Peter the Great, 45;
- his evenings in York Buildings, 136
-
- Peters, Hugh, 207
-
- Petty, William, 42
-
- Philips, Ambrose, 248;
- Pope's lines on, _ib._
-
- Physicians, the Royal College of, 225
-
- Pickett, Alderman, 148;
- street named after, 147
-
- "Pic-Nic," the, London newspaper, 139
-
- Pidgeon, Bat, barber, 160
-
- Pierce, Edward, sculptor, 49
-
- Pine, the engraver, 252
-
- "Pine Apple," the, 178
-
- Plague, the Great, 143;
- its origin in London, 262;
- its progress, 263
-
- Poitiers, the victory of, 111
-
- Pope, the, 9
-
- Pope, a relic of, 37;
- lines on the death of Buckingham by, 132;
- insolence of, 248;
- reply of Sir Godfrey Kneller to, 268;
- his dispute with Orator Henley, 342
-
- Pope, Miss, the actress, 273;
- her manner on the stage, 321
-
- Porridge Island, 236
-
- Porter, Mrs., the actress, 43
-
- Portugal Row, 403, 421
-
- Portugal Street, 429 _et seq._
-
- Precinct of the Savoy, 122
-
- Precinct Club, the, 169
-
- Prior, his boyhood, 229;
- his attachments, 282;
- his death, 283
-
- Pritchard, Mrs., actress, 317
-
- Proctor, student of the Royal Academy, 80
-
- Prynne, William, 398
-
- Punch, the puppet-show, 208
-
- "Punch," the periodical, 303
-
-
- Quakers, the, 44
-
- "Queen" newspaper, 168
-
- Queen Street, Great, 263;
- residents in, 264 _et seq._;
- residence of Lord Herbert of Cherbury in, 266
-
- Quin, the actor, 187, 271;
- appears on the stage with Garrick, 312;
- his career as an actor, _ib._;
- appears at Portugal Street Theatre, 437
-
-
- Radcliffe, Dr., 347
-
- Radford, Thomas, 93
-
- Railton, designer of the Nelson Memorial, 220
-
- Raimbach, the engraver, 258
-
- Raleigh, Sir Walter, 92;
- Durham House unjustly taken from, 96;
- costly dress worn by, _ib._
-
- Rann, John, "Sixteen-stringed Jack," 374
-
- Rawlinson, Dr., 16
-
- Ray, Miss, murder of, 160
-
- Rebecca, Biaggio, 76
-
- Reddish, Samuel, the actor, 318
-
- Reeve, John, 184
-
- _Rejected Addresses_, the, 140
-
- Rennie, John, architect, 124
-
- Reynolds, Sir Joshua, his club in Essex Street, 35;
- his adherence to the Spring Garden Society, 73;
- his lectures, 83;
- lying-in-state of, 79;
- residences of, 274
-
- Rhodes, the bookseller and actor, 233, 305
-
- Rice, Mr. ("Jim Crow"), 180
-
- Rich, Penelope, 31
-
- Rich, the actor and manager, 435;
- legend regarding, 436;
- Garrick's lines on, 438
-
- Richardson, the humourist, 187
-
- Richmond, the Duke of, his gallery at Whitehall, 72
-
- Rimbault, the clockmaker, 303
-
- Rivet, John, a brazier, 212
-
- Roberts, the solicitor, 143
-
- Robin Hood Debating Society, 443
-
- Robinson, Mrs., 318
-
- Robinson's Coffee-house, 215
-
- Robson, Mr. Frederick, 165, 236
-
- Roman Bath, in the Strand, 169
-
- Roman Road, ancient, 349
-
- Romilly, Sir Samuel, 400
-
- Rookery, the, 463
-
- Roubilliac, his burial-place, 246;
- his studio, 255;
- a pupil of, 257
-
- Royal Academy, the, Somerset House, 65;
- the germs of, 71;
- its service to English art, 75;
- its first officers, 74;
- catalogue, etc., 75
-
- Royal Academicians, the, 74
-
- Royal Society, the, 68;
- its portraits of Newton, and other curiosities, 69
-
- "Rummer," the, 229;
- the scene of Jack Sheppard's first robbery, 230
-
- Russel, Lord William, 285;
- his alleged plot, 405;
- his appearance before the Council, 406;
- his interview with French agents, _ib._;
- petition presented for his life, 407;
- the last days of, _ib._;
- his execution, 408
-
- Russel, Lady Rachel, her petition for her husband's life, 407;
- her letter to Dr. Fitzwilliams, 408
-
- Rutland, the Earls of, 91
-
- Ryan, the actor, 272
-
- Rymer, the antiquary, 43, 154
-
-
- Saa, Don Pantaleon de, his quarrel with Giraud, 93
-
- Sacheverell, Dr., 409
-
- Sadler, Thomas, the thief, 404
-
- St. Leonards, Lord, 396
-
- Sala, G. A., 122
-
- Sale, George, 49
-
- Salisbury, Earls of, old house of the, 256
-
- Salisbury House, Little, 89
-
- Salisbury House, Old, 89
-
- Salisbury Street, 89
-
- Sandwich Islands, the king and queen of, 102
-
- Sandwich, Montague, Earl of, 415
-
- Savage, Richard, 216;
- his escape from execution, _ib._
-
- Savage Club, the, 460
-
- Savoy, Peter, Earl of, 107;
- Henry III.'s grant to, _ib._;
- transfer of his manor to the chapter of Montjoy, 108
-
- Savoy, the, moonlight meetings in, 106;
- derivation of the name of, 107;
- occupants of the palace of, 108;
- Chaucer's marriage in, _ib._;
- the vicissitudes of, 109;
- attack of the mob of London on, 110;
- a residence of John, King of France, 111;
- its destruction by Wat Tyler, 112;
- erection of an hospital on its site, 114;
- its suppression and removal, 115;
- Conference of the Savoy, 116;
- a French church in, 117;
- a sanctuary for debtors, _ib._;
- Strype's description of it, _ib._;
- clandestine marriages in, 118;
- its state in the reign of George II., _ib._;
- portions of it remaining in 1816, _ib._;
- the destruction of, 119;
- Mr. G. A. Sala's description of the Precinct of, 122;
- traditions still lingering in, 123
-
- Savoy Street, 116
-
- Scheemakers, 333
-
- School of Design, 446
-
- Serle Street, origin of its name, 464
-
- Serle's coffee-house, Addison's visit to, 464;
- a curious letter extant at, _ib._
-
- Seven Dials, the, Mr. Dickens's description of, 385;
- Gay's description of, 461;
- the degraded state of, 462
-
- Seymour, Lord Thomas, 39;
- the mint established in aid of his designs, 95
-
- Seymour, Sir Edward, anecdote of, 234
-
- Seymour Place. _See_ Arundel House
-
- Shadwell, son of the poet, 135
-
- Shaftesbury, Earl of, 179
-
- Shallow, the revelry of, 158
-
- Sheppard, Jack, the burial-place of, 246
-
- Sheridan, Thomas, 187
-
- Sheridan, Richard Brinsley, produces the "School for Scandal," 322;
- his extravagance, 328;
- _sang froid_ exhibited in the House of Commons by, _ib._;
- his death, 329
-
- Shipley, Mr., founder of the Society of Arts, 100;
- his pupils, _ib._
-
- Shippen, "Honest," 45
-
- Shipyard, the, gable-ended house in, 148
-
- Shorter, Sir John, 22
-
- Siddons, Mrs., 91, 319;
- the homage of distinguished men to, 320
-
- Signs, the suppression of, 237;
- adornment of old London by, 238
-
- Simon, Old, 379-80;
- portraits of, 380;
- anecdotes of his dog "Rover," _ib._
-
- Singers, theatrical, 333 _et seq._
-
- Slaughter's, Old, 249;
- Hogarth and Roubilliac at, _ib._
-
- Slaughter's, New, 253
-
- Sloane, Sir Hans, 284
-
- Smith, the brothers, 330
-
- Smith, James, 139;
- epigram by, 140
-
- Snow, the goldsmith, 151, 443
-
- Soane, Sir John, 427
-
- Soane Museum, the, curiosities in, 424;
- impediments thrown in the way of visitors to, _ib._;
- its treasures, 425 _et seq._;
- its pictures and engravings, 426;
- a satire on, 465
-
- Soeur, Le, French sculptor, 209
-
- Somerset, the Protector, 57
-
- Somerset House, 56;
- Elizabeth's visits to Lord Hunsdon in, 58;
- Anne of Denmark's masquerades in, _ib._;
- pranks of Henrietta Maria's French household in, _ib._;
- Puritans offended by Henrietta Maria's Roman Catholic chapel in, 59;
- tombs under the great square of, _ib._;
- death of Inigo Jones in, _ib._;
- the celebration of Protestant service in, _ib._;
- the lying-in-state of Cromwell in, 60;
- Pepys's description of a strange scene in the presence-chamber of, 61;
- lying-in-state of Monk, Duke of Albemarle, in, _ib._;
- the murder of Sir Edmondbury Godfrey, _ib._;
- Waller made drunk at, 62;
- apartments for poor noblemen, _ib._;
- erection of new Government offices on the site of the old palace of,
- _ib._;
- scene witnessed by Pepys at, 63;
- old prints of, _ib._;
- the architect of the modern buildings of, 64;
- demolition of the old palace of, _ib._;
- Edward VI.'s furniture, and Catherine of Braganza's breakfast room in,
- _ib._;
- dimensions of the building completed by Sir William Chambers, 65;
- retirement of the Royal Academy to, _ib._;
- figures on the Strand front of, _ib._;
- Government clerks and public offices in, 66;
- statue and figure in the east wing of, _ib._;
- office for auditing public accounts in, _ib._;
- learned societies sheltered in, 67;
- distinguished men who must have frequented the halls of, _ib._;
- a legend of, 71;
- a tradition of Nelson at, _ib._;
- accident during Reynolds's lecture at, 78;
- day-dreams in the great quadrangle of, 81
-
- Somerset Coffee-house, 446
-
- Somerset House Stairs, 63
-
- Southampton Street, 185;
- Garrick's house in, _ib._
-
- Sparkes, Isaac, Irish comedian, 274
-
- "Spectator," office of the, 124
-
- Spelman, Lady, 40
-
- Spelman, Sir Henry, 391
-
- Spenser, his death and burial, 28
-
- Spiller, James, comedian, 154;
- his death, 438
-
- Spring Gardens Academy of Art, the, 72;
- dissimulation of the king in relation to, 73;
- intrigues against, _ib._
-
- Stage, the, reform of declamation and costume on, 325;
- first appearance of actresses, in London, on, 429
-
- Stapleton, Walter, his death, 26
-
- Steele, Sir Richard, his coffee-houses, 36;
- his residence, 135;
- his allusions to Lincoln's Inn, 398
-
- Stone, Nicholas, sculptor, 278
-
- Storace, operas written by, 334
-
- Stothard, the artist, sketch of his career, 283
-
- Strahan and Co., bankers, 151, 451 (_note_)
-
- Strand, the:--
- Essex Street, 25;
- Exeter House, 26;
- Exeter Place, _ib._;
- Essex House 29;
- Milford Lane, 38;
- Devereux Court, _ib._;
- Arundel House, 39;
- Arundel Street, 43;
- Norfolk Street, 44;
- Surrey Street, 48;
- Howard Street, 49;
- Strand Lane, 53;
- Anderson's pills in, _ib._;
- Turk's Head Coffee-house, _ib._;
- residence of Jacob Tonson in, 54;
- occupants of No. 141, _ib._;
- office of the "Illustrated London News" in, 55;
- Somerset House, 56;
- Haydon's first London lodgings in, 77;
- Beaufort House, 83;
- the residence of Blake, in, _ib._;
- office of the "Sun" newspaper, 83;
- Coutts's Bank, 86;
- Cecil Street, 88;
- Salisbury Street and House, 89;
- Mrs. Siddons's residence in, 91;
- Durham Street and House, _ib._;
- Buckingham Street, 135;
- Villiers Street, _ib._;
- Duke Street, _ib._;
- York Buildings, _ib._;
- Hungerford Bridge and Market, 136;
- Craven Street, 139;
- Northumberland Street, 143;
- the strata of, 146;
- the footway in Edward II.'s time, 147;
- discovery of a small bridge in, _ib._;
- houses on the north side of, _ib._ _et seq._;
- Butcher Row, 148;
- Palsgrave Place, 151;
- the Maypole in, 160;
- St. Clement's Danes, 152;
- a scene of Elizabeth's time in, 161;
- St. Mary's-le-Strand, 162;
- New Inn, 164;
- Wych Street, _ib._;
- Lyon's Inn, 165;
- Catherine Street, 166;
- Doyley's warehouse in, 168;
- Wellington Street, _ib._;
- Lyceum Theatre, 171;
- Exeter Change, 175;
- familiar sounds to the old residents in, 177;
- Exeter Street, 178;
- Exeter Hall, _ib._;
- a resident in, _ib._;
- Exeter House, 179;
- Burleigh Street, _ib._;
- Adelphi Theatre, 180;
- Southampton Street, 185;
- Bedford Street, 186;
- Gaiety Theatre, 452;
- memoranda relating to the south side of, 443;
- do. relating to the north side of, 452
-
- Strand, Bridge, the, 169
-
- Strand Lane, 53;
- mentioned by Addison, 169
-
- Strand Theatre, 444, 446
-
- Streets, the nomenclature of, 103
-
- Strype, the antiquary, 117
-
- Suckling, Sir John, 195;
- his death, 241
-
- Suett, the actor, 321
-
- Suffolk House, 194
-
- Sullivan, Luke, engraver, 251
-
- "Sun," office of the, 83
-
- Surrey Street, 48
-
- Surgeons, College of, 419
-
- Swan, the, Charing Cross, 236
-
-
- Tart-Hall, 43
-
- Taylor, the water-poet, 279;
- his complaint regarding carriages and tobacco, _ib._;
- epitaph on, 280
-
- Tempest, Peter Molyn, engraver, 167
-
- Temple Bar, its erection, 4;
- description of, 5;
- threatened destruction of, 6;
- fixing the heads of traitors on, 11;
- curious print of, 13;
- heads of Fletcher, Townley, and Oxburgh, exposed on, _ib._;
- apprehension of a man for firing bullets at the two last heads
- exhibited on, 16;
- Counsellor Layer's head blown by a terrible wind from, _ib._;
- removal of the last iron spike from, 17;
- a quotation of Dr. Johnson's at, _ib._;
- proclamation of peace at, 18;
- its adornment on public occasions, 19;
- opening its gates to the sovereign, 20;
- reception of Queen Elizabeth at, _ib._;
- reception of royal persons at, 21;
- pageants on the passage of King James, _ib._;
- the mournful celebrity of, 22
-
- Temple Club, 453
-
- Tenison, Dr. Thomas, 247
-
- Tennyson, Alfred, 418
-
- Terry, an actor, 183
-
- Thames, the, scenery on its banks, 136;
- embankment of, 190;
- old watermen on, 247;
- Copper Holme's ark on, _ib._
-
- Theatres, an old custom at, 172;
- a riot in one, 186
-
- Theatre, the Duke's, 429;
- a sword-fight between two factions in, 430;
- the principal ladies of, _ib._;
- Pepys's visits to, 431;
- the principal performers at, 432 _et seq._;
- plays of Congreve produced at, 434;
- Steele's account of an audience in, 435;
- the last proprietor of, _ib._;
- riot at, 436;
- Macklin's performance at, 437;
- Quin's appearance at, _ib._
-
- Thomson, the music-seller, 177
-
- Thornbury, the Rev. Nathaniel, 47
-
- Thornhill, Sir James, 72
-
- Thurloe, Secretary, 392-393
-
- Thurtell, the murderer of Weare, 165
-
- Thynne, Tom, 193
-
- Tillotson, Dr., 390
-
- Tobacco, introduction of, 96
-
- Tom's Coffee-house, 37
-
- Tonson, Jacob, 54
-
- Tories, they establish tavern-clubs, 284
-
- Townley, execution of, 14
-
- Trafalgar Square, 220;
- statues and fountains in, 221, 456
-
- Trojan Horse, Bushnell's, 7
-
- Tunstall, Bishop, 92
-
- Turk's Head Coffee-house, 53
-
- Turk's Head, Gerrard Street, 72
-
- Turner, J. W. M., anecdote of, 78;
- his opinion of the Thames scenery, 136;
- characteristics of his works, 224;
- his bequests to the nation, _ib._
-
- Tyburn, criminals on their way to, 373
-
- Tyler Wat, 112;
- a mistake of Shakspere regarding, 114 (_note_)
-
- Tyrconnel, the Duchess of. _See_ Widow, the White
-
- Twinings, the Messrs., 35, 152
-
-
- Ussher, Archbishop, 396
-
- Union Club, the, 457
-
-
- Vanderbank starts an academy of art, 72
-
- Vane, Sir Harry, 200
-
- Vere Street, Clare Market, 345
-
- Vernon, Robert, 224
-
- Vertue, 8
-
- Vestris, Madame, 175
-
- Via Trinovantica, 349
-
- Victoria embankment, 191
-
- "Ville de Paris," the Olympic Theatre partially built of its timbers, 164
-
- Villiers Street, 135
-
- "Vine," the, in St. Giles's, 375
-
- Vine Street, origin of the name, 300
-
- Vinegar Yard, Drury Lane, 300
-
- Voltaire rebukes Congreve's vanity, 52
-
- "Vortigern," by W. H. Ireland, 46
-
-
- Waagen, Dr., 199
-
- Waldo, Sir Timothy, 412
-
- Wallack, the actor, 334
-
- Waller, the poet, Saville's saying of, 62;
- lines by, 210
-
- Wallis, Albany, residence of, 46
-
- Walpole, a circumstance to surprise, 78;
- visits the Cock Lane ghost, 196
-
- Warburton, Bishop, 397
-
- Ward, Dr., inventor of "Friar's Balsam," disposal of his statue by
- Carlini, 100;
- attends on George II., _ib._
-
- Ward, Edward, 281
-
- Waterloo Bridge, Dupin and Canova's declaration respecting, 124;
- chief features of, _ib._;
- anecdote of Old Jack, a horse employed to drag the stone to, _ib._;
- the dark arch of, 451
-
- Watling Street, 349
-
- Weare, Mr. William, 165
-
- Webster, Benjamin, as an actor, 184
-
- Wedderburn, his insincerity, 415;
- Lord Clive's reward to, _ib._
-
- Welch, Judge, apprehends a highwayman, 378
-
- Wellington Street, newspapers and periodicals in, 167, 168, 454
-
- West, anecdote of, 73;
- his patronage of Proctor, 80
-
- Westminster Fire Office, 257
-
- Whetstone Park, 400
-
- Whitefoord, Caleb, 141;
- Adam's room in the house of, 142;
- Goldsmith's lines on, _ib._
-
- White Horse livery stables, 257
-
- Whitelock, Bulstrode, 234
-
- Whittington Club, the, 152
-
- Wickliffe, John, refuses tribute to the Pope, 109;
- appears before the Bishop of London, _ib._
-
- Widow, the White, the story of, 94
-
- Wild House, 277, 459
-
- Wilkes, Robert, actor, 311
-
- Wilkinson, Tate, 123
-
- Willis, Dr. Thomas, 241
-
- Wilson, the painter, 189, 283
-
- Wimbledon House, Strand, and Doyley's warehouse erected on the site of,
- 168
-
- Winchester House, 271
-
- Wither, George, 120, 121
-
- Woffington, Peg, president of the Beefsteak Club, 173;
- her career, 316
-
- Wolcot, Dr. (Peter Pinder), 84
-
- Wollaston, Dr., discoveries of, 88;
- anecdote of, 85
-
- Woodward, the actor, 315
-
- Wych Street, 164, 454
-
- Wynford, Lord, epigram on, 415
-
-
- Yates, Mr., the actor, 183
-
- Yates, Mrs., actress, 317
-
- York House, old, 126;
- river view of, 127;
- celebrated men connected with, _ib._;
- Lord Bacon's life here, _ib._;
- pictures, busts, and statues at, 131;
- paintings placed in it by the Duke of Buckingham, _ib._;
- Pepys's visit to, 132;
- streets built on its site, 135
-
- York Stairs, description of, 134
-
- York Buildings, waterworks, 135, 445
-
- York Buildings, Water Company, 445
-
- Young, Charles, the actor, 323, 335
-
-
- Zoffany, the artist, 303;
- Garrick's patronage of, 304
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] Tom Taylor's _Life of Haydon_, vol. i. p. 49.
-
-[2] Strype, B. iii. p. 278.
-
-[3] It was pulled down in January 1878.
-
-[4] The steepness of Holborn Hill was abolished by the new viaduct in
-1869.
-
-[5] Cunningham's _London_, vol. i. p. 260.
-
-[6] Archenholz, p. 227.
-
-[7] Beautifully reprinted in 1863 by Mr. J. C. Hotten.
-
-[8] Walpole's _Anecdotes of Painting_, vol. iii. p. 274.
-
-[9] Pamphlet "The Burning of the Pope," quoted in Brayley's _Londiniana_,
-vol. iv. p. 74.
-
-[10] Roger North's _Examen_, p. 574.
-
-[11] _Ibid._ p. 574.
-
-[12] For a further account of these Anti-Papal proceedings the reader may
-refer to _Sir Roger de Coverly_, with notes by W. H. Wills.
-
-[13] _State Trials_, x. pp. 105-124; Burnet, ii. p. 407.
-
-[14] Hume, vol. vii. p. 220.
-
-[15] Evelyn, vol. ii. p. 341.
-
-[16] _Temple Bar, the City Golgotha_ (1853), p. 33.
-
-[17] Cobbett's _State Trials_, vol. xviii.
-
-[18] _State Trials_, vol. xviii. p. 375.
-
-[19] _Annual Register_ (1766), p. 52.
-
-[20] Nichol's _Literary Anecdotes_.
-
-[21] Brayley.
-
-[22] Boswell, p. 258.
-
-[23] Ovid, _de Art. Amand._, B. v. 339.
-
-[24] _Recollections of the Life of John O'Keefe_, vol. i. p. 81.
-
-[25] _O'Keefe's Life_, vol. i. p. 101.
-
-[26] _London Scenes_, by Aleph (1863), p. 75.
-
-[27] Stow's _Annals_.
-
-[28] Hall's _Chronicle_ (condensed in Nichols' _London Pageants_).
-
-[29] Leland's _Collectanea_, vol. iv. pp. 310 _et seq._
-
-[30] Holinshed.
-
-[31] Nichols' _Progresses_, vol. i. p. 58.
-
-[32] Nichols' _London Pageants_, p. 63.
-
-[33] _London Gazette._
-
-[34] Nichols p. 83.
-
-[35] Dugdale.
-
-[36] Holinshed's _Chronicles_, vol. iii. p. 338.
-
-[37] Sharon Turner's _Hist. of England_, vol. xii. p. 276.
-
-[38] Hygford's _Exam. Murd._, 57.
-
-[39] _Ibid._
-
-[40] Pennant.
-
-[41] Camden, p. 632.
-
-[42] Hepworth Dixon's _Story of Lord Bacon's Life_ (1862), p. 120.
-
-[43] Hepworth Dixon's _Story of Lord Bacon's Life_ (1862), p. 121.
-
-[44] Wotton, _Reliquiæ_, p. 160.
-
-[45] Dr. Birch's _Memoirs of the Reign of James I._
-
-[46] Ben Jonson's _Works_ (Gifford), vol. vii. p. 75.
-
-[47] Clarendon's _History of the Rebellion_, x. 80.
-
-[48] MS. Journal of the House of Commons.
-
-[49] Smith's _Nollekens_.
-
-[50] Boswell's _Johnson_ (1860), p. 751.
-
-[51] Jeaffreson's _Book about Doctors_, p. 97.
-
-[52] Boswell, vol. iv. p. 276.
-
-[53] J. T. Smith's _Streets of London_ (1846), vol. i. p. 412.
-
-[54] _The Intelligencer_, Jan. 23, 1664-5.
-
-[55] Disraeli's _Curios. of Lit._, p. 289.
-
-[56] Evelyn, vol. i. p. 10.
-
-[57] Dr. King's _Anecdotes_, p. 117.
-
-[58] Thoresby's _Diary_, ii. 111-117.
-
-[59] _British Bibliographer_, vol. i. p. 574.
-
-[60] Pope's _Works_ (Carruthers), vol. ii. p. 379.
-
-[61] Hawkins's _Life of Johnson_, pp. 207-244.
-
-[62] Jeaffreson's _Book about Doctors_ (2d edit.) pp. 207, 208.
-
-[63] Stow, p. 161.
-
-[64] Dryden's _Misc. Poems_, iv. 275, ed. 1727 (Cunningham).
-
-[65] Latimer's Fourth Sermon, 1st ed.
-
-[66] Strype, B. iv. p. 105.
-
-[67] _Earl of Monmouth's Mem._, ed. 1759, p. 77.
-
-[68] Lysons.
-
-[69] Dr. Birch's _Mems. of the Peers of England_.
-
-[70] Lingard's _History of England_.
-
-[71] Hughson.
-
-[72] Cunningham (1846), vol. i. p. 38.
-
-[73] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, vol. i. p. 292.
-
-[74] Lilly _On the Life and Death of King Charles I._, p. 224.
-
-[75] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, ii. 153.
-
-[76] Smith's _Streets_, vol. i. p. 385.
-
-[77] Thoresby's _Letters_, ii. 329.
-
-[78] Hawkins's _Life of Johnson_, p. 208.
-
-[79] _Spectator_, 329-335.
-
-[80] Ireland's _Authentic Account_, etc. (1796), i. p. 42.
-
-[81] W. H. Ireland's _Vindication_, p. 21.
-
-[82] Ireland's _Vindication_, p. 19.
-
-[83] Boaden's _Life of Kemble_, vol. ii. p. 172.
-
-[84] Andrews's _History of British Journalism_, vol. ii. p. 285.
-
-[85] Strype, B. iv. p. 118.
-
-[86] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, vol. ii. p. 391.
-
-[87] _The Mourning Bride._
-
-[88] It is doubtful whether it was not the duchess. (Wilson's _Life of
-Congreve_, 8vo, 1730, i. p. 1 of Preface.)
-
-[89] Cibber's _Lives of the Poets_ (1753).
-
-[90] Stow, p. 165.
-
-[91] _Spectator_, No. 454.
-
-[92] Malachi Malagrowther's _Letters_.
-
-[93] Croker's _Boswell_, vol. i. p. 475.
-
-[94] Scott's _Dryden_, vol. i. p. 388.
-
-[95] Johnson's _Life of Dryden_.
-
-[96] Strype, B. ii. p. 508.
-
-[97] Hume.
-
-[98] Dugdale, vol. ii. p. 363.
-
-[99] Mitford, v. 201.
-
-[100] Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 756.
-
-[101] Stow, p. 149.
-
-[102] Burleigh's _Diary in Munden_, p. 811.
-
-[103] Wilson's _Life of James I._
-
-[104] L'Estrange's _Life of Charles I._
-
-[105] _Certain Information_, etc., No. 11, p. 87.
-
-[106] Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 755.
-
-[107] Essay by John D'Espagne.
-
-[108] Ludlow's _Memoirs_, vol. ii. p. 615.
-
-[109] Pepys, 2d. edit. vol. i. p. 309.
-
-[110] Pepys, vol. i. p. 357.
-
-[111] Aubrey's _Lives and Letters_.
-
-[112] Stow, p. 1045, ed. 1631.
-
-[113] Pepys's _Diary_, vol. i. p. 16.
-
-[114] Leigh Hunt's _Town_, p. 166.
-
-[115] _Ibid._ p. 168.
-
-[116] Dryden's _Essay on Dramatick Poesy_, 1668.
-
-[117] Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 756.
-
-[118] _European Magazine_ (Mr. Moser).
-
-[119] Smith's _Life of Nollekens_, vol. ii. p. 205.
-
-[120] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, vol. i. p. 22 (Notes by Northcote and Mr.
-Wornum).
-
-[121] Chalmers's _British Poets_, vol. vii. p. 101 (Ode to the Royal
-Society).
-
-[122] Cunningham, vol. i. p. 26.
-
-[123] _Ibid._ p. 757.
-
-[124] _Ibid._
-
-[125] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, vol. i. p. 282.
-
-[126] Galt's _Life of West_, pt. ii. p. 25.
-
-[127] _Ibid._ pp. 36-38.
-
-[128] Strange's _Enquiry into the Rise and Establishment of the Royal
-Academy_ (1775).
-
-[129] Pye's _Patronage of British Art_, p. 134.
-
-[130] The original thirty-six Academicians were--Benjamin West, Francesco
-Zuccarelli, Nathaniel Dance, Richard Wilson, George Michael Moser, Samuel
-Wale (a sign-painter), J. Baptist Cipriani, Jeremiah Meyer, Angelica
-Kauffmann, Charles Catton (a coach and sign painter), Francesco
-Bartolozzi, Francis Cotes, Edward Penny, George Barrett (Wilson's rival),
-Paul Sandby, Richard Yeo, Mary Moser, Agostino Carlini, William Chambers
-(the architect of Somerset House), Joseph Wilton (the sculptor), Francis
-Milner Newton, Francis Hayman, John Baker, Mason Chamberlin, John Gwynn,
-Thomas Gainsborough, Dominick Serres, Peter Toms (a drapery painter for
-Reynolds, who finally committed suicide), Nathaniel Hone (who for his
-libel on Reynolds was expelled the Academy), Joshua Reynolds, John
-Richards, Thomas Sandby, George Dance, J. Tyler, William Hoare of Bath,
-and Johann Zoffani. In 1772 Edward Burch, Richard Cosway, Joseph
-Nollekens, and James Barry (expelled in 1797), made up the
-forty.--Wornum's Preface to the _Lectures on Painting_.
-
-[131] Pye's _Patronage of British Art_, 1845, p. 136.
-
-[132] Royal Academy _Catalogues_, Brit. Mus.
-
-[133] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. i. p. 381.
-
-[134] _Life of Haydon_, by Tom Taylor, vol. i. p. 30.
-
-[135] _Ibid._ p. 20.
-
-[136] Thornbury's _Life of Turner_.
-
-[137] O'Keefe's _Life_ vol. i. p. 386.
-
-[138] Knowles's _Life of Fuseli_, vol. i. p. 32.
-
-[139] Irvine's _Life of Falconer_.
-
-[140] Smith's _Life of Nollekens_, vol. ii. p. 129.
-
-[141] Hatton, p. 785.
-
-[142] _Postman_, No. 80.
-
-[143] _Life of Blake_, by Gilchrist.
-
-[144] Andrews's _History of Journalism_, vol. ii. p. 85.
-
-[145] Strype, B. iii. p. 196.
-
-[146] Glover's _Life_, p. 6.
-
-[147] Dennis's _Letters_, p. 196.
-
-[148] Procter's _Life of Kean_, vol. ii. p. 140.
-
-[149] Dr. King's _Art of Cookery_.
-
-[150] _Spectator_, No. 9.
-
-[151] _Memoirs of the Kit-Cat Club_, p. 6.
-
-[152] Defoe's _Journal_, vol. i. p. 287.
-
-[153] _Letters of Lady M. W. Montagu_, edited by W. M. Thomas, Esq.
-
-[154] _Annual Obituary_, vol. vii.
-
-[155] _Monthly Repository_, by Leigh Hunt, 1836.
-
-[156] Procter's _Life of Kean_.
-
-[157] _The Temple Anecdotes_ (Groombridge), p. 50.
-
-[158] Strype, B. iv. p. 120.
-
-[159] _Ibid._
-
-[160] Dixon's _Bacon_, p. 227.
-
-[161] Appendix to the _Tatler_, vol. iv. p. 615.
-
-[162] Smith's _Streets of London_, vol. iv. p. 244.
-
-[163] _Egerton Papers_, by Collier, p. 376.
-
-[164] Strype, B. vi. p. 76.
-
-[165] Cunningham, vol. i. p. 283.
-
-[166] _London Gazette_, No. 897.
-
-[167] Pepys, vol. i. p. 137, 4to ed.
-
-[168] Horace Walpole.
-
-[169] Otway.
-
-[170] _Spectator_, No. 155.
-
-[171] _Tatler_, No. 26.
-
-[172] _Nouvelle Biographie Univ._, vol. xxxviii. p. 19.
-
-[173] _Ducatus Leodiensis_, fol. 1715, p. 485.
-
-[174] _British Apollo_ (1740), ii. p. 376.
-
-[175] Oldys's _Life of Raleigh_, p. 145.
-
-[176] Aubrey, vol. iii. p. 513.
-
-[177] Gough's _British Topography_, vol. i. p. 743.
-
-[178] Walpole's _Mems. of George III._, vol. iv. p. 173.
-
-[179] Elmes's _Anecdotes_, vol. iii.
-
-[180] Cunningham, vol. i. p. 83.
-
-[181] Boswell, vol. i. p. 225.
-
-[182] Hone's _Everyday Book_, vol. i. p. 237.
-
-[183] Pye's _Patronage of British Art_ (1845), pp. 61, 62.
-
-[184] _Wine and Walnuts_, vol. i. p. 161.
-
-[185] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. i. p. 3.
-
-[186] _Ibid._ vol. ii. p. 203.
-
-[187] _Haydon's Life_, vol. iii. p. 182.
-
-[188] _Book about Doctors_, by J. C. Jeaffreson, p. 221.
-
-[189] Archenholz, p. 109.
-
-[190] Colman's _Random Records_.
-
-[191] See the Percy Society's Publications.
-
-[192] Rymer, iii. 926.
-
-[193] Chaucer's _Works_.
-
-[194] Dugdale's _Baronetage_, vol. 1. p. 789.
-
-[195] _Scala Chron._, p. 175; Froissart, c. 161.
-
-[196] Rymer, vi. 452.
-
-[197] Froissart, lix.
-
-[198] Walsingham, p. 248.
-
-[199] Holinshed, vol. ii. p. 431.
-
-[200] Shakspere incorrectly makes Jack Cade burn the Savoy. He has
-attributed to that Irish impostor the act of Wat Tyler, a far more
-patriotic man.
-
-[201] Stow.
-
-[202] Cowley's _Works_, 10th edit. (Tonson), 1707, vol. ii. p. 587.
-
-[203] Letter to Evelyn. Cowley's _Works_ (1707), vol. ii. p. 731.
-
-[204] J. T. Smith's _Antiquarian Ramble in the Streets of London_ (1846),
-vol. i. p. 255.
-
-[205] Baker's _Chronicle_ (1730), p. 625.
-
-[206] Cunningham's _London_ (1849), vol. ii. p. 728.
-
-[207] _The Postman_ (1696), No. 180.
-
-[208] Strype, B. iv. p. 107, ed. 1720.
-
-[209] Hughson's _Walks through London_, p. 207.
-
-[210] Hughson's _Walks through London_, p. 209.
-
-[211] Dryden's _Works_ (1821 ed.), vol. ii. p. 105.
-
-[212] _Athenæ Ox._ vol. ii. p. 1036.
-
-[213] Cunningham (1849), vol. ii. p. 537.
-
-[214] Wood's _Athen. Ox._ ii. 396, ed. 1721.
-
-[215] _The Shepherd's Hunting_ (1633).
-
-[216] Macaulay's _History of England_, vol. ii. chap. v.
-
-[217] Buckingham's _Works_ (1704), p. 15.
-
-[218] _All the Year Round_, May 12, 1860 (_The Precinct_).
-
-[219] Andrews's _History of British Journalism_, vol. ii. p. 83.
-
-[220] Smiles's _Lives of the Engineers_, vol. ii. p. 187.
-
-[221] Smiles's _Lives of the Engineers_, vol. ii. p. 186.
-
-[222] _Ibid._, vol. ii. p. 93.
-
-[223] Hepworth Dixon's _Story of Lord Bacon's Life_ (1862), p. 14.
-
-[224] Montagu, xii. 420, 432.
-
-[225] Aubrey's _Lives_, vol. ii. p. 224; Dixon's _Bacon_, p. 315.
-
-[226] _Character of Lord Bacon._
-
-[227] Dixon's _Story of Lord Bacon's Life_, p. 33 (1862). Pearce's _Inns
-of Court_.
-
-[228] Sir B. Gerbier.
-
-[229] Bassompierre's _Embassy to England_.
-
-[230] Whitelocke, p. 167.
-
-[231] Peacham's _Compleat Gentleman_, ed. 1661, p. 108.
-
-[232] Pepys, 6th June 1663.
-
-[233] Dryden (Scott), vol. ix. p. 233.
-
-[234] Pepys's _Diary_. vol. i. p. 223.
-
-[235] Evelyn's _Memoirs_, vol. i. p. 530.
-
-[236] Rate Books of St. Martin's.
-
-[237] Cole's _MSS._, vol. xx. folio 220.
-
-[238] Gilchrist's _Life of Etty_, vol. i. p. 221.
-
-[239] Barrow's _Life of Peter the Great_, p. 90.
-
-[240] Ballard's Collection, Bodleian.
-
-[241] Pennant.
-
-[242] Strype, B. vi. p. 76.
-
-[243] Cunningham, vol. i. pp. 402, 403.
-
-[244] Rate-books of St. Martin's.
-
-[245] _Memorials of Franklin_, vol. i. p. 261.
-
-[246] Smith's _Comic Misc._ vol. ii. p. 186.
-
-[247] _Memoirs of James Smith_, by Horace Smith, vol. i. p. 32.
-
-[248] _Memoirs of James Smith_, by Horace Smith, vol. i. p. 54.
-
-[249] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. i. p. 340.
-
-[250] _Ibid._ vol. i. pt 302.
-
-[251] Harl. MSS. 6850.
-
-[252] Rate-books of St. Martin's.
-
-[253] Smith's _Book for a Rainy Day_, pp. 281, 282.
-
-[254] Cal. Rot. Patentium.
-
-[255] Brayley's _Beauties of England and Wales_, vol. x. part iv. p. 167.
-
-[256] _Father Hubbard's Tale_, 4to, 1604.--Middleton's _Works_, vol. v. p.
-573.
-
-[257] Archer's _Vestiges of Old London_ (View of Crockford's shop).
-
-[258] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, vol. iii. p. 911.
-
-[259] Malcolm's _Londinum Rediviv._ vol. iii. p. 397.
-
-[260] Hughson's _Walks_ (1829).
-
-[261] Boswell's _Life of Johnson_, vol. i. p. 383.
-
-[262] Boswell, vol. iii. p. 331.
-
-[263] _Censura Literaria_, vol. i. p. 176.
-
-[264] Spence's _Anecdotes_.
-
-[265] _State Poems_, vol. ii. p. 143 ("A Satyr on the Poets.")
-
-[266] Leigh Hunt's _Town_ (1857), p. 135.
-
-[267] Hughson's _Walks_, p. 184.
-
-[268] Leigh Hunt's _Town_ (1859 ed.), p. 134.
-
-[269] Strype, B. iv. p. 117.
-
-[270] Boswell.
-
-[271] Walpole's _Anecdotes_ (ed. Dallaway), vol. ii. p. 315.
-
-[272] Leigh Hunt's _Town_ (1859), p. 145.
-
-[273] Brayley's _Beauties of England and Wales_, vol. x. part iv. p. 166.
-
-[274] Malone's _Shakspere_, vol. iii. p. 516.
-
-[275] Nichols's _Hogarth_, vol. ii. p. 70.
-
-[276] Cunningham (1849), vol. i. p. 210.
-
-[277] Hughson's _Walks through London_, p. 188.
-
-[278] Chalmers's _Biog. Dict._ vol. v. p. 64.
-
-[279] Boswell, ed. Croker, vol. ii. 201.
-
-[280] Stow, p. 166.
-
-[281] Sir G. Buc, in Howes (ed. 1631), p. 1075.
-
-[282] Fitzstephen, circa, 1178: the quotation refers, however, more to the
-north of London.
-
-[283] Tennyson.
-
-[284] Malcolm's _London_, vol. ii.
-
-[285] Knox's _Elegant Extracts_.
-
-[286] Leigh Hunt's _Town_, p. 146.
-
-[287] _Henry IV._ second part, act iii. sc. 2.
-
-[288] _Prot. Dissenters' Magazine_, vol. vi.
-
-[289] Smith's _Life of Nollekens_, vol. i. 365.
-
-[290] Cradock's _Memoirs_, vol. iv. p. 166.
-
-[291] _Garrard to the Earl of Strafford_, vol. i. p. 227.
-
-[292] _Citie's Loyaltie Displayed_, 4to, 1661.
-
-[293] Pepys.
-
-[294] Aubrey's _Anecdotes_, vol. iii. p. 457.
-
-[295] Malcolm's _Streets of London_ (1846), vol. i. p. 363.
-
-[296] _Parish Clerks' Survey_, p. 286.
-
-[297] Cunningham's _Lives of the Painters_, vol. iii. p. 292.
-
-[298] Pope's _Dunciad_.
-
-[299] Addison's _Freeholder_, No. 4.
-
-[300] J. T. Smith's _Streets of London_ (1846), vol. i. pp. 366, 367.
-
-[301] Sir G. Buc (Stow by Howes), p. 1075, ed. 1631.
-
-[302] Roper's _Life of Sir Thomas More_, by Singer, p. 52.
-
-[303] _Spectator_ No. 2, March 2, 1710-11.
-
-[304] Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 606.
-
-[305] Sir G. Buc, in Howes, p. 1076, ed. 1631.
-
-[306] _Trivia._
-
-[307] _Smith's Streets of London_, vol. i. p. 338.
-
-[308] Hone's _Every-day Book_, vol. i. p. 1300.
-
-[309] Walpole's _Anecdotes of Painting_, vol. ii. p. 612.
-
-[310] No. 102.
-
-[311] Pennant's _London_ (1813), p. 204.
-
-[312] _Spectator_, No. 454.
-
-[313] _Spectator_, No. 454.
-
-[314] Andrews's _History of Journalism_, vol. ii. p. 8.
-
-[315] Brayley's _Theatres of London_ (1826), p. 40.
-
-[316] Brayley, p. 42.
-
-[317] Chetwood's _History of the Stage_, p. 141.
-
-[318] _Spectator_, No. 468.
-
-[319] Ward's _Secret History of Clubs_, ed. 1709.
-
-[320] Victor.
-
-[321] Edwards's _Anecdotes of Painting_, p. 20.
-
-[322] _Wine and Walnuts_, vol. i. p. 110.
-
-[323] P. Cunningham.
-
-[324] Dr. King's _Art of Cookery, humbly inscribed to the Beef-steak
-Club_. (1709.)
-
-[325] Leigh Hunt's _Town_ (1859), p. 191.
-
-[326] Cunningham, vol. i. p. 297.
-
-[327] Delaune.
-
-[328] Strype, B. iv. p. 119.
-
-[329] Leigh Hunt's _Town_, ch. iv.
-
-[330] _Wine and Walnuts_, vol. i. p. 281.
-
-[331] _Ibid._ p. 269.
-
-[332] _Wine and Walnuts_, vol. i. p. 276.
-
-[333] Cunningham, p. 187.
-
-[334] Whitelocke.
-
-[335] Lockhart's _Life of Scott_, vol. vi. p. 20.
-
-[336] _The Stage_, by Alfred Bunn, vol. iii. p. 131.
-
-[337] _Life of Mathews_, by Mrs. Mathews (abridged by Mr. Yates), p. 211.
-
-[338] _Life of Mathews_, by Mrs. Mathews.
-
-[339] _Critical Essays_ (1807), p. 140.
-
-[340] Hazlitt's _Criticisms of the English Stage_, p. 98.
-
-[341] Hazlitt's _Criticisms of the English Stage_, p. 98.
-
-[342] Cole's _Life of C. Kean_, vol. ii. p. 260.
-
-[343] Strype, B. vi. p. 93.
-
-[344] Stow.
-
-[345] Davies's _Life of Garrick_, vol. x. p. 217.
-
-[346] Strype, B. vi. p. 93.
-
-[347] Cunningham's _London_ (1850), p. 219.
-
-[348] Whyte's _Miscellanea Nova_, p. 49.
-
-[349] Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 597.--Rate-books of St. Martin's.
-
-[350] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, vol. i. p. 248.
-
-[351] Dixon's _Story of Lord Bacon's Life_, p. 204.
-
-[352] _English Causes Célèbres_ (edited by Craik), vol. i. p. 79.
-
-[353] _Memoirs of the Peers of James I._, p. 240.
-
-[354] _Autobiography of Lord Herbert_, p. 110
-
-[355] Suckling's _Poems_.
-
-[356] Camden's _Annals of King James_.
-
-[357] _Londinum Redivivum._
-
-[358] Walpole to Montague, Feb. 2, 1762.
-
-[359] Dix's _Life of Chatterton_, p. 267.
-
-[360] Foster's _Life of Goldsmith_, p. 216.
-
-[361] Irving's _Oliver Goldsmith_ (1850), p. 90.
-
-[362] Dr. Waagen's _Treasures of Art_, vol. i. p. 394.
-
-[363] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, vol. ii. p. 354.
-
-[364] Walpole, vol. i. p. 277.
-
-[365] _The Famous Chronicle of King Edward I._ (4to., 1593).
-
-[366] Bosworth's _Anglo-Saxon Dictionary_.
-
-[367] Hamlet.
-
-[368] _Diversions of Purley._
-
-[369] Peele's _Works_ (Dyce), vii. 575.
-
-[370] Rymer, ii. 498.
-
-[371] Heming, 590.
-
-[372] Walpole, vol. i. p. 32.
-
-[373] _Gleanings from Westminster Abbey_, 2d edition, p. 152 (W. Burges),
-Roxburghe Club.
-
-[374] Lilly's _Observations_.
-
-[375] Carlyle's _Cromwell_, vol. i. p. 99.
-
-[376] _State Trials_, vol. v. pp. 1234-5.
-
-[377] Narcissus Luttrell.
-
-[378] Overseers' Books (_Cunningham_, vol. i. p. 179).
-
-[379] _Harl. MSS._ 7315.
-
-[380] Carpenter (quoted by Walpole, _Anecdotes_, vol. ii. p. 395).
-
-[381] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, vol. ii. p. 394.
-
-[382] Smith's _Streets of London_, vol. i. p. 139.
-
-[383] Archenholz, _Tableau de l'Angleterre_, vol. ii. p. 164, 1788.
-
-[384] _Burnet_, vol. ii. p. 53, ed. 1823.
-
-[385] _Annual Register_ (1810).
-
-[386] Cobbett's _State Trials_, vol. xvii. p. 160.
-
-[387] Archenholz, vol. i. p. 166.
-
-[388] _Daily Advertiser_, 1731.
-
-[389] _Gentleman's Magazine_, vol. i.
-
-[390] v. 85.
-
-[391] Hogarth's _Works_ (Nicholls and Steevens), vol. i. p. 162.
-
-[392] Smith's _London_, vol. i. p. 141.
-
-[393] _Notes and Queries_ (vol. vi., 1858), p. 364.
-
-[394] _Dunciad_, B. iv. 30.
-
-[395] Pope's Works (edited by R. Carruthers), vol. ii. p. 314.
-
-[396] Stow, p. 167.
-
-[397] Report, May 16, 1844.
-
-[398] Smith's _London_, vol. i. p. 133.
-
-[399] Dr. Waagen, vol. i. p. 6.
-
-[400] Waagen, vol. i. p. 322.
-
-[401] _Ibid._ vol. i. p. 331.
-
-[402] Cunningham, nearly always correct, says £10,000 (vol. ii. p. 577).
-
-[403] Waagen, vol. ii. p. 329.
-
-[404] Cunningham's _London_, p. 428.
-
-[405] Smith's _Streets of London_, vol. i. p. 153.
-
-[406] Rate-books of St. Martin's (Cunningham).
-
-[407] MSS., Birch, 4221, quoted in the notes of the _Tatler_.
-
-[408] "Country Wife."
-
-[409] "The Scowrers."
-
-[410] _State Poems._
-
-[411] "The Hind and the Panther Transversed."
-
-[412] "The Relapse."
-
-[413] _The Art of Cookery._
-
-[414] _Weekly Journal_, Nov. 21, 1724.
-
-[415] _London Gazette_, June 4, 1688.
-
-[416] _Dunciad_, B. ii. v. 411.
-
-[417] _Flying Post_, June 23, 1716.
-
-[418] Pope's _Works_ (Carruthers), vol. ii. pp. 309, 310.
-
-[419] Leigh Hunt's _Essays on the Theatres_ (1807), p. 64.
-
-[420] Philips's _Life of Milton_, p. 32, 12mo, 1694.
-
-[421] Cunningham (1850), p. 107.
-
-[422] _Wine and Walnuts_, vol. i. p. 163.
-
-[423] _Royal Guide to the London Charities_, 1878-79.
-
-[424] _Life of Dr. John North._
-
-[425] Whitelock, p. 470, ed. 1732.
-
-[426] Burnet, vol. ii. p. 70, ed. 1823.
-
-[427] Boswell (Croker), vol. iii. p. 213.
-
-[428] Willis's _History of the See of Llandaff_.
-
-[429] _Bartholomew Fair_ (Ben Jonson).
-
-[430] Gifford's _Ben Jonson_, iv. p. 430.
-
-[431] Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 505.
-
-[432] _The World_, Nov. 29, 1753.
-
-[433] _Robson: a Sketch_ (Hotten, 1864).
-
-[434] Aubrey, iii. 415.
-
-[435] "Treacherous Brothers," 4to, 1696.
-
-[436] _St. James's Chronicle_, April 24, 1762.
-
-[437] _Ibid._ May 26, 1761.
-
-[438] Edwards' _Anecdotes_, pp. 116, 117.
-
-[439] Rate-books of St. Martin's.
-
-[440] Lord Orford's _Anecdotes of Painting_.
-
-[441] J. C. Jeaffreson's _Book about Doctors_, p. 109.
-
-[442] _Ath. Ox._ vol. ii.
-
-[443] Gifford's _Ben Jonson_, vol. ix. pp. 48, 63, 64.
-
-[444] Aubrey's _Letters_, vol. ii. p. 332.
-
-[445] Recital in grant to the parish from King James I.
-
-[446] Cunningham's _London_ (1849), vol. ii. p. 526.
-
-[447] Burnet's _Own Times_, vol. i. p. 327, ed. 1823.
-
-[448] Allan Cunningham's _Lives_, vol. iv. p. 290.
-
-[449] _Biog. Brit._
-
-[450] Smith's _Life of Nollekens_, vol. ii. p. 233.
-
-[451] Smith's _Book for a Rainy Day_, pp. 251, 252.
-
-[452] Prologues to the _Satires_, v. 180.
-
-[453] Dr. Johnson's _Life of Ambrose Philips_.
-
-[454] Smith's _Nollekens and his Times_, vol. ii. p. 222.
-
-[455] Cunningham (1850), p. 450.
-
-[456] Smith's _Streets_, vol. ii. p. 208.
-
-[457] Smith, vol. ii. p. 97.
-
-[458] Smith, p. 211.
-
-[459] _Ibid._ vol. ii. p. 212.
-
-[460] Smith, vol. ii. p. 224.
-
-[461] Smith's _Streets of London_, vol. ii. p. 226.
-
-[462] _Wine and Walnuts_, vol. i. p. 178, a curious and amusing book, the
-truth in which is spoiled by an injudicious and eccentric mixture of
-fiction.
-
-[463] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. i. pp. 93, 94.
-
-[464] _Ibid._ vol. ii. p. 233.
-
-[465] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. ii. p. 238.
-
-[466] _Ibid._ p. 241.
-
-[467] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. i. p. 143.
-
-[468] _Ibid._ vol. ii. p. 244.
-
-[469] _Ibid._ p. 250.
-
-[470] _Recollections of O'Keefe_, vol. i. p. 108.
-
-[471] Knowles's _Life of Fuseli_, vol. i. p. 57.
-
-[472] _Passages of a Working Life_, by Charles Knight, vol. i. pp. 114,
-115.
-
-[473] Hume's _Learned Societies_, pp. 84, 85.
-
-[474] Dr. Hodges' _Letter to a Person of Quality_, p. 15.
-
-[475] Defoe's _Journal of the Plague Year_.
-
-[476] Dr. Hodges' _Loimologia_, p. 7 (from the reprint in 1720, when the
-plague was raging in France).
-
-[477] _Ibid._ pp. 19, 20.
-
-[478] Howes, p. 1048.
-
-[479] Bagford, Harl. MSS. 5900, fol. 50.
-
-[480] Walpole's _Royal and Noble Authors_, vol. ii. p. 25.
-
-[481] Evelyn's _Diary_ (1850), vol. ii. p. 59.
-
-[482] Evelyn's _Diary_, vol. ii. p. 153 (1850).
-
-[483] _Life of Lord Herbert_ (1826), p. 304.
-
-[484] Horace Walpole.
-
-[485] Aubrey's _Lives_, vol. ii. p. 387.
-
-[486] Walpole's _Anecdotes of Painting_ (Dallaway), vol. ii. p. 593.
-
-[487] Richardson.
-
-[488] Walpole, vol. ii. p. 563 (partly from Dallaway's version of the same
-story).
-
-[489] Dallaway.
-
-[490] Walpole, vol. ii. p. 594.
-
-[491] Spence.
-
-[492] Aubrey, vol. ii p. 132.
-
-[493] Dallaway's Notes.
-
-[494] Clarendon, B. ii. p. 2117.
-
-[495] _Ibid._ B. i. p. 116.
-
-[496] _Clarendon_, B. viii. p. 694.
-
-[497] Walpole's _Anecdotes of Painting_, vol. ii. p. 452.
-
-[498] Doran's _Her Majesty's Servants_, vol. ii. p. 51.
-
-[499] Leigh Hunt's _Town_, p. 226.
-
-[500] _Ibid._ p. 226.
-
-[501] Hazlitt's _Criticisms of the English Stage_, p. 49.
-
-[502] _O'Keefe's Life_, vol. i. p. 322.
-
-[503] Leigh Hunt, p. 226.
-
-[504] _Life of Benjamin Franklin_ (1826), p. 31.
-
-[505] _Life of the Duke of Ormond_ (1747), pp. 67, 80.
-
-[506] Macaulay, vol. ii. p. 560.
-
-[507] Bramston, p. 339.
-
-[508] _Annual Register_ (1780), pp. 254-287.
-
-[509] _Life of Inigo Jones_, by P. Cunningham, p. 22 (Shakspere Society).
-
-[510] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. ii. p. 90.
-
-[511] Cibber's _Lives_, vol. ii. p. 10.
-
-[512] _Ibid._ p. 11.
-
-[513] Cunningham's _London_, vol. ii. p. 501.
-
-[514] Dryden's Works (Scott), vol. i. p. 204.
-
-[515] Scott's _Dryden_, vol. xiii. p. 7.
-
-[516] Cibber's _Lives_, vol. iv. p. 293.
-
-[517] _Wine and Walnuts_, vol. ii. p. 277.
-
-[518] Cibber's _Lives_, vol. iv. p. 47.
-
-[519] Cibber's _Lives_, vol. iv. p. 47.
-
-[520] Mrs. Bray's _Life of Stothard_, p. 47.
-
-[521] Defoe's _Journey through England_.
-
-[522] _Wine and Walnuts_, vol. ii. p. 167.
-
-[523] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. i. p. 27.
-
-[524] _Times_, Sept. 26, 1796.
-
-[525] Talfourd's _Final Memorials of Charles Lamb_, vol. i. p. 56.
-
-[526] Burke's _Landed Gentry_ (1858), p. 320.
-
-[527] Pennant.
-
-[528] Lingard, vol. vi. p. 607.
-
-[529] Walton's _Lives_ (1852), p. 22.
-
-[530] _Angel in the House_, by Mr. Coventry Patmore.
-
-[531] Dedication to Translation of Juvenal.
-
-[532] Donne's _Poems_ (1719), p. 291.
-
-[533] Miss Benger's _Memoirs of the Queen of Bohemia_, vol. ii. p. 322.
-
-[534] Miss Benger's _Memoirs of the Queen of Bohemia_, vol. ii. p. 428.
-
-[535] Sydney State Papers, vol. ii. p. 723.
-
-[536] Benger, vol. ii. p. 457.
-
-[537] _Ibid._, Preface.
-
-[538] Brayley's _Londiniana_, vol. iv. p. 301.
-
-[539] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, p. 210.
-
-[540] Cunningham, vol. i. p. 204.
-
-[541] Wilson's _Life of James I._ (1653), p. 146.
-
-[542] Aubrey's _Anecdotes and Traditions_, p. 3.
-
-[543] _Trivia._
-
-[544] Rate-books of St. Martin's, quoted by P. Cunningham.
-
-[545] Granger's _Biographical History of England_ (1824), vol. v. p. 356.
-
-[546] Pepys's _Memoirs_, vol. iii. p. 75.
-
-[547] Curll's _History of the English Stage_, vol. i. p. III.
-
-[548] _Miscellaneous Works by the late Duke of Buckingham, etc._, p. 35
-(1704).
-
-[549] _Miscellaneous Works by the late Duke of Buckingham, etc._, vol. i.
-p. 34.
-
-[550] _Burnet's History of his own Times_ (1753), vol. i. p. 387.
-
-[551] Leigh Hunt's _Town_ (1859), p. 282.
-
-[552] Evelyn's _Mems._ vol. ii. p. 339.
-
-[553] Collier, iii. 328.
-
-[554] Prynne's _Histrio-Mastix_ (1633).
-
-[555] Pepys (May 8, 1663).
-
-[556] Cibber's _Apology_, p. 338. ed. 1740.
-
-[557] Doran, vol. i. p. 57.
-
-[558] Dec. 7, 1666.
-
-[559] Jan. 23, 1667.
-
-[560] April 20, 1667.
-
-[561] Doran, p. 97.
-
-[562] Doran, vol. i. p. 79.
-
-[563] Leigh Hunt, p. 267.
-
-[564] Cibber's _Apology_, 250.
-
-[565] Doran, vol. i. p. 466.
-
-[566] _Tatler_, No. 182.
-
-[567] Doran, vol. i. p. 464.
-
-[568] Cumberland's _Memoirs_, p. 59.
-
-[569] Davies's _Miscellanies_, vol. i. p. 126.
-
-[570] Doran, vol. ii. p. 126.
-
-[571] _Ibid._ p. 149.
-
-[572] Doran, vol. i. p. 511.
-
-[573] _Ibid._ vol. ii. p. 7.
-
-[574] Dr. Doran, vol. ii. p. 277.
-
-[575] Dr. Doran's _Knights and their Days_.
-
-[576] _Elia_, p. 217.
-
-[577] Doran, vol. ii. p. 330.
-
-[578] Leigh Hunt's _Essays on the Theatres_, p. 124.
-
-[579] Hazlitt's _Essays_, p. 47.
-
-[580] _Elia_, p. 216.
-
-[581] Moore's _Sheridan_, p. 140.
-
-[582] _Ibid._ p. 181.
-
-[583] Murphy's _Garrick_.
-
-[584] Doran, vol. ii. p. 489.
-
-[585] Leigh Hunt's _Essays on the Theatres_, p. 124.
-
-[586] _Ibid._ p. 78.
-
-[587] Hazlitt's _Criticisms of the Stage_, p. 441.
-
-[588] _Elia_, p. 221.
-
-[589] Doran, vol. ii. p. 476.
-
-[590] Hazlitt's _Essays_, p. 47.
-
-[591] Hazlitt's _Criticisms_, pp. 49, 50.
-
-[592] _Elia_ (1853), p. 206.
-
-[593] _Elia_, p. 232.
-
-[594] _Ibid._ p. 213.
-
-[595] Moore's _Life of Sheridan_, p. 637.
-
-[596] Moore's _Sheridan_, p. 637.
-
-[597] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. ii. p. 113.
-
-[598] Hazlitt's _Essays_, p. 51.
-
-[599] _Ibid._ p. 212.
-
-[600] _The Georgian Era_, vol. iv. p. 43.
-
-[601] Hazlitt's _Essays_, p. 49.
-
-[602] _Lounger's Commonplace Book_, vol. ii. p. 137.
-
-[603] _Dunciad_, B. iii. p. 199.
-
-[604] _Lounger's Commonplace Book_, vol. ii. p. 141.
-
-[605] _The Intelligencer_, No. 3.
-
-[606] Leigh Hunt's _Town_, p. 248.
-
-[607] _Fly Leaves_ (Miller), vol. i. p. 96.
-
-[608] Disraeli's _Miscellanies_, p. 77.
-
-[609] _Wine and Walnuts_, vol. ii. p. 150.
-
-[610] Jeaffreson's _Book about Doctors_ (2d ed.), p. 85.
-
-[611] The very earliest was granted to Philip the Hermit, for gravelling
-the road at Highgate.
-
-[612] Rymer's _Foedera_.
-
-[613] Fuller's _Church History_.
-
-[614] Vaughan's _Life of Wickliffe_.
-
-[615] Dobie's _St. Giles's_, p. 11.
-
-[616] _Ibid._ (1829), p. 2.
-
-[617] Pennant (4th ed.), p. 3.
-
-[618] Butler's _Lives of the Saints_.
-
-[619] Aggas's Map, published in 1578 or 1560.
-
-[620] Stow's _Survey_, 1595.
-
-[621] Dobie's _St. Giles's_, p. 46.
-
-[622] Evelyn's _Diary_.
-
-[623] Brayley's _Londiniana_.
-
-[624] Dobie's _St. Giles's_, pp. 58, 59.
-
-[625] Defoe's _History of the Plague_.
-
-[626] Maitland's _History of London_.
-
-[627] Dr. Sydenham.
-
-[628] Dr. Hodgson's _Journal of the Plague_.
-
-[629] Dr. Hodges on the Plague.
-
-[630] Fuller's _Church History_.
-
-[631] Hume.
-
-[632] Fuller.
-
-[633] Parliamentary Report.
-
-[634] Ralph.
-
-[635] Rowland Dobie's _History of St. Giles's_, p. 119.
-
-[636] Pennant's _London_, p. 159.
-
-[637] Cunningham's _London_, vol. i. p. 339.
-
-[638] _Annual Register_, 1827.
-
-[639] Dobie's _St. Giles's_, p. 367.
-
-[640] Strype.
-
-[641] Strype.
-
-[642] Dobie's _St. Giles's_, p. 225.
-
-[643] Cunningham's _London_, vol. i. p. 384.
-
-[644] Smith's _Book for a Rainy Day_, p. 21.
-
-[645] Stow, p. 164.
-
-[646] Pennant.
-
-[647] Smith's _Book for a Rainy Day_, p. 29, date 1774.
-
-[648] Smith's _Book for a Rainy Day_ is one of the best works of a clever
-London antiquarian, to whose industry, as well as to Mr. Peter
-Cunningham's, the author is much indebted, as his foot-notes pretty well
-show.
-
-[649] Dryden's _Limberham_.
-
-[650] _Love for Love._
-
-[651] Stow.
-
-[652] Dobie's _St. Giles's_, p. 66.
-
-[653] Parton's account of St. Giles's.
-
-[654] Parton.
-
-[655] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. i. p. 130.
-
-[656] Archenholz, p. 117.
-
-[657] Smith's _Book for a Rainy Day_, p. 74.
-
-[658] Dobie's _History of St. Giles's_, p. 204.
-
-[659] _Bell's Life in London_, July 12, 1829.
-
-[660] Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 565.
-
-[661] Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 566.
-
-[662] _Sketches by Boz_, p. 44.
-
-[663] _Sketches by Boz_, p. 45.
-
-[664] Dobie's _St. Giles's_, p. 362.
-
-[665] T. Hudson Turner, _Archæological Journal_, Dec. 1848.
-
-[666] Sir G. Buc in Stow, by Howes, p. 1072 (ed. 1631).
-
-[667] Pennant, p. 176.
-
-[668] Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 480.
-
-[669] _Walpole_, by Dallaway, vol. ii. p. 37.
-
-[670] Lloyd's _State Worthies_.
-
-[671] _State Trials_, iv. 445, fol. ed.
-
-[672] _Hudibras_, part iii. c. 3.
-
-[673] Granger's _Biography_ in art. "Margaret Roper."
-
-[674] Dr. Birch's _Life of Tillotson_.
-
-[675] _Hale's Life_, by Burnet.
-
-[676] _Biog. Brit._, by the Hon. and Rev. F. Egerton.
-
-[677] Preface to Thurloe's _State Papers_, 1742.
-
-[678] _Biog. Brit._
-
-[679] _Session of the Poets._
-
-[680] Johnson's _Lives_.
-
-[681] _Ath. Ox._ vol. ii.
-
-[682] Foote's _Life of Murphy_.
-
-[683] Campbell's _Lives of the Chief Justices_, vol. iii. p. 221.
-
-[684] Dr. Johnson.
-
-[685] Pennant, p. 176.
-
-[686] Evelyn's _Diary_, vol. ii. p. 60 (1850).
-
-[687] _The Devil is an Ass._
-
-[688] Aubrey.
-
-[689] Gifford's _Ben Jonson_, vol. i. p. 9.
-
-[690] Fuller's _Worthies_, vol. ii. p. 112.
-
-[691] Gifford, vol. i. p. 14.
-
-[692] Moore's _Memoirs_, vol. ii. p. 211.
-
-[693] _Poems on Affairs of State_, vol. i. p. 147.
-
-[694] Cunningham.
-
-[695] Rymer's _Foedera_, vol. xvii. p. 120.
-
-[696] Wilkinson's _Handbook for Egypt_, p. 185.
-
-[697] Cunningham's _Life of Inigo Jones_, p. 23 (Shakspere Society).
-
-[698] _Canting Academy_, 1674 (Malcolm).
-
-[699] Cunningham.
-
-[700] Rate-books of St. Clement's Danes (Cunningham).
-
-[701] Wharton's _Works_.
-
-[702] _Life of Lord W. Russell_, by Lord John Russell, 3d ed. vol. ii. p.
-18.
-
-[703] Fox's _History of the Reign of James II._ (Introduction).
-
-[704] Lord John Russell, vol. i. p. 121.
-
-[705] Raplin, vol. xiv. p. 333.
-
-[706] Burnet's _History of his own Times_ (1725), vol. ii.
-
-[707] _Letters of Lady Russell_, 7th ed. 1819.
-
-[708] _State Trials_, vol. xviii. p. 522.
-
-[709] _Daily Journal_, July 9, 1735.
-
-[710] Ireland _Inns of Court_, p. 129.
-
-[711] Macaulay's _History of England_, vol. i. p. 353.
-
-[712] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, vol. iii. p. 167.
-
-[713] Pennant, p. 238.
-
-[714] _Lady M. W. Montague's Letters._
-
-[715] Burney's _Hist. of Music_, vol. iv. p. 667.
-
-[716] Lord Chesterfield (Mahon), vol. ii. p. 264.
-
-[717] Hawkins's _Life of Johnson_, p. 192.
-
-[718] Pugh's _Life of Jonas Hanway_ (1787), p. 184.
-
-[719] _Lounger's Commonplace Book_, vol. i. p. 361.
-
-[720] Macaulay's _Essay on Walpole's Letters_.
-
-[721] Walpole's _Memoirs_, vol. i. p. 169.
-
-[722] Campbell's _Lives of the Lord Chancellors_, vol. vi. p. 105.
-
-[723] Campbell's _Chief Justices_, vol. ii. p. 563.
-
-[724] Pepys, vol. ii. p. 272.
-
-[725] _Ibid._ p. 282.
-
-[726] Hatton's _New View of London_ (1708), p. 627.
-
-[727] Clarendon, vol. vi. pp. 89, 90.
-
-[728] Grosley's _Tour to London_, vol. ii. p. 309.
-
-[729] Walpole's _Letters_, vol. ii. p. 137.
-
-[730] Walpole's _Letters_, vol. vii. p. 223.
-
-[731] _Ibid._ vol. ix. p. 307.
-
-[732] Cunningham, vol. i. p. 228.
-
-[733] _Lady Fanshawe's Memoirs_, p. 92.
-
-[734] _Ibid._ p. 94.
-
-[735] _Lady Fanshawe's Memoirs_, pp. 300, 301.
-
-[736] Moore's _Diary_, vol. iv. p. 193.
-
-[737] _Ibid._ p. 35.
-
-[738] Coleridge's _Table Talk_.
-
-[739] Townsend, vol. i. p. 91.
-
-[740] "The Alabaster sarcophagus of Oimeneptah I., King of Egypt, now in
-Sir John Soane's Museum. Drawn by Joseph Bonomi, and described by Samuel
-Sharpe." London: Longmans and Co. 1864.
-
-[741] _Annual Register_ (1837).
-
-[742] Chapone's _Letters_, vol. ii. p. 68.
-
-[743] Leigh Hunt's _Town_, p. 237.
-
-[744] Malone, pp. 135, 136.
-
-[745] Grammont's _Mems._ (1811), vol. ii. p. 142.
-
-[746] Doran's _Her Majesty's Servants_, vol. i. p. 80.
-
-[747] Pepys, vol. iii. p. 136.
-
-[748] Pepys, vol. iv. p. 2.
-
-[749] Cibber's _Apology_, chap. v.
-
-[750] _Ibid._
-
-[751] _Doran_, vol. i. p. 119.
-
-[752] Doran, vol. i. p. 149.
-
-[753] Leigh Hunt's _Town_, p. 245.
-
-[754] Cibber's _Apology_, 2d. ed. p. 138.
-
-[755] Baker's _Biog. Dram._, vol. i. p. 270.
-
-[756] Doran, vol. i. p. 542.
-
-[757] Doran, vol. i. p. 424.
-
-[758] _Ibid._ p. 446.
-
-[759] Leigh Hunt's _Town_, p. 427.
-
-[760] Cunningham (1850), p. 406.
-
-[761] Doran, vol. i. p. 327.
-
-[762] Whincop's _Scanderberg_, p. 80 (1747).
-
-[763] _Fly Leaves_, by John Miller, p. 20.
-
-[764] The name of Strahan, Paul, and Bates's firm was originally Snow and
-Walton. It was one of the oldest banking-houses in London, second only to
-Child's. At the period of the Commonwealth Snow and Co. carried on the
-business of pawnbrokers, under the sign of the "Golden Anchor." The firm
-suspended payment about 1679 (as did many other banks), owing to the
-tyranny of Charles II. Strahan (the partner at the time of the last
-failure) had changed his name from Snow; his uncle, named Strahan (Queen's
-printer?) having left him £180,000, making change of name a condition. It
-is curious that on examining Strahan and Co.'s books, it was found by
-those of 1672 that a decimal system had been then employed. Strahan was
-known to all religious people. Bates had for many years been managing
-clerk. The firm had also a navy agency in Norfolk Street. They had
-encumbered themselves with the Mostyn Collieries to the amount of
-£139,940, and backed up Gandells, contractors who were making railways in
-France and Italy and draining Lake Capestang, lending £300,000 or
-£400,000. They finally pledged securities (£22,000) to the Rev. Dr.
-Griffiths, Prebendary of Rochester. Sir John Dean Paul got into a
-second-class carriage at Reigate, the functionaries trying to get in after
-him; the porter pulled them back, the train being in motion! Paul went to
-London alone, and in spite of telegraph got off, but at eight o'clock next
-night surrendered. The three men were tried October 26 and 27, 1858.
-
-[765] _Mrs. Lirriper's Lodgings_ (1863), pp. 6, 7.
-
-[766] _Harleian MS._, 6850.
-
-[767] _Cunningham_, vol. i. p. 378. I may here, as well as anywhere else,
-express my thanks to this careful and most industrious antiquary.
-
-[768] Mrs. Cornwall Baron Wilson's _Memoirs of the Duchess of St. Albans_
-(1840), vol. i. p. 331.
-
-[769] Kippis, _Bio. Brit._ iv. p. 266.
-
-[770] Thornbury's _British Artists_, vol. i. p. 171.
-
-[771] _Gentleman's Magazine_, August 1783, p. 709.
-
-[772] _David Copperfield_ (1864), p. 208.
-
-[773] _The Clubs of London_, vol. ii. p. 150.
-
-[774] _The Clubs of London_ (1828), vol. ii.
-
-[775] _Notes and Queries_, vol. vi. 2d series, p. 131.
-
-[776] Hatten, p. 24.
-
-[777] Cunningham, vol. i. p. 378.
-
-[778] _Notes and Queries_ (Bolton Corney), vol. viii. 2d series, p. 122.
-
-[779] Burnet, vol. i. p. 338.
-
-[780] Pepys, vol. v. p. 436.
-
-[781] Pennant, p. 215.
-
-[782] _Trivia._
-
-[783] _Anecdotes of Painting_, iv. 22.
-
-[784] Malone's _Dryden_, ii. 97.
-
-[785] Mr. Rimbault in _Notes and Queries_, Feb. 1850.
-
-[786] _Clubs of London_, vol. ii. p. 263.
-
-[787] All from Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 731, and how much else.
-
-[788] _Notes and Queries_, 2d series, vol. xi. p. 289.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
-
-The original text includes Greek characters that have been replaced with
-transliterations in this text version.
-
-Footnote 404 appears on page 224 of the text, but there is no
-corresponding marker on the page.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Haunted London, by Walter Thornbury
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Haunted London, by Walter Thornbury&mdash;A Project Gutenberg eBook
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<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" /></p>
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@@ -19866,382 +19824,6 @@ express my thanks to this careful and most industrious antiquary.</p>
<p><a href="#f_404">Footnote 404</a> appears on <a href="#Page_224">page 224</a> of the text, but there is no corresponding marker on the page.</p>
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+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 41580 ***</div>
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Haunted London, by Walter Thornbury
-
-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: Haunted London
-
-Author: Walter Thornbury
-
-Editor: Edward Walford
-
-Illustrator: F. W. Fairholt
-
-Release Date: December 8, 2012 [EBook #41580]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HAUNTED LONDON ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-HAUNTED LONDON
-
-
-
-
-DR. JOHNSON'S OPINIONS OF LONDON.--"It is not in the showy evolution of
-buildings, but in the multiplicity of human habitations, that the
-wonderful immensity of London consists.... The happiness of London is not
-to be conceived but by those who have been in it. I will venture to say
-there is more learning and science within the circumference of where we
-now sit than in all the rest of the kingdom.... A man stores his mind [in
-London] better than anywhere else.... No place cures a man's vanity or
-arrogance so well as London, for no man is either great or good, _per se_,
-but as compared with others, not so good or great, and he is sure to find
-in the metropolis many his equals and some his superiors.... No man of
-letters leaves London without regret.... By seeing London I have seen as
-much of life as the world can show.... When a man is tired of London he is
-tired of life, for there is in London all life can afford, and [London] is
-the fountain of intelligence and pleasure."--_Boswell's Life of Johnson._
-
-BOSWELL'S OPINION OF LONDON.--"I have often amused myself with thinking
-how different a place London is to different people. They whose narrow
-minds are contracted to the consideration of some one particular pursuit,
-view it only through that medium, a politician thinks of it merely as the
-seat of government, etc.; but the intellectual man is struck with it _as
-comprehending the whole of human life in all its variety, the
-contemplation of which is inexhaustible_."--_Boswell's Life of Johnson_
-(Croker, 1848), p. 144.
-
-
-
-
- HAUNTED LONDON
-
-
- BY WALTER THORNBURY
-
- EDITED BY EDWARD WALFORD, M.A.
-
-
- [Illustration: TEMPLE BAR, 1761.]
-
-
- _ILLUSTRATED BY F. W. FAIRHOLT, F.S.A._
-
-
- London
- CHATTO & WINDUS, PICCADILLY
- 1880
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-This book deals less with the London of the ghost-stories, the scratching
-impostor in Cock Lane, or the apparition of Parson Ford at the Hummums,
-than with the London consecrated by manifold traditions--a city every
-street and alley of which teems with interesting associations, every
-paving-stone of which marks, as it were, the abiding-place of some ancient
-legend or biographical story; in short, this London of the present haunted
-by the memories of the past.
-
-The slow changes of time, the swifter destructions of improvement, and the
-inevitable necessities of modern civilisation, are rapidly remodelling
-London.
-
-It took centuries to turn the bright, swift little rivulet of the Fleet
-into a foetid sewer, years to transform the palace at Bridewell into a
-prison; but events now move faster: the alliance of money with enterprise,
-and the absence of any organised resistance to needful though sometimes
-reckless improvements, all combine to hurry forward modern changes.
-
-If an alderman of the last century could arise from his sleep, he would
-shudder to see the scars and wounds from which London is now suffering.
-Viaducts stalk over our chief roads; great square tubes of iron lie heavy
-as nightmares on the breast of Ludgate Hill. In Finsbury and Blackfriars
-there are now to be seen yawning chasms as large and ghastly as any that
-breaching cannon ever effected in the walls of a besieged city. On every
-hand legendary houses, great men's birthplaces, the haunts of poets, the
-scenes of martyrdoms, and the battle-fields of old factions, heave and
-totter around us. The tombs of great men, in the chinks of which the
-nettles have grown undisturbed ever since the Great Fire, are now being
-uprooted. Milton's house has become part of the _Punch_ office. A printing
-machine clanks where Chatterton was buried. Almost every moment some
-building worthy of record is shattered by the pickaxes of ruthless
-labourers. The noise of falling houses and uprooted streets even now in my
-ears tells me how busily Time, the Destroyer and the Improver, is working;
-erasing tombstones, blotting out names on street-doors, battering down
-narrow thoroughfares, and effacing one by one the memories of the good,
-the bad, the illustrious, and the infamous.
-
-A sincere love of the subject, and a strong conviction of the importance
-of the preservation of such facts as I have dredged up from the Sea of
-Oblivion, have given me heart for my work. The gradual changes of Old
-London, and the progress of civilisation westward, are worth noting by all
-students of the social history of England. It will be found that many
-traits of character, many anecdotes of interest, as illustrating
-biography, are essentially connected with the habitations of the great men
-who have either been born in London, or have resorted to it as the centre
-of progress, art, commerce, government, learning, and culture. The fact of
-the residence of a poet, a painter, a lawyer, or even a rogue, at any
-definite date, will often serve to point out the social status he either
-aimed at or had acquired. It helps also to show the exact relative
-distinctions in fashion and popularity of different parts of London at
-particular epochs, and contributes to form an illustrated history of
-London, proceeding not by mere progression of time, and dealing with the
-abstract city--the whole entity of London--but marching through street
-after street, and detailing local history by districts at a time.
-
-A century after the martyrs of the Covenant had shed their blood for the
-good old cause, an aged man, mounted on a little rough pony, used
-periodically to make the tour of their graves; with a humble and pious
-care he would scrape out the damp green moss that filled up the letters
-once so sharp and clear, cut away the thorny arches of the brambles, tread
-down the thick, prickly undergrowth of nettles, and leave the brave names
-of the dead men open to the sunlight. It is something like this that I
-have sought to do with London traditions.
-
-I have especially avoided, in every case, mixing truth with fiction. I
-have never failed to give, where it was practicable, the actual words of
-my authorities, rather than run the risk of warping or distorting a
-quotation even by accident, or losing the flavour and charm of original
-testimony. Aware of the paramount value of sound and verified facts, I
-have not stopped to play with words and colours, nor to sketch imaginary
-groups and processions. Such pictures are often false and only mislead;
-but a fact proved, illustrated, and rendered accessible by index and
-heading, is, however unpretentious, a contribution to history, and has
-with certain inquirers a value that no time can lesson.
-
-In a comprehensive work, dealing with so many thousand dates, and
-introducing on the stage so many human beings, it is almost impossible to
-have escaped errors. I can only plead for myself that I have spared no
-pains to discover the truth. I have had but one object in view, that of
-rendering a walk through London a journey of interest and of pilgrimage to
-many shrines.
-
-In some cases I have intentionally passed over, or all but passed over,
-outlying streets that I thought belonged more especially to districts
-alien to my present plan. Maiden Lane, for example, with its memories of
-Voltaire, Marvell, and Turner, belongs rather to a chapter on Covent
-Garden, of which it is a palpable appanage; and Chancery Lane I have left
-till I come to Fleet Street.
-
-I should be ungrateful indeed if, in conclusion, I did not thank Mr.
-Fairholt warmly for his careful and valuable drawings on wood. To that
-accomplished antiquary I am indebted, as my readers will see, for several
-original sketches of bygone places, and for many curious illustrations
-which I should certainly not have obtained without the aid of his learning
-and research.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION pp. 1-3
-
-
- CHAPTER II. TEMPLE BAR.
-
- The Devil Tavern--London Bankers and Goldsmiths--A Whim
- of John Bushnell, the Sculptor--Irritating Processions--
- The Bonfire at Inner Temple Gate--A Barbarous Custom--
- Called to the Bar--A Curious Old Print of 1746--The
- White Cockades--An Execution on Kennington Common--
- Shenstone's "Jemmy Dawson"--Counsellor Layer--Dr.
- Johnson in the Abbey--The Proclamation of the Peace of
- Amiens--The Dispersion of the Armada--City Pageants and
- Festivities--The Guildhall--The Guildhall Twin Giants--
- Proclamation of War--A Reflection pp. 4-24
-
-
- CHAPTER III. THE STRAND (SOUTH SIDE).
-
- Essex Street--Beheading a Bishop--Exeter Place--The
- Gipsy Earl--Running a-muck--Lettice Knollys--A Portrait
- of Essex--Robert, Earl of Essex, the Parliamentary
- General--The Poisoning of Overbury--An Epicurean
- Doctor--Clubable Men--The Grecian--The Templar's
- Lounge--Tom's Coffee-house--A Princely Collector--"The
- Long Strand"--"Honest Shippen"--Boswell's Enthusiasm--
- Sale and the Koran--The Infamous Lord Mohun--A fine
- Rebuke--Jacob Tonson pp. 25-55
-
-
- CHAPTER IV. SOMERSET HOUSE.
-
- The Protector Somerset--Denmark House--The Queen's
- French Servants--The Lying-in-State of Cromwell--Scenes
- at Somerset House--Sir Edmondbury Godfrey--Old Somerset
- House--Erection of the Modern Building--Carlini's
- Grandeur--A Hive of Red Tapists--Expensive Auditing--The
- Royal Society--The Geological and the Antiquarian
- Societies--A Legend of Somerset House--St. Martin's Lane
- Academy--An Insult to Engravers--Rebecca's Practical
- Jokes--A Fashionable Man actually Surprised--Lying in
- State pp. 56-81
-
-
- CHAPTER V. THE STRAND (SOUTH SIDE, CONTINUED).
-
- The Folly--Fountain Court and Tavern--The Coal-hole--The
- Kit-cat Club--Coutts's Bank--The Eccentric Philosopher--
- Old Salisbury House--Robert the Devil--Little Salisbury
- House--Toby Matthew--Ivy Bridge--The Strand Exchange--
- Durham House--Poor Lady Jane--The Parochial Mind--A
- Strange Coalition--Garrick's Haunt--Shipley's School of
- Art--Barry's Temper--The Celestial Bed--Sir William
- Curtis pp. 82-105
-
-
- CHAPTER VI. THE SAVOY.
-
- The Earl of Savoy--John Wickliffe--A French King
- Prisoner--The Kentish Rebellion--John of Gaunt--The
- Hospital of St. John--Cowley's Regrets--Secret
- Marriages--Conference between Church of England and
- Presbyterian Divines--An Illegal Sanctuary--A Lampooned
- General--A Fat Adonis--John Rennie--Waterloo Bridge--The
- Duchy of Lancaster pp. 106-125
-
-
- CHAPTER VII. FROM THE SAVOY TO CHARING CROSS.
-
- York House--Lord Bacon--"To the Man with an Orchard give
- an Apple"--"Steenie"--Buckingham Street--Zimri--York
- Stairs--Pepys and Etty--Scenery on the Banks of the
- Thames--The London Lodging of Peter the Great--The Czar
- and the Quakers--The Hungerford Family--The Suspension
- Bridge--Grinling Gibbons--The Two Smiths--Cross
- Readings--Northumberland Street--Armed Clergymen pp. 126-145
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII. THE NORTH SIDE OF THE STRAND (FROM TEMPLE BAR TO CHARING
- CROSS).
-
- Faithorne, the Engraver--The Stupendous Arch--The Murder
- of Miss Ray--One of Wren's Churches--Thomas Rymer--Dr.
- Johnson at Church--Shallow's Revelry--Low Comedy
- Preachers--New Inn--Alas! poor Yorick!--The first
- Hackney Coaches--Doyley--The Beef-steak Club--Beef and
- Liberty--Madame Vestris--Old Thomson--Irene in a
- Garret--Mathews at the Adelphi--The Bad Points of
- Mathew's Acting--The Old Adelphi--A Riot in a Theatre--
- Dr. Johnson's Eccentricities pp. 146-189
-
-
- CHAPTER IX. CHARING CROSS.
-
- The Gunpowder Plot--Lord Herbert's Chivalry--A Schoolboy
- Legend--Goldsmith's Audience--Dobson Buried in a
- Garret--Charing--Queen Eleanor--A Brave Ending--
- Great-hearted Colonel Jones--King Charles at Charing
- Cross--A Turncoat--A Trick of Curll's--The Cock Lane
- Ghost--Savage the Poet--The Mews--The Nelson Column--The
- Trafalgar Square Fountains--Want of Pictures of the
- English School--Turner's Pictures--Mrs. Centlivre of
- Spring Gardens--Maginn's Verses--The Hermitage at
- Charing Cross--Ben Jonson's Grace--The Promised Land pp. 190-238
-
-
- CHAPTER X. ST. MARTIN'S LANE.
-
- A Certain Proof of Insanity--An Eccentric Character--
- Experimentum Crucis--St. Martin's-in-the-Fields--Gibb's
- Opportunity--St. Martin's Church--Good Company--The
- Thames Watermen--Copper Holmes--Old Slaughter's--
- Gardelle the Murderer--Hogarth's Quack--St. Martin's
- Lane Academy--Hayman's Jokes--The Old Watch-house and
- Stocks--Garrick's Tricks--An Encourager of Art--John
- Wilkes--The Royal Society of Literature--The Artist
- Quarter pp. 239-261
-
-
- CHAPTER XI. LONG ACRE AND ITS TRIBUTARIES.
-
- The Plague--Great Queen Street--Burning Panama--Lord
- Herbert's Poetry--Kneller's Vanity--Conway House--
- Winchester House--Ryan the Actor--An Eminent Scholar and
- Antiquary--Miss Pope--The Freemasons' Hall--Gentleman
- Lewis--Franklin's Self-denial--The Gordon Riots--Colonel
- Cromwell--An Eccentric Poetaster--Black Will's Rough
- Repartee--Ned Ward--Prior's Humble Cell--Stothard--The
- Mug-houses--Charles Lamb pp. 262-286
-
-
- CHAPTER XII. DRURY LANE.
-
- Drury House--Donne's Vision--Donne in his Shroud--The
- Queen of Bohemia--Brave Lord Craven--An Anecdote of
- Gondomar--Drury Lane Poets--Nell Gwynn--Zoffany--The
- King's Company--Memoranda by Pepys--Anecdotes of Joe
- Haines--Mrs. Oldfield's Good Sense--The Wonder of the
- Town--Quin and Garrick--Barry and Garrick--The Bellamy--
- The Siddons--Dicky Suett--Liston's Hypochondria--The
- First Play--Elliston's Tears--The End of a Man about
- Town--Edmund Kean--Grimaldi--Kelly and Malibran--Keeley
- and Harley--Scenes at Drury Lane--"Wicked Will
- Whiston"--Henley's Butchers--"Il faut vivre"--Henley's
- Sermons--The Leaden Seals pp. 287-348
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII. ST. GILES'S.
-
- The Lollards--Cobham's Death--The Lazar House--Holborn
- First Paved--The Mud Deluge--French Protestants--The
- Plague Cart--The Plague Time--Brought to his Knees--The
- New Church--The Grave of Flaxman--The Thorntons--Hog
- Lane--The Tyburn Bowl--The Swan on the Hop--The Irish
- Deluge--Sham Abraham--Simon and his Dog--Hiring Babies--
- Pavement Chalkers--Monmouth Street pp. 349-386
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV. LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS.
-
- The Earl of Lincoln's Garden--The Headless Chancellor--
- Spelman a late Ripener--Denham and Wither--Lord
- Lyndhurst--Warburton and Heber--Ben Jonson the
- Bricklayer--A Murder in Whetstone Park--The Dangers of
- Lincoln's Inn Fields--Shelter in St. John's Wood--Lord
- William Russell--A Brave Wife--Pelham--The Caricature of
- a Duke--Wilde and Best--Lindsey House--The Dukes of
- Ancaster--Skeletons--Lady Fanshawe--Lord Kenyon's
- Latin--The Belzoni Sarcophagus--Sir John Soane--Worthy
- Mrs. Chapone--The Duke's House--Betterton--Mrs.
- Bracegirdle--A Riot--Rich's Pantomime--The Jump pp. 387-442
-
- APPENDIX pp. 443-465
-
- INDEX pp. 467-476
-
-
-
-
-DESCRIPTIVE LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
- TEMPLE BAR, 1761, from a drawing by S. Wale. The view is
- taken from the City side of the Bar, looking through the
- arch to Butcher Row and St. Clement's Church. The sign
- projecting from the house to the spectator's left is that
- of the famous Devil Tavern _Vignette on Title_
-
- PAGE
-
- OLD HOUSES, SHIP YARD, TEMPLE BAR, circa 1761, from a plate
- in Wilkinson's _Londina Illustrata_ 4
-
- THE LORD MAYOR'S SHOW. From the picture by Hogarth 19
-
- TEMPLE BAR, 1746, copied from an undated print published soon
- after the execution of the rebel adherents of the young
- Pretender. The view is surrounded by an emblematic framework,
- and contains representations of the heads of Townley and
- Fletcher, remarkable as the last so exposed; they remained
- there till 1772 23
-
- ST. CLEMENT'S CHURCH AND THE STRAND IN 1753, from a print by
- I. Maurer 25
-
-
- TWO VIEWS OF ARUNDEL HOUSE, 1646, after Hollar. These views,
- unique of their kind, are particularly valuable for the
- clear idea they give of a noble London mansion of the period.
- Arundel House retains many ancient features, particularly in
- its dining-hall, which, with the brick residence for the
- noble owner, is the only dignified portion of the building.
- The rest has the character of an inn-yard--a mere collection
- of ill-connected outhouses and stabling. The shed with the
- tall square window in the roof was the depository of the
- famous collection of pictures and antiques made by the
- renowned Earl, part of which still forms the Arundel
- Collection at Oxford 40, 41
-
- PENN'S HOUSE, NORFOLK STREET, 1749, from a view by J. Buck.
- The view is taken from the river, looking up Norfolk Street
- to a range of old houses, still standing, in the Strand.
- Penn's house was the last on the west side of the street (to
- the spectator's left), overlooking the water 55
-
- SOMERSET HOUSE FROM THE RIVER, 1746, from an engraving by I.
- Knyff. Upon a barge moored in the river is seen the famous
- coffee-house known as "The Folly," which, originally used as
- a musical summer-house, ended in being the resort of depravity 56
-
- STRAND FRONT OF SOMERSET HOUSE, 1777, from a large engraving
- after I. Moss 80
-
- JACOB TONSON'S BOOK-SHOP, 1742, from an etching by Benoist.
- The shop of this famous bibliopole was opposite Catherine
- Street. The view is obtained from the background of the
- print representing a burlesque procession of Masons, got up
- by some humourist in ridicule of the craft 82
-
- OLD HOUSES IN THE STRAND, 1742, copied from the same print as
- the preceding view. These houses stood on the site of the
- present Wellington Street 104
-
- THE SAVOY, FROM THE THAMES, IN 1650, after Hollar 106
-
- THE SAVOY CHAPEL, from an original drawing 119
-
- THE SAVOY PRISON, 1793, from an etching by J. T. Smith 125
-
- DURHAM HOUSE, 1790, from an etching by J. T. Smith 126
-
- THE WATER GATE, 1860, from a Sketch 133
-
- YORK STAIRS AND SURROUNDING BUILDINGS, circa 1745, after an
- original drawing by Canaletti in the British Museum. This is
- one of the few interesting views of Old London sketched by
- Canaletti during his short stay in England. It comprises the
- famous water-gate designed by Inigo Jones, and the tall
- wooden tower of the York Buildings Water Company. The large
- mansion behind this (at the south-west corner of Buckingham
- Street) was that inhabited by Pepys from 1684, and in which
- he entertained the members of the Royal Society during his
- presidency. The house at the opposite corner (seen above the
- trees) is that in which the Czar Peter the Great resided for
- some time, when he visited England for instruction in
- shipbuilding 144
-
- CROCKFORD'S FISH-SHOP, from an original sketch 146
-
- THE OLD ROMAN BATH, from a drawing 169
-
- EXETER CHANGE, 1821, from an etching by Cooke 188
-
- TITUS OATES IN THE PILLORY, from an anonymous contemporary
- Dutch engraving 190
-
- THE KING'S MEWS, 1750, from a print by I. Maurer. This
- building, erected in 1732 at the expense of King George II.,
- was pulled down in 1830. In the foreground of this view the
- King is represented returning to his carriage after
- inspecting his horses 238
-
- BARRACK AND OLD HOUSES on the site of Trafalgar Square in
- 1826, from an original sketch by F. W. Fairholt. The view is
- taken from St. Martin's Church, looking toward Pall Mall;
- the building in the distance, to the left, is the College of
- Physicians 239
-
- OLD SLAUGHTER'S COFFEE-HOUSE, 1826, from an original sketch
- by F. W. Fairholt 260
-
- SALISBURY AND WORCESTER HOUSES IN 1630, from a drawing by
- Hollar in the Pepysian Library, Cambridge 262
-
- LYON'S INN, 1804, from an engraving in Herbert's _History of
- the Inns of Court_ 286
-
- CRAVEN HOUSE, 1790, from an original drawing in the British
- Museum 287
-
- DRURY LANE THEATRE, 1806, from an original drawing by Pugin.
- This was the _third_ theatre, succeeding Garrick's. It was
- built by Henry Holland, opened March 12, 1794, and burnt down
- Feb. 24, 1809. It was never properly finished on the side
- toward Catherine Street, where this view was taken 347
-
- CHURCH LANE AND DYOT STREET, from an original sketch by F. W.
- Fairholt 349
-
- THE SEVEN DIALS, from an original sketch by F. W. Fairholt 386
-
- LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS THEATRE IN 1821, from an original sketch
- by F. W. Fairholt 387
-
- THE BLACK JACK, Portsmouth Street, Lincoln's Inn Fields, from
- an original sketch by F. W. Fairholt. This public-house was
- the resort of the actors from the theatre, and among them Joe
- Miller, who was buried in the graveyard close by, where the
- hospital now stands. The house was also frequented by Jack
- Sheppard, and was sometimes termed "The Jump," from the
- circumstance of his having once jumped from one of the
- first-floor windows to escape from officers of justice 441
-
-
-
-
-HAUNTED LONDON.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-INTRODUCTION.
-
-
-One day when Fuseli and Haydon were walking together, they reached the
-summit of a hill whence they could catch a glimpse of St. Paul's.
-
-There was the grey dome looming out by fits through rolling drifts of
-murky smoke. The two little lion-like men stood watching "the sublime
-canopy that shrouds the city of the world."[1] Now it spread and seethed
-like the incense from Moloch's furnace; now it lifted and thinned into the
-purer blue, like the waft of some great sacrifice, or settled down to
-deeper and gloomier grandeur over "the vastness of modern Babylon." That
-brown cloud hid a huge ants' nest teeming with three millions of people.
-That dome, with its golden coronet and cross, rose like the globe in an
-emperor's hand--a type of the civilisation, and power, and Christianity of
-England.
-
-The hearts of the two men beat faster at the great sight.
-
-"Be George!" said Fuseli, shaking his white hair and stamping his little
-foot, "be George! sir, it's like the smoke of the Israelites making bricks
-for the Egyptians."
-
-"It is grander, Fuseli," said Haydon, "for it is the smoke of a people who
-would _have made the Egyptians make bricks for them_."
-
-It is of the multitudinous streets of this more than Egyptian city, their
-traditions, and their past and present inhabitants, that I would now
-write. I shall not pass by many houses where any eminent men dwell or
-dwelt, without some biographical anecdote, some epigram, some
-illustration; yet I will not stop long at any door, because so many others
-await me. I have "set down," I hope, "nought in malice." Truth I trust has
-been, and truth alone shall be, my object. I shall stay at Charing Cross
-to point out the heroism of the dying regicides; I shall pause at
-Whitehall to narrate some redeeming traits even in the character of a
-wilful king.
-
-The growth of London, and its conquest of suburb after suburb, has roused
-the imagination of poets and essayists ever since the days of Queen
-Elizabeth.
-
-When James I. forbade the building of fresh houses outside London walls,
-he little foresaw the time when the City would become almost impassable;
-when practical men would burrow roads under ground, or make subterranean
-railways to drain off the choking traffic; when cool-headed people would
-seriously propose to have flying bridges thrown over the chief
-thoroughfares; when new manners and customs, new diseases, new follies,
-new social complications would arise, from the fact of three millions of
-men silently agreeing to live together on only eleven square miles of
-land; when fish would cease to inhabit the poisoned river; when the roar
-of the traffic would render it almost impossible to converse; when, in
-fact, London would grow too large for comfort, safety, pleasure, or even
-social intercourse.
-
-It is difficult to select from what centre to commence a pilgrimage. For
-old Roman London we might start from the Exchange or the Tower; for
-mediaeval London from Chepe or Aldermanbury; for fashionable London from
-Charing Cross; for Shaksperean London from the Globe or Blackfriars. Even
-then our tours would be circuitous, and sometimes retrograde, and we
-should turn and double like hares before the hounds.
-
-I have for several reasons, therefore, and after some consideration,
-decided to start from Temple Bar, and walk westward along the Strand to
-Charing Cross; then to turn up St. Martin's Lane, and return by Longacre
-and Drury Lane to Lincoln's-Inn-Fields.
-
-That walk embraces the long line of palaces which once adorned the Strand,
-or river-bank street, the countless haunts of artists in St. Martin's
-Lane, the legends of Longacre, the theatrical reminiscences of Drury Lane,
-and the old noblemen's houses in Lincoln's-Inn-Fields. It comprises a
-period not so remote as East London, and not so modern as that of the West
-End. It brings us acquainted not only with many of the contemporaries of
-Shakspere and Dryden, but also with many celebrities of Garrick's time and
-of Dr. Johnson's age.
-
-If this is not the best point of departure, it has at least much to be
-said in its favour, as the loop I have drawn includes nothing intramural,
-and comprises a part of London inhabited by persons who lived more within
-the times of memoir-writing than those in the farther East,--a district,
-too, more within the range of the antiquary than the newer region of the
-West.
-
-I trust that in these remarks I have in some degree explained why I have
-spent so much time in pouring "old wine into new bottles."
-
-A preface is too often a pillory made by an author, in which he exposes
-himself to a shower of the most unsavoury missiles. I trust that mine may
-be considered only as a wayside stone on which I stand to offer a fitting
-apology for what I trust is a venial fault.
-
-It is the glory of my old foster-mother, London, I would celebrate; it is
-her virtues and her crimes I would record. Her miles of red-tiled roofs,
-her quiet green squares, her vast black mountain of a cathedral, her
-silver belt of a river, her acres and acres of stony terraces, her
-beautiful parks, her tributary fleets, seem to me as so many episodes in
-one great epic, the true delineation of which would form a new chapter in
-the HISTORY OF MANKIND.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: SHIP YARD, TEMPLE BAR, 1761.]
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-TEMPLE BAR.
-
-
-Temple Bar, that old dingy gateway of blackened Portland stone which
-separates the Strand from Fleet Street, the City from the Shire, and the
-Freedom of the City of London from the Liberty of the City of Westminster,
-was built by Sir Christopher Wren in the year 1670, four years after the
-Great Fire, and ten after the Restoration.
-
-In earlier days there were at this spot only posts, rails, and a chain, as
-at Holborn, Smithfield, and Whitechapel. In later times, however, a house
-of timber was erected, with a narrow gateway and one passage on the south
-side.[2]
-
-The original Bar seems to have crossed Fleet Street, several yards farther
-to the east of its successor. In the time of James I. it consisted of an
-iron railing with a gate in the middle. A man sat on the spot for many
-years after the erection of the new gate, to take toll from all carts
-which had not the City arms painted on them.
-
-Temple Bar, if described now in an architect's catalogue, would be noted
-as pierced with two side posterns for foot passengers, and having a
-central flattened archway for carriages. In the upper story is an
-apartment with semicircular arched windows on the eastern and western
-sides, and the whole is crowned with a sweeping pediment.
-
-On the western or Westminster side there are two niches, in which are
-placed mean statues of Charles I. and Charles II. in fluttering Roman
-robes, and on the east or Fleet Street side there are statues of James I.
-and Queen Elizabeth. They are all remarkable for their small feeble heads,
-their affected and crinkled drapery, and the piebald look produced by
-their projecting hands and feet being washed white by years of rain, while
-the rest of their bodies remains a sooty black.
-
-The upper room is held of the City by the partners of the very ancient
-firm of Messrs. Child, bankers. There they store their books and records,
-as in an old muniment-chamber. The north side ground floor, next to Shire
-Lane, was occupied as a barber's shop from the days of Steele and the
-_Tatler_.
-
-The centre slab on the east side of Temple Bar once contained the
-following inscription, now all but obliterated:--"Erected in the year
-1670, Sir Samuel Sterling, Mayor; continued in the year 1671, Sir Richard
-Ford, Lord Mayor; and finished in the year 1672, Sir George Waterman,
-Lord Mayor." It is probable that the corresponding western slab, and also
-the smaller one over the postern, once bore inscriptions.
-
-Temple Bar was doomed to destruction by the City as early as 1790, through
-the exertions of Alderman Picket. "Threatened men live long," says an old
-Italian proverb. Temple Bar still stands[3] a narrow neck to an immense
-decanter; an impeder of traffic, a venerable nuisance, with nothing
-interesting but its associations and its dirt. But then let us remember
-that as Holborn Hill has tormented horses and drivers ever since the
-Conquest, and its steepness is not yet in any way mitigated,[4] we must
-not expect hasty reforms in London.
-
-It does not enter into my purpose (unless I walked like a crab, backwards)
-to give the history of Child's bank. Suffice it for me to say that it
-stands on part of the site of the old Devil Tavern, kept by old Simon
-Wadloe, where Ben Jonson held his club. It was taken down in 1788, and
-Child's Place built in its stead.[5] Alderman Backwell, who was ruined by
-the shutting up of the Exchequer in the reign of Charles II., and became a
-partner in this, the oldest banking-house in London, was the agent for
-Government in the sale of Dunkirk to the French.
-
-Pepys makes frequent allusions to his friend Child, probably one of the
-founders of this bank. The Duke of York opposed his interference in
-Admiralty matters, and had a quarrel with a gentleman who declared that
-whoever impugned Child's honesty must be a knave. Child wrote an
-enlightened work on Indian trade, supporting the interests of the East
-India Company.
-
-Apollo Court, exactly opposite the bank, marks a passage that once faced
-the Apollo room, from whose windows Ben Jonson must have often glowered
-and Herrick laughed.
-
-Archenholz says that in his day there were forty-eight bankers in London.
-"The Duke of Marlborough," writes the Prussian traveller, "had some years
-ago in the hands of Child the banker, a fund of ten, fifteen, or twenty
-thousand pounds. Drummond had often in his hands several hundred thousand
-pounds at one time belonging to the Government."[6]
-
-In the earliest London Directory (1677),[7] among "the goldsmiths that
-keep running cashes," we find "Richard Blanchard and Child, at the
-Marygold in Fleet Street." The huge marigold (really a sun in full shine),
-above four feet high, the original street-sign of the old goldsmiths at
-Temple Bar, is still preserved in one of the rooms of Child's bank.
-
-John Bushnell, the sculptor who executed the statues on Temple Bar, being
-compelled by his master, Burman, of St. Martin's-in-the-Fields, to marry a
-discarded servant-maid, went to Italy, and resided in Rome and Venice, and
-in the latter place executed a monument to a Procuratore, representing a
-naval engagement between the Venetians and the Turks. His best works are
-Cowley's monument, that of Sir Palmes Fairborne in Westminster Abbey, and
-Lord Mordaunt's statue in Fulham church. He also executed the statues of
-Charles I., Charles II., and Sir Thomas Gresham for the Royal Exchange. He
-had agreed to complete the set of kings, but Cibber being also engaged,
-Bushnell would not finish the six or seven he had begun. Being told by
-rival sculptors that he could carve only drapery, and not the naked
-figure, he produced a very despicable Alexander the Great.
-
-The next whim of this vain, fantastic, and crazy man, was to prove that
-the Trojan Horse could really have been constructed.[8] He therefore had a
-wooden horse built with huge timbers, which he proposed to cover with
-stucco. The head held twelve men and a table; the eyes served as windows.
-Before it was half completed, however, it was demolished by a storm of
-wind, and no entreaties of the two vintners who had contracted to use the
-horse for a drinking booth could induce the mortified projector to rebuild
-the monster, which had already cost him L500. A wiser plan of his, that of
-bringing coal to London by sea, also miscarried; and the loss of an estate
-in Kent, through an unsuccessful lawsuit, completed the overthrow of
-Bushnell's never very well-balanced brain. He died in 1701, and was buried
-at Paddington. His two sons (to one of whom he left L100 a year, and to
-the other L60) became recluses, moping in an unfinished house of their
-father's, facing Hyde Park, in the lane leading from Piccadilly to Tyburn,
-now Park Lane. This strange abode had neither staircase nor doors, but
-there they brooded, sordid and impracticable, saying that the world had
-not been worthy of their father. Vertue, in 1728, describes a visit to the
-house, which was then choked with unfinished statues and pictures. There
-was a ruined cast of an intended brass equestrian statue of Charles II.:
-an Alexander and other unfinished kings completed the disconsolate
-brotherhood. Against the wall leant a great picture of a classic triumph,
-almost obliterated; and on the floor lay a bar of iron, as thick as a
-man's wrist, that had been broken by some forgotten invention of
-Bushnell's.
-
-After the discovery of the absurd Meal-Tub Plot, in 1679, the 17th of
-November, the anniversary of the accession of Queen Elizabeth was kept,
-according to custom, as a high Protestant festival, and celebrated by an
-extraordinary procession, at the expense of the Green-Ribbon Club, a few
-citizens, and some gentlemen of the Temple. The bells began to ring out at
-three o'clock in the morning; at dusk the procession began at Moorgate,
-and passed through Cheapside and Fleet Street, where it ended with a huge
-bonfire, "just over against the Inner Temple gate."[9]
-
-The stormy procession was thus constituted:--
-
-1. Six whifflers, in pioneer caps and red waistcoats, who cleared the
-way. 2. A bellman, ringing his bell, and with a doleful voice crying,
-"Remember Justice Godfrey." 3. A dead body, representing the wood-merchant
-of Hartshorne Lane (Sir E. Godfrey), in a decent black habit, white
-gloves, and the cravat wherewith he was murdered about his neck, with
-spots of blood on his wrists, breast, and shirt. This figure was held on a
-white horse by a man representing one of the murderers. 4. A priest in a
-surplice and cope, embroidered with bones, skulls, and skeletons. He
-handed pardons to all who would meritoriously murder Protestants. 5. A
-priest, bearing a great silver cross. 6. Four Carmelite friars, in white
-and black robes. 7. Four Grey Friars. 8. Six Jesuits with bloody daggers.
-9. The waits, playing all the way. 10. Four bishops in purple, with lawn
-sleeves, golden crosses on their breasts, and croziers in their hands. 11.
-Four other bishops, in full pontificals (copes and surplices), wearing
-gilt mitres. 12. Six cardinals, in scarlet robes and caps. 13. The Pope's
-chief physician, with Jesuits' powder and other still more grotesque
-badges of his office. 14. Two priests in surplices, bearing golden
-crosses. 15. Then came the centre of all this pageant, the Pope himself,
-sitting in a scarlet and gilt fringed chair of state. His feet were on a
-cushion, supported by two boys in surplices, with censers and white silk
-banners, painted with red crosses and bloody consecrated daggers. His
-Holiness wore a scarlet gown, lined with ermine and daubed with gold and
-silver lace. On his head he had the triple tiara, and round his neck a
-gilt collar, strung with precious stones, beads, Agnus Dei's, and St.
-Peter's keys. At the back of his chair climbed and whispered the devil,
-who hugged and caressed him, and sometimes urged him aloud to kill King
-Charles, or to forge a Protestant plot and to fire the city again, for
-which purpose he kept a torch ready lit.
-
-The number of spectators in the balconies and windows was computed at two
-hundred thousand. A hundred and fifty flambeaux followed the procession by
-order, and as many more came as volunteers.
-
-Roger North also describes a fellow with a stentorophonic tube (a
-speaking-trumpet), who kept bellowing out--"Abhorrers! abhorrers!"[10]
-
-Lastly came a complaisant, civil gentleman, who was meant to represent
-either Sir Roger l'Estrange, or the King of France, or the Duke of York.
-"Taking all in good part, he went on his way to the fire."
-
-At Temple Bar some of the mob had crowned the statue of Elizabeth with
-gilt laurel, and placed in her hand a gilt shield with the motto, "The
-Protestant Religion and Magna Charta." A spear leant against her arm, and
-the niche was lit with candles and flambeaux, so that, as North said, she
-looked like the goddess Pallas, the object of some solemn worship and
-sacrifice.
-
-All this time perpetual battles and skirmishes went on between the Whigs
-and Tories at the different windows, and thousands of volleys of squibs
-were discharged.
-
-When the pope was at last toppled into the fire a prodigious shout was
-raised, that spread as far as Somerset House, where the queen then was,
-and, as a pamphleteer of the time says, before it ceased, reached
-Scotland, France, and even Rome.
-
-From these processions the word MOB (_mobile vulgus_) became introduced
-into our language.[11] In 1682, Charles II. tried to prohibit this annual
-festival, but it continued nevertheless till the reign of Queen Anne, or
-even later.[12]
-
-At Temple Bar, where the houses seemed turned into mountains of heads, and
-many fireworks were let off, a man representing the English cardinal
-(Philip Howard, brother of the Duke of Norfolk) sang a rude part-song with
-other men who personated the people of England. The cardinal first
-began:--
-
- "From York to London town we come
- To talk of Popish ire,
- To reconcile you all to Rome,
- And prevent Smithfield fire."
-
-To which the people replied, valorously:--
-
- "Cease, cease, thou Norfolk cardinal,
- See! yonder stands Queen Bess,
- Who saved our souls from Popish thrall:
- Oh, Bess! Queen Bess! Queen Bess!
-
- "Your Popish plot, and Smithfield threat,
- We do not fear at all,
- For, lo! beneath Queen Bess's feet,
- You fall! you fall! you fall!
-
- "'Tis true our king's on t'other side,
- A looking t'wards Whitehall,
- But could we bring him round about,
- He'd counterplot you all.
-
- "Then down with James and up with Charles,
- On good Queen Bess's side,
- That all true commons, lords, and earls
- May wish him a fruitful bride.
-
- "Now God preserve great Charles our king,
- And eke all honest men,
- And traitors all to justice bring:
- Amen! Amen! Amen!"
-
-It was formerly the barbarous and brutal custom to place the heads and
-quarters of traitors upon Temple Bar as scarecrows to all persons who did
-not consider William of Orange, or the Elector of Hanover, the rightful
-possessors of the English crown.
-
-Sir Thomas Armstrong was the first to help to deck Wren's new arch. When
-Shaftesbury fled in 1683, and the Court had partly discovered his
-intrigues with Monmouth and the Duke of Argyle, the more desperate men of
-the Exclusion Party plotted to stop the king's coach as he returned from
-Newmarket to London, at the Rye House, a lonely mansion near Hoddesden.
-The plot was discovered, and Monmouth escaped to Holland. In the meantime
-the informers dragged Russell and Sydney into the scheme, for which they
-were falsely put to death. Sir Thomas Armstrong, who had been taken at
-Leyden and delivered up to the English Ambassador at the Hague, claimed a
-trial as a surrendered outlaw, according to the 6th Edward VI. But Judge
-Jeffreys refused him his request, as he had not surrendered voluntarily,
-but had been brought by force. Armstrong still claiming the benefit of the
-law, the brutal judge replied:--"And the benefit of the law you shall
-have, by the grace of God. See that execution be done on Friday next,
-according to law."
-
-Armstrong had sinned deeply against the king. He had sold himself to the
-French ambassador, he had urged Monmouth on in his undutiful conduct to
-his father, and he had been an active agent in the Rye House Plot. Charles
-would listen to no voice in his favour. On the scaffold he denied any
-intention of assassinating the king or changing the form of
-government.[13]
-
-Sir William Perkins and Sir John Friend were the next unfortunate
-gentlemen who lent their heads to crown the Bar. They were rash,
-hot-headed Jacobites, who, too eagerly adopting the "ultima ratio" of
-political partisans, had planned, in 1696, to stop King William's coach in
-a deep lane between Brentford and Turnham Green, as he returned from
-hunting at Richmond. Sir John Friend was a person who had acquired wealth
-and credit from mean beginnings, but Perkins was a man of fortune,
-violently attached to King James, though as one of the six clerks of
-Chancery he had taken the oath to the new Government. Friend owned that he
-had been at a treasonable meeting at the King's Head Tavern in Leadenhall
-Street, but denied connivance in the assassination-plot. Perkins made an
-artful and vigorous defence, but the judge acted as counsel for the Crown
-and guided the jury. They both suffered at Tyburn, three nonjuring
-clergymen absolving them, much to the indignation of the loyal
-bystanders.[14]
-
-John Evelyn calls the sight of Temple Bar "a dismal sight."[15] Thank God,
-this revolting spectacle of traitors' heads will never be seen here again.
-
-In 1716 Colonel Henry Oxburgh's head was added to the quarters of Sir
-John Friend (a brewer) and the skull of Sir William Perkins. Oxburgh was a
-Lancashire gentleman, who had served in the French army. General Foster
-(who escaped from Newgate, in 1716) had made him colonel directly he
-joined the Pretender's army. To him, too, had been entrusted the
-humiliating task of proposing capitulation to the king's troops at
-Preston, when the Highlanders, frenzied with despair, were eager to sally
-out and cut their way through the enemy's dragoons. He met death with a
-serene temper. A fellow-prisoner described his words as coming "like a
-gleam from God. You received comfort," he says, "from the man you came to
-comfort." Oxburgh was executed at Tyburn, May 14; his body was buried at
-St. Giles', all but his head, and that was placed on Temple Bar two days
-afterwards.
-
-A curious print of 1746 represents Temple Bar with the three heads raised
-on tall poles or iron rods. The devil looks down in triumph and waves the
-rebel banner, on which are three crowns and a coffin, with the motto, "A
-crown or a grave." Underneath are written these wretched verses:
-
- "Observe the banner which would all enslave,
- Which ruined traytors did so proudly wave.
- The devil seems the project to despise;
- A fiend confused from off the trophy flies.
-
- "While trembling rebels at the fabrick gaze,
- And dread their fate with horror and amaze,
- Let Briton's sons the _emblematick_ view,
- And plainly see what to rebellion's due."
-
-A curious little book "by a member of the Inner Temple," which has
-preserved this print, has also embalmed the following stupid and
-cold-blooded impromptu on the heads of Oxburgh, Townley, and Fletcher:--
-
- "Three heads here I spy,
- Which the glass did draw nigh,
- The better to have a good sight;
- Triangle they're placed,
- Old, bald, and barefaced,
- Not one of them e'er was upright."[16]
-
-The heads of Fletcher and Townley were put up on Temple Bar August 2,
-1746. On August 16, Walpole writes to Montague to say that he had "passed
-under the new heads at Temple Bar, where people made a trade of letting
-spying-glasses at a halfpenny a look."
-
-Townley was a young officer about thirty-eight years of age, born at
-Wigan, and of a good family. His uncle had been out in 1715, but was
-acquitted on his trial. Townley had been fifteen years abroad in the
-French army, and was close to the Duke of Berwick when the duke's head was
-shot off at the siege of Philipsburgh. When the Highlanders came into
-England he met them near Preston, and received from the young Pretender a
-commission to raise a regiment of foot. He had been also commandant at
-Carlisle, and directed the sallies from thence.
-
-Fletcher, a young linen chapman at Salford, had been seen pulling off his
-hat and shouting when a sergeant and a drummer were beating up for
-volunteers at the Manchester Exchange. He had been seen also at Carlisle,
-dressed as an officer, with a white cockade in his hat and a plaid sash
-round his waist.[17]
-
-Seven other Jacobites were executed on Kennington Common with Fletcher and
-Townley. They were unchained from the floor of their room in Southwark new
-gaol early in the morning, and having taken coffee, had their irons
-knocked off. They were then, at about ten o'clock, put into three sledges,
-each drawn by three horses. The executioner, with a drawn scimitar, sat in
-the first sledge with Townley; a party of dragoons and a detachment of
-foot-guards conducted him to the gallows, near which a pile of faggots and
-a block had been placed. While the prisoners were stepping from their
-sledges into a cart drawn up beneath a tree, the wood was set on fire, and
-the guards formed a circle round the place of execution. The prisoners had
-no clergyman, but Mr. Morgan, one of their number, put on his spectacles
-and read prayers to them, which they listened and responded to with
-devoutness. This lasted above an hour. Each one then threw his
-prayer-book and some written papers among the spectators; they also
-delivered notes to the sheriff, and then flung their hats into the crowd.
-"Six of the hats," says the quaint contemporary account, "were laced with
-gold,--all of these prisoners having been genteelly dressed." Immediately
-after, the executioner took a white cap from each man's pocket and drew it
-over his eyes; then they were turned off. When they had hung about three
-minutes, the executioner pulled off their shoes, white stockings, and
-breeches, a butcher removing their other clothes. The body of Mr. Townley
-was then cut down and laid upon a block, and the butcher seeing some signs
-of life remaining, struck it on the breast, then took out the bowels and
-the heart, and threw them into the fire. Afterwards, with a cleaver, they
-severed the head and placed it with the body in the coffin. When the last
-heart, which was Mr. Dawson's, was tossed into the fire, the executioner
-cried, "God save King George!" and the immense multitude gave a great
-shout. The heads and bodies were then removed to Southwark gaol to await
-the king's pleasure.
-
-According to another account the bodies were cloven into quarters; and as
-the butcher held up each heart he cried, "Behold the heart of a traitor!"
-
-Mr. James Dawson, one of the unhappy men thus cruelly punished, was a
-young Lancashire gentleman of fortune, just engaged to be married. The
-unhappy lady followed his sledge to the place of execution, and approached
-near enough to see the fire kindled and all the other dreadful
-preparations. She bore it well till she heard her lover was no more, but
-then drew her head back into the coach, and crying out, "My dear, I follow
-thee!--I follow thee! Sweet Jesus, receive our souls together!" fell on
-the neck of a companion and expired. Shenstone commemorated this
-occurrence in a plaintive ballad called "Jemmy Dawson."
-
-Mr. Dawson is described as "a mighty gay gentleman, who frequented much
-the company of the ladies, and was well respected by all his acquaintance
-of either sex for his genteel deportment. He was as strenuous for their
-vile cause as any one in the rebel army. When he was condemned and double
-fettered, he said he did not care if they were to put a ton weight of iron
-on him; it would not in the least daunt his resolution."[18]
-
-On January 20 (between 2 and 3 A.M.), 1766, a man was taken up for
-discharging musket-bullets from a steel crossbow at the two remaining
-heads upon Temple Bar. On being examined he affected a disorder in his
-senses, and said his reason for doing so was "his strong attachment to the
-present Government, and that he thought it was not sufficient that a
-traitor should merely suffer death; that this provoked his indignation,
-and that it had been his constant practice for three nights past to amuse
-himself in the same manner. And it is much to be feared," says the
-recorder of the event, "that he is a near relation to one of the unhappy
-sufferers."[19] Upon searching this man, about fifty musket-bullets were
-found on him, wrapped up in a paper with a motto--"Eripuit ille vitam."
-
-"Yesterday," says a news-writer of the 1st of April, 1772, "one of the
-rebel heads on Temple Bar fell down. There is only one head now
-remaining."
-
-The head that fell was probably that of Councillor Layer, executed for
-high treason in 1723. The blackened head was blown off the spike during a
-violent storm. It was picked up by Mr. John Pearce, an attorney, one of
-the Nonjurors of the neighbourhood, who showed it to some friends at a
-public-house, under the floor of which it was buried. In the meanwhile Dr.
-Rawlinson, a Jacobite antiquarian, having begged for the relic, was
-imposed on with another. In his will the doctor desired to be buried with
-this head in his right hand,[20] and the request was complied with.
-
-This Dr. Rawlinson, one of the first promoters of the Society of
-Antiquaries, and son of a lord mayor of London, died in 1755. His body was
-buried in St. Giles' churchyard, Oxford, and his heart in St. John's
-College. The sale of his effects lasted several days, and produced L1164.
-He left upwards of 20,000 pamphlets; his coins he bequeathed to Oxford.
-
-The last of the iron poles or spikes on which the heads of the unfortunate
-Jacobite gentlemen were fixed, was removed only at the commencement of the
-present century.[21]
-
-The above-named Christopher Layer was a barrister, living in Old
-Southampton Buildings, who had engaged in a plot to seize the Bank and the
-Tower, to arm the Minters in Southwark, to seize the king, Walpole, and
-Lord Cadogan, to place cannon on the terrace of Lincoln's-Inn-Fields
-gardens, and to draw a force of armed men together at the Exchange. The
-prisoner had received blank promissory-notes signed in the Pretender's own
-hand, and also treasonable letters full of cant words of the party in
-disguised names--such as Mr. Atkins for the Pretender, Mrs. Barbara Smith
-for the army, and Mr. Fountaine for himself.
-
-It was proved that, at an audience in Rome, Layer had assured the
-Pretender that the South Sea losses had done good to his cause; and the
-Pretender and the Pretender's wife (through their proxies, Lord North and
-Grey, and the Duchess of Ormond) had stood as godfather and godmother to
-his (Layer's) daughter's child.
-
-He was executed at Tyburn in May 1723, and avowed his principles even
-under the gallows. His head was taken to Newgate, and the next day fixed
-upon Temple Bar; but his quarters were delivered to his relations to be
-decently interred.
-
-In April 1773 Boswell dined at Mr. Beauclerk's with Dr. Johnson, Lord
-Charlemont, Sir Joshua Reynolds, and some other members of the Literary
-Club--it being the evening when Boswell was to be balloted for as
-candidate for admission into that distinguished society.[22] The
-conversation turned on Westminster Abbey, and on the new and commendable
-practice of erecting monuments to great men in St. Paul's; upon which the
-doctor observed--
-
-"I remember once being with Goldsmith in Westminster Abbey. While we
-surveyed the Poets' Corner, I said to him--
-
- 'Forsitan et nostrum nomen miscebitur illis.'
-
-When we got to Temple Bar he stopped me, pointed to the heads upon it, and
-slily whispered--
-
- 'Forsitan et nostrum nomen miscebitur _istis_.'"[23]
-
-This walk must have taken place a year or two before 1773, for in 1772, as
-we have seen, the last head but one fell.
-
-O'Keefe, the dramatist, who arrived in England on August 12, 1762, the day
-on which the Prince of Wales (afterwards George IV.) was born, describes
-the heads of poor Townley and Fletcher as stuck up on high poles, not over
-the central archway, but over the side posterns. Parenthetically he
-mentions that he had also seen the walls of Cork gaol garnished with
-heads, like the ramparts of the seraglio at Constantinople.[24]
-
-O'Keefe tells us that he heard the unpopular peace of 1763 proclaimed at
-Temple Bar, and witnessed the heralds in the Strand knock at the city
-gate. The duke of Nivernois, the French ambassador on that occasion, was a
-very little man, who wore a coat of richly-embroidered blue velvet, and a
-small _chapeau_, which set the fashion of the Nivernois hat.[25]
-
-At the proclamation of the short peace of Amiens, the king's marshal, with
-his officers, having ridden down the Strand from Westminster, stopped at
-Temple Bar, which was kept shut to show that there commenced the Lord
-Mayor's jurisdiction. The herald's trumpets were blown thrice; the junior
-officer then tapped at the gate with his cane, upon which the City
-marshal, in the most unconscious way possible, answered, "Who is there?"
-The herald replied, "The officers-of-arms, who seek entrance into the City
-to publish his majesty's proclamation of peace." On this the gates were
-flung open, and the herald alone was admitted, and conducted to the Lord
-Mayor. The latter then read the royal warrant, and returning it to the
-bearer, ordered the City marshal to open the gate for the whole
-procession. The Lord Mayor and aldermen then joined it, and proceeded to
-the Royal Exchange, where the proclamation, that was to bid the cannon
-cease and chain up the dogs of war, was read for the last time.
-
-[Illustration: THE LORD MAYOR'S SHOW. AFTER HOGARTH.]
-
-The timber work and doors of Temple Bar have been often renewed since
-1672. New doors were hung for Nelson's funeral, when the Bar was to be
-closed; and again at the funeral of Wellington, when the plumes and
-trophies had to be removed in order that the car might pass through the
-gate, which was covered with dull theatrical finery.[26]
-
-The old, black, mud-splashed gates of Temple Bar are also shut whenever
-the sovereign has occasion to enter the City. This is an old custom, a
-tradition of the times when the city was proud of its privileges, and
-sometimes even jealous of royalty. When the cavalcade approaches, a
-herald, in his tabard of crimson and gold lace, sounds a trumpet before
-the portal of the City; another herald knocks; a parley ensues; the gates
-are then thrown open, and the Lord Mayor appearing, kneels and hands the
-sword of the city to his sovereign, who graciously returns it.
-
-Stow describes a scene like this in the old days of the "timber house,"
-when Queen Elizabeth was on her way to old St. Paul's to return thanks to
-God for the discomfiture of the Armada. The City waits fluted, trumpeted,
-and fiddled from the roof of the gate; while below, the Lord Mayor and his
-brethren, in scarlet gowns, received and welcomed their brave queen,
-delivering up the sword which, after certain speeches, she re-delivered to
-the mayor, who, then taking horse, rode onward to St. Paul's bearing it in
-its shining sheath before her.[27]
-
-In the June after the execution of Charles I., when Cromwell had dispersed
-the mutinous regiments with his horse, and pistolled or hanged their
-leaders, a day of thanksgiving was appointed, and the Parliament, the
-Council of State, and the Council of the Army, after endless sermons,
-dined together at Grocers' Hall; on that day Lenthall, the Speaker,
-received the sword of state from the mayor at the Bar, and assumed the
-functions of royalty.
-
-The same ceremony took place when Queen Anne went to St. Paul's to return
-thanks for the Duke of Marlborough's victories, and again when George III.
-came to return thanks for a recovery from his fit of insanity, and when
-Queen Victoria passed on her way to Cornhill to open the Royal Exchange.
-
-Temple Bar naturally does not figure much in the early City pageants,
-because, after proceeding to Westminster by water, the mayor and aldermen
-usually landed at St. Paul's Stairs.
-
-It is, we believe, first mentioned in the great festivities when the City
-brought poor Anne Boleyn, in 1533, from Greenwich to the Tower, and on the
-second day after conducted her through the chief streets and honoured her
-with shows. On that day the Fleet Street conduit ran claret, and Temple
-Bar was newly painted and repaired; there also stood singing men and
-children, till the company rode on to Westminster Hall. The next day was
-the coronation.[28]
-
-On the 19th of February 1546-7 the young King Edward VI. passed through
-London, the day before his coronation. At the Fleet Street conduit two
-hogsheads of wine were given to the people. The gate at Temple Bar was
-also painted and fashioned with varicoloured battlements and buttresses,
-richly hung with cloth of arras, and garnished with fourteen standards.
-There were eight French trumpeters blowing their best, besides a pair of
-"regals," with children singing to the same.[29]
-
-In September 1553 Queen Mary rode through London, the day before her
-coronation, in a chariot covered with cloth of tissue, and drawn by six
-horses draped with the same. Minstrels played at Ludgate, and the Temple
-Bar was newly painted and hung.[30]
-
-But even a greater time came for the old City boundary in January 1558-9,
-when Queen Elizabeth went from the Tower to Westminster. Temple Bar was
-"finely dressed" up with the two giants--Gog and Magog (now in the
-Guildhall)--who held between them a poetical recapitulation of all the
-other pageantries, both in Latin and English. On the south side was a
-noise of singing children, one of whom, richly attired as a poet, gave the
-queen farewell in the name of the whole city.[31]
-
-In 1603 King James, Queen Anne of Denmark, and Prince Henry Frederick
-passed through "the honourable City and Chamber" of London, and were
-welcomed with pageants. The last arch, that of Temple Bar, represented a
-temple of Janus. The principal character was Peace, with War grovelling at
-her feet; by her stood Wealth; below sat the four handmaids of
-Peace,--Quiet treading on Tumult, Liberty on Servitude, Safety on Danger,
-and Felicity on Unhappiness. There was then recited a poetical dialogue by
-the Flamen Martialis and the Genius Urbis, written by Ben Jonson.
-
-Here, hitherto, the pageantry had always ceased, but the Strand suburbs
-having now greatly increased, there was an additional pageant beyond
-Temple Bar, which had been thought of and perfected in only twelve days.
-The invention was a rainbow; and the moon, sun, and pleiades advanced
-between two magnificent pyramids seventy feet high, on which were drawn
-out the king's pedigrees through both the English and the Scottish
-monarchs. A speech composed by Ben Jonson was delivered by Electra.[32]
-
-When Charles II. came through London, according to custom, the day before
-his coronation, I suspect that "the fourth arch in Fleet Street" was close
-to Temple Bar. It was of the Doric and Ionic orders, and was dedicated to
-Plenty, who made a speech, surrounded by Bacchus, Ceres, Flora, Pomona,
-and the Winds; but whether the latter were alive or only dummies, I cannot
-say.
-
-The _London Gazette_ of February 8, 1665-6, announces the proclamation of
-war against France; and Pepys mentions this as also the day on which they
-went into mourning at court for the King of Spain. War was proclaimed by
-the herald-at-arms and two of his brethren, his majesty's
-sergeants-at-arms, and trumpeters, with the other usual officers before
-Whitehall, and afterwards (the Lord Mayor and his brethren assisting) at
-Temple Bar, and in other usual parts of the City.
-
-James II., in 1687, honoured Sir John Shorter as Lord Mayor with his
-presence at an inaugurative banquet at Guildhall. The king was accompanied
-by Prince George of Denmark, and was met by the two sheriffs at Temple
-Bar.
-
-[Illustration: TEMPLE BAR, 1746.]
-
-On Lord Mayor's Day, 1689, when King William and Queen Mary came to the
-City to see the show, the City militia regiments lined the street as far
-as Temple Bar, and beyond came the red and blue regiments of Middlesex and
-Westminster; the soldiers, at regulated distances, holding lighted
-flambeaux in their hands, and all the houses being illuminated.[33]
-
-In 1697, when Macaulay's hero, William III., made a triumphant entry into
-London to celebrate the conclusion of the peace of Ryswick, the procession
-included fourscore state coaches, each with six horses; the three City
-regiments guarded Temple Bar, and beyond them came the liveries of the
-several companies, with their banners and ensigns displayed.[34]
-
-George III. in his day, and Queen Victoria in her and our own, passed
-through Temple Bar in state more than once, on their way into the City;
-the last occasion was on February 1872, when the Queen proceeded to St.
-Paul's to offer thanks for the recovery of her son the Prince of Wales.
-Through it also the bodies of Nelson and of Wellington were borne to their
-last resting place in St. Paul's.
-
-On the auspicious entrance into London of the fair Princess Alexandra, the
-old gate was hung with tapestry of gold tissue, powdered with crimson
-hearts; and very mediaeval and gorgeous it looked; but the real days of
-pageants are gone by. We shall never again see fountains running wine, nor
-maidens blowing gold-leaf into the air, as in the luxurious days of our
-Plantagenet kings.
-
-There are many portals in the world loftier and more beautiful than our
-dull, black arch of Temple Bar. The Vatican has grander doorways, the
-Louvre more stately entrances, but through no gateway in the world have
-surely passed onwards to death so many millions of wise and brave men, or
-so many thinkers who have urged forward learning and civilisation, and
-carried the standard of struggling humanity farther into space.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: ST. CLEMENT'S CHURCH IN THE STRAND, 1753.]
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE STRAND (SOUTH SIDE).
-
-
-Essex Street was formerly part of the Outer Temple, the western wing of
-the Knight Templars' quarter. The outer district of these proud and
-wealthy Crusaders stretched as far as the present Devereux Court; those
-gentler spoilers, the mediaeval lawyers, having extended their frontiers
-quite as far as their rooted-out predecessors. From the Prior and Canons
-of the Holy Sepulchre[35] it was transferred, in the reign of Edward II.
-to the Bishops of Exeter, who built a palace here and occupied it till the
-reign of Henry VII. or Henry VIII.
-
-The first tenant of Exeter House was the ill-fated Walter Stapleton, Lord
-Treasurer of England, a firm adherent to the luckless Edward II., against
-his queen and the turbulent barons. In 1326, when Isabella landed from
-France to chase the Spensers from her husband's side, and advanced on
-London, the weak king and his evil counsellors fled to the Welsh frontier;
-but the bishop held out stoutly for his king, and, as custos of the City
-of London, demanded the keys from the Lord Mayor, Hammond Chickwell, to
-prevent the treachery of the disaffected city. The watchful populace,
-roused by Isabella's proclamation that had been hung on the new cross in
-Cheapside, rose in arms, seized the vacillating mayor, and took the keys.
-They next ran to Exeter House, then newly erected, fired the gates, and
-burnt all the plate, jewels, money, and goods. The bishop, at that time in
-the fields, being almost too proud to show fear, rode straight to the
-northern door of St. Paul's to take sanctuary. There the mob tore him from
-his horse, stripped him of his armour, and dragging him to Cheapside,
-proclaimed him a traitor, a seducer of the king, and an enemy of their
-liberties, and lopping off his head, set it on a pole. The corpse was
-buried without funeral service in an old churchyard of the Pied
-Friars.[36] His brother and some servants were also beheaded, and their
-bleeding and naked bodies thrown on a heap of rubbish by the river side.
-
-Exeter Place was shortly afterwards rebuilt, but the new house seemed a
-doomed place, and brought no better fortune to its new owners. Lord Paget,
-who changed its name to Paget House, fought at Boulogne under the poet
-Earl of Surrey, was ambassador at the court of Charles V., and on his
-return obtained a peerage and the garter. He fell with the Protector
-Somerset, being accused of having planned the assassination of the Duke of
-Northumberland at Paget House. Released from the Tower, he was deprived of
-the garter upon the malicious pretence that he was not a gentleman by
-blood. Queen Mary, however, restored the fallen man to honour, made him
-Lord Privy Seal, and sent him on an embassy.
-
-The next occupier of the unlucky house, Thomas Howard, fourth Duke of
-Norfolk, and son of the poet Earl of Surrey, maintained in its chambers an
-almost royal magnificence. It was here he was arrested for conspiring,
-with the aid of Mary Queen of Scots, the Pope, and the King of Spain, to
-marry Mary and restore the Popish religion.
-
-The duke's ambition and treason were fully proved by his own intercepted
-letters; indeed, he himself confessed his guilt, though he had denounced
-Mary to Elizabeth as a "notorious adulteress and murderer." To crown his
-rashness, meanness, and treason, he wrote from the Tower the most abject
-letters to Elizabeth, imploring her clemency. He was privately beheaded in
-1572, but his estates were restored to his children.[37] It was under the
-mat, hard by a window in the entry towards the duke's bedchamber, that the
-celebrated alphabet in cipher[38] was hidden, which the duke afterwards
-concealed under a roof tile, where it was found, unmasking all his plans.
-
-In the Tower the unhappy plotter had written affecting letters to his son
-Philip, bidding him worship God, avoid courts, and beware of ambition.[39]
-The warning of the man whose eyes had been opened too late is touching.
-The writer, speaking of court life, remarks, "It hath no certainty. Either
-a man, by following thereof, hath too much worldly pomp, which in the end
-throws him down headlong, or else he liveth there unsatisfied, either that
-he cannot obtain to himself that he would, or else that he cannot do for
-his friends as his heart desireth."
-
-Poor Philip did not benefit much by these lessons, but remained simple
-Earl of Arundel, was repeatedly committed to the Tower, as by necessity an
-ill-wisher to Elizabeth, and eventually died there after ten weary years
-of imprisonment. His initials are still to be found on the walls of one of
-the chambers in the Beauchamp Tower.
-
-Fools never learn the lessons which Time tries so hard to beat into them.
-Plotter succeeds plotter, and the rough lesson of the headsman seldom
-teaches the conspirator's successor to cease from conspiring.
-
-To the Norfolks succeeded Dudley, the false Earl of Leicester, the black
-or gipsy earl, as he was called from his swarthy Italian complexion.
-Leicester, like the duke before him, plotted with Mary's Jesuits and
-assassins, and at the same time contrived to keep in favour with his own
-jealous queen, in spite of all his failures and schemings in Holland, and
-his suspected assassinations of his enemies in England. Leicester died of
-fever the year of the Armada (1588), on his return from the camp at
-Tilbury, leaving Leicester Place to Robert Devereux, his step-son, the
-Earl of Essex,[40] who succeeded to his favour at court, but was doomed to
-an untimely death.
-
-It was to the great Lord of Kenilworth--that dark, mysterious man, who
-perhaps deserved more praise than historians usually give him--that
-Spenser dedicated his poem of "Virgil's Gnat." In his beautiful
-"Prothalamion" on the marriage of Lady Elizabeth and Lady Catherine
-Somerset, he speaks somewhat abjectly of Leicester, ingeniously contriving
-to remind Essex of his father-in-law's bounty. "Near to the Temple," the
-needy poet says,
-
- "Stands a stately place,
- _Where I gayned giftes_ and the goodly grace
- Of that great lord who there was wont to dwell,
- Whose want too well now feels my friendless case;
- But, ah! here fits not well
- Old woes."
-
-Then the poet goes on to eulogise Essex, who, however, it is supposed,
-after all allowed him to die in want. But there is a mystery about
-Spenser's death. He returned from Ireland, beggared and almost
-broken-hearted, in October or November 1599, and died in the January
-following, just as Essex was preparing to start to Ireland. In that whirl
-of ambition, the poor poet may perhaps have been rather overlooked than
-wilfully slighted. This at least is certain, that he was buried in
-Westminster Abbey, near Chaucer's tomb, the Earl of Essex defraying the
-expenses of his public funeral.
-
-It was in his prison-house near the Temple that the hair-brained Earl of
-Essex shut himself sulkily up, when Queen Elizabeth had given him a box on
-the ears, after a dispute about the new deputy for Ireland, in which the
-earl had shown a petulant violence unworthy of the pupil of Burleigh.
-
-Far too much sympathy has been shown with this rash, imperious, and
-unbearable young noble. He was sent to Ireland, and there concluded a
-disgraceful, wilful, and traitorous treaty with one of England's most
-inveterate and dangerous enemies. He returned from that "cursedest of all
-islands," as he called it, against express command, and was with
-difficulty dissuaded from landing in open rebellion. Generous and frank he
-may have been, but his submission to the mild and well-deserved punishment
-of confinement to his own house was as base and abject as it was false and
-hypocritical.
-
-Alarmed, mortified, and enraged at the duration of his banishment from
-court, and at the refusal of a renewed grant for the monopoly of sweet
-wines, Essex betook himself to open rebellion, urged on by ill-advisers
-and his own reckless impatient spirit. He invited the Puritan preachers to
-prayers and sermons; he plotted with the King of Scotland. It was arranged
-at secret meetings at Drury House (then Sir Charles Daver's) to seize
-Whitehall and compel the queen to dismiss Cecil and other ministers
-hostile to Essex.
-
-Sir Christopher Blount was to seize the palace gates, Davies the hall,
-Davers the guard-room and presence-chamber, while Essex, rushing in from
-the Mews with some hundred and twenty adherents, was to compel the queen
-to assemble a parliament to dismiss his enemies, and to fix the
-succession. All these plans were proposed to Essex in writing--the
-arch-conspirator was never himself present.
-
-The delay of letters from Scotland led to the premature outbreak of the
-plot. An order was at once sent summoning Essex to the council, and the
-palace guards were doubled.
-
-On Sunday, February 7, 1601, Essex, fearing instant arrest, assembled his
-friends, and determined to arm and sally forth to St. Paul's Cross, where
-the Lord Mayor and aldermen were hearing the sermon, and urge them to
-follow him to the palace. On the Lord Keeper and other noblemen coming to
-the house to know the cause of the assembly, Essex locked them into a back
-parlour, guarded by musketeers, and followed by two hundred gentlemen,
-drew his sword and rushed into the street like a madman "running a-muck."
-
-Temple Bar was opened for him; but at St. Paul's Cross he found no
-meeting. The citizens crowded round him, but did not join his band. When
-he reached the house of Sheriff Smith, the crafty Sheriff had stolen away.
-
-In the meantime Lord Burleigh and the Earl of Cumberland, with a herald,
-had entered the City and proclaimed Essex a traitor; a thousand pounds
-being offered for his apprehension. Despairing of success, the mad earl
-then turned towards his own house, and finding Ludgate barricaded by a
-strong party of citizens under Sir John Levison, attempted to force his
-way, killing two or three citizens, and losing Tracy, a young friend of
-his own. Then striking down to Queenhithe, the earl and some fifty
-followers who were left took boat for Essex Gardens.
-
-On entering his house, he found that his treacherous confidant, Sir
-Ferdinand Gorges, had made terms with the court and released the hostages.
-Essex then, by the advice of Lord Sandys, resolved to fortify the place,
-hold out to the last extremity, and die sword in hand. In a few minutes,
-however, the Lord Admiral's troops surrounded the building. A parley
-ensued between Sir Robert Sidney in the garden, and Essex and his rash
-ally, Shakspere's patron, the Earl of Southampton, who were on the roof.
-The earl's demands were proudly refused, but a respite of two hours was
-given him, that the ladies and female servants might retire. About six
-the battering train arrived from the Tower, and Essex then wisely
-surrendered at discretion.[41]
-
-The night being very dark, and the tide not serving to pass the dangers of
-London Bridge, Essex and Southampton were taken by boat to Lambeth Palace,
-and the next morning to the Tower.
-
-Essex had fully deserved death. He was executed privately, by his own
-request, at the Tower, February 25, 1601. Meyrick, his steward, and Cuffe,
-his secretary, were hanged and quartered at Tyburn. Sir Charles Davers and
-Sir Christopher Blount perished on Tower Hill. Other prisoners were fined
-and imprisoned, and the Earl of Southampton pined in durance till the
-accession of James I. (1603).
-
-Among the even older tenants of Essex House, we must not forget that
-unhappy woman, the earl's mother, who, first as Lettice Knollys, then as
-Countess of Essex, afterwards as Lady Leicester, and next as wife of Sir
-Christopher Blount, was a barb in Elizabeth's side for thirty years.
-Married as a girl to a noble husband, she gave up her honour to a seducer,
-and there is reason to think that she consented to the taking of his life.
-While Devereux lived, she deceived the queen by a scandalous amour, and,
-after his death, by a clandestine marriage with the Earl of Leicester.
-While Dudley lived, she wallowed in licentious love with Christopher
-Blount, his groom of the horse. When her second husband expired in agony
-at Cornbury, not an hour's gallop from the place in which Amy Robsart
-died, she again mortified the queen by a secret union with her last
-seducer, Blount. Her children rioted in the same vices. Essex himself,
-with his ring of favourites, was not more profligate than his sister
-Penelope, Lady Rich.[42]
-
-This sister was the (Platonic?) mistress of Sydney, whose stolen love for
-her is pictured in his most voluptuous verse. On his death at Zuetphen, she
-lived with Lord Montjoy, though her husband, Lord Rich, was still alive.
-Nor was her sister Dorothy one whit better. After marrying one husband
-secretly and against the canon, she wedded Percy, the wizard Earl of
-Northumberland, whom she led the life of a dog, until he indignantly
-turned her out of doors.[43] It is not easy, observes Mr. Dixon, except in
-Italian story, to find a group of women so depraved and so detestable as
-the mother and sisters of the Earl of Essex.
-
-Essex, the rash noble, who died at the untimely age of thirty-three, had a
-dangerous, ill-tempered face, if we may judge by More's portrait of him.
-He stooped in walking, danced badly, and was slovenly in his dress;[44]
-yet being a generous, frank friend, an impetuous and chivalrous if not
-wise soldier, and an enemy of Spain and the Cecils, he became a favourite
-of the people. The legend of the ring sent by Essex to the queen,[45] and
-maliciously detained by the Countess of Nottingham, we shall presently
-discuss. No applications for mercy by Essex (and he made many during his
-trial) affect the question of his deserving death. That the queen
-consented with regret to the death of Essex, on the other hand, needs no
-doubtful legend to serve as proof.
-
-Elizabeth had forgiven the earl's joining the Cadiz fleet against her
-wish, she forgave his secret marriage, she forgave his shameful
-abandonment of his Irish command and even his dishonourable treaty with
-Tyrone, but she could not forgive an open and flagrant rebellion at a time
-when she was so surrounded by enemies.
-
-An historical writer, gifted with an eminently analytical mind, Mr.
-Hepworth Dixon, has lately, with great ingenuity, endeavoured to refute
-the charges of ingratitude brought against Bacon for his time serving and
-(to say the least) undue eagerness in aggravating the crimes of his old
-and generous friend. There can be, however, no doubt that Bacon too soon
-abandoned the unfortunate Essex, and, moreover, threw the weight of much
-misapplied learning into the scale against the prisoner. No minimising of
-the favours received by him from Essex can in my mind remove this stain
-from Bacon's reputation.
-
-In Essex House was born a less brilliant but a happier and a more prudent
-man--Robert, Earl of Essex, afterwards the well-known Parliamentary
-general. A child when his father died on the scaffold, he was placed under
-the care of his grandmother, Lady Walsingham, and was afterwards at Eton
-under the severe Saville. A good, worthy, heavy lad, brought up a
-Presbyterian, he was betrothed when only fourteen to Lady Frances Howard,
-daughter of the Earl of Suffolk, who was herself only thirteen.
-
-The earl travelled on the Continent for four years, and on his return was
-married at Essex House. It was for this inauspicious marriage that Ben
-Jonson wrote one of his most beautiful and gorgeous masques, Inigo Jones
-contributing the machinery, and Ferrabosco the music. The rough-grained
-poet seems to have been delighted with the success of the entertainment,
-for he says, "Nor was there wanting whatsoever might give to the furniture
-a complement, either in riches or strangeness of the habits, delicacy of
-dances, magnificence of the scene, or divine rapture of music."[46]
-
-The countess was already, even at this time, the mistress of Robert Carr,
-the handsome minion of James I. She obtained a divorce from her husband in
-1613, and espoused her infamous lover. The cruel poisoning of Sir Thomas
-Overbury for opposing the new marriage followed; and the earl and
-countess, found guilty, but spared by the weak king, lingered out their
-lives in mutual reproaches and contempt, loathed and neglected by all.
-Fate often runs in sequences--the earl was unhappy with his second wife,
-from whom he also was divorced.
-
-Essex emerged from a country retirement to turn general for the
-Parliament. Just, affable, and prudent, he was a popular man till he
-became marked as a moderatist desirous for peace, and was ousted by the
-artful "Self-denying Ordinance." If he had lived it is probable he would
-either have lost his head or have fled to France and turned cavalier. His
-death during the time that Charles I. remained a prisoner with the Scotch
-army at Newcastle saved him from either fate. With him the Presbyterian
-moderatists and the House of Peers finally lost even their little
-remaining power.
-
-When the earl resigned his commission, the House of Commons went to Essex
-House to return their ex-general thanks for his great services. A year
-later they followed him to the grave (1646), little perhaps thinking how
-bitterly the earl had reproached them for ingratitude, and what plans he
-had devised to reform the army and to check Cromwell and Fairfax.[47]
-
-On the earl's death, his Royalist brother-in-law, the Marquis of Hertford,
-attempted to seize his ready money and papers, but was frustrated by the
-Parliament.[48]
-
-Whether the next earl, who on being arrested for sharing in the Rye-House
-plot destroyed himself at the Tower, lived in his father's house, I do not
-know, but the mansion, so unlucky to its owners, was occupied by families
-of rank for some time after the Restoration, and then falling into neglect
-and ruin, as fashion began to flow westward, was subdivided, and a street,
-called Essex Street, was built on part of its site.
-
-Samuel Patterson, the bookseller and auctioneer, lived in Essex Street, in
-1775, in rooms formerly the residence of Sir Orlando Bridgeman. He was
-originally a bag-maker. Afterwards Charles Dibdin commenced his
-entertainments in these rooms, and here his fine song of "Poor Jack"
-became famous.[49] Patterson's youngest child was Dr. Johnson's godson,
-and became a pupil of Ozias Humphrey.[50] Patterson wrote a book of
-travels in Sterne's manner, but claimed a priority to that strange writer.
-
-George Fordyce, a celebrated epicurean doctor of the eighteenth century,
-lived in the same street. For twenty years he dined daily at Dolly's
-Chop-house, and at his solitary meal he always took a tankard of strong
-ale, a quarter of a pint of brandy, and a bottle of port. After these
-potations, he walked to his house and gave a lecture to his pupils.[51]
-
-Dr. Johnson, the year before he died, formed a club in Essex Street, at
-the Essex Head, a tavern kept by an old servant of his friend, Thrale, the
-brewer. It was less select than the Literary Club, but cheaper. Johnson,
-writing to Sir Joshua Reynolds to join it, says, "the terms are lax and
-the expences light--we meet thrice a week, and he who misses forfeits
-twopence."[52] Sir John Hawkins spitefully calls it "a low ale-house
-association;" but Windham, Daines Barrington, Horsley, Boswell, and
-Brocklesby were members of it; for rich men were less luxurious than they
-are now, and enjoyed the sociable freedom of a tavern. Sir Joshua refused
-to join, probably because Barry, who had insulted him, and was very
-pugnacious, had become a member.[53] It went on happily for many years,
-says Boswell, whom Johnson, when he proposed him for election, called "a
-clubable man." Towards the end of his life the great lexicographer grew
-more and more afraid of solitude, and a club so near his home was probably
-a great convenience to him.
-
-Near Devereux Court are the premises of the well-known tea-dealers,
-Messrs. Twining. The graceful recumbent stone figures of Chinamen over the
-Strand front have much elegance, and must have come from some good hand.
-One of this family was a Colchester rector, and a translator of
-Aristotle's _Poetics_. He was an excellent man, a good linguist and
-musician, and a witty companion. He was contemporary with Gray and Mason,
-the poets, at Cambridge. In the back parlour is a portrait of the founder
-of the house. A century and a half ago ladies used to drive to the door of
-Twining's and drink tiny cups of the new and fashionable beverage as they
-sat in their coaches. There is an epigram extant, written either by
-Theodore Hook or one of the Smiths; the point of it is, that if you took
-away his T, Twining would be Wining.
-
-In 1652 Constantine, the Greek servant of a Levant merchant, opened in
-Devereux Court a coffee-house, which became known as "The Grecian." In
-1664-5 advertised his Turkey "coffee bery," chocolate, "sherbet," and tea,
-as good and cheap, and announced his readiness to give gratuitous
-instructions in the art of preparing the said liquors.[54]
-
-In the same year, a Greek named Pasqua Rosee had also established a house
-in St. Michael's Alley, Cornhill, for the sale of "the coffee drink."[55]
-
-John Evelyn describes a Greek fellow-student, afterwards Bishop of Smyrna,
-drinking coffee when he was at college in about 1637.[56]
-
-In April 1709 Steele, in No. 1 of the _Tatler_, announces that he shall
-date all learned articles from the "Grecian," all gallantry from
-"White's," all poetry from "Wills's," all foreign and domestic news from
-"St. James's."
-
-In 1710-11 Addison, starting the "_Spectator_ along with Steele," tells us
-his own grave face was well known at the Grecian; and in No. 49 (April
-1711), the _Spectator_ describes the spleen and inward laughter with which
-he views at the Grecian the young Templars come in, about 8 A.M., either
-dressed for Westminster, and with the preoccupied air of assumed business,
-or in gay cap, slippers, and particoloured dressing-gowns, rising early to
-publish their laziness, and being displaced by busier men towards noon.
-Dr. King relates a story of two hot-blooded young gentlemen quarrelling
-one evening at this coffee-house about the accent of a Greek word.
-Stepping out into Devereux Court, they fought, and one of them being run
-through the body, died on the spot.[57] This Dr. King was principal of St.
-Mary's Hall, Oxford, and a staunch Tory. It is he who relates the secret
-visit of the Pretender to London. He died in 1763.
-
-Ralph Thoresby, the Leeds topographer, met Dr. Sloane, the secretary of
-the Royal Society, by appointment at the Grecian in May 1712; and again in
-June he describes retiring to the Grecian after a meeting of the Royal
-Society, of which he was a fellow, with the president, Sir Isaac
-Newton,[58] Dr. Halley, who published the _Principia_ for Newton, and
-Keill, who opposed Leibnitz about the invention of Fluxions, and defended
-Newton's doctrines against the Cartesians. (The Royal Society held its
-meetings at this time in Crane Court, Fleet Street.) Roger North,
-Attorney-General under James II., who died in 1733, describes in his
-_Examen_ the Privy Council Board, as held at the Grecian coffee-house. The
-Grecian was closed in 1843, and has been since turned into the Grecian
-Chambers. On what was once the front of the coffee-house frequented by
-Steele and Addison, there is a bust of Essex, with the date 1676.
-
-In this court, at the house of one Kedder, in 1678, died Marchmont
-Needham, a vigorous but unprincipled turncoat and newspaper writer, who
-three times during the civil wars changed his principles to save his
-worthless neck. He was alternately the author of the _Mercurius
-Britannicus_ for the Presbyterians, _Mercurius Pragmaticus_ for the king,
-and _Mercurius Politicus_ for the Independents. The great champion of the
-late usurper, as the Cavaliers called him, "whose pen, compared with
-others', was as a weaver's beam," latterly practised as a physician, but
-with small success.[59]
-
-There is a letter of Pope addressed to Fortescue, his "counsel learned in
-the law," at Tom's coffee-house, in Devereux Court. Fortescue, the poet's
-kind, unpaid lawyer, was afterwards (in 1738) Master of the Rolls. Pope's
-imitation of the first satire of Horace, suggested by Bolingbroke, was
-addressed to Mr. Fortescue, and published in 1733. This lawyer was the
-author of the droll report in _Scriblerus_ of "Stradling _versus_ Styles,"
-wherein Sir John Swale leaves all his black and white horses to one
-Stradling, but the question is whether this bequest includes Swale's
-piebald horses. It is finally proved that the horses are all mares.[60]
-
-Dr. Birch, the antiquary, the dull writer but good talker, frequented
-Tom's; and there Akenside--short, thin, pale, strumous, and lame,
-scrupulously neat, and somewhat petulant, vain, and irritable--spent his
-winter evenings, entangled in disputes and altercations, chiefly on
-subjects of literature and politics, that fixed on his character the stamp
-of haughtiness and self-conceit, and drew him into disagreeable
-situations.[61] Akenside was a contradictory man. By turns he was placid,
-irritable; simple, affected; gracious, haughty; magnanimous, mean;
-benevolent, yet harsh, and sometimes even brutal. At times he manifested a
-childlike docility, and at other times his vanity and arrogance made him
-seem almost a madman.[62]
-
-Gay, in his _Trivia_, describes Milford Lane so faithfully that it might
-pass for a yesterday's sketch of the same place. He writes--
-
- "Where the fair columns of St. Clement stand,
- Whose straitened bounds incroach upon the Strand;
- Where the low pent-house bows the walker's head,
- And the rough pavement wounds the yielding tread;
- Where not a post protects the narrow space,
- And strung in twines combs dangle in thy face.
- Summon at once thy courage--rouse thy care;
- Stand firm, look back, be resolute, beware!
- Forth issuing from steep lanes, the collier's steeds
- Drag the black load; another cart succeeds;
- Team follows team, crowds heap'd on crowds appear."
-
-Stow mentions Milford Lane, but gives no derivation for its name.[63] The
-coarse poem by Henry Savill, commonly attributed to the witty Earl of
-Dorset, beginning--
-
- "In Milford Lane, near to St. Clement's steeple."[64]
-
-gave the street for a time such a disagreeable notoriety as the pillory
-gives to a rogue.
-
-Arundel House, in the Strand, was the old inn or town-house of the Bishops
-of Bath, stolen by force in the rough, greedy times of Edward VI., by the
-bad Lord Thomas Seymour, the admiral, and the brother of the Protector;
-from him it derived the name of Seymour Place, and must have been
-conveniently near to the ambitious kinsman who afterwards beheaded him.
-This Admiral had married Henry VIII.'s widow, Catherine Parr; and she
-dying in childbed, he began to woo, in his coarse boisterous way, the
-young Princess Elizabeth, who had been living under the protection of her
-mother-in-law, who was indeed generally supposed to have been poisoned by
-the admiral. His marriage with Elizabeth would have smoothed his way to
-the throne in spite of her father's cautious will. It was said that
-Elizabeth always blushed when she heard his name. He died on the scaffold.
-Old Bishop Latimer, in a sermon, declared "he was a wicked man, and the
-realm is well rid of him."[65] It is certain that, whatever were his
-plots, he had projected a marriage between Lady Jane Grey and the young
-king.
-
-The admiral's house was bought, on its owner's fall, by Henry Fitz-Alan,
-Earl of Arundel, for the nominal sum of L41: 6: 8, with several other
-messuages and lands adjoining.[66] The earl dying in 1579, was succeeded
-by his grandson, Philip Howard, son of the Duke of Norfolk, the owner of
-Essex House adjoining, who was beheaded for his intrigues with Mary of
-Scotland. He died in the Tower in 1598. The house then passed into the
-keeping of Robert Cary, Earl of Monmouth,[67] during the minority of
-Thomas Howard, Philip's son.
-
-In Arundel Palace, in 1603, died the Countess of Nottingham, sister of Sir
-Robert Cary;[68] she was buried at Chelsea. It is of this countess that
-Lady Spelman, a granddaughter of Sir Robert Cary, used to tell the
-doubtful legend of the ring[69] given by Queen Elizabeth to Lord Essex,
-which an acute writer of the present day believes to be a pure fabrication
-of the times of James I.
-
-[Illustration: ARUNDEL HOUSE, 1646.]
-
-The story runs thus:--When the Countess Catherine was dying, she sent to
-the Queen to tell her that she had a secret to reveal, without disclosing
-which she could not die in peace. The Queen came, and the countess then
-told her that when Essex was in the Tower, under sentence of death, he one
-morning threw a ring from his window to a boy passing underneath, hiring
-him to carry it to his friend Lady Scrope, the countess's sister, and beg
-of her to present it in his name to the queen, who had promised to protect
-him whenever he sent her that keepsake, and who was then waiting for some
-such sign of his submission. The boy not clearly understanding the
-message, brought the ring to the countess, who showed it to her husband,
-and he insisted on her keeping it. The countess, having made this
-disclosure, begged her majesty's forgiveness; but the queen answered,
-"God may forgive you, but I never can!" and burst from the room in a
-paroxysm of rage and grief. From that time Elizabeth became perturbed in
-mind, refused to eat or sleep, and died a fortnight after the countess.
-Now this is absurd. The queen never repented the death of that wrongheaded
-traitor, and really died of a long-standing disease which had well-defined
-symptoms.[70]
-
-At Arundel House lodged that grave, wise minister of Henry IV. of France,
-the Duc de Sully, then only the Marquis de Rosny. He describes the house
-with complacency as fine and commodious, and having a great number of
-apartments on the same floor. It was really a mean and low building, but
-commanding a fine prospect of the river and Westminster, so fine, indeed,
-that Hollar took a view of London from the roof. The first night of his
-arrival Sully slept at the French ambassador's house in Butcher Row
-adjoining, a poor house with low rooms, a well staircase lit by a
-skylight, and small casements.[71]
-
-[Illustration: ARUNDEL HOUSE, 1646.]
-
-In the time of James I., in whose reign the earldom was restored to Thomas
-Howard, Arundel House became a treasury of art. The travelled earl's
-collection comprised thirty-seven statues, one hundred and twenty-eight
-busts, and two-hundred and fifty inscribed marbles, exclusive of
-sarcophagi, altars, medals, gems, and fragments. Some of his noblest
-relics, however, he was not allowed to remove from Rome. Of this proud and
-princely amateur of art Lord Clarendon speaks with too obvious prejudice.
-He describes him as living in a world of his own, surrounded by strangers,
-and though illiterate, willing to be thought a scholar because he was a
-collector of works of art. Yet the historian admits that he had an air of
-gravity and greatness in his face and bearing. He affected an ancient and
-grave dress; but Clarendon asserts that this was all outside, and that his
-real disposition was "one of levity," as he was fond of childish and
-despicable amusements. Vansomer's portraits of the earl and countess
-contain views of the statue and picture galleries.[72] This illustrious
-nobleman, whom the excellent Evelyn calls "my noble friend," died in 1646.
-At the Restoration his house and marbles were restored to his grandson,
-Mr. Henry Howard; the antiquities were then lying scattered about Arundel
-Gardens, and were neglected and corroding, blanching with rain, and green
-with damp, much to the horror of Evelyn and other antiquaries, who
-regarded their fate with alarm and pity.
-
-The old Earl of Arundel (whom Clarendon disliked) had been a collector of
-art in a magnificent and princely way. He despatched artist-agents to
-Italy, and even to Asia Minor, to buy pictures, drawings, statues, votive
-slabs, and gems. William Petty collected sculpture for him at Paros and
-Delos, but the collections were lost off Samos in a storm. He collected
-Holbein's and Albert Duerer's drawings, discovered the genius of Inigo
-Jones, and brought Hollar from Prague. He left England just before the
-troubles, having received many affronts from Charles's ministers, who had
-neglected to restore his ancient titles, went to Padua, and there died.
-The marbles Mr. Evelyn induced Mr. Howard, in 1667, to send to the
-University of Oxford; the statues were also given to Oxford by a later
-descendant; and the earl's library (originally part of that of the King of
-Hungary) Mr. Evelyn persuaded the Duke of Norfolk to bestow on the Royal
-Society.[73]
-
-The old earl was, I suspect, a proud, soured, and a rather arrogant,
-formal person. In a certain dispute about a rectory, he once said to King
-Charles I.: "Sir, this rectory was an appendant and a manour of mine until
-my grandfather unfortunately lost both his life and seven lordships, for
-the love he bore to your grandmother."[74]
-
-After the Great Fire of London, Mr. Howard lent the Royal Society rooms in
-his house. In 1678 the palace was taken down, and the present Arundel,
-Surrey, Howard, and Norfolk streets were erected in its stead. The few
-marbles that remained were removed to Tart Hall, Westminster, and to
-Cuper's Gardens across the river.[75] Tart Hall was the residence of the
-Countess of Arundel: Cuper's Gardens belonged to a gardener of the Earl of
-Arundel. The Duke of Norfolk originally intended to build a more
-magnificent house on the old site, and even obtained an act of Parliament
-for the purpose; but fashion was already setting westward, and the design
-was abandoned.[76]
-
-In Arundel Street lived Rymer, the historical antiquary, who died here in
-1715; John Anstis, the Garter king-at-arms, resided here in 1715-16;[77]
-also Mrs. Porter, the actress, "over against the Blue Ball."
-
-Gay, in his delightful _Trivia_ sketches the "long Strand," and pauses to
-mourn over the glories of Arundel House. His walk is from "the Temple's
-silent walls," and he stays to look down at the site of the earl's
-mansion--
-
- ----"That narrow street, which steep descends,
- Whose building to the shining shore extends;
- Here Arundel's famed structure rear'd its frame--
- The street alone retains an empty name;
- Where Titian's glowing paint the canvas warm'd,
- And Raphael's fair design with judgment charm'd,
- Now hangs the bellman's song, and pasted here
- The coloured prints of Overton appear;
- Where statues breathed, the work of Phidias' hands,
- A wooden pump or lonely watch-house stands;
- There Essex' stately pile adorned the shore;
- There Cecil's, Bedford's, Villiers'--now no more."
-
-In the Strand, between Arundel and Norfolk Streets, in the year 1698,
-lived Sir Thomas Lyttelton, Speaker of the House of Commons, and father of
-Pope's friend, and the author of the _History of Henry the Second_, a
-ponderous and pompous work.
-
-Next door to him lived the father of Bishop Burnet--a remarkable person,
-for he was a poor but honest lawyer, born at Edinburgh in 1643. A
-bookseller of the same name--a collateral descendant of the bishop whom
-Swift hated so cordially--afterwards occupied the house.
-
-At the south-west corner of Norfolk Street, near the river, in his wild
-days lodged the Quaker Penn, son of Cromwell's stout Bristol admiral. He
-had been twice beaten and turned out of doors by his father for his
-fondness for Nonconformist society and prayer-meetings, and for refusing
-to stand uncovered in the presence of Charles II. or of the Duke of York,
-of whom later he became the suspected favourite. We do not generally
-associate the grave and fanatic Penn with a gay and licentious court, nor
-do we portray him to ourselves as slinking away from hawk-eyed bailiffs;
-and yet the venerated founder of repudiating Pennsylvania chose this house
-when he was sued for debts, as being convenient for slipping unobserved
-into a boat. In the eastern entrance he had a peep-hole, through which he
-could reconnoitre any suspicious visitor. On one occasion a dun, having
-sent in his name and waited an unconscionable time, knocked again. "Will
-not thy master see me?" he said to the servant. The knave was at least
-candid, for he replied: "Friend, he _has_ seen thee, and he does not like
-thee."[78]
-
-In Norfolk Street, in Penn's old house, afterwards resided for thirty
-years that truly good man, Dr. Richard Brocklesby, who in early life,
-during the Seven Years' War, had practised as an army surgeon. He was a
-friend of Burke and Dr. Johnson. To the former he left, or rather gave, a
-thousand pounds, and to the latter he offered an annuity of a hundred
-pounds a year, to enable him to travel for his health, and also apartments
-in his own house for the sake of medical advice, which Johnson
-affectionately and gratefully declined. The doctor was one of the most
-generous and amiable of men; he attended the poor for nothing, and had
-many pensioners. He died the day after returning from a visit to Burke at
-Beaconsfield. He had been warned against the fatigue of this journey, but
-had replied with true Christian philosophy, "My good friend, where's the
-difference whether I die at a friend's house, at an inn, or in a
-post-chaise? I hope I am prepared for such an event, and perhaps it would
-be as well to elude the anticipation of it."
-
-Dr. Brocklesby was ridiculed by Foote, but Foote attacked virtue quite as
-often as vice. He was the physician who had attended Lord Chatham when he
-was struck down by illness in the House of Lords, a short time before his
-death.
-
-In January 1698 Peter the Great arrived from Holland, and went straight to
-a house prepared for him in Norfolk Street, near the water side. On the
-following day he was visited by King William and the principal nobility.
-Incommoded here by visitors, the Czar removed to Admiral Benbow's house at
-Deptford, where he could live more retired. This Deptford house was Sayes
-Place, afterwards the Victualling Office, and had once belonged to the
-celebrated John Evelyn.
-
-The "Honest Shippen" of Pope--William Shippen, M.P.--lived also in Norfolk
-Street: a brave, honest man, in an age when nearly every politician had
-his price. It was of him Sir Robert Walpole remarked "that he would not
-say who was corrupted, but he would say who was not corruptible, and that
-was Shippen."
-
-Mortimer, a rough, picturesque painter, who was called "the English
-Salvator Rosa," and imitated that unsatisfactory artist in a coarse,
-sketchy kind of way, dwelt in this street.
-
-At No. 21 lived Albany Wallis, a friend and executor of Garrick. In this
-street also Addison makes that delightful old country gentleman, Sir Roger
-de Coverley, put up before he goes to Soho Square.[79]
-
-At No. 8, in 1795, lived Samuel Ireland, the father of the celebrated
-literary impostor; and here were shown to George Chalmers, John Kemble,
-and other Shaksperian scholars, the forged plays which the public
-ultimately scented out as ridiculous.
-
-In 1796 Mr. W. H. Ireland published a full confession of his forgeries,
-fully exonerating his father from all connivance in his foolish fraud,
-claiming forgiveness for a boyish deception begun without evil intention
-and without any thought of danger. "I should never have gone so far," he
-says, "but that the world praised the papers too much, and thereby
-flattered my vanity."[80] After the failure of "Vortigern," the father,
-Mr. S. Ireland, still credulous, had written a pamphlet, accusing Malone,
-his son's chief assailant, of mean malice and unbearable arrogance.
-
-The true story of the forgery is this. W. H. Ireland, then only eighteen,
-was articled to a solicitor in New Inn, where he practised Elizabethan
-handwriting for the sake of deceiving credulous antiquaries. A forged deed
-exciting the admiration of his father, who was a collector of old tracts
-and a worshipper of Shakspere, led him to continue his deceptions, and to
-pretend to have discovered a hoard of Shaksperian MSS. A fellow clerk, one
-Talbot, afterwards an actor, discovering the forgeries, Ireland made him
-an accomplice. They then produced a "Profession of Faith," signed by
-Shakspere, which Dr. Parr and Dr. Warton (brother of the poet) declared
-contained "finer things" than all the Church Service. This foolish praise
-set the secretive lawyer's clerk on writing original verse,--a poem to
-Anne Hathaway, and the play of "Vortigern," the most recklessly impudent
-of all his impostures. Boswell was the first to propose a certificate to
-be signed by all believers in the productions. Dr. Parr, thinking
-Boswell's writing too feeble, drew up another, which was signed by
-twenty-one noblemen, authors, and "celebrated literary characters."
-Boswell, characteristically enough, previous to signing his name, fell on
-his knees, and, "in a tone of enthusiasm and exultation, thanked God that
-he had lived to witness this discovery, and exclaimed that he could now
-die in peace."[81] Lords Kinnaird, Somerset, and Lauderdale were the
-noblemen. There were also present Bindley, Valpy, Pinkerton, Pye the poet
-laureate, Matthew Wyatt, and the present author's grandfather, the Rev.
-Nathaniel Thornbury, an intimate friend of Jenner and of Dr. Johnson, who
-had at this time been twelve years dead. The elder Ireland, in his
-pamphlet, alludes to the solemn and awful manner in which, before crowds
-of eminent characters, his son attested the genuineness of his forgeries.
-"I could not," says the honest fellow, "suffer myself to cherish the
-slightest suspicion of his veracity."[82]
-
-Singularly enough Mr. Albany Wallis--(a solicitor, I believe), of Norfolk
-Street,--who had given to Garrick a mortgage deed bearing Shakspere's
-signature, became the most ardent believer in the unprincipled young
-clerk's deceptions.
-
-The terms agreed upon for Ireland's forgery of "Vortigern" was L300 down,
-and a division of the receipts, deducting charges, for sixty nights. The
-play, however, lived only one night, for which the Irelands received their
-half, L103. The commentators Malone and Steevens remained sceptical, and
-Kemble was suspicious and cold in the cause, though he was to be the hero;
-but the gulls and quidnuncs were numerous enough to cram the house, and
-that most commonplace of poets, Sir James Bland Burges, wrote the
-prologue. The final damnation of the play was secured by a rhapsody of
-Vortigern's, a patch-work thing from "Richard II." and "Henry IV." The
-fatal line--
-
- "And when the solemn mockery is o'er,"
-
-convulsed the house.[83] Mr. W. H. Ireland in later life was editor of the
-_York Herald_, and died in 1835.[84]
-
-Another eminent historical antiquary, Dr. Birch, lived in Norfolk Street.
-The son of a Quaker tradesman at Clerkenwell, he became a London clergyman
-and an historian, famous for his Sunday evenings' conversaziones, and was
-killed by a fall from his horse in 1766. He seems to have been a most
-pleasant, generous, and honest man. He edited Bacon's _Letters and
-Speeches_, and Thurloe's _State Papers_, etc. His chief work was his
-_Memoirs of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth_. He left books, manuscripts, and
-money to the British Museum, for which let all scholars bless the good
-man's memory. He appears to have been a student of boundless industry, as
-from the Lambeth Library alone he transcribed with his own hand sixteen
-quarto volumes. He was rector of St. Margaret Pattens in Fenchurch Street.
-Dr. Birch must have been a kind husband, for his wife on her deathbed
-wrote him the following tender letter:--
-
- "This day I return you, my dearest life, my sincere, hearty thanks for
- every favour bestowed on your most faithful and obedient wife,
-
- HANNAH BIRCH."
-
-We leave it to the watchful cynic to remark that the doctor had been
-married only one year. It was of this worthy book-worm that Johnson
-said--"Yes, sir, he is brisk in conversation, but when he takes up the pen
-it benumbs him like a torpedo."
-
-Strype describes Surrey Street as replenished with good buildings,
-especially that of Nevison Fox, Esq., towards the Strand, "which is a
-fine, large, and curious house of his own building," and the two houses
-that front the Thames, that on the east side being the Hon. Charles
-Howard's, brother to the Duke of Norfolk. Both of these houses had
-pleasant though small gardens towards the Thames.[85]
-
-In 1736 died here George Sale, the useful translator of the Mohammedan
-Bible, the Koran, that strange compound of pure prayers and impure
-plagiarisms from the laws of Moses. Sale had published his Koran in 1734,
-and in the year of his death he joined Paul Whitehead, Dr. Birch, and Mr.
-Strutt, in founding a "Society for the Encouragement of Learning." He
-spent many years in writing for the _Universal History_, in which Bayle's
-ten folio volumes were included.
-
-Edward Pierce, a sculptor, son of a painter of altar-pieces and
-church-ceilings, and a pupil of Vandyke, lived at the corner of Surrey
-Street, and was buried in the Savoy. He helped Sir Christopher Wren to
-build St. Clement's church, and carved the four guardian dragons on the
-Monument of London. The statue of Sir William Walworth at the fishmongers'
-Hall is from his hand, and so is the bust of Thomas Evans in the hall of
-the painters and stainers. He executed also busts of Cromwell, Wren, and
-Milton.[86]
-
-The charming actress, Mrs. Bracegirdle, lived in Howard Street. She was
-the belle and toast of London; every young man of mode was, or pretended
-to be, in love with her; and the wits wrote verses upon her beauty, in
-imitation of Sedley and Waller. Congreve tells us that it was the fashion
-to avow a tenderness for her. Rowe, in an imitation of an ode of Horace,
-urges the Earl of Scarsdale to marry her (though he had a wife living) and
-set the town at defiance.
-
-Among this crowd of admirers was a Captain Hill, a half-cracked
-man-about-town, a drunken, profligate bully, of low character, and a
-friend of the infamous duellist, Lord Mohun. One of Mrs. Bracegirdle's
-favourite parts was Statira, her lover Alexander being her friend and
-neighbour, the eminent actor Mountfort. Cibber describes him in this
-character as "great, tender, persistent, despairing, transported,
-amiable." Hill, "that dark-souled fellow in the pit," as Leigh Hunt calls
-him, mistook the frantic extravagance of stage-passion for real love, and
-in a fit of mad jealousy swore to be revenged on Mountfort, and to carry
-off the lady by force. Lord Mohun, always ready for any desperate
-mischief, agreed to help him in his design. On the night appointed the
-friends dined together, and having changed clothes, went to Drury Lane
-Theatre at six o'clock; but as Mrs. Bracegirdle did not act that night,
-they next took a coach and drove to her lodgings in Howard Street. They
-then, finding that she had gone to supper with a Mr. Page, in Princes
-Street, Drury Lane, went to his house and waited till she came out. She
-appeared at last at the door, with her mother and brother, Mr. Page
-lighting them out.
-
-Hill immediately seized her, and endeavoured, with the aid of some hired
-ruffians, to drag her into the coach, where Lord Mohun sat with a loaded
-pistol in each hand; but her brother and Mr. Page rushing to the rescue,
-and an angry crowd gathering, Hill was forced to let go his hold and
-decamp. Mrs. Bracegirdle and her escort then proceeded to her lodgings in
-Howard Street, followed by Captain Hill and Lord Mohun on foot. On
-knocking at the door, as it was said, to beg Mrs. Bracegirdle's pardon,
-they were refused admittance; upon which they sent for a bottle of wine to
-a neighbouring tavern, which they drank in the street, and then began to
-patrol up and down with swords drawn, declaring they were waiting to be
-revenged on Mountfort the actor. Messengers were instantly despatched to
-warn Mountfort, both by Mrs. Bracegirdle's landlady and his own wife, but
-he could not be found. The watch were also sent for, and they begged the
-two ruffians to depart peaceably. Lord Mohun replied, "He was a peer of
-the realm, that he had been drinking a bottle of wine, but that he was
-ready to put up his sword if they particularly desired it: but as for his
-friend, he had lost his scabbard." The cautious watch then went away.
-
-In the meantime the unlucky Mountfort, suspecting no evil, passed down the
-street on his way home, heedless of warnings. On coming up to the
-swordsmen, a female servant heard the following conversation:--
-
-Lord Mohun embraced Mountfort, and said--
-
-"Mr. Mountfort, your humble servant. I am glad to see you."
-
-"Who is this?--Lord Mohun?" said Mountfort.
-
-"Yes, it is."
-
-"What brings your lordship here at this time of night?"
-
-Lord Mohun replied--
-
-"I suppose you were sent for, Mr. Mountfort?"
-
-"No, indeed, I came by chance."
-
-"Have you not heard of the business of Mrs. Bracegirdle?"
-
-"Pray, my lord," said Hill, breaking in, "hold your tongue. This is not a
-convenient time to discuss this business."
-
-Hill seemed desirous to go away, and pulled Lord Mohun's sleeve; but
-Mountfort, taking no notice of Hill, continued to address Lord Mohun,
-saying he was sorry to see him assisting Captain Hill in such an evil
-action, and begging him to forbear.
-
-Hill instantly gave the actor a box on the ear, and on Mountfort demanding
-what that was for, attacked him sword in hand, and ran him through before
-he had time to draw his weapon. Mountfort died the next day of the wound,
-declaring with his last breath that Lord Mohun had offered him no
-violence. Hill fled from justice, and Lord Mohun was tried for murder, but
-unfortunately acquitted for want of evidence.
-
-That fortunate poet, Congreve, whom Pope declared to be one of the three
-most honest-hearted and really good men in the Kit-cat Club, lived for
-some time in Howard Street, where he was a neighbour and frequent guest of
-Mrs. Bracegirdle.
-
-Congreve, on becoming acquainted with the Duchess of Marlborough, removed
-from Howard Street to a better house in Surrey Street, where he died,
-January 19, 1729. The career of this son of a Yorkshire officer had been
-one long undisturbed triumph. His first play had been revised by Dryden
-and praised by Southerne. Besides being commissioner of hackney-coach and
-wine licences, he also held a place in the Pipe Office, a post in the
-Custom House, and a secretaryship in Jamaica. He never quarrelled with the
-wits: both Addison and Steele admired and praised him, and Voltaire
-eulogises his comedies.
-
-It was here that Voltaire, while lodging in Maiden Lane, visited the gouty
-and nearly blind dramatist, then infirm and on the verge of life. "Mr.
-Congreve," he says, "had one defect, which was his entertaining too mean
-an idea of his profession--that of a writer--though it was to this he owed
-his fame and fortune. He spoke of his works as of trifles that were
-beneath him, and hinted to me in our first conversation that I should
-visit him upon no other footing than that of a gentleman who led a life of
-plainness and simplicity. I answered, that _had he been so unfortunate as
-to be a mere gentleman_ I should never have come to see him; and I was
-very much disgusted at so unseasonable a piece of vanity."
-
-The body of Congreve lay in state in the Jerusalem Chamber, and was
-afterwards interred with great solemnity in Henry VII.'s Chapel. The Duke
-of Bridgewater and the Earl of Godolphin were amongst those who bore the
-pall. The monument was erected by the Duchess of Marlborough, to whom the
-favoured poet had left L10,000. Above his body--
-
- "The ancient pillars rear their marble heads
- To bear aloft the arch'd and pond'rous roof,
- By its own weight made steadfast and immoveable."[87]
-
-Congreve's bequest to the duchess of all his property, except L1000,
-including L200 to Mrs. Bracegirdle (a legacy afterwards cancelled),
-created much scandal. The shameless bookseller, Curll, instantly launched
-forth a life of Congreve, professing to be written by one Charles Wilson,
-Esq., but generally attributed to Oldmixon. The duchess's friends were
-alarmed, and Arbuthnot interfered. Upon being told that some genuine
-letters and essays were to be published in the work, Mrs. Bracegirdle or
-the duchess[88] cried out with defiant affectation and a dramatic drawl,
-"Not one single sheet of paper, I dare to swear."
-
-The duchess, who raised a monument in the Abbey to her brilliant but
-artificial friend, is said to have had a wax image of him made to place on
-her toilette table. "To this she would talk as to the living Mr. Congreve,
-with all the freedom of the most _polite_ and unreserved
-conversation."[89]
-
-Strand Lane used formerly to lead to a small landing-pier for wherries,
-called Strand Bridge. In Stow's time the lane passed under a bridge down
-to the landing-place.[90] A writer in the _Spectator_ describes how he
-landed here on a summer morning, arriving with ten sail of apricot boats,
-consigned to Covent Garden,[91] after having first touched at Nine Elms
-for melons. In this lane there is a fine Roman bath which, if indeed
-Roman, is the most western relic of Roman London, the centre of which was
-on the east end of the Royal Exchange.
-
-No. 165 has been long used as a warehouse for the sale of Dr. Anderson's
-pills. Dr. Patrick Anderson was physician to Charles I., and as early as
-1649 a man named Inglis sold these quack pills at the Golden Unicorn, over
-against the Maypole in the Strand. Tom Brown says, "There are at least a
-score of pretenders to Anderson's Scotch pills, and the Lord knows who has
-the true preparation." Brown died in 1704. Sir Walter Scott used to tell
-one of his best stories about these pills. It dwelt on the passion for
-them entertained by a certain hypochondriacal Lowland laird. Bland or
-rough, old or young, no visitor at his house escaped a dose--"joost ane
-leetle Anderson;" and his toady "the doer" used always to swallow a
-brace.[92]
-
-The Turk's Head Coffee-house stood on the site of No. 142 Strand. Dr.
-Johnson used to sup at this house to encourage the hostess, who was a
-good civil woman, and had not too much business. July 28, 1763, Boswell
-mentions supping there with Dr. Johnson; and again, on August 3, in the
-same year, just before he set out for his wildgoose chase in Corsica.[93]
-No. 132 was the shop of a bookseller named Bathoe. The first circulating
-library in London was established here in 1740.
-
-Jacob Tonson, Dryden's grinding publisher and bookseller, lived at the
-Shakspere's Head, over against Catherine Street, now No. 141 Strand, from
-about 1712 till he died, in 1735-6. Tonson seems to have been rough, hard,
-and penurious. The poet and publisher were perpetually squabbling, and
-Dryden was especially vexed at his trying to force him to dedicate his
-translation of Virgil to King William, and when he refused, making the
-engraver of the frontispiece aggravate the nose of AEneas till it became "a
-hooked promontory," like that of the Protestant king. It was to Tonson's
-shop at Gray's Inn, however, that Dryden, on being refused money, probably
-sent that terrible triplet to the obdurate bibliopole:--
-
- "With leering looks, bull-faced, and freckled fair,
- With two left legs, and Judas-colour'd hair,
- And frowsy pores that taint the ambient air."[94]
-
-"Tell the dog," said Dryden to his messenger, "that he who wrote those can
-write more." But Tonson was perfectly satisfied with this first shot, and
-surrendered at discretion. The irascible poet afterwards accused him of
-intercepting his letters to his sons at Rome, and he confessed to
-Bolingbroke on one occasion that he was afraid of Tonson's tongue.[95]
-
-Tonson's house, since rebuilt, was afterwards occupied by Andrew Millar,
-the publisher and friend of Thomson, Fielding, Hume, and Robertson, and
-after his death by Thomas Cadell, his apprentice, and the friend and
-publisher of Gibbon the historian. The _Seasons_, _Tom Jones_, and the
-Histories of Hume, Robertson, and Gibbon were first published at this
-house. Millar was a Scotchman, and distinguished his shop by the sign of
-Buchanan's Head, afterwards the badge of Messrs. Blackwood.
-
-The _Illustrated London News_, whose office is near Somerset House, was
-started in 1842 by Mr. Herbert Ingram, originally a humble newsvendor at
-Northampton; an industrious man, who would run five miles with a newspaper
-to oblige an old customer. In the first year he sold a million copies; in
-the second, two; and in 1848, three millions. Dr. Mackay, the song-writer,
-wrote leaders; Mr. Mark Lemon aided him; Mr. Peter Cunningham collected
-his column of weekly chat; Thomas Miller, the basket-maker poet, was also
-on his staff. Mr. Ingram obtained a seat in Parliament, and was eventually
-drowned in a steamboat collision on Lake Michigan.
-
-[Illustration: PENN'S HOUSE, NORFOLK STREET, 1749.]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: SOMERSET HOUSE FROM THE RIVER, 1746.]
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-SOMERSET HOUSE.
-
- "And every day there passes by my side,
- Up to its western reach, the London tide--
- The spring tides of the term. My front looks down
- On all the pride and business of the town;
- My other fair and more majestic face
- For ever gazes on itself below,
- In the best mirror that the world can show."
- COWLEY.
-
-
-That ambitious and rapacious noble the Protector Somerset, brother of
-Queen Jane Seymour, and maternal uncle of Edward VI., the owner of more
-than two hundred manors,[96] and who boasted that his own friends and
-retainers made up an army of ten thousand men, determined to build a
-palace in the Strand. For this purpose he demolished the parish church of
-St. Mary, and pulled down the houses of the Bishops of Worcester,
-Llandaff, and Lichfield. He also began to remove St. Margaret's, at
-Westminster, for building materials, till his masons were driven away by
-rioters. He destroyed a chapel in St. Paul's Churchyard, with a cloister
-containing the "Dance of Death," and a charnel-house, the bones of which
-he buried in unconsecrated ground,[97] and finally stole the stones of the
-church of St. John of Jerusalem, near Smithfield,[98] and those of Strand
-Inn (belonging to the Temple), where Occleve the poet, a contemporary of
-Gower and Chaucer, had studied law.
-
-The unwise Protector determined in this building to rival Whitehall and
-Hampton Court. It was begun probably about 1549, and no doubt remained
-unfinished at his death. He had at that time lavished on it L50,000 of our
-present money.
-
-The architect was John of Padua,[99] Henry VIII.'s architect, who built
-Longleat, in Wiltshire, the seat of the Marquis of Bath, a magnificent
-specimen of the Italian-Elizabethan style, and also the gates of Caius
-College, at Cambridge. The Protector is said to have spent at one time
-L100 a day in building, every stone he laid bringing him nearer to his own
-narrow home. A plan of the house is still preserved in the Soane
-Museum.[100]
-
-After the attainder of the duke, when the new palace became the property
-of the crown, little was done to complete the building. The screen
-prepared for the hall was bought for St. Bride's, where it was probably
-destroyed in the Great Fire.[101] The Protector was a good friend to the
-people, but he was weak and ambitious, and the plotters of Ely House had
-no difficulty in dragging him to the scaffold. The minority of Edward
-brought many of the Strand noblemen to the axe, but the fate of the
-admiral and his brother did not deter their neighbours Northumberland,
-Raleigh, Norfolk, and Essex.
-
-Elizabeth granted the keeping of Somerset House to her faithful cousin
-Lord Hunsdon, for life,[102] and here she frequently would visit him, in a
-jewelled farthingale, with Raleigh and Essex in her train.
-
-In 1616 that Scotch Solomon, James I., commanded the place to be called
-Denmark House; and his queen kept her gay and not very decent court here,
-so that Ben Jonson must have often seen his glorious masques acted in this
-palace, to which his coadjutor Inigo Jones built a chapel, and made other
-additions. Anne of Denmark and her maids-of-honour kept up here a
-continual masquerade,[103] appearing in various dresses, and transforming
-themselves to the delight of all whose interest it was to be delighted.
-
-Here too that impetuous queen, Henrietta Maria, resided with her wilful
-and extravagant French household, whose insolence irritated and disgusted
-the people and offended Charles the First. The king at last, losing
-patience, summoned them together one evening and dismissed them all. They
-behaved like sutlers at the sack of a town. They claimed fictitious debts;
-they invented exorbitant bills; they greedily divided among each other the
-queen's wardrobe and jewels, scarcely leaving her a change of linen. The
-king paid nearly L50,000 to get rid of them; Madame St. George alone
-claiming several thousand pounds besides jewels.[104] They still delayed
-their departure; on which the king, at last roused, wrote the following
-imperative letter to Buckingham:--
-
- "STEENIE--I have received your letter by Dick Greame. This is my
- answer. I command you to send all the French away to-morrow out of the
- town, if you can by fair means (but stick not long in disputing),
- otherways force them away--driving them away like so many wild beasts
- until ye have shipped them; and the devil go with them. Let me hear no
- answer, but of the performance of my command. So I rest
-
- "Your faithful, constant, loving friend,
- "C. R.
-
- "Oaking, the seventh of August, 1626."
-
-As the French invented all sorts of vexatious delays, the yeomen of the
-guard at last jostled them out, carting them off in nearly forty coaches.
-They arrived at Dover after four days' tedious travelling, wrangling, and
-bewailing. The squib did not burn out without one final detonation. As the
-vivacious Madame St. George stepped into the boat, with perhaps some
-insolent gesture of adieu, a man in the mob flung a stone at her French
-cap. A gallant Englishman who was escorting her instantly quitted his
-charge, ran the fellow through the body, and returned to the boat. The man
-died on the spot, but no notice, it appears, was taken of the murderer.
-
-In Somerset House, at the Christmas masque of 1632-3, Charles's
-high-spirited queen took part for the last time in a masque. Unfortunately
-for Prynne, the next day out came his _Histriomastix_, with a scurrilous
-marginal note, "Women actors notorious whores!" for which the stubborn
-fanatic lost his ears.
-
-Queen Henrietta had, in Somerset House, an ostentatiously magnificent
-Catholic chapel built by Inigo Jones, which became the scene of spectacles
-that were gall and wormwood to the Puritans, who were already couching for
-their spring.
-
-Their time came in March 1643, when Roundheads, grimly rejoicing, burnt
-all the pictures, images, Jesuitical books, and tapestry.[105]
-
-Five of the unhappy queen's French Roman Catholic servants are entombed in
-the cellars of the present building, under the great quiet square.[106]
-
-Here, close to his own handiwork, that distinguished architect, Inigo
-Jones, who had lodgings in the palace, died in 1652.
-
-About the same time the House of Peers permitted the Protestant service to
-be held in Somerset House instead of in Durham House. This drove out the
-Quakers and Anabaptists, and prevented the pulling down of the palace and
-the making of a street from the garden through the chapel and back-yard up
-into the Strand.[107]
-
-The Protector's palace was the scene of a great and sad event in November
-1658; for the body of Cromwell, who had died at Whitehall, lay in state
-here for several days. He lay in effigy on a bed of royal crimson velvet,
-covered with a velvet gown, a sceptre in his hand, and a crown upon his
-head. The Cavaliers, whose spirits were recovering, were very angry at
-this foolish display,[108] forgetting that it was not poor Oliver's own
-doing; and the baser people, who follow any impulse of the day, threw dirt
-in the night upon the blazoned escutcheon that was displayed over the
-great gate of Somerset House.
-
-The year after, an Act was passed to sell all royal property, and Somerset
-House was disposed of for L10,000. The Restoration soon stepped in and
-annulled the bargain. After the return of the son who so completely
-revenged upon us the death of his father, the luckless palace became the
-residence of its former inhabitant, now older and gentler--the
-queen-mother. She improved and beautified it. The old courtier, Waller,
-only fifty-seven at the time, wrote some fulsome verses on the occasion.
-He talks of her adorning the town as with a brave revenge, to show--
-
- "That glory came and went with you."
-
-He mentions also the view from the palace:--
-
- "The fair view her window yields,
- The town, the river, and the fields."
-
-Cowley, the son of a Fleet Street grocer, flew still higher, larded his
-flattery with perverted texts, like a Puritanised Cavalier time-server,
-and wrote--
-
- "On either side dwells Safety and Delight;
- Wealth on the left and Power sits on the right."
-
-In May 1665, when the queen-mother, who had lived in Somerset House with
-her supposed husband, the Earl of St. Albans, took her farewell of England
-for a gayer court, Cowley wrote these verses to the setting sun, in hopes
-to propitiate the rising sun; for here, too, lived Catherine of Braganza,
-the unhappy wife of Charles II.
-
-There were strange scenes at Somerset House even during the queen-mother's
-residence, for the old court gossip Pepys describes being taken one day to
-the Presence-chamber.[109] He found the queen not very charming, but still
-modest and engaging. Lady Castlemaine was there, Mr. Crofts, a pretty
-young spark of fifteen (her illegitimate child), and many great ladies. By
-and by in came the king and the Duke and Duchess of York. The conversation
-was not a very decorous one; and the young queen said to Charles, "You
-lie!" which made good sport, as the chuckling and delighted Pepys remarks,
-those being the first English words he had heard her say; and the king
-then tried to make her reply, "Confess and be hanged."
-
-In another place Pepys indignantly describes "a little proud, ugly,
-talkative lady crying up the queen-mother's court as more decorous than
-the king's;" yet the diary-keeper confesses that the former was the better
-attended, the old nobility dreading, I suppose, the scandal of
-Whitehall.[110]
-
-In 1670 Monk, Duke of Albemarle, having died at his lodgings in the
-Cockpit, at Whitehall, lay in state in Somerset House, and was afterwards
-buried with almost regal pomp in Henry VII.'s Chapel.
-
-In October 1678, the infamous devisers of the Popish plot connected
-Somerset House and the attendants in the Queen's Chapel with the murder of
-a City magistrate, the supposed Protestant martyr, Sir Edmondbury Godfrey,
-who was found murdered in a field near Primrose Hill, "between Kilburn and
-Hampstead," as it was then thought necessary to specify. The lying
-witnesses, Prance and Bedloe, swore that the justice had been inveigled
-into Somerset House under pretence of being wanted to keep the peace
-between two servants who were fighting in the yard; that he was then
-strangled, his neck broken, and his own sword run through his body. The
-corpse was kept four days, then carried in a sedan-chair to Soho, and
-afterwards on a horse to Primrose Hill, nearly three miles off. The
-secrecy and convenient neighbourhood of the river for hiding a murdered
-man seem never to have struck the rogues, who forgot even to "lie like
-truth," so credulous and excited was the multitude.
-
-Waller, says Aubrey, though usually very temperate, was once made drunk at
-Somerset House by some courtiers, and had a cruel fall when taking boat at
-the water stairs, "'Twas a pity to use such a sweet man so
-inhumanly."[111] Saville used to say that "nobody should keep him company
-without drinking but Mr. Waller."
-
-In 1692 that poor ill-used woman and unhappy wife, Catherine of Braganza,
-left Somerset House, and returned thence to Portugal, the home of her
-happy childhood and happier youth.
-
-The palace, never the home of very happy inmates, then became a lodging
-for foreign kings and ambassadors, and a home for a few noblemen and poor
-retainers of the court, much as Hampton Court is now. Lewis de Duras, Earl
-of Feversham, the incompetent commander at Sedgemoor, who lies buried at
-the Savoy, lived here in 1708; and so did Lady Arlington, the widow of
-Secretary Bennet, that butt of Killigrew and Rochester. In the reign of
-George III., Charlotte Lennox, the authoress of the _Female Quixote_, had
-apartments in Somerset House.
-
-Houses, like men, run their allotted courses. In 1775 the old palace,
-which had been settled on the queen-consort in the event of her surviving
-the king, was exchanged for Buckingham House; and the Government instantly
-began to pull down the river-side palace, and erect new public offices
-designed by Sir William Chambers, a Scotch architect, who had given
-instruction in his art to George III., when Prince of Wales.
-
-In 1630, a row of fishmongers' stalls, in the middle of the street, over
-against Denmark House (Somerset House), was broken down by order of
-Government to prevent stalls from growing into sheds, and sheds into
-dwelling houses, as had been the case in Old Fish Street, Saint Nicholas
-Shambles, and other places.[112]
-
-On the 2d of February, 1659-60, Pepys tells us in his diary, that having
-L60 with him of his lord's money, on his way from London Bridge, and
-hearing the noise of guns, he landed at Somerset House, and found the
-Strand full of soldiers. Going upstairs to a window, Pepys looked out and
-saw the foot face the horse and beat them back, all the while bawling for
-a free parliament and money. By and by a drum was heard to sound a march
-towards them, and they all got ready again, but the new comers proving of
-the same mind, they "made a great deal of joy to see one another."[113]
-This was the beginning of Monk's change, for the king returned in the
-following May. On the 18th of February two soldiers were hanged opposite
-Somerset House for a mutiny, of which Pepys was an eye-witness.
-
-The prints of old Somerset House show a long line of battlemented wall
-facing the river, and a turreted and partially arcaded front. There is
-also a scarce view of the place by Hollar.[114] The river front has two
-porticos. The chapel is to the left, and near it are the cloisters of the
-Capuchins. The bowling-green seems to be to the right, between the two
-rows of trees. The garden is formal. The royal apartments were on the
-river side. The only memorial left of the outhouses of the old palace was
-the sign of a lion in the wall of a house in the Strand, that is mentioned
-in old records.[115]
-
-Dryden describes his two friends, Eugenius and Neander, landing at
-Somerset Stairs, and gives us a pleasant picture of the summer evening,
-the water on which the moonbeams played looked like floating quicksilver,
-and some French people dancing merrily in the open air as the friends walk
-onwards to the Piazza.[116]
-
-Of the old views of Somerset House, that of Moss is considered the best.
-There is also an early and curious one by Knyff. A picture in Dulwich
-Gallery (engraved by Wilkinson) represents the river front before Inigo
-Jones had added a chapel for the queen of Charles I.[117]
-
-Sir William Chambers built the present Somerset House. The old palace,
-when the clearance for the demolition began, presented a singular
-spectacle.[118] At the extremity of the royal apartments two large
-folding-doors joined Inigo Jones's additions to John of Padua's work. They
-opened into a long gallery on the first floor of the water garden wing, at
-the lower end of which was another gallery, making an angle which formed
-the original river front, and extended to Strand Lane. This old part had
-been long shut up, and was supposed to be haunted. The gallery was
-panelled and floored with oak. The chandelier chains still hung from the
-stucco ceilings. The furniture of the royal apartment was removed into
-lumber-rooms by the Royal Academy. There were relics of a throne and
-canopy; the crimson velvet curtains for the audience-chamber had faded to
-olive colour; and the fringe and lace were there, but a few threads and
-spangles had been peeled off them. There were also scattered about in
-disorder, broken chairs, stools, couches, screens, and fire-dogs.
-
-In the older apartments much of Edward VI.'s furniture still remained. The
-silk hangings of the audience-chamber were in tatters, and so were the
-curtains, gilt-leather covers, and painted screens; one gilt chandelier
-also remained, and so did the sconces. A door beyond, with difficulty
-opened, led into a small tower on the first floor, built by Inigo Jones,
-and used as a breakfast-room or dressing-room by Queen Catherine. It was a
-beautiful octagonal domed apartment, with a tasteful cornice. The walls
-were frescoed, and there were pictures on the ceiling. A door from this
-place opened on the staircase and led to a bath-room, lined with marble,
-on the ground floor.
-
-The painters of the day compared the ruined palace, characteristically
-enough, to the gloomy precincts of the dilapidated castles in Mrs.
-Radcliffe's wax-work romances.
-
-Sir William Chambers completed his work in about five years, clearing two
-thousand a year. It cost more than half a million of money. The Strand
-front is 135 feet long; the quadrangle 210 feet wide and 296 feet deep.
-The main buildings are 54 feet deep and six stories high. They are faced
-with Portland stone, now partly sooty black, partly blanched white with
-the weather. The basement is adorned with rustic work, Corinthian
-pilasters, balustrades, statues, masks, and medallions. The river terrace
-was intended in anticipation of the possible embankment of the Thames.
-Some critics think Chambers's great work heavy, others elegant but timid.
-There is too much rustic work, and the whole is rather "cut up." The vases
-and niches are unmeaning, and it was a great structural fault to make the
-portico columns of the fine river side stand on a brittle-looking arch.
-
-It was to Somerset House that the Royal Academy came after the split in
-the St. Martin's Lane Society. Here West exhibited his respectable
-platitudes, Reynolds his grand portraits, and Lawrence his graceful,
-brilliant, but meretricious pictures. In the great room of the Academy, at
-the top of the building, Reynolds, Opie, Barrie, and Fuseli lectured.
-Through the doorway to the right of the vestibule, Reynolds, Wilkie,
-Turner, Flaxman, and Chantrey have often stepped. Under that bust of
-Michael Angelo almost all our great men from Johnson to Scott must have
-passed.
-
-Carlini, an Italian friend of Cipriani, executed the two central statues
-on the Strand front of Somerset House, and also three of the nine colossal
-key-stone masks--the rivers Dee, Tyne, and Severn. Carlini was one of the
-unsuccessful candidates for the Beckford monument in Guildhall. When
-Carlini was keeper of the Academy, he used to walk from his house in Soho
-to Somerset Place, dressed in a deplorable greatcoat, and with a broken
-tobacco pipe in his mouth; but when he went to the great annual Academy
-dinner, he would make his way into a chair, full dressed in a purple silk
-coat, and scarlet gold-laced waistcoat, with point-lace ruffles, and a
-sword and bag.[119] Wilton, the sculptor, executed the two outer figures.
-
-Giuseppe Ceracchi, who carved some of the heads of the river gods for the
-key-stones of the windows of the Strand front of Somerset House, was an
-Italian, but it is uncertain whether he was born at Rome or in Corsica. He
-gave the accomplished Mrs. Damer (General Conway's daughter) her first
-lessons in sculpture, an art which she afterwards perfected in the studio
-of the elder Bacon. Ceracchi executed the only bust in marble that
-Reynolds ever sat for. A statue of Mrs. Damer, from a model by him, is now
-in the British Museum. This sculptor was guillotined in 1801, for a plot
-against Napoleon.[120] He is said to have lost his wits in prison, and to
-have mounted the scaffold dressed as a Roman emperor. It was to Mrs. Damer
-(the daughter of his old friend) that Horace Walpole, our most French of
-memoir-writers, bequeathed his fantastic villa at Strawberry Hill, and its
-incongruous but valuable curiosities. She is said to have sent a bust of
-Nelson to the Rajah of Tanjore, who wished to spread a taste for English
-art in India.
-
-The rooms round the quadrangle are hives of red-tapists. There are about
-nine hundred Government clerks nestled away in them, and maintained at an
-annual cost to us of about L275,000. There is the office of the Duchy of
-Cornwall, and there are the Legacy Duty, the Stamps, Taxes, and Excise
-Offices, the Inland Revenue Office, the Registrar General's Office
-(created pursuant to 6 and 7 Will. IV., c. 86), part of the Admiralty and
-the Audit Office, and lastly the Will Office.
-
-The east wing of Somerset House, used as King's College, was built in
-1829. The bronze statue of George III., and the fine recumbent figure of
-Father Thames, in the chief court, were cast by John Bacon, R.A.
-
-The office for auditing the public accounts existed, under the name of the
-Office of the Auditors of the Imprests, as far back as the time of Henry
-VIII. The present commission was established in 1785, and the salaries
-formerly paid for the passing of accounts are now paid out of the Civil
-List, all fees being abolished. The average annual cost of the office for
-auditing some three hundred and fifty accounts is L50,000. There are six
-commissioners, a secretary, and upwards of a hundred clerks. Almost all
-the home and colonial expenditure is examined at this office. Edward
-Harley and Arthur Maynwaring (the wit of the Kit-Cat Club) were the two
-Auditors of the Imprests in the reign of Queen Anne. The Earl of Oxford,
-the collector of MSS., obtained many curious public documents from his
-brother. If he had taken the whole the nation would have been a gainer;
-for the Government bought his collection for the British Museum, and all
-that he left (except what Sir William Musgrave, a commissioner, scraped
-together and gave to the British Museum) were barbarously destroyed by
-Government, heedless of their historical value. Maynwaring's fees were
-about L2000 a year. The present salary of a commissioner is L1200; the
-chairman's salary is L500. In 1867 the western front of Somerset House was
-added; it is from the designs of Pennethorne, to accommodate the clerks of
-the Inland Revenue Department.
-
-The Astronomical Society, Geographical Society, and Geological Society,
-were for many years sheltered in Somerset House, before removing
-westwards.
-
-Hither, in 1782, from Crane Court, came the Royal Society. The entrance
-door to the society's rooms, to the left of the vestibule, is marked out
-by the bust of Sir Isaac Newton; Herschel, Davy, and Wollaston, as well as
-Walpole and Hallam, must have passed here, for the same door leads to the
-apartments of the Society of Antiquaries.
-
-This society, when burnt out of Aldersgate Street by the Great Fire, held
-its meetings for a time in Arundel House. At first its doings were
-trifling and sometimes absurd. Enthusiasts and pedants often made the
-society ludicrous by their aberrations. Charles II. pretended to admire
-their Baconic inductions, but must have laughed at Boyle's essays and
-platitudes, and the hope of Wilkins, the Bishop of Chester, of flying to
-the moon. Evelyn's suggestions were unpractical and dilettantish, and
-Pepys's ramblings not over wise. We may be sure that there was food for
-laughter, when Butler could thus sketch the occupations of these
-philosophers:--
-
- "To measure wind and weigh the air,
- To turn a circle to a square,
- And in the braying of an ass
- Find out the treble and the bass,
- If mares neigh _alto_, and a cow
- In double diapason low."
-
-Yet how can we wonder that in the vast gold mines of the new philosophy
-our wise men hesitated where first to sink their shafts? Cowley
-chivalrously sprang forward to ward off from them the laughter and scorn
-of the Rochesters and the Killigrews of the day, and to prove that these
-initiative studies were not "impertinent and vain and small," nothing in
-nature being worthless. He ends his fine, rambling ode with the following
-noble simile:--
-
- "Lo! when by various turns of the celestial dance,
- In many thousand years,
- A star so long unknown appears,
- Though Heaven itself more beauteous by it grow,
- It troubles and alarms the world below;
- Does to the wise a star, to fools a meteor show."[121]
-
-The Royal Society's traditions belong more to Gresham College than to
-Somerset House, the later home of our wise men. It originated in 1645, in
-meetings held in Wood Street and Gresham College, suggested by Theodore
-Hank, a German of the Palatinate. During the Civil War its discussions
-were continued at Oxford. The present entrance-money is L10, and the
-annual subscription is L4. The society consists at present of between 700
-and 800 fellows, and the anniversary is held every 30th of November, being
-St. Andrew's Day. The Transactions of the society fill upwards of 150
-quarto volumes. The first president was Viscount Brouncker, and the
-second Sir Joseph Williamson. Mr. William Spottiswoode is the present
-president. The society possesses some valuable pictures, including three
-portraits of Sir Isaac Newton--one by C. Jervas, presented by the great
-philosopher himself, and hung over the president's chair; a second by D.
-C. Marchand, and a third by Vanderbank; two portraits of Halley, by Thomas
-Murray and Dahl; two of Hobbes, the great advocate of despotism--one taken
-in 1663 (three years after the Restoration), and the other by Gaspars,
-presented by Aubrey; Sir Christopher Wren, by Kneller; Wallis, by West;
-Flamstead, by Gibson; Robert Boyle, by F. Kerseboom (a good likeness, says
-Boyle); Pepys, the cruel expositor of his own weaknesses, by Kneller; Sir
-A. Southwell, by the same portrait-painter; Dr. Birch, the great
-historical compiler, by Wills (the original of the mezzotint done by Faber
-in 1741, and bequeathed by Dr. Birch); Martin Folkes, the great
-antiquarian, by Hogarth; Dr. Wollaston, the eccentric discoverer, by
-Jackson; and Sir Humphrey Davy, by Sir Thomas Lawrence.
-
-Amongst the curiosities of the society are the silver-gilt mace presented
-to the society by Charles II. in 1662--(long supposed to be the bauble
-which Cromwell treated with such contempt); a solar dial, made by Sir
-Isaac Newton himself when a boy; a reflecting telescope, made by Newton in
-1671; the precious MS. of the _Principia_ in Newton's handwriting; a
-silvery lock of Newton's hair; the MS. of the _Parentalia, or Memoirs of
-the Family of the Wrens_, written by young Wren; the charter-book of the
-society, bound in crimson velvet, and containing the signatures of the
-founder and fellows; a Rumford fireplace, one of the earliest in use; and
-a marble bust of Mrs. Somerville, the great mathematician and philosopher,
-by Chantrey. The society gives annually two gold medals--one the Rumford,
-the other the Copley medal, called by Sir Humphrey Davy "the ancient olive
-crown of the Royal Society."
-
-The Geological Society has a museum of specimens and fossils from all
-quarters of the globe. The number of its fellows is about 875, and the
-time of meeting alternate Wednesday evenings from November till June. It
-also publishes a quarterly journal. The entrance-money is six guineas, the
-annual subscription two.
-
-The Society of Antiquaries was fairly started in 1707, by Wanley, Bagford,
-and Talman, who agreed to meet together every Friday under penalty of
-sixpence. It had originated about 1580, when it held its first sittings in
-the Heralds' College; but it did not obtain a charter till 1751, both
-Elizabeth and James being afraid of its meddling with royal prerogatives
-and illustrious genealogies, and the Civil War having interrupted its
-proceedings. Its first meeting was at the Bear Tavern, in the Strand. In
-1739 the members were limited to one hundred, and the terms were one
-guinea entrance and twelve shillings annually. The society agreed to
-discuss antiquarian subjects, and chiefly those relating to English
-history prior to James I. In 1751 George II. granted its members a
-charter, and in 1777 George III. gave them apartments in Somerset House,
-where they continued till their recent removal to Burlington House. The
-terms now are eight guineas admission, and four guineas annually. The
-_Archaeologia_, a journal of the society's proceedings, commenced in 1770.
-The meetings are every Thursday evening from November to June, and the
-anniversary meeting is the 23d of April.
-
-The museum of this society contains, among other treasures, the _Household
-Book_ of the Duke of Norfolk; a large and valuable collection of early
-proclamations and ballads; T. Porter's unique map of London (Charles I.);
-a folding picture in panel, of the "Preaching at Old St. Paul's in 1616;"
-early portraits of Edward IV. and Richard III., engraved for the third
-series of _Ellis's Letters_; a three-quarter portrait of Mary I. with the
-monogram of Lucas de Heere, and the date 1546; a curious portrait of the
-Marquis of Winchester (who died 1571); the portrait by Sir Antonio More,
-of Schorel, a Dutch painter; portraits of antiquaries--Burton, the
-Leicestershire antiquary, Peter le Neve, Humphrey Wanley Baker, of St.
-John's College, William Stukeley, George Vertue, and Edward, Earl of
-Oxford, presented by Vertue; a Bohemian astronomical clock of gilt brass,
-made in 1525 for Sigismund, King of Poland, and bought at the sale of the
-effects of James Ferguson, the astronomer; and a spur of gilt brass, found
-on Towton field, the scene of the bloody conflict between Edward IV. and
-the Lancastrian forces. Upon the shank is engraved the following
-posey--"En loial amour tout mon coer."[122]
-
-The Astronomical Society was instituted in 1820, and received the royal
-charter in 1st William IV. The entrance-money is two guineas, and the
-annual subscription the same amount. The annual general meeting is the
-second Friday in February. A medal is awarded every year. The society has
-a small but good mathematical library, and a few astronomical instruments.
-
-A little above the entrance door to "the Stamps and Taxes" there is a
-white watch-face let into the wall. Local tradition declares it was left
-there in votive gratitude by a labourer who fell from a scaffolding and
-was saved by the ribbon of his watch catching in some ornament. It was
-really placed there by the Royal Society as a meridian mark for a portable
-transit instrument in a window of an ante-room.[123]
-
-A tradition of Nelson belongs to this quiet square. An old clerk at
-Somerset House used to describe seeing the hero of the Nile pass on his
-way to the Admiralty. Thin and frail, with only one arm, he would enter
-the vestibule at a smart pace, and make direct for his goal, pushing
-across the rough round stones of the quadrangle, instead of taking, like
-others, the smooth pavement. Nelson always took the nearest way to the
-object he wished to attain.[124]
-
-The Royal Academy soon found a home in Somerset House. Germs of this
-institution are to be found as early as the reign of Charles I., when Sir
-Francis Kynaston, a translator of Chaucer into Latin (_circa_ 1636), was
-chosen regent of an academy in Covent Garden.[125]
-
-In 1643 that shifty adventurer, Sir Balthazar Gerbier, who had been fellow
-ambassador with Rubens in Spain, started some quack establishment of the
-same kind at Bethnal Green. He afterwards went to Surinam, was turned out
-by the Dutch, came back, designed an ugly house at Hampstead Marshal, in
-Berks, and died in 1667.
-
-In 1711 Sir Godfrey Kneller instituted a private art academy, of which he
-became president. Hogarth, writing about 1760, says, that sixty years
-before some artists had started an academy, but their leaders assuming too
-much pomposity, a caricature procession was drawn on the walls of the
-studio, upon which the society broke up in dudgeon. Sir James Thornhill,
-in 1724, then set up an academy at his own house in Covent Garden, while
-others, under Vanderbank, turned a neighbouring meeting-house into a
-studio; but these rival confederations broke up at Sir James's death in
-1734.
-
-Hogarth, his son-in-law, opened an academy, under the direction of Mr.
-Moser, at the house of a painter named Peter Hyde, in Greyhound Court,
-Arundel Street. In 1739 these artists removed to a more commodious house
-in Peter's Court, St. Martin's Lane, where they continued till 1767, when
-they removed to Pall Mall.
-
-In 1738 the Duke of Richmond threw open to art-students his gallery at
-Whitehall, closed it again when his absence in the German war prevented
-the paying of the premiums, was laughed at, and then re-opened it again.
-It lasted some years, and Edwards, author of the _Anecdotes_, studied
-there.
-
-In 1753 some artists meeting at the Turk's Head, Gerrard Street, Soho,
-tried ineffectually to organise an academy; but in 1765 they obtained a
-charter, and appointed Mr. Lambert president.
-
-In 1760 their first exhibition of pictures was held in the rooms of the
-Society of Arts, and in 1761 there were two exhibitions, one at Spring
-Gardens: for the latter Hogarth illustrated a catalogue, with a compliment
-to the young king and a caricature of rich connoisseurs.
-
-In 1768 eight of the directors of the Spring Gardens Society, indignant at
-Mr. Kirby being made president of the society in the place of Mr. Hayman,
-resigned; and, co-operating with sixteen others who had been ejected,
-secretly founded a new society. Wilton, Chambers, West, Cotes, and Moser,
-were the leaders in this scheme, and Reynolds soon joined them, tempted,
-it is supposed, by a promise of knighthood.
-
-West was the chief mover in this intrigue. The Archbishop of York, who had
-tried to raise L3000 to enable the American artist to abandon
-portrait-painting, had gained the royal ear, and West was painting the
-"Departure of Regulus" for the king, who was even persuaded and flattered
-into drawing up several of the laws of the new society with his own
-hand.[126] The king, in the meantime, with unworthy dissimulation,
-affected outwardly a complete neutrality between the two camps, presented
-the Spring Gardens Society with L100, and even attended their exhibition.
-
-The king's patronage of the new society was disclosed to honest Mr. Kirby
-(father of Mrs. Trimmer, and the artist who had taught the king
-perspective) in a very malicious and mortifying manner, and the story was
-related to Mr. Galt by West, with a quiet, cold spite, peculiarly his own.
-Mr. Kirby came to the palace just as West was submitting his sketch for
-"Regulus" to the king. West was a true courtier, and knew well how to make
-a patron suggest his own subject. Kirby praised the picture, and hoped Mr.
-West intended to exhibit it. The Quaker slily replied that that depended
-on his majesty's pleasure. The king, like a true confederate, immediately
-said, "Assuredly I shall be happy to let the work be shown to the public."
-"Then, Mr. West," said the perhaps too arrogant president, "you will send
-it to my exhibition?" "No!" said the king, and the words must have been
-thunderbolts to poor Kirby; "it must go to _my_ exhibition."[127] "Poor
-Kirby," says West, "only two nights before, had declared that the design
-of forming such an institution was not contemplated. His colour forsook
-him--his countenance became yellow with mortification--he bowed with
-profound humility, and instantly retired, _nor did he long survive the
-shock_!"
-
-Mr. West is wrong, however, in the last statement, for his rival did not
-die till 1774. Mr. Kirby, a most estimable man, was originally a
-house-painter at Ipswich. He became acquainted with Gainsborough, was
-introduced by Lord Bute to the king, and wrote and edited some valuable
-works on perspective, to one of which Hogarth contributed an inimitable
-frontispiece.
-
-Sir Robert Strange says that much of this intrigue was carried out by Mr.
-Dalton,[128] a print seller in Pall Mall, and the king's librarian, in
-whose rooms the exhibition was held in 1767 and 1768.
-
-Thus an American Quaker, a Swiss, and a Swede--(a gold-chaser, a
-coach-painter, an architect, and a third-rate painter, West)--ignobly
-established the Royal Academy. Many eminent men refused to join the new
-society. Allan Ramsay, Hudson, Scott the marine-painter, and Romney were
-opposed to it. Engravers (much to the disgrace of the Academy) were
-excluded; and worst of all, one of the new laws forbade any artist to be
-eligible to academic honours who did not exhibit his works in the
-Academy's rooms: thus depriving for ever every English artist of the right
-to earn money by exhibiting his own works.[129]
-
-The proportion of foreigners in the Academy was very large. The two ladies
-who became members (Angelica Kauffmann and Mrs. Moser) were both
-Swiss.[130]
-
-The other unlucky society, deprived of its share of the St. Martin's Lane
-casts, etc., and shut out from the Academy, furnished a studio over the
-Cyder Cellars in Maiden Lane, struggled on till 1807, and then ceased to
-exist.[131]
-
-The Academy, with all its tyranny and injustice, has still been useful to
-English art in perpetuating annual exhibitions which attract purchasers.
-But what did more good to English art than twenty academies was the king's
-patronage of West, the spread of engraving, and the rise of middle-class
-purchasers, who rendered it no longer necessary for artists to depend on
-the caprice and folly of rich aristocratic patrons.
-
-One word more about the art oligarchy. The first officers of the new
-society were--Reynolds, president; Moser, keeper; Newton, secretary;
-Penny, professor of painting; Sandby, professor of architecture; Wale,
-professor of perspective; W. Hunter, professor of anatomy; Chambers,
-treasurer; and Wilson, librarian. Goldsmith was chosen professor of
-history at a later period.
-
-The catalogue of the first exhibition of the Royal Academy contains the
-names of only one hundred and thirty pictures: Hayman exhibited scenes
-from _Don Quixote_; Rooker some Liverpool views; Reynolds some allegorised
-portraits; Miss Kauffmann some of her tame Homeric figures; West his
-"Regulus" (that killed Kirby), and a Venus and Adonis; Zuccarelli two
-landscapes.
-
-In 1838, the first year after the opening of the National Gallery, 1382
-works of art, including busts and architectural designs, were exhibited.
-Among the pictures then shown were--Stanfield's "Chasse Maree off the
-Gulf-stream Light," "The Privy Council," by Wilkie; portraits of men and
-dogs, by Landseer; "The Pifferari," "Phryne," and "Banishment of Ovid," by
-Turner; "A Bacchante," by Etty; "Gaston de Foix," by Eastlake; Allan's
-"Slave Market," Leslie's "Dinner Scene from the Merry Wives of Windsor;"
-"A View on the Rhine," by Callcott; Shee's portrait of Sir Francis
-Burdett; portraits by Pickersgill; Maclise's "Christmas in the Olden
-Time," and "Olivia and Sophia fitting out Moses for the Fair;" "The
-Massacre of the Innocents," by Hilton; and a picture by Uwins.[132]
-
-Angelica Kauffmann and Biaggio Rebecca helped to decorate the Academy's
-old council-chamber at Somerset House. The paintings still exist. Rebecca
-was an eccentric, conceited Italian artist, who decorated several rooms at
-Windsor, and offended the worthy precise old king by his practical jokes.
-On one occasion, knowing he would meet the king on his way to Windsor with
-West, he stuck a paper star on his coat. The next time West came, the king
-was curious to know who the foreign nobleman was he had seen--"Person of
-distinction, eh? eh?"--and was doubtless vexed at the joke.
-
-Rebecca's favourite trick was to draw a half-crown on paper, and place it
-on the floor of one of the ante-rooms at Windsor, laughing immoderately at
-the eagerness with which some fat courtier in full dress, sword and bag,
-would run and scuffle to pick it up.[133]
-
-Fuseli took his place as Keeper of the Academy in 1805. Smirke had been
-elected, but George III., hearing that he was a democrat, refused to
-confirm the appointment. Haydon, who called on Fuseli in Berners Street in
-1805, when he had left his father the bookseller at Plymouth, describes
-him as "a little white-headed, lion-faced man, in an old flannel
-dressing-gown tied round his waist with a piece of rope, and upon his head
-the bottom of Mrs. Fuseli's work-basket." His gallery was full of
-galvanised devils, malicious witches brewing incantations, Satan bridging
-chaos or springing upwards like a pyramid of fire, Lady Macbeth, Paolo and
-Francesca, Falstaff and Mrs. Quickly.
-
-Elsewhere the impetuous Haydon sketches him vigorously. Fuseli was about
-five feet five inches high, had a compact little form, stood firmly at his
-easel, painted with his left hand, never held his palette upon his thumb,
-but kept it upon his stone slab, and being very near-sighted and too vain
-to wear glasses, used to dab his beastly brush into the oil, and sweeping
-round the palette in the dark, take up a great lump of white, red, or
-blue, and plaster it over a shoulder or a face; then prying close in, he
-would turn round and say, "By Gode! dat's a fine purple! it's very like
-Correggio, by Gode!" and then all of a sudden burst out with a quotation
-from Homer, Tasso, Dante, Ovid, Virgil, or the Niebelungen, and say,
-"Paint dat!" "I found him," says Haydon, "a most grotesque mixture of
-literature, art, scepticism, indelicacy, profanity, and kindness. He put
-me in mind of Archimago in Spenser."[134]
-
-When Haydon came first to town from Plymouth, he lodged at 342
-Strand,[135] near Charing Cross, and close to his fellow-student, the
-good-natured, indolent, clever Jackson. The very morning he arrived he
-hurried off to the Exhibition, and mistaking the new church in the Strand
-for Somerset House, ran up the steps and offered his shilling to a beadle.
-When he at last found the right house, Opie's _Gil Blas_ and Westall's
-_Shipwrecked Sailor Boy_ were all the historical pictures he could find.
-
-Sir Joshua read his first discourse before the Academy in 1769. Barry
-commenced his lectures in 1784, ended them in 1798, and was expelled the
-Academy in 1799. Opie delivered his lectures in 1807, the year in which he
-died. Fuseli began in 1801, and delivered but twelve lectures in all.
-
-It was on St. George's Day, 1771, that Sir Joshua Reynolds took the chair
-at the first annual dinner of the Royal Academy. Dr. Johnson was there,
-with Goldsmith and Horace Walpole. Goldsmith got the ear of the company,
-but was laughed at by Johnson for professing his enthusiastic belief in
-Chatterton's discovery of ancient poems. Walpole, who had believed in the
-poet of Bristol till he was laughed at by Mason and Gray, began to banter
-Goldsmith on his opinions, when, as he says, to his surprise and concern,
-and the dashing of his mirth, he first heard that the poor lad had been to
-London and had destroyed himself. Goldsmith had afterwards a quarrel with
-Dr. Percy on the same subject.
-
-One day, while Reynolds was lecturing at Somerset House, the floor
-suddenly began to give way. Turner, then a boy, was standing near the
-lecturer. Reynolds remained calm, and said afterwards that his only
-thought was what a loss to English art the death of that roomful would
-have been.
-
-On the death of Mr. Wale, the Professor of Perspective, Sir Joshua was
-anxious to have Mr. Bonomi elected to the post, but he was treated with
-great disrespect by Mr. Copley and others, who refused to look at Bonomi's
-drawings, which Sir Joshua (as some maintained, contrary to rule) had
-produced at Fuseli's election as Academician. Reynolds at first threatened
-to resign the presidency; but thought better of it afterwards.
-
-In the catalogues in 1808 Turner's name first appeared with the title of
-Professor of Perspective attached to it. His lectures were bad, from his
-utter want of language, but he took great pains with his diagrams, and his
-ideas were often original. On one celebrated occasion Turner arrived in
-the lecture-room late, and much perturbed. He dived first into one pocket,
-and then into another; at last he ejaculated these memorable words:
-"Gentlemen, I've been and left my lecture in the hackney-coach!"[136]
-
-In 1779 O'Keefe describes a visit paid to Somerset House to hear Dr.
-William Hunter lecture on anatomy. He describes him as a jocose little
-man, in "a handsome modest" wig. A skeleton hung on a pivot by his side,
-and on his other hand stood a young man half stripped. Every now and then
-he paused, to turn to the dead or the living example.[137]
-
-In 1765, when Fuseli was living humbly in Cranbourn Alley, and translating
-Winckelmann, he used to visit Smollett, whose _Peregrine Pickle_ he was
-then illustrating; and also Falconer, the author of _The Shipwreck_, who,
-being poor, was allowed to occupy apartments in Somerset House.[138] The
-poet was a mild, inoffensive man, the son of an Edinburgh barber. He had
-been apprenticed on board a merchant vessel, after which he entered the
-royal navy. In 1762 he published his well-known poem. He went out to India
-in 1769, in the _Aurora_, which is supposed to have foundered in the
-Mozambique Channel.[139] Falconer was a short thin man, with a
-hard-featured, weather-beaten face and a forbidding manner; but he was
-cheerful and generous, and much liked by his messmates. That hearty
-sea-song, "Cease, rude Boreas," has been attributed to him.
-
-Fuseli succeeded Barry as Lecturer on Painting in 1799, and became Keeper
-on the death of Wilton, the sculptor, in 1803. He died in 1825, aged
-eighty-four, and was buried in St. Paul's, between Reynolds and Opie.
-Lawrence, Beechey, Reinagle, Chalon, Jones, and Mulready followed him to
-his stately grave. The body had previously been laid in state in Somerset
-House, his pictures of "The Lazar House" and "The Bridging of Chaos" being
-hung over the coffin.
-
-When Sir Joshua died, in 1792, his body lay in state in a velvet coffin,
-in a room hung with sable, in Somerset House. Burke and Barry, Boswell and
-Langton, Kemble and John Hunter, Towneley and Angerstein came to witness
-the ceremony.
-
-Where events are so interwoven as they are in topographical history, I
-hope to be pardoned if I am not always chronological in my arrangement,
-for it must be remembered that I have anecdotes to attend to as well as
-dates. Let me here, then, dilate on a cruel instance of misused academic
-power. My story relates to a young genius as unfortunate as Chatterton,
-yet guiltless of his lies and forgeries, who died heart-broken by neglect
-more than half a century ago.
-
-[Illustration: SOMERSET HOUSE FROM THE STRAND, 1777.]
-
-Procter, a young Yorkshire clerk, came up to London in 1777, and became a
-student of the Royal Academy. In 1783 he carried off a silver medal, and
-the next year won the gold medal for an historical picture. When Procter
-gained this last prize, his fellow-students, raising him on their
-shoulders, bore him downstairs, and then round the quadrangle of Somerset
-House, shouting out, "Procter! Procter!" Barry was delighted at this, and
-exclaimed with an oath, "Bedad! the lads have caught the true spirit of
-the ould Greeks." Sir Abraham Hume bought Procter's "Ixion," which was
-praised by Reynolds. His colossal "Diomede" the poor fellow had to break
-up, as he had no place to keep it in, and no one would buy it. In 1794 Mr.
-West, wishing that Procter should go to Rome as the travelling student,
-discovered him, after much inquiry, in poor lodgings in Maiden Lane. A day
-or two afterwards he was found dead in his bed. The Academicians had been,
-perhaps, just a little too late with their patronage.[140]
-
-And now, when through grey twilight glooms I steal a glance as I pass by
-at that grave black figure of the river god, presiding solemn as
-Rhadamanthus over the central quadrangle of Somerset House, I sometimes
-dream I see little leonine Fuseli, stormy Barry, and courtly Reynolds
-pacing together the dim quadrangle that on these autumnal evenings, when
-the rifle drills are over, wears so lonely and purgatorial an aspect; and
-far away from them, in murky corners, I fancy I hear muttering the ghosts
-of Portuguese monks, while scowling at them, stalks by pale Sir
-Edmondbury, with a sword run through his shadowy body.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: JACOB TONSON'S BOOK-SHOP, 1742.]
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE STRAND (SOUTH SIDE, CONTINUED).
-
-
-On the Thames, off Somerset House, was a timber shed built on a strong
-barge, and called "the Folly." In William III.'s reign it was anchored
-higher up the stream, near the Savoy. Tom Brown calls it "a musical
-summer-house." Its real name was "The Royal Diversion." Queen Mary
-honoured it with her presence.[141] It was at first frequented by "persons
-of quality," but latterly it became disreputable, and its orchestra and
-refreshment alcoves were haunted by thieves, gamesters, and courtesans.
-
-Near the Savoy stood the palace of the bishops of Carlisle, which was
-obtained by exchange with Henry VIII. for Rochester Place at Lambeth. The
-English sultan gave it to his lucky favourite, Bedford, who took it as his
-residence. In the reign of James I. the Earl of Worcester bought it; and
-in 1627 the Duke of Beaufort let it to Lord Clarendon, while his ill-fated
-house was building in Piccadilly. It was then rebuilt on a smaller scale
-by the duke, and eventually burnt down in 1695.[142] The present Beaufort
-Buildings were then erected. Beaufort House, which occupies the site of
-one in which Cardinal Beaufort died, is now a printing-office.
-
-Blake, the mystical painter, died in 1828, at No. 3 Fountain Court, after
-five years' residence there. In these dim rooms he believed he saw the
-ghost of a flea, Satan himself looking through the bars of the staircase
-window, to say nothing of hosts of saints, angels, evil spirits, and
-fairies. Here also he wrote verse passionate as Shelley's and pure and
-simple-hearted as Wordsworth's. Here he engraved, tinted, railed at
-Woollett, and raved over his Dante illustrations; for though poor and
-unknown, he was yet regal in his exulting self-confidence. Here, just
-before his death, the old man sat up in bed, painting, singing, and
-rejoicing. He died without a struggle.[143]
-
-The office of the _Sun_ is on this side the Strand. This paper was
-established in 1792. Mr. Jerdan left the _Sun_ in 1816, selling his share
-for L300. He had quarrelled with the co-proprietor, Mr. John Taylor, who
-aspired to a control over him. In 1817 he set up the _Literary Gazette_,
-the first exclusive organ of literary men.[144] The first editor of the
-_Sun_ got an appointment in the West Indies. The paper was then edited by
-Robert Clark, printer of the _London Gazette_, and afterwards by Jerdan,
-assisted by Fladgate the facetious lawyer, Mulloch, and John Taylor. After
-getting his sop in the pan of L300 a year from Government, that
-low-principled satirist, Dr. Wolcot (Peter Pindar), wrote epigrams for it.
-
-Fountain Court was in Strype's time famous for an adjacent tavern from
-which it derived its name. It was well paved, and its houses were
-respectably inhabited.[145] The Fountain Tavern was renowned for its good
-rooms, excellent vaults, "curious kitchen," and old wine. The Fountain
-Club, of which Pulteney was a member (circa 1737), held its meetings in
-this tavern, to oppose that fine old Whig gentleman Sir Robert
-Walpole.[146] Sir Charles Hanbury Williams thus mentions it in one of his
-lampoons:--
-
- "Then enlarge on his cunning and wit,
- Say how he harangued at the Fountain,
- Say how the old patriots were bit,
- And a mouse was produced by a mountain."
-
-Here Pulteney may have planned the _Craftsman_ with Bolingbroke, and
-perhaps have arranged his duel with Lord Hervey, the "Sporus" of Pope.
-
-Dennis, the critic, mentions in his _Letters_ dining here with Loggen, the
-painter, and Wilson, a writer praised by poor Otway in Tonson's first
-_Miscellany_. "After supper," he says, "we drank Mr. Wycherly's health by
-the name of Captain Wycherly."[147] This was the dramatist, the celebrated
-author of _The Plain Dealer_ and _The Country Wife_.
-
-The great room of the Fountain Tavern was afterwards Akermann's well-known
-picture shop; and is now Simpson's cigar divan.
-
-Charles Lillie, the perfumer recommended by Steele in the _Tatler_ (Nos.
-92, 94), lived next door to the Fountain Tavern. He was burnt out and went
-to the east corner of Beaufort Buildings in 1709. Good-natured Steele,
-pitying him probably for his losses, praised his Barcelona snuff, and his
-orange-flower water prepared according to the Royal Society's receipt.
-
-The Coal Hole, in this court, was so named by Rhodes, its first landlord,
-from its having been originally the resort of coal-heavers. In his and
-Edmund Kean's time it was respectably frequented. It was once the
-"Evans's" of London, famous for steaks and ale; afterwards it sank to a
-low den with _poses plastiques_ and ribald sham trials, that used to be
-conducted by "Baron" Nicholson, a fat gross man, but not without a certain
-unctuous humour, who is now dead.
-
-Edmund Kean, always low in his tastes, used to fly the society of men like
-Lord Byron to come hither and smoke and drink. The dress, the ceremony,
-and the compulsory good behaviour of respectable society made him silent
-and melancholy.[148] He used to say that noblemen talked such nonsense
-about the stage, and that only literary men understood the subject.
-
-The Kit-Cat Club was instituted in 1700, and died away about the year
-1720. There were originally thirty-nine members, and they increased
-gradually to the forty-eight whose portraits Kneller painted for their
-secretary, Jacob Tonson, Dryden's bookseller. Their earliest rendezvous
-was at the house of a pastry-cook, one Christopher Cat, in Shire Lane,
-near Temple Bar. When he grew wealthier, the club removed with him to the
-Fountain Tavern in the Strand. The club derived its name from the
-celebrated mutton pie,[149] which had been christened after its
-maker.[150] The first members were those Whig patriots who brought about
-the Revolution and drove out King James. Their object was the
-encouragement of literature and the fine arts, and the diffusion of
-loyalty to the House of Hanover. They elected their "toast" for the year
-by ballot. The lady's name, when chosen, was written on the club
-drinking-glasses with a diamond. Among the more celebrated of the members
-of this club were Kneller, Vanbrugh, Congreve, Addison, Garth, Steele,
-Lord Mohun, the Duke of Wharton, Sir Robert Walpole, the Earl of
-Burlington, the Earl of Bath, the Earl of Dorset, the Earl of Halifax, the
-proud Duke of Somerset, and the Duke of Newcastle.
-
-In summer the Club met at Tonson's house at Barn Elms in Surrey, or at the
-Upper Flask Tavern at Hampstead.[151] There seems to have been always some
-doubt about the derivation of the name of the club; for an epigram still
-extant, written either by Pope or Arbuthnot, attributes the name to the
-fact of the members toasting "old Cats and young kits." Mr. Defoe mentions
-the landlord's name as Christopher Catt,[152] while Ned Ward says that
-though his name was Christopher, he lived at the sign of the Cat and
-Fiddle.
-
-Lady Mary Wortley Montagu was once brought by her father to this club when
-a child, and made the toast for the year. "Petted, praised, fondled, and
-fed with sweetmeats," she used to say in her old age that it was the
-happiest day of her life![153]
-
-No. 59 is Coutts's Bank. It was built for Mr. Coutts, in 1768, by the Adam
-brothers--to whom we are indebted for the Adelphi. The old house of the
-firm, of the date of Queen Anne, was situated in St. Martin's Lane. The
-present house contains some fine marble chimney-pieces of the Cipriani and
-Bacon school. The dining-room is hung with quaint Chinese subjects on
-paper, sent to Mr. Coutts by Lord Macartney, while on his embassy to
-China, in 1792-95. In another room hang portraits of some early friends of
-this son of Mammon, including Dr. Armstrong, the poet and physician,
-Fuseli's friend, by Reynolds. The strong rooms consist of cloistered
-vaults, wherein the noblemen and rich commoners who bank in the house
-deposit patents, title-deeds, and plate of fabulous value.
-
-Mr. Coutts was the son of a Dundee merchant. His first wife was a servant,
-a Lancashire labourer's offspring. He had three daughters, one of whom
-became the wife of Sir Francis Burdett, a second Countess of Guilford, and
-a third Marchioness of Bute. On becoming acquainted with Miss Mellon, and
-inducing her to leave the stage to avoid perpetual insults, Mr. Coutts
-bought for her of Sir W. Vane Tempest, a small villa called Holly Lodge,
-at the foot of Highgate Hill, for which he gave L25,000. His banking-house
-strong rooms alone cost L10,000 building. The first deposit in the
-enlarged house was the diamond aigrette that the Grand Signor had placed
-in Nelson's hat. Mr. Coutts, though very charitable, was precise and
-exact. On one occasion, there being a deficit of 2s. 10d. in the day's
-accounts, the clerks were detained for hours, or, as is said, all night.
-One of Coutts's clerks, who took the western walk, was discovered to be
-missing with L17,000.[154] Rewards were offered, and the town placarded,
-but all in vain. The next day, however, the note-case arrived from
-Southampton. The clerk's story was, that on his way through Piccadilly,
-being seized with a stupor, he had got into a coach in order to secure the
-money. He had remained insensible the whole journey, and had awoke at
-Southampton. Mr. Coutts gave him a handsome sum from his private purse,
-but dismissed him.
-
-Coutts's Bank stands on nearly the centre of the site of the "New
-Exchange." When the Adelphi was built in Durham Gardens, Mr. Coutts
-purchased a vista to prevent his view being interrupted, stipulating that
-the new street leading to the entrance should face this opening; and on
-this space, up to the level of the Strand, he built his strong rooms. Some
-years after, wishing to enlarge them, he erected over the office a
-counting-house and a set of offices extending from William Street to
-Robert Street, and threw a stone bridge over William Street to connect the
-front and back premises.
-
-Mr. Coutts, late in life, married Harriet Mellon, who, after his death,
-became the wife of the Duke of St. Albans, a descendant of Nell Gwynn,
-that light-hearted wanton, whom nobody could hate. "Miss Mellon," says
-Leigh Hunt, "was arch and agreeable on the stage; she had no genius; but
-then she had fine eyes and a good-humoured mouth." The same gay writer
-describes her when young as bustling about at sea-ports, selling tickets
-for her benefit-night; but then, says the kindly apologist for everybody,
-she had been left with a mother to support.[155]
-
-Edmund Kean, the great tragedian, was lodging at 21 Cecil Street when,
-poor and unknown, he made his first great triumph as Shylock, at Drury
-Lane; a few days after, his mantelpiece was strewn with bank-notes, and
-his son Charles was seen sitting on the floor playing with a heap of
-guineas.[156] This great actor brought the theatre, in sixty-eight nights
-of 1814, no less than twenty thousand pounds.
-
-The last house on the west side of Cecil Street was inhabited in 1706 by
-Lord Gray, and in 1721-4 by the Archbishop of York. In the opposite house
-lived for many years Major-General Sir William Congreve, the inventor of
-the rockets which bear his name, and a great friend and companion of
-George IV., to whom he is said to have borne a striking personal
-resemblance. Sir William was a descendant of Congreve the dramatist; and
-he was the inventor of a number of successful projects and contrivances,
-among which may be mentioned the engines employed in dredging the Thames.
-The east side of Cecil Street is in the Savoy precinct, the west in the
-parish of St. Martin's-in-the-Fields.
-
-Dr. Wollaston was living in Cecil Street (No. 28) in the year 1800. This
-eccentric philosopher, originally a physician, was born in 1766, and died
-of brain disease in 1828. He discovered two new metals--palladium and
-rhodium--and acquired more than L30,000, by inventing a plan to make
-platinum malleable. He improved and invented the camera lucida, and was
-the first to demonstrate the identity of galvanism and common
-electricity. He carried on his experiments with the simplest instruments,
-and never allowed even his most intimate friends to enter his laboratory.
-When a foreign philosopher once called on him and asked to see his study,
-he instantly produced, in his strange way, a small tray, on which were
-some glass tubes and a twopenny blow-pipe. Once, shortly after inspecting
-a grand galvanic battery, on meeting a brother philosopher in the street
-he led him by the button into a mysterious corner, took from his pocket a
-tailor's thimble, poured into it some liquid from a small phial, and
-instantly heated a platinum wire to a white heat.[157]
-
-Salisbury Street, in the Strand, was originally built about 1678, but was
-extensively rebuilt by Payne in the early part of the reign of George III.
-
-Old Salisbury House stood on the sites of Salisbury and Cecil Streets,
-between Worcester House, now Beaufort Buildings, and Durham House, now the
-Adelphi. It was so called after Sir Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, and
-Lord High Treasurer to James I., who died 1612. Queen Elizabeth was
-present at the house-warming. This Cecil was the bad minister of a bad
-king. He was Raleigh's enemy and Bacon's; he was the foe of reform, and
-the friend of Spain, from whom he received bribes, and the slave of vice.
-Bacon painted this vicious hunchback in his _Essay on Deformity_. The
-house was divided subsequently into Great and Little Salisbury House--the
-latter being let to persons of quality. About 1678 it was pulled down, and
-Salisbury Street built; but it proved too steep and narrow, and was not a
-successful speculation.[158] The other part, next to Great Salisbury House
-and over the Long Gallery, was turned into the "Middle Exchange." This
-eventually gave way to Cecil Street,--a fair street, with very good
-houses, fit for persons of repute.[159]
-
-On the death of Sackville the poet, Cecil took the white staff, being
-already Premier-Secretary. His ambition stretched into every department of
-the State. "He built a new palace at Hatfield, and a new Exchange in the
-Strand. Countesses intrigued for him. His son married a Howard, his
-daughter a Clifford. Ambassadors started for Italy, less to see Doges and
-Grand Dukes than to pick up pictures and statues, and bronzes and
-hangings, for his vast establishment at Hatfield Chase. His gardeners
-travelled through France to buy up mulberries and vines. Salisbury House,
-on the Thames, almost rivalled the luxurious villas of the Roman
-cardinals; yet, under this blaze of worldly success, Cecil was the most
-miserable of men. Friends grudged his rise; his health was broken; the
-reins which his ambition drew into his hands were beyond the powers of a
-single man to grasp; and the vigour of his frame, wasted by years of
-voluptuous licence, failed him at the moment when the strain on his
-faculties was at the full."[160]
-
-In Little Salisbury House lived William Cavendish, third Earl of
-Devonshire, and father of the first Duke of Devonshire, one of the leaders
-of the great revolution that drove out the Stuarts. Two or three days
-after the Restoration, King Charles, passing in his coach through the
-Strand, espied Hobbes, that mischievous writer in favour of absolute
-power, standing at the door of his patron the earl. The king took off his
-hat very kindly to the old man, gave him his hand to kiss, asked after his
-health, ordered Cooper to take his portrait, and settled on him a pension
-of L100 a year. Hobbes had been an assistant of Bacon, and a friend of Ben
-Jonson and of Lord Herbert of Cherbury. He had taught Charles II.
-mathematics, and corresponded with Descartes.
-
-In the street standing on the site of Sir Robert Cecil's house was the
-residence of the famous Partridge, the cobbler, impudent sham-almanac
-maker, and predecessor of our own Moore and Zadkiel, who had foretold the
-death of the French king. To expose this noisy charlatan and upset his
-ridiculous hap-hazard predictions, Swift with cruel and trenchant malice
-reported and lamented his decease in the _Tatler_ (1708), to which he
-contributed under the name of Bickerstaff. The article raised a laugh
-that has not even quite died away in the present day. Partridge, furious
-at his losses and the extinguishing of his ill-earned fame, knocked down a
-hawker who passed his stall crying an account of his death. This happening
-just as the joke was fading, revived it again, and finally ruined the
-almanac of poor Partridge.[161] "The villain," says the poor outwitted
-astrologer, "told the world I was dead, and how I died, and that he was
-with me at the time of my death. I thank God, by whose mercy I have my
-being, that I am still alive, and, excepting my age, as well as ever I was
-in my life." He actually died in 1715.
-
-A little beyond Cecil Street formerly stood Ivy Bridge, under which there
-was a narrow passage to the Thames, once forming a boundary line between
-the Duchy of Lancaster and the City of Westminster. Near Ivy Bridge stood
-the mansion of the Earls of Rutland. Opposite this spot Old Parr had
-lodgings when he came to court to be shown to Charles I., and died of the
-visit. Parr was a Shropshire labourer. He was born in 1483, and died aged
-152. His grandson lived to 120, and in the year of his death had married a
-widow. Parr's London lodging became afterwards the Queen's Head
-public-house.[162]
-
-Mrs. Siddons was living at 149 Strand, during the time of her earlier
-successes. Probably she returned there on that glorious October night of
-1782, when she achieved her first great triumph in Southerne's tragedy of
-_Isabella_, when her younger son, who acted with her, burst into tears,
-overcome by the reality of the dying scene. "I never heard," she says,
-"such peals of applause in all my life." She returned home solemnly and
-calmly, and sat down to a frugal, neat supper with her father and husband,
-in silence uninterrupted, except by exclamations of gladness from Mr.
-Siddons.
-
-Durham Street marks the site of old Durham House, built by Hatfield,
-Bishop of Durham, in 1345. In Henry IV.'s time wild Prince Hal lodged
-there for some nights.
-
-In the reign of Henry VIII. Bishop Tunstall exchanged the house with the
-king for one in Thames Street. Here, in 1550, lodged the French
-ambassador, M. de Chastillon, and his colleagues.
-
-Edward VI. granted the house to his sister Elizabeth for life, and here
-that princess bore the scorn and persecution of Bonner and his spies. On
-Mary coming to the throne and finding Tunstall driven from the Strand and
-without a shelter, she restored to him Durham House. This Tunstall led a
-life of great vicissitudes. Henry VIII. had moved him from London to
-Durham; Edward VI. had dissolved his bishopric altogether; Mary had
-restored it; and Elizabeth again stripped him in 1559, the year in which
-he died.
-
-The virgin queen kept the house some time in her own tenacious hands, but
-in 1583 granted it to Raleigh, whom she had loaded with favours, and who,
-in 1591, was Captain of the Guard, Lord Warden of the Stannaries, and
-Lieutenant of Cornwall.
-
-On the death of Queen Elizabeth Raleigh's sun of fortune set for ever, and
-that sly time-server Toby Matthew, Bishop of Durham, claimed the old town
-house of the see, relying on Cecil's help and King James's dislike to the
-great enemy of Spain. Sir Walter opposed him, but the king in council,
-1603, recognised the claim, and stripped Raleigh of his possession. The
-aggrieved man, in a letter of remonstrance to the Lord Keeper Egerton,
-states that he had occupied the house about twenty years, and had expended
-on it L2000 out of his own purse.[163] Raleigh did not die at Tower Hill
-till 1618; but Durham House was never occupied again either by bishop or
-noble, and five years after the stables of the house came down to make way
-for the New Exchange.
-
-In Charles I.'s reign the Earl of Pembroke bought Durham Yard from the
-Bishop of Durham for L200 a year, and built a handsome street leading to
-the river.[164] The river front and the stables remained in ruins till the
-Messrs. Adam built the Adelphi on the site of Raleigh's old turret study.
-Ivy Street had been the eastward boundary of the bishop's domain.[165]
-
-The New Exchange was opened April 11, 1609, in the presence of King James
-and his Danish queen. It was built principally through the intervention of
-Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, who lived close by. It was called by the king
-"Britain's Bourse," but it could not at first compete with the Royal
-Exchange. At the Restoration, however, when Covent Garden grew into a
-fashionable quarter, the New Exchange became more frequented than
-Gresham's building in the city.
-
-In the year 1653 (Cromwell), the New Exchange was the scene of a tragedy.
-Don Pantaleon de Saa, brother of the Portuguese ambassador, quarrelled
-with a gentleman named Giraud, who was flirting with the milliners, and
-who had used some contemptuous expression. The Portuguese, bent on
-revenge, hired some bravos, who the next day stabbed to death a gentleman
-whom they mistook for Mr. Giraud. They were instantly seized, and Don
-Pantaleon was found guilty and executed. Singularly enough, the intended
-victim perished on the same day on the same scaffold, having in the
-meantime been condemned for a plot against the Protector.
-
-There are many legends existing about the New Exchange. Thomas Duffet, an
-actor of Charles II.'s time, kept originally a milliner's shop here. At
-the Eagle and Child, in Britain's Bourse, the first edition of _Othello_
-was sold in 1622. At the sign of the "Three Spanish Gypsies" lived Thomas
-Radford, who sold wash-balls, powder, and gloves, and taught sempstresses.
-His wife, the daughter of John Clarges, a farrier in the Savoy before or
-after Radford's death, married General Monk, became the vulgar Duchess of
-Albemarle, and was eventually buried in Westminster Abbey. At the sign of
-the Fop's Head lived, in 1674, Will Cademan, a player and
-play-publisher.[166] Henry Herringham, the chief London publisher before
-Dryden's petty tyrant, Tonson, had his shop at the Blue Anchor in the
-Lower Walk. Mr. and Mrs. Pepys frequented the New Exchange. Here the
-Admiralty clerk's wife had "a mind to" a petticoat of sarcenet bordered
-with black lace, and probably purchased it. Here also, in April, 1664,
-Pepys and his friend Creed partook of "a most delicate dish of curds and
-cream."[167] Both Wycherly and Etherege have laid scenes of their comedies
-at the New Exchange; and here, too, Dryden's intriguing Mrs. Brainsick
-pretends to visit her "tailor" to try on her new stays.
-
-This Strand Bazaar, in the time of William and Mary, was the scene of the
-pretty story of the "White Widow." For several weeks a sempstress appeared
-at one of the stalls, clothed in white, and wearing a white mask. She
-excited great curiosity, and all the fashionable world thronged her stall.
-This mysterious milliner was at last discovered to be no less a person
-than the Duchess of Tyrconnel, widow of Talbot, the Lord Deputy of Ireland
-under James II. Unable to obtain a secret access to her family, and almost
-starving, she had been compelled to turn shopwoman. Her relatives provided
-for her directly the story became known.[168] This duchess was the Frances
-Jennings mentioned by Grammont, and sister to Sarah, Duchess of
-Marlborough.
-
-This long arcade, leading from the Strand to the water stairs, was divided
-into four parts--the outward walk below stairs, the inner walk below
-stairs, the outward walk above stairs, and the inner walk above stairs.
-The lower walk was a place of assignations. In the upper walk the air rang
-with cries of "Gloves or ribands, sir?" "Very good gloves or ribands."
-"Choice of fine essences."[169] Here Addison used to pace, watching the
-fops and fools with a kindly malice.[170] The houses in the Strand, over
-against the Exchange door, were often let to rich country families, who
-glared from the balconies and stared from the windows.[171]
-
-Soon after the death of Queen Anne the New Exchange became disreputable.
-No one would take stalls, so it was pulled down in 1737, and a frontage of
-dwelling-houses and shops made to the Strand, facing what is now the
-Adelphi Theatre. But we must return for a moment to old Durham House and a
-few more of its earlier tenants.
-
-In Henry VIII.'s time Durham House had been the scene of great banquets
-given by the challengers after the six days' tournament that celebrated
-the butcher king's ill-omened marriage with that "Flemish mare," as he
-used ungallantly to call Anne of Cleves. To these sumptuous feasts the
-bruised and battered champions, together with all the House of Commons and
-Corporation of London, were invited. To reward the challengers, among whom
-was Oliver Cromwell's ancestor, Dick o' the Diamond, the burly king gave
-them each a yearly pension of one hundred marks out of the plundered
-revenues of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem.
-
-Later a mint was established at Durham House by Sir William Sherrington,
-to aid the Lord Admiral Seymour in his treasonable efforts against his
-brother, the Protector, who finally offered him up a victim to his
-ambition. Sherrington, however, escaped, and worked the mint for the
-equally unfortunate Protector.
-
-But no loss of heads could warn the Strand noblemen. It was here that the
-ambitious Duke of Northumberland married his son, Lord Guildford Dudley,
-to poor meek-hearted Lady Jane Grey, who, the luckless queen of an hour,
-longed only for her Greek books, her good old tutor Ascham, and the quiet
-country house where she had been so happy. On that great day for the duke,
-Lady Jane's sister also married Lord Herbert, and Lord Hastings espoused
-Lady Catherine Dudley. It was from Durham House that the poor martyr of
-ambition, Lady Jane, was escorted in pomp to the Tower, which was so soon
-to be her grave.
-
-In 1560 Jean Nicot, a French ambassador, had carried tobacco from Lisbon
-to Paris. In 1586[172] Drake brought tobacco from Raleigh's colony in
-Virginia. Raleigh was fond of smoking over his books. His tobacco-box
-still existed in 1715; it was of gilt leather, as large as a muff-case,
-and contained cases for sixteen pipes.[173] There is a doubtful legend
-about Raleigh's first pipe, the scene of which may be not unfairly laid at
-Durham House, where Raleigh then lived.
-
-One day his servant, bringing in a tankard of spiced ale as usual into the
-turret study, found Raleigh (it is said) smoking a pipe over his folios.
-The clown, seeing smoke issue in clouds from his master's mouth, dropped
-the tankard in a fright, and ran downstairs to shout to the family that
-"master was on fire, and that he would be burnt to ashes if they did not
-run directly to his help."[174]
-
-The stalwart, sour-faced Raleigh disported himself at Durham House in a
-suit of clothes beset with jewels and valued at sixty thousand
-pounds,[175] and in diamond court-shoes valued at six thousand six hundred
-pieces of gold. Here he lived with his wife Elizabeth, and his two unlucky
-sons Walter and Carew. Here, as he sat in his study in the little turret
-that looked over the Thames,[176] he must have written against the
-Spaniards, told his adventures in Virginia, and described his discovery of
-the gold country of Guiana, his quarrel with Essex at Fayal, and the
-capture of the rich caracks laden with gold, pearls, and cochineal.
-
-The estate of Durham Place was purchased from the Earl of Pembroke, about
-1760, by four brothers of the name of Adam, sons of an architect at
-Kirkaldy, who were patronised by the handsome and much-abused Earl of
-Bute, and who built Caen Wood House, near Hampstead, afterwards the wise
-Lord Mansfield's. Robert, the ablest of the brothers, had visited Palmyra,
-and was supposed from those gigantic ruins to have borrowed his grand
-spirit of construction, as well as much of that trivial ornament which he
-might surely have found nearer home. When the brothers Adam began their
-work, Durham Yard (the court-yard of Raleigh's old house) was a tangle of
-small sheds, coal-stores, wine-vaults, and lay-stalls. They resolved to
-leave the wharves, throw some huge arches over the declivity, connect the
-river with the Strand, and over these vaults erect a series of well-built
-streets, a noble river terrace, and lofty rooms for the newly-established
-Society of Arts.
-
-In July 1768,[177] when the Adelphi Buildings were commenced, the Court
-and City were at war, and the citizens, wishing to vex Bute, applied to
-Parliament to prevent the brothers encroaching on the river, of which
-sable stream the Lord Mayor of London is the conservator, but not the
-purifier; but they lost their cause, and the worthy Scotchmen
-triumphed.[178]
-
-The Scotch are a patriotic people, and stand bravely by their own folk.
-The Adams sent to Scotland for workmen, whose labours they stimulated by
-countless bagpipes; but the canny men, finding the bagpipes played their
-tunes rather too quick, threw up the work, and Irishmen were then
-employed. The joke of the day was, that the Scotchmen took their bagpipes
-away with them, but left their _fiddles_![179]
-
-The Adelphi at once became fashionable. Garrick, then getting old, left
-his house in Southampton Street to occupy No. 5, the centre building of
-the terrace, and lived there till his death in 1779. Singularly enough,
-this great and versatile actor had, on first coming to London with his
-friend Johnson, started as a wine merchant below in Durham Yard. Here he
-must have raved in "Richard," and wheedled as Abel Drugger; and in the
-rooms at No. 5 half the celebrities of his century must have met. He died
-in the "first floor back," and his widow died in the same house as long
-after as 1822. The ceiling in the front drawing-room was painted by
-Antonio Zucchi. A white marble chimney-piece in the same room is said to
-have cost L300.[180] Garrick died after only nine years' residence in the
-new terrace; but his sprightly widow, a theatrical critic to the last,
-lived till she was past ninety, still an enthusiast about her husband's
-genius. The first time she re-opened the house after Davy's death, Dr.
-Johnson, Boswell, Sir Joshua, Mrs. Carter, and Mrs. Boscawen were present.
-"She looked well," says Boswell; "and while she cast her eyes on her
-husband's portrait, which was hung over the chimney-piece, said, that
-death was now the most agreeable object to her." Worthy woman! and so she
-honestly thought at the time; but she lived exactly forty-three years
-longer in the same house.
-
-If there is a spot in London which Johnson's ghost might be expected to
-revisit, it is that quiet and lonely Adelphi Terrace. At night no sound
-comes to you but a shout from some passing barge, or the creak of a ship's
-windlass. Here Johnson and Boswell once leant over, looking at the Thames.
-The latter said, "I was thinking of two friends we had lost, who once
-lived in the buildings behind us, Beauclerk and Garrick." "Ay, sir,"
-replied Johnson, seriously, "and two _such_ friends as cannot be
-supplied." This is a recollection that should for ever hallow the Adelphi
-Terrace to us.
-
-The Beauclerk above mentioned was one of the few rakes whom Johnson loved.
-He was a friend of Langton, and as such had become intimate with the great
-doctor. Topham Beauclerk was a man of acute mind and elegant manners, and
-ardently fond of literature. He was of the St. Albans family, and had a
-resemblance to swarthy Charles II., a point which pleased his elder
-friend. The doctor liked his gay, young manner, and flattered himself much
-as women do who marry rakes, that he should reform him in time.
-
-"What a coalition!" said Garrick, when he heard of the friendship; "why, I
-shall have my old friend to bail out of the Round House." Beauclerk, says
-Boswell, "could take more liberties with Johnson than any one I ever saw
-him with;"[181] but, on the other hand, Beauclerk was not spared. On one
-occasion Johnson said to him, "You never open your mouth, sir, without an
-intention to give pain, and you have often given me pain--not from the
-power of what you said, but from seeing your intention." At another time
-he said, "Thy body is all vice, and thy mind all virtue."
-
-When the Adelphi was building, Garrick applied for the corner house of
-Adam Street for his friend Andrew Beckett, the bookseller in the Strand,
-and he obtained it. In this letter he calls the architects "the dear
-Adelphi," and the western house "the corner blessing." Garrick's house was
-for some years occupied by the Royal Literary Fund, but is now a Club.
-
-Garrick promised the brothers, if the request was granted, to make the
-shop, as old Jacob Tonson's once was, the rendezvous of the first people
-in England. "I have," he says, "a little selfishness in this request. I
-never go to coffee-houses, seldom to taverns, and should constantly (if
-this scheme takes place), be at Beckett's at one at noon and six at
-night."[182]
-
-Garrick was a frequent visitor at the house of Mr. Thomas Beckett, the
-bookseller, in Pall Mall, and he obtained the appointment of sub-librarian
-at Carlton Palace for the son Andrew, who had written a comedy on the
-_Emile_ of Rousseau at the age of fourteen, and produced a poem called
-_Theodosius and Constantia_. For nearly ten years he wrote for the British
-and Monthly Reviews. He was born in 1749, and died in 1843. His most
-useful work is called _Shakspere Himself Again_, in which he released the
-original text from much muddy nonsense of commentators. He complained
-bitterly of Griffiths, of the _Monthly Review_, having given him only L45
-for four or five years' work--280 articles, produced after reading and
-condensing 590 volumes; Mr. Griffiths' annual profit by the _Monthly_
-being no less than L2000.
-
-Into a house in John Street the Society of Arts, established in 1753 by
-Mr. Shipley, an artist, moved, about 1772. This society still give
-lectures and rewards, and does about as much good as ever it did. Art
-must grow wild--it will not thrive in hot-houses. The great room is still
-adorned with the six large pictures illustrating the "Progress of
-Society," painted by poor, half-crazed Barry, the ill-educated artist,
-who, too proud to paint cabinet pictures, could yet paint nothing larger
-sound or well.
-
-Shipley, who established the society of Arts in imitation of one already
-established at Dublin, was originally a drawing-master at Northampton.
-From its commencement in 1753-4 to 1778 the society distributed in
-premiums and bounties L24,616. A year after its foundation Josiah Wedgwood
-began to infuse a classical and purer taste among the proprietors of the
-Staffordshire potteries,[183] and employed Flaxman to draw some of his
-designs, and was the first to improve the shape and character of our
-simplest articles of use.
-
-Mr. Shipley was a brother of the Bishop of St. Asaph, and had studied
-under a portrait-painter named Phillips. In 1738 the Society of Arts voted
-their founder a gold medal for his public spirit. His school was continued
-by a Mr. Pars. He died, aged upwards of ninety, in 1784.[184]
-
-Nollekens, the sculptor, learned drawing there, and Cosway, afterwards the
-fashionable miniature-painter, was the errand-boy. The house was
-subsequently inhabited by Rawle, the antiquary, a friend of fat, coarse,
-clever Captain Grose.[185]
-
-Dr. Ward, the inventor of "Friar's Balsam," a celebrated quack doctor
-ridiculed by Hogarth, left his statue by Carlini to the Society of Arts.
-The doctor allowed Carlini L100 a year, so that he should work at this
-statue for life.[186]
-
-This Joshua Ward, celebrated for his drop and pill, by which and his
-balsam he made a fortune, was the son of a drysalter in Thames Street.
-Praised by General Churchill and Lord Chief Baron Reynolds, he was called
-in to prescribe for King George. The king recovering in spite of the
-quack, "Spot" Ward was rewarded by a solemn vote of a credulous House of
-Commons, and he obtained the privilege of being allowed to drive his
-carriage through St. James's Park. Ward is conspicuous in one of Hogarth's
-caricatures by a claret mark covering half his brazen face.
-
-The housekeeper at the Society of Arts in Haydon's time (1842) remembered
-Barry at work on the frescoes that are so deficient in colour and taste,
-but show such a fine grasp of mind. She said his violence was dreadful,
-his oaths horrid, and his temper like insanity. In summer he came at five
-and worked till dark; he then lit his lamp and went on etching till eleven
-at night. He was seven years at his task. Burke and Johnson called once;
-but no artist came to see him. He would have almost shot any painter who
-dared to do so. He had his tea boiled in a quart pot, dined in Porridge
-Island, and took milk for supper.[187]
-
-Years after Barry lay in state in the great room which his own genius had
-adorned, and was buried in the Abbey; but few of the Academicians attended
-his funeral. The Adelphi pictures have been recently lined and restored.
-
-Barry having vainly attempted to decorate St. Paul's, executed the
-paintings now at the Society of Arts for his mere expenses, but
-eventually, one way and another, cleared a considerable sum by them. He
-painted them, as he said, to prove that Englishmen had a genius for high
-art, music, and other refinements of life. They are fairly drawn, often
-elegantly and reasonably well grouped, but bad in colour. The
-heterogeneous dresses are jumbled together with bad taste--Dr. Burney in a
-toupee floats among water-nymphs, and William Penn's wig and hat are
-ludicrously obtrusive. The perspective is often "out," and the attitudes
-are stiff; still, historically speaking, the pictures are large-minded and
-interesting; and, in spite of his faults, one likes to think of the brave
-Irishman busy on his scaffold, railing at Reynolds and defying everybody.
-Barry was really a self-deceiver, like Haydon, and aimed far beyond his
-powers.
-
-At Osborne's Hotel, in John Street, the King and Queen of the Sandwich
-Islands resided while on a visit to England in the reign of George IV. A
-comic song written on their arrival was once popular, though now
-forgotten; and Theodore Hook produced a quaint epigram on their death by
-small-pox, the point of which was, that one day Death, being hungry,
-called for "two Sandwiches." The epigram was not without the unfeeling wit
-peculiar to that heartless lounger at the clubs, who spent his life
-amusing the great people, and who died at last a worn-out spendthrift,
-_sans_ character, _sans_ everything.
-
-Of all London's charlatans, perhaps the most impudent was Dr. Graham, a
-Scotchman, whose brother married Catherine Macaulay, the author of a
-forgotten History of England, much vaunted by Horace Walpole. In or about
-1780 this plausible cheat opened what he called a "Temple of Health," in a
-central house in the Adelphi Terrace. His rooms were stuffed with glass
-globes, marble statues, medico-electric apparatus, figures of dragons,
-stained glass, and other theatrical properties. The air was drugged with
-incense and strains of music. The priestess of this temple was said to be
-no less a person than Emma Lyons, afterwards Lady Hamilton, the fatal
-Cleopatra of Lord Nelson. She had been first a housemaid and afterwards a
-painter's model. She was as beautiful as she was vulgar and abandoned. The
-house was hung with crutches, ear-trumpets, and other trophies.[188] For
-one night in the celestial bed, that secured a beautiful progeny, this
-impostor obtained L100; for a supply of his elixir of life L1000 in
-advance, and for his earth-baths a guinea each. Yet this arrant knave and
-hypocrite was patronised by half the English nobility. Archenholz, a
-German traveller, writing about 1784, describes Dr. Graham and his L60,000
-celestial bed. He dilates on the vari-coloured transparent glasses, and
-the rich vases of perfume that filled the impudent quack's temple, the
-half-guinea treatises on health, the _moonshine_ admitted into the rooms,
-and the divine balm at a guinea a bottle.
-
-A magneto-electric bed, to be slept in for the small sum of L50 a night,
-was on the second floor, on the right hand of the orchestra, and near the
-hermitage. Electricity and perfumes were laid on in glass tubes from
-adjoining reservoirs. The beds (there were two or three at least) rested
-on six massy transparent columns. The perfumed curtains were of purple and
-celestial blue, like those of the Grand Turk. Graham was blasphemous
-enough to call this chamber his "Holy of Holies." His chief customers were
-captains of privateers, nabobs, spendthrifts, and old noblemen. The farce
-concluded in March 1784, when the rooms were shut for ever, and the temple
-of Apollo, the immense electrical machine, the self-playing organ, and the
-celestial bed, were sold in open daylight by a ruthless auctioneer.[189]
-
-Bannister "took off" Graham in a farce called _The Genius of Nonsense_,
-produced at the Haymarket in 1780. His satin sofas on glass legs, his
-celestial bed, his two porters in long tawdry greatcoats and immense
-gold-laced cocked hats, distributing handbills at the door, while his
-goddess of health was dying of a sore-throat from squalling songs at the
-top of the staircase, were all hit off by a speaking harlequin, who also
-caricatured the doctor's sliding walk and bobbing bows. The younger Colman
-and Bannister had been to the Temple of Health on purpose to take the
-quack's portrait.[190]
-
-Mr. Thomas Hill, the fussy, good-natured Hull of Theodore Hook's _Gilbert
-Gurney_, lived for many years and finally died in the second floor of No.
-1 James Street, Adelphi. He was the supposed prototype of the obtrusive
-Paul Pry. It was Hill's boast always to have what you wanted. "Cards, sir?
-Pooh! pooh! Nonsense! thousands of packs in the house." Liston made the
-name of Paul Pry proverbial and world-wide.
-
-The names of the four Scotch brothers, John, Robert, James, and William
-Adam, are preserved by the existing Adelphi Streets. When will any of our
-streets be named after great thinkers? It is a disgrace to us to allow new
-districts to be christened, without Government supervision, by worthless,
-ignoble, and ridiculous names, confusing in their vulgar repetition.
-Indifferent kings, and nobles not much better, give their names to half
-the suburbs of London, while Shakespere is unremembered by the builders,
-and Spenser and Byron have as yet no brick-and-mortar godchildren.
-
-[Illustration: OLD HOUSES ON THE SITE OF WELLINGTON STREET, 1742.]
-
-The eldest of the brothers, Robert Adam, died in 1792, and was buried in
-the south aisle of Westminster Abbey. His pall was supported by the Duke
-of Buccleuch, the Earl of Coventry, the Earl of Lauderdale, Lord Stormont,
-Lord Frederick Campbell, and Mr. Pulteney.
-
-It was told as a joke invented against that fat butt, Sir William Curtis,
-that at a public dinner some lover of royalty and Terence proposed the
-healths of George IV. and the Duke of York as "the Adelphi," upon which
-the alderman, who followed with the next toast, determining that the East
-should not be far behind the West, rose and said that "as they were now on
-the subject of streets, he would beg to propose Finsbury Square." But,
-after all, why should we laugh at the poor alderman because he did not
-happen to know Greek? That surely is a venial sin.
-
-And here, retracing our steps, we must make an episode and turn back down
-the Savoy.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: THE SAVOY FROM THE THAMES, 1650.]
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE SAVOY.
-
- "Their leaders, John Ball, Jack Straw, and Wat Tyler, then marched
- through London, attended by more than twenty thousand men, to the
- PALACE OF THE SAVOY, which is a handsome building on the road to
- Westminster, situated on the banks of the Thames, and belonging to the
- Duke of Lancaster. They immediately killed the porters, pressed into
- the house, and set it on fire."--_Froissart's Chronicles._
-
-
-A minute's walk down a turning on the south side of the Strand, and we are
-in the precinct of an old palace, and standing on royal property.
-
-In a ramble by moonlight one cannot fail to meet under the churchyard
-trees in the Savoy, John of Gaunt, who once lived there; John, King of
-France, who died there; George Wither, the poet, and sweet Mistress Anne
-Killigrew, who are buried there, and Chaucer, who was married there.
-
-Down that steep, dray-traversed street, now so dull and lonely, kings and
-bishops, knights and ladies, have paced, and mobs have hurried with sword
-and fire. Now it is a congeries of pickle warehouses, printing offices,
-and glass manufactories.
-
-Simon de Montfort, that ambitious Earl of Leicester who married the sister
-of Henry III., and whose father persecuted the Albigenses, dwelt in the
-Savoy. Here he must have first won the barons, the people, and the humbler
-clergy by his opposition to the extortions of the king and the bishops.
-Here for a time he must have all but reigned, till that fatal August day
-when he fell at Evesham. Simon was a friend of the monks, and after his
-death endless miracles were said to have been wrought at his grave,[191]
-as might have been expected.
-
-The Savoy derives its foreign name from a certain Peter, Earl of Savoy,
-uncle of Eleanor, the daughter of Raymond, Count of Provence, and queen of
-that good man, but weak monarch, Henry III. This earl was the leader of
-that rapacious and insolent train of Frenchmen and Savoyards which
-followed Queen Eleanor to England, and drove Simon de Montfort and his
-impetuous barons to rebellion by their hunger for titles, lands, and
-benefices. In 30 Henry III. the king granted to Peter, Earl of Richmond
-and Savoy, all those houses in the Strand, adjoining the river, formerly
-belonging to Brian de Lisle, upon paying yearly to the king's exchequer,
-at the Feast of St. Michael, three barbed arrows for all services.
-
-In 1322 an Earl of Lancaster, then master of the Savoy, on the return of
-the Spensers, formed an alliance with the Scots, and broke out into open
-rebellion against Edward II. He was taken at Boroughbridge, led to
-Pontefract, and there beheaded. As he was led to execution on a bridleless
-pony, the mob pelted him with mud, taunting him as King Arthur--the royal
-name he had assumed in his treasonable letters to the Scots.[192]
-
-Earl Peter, in due time growing weary of stormy England, and sighing for
-his cool Savoy mountains, transferred his mansion to the provost and
-chapter of Montjoy (Fratres de Monte Jovis) at Havering-atte-Bower, a
-small village in Essex. At the death of the foolish king, his widow
-purchased the palace of the Savoy of the Montjoy chapter, as a residence
-for her son Edmund, afterwards Earl of Lancaster, to whom had been given
-the chief estates of the defeated Montfort.
-
-His son Henry, Duke of Lancaster, repaired and partly rebuilt the palace,
-at an expense of upwards of 50,000 marks. From this potent lord it
-descended to Edward III.'s son, John of Gaunt (Ghent), who lived here in
-the splendour befitting the son of Edward III., the uncle of Richard II.,
-and the father of a prince hereafter to become Henry IV.
-
-It was in the chapel of this river-side palace (about 1360, Edward III.)
-that our great poet, Geoffrey Chaucer, married Philippa, daughter of a
-knight of Hainault and sister to a mistress of the Duke's. He mentions his
-marriage in his poem of _The Dream_.[193] He says harmoniously--
-
- "On the morrow,
- When every thought and every sorrow
- Dislodg'd was out of mine heart,
- With every woe and every smart,
- Unto a tent prince and princess
- Methought brought me and my mistress.
-
- * * * * *
-
- With ladies, knighten, and squiers,
- And a great host of ministers,
- Which tent was church parochial."
-
-Those marriage bells have long since rung, the smoke of that incense has
-long since risen to heaven, yet we seldom pass the Savoy without thinking
-how the poet and his fair Philippa went
-
- "To holy church's ordinance,
- And after that to dine and dance,
- ... and divers plays."
-
-It was to his great patron--"time-honoured" Lancaster, claimant, through
-his wife, of the throne of Castile--that Chaucer owed all his court
-favours, his Genoese embassy, his daily pitcher of wine, his wardship, his
-controllership, and his annuity of twenty marks. It was in this palace he
-must have imbibed his attachment to Wickliffe, and his hatred of all proud
-and hypocritical priests.
-
-Buildings seem, like men, to be born under special stars. It was the fate
-of the Savoy to enjoy a hundred and forty years of splendour, and then to
-sink into changeless poverty and desolation. It was also its ill fate to
-be once sacked and once burnt. In 1378, under Richard II., its first
-punishment overtook it. John Wickliffe, a Yorkshireman, had been appointed
-rector of Lutterworth, in Leicestershire, by the favour of John of Ghent,
-who was delighted with a speech of Wickliffe in Parliament denying that
-King John's tribute to the Pope necessarily bound King Edward III. The
-Papal bull for Wickliffe's prosecution did not reach England till the
-king's death, but Wickliffe was cited on the 19th of February, 1378, to
-appear before the Bishop of London at St. Paul's. In the interval before
-his appearance he had promised the Parliament, at their request, to prove
-the legality of its refusal to pay tribute to the Pope.
-
-On the day appointed Wickliffe appeared in Our Lady's Chapel, accompanied
-by the Earl Marshall, Percy, and the Duke of Lancaster, who openly
-encouraged him, to the horror of the populace and the bitter rage of the
-priests. A quarrel instantly began by Courtenay, the Bishop of London,
-opposing a motion of the Earl Marshall that Wickliffe should be allowed a
-seat. The proud duke, pale with anger, whispered fiercely to the bishop
-that, "rather than take such language from him, he would drag him out of
-the church by the hair of his head." The threat was heard by an unfriendly
-bystander, and it passed round the church in whispers. Rumour, with her
-thousand babbling tongues, was soon busy in the churchyard, where the
-people had assembled, eager for the reformer's condemnation. They
-instantly broke forth like hounds which have recovered a scent. It was at
-once proposed to break into the church and pull the duke from the
-judgment-seat. When he appeared at the door, he was received with ominous
-yells, and was chased and pelted by the mob. Furious and beside himself
-with rage, he instantly proceeded to Westminster, where the Parliament was
-sitting, and moved that from that day forth all the privileges of the
-citizens of London should be annulled, that they should no longer elect a
-mayor or sheriff, and that Lord Percy should possess the entire
-jurisdiction over them--a severe penalty, it must be owned, for pelting a
-duke with mud.
-
-The following day, the citizens, hearing of this insolent proposal,
-snatched up their arms, and swore to take the proud duke's life. After
-pillaging the Marshalsea, where Lord Percy resided, they poured down on
-the Savoy and killed a priest whom they took to be Percy in disguise. They
-then broke all the furniture and threw it into the Thames, leaving only
-the bare walls standing. While the mob were shouting at the windows,
-feeding the river with torrents of spoiled wealth, or cutting the beds and
-tapestry to pieces, the duke and Lord Percy, who had been dining with John
-of Ypres, a merchant in the City, escaped in disguise by rowing up the
-river to Kingston in an open boat. Eventually, at the entreaties of the
-Bishop of London, who pleaded the sanctity of Lent, the rioters dispersed,
-having first hung up the duke's arms in a public place as those of a
-traitor. The Londoners finally appeased their opponent by carrying to St.
-Paul's a huge taper of wax, blazoned with the duke's arms, which was to
-burn continually before the image of Our Lady in token of reconciliation.
-
-This John of Gaunt, fourth son[194] of Edward III., married Blanche,
-daughter of Henry, Duke of Lancaster, who died of the plague in 1360, John
-succeeding to the title in right of his wife. He married his daughter
-Philippa to the King of Portugal, and his daughter Catharine to the Infant
-of Spain. From Henry Plantagenet, fourth Earl and first Duke of
-Lancaster, the Savoy descended to this John of Ghent, who married that
-amiable princess, Blanche Plantagenet, daughter and co-heir of Earl Henry.
-
-Into this same king-haunted precinct John of France, after the slaughter
-at Poitiers, was brought with chivalrous and almost ostentatious humility
-by the Black Prince. One thousand nine hundred English lances had routed
-with great slaughter eight thousand French. The lanes and moors of
-Maupertuis were choked with dead knights; the French king had been
-wounded, beaten to the ground, and taken prisoner, together with his son
-Philip, by a gentleman of Artois.[195] Sailing from Bordeaux, the Black
-Prince arrived at Sandwich with his prisoner, and was received at
-Southwark by the citizens of London on May 5, 1357. Triumphal arches were
-erected, and tapestry hung from every window. The King of France rode like
-a conqueror on a richly trapped cream-coloured horse, while by his side
-sat the young prince on a small black palfrey. Some hours elapsed before
-the procession could reach Westminster Hall, where King Edward was
-surrounded by his prelates, knights, and barons. When John entered, our
-king arose, embraced him, and led him to a splendid banquet prepared for
-him. The palace of the Savoy was allotted to King John and his son, till
-his removal to Windsor.
-
-Here the royal Frenchman may have been when he heard the tidings of the
-ferocity of the Jacquerie, and of the dreadful riots in his capital. To
-the Savoy he returned when his son, the Duke of Anjou, broke his parole
-and fled to Paris, desirous to exculpate himself of this dishonour, and to
-arrange for a crusade to recover Cyprus from the Turk.[196] To his
-council, dissuading him from returning, like a second Regulus, to
-captivity and perhaps death, the king addressed these memorable words--"If
-honour were banished from every other place, it should at least find an
-asylum in the breast of kings."
-
-John was affectionately received by the chivalrous Edward, and again
-returned to his old quarters in the Savoy, with his hostages of the blood
-royal--"the three lords of the fleur-de-lys." Here he spent several weeks
-in giving and receiving entertainments; but before he could proceed to
-business, he was attacked with a dangerous illness, and expired in 1364.
-His obsequies were performed with regal magnificence, and his corpse was
-sent with a splendid retinue to be interred at St. Denis.
-
-When treaties are broken by statesmen, or unjust wars declared, let the
-reader go to the Savoy, and think of that brave promise-keeper, King John
-of France.
-
-During the latter years of King Edward III., John of Gaunt became very
-unpopular. "The good Parliament" (1376) remonstrated against the expense
-of his unsuccessful wars in Spain, Scotland, and France, and against the
-excessive taxation. The duke imprisoned the Speaker, and banished wise
-William of Wyckeham from the king's person, but in vain attempted to alter
-the law of succession.
-
-In Wat Tyler's rebellion the duke's palace was the first to be destroyed.
-A refusal to pay oppressive poll-tax led to a riot at Fobbing, a village
-in Essex; from this place the flame spread like wildfire through the whole
-county, and the people rose, led by a priest named Jack Straw. At
-Dartford, a tiler bravely beat out the brains of a tax-collector who had
-insulted his daughter. Kent instantly rose, took Rochester Castle, and
-massed together at Maidstone, under Wat, a tiler, and Ball, a preacher. In
-a few days a hundred thousand men, rudely armed with clubs, bills, and
-bows, poured over Blackheath and hurried on to London.[197] In Southwark
-they demolished the Marshalsea and the King's Bench; then they sacked
-Lambeth Palace, destroyed Newgate, fired the house of the Knights
-Hospitallers at Clerkenwell, and that of the Knights of St. John at
-Highbury, and seizing the Tower, beheaded an archbishop and several
-knights. All Flemings hidden in churches were dragged out and put to
-death. Yet, with all this intoxication of new liberty, the claims of
-these Kentish men were simple and just. They demanded--The abolition of
-slavery; the reduction of rent to fourpence an acre; the free liberty of
-buying and selling in all fairs and markets; and lastly a general pardon.
-
-At the great bivouacs at Mile End and on Tower Hill, Wat Tyler's men
-required all recruits to swear to be true to King Richard and the Commons,
-and to admit no monarch of the name of John.[198] This last clause of the
-oath was aimed at John of Gaunt, to whom the people attributed all their
-misery. On June 13, 1381, a deluge of billmen, bowmen, artisans, and
-ploughmen rolled down on the Savoy. The duke was at the time negotiating
-with the Scots on the Borders, while his castles of Leicester and Tutbury
-were being plundered. The attack was sudden, and there was no defence. A
-proclamation had previously been made by Wat Tyler, that, as the common
-object was justice and not plunder, any one found stealing would be put to
-death.
-
-For beauty and stateliness of building, as well as all manner of princely
-furniture, there was, says Holinshed, no palace in the realm comparable to
-the duke's house that the Kentish and Essex men burnt and marred. They
-tore the silken and velvet hangings; they beat up the gold and silver
-plate, and threw it into the Thames; they crushed the jewels and mortars,
-and poured the dust into the river. One of the men--unfortunate
-rogue!--being seen to slip a silver cup into the breast of his doublet,
-was tossed into the fire and burnt to death, amid shouts and "fell
-cries."[199] The cellars were ruthlessly plundered, probably in spite of
-Wat Tyler, and thirty-two of the poor wretches, buried under beams and
-stones, were either starved or suffocated. In the wildest of the storm,
-some barrels were at last found which were supposed to contain money. They
-were flung into the huge bonfire; in an instant they exploded, blew up the
-great hall, shook down several houses, killed many men, and reduced the
-palace to ruins. That was on the 13th; on the 15th, the Essex men had
-dispersed; and Wat Tyler, the impetuous reformer, during a conference
-with the king in Smithfield, was slain by a sudden blow from the sword of
-Lord Mayor Walworth.
-
-John of Gaunt died at the Bishop of Ely's palace in Holborn, at Christmas
-1398--his old home being now a ruin--and he was buried on the north side
-of the high altar of Saint Paul's, beside the Lady Blanche, his first
-wife. Instantly on his death, the wilful young king, to the rage of the
-people, seized on all his uncle's lands, rents, and revenues, and banished
-the duke's attorney, who resisted his shameless theft. Amongst this pile
-of plunder the Savoy must have also passed.
-
-The Savoy had bloomed, and after the bloom came in its due time the "sere
-and yellow leaf." The precinct must have remained a waste during the Wars
-of the Roses;[200] but its blackened ruins preached their silent lesson in
-vain to the turbulent and tormented Londoners.
-
-In the reign of that dark and wily king, Henry VII., sunshine again fell
-on the Savoy. That prince, who was fond of erecting convents, founded on
-the old site a hospital, intended to shelter one hundred poor almsmen. It
-was not, however, finished when he died, nor was it completed till the
-fifteenth year of his son's reign (1524), the year in which the French
-were driven out of Italy.
-
-The hospital, which was dedicated to John the Baptist, was in the form of
-a cross, and over the entrance-gate, facing the Strand, was the following
-insipid inscription:--
-
- "_Hospitium hoc inopi turba Savoia vocatum,
- Septimus Henricus solo fundavit ab imo._"
-
-The master and four brethren were to be priests and to officiate in turns,
-standing day and night at the gate to invite in and feed any poor or
-distressed persons who passed down the river-side road. If those so
-received were pilgrims or travellers, they were to be dismissed the next
-morning with a letter of recommendation to the next hospital, and with
-money to defray their expenses on the journey.
-
-In the reign of Edward VI., part of the revenues of the new hospital, to
-the value of six hundred pounds, was transferred to Bridewell prison and
-Christ's Hospital school for poor orphan children; for already abuses had
-crept in, and indiscriminate charity had led to its usual melancholy
-results. The old palace had become no mere shelter for the deserving poor,
-but a den of loiterers, sham cripples, and vagabonds of either sex, who
-begged all day in the fields and came to the Savoy to sleep and sup.[201]
-
-Queen Mary, whose Spanish blood made her a friend to all monastic
-institutions, re-endowed the unlucky place with fresh lands; but it went
-on in its old courses till the twelfth year of Elizabeth, who suddenly
-pounced in her own stern way on the nest of rogues, and, to the terror of
-sinecurists, deprived Thomas Thurland, then master, of his office, for
-corruption and embezzlement of the hospital estates.
-
-We hear nothing more of the unlucky and neglected Hospital of St. John
-till the Restoration, when Dr. Henry Killigrew was appointed master, much
-to the chagrin and disappointment of the poet Cowley, to whom the sinecure
-had been promised by Charles I. and Charles II.
-
-Cowley, the clever son of a London stationer, had been secretary to the
-queen-mother, but returning as a spy to England, was apprehended, and upon
-that made his peace with Cromwell. This latter fact the Royalists never
-forgave, and considering his play of _The Cutter of Colman Street_ as
-caricaturing the old roystering Cavalier officers, they damned his comedy,
-lampooned him, and gave the Savoy to Killigrew, father of the court wit.
-Upon this the mortified poet wrote his poem of "The Complaint,"[202]
-wherein he calls the Savoy the Rachel he had served with "faith and labour
-for twice seven years and more," and querulously describes himself as left
-alone gasping on the naked beach, while all his fellow voyagers had
-marched up to possess the promised land. The poem, though ludicrously
-querulous, contains some lines, such as the following, which are truly
-beautiful. The muse is reproaching the truant poet.
-
- "Art thou returned at last," said she,
- "To this forsaken place and me,
- Thou prodigal who didst so loosely waste,
- Of all thy youthful years, the good estate?
- Art thou return'd here to repent too late,
- And gather husks of learning up at last,
- Now the rich harvest-time of life is past,
- And winter marches on so fast?"
-
-With this farewell lament Cowley withdrew "from the tumult and business of
-the world," to his long-coveted retirement[203] at pleasant, green
-Chertsey, where, seven years after, he died.
-
-The Savoy, always an abused sinecure, that made the master a rogue and its
-inmates professional beggars, was finally suppressed in the reign of Queen
-Anne.[204] It was then used as a barrack for five hundred soldiers, and as
-a deserters' prison, till the approaches to Waterloo Bridge rendered its
-removal necessary.
-
-Savoy Street occupies the site of the old central Henry VII.'s Tudor gate.
-Coal wharves cover the site of the ancient front of the hospital, and the
-houses in Lancaster Place, leading to Waterloo Bridge, another part of its
-area.
-
-In 1661, the year after the restoration of Charles II., a celebrated
-conference between the Church of England bishops and the Presbyterian
-divines took place, with very small result, in the Bishop of London's
-lodgings in the Savoy. Among the twelve bishops were Sheldon and Gauden,
-the author of _Ikon Basilike_: among the Presbyterians Baxter, Calamy, and
-Reynolds. They were to revise the Liturgy, and to discuss rules and forms
-of prayer; but there was so much distrust and reserve on both sides, that
-at the end of two months the conference came to an untimely end.[205] It
-was the bishops' hour of triumph, and no concessions could be expected
-from them after their many mortifications. In the same year Charles II.
-established a French church in the Savoy, and Dr. Durel preached the first
-sermon to the foreign residents in London, July 14, 1661.[206]
-
-In Queen Anne's time, after its suppression, the Savoy became, like the
-Clink and Whitefriars, a sanctuary for fraudulent debtors. On one
-occasion, in 1696, a creditor entering that nest of thieves to demand a
-debt, was tarred and feathered, carried in a wheelbarrow into the Strand,
-and there bound to the May-pole; but some constables coming up dispersed
-the rabble and rescued the tormented man from his persecutors.[207]
-
-Strype, writing about 1720 (George I.), describes the Savoy as a great
-ruinous building, divided into several apartments. In one a cooper stored
-his hoops and butts; in another there were rooms for deserters, pressed
-men, Dutch recruits, and military prisoners. Within the precinct there was
-the king's printing-press, where gazettes, proclamations, and Acts of
-Parliament were printed; and also a German Lutheran church, a French
-Protestant church, and a Dissenting chapel; besides "harbours for refugees
-and poor people."[208] The worthy writer thus describes the hall of the
-old hospital:--
-
-"In the midst of its buildings is a very spacious hall, the walls three
-foot broad, of stone without and brick and stone inward. The ceiling is
-very curiously built with wood, having knobs in one place hanging down,
-and images of angels holding before their breasts coats of arms, but
-hardly discoverable. One is a cross gules between four stars, or else
-mullets. It is covered with lead, but in divers places open to the
-weather. Towards the east end of the hall is a fair cupola with glass
-windows, but all broken, which makes it probable the hall was as long
-again, since cupolas are wont to be built about the middle of great
-halls."
-
-In 1754 (George II.) clandestine marriages were performed at the Savoy
-church; and the advantages of secrecy, privacy, and access by water were
-boldly advertised in the papers of the day. The _Public Advertiser_ of
-January 2, 1754, contains the following impudent and touting
-advertisement:--
-
-"BY AUTHORITY.--Marriages performed with the utmost privacy, secrecy, and
-regularity, at the ancient royal chapel of St. John the Baptist in the
-Savoy, where regular and authentic registers have been kept from the time
-of the Reformation (being two hundred years and upwards) to this day. The
-expense not more than one guinea, the five shilling stamp included. There
-are five private ways by land to this chapel, and two by water."
-
-At this time the Savoy was still a large cruciform building, with two rows
-of mullioned windows facing the Thames; a court to the north of it was
-called the Friary. The north front, the most ornamented, had large pointed
-windows and embattled parapets, lozenged with flint.
-
-At the west end, in 1816, stood the guard-house, or military prison, its
-gateway secured by a strong buttress, and embellished with Henry VII.'s
-arms and the badges of the rose and the portcullis: above these were two
-hexagonal oriel windows.
-
-In 1816, when the ruins were to be removed, crowds thronged to see the
-remains of John of Gaunt's old palace.[209] The workmen found it difficult
-to destroy the mossy and ivy-covered walls and the large north window; the
-masses of flint, stone, and brick being eight or ten feet thick. The
-screw-jack was powerless to destroy the work of Chaucer's time. The masons
-had to dig, pickaxe holes, and loosen the foundations, then to drive
-crowbars into the windows and fasten ropes to them, so as to pull the
-stones inwards. The outer buttresses would in any other way have defied
-armies.
-
-Some of the stone was soft and white. This, according to tradition, was
-that brought from Caen by Queen Mary. The industrious costermongers
-discovered this, and cut it into blocks to sell as hearthstones. A fire
-about 1777 had thrown down much of the hospital, so that the old level was
-fifteen or twenty feet deeper. The vaults and subterranean passages were
-unexplored. The wells were filled up. The workmen then pulled down the
-German chapel, which stood next Somerset House, and the red-brick house in
-the Savoy Square that was used for barracks. "The entrance," says a writer
-of 1816, "to the Strand or Waterloo Bridge will be spacious, and the
-houses in the Strand now only stop the opening."[210]
-
-The Chapel of St. Mary, Savoy, is a late and plain Perpendicular
-structure, with a fine coloured ceiling. This small, quiet chapel holds a
-silent congregation of illustrious dead.
-
-[Illustration: THE SAVOY CHAPEL.]
-
-Here are interred Sir Robert and Lady Douglas (temp. James I.); the
-Countess of Dalhousie, daughter of Sir Allen Apsley, Lieutenant of the
-Tower, and sister to that admirable wife, Mrs. Hutchinson, who died in
-1663; William Chaworth, who died in 1582, a member of that Nottinghamshire
-family, one of whom, Lord Byron's predecessor, killed in a tavern duel;
-and Mrs. Anne Killigrew, who died in 1685, the paintress and poetess on
-whom Dryden wrote an extravagant but glorious ode, beginning--
-
- "That youngest virgin daughter of the skies,
- Made in the last promotion of the blest."[211]
-
-This accomplished young lady was daughter of Dr. Henry Killigrew, and
-niece of Thomas Killigrew the wit, of whom Denham, the poet, bitterly
-said--
-
- "Had Cowley ne'er spoke, Killigrew ne'er writ,
- Combined in one they'd made a matchless wit."
-
-The father of Mistress Killigrew was author of a tragedy called _The
-Conspiracy_, which both Ben Jonson and Lord Falkland eulogised. Even old
-Anthony Wood says, in his own quaint way, that this lady "was a Grace for
-beauty, and a Muse for wit."[212]
-
-We must add to this list Sir Richard and Lady Rokeby, who died in 1523,
-and Gawin Douglas, that good Bishop of Dunkeld who first translated Virgil
-into Lowland Scotch. He was pensioned by Henry VIII., was a friend of
-Polydore Virgil, and died of the plague in London in 1521. The brass is on
-the floor, about three feet south of the stove in the centre of the
-chapel.[213]
-
-Dr. Cameron, the last victim executed for the daring rebellion of 1745,
-lies here also in good company among knights and bishops. His monument, by
-M. L. Watson, was not erected till 1846. Here, too, is that great admiral
-of Elizabeth--George, third Earl of Cumberland, who used to wear the glove
-which his queen had given him, set in diamonds, in his tilting helmet. He
-died in the Duchy House in the Savoy, October 3, 1605; but his bowels
-alone were buried here, the rest of his body lies at Skipton. He was the
-father of the brave, proud Countess, who, when Charles II.'s secretary
-pressed on her notice a candidate for Appleby, wrote that celebrated
-cannon-shot of a letter:--
-
- "I have been bullied by an usurper; I have been neglected by a court,
- but I will not be dictated to by a subject. Your man shan't stand.
-
- "ANNE, DORSET, PEMBROKE, AND MONTGOMERY."
-
-Here also there is a tablet to the memory of Richard Lander, the
-traveller, originally a servant of that energetic discoverer Captain
-Clapperton, who was the first to cross Africa from Tripoli and Benin.
-Lander had the honour also of first discovering the course of the Niger.
-He died in February 1834, from a gunshot-wound, at Fernando Po, aged only
-thirty-one. Such are the lion-men who extend the frontiers of English
-commerce.
-
-In the Savoy reposes a true poet, but an unhappy man--George Wither, the
-satirist and idyllist, who died in 1667, and lies here between the east
-door and the south end of the chapel.[214] He was one of Cromwell's
-major-generals, and had a hard time of it after the Restoration. It was to
-save Wither's life that Denham used that humorous petition--"As long as
-Wither lives I should not be considered the worst poet in England."
-
-Wither anticipated Wordsworth in simple earnestness and a regard for the
-humblest subjects. The soldier-poet himself says--
-
- "In my former days of bliss,
- Her divine skill taught me this:
- That from everything I saw
- I could some invention draw,
- And raise pleasure to her height
- Through the meanest object's sight,
- By the murmur of a spring,
- By the least bough's rustling."[215]
-
-These charming lines were written when Wither lay in the Marshalsea,
-imprisoned for writing a satire--_Abuses stripped and whipped_.
-
-In the same church lies one of the smallest of military heroes--Lewis de
-Duras, Earl of Feversham, who died in the reign of Queen Anne. He was
-nephew of the great Turenne, and was one of the few persons present when
-Charles II. received extreme unction. He commanded, or rather followed,
-King James II.'s troops at Sedgemoor, in 1685, and at that momentous
-crisis "thought only of eating and sleeping."[216] Upon this shambling
-general the Duke of Buckingham wrote one of his latest lampoons.[217]
-
-In 1552 the first manufactory of glass in England was established at the
-old Savoy House. It was here that, in 1658, the Independents met and drew
-up their famous Declaration of Faith. In 1671 the Royal Society's
-publications were printed here. In Dryden's time, the wounded English
-sailors who had been mangled by Van Tromp's and De Ruyter's shot were
-nursed here. The good and witty Fuller, who wrote the _Worthies_ lectured
-here. Half-crazed Alexander Cruden, who compiled the laborious Concordance
-to the Bible, lived here; and here grinding Jacob Tonson had a warehouse.
-
-In 1843 the Queen repaired the Savoy Chapel, in virtue of her being the
-patron of it. The duty, indeed, fell upon the Crown, for the chapel stood
-in the Liberty of the Duchy of Lancaster, and the office of the Duchy is
-in Lancaster Place, to the right as you approach Waterloo Bridge.
-
-In July 1864 the Savoy Chapel was unfortunately destroyed by a fire
-occasioned by an explosion of gas. The coloured ceiling, the altar window,
-containing a figure of St. John the Baptist, and a solitary niche with
-some tabernacle work at the east end, all perished. It was shortly
-afterwards restored and decorated afresh throughout, at the cost of Her
-Majesty.
-
-Mr. George Augustus Sala has admirably sketched the present condition of
-the Precinct,--its almost solemn silence and its gravity,--its loneliness,
-as of Juan Fernandez, Norfolk Island, or Key West,[218] although on the
-very verge of the roaring world of London, and but five minutes' walk from
-Temple Bar.
-
-The royal property is chiefly covered now by shops, public-houses, and
-printing-offices. The Precinct still retains traditions of the vagabond
-squatters who, till about the middle of the last century, assumed
-possession of the ruinous tenements in the Savoy, till the Footguards
-turned them out, and the houses were pulled down, rebuilt, and let to
-respectable tenants.
-
-The old churchyard has long since been sealed up by the Board of Health,
-but the trees and grass still flourish round the old stones. Clean-shaved,
-nattily dressed actors come to this quiet purlieu to study their parts.
-Musicians of theatrical orchestras, penny-a-liners, and printers haunt the
-bar of the Savoy tavern. Those quiet houses with the white door-steps,
-shining brass plates and green blinds, are inhabited by accountants'
-clerks, retired and retiring small tradesmen, and commission agents
-interested in pale ale, pickles, and Wallsend coals.
-
-"So," says Mr. Sala, "run the sands of life through this quiet hour-glass;
-so glides the life away in the old Precinct. At its base a river runs for
-all the world; at its summit is the brawling, raging Strand; on either
-side are darkness and poverty and vice, the gloomy Adelphi arches, the
-Bridge of Sighs that men call Waterloo. But the Precinct troubles itself
-little with the noise and tumult; it sleeps well through life without its
-fitful fever."
-
-Wearied of its old grandeur, pondering, as old men ponder, over its dead
-kings--for Wat Tyler and his Kentish men need no Riot Act to quiet them
-now--the Savoy and its crowned ghosts drift on with our methodical planet,
-meekly awaiting the death-blow that time must some day inflict.
-
-Tait Wilkinson's father was a minister of the Savoy. Garrick helped to
-transport him by informing against him for illegally performing the
-marriage ceremony. In return, Garrick helped forward the son--"an exotic,"
-as he called him, rather than an actor--but a wonderful mimic, not only of
-voice and manner, but even of features. He used to reproduce Foote's
-imitations of the older actors--as Mathews afterward imitated Wilkinson,
-who in his time had imitated Foote, to that impudent buffoon's great
-vexation.
-
-The _Examiner_, whose office is near Waterloo Bridge, was started by Leigh
-Hunt and his brother John in 1808. It began by boldly asserting the
-necessity for reform, lampooning the Regent, and attacking the cant and
-excesses of Methodism. In 1812 both the Hunts were found guilty of having
-called the Prince Regent "the Prince of Whales" and "a fat Adonis of
-fifty," and were sentenced to two years' imprisonment in Horsemonger Lane
-gaol, and to pay a fine of L500. At a later period, Hazlitt joined the
-paper, and wrote for it the essays reprinted (in 1817) under the title of
-_The Round Table_.[219] Close to it is the office of the _Spectator_,
-another paper of the same calibre and class, and more important than the
-_Examiner_ now, though its early history is not so interesting.
-
-Waterloo Bridge, one of those marvels built by the industrious
-simple-hearted John Rennie, was opened by the Prince Regent in 1817. Dupin
-declared it was a colossal monument worthy of Sesostris or the Caesars; and
-what most struck Canova in England was that the foolish Chinese Bridge
-then in St. James's Park should be the production of the Government, while
-Waterloo Bridge was the result of mere private enterprise.[220] The bridge
-did not settle more than a few inches after the centres were struck.
-
-The project of erecting the Strand Bridge, as it was first called, was
-started by a company in 1809, a joint-stock-fever year. Rennie received
-L1000 a year for himself and assistants, or L7: 7s. a day, and expenses.
-The bridge consists of nine arches, of 120 feet span, with piers 20 feet
-thick, the arches being plain semi-ellipses, with their crowns 30 feet
-above high water. Over the points of each pier are placed Doric column
-pilasters, after a design taken from the Temple of Segesta in Sicily. In
-the construction of the bridge the chief features of Rennie's management
-were the following:--The employment of coffer-dams in founding the piers;
-new methods of constructing, floating, and fixing the centres; the
-introduction and working of Aberdeen granite to an extent before unknown;
-and the adoption of elliptical stone arches of an unusual width.
-
-Nearly all the bur stone was brought to the bridge by one horse, called
-"Old Jack." On one occasion the driver, a steady man, but too fond of his
-morning dram, kept "Old Jack" waiting a longer time than usual at the
-public-house, upon which he poked his head in at the open door, and gently
-drew out his master by the coat collar.[221]
-
-Rennie, the architect of the three great London bridges, the engineer of
-the Plymouth Breakwater and of the London and East India Docks, and a
-drainer of the Fens, was the son of a small farmer in East Lothian, and
-was born in 1761.[222]
-
-[Illustration: THE SAVOY PRISON, 1793.]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: DURHAM HOUSE, 1790.]
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-FROM THE SAVOY TO CHARING CROSS.
-
-
-Old York House stood on the site of Buckingham and Villiers Streets. In
-ancient times, York House had been the inn of the Bishops of Norwich.
-Abandoned to the crown, King Henry VIII. gave the place to that gay knight
-Charles Brandon, the husband of his beautiful sister Mary, the Queen of
-France. When the Church rose again and resumed its scarlet pomp, the house
-was given to Queen Mary's Lord Chancellor, Nicholas Heath, Archbishop of
-York, in exchange for Suffolk House in Southwark, which was presented by
-Queen Mary to the see of York in recompense for York House, Whitehall,
-taken from Wolsey by her father. On the fall of that minister, once more a
-change took place, and the house passed to the Lord Keeper, Sir Nicholas
-Bacon, who rented it of the see of York.
-
-In this house the great Francis Bacon was born, on the 22d of January,
-1561. York House stood near the royal palace, from which it was parted by
-lanes and fields. Its courtyard and great gates opened to the street. The
-main front, with its turrets and water stair, faced the river. The garden,
-falling by an easy slope to the Thames, commanded a view as far south as
-the Lollards' Tower at Lambeth, as far east as London Bridge. "All the gay
-river life[223] swept past the lawn, the salmon-fishers spreading their
-nets, the watermen paddling gallants to Bankside, and Shakspere's theatre,
-the city barges rowing past in procession, and the queen herself, with her
-train of lords and ladies, shooting by in her journeys from the Tower to
-Whitehall Stairs. From the lattice out of which he gazed, the child could
-see over the palace roof the pinnacles and crosses of the old abbey."
-
-The Lord Keeper Pickering died at York House in 1596, and Lord Chancellor
-Egerton in 1616 or 1617. In 1588 it is supposed the Earl of Essex tried to
-obtain the house, as Archbishop Sandys wrote to Burghley begging him to
-resist some such demand. Essex was in ward here for six months, fretting
-under the care of Lord Keeper Egerton.
-
-"York House was the scene," says a clever pleader for a great man's good
-fame, "of Bacon's gayest hours, and of his sharpest griefs--of his highest
-magnificence, and of his profoundest prostration. In it his studious
-childhood passed away. In it his father died. On going into France, to the
-court of Henry IV., he left it a lively, splendid home; on his return from
-that country, he found it a house of misery and death. From its gates he
-wandered forth with his widowed mother into the world. Though it passed
-into other hands, his connection with it never ceased. Under Egerton its
-gates again opened to him. It was the scene of that inquiry into the Irish
-treason when he was the queen's historian. During his courtship of Alice
-Barnham, York House was his second home. In one of its chambers he watched
-by the sick-bed of Ellesmere, and on Ellesmere's surrender of the Seals,
-presented the dying Chancellor with the coronet of Brackley. It became his
-own during his reign as Keeper and Chancellor. From it he dated his great
-Instauration; in its banqueting-hall he feasted poets and scholars; from
-one of its bed-rooms he wrote his Submission and Confession; in the same
-room he received the Earls of Arundel, Pembroke, and Southampton, as
-messengers from the House of Lords; there he surrendered the Great Seal.
-To regain York House, when it had passed into other hands, was one of the
-warmest passions of his heart, and the resolution to retain it against the
-eager desires of Buckingham was one of the secret causes of his fall."
-
-"No," said the fallen great man; "York House is the house wherein my
-father died and wherein I first breathed, and there will I yield my last
-breath, if it so please God, and the king will give me leave."[224]
-
-Some of the saddest and some of the happiest events of Bacon's life must
-have happened in the Strand. From thence he rode, sumptuous in purple
-velvet from cap to shoe, along the lanes to Marylebone Chapel, to wed his
-bride Alice Barnham.
-
-York House was famous for its aviary, on which Bacon had expended L300. It
-was in the garden here that we are told the Chancellor once stood looking
-at the fishers below throwing their nets. Bacon offered them so much for a
-draught, but they refused. Up came the net with only two or three little
-fish; upon which his lordship told them that "hope was a good breakfast,
-but an ill supper."[225]
-
-It was on the death of his friend, Lord Chancellor Ellesmere, and on his
-own installation, that Bacon bought the lease of York House from the
-former's son, the first Earl of Bridgewater. He found the rooms vast and
-naked. His friends and votaries furnished the house, giving him books and
-drawings, stands of arms, cabinets, jewels, rings, and boxes of money.
-Lady Caesar contributed a massive gold chain, and Prince Charles a diamond
-ring.
-
-Bacon, when young, had been often taken to court by his father; and the
-queen, delighting in the gravity and wisdom of the boy, used to call him
-her "young Lord Keeper." Even then his mind was philosophically observant;
-and it is said that he used to leave his playmates in St. James's Fields
-to try and discover the cause of the echo in a certain brick conduit.[226]
-
-At Durham House, on January 22, 1620, the year in which he published his
-_magnum opus_, the _Novum Organon_, and a twelvemonth before his disgrace,
-Bacon gave a grand banquet to his friends. Ben Jonson was one of the
-guests, and is supposed to have himself recited a set of verses, in which
-he says--
-
- "Hail th' happy genius of the ancient pile!
- How comes it that all things so about thee smile,--
- The fire, the wine, the men?--and in the midst
- Thou stand'st as if some mystery thou didst.
-
- "England's High Chancellor, the destined heir,
- In his soft cradle to his father's chair,
- Whose even thread the Fates spin round and full,
- Out of their choicest and their richest wool.
- 'Tis a brave cause of joy. * *
- Give me a deep-crowned bowl, that I may sing,
- In raising him, the wisdom of my king."
-
-Who till he dies can boast of having been happy? The year after, the
-king's anger fell like an axe upon the great courtier. Solitary and
-comfortless at Gorhambury, Bacon petitioned the Lords in almost abject
-terms to be allowed to return to York House, where he could advance his
-studies and consult his physicians, creditors, and friends, so that "out
-of the carcass of dead and rotten greatness, as out of Samson's lion,
-there may be honey gathered for future times." Sir Edward Sackville prayed
-him in vain to remove his straitest shackles by surrendering York House to
-the king's favourite; and so did his creditor, Mr. Meautys, who, says
-Bacon, used him "coarsely," and meant "to saw him asunder." "The great
-lords," says Meautys, "long to be in York House. I know your lordship
-cannot forget they have such a savage word among them as _fleecing_." This
-word has grown tame in modern times, but it had a terrible significance in
-those days, when it hinted at flaying.
-
-An episode about Bacon's younger days may be pardoned here. The Gray's Inn
-Chambers occupied by Bacon were in Coney Court, looking over the gardens
-and past St. Pancras Church to Hampstead Hill. They are no longer
-standing. The site of them was No. 1 Gray's Inn Square. Bacon began to
-keep his terms at the age of eighteen, in June 1579. His uncle Burleigh
-was bencher in this inn, and his cousins, Robert, Cecil, and Nicholas
-Trott, students. In his latter days, when Attorney-General, and even when
-Lord Chancellor, he retained a lease of his old rooms in Coney Court. He
-was called to the bar when he was twenty-one, in 1582; and as soon as he
-was called he appeared in Fleet Street in his serge and bands, as a sign
-that he was going to practise for his bread. At the close of his first
-session, however, he was raised to the bench. Bacon always remained
-attached to Gray's Inn; he laid out the gardens, planted the elm-trees,
-raised the terrace, pulled down and rebuilt the chambers, dressed the dumb
-show, led off the dances, and invented the masques.[227]
-
-After Lord Bacon's disgrace, the first Duke of Buckingham of the Villiers
-family borrowed the house from Toby Mathew, the courtly archbishop of
-York, in hopes of a final exchange, which did eventually take place.[228]
-In 1624, two years before Bacon's death, a bill was passed to enable the
-king to exchange some lands for York House, so coveted by his proud
-favourite. Buckingham soon partially pulled down the old mansion, and
-lined the walls of his temporary structure with huge mirrors. Here he
-entertained the foreign ambassadors. Of all his splendour, the only relic
-left is the water gate usually ascribed to Inigo Jones.
-
-This Duke of Buckingham, the "Steenie" of King James, and of Scott's
-_Fortunes of Nigel_, was the younger son of a poor knight, who won James
-I. by his personal beauty, vivacity, and accomplishments--by his dancing,
-jousting, leaping, and masquerading. At first page, cupbearer, and
-gentleman of the bedchamber, he rose to power on the disgrace of Carr.
-
-It was at York House--"Yorschaux," as he calls it, with the usual
-insolence and carelessness of his nation--that Bassompierre visited the
-duke in 1626. He praises the mansion as more richly fitted up than any
-other he had ever seen.[229] Yet the duke did not live here, but at
-Wallingford House, on the site of the Admiralty, keeping York House for
-pageants and levees, till Felton's knife severed his evil soul from his
-body, August 23, 1628. His son, the Zimri of Dryden, was born at
-Wallingford House.
-
-The "superstitious pictures" at York House were sold in 1645,[230] and the
-house given by Cromwell to General Fairfax, whose daughter married the
-second and last Duke of Buckingham, of the Villiers line, the favourite of
-Charles II., the rival of Rochester, the plotter with Shaftesbury, the
-selfish profligate who drove Lee into Bedlam and starved Samuel Butler.
-
-In 1661 the galleries of York House were famous for the antique busts and
-statues that had belonged to Rubens on his visit to this country, when he
-painted James I. in jackboots being hauled heavenward by a flock of
-angels. In the riverside gardens--not far, I presume, from the water
-gate--stood John of Bologna's "Cain and Abel," which the King of Spain had
-given to Prince Charles on his luckless visit to Madrid, and which Charles
-had bestowed on his dangerous favourite.[231]
-
-The great rooms, even then emblazoned with the lions and peacocks of the
-Villiers and Manners families, were traversed by Evelyn, who describes the
-house and gardens as much ruined through neglect. Pepys also, who thrust
-his nose into every show-place, went to York House when the Russian
-ambassador was there, and rapturously and poetically vows he saw "the
-remains of the noble soul of the late Duke of Buckingham appearing in the
-house in every place, in the door-cases and the windows,"[232]--odd places
-for a noble soul to make its abode!
-
-The Duke of Buckingham, in King Charles's days, had turned York House into
-a treasury of art. He bought Rubens's private collection of pictures for
-L10,000, Sir Henry Wotten having purchased them for him at Venice. He had
-seventeen Tintorets, and thirteen works of Paul Veronese. For an "Ecce
-Homo" by Titian, containing nineteen figures as large as life, he refused
-L7000 from the Earl of Arundel. During the Civil Wars the pictures were
-removed by his son to Antwerp, and there sold by auction.
-
-Who can look down Buckingham Street in the twilight, and see the pediment
-of the old water gate of the duke's house, without repeating to himself
-the scourging lines of Dryden when he drew Buckingham as Zimri?--
-
- "A man so various that he seem'd to be
- Not one but all mankind's epitome;
- Stiff in opinions, always in the wrong;
- Was everything by turns, and nothing long;
- But, in the course of one revolving moon,
- Was chemist, fiddler, statesman, and buffoon."[233]
-
-In vain Settle eulogised the mercurial and licentious spendthrift.
-Settle's verse is forgotten, but we all remember Pope's ghastly but
-exaggerated picture of the rake's death in "the worst inn's worst room"--
-
- "No wit to flatter left of all his store,
- No fool to laugh at, which he valued more,
- There, victor of his health, of fortune, friends,
- And fame, this lord of useless thousand ends."
-
-The first Duke of Buckingham, to judge by Clarendon, who was the friend of
-all friends of absolutism, must have been a man of magnificent generosity
-and "flowing courtesy," a staunch friend, and a desperate and unrelenting
-hater; but he was an enemy of the people; and had he survived the knife of
-Felton he must have been the first of a faithless king's bad counsellors
-to perish on the scaffold.
-
-[Illustration: THE WATER GATE, 1860.]
-
-The second duke was a base-tempered, shameless profligate, a fickle,
-dishonest intriguer, who perished at last, a poor worn-out man, in a
-farmer's house in Yorkshire, from a cold caught while hunting. He was the
-author of several obscene lampoons, from which Swift took some hints; and
-he was the godfather of a mock tragedy, _The Rehearsal_, in which he was
-helped by Martin Clifford and Butler, the author of _Hudibras_, the latter
-of whom he left to starve. Baxter, it is true, drops a redeeming word or
-two on behalf of the gay scoundrel; but then Buckingham had intrigued with
-the Puritans.
-
-York Stairs, the only monument of Zimri's splendour left, stand now in the
-middle of the gardens of the new Embankment. Till the Embankment was made,
-the gate was approached by a small enclosed terrace planted with lime
-trees. The water gate consists of a central archway and two side windows.
-Four rusticated columns support an arched pediment and two couchant lions
-holding shields. On a scroll are the Villiers arms. On the street side
-rise three arches, flanked by pilasters and an entablature, on which are
-four stone globes. Above the keystone of the arches are shields and
-anchors. In the centre are the arms of Villiers impaling those of Manners.
-The Villiers' motto, _Fidei coticula crux_, "The cross is the whetstone of
-faith," is inscribed on the frieze. The gate, as it now stands, is
-ridiculous, and is almost buried in the soil. It would be a charity to
-remove it to a water-side position.
-
-In 1661, on the day of the great affray at the Tower Wharf between the
-retinues of the French and Spanish ambassadors, arising out of a dispute
-for precedence, Pepys saw the latter return to York House in triumph,
-guarded with fifty drawn swords, having killed several Frenchmen. "It is
-strange," says the amusing quidnunc, "to see how all the city did rejoice,
-and, indeed, we do naturally all love the Spanish and hate the French."
-Worthy man! the fact was, all time-servers were then agog about the queen
-who was expected from Portugal. From York House Pepys went peering about
-the French ambassador's, and found his retainers all like dead men and
-shaking their heads. "There are no men in the world," he says, "of a more
-insolent spirit when they do well, and more abject if they miscarry, than
-these people are."[234]
-
-In 1683 the learned and amiable John Evelyn, being then on the Board of
-Trade, took a house in Villiers Street for the winter, partly for business
-purposes, partly to educate his daughters.[235] Evelyn's works gave a
-valuable impetus to art and agriculture.
-
-Addison's jovial friend, that delightful writer, Sir Richard Steele, lived
-in Villiers Street from 1721 to 1724, after the death of his wife, the
-jealous "Prue." Here he wrote his _Conscious Lovers_. The big,
-swarthy-faced ex-trooper, so contrasting with his grave and colder friend
-Addison, is a salient personage in the English Temple of Fame.
-
-Duke Street, built circa 1675,[236] was named from the last Duke of
-Buckingham. Humphrey Wanley, the great Harleian librarian, lived here, and
-the son of Shadwell, the poet and Dryden's enemy, who was an eminent
-physician, and inherited much of his father's excellent sense.
-
-In 1672 the "chemyst, statesman, and buffoon" Duke of Buckingham sold York
-House and gardens for L30,000 to a brewer and woodmonger, who pulled it
-down and laid out the present streets, naming them, with due respect to
-rank and wealth, even in a rascal, George Street, Villiers Street, Duke
-Street, and Buckingham Street. In 1668 their rental was L1359: 10s.[237]
-
-In Charles II.'s time waterworks were started at York Buildings by a
-company chartered to supply the West end with water, but they failed,
-being in advance of the time. The company, however, did not concentrate
-its energies on waterworks; it gave concerts, bought up forfeited estates
-in Scotland, and started many wild and eccentric projects, in some of
-which Steele figured prominently. The company has long been forgotten,
-though kept in memory by a tall water tower, which was standing in the
-reign of George III.
-
-In Buckingham Street, built in 1675, Samuel Pepys, the diarist, came to
-live in 1684. The house, since rebuilt, was the last on the west side, and
-looked on the Thames. It had been his friend Hewer's before him. A view of
-the library shows us the tall plain book-cases, and a central window
-looking on the river. Pepys, the son of an army tailor, and as fond of
-dress and great people as might be expected of a tailor's son, was for a
-long time Secretary of the Admiralty under Charles II. He was President of
-the Royal Society; and it is largely to his five folio books of ballads
-that we owe Dr. Percy's useful compilation, _The Relics of Ancient
-Poetry_. Pepys died in 1703, at the house of his friend Hewer, at Clapham.
-
-Pepys's house (No. 14) became afterwards, in the summer of 1824, the home
-of Etty, the painter, and remained so till within a few months of his
-death in 1849. Etty first took the ground floor (afterwards occupied by
-Mr. Stanfield), then the top floor; the special object of his ambition
-being to watch sunsets over the river, which he loved as much as Turner
-did, who frequently said, "There is finer scenery on its banks than on
-those of any river in Italy." Its ebb and flow, Etty used to declare, was
-like life, and "the view from Lambeth to the Abbey not unlike Venice." In
-those river-side rooms the artists of two generations have
-assembled--Fuseli, Flaxman, Holland, Constable, and Hilton--then Turner,
-Maclise, Dyce, Herbert, and all the younger race. Etty's rooms looked on
-to a terrace, with a small cottage at one end; the keeper once was a man
-named Hewson, supposed to be the original Strap of _Roderick Random_.[238]
-An amiable, dreamy genius was the son of the miller and gingerbread-maker
-of York.
-
-The witty Earl of Dorset lived in this street in 1681.
-
-Opposite Pepys's house, and on the east side (left-hand corner), was a
-house where Peter the Great lodged when in England. Here, after rowing
-about the Thames, watching the boat-building, or pulling to Deptford and
-back, this brave half-savage used to return and spend his rough evenings
-with Lord Caermarthen, drinking a pint of hot brandy and pepper, after
-endless flasks of wine. It was certainly "brandy for heroes" in this case.
-
-Lord Caermarthen was at this time Lord President of the Council, and had
-been appointed Peter's cicerone by King William. The Russian czar was a
-hard drinker, and on one occasion is said to have drunk a pint of brandy,
-a bottle of sherry, and eight flasks of sack, after which he calmly went
-to the play. While in York Buildings, the rough czar was so annoyed with
-the vulgar curiosity of intrusive citizens, that he would sometimes rise
-from his dinner and leave the room in a rage. Here the Quakers forced
-themselves upon him, and presented him with _Barclay's Apology_, after
-which the czar attended their meeting in Gracechurch Street. He once asked
-them of what use they were in any kingdom, since they would not bear arms.
-On taking his farewell of King William, Peter drew a rough ruby, valued at
-L10,000, from his waistcoat pocket, and presented it to him screwed up in
-brown paper.[239] He went back just in time to crush the Strelitzes,
-imprison his sister Sophia, and wage war on Charles XII. The great
-reformer was only twenty-six years old when he visited England.
-
-In 1706 Robert Harley, Esq., afterwards Swift's great patron and Earl of
-Oxford, lived here;[240] and (1785) John Henderson, the actor, died in
-this street.
-
-Walter, Lord Hungerford, of Farleigh Castle, Somerset, took the Duke of
-Orleans prisoner at Agincourt. He was Lord High Steward of Henry V. and
-one of the executors to his will, and Lord High Treasurer in the reign of
-Henry VI. This illustrious noble was the son of Sir Thomas de Hungerforde,
-who in 51 Edward III. was the first to take the chair as Speaker of the
-House of Commons.
-
-Hungerford Market covered the site of the seat of the Hungerford family.
-Pepys mentions a fire at the house of old Lady Hungerford in Charles II.'s
-time.
-
-Sir Edward (her husband), created a Knight of the Bath at the coronation
-of Charles II., pulled down the old mansion and divided it in 1680 into
-several houses, enclosing also a market-place. On the north side of the
-market-house was a bust of one of the family in a full-bottomed wig.[241]
-It grew a disused and ill-favoured place before 1833. When a new market
-(Fowler, architect) was opened, it was intended to put an end to the
-monopoly of Billingsgate. The old market had at first answered well for
-fruit and vegetables, as there was no need of porters from the water side;
-but by 1720 Covent Garden had beaten it off.[242] It attempted too much in
-rivalling at once Leadenhall and Billingsgate, and failed--only a few
-fishmongers lingering on to the last.
-
-In 1845 a suspension bridge, crossing from Hungerford to Lambeth (built
-under Mr. I. K. Brunel's supervision), was opened. It consisted of three
-spans, and two brick towers in the Italian style; the main span, at the
-time of its erection, was larger than that of any other in the country,
-and only second to that of the bridge at Fribourg. It cost L110,000, and
-consumed more than 10,000 tons of iron.[243]
-
-In the same year the bridge was sold to the original proprietors for
-L226,000, but the purchase was never carried out. It was replaced in 1864
-by a railway bridge, and the market itself was filled up by an enormous
-railway station. The market had sunk to zero years before. In 1850 some
-rogue of a speculator had opened in it a pretended exhibition of the
-surplus articles rejected for want of room from the glass palace in Hyde
-Park. It proved a total failure, and swallowed up a vast sum of money and
-a fine northern estate or two. Latterly it had become a gratuitous
-music-hall, a billiard-room, and a penny-ice house, conducted by an
-Italian.
-
-The railway station, built by Mr. Barry, the son of the architect of the
-New Houses of Parliament, faces the Strand. It is of a most creditable
-design, and the high Mansard roofs, which surmounted the hotel which forms
-its front, are of a freer and grander character than those of any modern
-London building. A model of the Eleanor Cross has been erected in the
-courtyard in front of it. This building is one of the first omens of
-better things that we have yet seen in our still terribly mean and ugly
-city.
-
-Craven Street was called Spur Alley till 1742.[244] Grinling Gibbons, the
-great wood-carver, born at Rotterdam, and whose genius John Evelyn
-discovered, lived here after leaving the Belle Sauvage Yard. Here he must
-have fashioned those fragile strings of birds and fruit and flowers that
-adorn so many city churches, and the houses of so many English noblemen.
-At No. 7, in 1775, lodged the great Benjamin Franklin, then no longer a
-poor printer, but the envoy of the American colonies. Here Lords Howe and
-Stanhope visited him to propose terms from Lords Camden and Chatham, but
-unfortunately only in vain.[245] That weak and unfortunate man, the Rev.
-Mr. Hackman, who shot Miss Ray, the actress and the mistress of Lord
-Sandwich, who had encouraged his suit, lived in this street.
-
-James Smith, one of the authors of the _Rejected Addresses_,--a series of
-parodies rivalled only by those of _Bon Gaultier_, lived at No. 27. It was
-on his own street that he wrote the well-known epigram--[246]
-
- "In Craven Street, Strand, the attorneys find place,
- And ten dark coal barges are moor'd at its base.
- Fly, Honesty, fly! seek some safer retreat:
- There's _craft_ in the river and _craft_ in the street."
-
-But Sir George Rose capped this in return, retorting in extemporaneous
-lines, written after dinner:--
-
- "Why should Honesty fly to some safer retreat,
- From attorneys and barges?--'od rot 'em!
- For the lawyers are _just_ at the top of the street,
- And the barges are _just_ at the bottom."
-
-James Smith, the intellectual hero of this street, the son of a solicitor
-to the Ordnance, was born in 1775. In 1802 he joined the staff of the
-_Pic-Nic_ newspaper, with Combe, Croker, Cumberland, and that mediocre
-poet, Sir James Bland Burgess. It changed its name to the _Cabinet_, and
-died in 1803. From 1807 to 1817 James Smith contributed to the _Monthly
-Mirror_ his "Horace in London." In 1812 came out the _Rejected Addresses_,
-inimitable parodies by himself and his brother, not merely of the manner
-but of the very mode of thought of Wordsworth, Cobbett, Southey,
-Coleridge, Crabbe, Lord Byron, Scott, etc. The copyright, originally
-offered to Mr. Murray for L20, but declined, was purchased by him in 1819,
-after the sixteenth edition, for L131; so much for the foresight of
-publishers. The book has since deservedly gone through endless editions,
-and has not been approached even by the talented parody writers of
-_Punch_. Those who wish to see the story of this publication in detail,
-must hunt it up in the edition of the _Addresses_ illustrated by George
-Cruickshank.
-
-Mr. Smith was the chief deviser of the substance of the _Entertainments_
-of the elder Charles Mathews. He wrote the _Country Cousins_ in 1820, and
-in the two succeeding years the _Trip to France_ and the _Trip to
-America_. For these last two works the author received a thousand pounds.
-"A thousand pounds!" he used to ejaculate, shrugging his shoulders, "and
-all for nonsense."[247]
-
-James Smith was just the man for Mathews, with his slight frameworks of
-stories filled up with songs, jokes, puns, wild farcical fancies, and
-merry conceits, and here and there among the motley, with true touches of
-wit, pathos, and comedy, and faithful traits of life and character, such
-as only a close observer of society and a sound thinker could pen.
-
-He was lucky enough to obtain a legacy of L300 for a complimentary epigram
-on Mr. Strahan, the king's printer. Being patted on the head when a boy by
-Chief-Justice Mansfield, in Highgate churchyard, and once seeing Horace
-Walpole on his lawn at Twickenham, were the two chief historical events of
-Mr. Smith's quiet life. The four reasons that kept so clever a man
-employed on mere amateur trifling were these--an indolent disinclination
-to sustained work, a fear of failure, a dislike to risk a well-earned
-fame, and a foreboding that literary success might injure his practice as
-a lawyer. His favourite visits were to Lord Mulgrave's, Mr. Croker's,
-Lord Abinger's, Lady Blessington's, and Lord Harrington's.
-
-Pretty Lady Blessington used to say of him, that "James Smith, if he had
-not been a _witty_ man, must have been a _great_ man." He died in his
-house in Craven Street, with the calmness of a philosopher, on the 24th of
-December 1839, in the sixty-fifth year of his age.[248] Fond of society,
-witty without giving pain, a bachelor, and therefore glad to escape from a
-solitary home, James Smith seems to have been the model of a diner-out.
-
-Caleb Whitefoord, a wine merchant in Craven Street, and an excellent
-connoisseur in old pictures, was one of the legacy-hunters who infested
-the studio of Nollekens, the miserly sculptor of Mortimer Street. He was a
-foppish dresser, and was remarkable for a dashing three-cornered hat, with
-a sparkling black button and a loop upon a rosette. He wore a wig with
-five tiers of curls, of the Garrick cut, and he was one of the last to
-wear such a monstrosity. This crafty wine merchant used to distribute
-privately the most whimsical of his _Cross Readings_, _Ship News_, and
-_Mistakes of the Press_--things in their day very popular, though now
-surpassed in every number of _Punch_. Some of the best were the
-following:--"Yesterday Dr. Pretyman preached at St. James's,--and
-performed it with ease in less than sixteen minutes." "Several changes are
-talked of at Court,--consisting of 9050 triple bob-majors." "Dr. Solander
-will, by Her Majesty's command, undertake a voyage--round the head-dress
-of the present month." "Sunday night.--Many noble families were
-alarmed--by the constable of the ward, who apprehended them at cards." A
-simple-hearted age could laugh heartily at these things: would that we
-could!
-
-It has often been asserted that Goldsmith's epitaph on Whitefoord was
-written by the wine merchant himself, and sent to the editor of the fifth
-edition of the Poems by a convenient common friend. It is not very
-pointed, and the length of the epitaph is certainly singular,
-considering that the poet dismissed Burke and Reynolds in less than
-eighteen lines.
-
-Adam built an octagon room in Whitefoord's house in order to give his
-pictures an equal light; and Mr. Christie adopted the idea when he fitted
-up his large room in King Street, St. James's.[249]
-
-Goldsmith is said to have been intimate with witty, punning Caleb
-Whitefoord, and certain it is his name is found in the postscript to the
-poem of _Retaliation_, written by Oliver on some of his friends at the St.
-James's Coffee-house. These were the Burkes, fretful Cumberland, Reynolds,
-Garrick, and Canon Douglas. In this poem Goldsmith laments that Whitefoord
-should have confined himself to newspaper essays, and contented himself
-with the praise of the printer of the _Public Advertiser_; he thus sums
-him up:--
-
- "Rare compound of oddity, frolic, and fun,
- Who relish'd a joke and rejoiced in a pun;
- Whose temper was generous, open, sincere;
- A stranger to flattery, a stranger to fear.
-
- * * * * *
-
- "Merry Whitefoord, farewell! for thy sake I admit
- That a Scot may have humour--I'd almost said wit;
- This debt to thy memory I cannot refuse,
- Thou best-humour'd man with the worst-humour'd Muse."
-
-Whitefoord became Vice-President of the Society of Arts.
-
-Anthony Pasquin (Williams), a celebrated art critic and satirist of Dr.
-Johnson's time, was articled to Matt Darley, the famous caricaturist of
-the Strand, to learn engraving.[250]
-
-The old name of Northumberland Street was Hartshorne Lane or Christopher
-Alley.[251] Here Ben Jonson lived when he was a child, and after his
-mother had taken a bricklayer for her second husband.
-
-At the bottom of this lane Sir Edmondbury Godfrey had his wood wharf. This
-fact shows how much history is illustrated by topography, for the
-residence of the unfortunate justice explains why it should have been
-supposed that he had been inveigled into Somerset House.
-
-In 1829 Mr. Wood, who kept a coal wharf, resided in Sir Edmondbury's old
-premises at the bottom of Northumberland Street. It was here the court
-justice's wood-wharf was, but his house was in Green's Lane, near
-Hungerford Market.[252] During the Great Plague Sir Edmondbury had been
-very active; on one occasion, when his men refused to act, he entered a
-pest-house alone to apprehend a wretch who had stolen at least a thousand
-winding-sheets. Four medals were struck on his death. There is also a
-portrait of the unlucky woodmonger in the waiting-room adjoining the
-Vestry of St. Martin's-in-the-Fields.[253] He wore, it seems, a full black
-wig, like Charles II.
-
-Three men were tried for his murder--the cushion-man at the Queen's
-Chapel, the servant of the treasurer of the chapel, and the porter of
-Somerset House. The truculent Scroggs tried the accused, and those
-infamous men, Oates, Prance, and Bedloe, were the false witnesses who
-murdered them. The prisoners were all executed. Sir Edmondbury's corpse
-was embalmed and borne to its funeral at St. Martin's from Bridewell. The
-pall was supported by eight knights, all justices of the peace, and the
-aldermen of London followed the coffin. Twenty-two ministers marched
-before the body, and a great Protestant mob followed. Dr. William Lloyd
-preached the funeral sermon from the text 2 Sam. iii. 24. The preacher was
-guarded in the pulpit by two clergymen armed with "Protestant flails."
-
-[Illustration: YORK STAIRS, WITH THE HOUSES OF PEPYS AND PETER THE GREAT,
-AFTER CANALETTI (CIRCA 1745).]
-
-In July 1861, No. 16 Northumberland Street, then an old-fashioned,
-dingy-looking house, with narrow windows, which had been divided into
-chambers, was the scene of a fight for life and death between Major Murray
-and Mr. Roberts, a solicitor and bill-discounter; the latter attempted the
-life of the former for the sake of getting possession of his mistress, to
-whom he had lent money. Under pretext of advancing a loan to the Grosvenor
-Hotel Company, of which the major was a promoter, he decoyed him into a
-back room on the first floor of No. 16, then shot him in the back of the
-neck, and immediately after in the right temple. The major, feigning to be
-dead, waited till Roberts's back was turned, then springing to his feet
-attacked him with a pair of tongs, which he broke to pieces over his
-assailant's head. He then knocked him down with a bottle which lay near,
-and escaped through the window, and from thence by a water-pipe to the
-ground. Roberts died soon afterwards, but Major Murray recovered, and the
-jury returning a verdict of "Justifiable Homicide," he was released. The
-papers described Roberts's rooms as crowded with dusty Buhl cabinets,
-inlaid tables, statuettes, and drawings. These were smeared with blood and
-wine, while on the glass shades of the ornaments a rain of blood seemed
-to have fallen.
-
-The embankment, which here is very wide, and includes several acres of
-garden on the spot where the Thames once flowed, has largely altered the
-character of the streets below the Strand and the river, destroying the
-picturesque wharves and spoiling the appearance of the Water Gate, which
-is half buried in gravel and flowers, like the Sphynx in Egypt. Between it
-and the Thames now stands Cleopatra's Needle, brought over to England at
-great cost of money and life, and set up here in 1878.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: CROCKFORD'S FISH SHOP.]
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
- THE NORTH SIDE OF THE STRAND, FROM TEMPLE BAR TO CHARING CROSS, WITH
- DIGRESSIONS ON THE SOUTH.
-
-
-The upper stratum of the Strand soil is composed of a reddish yellow
-earth, containing coprolites. Below this runs a seam of leaden-coloured
-clay, mixed with a few martial pyrites, calcined-looking lumps of iron
-and sulphur with a bright silvery fracture.
-
-A petition of the inhabitants of the vicinity of the King's Palace at
-Westminster (8 Edward II.) represents the footway from Temple Bar to their
-neighbourhood as so bad that both rich and poor men received constant
-damage, especially in the rainy season, the footway being interrupted by
-_bushes and thickets_. A tax was accordingly levied for the purpose, and
-the mayor and sheriffs of London and the bailiff of Westminster were
-appointed overseers of the repairs.
-
-In the 27th of Edward III. the Knights Templars were called upon to
-repair[254] "the bridge of the new Temple," where the lords who attended
-Parliament took water on their way from the City. Workmen constructing a
-new sewer in the Strand, in 1802, discovered, eastward of St.
-Clement's,[255] a small, one-arched stone bridge, supposed to be the one
-above alluded to, unless it was an arch thrown over some gully when the
-Strand was a mere bridle-road.
-
-In James I.'s time, Middleton, the dramatist, describes a lawyer as
-embracing a young spendthrift, and urging him to riot and excess, telling
-him to make acquaintance with the Inns of Court gallants, and keep rank
-with those that spent most; to be lofty and liberal; to lodge in the
-Strand; in any case, to be remote from the handicraft scent of the
-City.[256]
-
-It is but right to remind the reader that within the last few years the
-whole of that part of the north side of the Strand lying between Temple
-Bar and St. Clement's Inn, including what was once known as Pickett
-Street, and extending backward almost as far as Lincoln's Inn, has been
-demolished, in order to make room for the new Law Courts, which are now
-fast rising towards completion.
-
-The house which immediately adjoined Temple Bar on the north side, to the
-last a bookseller's, stood on the site of a small pent-house of lath and
-plaster, occupied for many years by Crockford as a shell-fish shop. Here
-this man made a large sum of money, with which he established a gambling
-club, called by his name, on the west side of St. James's Street. It was
-shut up at Crockford's death in 1844, and, having passed through sundry
-phases, is now the Devonshire Club. Crockford would never alter his shop
-in his lifetime; but at his death the quaint pent-house and James I.
-gable[257] were removed, and a yellow brick front erected.
-
-That great engraver, William Faithorne, after being taken prisoner as a
-Royalist at Basing in the Civil Wars, went to France, where he was
-patronised by the Abbe de Marolles. He returned about 1650, and set up a
-shop--where he sold Italian, Dutch, and English prints, and worked for
-booksellers--without Temple Bar, at the sign of the Ship, next the Drake
-and opposite the Palsgrave Head Tavern. He lived here till after 1680.
-Grief for his son's misfortunes induced consumption, of which he died in
-1691. Flatman wrote verses to his memory. _Lady Paston_ is thought his
-_chef d'oeuvre_.[258]
-
-Ship Yard, now swept away, had been granted to Sir Christopher Hatton in
-1571. Wilkinson gives a fine sketch of an old gable-ended house in Ship
-Yard, supposed to have been the residence of Elias Ashmole, the celebrated
-antiquarian. Here, probably, he stored his alchemic books and those
-treasures of the Tradescants which he gave to Oxford.
-
-In 1813 sundry improvements projected by Alderman Pickett led to the
-removal of one of the greatest eye-sores in London--Butcher Row. This
-street of ragged lazar-houses extended in a line from Wych Street to
-Temple Bar. They were overhanging, drunken-looking, tottering
-tenements,[259] receptacles of filth, and invitations to the cholera. In
-Dr. Johnson's time they were mostly eating-houses.
-
-This stack of buildings on the west side of Temple Bar was in the form of
-an acute-angled triangle; the eastern point, nearest the Bar, was formed
-latterly by a shoemaker's and a fishmonger's shop, with wide fronts; its
-western point being blunted by the intersection of St. Clement's
-vestry-room and almshouse. On both sides of it resided bakers, dyers,
-smiths, combmakers, and tinplate-workers.
-
-The decayed street had been a flesh-market since Queen Elizabeth's time,
-when it flourished. A scalemaker's, a fine-drawer's, and Betty's
-chophouse, were all to be found there.[260] The whole stack was built of
-wood, and was probably of about the age of Edward VI. The ceilings were
-low, traversed by huge unwrought beams, and dimly lit by small casement
-windows. The upper stories overhung the lower, according to the old London
-plan of widening the footway.
-
-It was at Clifton's Eating-house, in Butcher Row, in 1763, that that
-admirable gossip and useful parasite, Boswell, with a tremor of foolish
-horror, heard Dr. Johnson disputing with a petulant Irishman about the
-cause of negroes being black.
-
-"Why, sir," said Johnson, with judicial grandeur, "it has been accounted
-for in three ways--either by supposing that they were the posterity of
-Ham, who was cursed; or that God first created two kinds of men, one black
-and the other white; or that by the heat of the sun the skin is scorched,
-and so acquires a sooty hue. This matter has been much canvassed among
-naturalists, but has never been brought to any certain issue."[261]
-
-What the Irishman's arguments were, Boswell of course forgot, but as his
-antagonist became warm and intemperate, Johnson rose and quietly walked
-away. When he had retired, the Irishman said--"He has a most ungainly
-figure, and an affectation of pomposity unworthy of a man of genius."
-(This very same evening Boswell and his deity first supped together at the
-Mitre.) It was here, many years later, that Johnson spent pleasant
-evenings with his old college friend Edwards,[262] whom he had not seen
-since the golden days of youth. Edwards, a good, dull, simple-hearted
-fellow, talked of their age. "Don't let us discourage one another," said
-Johnson, with quiet reproof. It was this same worthy fellow who amused
-Burke at the club by saying--"You are a philosopher, Dr. Johnson. I have
-tried in my time to be a philosopher too, but I don't know how it was,
-cheerfulness was always breaking in." This was a wise blunder, worthy of
-Goldsmith, the prince of wise blunderers.
-
-It was in staggering home from the Bear and Harrow in Butcher Row, through
-Clare Market, that Lee, the poet, lay down or fell on a bulk, and was
-stifled in the snow (1692).
-
-Nat Lee was the son of a Hertfordshire rector; a pupil of Dr. Busby, a
-coadjutor of Dryden, and an unsuccessful actor. He drank himself into
-Bedlam, where, says Oldys, he wrote a play in twenty-five acts.[263] Two
-of his maddest lines were--
-
- "I've seen an unscrewed spider spin a thought
- And walk away upon the wings of angels."
-
-The Duke of Buckingham, who brought Lee up to town,[264] neglected him,
-and his extreme poverty no doubt drove him faster to Moorfields. Poor
-fellow! he was only thirty-five when he died. He is described as
-stout,[265] handsome, and red faced. The Earl of Pembroke, whose daughter
-married a son of the brutal Judge Jefferies, was Lee's chief patron. The
-poet, when visiting him at Wilton, drank so hard that the butler is said
-to have been afraid he would empty the cellar. Lee's poetry, though noisy
-and ranting, is full of true poetic fire,[266] and in tenderness and
-passion the critics of his time compared him to Ovid and Otway.
-
-Thanks to the alderman, whose name is forgotten, though it well deserved
-to live,--the streets, lanes, and alleys which once blocked up St.
-Clement's Church, like so many beggars crowding round a rich man's door,
-were swept away, and the present oval railing erected. The enlightened
-Corporation at the same time built the big, dingy gateway of Clement's
-Inn--people at the time called it "stupendous;"[267] and to it were added
-the restored vestry-room and almshouse. The south side of the Strand was
-also rebuilt, with loftier and more spacious shops. In the reign of Edward
-VI. this beginning of the Strand had been a mere loosely-built suburban
-street, the southern houses, then well inhabited, boasting large gardens.
-
-There is a fatality attending some parts of London. In spite of Alderman
-Pickett and his stupendous arch of stucco, the new houses on the north
-side did not take well. They were found to be too large and expensive;
-they became under-let,[268] and began by degrees to relapse into their old
-Butcher Row squalor; the tide of humanity setting in towards Westminster
-flowing away from them to the left. As in some rivers the current, for no
-obvious reason, sometimes bends away to the one side, leaving on the other
-a broad bare reach of grey pebble, so the human tide in the Strand has
-always, in order to avoid the detour of the twin streets (Holywell and
-Wych), borne away to the left.
-
-It is probable that Palsgrave Place, on the south side, just beyond
-Child's bank, in Temple Bar without, marks the site of the Old Palsgrave's
-Head Tavern. The Palsgrave was that German prince who was afterwards King
-of Bohemia, and who married the daughter of James I.
-
-No. 217 Strand, on the south side, was Snow's, the goldsmith. Gay has
-preserved his memory in some pleasant verses. It was, a few years ago, the
-bank of those most decent of defrauders, Strachan, Paul, and Bates, and
-through them proved the grave of many a fortune. Next to it, westwards,
-is Messrs. Twinings bank, and their still more ancient tea shop.
-
-The Crown and Anchor Tavern in the Strand (south side), afterwards the
-Whittington Club, and now the Temple Club, is described by Strype as a
-"large and curious house," with good rooms and other conveniences for
-entertainments.[269] Here Dr. Johnson occasionally supped with Boswell,
-and bartered his wisdom for the flattering Scotchman's inanity. In this
-same tavern the sultan of literature quarrelled with amiable but
-high-spirited Percy about old Dr. Mounsey; and here, when Sir Joshua
-Reynolds was gravely and calmly upholding the advantages of wine in
-stimulating and inspiring conversation, Johnson said, with good-natured
-irony, "I have heard none of these drunken--nay, drunken is a coarse
-word--none of these _vinous flights_!"[270]
-
-St. Clement's is one of Wren's fifty churches, and it was built by Edward
-Pierce, under Wren's superintendence.[271] It took the place of an old
-church mentioned by Stow, that had become old and ruinous, and was taken
-down circa 1682, during the epidemic for church-building after the Great
-Fire.
-
-This church has many enemies and few friends. One of its bitterest haters
-calls it a "disgusting fabric," obtruded dangerously and inconveniently
-upon the street. A second opponent describes the steeple as fantastic, the
-portico clumsy and heavy, and the whole pile poor and unmeaning. Even
-Leigh Hunt abuses it as "incongruous and ungainly."[272]
-
-There have been great antiquarian discussions as to why the church is
-called St. Clement's "Danes." Some think there was once a massacre of the
-Danes in this part of the road to Westminster; others declare that Harold
-Harefoot was buried in the old church; some assert that the Danes, driven
-out of London by Alfred, were allowed to settle between Thorney Island
-(Westminster) and Ludgate, and built a church in the Strand; so, at
-least, we learn, Recorder Fleetwood told Treasurer Burleigh. The name of
-Saint Clement was taken from the patron saint of Pope Clement III., the
-friend of the Templars, who dwelt on the frontier line of the City.
-
-In 1725 there was a great ferment in the parish of St. Clement's, in
-consequence of an order from Dr. Gibson, Bishop of London, to remove at
-once an expensive new altar-piece painted by Kent, a fashionable
-architectural quack of that day; who, however, with "Capability Brown,"
-had helped to wean us from the taste for yew trees cut into shapes, Dutch
-canals, formal avenues, and geometric flower-beds.
-
-Kent was originally a coach-painter in Yorkshire, and was patronised by
-the Queen, the Duke of Newcastle, and Lord Burlington. He helped to adorn
-Stowe, Holkham, and Houghton. He was at once architect, painter, and
-landscape gardener. In the altar-piece, the vile drawing of which even
-Hogarth found it hard to caricature, the painter was said to have
-introduced portraits of the Pretender's wife and children. The "blue
-print," published in 1725, was followed by another representing Kent
-painting Burlington Gate. The altar-piece was removed, but the nobility
-patronised Kent till he died, twenty years or so afterwards. We owe him,
-however, some gratitude, if, according to Walpole, he was the father of
-modern gardening.
-
-The long-limbed picture caricatured by Hogarth was for some years one of
-the ornaments of the coffee-room of the Crown and Anchor in the Strand.
-Thence it was removed to the vestry-room of the church, over the old
-almshouses in the churchyard. After 1803 it was transported to the new
-vestry-room on the north side of the churchyard.[273]
-
-In the old church Sir Robert Cecil, the first Earl of Salisbury, was
-baptized, 1563; as were Sir Charles Sedley, the delightful song-writer and
-the oracle of the licentious wits of his day, 1638-9; and the Earl of
-Shaftesbury, the son of that troublous spirit "Little Sincerity," and
-himself the author of the _Characteristics_.
-
-The church holds some hallowed earth: in St. Clement's was buried Sir John
-Roe, who was a friend of Ben Jonson, and died of the plague in the sturdy
-poet's arms.
-
-Dr. Donne's wife, the daughter of Sir George More, and who died in
-childbed during her husband's absence at the court of Henri Quatre, was
-buried here. Her tomb, by Nicholas Stone, was destroyed when the church
-was rebuilt. Donne, on his return, preached a sermon here on her death,
-taking the text--"Lo! I am the man that has seen affliction." John Lowin,
-the great Shaksperean actor, lies here. He died in 1653. He acted in Ben
-Jonson's "Sejanus" in 1605, with Burbage and Shakspere. Tradition reports
-him to have been the favourite Falstaff, Hamlet, and Henry VIII. of his
-day.[274] Burbage was the greatest of the Shaksperean tragedians, and
-Tarleton the drollest of the comedians; but Lowin must have been as
-versatile as Garrick if he could represent Hamlet's vacillations, and also
-convey a sense of Falstaff's unctuous humour. Poor mad Nat Lee, who died
-on a bulk in Clare Market close by, was buried at St. Clement's, 1692; and
-here also lies poor beggared Otway, who died in 1685. In the same year as
-Lee, Mountfort, the actor, whom Captain Hill stabbed in a fit of jealousy
-in Howard Street adjoining, was interred here.
-
-In 1713 Thomas Rymer, the historiographer of William III. and the compiler
-of the _Foedera_ and fifty-eight manuscript volumes now in the British
-Museum, was interred here. He had lived in Arundel Street. In 1729 James
-Spiller, the comedian of Hogarth's time, was buried at St. Clement's. A
-butcher in Clare Market wrote his epitaph, which was never used. Spiller
-was the original Mat of the Mint in the "Beggars' Opera." His portrait, by
-Laguerre, was the sign of a public-house in Clare Market.[275]
-
-In this church was probably buried, at the time of the Plague, Thomas
-Simon, Cromwell's celebrated medallist. His name, however, is not on the
-register.[276]
-
-Mr. Needham, who was buried at St. Clement's with far better men, was an
-attorney's clerk in Gray's Inn, who, in 1643, commenced a weekly paper. He
-seems to have been a mischievous, unprincipled hireling, always ready to
-sell his pen to the best bidder.
-
-It is not for us in these later days to praise a church of the Corinthian
-order, even though its southern portico be crowned by a dome and propped
-up with Ionic pillars. Its steeple of the three orders, in spite of its
-vases and pilasters, does not move me; nor can I, as writers thought it
-necessary to do thirty years ago,[277] waste a churchwarden's unreasoning
-admiration on the wooden cherubim, palm-branches, and shields of the
-chancel; nor can even the veneered pulpit and cumbrous galleries, or the
-Tuscan carved wainscot of the altar draw any praise from my reluctant
-lips.
-
-The arms of the Dukes of Norfolk and the Earls of Arundel and Salisbury,
-in the south gallery, are worthy of notice, because they show that these
-noblemen were once inhabitants of the parish.
-
-Among the eminent rectors of St. Clement's was Dr. George Berkeley, son of
-the Platonist bishop, the friend of Swift, to whom Pope attributed "every
-virtue under heaven." He died in 1798. It was of his father that Atterbury
-said, he did not think that so much knowledge and so much humility existed
-in any but the angels and Berkeley.[278]
-
-Dr. Johnson, the great and good, often attended service at St. Clement's
-Church. They still point out his seat in the north gallery, near the
-pulpit. On Good Friday, 1773, Boswell tells us he breakfasted with his
-tremendous friend (Dr. Levett making tea), and was then taken to church by
-him. "Dr. Johnson's behaviour," he says, "was solemnly devout. I never
-shall forget the tremulous earnestness with which he pronounced the awful
-petition in the Litany, 'In the hour of death and in the day of judgment,
-good Lord, deliver us.'"[279]
-
-Eleven years later the doctor writes to Mrs. Thrale, "after a confinement
-of 129 days, more than the third part of a year, and no inconsiderable
-part of human life, I this day returned thanks to God in St. Clement's
-Church for my recovery--a recovery, in my 75th year, from a distemper
-which few in the vigour of youth are known to surmount."
-
-Clement's Inn (of Chancery), a vassal of the Inner Temple, derives its
-name from the neighbouring church, and the "fair fountain called Clement's
-Well,"[280] the Holy Well of the neighbouring street pump.
-
-Over the gate is graven in stone an anchor without a stock and a capital C
-couchant upon it.[281] This device has reference to the martyrdom of the
-guardian saint of the inn, who was tied to an anchor and thrown into the
-sea by order of the emperor Trajan. Dugdale states that there was an inn
-here in the reign of Edward II.
-
-There is, indeed, a tradition among antiquaries, that as far back as the
-Saxon kings there was an inn here for the reception of penitents who came
-to the Holy Well of St. Clement's; that a religious house was first
-established, and finally a church. The Holy Lamb, an inn at the west end
-of the lane, was perhaps the old Pilgrims' Inn. In the Tudor times the
-Clare family, who had a mansion in Clare Market, appears to have occupied
-the site. From their hands it reverted to the lawyers. As for the well, a
-pump now enshrines it, and a low dirty street leads up to it. This is
-mentioned in Henry II.'s time[282] as one of the excellent springs at a
-small distance from London, whose waters are "sweet, healthful, and clear,
-and whose runnels murmur over the shining pebbles: they are much
-frequented," says the friend of Archbishop Becket, "both by the scholars
-from the school (Westminster) and the youth from the City, when on a
-summer's evening they are disposed to take an airing." It was seven
-centuries ago that the hooded boys used to play round this spring, and at
-this very moment their descendants are drinking from the ladle or
-splashing each other with the water, as they fill their great brown
-pitchers. The spring still feeds the Roman Bath in the Strand already
-mentioned.
-
- "For men may come, and men may go,
- But I flow on for ever."[283]
-
-The hall of St. Clement's Inn is situated on the south side of a neat
-small quadrangle. It is a small Tuscan building, with a large florid
-Corinthian door and arched windows, and was built in 1715. In the second
-irregular area there is a garden, with a statue of a kneeling black figure
-supporting a sun-dial on the east side.[284] It was given to the inn by an
-Earl of Clare, but when is unknown. It was brought from Italy, and is said
-to be of bronze, but ingenious persons having determined on making it a
-blackamoor, it has been painted black. A stupid, ill-rhymed, cumbrous old
-epigram sneers at the sable son of woe flying from cannibals and seeking
-mercy in a lawyers' inn. The first would not have eaten him till they had
-slain him; but lawyers, it is well known, will eat any man alive.[285]
-
-Poor Hollar, the great German engraver, lived in 1661 just outside the
-back door of St. Clement's, "as soon as you come off the steps, and out of
-that house and dore at your left hand, two payre of stairs, into a little
-passage right before you." He was known for "reasons' sake" to the people
-of the house only as "the Frenchman limner." Such was the direction he
-sent to that gossiping Wiltshire gentleman, John Aubrey.
-
-The inn has very probably reared up a great many clever men; but it is
-chiefly renowned for having fostered that inimitable old bragging twaddler
-and country magistrate, the immortal Justice Shallow. Those chimes that
-"in a ghostly way by moonlight still bungle through Handel's psalm tunes,
-hoarse with age and long vigils"[286] as they are, must surely be the same
-that Shallow heard. How deliciously the old fellow vapours about his wild
-times!
-
-"Ha, Cousin Silence, that thou hadst seen that that this knight and I have
-seen!--Ha, Sir John, said I well?"
-
-_Falstaff_--"We have heard the chimes at midnight, Master Shallow."
-
-_Shal._--"That we have, that we have, that we have; in faith, Sir John, we
-have; our watchword was--Hem, boys!--Come, let's to dinner; come, let's to
-dinner. Oh, the days that we have seen!--Come, come."[287]
-
-And before that, how he glories in the impossibility of being detected
-after bragging fifty-five years! This man, as Falstaff says, "lean as a
-man cut after supper out of a cheese-paring," was once mad Shallow, lusty
-Shallow, as Cousin Silence, his toady, reminds him.
-
-"By the mass," says again the old country gentleman, "I was called
-anything, and I would have done anything, indeed, and roundly too. There
-was I and little John Doit of Staffordshire, and black George Barnes of
-Staffordshire, and Francis Pickbone, and Will Squele, a Cotswold man: you
-had not four such swinge-bucklers in all the inns of court again."
-
-And thus he goes maundering on with dull vivacity about how he played Sir
-Dagonet in Arthur's Show at Mile End, and once remained all night
-revelling in a windmill in St. George's Fields.
-
-A curious record of Shakspere's times serves admirably to illustrate
-Shallow's boast. In Elizabeth's time the eastern end of the Strand was the
-scene of frequent disturbances occasioned by the riotous and unruly
-students of the inns of court, who paraded the streets at night to the
-danger of peaceable passengers. One night in 1582, the Recorder himself,
-with six of the honest inhabitants, stood by St. Clement's Church to see
-the lanterns hung out, and to try and meet some of the brawlers, the
-Shallows of that time. About seven at night they saw young Mr. Robert
-Cecil, the Treasurer's son, pass by the church and salute them civilly, on
-which they said, "Lo, you may see how a nobleman's son can use himself,
-and how he pulleth off his cap to poor men--our Lord bless him!" Upon
-which the Recorder wrote to his father, like a true courtier, making
-capital of everything, and said, "Your lordship hath cause to thank God
-for so virtuous a child."
-
-Through the gateway in Pickett Street, a narrow street led to New Court,
-where stood the Independent Meeting House in which the witty Daniel
-Burgess once preached. The celebrated Lord Bolingbroke was his pupil, and
-the Earl of Orrery his patron. He died 1712, after being much ridiculed by
-Swift and Steele for his sermon of _The Golden Snuffers_, and for his
-pulpit puns in the manner followed by Rowland Hill and Whitfield. This
-chapel was gutted during the Sacheverell riots, and repaired by the
-Government. Two examples of Burgess's grotesque style will suffice. On one
-occasion, when he had taken his text from Job, and discoursed on the "Robe
-of Righteousness," he said--
-
-"If any of you would have a good and cheap suit, you will go to Monmouth
-Street; if you want a suit for life, you will go to the Court of Chancery;
-but if you wish for a suit that will last to eternity, you must go to the
-Lord Jesus Christ and put on His robe of righteousness."[288] On another
-occasion, in the reign of King William, he assigned as a motive for the
-descendants of Jacob being called Israelites, that God did not choose that
-His people should be called _Jacobites_.
-
-Daniel Burgess was succeeded in his chapel by Winter and Bradbury, both
-celebrated Nonconformists. The latter of these was also a comic preacher,
-or rather a "buffoon," as one of Dr. Doddridge's correspondents called
-him. It was said of his sermons that he seemed to consider the Bible to be
-written only to prove the right of William III. to the throne. He used to
-deride Dr. Watts's hymns from the pulpit, and when he gave them out always
-said--
-
- "Let us sing one of Watts's whims."
-
-Bat Pidgeon, the celebrated barber of Addison's time, lived nearly
-opposite Norfolk Street. His house bore the sign of the Three Pigeons.
-This was the corner house of St. Clement's churchyard, and there Bat, in
-1740, cut the boyish locks of Pennant[289]. In those days of wigs there
-were very few hair-cutters in London.
-
-The father of Miss Ray, the singer, and mistress of old Lord Sandwich, is
-said to have been a well-known staymaker in Holywell Street, now
-Booksellers' Row. His daughter was apprenticed in Clerkenwell, from whence
-the musical lord took her to load her with a splendid shame. On the day
-she went to sing at Covent Garden in "Love in a Village," Hackman, who had
-left the army for the church, waited for her carriage at the Cannon
-Coffee-house in Cockspur Street. At the door of the theatre, by the side
-of the Bedford Coffee-house, Hackman rushed out, and as Miss Ray was being
-handed from her carriage he shot her through the head, and then attempted
-his own life[290]. Hackman was hanged at Tyburn, and he died declaring
-that shooting Miss Ray was the result of a sudden burst of frenzy, for he
-had planned only suicide in her presence.
-
-The Strand Maypole stood on the site of the present church of St. Mary le
-Strand, or a little northward towards Maypole Alley, behind the Olympic
-Theatre. In the thirteenth century a cross had stood on this spot, and
-there the itinerant justices had sat to administer justice outside the
-walls. A Maypole stood here as early as 1634[291]. Tradition says it was
-set up by John Clarges, the Drury Lane blacksmith, and father of General
-Monk's vulgar wife.
-
-The Maypole was Satan's flag-staff in the eyes of the stern Puritans, who
-dreaded Christmas pies, cards, and dances. Down it came when Cromwell went
-up. The Strand Maypole was reared again with exulting ceremony the first
-May day after the Restoration. The parishioners bought a pole 134 feet
-high, and the Duke of York, the Lord High Admiral, lent them twelve seamen
-to help to raise it. It was brought from Scotland Yard with drums, music,
-and the shouts of the multitude; flags flying, and three men bare-headed
-carrying crowns.[292] The two halves being joined together with iron
-bands, and the gilt crown and vane and king's arms placed on the top, it
-was raised in about four hours by means of tackle and pulleys. The Strand
-rang with the people's shouts, for to them the Maypole was an emblem of
-the good old times. Then there was a morris dance, with tabor and pipe,
-the dancers wearing purple scarfs and "half-shirts." The children laughed,
-and the old people clapped their hands, for there was not a taller Maypole
-in Europe. From its summit floated a royal purple streamer; and half way
-down was a sort of cross-trees or balcony adorned with four crowns and the
-king's arms. It bore also a garland of vari-coloured favours, and beneath
-three great lanterns in honour of the three admirals and all seamen, to
-give light in dark nights. On this spot, a year before, the butchers of
-Clare Market had rung a peal with their knives as they burnt an
-emblematical Rump.[293]
-
-In the year 1677 a fatal duel was fought under the Maypole, which had been
-snapped by a tempest in 1672.[294] One daybreak Mr. Robert Percival, a
-notorious duellist, only nineteen years of age, was found dead under the
-Maypole, with a deep wound in his left breast. His drawn and bloody sword
-lay beside him. His antagonist was never discovered, though great rewards
-were offered. The only clue was a hat with a bunch of ribbons in it,
-suspected to belong to the celebrated Beau Fielding, but it was never
-traced home to him. The elder brother, Sir Philip Percival, long after,
-violently attacked a total stranger whom he met in the streets of Dublin.
-The spectators parted them. Sir Philip could account for his conduct only
-by saying he felt urged on by an irresistible conviction that the man he
-struck at was his brother's murderer.[295]
-
-The Maypole, disused and decaying, was pulled down in 1713, when a new
-one, adorned with two gilt balls and a vane, was erected in its stead. In
-1718 the pole, being found in the way of the new church, was given to Sir
-Isaac Newton as a stand for a large French telescope that belonged to his
-friend Mr. Pound, the rector of Wanstead.
-
-Saint Mary-le-Strand was begun in 1714, and consecrated in 1723-4.[296] It
-was one of the fifty ordered to be built in Queen Anne's reign. The old
-church, pulled down by that Ahab, the Protector Somerset, to make room for
-his ill-omened new palace, stood considerably nearer to the river.
-
-Gibbs, the shrewd Aberdeen architect, who succeeded to Wren and Vanbrugh,
-and became famous by building St. Martin's Church, reared also St. Mary's.
-Gibbs, according to Walpole, was a mere plodding mechanic. He certainly
-wanted originality, simplicity, and grace. St. Mary's is broken up by
-unmeaning ornament; the pagoda-like steeple is too high,[297] and crushes
-the church, instead of as it were blossoming from it. One critic (Mr.
-Malton) alone is found to call St. Mary's pleasant and picturesque; but I
-confess to having looked on it so long that I begin almost to forget its
-ugliness.
-
-Gibbs himself tells us how he set to work upon this church. It was his
-first commission after his return from Rome. As the site was a very public
-one, he was desired to spare no cost in the ornamentation, so he framed it
-of two orders, making the lower walls (but for the absurd niches to hold
-nothing) solid, so as to keep out the noises of the street. There was at
-first no steeple intended, only a small western campanile, or bell-turret;
-but, eighty feet from the west front, there was to be erected a column 250
-feet high, crowned by a statue of Queen Anne. This absurdity was forgotten
-at the death of that rather insipid queen, and the stone still lying
-there, the thrifty parish authorities, unwilling to waste the materials,
-resolved to build a steeple. The church being already twenty feet from the
-ground, it was necessary to spread it north and south, and so the church,
-originally square, became oblong.
-
-Pope calls St. Mary's Church bitterly the church that--
-
- Collects "the _saints_ of Drury Lane."[298]
-
-Addison describes his Tory fox-hunter's horror on seeing a church
-apparently being demolished, and his agreeable surprise when he found it
-was really a church being built.[299]
-
-St. Mary's was the scene of a tragedy during the proclamation of the short
-peace in 1802. Just as the heralds came abreast of Somerset House, a man
-on the roof of the church pressed forward too strongly against one of the
-stone urns, which gave way and fell into the street, striking down three
-persons: one of these died on the spot; the second, on his way to the
-hospital; and the third, two days afterwards. A young woman and several
-others were also seriously injured. The urn, which weighed two hundred
-pounds, carried away part of the cornice, broke a flag-stone below, and
-buried itself a foot deep in the earth. The unhappy cause of this mischief
-fell back on the roof and fainted when he saw the urn fall. He was
-discharged, no blame being attached to him. It was found that the urn had
-been fastened by a wooden spike, instead of being clamped with iron.[300]
-
-The church has been lately refitted in an ecclesiastical style, and filled
-with painted windows. There are no galleries in its interior. The ceiling
-is encrusted with ornament. It contains a tablet to the memory of James
-Bindley, who died in 1818. He was the father of the Society of
-Antiquaries, and was a great collector of books, prints, and medals.
-
-New Inn, in Wych Street, is an inn of Chancery, appertaining to the Middle
-Temple. It was originally a public inn, bearing the sign of Our Lady the
-Virgin, and was bought by Sir John Fineux, Chief Justice of the King's
-Bench, in the reign of King Edward IV., to place therein the students of
-the law then lodged in St. George's Inn, in the little Old Bailey, which
-was reputed to have been the most ancient of all the inns of
-Chancery.[301]
-
-Sir Thomas More, the luckless minister of Henry VIII., was a member of
-this inn till he removed to Lincoln's Inn. When the Great Seal was taken
-from this wise man, he talked of descending to "New Inn fare, wherewith
-many an honest man is well contented."[302] Addison makes the second best
-man of his band of friends (after Sir Roger de Coverley) a bachelor
-Templar; an excellent critic, with whom the time of the play is an hour of
-business. "Exactly at five he passes through New Inn, crosses through
-Russell Court, and takes a turn at Wills's till the play begins. He has
-his shoes rubbed and his periwig powdered at the barber's as you go into
-the Rose."[303]
-
-Wych Street derives its name from the old name for Drury Lane--_via de
-Aldewych_. Till some recent improvements were effected in its tenants, it
-bore an infamous character, and was one of the disgraces of London.
-
-The Olympic Theatre, in Wych Street, was built in 1805 by Philip Astley, a
-light horseman, who founded the first amphitheatre in London on the garden
-ground of old Craven House. It was opened September 18, 1806, as the
-Olympic Pavilion, and burnt to the ground March 29, 1849. It was built out
-of the timbers of the captured French man-of-war, _La Ville de Paris_, in
-which William IV. went out as midshipman. The masts of the vessel formed
-the flies, and were seen still standing amidst the fire after the roof
-fell in. In 1813 it was leased by Elliston, and called the Little Drury
-Lane Theatre. Its great days were under the rule of Madame Vestris,[304]
-who, both as a singer and an actress, contributed to its success. More
-recently it was under the able and successful management of the late Mr.
-Frederick Robson. Born at Margate in 1821, he was early in life
-apprenticed to a copperplate engraver in Bedfordbury. He appeared first,
-unsuccessfully, at a private theatre in Catherine Street, and played at
-the Grecian Saloon as a comic singer and low comedian from 1846 to 1849.
-In 1853 he joined Mr. Farren at the Olympic. He there acquired a great
-reputation in various pieces--"The Yellow Dwarf," "To oblige Benson," "The
-Lottery Ticket," and "The Wandering Minstrel,"--the last being an old
-farce originally written to ridicule the vagaries of Mr. Cochrane.
-
-Lyon's Inn, an inn of Chancery belonging to the Inner Temple, was
-originally a hostelry with the sign of the Lion. It was purchased by
-gentlemen students in Henry VIII.'s time, and converted into an inn of
-Chancery.[305]
-
-It degenerated into a haunt of bill-discounters and Bohemians of all
-kinds, good and bad, clever and rascally, and remained a dim, mouldy place
-till 1861, when it was pulled down. Its site is now occupied by the Globe
-Theatre. Just before the demolition of the inn, when I visited it, a
-washerwoman was hanging out wet and flopping clothes on the site of Mr.
-William Weare's chambers.
-
-On Friday, 24th of October 1823, Mr. William Weare, of No. 2 Lyon's Inn,
-was murdered in Gill's Hill Lane, Hertfordshire, between Edgware and St.
-Alban's. His murderer was Mr. John Thurtell, son of the Mayor of Norwich,
-and a well-known gambler, betting man, and colleague of prize-fighters.
-Under pretence of driving him down for a shooting excursion, Thurtell shot
-Weare with a pistol, and when he leaped out of the chaise, pursued him
-and cut his throat. He then sank the body in a pond in the garden of his
-friend and probable accomplice, Probert, a spirit merchant, and afterwards
-removed it to a slough on the St. Alban's road. His confederate, Hunt, a
-public singer, turned king's evidence, and was transported for life.
-Thurtell was hanged at Hertford. He pleaded that Weare had robbed him of
-L300 with false cards at Blind Hookey, and he had sworn revenge; but it
-appeared that he had planned several other murders, and all for money.
-Probert was afterwards hanged in Gloucestershire for horse-stealing.
-
-At the sale of the building materials some Jews were observed to be very
-eager to acquire the figure of the lion that adorned one of the walls.
-There were various causes assigned for this eagerness. Some said that a
-Jew named Lyons had originally founded the inn; others declared that the
-lion was considered to be an emblem of the Lion of the tribe of Judah.
-Directly the auctioneer knocked it down the Jewish purchaser drew a knife,
-mounted the ladder, and struck his weapon into the lion. "S'help me, Bob!"
-said he, in a tone of disgust, "if they didn't tell me it was lead, and
-it's only stone arter all!"
-
-Gay, who speaks of the dangers of "mazy Drury Lane," gives Catherine
-Street a very bad character. He describes the courtesans, with their
-new-scoured manteaus and riding-hoods or muffled pinners, standing near
-the tavern doors, or carrying empty bandboxes, and feigning errands to the
-Change.[306] The street is now almost entirely occupied by newspaper
-publishers. The _Morning Herald_, the _Court Journal_, the _Naval and
-Military Gazette_, the _Gardener's Gazette_, the _Builder_, the _Weekly
-Register_, and the _Court Gazette_, all either are or have been published
-in Catherine Street. Scott's Sanspareil Theatre was opened here about 1810
-for the performance of operettas, dancing, and pantomimes.[307] In
-September 1741 a man named James Hall was executed at the end of Catherine
-Street.
-
-The Maypole close to St. Mary's Church is said to have been the first
-place in London where hackney coaches were allowed to stand. Coaches were
-first introduced into England from Hungary in 1580 by Fitzalan, Earl of
-Arundel; but for a time they were thought effeminate. The Thames watermen
-especially railed against them, as might be expected. In the year 1634, a
-Captain Baily who had accompanied Raleigh in his famous expedition to
-Guiana, started four hackney coaches, with drivers in liveries, at the
-Maypole; but as, in the year 1613, sixty hackney coaches from London[308]
-plied at Stourbridge fair, perhaps there had been coach-stands in the
-streets before Baily's time. In 1625 there were only twenty coaches in
-London; in 1666, under Charles II., the number had so increased that the
-king issued a proclamation complaining of the coaches blocking up the
-narrow streets and breaking up the pavement, and forbade coach-stands
-altogether.
-
-Peter Molyn Tempest, the engraver of "The Cries of London," published at
-the end of King William's reign, lived in the Strand opposite Somerset
-House. "The Cries" were designed by Marcellus Laroon, a Dutch painter
-(1653-1702), who painted draperies for Kneller.[309] He was celebrated for
-his conversation pieces and his knack of imitating the old masters.
-Tempest's quaint advertisement of the "Cries" in the _London Gazette_, May
-28 and 31, 1688, runs thus:--
-
-"There is now published the Cryes and Habits of London, lately drawn after
-the life in great variety of actions, curiously engraved upon fifty
-copper-plates, fit for the ingenious and lovers of art. Printed and sold
-by P. Tempest, over against Somerset House, in the Strand."
-
-The _Morning Chronicle_, whose office was opposite Somerset House, was
-started in 1770. It was to Perry, of the _Morning Chronicle_, that
-Coleridge, when penniless and about to enlist in a cavalry regiment, sent
-a poem and a request for a guinea, which he got. Hazlitt was theatrical
-critic to this paper, succeeding Lord Campbell in the post. In 1810 David
-Ricardo began his letters on the depreciation of the currency in the
-_Chronicle_. James Perry, whose career we have no room to follow, lived in
-great style at Tavistock House, the house afterwards occupied for many
-years by Mr. Charles Dickens. _The Sketches by Boz_ of Charles Dickens
-first appeared in the columns of the _Chronicle_. The last _Morning
-Chronicle_ appeared on Wednesday, March 19, 1862. Latterly the paper was
-said to have been in the pay of the Emperor of France.
-
-No. 346, at the east corner of Wellington Street, now the office of the
-_Law Times_, the _Queen_, and the _Field_, was Doyley's celebrated
-warehouse for woollen articles. Dryden, in his _Kind Keeper_, speaks of
-"Doyley" petticoats; Steele, in his _Guardian_,[310] of his "Doyley" suit;
-while Gay, in the _Trivia_, describes a "Doyley" as a poor defence against
-the cold.
-
-Doyley's warehouse stood on the ancient site of Wimbledon House, built by
-Sir Edward Cecil, son to the first Earl of Exeter, and created Viscount
-Wimbledon by Charles I. The house was burnt to the ground in 1628, and the
-day before the viscount had had part of his house at Wimbledon
-accidentally blown up by gunpowder. Pennant, when a boy, was brought by
-his mother to a large glass shop, a little beyond Wimbledon House; the old
-man who kept it remembered Nell Gwynne coming to the shop when he was an
-apprentice; her footman, a country lad, got fighting in the street with
-some men who had abused his mistress.[311]
-
-Mr. Doyley was a much respected warehouseman of Dr. Johnson's time, whose
-family had resided in their great old house, next to Hodsall the banker's,
-at the corner of Wellington Street, ever since Queen Anne's time. The
-dessert napkins called Doyleys derived their name from this firm. Mr.
-Doyley's house was built by Inigo Jones, and forms a prominent feature in
-old engravings of the Strand, as it had a covered entrance that ran out
-like a promontory into the carriage-way. It was pulled down about
-1782.[312] Mr. Doyley, a man of humour and a friend of Garrick and
-Sterne, was a frequenter of the Precinct Club, held at the Turk's Head,
-opposite his own house. The rector of St. Mary's attended the same club,
-and enjoyed the seat of honour next the fire.
-
-[Illustration: THE OLD ROMAN BATH, STRAND.]
-
-Not far from this stood the Strand Bridge, which crossed the street, and
-received the streams flowing from the higher grounds down Catharine Street
-to the Thames. Strand Lane, hard by on the south, famous still for its old
-Roman bath, passed under the arch, and led to a water stair or landing
-pier. Addison, in his bright pleasant way, describes landing there one
-morning with ten sail of apricot boats, after having put in at Nine Elms
-for melons, consigned by Mr. Cuffe of that place to Sarah Sewell and
-Company at their stall in Covent Garden.[313]
-
-The _Morning Post_, whose office is in Wellington Street, was started in
-1772; when almost defunct it was bought in 1796 by Daniel Stuart, and
-Christie the auctioneer, who gave only L600 for copyright, house, and
-plant. Coleridge, Southey, Lamb, Wordsworth, and Mackintosh all wrote for
-Stuart's paper. Coleridge commenced his political papers in 1797, and on
-his return from Germany (November 1799) joined the badly-paid staff, but
-refused to become a parliamentary reporter. Fox declared in the House of
-Commons that Coleridge's essays had led to the rupture of the peace of
-Amiens, an announcement which led to a pursuit by a French frigate, when
-the poet left Rome, where he then was, and sailed from Leghorn. Lamb wrote
-facetious paragraphs at sixpence a-piece.[314] The _Morning Post_ soon
-became second only to the _Chronicle_, and the great paper for
-booksellers' advertisements. It is mentioned by Byron as the organ of the
-aristocracy and of West End society, and it has maintained that position
-to the present time with little change.
-
-The _Athenaeum_, whose office is in Wellington Street, is identified with
-the name of Mr. (afterwards) Sir C. Wentworth Dilke. He was born in 1789,
-and was originally in the Navy Pay Office. He bought the paper, which had
-been unsuccessful since 1828 under its originator, that shifty adventurer,
-Mr. J. S. Buckingham, and also under Mr. John Sterling. Under his care it
-gradually grew into a sound property, and became what it now is, the
-_Times_ of weekly papers. Its editor, Mr. Hervey, the author of many
-well-known poems, was replaced in 1853 by Mr. Hepworth Dixon, under whom
-it steadily throve, till his retirement in 1871.
-
-A little farther up the street is the office of _All the Year Round_, a
-weekly periodical which, in 1859, took the place of _Household Words_,
-started by Mr. Charles Dickens in 1850. It contains essays by the best
-writers of the day, graphic descriptions of current events, and continuous
-stories. Mrs. Gaskell, Mr. Wilkie Collins, Charles Reade, Lord Lytton,
-Mr. Sala, and Mr. Dickens himself, are among those who have published
-novels in its pages.
-
-The original Lyceum was built in 1765 as an exhibition-room for the
-Society of Arts, by Mr. James Payne, an architect, on ground once
-belonging to Exeter House. The society splitting, and the Royal Academy
-being founded at Somerset House in 1768, the Lyceum Society became
-insolvent. Mr. Lingham, a breeches-maker, then purchased the room, and let
-it out to Flockton for his Puppet-show and other amusements. About 1794
-Dr. Arnold partly rebuilt it as a theatre, but could not obtain a licence
-through the opposition of the winter houses.[315] It was next door to the
-shop of Millar the publisher.
-
-The Lyceum in 1789-94 was the arena of all experimenters--of Charles
-Dibdin and his "Sans Souci," of the ex-soldier Astley's feats of
-horsemanship, of Cartwright's "Musical Glasses," of Philipstal's
-successful "Phantasmagoria." Lonsdale's "Egyptiana" (paintings of Egyptian
-scenes, by Porter, Mulready, Pugh, and Cristall), with a lecture, was a
-failure. Here Ker Porter exhibited his large pictures of Lodi, Acre, and
-the siege of Seringapatam. Then came Palmer with his "Portraits," Collins
-with his "Evening Brush," Incledon with his "Voyage to India," Bologna
-with his "Phantascopia," and Lloyd with his "Astronomical Exhibition."
-Subscription concerts, amateur theatricals, debating societies, and
-schools of defence were also tried here. One day it was a Roman Catholic
-chapel; next day the "Panther Mare and Colt," the "White Negro Girl," or
-the "Porcupine Man" held their levee of dupes and gapers in its changeful
-rooms.[316]
-
-In 1809 Dr. Arnold's son obtained a licence for an English opera-house.
-Shortly afterwards the Drury Lane company commenced performing here, their
-own theatre having been burnt. Mr. T. Sheridan was then manager. In 1815
-Mr. Arnold erected the predecessor of the present theatre, on an enlarged
-scale, at an expense of nearly L80,000, and it was opened in 1816. In 1817
-the experiment of two short performances on the same evening was
-unsuccessfully tried. On April 1, 1818, Mr. Mathews, the great comedian,
-began here his entertainment called "Mail-coach Adventures," which ran
-forty nights.
-
-The Beef-steak Club was established in the reign of Queen Anne (before
-1709).[317] The _Spectator_ mentions it, 1710-11. The club met in a noble
-room at the top of Covent Garden Theatre, and never partook of any dish
-but beef-steaks. Their Providore was their president and wore their badge,
-a small gold gridiron, hung round his neck by a green silk riband.[318]
-Estcourt had been a tavern-keeper, and is mentioned in a poem of
-Parnell's, who was himself too fond of wine. He died in 1712. Steele gives
-a delightful sketch of him. He had an excellent judgment, he was a great
-mimic, and he told an anecdote perfectly well. His well-turned compliments
-were as fine as his smart repartees. "It is to Estcourt's exquisite talent
-more than to philosophy," says Steele, "that I owe the fact that my person
-is very little of my care, and it is indifferent to me what is said of my
-shape, my air, my manner, my speech, or my address. It is to poor Estcourt
-I chiefly owe that I am arrived at the happiness of thinking nothing a
-diminution of myself but what argues a depravity of my will."
-
-The kindly essay ends beautifully. "None of those," says the true-hearted
-man, "will read this without giving him some sorrow for their abundant
-mirth, and one gush of tears for so many bursts of laughter. I wish it
-were any honour to the pleasant creature's memory that my eyes are too
-much suffused to let me go on."
-
-Later, Churchill and Wilkes, those partners in dissoluteness and satire,
-were members of this social club. After Estcourt, that jolly companion,
-Beard the singer, became president of this jovial and agreeable company.
-
-It was an old custom at theatres to have a Beef-steak Club that met every
-Saturday, and to which authors and wits were invited. In 1749 Mr.
-Sheridan, the manager, founded one at Dublin. There were fifty or sixty
-members, chiefly noblemen and members of Parliament, and no performer was
-admitted but witty Peg Woffington, who wore man's dress, and was president
-for a whole season.[319]
-
-A Beef-steak Society was founded in 1735 by John Rich, the great
-harlequin, and manager of Covent Garden Theatre, and George Lambert, the
-scene-painter.[320] Lambert, being much visited by authors, wits, and
-noblemen, whilst painting, and being too hurried to go to a tavern, used
-to have a steak cooked in the room, inviting his guests to share his snug
-and savoury but hurried meal. The fun of these accidental and impromptu
-dinners led to a club being started, which afterwards moved to a more
-convenient room in the theatre. After many years the place of meeting was
-changed to the Shakspere Tavern, where Mr. Lambert's portrait, painted by
-Hudson, Reynolds's pompous master, was one of the decorations of the
-club-room.[321] They then returned to the theatre, but being burned out in
-1812, adjourned to the Bedford. Lambert was the merriest of fellows, yet
-without buffoonery or coarseness. His manners were most engaging, he was
-social with his equals, and perfectly easy with richer men.[322] He was
-also a great leader of fun at old Slaughter's artist-club.
-
-The club throve down to about 1869, when it was dissolved; steaks were
-perennial as a dish, whatever the wit may have been, to the last.
-Twenty-four noblemen and gentlemen, each of whom might bring a friend,
-partook of a five o'clock dinner of steaks in a room of their own behind
-the scenes at the Lyceum Theatre every Saturday from November till June.
-They called themselves "The Steaks," disclaimed the name of "Club," and
-dedicated their hours to "Beef and Liberty," as their ancestors did in the
-anti-Walpole days.[323]
-
-Their room was a little typical Escurial. The doors, wainscot, and floor,
-were of stout oak, emblazoned with gridirons, like a chapel of St.
-Laurence. The cook was seen at his office through the bars of a vast
-gridiron, and the original gridiron of the society (the survivor of two
-terrific fires) held a conspicuous position in the centre of the ceiling.
-This club descended lineally from Wilkes's and from Lambert's. To the end
-there was Attic salt enough to sprinkle over "the Steaks," and to justify
-the old epicure's lines to the club:--
-
- "He that of honour, wit, and mirth partakes,
- May be a fit companion o'er beef-steaks;
- His name may be to future times enrolled
- In Estcourt's book, whose gridiron's framed of gold."[324]
-
-Its gridiron and other treasures were sold by auction, and fetched
-fabulous prices.
-
-Dr. William King, the author of the above quoted verses, was an indolent,
-wrong-headed genius. Some three years after the Restoration he took part
-against the irascible Bentley in the dispute about the Epistles of
-Phalaris, satirised Sir Hans Sloane, and supported Sacheverell. He wrote
-_The Art of Cookery_, _Dialogues of the Dead_, _The Art of Love_, and
-_Greek Mythology for Schools_. Recklessly throwing up his Irish Government
-appointment, he came to London. There Swift got him appointed manager of
-the _Gazette_; but being idle, and fond of the bottle, he resigned his
-office in six months, and went to live at a friend's house in the garden
-grounds between Lambeth and Vauxhall. He died in 1712, in lodgings
-opposite Somerset House, procured for him by his relation, Lord Clarendon.
-He was buried in the north cloisters of Westminster Abbey, close to his
-master, Dr. Knipe, to whom he had dedicated his _School Mythology_.
-
-Mr. T. P. Cooke obtained some of his early triumphs at the Lyceum as
-Frankenstein, and at the Adelphi as Long Tom Coffin. His serious pantomime
-in the fantastic monster of Mrs. Shelley's novel is said to have been
-highly poetical. He made his debut in 1804, at the Royalty Theatre, and
-soon afterwards left Astley's to join Laurent, the manager of the Lyceum.
-This best of stage seamen since Bannister's time was born in 1780, and
-died only recently.
-
-Madame Lucia Elizabeth Vestris had the Lyceum in 1847. This fascinating
-actress was the daughter of Francesco Bartolozzi, the engraver, and was
-born in 1797. She married the celebrated dancer, Vestris, in 1813, and in
-1813 appeared at the King's Theatre, in Winter's opera of "Proserpina." In
-1820, after a wild and disgraceful life in Paris, she appeared at Drury
-Lane as Lilla, Adela, and Artaxerxes, and exhibited the archness, and
-vivacity of Storace without her grossness. In a burlesque of "Don
-Giovanni," as "Paul" and as "Apollo," she was much abused by the critics
-for her wantonness of manner and dress, but she still won her audiences by
-her sweet and powerful contralto, and by her songs, "The Light Guitar" and
-"Rise, gentle Moon." Harley played Leporello to her under Mr. Elliston's
-management. After this she took to "first light comedy" and melodrama, and
-married Mr. Charles Mathews. The theatre was burnt down in 1830, and
-rebuilt soon afterwards. Madame Vestris herself died in 1856.
-
-"That little crowded nest" of shops and wild beasts,[325] Exeter Change,
-stood where Burleigh Street now stands, but extended into the main road,
-so that the footpath of the north side of the Strand ran directly through
-it.[326] It was built about 1681,[327] and contained two walks below and
-two walks above stairs, with shops on each side for sempsters, milliners,
-hosiers, etc. The builders were very sanguine, but the fame of the New
-Exchange (now the Adelphi) blighted it from the beginning;[328] the shops
-next the street alone could be let; the rest lay unoccupied. The Land Bank
-had rooms here. The body of the poet Gay lay in state in an upper room,
-afterwards used for auctions. In 1721 a Mr. Normand Corry exhibited here a
-damask bed, with curtains woven by himself; admission two shillings and
-sixpence. About 1780 Lord Baltimore's body lay here in state, preparatory
-to its interment at Epsom.
-
-This infamous lord, of unsavoury reputation, had married a daughter of the
-Duke of Bridgewater: he lived on the east side of Russell Square, and was
-notorious for an unscrupulous profligacy, rivalling even that of the
-detestable Colonel Charteris. In 1767 his agents decoyed to his house a
-young woman named Woodcock, a milliner on Tower Hill. After suffering all
-the cruelty which Lovelace showed to Clarissa, the poor girl was taken to
-Lord Baltimore's house at Epsom, where her disgrace was consummated. The
-rascal and his accomplices were tried at Kingston in 1768, but
-unfortunately acquitted through an informality in Miss Woodcock's
-deposition. The disgraced title has since become extinct.
-
-The last tenants of the upper rooms were Mr. Cross and his wild beasts.
-The Royal Menagerie was a great show in our fathers' days. Leigh Hunt
-mentions that one day at feeding time, passing by the Change, he saw a
-fine horse pawing the ground, startled at the roar of Cross's lions and
-tigers.[329] The vast skeleton of Chunee, the famous elephant, brought to
-England in 1810, and exhibited here, is to be seen at the College of
-Surgeons in Lincoln's Inn Fields. In 1826, after a return of an annual
-paroxysm, aggravated by inflammation of the large pulp of one of his
-tusks, Chunee became dangerous, and it was necessary to kill him. His
-keeper first threw him buns steeped in prussic acid, but these produced no
-effect. A company of soldiers was then sent for, and the monster died
-after upwards of a hundred bullets had pierced him. In the midst of the
-shower of lead, the poor docile animal knelt down at the well-known voice
-of his keeper, to turn a vulnerable point to the soldiers. At the College
-of Surgeons the base of his tusk is still shown, with a spicula of ivory
-pressing into the pulp.
-
-De Loutherbourg, after Garrick's retirement, left Covent Garden and
-exhibited his _Eidophusikon_ in a room over Exeter Change. The stage was
-about six feet wide and eight feet deep. The first scene was the view
-from One-tree Hill in Greenwich Park. The lamps were above the proscenium,
-and had screens of coloured glass which could be rapidly changed. His best
-scenes were the loss of the _Halsewell_ East Indiaman and the rising of
-Pandemonium. A real thunder-storm once breaking out when the shipwreck
-scene was going on, some of the audience left the room, saying that "the
-exhibition was presumptuous." Gainsborough was such a passionate admirer
-of the _Eidophusikon_ that for a time he spent every evening at
-Loutherbourg's exhibition.[330]
-
-Mr. William Clarke, a seller of hardware (steel buttons, buckles, and
-cutlery), was proprietor of Exeter Change for nearly half a century. He
-was an honest and kind man, much beloved by his friends, and known to
-everybody in Johnson's time. When he became infirm he was allowed by King
-George the special privilege of riding across St. James's Park to
-Buckingham Gate, his house being in Pimlico. He died rich.
-
-Another character of Clarke's age was old Thomson, a music-seller, and a
-good-natured humourist. He was deputy organist at St. Michael's, Cornhill,
-and had been a pupil of Boyce. His shop was a mere sloping stall, with a
-little platform behind it for a desk, rows of shelves for old pamphlets
-and plays, and a chair or two for a crony. Thomson furnished Burney and
-Hawkins with materials for their histories of music. It was said that
-there was not an air from the time of Bird that he could not sing. Poor
-soured Wilson used to be fond of sitting with Thomson and railing at the
-times. Garrick and Dr. Arne also frequented the shop.[331]
-
-The nine o'clock drum at old Somerset House and the bell rung as a signal
-for closing Exeter Change were once familiar sounds to old Strand
-residents: but alas! times are changed; and they are heard no more.
-
-It was in Thomson's shop that the elder Dibdin (Charles), together with
-Hubert Stoppelaer, an actor, singer, and painter, planned the Patagonian
-Theatre, which was opened in the rooms above. The stage was six feet wide,
-the puppet actors only ten inches high. Dibdin wrote the pieces, composed
-the music, helped in the recitations, and accompanied the singers on a
-small organ. His partner spoke for the puppets and painted the scenes.
-They brought out "The Padlock" here. The miniature theatre held about 200
-people.[332]
-
-Exeter Hall was built by Mr. Deering, in 1831, for various charitable and
-religious societies that had scruples about holding their meetings in
-taverns or theatres. It stands a little west of the site of the "old
-Change." The front, with its two massy plain Greek pillars, is a good
-instance of making the most of space, though it still looks as if it were
-riding "bodkin" between the larger houses. The building contains two
-halls--one that will hold eight hundred persons, and another, on the upper
-floor, able to hold three thousand. The latter is a noble room, 131 feet
-long by 76 wide, and contains the Sacred Harmonic Society's gigantic
-organ. There are also nests of offices and committee-rooms. In May the
-white neckcloths pour into Exeter Hall in perfect regiments.
-
-In the Strand, near Exeter House, lived the beautiful Countess of
-Carlisle, a beauty of Charles I.'s court, immortalised by Vandyke,
-Suckling, and Carew. She paid L150 a year rent, equal to L600 of our
-current money.[333]
-
-Exeter Street had no western outlet when first built; for where the street
-ends was the back wall of old Bedford House. Dr. Johnson, after his
-arrival with Garrick from Lichfield, lodged here, in a garret, at the
-house of Norris, a staymaker. In this garret Johnson wrote part at least
-of that sonorous tragedy, "Irene." He used to say he dined well and with
-good company for eightpence, at the Pine Apple in the street close by.
-Several of the guests had travelled. They met every day, but did not know
-each other's names. The others paid a shilling, and had wine. Johnson paid
-sixpence for a cut of meat (a penny for bread, a penny to the waiter),
-and was served better than the rest, for the waiter that is forgotten is
-apt also to forget.
-
-In Cecil's time Bedford House became known as Exeter House. From hence, in
-1651, Cromwell, the Council of State, and the House of Commons followed
-General Popham's body to its resting-place at Westminster.[334] It was
-while receiving the sacrament on Christmas Day at the chapel of Exeter
-House that that excellent gentleman, Evelyn, and his wife were seized by
-soldiers, warned not to observe any longer the "superstitious time of the
-Nativity," and dismissed with pity.
-
-In Exeter House lived that shifty and unscrupulous turncoat, Antony Ashley
-Cooper, Earl of Shaftesbury, the great tormentor of Charles II., and the
-father of the author of the _Characteristics_, who was born here 1670-1,
-and educated by the amiable philosopher Locke. "The wickedest fellow in my
-dominions," as Charles II. once called "Little Sincerity," afterwards
-removed hence about the time of the Great Fire to Aldersgate Street, in
-order to be near his City intriguers. After the Great Fire, till new
-offices could be built, the Court of Arches, the Admiralty Court, etc.,
-were held in Exeter House. The property still belongs to the Cecil family.
-
-That great statesman, Burleigh, Bacon's uncle, lived on the site of the
-present Burleigh Street. He was of birth so humble that his father could
-only be entitled a gentleman by courtesy. Slow but sure of judgment,
-silent, distrustful of brilliant men, such as Essex and Raleigh, he made
-himself, by unremitting skill, assiduity, and fidelity, the most trusted
-and powerful person in Queen Elizabeth's privy council. Here, fresh from
-his frets with the rash Essex, the old wily statesman pondered over the
-fate of Mary of Scotland, or strove for means to foil Philip of Spain and
-his Armada. Here also lived his eldest son, Sir Thomas Cecil, subsequently
-the second Lord Burleigh and Earl of Exeter, who died 1622, whose daughter
-married the heir of Lord Chancellor Hatton, the dancing chancellor.
-Burleigh Street replaced the old house in 1678, when Salisbury Street was
-built.
-
-The "Little Adelphi" Theatre was opened in 1806 under the name of the
-"Sans Souci" by Mr. John Scott, a celebrated colour-maker, famous for a
-certain fashionable blue dye. The entertainments (optical and mechanical)
-were varied by songs, recitations, and dances, the proprietor's daughter
-being a clever amateur actress. Its real success did not begin till 1821,
-when Pierce Egan's dull and rather vulgar book of London low life, _Tom
-and Jerry_, was dramatised--Wrench as Tom, Reeve as Jerry. Subsequently
-Power, the best Irishman that trod the boards in London, appeared here in
-melodrama. In 1826 Terry and Yates became joint lessees and managers.
-Ballantyne and Scott backed up Terry, Sir Walter being always eager for
-money. Scott eventually had to pay L1750 for the speculative printer; he
-seems from the outset to have entertained fears of Terry's failure.[335]
-Here Keely too made his first hit as Jemmy Green.
-
-In 1839 Mr. Rice, "the original Jim Crow," was playing at the
-Adelphi.[336] This Mr. Rice was an American actor who had studied the
-drolleries of the Negro singers and dancers, especially those of one Jim
-Crow, an old boatman who hung about the wharfs of Vicksburg, the same town
-on the Mississippi that has lately stood so severe a siege. He initiated
-among us negro tunes and negro dances. This was the fatal beginning of
-those "negro entertainments," falsely so called.
-
-In 1808 Mr. Mathews gave his first entertainment, "The Mail-coach
-Adventures," at Hull. Mr. James Smith had strung together some sketches of
-character, and written for him those two celebrated comic songs, "The Mail
-Coach" and "Bartholomew Fair." In 1818 Mr. Mathews, unfortunately for his
-peace of mind, sold himself for seven years to a very sharp practiser, Mr.
-Arnold, of the Lyceum, for L1000 a year, liable to the deduction of L200
-fine for any non-appearance. This becoming unbearable, Mr. Arnold made a
-new agreement, by which he took to himself L40 every night, and shared the
-rest with Mr. Mathews, who also paid half the expenses.[337] The shrewd
-manager made L30,000 by this first speculation. Rivalling Mr. Dibdin, the
-wonderful mimic appeared in plain evening dress with no other apparent
-preparation than a drawing-room scene, a small table covered with a green
-cloth, and two lamps. His first entertainment included "Fond Barney, the
-Yorkshire Idiot" and the "Song of the Royal Visitors," full of droll
-Russian names. In 1819 he produced "The Trip to Paris." In 1820 he brought
-out "The Country Cousins," with the two celebrated comic songs, "The White
-Horse Cellar," and "O, what a Town!--what a Wonderful Metropolis!" both
-full of the most honest and boisterous fun. In 1821 Peake wrote for him
-the "Polly Packet," introducing a caricature of Major Thornton, the great
-sportsman, as Major Longbow. The entertainment was called "Earth, Air, and
-Water," and contained the song of "The Steam-Boat."
-
-In 1824 Mr. Mathews gave his "Trip to America," with Yankee songs, negro
-imitations, and that fine bit of pathos, "M. Mallet at the Post-Office."
-In 1825 appeared his "memorandum Book," and in 1826 his "Invitations,"
-with the "Ruined Yorkshire Gambler (Harry Ardourly)," and "A Civic Water
-Party."
-
-In 1828 he opened the Adelphi Theatre in partnership with Mr. Yates,
-playing the drunken Tinker in Mr. Buckstone's "May Queen," and singing
-that prince of comic songs, "The Humours of a Country Fair," written for
-him by his son Charles. Mr. Moncrief wrote his "Spring Meeting for 1829,"
-and Mr. Peake his "Comic Annual for 1830." In 1831 his son Charles aided
-Mr. Peake in producing an entertainment, and again in 1832. In 1833 his
-health began to fail; he lost much money in bubble companies, and had an
-action brought against him for L30,000. In 1833 Mr. Peake and Mr. Charles
-Mathews wrote the "At Home." Subsequently the great mimic went to
-America, whence he returned in 1838, only to die a few months after.[338]
-
-Leigh Hunt praises Mr. Mathews's valets and old men, but condemns his
-nervous restlessness and redundance of bodily action. While Munden,
-Liston, and Fawcett could not conceal their voices, Mathews rivalled
-Bannister in his powers of mimicry. His delineation of old age was
-remarkable for its truthfulness and variety. Leigh Hunt confesses that
-till Mathews acted Sir Fretful Plagiary, he had ranked him as an actor of
-habits and not of passions, and far inferior to Bannister and Dowton; but
-the extraordinary blending of vexation and conceit in Sheridan's
-caricature of Cumberland proved Mathews, Mr. Hunt allowed, to be an actor
-who knew the human heart.[339]
-
-In 1820 Hazlitt criticised Mathews's third entertainment, "The Country
-Cousins," a melange of songs, narrative, ventriloquism, imitations, and
-character stories. He had left Covent Garden on the ground that he had not
-sufficiently frequent opportunities for appearing in legitimate comedy.
-The severe critic says, "Mr. Mathews shines particularly neither as an
-actor nor a mimic of actors; but his forte is a certain general tact and
-versatility of comic power. You would say he is a clever performer--you
-would guess he is a cleverer man. His talents are not pure, but mixed. He
-is best when he is his own prompter, manager, performer, orchestra, and
-scene-shifter."[340]
-
-Hazlitt then goes on to accuse his "subject" of a want of taste, of his
-gross and often superficial surprises, and of his too restless disquietude
-to please. "Take from him," says Hazlitt, "his odd shuffle in the gait, a
-restless volubility of speech and motion, a sudden suppression of
-features, or the continued repetition of a cant phrase with unabated
-vigour, and you reduce him to almost total insignificance." It should be
-said that his "shuffle" was rather a "limp."
-
-As a mimic of other actors, the same writer says Mathews often failed. He
-gabbled like Incledon, entangled himself like Tait Wilkinson, croaked like
-Suett, lisped like Young, but he could make nothing of John Kemble's
-"expressive, silver-tongued cadences." He blames him more especially for
-turning nature into pantomime and grimace, and dealing too much with
-worn-out topics, like Cockneyisms, French blunders, or the ignorance of
-country people in stage-coaches, Margate hoys, and Dover packet-boats. In
-another place the severe critic, who could be ill-tempered if he chose,
-blames Mathews for many of his songs, for his meagre jokes, dry as
-scrapings of "Shabsuger cheese," and for his immature ventriloquism. "His
-best imitations," says Hazlitt, "were founded on his own observation, and
-on the absurd characteristics of chattering footmen, drunken coachmen,
-surly travellers, and garrulous old men. His old Scotchwoman, with her
-pointless story, was a portrait equal to Wilkie or Teniers, as faithful,
-as simple, as delicately humorous, with a slight dash of pathos, but
-without one particle of caricature, vulgarity, or ill-nature." His best
-broad jokes were these: the abrupt proposal of a mutton-chop to a man who
-was sea-sick, and the convulsive marks of abhorrence with which he
-received it; and the tavern beau who was about to swallow a lighted candle
-for a glass of brandy-and-water as he was going drunk to bed. Poor
-Wiggins, the fat, hen-pecked husband, who, unwieldy and helpless, is
-pursued by a rabble of boys, was one of his best characters. Hazlitt
-mentions also as a stroke of true genius his imitation of a German family,
-the wife grumbling at her husband returning drunk, and the little child's
-paddling across the room to its own bed at its father's approach.[341]
-
-Terry, who in 1825 joined partnership with Yates, and died in 1829, was a
-quiet, sensible actor, praised in his Mephistopheles, and even in King
-Lear. His Peter Teazle was inferior to Farren's, and his Dr. Cantwell came
-after Dowton's.
-
-Yates was born in 1797. He made his debut at Covent Garden as Iago in
-1818. He was very versatile, and triumphed alternately in tragedy,
-comedy, farce, and melodrama. A critic of 1834 says, "Mr. Yates is
-occasionally capital, and always respectable. In burlesque he is
-excellent, but a little too broad, and given to an exaggeration which is
-sometimes vulgar. He is a better buck than fop, and a better rake than
-either, were he more refined."
-
-John Reeve was another of the Adelphi celebrities. He was born in 1799,
-and was originally a clerk at a Fleet Street banking-house. He appeared
-first at Drury Lane in 1819 as Sylvester Daggerwood. His imitations were
-pronounced perfect, and he soon rose to great celebrity in broad farce,
-burlesque, and the comic parts of melodrama. Lord Grizzle, Bombastes, and
-Pedrillo, were favourite early characters of his. He was considered too
-heavy for Caleb Quotem, and not quiet enough for Paul Pry. Liston excelled
-him in the one, and Harley in the other.
-
-Benjamin Webster was born at Bath in 1800. He took the management of the
-Haymarket in 1837, and built the New Adelphi Theatre in 1858. In melodrama
-Mr. Webster excels. His best parts are--Lavater, Tartuffe, Belphegor,
-Triplet, and Pierre Leroux in "The Poor Stroller." He is excellent in poor
-authors and strolling players, and achieved a great triumph in Mr. Watts
-Philips's play of "The Dead Heart." He is energetic and forcible, but he
-has a bad hoarse voice, and he protracts and details his part so
-elaborately as often to become tedious.
-
-In 1844 Madame Celeste, who in 1837 had appeared at Drury Lane on her
-return from America, was directress of the Adelphi. She then left and took
-the Lyceum, which she held until the close of 1860-1.
-
-The old Adelphi closed in June 1858. Although a small and incommodious
-house, it had long earned a special fame of its own. It began its career
-with "True Blue Scott," and went on with Rodwell and Jones during the "Tom
-and Jerry" mania, when young men about town wrenched off knockers, knocked
-down old men who were paid to apprehend thieves, and attended beggars'
-suppers. Under Terry and Yates, Buckstone and Fitzball produced pieces in
-which T. P. Cooke, O. Smith, Wilkinson, and Tyrone Power shone (this
-actor was drowned in 1841). There also flourished Wright, Paul Bedford,
-Mrs. Yates, and Mrs. Keeley, in "The Pilot," "The Flying Dutchman," "The
-Wreck Ashore," "Victorine," "Rory O'More," and "Jack Sheppard,"[342]--the
-last of these a play to be branded as a demoralising apotheosis of a
-clever thief.
-
-In 1844 Mr. Webster became proprietor of the Adelphi, and Madame Celeste,
-a good melodramatic actress, became the directress. Then was brought out
-that crowning triumph of the theatre, "The Green Bushes," by Mr.
-Buckstone--a tremendous success.
-
-Among the greatest "hits" at the Adelphi have been of later years Mr.
-Watts Philips's "Dead Heart," a powerful melodrama of the French
-Revolution period, Miss Bateman's "Leah," an American-German play of the
-old school, and "The Colleen Bawn," Mr. Boucicault's clever dramatic
-version of poor Gerald Griffin's novel, full of fine melodramatic
-situations.
-
-The old town house of the Earls of Bedford stood on the site of the
-present Southampton Street, and was taken down in 1704, in Queen Anne's
-reign. It was a large house with a courtyard before it, and a spacious
-garden with a terrace walk.[343] Before this house was built the Bedford
-family lived at the opposite side of the Strand, in the Bishop of
-Carlisle's inn, which, in 1598, was called Russell or Bedford House.[344]
-In 1704 the family removed to Bloomsbury. The neighbouring streets were
-christened by this family. Russell Street bears their family name, and
-Tavistock Street their second title.
-
-Garrick lived at No. 36 Southampton Street before he went to the Adelphi.
-In 1755, to give himself some rest, he brought out a magnificent ballet
-pantomime, called "The Chinese Festival," composed by "the great Noverre."
-Unfortunately for Garrick, war had just broken out between England and
-France, and the pit and gallery condemned the Popish dancers in spite of
-King George II. and the quality. Gentlemen in the boxes drew their swords,
-leaped down into the pit, and were bruised and beaten. The galleries
-looked on and pelted both sides. The ladies urged fresh recruits against
-the pit, and each fresh levy was mauled. The pit broke up benches, tore
-down hangings, smashed mirrors, split the harpsichords, and storming the
-stage, cut and slashed the scenery.[345] The rioters then sallied out to
-Mr. Garrick's house (now Eastey's Hotel) in Southampton Street, and broke
-every window from basement to garret.
-
-Mrs. Oldfield, who lived in Southampton Street, was the daughter of an
-officer, and so reduced as to be obliged to live with a relation who kept
-the Mitre Tavern in St. James's Market. She was overheard by Mr. Farquhar
-reading a comedy, and recommended by him to Sir John Vanbrugh. She was
-excellent as Lady Brute and also as Lady Townley. She died in 1730; her
-body lay in state in the Jerusalem Chamber, and was afterwards buried in
-the Abbey. Lord Hervey and Bubb Doddington supported her pall. Her corpse,
-by her own request, was richly adorned with lace--a vanity which Pope
-ridiculed in those bitter lines--
-
- "One would not sure be ugly when one's dead;
- And, Betty, give this cheek a little red."
-
-In 1712 Arthur Maynwaring, in his will, describes this street as New
-Southampton Street.
-
-Bedford Street was first so named in 1766 by the Paving Commissioners. The
-lower part of the street was called Half-Moon Street; after the fire of
-London it became fashionable with mercers, lacemen, and drapers.[346] The
-lower part of the street is in the parish of St. Martin's in the Fields,
-the upper in that of St. Paul's, Covent Garden. In the overseers' accounts
-of St. Martin's mention is made of the names of persons who were fined in
-1665 for drinking on the Lord's Day at the Half-Moon Tavern in this
-street, also for carrying linen, for shaving customers, for carrying home
-venison or a pair of shoes, and for swearing. Sir Charles Sedley and the
-Duke of Buckingham were fined by the Puritans in 1657-58 for riding in
-their coaches on that day.[347] Ned Ward, the witty publican, in his
-_London Spy_, mentions the Half-Moon Tavern in this street.
-
-On the eastern side of the same street, in 1645, lived Remigius van
-Limput, a Dutch painter, who, at the sale of King Charles's pictures,
-bought Vandyke's florid masterpiece, now at Windsor, of the king on
-horseback. After the Restoration he was compelled to disgorge it. Had this
-grand picture been the portrait of any better king, Cromwell would not
-have parted with it.
-
-The witty bulky Quin lived here from 1749 to 1752. It was in 1749 that
-this great tragedian, reappearing after a retirement, performed in his
-friend Thomson's posthumous play of "Coriolanus." Good-natured Quin had
-once rescued the fat lazy poet from a sponging-house. It was about this
-time that the great elocutionist was instructing Prince George in
-recitation. When, afterwards, as king, he delivered his first speech
-successfully in Parliament, the actor exclaimed triumphantly, "Sir, it was
-I taught the boy."
-
-On the west side, at No. 15, lived Chief "Justice" Richardson, the
-humourist. He died in 1635. The interior of the house is ancient. Sir
-Francis Kynaston, an esquire of the body to Charles I., and author of
-_Leoline and Sydanis_, lived in this street in 1637. He died in 1642. The
-Earl of Chesterfield, one of Grammont's gay and heartless gallants, lived
-in Bedford Street in 1656. In the same street, in his old age, at the
-house of his son, a rich silk-mercer, dwelt Kynaston, the great actor of
-Charles II.'s time, so well known for his female characters. Thomas
-Sheridan, the lecturer on elocution, the son of Swift's friend, and the
-father of the wit and orator, lived in Bedford Street, facing Henrietta
-Street and the south side of Covent Garden. Here Dr. Johnson often visited
-him. "One day," says Mr. Whyte, "we were standing together at the
-drawing-room window expecting Johnson, who was to dine with us.[348] Mr.
-Sheridan asked me could I see the length of the garden. 'No, sir.' 'Take
-out your opera-glass then: Johnson is coming, you may know him by his
-gait.' I perceived him at a good distance, walking along with a peculiar
-solemnity of deportment, and an awkward, measured sort of step. At that
-time the broad flagging at each side of the streets was not universally
-adopted, and stone posts were in fashion to prevent the annoyance of
-carriages. Upon every post, as he passed along, I could observe he
-deliberately laid his hand; but missing one of them, when he had got to
-some distance he seemed suddenly to recollect himself, and immediately
-returning back, carefully performed the accustomed ceremony, and resumed
-his former course, not omitting one, till he gained the crossing. This,
-Mr. Sheridan assured me, however odd it might appear, was his constant
-practice, but why or wherefore he could not inform me." This eccentric
-habit of Johnson, the result of hypochondriacal nervousness, is also
-mentioned by Boswell.
-
-[Illustration: EXETER CHANGE, 1821.]
-
-Richard Wilson, the great landscape-painter--"Red-nosed Dick," as he was
-familiarly called--was a great ally of Mortimer, "the English Salvator."
-They used to meet over a pot of porter at the Constitution, Bedford
-Street. Mortimer, who was a coarse joker, used to make Dr. Arne, the
-composer of "Rule Britannia," who had a red face and staring eyes, very
-angry by telling him that his eyes looked like two oysters just opened for
-sauce, and put on an oval side dish of beetroot.
-
-Close to the Lowther Arcade there is one of those large cafes that are
-becoming features in modern London. It was started by an Italian named
-Carlo Gatti. There you may see refugees of all countries, playing at
-dominoes, sipping coffee, or groaning over the wrongs of their native land
-and their own exile. No music is allowed in this large hall, because it
-might interfere with the week-day services at St. Martin's Church.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: TITUS OATES IN THE PILLORY.]
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-CHARING CROSS.
-
-
-On July 20, 1864, was laid the first stone of the great Thames Embankment,
-which now forms the wall of our river from Blackfriars to Westminster. A
-couple of flags fluttered lazily over the stone as a straggling procession
-of the members of the Metropolitan Board of Works moved down to the
-wooden causeway leading to the river. For two years about a thousand men
-were at work on it night and day. Iron caissons were sunk below the mud,
-deep in the gravel, and within ten feet of the clay which is the real
-foundation of London, and the Victoria Embankment rose gradually into
-being. It was opened by Royalty in the summer of 1870. This scheme,
-originally sketched out by Wren, was designed by Colonel Trench, M.P., and
-also by Martin the painter; but it was never carried out until the days of
-Lord Palmerston and the Metropolitan Board of Works. Its piers, its
-flights of steps, its broad highway covering a railway, its gardens, its
-terraces, are complete; and when the buildings along it are finished
-London may for the first time claim to compare itself in architectural
-grandeur with Nineveh, Rome, or modern Paris.
-
-Northumberland House, which faced Charing Cross, covering the site of
-Northumberland Avenue, was a good but dull specimen of Jacobean
-architecture; it was built by Henry Howard, Earl of Northampton, son of
-the poet Earl of Surrey, about 1605.[349] Walpole attributes the building
-to Bernard Jansen, a Fleming, and an imitator of Dieterling, and to Gerard
-Christmas, the designer of Aldersgate. Jansen probably built the house,
-which was of brick, and Christmas added the stone frontispiece, which was
-profusely ornamented with rich carved scrolls, and an open parapet worked
-into letters and other devices. John Thorpe is also supposed to have been
-associated in the work; and plans of both the quadrangles of this enormous
-palace are preserved among the _Soane MSS._[350] Jansen was the architect
-of Audley End, in Essex, one of the wonders of the age. Thorpe built
-Burghley. The front was originally 162 feet long, the court 82 feet
-square; as Inigo Jones has noted in a copy of _Palladio_ preserved at
-Worcester College, Oxford.
-
-The Earl of Northampton left the house by his will, in 1614, to his
-nephew, Thomas Howard, Earl of Suffolk, who died in 1626. This was the
-father of the memorable Frances, Countess of Essex and Somerset; and from
-him the house took the name of Suffolk House, till the marriage in 1642 of
-Elizabeth, daughter of Theophilus, second Earl of Suffolk, with Algernon
-Percy, tenth Earl of Northumberland, when it changed its name accordingly.
-
-Dorothy, sister of the rash and ungrateful Earl of Essex, whose violence
-and follies nothing less than the executioner's axe could cure, married
-the "wizard" Earl of Northumberland, as he was called, whom "she led the
-life of a dog, till he indignantly turned her out of doors." He was
-afterwards engaged in the Gunpowder Plot, being angry with the Government
-that had overlooked him. "His name was used and his money spent by the
-conspirators; one of his servants hired the vault, and procured the lease
-of Vineyard House. Thomas Percy, his kinsman and steward, supped with him
-on the very night of the plot. His servant, Sir Dudley Carleton, who hired
-the house, was thrust into the Tower, and the earl joined him there not
-long after; but Cecil was either unable or unwilling to touch his
-life."[351] Northumberland, with Cobham and Raleigh, had before this
-engaged in schemes with the French against the Government. Thomas Percy
-had been beheaded for plotting with Mary. Henry Percy had shot himself
-while in the Tower, on account of the Throckmorton Conspiracy. Compounding
-for a fine of L11,000, the earl devoted himself in the Tower to scientific
-and literary pursuits, and gave annuities to six or seven eminent
-mathematicians, who ate at his table. In 1611 he was again examined, and
-finally released in 1617. The king's favourite, Hay, afterwards Earl of
-Carlisle, had married the earl's daughter Lucy against his will, which so
-irritated him that he was with difficulty persuaded to accept his own
-release, because it was obtained through the intercession of Hay.
-
-Joceline Percy, son of Algernon, dying in 1670, without issue male,
-Northumberland House became the property of his only daughter Elizabeth
-Percy, the heiress of the Percy estates. Her first husband was Henry
-Cavendish, Earl of Ogle; her second, Thomas Thynne, of Longleat, in
-Wilts, who was shot in his coach in Pall Mall, on Sunday, February 12,
-1681-2; her third husband was Charles Seymour, the _proud_ Duke of
-Somerset, who married her in 1682. This lady was twice a widow and three
-times a wife before the age of seventeen.
-
-The "proud" duke and duchess lived in great state and magnificence at
-Northumberland House. The duchess died in 1722, and the duke followed in
-1748. He was succeeded by his eldest son, Algernon, Earl of Hertford, and
-the seventh Duke of Somerset, who was created Earl of Northumberland in
-1749, with remainder, failing issue male, to his son-in-law, Sir Hugh
-Smithson, who in 1766 was raised to the dukedom. The lion which country
-cousins for two centuries remember to have crowned the central gateway of
-the duke's house, represented the Percy crest. It is of this stiff-tailed
-animal, for the exact angle of the tail is treated by heralds as a matter
-of the most vital importance, that the old story imputed to Sheridan is
-told. Probably some audacious wit did once collect a London crowd by
-declaring that its tail wagged--but certainly it was not Sheridan.
-
-Tom Thynne, or, as he was called, "Tom of Ten Thousand," was shot at the
-east end of Pall Mall, opposite the Opera Arcade, by Borosky, a Polish
-soldier urged on by Count Koenigsmark, a Swedish adventurer, son of one of
-Gustavus's old generals, and who was enraged with Thynne for having just
-married the youthful widow of the Earl of Ogle, Lady Elizabeth Percy.
-Thynne was a favourite of the Duke of Monmouth. Shaftesbury had been
-lately released from the Tower, in spite of Dryden's onslaught on him as
-"Achitophel," on the foolish duke as "Absalom," and on Thynne as
-"Issachar," his wealthy western friend. The three murderers were hanged in
-Pall Mall, but their master strangely escaped, partly owing to the
-influence of Charles II. The count, who had shown great courage at Tangier
-against the Moors, and had boarded a Turkish galley at his eminent peril,
-died in 1686, at the battle of Argos in the Morea. His younger brother was
-assassinated at Hanover, on suspicion of an intrigue with Sophia of Zell,
-the young and beautiful wife of the Elector, afterwards George I. of
-England.[352]
-
-The Earl of Northampton, Surrey's son, who built Northumberland House (as
-Osborne, who loved scandal, says with Spanish gold), seems to have been an
-unscrupulous time-server, flatterer, and parasite. In 1596 he wrote to
-Burleigh, and spoke of his reverend awe at his lordship's "piercing
-judgment;" yet a year after he writes a plotting letter to Burleigh's
-great enemy, Essex, and says: "Your lordship by your last purchase hath
-almost enraged the dromedary that would have won the Queen of Sheba's
-favour by bringing pearls. If you could once be so fortunate in dragging
-old Leviathan (Burghley) and his rich tortuosum colubrum (Sir Robert
-Cecil), as the prophet termeth them, out of their den of mischievous
-device, the better part of the world would prefer your virtue to that of
-Hercules." The earl became a toady and creature of the infamous Carr, Earl
-of Somerset, and is thought to have died just in time to escape
-prosecution for the poisoning of Sir Thomas Overbury in the Tower.[353]
-
-It was shortly before Suffolk House changed its name that it became the
-scene of one of Lord Herbert of Cherbury's mad Quixotic quarrels. His
-chivalrous lordship had had sundry ague fits, which had made him so lean
-and yellow that scarce any man could recognise him. Walking towards
-Whitehall he one day met a Mr. Emerson, who had spoken very disgraceful
-words of Lord Herbert's friend, Sir Robert Harley. Lord Herbert therefore,
-sensible of the dishonour, took Emerson by his long beard, and then,
-stepping aside, drew his sword; Captain Thomas Scriven being with Lord
-Herbert, and divers friends with Mr. Emerson. All who saw the quarrel
-wondered at the Welsh nobleman, weak and "consumed" as he was, offering to
-fight; however, Emerson ran and took shelter in Suffolk House, and
-afterwards complained to the Lords in Council, who sent for Lord Herbert,
-the lean, yellow Welsh Quixote, but did not so much reprehend him for
-defending the honour of his friend as for adventuring to fight, being at
-the same time in such weak health.[354]
-
-Algernon, the tenth Earl of Northumberland, is called by Clarendon "the
-proudest man alive." He had been Lord High Admiral to King Charles I., and
-was appointed general against the Scotch Covenanters, but, being unable to
-take the command from ill health, gave up his commission. He gradually
-fell away from the king's cause, but nevertheless refused to continue High
-Admiral against the king's wish. He treated the Dukes of York and
-Gloucester and the Princess Elizabeth with "such consideration" that they
-were removed from his care, and from that time he turned Royalist again.
-
-Sir John Suckling refers to Suffolk House in his exquisite little poem on
-the wedding of Roger Boyle, Lord Broghill, with Lady Margaret Howard,
-daughter of the Earl of Suffolk. The well known poem begins--
-
- "At Charing-cross, hard by the way
- Where we (thou know'st) do sell our hay,
- There is a house with stairs."
-
-And then the gay and graceful poet goes on to sketch Lady Margaret--
-
- "Her lips were red, and one was thin,
- Compared with that was next her chin.
- Some bee had stung it newly."
-
-And then follows that delightful, fantastic simile, comparing her feet to
-little mice creeping in and out her petticoat.[355] Sir John was born in
-1609.
-
-The oldest part of Northumberland House was the Strand entrance. This was
-crowned, as stated above, by a frieze or balustrade of large stone
-letters, probably including the name and titles of the earl and the
-glorified name of the architect. At the funeral of Anne of Denmark, 1619,
-a young man, named Appleyard, was killed by the fall of the letter S[356]
-from the house, which was then occupied by the Earl of Strafford, Lord
-Treasurer. The house was originally only three sides of a quadrangle, the
-river side remaining open to the gardens; but traffic and noise
-increasing, the quadrangle was completed along the river side and the
-principal apartments. There is a drawing by Hollar of the house in his
-time, and another, a century later, by Canaletti. The new front towards
-the gardens was spoiled by a clumsy stone staircase, which was attributed
-to Inigo Jones, but probably incorrectly.
-
-The date, 1746, on the facade referred to the repairs made in that year,
-and the letters "A. S. P. N." stood for Algernon Somerset, Princeps
-Northumbriae. The lion over the gateway was said to be a copy of one by
-Michael Angelo; it is now at Sion House, Isleworth. The gateway was
-covered with ornaments and trophies. Double ranges of grotesque pilasters
-enclosed eight niches on the sides, and there was a bow window and an open
-arch above the chief gate. Between each of the fourteen niches in the
-front there were trophies of crossed weapons, and the upper stories had
-twenty-four windows, in two ranges, and pierced battlements. Each wing
-terminated in a little cupola, and the angles had rustic quoins. The
-quadrangle within the gate was simpler and in better taste, and the house
-was screened from the river by elm trees.[357]
-
-There used to be a schoolboy tradition, prevalent at King's College in the
-author's time, that one of the niches in the front of Northumberland House
-was of copper and movable. So far the story was true; but the tradition
-went on to relate how, once upon a time, a certain enemy of the house of
-Percy obtained secret admission by this niche and murdered one of the
-dukes, his enemy. History is, however, fortunately, quite silent on this
-subject.
-
-In February 1762 Horace Walpole and a party of quality set out from
-Northumberland House to hear the ghost in Cock Lane that Dr. Johnson
-exposed, and that Hogarth and Churchill ridiculed with pen and pencil.
-The Duke of York, Lady Northumberland, Lady Mary Coke, and Lord Hertford,
-all returned from the Opera with Horace Walpole, then changed their dress,
-and set out in a hackney coach. It rained hard, and the lane and house
-were "full of mob." The room of the haunted house, small and miserable,
-was stuffed with eighty persons, and there was no light but one tallow
-candle. As clothes-lines hung from the ceiling, Walpole asked drily if
-there was going to be rope-dancing between the acts. They said the ghost
-would not come till 7 A.M., when only 'prentices and old women remained.
-The party stayed till half-past one. The Methodists had promised
-contributions, provisions were sent in like forage, and the neighbouring
-taverns and ale-houses were making their fortunes.[358]
-
-On May 14, 1770, poor Chatterton, who suffered so terribly for the
-deceptions of his ambitious boyhood, writes from the King's Bench (for the
-present) that a gentleman who knew him at the Chapter coffee-house, in
-Paternoster Row--frequented by authors and publishers--would have
-introduced him to the young Duke of Northumberland as a companion in his
-intended general tour, "but, alas! I spake no tongue but my own."[359] But
-this is taken from a most questionable work, full of fictions and
-forgeries. Its author was a Bristol man, who afterwards fled to America.
-He also wrote a series of Conversations with the poets of the Lake school,
-many of which are too obviously imaginary.
-
-On March 18, 1780, the Strand front of Northumberland House was totally
-destroyed by fire. The apartments of Dr. Percy, the Duke's kinsman and
-chaplain, afterwards Bishop of Dromore and editor of the _Reliques of
-Ancient Poetry_ were consumed; but great part of his library escaped.
-
-Goldsmith's simple-hearted ballad of _Edwin and Angelina_ was originally
-"printed for the amusement of the Countess of Northumberland." Two years
-after, Kenrick accused him in the papers of plagiarising it from Percy's
-pasticcio from Shakspere in the _Reliques_, which was probably written in
-1765.[360]
-
-It is probable that Goldsmith often visited Percy, when acting as chaplain
-at Northumberland House. Sir John Hawkins, indeed, describes meeting the
-poet waiting for an audience in an outer room. At his own audience Hawkins
-mentioned that the doctor was waiting. On their way home together,
-Goldsmith told Hawkins that his lordship said that he had read the
-_Traveller_ with delight, that he was going as Lord Lieutenant to Ireland,
-and should be glad, as Goldsmith was an Irishman, to do him any kindness.
-Hawkins was enraptured at the rich man's graciousness. But Goldsmith had
-mentioned only his brother, a clergyman there, who needed help. "As for
-myself," he added, bitterly, "I have no dependence on the promises of
-great men. I look to the booksellers for support; they are my best
-friends, and I am not inclined to forsake them for others." "Thus," says
-Hawkins, "did this idiot in the affairs of the world trifle with his
-fortunes and put back the hand that was held out to assist him." The earl
-told Percy, after Goldsmith's death, that had he known how to help the
-poet he would have done so, or he would have procured him a salary on the
-Irish establishment that would have allowed him to travel. Let men of the
-world remember that the poet a few days before had been forced to borrow
-15s. 6d. to meet his own wants.
-
-This conversation took place in 1765. In 1771, when Goldsmith was stopping
-at Bath with his good-natured friend Lord Clare, he blundered by mistake
-at breakfast time into the next door on the same Parade, where the Duke
-and Duchess of Northumberland were staying. As he took no notice of them,
-but threw himself carelessly on a sofa, they supposed there was some
-mistake, and therefore entered into conversation with him, and when
-breakfast was served up, invited him to stay and partake of it. The poet,
-hot, stammering, and irrecoverably confused, withdrew with profuse
-apologies for his mistake, but not till he had accepted an invitation to
-dinner. This story, a parallel to the laughable blunder in _She Stoops to
-Conquer_, was told by the duchess herself to Dr. Percy.
-
-It was probably of the first of these interviews that Goldsmith used to
-give the following account:--
-
-"I dressed myself in the best manner I could, and, after studying some
-compliments I thought necessary on such an occasion, proceeded to
-Northumberland House, and acquainted the servants that I had particular
-business with the duke. They showed me into an ante-chamber, where, after
-waiting some time, a gentleman, very elegantly dressed, made his
-appearance. Taking him for the duke, I delivered all the fine things I had
-composed, in order to compliment him on the honour he had done me; when to
-my fear and astonishment, he told me I had mistaken him for his master,
-who would see me immediately. At that instant the duke came into the
-apartment, and I was so confounded on the occasion that I wanted words
-barely sufficient to express the sense I entertained of the duke's
-politeness, and went away exceedingly chagrined at the blunder I had
-committed."[361]
-
-Dr. Waagen, the picture critic, seems to have been rather dazzled at the
-splendour of Northumberland House. He praises the magnificent staircase,
-lighted from above and reaching up through three stories, the white marble
-floors, the balustrades and chandeliers of gilt bronze, the cabinets of
-Florentine mosaic, and the arabesques of the drawing-room.[362] The great
-picture of the duke's collection was the Cornaro family, by Titian; I
-believe from the Duke of Buckingham's collection. It is a splendid
-specimen of the painter's middle period and golden tone. The faces of the
-kneeling Cornari are grand, simple, senatorial, and devout. There was also
-a Saint Sebastian, by Guercino, "clear and careful," and large as life; a
-fine Snyders and Vandyke; many copies by Mengs (particularly "The School
-of Athens"); and a good Schalcken, with his usual candlelight effect. The
-gem of all the English pictures was one by Dobson, Vandyke's noble pupil.
-It contained the portrait of the painter and those of Sir Balthasar
-Gerbier, the architect, and Sir Charles Cotterell. The colour is as rich
-and juicy as Titian's, the drapery learned and graceful, the faces are
-full of fire and spirit. Dobson died at the age of thirty-six. Sir Charles
-was his patron.[363] Vandyke is said to have disinterred Dobson from a
-garret, and recommended him to the king. Gerbier was a native of Antwerp,
-a painter, architect, and ambassador. This picture of Dobson was bought at
-Betterton's sale for L44.[364] The gallery of the Duke of Northumberland
-was removed in 1875, when the house was demolished, to Sion House.
-
-Northumberland House was connected with, at all events, one period of
-English history. In the year 1660, when General Monk was in quarters at
-Whitehall, the Earl of Northumberland, in the name of the nobility and
-gentry of England, invited him here to the first conference in which the
-restoration of the Stuarts was publicly talked of. Algernon Percy, the
-tenth earl, had been Lord High Admiral under Charles I.
-
-That staunch, brave, crotchety man, Sir Harry Vane the younger (the son of
-Lord Strafford's enemy), lived next door to Northumberland House,
-eastwards, in the Strand. The house in Charles II.'s time became the
-official residence of the Secretary of State, and Mr. Secretary Nicholas
-dwelt there, when meetings were held to found a commonwealth and put down
-that foolish, good-natured, incompetent Richard Cromwell. To the great
-Protector, Vane was a thorn in the flesh, for he wanted a republic when
-the nation required a stronger and more compact government. Oliver's
-exclamation, "Oh, Sir Harry Vane! Sir Harry Vane!--The Lord deliver me
-from Sir Harry Vane!" expresses infinite vexation with an impracticable
-person. Vane was a "Fifth-monarchy man," and believed in universal
-salvation. He must have been a good man, or Milton would never have
-addressed the sonnet to him in which he says--
-
- "Therefore, on thy firm hand Religion leans
- In peace, and reckons thee her eldest son."
-
-Sir Harry left behind him some very tough and dark treatises on prophecy,
-and other profound matters that few but angels or fools dare to meddle
-with.
-
-There is a foolish tradition that Charing Cross was so named originally by
-Edward I. in memory of his _chere reine_. Peele, one of the glorious band
-of Elizabethan dramatists, helped to spread this tradition. He makes King
-Edward say--
-
- "Erect a rich and stately carved cross,
- Whereon her statue shall with glory shine;
- And henceforth see you call it Charing Cross.
- For why?--the _chariest_ and the choicest queen
- That ever did delight my royal eyes
- There dwells in darkness."[365]
-
-The inconsolable widower, however, in spite of his costly grief, soon
-married again.
-
-The truth is, there are in England one or two Charings; one of them is a
-village thirteen miles from Maidstone. "_Ing_" means meadow in Saxon.[366]
-The meaning of "_Char_" is uncertain; it may be the contraction of the
-name of some long-forgotten landowner, "rich in the possession of
-dirt."[367] The Anglo-Saxon word _cerre_--a turn (says Mr. Robert
-Ferguson, an excellent authority), is retained in the name given in
-Carlisle and other northern towns to the chares, or _wynds_--small
-streets. In King Edward's time Charing was bounded by fields, both north
-and west. There has been a good deal of nonsense, however, written about
-"the pleasant village of Charing." In Aggas's map, published under
-Elizabeth, Hedge Lane (now Whitcombe Street) is a country lane bordered
-with fields; so is the Haymarket, and all behind the Mews up to St.
-Martin's Lane is equally rural.
-
-Horne Tooke[368] derives the word Charing from the Saxon verb _charan_--to
-turn; but the etymology is still doubtful, however much the river may bend
-on its way to Westminster. However, doubtless, the place was named
-Charing as far back as the Saxon times.
-
-It was Peele also who kept alive the old tradition of Queen Eleanor
-sinking at Charing Cross and rising again at Queenhithe. When falsely
-accused of _her crimes_, his heroine replies in the words of a rude old
-ballad well known in Elizabeth's time--
-
- "If that upon so vile a thing
- Her heart did ever think,
- She wished the ground might open wide,
- And therein she might sink.
-
- With that at Charing Cross she sank
- Into the ground alive,
- And after rose with life again,
- In London at Queenhithe."[369]
-
-The Eleanor crosses were erected at Lincoln, Geddington, Northampton,
-Stony Stratford, Woburn, Dunstable, St. Albans, Waltham, Cheap, and
-Charing. Three only now remain,--Northampton, Geddington, and Waltham.
-Charing Cross was probably the most costly; it was octagonal, and was
-adorned with statues in tiers of niches, which were crowned with
-pinnacles. It was begun by Master Richard de Crundale, "cementarius," but
-he died about 1293, before it was finished, and the work went on under the
-supervision of Roger de Crundale. Richard received about L500 for his
-work, exclusive of materials furnished him, and Roger L90: 7: 5. The stone
-was brought from Caen, and the marble steps from Corfe in Dorsetshire.
-Only one foreigner was employed on all the crosses, and he was a
-Frenchman. The Abbot Ware brought mosaics, porphyry, and perhaps designs
-from Italy, but there is no proof that he brought over Cavallini. A
-replica of the original cross, designed by Mr. Barry, has been erected at
-the west end of the Strand, opposite the Charing Cross Railway Station and
-Hotel.
-
-The cluster of houses at Charing acquired the name of Cross from the
-monument set up by Edward I. to the memory of his gentle, pious, and
-brave wife Eleanor, the sister of Alphonso, King of Castille. This good
-woman was the daughter of Ferdinand III., and after the death of her
-mother, heiress of Ponthieu. She bore to her fond husband four sons and
-eleven daughters, of whom only three are supposed to have survived their
-father.
-
-Queen Eleanor died at Hardley, near Lincoln, in 1290. The king followed
-the funeral to Westminster, and afterwards erected a cross to his wife's
-memory at every place where the corpse rested for the night. In the
-circular which the king sent on the occasion to his prelates and nobles,
-he trusts that prayers may be offered for her soul at these crosses, so
-that any stains not purged from her, either from forgetfulness or other
-causes, may through the plenitude of the Divine grace be removed.[370] It
-was Queen Eleanor who, when Edward was stabbed at Acre, by an emissary of
-the Emir of Joppa, according to a Spanish historian,[371] sucked the
-poison from the wounds at the risk of her own life.
-
-This warlike king, who subdued Wales and Scotland, who expelled the Jews
-from England, who hunted Bruce, hanged Wallace, and who finally died on
-his march to crush Scotland, had a deep affection for his wife, and strove
-by all that art could do to preserve her memory.
-
-Old Charing Cross was long supposed to have been built from the designs of
-Pietro Cavallini, a contemporary of Giotto. He is said to have assisted
-that painter in the great mosaic picture over the chief entrance of St.
-Peter's. But there is little ground for accepting the tradition as true,
-though asserted by Vertue, as we learn from Horace Walpole's 'Anecdotes.'
-Cavallini was born in 1279, and died in 1364. The monument to Henry III.
-at the Abbey, and the old paintings round the chapel of St. Edward are
-also attributed to this patriarch of art by Vertue.[372]
-
-Queen Eleanor had three tombs--one in Lincoln Cathedral, over her viscera;
-another in the church of the Blackfriars in London, over her heart; a
-third in Westminster Abbey, over the rest of her body. The first was
-destroyed by the Parliamentarians; the second probably perished at the
-dissolution of the monasteries; the third has escaped. It is a valuable
-example of the thirteenth century beau-ideal. The tomb was the work of
-William Torel, a London goldsmith. The statue is not a portrait statue any
-more than the statue of Henry III. by the same artist. Torel seems to have
-received for his whole work about L1700 of our money.[373]
-
-The beautiful cross, with its pinnacles and statues, was demolished in
-1647 under an order of the House of Commons, which had remained dormant
-for three years; and at the same time fell its brother cross in Cheapside.
-
-The Royalist ballad-mongers, eager to catch the Puritans tripping,
-produced a lively street song on the occasion, beginning--
-
- "Undone, undone the lawyers are,
- They wander about the town,
- Nor can find the way to Westminster,
- Now Charing Cross is down.
- At the end of the Strand they make a stand,
- Swearing they are at a loss,
- And chaffing say that's not the way,
- They must go by Charing Cross."
-
-The ballad-writer goes on to deny that the Cross ever spoke a word against
-the Parliament, though he confesses it might have inclined to Popery; for
-certain it was that it "never went to church."
-
-The workmen were engaged for three months in pulling down the Cross.[374]
-Some of the stones went to form the pavement before Whitehall; others were
-polished to look like marble, and were sold to antiquaries for
-knife-handles. The site remained vacant for thirty-one years.
-
-After the Restoration Charing Cross was turned into a place of execution.
-Here Hugh Peters, Cromwell's chaplain, and Major-General Harrison, the
-sturdy Anabaptist, Colonel Jones, and Colonel Scrope were executed. They
-all died bravely, without a doubt or a fear.
-
-Harrison was the son of a Staffordshire farmer, and had fought bravely at
-the siege of Basing; he had been major-general in Scotland; had helped
-Cromwell at the disbanding of the Rump; had served in the Council of
-State; and finally having expressed honest Anabaptist scruples about the
-Protectorate, had been imprisoned to prevent rebellion. Cromwell's son
-Oliver had been captain in Harrison's regiment.[375] As he was led to the
-scaffold some base scullion called out to the brave old Ironside, "Where
-is your good _old_ cause now?" Harrison replied with a cheerful smile,
-clapping his hand on his breast, "Here it is, and I am going to seal it
-with my blood." When he came in sight of the gallows he was transported
-with joy; his servant asked him how he did? He answered, "Never better in
-my life." His servant told him, "Sir, there is a crown of glory prepared
-for you."[376] "Yes," replied he, "I see." When he was taken off the
-sledge, the hangman desired him to forgive him. "I do forgive thee," said
-he, "with all my heart, as it is a sin against me," and told him he wished
-him all happiness; and further said, "Alas, poor man, thou dost it
-ignorantly; the Lord grant that this sin may not be laid to thy charge!"
-and putting his hand into his pocket he gave him all the money he had; and
-so parting with his servant, hugging him in his arms, he went up the
-ladder with an undaunted countenance. The cruel rabble observing him
-tremble in his hands and legs, he took notice of it, and said, "Gentlemen,
-by reason of some scoffing that I do hear, I judge that some do think I am
-afraid to die by the shaking I have in my hands and knees. I tell you
-_No_; but it is by reason of much blood I have lost in the wars, and many
-wounds I have received in my body, which caused this shaking and weakness
-in my nerves. I have had it this twelve years. I speak this to the praise
-and glory of God. He hath carried me above the fear of death, and I value
-not my life, because I go to my Father, and I am assured I shall take it
-again. Gentlemen, take notice, that for being an instrument in that cause
-(an instrument of the Son of God) which hath been pleaded amongst us, and
-which God hath witnessed to by many appeals and wonderful victories, I am
-brought to this place to suffer death this day, and if I had ten thousand
-lives I could freely and cheerfully lay them down all to witness to this
-matter."
-
-Then he prayed to himself with tears, and having ended, the hangman pulled
-down his cap, but he thrust it up and said, "I have one word more to the
-Lord's people. Let them not think hardly of any of the good ways of God
-for all this, for I have found the way of God to be a perfect way, and He
-hath covered my head many times in the day of battle. By my God I have
-leaped over a wall, by my God I have run through a troop, and by my God I
-will go through this death, and He will make it easy to me. Now, into thy
-hands, O Lord Jesus, I commit my spirit."
-
-After he was hanged they cut down this true martyr, and stripping him,
-slashed him open in order to disembowel him. In the last rigour of his
-agony this staunch soldier is said to have risen up and struck the
-executioner.
-
-Three days after, Carew and Cook were hanged at the same place, rejoicing
-and praying cheerfully to the last. As Cook parted from his wife he said
-to her, "I am going to be married in glory this day. Why weepest
-thou?--let them weep who part and shall never meet again."
-
-On the 17th, Thomas Scot perished at the same place. His last words
-were--"God engaged me in a cause not to be repented of--I say, in a cause
-not to be repented of."
-
-Jones and Scrope (both old men) were drawn in one sledge. Their grave yet
-cheerful and courageous countenances caused great admiration and
-compassion among the crowd. Observing one of his friend's children weeping
-at Newgate, Colonel Jones took her by the hand. He said, "Suppose your
-father were to-morrow to be King of France, and you were to tarry a little
-behind, would you weep so? Why, he is going to reign with the King of
-kings." When he saw the sledge, he said, "It is like Elijah's fiery
-chariot, only it goes through Fleet Street." The night before he suffered,
-he told a friend the only temptation he had was lest he should be too much
-transported, and so neglect and slight his life, so greatly was he
-satisfied to die in such a cause. Another friend he grasped in his arms
-and said, "Farewell! I could wish thee in the same condition as myself,
-that our souls might mount up to heaven together and share in eternal
-joys." To another friend he said, "Ah, dear heart! if we had perished
-together in that storm going to Ireland, we had been in heaven to welcome
-honest Harrison and Carew; but we will be content to go after them--we
-will go after." It is added that "the executioner, having done his part
-upon three others that day, was so surfeited with blood and sick, that he
-sent his boy to finish the tragedy on Colonel Jones."
-
-Hugh Peters was much afraid while in Newgate lest his spirits should fail
-him when he saw the gibbet and the fire, but his courage did not fail him
-in that hour of great need. On his way to execution he looked about and
-espied a man to whom he gave a piece of gold, having bowed it first, and
-desired him to carry that as a token to his daughter, and to let her know
-that her father's heart was as full of comfort as it could be, and that
-before the piece should come into her hands he should be with God in
-glory.
-
-While Cook was being hanged they made Peters sit within the rails to
-behold his death. While sitting thus, one came to him and upbraided the
-old preacher with the king's death, and bade him repent. Peters replied,
-"Friend, you do not well to trample upon a dying man: you are greatly
-mistaken--I had nothing to do in the death of the king."
-
-When Mr. Cook was cut down and about to be quartered, Colonel Turner told
-the sheriff's men to bring Mr. Peters nearer to see the body. By and by
-the hangman came to him, rubbing his bloody hands, and tauntingly asked
-him, "Come, how do you like this--how do you like this work?" To whom Mr.
-Peters calmly replied, "I am not, I thank God, terrified at it--you may do
-your worst."
-
-Being upon the ladder, he spoke to the sheriff and said, "Sir, you have
-here slain one of the servants of God before mine eyes, and have made me
-to behold it on purpose to terrify and discourage me, but God hath made it
-an ordinance to me for my strengthening and encouragement."
-
-When he was going to die, he said, "What, flesh! art thou unwilling to go
-to God through the fire and jaws of death? Oh! this is a good day. He is
-come that I have long looked for, and I shall soon be with Him in glory."
-And he smiled when he went away. "What Mr. Peters said further it could
-not be taken, in regard his voice was low at the time and the people
-uncivil."
-
-In May 1685 that consummate scoundrel Titus Oates came to the pillory at
-Charing Cross. He had been condemned to pay a thousand marks fine, to be
-stripped of his gown, to be whipped from Newgate to Tyburn, from Aldgate
-to Newgate, and to stand in the pillory at the Royal Exchange and before
-Westminster Hall. He was also condemned to stand one hour in the pillory
-at Charing Cross every 10th of August, and there an eye-witness describes
-seeing him in 1688.[377]
-
-In 1666 and 1667 an Italian puppet-player set up his booth at Charing
-Cross, and there and then probably introduced "Punch and Judy" into
-England. He paid a small rent to the overseers of St. Martin's parish, and
-is called in their books "Punchinello." In 1668 we learn that a Mr. Devone
-erected a small playhouse in the same place.[378]
-
-There is still extant a song written to ridicule the long delay in setting
-up the king's statue, and it contains an allusion to "Punch"--
-
- "What can the mistry be, why Charing Cross
- These five months continues still blinded with board?
- Dear Wheeler, impart--wee are all att a loss,
- Unless Punchinello is to be restored."[379]
-
-The royal statue at Charing Cross is the work of Hubert Le Soeur, a
-Frenchman and a pupil of the famous John of Bologna, the sculptor of the
-"Rape of the Sabines" in the Loggia at Florence. Le Soeur's copy of the
-"Fighting Gladiator," which is praised by Peacham in his "Compleat
-Gentleman," once at the head of the canal in St. James's Park, is now at
-Hampton Court. Le Soeur also executed the monuments of Sir George
-Villiers, and Sir Thomas Richardson the judge, in Westminster Abbey.
-
-The original contract for the brazen equestrian statue, a foot larger than
-life, is dated 1630. The sculptor was to receive L600. The agreement was
-drawn up by Sir Balthasar Gerbier for the purchaser, the Lord High
-Treasurer Weston. Yet the existing statue was not cast till 1633, and the
-above-mentioned agreement speaks of it as to be erected in the Lord
-Treasurer's garden at Roehampton; so that the agreement may not refer to
-the same work, although it certainly specifies that the sculptor shall
-"take advice of his Maj. riders of greate horses, as well for the shape of
-the horse and action as for the graceful shape and action of his Maj.
-figure on the same."[380]
-
-The present statue was cast in 1633, on a piece of ground near the church
-in Covent Garden, and not being actually erected when the Civil War broke
-out, it was sold by the Parliament to John Rivet, a brazier, living at
-"the Dial, near Holburn Conduit," with strict orders to break it up. But
-the man, being a shrewd Royalist, produced some fragments of old brass,
-and hid the statue underground till the Restoration. Rivet refusing to
-deliver up the statue after Charles's return, a replevin was served upon
-him to compel its surrender. The dispute, however, lasted many years, and
-he probably pleaded compensation. The statue was erected in its present
-position about 1674, by an order from the Earl of Danby, afterwards Duke
-of Leeds. Le Soeur died, it is supposed, before the statue was erected.
-
-Horace Walpole, who praises the "commanding grace of the figure," and the
-"exquisite form of the horse,"[381] incorrectly says, "The statue was made
-at the expense of the family of Howard, Lord Arundel, who have still the
-receipt to show by whom and for whom it was cast."
-
-There is still extant a very rare large sheet print of the statue,
-engraved in the manner and time of Faithorne, but without name or date.
-The inscription beneath it describes the statue as almost ten feet high,
-and as "preserved underground," with great hazard, charge, and care, by
-John Rivet, a brazier.[382]
-
-John Rivet may have been a patriot, but he was certainly a shrewd one. To
-secure his concealed treasure he had manufactured a large quantity of
-brass handles for knives and forks, and advertised them as being forged
-from the destroyed statue. They sold well; the Royalists bought them as
-sad and precious relics; the Puritans as mementos of their triumph. He
-doubled his prices, and still his shop was crowded with eager customers,
-so that in a short time he realised a considerable fortune.[383]
-
-The brazier, or the brazier's family, probably sold the statue to Charles
-II. at his restoration. The Parliament voted L70,000 for solemnising the
-funeral of Charles I., and for erecting a monument to his memory.[384]
-Part of this sum went for the pedestal, but whether the brazier or his kin
-were rewarded is not known. Charles II. probably spent most of the money
-on his pleasures.
-
-There is a fatality attending the verses of most time-serving poets.
-Waller never wrote a court poem well but when he lauded that great man,
-the Protector. When the statue of "the Martyr" was set up, _fourteen
-years_ after the Restoration--so tardy was filial affection--Waller wrote
-the following dull and unworthy lines about the statue of a faithless
-king:--
-
- "That the first Charles does here in triumph ride,
- See his son reign where he a martyr died,
- And people pay that reverence as they pass
- (Which then he wanted) to the sacred brass
- Is not th' effect of gratitude alone,
- To which we owe the statue and the stone;
- But Heaven this lasting monument has wrought,
- That mortals may eternally be taught
- Rebellion, though successful, is but vain,
- And kings so kill'd rise conquerors again.
- This truth the royal image does proclaim
- Loud as the trumpet of surviving fame."
-
-Andrew Marvell, one of the most powerful of lampoon writers, and the very
-Gillray of political satirists, wrote some bitter lines on the statue of
-the so-called Martyr at Charing Cross, lines which in an earlier reign
-would have cost the honest daring poet his ears, if not his head.
-
-There was an equestrian stone statue of Charles II. at Woolchurch
-(Woolwich?), and the poet imagines the two horses, the one of stone and
-the other of brass, talking together one evening, when the two riders,
-weary of sitting all day, had stolen away together for a chat.
-
- "WOOLCHURCH.--To see Dei gratia writ on the throne,
- And the king's wicked life says God there is none.
-
- CHARING.--That he should be styled Defender of the Faith
- Who believes not a word what the Word of God saith.
-
- WOOLCHURCH.--That the Duke should turn Papist and that church defy
- For which his own father a martyr did die.
-
- CHARING.--Tho' he changed his religion, I hope he's so civil
- Not to think his own father has gone to the devil."
-
-Upon the brazen horse being asked his opinion of the Duke of York, it
-replies with terrible truth and force:--
-
- "The same that the frogs had of Jupiter's stork.
- With the Turk in his head and the Pope in his heart,
- Father Patrick's disciple will make England smart.
- If e'er he be king, I know Britain's doom:
- We must all to the stake or be converts to Rome.
- Ah! Tudor! ah! Tudor! of Stuarts enough.
- None ever reigned like old Bess in her ruff.
-
- * * * * *
-
- WOOLCHURCH.--But can'st thou devise when kings will be mended?
-
- CHARING.--When the reign of the line of the Stuarts is ended."
-
-In April 1810 the sword, buckles, and straps fell from the statue.[385]
-The king's sword was stolen on the day on which Queen Victoria went to
-open the Royal Exchange.
-
-London has its local traditions as well as the smallest village. There is
-a foolish story that the sculptor of Charles I. and his steed committed
-suicide in vexation at having forgotten to put a girth to the horse. The
-myth has arisen from the supposition of there being no girth, and
-retailers of such stories, Mr. Leigh Hunt included, did not take the
-trouble to ascertain whether there was or was not a girth. Unfortunately
-for the story there is a girth, and it is clearly visible.
-
-The pedestal, by some assigned to Marshal, by others to Grinling Gibbons,
-the great wood-carver, and a Dutchman by birth, is seventeen feet high,
-and is enriched with the arms of England, trophies of armour, cupids, and
-palm-branches. It is erected in the centre of a circular area, thirty feet
-in diameter, raised one step from the roadway, and enclosed with iron
-rails. The lion and unicorn are much mutilated, and the trophies are
-honeycombed and corroded by the weather. It has not been generally
-observed that on the south side of the pedestal two weeping children
-support a crown of thorns, and that the same emblem is repeated on the
-opposite side, below the royal arms.
-
-In 1727 (1st George II.) that infamous rogue, Edmund Curll, the publisher
-of all the filth and slander of his age, stood in the pillory at Charing
-Cross for printing a vile work called _Venus in a Cloyster_. He was not,
-however, pelted or ill-used; for, with the usual lying and cunning of his
-reptile nature, he had circulated printed papers telling the people that
-he stood there for daring to vindicate the memory of Queen Anne. The mob
-allowed no one to touch him; and when he was taken down they carried him
-off in triumph to a neighbouring tavern.[386]
-
-Archenholz, an observant Prussian officer who was in England in 1784,
-tells a curious anecdote of the statue at Charing Cross. During the war in
-which General Braddock was defeated by the French in America, about the
-time when Minorca was in the enemy's hands, and poor Byng had just fallen
-a victim to popular fury, an unhappy Spaniard, who did not know a word of
-English, and had just arrived in England, was surrounded by a mob near
-Whitehall, who took him by his dress for a French spy. One of the rabble
-instantly proposed to mount him on the king's horse. The idea was adopted.
-A ladder was brought, and the miserable Spaniard was forced upon its back,
-to be loaded with insults and pelted with mud. Luckily for the stranger,
-at that moment a cabinet minister happening to pass by, stopped to inquire
-the cause of the crowd. On addressing the man in French he discovered the
-mistake, and informed the mob. They instantly helped the man down, and the
-minister, taking him in his coach to the Spanish ambassador, apologised in
-the name of the nation for a mistake that might have been fatal.[387]
-
-In June 1731 Japhet Crook, _alias_ Sir Peter Stranger, who had been found
-guilty of forging the writings to an estate, was sentenced to imprisonment
-for life.[388] He was condemned to stand for one hour in the pillory at
-Charing Cross. He was then seated in an elbow-chair; the common hangman
-cut off both his ears with an incision knife, and then delivered them to
-Mr. Watson, a sheriff's officer. He also slit both Crook's nostrils with a
-pair of scissors, and seared them with a hot iron, pursuant to the
-sentence. A surgeon attended on the pillory and instantly applied styptics
-to prevent the effusion of blood. The man bore the operations with
-undaunted courage. He laughed on the pillory, and denied the fact to the
-last. He was then removed to the Ship Tavern at Charing Cross, and thence
-taken back to the King's Bench prison, to be confined there for life.[389]
-
-This Crook had forged the conveyance, to himself, of an estate, upon which
-he took up several thousand pounds. He was at the same time sued in
-Chancery for having fraudulently obtained a will and wrongfully gained an
-estate. In spite of losing his ears, he enjoyed the ill-gained money in
-prison till the day of his death, and then quietly left it to his
-executor. He is mentioned by Pope in his 3d epistle, written in 1732.
-Talking of riches, he says--
-
- "What can they give?--to dying Hopkins heirs?
- To Chartres vigour? Japhet nose and ears?"[390]
-
-It was in this essay that, having been accused of attacking the Duke of
-Chandos, Pope first began to attack vices instead of follies, and, in
-order to prevent mistakes, boldly to publish the names of the malefactors
-whom he gibbeted.
-
-Crook had been a brewer on Tower Hill. The 2d George II., c. 25, made
-forgery a felony; and the first sufferer under the new law was Richard
-Cooper, a Stepney victualler, who was hanged at Tyburn, in June 1731, six
-days only after the older and luckier thief had stood in the pillory.
-
-In 1763 Parsons, the parish-clerk of St. Sepulchre's, and the impudent
-contriver of the "Cock Lane ghost" deception, mounted here to the same bad
-eminence. Parsons's child, a cunning little girl of twelve years, had
-contrived to tap on her bed in a way that served to convey what were
-supposed to be supernatural messages. It proved to be a plot devised by
-Parsons out of malice against a gentleman of Norfolk who had sued him for
-a debt. This gentleman was a widower, who had taken his wife's sister as
-his mistress--a marriage with her being forbidden by law--and had brought
-her to lodge with Parsons, from whence he had removed her to other
-lodgings, where she had died suddenly of small-pox. The object of Parsons
-was to obtain the ghost's declaration that she had been poisoned by
-Parsons's creditor. The rascal was set three times in the pillory and
-imprisoned for a year in the King's Bench. The people, however, singularly
-enough, did not pelt the impudent rogue, but actually collected money for
-him.
-
-There is a rare sheet-print of Charing Cross by Sutton Nicholls, in the
-reign of Queen Anne. It shows about forty small square stone posts
-surrounding the pedestal of the statue. The spot seems to have been a
-favourite standing-place for hackney coaches and sedan chairs. Every house
-has a long stepping-stone for horsemen at a regulated distance from the
-front.
-
-In 1737 Hogarth published his four prints of the "Times of the Day."[391]
-The scene of _Night_ is laid at Charing Cross; it is an
-illumination-night. Some drunken Freemasons and the Salisbury "High-flyer"
-coach upset over a street bonfire near the Rummer Tavern, fill up the
-picture, which is curious as showing the roadway much narrower than it is
-now, and impeded with projecting signs above and bulkheads below.
-
-The place is still further immortalised in the old song--
-
- "I cry my matches by Charing Cross,
- Where sits a black man on a black horse."
-
-In a sixpenny book for children, published about 1756, the absurd figure
-of King George impaled on the top of Bloomsbury Church is contrasted with
-that of King Charles at the Cross.
-
- "No longer stand staring,
- My friend, at Cross Charing,
- Amidst such a number of people;
- For a man on a horse
- Is a matter of course,
- But look! here's a king on a steeple."[392]
-
-It was at Robinson's coffee-house, at Charing Cross, that that clever
-scamp, vigorous versifier, and, as I think, great impostor, Richard
-Savage, stabbed to death a Mr. Sinclair in a drunken brawl. Savage had
-come up from Richmond to settle a claim for lodgings, when, meeting two
-friends, he spent the night in drinking, till it was too late to get a
-bed. As the three revellers passed Robinson's, a place of no very good
-name, they saw a light, knocked at the door, and were admitted. It was a
-cold, raw, November night; and hearing that the company in the parlour
-were about to leave, and that there was a fire there, they pushed in and
-kicked down the table. A quarrel ensued, swords were drawn, and Mr.
-Sinclair received a mortal wound. The three brawlers then fled, and were
-discovered lurking in a back-court by the soldiers who came to stop the
-fray. The three men were taken to the Gate House at Westminster, and the
-next morning to Newgate. That cruel and bullying judge, Page, hounded on
-the jury at the trial in the following violent summing up:--"Gentlemen of
-the jury, you are to consider that Mr. Savage is a very great man, a much
-greater man than you or I, gentlemen of the jury; that he wears very fine
-clothes, much finer than you or I, gentlemen of the jury; that he has
-abundance of money in his pocket, much more money than you or I, gentlemen
-of the jury; but, gentlemen of the jury, is it not a very hard case,
-gentlemen of the jury, that Mr. Savage should therefore kill you or me,
-gentlemen of the jury?"
-
-The verdict was of course "Guilty," for these homicides during tavern
-brawls had become frightfully common, and quiet citizens were never sure
-of their lives. Sentence of death was recorded against him. Eventually a
-lady at court interceded for the poet, who escaped with six months'
-imprisonment in Newgate, which he certainly well deserved.
-
-There is every reason to suppose from the researches of Mr. W. Moy Thomas,
-that Savage was an impostor. He claimed to be the illegitimate son of the
-Countess of Macclesfield by Lord Rivers. The lady had an illegitimate
-child born in Fox Court, Gray's Inn Lane in 1697; but this child, there
-is reason to think, died in 1698.[393] Savage imposed on Dr. Johnson and
-other friends with stories of being placed at school and apprenticed to a
-shoemaker in Holborn by his countess mother, until among his nurse's old
-letters he one day accidentally discovered the secret of his birth. There
-is no proof at all of his being persecuted by the countess, whose life he
-rendered miserable by insults, lampoons, abuse, slander, and begging
-letters.
-
-Pope has embalmed Page in the _Dunciad_ just as a scorpion is preserved in
-a spirit-bottle:--
-
- "Morality by her false guardians drawn,
- Chicane in furs, and Casuistry in lawn,
- Gasps as they straighten at each end the cord,
- And dies when Dulness gives her _Page_ the word."[394]
-
-And again, with equal bitterness and truth, in his _Imitations of
-Horace_:--
-
- "Slander or poison dread from Delia's rage,
- Hard words or hanging if your judge be Page."
-
-This "hanging judge," who enjoyed his ermine and his infamy till he was
-eighty, first obtained preferment by writing political pamphlets. He was
-made a Baron of the Exchequer in 1718, a Justice of the Common Pleas in
-1726, and in 1727 transferred to the Court of King's Bench. Page was so
-illiterate that he commenced one of his charges to the grand jury of
-Middlesex with this remarkable statement: "I dare venture to affirm,
-gentlemen, on my own knowledge, that England never was so happy, both _at
-home and abroad_, as it now is." Horace Walpole mentions that when Crowle,
-the punning lawyer, was once entering an assize court, some one asked him
-if Judge Page was not "just behind." Crowle replied, "I don't know, but I
-am sure he never was just before."[395]
-
-The various mews, now stables, about London, derive their name from the
-enclosure where falcons in the Middle Ages were kept to mew (_mutare_,
-Minshew) their feathers. The King's Mews stood on the site of the present
-Trafalgar Square. In the 13th Edward II. John de la Becke had the custody
-of the Mews "apud Charing, juxta Westminster." In the 10th Edward III.
-John de St. Albans succeeded Becke. In Richard II.'s time the office of
-king's falconer, a post of importance, was held by Sir Simon Burley, who
-was constable of the castles of Windsor, Wigmore, and Guilford, and also
-of the royal manor of Kennington. This Sir Simon had been selected by the
-Black Prince as guardian of Richard II., and he also negotiated his
-marriage. One of the complaints of Wat Tyler and his party was that he had
-thrown a burgher of Gravesend into Rochester Castle. The Duke of
-Gloucester had him executed in 1388, in spite of Richard's queen praying
-upon her knees for his life. At the end of this reign or in the first year
-of Henry IV., the poet Chaucer was clerk of the king's works and also of
-the Mews at Charing; and here, from his fluttering, angry little feathered
-subjects, he must have drawn many of those allusions to the brave sport of
-hawking to be found in the immortal _Canterbury Tales_.
-
-The falconry continued at Charing till 1534 (26th Henry VIII.), when the
-king's fine stabling, with many horses and a great store of hay, being
-destroyed by fire, the Mews was rebuilt and turned into royal stables, in
-the reigns of Edward VI. and Mary.[396]
-
-M. St. Antoine, the riding-master, whose portrait Vandyke painted,
-performed his caracoles and demi-tours at the Mews. Here Cromwell
-imprisoned Lieut.-Colonel George Joyce, who, when plain cornet, had
-arrested the king at Holmby. An angry little Puritan pamphlet of four
-pages, published in 1659, gives an account of Cromwell's troubles with the
-fractious Joyce, and how he had resolved to cashier him and destroy his
-estate.
-
-The colonel was carried by musqueteers to the common Dutch prison at the
-Mews, and seems to have been much tormented by Cavalier vermin. There he
-remained ten days, and was then removed to another close room, where he
-fell sick from the "evil smells," and remained so for ten weeks, refusing
-all the time to lay down his commission, declaring that he had been
-unworthily dealt with, and that all that had been sworn against him was
-false.
-
-There was at the Mews gate a celebrated old book shop, opened in 1750 by
-Mr. Thomas Payne, who kept it alive for forty years. It was the rendezvous
-of all noblemen and scholars who sought rare books. It may be remarked, by
-the way, that booksellers' shops have always been the haunts of wits and
-poets. Dodsley, the ex-footman, gathered round him the wisest men of his
-age, as Tonson had also done before him; while, as for John Murray's back
-parlour, it was in Byron's and Moore's days a very temple of the Muses.
-
-In Charles II.'s time the famous but ugly horse Rowley lived at the Mews,
-and gave a nickname to his swarthy royal master.
-
-In 1732 that impudent charlatan, Kent, rebuilt the Mews, which was only
-remarkable after that for sheltering for a time Mr. Cross's menagerie,
-when first removed from Exeter Change in 1829.
-
-The National Gallery, one of the poorest buildings in London (which is
-saying a good deal), was built between 1832 and 1838, from the designs of
-a certain unfortunate Mr. Wilkins, R.A. It is not often that Fortune is so
-malicious as to give an inferior artist such ample room to show his
-inability. The vote for founding the Gallery passed in Parliament in April
-1824. The columns of the portico were part of the screen of Carlton
-House--interesting memorials of a debasing regency, and, if possible, of a
-worse reign. The site has been called "the finest in Europe:" it is,
-however, a fine site, which is more than can be said of the building that
-covers it. The front is 500 feet long. In the centre is a portico, on
-stilts, with eight Corinthian columns approached by a double flight of
-steps; a low squat dome not much larger than a washing basin; and two
-pepper-castor turrets that crown the eyesore of London. Though on high
-ground--very high ground for a rather flat city--the architect, pinched
-for money, contrived to make the building lower than the grand portico of
-St. Martin's Church, and even than the houses of Suffolk Place.
-
-One of the last occasions on which William IV. appeared in public was in
-1837, before the opening of the first Academy Exhibition here in May. The
-good-natured king is said to have suggested calling the square
-"Trafalgar," and erecting a Nelson monument. A subscription was opened,
-and the Duke of Buccleuch was appointed chairman.
-
-The square was commenced in 1829, but was not completed till after 1849.
-The Nelson column was begun in 1837, and the statue set up in November
-1843. Three premiums were offered for the three best designs, and Mr.
-Railton carried off the palm. Upwards of L20,480 were subscribed, and,
-L12,000 it was thought would be required to complete the monument.[397] It
-was originally intended to expend only L30,000 upon the whole.[398] Alas
-for estimates so sanguine, so fallacious! the granite work alone cost
-upwards of L10,000.
-
-Mr. Railton chose a column, after mature reflection; although triumphal
-columns are bad art, and the invention of a barbarous people and a corrupt
-age.[399] He rejected a temple, as too expensive and too much in the way;
-a group of figures he condemned as not visible at a distance; he finally
-chose a Corinthian column as new, as harmonious, and as uniting the
-labours of sculptor and architect.
-
-The column, with its base and pedestal, measures 193 feet. The fluted
-shaft has a torus of oak leaves. The capital is copied from the fine
-example of Mars Ultor at Rome; from it rises a circular pedestal wreathed
-with laurel, and surmounted by a statue of Nelson, eighteen feet high, and
-formed of two blocks of stone from the Granton quarry. The great pedestal
-is adorned with four bassi-relievi, eighteen feet square each,
-representing four of Nelson's great victories. It is difficult to say
-which is tamest of the four. That of "Trafalgar" is by Mr. Carew; the
-"Nile," by Mr. Woodington; "St. Vincent," by Mr. Watson; and "Copenhagen,"
-by Mr. Ternouth.
-
-The pedestal is raised on a flight of fifteen steps, at the angles of
-which are placed couchant lions from the designs of Sir Edwin Landseer.
-They are forged out of French cannon. The capital is of the same costly
-material, which, considering the brave English blood it has cost, should
-have been painted crimson. Many years passed by after the commission was
-given to Sir Edwin Landseer before they were placed _in situ_.
-
-The cocked hat on Mr. Baily's statue has been somewhat unjustly ridiculed,
-and so has the coil of rope or pigtail supporting the hero.
-
-The bronze equestrian statue of George IV., at the north-east end of the
-square, is by Chantrey. It was ordered by the king in 1829. The price was
-to be 9000 guineas, but the worthy monarch never paid the sculptor more
-than a third of that sum; the rest was given by the Woods and Forests out
-of the national taxes, and the third instalment in 1843, after Chantrey's
-death, by the Lords of the Treasury. It is a sprightly and clever statue,
-but of no great merit. It should have been paid for by William IV., just
-as the Nelson statue should have been erected by Parliament, the honour
-being one due to Nelson from an ungrateful nation. This statue of George
-IV. was originally intended to crown the arch in front of Buckingham
-Palace--an arch that cost L80,000, and that was hung with gates that cost
-3000 guineas. The so-called Chartist riots of 1848 were commenced by boys
-destroying the hoarding round the base of the Nelson monument.
-
-The fountains in the centre of the Square are of Peterhead granite, and
-were made at Aberdeen. They are mean, despicable, and unworthy of the
-noble position which they occupy. Some years ago there was a fuss about an
-Artesian well that was to feed these stone punch-bowls with inexhaustible
-gushes of silvery water. This supply has dwindled down to a sort of
-overflow of a ginger-beer bottle once a day. I blush when I take a
-foreigner to see Trafalgar Square, with its squat domes, its mean statues,
-its tame bassi-relievi, and its disgraceful fountains.
-
-I will not trust myself to criticise the statues of Napier and Havelock.
-The figures are poor, and unworthy of the fiery soldier and the Christian
-hero they misrepresent. They should be in the Abbey. Why has the Abbey
-grown, like the Court, less receptive than ever? What passport is there
-into the Abbey, where such strange people sleep, if the conquest of Scinde
-and the relief of Lucknow will not take a body there.
-
-But to return to the National Gallery. Mr. G. Agar-Ellis, afterwards Lord
-Dover, first proposed a National Gallery in Parliament in 1824; Government
-having previously purchased thirty-eight pictures from Mr. Angerstein for
-L57,000. This collection included "The Raising of Lazarus," by Del Piombo.
-It is supposed that Michael Angelo, jealous of Raphael's
-"Transfiguration," helped Sebastian in the drawing of his cartoon, which
-was to be a companion picture for Narbonne Cathedral. It was purchased
-from the Orleans Gallery for 3500 guineas.[400]
-
-In 1825 some pictures were purchased for the Gallery from Mr. Hamlet.
-These included the "Bacchus and Ariadne" of Titian, for L5000. This golden
-picture (extolled by Vasari) was painted about 1514 for the Duke of
-Ferrara. Titian was then in the full vigour of his thirty-seventh
-year.[401]
-
-In the same year "La Vierge au Panier" of Correggio was purchased from Mr.
-Nieuwenhuy, a picture-dealer, for L3800. It is a late picture, and hurt in
-cleaning. It was one of the gems of the Madrid Gallery.
-
-In 1826, Sir George Beaumont presented sixteen pictures, valued at 7500
-guineas. These included one of the finest landscapes of Rubens, "The
-Chateau," which originally cost L1500, and Wilkie's _chef-d'oeuvre_, that
-fine Raphaelesque composition, "The Blind Fiddler."
-
-In 1834 the Rev. William Holwell Carr left the nation thirty-five
-pictures, including fine specimens of the Caracci, Titian, Luini,
-Garofalo, Claude, Poussin, and Rubens.
-
-Another important donation was that of the great "Peace and War," bought
-for L3000 by the Marquis of Stafford, and given to the nation. It was
-originally presented to Charles I., by Rubens, who gave unto the king not
-as a painter but as almost a king.
-
-The British Institution also gave three esteemed pictures by Reynolds,
-Gainsborough, and West, and a fine Parmigiano.
-
-But the greatest addition to the collection was made in 1834, when
-L11,500[402] were given for the two great Correggios, the "Ecce Homo" and
-the "Education of Cupid," from the Marquis of Londonderry's collection. To
-the "Ecce Homo" Pungileoni assigns the date 1520, when the great master
-was only twenty-six. It once belonged to Murat. The "Education of Cupid,"
-which once belonged to Charles I., has been a good deal retouched.[403]
-
-In 1836 King William IV. presented to the gallery six pictures; in 1837
-Colonel Harvey Ollney gave seventeen; in 1838 Lord Farnborough bequeathed
-fifteen, and R. Simmons, Esq., fourteen. The last pictures were chiefly of
-the Netherlands school. In 1854 the nation possessed two hundred and
-sixteen pictures, and of these seventy only had been purchased.
-
-In 1857 that greatest of all landscape-painters, Joseph M. W. Turner, left
-the nation 362 oil-paintings, and about 19,000 sketches (including 1757
-water-colour drawings of value). In his will this eccentric man
-particularly desired that two of his pictures--a Dutch coast-scene and
-"Dido Building Carthage"--should be hung between Claude's "Sea-Port" and
-"Mill."
-
-The will was disputed, and the engravings and the money, all but L20,000,
-went to the next of kin.
-
-The diploma pictures (that formerly were annually exhibited to the public)
-are of great interest. They were given by various members of the Royal
-Academy at their elections. That of the parsimonious Wilkie--"Boys digging
-for Rats" (fine as Teniers)--is remarkably small. There is a very fine
-graceful portrait of Sir William Chambers, the architect, by Reynolds, and
-one still more robust and glowing of Sir Joshua by himself. He is in his
-doctor's robes. There is a splendid but rather pale Etty--"A Satyr
-surprising a Nymph;" and a fine vigorous picture by Briggs, of "Blood
-stealing the Crown."
-
-In 1849, Robert Vernon, Esq., nobly left the nation one hundred and
-sixty-two fine examples of the English school. These are now removed to
-the Kensington Museum.
-
-Of the pictures given by Turner to the nation, the masterpieces are the
-"Temeraire" and the "Escape of Ulysses,"--both triumphs of colour and
-imagination. The one is a scene from the _Odyssey_; the other represents
-an old man-of-war being towed to its last berth--a scene witnessed by the
-artist himself while boating near Greenwich. The works of Turner may be
-divided very fairly into three eras: those in which he imitated the Dutch
-landscape-painters, the period when he copied idealised Nature, and the
-time when he resorted from eccentricity or indifference to reckless
-experiments in colour and effect--most of them quite unworthy of his
-genius. Not in drawing the figure, but in aerial perspective, did Turner
-excel. The great portfolios of drawings that he left the nation show with
-what untiring and laborious industry he toiled. In habits sordid and mean,
-in tastes low and debased, this great genius, the son of a humble
-hairdresser in Maiden Lane, succeeded in attaining an excellence in
-landscape, fitful and unequal it is true, but often rising to poetic
-regions unknown to Claude, Ruysdael, Vandervelde, Salvator, or Backhuysen.
-
-Ever since the modern pictures were removed to South Kensington, there has
-been a constant effort to transfer the ancient pictures and to abandon the
-National Gallery to the Royal Academy--a rich society, making L5000 or
-L6000 a year, which its members cannot spend, and which tenants the
-national building only by permission. To remove the pictures from the
-centre of London is to remove them from those who cannot go far to see
-them, to the neighbourhood of rich people who do not need their teaching,
-and who have picture-galleries of their own.
-
-In 1859, twenty pictures were bequeathed to the gallery by Mr. Jacob Bell,
-and a few years later twenty-two others were added as a gift by Her
-Majesty. The last great addition is the presentation of ninety-four
-pictures by Mr. Wynn Ellis. But in spite of all these treasures, acquired
-by purchase or by bequest, the nation cannot boast that its gallery does
-justice to our taste or national wealth. It is still lamentably deficient
-in more than one department; and there are not wanting those who assert
-that the Royal Academy stifles art rather than promotes it. It is regarded
-by the outside world as a close-borough, in which the interests of the
-public and of students are postponed to those of its Associates and
-Members, the A.R.A.'s and R.A.'s of the age.
-
-The building in which the collection is deposited was erected at the
-national expense, from the designs of Mr. William Wilkins, R.A., and
-opened to the public in 1838. It was considerably altered and enlarged in
-1860, and in 1869 five other rooms were added by the surrender to the
-Trustees of those hitherto appropriated by the Royal Academy. In 1876 a
-new wing was added, after a design by Mr. E. M. Barry, R.A., and the whole
-collection is now under one roof.
-
-The Royal College of Physicians is a large classic building at the
-north-west corner of Trafalgar Square. It was built in 1823 from the
-designs of Sir Robert Smirke. The college was founded in 1518 by Dr.
-Linacre, the successor to Shakspeare's Dr. Butts, and physician to Henry
-VII. From Knightrider Street the doctors moved to Amen Corner, and thence
-to Warwick Lane, between Newgate Street and Paternoster Row. The number of
-fellows, originally thirty, is now as unlimited as the "dira cohors" of
-diseases that the college has to encounter.
-
-In the gallery above the library there are seven preparations made by the
-celebrated Harvey when at Padua--"learned Padua." There are also some
-excellent portraits--Harvey, by Jansen; Sir Thomas Browne, the author of
-_Religio Medici_; Sir Theodore Mayerne, the physician of James I.; Sir
-Edmund King, who, on his own responsibility, bled Charles II. during a
-fit; Dr. Sydenham, by Mary Beale; Doctor Radcliffe, William III.'s doctor,
-by Kneller; Sir Hans Sloane, the founder of the British Museum, by
-Richardson, whom Hogarth rather unjustly ridiculed; honest Garth (of the
-"Dispensary"), by Kneller; Dr. Freind, Dr. Mead, Dr. Warren (by
-Gainsborough); William Hunter, and Dr. Heberden.
-
-There are also some valuable and interesting busts--George IV., by
-Chantrey (a _chef-d'oeuvre_); Dr. Mead, by the vivacious Roubilliac; Dr.
-Sydenham, by Wilton; Harvey, by Scheemakers; Dr. Baillie, by Chantrey,
-from a model by Nollekens; Dr. Babington, by poor Behnes. One of the
-treasures of the place is Dr. Radcliffe's gold-headed cane, which was
-successively carried by Drs. Mead, Askew, Pitcairn, and Baillie. There is
-also a portrait-picture by Zoffany of Hunter delivering a lecture on
-anatomy to the Royal Academy. Any fellow can give an order to see this
-hoarded collection, which should be thrown open to the public on certain
-days. It is selfish and utterly wanting in public spirit to keep such
-treasures in the dark.
-
-The wits buzzed about Charing Cross between 1680 and 1730 as thick as bees
-round May flowers. In this district, between those years, stood "The
-Elephant," "The Sugarloaf," "The Old Man's Coffee-house," "The Old Vine,"
-"The Three Flower de Luces," "The British Coffee-house," "The Young Man's
-Coffee-house," and "The Three Queens."
-
-There is an erroneous tradition that Cromwell had a house on the site of
-Drummond's bank. He really lived farther south, in King Street. When the
-bank was built, the houses were set back full forty yards more to the
-west, upon an open square place called "Cromwell's Yard."[405]
-
-Drummond's is said to have gained its fame by advancing money secretly to
-the Pretender. Upon this being known, the Court withdrew all their
-deposits. The result was that the Scotch Tory noblemen rallied round the
-house and brought in so much money that the firm soon became leading
-bankers, dividing the West End custom with Messrs. Coutts.
-
-Craig's Court, on the east side of Charing Cross, was built in 1702. It is
-generally supposed to have been named after the father of Mr. Secretary
-Craggs, the friend of Pope and Addison: Mr. Cunningham, an excellent and
-reliable authority, says that as early as the year 1658 there was a James
-Cragg living on the "water side," in the Charing Cross division of St.
-Martin's-in-the-Fields. The Sun Fire-office was established in this court
-in 1726; and here is Cox and Greenwood's, the largest army agency office
-in Great Britain.
-
-Locket's, the famous ordinary, so called from Adam Locket, the landlord in
-1674, stood on the site of Drummond's bank. An Edward Locket succeeded to
-him in 1688, and remained till 1702.[406] In 1693 the second Locket took
-the Bowling-green House at Putney Heath. That fair, slender, genteel Sir
-George Etherege, whom Rochester praises for "fancy, sense, judgment, and
-wit," frequented Locket's, and displayed there his courtly foppery, which
-served as a model for his own Dorimant, and that prince and patriarch of
-fops Sir Fopling Flutter. Sir George was always gentle and courtly, and
-was compared in this to Sedley.
-
-He once got into a violent passion at the ordinary, and abused the
-"drawers" for some neglect. This brought in Mrs. Locket, hot and fuming.
-"We are so provoked," said Sir George, "that even I could find it in my
-heart to pull the nosegay out of your bosom, and fling the flowers in your
-face." This mild and courteous threat turned his friends' anger into a
-general laugh.
-
-Sir George having run up a long score at Locket's, added to the injury by
-ceasing to frequent the house. Mrs. Locket began to dun and threaten him.
-He sent word back by the messenger that he would kiss her if she stirred a
-step in it. When Mrs. Locket heard this, she bridled up, called for her
-hood and scarf, and told her anxious husband that she'd see if there was
-any fellow alive who had the impudence! "Prythee, my dear, don't be so
-rash," said her milder husband; "you don't know what a man may do in his
-passion."[407]
-
-Wycherly, that favourite of Charles II. till he married his titled wife,
-writes in one of his plays (1675), "Why, thou art as shy of my kindness as
-a Lombard Street alderman of a courtier's civility at Locket's."[408]
-Shadwell too, Dryden's surly and clever foe, says (1691), "I'll answer you
-in a couple of brimmers of claret at Locket's at dinner, where I have
-bespoke an admirable good one."[409]
-
-A poet of 1697 describes the sparks, dressed by noon hurrying to the Mall,
-and from thence to Locket's.[410] Prior proposes to dine at a crown a head
-on ragouts washed down with champagne; then to go to court; and lastly he
-says[411]--
-
- "With evening wheels we'll drive about the Park,
- Finish at Locket's, and reel home i' the dark."
-
-In 1708, Vanbrugh makes Lord Foppington doubtful whether he shall return
-to dinner, as the noble peer says--"As Gad shall judge me I can't tell,
-for 'tis possible I may dine with some of our House at Lacket's."[412]
-
-And in the same play the very energetic nobleman remarks--"From thence
-(the Park) I go to dinner at Lacket's, where you are so nicely and
-delicately served that, stap my vitals! they shall compose you a dish no
-bigger than a saucer shall come to fifty shillings. Between eating my
-dinner and washing my mouth, ladies, I spend my time till I go to the
-play."
-
-In 1709 the epicurean and ill-fated Dr. King, talking of the changes in
-St. James's Park, says--
-
- "For Locket's stands where gardens once did spring,
- And wild ducks quack where grasshoppers did sing."[413]
-
-Tom Brown also mentions Locket's, for he writes--"We as naturally went
-from Mann's Coffee-house to the Parade as a coachman drives from Locket's
-to the play-house."
-
-Prior, the poet, when his father the joiner died, was taken care of by his
-uncle, who kept the Rummer Tavern at the back of No. 14 Charing Cross, two
-doors from Locket's. It was a well-frequented house, and in 1685 the
-annual feast of the nobility and gentry of St. Martin's parish was held
-there. Prior was sent by the honest vintner to study under the great Dr.
-Busby at Westminster: and in a window-seat at the Rummer the future poet
-and diplomatist was found reading Horace, according to Bishop Burnet, by
-the witty Earl of Dorset, who is said to have educated him. Prior, in the
-dedication of his poems to the earl's son, proves his patron to have been
-a paragon. Waller and Sprat consulted Dorset about their writings. Dryden,
-Congreve, and Addison praised him. He made the court read _Hudibras_, the
-town praise Wycherly's "Plain Dealer," and Buckingham delay his
-"Rehearsal" till he knew his opinion. Pope imitated his "Dorinda," and
-King Charles took his advice upon Lely's portraits.
-
-One of Prior's gayest and pleasantest poems seems to prove, however, that
-Fleetwood Shepherd was a more essential patron than even the earl. The
-poet writes--
-
- "Now, as you took me up when little,
- Gave me my learning and my vittle,
- Asked for me from my lord things fitting,
- Kind as I'd been your own begetting,
- Confirm what formerly you've given,
- Nor leave me now at six and seven,
- As Sunderland has left Mun Stephen."
-
-And again, still more gaily--
-
- "My uncle, rest his soul! when living,
- Might have contrived me ways of thriving,
- Taught me with cider to replenish
- My vats or ebbing tide of Rhenish;
- So when for hock I drew pricked white-wine,
- Swear't had the flavour, and was right wine;
- Or sent me with ten pounds to Furni-
- val's Inn, to some good rogue attorney,
- Where now, by forging deeds and cheating,
- I'd found some handsome ways of getting.
- All this you made me quit to follow
- That sneaking, whey-faced god, Apollo;
- Sent me among a fiddling crew
- Of folks I'd neither seen nor knew,
- Calliope and God knows who,
- I add no more invectives to it:
- You spoiled the youth to make a poet."
-
-That rascally housebreaker, Jack Sheppard, made his first step towards the
-gallows by the robbery of two silver spoons at the Rummer Tavern. This
-young rogue, whose deeds Mr. Ainsworth has so mischievously recorded, was
-born in 1701, and ended his short career at Tyburn in 1724.[414] The
-Rummer Tavern is introduced by Hogarth into his engraving of "Night." The
-business was removed to the water side of Charing Cross in 1710, and the
-new house burnt down in 1750. In 1688, Samuel Prior offered ten guineas
-reward for the discovery of some persons who had accused him of clipping
-coin.[415]
-
-Mrs. Centlivre, whom Pope pilloried in the _Dunciad_[416] was the daughter
-of a Lincolnshire gentleman, who, being a Nonconformist, fled to Ireland
-at the Restoration to escape persecution. Being left an orphan at the age
-of twelve, she travelled to London on foot to seek her fortune. In her
-sixteenth year she married a nephew of Sir Stephen Fox, who, however, did
-not live more than a twelvemonth after. She afterwards wedded an officer
-named Carrol, who was killed in a duel soon after their marriage. Left a
-second time a widow, she then took to dramatic writing for a subsistence,
-and from 1700 to 1705 produced six comedies, to one of which--"The
-Gamester"--the poet Rowe contributed a prologue. She next tried the stage;
-and while performing Alexander the Great, at Windsor, won the heart of Mr.
-Centlivre, "a Yeoman of the Mouth," or principal cook to Queen Anne, who
-married her. She lived happily with her husband for eighteen years, and
-wrote some good, bustling, but licentious plays. "The Busybody," and
-"Wonder; a Woman keeps a Secret," act well.
-
-In May, 1716, Mrs. Centlivre visited her native town of Holbeach for her
-health, and on King George's birthday[417] invited all the pauper widows
-of the place to a tavern supper. The windows were illuminated, the
-church-bells were set ringing, there were musicians playing in the room,
-the old women danced, and most probably got drunk, the enthusiastic
-loyalist making them all fall on their knees and drink the healths of the
-royal family, the Duke of Marlborough, Mr. Walpole, the Duke of Argyle,
-General Cadogan, etc. etc. She ended the feast by sending the ringers a
-copy of stirring verses denouncing the Jacobites;--
-
- "Disdain the artifice they use
- To bring in mass and wooden shoes
- With transubstantiation:
- Remember James the Second's reign,
- When glorious William broke the chain
- Rome had put on this nation."
-
-This clever but not too virtuous woman died at her house in Buckingham
-Court, Spring Gardens, December 1, 1723.[418]
-
-Pope's dislike to Mrs. Centlivre is best explained by one of his own notes
-to the _Dunciad_:--"She (Mrs. C.) wrote many plays and a song before she
-was seven years old: she also wrote a ballad against Mr. Pope's _Homer_
-before he began it." And why should not an authoress have expressed her
-opinion of Mr. Pope's inability to translate Homer?
-
-Mrs. Centlivre is rather bitterly treated by Leigh Hunt, who says that
-she, "without doubt, wrote the most entertaining dramas of intrigue, with
-a genius infinitely greater, and a modesty infinitely less, than that of
-her sex in general; and she delighted, whenever she could not be obscene,
-to be improbable."[419]
-
-Milton lodged at one Thomson's, next door to the Bull-head Tavern at
-Charing Cross, close to the opening to the Spring Gardens, during the time
-he was writing his book _Joannis Philippi Angli Defensio_.[420]
-
-The Golden Cross ran up beside the King's Mews a little east of its
-present site; it was the "Bull and Mouth" of the West End till railways
-drew travellers from the old roads; it then became a railway parcel
-office. Poor reckless Dr. Maginn wrote a ballad lamenting the change, in
-which he mourned the Mews Gate public-house, Tom Bish and his lotteries,
-and the barrack-yard. He curses Nash and Wyatville, and then bursts
-forth--
-
- "No more I'll eat the juicy steak
- Within its boxes pent,
- When in the mail my place I take,
- For Bath or Brighton bent.
-
- "No more the coaches I shall see
- Come trundling from the yard,
- Nor hear the horn blown cheerily
- By brandy-sipping guard.
- King Charles, I think, must sorrow sore,
- E'en were he made of stone,
- When left by all his friends of yore
- (Like Tom Moore's rose) alone.
-
- "No wonder the triumphant Turk
- O'er Missolonghi treads,
- Roasts bishops, and in bloody work
- Snips off some thousand heads!
- No wonder that the Crescent gains,
- When we the fact can't gloss,
- That we ourselves are at such pains
- To trample down the Cross!
-
- "Oh! London won't be London long,
- For 'twill be all pulled down,
- And I shall sing a funeral song
- O'er that time-honoured town.
- One parting curse I here shall make,
- And then lay down my quill,
- Hoping Old Nick himself may take
- Both Nash and Wyatville."[421]
-
-Till late in the last century a lofty straddling sign-post and a long
-water-trough, just such as still adorn country towns, stood before this
-inn.[422]
-
-Charing Cross Hospital, one of those great charities that atone for so
-many of the sins of London, relieved, in the year 1878, 15,854 necessitous
-persons, including more than 1000 cases of severe accident, while above
-1500 persons were admitted on the recommendation of governors and
-subscribers.[423] Surely, if anything can redeem our national vices, our
-selfishness, our commercial dishonesty, our unjust wars, and our
-unrighteous conquests, it must be such vast charities as these.
-
-One authority represents that great scholar and divine, Dr. Isaac Barrow,
-the friend of Newton, as having died "in mean lodgings at a saddler's near
-Charing Cross, an old, low, ill-built house, which he had used for many
-years." Barrow was then Master of Trinity College, Cambridge. Roger North,
-however, says that he died of an overdose of opium, and "ended his days in
-London in a prebendary's house that had a little stair to it out of the
-cloisters, which made him call it a _man's nest_."[424] Barrow died in
-1677, and was buried in the Abbey. Rhodes, the bookseller and actor, lived
-at the Ship at Charing Cross. He had been wardrobe-keeper at the
-Blackfriars Theatre; and in 1659 he reopened the Cockpit Theatre in Drury
-Lane.
-
-On September 7, 1650, as that dull, learned man, Bulstrode Whitelock, one
-of the Commissioners for the Great Seal, was going in his coach towards
-Chelsea, a messenger from Scotland stopped him about Charing Cross, and
-cried, "Oh, my lord, God hath appeared gloriously to us in Scotland; a
-glorious day, my lord, at Dunbar in Scotland." "I asked him," says
-Whitelock, "how it was. He said that the General had routed all the Scots
-army, but that he could not stay to tell me the particulars, being in
-haste to go to the House."[425]
-
-Lord Dartmouth relates a story in Burnet of Sir Edward Seymour the
-Speaker's coach breaking down at Charing Cross, in Charles II.'s time. He
-instantly, with proud coolness, ordered the beadles to stop the next
-gentleman's coach that passed and bring it to him. The expelled gentleman
-was naturally both surprised and angry; but Sir Edward gravely assured him
-that it was far more proper for him than for the Speaker of the House of
-Commons to walk the streets, and accordingly left him to do so without any
-further apology.[426]
-
-Horace Walpole was a diligent attender at the State Trials of 1746. The
-day "poor brave old" Balmerino retracted his plea, asked pardon, and
-desired the Peers to intercede for mercy, Walpole tells us that his
-lordship stopped the coach at Charing Cross as he returned to the Tower,
-carelessly to buy "honey-blobs," as the Scotch call gooseberries.
-
-But we must not leave Charing Cross without specially remembering that
-when Boswell dared to praise Fleet Street as crowded and cheerful, Dr.
-Johnson replied in a voice of thunder, "Why, sir, Fleet Street _has_ a
-very animated appearance; but I think the full tide of existence is at
-Charing Cross."[427]
-
-Nearly where the Post Office at Charing Cross now stands, there was once
-(of all things in the world) a hermitage. Even Prince George of Denmark
-might have been pardoned by James II., his sour father-in-law, for making
-his invariable reply, "Est-il possible?" to this statement. Yet the patent
-rolls of the 47th Henry III. grant permission to William de Radnor, Bishop
-of Llandaff, to lodge, with all his retainers, within the precinct of the
-Hermitage at Charing, whenever he came to London.[428]
-
-Opposite this stood the ancient Hospital of St. Mary Roncevalles. It was
-founded by William Marechal, Earl of Pembroke, a son, I believe, of the
-early English conqueror of Ireland. It was suppressed by Henry V. as an
-alien priory, restored by Edward IV., and finally suppressed by Edward
-VI., who granted it to Sir Thomas Carwarden, to be held in free soccage of
-the honour of Westminster.
-
-The mesh and labyrinth of obscure alleys and lanes running between the
-bottom of St. Martin's Lane and Bedford Street, towards Bedfordbury, with
-old Round Court, so called in mockery, for its centre, were swept away by
-the besom of improvement in 1829, when Trafalgar Square was begun, never
-to be finished. In Elizabeth's or James's time, gallants who had cruised
-in search of Spanish galleons wittily nicknamed these Straits "the
-Bermudas," from their narrow and intricate channels. Here the valorous
-Captain Bobadill must have lived in Barmecidal splendour, and have taught
-his dupes the true conduct of the weapon. Justice Overdo mentions the
-Bermudas with a righteous indignation. "Look," says that great legal
-functionary, "into any angle of the town, the Streights or the Bermudas,
-where the quarrelling lesson is read, and how do they entertain the time
-but with bottled ale and tobacco?"[429] How natural for Drake's men to
-give such a name to a labyrinth of devious alleys! At a subsequent period
-the cluster of avenues exchanged the title of _Bermudas_ for that of the
-_C'ribbee Islands_, the learned possessors corrupting the name into a
-happy allusion to the arts cultivated there.[430]
-
-Gay, writing in 1715, describes the small streets branching from Charing
-Cross as resounding with the shoeblacks' cry, "Clean your honour's shoes?"
-Great improvements were made in 1829-30, when the present arcade leading
-from West Strand to St. Martin's Church, and inhabited chiefly by German
-toymen, was built and named after Lord Lowther then Chief Commissioner of
-the Woods and Forests.[431] The Strand was also widened, and many old
-tottering houses were removed.
-
-Porridge Island was the cant name for a paved alley near St. Martin's
-Church, originally a congeries of cookshops erected for the workmen at the
-new church, and destroyed when the great rookery there was pulled down in
-1829. It was a part of Bedfordbury, and derived its name from being full
-of cookshops, or "slap-bangs," as street boys called such odorous places.
-A writer in _The World_, in 1753, describes a man like Beau Tibbs, who had
-his dinner in a pewter plate from a cookshop in Porridge Island, and with
-only L100 a year was foolish enough to wear a laced suit, go every evening
-in a chair to a rout, and return to his bedroom on foot, shivering and
-supperless, vain enough to glory in having rubbed elbows with the quality
-of Brentford.[432]
-
-It was in Round Court, in the centre of the key shops, herb shops, and
-furniture warehouses of Bedfordbury that, in 1836, Robson the actor was
-apprenticed to a Mr. Smellie, a copperplate engraver, and the printer of
-the humorous caricatures of Mr. George Cruikshank.[433]
-
-The Swan at Charing Cross, over against the Mews, flourished in 1665, when
-Marke Rider was the landlord. The token of the house bore the figure of a
-swan holding a sprig in its mouth. Its memory is embalmed in a curious
-extempore grace once said by Ben Jonson before King James. These are the
-verses:--
-
- "Our king and queen the Lord God bless,
- The Palsgrave and the Lady Besse;
- And God bless every living thing
- That lives and breathes, and loves the king;
- God bless the Council of Estate,
- And Buckingham the fortunate;
- God bless them all, and keep them safe,
- And God bless me, and God bless Ralph."
-
-The schoolmaster king being mighty inquisitive to know who this Ralph was,
-Ben told him it was the drawer at the Swan Tavern, who drew him good
-canary. For this drollery the king gave Ben a hundred pounds.[434] The
-story is probably true, for it is confirmed by Powell the actor.[435]
-
-The street signs of London were condemned in the second year of George
-III.'s reign; but the sweeping Act for their final removal was not passed
-till nine years later. In 1762, Bonnel Thornton (aided by Hogarth) opened
-an exhibition of street signs in Bow Street[436] in ridicule of the Spring
-Gardens exhibition. But as early as 1761 the street signs seem to have
-been partially removed as dangerous obstructions. A writer in a
-contemporary paper says,[437] "My master yesterday sent me to take a place
-in the Canterbury stage; he said that when I came to Charing Cross I
-should see which was the proper inn by the words on the sign. I rambled
-about, but could see no sign at all. At last I was told that there used to
-be such a sign under a little golden cross which I saw at a two pair of
-stairs window. I entered and found the waiter swearing about innovations.
-He said that the members of Parliament were unaccountable enemies to signs
-which used to show trades; that, for his master's part, he might put on
-sackcloth, for nobody came to buy sack. 'If,' said he, 'any of the signs
-were too large, could they not have limited their size without pulling
-down the sign-posts and destroying the painted ornaments of the Strand?'
-On my return I saw some men pulling with ropes at a curious sign-iron,
-which seemed to have cost some pounds: along with the iron down came the
-leaden cover to the pent-house, which will cost at least some pounds to
-repair."
-
-This was written the year of the first Act (2d George III.), and was
-probably a groan from some one interested in the existence of the abuse.
-The inferior artists gained much money from this source. Mr. Wale, one of
-the first Academicians, painted a Shakspere five feet high[438] for a
-public-house at the north-west corner of Little Russell Street, Covent
-Garden. The picture was enclosed in a sumptuous carved gilt frame, and was
-suspended by rich foliated ironwork. A London street a hundred years ago
-must have been one long grotesque picture-gallery.
-
-When the meat is all good it is difficult to know where to insert the
-knife. In travelling, how hard it is to turn back almost in sight of some
-Promised Land of which one has often dreamed! Like that traveller I feel,
-when I find it necessary in this chapter to confine myself strictly to the
-legends, traditions, and history of Charing Cross proper, leaving for
-other opportunities Spring Gardens, the story of the greater part of which
-belongs more to St. James's Park, Whitehall, and Scotland Yard.
-
-[Illustration: THE KING'S MEWS, 1750.]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: BARRACK AND OLD HOUSES ON SITE OF TRAFALGAR SQUARE, 1826.]
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-ST. MARTIN'S LANE.
-
-
-Saint Martin's Lane, extending from Long Acre to Charing Cross, was built
-before 1613, and then called the West Church Lane. The first church was
-built here by Henry VIII. The district was first called St. Martin's Lane
-about 1617-18.[439]
-
-Sir Theodore Mayerne, physician to James I., lived on the west side of
-this lane. Mayerne was the godson of Beza, the great Calvinist reformer,
-and one of Henry IV.'s physicians. He came to England after that king's
-death. He then became James I.'s doctor, and was blamed for his treatment
-of Prince Henry, whom many thought to have been poisoned. He was
-afterwards physician to Charles I., and nominally to Charles II.; but he
-died in 1655, five years before the Restoration. He gave his library to
-the College of Physicians, and is said to have disclosed some of his
-chemical secrets to the great enameller, Petitot.[440] Mayerne died of
-drinking bad wine at a Strand tavern, and foretold the time of his death.
-
-A good story is told of Sir Theodore, which is the more curious because it
-records the fashionable fee of those days. A friend consulting Mayerne,
-and expecting to have the fee refused, ostentatiously placed on the table
-two gold broad pieces (value six-and-thirty shillings each). Looking
-rather mortified when Mayerne swept them into his pouch, "Sir." said Sir
-Theodore, gravely, "I made my will this morning, and if it should become
-known that I refused a fee the same afternoon I might be deemed _non
-compos_."[441]
-
-Near this fortunate doctor, honoured by kings, lived Sir John Finett, a
-wit and a song-writer, of Italian extraction. He became Master of the
-Ceremonies to Charles I., and wrote a pedantic book on the treatment of
-ambassadors, and other questions of precedency, of the gravest importance
-to courtiers, but to no one else. He died in 1641.
-
-Two doors from Mayerne and five from Finett, from 1622 to 1634, lived
-Daniel Mytens, the Dutch painter. On Vandyke's arrival Mytens grew jealous
-and asked leave to return to the Hague. But the king persuaded him to
-stay, and he became friendly with his rival, who painted his portrait.
-There are pictures by this artist at Hampton Court. Prince Charles gave
-him his house in the lane for twelve years at the peppercorn rent of 6d. a
-year.
-
-Next to Sir John Finett lived Sir Benjamin Rudyer, and on the same side
-Abraham Vanderoort, keeper of the pictures to Charles I., and necessarily
-an acquaintance of Mytens and Vandyke.
-
-Carew Raleigh, son of the great enemy of Spain, and born in the Tower,
-lived in this lane, on the west side, from 1636 to 1638, and again in
-1664. This unfortunate man spent all his life in writing to vindicate his
-father's memory, and in efforts to recover his Sherborne estate. In 1659,
-by the influence of General Monk, he was made Governor of Jersey.
-
-The chivalrous wit, Sir John Suckling, dwelt in St. Martin's-in-the-Fields
-in 1641, the year in which he joined in a rash plot to rescue Strafford
-from the Tower. He fled to France, and died there in poverty the same
-year, in the thirty-second year of his age. Suckling had served in the
-army of Gustavus Adolphus, and was famous for his sparkling repartee.
-There is an exquisite quaint grace about his poem of "The Wedding," which
-has its scene at Charing Cross.
-
-Dr. Thomas Willis, a great physician of his day, who died here in 1678,
-was grandfather of Browne Willis, the antiquary. Dr. Willis was a friend
-of Wren, and a great anatomist and chemist. He mapped out the nerves very
-industriously, and in his _Cerebri Anatome_ forestalled many future
-phrenological discoveries.[442]
-
-In the same year that eccentric charlatan, Sir Kenelm Digby, was living in
-the lane. The son of one of the gunpowder conspirators, and the
-"Mirandola" of his age, he was one of Ben Jonson's adopted sons.[443] He
-was generous to the poets; he understood ten or twelve languages; he
-shattered the Venetian galleys at Scanderoon; he studied chemistry, and
-professed to cure wounds with sympathetic powder. He held offices of
-honour under Charles I., in France became a friend of Descartes, and after
-the Restoration was an active member of the Royal Society. He was born,
-won his naval victory, and died on the same day of the month. Ben Jonson,
-in a poem on him, calls him "prudent, valiant, just, and temperate," and
-adds quaintly--
-
- "His breast is a brave palace, a broad street,
- Where all heroic ample thoughts do meet,
- Where Nature such a large survey hath ta'en,
- As others' souls to _his dwelt in a lane_."
-
-I cannot here help observing that the ridiculous story about Ben Jonson in
-his old age refusing money from Charles I., and rudely sending back word
-"that the king's soul dwelt in a lane," must have originated in some
-careless or malicious perversion of this line of the rough old poet's.
-
-"Immortal Ben" wrote ten poems on the death of Sir Kenelm's wife, who was
-the daughter of Sir Edward Stanley, and, it is supposed, the mistress of
-the Earl of Dorset. Randolph, Habington, and Feltham also wrote elegies on
-this beautiful woman, who was found dead in her bed, accidentally
-poisoned, it is supposed, by viper wine, or some philtre or cosmetic given
-her by her experimentalising husband in order to heighten her beauty.[444]
-In one of Ben Jonson's poems there are the following incomparable verses
-about Lady Venetia:--
-
- "Draw first a cloud, all save her neck,
- And out of that make day to break,
- Till like her face it do appear,
- And men may think all light rose there."
-
-And again--
-
- "Not swelling like the ocean proud,
- But stooping gently as a cloud,
- As smooth as oil pour'd forth, and calm
- As showers, and sweet as drops of balm."
-
-Sir Kenelm, when imprisoned in Winchester House, in Southwark, wrote an
-attack on Sir Thomas Browne's sceptical work _Religio Medici_. He also
-produced a book on cookery, and a commentary on the _Faerie Queen_. This
-strange being was buried in Christ Church, Newgate Street.
-
-St. Martin's-in-the-Fields is an ancient parish, but it was first made
-independent of St. Margaret's, Westminster, in 1535, by that tyrant Henry
-VIII., who, justly afraid of death, disliked the ceaseless black funeral
-processions of the outlying people of St. Martin's passing the courtly
-gate of Whitehall, and who therefore erected a church near Charing Cross,
-and constituted its neighbourhood into a parish.[445] In 1607, that
-unfortunate youth of promise, Henry Prince of Wales, added a chancel to
-the very small church, which soon proved insufficient for the growing and
-populous suburb. But though so modern, this parish formerly included in
-its vast circle St. Paul's Covent Garden, St. James's Piccadilly, St.
-Anne's Soho, and St. George's Hanover Square. It extended its princely
-circle as far north as Marylebone, as far south as Whitehall, as far east
-as the Savoy, and as far west as Chelsea and Kensington. When first rated
-to the poor in Queen Elizabeth's time it contained less than a hundred
-rateable persons. The chief inhabitants lived by the river side or close
-to the church. Pall Mall and Piccadilly were then unnamed, and beyond the
-church westward were St. James's Fields, Hay-hill Farm, Ebury Farm, and
-the Neat houses about Chelsea.[446]
-
-In 1638 this overgrown parish, had carved out of it the district of St.
-Paul's, Covent Garden; in 1684, St. James's, Westminster; and in 1686, St.
-Anne's, Soho. But even in 1680, Richard Baxter, with brave fervour,
-denounced what he called "the greatest cure in England,"[447] with its
-population of forty thousand more persons than the church could
-hold--people who "lived like Americans, without hearing a sermon for many
-years." From such parishes of course crept forth Dissenters of all creeds
-and colours. In 1826 the churchyard was removed to Camden Town, and the
-street widened, pursuant to 7 George IV. c. 77.
-
-That shrewd native of Aberdeen, Gibbs--a not unworthy successor of
-Wren--came to London at a fortunate time. Wren was fast dying; Vanbrugh
-was neglected; there was room for a new architect, and no fear of
-competition. His first church, St. Martin's, was a great success. Though
-its steeple was heavy and misplaced, and the exterior flat and without
-light or shade,[448] the portico was foolishly compared to that of the
-Parthenon, and was considered unique for dignity and unity of combination.
-The interior was so constructed as to render the introduction of further
-ornaments or of monuments impossible. Savage did but express the general
-opinion when he wrote with fine pathos--
-
- "O Gibbs! whose art the solemn fanes can raise,
- Where God delights to dwell and man to praise."
-
-The church was commenced in 1721 and finished in 1726, at a cost of
-L36,891: 10: 4, including L1500 for an organ.
-
-With all its faults, it is certainly one of the finest buildings in
-London, next to St. Paul's and the British Museum; but its cardinal fault
-is the unnatural union of the Gothic steeple and the Grecian portico. The
-one style is Pagan, the other Christian; the one expresses a sensuous
-contentment with this earth, the other mounts towards heaven with an
-eternal aspiration. The steeple leaps like a fountain from among lesser
-pinnacles that all point upwards. The Grecian portico is a cave of level
-shadow and of philosophic content.
-
-St. Martin's Church enshrines the dust of some illustrious persons. Here
-lies Nicholas Hilliard, the miniature-painter to Queen Elizabeth, and who
-died in 1619. He was a very careful painter, in the manner of Holbein. The
-great Isaac Oliver was his pupil. He must have had some trouble with the
-manly queen when she began to turn into a hag and to object to any shadow
-in her portraits. Near him, in 1621, was buried Paul Vansomer, a Flemish
-painter, celebrated for his portraits of James I. and his Danish queen.
-And here rests, too, a third and greater painter, William Dobson,
-Vandyke's protege, who, born in an unlucky age, and forgotten amid the
-tumult of the Civil War, died in 1646, in poverty, in his house in St.
-Martin's Lane. Dobson had been apprenticed to a picture-dealer, and was
-discovered in his obscurity by Vandyke, whose style he imitated, giving
-it, however, a richer colour and more solidity. Charles I. and Prince
-Rupert both sat to him for their portraits. In this church reposes Sir
-Theodore Mayerne, an old court physician. His conserve of bats and
-scrapings of human skulls could not keep him from the earthy bed it seems.
-Nicholas Stone, the sculptor, who died 1647, sleeps here (Stone's son was
-Cibber's master), all unknown to the learned Thomas Stanley, who died in
-1678, and was known for his _History of Philosophy_ and translation of
-AEschylus. Here, also, is John Lacey--first a dancing-master, afterwards a
-trooper, lastly a comedian. He died in 1681. Charles II. was a great
-admirer of Lacey, but unfortunately more so of Nell Gwynn, who also came
-to sleep here in 1687. Poor Nell! with her good-nature and simple
-frankness, she stands out, wanton and extravagant as she was, in pleasant
-contrast with the proud painted wantons of that infamous court.
-
-If the dead could shudder, Secretary Coventry, who was buried here the
-year before Nell, must have shuddered at the neighbourhood in which he
-found himself; for he was the son of Lord Keeper Coventry, who died at
-Durham House in 1639-40. He had been Commissioner to the Treasury, and had
-given his name to Coventry Street. This great person became a precedent of
-burial to the Hon. Robert Boyle. This wise and good man, whom Swift
-ridiculed, was the inventor of the air-pump, and one of the great
-promoters of the Royal Society and of the Society for the Propagation of
-the Gospel. He died in 1691, and his funeral sermon was preached by
-Swift's _bete noir_, that fussy time-server, Bishop Burnet.
-
-In the churchyard lies a far inferior man, Sir John Birkenhead, who died
-in 1679. He was a great pamphlet-writer for the Royalists, and Lawes set
-some of his verses to music.[449] He left directions that he should not be
-buried within the church, as coffins were often removed. In or out of the
-church was buried Rose, Charles II.'s gardener, the first man to grow a
-pine-apple in England--a slice of which the king graciously handed to Mr.
-Evelyn.
-
-Worst of all--a scoundrel, and fool among sensible men--here lies the
-bully and murderer, Lord Mohun, who fell in a duel in Hyde Park with the
-Duke of Hamilton, immortalised in Mr. Thackeray's _Esmond_. Mohun died
-in 1712. Here also, in 1721, came that vile and pretentious French
-painter, Louis Laguerre, whom Pope justly satirised. He was brought over
-by Verrio, and painted the "sprawling" "Labours of Hercules" at Hampton
-Court. He died of apoplexy at Drury Lane Theatre. That clever and
-determined burglar, Jack Sheppard, is said to have been buried in St.
-Martin's in 1724. Farquhar, the Irish dramatist, author of "The Beaux'
-Stratagem," was interred here in 1707. Roubilliac, the French sculptor,
-who lived close by, was also buried in this spot, and Hogarth attended his
-funeral.
-
-Mr. J. T. Smith, author of the _Life of Nollekens_, speaking of his own
-visits to the vaults of St. Martin's Church, says, "It is a curious fact
-that Mrs. Rudd requested to be placed near the coffins of the Perreaus.
-Melancholy as my visits to this vault have been, I frankly own that
-pleasant recollections have almost invited me to sing, 'Did you ne'er hear
-of a jolly young waterman?' when passing by the coffin of my father's old
-friend, Charles Bannister."[450]
-
-Mr. F. Buckland that delightful writer on natural history, who visited the
-same charnel-house in his search for the body of the great John Hunter,
-describes the vaults as piled with heaps of leaden coffins, horrible to
-every sense; but as I write from memory, I will not give the ghastly
-details.
-
-That indefatigable and too restless exposer of abuses, Daniel Defoe, wrote
-a pamphlet in 1720 entitled "Parochial Tyranny; or, the Housekeeper's
-Complaint against the Exactions of Select Vestries." In this pamphlet he
-published one of the bills of the vestry of St. Martin's in 1713, which
-contains the following impudent items:--
-
- "Spent at May meetings or visitation L65 0 4
-
- Ditto at taverns, with ministers, justices,
- overseers, &c. 72 19 7
-
- Sacrament bread and wine 88 10 0
-
- Paid towards a robbery 21 14 0
-
- Spent for dinner at the Mulberry Gardens 49 13 4"
-
-In 1818 the churchwardens' dinner cost L56: 18s. Archdeacon Potts' sermon
-on the death of Queen Charlotte not selling, the parish paid the loss,
-L48: 12: 9. In 1813 the vestry charged the parish L5 for petitioning
-against the Roman Catholics.
-
-The Thames watermen have a plot set apart for themselves in St. Martin's
-Churchyard. These amphibious and pugnacious beings were formerly notorious
-for their powers of sarcasm, though Dr. Johnson on a celebrated occasion
-put one of them out of countenance. In spite of coaches and sedan
-chairs--their horror in the times of the "Water Poet," who must often have
-ferried Shakspere over to the Globe Theatre at the Bankside--they
-continued till the days of omnibuses and cheap cabs, rowing and singing,
-rejoicing in their scarlet tunics, and skimming to and fro over the Thames
-like swallows.
-
-There is a Westminster tradition of a waterman who pretended to be deaf,
-and who was much employed by lovers, barristers who wished to air their
-eloquence, and young M.P.s who wanted to recite their speeches
-undisturbed.
-
-In 1821 died Copper Holms, a well-known character on the river. He lived,
-with his wife and children, somewhere along the shore in an ark, which he
-had artfully framed from a West-country vessel, and which, coppers and
-all, cost him L150. The City brought an action to compel him to remove the
-obstruction. The honest fellow was buried in "The Waterman's Churchyard,"
-on the south side of St. Martin's Church.[451]
-
-In 1683 Dr. Thomas Tenison, vicar of the parish, afterwards Archbishop of
-Canterbury, lived in this street; he died at Lambeth in 1715. He founded
-in this parish a school and library. Though Swift did say he was "hot and
-heavy as a tailor's iron," he seems to have been one of the best and most
-tolerant of men, notwithstanding he attacked Hobbes and Bellarmine with
-his pen. He worked bravely during the plague, and was princely in his
-charities during the dreadful winter of 1683. It was he who prepared
-Monmouth for death, and smoothed Queen Mary's dying pillow. He was a
-steady friend of William of Orange.
-
-Two doors from Slaughter's, on the west side, but lower down, lived
-Ambrose Philips, from 1720 to 1724. Pope laughed at his "Pastorals," which
-had been overpraised by Tickell. Though a friend of Addison and Steele,
-his sprightly but effeminate copies of verses procured him from Henry
-Carey the name of "Namby Pamby." His "Winter Scene," a sketch of a Danish
-winter, is, however, admirable.
-
-Ambrose Philips was laughed at for advertising in the _London Gazette_, of
-January 1714, for contributions to a _Poetical Miscellany_. He was a
-Leicestershire man, and chiefly remarkable for translating Racine's
-"Distressed Mother." When the Whigs came into power under George I. he was
-put into the commission of the peace, and made a Commissioner of the
-Lottery. He afterwards became Registrar of the Prerogative Court at
-Dublin, wrote in the _Free Thinker_, and died in 1749. Pope laughed at the
-small poet as--
-
- "The bard whom pilfered Pastorals renown,
- Who turns a Persian tale for half-a-crown,
- Just writes to make his barrenness appear,
- And strains from hide-bound brains eight lines a year."[452]
-
-It was always one of Pope's keenest strokes to call a man poor. Philips,
-in 1714, had industriously translated the _Thousand and One Days_, a
-series of Persian tales, and gained very honourably earned money. The wasp
-of Twickenham, whose malice never grew old, sketched Philips again as
-"Macer," a simple, harmless fellow, who borrowed ends of verse, and whose
-highest ambition was "to wear red stockings and to dine with Steele."
-Ambrose, naturally indignant to hear himself accused of stealing the
-little fame he had, very spiritedly hung up a birch at the bar of Button's
-Coffee-house, with which he threatened to chastise the AEsop of the age if
-he dared show himself, but Pope wisely stayed at home.[453]
-
-The first house from the corner of Newport Street, on the right hand going
-to Charing Cross, was occupied by Beard, the celebrated public singer, who
-in 1738-9 married Lady Henrietta Herbert, the only daughter of the Earl
-Waldegrave. After her death the widower married the daughter of Mr. John
-Rich, the inventor of English pantomime, the best harlequin that probably
-ever lived, and the patentee of Covent Garden Theatre from 1732 to 1762.
-The parlour of the house had two windows facing the south towards Charing
-Cross. Here Mr. J. T. Smith describes his father smoking a pipe with Beard
-and George Lambert, the latter the founder of the Beef-steak Club and the
-clever scene-painter of Covent Garden Theatre. The fire of 1808 destroyed
-most of Lambert's work with the theatre.[454]
-
-Next to this house stood "Old Slaughter's" Coffee-house, the great haunt
-of artists from Hogarth to Wilkie. Towards the end of its existence it was
-the head-quarters of naval and military officers before the establishment
-of West End Clubs. It was pulled down in 1844 to make way for the new
-street between Long Acre and Leicester Square. The original landlord, John
-Slaughter, started it in 1692, and died about 1740.[455] It first became
-known as "Old Slaughter's" in 1760, when an opposition set up in the
-street under the name of "Young" or "New Slaughter's."
-
-There is a foolish tradition that the coffee-house derived its name from
-being frequented by the butchers of Newport Market. Mr. Smith gives a
-charming chapter on the frequenters of this old haunt of Dryden and
-afterwards of Pope. The first he mentions was Mr. Ware, the architect, who
-published a folio edition of Palladio, the great Italian architect of
-Elizabeth's time. Ware was originally a chimney-sweeper's boy in Charles
-Court, Strand; but being one day seen chalking houses on the front of
-Whitehall, a gentleman passing became his patron, educated him, and sent
-him to Italy. His bust was one of Roubilliac's best works. His skin is
-said to have retained the stain of soot to the day of his death.[456]
-
-Gravelot, who kept a drawing-school in the Strand, nearly opposite
-Southampton Street, was another frequenter of Old Slaughter's. Henri
-Francois Bourignon Gravelot was born in Paris in 1699, and died in that
-city in 1773. His drawings were always minutely finished, and his designs
-tasteful, particularly those which he etched himself for Sir John Hanmer's
-small edition of Shakspere. He found an excellent engraver in poor Charles
-Grignon, Le Bas' pupil, who in his old age was driven off the field, fell
-into poverty, and so remained till he died in 1810, aged 94.
-
-John Gwynn, the architect, who lived in Little Court, Castle Street,
-Leicester Fields, also frequented this house. He built the bridge at
-Shrewsbury, and wrote a work on London improvements, which his friend Dr.
-Johnson revised and prefaced. The doctor also wrote strongly in favour of
-Gwynn's talent and integrity when he was unsuccessfully competing with
-Mylne for the erection of old Blackfriars Bridge.
-
-Hogarth, too, "used" Slaughter's, and came there to rail at the "black old
-masters," the follies of patrons, and the knavery of dealers. Here he
-would banter and brag, and sketch odd faces on his thumb-nail. Perhaps the
-"Midnight Conversation" was partly derived from convivial scenes in St.
-Martin's Lane.
-
-Roubilliac, the eccentric French sculptor, was another habitue of the
-place. His house and studio were opposite on the east side of the lane,
-and were approached by a long passage and gateway. Here his friends must
-have listened to his rhapsodies in broken English about his great statues
-of Handel, Sir Isaac Newton, and that of Shakspere now at the British
-Museum, which cost Garrick, who left it to the nation, three hundred
-guineas.[457]
-
-That pompous and wretched portrait-painter, Hudson, Reynolds's master and
-Richardson's pupil, used also to frequent Slaughter's. Hudson was the most
-ignorant of painters, yet he was for a time the fashion. He painted the
-portraits of the members of the Dilettanti Society, and was a great and
-ignorant collector of Rembrandt etchings. Hogarth used to call him, in his
-brusque way, "a fat-headed fellow."
-
-Here Hogarth would meet his own engraver, M'Ardell, who lived in Henrietta
-Street. One of the finest English mezzotints in respect of brilliancy is
-Hogarth's portrait of Captain Coram, the brave old originator of the
-Foundling Hospital, by M'Ardell. His engravings after Reynolds are superb.
-That painter himself said that they would immortalise him.[458]
-
-Here, also, came Luke Sullivan, another of Hogarth's engravers, from the
-White Bear, Piccadilly. His etching of "The March to Finchley" is
-considered exquisite.[459] Sullivan was also an exquisite
-miniature-painter, particularly of female heads. He was a handsome,
-lively, reckless fellow, and died in miserable poverty.
-
-At Slaughter's, too, Hogarth must have met the unhappy Theodore Gardelle,
-the miniature-painter, who afterwards murdered his landlady in the
-Haymarket and burnt her body. Hogarth is said to have sketched him in his
-ghostly white cap on the day of his execution. Gardelle, like Greenacre,
-pleaded that he killed the woman by an accidental blow, and then destroyed
-the body in fear. Foote notices his gibbet in _The Mayor of Garratt_.
-
-Old Moser, keeper of the drawing academy in Peter's Court--Roubilliac's
-old rooms--was often to be seen at the same haunt. Moser was a German
-Swiss, a gold-chaser and enameller; he became keeper of the Royal Academy
-in 1768. His daughter painted flowers.
-
-That great painter, poor old Richard Wilson, neglected and almost starved
-by the senseless art-patrons of his day, occasionally came to Slaughter's,
-probably to meet his countryman, blind Parry, the Welsh harper and great
-draught-player.
-
-And, last of all, we must mention Nathanael Smith, the engraver, and Mr.
-Rawle, the accoutrement maker in the Strand, and the inseparable companion
-of Captain Grose, the great antiquary, on whom Burns wrote poems--a
-learned, fat, jovial Falstaff of a man, who compiled an indecorous but
-clever slang dictionary. It was at Rawle's sale that Dickey Suett bought
-Charles II.'s black wig, which he wore for years in "Tom Thumb."
-
-Nos. 76 and 77 St. Martin's Lane were originally one house, built by
-Payne, the architect of Salisbury Street and the original Lyceum. He built
-two small houses in his garden for his friends Gwynn, the competitor for
-Blackfriars Bridge, and Wale, the Royal Academy lecturer on perspective,
-and well-known book-illustrator. The entrances were in Little Court,
-Castle Street. In old times the street on this side, from Beard's Court,
-to St. Martin's Court, was called the Pavement; but the road has since
-been heightened three feet.
-
-Below Payne's, in Hogarth's time, lived a bookseller named Harding, a
-seller of old prints, and author of a little book on the _Monograms of Old
-Engravers_. It was to this shop that Wilson, the sergeant painter, took an
-etching of his own, which was sold to Hudson as a genuine Rembrandt. That
-same night, by agreement, Wilson invited Hogarth and Hudson to supper.
-When the cold sirloin came in, Scott, the marine-painter, called out, "A
-sail, a sail!" for the beef was stuck with skewers bearing impressions of
-the new Rembrandt, of which Hudson was so proud.[460]
-
-Nos. 88 and 89 were built on the site of a large mansion, the staircase of
-which was adorned with allegorical figures. It was here that Hogarth's
-particular friend, John Pine, lived. Pine was the engraver and publisher
-of the scenes from the Armada tapestry in the House of Lords, now
-destroyed. He was a round, fat, oily man; and Hogarth drew him, much to
-his annoyance, as the fat friar eyeing the beef at the "Gate of Calais."
-His son Robert, who painted one of the best portraits of Garrick, and
-carried off the hundred guinea prize of the Society of Arts for his
-picture of the "Siege of Calais," also lived here, and, after him, Dr.
-Gartshore.
-
-The house No. 96, on the west side, was Powell the colourman's in 1828; it
-had then a Queen Anne door-frame, with spread-eagle and carved foliage and
-flowers, like the houses in Carey Street and Great Ormond Street, and a
-shutter sliding in grooves in the old-fashioned way. Mr. Powell's mother
-made for many years annually a pipe of wine from the produce of a vine
-nearly a hundred feet long.[461] This house had a large staircase, painted
-with figures in procession, by a French artist named Clermont, who claimed
-one thousand guineas for his work, and received five hundred. Behind the
-house was the room which Hogarth has painted in "Marriage a la Mode." The
-quack is Dr. Misaubin, whose vile portrait the satirist has given. The
-savage fat woman is his Irish wife. Dr. Misaubin, who lived in this house,
-was the son of a pastor of the Spitalfields French Church. The quack
-realised a great fortune by a famous pill. His son was murdered; his
-grandson squandered his money, and died in St. Martin's Workhouse.
-
-No. 104 was at one time the residence of Sir James Thornhill, Hogarth's
-august father-in-law, a poor yet pretentious painter, who decorated St.
-Paul's. He painted the staircase wall with allegories that were existing
-some years since in good condition. The junior Van Nost, the sculptor,
-afterwards lived here--the same artist who took that mask of Garrick's
-face which afterwards belonged to the elder Mathews. After him, before
-1768, came Hogarth's convivial artist-friend, Francis Hayman, who
-decorated Vauxhall and illustrated countless books. Perhaps it was here
-that the Marquis of Granby, before sitting to the painter, had a round or
-two of sparring. Sir Joshua Reynolds, too, a graver and colder man, came
-to live here before he went to Great Newport Street.
-
-New Slaughter's, at No. 82 in 1828, was established about 1760, and was
-demolished in 1843-44, when the new avenue of Garrick Street was made
-between Long Acre and Leicester Square. It was much frequented by artists
-who wished cheap fare and good society. Roubilliac was often to be found
-here. Wilkie long after enjoyed his frugal dinners here at a small cost.
-He was always the last dropper-in, and was never seen to dine in the house
-before dark. The fact is, the patient young Scotchman always slaved at his
-art till the last glimpse of daylight had disappeared below the red roofs.
-
-Upon the site of the present Quakers' Meeting-house in St. Peter's Court,
-St. Martin's Lane, stood Roubilliac's first studio after he left Cheere.
-Here he executed, with ecstatic raptures at his own genius, his great
-statue of Handel for Vauxhall. Here afterwards a drawing academy was
-started, Mr. Michael Moser being chosen the keeper. Reynolds, Mortimer,
-Nollekens, and M'Ardell were among the earliest members. Hogarth presented
-to it some of his father-in-law's casts, but opposed the principle of
-cheap education to young artists, declaring that every foolish father
-would send his boy there to keep him out of the streets, and so the
-profession would be overstocked. In this academy the students sat to each
-other for drapery, and had also male and female models--sometimes in
-groups.
-
-Amongst the early members of the St. Martin's Lane Academy were the
-following:--Moser, afterwards keeper of the Academy; Hayman, Hogarth's
-friend; Wale, the book-illustrator; Cipriani, famous for his book-prints;
-Allan Ramsay, Reynolds's rival; F. M. Newton; Charles Catton, the prince
-of coach-painters; Zoffany, the dramatic portrait-painter; Collins, the
-sculptor, who modelled Hayman's "Don Quixote;" Jeremy Meyer; William
-Woollett, the great engraver; Anthony Walker, also an engraver; Linnel, a
-carver in wood; John Mortimer, the Salvator Rosa of that day; Rubinstein,
-a drapery-painter and drudge to the portrait-painters; James Paine, son of
-the architect of the Lyceum; Tilly Kettle, who went to the East, painted
-several rajahs, and then died near Aleppo; William Pars, who was sent to
-Greece by the Dilettanti Society; Vandergutch, a painter who turned
-picture-dealer; Charles Grignon, the engraver; C. Norton, Charles
-Sherlock, and Charles Bibb, also engravers; Richmond, Keeble, Evans,
-Roper, Parsons, and Black, now forgotten; Russell, the crayon-painter;
-Richmond Cosway, the miniature-painter, a fop and a mystic; W. Marlowe, a
-landscape-painter; Messrs. Griggs, Rowe, Dubourg, Taylor, Dance, and
-Ratcliffe, pupils of gay Frank Hayman; Richard Earlom, engraver of the
-"Liber Veritatis" of Claude for the Duke of Richmond; J. A. Gresse, a fat
-artist who taught the queen and princesses drawing; Giuseppe Marchi, an
-assistant of Reynolds; Thomas Beech; Lambert, a sculptor, and pupil of
-Roubilliac; Reed, another pupil of the same great artist, who aided in
-executing the skeleton on Mrs. Nightingale's monument, and was famous for
-his pancake clouds; Biaggio Rebecca, the decorator; Richard Wilson, the
-great landscape-painter; Terry, Lewis Lattifere, John Seton, David Martin,
-Burgess; Burch, the medallist; John Collett, an imitator of Hogarth;
-Nollekens, the sculptor; Reynolds, and, of course, Hogarth himself, the
-_primum mobile_.[462]
-
-No. 112 was in old times one of those apothecaries' shops with bottled
-snakes in the windows. It was kept by Leake, the inventor of a
-"diet-drink" once as famous as Lockyer's pill.
-
-Frank Hayman, one of these St. Martin's Lane worthies, was originally a
-scene-painter at Drury Lane. He was with Hogarth at Moll King's when
-Hogarth drew the girl squirting brandy at the other for his picture in the
-_Rake's Progress_. Hayman was a Devonshire man, and a pupil of Brown. When
-he buried his wife, a friend asked him why he spent so much money on the
-funeral. "Oh, sir," replied the droll, revelling fellow, "she would have
-done as much or more for me with pleasure."
-
-Quin and Hayman were inseparable boon companions. One night, after
-"beating the rounds," they both fell into the kennel. Presently Hayman,
-sprawling out his shambling legs, kicked his bedfellow Quin. "Hallo! what
-are you at now?" growled the Welsh actor. "At? why, endeavouring to get
-up, to be sure, for this don't suit my palate." "Pooh!" replied Quin,
-"remain where you are; the watchman will come by shortly, and he will
-_take us both up_!"[463]
-
-No. 113 was occupied by Thomas Major, a die-engraver to the Stamp Office,
-a pupil of Le Bas, and an excellent reproducer of subjects from Teniers.
-He was also an engraver of landscapes after pictures by Ferg, one of the
-artists employed with Sir James Thornhill at the Chelsea china
-manufactory.
-
-The old watch-house or round-house used to stand exactly opposite the
-centre of the portico of Gibbs's church.[464] There is a rare etching
-which represents its front during a riot. Stocks, elaborately carved with
-vigorous figures of a man being whipped by the hangman, stood near the
-wall of the watch-house. The carving, much mutilated, was preserved in the
-vaults under the church.
-
-Near the stocks, with an entrance from the King's Mews, stood "the Barn,"
-afterwards called "the Canteen," which was a great resort of the chess,
-draught, and whist players of the City.
-
-At the south-west corner of St. Martin's Lane was the shop of Jefferys,
-the geographer to King George III.
-
-No. 20 was a public-house, latterly the Portobello, with Admiral Vernon's
-ship, well painted by Monamy, for its sign. The date, 1638, was on the
-front of this house, now removed.
-
-No. 114 stands on the site of the old house of the Earls of Salisbury.
-Before the alterations of 1827 there were vestiges of the old building
-remaining. It has been a constant tradition in the lane, that in this
-house, in James II.'s reign, the seven bishops were lodged before they
-were conveyed to the Tower.
-
-Opposite old Salisbury House stood a turnpike, and the tradition in the
-lane is that the Earl of Salisbury obtained its removal as a nuisance. At
-that time the church was literally in the fields. The turnpike-house
-stood (circa 1760) on the site of No. 28, afterwards (in 1828) Pullen's
-wine-vaults. The Westminster Fire Office was first established in St.
-Martin's Lane, between Chandos Street and May's Buildings.
-
-The White Horse livery-stables were originally tea-gardens,[465] and south
-of these was a hop-garden. The oldest house in the lane overhung the White
-Horse stables, and was standing in 1828.
-
-No. 60 was formerly Chippendale's, the great upholsterer and
-cabinet-maker, whose folio work was the great authority in the trade
-before Mr. Hope's classic style overthrew for a time that of Louis
-Quatorze.
-
-No. 63 formerly led to Roubilliac's studio. Here, in 1828, the Sunday
-paper _The Watchman_, was printed.
-
-It must have been here, in the sculptor's time, that Garrick, coming to
-see how his Shakspere statue progressed, drew out a two-foot rule, and put
-on a tragic and threatening face to frighten a great red-headed
-Yorkshireman, who was sawing marble for Roubilliac; but who, to his
-surprise, merely rolled his quid, and coolly said, "What trick are you
-after next, my little master?" Upon the honest sculptor's death, Read, one
-of his pupils, a conceited pretender, took the premises in 1762, and
-advertised himself as "Mr. Roubilliac's successor."
-
-Read executed the poor monuments of the Duchess of Northumberland and of
-Admiral Tyrrell, now in Westminster Abbey. His master used to say to Read
-when he was bragging, "Ven you do de monument, den de varld vill see vot
-von d-- ting you vill make." Nollekens used to say of the admiral's
-monument, "That figure going to heaven out of the sea looks for all the
-world as if it were hanging from a gallows with a rope round its
-neck."[466]
-
-No. 70 was formerly the house where Mr. Hone held his exhibition when his
-picture of "The Conjuror," intended to ridicule Sir Joshua Reynolds as a
-plagiarist, and to insult Miss Angelica Kaufmann, was refused admittance
-at Somerset House. Mr. Nathanael Hone was a miniature-painter on enamel,
-who attempted oil pictures and grew envious of Reynolds. Hone was a tall,
-pompous, big, erect man, who wore a broad brimmed hat and a lapelled coat,
-punctiliously buttoned up to his chin. He walked with a measured, stately
-step, and spoke with an air of great self-importance--in this sort of way:
-"Joseph Nollekens, Esq., R.A., how--do--you--do?"[467]
-
-The corner house of Long Acre, now 72, formed part of the extensive
-premises of Mr. Cobb, George III.'s upholsterer--a proud, pompous man, who
-always strutted about his workshops in full dress. It was Dance's portrait
-of Mr. Cobb, given in exchange for a table, that led to Dance's
-acquaintance with Garrick. One day in the library at Buckingham House, old
-King George asked Cobb to hand him a certain book. Instead of doing so,
-mistaken Cobb called to a man who was at work on a ladder, and said,
-"Fellow, give me that book." The king instantly rose and asked the man's
-name. "Jenkins," replied the astonished upholsterer. "Then," observed the
-good old king, "Jenkins shall hand me the book."[468]
-
-Alderman Boydell, the great encourager of art, when he first began with
-half a shop, used to etch small plates of landscapes in sets of six for
-sixpence. As there were few print-shops then in London, he prevailed upon
-the proprietors of toy-shops to put them in their windows for sale. Every
-Saturday he went the round of the shops to see what had been done, or to
-take more. His most successful shop was "The Cricket-Bat," in Duke's
-Court, St. Martin's Lane.[469]
-
-Abraham Raimbach, the engraver, was born in Cecil Court, St. Martin's
-Lane, in 1776. Sir Joshua Reynolds, in his early period, lived nearly
-opposite May's Buildings. He afterwards went to Great Newport Street,
-where he first met Dr. Johnson.
-
-O'Keefe describes being in a coffee-house in St. Martin's Lane on the very
-morning when the famous No. 45 came out. The unconscious newsman came in,
-and, as a matter of course, laid the paper on the table before him. About
-the year 1777 O'Keefe was standing talking with his brother at Charing
-Cross, when a slender figure in a scarlet coat with a large bag, and
-fierce three-cocked hat, crossed the way, carefully choosing his steps,
-the weather being wet--it was John Wilkes.[470]
-
-When Fuseli returned to London in 1779, after his foreign tour, he resided
-with a portrait painter named Cartwright, at No. 100 St. Martin's
-Lane,[471] and he remained there till his marriage with Miss Rawlins in
-1788, when he removed to Foley Street. Here he commenced his acquaintance
-with Professor Bonnycastle, and produced his popular picture of "The
-Nightmare" (1781), by which the publisher of the print realised L500. Here
-also he revised Cowper's version of the _Iliad_, and became acquainted
-with Sir Joshua Reynolds and Dr. Moore, the author of _Zeluco_.
-
-May's Buildings bear the date of 1739. Mr. May, who built them, lived at
-No. 43, which he ornamented with pilasters and a cornice. This house used
-to be thought a good specimen of architectural brickwork.
-
-The club of "The Eccentrics," in May's Buildings, was, in 1812, much
-frequented by the eloquent Richard Lalor Sheil, by William Mudford, the
-editor of the _Courier_, a man of logical and sarcastic power,--and by
-"Pope Davis," an artist, in later years a great friend of the unfortunate
-Haydon. "Pope Davis" was so called from having painted, when in Rome, a
-large picture of the "Presentation of the Shrewsbury Family to the
-Pope."[472]
-
-The Royal Society of Literature, at 4 St. Martin's Place, Charing Cross,
-was founded in 1823, "for the advancement of literature," on which at
-present it has certainly had no very perceptible influence. It was
-incorporated by royal charter Sept. 13, 1826. George IV. gave 1000 guineas
-a year to this body, which rescued the last years of Coleridge's wasted
-life from utter dependence, and placed Dr. Jamieson above want. William
-IV. discontinued the lavish grant of a king who was generous only with
-other people's money, and was always in debt; and since that the somewhat
-effete society has sunk into a Transaction Publishing Society, or rather a
-club with an improving library. Sir Walter Scott's opposition to the
-society was as determined as Hogarth's against the Royal Academy. "The
-immediate and direct favour of the sovereign," said Scott, who had a
-superstitious respect for any monarch, "is worth the patronage of ten
-thousand societies." Literature wants no patronage now, thank God, but
-only intelligent purchasers; and whether a king does or does not read an
-author's work, is of small consequence to any writer.
-
-[Illustration: OLD SLAUGHTER'S COFFEE-HOUSE.]
-
-Admission to the Royal Society of Literature is obtained by a certificate,
-signed by three members, and an election by ballot. Ordinary members pay
-three guineas on admission, and two guineas annually, or compound by a
-payment of twenty guineas. The society devotes itself for the most part to
-the study of Greek and Latin inscriptions and Egyptian literature.[473]
-This learned body also professes to fix the standard of the English
-language; to read papers on history, poetry, philosophy, and philology; to
-correspond with learned men in foreign countries; to reward literary
-merit; and to publish unedited remains of ancient literature.
-
-St. Martin's Lane has seen many changes. Cranbourne Alley is gone with all
-its bonnet-shops, and the Mews and C'ribbee Islands are no more, but there
-still remain a few old houses, with brick pilasters and semi-Grecian
-pediments, to remind us of the days of Fuseli and Reynolds, Hayman and Old
-Slaughter's, Hogarth and Roubilliac. I can assure my readers that a most
-respectable class of ghosts haunts the artist quarter in St. Martin's
-Lane.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: SALISBURY AND WORCESTER HOUSES, 1630.]
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-LONG ACRE AND ITS TRIBUTARIES.
-
-
-At the latter end of 1664, says Defoe, two men, said to be Frenchmen, died
-of the plague at the Drury Lane end of Long Acre. Dr. Hodges, however, a
-greater authority than Defoe, who wrote fifty-seven years after the event,
-says merely that the pestilence broke out in Westminster, and that two or
-three persons dying, the frightened neighbours removed into the City, and
-there carried the contagion. He, however, distinctly states that the pest
-came to us from Holland, and most probably in a parcel of infected goods
-from Smyrna.[474]
-
-According to Defoe, the family with which the Frenchmen had lodged
-endeavoured to conceal the deaths; but the rumour growing, the Secretary
-of State heard of it, and sent two physicians and a surgeon to inspect the
-bodies. They certifying that the men had really died of the plague, the
-parish clerk returned the deaths to "the Hall," and they were printed in
-the weekly bill of mortality. "The people showed a great concern at this,
-and began to be alarmed all over the town."[475] At Christmas Dr. Hodges
-attended a case of plague, and shortly afterwards a proclamation was
-issued for placing watchmen day and night at the doors of infected houses,
-which were to be marked with a red St. Andrew cross and the subscription
-"Lord have mercy upon us!"[476] By the next September the terrible disease
-had risen to its height, and the deaths ranged as high as 12,000 a week,
-and in the worst night after the bonfires had been burned in the street,
-to 4000 in the twelve hours.[477]
-
-Great Queen Street, so called after Henrietta Maria, the imprudent but
-brave wife of Charles I., was built about 1629, before the troubles. Howes
-(editor of Stow) speaks in 1631, of "the new fair buildings leading into
-Drury Lane."[478] Many of the houses were built by Webb, one of Inigo
-Jones's scholars. The south was the fashionable side, looking towards the
-Pancras fields; most of the north side houses must, therefore, be of a
-later date. According to one authority Inigo Jones himself built Queen
-Street, at the cost of the Jesuits, designing it for a square, and leaving
-in the middle a niche for the statue of Queen Henrietta. "The stately and
-magnificent houses," begun on the other side near Little Queen Street,
-were not continued. There were fleurs-de-luce placed on the walls in
-honour of the queen.[479]
-
-George Digby, the second Earl of Bristol, lived in Great Queen Street, in
-a large house with seven rooms on a floor, a long gallery, and gardens.
-Evelyn describes going to see him (probably there), to consult about the
-site of Greenwich Hospital, with Denham the poet and surveyor, and one of
-Inigo Jones's clerks. Digby was a Knight of the Garter, who first wrote
-against Popery and then converted himself. He persecuted Lord Strafford,
-yet then turning courtier, lived long enough to persecute Lord Clarendon.
-Grammont, Bussy, and Clarendon all decry the earl; and Horace Walpole
-writes wittily of him--"With great parts, he always hurt himself and his
-friends; with romantic bravery, he was always an unsuccessful commander.
-He spoke for the Test Act, though a Roman Catholic, and addicted himself
-to astrology on the birthday of true philosophy."[480]
-
-In 1671 Evelyn describes the earl's house as taken by the Commissioners of
-Trade and Plantations, of which he was one, and furnished with tapestry
-"of the king's." The Duke of Buckingham, the earl of Sandwich (Pepys's
-patron), the Earl of Lauderdale, Sir John Finch, Waller the poet, and
-saturnine Colonel Titus (the author of the terrible pamphlet against
-Cromwell, _Killing no Murder_) were the new occupants.
-
-They sat, says Evelyn, at the board in the council chamber, a very large
-room furnished with atlases, maps, charts, and globes. The first day's
-debate was an ominous one: it related to the condition of New England,
-which had grown rich, strong, and "very independent as to their regard to
-Old England or his majesty. The colony was able to contest with all the
-other plantations,[481] and there was fear of her breaking from her
-dependence. Some of the council were for sending a menacing letter, but
-others who better understood the peevish and touchy humour of that colony
-were utterly against it." A few weeks afterwards Evelyn was at the
-council, when a letter was read from Jamaica, describing how Morgan, the
-Welsh buccaneer, had sacked and burned Panama; the bravest thing of the
-kind done since Drake. Morgan, who cheated his companions and stole their
-spoil, afterwards came to England, and was, like detestable Blood,
-received at court.
-
-Lord Chancellor Finch, Earl of Nottingham, who lived in Great Queen
-Street, presided as Lord High Steward at Lord Strafford's trial, at which
-Evelyn was present, noticing the ill-bred impudence of Titus Oates.[482]
-Finch was the son of a recorder of London, and died in 1681. He was living
-here when that impudent thief, Sadler, stole the mace and purse, and
-carried them off in procession.
-
-The choleric and Quixotic Lord Herbert of Cherbury lived in Great Queen
-Street, in a house on the south side, a few doors east of Great Wyld
-Street. Here he began his wild Deistic work, _De Veritate_, published in
-Paris in 1624, and in London three years before his death. He says that he
-finished this rhapsody in France, where it was praised by Tilenus, an
-Arminian professor at Sedan, and an opponent of the Calvinists, which
-procured him a pension from James I., and also from the learned Grotius
-when he came to Paris, after his escape in a linen-chest from the
-Calvinist fortress of Louvestein. Urged to publish by friends, Lord
-Herbert, afraid of the censure his book might receive, was relieved from
-his doubts by what his vanity and heated imagination pleased to consider a
-vision from heaven.
-
-This Welsh Quixote says, "Being thus doubtful in my chamber one fair day
-in the summer, my casement being open towards the south, the sun shining
-clear and no wind stirring, I took my book, _De Veritate_, in my hand, and
-kneeling on my knees, devoutly said these words: 'Oh, thou eternal God,
-author of the light which now shines upon me, and giver of all inward
-illuminations, I do beseech thee of thy infinite goodness to pardon a
-greater request than a sinner ought to make. I am not satisfied enough
-whether I shall publish this book, _De Veritate_. If it be for thy glory,
-I beseech thee to give me some sign from heaven; if not, I shall suppress
-it!' I had no sooner spoken these words, but a _loud though gentle
-noise_[483] came from the heavens (for it was like nothing on earth),
-which did so comfort and cheer me that I took my petition as granted. And
-this (however strange it may seem) I protest before the eternal God is
-true. Neither am I in any way superstitiously deceived herein, since I did
-not only hear the noise, but in the serenest sky that ever I saw--being
-without _all_ cloud--did, to my thinking, see the place from whence it
-came."
-
-The noise was probably some child falling from a chair overhead, or a
-chest of drawers being moved in an upper room; and if it _had_ been
-thunder in a clear sky, it was no more than Horace once heard. Heaven does
-not often express its approval of Deistical books. Lord Herbert, doubted
-of general, and yet believed in individual revelation. What crazy vanity,
-to think the work of an amateur philosopher of sufficient importance for a
-special revelation,[484] that (in his own opinion) had been denied to a
-neglected world! Lord Herbert, though refused the sacrament by Usher, bore
-it very serenely, asked what o'clock it was, then said, "An hour hence I
-shall depart," turned his head to the other side, and expired.[485] He had
-moved to this quarter from King Street. Lord Herbert, though he wrote a
-Life to vindicate that brutal tyrant Henry VIII., was inconsistent enough
-to join the Parliament against a less wise but more illegal king, Charles
-I. When I pass down Queen Street, wondering whether that southern window
-of the Welsh knight's vision was on the front of the south side, or on the
-back of the southern side of the street, I sometimes think of those soft
-lines of his upon the question "whether love should continue for ever?"
-
- "Having interr'd her infant birth,
- The watery ground that late did mourn
- Was strew'd with flowers for the return
- Of the wish'd bridegroom of the earth.
-
- "The well-accorded birds did sing
- Their hymns unto the pleasant time,
- And in a sweet consorted chime,
- Did welcome in the cheerful spring."
-
-And then on my return home, I get out brave old Ben Jonson, and read his
-lines addressed to this last of the knights:--
-
- "... and on whose every part
- Truth might spend all her voice, Fame all her art.
- Whether thy learning they would take, or wit,
- Or valour, or thy judgment seasoning it,
- Thy standing upright to thyself, thy ends
- Like straight, thy piety to God and friends."
-
-Sir Thomas Fairfax, general of the Parliament, probably lived here, as he
-dated from this street a printed proclamation of the 12th of February
-1648.
-
-Sir Godfrey Kneller, the great portrait painter of William and Mary's
-reign, but more especially of Queen Anne's time, once lived in a house in
-this street. Sir Godfrey, though a humorist, was the vainest of men, and
-was made rather a butt by his friends Pope and Gay. Kneller was the son of
-a surveyor at Luebeck, and intended for the army. King George I., who
-created him a baronet, was the last of the sovereigns who sat to him. Sir
-Godfrey was the successor of Sir Peter Lely in England, but was still more
-slight and careless in manner. His portraits may be often known by the
-curls being thrown behind the back, while in Lely's portraits they fall
-over the shoulders and chest. Kneller was a humorist, but very vain, as a
-man might well be whom Dryden, Pope, Addison, Prior, Tickell, and Steele
-had eulogised in verse. On one occasion, when Pope was sitting watching
-Kneller paint, he determined to fool him "to the top of his bent." "Do you
-not think, Sir Godfrey," said the little poet, slily, "that, if God had
-had your advice at the creation, he would have made a much better world?"
-The painter turned round sharply from his easel, fixed his eyes on Pope,
-and laying one hand on his deformed shoulder, replied, "Fore Gott, Mister
-Pope, I theenk I shoode."
-
-There was wit in all Kneller's banter, and even when his quaint sayings
-told against himself, they seemed to reflect the humour of a man conscious
-of the ludicrous side of his own vanity. To his tailor who brought him his
-son to offer him as an apprentice emulative of Annibale Caracci, whose
-father had also sat cross-legged, Sir Godfrey said, grandly, "Dost thou
-think, man, I can make thy son a painter? No; God Almighty only makes
-painters." To a low fellow whom he overheard cursing himself he said, "God
-damn you? No, God may damn the Duke of Marlborough, and perhaps Sir
-Godfrey Kneller; but do you think he will take the trouble of damning such
-a scoundrel as you?"[486]
-
-Gay on one occasion read some verses to Sir Godfrey (probably those
-describing Pope's imaginary welcome from Greece) in which these outrageous
-lines occur--
-
- "What can the extent of his vast soul confine--
- A painter, critic, engineer, divine?"
-
-Upon which Kneller, remembering that he had been intended for a soldier,
-and perhaps scenting out the joke, said, "Ay, Mr. Gay, all vot you 'ave
-said is very faine and very true, but you 'ave forgot von theeng, my good
-friend. Egad, I should have been a general of an army, for ven I vos in
-Venice there vos a _girandole_, and all the Place of St. Mark vos in a
-smoke of gunpowder, and I did like the smell, Mr. Gay--should have been a
-great general, Mr. Gay."[487]
-
-His dream, too, was related by Pope to Spence as a good story of the
-German's droll vanity. Kneller thought he had ascended by a very high hill
-to heaven, and there found St. Peter at the gate, dealing with a vast
-crowd of applicants. To one he said, "Of what sect was you?" "I was a
-Papist." "Go you there." "What was you?" "A Protestant." "Go you there."
-"And you?" "A Turk." "Go you there." In the meantime St. Luke had descried
-the painter, and asking if he was not the famous Sir Godfrey Kneller,
-entered into conversation with him about his beloved art, so that Sir
-Godfrey quite forgot about St. Peter till he heard a voice behind him--St.
-Peter's--call out, "Come in, Sir Godfrey, and take whatever place you
-like."[488]
-
-Pope is said to have ridiculed his friend under the name of Helluo.[489]
-He certainly laughed at his justice in dismissing a soldier who had stolen
-a joint of meat, and blaming the butcher who had put it in the rogue's
-way. Whenever he saw a constable, followed by a mob, coming up to his
-house at Whitton, he would call out to him, "Mr. Constable, you see that
-turning; go that way; you will find an ale-house, the sign of the King's
-Head: go and make it up."[490]
-
-Jacob Tonson got pictures out of Kneller, covetous as he was, by praising
-him extravagantly, and sending him haunches of fat venison and dozens of
-cool claret. Sir Godfrey used to say to Vandergucht, "Oh, my goot man,
-this old Jacob loves me. He is a very goot man, for you see he loves me,
-he sends me goot things. The venison vos fat." Old Geckie, the surgeon,
-however, got a picture or two even cheaper, for he sent no present, but
-then his praises were as fat as Jacob's venison.[491]
-
-Sir Godfrey used to get very angry if any doubt was expressed as to the
-legitimacy of the Pretender. "His father and mother have sat to me about
-thirty-six times a-piece, and I know every line and bit of their faces.
-Mine Gott, I could paint King James _now_ by memory. I say the child is so
-like both, that there is not a feature in his face but what belongs to
-either father or mother--nay, the nails of his fingers are his
-mother's--the queen that was. Doctor, you may be out in your letters, but
-I cannot be out in my lines."[492]
-
-Kneller had intended Hogarth's father-in-law, Sir James Thornhill, to
-paint his staircase at Whitton, but hearing that Newton was sitting to
-him, he was in dudgeon, declared that no portrait-painter should paint
-his house, and employed "sprawling" Laguerre instead.
-
-Kneller's prices were fifteen guineas for a head, twenty if with only one
-hand, thirty for a half, and sixty for a whole length. He painted much too
-fast and flimsily, and far too much by the help of foreign assistants--in
-fact, avowedly to fill his kitchen. In thirty years he made a large
-fortune, in spite of losing L20,000 in the South Sea Bubble. His wigs,
-drapery, and backgrounds were all painted for him. He is said to have left
-at his death 500 unfinished portraits.[493] His favourite work, the
-portrait of a Chinese converted and brought over by Couplet, a Jesuit, is
-at Windsor. But Walpole preferred his Grinling Gibbons at Houghton.
-
-Kneller left his house in Great Queen Street to his wife, and after her
-decease to his godson Godfrey Huckle, who took the name of Kneller.
-Amongst the celebrated persons painted by Kneller in his best manner were
-Bolingbroke, Wren, Lady Wortley Montague, Pope, Locke, Burnet, Addison,
-Evelyn, and the Earl of Peterborough. The brittleness of this man's fame
-is another proof that he who paints merely for his time must perish with
-his time.
-
-Conway House was in Great Queen Street. Lord Conway, an able soldier,
-brought up by Lord Vere, his uncle, was an epicure, who by his agreeable
-conversation was very acceptable at the court of Charles I.[494] He had
-the misfortune to be utterly routed by the Scotch at Newburn--a defeat
-which gave them Newcastle. The previous Lord Conway was that Secretary of
-State of whom James I. said, "Steenie has given me two proper servants--a
-secretary (Conway) who can neither write nor read, and a groom of the
-bedchamber (Mr. Clarke, a one-handed man) who cannot truss my
-points."[495] It had been well for England if this sottish pedant had had
-no worse servants than Conway and Clarke. Raleigh might then have been
-spared, and Overbuy would not have been poisoned.
-
-Lord Conway, whose son, General Conway, was such an idol of Horace
-Walpole, lived in the family house in Great Queen Street.
-
-Winchester House was not far off. Lord Pawlet figures in all the early
-scenes of the Civil War. He was one of the first nobles to raise forces in
-the West for the wrong-headed king. On one occasion Basing House was all
-but lost by a plot hatched between Waller and the Marquis of Winchester's
-brother, but it was detected in time to save that important place. Basing,
-after three months' siege by a conjunction of Parliament troops from
-Hampshire and Essex, was gallantly succoured by Colonel Gage. The
-Marchioness, a lady of great honour and alliance, being sister to the Earl
-of Essex and to the lady Marchioness of Hertford, enlisted all the Roman
-Catholics in Oxford in this dashing adventure.[496] Basing was, however,
-eventually stormed and taken by Cromwell, who put most of the garrison to
-the sword. William, the fourth marquis, died 1628, and was succeeded by
-his son, who was the father of Charles, created in 1689 Duke of Bolton, a
-title that became extinct in 1794.
-
-John Greenhill, a Long Acre celebrity, was one of the most promising of
-Lely's scholars. He painted portraits, among others, of Locke,
-Shaftesbury, and Davenant. He also drew in crayons, and engraved. It is
-said that Lely was jealous of him, and would not let his pupil see him
-paint, till Greenhill's handsome wife was sent to Sir Peter to sit for her
-portrait, which cost twelve broad pieces or L15. Greenhill, at first
-industrious, became acquainted with the players, and fell into debauched
-courses. Coming home drunk late one night from the Vine Tavern, he fell
-into the kennel in Long Acre, and was carried to Perrey Walton's, the
-royal picture-cleaner, in Lincoln's Inn Fields, where he had been lodging,
-and died in his bed that night (1676), in the flower of his age. He was
-buried at St. Giles's, and shameless Mrs. Aphra Behn, who admired his
-person and his paintings, wrote a long elegy on his death. Sir Peter is
-said to have settled L40 a year on Greenhill's widow and children, but she
-died mad soon after her husband.[497]
-
-In June 1718 Ryan, an actor of Lincoln's Inn Theatre, was supping at the
-Sun in Long Acre, and had placed his sword quietly in the window, when a
-bully named Kelly came up and made passes at him, provoking him to a duel.
-The young actor took his sword, drew it, and passed it through the
-rascal's body. The act being one of obvious self-defence, he was not
-called to serious account for it. This Ryan had acted with Betterton.
-Addison especially selected him as Marcus in his "Cato," and Garrick
-confessed he took Ryan's Richard as his model.[498]
-
-Some years after, Ryan, by this time the Orestes, Macduff, Iago, Cassio,
-and Captain Plume of the Lincoln's Inn Fields Theatre, in passing down
-Great Queen Street, after playing Scipio in "Sophonisba," was fired at by
-a footpad, and had his jaw shattered. "Friend," moaned the wounded man,
-"you have killed me, but I forgive you." The actor, however, recovered to
-resume his place upon the boards, and generous Quin gave him L1000 in
-advance that he had put him down for in his will. He died in 1760.
-
-Hudson, a wretched portrait-painter, although the master of Sir Joshua
-Reynolds, lived in a house now divided into two, Nos. 55 and 56.
-Portrait-painting, being unable to sink lower than Hudson, turned and
-began to rise again. When Reynolds in later years took a villa on Richmond
-Hill, somewhat above that of Hudson, he said, "I never thought I should
-live to look down on my old master." Hudson's house was afterwards
-occupied by that insipid poet, Hoole, the translator of Tasso and of
-Ariosto.
-
-The old West End entrance of this street, a narrow passage known as the
-"Devil's Gap," was taken down in 1765.
-
-Martin Folkes, an eminent scholar and antiquarian, was born in Great Queen
-Street in 1690. He was made vice-president of the Royal Society by Newton
-in 1723, and in 1727, on Sir Isaac's death, disputed the presidentship
-with Sir Hans Sloane,--a post which he eventually obtained in 1741, on the
-resignation of Sir Hans. Folkes was a great numismatist, and seems to
-have been a generous, pleasant man. He died in 1784. The sale of his
-library, prints, and coins lasted fifty-six days. He was, as Leigh Hunt
-remarks, one of "the earliest persons among the gentry to marry an
-actress,"[499] setting by that means an excellent example. His wife's name
-was Lucretia Bradshaw.
-
-Miss Pope, of Queen Street, had a face grave and unpromising, but her
-humour was dry and racy as old sherry. Churchill, in the "Rosciad,"
-mentions her as vivaciously advancing in a jig to perform as Cherry and
-Polly Honeycomb. Later she grew into an excellent Mrs. Malaprop.[500]
-
-This good woman, well-bred lady, and finished actress, lived for forty
-years in Queen Street, two doors east of Freemasons' Tavern; there, the
-Miss Prue, and Cherry, and Jacinta, and Miss Biddy of years before, the
-friend of Garrick and the praised of Churchill, sat, surrounded by
-portraits of Lord Nuneham, General Churchill, Garrick, and Holland, and
-told the story of her first love to Horace Smith.
-
-An attachment had sprung up between her and Holland, but Garrick had
-warned her of the man's waywardness and instability. Miss Pope would not
-believe the accusations till one day, on her way to see Mrs. Clive at
-Twickenham, she beheld the unfaithful Holland in a boat with Mrs.
-Baddeley, near the Eel-pie Island. She accused him at the next rehearsal,
-he would confess no wrong, and she never spoke to him again but on the
-stage. "But I have reason to know," said the old lady, shedding tears as
-she looked up at her cruel lover's portrait, "that he never was really
-happy."
-
-Miss Pope left Queen Street at last, finding the Freemasons too noisy
-neighbours, especially after dinner. "Miss Pope," says Hazlitt, "was the
-very picture of a duenna or an antiquated dowager in the latter spring of
-beauty--the second childhood of vanity; more quaint, fantastic, and
-old-fashioned, more pert, frothy, and light-headed than can be
-imagined."[501]
-
-It was not very easy to please poor soured Hazlitt, whose opinion of women
-had not been improved by his having been jilted by a servant girl. This
-good woman, Miss Pope, died at Hadley in 1801, her latter life having been
-embittered by the loss of her brother and favourite niece.
-
-The Freemasons' Hall, built by T. Sandby, architect, was opened in 1776,
-by Lord Petre, a Roman Catholic nobleman, with the usual mysterious
-ceremonials of the order. The annual assemblies of the lodges had
-previously been held in the halls of the City's companies. The tavern was
-built in 1786, by William Tyler, and has since been enlarged. In the
-tavern public meetings and dinners take place, chiefly in May and June.
-Here a farewell banquet was given to John Philip Kemble, and a public
-dinner on his birthday, to James Hogg, the Ettrick Shepherd. All the
-waiters in this tavern are Masons. The house has been lately enlarged. Its
-new great Hall was inaugurated by the dinner given to Charles Dickens by
-his friends on his departure for America in November 1857.
-
-Isaac Sparkes, a famous Irish comedian about 1774, was an old, fat,
-unwieldy man, with a vast double chin, and large, bushy, prominent
-eyebrows. When in London, he established in Long Acre a Club, which was
-frequented by Lord Townshend, Lord Effingham, Lord Lindore, Captain
-Mulcaster, Mr. Crewe of Cheshire, and "other nobles and fashionables."
-Sparkes, who dressed well and had a commanding presence, probably presided
-over it, as he did at Dublin clubs, dressed in robes as Lord Chief Justice
-Joker.[502]
-
-In one of the grand old houses in Great Queen Street, on the right hand as
-one goes towards Lincoln's Inn Fields, occupied before 1830 by Messrs.
-Allman the booksellers, died Lewis the comedian, famous to the last, as
-Leigh Hunt tells us, for his invincible airiness and juvenility. "Mr.
-Lewis," says the same veteran play-goer, "displayed a combination rarely
-to be found in acting--that of the fop and the real gentleman. With a
-voice, a manner, and a person all equally graceful and light, with
-features at once whimsical and genteel, he played on the top of his
-profession like a plume. He was the Mercutio of the age, in every sense of
-the word mercurial. His airy, breathless voice, thrown to the audience
-before he appeared, was the signal of his winged animal spirits; and when
-he gave a glance of his eye or touched with his finger another man's ribs,
-it was the very _punctum saliens_ of playfulness and innuendo. We saw him
-take leave of the public, a man of sixty-five, looking not more than half
-the age, in the character of the Copper Captain; and heard him say, in a
-voice broken with emotion, that for the space of thirty years he had not
-once incurred their displeasure."[503]
-
-Benjamin Franklin, when first in England, worked at the printing-office of
-Mr. Watts, in Little Wild Street, after being employed for twelve months
-at one Palmer's, in Bartholomew Close. He lodged close by in Duke Street,
-opposite the Roman Catholic Chapel, with a widow, to whom he paid
-three-and-sixpence weekly. His landlady was a clergyman's daughter, who
-had married a Catholic, and abjured Protestantism. She and Franklin were
-much together, as he kept good hours and she was lame and almost confined
-to her room. Their frugal supper often consisted of nothing but half an
-anchovy, a small slice of bread and butter each, and half a pint of ale
-between them. On Franklin proposing to leave for cheaper lodgings, she
-consented to let him retain his room at two shillings a week. In the attic
-of the house lived a voluntary nun. She was a lady who early in life had
-been sent to the Continent for her health, but unable to bear the climate,
-had returned home to live in seclusion on L12 a year, devoting the rest of
-her income to charity, and subsisting, healthy and cheerful, on nothing
-but water-gruel. Her presence was thought a blessing to the house, and
-several tenants in succession had charged her no rent. She permitted the
-occasional visits of Franklin and his landlady; and the brave American
-lad, while he pitied her superstition, felt confirmed in his frugality by
-her example.
-
-During his first weeks with Mr. Watts, Franklin worked as a pressman,
-drinking only water while his companions had their five pints of porter
-daily. The "Water American," as he was called, was, however, stronger than
-his colleagues, and tried to persuade some of them that strong beer was
-not necessary for strong work. His argument was that bread contained more
-materials of strength than beer, and that it was only corn in the beer
-that produced the strength in the liquid.
-
-Born to be a reformer, Franklin persuaded the _chapel_ to alter some of
-their laws; he resisted impositions, and conciliated the respect of his
-fellows. He worked as a pressman, as he had done in America, for the sake
-of the exercise. He used, he tells us, to carry up and down stairs with
-one hand a large _form_ of type, while the other fifty men required both
-hands to do the same work.
-
-Franklin's fellow pressman drank every day a pint of beer before
-breakfast, a pint with bread and cheese for breakfast, a pint between
-breakfast and dinner, one at dinner, one again at six in the afternoon,
-and another after his day's work; and all this he declared to be necessary
-to give him strength for the press. "This custom," said the King of Common
-Sense, "seemed to me abominable." Franklin, however, failed to make a
-convert of this man, and he went on paying his four or five shillings a
-week for the "cursed beverage," destined probably, poor devil, to remain
-all his life in a state of voluntary wretchedness, serfdom, and poverty.
-
-A few of the men consented to follow Franklin's example, and renouncing
-beer and cheese, to take for breakfast a basin of warm gruel, with butter,
-toast, and nutmeg. This did not cost more than a pint of beer--"namely,
-three halfpence"--and at the same time was more nourishing and kept the
-head clearer. Those who gorged themselves with beer would sometimes run up
-a score and come to the Water American for credit, "their light being
-out." Franklin attended at the great stone table every Saturday evening to
-take up the little debts, which sometimes amounted to thirty shillings a
-week. "This circumstance," says Franklin in his autobiography, "added to
-the reputation of my being a tolerable _gabber_--or, in other words,
-skilful in the art of burlesque--kept up my importance in the 'chapel.' I
-had, besides, recommended myself to the esteem of my master by my
-assiduous application to business, never observing 'Saint' Monday. My
-extraordinary quickness in composing always procured me such work as was
-most urgent, and which is commonly best paid; and thus my time passed away
-in a very pleasant manner."[504]
-
-Franklin, like a truly great man, was quietly proud of the humble origin
-from which he had risen; and when he came to England as the agent and
-ambassador of Massachusetts, he paid a visit to his work-room in Wild
-Street, and going to his old friend the press, said to the two workmen
-busy at it, "Come, my friends, we will drink together; it is now forty
-years since I worked like you at this very press as a journeyman printer."
-
-Wild House stood on the site of Little Wild Street. The Duchess of Ormond
-was living there in 1655.[505]
-
-On the day when King James II. escaped from London the mob grew unruly,
-and assembled in great force to pull down houses where either mass was
-said or priests lodged. Don Pietro Ronguillo, the Spanish ambassador, who
-lived at Wild House, and whom Evelyn mentions as having received him with
-"extraordinary civility" (March 26, 1681), had not thought it necessary to
-ask for soldiers, though the rich Roman Catholics had sent him their money
-and plate as to a sanctuary, and the plate of the Chapel Royal was also in
-his care. But the house was sacked without mercy; his noble library
-perished in the flames; the chapel was demolished; the pictures, rich
-beds, and furniture were destroyed,--the poor Spaniard making his escape
-by a back door.[506] His only comfort was that the sacred Host in his
-chapel was rescued.[507]
-
-In 1780 another savage and thievish Protestant mob, under Lord George
-Gordon, assembled in St. George's Fields to petition Parliament against
-the Test Act, which relieved Roman Catholics from many vexatious penalties
-and unjust disabilities on condition of their taking their oaths of
-allegiance and disbelief in the infamous doctrines of the Jesuits. The mob
-assembled on the 2d of June, and jostled and insulted the Peers going to
-the House of Lords. The same evening the people demolished the greater
-part of the Roman Catholic Chapel in Duke Street. On Monday they stripped
-the house and shop of Mr. Maberly, of Little Queen Street, who had been a
-witness at the trial of some rioters. On Tuesday they passed through Long
-Acre and burnt Newgate, releasing three hundred prisoners, and the same
-day destroyed the house of Justice Cox in Great Queen Street.[508] In
-these street riots seventy-two private houses and four public gaols were
-burnt, and more than four hundred rioters perished.
-
-At the above-named chapel Nollekens, the eminent sculptor, was baptized in
-1737. The present chapel is much resorted to on Sundays by the Irish poor
-and foreigners, who live about Drury Lane.
-
-Nicholas Stone, the great monumental sculptor, lived in Long Acre. In 1619
-Inigo Jones began the new Banqueting House at Whitehall, and replaced the
-one destroyed by fire six months before. This master mason was Nicholas
-Stone,[509] the sculptor of the fine monument to Sir Francis Vere in
-Westminster Abbey. His pay was 4s. 10d. a day. Stone also designed Dr.
-Donne's splendid monument in St. Paul's. Roubilliac was a great admirer of
-the kneeling knight at the north-west corner of Vere's tomb. He used to
-stand and watch it, and say, "Hush! hush! he vill speak presently." Mr. J.
-T. Smith seems to think that the Shakspere monument at Stratford is in
-this sculptor's manner.[510] Inigo Jones, who had been fined for having
-borne arms at the siege of Basing House, joined with Nicholas Stone in
-burying their money near Inigo's house in Scotland Yard; but as the
-Parliament encouraged servants to betray such hidden treasures, the
-partners removed their money and hid it again with their own hands in
-Lambeth Marsh.
-
-Oliver Cromwell, when member for Cambridge, lived from 1637 to 1643, on
-the south side of Long Acre, two doors from Nicholas Stone the sculptor.
-
-John Taylor, the "Water-Poet" an eccentric poetaster, kept a public-house
-in Phoenix Alley, now Hanover Court, near Long Acre. He was a Thames
-waterman, who had fought at the taking of Cadiz, and afterwards travelled
-to Germany and Scotland as a servant to Sir William Waade. He was then
-made collector of the wine-dues for the lieutenant of the Tower, and wrote
-a life of Old Parr, and sixty-three volumes of satire and jingling
-doggerel, not altogether without vivacity and vigour. He called himself
-"the King's Water Poet" and "the Queen's Waterman;" and in 1623 wrote a
-tract called "The World runs on Wheels"--a violent attack on the use of
-coaches. "I dare truly affirm," says the writer, "that every day in any
-term (especially if the court be at Whitehall) they do rob us of our
-livings and carry five hundred and sixty fares daily from us." In this
-quaint pamphlet Taylor gives a humorous account of his once riding in his
-master's coach from Whitehall to the Tower. "Before I had been drawn
-twenty yards," he says, "such a timpany of pride puft me up that I was
-ready to burst with the wind-cholic of vaine glory." He complains
-particularly of the streets and lanes being blocked with carriages,
-especially Blackfriars and Fleet Street or the Strand after a masque or
-play at court; the noise deafening every one and souring the beer, to the
-injury of the public health. It is Taylor who mentions that William
-Boonen, a Dutchman, first introduced coaches into England in 1564, and
-became Queen Elizabeth's coachman. "It is," he says, "a doubtful question
-whether the devil brought tobacco into England in a coach, or brought a
-coach in a fog or mist of tobacco." Nor did Taylor rest there, for he
-presented a petition to James I., which was submitted to Sir Francis
-Bacon and other commissioners, to compel all play-houses to stand on the
-Bankside, so as to give more work to watermen. In the Civil War, Taylor
-went to Oxford and wrote ballads for the king. On his return to London, he
-settled in Long Acre with a mourning crown for a sign;[511] but the
-Puritans resenting this emblem, he had his own portrait painted instead
-with this motto--
-
- "There's many a head stands for a sign:
- Then, gentle reader, why not mine?"
-
-Taylor was born in 1580, and died in 1654; and the following epitaph was
-written on the vain, honest fellow, who was buried at St.
-Martin's-in-the-Fields:--
-
- "Here lies the Water-poet, honest John,
- Who rowed on the streams of Helicon;
- Where having many rocks and dangers past,
- He at the haven of Heaven arrived at last."[512]
-
-From 1682 to 1686 John Dryden lived in Long Acre, on the north side, in a
-house facing what formerly was Rose Street. His name appears in the
-rate-books as "John Dryden, Esq."--an unusual distinction--and the sum he
-paid to the poor varied from 18s. to L1.[513] It was here he resided when
-he was beaten, one December evening in 1679, by three ruffians hired by
-the Earl of Rochester and the Duchess of Portsmouth. Sir Walter Scott
-makes the poet live at the time in Gerard Street; but no part of Gerard
-Street was built in 1679. Rochester had the year before ridiculed Dryden
-as "Poet Squab," and believed that Dryden had helped Mulgrave in
-ridiculing him in his clumsy "Essay on Satire." The best lines of this
-dull poem are these:--
-
- "Of fighting sparks Fame may her pleasure say,
- But 'tis a bolder thing to run away.
- The world may well forgive him all his ill,
- For every fault does prove his penance still;
- Falsely he falls into some dangerous noose,
- And then as meanly labours to get loose."
-
-A letter from Rochester to a friend, dated November 21, in the above year,
-is still extant, in which he names Dryden as the author of the satire, and
-concludes with the following threat:--"If he (Dryden) falls on me at the
-blunt, which is his very good weapon in wit, I will forgive him, if you
-please, and _leave the repartee to Black Will with a cudgel_."[514]
-
-Dryden offered a reward of fifty pounds for the discovery of the men who
-cudgelled him, depositing the money in the hands of "Mr. Blanchard,
-goldsmith, next door to Temple Bar," but all in vain. The Rose Alley
-satire, the Rose Alley ambuscade, and the Dryden salutation, became
-established jokes with Dryden's countless enemies. Even Mulgrave himself,
-in his _Art of Poetry_ said of Dryden coldly--
-
- "Though praised and punished for another's rhymes,
- His own deserve as great applause sometimes."
-
-And, in a conceited note, the amateur poet described the libel as one for
-which Dryden had been unjustly "_applauded and wounded_." But these lines
-and this note Mulgrave afterwards suppressed.
-
-Poor Otway, whom Rochester had satirised, and who had accused Dryden of
-saying of his _Don Carlos_ that, "Egad, there was not a line in it he
-would be author of," stood up bravely for Dryden as an honest satirist in
-these vigorous verses:--
-
- "Poets in honour of the truth should write,
- With the same spirit brave men for it fight.
-
- * * * * *
-
- From any private cause where malice reigns,
- Or general pique all blockheads have to brains."
-
-Dryden never took any poetical revenge on Rochester, and in the prefatory
-essay to his _Juvenal_ he takes credit for that forbearance.[515]
-
-Edward (more generally known as Ned) Ward was the landlord of
-public-houses alternately in Moorfields, Clerkenwell, Fulwood's Rents, and
-Long Acre. He was born in 1667, and died 1731. He was a High Tory, and
-fond of the society of poets and authors.[516] Attacked in the _Dunciad_,
-he turned _Don Quixote_ into Hudibrastic verse, and wrote endless songs,
-lampoons, coarse clever satires, and _Dialogues on Matrimony_ (1710).
-
-The father of Pepys's long-suffering wife lived in Long Acre; and the
-bustling official describes, with a stultifying exactitude, his horror at
-a visit which he found himself forced to pay to a house surrounded by
-taverns.
-
-Dr. Arbuthnot, in a letter to Mr. Watkins, gives Bessy Cox--a woman in
-Long Acre whom Prior would have married when her husband died--a
-detestable character. The infatuated poet left his estate between his old
-servant Jonathan Drift, and this woman, who boasted that she was the
-poet's Emma,--another virago, Flanders Jane, being his Chloe.[517]
-
-It is said of this careless, pleasant poet, that after spending an
-intellectual evening with Oxford, Bolingbroke, Pope, and Swift, in order
-to unbend, he would smoke a pipe and drink a bottle of ale with a common
-soldier and his wife in Long Acre. Cibber calls the man a butcher;[518]
-other writers make him a cobbler or a tavern-keeper, which is more likely.
-The shameless husband is said to have been proud of the poet's preference
-for his wife. Pope, who was remorseless at the failings of friends, calls
-the woman a wretch, and said to Spence, "Prior was not a right good man;
-he used to bury himself for whole days and nights together with this poor
-mean creature, and often drank hard." This person, who perhaps is
-misrepresented--and where there is a doubt the prisoner at the bar should
-always have the benefit of it--was the Venus of the poet's verse. To her
-Prior wrote, after Walpole tried to impeach him:--
-
- "From public noise and faction's strife,
- From all the busy ills of life,
- Take me, my Chloe, to thy breast,
- And lull my wearied soul to rest.
-
- "For ever in this humble cell [ale-house]
- Let thee and I [me], my fair one, dwell;
- None enter else but Love, and he
- Shall bar the door and keep the key."
-
-Prior was the son of a joiner,[519] and was brought up, as before
-mentioned, by his uncle, a tavern-keeper at Charing Cross, where the
-clever waiter's knowledge of Horace led to his being sent to college by
-the Earl of Dorset. Abandoning literature, he finally became our
-ambassador to France. He died in retirement in 1721.
-
-It was in a poor shoemaker's small window in Long Acre,--half of it
-devoted to boots, half to pictures--that poor starving Wilson's fine
-classical landscapes were exposed, often vainly, for sale. Here, from his
-miserable garret in Tottenham Court Road, the great painter, peevish and
-soured by neglect, would come swearing at his rivals Barret and Smith of
-Chichester. I can imagine him, with his tall, burly figure, his red face,
-and his enormous nose, striding out of the shop, thirsting for porter, and
-muttering that, if the pictures of Wright of Derby had fire, his had air.
-Yet this great painter, whose works are so majestic and glowing, so fresh,
-airy, broad, and harmonious, was all but starved. The king refused to
-purchase his "Kew Gardens," and the very pawnbrokers grew weary of taking
-his Tivolis and Niobes as pledges, far preferring violins, flat-irons, or
-telescopes.
-
-It was in Long Acre that that delightful idyllic painter, Stothard, was
-born in 1755. His father, a Yorkshireman, kept an inn in the street.[520]
-Sent for his health into Yorkshire, and placed with an old lady who had
-some choice engravings, he began to draw. The first subject that he ever
-painted was executed with an oyster-shell full of black paint, borrowed
-from the village plumber and glazier. This little man was the father of
-many a Watteau lover and tripping Boccaccio nymph. That genial and
-graceful artist, who illustrated Chaucer, _Robinson Crusoe_, and _The
-Pilgrim's Progress_, had the road to fame pointed out to him first by
-that little black man.
-
-On the accession of King George I. the Tories had such sway over the
-London mobs, that the friends of the Protestant succession resolved to
-found cheap tavern clubs in various parts of the City in order that
-well-affected tradesmen might meet to keep up their spirit of loyalty, and
-serve as focus-points of resistance in case of Tory tumults.
-
-Defoe, a staunch Whig, describes one of these assemblies in Long Acre,
-which probably suggested the rest. At the Mughouse Club in Long Acre,
-about a hundred gentlemen, lawyers, and tradesmen met in a large room, at
-seven o'clock on Wednesday and Saturday evenings in the winter, and broke
-up soon after ten. A grave old gentleman, "in his own grey hairs,"[521]
-and within a few months of ninety, was the president, and sat in an
-"armed" chair, raised some steps above the rest of the company, to keep
-the room in order. A harp was played all the time at the lower end of the
-room, and every now and then one of the company rose and entertained the
-rest with a song. Nothing was drunk but ale, and every one chalked his
-score on the table beside him. What with the songs and drinking healths
-from one table to another, there was no room for politics or anything that
-could sour conversation. The members of these clubs retired when they
-pleased, as from a coffee-house.
-
-Old Sir Hans Sloane's coach, made by John Aubrey, Queen Anne's coachmaker,
-in Long Acre, and given to him by her for curing her of a fit of the gout,
-was given by Sir Hans to his old butler, who set up the White Horse Inn
-behind Chelsea Church, where it remained for half a century.[522]
-
-Charles Catton, one of the early Academicians, was originally a coach and
-sign painter. He painted a lion as a sign for his friend, a celebrated
-coachmaker, at that time living in Long Acre.[523] A sign painted by
-Clarkson, that hung at the north-east corner of Little Russell Street
-about 1780, was said to have cost L500, and crowds used to collect to
-look at it.
-
-Lord William Russell was led from Holborn into Little Queen Street on his
-way to the scaffold in Lincoln's Inn Fields. As the coach turned into this
-street, Lord Russell said to Tillotson, "I have often turned to the other
-hand with great comfort, but I now turn to this with greater." He referred
-to Southampton House, on the opposite side of Holborn, which he inherited
-through his brave and good wife, the grand-daughter of Shakspere's early
-patron.
-
-In the year 1796 Charles Lamb resided with his father, mother, aunt, and
-sister in lodgings at No. 7 Little Queen Street, a house, I believe,
-removed to make way for the church. Southey describes a call which he made
-on them there in 1794-5. The father had once published a small quarto
-volume of poetry, of which "The Sparrow's Wedding" was his favourite, and
-Charles used to delight him by reading this to him when he was in his
-dotage. In 1797 Lamb published his first verses. His father, the
-ex-servant and companion of an old Bencher in the Temple, was sinking into
-the grave; his mother had lost the use of her limbs, and his sister was
-employed by day in needlework, and by night in watching her mother. Lamb,
-just twenty-one years old, was a clerk in the India House. On the 22d of
-September[524] Miss Lamb, who had been deranged some years before by
-nervous fatigue, seized a case-knife while dinner was preparing, chased a
-little girl, her apprentice, round the room, and on her mother calling to
-her to forbear, stabbed her to the heart. Lamb arrived only in time to
-snatch the knife from his sister's hand. He had that morning been to
-consult a doctor, but had not found him at home. The verdict at the
-inquest was "Insanity," and Mary Lamb was sent to a mad-house, where she
-soon recovered her reason. Poor Lamb's father and aunt did not long
-survive. Not long after, Lamb himself was for six weeks confined in an
-asylum. There is extant a terrible letter in which he describes rushing
-from a party of friends who were supping with him soon after the horrible
-catastrophe, and in an agony of regret falling on his knees by his
-mother's coffin, asking forgiveness of Heaven for forgetting her so
-soon.[525]
-
-There is no doubt that poor Lamb played the sot over his nightly grog; but
-he had a noble soul, and let us be lenient with such a man--
-
- "Be to his faults a little blind,
- And to his virtues very kind."
-
-He abandoned her whom he loved, together with all meaner ambitions, and
-drudged his years away as a poor, ignoble clerk, in order to maintain his
-half-crazed sister; for this purpose--true knight that he was, though he
-never drew sword--he gave all that he had--HIS LIFE! Peace, then! peace be
-to his ashes!
-
-[Illustration: LYON'S INN, 1804.]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: CRAVEN HOUSE, 1790]
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-DRURY LANE.
-
-
-The Roll of Battle Abbey tells us that the founder of the Drury family
-came into England with that brave Norman robber, the Conqueror, and
-settled in Suffolk.[526]
-
-From this house branched off the Druries of Hawstead, in the same county,
-who built Drury House in the time of Elizabeth. It stood a little behind
-the site of the present Olympic Theatre. Of another branch of the same
-family was that Sir Drue Drury, who, together with Sir Amias Powlett, had
-at one time the custody of Mary, Queen of Scots.
-
-Drury Lane takes its name from a house probably built by Sir William
-Drury, a Knight of the Garter, and a most able commander in the desultory
-Irish wars during the reign of Elizabeth, who fell in a duel with John
-Burroughs, fought to settle a foolish quarrel about some punctilio of
-precedency.[527] In this house, in 1600, the imprudent friends of rash
-Essex resolved on the fatal outbreak that ended so lamentably at Ludgate.
-The Earl of Southampton then resided there.[528] The plots of Blount,
-Davis, Davers, etc., were communicated to Essex by letter. It was noticed
-that at his trial the earl betrayed agitation at the mention of Drury
-House, though he had carefully destroyed all suspicious papers.
-
-Sir William's son Robert was a patron of Dr. Donne, the religious poet and
-satirist, who in 1611 had apartments assigned to him and his wife in Drury
-House. Donne, though the son of a man of some fortune, was foolish enough
-to squander his money when young, and in advanced life was so wanting in
-self-respect as to live about in other men's houses, paying for his food
-and lodging by his wit and conversation. He lived first with Lord
-Chancellor Egerton, Bacon's predecessor, afterwards at Drury House and
-with Sir Francis Wooley at Pitford, in Surrey. After his clandestine
-marriage with Lady Ellesmere's niece, Donne's life was for some time a
-hard and troublesome one.
-
-"Sir Robert Drury," says Isaac Walton, "a gentleman of a very noble estate
-and a more liberal mind, assigned Donne and his wife a useful apartment in
-his own large house in Drury Lane, and rent free; he was also a cherisher
-of his studies, and such a friend as sympathised with him and his in all
-their joys and sorrows."[529]
-
-Sir Robert, wishing to attend Lord Hay as King James's ambassador at his
-audiences in Paris with Henry IV., begged Donne to accompany him. But the
-poet refused, his wife being at the time near her confinement and in poor
-health, and saying that "her divining soul boded some ill in his absence."
-But Sir Robert growing more urgent, and Donne unwilling to refuse his
-generous friend a request, at last obtained from his wife a faint consent
-for a two months' absence. On the twelfth day the party reached Paris. Two
-days afterwards Donne was left alone in the room where Sir Robert and
-other friends had dined. Half an hour afterwards Sir Robert returned, and
-found Mr. Donne still alone, "but in such an ecstasy, and so altered in
-his looks," as amazed him. After a long and perplexed pause, Donne said,
-"I have had a dreadful vision since I saw you; I have seen my dear wife
-pass by me twice in this room with her hair hanging about her shoulders
-and a dead child in her arms;" to which Sir Robert replied, "Sure, sir,
-you have slept since I saw you, and this is the result of some melancholy
-dream, which I desire you to forget, for you are now awake." Donne assured
-his friend that he had not been asleep, and that on the second appearance
-his wife stopped, looked him in the face, and then vanished.
-
-The next day, however, neither rest nor sleep had altered Mr. Donne's
-opinion, and he repeated the story with only a more deliberate and
-confirmed confidence. All this inclining Sir Robert to some faint belief,
-he instantly sent off a servant to Drury House to bring him word in what
-condition Mrs. Donne was. The messenger returned in due time, saying that
-he had found Mrs. Donne very sad and sick in bed, and that after a long
-and dangerous labour she had been delivered of a dead child; and upon
-examination, the delivery proved to have been at the very day and hour in
-which Donne had seen the vision. Walton is proud of this late miracle, so
-easily explainable by natural causes; and illustrates the sympathy of
-souls by the story of two lutes, one of which, if both are tuned to the
-same pitch, will, though untouched, echo the other when it is played.
-
-Far be it from me to wish to ridicule any man's belief in the
-supernatural; but still, as a lover of truth, wishing to believe what
-_is_, whether natural or supernatural, without confusing the former with
-the latter, let me analyse this pictured presentiment. An imaginative man,
-against his sick wife's wish, undertakes a perilous journey. Absent from
-her--alone--after wine and friendly revel feeling still more lonely--in
-the twilight he thinks of home and the wife he loves so much. Dreaming,
-though awake, his fears resolve themselves into a vision, seen by the
-mind, and to the eye apparently vivid as reality. The day and hour happen
-to correspond, or he persuades himself afterwards that they do correspond
-with the result, and the day-dream is henceforward ranked among
-supernatural visions. Who is there candid enough to write down the
-presentiments that do not come true? And after all, the vision, to be
-consistent, should have been followed by the death of Mrs. Donne as well
-as the child.
-
-Some verses are pointed out by Isaac Walton as those written by Donne on
-parting from her for this journey. But there is internal evidence in them
-to the contrary; for they refer to Italy, not to Paris, and to a lady who
-would accompany him as a page, which a lady in Mrs. Donne's condition
-could scarcely have done. I have myself no doubt that the verses cited
-were written to his wife long before, when their marriage was as yet
-concealed. With what a fine vigour the poem commences!--
-
- "By our first strange and fatal interview,
- By all desires which thereof did ensue,
- By our long-striving hopes, by that remorse
- Which my words' masculine persuasive force
- Begot in thee, and by the memory
- Of hurts which spies and rivals threaten me!"
-
- * * * * *
-
-And how full of true feeling and passionate tenderness is the dramatic
-close!--
-
- "When I am gone dream me some happiness,
- Nor let thy looks our long-hid love confess;
- Nor praise nor dispraise me; nor bless nor curse
- Openly love's force; nor in bed fright thy nurse
- With midnight startings, crying out, 'Oh! oh!
- Nurse! oh, my love is slain! I saw him go
- O'er the white Alps alone; I saw him, I,
- Assailed, taken, fight, stabbed, bleed, and die.'"
-
-The verses really written on Donne's leaving for Paris begin with four
-exquisite lines--
-
- "As virtuous men pass mild away,
- And whisper to their souls to go,
- Whilst some of their sad friends do say,
- 'The breath goes now,' and some say 'No!'"
-
-A later verse contains a strange conceit, beaten out into pin-wire a page
-long by a modern poet--[530]
-
- "If we be two, we are two so
- As stiff twin compasses are two;
- Thy soul, the fix'd foot, makes no show
- To move, but does if t'other do."
-
-Donne was the chief of what Dr. Johnson unwisely called "the metaphysical
-school of poetry." Dryden accuses Donne of perplexing the fair sex with
-nice speculations.[531] His poems, often pious and beautiful, are
-sometimes distorted with strange conceits. He has a poem on a flea; and in
-his lines on Good Friday he thus whimsically expresses himself:--
-
- "Who sees God's face--that is, self-life--must die:
- What a death were it then to see God die!
- It made his own lieutenant, Nature, shrink;
- It made his footstool crack and the sun wink.
- Could I behold those hands, which span the Poles,
- And tune all sphears at once, pierced with those holes!"[532]
-
-This imitator of the worst faults of Marini was made Dean of St. Paul's by
-King James I., who delighted to converse with him. The king used to say,
-"I always rejoice when I think that by my means Donne became a divine." He
-gave the poet the deanery one day as he sat at dinner, saying "that he
-would carve to him of a dish he loved well, and that he might take the
-dish (the deanery) home to his study and say grace there to himself, and
-much good might it do him."
-
-Shortly before his death Donne dressed himself in his shroud, and standing
-there, with his eyes shut and the sheet opened, "To discover his thin,
-pale, and death-like face," he caused a curious painter to take his
-picture. This picture he kept near his bed as a ghostly remembrance, and
-from this Nicholas Stone, the sculptor, carved his effigy, which still
-exists in St. Paul's, having survived the Great Fire, though the rest of
-his tomb and monument has perished.
-
-Drury House took the name of Craven House when rebuilt by Lord Craven.
-There is a tradition in Yorkshire, where the deanery of Craven is
-situated, that this chivalrous nobleman's father was sent up to London by
-the carrier, and there became a mercer or draper. His son was not unworthy
-of the staunch old Yorkshire stock. He fought under Gustavus Adolphus
-against Wallenstein and Tilly, and afterwards attached himself to the
-service of the unfortunate King and Queen of Bohemia, and won wealth and a
-title for his family, which the Wars of the Roses had first reduced to
-indigence.
-
-The Queen of Bohemia had been married in 1613 to Frederic, Count Palatine
-of the Rhine, only a few months after the death of Prince Henry her
-brother. The young King of Spain had been her suitor, and the Pope had
-opposed her match with a Protestant. She was married on St. Valentine's
-Day; and Donne, from his study in Drury Lane, celebrated the occasion by a
-most extravagant epithalamion in which is to be found this outrageous
-line--
-
- "Here lies a She sun, and a He moon there."
-
-The poem opens prettily enough with these lines--
-
- "Hail, Bishop Valentine, whose day this is!
- All the air is thy diocese;
- And all the chirping choristers
- And other birds are thy parishioners.
- Thou marry'st every year
- The lyrique lark and the grave whispering dove."
-
-At seventeen Sir William Craven had entered the service of the Prince of
-Orange. On the accession of Charles I. he was ennobled. At the storming of
-Creuzenach he was the first of the English Cavaliers to mount the breach
-and plant the flag. It was then that Gustavus said smilingly to him, "I
-perceive, sir, you are willing to give a younger brother a chance of
-coming to your title and estate." At Donauwert the young Englishman again
-distinguished himself. In the same month that Gustavus fell at Lutzen, the
-Elector Palatine died at Mentz. While Grotius interceded for the Queen of
-Bohemia, Lord Craven fought for her in the vineyards of the
-Palatinate.[533] In consequence, perhaps, of Richelieu's intrigues, four
-years elapsed before Charles I. took compassion on the children of his
-widowed sister, whose cause the Puritans had loudly advocated. When
-Charles and Rupert did go to England, they went under the care of the
-trusty Lord Craven, who was to try to recover the arrears of the widow's
-pension. On their return to Germany, to campaign in Westphalia, Rupert and
-Lord Craven were taken prisoners and thrown into the castle at Vienna--a
-confinement that lasted three years, a long time for brave young soldiers
-who, like the Douglas, "preferred the lark's song to the mouse's squeak."
-
-Later in the Civil War we find this same generous nobleman giving L50,000
-to King Charles, at a time when he was a beggar and a fugitive. Cromwell,
-enraged at the aid thus ministered to an enemy, accused the Cavalier of
-enlisting volunteers for the Stuart, and instantly, with stern
-promptitude, sequestered all his English estates except Combe Abbey. In
-the meantime Lord Craven served the State and his queen bravely, and
-waited for better times. It was this faithful servant who consoled the
-royal widow for her son's ill-treatment, the slander heaped upon her
-daughter, and the incessant vexations of importunate creditors.
-
-The Restoration brought no good news for the unfortunate queen. Charles,
-afraid of her claims for a pension, delayed her return to England, till
-the Earl of Craven generously offered her a house next his own in Drury
-Lane. She found there a pleasant and commodious mansion, surrounded by a
-delightful garden.[534] It does not appear that she went publicly to
-court, or joined in the royal revelries; but she visited the theatres with
-her nephew Charles and her good old friend and host, and she was reunited
-to her son Rupert.
-
-In the autumn of 1661, the year after the Restoration, she removed to
-Leicester House, then the property of Sir Robert Sydney, Earl of
-Leicester, and in the next February she died.[535] Evelyn mentions a
-violent tempestuous wind that followed her death, as a sign from Heaven to
-show that the troubles and calamities of this princess and of the royal
-family in general had now all blown over, and were, like the ex-queen, to
-rest in repose.
-
-She left all her books, pictures, and papers to her incomparable old
-friend and benefactor. The Earl of Leicester wrote to the Earl of
-Northumberland a cold and flippant letter to announce the departure of
-"his royal tenant;" and adds, "It seems the Fates did not think it fit I
-should have the honour, which indeed I never much desired, to be the
-landlord of a queen." Charles, who had grudged the dethroned queen even
-her subsistence, gave her a royal funeral in Westminster Abbey.
-
-At the very time when she died Lord Craven was building a miniature
-Heidelberg for her at Hampstead Marshall, in Berkshire, under the advice
-of that eminent architect and charlatan, Sir Balthasar Gerbier. But the
-palace was ill-fated, like the poor queen, for it was consumed by an
-accidental fire before it could be tenanted. The arrival of the Portuguese
-Infanta, a princess scarcely less unfortunate than the queen just dead,
-soon erased all recollections of King James's ill-starred daughter.
-
-The biographers of the Queen of Bohemia do not claim for her beauty, wit,
-learning, or accomplishments; but she seems to have been an affectionate,
-romantic girl, full of vivacity and ambition, who was ripened by sorrow
-and disappointment into an amiable and high-souled woman.
-
-It was always supposed that the Queen of Bohemia was secretly married to
-Lord Craven, as Bassompierre was to a princess of Lorraine. A base and
-abandoned court could not otherwise account for a friendship so
-unchangeable and so unselfish. There is also a story that when Craven
-House was pulled down, a subterranean passage was discovered joining the
-eastern and western sides. Similar passages have been found joining
-convents to monasteries; but, unfortunately for the scandalmongers, they
-are generally proved to have been either sewers or conduits. The "Queen of
-Hearts," as she was called--the princess to whose cause the chivalrous
-Christian of Brunswick, the knight with the silver arm, had solemnly
-devoted his life and fortunes--the "royal mistress" to whom shifty Sir
-Henry Wotton had written those beautiful lines--
-
- "You meaner beauties of the night,
- That poorly entertain our eyes
- More by your number than your light,
- What are ye when the moon doth rise?"
-
-was at "last gone to dust." Her faithful servant, the old soldier of
-Gustavus, survived her thirty-five years, and lived to follow to the grave
-his foster-child in arms, Prince Rupert, whose daughter Ruperta was left
-to his trusty guardianship.
-
-In 1670, on the death of the stolid and drunken Duke of Albemarle, Charles
-II. constituted Lord Craven colonel of the Coldstreams. Energetic,
-simple-hearted, benevolent, this good servant of a bad race became a
-member of the Royal Society, lived in familiar intimacy with Evelyn and
-Ray, improved his property, and employed himself in gardening.
-
-Although he had many estates, Lord Craven always showed the most
-predilection for Combe Abbey, the residence of the Queen of Bohemia in her
-youth. To judge by the numerous dedications to which his name is prefixed,
-he would appear to have been a munificent patron of letters, especially
-of those authors who had been favourites of Elizabeth of Bohemia.[536]
-
-On the accession of James, Lord Craven, true as ever, was sworn of the
-Privy Council; but soon after, on some mean suspicion of the king, was
-threatened with the loss of his regiment. "If they take away my regiment,"
-said the staunch old soldier, "they had as good take away my life, since I
-have nothing else to divert myself with." In the hurry of the Popish
-catastrophe it was not taken away. But King William proved Craven's
-loyalty to the Stuarts by giving his regiment to General Talmash.
-
-The unemployed officer now expended his activity in attending riots and
-fires. Long before, when the Puritan prentices had pulled down the houses
-of ill-fame in Whettone Park and in Moorfields, Pepys had described the
-colonel as riding up and down like a madman, giving orders to his men.
-Later Lord Dorset had spoken of the old soldier's energy in a gay ballad
-on his mistress--
-
- "The people's hearts leap wherever she comes,
- And beat day and night like my Lord Craven's drums."
-
-In King William's reign the veteran was so prompt in attending fires that
-it used to be said his horse smelt a fire as soon as it broke out.
-
-Lord Craven died unmarried in 1697, aged 88, and was buried at Binley,
-near Coventry. The grandson of a Wharfdale peasant had ended a well-spent
-life. His biographer, Miss Benger, well remarks:--"If his claims to
-disinterestedness be contemned of men, let his cause be (left) to female
-judges,--to whose honour be it averred, examples of nobleness, generosity
-and magnanimity are ever delightful, because to their purer and more
-susceptible souls they are (never) incredible."[537]
-
-Drury House was rebuilt by Lord Craven after the Queen's death. It
-occupied the site of Craven Buildings and the Olympic Theatre. Pennant,
-ever curious and energetic, went to find it, and describes it in his
-pleasant way as a "large brick pile," then turned into a public-house
-bearing the sign of the Queen of Bohemia, faithful still to the worship of
-its old master.
-
-The house was taken down in 1809, when the Olympic Pavilion was built on
-part of its gardens. The cellars, once stored with good Rhenish from the
-Palatinate, and sack from Cadiz, still exist, but have been blocked up.
-Palsgrave Place, near Temple Bar, perpetuates the memory of the unlucky
-husband of the brave princess.
-
-It was Lord Craven who generously founded pest-houses in Carnaby Street,
-soon after the Great Plague. There were thirty-six small houses and a
-cemetery. They were sold in 1772 to William, third Earl of Craven, for
-L1200. It may be remembered that in the _Memoirs of Scriblerus_ a room is
-hired for the dissection of the purchased body of a malefactor, near the
-St. Giles's pest-fields, and not far from Tyburn Road, Oxford Street. The
-Earl was their founder.
-
-On the end wall at the bottom of Craven Buildings there was formerly a
-large fresco-painting of the Earl of Craven, who was represented in
-armour, mounted on a charger, and with a truncheon in his hand. This
-portrait had been twice or thrice repainted in oil, but in Brayley's time
-was entirely obliterated.[538] This fresco is said to have been the work
-of Paul Vansomer, a painter who came to England from Antwerp about 1606,
-and died in 1621. He painted the Earl and Countess of Arundel, and there
-are pictures by him at Hampton Court. He also executed the pleasant and
-quaint hunting scene, with portraits of Prince Henry and the young Earl of
-Essex, now at St. James's Palace.[539]
-
-Mr. Moser, keeper of the Royal Academy, a chaser of plate, cane-heads, and
-watch-cases, afterwards an enameller of watch-trinkets, necklaces, and
-bracelets, lived in Craven Buildings, which were built in 1723 on part of
-the site of Craven House. He died in his apartments in Somerset House in
-1783.
-
-It was in Short's Gardens, Drury Lane, "in a hole," that Charles Mathews
-the elder made one of his first attempts as an actor.
-
-Clare House Court, on the left hand going up Drury Lane, derived its name
-from John Holles, second Earl of Clare, whose town house stood at the end
-of this court. His son Gilbert, the third Earl, died in 1689, and was
-succeeded by his son, John Holles, created Marquis of Clare and Duke of
-Newcastle in 1694. He died in 1711, when all his honours became extinct.
-The corner house has upon it the date 1693.[540]
-
-In the reign of James I., when Gondomar, the Spanish ambassador, lived at
-Ely House, in Holborn, he used to pass through Drury Lane in his litter on
-his way to Whitehall, Covent Garden being then an enclosed field, and this
-district and the Strand the chief resorts of the gentry. The ladies,
-knowing his hours, would appear in their balconies or windows to present
-their civilities to the old man, who would bend himself as well as he
-could to the humblest posture of respect. One day, as he passed by the
-house of Lady Jacob in Drury Lane, she presented herself: he bowed to her,
-but she only gaped at him. Curious to see if this yawning was intentional
-or accidental, he passed the next day at the same hour, and with the same
-result. Upon which he sent a gentleman to her to let her know that the
-ladies of England were usually more gracious to him than to encounter his
-respects with such affronts. She answered that she had a mouth to be
-stopped as well as others. Gondomar, finding the cause of her distemper,
-sent her a present, an antidote which soon cured her of her strange
-complaint.[541] This Lady Jacob became the wife of the poet Brooke.
-
-That credulous gossip, the Wiltshire gentleman, Aubrey, tells a quaint
-story of a duel in Drury Lane, in probably Charles II.'s time, which is a
-good picture of such rencontres amongst the hot-blooded bravos of that
-wild period.
-
-"Captain Carlo Fantom, a Croatian," he says, "who spoke thirteen
-languages, was a captain under the Earl of Essex. He had a world of cuts
-about his body with swords, and was very quarrelsome. He met, coming late
-at night out of the Horseshoe Tavern in Drury Lane, with a lieutenant of
-Colonel Rossiter, who had great jingling spurs on. Said he, 'The noise of
-your spurs doe offend me; you must come over the kennel and give me
-satisfaction.' They drew and passed at each other, and the lieutenant was
-runne through, and died in an hour or two, and 'twas not known who killed
-him."[542]
-
-About this time John Lacy, Charles II.'s favourite comedian, the Falstaff
-of Dryden's time, lived in Drury Lane from 1665 till his death in 1681.
-The ex-dancing-master and lieutenant dwelt near Cradle Alley and only two
-doors from Lord Anglesey.
-
-Drury Lane, though it soon began to deteriorate, had fashionable
-inhabitants in Charles II.'s time. Evelyn, that delightful type of the
-English gentleman, mentions in his _Diary_ the marriage of his niece to
-the eldest son of Mr. Attorney Montague at Southampton Chapel, and talks
-of a magnificent entertainment at his sister's "lodgings" in Drury Lane.
-Steele, however, branded its disreputable districts; Gay[543] warned us
-against "Drury's mazy courts and dark abodes;" and Pope laughed at
-building a church for "the saints of Drury Lane," and derided its proud
-and paltry "drabs." The little sour poet, snugly off and well housed,
-delighted to sneer, with a cruel and ungenerous contempt, at the poverty
-of the poor Drury Lane poet who wrote for instant bread:--
-
- "'Nine years!' cries he, who, high in Drury Lane,
- Lull'd by soft zephyrs through the broken pane,
- Rhymes ere he wakes, and prints before Term ends,
- Obliged by hunger and request of friends."
-
-To ridicule poverty, and to treat misfortune as a punishable crime, is the
-special opprobrium of too many of the heroes of English literature.
-
-Hogarth has shown us the poor poet of Drury Lane; Goldsmith has painted
-for us the poor author, but in a kindlier way, for he must have
-remembered how poor he himself and Dr. Johnson, Savage, Otway, and Lee had
-been. Pope, in his notes to the _Dunciad_, expressly says that the poverty
-of his enemies is the cause of all their slander. Poverty with him is
-another name for vice and all uncleanness. Goldsmith only laughs as he
-describes the poor poet in Drury Lane in a garret, snug from the Bailiff,
-and opposite a public-house famous for Calvert's beer and Parsons's "black
-champagne." The windows are dim and patched; the floor is sanded. The damp
-walls are hung with the royal game of goose, the twelve rules of King
-Charles, and a black profile of the Duke of Cumberland. The rusty grate
-has no fire. The mantelpiece is chalked with long unpaid scores of beer
-and milk. There are five cracked teacups on the chimney-board; and the
-poet meditates over his epics and his finances with a stocking round his
-brows "instead of bay."
-
-Early in the reign of William III. Drury Lane finally lost all traces of
-its aristocratic character.
-
-Vinegar Yard, in Drury Lane, was originally called Vine Garden Yard. Vine
-Street, Piccadilly, Vine Street, Westminster, and Vine Street, Saffron
-Hill, all derived their names from the vineyards they displaced; but there
-is great reason to suppose that in the Middle Ages orchards and
-herb-gardens were often classified carelessly as "vineyards." English
-grapes might produce a sour, thin wine, but there was never a time when
-home-made wine superseded the produce of Montvoisin, Bordeaux, or Gascony.
-Vinegar Yard was built about 1621.[544] In St Martin's Burial Register
-there is an entry, "1624, Feb. 4: Buried Blind John out of Vinagre Yard."
-Clayrender's letter in Smollett's _Roderick Random_ is written to her
-"dear kreetur" from "Winegar Yard, Droory Lane." This fair charmer must
-surely have lived not far from Mr. Dickens's inimitable Mrs. Megby. The
-nearness of Vinegar Yard to the theatre is alluded to by James Smith in
-his parody on Sir Walter Scott in the _Rejected Addresses_.
-
-General Monk's gross and violent wife was the daughter of his servant,
-John Clarges, a farrier in the Savoy. Her mother, says Aubrey, was one of
-the five women-barbers[545] that lived in Drury Lane. She kept a
-glove-shop in the New Exchange before her marriage, and as a seamstress
-used to carry the general's linen to him when he was in the Tower.
-
-Pepys hated her, because she was jealous of his patron, Lord Sandwich, and
-called him a coward. He calls her "ill-looking" and "a plain, homely
-dowdy," and says that one day, when Monk was drunk, and sitting with
-Troutbeck, a disreputable fellow, the duke was wondering that Nan Hyde, a
-brewer's daughter, should ever have come to be Duchess of York. "Nay,"
-said Troutbeck, "ne'er wonder at that, for if you will give me another
-bottle of wine I will tell you as great if not a greater miracle, and that
-was that our Dirty Bess should come to be Duchess of Albemarle."[546]
-
-Nell Gwynn was born in Coal Yard, on the east side of Drury Lane,[547] the
-next turning to the infamous Lewknor Lane, which used to be inhabited by
-the orange-girls who attended the theatres in Charles II.'s reign. It was
-in this same lane that Jonathan Wild, the thief-taker, whom Fielding
-immortalises, afterwards lived. In a coarse and ruthless satire written by
-Sir George Etherege after Nell's death, the poet calls her a "scoundrel
-lass," raised from a dunghill, born in a cellar, and brought up as a
-cinder-wench in a coalyard.[548]
-
-Nelly was the vagabond daughter of a poor Cavalier captain and fruiterer,
-who is said to have died in prison at Oxford. She began life by selling
-fish in the street, then turned orange-girl at the theatres, was promoted
-to be an actress, and finally became a mistress of Charles II. Though not
-as savage-tempered as the infamous Lady Castlemaine, Nelly was almost as
-mischievous, and quite as shameless. She obtained from the king L60,000
-in four years.[549] She bought a pearl necklace at Prince Rupert's sale
-for L4000. She drank, swore, gambled, and squandered money as wildly as
-her rivals. Nelly was small, with a good-humoured face, and "eyes that
-winked when she laughed."[550] She was witty, reckless, and good-natured.
-The portrait of her by Lely, with the lamb under her arm, shows us a very
-arch, pretty, dimply little actress. The present Duke of St. Alban's is
-descended from her.[551]
-
-In 1667 Nell Gwynn was living in Drury Lane, for on May day of that year
-Pepys says--"To Westminster, in the way meeting many milkmaids with
-garlands upon their pails, dancing with a fiddler between them; and saw
-pretty Nelly standing at her lodging's door in Drury Lane, in her
-smock-sleeves and boddice, looking upon one. She seemed a mighty pretty
-creature." Nelly had not then been long on the stage, and Pepys had hissed
-her a few months before being introduced to her by dangerous Mrs. Knipp.
-In 1671 Evelyn saw Nelly, then living in Pall Mall, "looking out of her
-garden on a terrace at the top of the wall," and talking too familiarly to
-the king, who stood on the green walk in the park below.[552]
-
-Poor Nell was not "allowed to starve," but ended an ill life by dying of
-apoplexy. There is no authority for the name of "Nell Gwynn's Dairy" given
-to a house near the Adelphi.
-
-That infamous and perjured scoundrel, and the murderer of so many innocent
-men, Titus Oates, was the son of a popular Baptist preacher in Ratcliffe
-Highway, and was educated at Merchant Taylor's. Dismissed from the Fleet,
-of which he was chaplain, for infamous practices, he became a Jesuit at
-St. Omer's, and came back to disclose the sham Popish plot, for which
-atrocious lie he received of the Roman Catholic king, Charles II., L1200 a
-year, an escort of guards, and a lodging in Whitehall. Oates died in
-1705. He lodged for some time in Cockpit Alley, now called Pitt Place.
-
-It was in the Crown Tavern, next the Whistling Oyster, and close to the
-south side of Drury Lane Theatre, that _Punch_ was first projected by Mr.
-Mark Lemon and Mr. Henry Mayhew in 1841; and its first number was
-"prepared for press" in a back room in Newcastle Street, Strand. Great
-rivers often have their sources in swampy and obscure places, and our
-good-natured satirist has not much to boast of in its birthplace. To
-_Punch_ Tom Hood contributed his immortal "Song of the Shirt," and
-Tennyson his scorching satire against Bulwer and his "New Timon;" almost
-from the first, Leech devoted to it his humorous pencil, and Albert Smith
-his perennial store of good humour and drollery. Amongst its other early
-contributors should be mentioned Mr. Gilbert A. a Beckett, Mr. W. H.
-Wills, and Douglas Jerrold.
-
-Zoffany, the artist, lived for some time in poverty in Drury Lane. Mr.
-Audinet, father of Philip Audinet the engraver, served his time with the
-celebrated clockmaker, Rimbault, who lived in Great St. Andrew's Street,
-Seven Dials. This worthy excelled in the construction of the clocks called
-at that time "Twelve-tuned Dutchmen," which were contrived with moving
-figures, engaged in a variety of employments. The pricking of the barrels
-of those clocks was performed by Bellodi, an Italian, who lived hard by,
-in Short's Gardens, Drury Lane. This person solicited Rimbault in favour
-of a starving artist who dwelt in a garret in his house. "Let him come to
-me," said Rimbault. Accordingly Zoffany waited upon the clockmaker, and
-produced some specimens of his art, which were so satisfactory that he was
-immediately set to work to embellish clock-faces, and paint appropriate
-backgrounds to the puppets upon them. From clock-faces the young painter
-proceeded to the human face divine, and at last resolved to try his hand
-upon the visage of the worthy clockmaker himself. He hit off the likeness
-of the patron so successfully, that Rimbault exerted himself to serve and
-promote him. Benjamin Wilson, the portrait-painter, who at that time lived
-at 56 Great Russell Street, a house afterwards inhabited by Philip
-Audinet, being desirous of procuring an assistant who could draw the
-figure well, and being, like Lawrence, deficient in all but the head,
-found out the ingenious painter of clock-faces, and engaged him at the
-moderate salary of forty pounds a year, with an especial injunction to
-secrecy. In this capacity he worked upon a picture of Garrick and Miss
-Bellamy in "Romeo and Juliet," which was exhibited under the name of
-Wilson. Garrick's keen eye satisfied him that another hand was in the
-work; so he resolved to discover the unknown painter. This discovery he
-effected by perseverance: he made the acquaintance of Zoffany and became
-his patron, employing him himself and introducing him to his friends; and
-in this way his bias to theatrical portraiture became established.
-Garrick's favour met with an ample return in the admirable portraits of
-himself and contemporaries, which have rendered their personal appearance
-so speakingly familiar to posterity both in his pictures and the admirable
-mezzotinto scrapings of Earlom. Zoffany was elected among the first
-members of the Royal Academy in 1768.
-
-The old Cockpit, or Phoenix Theatre, stood on the site of what is now
-called Pitt Place. Early in James I.'s reign it had been turned into a
-playhouse, and probably rebuilt.[553]
-
-On Shrove Tuesday 1616-17 the London prentices, roused to their annual
-zeal by a love of mischief and probably a Puritan fervour, sacked the
-building, to the discomfiture of the harmless players. Bitter,
-narrow-headed Prynne, who notes with horror and anger the forty thousand
-plays printed in two years for the five Devil's chapels in London,[554]
-describes the Cockpit as demoralising Drury Lane, then no doubt wealthy,
-and therefore supposed to be respectable. In 1647 the Cockpit Theatre was
-turned into a schoolroom; in 1649 Puritan soldiers broke into the house,
-which had again become a theatre, captured the actors, dispersed the
-audience, broke up the seats and stage, and carried off the dramatic
-criminals in open day, in all their stage finery, to the Gate House at
-Westminster.
-
-Rhodes, the old prompter at Blackfriars, who had turned bookseller,
-reopened the Cockpit on the Restoration. The new Theatre in Drury Lane
-opened in 1663 with the "Humorous Lieutenant" of Beaumont and Fletcher.
-This was the King's Company under Killigrew. Davenant and the Duke of
-York's company found a home first in the Cockpit, and afterwards in
-Salisbury Court, Fleet Street.
-
-The first Drury Lane Theatre was burnt down in 1672. Wren built the new
-house, which opened in 1674 with a prologue by Dryden. Cibber gives a
-careful account of Wren's Drury Lane, the chief entrance to which was down
-Playhouse Passage. Pepys blamed it for the distance of the stage from the
-boxes, and for the narrowness of the pit entrances.[555] The platform of
-the stage projected very forward, and the lower doors of entrance for the
-actors were in the place of the stage-boxes.[556]
-
-In 1681 the two companies united, leaving Portugal Street to the lithe
-tennis-players and Dorset Gardens to the brawny wrestlers. Wren's theatre
-was taken down in 1791; its successor, built by Holland, was opened in
-1794, and destroyed in 1809. The present edifice, the fourth in
-succession, is the work of Wyatt, and was opened in 1812.[557]
-
-Hart, Mohun, Burt, and Clun were all actors in Killigrew's company. Hart,
-who had been a captain in the army, was dignified as Alexander,
-incomparable as Catiline, and excellent as Othello. He died in 1683.
-Mohun, whom Nat Lee wrote parts for, and who had been a major in the Civil
-War, was much applauded in heroic parts, and was a favourite of
-Rochester's. Burt played Cicero in Ben Jonson's "Catiline;" and poor Clun,
-who was murdered by footpads in Kentish Town, was great as Iago, and as
-Subtle in "The Alchymist."
-
-From Pepys's memoranda of visits to Drury Lane we gather a few facts about
-the licentious theatre-goers of his day. After the Plague, when Drury Lane
-had been deserted, the old gossip went there, half-ashamed to be seen, and
-with his cloak thrown up round his face.[558] The king flaunts about with
-his mistresses, and Pepys goes into an upper box to chat with the
-actresses and see a rehearsal, which seems then to have followed and not
-preceded the daily performance.[559] He describes Sir Charles Sedley, in
-the pit, exchanging banter with a lady in a mask. Three o'clock seems to
-have been about the time for theatres opening.[560] The king was angry, he
-says, with Ned Howard for writing a play called "The Change of Crowns," in
-which Lacy acted a country gentleman who is astonished at the corruption
-of the court. For this Lacy was committed to the porter's lodge; on being
-released, he called the author a fool, and having a glove thrown in his
-face, returned the compliment with a blow on Howard's pate with a cane;
-upon which the pit wondered that Howard did not run the mean fellow
-through; and the king closed the house, which the gentry thought had grown
-too insolent.
-
-August 15, 1667, Pepys goes to see the "Merry Wives of Windsor," which
-pleased our great Admiralty official "in no part of it." Two days after he
-weeps at the troubles of Queen Elizabeth, but revives when that dangerous
-Mrs. Knipp dances among the milkmaids, and comes out in her nightgown to
-sing a song. Another day he goes at three o'clock to see Beaumont and
-Fletcher's "Scornful Lady," but does not remain, as there is no one in the
-pit. In September of the same year he finds his wife and servant in an
-eighteenpenny seat. In October 1667 he ventures into the tiring-room where
-Nell was dressing, and then had fruit in the scene-room, and heard Mrs.
-Knipp read her part in "Flora's Vagaries," Nell cursing because there were
-so few people in the pit. A fortnight after he contrives to see a new
-play, "The Black Prince," by Lord Orrery; and though he goes at two, finds
-no room in the pit, and has for the first time in his life to take an
-upper four-shilling-box. November 1, he proclaims the "Taming of the
-Shrew" "a silly old play." November 2, the house was full of Parliament
-men, the House being up. One of them choking himself while eating some
-fruit, Orange Moll thrust her finger down his throat and brought him to
-life again.
-
-Pepys condemns Nell Gwynn as unbearable in serious parts, but considers
-her beyond imitation as a madwoman. In December 1667 he describes a poor
-woman who had lent her child to the actors, but hearing him cry, forced
-her way on to the stage and bore it off from Hart.
-
-It would seem from subsequent notes in the _Diary_, that to a man who
-stopped only for one act at a theatre, and took no seat, no charge was
-made.
-
-In February 1668 Pepys sees at Drury Lane "The Virgin Martyr," by
-Massinger, which he pronounces not to be worth much but for Becky
-Marshall's acting; yet the wind music when the angel descended "wrapped
-up" his soul so, that, remarkably enough, it made him as sick as when he
-was first in love, and he determined to go home and make his wife learn
-wind music. May 1, 1668, he mentions that the pit was thrown into disorder
-by the rain coming in at the cupola. May 7 of the same year, he calls for
-Knipp when the play is over, and sees "Nell in her boy's clothes, mighty
-pretty." "But, Lord!" he says, "their confidence! and how many men do
-hover about them as soon as they come off the stage! and how confident
-they are in their talk!"
-
-On May 18, 1668, Pepys goes as early as twelve o'clock to see the first
-performance of that poor play, Sir Charles Sedley's "Mulberry Garden," at
-which the king, queen, and court did not laugh. While waiting for the
-curtain to pull up, Pepys hires a boy to keep his place, slips out to the
-Rose Tavern in Russell Street, and dines off a breast of mutton from the
-spit.
-
-On September 15, 1668, there is a play--"The Ladies a la Mode"--so bad
-that the actor who announced the piece to be repeated fell a-laughing, as
-did the pit. Four days after Pepys sits next Shadwell, the poet,
-admiring Ben Jonson's extravagant comedy, "The Silent Woman."
-
-In January 1669 he sat in a box near "that merry jade Nell," who, with a
-comrade from the Duke's House, "lay there laughing upon people."
-
-"Les Horaces" of Corneille he found "a silly tragedy." February 1669
-Beetson, one of the actors, read his part, Kynaston having been beaten and
-disabled by order of Sir Charles Sedley, whom he had ridiculed. The same
-month Pepys went to the King's House to see "The Faithful Shepherdess,"
-and found not more than L10 in the house.
-
-A great leader in the Drury Lane troop was Lacy, the Falstaff of his day.
-He was a handsome, audacious fellow, who delighted the town as "Frenchman,
-Scot, or Irishman, fine gentleman or fool, honest simpleton or rogue,
-Tartuffe or Drench, old man or loquacious woman." He was King Charles's
-favourite actor as Teague in "The Committee," or mimicking Dryden as Bayes
-in "The Rehearsal."
-
-The greatest rascal in the company was Goodman--"Scum Goodman," as he was
-called--admirable as Alexander and Julius Caesar. He was a dashing,
-shameless, impudent rogue, who used to boast that he had once taken "an
-airing" on the road to recruit his purse. He was expelled Cambridge for
-slashing a picture of the Duke of Monmouth. He hired an Italian quack to
-poison two children of his mistress, the infamous Duchess of Cleveland,
-joined in the Fenwick plot to kill King William, and would have turned
-traitor against his fellow conspirators had he not been bought off for
-L500 a year, and sent to Paris, where he disappeared.
-
-Haines, one of Killigrew's band, was an impudent but clever low comedian.
-In Sparkish, in "The Country Wife," he was the very model of airy
-gentlemen. His great successes were as Captain Bluff in Congreve's "Old
-Bachelor," Roger in "AEsop," and "the lively, impudent, and irresistible
-Tom Errand" in Farquhar's "Constant Couple," "that most triumphant comedy
-of a whole century."[561]
-
-The stories told of Joe Haines are good. He once engaged a simple-minded
-clergyman as "chaplain to the Theatre Royal," and sent him behind the
-scenes ringing a big bell to call the actors to prayers. "Count" Haines
-was once arrested by two bailiffs on Holborn Hill at the very moment that
-the Bishop of Ely passed in his carriage. "Here comes my cousin, he will
-satisfy you," said the ready-witted actor, who instantly stepped to the
-carriage window and whispered Bishop Patrick--"Here are two Romanists, my
-lord, inclined to become Protestants, but yet with some scruples of
-conscience." The anxious bishop instantly beckoned to the bailiffs to
-follow him to Ely Place, and Joe escaped; the mortified bishop paying the
-money out of sheer shame. Haines died in 1701.
-
-Amongst the actresses at this house were pretty but frail Mrs. Hughes, the
-mistress of Prince Rupert, and Mrs. Knipp, Pepys's dangerous friend, who
-acted rakish fine ladies and rattling ladies'-maids, and came on to sing
-as priestess, nun, or milkmaid. Anne Marshall, the daughter of a
-Presbyterian divine, acquired a reputation as Dorothea in "The Virgin
-Martyr," and as the Queen of Sicily in Dryden's "Secret Love."
-
-But Nell Gwynn was the chief "toast" of the town. Little, pretty,
-impudent, and witty, she danced well, and was a good actress in comedy and
-in characters where "natural emotion bordering on insanity" was to be
-represented.[562] Her last original part was that of Almahide in Dryden's
-"Conquest of Granada," where she spoke the prologue in a straw hat as
-large as a waggon-wheel.
-
-Leigh Hunt says that "Nineteen out of twenty of Dryden's plays were
-produced at Drury Lane, and seven out of Lee's eleven; all the good plays
-of Wycherly, except 'The Gentleman Dancing Master;' two of
-Congreve's--'The Old Bachelor' and 'The Double Dealer;' and all
-Farquhar's, except 'The Beau's Stratagem.'"[563] Dryden's impurity and
-daring bombast were the attractions to Drury Lane, as Otway's
-sentimentalism and real pathos were to the rival house. Lee's splendid
-bombast was succeeded by Farquhar's gay rakes and not too virtuous women.
-
-Doggett, who was before the public from 1691 to 1713, was a little lively
-Irishman, for whom Congreve wrote the characters of Fondlewife, Sir Paul
-Pliant, and Ben. He was partner in the theatre with Cibber and Wilkes from
-1709 to 1712, but left when Booth was taken into the firm. He was a
-staunch Whig, and left an orange livery and a badge to be rowed for yearly
-by six London watermen.
-
-The queen of comedy, Mrs. Oldfield, flashed upon the town first as Lady
-Betty Modish in Cibber's "Careless Husband," in 1704-5. When quite a girl
-she was overheard by Farquhar reading "The Scornful Lady" of Beaumont and
-Fletcher to her aunt, who kept the Mitre Tavern in St. James's Market.
-Farquhar introduced her to Vanbrugh, and Vanbrugh to Rich. "She excelled
-all actresses," says Davies, "in sprightliness of wit and elegance of
-manner, and was greatly superior in the clear, sonorous, and harmonious
-tones of her voice." Her eyes were large and speaking, and when intended
-to give special archness to some brilliant or gay thought, she kept them
-mischievously half shut. Cibber praises Mrs. Oldfield for her unpresuming
-modesty, and her good sense in not rejecting advice--"A mark of good
-sense," says the shrewd old manager, "rarely known in any actor of either
-sex but herself. Yet it was a hard matter to give her any hint that she
-was not able to take or improve."[564] With all this merit, she was
-tractable and less presuming in her station than several that had not half
-her pretensions to be troublesome. This excellent actress was not fond of
-tragedy, but she still played Marcia in "Cato;" Swift, who attended the
-rehearsals with Addison, railed at her for her good-humoured carelessness
-and indifference; and Pope sneered at her vanity in her last moments. It
-is true that she was buried in kid gloves, tucker, and ruffles of best
-lace. Mrs. Oldfield lived first with a Mr. Maynwaring, a rough,
-hard-drinking Whig writer, to whom Addison dedicated one of the volumes of
-the _Spectator_; and after his death with General Churchill, one of the
-Marlborough family. Nevertheless, she went to court and habitually
-associated with ladies of the highest rank. Society is cruel and
-inconsistent in these matters. Open scandal it detests, but to secret vice
-it is indifferent.
-
-Mrs. Oldfield died in 1730, lay in state in the Jerusalem Chamber, and
-when she was borne to her grave in the Abbey, Lord Hervey (Pope's
-"Sporus"), Lord Delawarr, and that toady Bubb Doddington, supported her
-pall. The late Earl of Cadogan was the great-grandson of Anne
-Oldfield.[565] This actress, so majestic in tragedy, so irresistible in
-comedy, was generous enough to give an annuity to poor, hopeless, scampish
-Savage.
-
-Robert Wilkes, a young Irish Government clerk, obtained great successes as
-Farquhar's heroes, Sir Harry Wildair, Mirabel, Captain Plume, and Archer.
-He played equally well the light gentlemen of Cibber's comedies. Genest
-describes him as buoyant and graceful on the stage, irreproachable in
-dress, his every movement marked by "an ease of breeding and manner." This
-actor also excelled in plaintive and tender parts. Cibber hints, however,
-at his professional conceit and overbearing temper. Wilkes on one occasion
-read "George Barnwell" to Queen Anne at the Court at St. James's. He died
-in 1732.
-
-Barton Booth, who was at Westminster School with Rowe the poet, identified
-himself with Addison's Cato. His dignity, pathos, and energy as that lover
-of liberty led Bolingbroke to present him on the first night with a purse
-of fifty guineas. The play was translated into four languages; Pope gave
-it a prologue; Garth decked it with an epilogue; while Denis proved it, to
-his own satisfaction, to be worthless. Aaron Hill tells us that statistics
-proved that Booth could always obtain from eighteen to twenty rounds of
-applause during the evening. When playing the Ghost to Betterton's Hamlet,
-Booth is said to have been once so horror-stricken as to be unable to
-proceed with his part. He often took inferior Shaksperean parts, and was
-frequently indolent; but if he saw a man whose opinion he valued among the
-audience he fired up and played to him. This petted actor and manager died
-in 1733.
-
-Colley Cibber, to judge from Steele's criticisms, must have been admirable
-as a beau, whether rallying pleasantly, scorning artfully, ridiculing, or
-neglecting.[566] Wilkes surpassed him in beseeching gracefully,
-approaching respectfully, pitying, mourning, and loving. In the part of
-Sir Fopling Flutter in "The Fool of Fashion," played in 1695, Cibber wore
-a fair, full-bottomed periwig which was so much admired that it used to be
-brought on the stage in a sedan and put on publicly. To this wonder of the
-town Colonel Brett, who married Savage's mother, took a special fancy.
-"The beaux of those days," says Cibber, "had more of the stateliness of
-the peacock than the pert of the lapwing." The colonel came behind the
-scenes, first praised the wig, and then offered to purchase it. On
-Cibber's bantering him about his anxiety for such a trifle, the gay
-colonel began to rally himself with such humour that he fairly won Cibber,
-and they sat down at once, laughing, to finish their bargain over a
-bottle.
-
-Quin's career began at Dublin in 1714, and ended at Bath in 1753. From
-1736 to 1741 he was at Drury Lane. From Booth's retirement till the coming
-of Garrick, Quin had no rival as Cato, Brutus, Volpone, Falstaff, Zanga,
-etc. His Macbeth, Othello, and Lear were inferior. Davies says, the tender
-and the violent were beyond his reach, but he gave words weight and
-dignity by his sensible elocution and well-regulated voice. His movements
-were ponderous and his action languid. Quin was generous, witty, a great
-epicure, and a careless dresser. It was his hard fate, though a
-warm-hearted man, to be equally warm in temper, and to kill two
-adversaries in duels that were forced upon him. Quin was a friend of
-Garrick and of Thomson the poet, and a frequent visitor at Allen's house
-at Prior Park, near Bath, where Pope, Warburton, and Fielding visited.
-
-Some of Quin's jests were perfect. When Warburton said, "By what law can
-the execution of Charles I. be justified?" Quin replied, "By all the laws
-he had left them." No wonder Walpole applauded him. The bishop bade the
-player remember that the regicides came to violent ends, but Quin gave him
-a worse blow. "That, your lordship," he said, "if I am not mistaken, was
-also the case with the twelve apostles." Quin could overthrow even Foote.
-They had at one time had a quarrel, and were reconciled, but Foote was
-still a little sore. "Jemmy," said he, "you should not have said that I
-had but one shirt, and that I lay in bed while it was washed." "Sammy,"
-replied the actor, "I never _could_ have said so, for I never knew that
-you had a shirt to wash." Quin died in 1766, and Garrick wrote an epitaph
-on his tomb in Bath Abbey, ending with the line--
-
- "To this complexion we must come at last."
-
-Garrick appeared first at Goodman's Fields Theatre, in 1741, as King
-Richard. In eight days the west flocked eastward, and, as Davies tells us,
-"the coaches of the nobility filled up the space from Temple Bar to
-Whitechapel." Pope came up from Twickenham to see if the young man was
-equal to Betterton. Garrick revolutionised the stage. Tragedians had
-fallen into a pompous "rhythmical, mechanical sing-song,"[567] fit only
-for dull orators. Their style was overlaboured with art--it was mere
-declamation. The actor had long ceased to imitate nature. Garrick's first
-appearance at Drury Lane was in 1742. Cumberland, then at Westminster
-School, describes his sight of Quin and Garrick, and the first impressions
-they produced on him. Garrick was Lothario, Mrs. Cibber Calista, Quin
-Horatio, and Mrs. Pritchard Lavinia. Quin, when the curtain drew up,
-presented himself in a green velvet coat, embroidered down the seams, an
-enormous full-bottomed periwig, rolled stockings, and high-heeled square
-shoes.[568] "With very little variation of cadence, and in a deep full
-tone, accompanied by a sawing kind of action which had more of the senate
-than the stage in it, he rolled out his heroics with an air of dignified
-indifference that seemed to disdain the plaudits that were bestowed upon
-him. Mrs. Cibber, in a key high-pitched but sweet withal, sang or rather
-recitatived Rowe's harmonious strains. But when, after long and anxious
-expectation, I first beheld little Garrick, then young and light and alive
-in every muscle and every feature, come bounding on the stage and pointing
-at the wittol Altamont and heavy-paced Horatio, heavens! what a
-transition!--it seemed as if a whole century had been swept over in the
-passage of a single scene." And yet, according to fretful Cumberland, "the
-show of hands" was for Quin, though, according to Davies, the best judges
-were for Garrick. And when Quin was slow in answering the challenge,
-somebody in the gallery called out, "Why don't you tell the gentleman
-whether you will meet him or not?" Garrick's repertory extended to one
-hundred characters, of which he was the original representative of
-thirty-six. Of his comic characters, Ranger and Abel Drugger were the
-best--one was irresistibly vivacious, the other comically stupid.
-
-Garrick, who mutilated Shakespere and wrote clever verses and useful
-theatrical adaptations, was a vain, sprightly man, who got the reputation
-of reforming stage costume, although it was Macklin, pugnacious and
-courageous, who first dared to act Macbeth dressed as a Highland chief,
-and felt proud of his own anachronism. Garrick had, in fact, a dislike to
-really truthful costume. He dared to play Hotspur in laced frock and
-Ramillies wig.[569] In truth, it was neither Garrick nor Macklin who
-originated this reform, but the change of public opinion and the widening
-of education. West, in spite of ridicule and condemnation, dared to dress
-the soldiers in his "Death of Wolfe" in English uniform, instead of in the
-armour of stage Romans. Burke said of Garrick that he was the most acute
-observer of nature he had ever known. Garrick could assume any passion at
-the moment, and could act off-hand Scrub or Richard, Brute or Macbeth. He
-oscillated between tragedy and comedy; he danced to perfection; he was
-laborious at rehearsals, and yet all that he did seemed spontaneous. In
-Fribble he imitated no fewer than eleven men of fashion so that every one
-recognised them. Garrick died in 1779, and was buried in _the_ Abbey.
-"Chatham," says Dr. Doran, the actor's admirable biographer, "had
-addressed him living in verse, and peers sought for the honour of
-supporting the pall at his funeral."[570] That he was vain and
-over-sensitive there can be no doubt; but there can be also no doubt that
-he was generous, often charitable, delightful in society, and never, like
-Foote, eager to give pain by the exercise of his talent. As an actor,
-Garrick has not since been equalled in versatility and equal balance of
-power; nor has any subsequent actor attained so high a rank among the
-intellect of his age.
-
-Kitty Clive, born in 1711, took leave of the stage in 1769. She was one of
-the best-natured, wittiest, happiest, and most versatile of actresses,
-whether as "roguish chambermaid, fierce virago, chuckling hoyden, brazen
-romp, stolid country girl, affected fine lady, or thoroughly natural old
-woman."[571] Fielding, Garrick, and Walpole delighted in Kitty Clive.
-After years of quadrille at Purcell's, and cards and music at the villa at
-Teddington which Horace Walpole lent her, Kitty Clive died suddenly,
-without a groan, in 1785.
-
-Woodward was excellent in fops, rascals, simpletons, and Shakesperean
-light characters. His Bobadil, Marplot, and Touchstone were beyond
-approach. Shuter, originally a billiard-marker, came on the stage in 1744,
-and quitted it in 1776. His grimace and impromptu were much praised.
-
-Samuel Foote, born at Truro in 1720, having failed in tragedy, and not
-been very successful in comedy, started his entertainments at the
-Haymarket in 1747. He died in 1777. His history belongs to the records of
-another theatre.
-
-Spanger Barry in 1748-9 acted Hamlet and Macbeth alternately with Garrick.
-Davies says that Barry could not perform such characters as Richard and
-Macbeth, but he made a capital Alexander. "He charmed the ladies by the
-soft melody of his love complaints and the noble ardour of his courtship."
-Only Mrs. Cibber excelled him in the expression of love, grief,
-tenderness, and jealous rage. Tall, handsome, and dignified, Barry
-undoubtedly ran Garrick close in the part of Romeo, artificial as
-Churchill in the _Rosciad_ declares him to have been. A lady once said,
-"that had she been Juliet she should have expected Garrick to have stormed
-the balcony, he was so impassioned; but that Barry was so eloquent,
-tender, and seductive, that she should have come down to him."[572] In
-Lear, the town said that Barry "was every inch a king" but Garrick "every
-inch King Lear." Barry was amorous and extravagant. He delighted in giving
-magnificent entertainments, and treated Mr. Pelham in so princely a style
-that that minister (with not the finest taste) rebuked him for his lavish
-hospitality.
-
-The brilliant and witching Peg Woffington was the daughter of a small
-huckster in Dublin, and became a pupil of Madame Violante, a rope-dancer.
-In 1740 she came out at Covent Garden, and soon won the town as Sir Harry
-Wildair. She played Lady Townley and Lady Betty Modish with "happy ease
-and gaiety."[573] She rendered the most audacious absurdities pleasing by
-her beautiful bright face and her vivacity of expression. Peg quarrelled
-with Kitty Clive and Mrs. Cibber, and detested that reckless woman George
-Anne Bellamy. This witty and enchanting actress, as generous and
-charitable as Nell Gwynn with all her faults, was struck by paralysis
-while acting Rosalind at Covent Garden, and died in 1760.
-
-During his career from 1691 to his retirement in 1733, clever, careless
-Colley Cibber originated nearly eighty characters, chiefly grand old fops,
-inane old men, dashing soldiers, and impudent lacqueys. His Fondlewife,
-Sir Courtly Nice, and Shallow were his best parts. "Of all English
-managers," says Dr. Doran, "Cibber was the most successful. Of the English
-actors, he is the only one who was ever promoted to the laureateship or
-elected a member of White's Club." Even Pope, who hated him and got some
-hard blows from him, praised "The Careless Husband;" Walpole, who despised
-players, praised Colley; and Dr. Johnson approved of his admirably written
-_Apology_.
-
-Cibber's daughter, Mrs. Clarke, led a wild and disreputable life, became a
-waitress at Marylebone, and died in poverty in 1760. Colley's son
-Theophilus, the best Pistol ever seen on the stage, and the original
-George Barnwell, was drowned in crossing the Irish Sea.
-
-His wife was a sister of Dr. Arne, the composer. In tragedy she was
-remarkable for her artless sensibility and exquisite variety of
-expression. As Ophelia she moved even Tate Wilkinson. She was one of the
-first actresses to make the woes of the grand tragedy queen natural. She
-died in 1766, and was buried in the cloisters of Westminster Abbey.
-
-Mrs. Pritchard, that "inspired idiot," as Dr. Johnson called her in his
-contempt for her ignorance, seems to have been a virtuous woman. She left
-the stage in 1768. Though plain, and in later years very stout, Mrs.
-Pritchard was admired in tragedy for her perfect pronunciation and her
-force and dignity as the Queen in "Hamlet," and as Lady Macbeth. She was
-also a good comedian in playful and witty parts. She was, however, not
-very graceful, and inclined to rant.
-
-When Mrs. Cibber died in 1765, Mrs. Yates succeeded to her fame, with Mrs.
-Barry for a rival, till Mrs. Siddons came from Bath and unseated both.
-Mrs. Yates was wanting in pathos, but in pride and scorn as Medea, or in
-hopeless grief as Constance, she was unapproachable. She died in 1787.
-
-George Anne Bellamy, the reckless and the unfortunate, was the daughter of
-a Quakeress, with whom Lord Tyrawley ran away from school. Dr. Doran says,
-"What with the loves, caprices, charms, extravagances, and sufferings of
-Mrs. Bellamy, she excited the wonder, admiration, pity, and contempt of
-the town for thirty years."[574] Now she was squandering money like a
-Cleopatra; now she was crouching on the wet steps of Westminster Bridge,
-brooding over suicide. "The Bellamy," says the critic, was only equal to
-"the Cibber" in expressing the ecstasy of love. This follower of the old
-school of intoners was the original Volumnia of Thomson, the Erixene of
-Dr. Young, and the Cleone of the honest footman poet and publisher
-Dodsley. She took her farewell benefit in 1784.
-
-In 1778 Miss Farren appeared at Drury Lane. She was the daughter of a poor
-vagabond strolling player. Walpole says she was the most perfect actress
-he had ever seen; and he spoke well of her fine ladies, of whom he was a
-judge. Adolphus, not easily appeased, praised her irresistible graces and
-"all the indescribable little charms which give fascination to the women
-of birth and fashion." She was gay as Lady Betty Modish, sentimental as
-Cecilia or Indiana, and playful as Rosara in the "Barber of Seville." In
-1797 the little girl who had been helped over the ice to the lock-up at
-Salisbury, to hand up a bowl of milk to her father when a prisoner
-there,[575] took leave of the stage in the part of Lady Teazle, and
-married the Earl of Derby, who had buried his wife just six weeks before.
-
-In 1798 Mrs. Abington, "the best affected fine lady of her time," retired
-from the stage of Drury Lane. She was the daughter of a common soldier,
-and as a girl was known as "Nosegay Fan," and had sold flowers in St.
-James's Park. She first appeared at Drury Lane in 1756-7.
-
-Poor Mrs. Robinson, the "Perdita" so heartlessly betrayed by the Prince of
-Wales, was driven on to the stage in 1776 by her husband, a handsome
-scapegrace who had run through his fortune. She passed from the stage in
-1780, and died, forgotten, poor, and paralytic, in 1800.
-
-In 1767 Samuel Reddish, Canning's stepfather, first appeared at Drury Lane
-as Lord Townley. He was a reasonably good Edgar and Posthumus, but failed
-in parts of passion. He went mad in 1779. In this group of minor actors we
-may include Gentleman Smith, a good Charles Surface, who retired from the
-stage in 1786; Yates, whose forte was old men and Shakspere's fools
-(1736-1780); Dodd, who, from 1765 to 1796, was the prince of fops and old
-men (Master Slender and Master Stephen were said to die with him); and
-lastly, that great comic actor, John Palmer, who died on the stage in
-1798, as he was playing the Stranger. He was the original representative
-of plausible Joseph Surface. "Plausible," he used to say, "am I? You rate
-me too highly. The utmost I ever did in that way was that I once persuaded
-a bailiff who had arrested me to bail me." Once when making friends with
-Sheridan after a quarrel, Palmer said to the author, "If you could but see
-my heart, Mr. Sheridan!" to which Sheridan replied, "Why, Jack, you forgot
-I wrote it." "Jack Palmer," says Lamb, "was a gentleman with a slight
-infusion of the footman."[576] He had two voices, both plausible,
-hypocritical, and insinuating.
-
-Henderson was engaged by Sheridan for Drury Lane in 1777. As Falstaff this
-humorous friend of Gainsborough was seldom equalled. His defects were a
-woolly voice and a habit of sawing the air. Dr. Doran says, "he was the
-first actor who, with Sheridan, gave public readings" at Freemasons' Hall;
-and his recitation of "John Gilpin" gave impetus to the sale of the
-narrative of that adventurous ride.[577] Henderson died in 1785, aged only
-thirty-eight, and was buried in Westminster Abbey.
-
-Mrs. Siddons, the daughter of an itinerant actor, was born in 1755. After
-strolling and becoming a lady's-maid, she married a poor second-rate actor
-of Birmingham. She appeared first at Drury Lane in 1775 as Portia. Her
-first real triumph was in 1780, as Isabella in Southerne's tragedy. The
-management gave her Garrick's dressing-room, and some legal admirers
-presented her with a purse of a hundred guineas. Soon afterwards, as Jane
-Shore, she sent many ladies in the audience into fainting fits. This great
-actress closed her career in 1812 with Lady Macbeth, her greatest triumph.
-She is said to have made King George III. shed tears. He admired her
-especially for her repose. "Garrick," he used to say, "could never stand
-still. He was a great fidget." No actress received more homage in her time
-than Mrs. Siddons. Reynolds painted his name on the hem of her garment in
-his portrait of her as the Tragic Muse. Dr. Johnson kissed her hand and
-admired her genius. In comedy Mrs. Siddons failed; her rigorous Grecian
-face was not arch. "In comedy" says Colman, "she was only a frisking
-grig." "Those who knew her best," says Dr. Doran, "have recorded her
-grace, her noble carriage, divine elocution and solemn earnestness, her
-grandeur, her pathos, her correct judgment." Erskine studied her cadences
-and tones. According to Campbell, she increased the heart's capacity for
-tender, intense, and lofty feelings. This lofty-minded actress, as Young
-calls her, died in 1831.
-
-Her elder brother, John Kemble, first appeared at Drury Lane, in 1783, as
-Hamlet. In 1788-9 he succeeded King as manager of the theatre, and
-continued so till 1801. In Coriolanus and Cato, Kemble was pre-eminent,
-but his Richard and Sir Giles were inferior to Cook's and Kean's. In
-comedy he failed, except in snatches of dignity or pathos. As an actor
-Kemble was sometimes heavy and monotonous. He had not the fire or
-versatility of Garrick, or the wild passion of Edmund Kean. As Hamlet he
-was romantic, dignified, and philosophic. In his Rolla he delighted
-Sheridan and Pitt; in Octavian he drew tears from all eyes. He excelled
-also in Coeur de Lion, Penruddock, and the Stranger. In private life he
-was always majestic and gravely convivial. When Covent Garden was burnt
-down in 1808, he bore the loss bravely, and on the night of the opening
-the generous Duke of Northumberland sent him back his bond for L10,000 to
-be committed to the flames. Walpole, who saw Kemble, preferred him to
-Garrick in Benedick, and to Quin in Maskwell. Kemble took his solemn
-farewell of the stage in 1817 as Coriolanus, and died at Lausanne in 1823.
-Leigh Hunt, an excellent dramatic critic, paints the following picture of
-Kemble: "A figure of melancholy dignity, dealing out a most measured
-speech in sepulchral tones and a pedantic pronunciation, and injuring
-what he has made you feel by the want of feeling it himself."[578] John
-Kemble's brother Charles acted well in Mercutio, Young Mirabel, and
-Benedick. He remained on the stage till 1836.
-
-George Frederick Cooke, whose life was one perpetual debauch, and whose
-career on the stage extended from 1801 to 1812, when he died at Boston,
-did not, I think, appear at Drury Lane. His laurels were won chiefly at
-Covent Garden.
-
-Master Betty, born in 1791 at Shrewsbury, elegant, and quick of memory,
-appeared at Drury Lane in 1804, fretted his little hour upon the stage,
-and earned a fortune with which he prudently retired in 1808. He lived
-till 1876.
-
-King, the original representative of Sir Peter Teazle, Lord Ogleby, Puff,
-and Dr. Cantwell, began his London career at Drury Lane in 1748. He left
-the stage in 1802. His best characters were Touchstone and Ranger, and in
-these parts he was always arch, rapid, and versatile. Hazlitt discourses
-on King's old, hard, rough face, and his shrewd hints and tart replies.
-
-Dickey Suett was a favourite low comedian from 1780 to 1805, when he died.
-He was a tall, thin, ungainly man, too much addicted to grimace,
-interpolations, and practical jokes. He drank hard, and suffered from
-mental depression. Hazlitt calls him "the delightful old croaker, the
-everlasting Dickey Gossip of the stage."[579] Lamb describes his "Oh, la!"
-as irresistible; "he drolled upon the stock of those two syllables richer
-than the cuckoo." Shakspere's jesters "have all the true Suett stamp--a
-loose and shambling gait, and a slippery tongue."[580]
-
-Miss Pope, who left the stage in 1808, had played with Garrick and Mrs.
-Clive. She was the original Polly Honeycomb, Miss Sterling, Mrs. Candour,
-and Tilburina. In youth she played hoydens, chambermaids, and half-bred
-ladies, with a dash and good-humour free from all vulgarity, and in old
-age she took to duennas and Mrs. Heidelburg. In 1761 Churchill mentions
-her as "lively Pope," and in 1807 Horace Smith describes her as "a bulky
-person with a duplicity of chin."
-
-In 1741 the theatre, which had been rebuilt by Wren in 1674, in a cheap
-and plain manner, became ruinous, and was enlarged and almost rebuilt by
-the Adams. In 1747 Garrick became the manager, and Dr. Johnson, as a
-friend, wrote the celebrated address beginning with the often-quoted
-lines--
-
- "When Learning's triumph o'er her barbarous foes
- First reared the stage, immortal Shakspere rose.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Each change of many-coloured life he drew,
- Exhausted worlds, and then imagined new;
- Existence saw him spurn her bounded reign,
- And panting Time toiled after him in vain."
-
-In 1775, the year in which "The Duenna" was brought out at Covent Garden,
-Garrick made known his wish to sell a moiety of the patent of this
-theatre. In June 1776 a contract was signed, Mr. Sheridan taking
-two-fourteenths of the whole for L10,000, Mr. Linley the same, and Dr.
-Ford three-fourteenths at L15,000.[581] How Sheridan raised the money no
-one ever knew.
-
-Sheridan's first contribution to this new stage was an alteration of
-Vanbrugh's licentious comedy of "The Relapse," which he called "A Trip to
-Scarborough," and brought out in 1777. The same year the brilliant
-manager, then only six-and-twenty, produced the finest and most popular
-comedy in the English language, "The School for Scandal." On the last slip
-of this miracle of wit and dramatic construction Sheridan wrote--"Finished
-at last, thank God!--R. B. SHERIDAN." Below this the prompter added his
-devout response--"Amen.--W. HOPKINS."[582] Garrick was proud of the new
-manager, and boasted of his budding genius.[583]
-
-In 1778 Sheridan bought out Mr. Lacy for more than L45,000, and Dr. Ford
-for L77,000. In 1779 Garrick died, and Sheridan wrote a monody to his
-memory, which was delivered by Mrs. Yates after the play of "The West
-Indian." Slander attributed the finest passage in this monody to Tickell,
-just as it had before attributed Tickell's bad farce to Sheridan.
-
-Dowton, who appeared in 1796 as Sheva, was felicitous in good-natured
-testy old men, and also in crabbed and degraded old villains. His Dr.
-Cantwell and Sir Anthony Absolute were in the true spirit of old comedy.
-Leigh Hunt praises Dowton's changes from the irritable to the yielding,
-and from the angry to the tender.
-
-Willy Blanchard was natural and unaffected, but mannered.
-
-Mathews first appeared in London in 1803. He excelled in valets and old
-men, and drew tears as M. Mallet, the poor emigre who is disappointed
-about a letter.
-
-Liston made his debut at the Haymarket in 1805 as Sheepface. Leigh Hunt
-praises his ignorant rustics, and condemns his old men. He sets him down
-as a painter of emotions, and therefore more intellectual than Fawcett and
-less farcical than Munden. Liston was a hypochondriac; below his fun there
-was always an under-current of melancholy, "as though," says Dr. Doran,
-mysteriously, "he had killed a boy when, under the name of Williams, he
-was usher at the Rev. Dr. Burney's at Gosport."[584]
-
-In 1807 Jones and Young made their first appearances, but not at Drury
-Lane. Young originated Rienzi, and played Hamlet, Falstaff, and Captain
-Macheath. Jones was a stage rake of great excellence.
-
-Among the actresses before Kean, we may mention Miss Brunton, afterwards
-Countess of Craven, and Mrs. Davison, a good Lady Teazle.
-
-Lewis, who left the stage in 1809, was a draper's son. He died in 1813,
-and out of part of his fortune the new church at Ealing was erected. He
-played Young Rapid and Jeremy Diddler, and created the Hon. Tom
-Shuffleton in "John Bull." His restless style suited Morton and Reynolds's
-comedies, and he succeeded in "all that was frolic, gay, humorous,
-whimsical, eccentric, and yet elegant." He was manager of Covent Garden
-for twenty-one years, and made everyone do his duty by kindness and good
-treatment. Leigh Hunt sketches Lewis admirably, with his "easy
-flutter,"[585] short knowing respiration, and complacent liveliness. Lewis
-played the gentleman with more heart than Elliston. He seemed polite, not
-from vanity, but rather from a natural irresistible wish to please. He had
-all the laborious carelessness of action, important indifference of voice,
-and natural vacuity of look that are requisite for the lounger.[586] His
-defects were a habit of shaking his head and drawing in of the breath. His
-"flippant airiness," "vivacious importance," and "French flutter" must
-have been in their way perfect. "Gay, fluttering, hair-brained Lewis!"
-says Hazlitt; "nobody could break open a door, or jump over a table, or
-scale a ladder, or twirl a cocked hat, or dangle a cane, or play a
-jockey-nobleman or a nobleman's jockey like him."[587]
-
-Here a moment's pause for an anecdote. When a riot took place at Drury
-Lane in 1740 about the non-appearance of a French dancer, the first
-symptoms of the outbreak were the ushering of ladies out of the pit. A
-noble marquis gallantly proposed to fire the house. The proposal was
-considered, but not adopted. The bucks and bloods then proceeded to
-destroy the musical instruments and fittings, to break the panels and
-partitions, and pull down the royal arms. The offence was finally condoned
-by the ringleading marquis sending L100 to the manager.
-
-Charles Lamb describes Drury Lane in his own delightful way. The first
-play he ever saw was in 1781-2, when he was six years old. "A portal, now
-the entrance," he writes, "to a printing-office, at the north end of Cross
-Court was the pit entrance to old Drury; and I never pass it without
-shaking some forty years from off my shoulders, recurring to the evening
-when I passed through it to see my first play. The afternoon was wet: with
-what a beating heart did I watch from the window the puddles!
-
-"It was the custom then to cry, ''Chase some oranges, 'chase some
-nonpareils, 'chase a bill of the play?' But when we got in, and I beheld
-the green curtain that veiled a heaven to my imagination, the breathless
-anticipations I endured! The boxes, full of well-dressed women of quality,
-projected over the pit. The orchestra lights arose--the bell sounded
-once--it rang the second time--the curtain drew up, and the play was
-'Artaxerxes;' 'Harlequin's Invasion' followed."
-
-The next play Lamb went to was "The Lady of the Manor," followed by a
-pantomime called "Lunn's Ghost." Rich was not long dead. His third play
-was "The Way of the World" and "Robinson Crusoe." Six or seven years after
-he went (with what changed feelings!) to see Mrs. Siddons in Isabella.
-"Comparison and retrospection," he says, "soon yielded to the present
-attraction of the scene, and the theatre became to me, upon a new stock,
-the most delightful of all recreations."[588]
-
-Handsome Jack Bannister, who played in youth with Garrick, and in later
-years with Edmund Kean, was the model for the Uncle Toby in Leslie's
-picture. Natural, honest, as Hamlet, he was also good as Walter in "The
-Children of the Wood." Inimitable "in depicting heartiness," says Dr.
-Doran, "ludicrous distress, grave or affected indifference, honest
-bravery, insurmountable cowardice, a spirited young or an enfeebled yet
-impatient old fellow, mischievous boyishness, good-humoured vulgarity,
-there was no one of his time who could equal him."[589] Bannister left the
-stage with a handsome fortune. Hazlitt says finely of him that his
-"gaiety, good-humour, cordial feeling, and natural spirits shone through
-his characters and lighted them up like a transparency."[590] His kind
-heart and honest face were as well known as his good-humoured smile and
-buoyant activity. "Jack," says Lamb, "was beloved for his sweet,
-good-natured moral pretensions." He gave us "a downright concretion of a
-Wapping sailor, a jolly warm-hearted Jack Tar."
-
-Mrs. Jordan's mother was the daughter of a Welsh clergyman who had eloped
-with an officer. The debutante came out at Drury Lane in 1785 as the
-heroine of "The Country Girl." In 1789 she became the mistress of the Duke
-of Clarence. Good-natured, and endowed with a sweet clear voice, she
-played rakes with the airiest grace, and excelled in representing arch,
-buoyant girls, spirited, buxom, lovable women, and handsome hoydens. The
-critics complained of her as vulgar. Late in life she retired to France,
-and died in 1815. "Her wealth," says Dr. Doran, "was lavished on the Duke
-of Clarence, who left her to die untended; but when he became king he
-ennobled all her children, the eldest being made Earl of Munster."
-Hazlitt, speaking of Mrs. Jordan, says eloquently, her voice "was a
-cordial to the heart, because it came from it full, like the luscious
-juice of the rich grape. To hear her laugh was to drink nectar. Her smile
-was sunshine; her talking far above singing; her singing was like the
-twanging of Cupid's bow. Her body was large, soft, and generous like the
-rose. Miss Kelly, if we may accept the judgment of Hazlitt, was in
-comparison a mere dexterous, knowing chambermaid. Jordan was all
-exuberance and grace. It was her capacity for enjoyment, and the contrast
-she presented to everything sharp, angular, and peevish, that delighted
-the spectator. She was Cleopatra turned into an oyster wench."[591]
-Charles Lamb praises Mrs. Jordan for her tenderness in such parts as
-Ophelia, Helena, and Viola, and for her "steady, melting eye."[592]
-
-Robert William Elliston was the son of a Bloomsbury watchmaker, and was
-born in 1774. He appeared in London first in 1797, and obtained a triumph
-as Sir Edward Mortimer, a part in which Kemble had failed. He is praised
-by Dr. Doran as one of the best of stage gentlemen, not being so reserved
-and languid as Charles Kemble. All the qualities that go to the making of
-a gallant were conspicuous in his Duke Aranza--self-command, kindness,
-dignity, good-humour, a dash of satire, and true amatory fire; but then
-his voice was too pompously deep in soliloquy, and he was too genteel in
-low comedy. As a stage lover he was impassioned, tender, and courteous,
-yet he would persist in one uniform dress--blue coat, white waistcoat, and
-white knee-breeches. Yet, though a self-deceiving and pompous humbug,
-Charles Lamb reverenced him and Leigh Hunt admired his acting. In turn
-proprietor of the Olympic, the Surrey, and Drury Lane theatres, Elliston
-outlived his fame and fortune. When acting George IV. in a sham coronation
-procession, having taken too much preliminary wine, he became so affected
-at the delight of the audience that he gave them his grandest benediction
-in these affecting words, "Bless you, my people!" When Douglas Jerrold
-saved the Surrey Theatre by his "Black-eyed Susan," Elliston declared such
-services should be acknowledged by a presentation of plate--not by
-himself, however, but by Jerrold's own friends. Elliston's last appearance
-was in 1826, and he died in 1831.
-
-Hull, a heavy, useful, and intelligent actor, left the stage in 1807.
-Holman, an exaggerating actor, had a career that lasted from 1784 to 1800.
-Munden, the broadest of farceurs and drollest of grimacers, appeared first
-in 1790 as Sir Francis Gripe, and last, in 1823, as Sir Robert Bramble and
-Dozey. His Crack in "The Turnpike Gate" was one of his greatest parts; but
-I am afraid he would be now thought too much of the buffoon. Charles Lamb
-devotes a whole essay to the subject of Munden's acting as Cockletop, Sir
-Christopher Curry, Old Dornton, and the Cobbler of Preston. He says of
-him: "When you think he has exhausted his battery of looks in
-unaccountable warfare with your gravity, suddenly he sprouts out an
-entirely new set of features, like Hydra. He, and he alone, makes faces.
-In the grand grotesque of farce, Munden stands out as single and
-unaccompanied as Hogarth. Can any man wonder like him, any man see ghosts
-like him, or fight with his own shadow?"[593]
-
-Lamb praises Dodd for a face formally flat in Foppington, frothily pert in
-Fattle, and blankly expressive of no meaning in Acres and Fribble.[594]
-
-In 1792 Sheridan's affairs began to get entangled. The surveyors reported
-the theatre unsafe and incapable of repair, and it was therefore resolved
-to build a new one at a cost of L150,000 by means of 300 shares at L500
-each. In the meantime, while Sheridan was paying interest for his loan,
-the company was playing at an enormous expense on borrowed stages; and the
-careless and profuse manager, his prudent wife now dead, was maintaining
-three establishments--one at Wanstead, one at Isleworth, and one in Jermyn
-Street. In 1794 a new Theatre was built by Henry Holland.
-
-In 1798 that masterpiece of false, hysterical German sentiment, "The
-Stranger" (translated from Kotzebue), was rewritten by Sheridan, and
-brought out at his own theatre. This was one of the earliest importations
-of the Germanism that Canning afterwards, for political purposes, so
-pungently denounced in the _Anti-Jacobin_. The great success of "The
-Stranger," and the false taste it had implanted, induced Sheridan, in
-1799, to bring out the play of "Pizarro." He wrote scarcely anything in it
-but the speech of Rolla, which is itself an amplification of a few lines
-of the original.
-
-The new theatre was to have cost L75,000, and the L150,000 subscribed for
-was to have paid the architect and defrayed the mortgage debts. The
-theatre, however, cost more than L150,000; only part of the debt was paid
-off, and a claim of L70,000 remained upon the property.[595]
-
-On the 24th of February 1809, while the House of Commons was occupied with
-Mr. Ponsonby's motion on the conduct of the war in Spain, the debate was
-interrupted by a great glare of light through the windows. When the cause
-was ascertained, so much sympathy was felt for Sheridan that it was
-proposed to adjourn; but Sheridan calmly rose and said, "that whatever
-might be the extent of his private calamity, he hoped it would not
-interfere with the public business of the country." He then left the
-house, and is said to have reached Drury Lane just in time to find all
-hope of saving his property abandoned. According to one story he coolly
-proceeded to the Piazza Coffee-house and discussed a bottle of wine,
-replying to a friend who praised his philosophic calmness, "Why, a man may
-surely be allowed to take a glass of wine _at his own fireside_."[596] He
-is said to have been most grieved at the loss of a harpsichord that had
-belonged to his wife.
-
-Encouraged by the opening presented, and at the tardiness of shareholders
-to rebuild, speculators now proposed to erect a third theatre; but this
-design Sheridan and his friends defeated, and Mr. Whitbread, the great
-brewer of Chiswell Street, Finsbury, who afterwards destroyed himself,
-exerted his energies in the rebuilding of it.
-
-By the new agreement of 1811, Sheridan was to receive for his moiety
-L24,000, and an additional sum of L4000 for the property of the
-fruit-offices and the reversion of boxes and shares; his son also
-receiving his quarter of the patent property. Out of this sum the claims
-of the Linley family and other creditors were to be satisfied.
-
-Overwhelmed with debt, dogged by bailiffs, hurried to and from
-sponging-houses, Sheridan, now a broken-down man, died in 1816,
-reproaching the committee with his last breath for refusing to lend him
-more money.
-
-The new theatre, built by Mr. B. Wyatt, had been opened in October 1812,
-the performances consisting of "Hamlet" and "The Devil to Pay." The house
-held 800 persons less than its predecessor. The proprietors being anxious
-to have an opening address equal to that of Dr. Johnson, advertised for a
-suitable poem, and professed a desire for an open and free competition.
-The verses were, like Oxford competition poems, to be marked with a word,
-number, or motto, and the appended sealed paper containing the name of
-the writer was not to be opened unless the poem was successful. They
-offered twenty guineas as the prize, and extended the time for sending in
-the poems. The result was an avalanche of mediocrity, till the secretary's
-desk and the treasury-office ran over with poems. The proprietors were in
-despair, when Lord Holland prevailed on Lord Byron to write an address, at
-the risk, as the poet feared, "of offending a hundred rival scribblers and
-a discerning public." The poem was written and accepted, and delivered on
-the special night by Mr. Elliston, who performed the part of Hamlet. The
-address was voted tame by the newspapers, with the exception of the
-following passage--
-
- "As soars this fane to emulate the last,
- Oh, might we draw our omens from the past?
- Some hour propitious to our prayers, may boast
- Names such as hallow still the dome we lost.
- On Drury first your Siddons' thrilling art
- O'erwhelmed the gentlest, stormed the sternest heart;
- On Drury Garrick's latest laurels grew;
- Here your last tears retiring Roscius drew,
- Sigh'd his last thanks, and wept his last adieu."
-
-The brothers Smith eagerly seized this fine opportunity for parody, and
-the "Rejected Addresses" made all London shake with laughter.
-
-The leaden statue of Shakspere over the entrance of old Drury Lane was
-executed by Cheere of Hyde Park Corner--"the leaden figure man" formerly
-so celebrated--from a design by Scheemakers, a native of Antwerp and the
-master of Nollekens. When this sculptor first went to Rome to study, he
-travelled on foot, and had to sell his shirts by the way in order to
-procure funds. Mr. Whitbread, one of Sheridan's creditors, gave the figure
-to the theatre.[597]
-
-Mr. Whitbread and a committee had erected the house and purchased the old
-patent rights by means of a subscription of L400,000. Of this L20,000 was
-paid to Sheridan, and a like sum to the other holders of the patent. The
-creditors of the old house took a quarter of what they claimed in full
-payment, and the Duke of Bedford abandoned a claim of L12,000. The company
-consisted of Elliston, Dowton, Bannister, Rae, Wallack, Wewitzer, Miss
-Smith, Mrs. Davison, Mrs. Glover, Miss Kelly, and Miss Mellon. Mr. C.
-Kemble and Grimaldi were at the other house, that the next season boasted
-a strong company--John and Charles Kemble, Conway, Terry, and Matthews. At
-Drury Lane no new piece was brought out except Coleridge's "Remorse." At
-Covent Garden there was played "Aladdin, or the Wonderful Lamp."
-
-At Drury Lane, says Dr. Doran, neither new pieces nor new players
-succeeded, till on the 20th of January 1814, the play-bills announced the
-first appearance of an actor from Exeter, whose coming changed the evil
-fortunes of the house, scared the old correct, dignified, and classical
-school of actors, and brought again to the memories of those who could
-look back as far as Garrick the fire, nature, impulse, and terrible
-earnestness--all, in short, but the versatility, of that great master in
-his art. This player was Edmund Kean.
-
-Kean was born in 1787. He was the son of a low and worthless actress,
-whose father, George Saville Carey, a poor singer, reciter, and mimic,
-hanged himself. The father of Carey was a dramatist and song-writer, the
-natural son of the great Lord Halifax, who died in 1695. Kean's father is
-unknown: he may have been Aaron Kean the tailor, or Moses Kean the
-builder. In early life the genius was cabin-boy, strolling player, dancer
-on the tight-rope, and elocutionist at country fairs. His first
-appearance, as Shylock, in 1814, was a triumph. That night he came home
-and promised his wife a carriage, and his son Charles (then in his cradle)
-an education at Eton. In Richard III. he soon attained great triumphs. He
-was audacious, sneering, devilish, almost supernatural in his cruelty and
-hypocrisy. His Hamlet, though graceful and earnest, was inferior to his
-Othello; but Kemble thought that the latter was a mistake, Othello being
-palpably "a slow man." When Southey saw Kean and Young, he said, "It is
-the arch-fiend himself." When Kean played Sir Giles Overreach, and
-removed it from Kemble's repertory, his wife received him on his return
-from the theatre with the anxious question, "What did Lord Essex think of
-it?" The triumphant reply is well known: "D---- Lord Essex, Mary! the pit
-rose at me."
-
-In 1822, after a visit to America, Kean appeared with his rival Young in a
-series of characters, though he never liked "the Jesuit," as he used to
-call Young. In 1827, Kean's son Charles appeared as Norval at Drury Lane,
-while his father, now sinking fast, was acting at Covent Garden. In 1833
-Kean, shattered and exhausted, played Othello to his son's Iago, and died
-two months after.
-
-Hazlitt has a fine comparison between Kean and Mrs. Siddons. Mrs. Siddons
-never seemed to task her powers to the utmost. Her least word seemed to
-float to the end of the stage; the least motion of her hand commanded
-obedience. "Mr. Kean," he says, "is all effort, all violence, all extreme
-passion; he is possessed with a fury and demon that leaves him no repose,
-no time for thought, nor room for imagination.[598] Mr. Kean's imagination
-appears not to have the principles of joy or hope or love in it. He seems
-chiefly sensible to pain and to the passion that springs from it, and to
-the terrible energies of mind or body which are necessary to grapple with
-or to avert it."[599]
-
-The new theatre had small success under its committee of proprietors, and
-soon became involved in debt and unable to pay the performers. In 1814 it
-was let to the highest bidder, Elliston, who took it at the yearly rental
-of L10,300, and expended L15,000 on repairs. Captain Polhill afterwards
-became the lessee, and sunk in it large sums of money. The two next
-lessees, Messrs. Bunn and Hammond, became bankrupts. Towards the middle of
-1840 the house was reopened, after a closing of some months, for the then
-new entertainments of promenade concerts.
-
-Grimaldi, the son of Queen Charlotte's dentist, was born in 1779. He made
-his debut at Drury lane in a "Robinson Crusoe" pantomime in 1781, and
-retired from the stage in 1828. His first part of any importance was
-Orson. He remained at Drury Lane for nearly five-and-twenty years, and
-then played alternately at Covent Garden and Sadler's Wells every night.
-"He was the very beau-ideal of thieves," says a critic of the time:
-"robbery became a science in his hand; you forgave the larceny from the
-humour with which Joe indulged his irresistible weakness."[600] He was
-famous for his rich ringing laugh, his complacent chuckle, the roll of his
-eyes, the drop of his chin, and his elongated respiration. But we must go
-back to the singers.
-
-Mrs. Crouch, the great singer, and the daughter of a Gray's Inn Lane
-attorney, was articled to Mr. Linley, patentee of Drury Lane, in 1779, and
-in 1780 made her debut as Mandane. In 1785 she married a lieutenant in the
-navy, but returned to the stage in 1786, to be eclipsed by Mrs.
-Billington. In 1787 she acted with Kelly at Drury Lane in the opera of
-"Richard Coeur de Lion," and in the same year, in the character of Selima,
-sang the once popular song of "No Flower that blows is like the Rose." In
-1788 she played Lady Elinor in "The Haunted Tower" at Drury Lane. She died
-in 1804.
-
-Mrs. Billington, the daughter of a German musician, was born in London in
-1765. In 1801-2 she sang alternately at Drury Lane and Covent Garden. She
-died in 1818. Bianchi wrote for this lady the opera of "Inez de Castro."
-She is said to have played and sung at sight Mozart's "Clemenza di Tito;"
-her voice ranged from D to G in altissimo. She indulged too much in
-ornament, but was especially celebrated for her "Soldier tired of War's
-Alarms."
-
-John Braham, a Jew pencil-boy--so the musical _on dit_ goes--was brought
-up by a singer at the Duke's Place Synagogue. He made his debut in 1787.
-He appeared first, in 1796, in Storace's opera of "Mahmoud," at Drury
-Lane. The compass of his song, "Let Glory's Clarion," extended over
-seventeen notes. He died in 1856.
-
-Storace, born in 1763, died in 1796. He was the son of an Italian
-double-bass player, was engaged by Linley to compose for Drury Lane, and
-for that theatre wrote the following operas:--"The Siege of Belgrade,"
-1792: "Lodoiska," 1794; and "The Iron Chest," 1796. This brilliant young
-man wrote chiefly for Braham and Kelly.
-
-Madame Storace made her debut at Drury Lane, in 1789, in her brother's
-comic opera of "The Haunted Tower."
-
-Bishop, who was born about 1780, produced his opera of "The Mysterious
-Bride" at Drury Lane in 1808. In 1809, the night preceding the fire,
-Bishop produced his first great success, "The Circassian Bride," the score
-of which was burnt. After being long at Covent Garden, Bishop, in 1826,
-produced his "Aladdin" at Drury Lane to compete with Weber's "Oberon" at
-Covent Garden. In 1827 he adapted Rossini's "Turco in Italia;" and in
-1830, for Drury Lane, he adapted Rossini's "William Tell."
-
-Michael Kelly, born in 1762, made his first appearance at Drury Lane in
-1787. In his jovial career Kelly composed "The Castle Spectre," "Blue
-Beard" (the march in which is very pompously oriental and fine), "Of Age
-To-morrow," "Deaf and Dumb," etc. He also wrote many Italian, English, and
-French songs, and had a good tenor voice. He became superintendent of
-music at the Drury Lane Theatre, and died in 1826. He was an agreeable
-man, and much esteemed by George IV. Parkes accuses him of a want of
-knowledge of harmony, and of stealing from the Italians.
-
-In May 1836 Madame Malibran (de Beriot) appeared at Drury Lane as Isolina
-in Balfe's "Maid of Artois," which was a great success. At the close of
-the season she went abroad. Returned in September, she sang at the
-Manchester Festival, and after a duet with Madame Caradori Allen, was
-taken ill, and died a few days after. This gifted woman, the daughter of a
-Spanish Jew (an opera-singer), was born in 1808.
-
-To return to our last batch of actors. James Wallack, born in 1792, began
-to be known about 1816, and in 1820 was principal tragedian at Drury
-Lane. His Hamlet, Rolla, and Romeo were very manly and bearable. He
-afterwards became stage-manager at Drury Lane, and was praised for his
-light comedy.
-
-Charles Young, who played with Kean at Drury Lane, was a dignified but
-rather cold actor. Booth appeared also with Kean in 1817, and again in
-1820 with Wallack and Cooper.
-
-Mrs. Mardyn (the supposed mistress of Lord Byron) appeared on the Drury
-Lane stage in 1815. She was boisterous, but so full of girlish gaiety and
-reckless wildness that she became for a short time the favourite of the
-town. She failed, however, when she reappeared in 1833 in a tragic part.
-
-Charming Mrs. Nisbett, "that peach of a woman," as Douglas Jerrold used to
-call her, died in 1858, aged forty-five. The daughter of a drunken Irish
-officer who took to the stage, she married an officer in the Life Guards
-in 1831; but on the death of her husband by an accident, she returned to
-her first love in 1832, and reappeared at Drury Lane. Her great triumph
-was "The Love Chase," which was produced at the Haymarket in 1837, and ran
-for nearly one hundred nights. It was worth going a hundred miles to hear
-Mrs. Nisbett's merry, ringing, silvery laugh.
-
-Irish Johnstone, who died in 1828, is described by Hazlitt as acting at
-Drury Lane, "with his supple knees, his hat twisted round in his hand, his
-good-humoured laugh, his arched eyebrows, his insinuating leer, and his
-lubricated brogue curling round the ear like a well-oiled
-moustachio."[601]
-
-Oxberry quitted Drury Lane with Elliston in 1820. In 1821 he took the
-Craven's Head Chop-house in Drury Lane, where he used to say to his
-guests, "We vocalise on a Friday, conversationalise on a Sunday, and
-chopise every day." His best characters were Leo Luminati, Slender, and
-Abel Day. Emery surpassed him in Tyke, Little Knight, and Robin Roughhead.
-
-Farren, who was born about 1787, made his debut at Covent Garden in 1818.
-He was for some time at Drury Lane, and latterly manager of the Olympic.
-In old men he took the place of Dowton. His finest performance was Lord
-Ogleby, but in his prime he excelled also in Sir Peter Teazle, Sir Anthony
-Absolute, Sir Fretful Plagiary, and the Bailie Nicol Jarvie.
-
-John Pritt Harley was the son of a silk-mercer, and originally a clerk in
-Chancery Lane. He was born in 1786 or 1790. He made his debut at the
-Lyceum in 1815, in "The Devil's Bridge." His first appearance at Drury
-Lane was in 1815, as Lissardo in "The Wonder." In farce he was
-good-humoured, bustling, and droll; and he excelled in Caleb Quotem, Peter
-Fidget, Bottom, and many Shaksperean characters. He died only a year or
-two ago, repeating, it is said, this line of one of his old parts: "I have
-an exposition of sleep come upon me."
-
-Miss Kelly, born in 1790, was at the Lyceum in 1808, and went from thence
-to Drury Lane. She sang in operas, and was admirable in genteel comedy and
-domestic tragedy. Her romps were scarcely inferior to Mrs. Jordan's; her
-waiting-maids were equal to Mrs. Orger's. Charles Lamb, writing in 1818,
-says of her--
-
- "Your tears have passion in them, and a grace,
- A genuine freshness which our hearts avow;
- Your smiles are winds whose ways we cannot trace,
- That vanish and return we know not how."
-
-Miss Kelly was twice shot at while acting. In both cases the cruel
-assailants were rejected admirers.
-
-In 1850 Mrs. Glover took her farewell benefit at Drury Lane; Farren and
-Madame Vestris taking parts in the performance--Mrs. Glover playing Mrs.
-Malaprop. She was born in 1779, and had made her first appearance as
-Elvina in good Hannah More's dull tragedy, at Covent Garden, in 1797.
-Beautiful in youth, Mrs. Glover had gracefully passed from sighing Juliets
-and maundering Elvinas into Mrs. Heidelbergs, Mrs. Candours, and the Nurse
-in "Romeo and Juliet."
-
-Robert Keeley, who was brought up a compositor, was born in Grange Court,
-Carey Street, in 1794. He acted at Drury Lane as early as 1819, and at the
-Adelphi as early as 1826 as Jemmy Green in "Tom and Jerry." In 1834 we
-find the critics ranking him below Liston and Reeve, but he was very
-popular in his representations of cowardly fear and stupid chuckling
-astonishment. He left the stage for several years before his death. Miss
-Helen Faucit, born in 1816, was the original heroine of Sir Bulwer
-Lytton's and Mr. Browning's plays. Her Beatrice, Imogen, and Rosalind were
-admirable, and her Antigone was a great success. She retired from the
-stage in 1851, when she married Mr. Theodore Martin, the accomplished
-translator of Horace and Catullus, and the joint author with Professor
-Aytoun of those admirable burlesque ballads of "Bon Gaultier."
-
-William Charles Macready, the son of a Dublin upholsterer, appeared in
-London first in 1816. Kean approved his Orestes, and he soon advanced to
-Rob Roy, Virginius, and Coriolanus. He then removed to Drury Lane, and
-distinguished himself as Caius Gracchus and William Tell, in two of Mr.
-Sheridan Knowles's plays. He reappeared at Drury Lane in 1826. The critics
-said that he failed in Rolla and Hamlet, but excelled in Rob Roy,
-Coriolanus, and Richard. He himself preferred his own Hamlet. They
-complained that he had a burr in his enunciation, and a catching of the
-breath--that he was too fond of declamation and violent transitions;
-others thought him too heavy and colloquial. In 1826 he went to America,
-where the fatal riot of Forrest's partisans occurred, and twenty-two men
-were killed. His season closed at Drury Lane in 1843. His benefit took
-place in 1851, and he then retired from the stage to live the life of a
-quiet, useful country gentleman in the west of England. He died in 1873,
-and lies buried at Kensal Green.
-
-Mr. Charles Kean, struggling with a bad voice and a mean figure, had a
-hard fight for success, and won it only by the most dauntless
-perseverance. Born in 1811, he appeared for the first time upon the boards
-as Norval, in 1827. After repeated failures in London and much success in
-the provinces and America, Mr. Kean accepted an engagement at Drury Lane
-in 1838--Mr. Bunn offering him L50 a night. He succeeded in Hamlet, and
-was presented with a silver vase of the value of L200. In Richard and Sir
-Giles Overreach he also triumphed. In 1843 Mr. Kean renewed his engagement
-with Mr. Bunn. Before retiring from the stage and starting for Australia,
-Mr. and Mrs. Kean performed for many nights at Drury Lane. Charles Kean
-died in 1868.
-
-Miss Ellen Tree first performed at Drury Lane as Violante in "The Wonder."
-She married Mr. C. Kean in 1842, and aided him in those
-antiquarianly-correct spectacles that for a time rendered a scholarly,
-careful, but scarcely first-rate actor popular in the metropolis.
-
-We have room in this brief and imperfect _resume_ of theatrical history
-for only two pictures of Drury Lane. One is in 1800, when George III. was
-fired at by Hatfield as he entered the house to witness Cribber's comedy
-of "She Would and She Would Not." When the Marquis of Salisbury would have
-drawn him away, the brave, obstinate king said--"Sir, you discompose me as
-well as yourself: I shall not stir one step." The queen and princesses
-were in tears all the evening, but George III. sat calm and collected,
-staring through his single-barrel opera-glass. In 1783 the king, queen,
-and Prince of Wales went to Drury Lane to see Mrs. Siddons play Isabella.
-They sat under a dome of crimson velvet and gold. The king wore a
-Quaker-coloured dress with gold buttons, while the handsome scapegrace
-prince was adorned in blue Genoa velvet.
-
-Mr. Planche, the accomplished writer of extravaganzas and the _Somerset
-Herald_, brought out his burlesque of "Amoroso, King of Little Britain,"
-at Drury Lane in 1818. He afterwards wrote the libretto of "Maid Marian"
-for Mr. Bishop, and that of "Oberon" for Weber. In 1828 his "Charles XII."
-was produced at Drury Lane.
-
-On Mr. Falconer's clever imitative experiments we have no room to dilate.
-The "Peep o' Day," a piece which reproduced all the "Colleen Bawn"
-effects, was the best.
-
-And now leaving the theatres for meaner places, we pass on to the district
-of the butchers. Clare Market stands on a spot formerly called Clement's
-Inn Fields, and was built by the Earl of Clare, who lived close by, in
-1657. The family names, Denzil, Holles, etc., are retained in the
-neighbouring streets.
-
-This market became notorious in Pope's time for the buffoonery, noisy
-impudence, and extravagances of Orator Henley, a sort of ecclesiastical
-outlaw of a not very religious age, who tried to make his impudence and
-conceit pass for genius. This street-orator, the son of a Leicestershire
-vicar, was born in 1692. After going to St. John's College, Cambridge, he
-returned home, kept a school, wrote a poem called "Esther," and began a
-Universal Grammar in ten languages. Heated by an itch for reforming, and
-tired of the country, or driven away, as some say, by a scandalous
-embarrassment, he hurried to London, and for a short time did duty at a
-chapel in Bedford Row. During this time, under the Earl of Macclesfield's
-patronage, he translated Pliny's epistles, Vertot's works, and
-Montfaucon's Italian travels. He then competed for a lecturership in
-Bloomsbury, but failed, the parishioners not disliking his language or his
-doctrine, but complaining that he threw himself about too much in the
-pulpit.
-
-Now, "regular action" was one of Henley's peculiar prides. The rejection
-hurt his vanity and nearly drove him crazy. Losing his temper, he rushed
-into the vestry-room. "Blockheads!" he roared, "are _you_ qualified to
-judge of the degree of action necessary for a preacher of God's Word? Were
-you able to read, or had got sufficient sense, you sorry knaves, to
-understand the renowned orator of antiquity, he would tell you almost the
-only requisite of a public speaker was ACTION, ACTION, ACTION. But I
-despise and defy you: _provoco ad populum_; the public shall decide
-between us." He then hurried from the room, soon afterwards published his
-probationary discourse, and taking a room in Newport Market, started as
-quack divine and public lecturer.
-
-But he first consulted the eccentric and heretical Whiston, whom Swift
-bantered so ruthlessly--Whiston being, like Henley, a Leicestershire
-man--as to whether he should incur any legal penalties by officiating as a
-separatist from the Church of England. Whiston, himself an expelled
-professor, tried to dissuade the Orator from his wild project.
-Disagreement and abuse followed, and the correspondence ended with the
-following final bomb-shell from the violent demagogue:--
-
- "To Mr. WILLIAM WHISTON,
-
- "Take notice that I give you warning not to enter my room in Newport
- Market, at your peril.
-
- "JOHN HENLEY."[602]
-
-The Orator patronised divinity on Sundays, and secular subjects on
-Wednesdays and Fridays. The admittance was one shilling. He also published
-outrageous pamphlets and a weekly farrago called The _Hyp-Doctor_,
-intended to antidote _The Craftsman_, and for which pompous nonsense Sir
-Robert Walpole is said to have given him L100 a year. He also attacked
-eminent persons, even Pope, from his pulpit. Every Saturday an
-advertisement of the subject of his next week's oration appeared in the
-_Daily Advertiser_, preceded by a sarcastic or libellous motto, and
-sometimes an offer that if any one at home or abroad could be found to
-surpass him, he would surrender his Oratory at once to his conqueror.
-
-In 1729 Henley, growing perhaps more popular, removed to Clare Market,
-where the butchers became his warm partisans and served as his body-guard.
-The following are two of his shameless advertisements:--
-
-"At the Oratory in Newport Market, to-morrow, at half an hour after ten,
-the sermon will be on the Witch of Endor. At half an hour after five, the
-theological lecture will be on the conversion and original of the Scottish
-nation and of the Picts and Caledonians, St. Andrew's relics and
-panegyric, and the character and mission of the Apostles.
-
-"On Wednesday, at six or near the matter, take your chance, will be a
-medley oration on the history, merits, and praise of confusion and of
-confounders, in the road and out of the way.
-
-"On Friday will be that on Dr. Faustus and Fortunatus and conjuration.
-After each the Chimes of the Times, Nos. 23 and 24."
-
-Very shortly afterwards he advertised from Clare Market:--
-
-1. "The postil will be on the turning of Lot's wife into a pillar of salt.
-2. The sermon will be on the necessary power and attractive force which
-religion gives the spirit of a man with God and good spirits.
-
-2. "At five--1. The postil will be on this point:--In what language our
-Saviour will speak the last sentence to mankind.
-
-3. "The lecture will be on Jesus Christ's sitting at the right hand of
-God; where that is; the honours and lustre of his inauguration; the
-learning, criticism, and piety of that glorious article.
-
-"The Monday's orations will shortly be resumed. On Wednesday the oration
-will be on the skits of the fashions, or a live gallery of family pictures
-in all ages; ruffs, muffs, puffs manifold; shoes, wedding-shoes,
-two-shoes, slip-shoes, heels, clocks, pantofles, buskins, pantaloons,
-garters, shoulder-knots, periwigs, head-dresses, modesties, tuckers,
-farthingales, corkins, minnikins, slammakins, ruffles, round-robins, fans,
-patches; dame, forsooth, madam, my lady, the wit and beauty of my granmum;
-Winnifred, Joan, Bridget, compared with our Winny, Jenny, and Biddy: fine
-ladies and pretty gentlewomen; being a general view of the _beau monde_
-from before Noah's flood to the year '29. On Friday will be something
-better than last Tuesday. After each a bob at the times."
-
-This very year, 1729, the _Dunciad_ was published, and in it this Rabelais
-of the pulpit had, of course, his niche. Pope had been accused of taking
-the bread out of people's mouths. He denies this, and asks if "Colley
-(Cibber) has not still his lord, and Henley his butchers;" and ends with
-these lines, which, however, had no effect, for Henley went on ranting for
-eighteen years longer--
-
- "But where each science lifts its modern type,
- History her pot, Divinity his pipe;
- While proud Philosophy repines to show,
- Dishonest sight! his breeches rent below,--
- Imbrown'd with native bronze, lo! Henley stands,
- Tuning his voice and balancing his hands.
- How fluent nonsense trickles from his tongue!
- How sweet the periods, neither said nor sung!
- Still break the benches, Henley, with thy strain,
- While Sherlock, Hare, and Gibson preach in vain.
- O great restorer of the good old stage,
- Preacher at once and zany of the age!
- O worthy thou of Egypt's wise abodes!
- A decent priest when monkeys were the gods.
- But Fate with butchers placed thy priestly stall,
- Meek modern faith to murder, hack, and maul,
- And bade thee live to crown Britannia's praise
- In Toland's, Tindal's, and in Woolston's days."[603]
-
-In another place he says--
-
- "Henley lay inspired beside a sink,
- And to mere mortals seemed a priest in drink."
-
-Pope often attacked Henley in the _Grub Street Journal_, and the Orator
-retaliated. A year or two after the _Essay on Man_ was published, Henley
-(Dec. 1737) announced a lecture, "Whether Mr. Pope be a man of sense, in
-one argument--'Whatever is is right.'" If whatever is is right, Henley
-thought that nothing could be wrong; ergo, he himself was not a proper
-object of satire.
-
-Henley's pulpit was covered with velvet and gold lace, and over his altar
-was written, "The PRIMITIVE Eucharist." A contemporary journalist
-describes him entering his pulpit suddenly, like a harlequin, through a
-sort of trap-door at the back, and "at one large leap jumping into it and
-falling to work," beating his notions into the butcher-audience
-simultaneously with his hands, arms, legs, and head.
-
-In one of his arrogant puffs, he boasts that he has singly executed what
-"would sprain a dozen of modern doctors of the tribe of Issachar;" that no
-one dares to answer his challenges; that he can write, read, and study
-twelve hours a day and not feel the yoke; and write three dissertations a
-week without help, and put the Church in danger. He struck medals for his
-tickets, with a star rising to the meridian upon them, and the vain
-superscription "Ad summa" ("To the heights"), and below, "Inveniam viam
-aut faciam" ("I will find a way or make one").
-
-When the Orator's funds grew low, his audacity and impudence rose to their
-climax. He once filled his chapel with shoemakers, whom he had attracted
-by advertising that he could teach a method of making shoes with wonderful
-celerity. His secret consisted in cutting the tops off old boots. His
-motto to this advertisement was "Omne majus continet in se minus" ("The
-greater includes the less").
-
-In 1745 Henley was cited before the Privy Council for having used
-seditious expressions in one of his lectures. Herring, then Archbishop of
-York, had been arming his clergy, and urging every one to volunteer
-against the Pretender. The Earl of Chesterfield, then Secretary of State,
-urged on Henley the impropriety of ridiculing such honest exertions at a
-time when rebellion actually raged in the very heart of the kingdom. "I
-thought, my lord," said Henley, "that there was no harm in cracking a joke
-on a _red herring_."
-
-During his examination, the restorer of ancient eloquence requested
-permission to sit, on account of a rheumatism that was generally supposed
-to be imaginary. The earl tried to turn the outlaw divine into ridicule;
-but Henley's eccentric answers, odd gestures, hearty laughs, strong voice,
-magisterial air, and self-possessed face were a match for his somewhat
-heartless lordship.
-
-Being cautioned about his disrespectful remarks on certain ministers,
-Henley answered gravely, "My lords, I must live." Lord Chesterfield
-replied, "I don't see the necessity," and the council laughed. Upon this
-Henley, remembering that the joke was Voltaire's, was somewhat irritated.
-"That is a good thing, my lord," he exclaimed, "but it has been said
-before." A few days after the Orator, being reprimanded and cautioned, was
-dismissed as an impudent but entertaining fellow.[604]
-
-Dr. Herring whom the rogue ridiculed was a worthy man, who in 1747, on the
-death of Potter, became Archbishop of Canterbury, and died in 1757. Swift
-hated Herring for condemning the "Beggars' Opera" in a sermon at Lincoln's
-Inn, and wrote accordingly: "The 'Beggars' Opera' will probably do more
-good than a thousand sermons of so stupid, so injudicious, and so
-prostitute a divine."[605]
-
-In 1748 Dr. Cobden, the Court chaplain, an odd but worthy man, incurred
-the resentment of King George II. by preaching before him a sermon
-entitled "A Persuasive to Chastity"--a virtue not popular then at St.
-James's. He resigned his post in 1752. The text of this obnoxious sermon
-was, "Take away the wicked from before the king." Henley's next Saturday's
-motto was--
-
- "Away with the wicked before the king,
- Away with the wicked behind him;
- His throne it will bless
- With righteousness,
- And we shall know where to find him."
-
-If any of the Orator's old Bloomsbury friends ever caught his eye among
-the audience, he would gratify his vanity and rankling resentment by a
-pause. He would then say, "You see, sir, all mankind are not exactly of
-your opinion; there are, you perceive, a few sensible persons in the world
-who consider me as not totally unqualified for the office I have
-undertaken." His abashed adversaries, hot and confused, and with all eyes
-turned on them, would retreat precipitately, and sometimes were pushed out
-of the room by Henley's violent butchers.
-
-The Orator figures in two caricatures, attributed, as Mr. Steevens thinks,
-wrongly to Hogarth. In one he is christening a child; in another he is on
-a scaffold with a monkey by his side. A parson takes the money at the
-door, while a butcher is porter. Modesty is in a cloud, Folly in a coach,
-and there is a gibbet prepared for poor Merit.
-
-Henley, who latterly grew coarse, brutal, and drunken, died October 14,
-1756. The _Gentleman's Magazine_ merely announces his death thus:--"Rev.
-Orator Henley, aged 64." "Nollekens" Smith says that he died mad.
-
-It is somewhat uncertain where his Oratory stood: some say in Duke Street;
-others, in the market. It was probably in Davenant's old theatre, at the
-Tennis Court in Vere Street.[606]
-
-The beginning of one of this buffoon's ribald sermons has been preserved,
-and is worth quoting to prove the miserable claptrap with which he amused
-his rude audience. The text is taken from Jeremiah xvi. 16, "I will send
-for many fishers, saith the Lord, and they shall fish them; and after that
-I will send many hunters, and they shall hunt."
-
-"The former part of the text seems, as Scripture is written for our
-admonition, on whom the ends of the world are come (an end of all we have
-in the world), to relate to the _Dutch_, who are to be fished by us
-according to Act of Parliament; for the word 'herrings' in the Act has a
-figurative as well as a literal sense, and by a metaphor means Dutchmen,
-who are the greatest stealers of herrings in the world; so that the drift
-of the statute is, that we are to fish for Dutchmen, and catch them,
-either by nets or fishing-rods in return for their repeated catching of
-Englishmen, then transport them in some of Jonathan Forward's close
-lighters and sell them in the West Indies, to repair the loss which our
-South Sea Company endure by the Spaniards denying them the assiento, or
-sale of negroes."[607]
-
-Among other wild sermons of Henley, we find discourses on "The Tears of
-Magdalen," "St. Paul's Cloak," and "The Last Wills of the Patriarchs." He
-left behind him 600 MSS., which he valued at one guinea a-piece, and 150
-volumes of commonplaces and other scholarly memoranda. They were sold for
-less than L100. They had been written with great care. When Henley was
-once accused that he _did all_ for lucre, he retorted "that some do
-nothing for it." He once filled his room by advertising an oration on
-marriage. When he got into his pulpit he shook his head at the ladies, and
-said "he was afraid they oftener came to church to get husbands than to
-hear the preacher." On one occasion two Oxonians whom he challenged came
-followed by such a strong party that the butchers were overawed, and
-Henley silently slunk away by a door behind the rostrum.[608]
-
-There are still popular preachers in London as greedy of praise and as
-basely eager for applause as Orator Henley. Equally great buffoons, and
-men equally low in moral tone, still fill some pulpits, and point the way
-to a path they may never themselves take. To such unhappy self-deceivers
-we can advise no better cure than a moonlight walk in Clare Market in
-search of the ghost of Orator Henley.
-
-There was in Hogarth's time an artists' club at the Bull's Head, Clare
-Market. Boitard etched some of the characters. Hogarth, Jack Laguerre,
-Colley Cibber, Denis the critic (?), Boitard, Spiller the comedian, and
-George Lambert, were members. Laguerre gave Spiller's portrait to the
-landlord, and drew a caricature procession of his "chums." The inn was
-afterwards called the "Spiller's Head." One of the wags of the club wrote
-an epitaph on Spiller, beginning--
-
- "The butchers' wives fall in hysteric fits,
- For sure as they're alive, poor Spiller's dead;
- But, thanks to Jack Laguerre, we've got his head.
-
- * * * * *
-
- He was an inoffensive, merry fellow,
- When sober hipped, blithe as a bird when mellow."[609]
-
-The Bull's Head Tavern in Clare Market, the same place in which Hogarth's
-club was held, had previously been the favourite resort of that
-illustrious Jacobite, Dr. Radcliffe, who is said to have killed two
-queens. Swift did not like this overbearing, ignorant, and surly humorist,
-who, however, rejoiced in doing good, and left a vast sum of money to the
-University of Oxford. When Bathurst, the head of Trinity College, asked
-Radcliffe where his library was, he pointed to a few vials, a skeleton,
-and a herbal, and replied, "There is Radcliffe's library."[610]
-
-[Illustration: DRURY LANE THEATRE, 1806.]
-
-Mrs. Bracegirdle, that excellent and virtuous actress, used to be in the
-habit (says Tony Ashton) of frequently going into Clare market and giving
-money to the poor unemployed basketwomen, insomuch that she could not pass
-that neighbourhood without thankful acclamations from people of all
-degrees.
-
-In 1846 there were in and about Clare Market, about 26 butchers who
-slaughtered from 350 to 400 sheep weekly in the stalls and cellars. The
-number killed was from 50 to 60 weekly--but in winter sometimes as many as
-200. But the butchers' market has now become almost a thing of the past.
-
-Joe Miller formerly lay buried in a graveyard on the south side of
-Portugal Street, but the graveyard is now turned to other purposes. At the
-corner of Portugal Street and Lincoln's Inn Fields is the "Black Jack"
-Inn, a hostelry whose name is connected with some of Jack Sheppard's
-feats.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: OLD ST. GILES'S--CHURCH LANE AND DYOT STREET, 1869.]
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-ST. GILES'S.
-
-
-That ancient Roman military road (the Watling Street) came from Edgeware,
-and passing over Hyde Park and through St. James's Park by Old Palace
-Yard, once the Wool Staple, it reached the Thames. Thence it was continued
-to Canterbury and the three great seaports.
-
-Another Roman road, the _Via Trinobantica_, which began at Southampton and
-ended at Aldborough, ran through London, crossed the Watling Street at
-Tyburn, and passed along Oxford Street. In latter times, says Dr.
-Stukeley, the road was changed to a more southerly direction, and Holborn
-was formed, leading to Newgate or the Chamberlain's Gate.
-
-One of the earliest tolls ever imposed in England is said to have had its
-origin in St. Giles's.[611] In 1346 Edward III. granted to the Master of
-the Hospital of St. Giles and to John de Holborne, a commission empowering
-them to levy tolls for two years (one penny in the pound on their value)
-on all cattle and merchandise passing along the public highways leading
-from the old Temple, _i.e._ Holborn Bars, to the Hospital of St. Giles's,
-and also along the Charing Road and another highway called Portpool, now
-Gray's Inn Lane. The money was to be used in repairing the roads, which,
-by the frequent passing of carts, wains, horses, and cattle, had become so
-miry and deep as to be nearly impassable. The only persons exempted were
-to be lords, ladies, and persons belonging to religious
-establishments.[612]
-
-Henry V. ascended the throne in 1413, and astonished his subjects by
-suddenly casting off his slough of vice, and becoming a self-restrained,
-virtuous, and high-spirited king. His first care was to forget party
-distinctions, and to put down the Lollards, or disciples of Wickliffe,
-whom the clergy denounced as dangerous to the civil power. As a good
-general secures the rear of his army before he advances, so the young king
-was probably desirous to guard himself against this growing danger before
-he invaded Normandy and made a clutch at the French crown.
-
-Arundel, the primate, urged him to indict Sir John Oldcastle, Lord Cobham,
-the head of the Lollard sect. The king was averse to a prosecution, and
-suggested milder means. At a conference, therefore, appointed before the
-bishops and doctors in 1414, the following articles were handed Oldcastle
-as tests, and the unorthodox lord was allowed two days to retract his
-heresies. He was required to confess that at the sacrament the material
-bread and wine are turned into Christ's very body and Christ's very
-blood; that every Christian man ought to confess to an ordained priest;
-that Christ ordained St. Peter and his successors as his vicars on earth;
-that Christian men ought to obey the priest; and that it is profitable to
-go on pilgrimages and to worship the relics and images of saints. "This is
-determination of Holy Church. _How feel ye this article?_" With these
-stern words ended every dogma proposed by the primate.
-
-Lord Cobham, who was much esteemed by the king, and had been a good
-soldier under his father, repeatedly refused to profess his belief in
-these tenets. The archbishop then delivered the heretic to the secular
-arm, to be put to death, according to the usage of the times. The night
-previous to his execution, however, Lord Cobham escaped from the Tower and
-fled to Wales, where he lay hid for four years while Agincourt was being
-fought, and where he must have longed to have been present with his true
-sword.
-
-Soon after his escape, the frightened clergy spread a report that he was
-in St. Giles's Fields, at the head of twenty thousand Lollards, who were
-resolved to seize the king and his two brothers, the Dukes of Bedford and
-Gloucester. For this imaginary plot thirty-six persons were hanged or
-burnt; but the names of only three are recorded, and of these Sir Roger
-Acton is the only person of distinction.
-
-A reward of a thousand marks was offered for Lord Cobham, and other
-inducements were held out by Chicheley, the Primate Arundel's successor.
-Four years, however, elapsed before the premature Protestant was
-discovered and taken by Lord Powis in Wales.[613] After some blows and
-blood a country-woman in the fray breaking Cobham's leg with a stool, he
-was secured and sent up to London in a horse-litter. He was sentenced to
-be drawn on a hurdle to the gallows in St. Giles's Fields, and to be
-hanged over a fire, in order to inflict on him the utmost pain.
-
-He was brought from the Tower on the 25th of December 1418, and his arms
-bound behind him. He kept a very cheerful countenance as he was drawn to
-the field where his assumed treason had been committed. When he reached
-the gallows, he fell devoutly on his knees and piously prayed God to
-forgive his enemies. The cruel preparations for his torment struck no
-terror in him, nor shook the constancy of the martyr. He bore everything
-bravely as a soldier, and with the resignation of a Christian. Then he was
-hung by the middle with chains and consumed alive in the fire, praising
-God's name as long as his life lasted.
-
-He was accused by his enemies of holding that there was no such thing as
-free will; that all sin was inevitable; and that God could not have
-prevented Adam's sin, nor have pardoned it without the satisfaction of
-Christ.[614]
-
-Fuller says of him: "Stage-poets have themselves been very bold with, and
-others very merry at, the memory of Sir John Oldcastle (Lord Cobham), whom
-they have fancied a boon companion or jovial roysterer, and yet a coward
-to boot, contrary to the credit of the chronicles, owning him to be a
-martial man of merit. Sir John Falstaff hath derided the memory of Sir
-John Oldcastle, and of late is substituted buffoon in his place; but it
-matters us little what petulant priests or what malicious poets have
-written against him."
-
-The gallows had been removed from the Elms at Smithfield in 1413, the
-first year of Henry V.; but Tyburn was a place of execution as early as
-1388.[615] The St. Giles's gallows was set up at the north corner of the
-hospital wall, between the termination of High Street and Crown Street,
-opposite to where the Pound stood.
-
-The manor of St. Giles was anciently divided from Bloomsbury by a great
-fosse called Blemund's Ditch. The Doomsday Book contains no mention of
-this district, nor indeed of London at all, except of ten acres of land
-nigh Bishopsgate, belonging to St. Paul's, and a vineyard in Holborn,
-belonging to the Crown. This yard is supposed to have stood on the site of
-the Vine Tavern (now destroyed), a little to the east of Kingsgate
-Street.[616]
-
-Blemund's Ditch was a line of defence running nearly parallel with the
-north side of Holborn, and connecting itself to the east with the Fleet
-brook. It was probably of British origin.[617] On the north-west of
-London, in the Roman times, there were marshes and forests, and even as
-late as Elizabeth, Marylebone and St. John's Wood were almost all chase.
-
-The manor was crown property in the Norman times, for Matilda, daughter of
-Malcolm king of Scotland and the queen of Henry I., built a leper hospital
-there, and dedicated it to St. Giles. The same good woman erected a
-hospital at Cripplegate, and another at St. Katharine's, near the Tower,
-and founded a priory within Aldgate. The hospital of St. Giles sheltered
-forty lepers, one clerk, a messenger, the master, and several matrons; the
-queen gave 60s. a year to each leper. The inmates of lazar hospitals were
-in the habit of begging in the market-places.
-
-The patron saint, St. Giles, was an Athenian of the seventh century, who
-lived as a hermit in a forest near Nismes. One day some hunters, pursuing
-a hind that he had tamed, struck the Greek with an arrow as he protected
-it, but the good man still went on praying, and refused all recompense for
-the injury. The French king in vain attempted to entice the saint from his
-cell, which in time, however, grew first into a monastery, and then into a
-town.[618]
-
-This hospital was built on the site of the old parish church, and it
-occupied eight acres. It stood a little to the west of the present church,
-where Lloyd's Court stands or stood; and its gardens reached between High
-Street and Hog Lane, now Crown Street, to the Pound, which used to stand
-nearly opposite to the west end of Meux's Brewhouse. It was surrounded by
-a triangular wall, running in a line with Crown Street to somewhere near
-the Cock and Pye Fields (afterwards the Seven Dials), in a line with
-Monmouth Street, and thence east and west up High Street, joining near the
-Pound.
-
-Unwholesome diet and the absence of linen seem to have encouraged
-leprosy, which was probably a disease of Eastern origin. In 1179 the
-Lateran Council decreed that lepers should keep apart, and have churches
-and churchyards of their own. It was therefore natural to build hospitals
-for lepers outside large towns. King Henry II., for the health of the
-souls of his grandfather and grandmother, granted the poor lepers a second
-60s. each to be paid yearly at the feast of St. Michael, and 30s. more out
-of his Surrey rents to buy them lights. He also confirmed to them the
-grant of a church at Feltham, near Hounslow. In Henry III.'s reign, Pope
-Alexander IV. issued a bull to confirm these privileges. Edward I. granted
-the hospital two charters in 1300 and 1303; and in Edward II.'s reign so
-many estates were granted to it that it became very rich. Edward III. made
-St. Giles a cell of Burton St. Lazar in Leicestershire. This annexation
-led to quarrels, and to armed resistance against the visitations of Robert
-Archbishop of Canterbury. In this reign the great plague broke out, and
-the king commanded the wards of the city to issue proclamations and remove
-all lepers. It is strange that St. Giles's should have been the resort of
-pariahs from the very beginning.
-
-Burton St. Lazar (a manor sold in 1828 for L30,000) is still celebrated
-for its cheeses. It remained a flourishing hospital from the reign of
-Stephen till Henry VIII. suppressed it. St. Giles's sank in importance
-after this absorption, and finally fell in 1537 with its larger brother.
-By a deed of exchange the greedy king obtained forty-eight acres of land,
-some marshes, and two inns. Six years after the king gave St. Giles's to
-John Dudley, Viscount Lisle, High Admiral of England, who fitted up the
-principal part of the hospital for his own residence. Two years after Lord
-Lisle sold the manor to Wymond Carew, Esq. The mansion was situated
-westward of the church and facing it. It was afterwards occupied by the
-celebrated Alice, Duchess of Dudley, who died there in the reign of
-Charles II., aged ninety. This house was subsequently the residence of
-Lord Wharton. It divided Lloyd's Court from Denmark Street.
-
-The master's house, "The White House," stood on the site of Dudley Court,
-and was given by the duchess to the parish as a rectory-house. The wall
-which surrounded the hospital gardens and orchards was not entirely
-removed till 1639.
-
-Early in the fourteenth century the parish of St. Giles, including the
-hospital inmates, numbered only one hundred inhabitants. In King John's
-reign it was laid out in garden plots and cottages. In Henry III.'s reign
-it was a scattered country village, with a few shops and a stone cross,
-where the High Street now is. As far back as 1225 a blacksmith's shop
-stood at the north-west end of Drury Lane, and remained there till its
-removal in 1575.
-
-In Queen Elizabeth's reign the Holborn houses did not run farther than Red
-Lion Street; the road was then open as far as the present Hart Street,
-where a garden wall commenced near Broad Street, St. Giles's, and the end
-of Drury Lane, where a cluster of houses on the right formed the chief
-part of the village, the rest being scattered houses. The hospital
-precincts were at this time surrounded by trees. Beyond this, north and
-south, all was country; and avenues of trees marked out the Oxford and
-other roads. There was no house from Broad Street, St. Giles's, to Drury
-House at the top of Wych Street.[619]
-
-The lower part of Holborn was paved in the reign of Henry VI., in 1417;
-and in 1542 (33d Henry VIII.) it was completed as far as St. Giles's,
-being very full of pits and sloughs, and perilous and noisome to all on
-foot or horseback. The first increase of buildings in this district was on
-the north side of Broad Street. Three edicts of 1582, 1593, and 1602
-evince the alarm of Government at the increase of inhabitants and prohibit
-further building under severe penalties. The first proclamation, dated
-from Nonsuch Palace, in Surrey, assigns the reason of these
-prohibitions:--1. The difficulty of governing more people without new
-officers and fresh jurisdictions. 2. The difficulty of supplying them with
-food and fuel at reasonable rates. 3. The danger of plague and the injury
-to agriculture. Regulations were also issued to prevent the further
-resort of country people to town, and the lord mayor took oaths to enforce
-these proclamations. But London burst through these foolish and petty
-restraints as Samson burst the green withs. In 1580 the resident
-foreigners in the capital had increased from 3762 to 6462 persons, the
-majority being Dutch who had fled from the Spaniards, and Huguenots who
-had escaped from France after the massacre of St. Bartholomew. St. Giles's
-grew, especially to the east and west, round the hospital. The girdle wall
-was mostly demolished soon after 1595. Holborn, stretching westward, with
-its fair houses, lodgings for gentlemen, and inns for travellers,[620] had
-nearly reached it. In Aggas's map, cattle graze amid intersecting
-footpaths, where Great Queen Street now is. There were then only two or
-three houses in Covent Garden, but in 1606 the east side of Drury Lane was
-built; in the assessment of 1623 upwards of twenty courtyards and alleys
-are mentioned; and 100 houses were added on the north side of St. Giles's
-Street, 136 in Bloomsbury, 56 on the west side of Drury Lane, and 71 on
-the south side of Holborn.[621] The south and east sides of the hospital
-site had been the slowest in their growth. After the Great Fire, these
-still remained gardens, but the north side, nearer Oxford Road, was
-already occupied. The first inhabitants of importance were Mr. Abraham
-Speckart and Mr. Breads, in the reigns of James I. and Charles I., and
-afterwards Sir William Stiddolph. New Compton Street was originally called
-Stiddolph Street, but afterwards changed its name when Charles II. gave
-the adjoining marsh-land to Mr. Francis Compton, who built on the old
-hospital land a continuation of Old Compton Street. Monmouth Street,
-probably named after the foolish and unfortunate duke, was also built in
-this reign.
-
-In 1694, in the reign of William III., a Mr. Neale, a lottery promoter,
-took on lease the Cock and Pye Fields--then the resort of gambling boys,
-thieves, and beggars, and a sink of filth and cesspools--and built the
-neighbouring streets, placing in the centre a Doric pillar with seven
-dials on it; afterwards a clock was added.[622] This same Mr. Thomas Neale
-took a large piece of ground on the north side of Piccadilly from Sir
-Thomas Clarges, agreeing to lay out L10,000 in building; but he failed to
-carry out his design, and Sir Walter Clarges, after great trouble, got the
-lease out of his hands, and Clarges Street was then built.[623]
-
-In 1697 many hundreds of the 14,000 French refugees who fled from Louis
-XIV.'s dragoons after the cruel revocation of the Edict of Nantes settled
-about Long Acre, the Seven Dials, and Soho. In Strype's time (Queen Anne's
-reign), Stacie Street, Kendrick Yard, Vinegar Yard, and Phoenix Street,
-were mostly occupied by poor French people; indigent marquises and
-starving countesses.
-
-In the reign of Queen Anne, St. Giles's increased with great rapidity--St.
-Giles's Street and Broad Street from the Pound to Drury Lane, the
-south-east side of Tottenham Court Road, Crown Street, the Seven Dials,
-and Castle Street were completed; the south side of Holborn was also
-finished from Broad Street to a little east of Great Turnstile, and, on
-the north side, the street spread to two doors east of the Vine
-Tavern.[624] The Irish had already begun to debase St. Giles's; the French
-refugees completed the degradation and hopelessness, and spread like a mud
-deluge towards Soho.
-
-In 1640 there are in the parish books several entries of money paid to
-soldiers and distressed men who had lost everything they had in Ireland:--
-
- Paid to a poor Irishman, and to a prisoner come
- over from Dunkirk L0 1 0
-
- Paid for a shroud for an Irishman that died at
- Brickils 0 2 6
-
-In 1640, 1642, and 1647, there constantly occur donations to poor Irish
-ministers and plundered Irish. Clothes were sent by the parish into
-Ireland. There is one entry--
-
- Paid to a poor gentleman undone by the burning of a city
- in Ireland; having licence from the lords to collect L0 3 0
-
-The following entries are also curious and characteristic:--
-
- 1642.--To Mrs. Mabb, a poet's wife, her husband being
- dead L0 1 0
-
- Paid to Goody Parish, to buy her boys two
- shirts; and Charles, their father, a waterman
- at Chiswick, to keep him at L20 a
- year from Christmas 0 3 0
-
- 1648.--Gave to the Lady Pigot, in Lincoln's Inn
- Fields, poor and deserving relief 0 2 6
-
- 1670.--Given to the Lady Thornbury, being poor
- and indigent 0 10 0
-
- 1641.--To old Goodman Street and old Goody
- Malthus, very poor ------
-
- 1645.--To Mother Cole and Mother Johnson, xiid.
- a-piece 0 2 0
-
- 1646.--To William Burnett, in a cellar in Raggedstaff
- Yard, being poor and very sick 0 1 6
-
- To Goody Sherlock, in Maidenhead-fields
- Lane, one linen-wheel, and gave her
- money to buy flax 0 1 0
-
-There are also some interesting entries showing what a sink for the
-poverty of all the world the St. Giles's cellars had become, even before
-the Restoration.
-
- 1640.--Gave to Signor Lifecatha, a distressed
- Grecian ------
-
- 1642.--To Laylish Milchitaire, of Chimaica, in
- Armenia, to pass him to his own country,
- and to redeem his sons in slavery under
- the Turks L0 5 0
-
- 1654.--Paid towards the relief of the mariners,
- maimed soldiers, widows and orphans of
- such as have died in the service of Parliament 4 11 0
-
-These were for Cromwell's soldiers; and this year Oliver himself gave L40
-to the parish to buy coals for the poor.
-
- 1666.--Collected at several times towards the relief
- of the poor sufferers burnt out by the late
- dreadful fire of London L25 8 4
-
-In 1670 nearly L185 was collected in this parish towards the redemption of
-slaves.
-
-After 1648 the Irish are seldom mentioned by name. They had grown by this
-time part and parcel of the district, and dragged all round them down to
-poverty. In 1653 an assistant beadle was appointed specially to search out
-and report all new arrivals of chargeable persons. In 1659 a monthly
-vestry-meeting was instituted to receive the constable's report as to new
-vagrants.
-
-In 1675 French refugees began to increase, and in 1679-1680, 1690 and 1692
-fresh efforts were made to search out and investigate the cases of all
-new-comers. In 1710 the churchwardens reported to the commissioners for
-building new churches, that "a great number of French Protestants were
-inhabitants of the parish."
-
-Well-known beggars of the day are frequently mentioned in the parish
-accounts, as for instance--
-
- 1640.--Gave to Tottenham Court Meg, being very
- sick L0 1 0
-
- 1642.--Gave to the ballad-singing cobbler 0 1 0
-
- 1646.--Gave to old Friz-wig 1 6 0
-
- 1657.--Paid the collectors for a shroud for old Guy,
- the poet 0 2 6
-
- 1658.--Paid a year's rent for Mad Bess 1 4 6
-
- 1642.--Paid to one Thomas, a traveller 0 0 6
-
- To a poor woman and her children, almost
- starved 0 5 6
-
- 1645.--For a shroud for Hunter's child, the blind
- beggar-man 0 1 6
-
- 1646.--Paid and given to a poor wretch, name forgot 0 1 0
-
- Given to old Osborn, a troublesome fellow 0 1 3
-
- Paid to Rotton, the lame glazier, to carry
- him towards Bath 0 3 0
-
- 1647.--To old Osborne and his blind wife 0 0 6
-
- To the old mud-wall maker 0 0 6
-
-In 1665 the plague fell heavily on St. Giles's, already dirty and
-overcrowded. The pest had already broken out five times within the eighty
-years beginning in 1592; but no outbreak of this Oriental pest in London
-had carried off more than 36,000 persons. The disease in 1665, however,
-slew no fewer than 97,306 in ten months.[625] In St. Giles's the plague of
-1592 carried off 894 persons; in 1625 there died of the plague about 1333;
-but in 1665 there were swept off from this parish alone 3216. The plague
-of 1625 seemed to have alarmed London quite as much as its successor, for
-we find that in St. Giles's no assessment could be made, as the richer
-people had all fled into the country. A pest-house was fitted up in
-Bloomsbury for the nine adjoining parishes, and this was afterwards taken
-by St. Giles's for itself. The vestry appointed two examiners to inspect
-infected houses. Mr. Pratt, the churchwarden, who advanced money to
-succour the poor when the rich deserted them, was afterwards paid forty
-pounds for the sums he had generously disbursed at his own risk. In 1642
-the entries in the parish books show that the disease had again become
-virulent and threatening. The bodies were collected in carts by
-torchlight, and thrown without burial service into large pits. Infected
-houses were padlocked up, and watchmen placed to admit doctors or persons
-bringing food to the searchers, who at night brought out the dead.
-
-The following entries (for 1642) in the parish books seem to me even more
-terrible than Defoe's romance written fifty years after the events:--
-
- Paid for the two padlocks and hasps for visited
- houses L0 2 6
-
- Paid Mr. Hyde for candles for the bearers 0 10 0
-
- " to the same for the night-cart and cover 7 9 0
-
- " to Mr. Mann for links and candles for the
- night-bearers 0 10 0
-
-The next year the plague still raged, and the same precautions seem to
-have been taken as afterwards in 1665, showing that the terrible details
-of that punishment of filth and neglect were not new to London citizens.
-
-The entries go on:--
-
- To the bearers for carrying out of Crown Court a woman
- that died of the plague L0 1 6
-
- Sent to a poor man shut up in Crown Yard of the plague 0 1 6
-
-Then follow sums paid for padlocks and staples, graves and links:--
-
- Paid and given Mr. Lyn, the beadle, for a piece of good
- service to the parish in conveying away of a visited
- household to Lord's Pest House, forth of Mr. Higgins's
- house at Bloomsbury L0 1 6
-
- Received of Mr. Hearle (Dr. Temple's gift) to be given
- to Mrs. Hockey, a minister's widow, shut up in the
- Crache Yard of the plague 0 10 0
-
-But now came the awful pestilence of 1665; the streets were so deserted
-that grass grew in them, and nothing was to be seen but coffins,
-pest-carts, link-men, and red-crossed doors. The air resounded with the
-tolling of bells, the screams of distracted mourners crying from the
-windows, "Pray for us!" and the dismal call of the searchers, "Bring out
-your dead!"[626]
-
-The plague broke out in its most malignant form among the poor of St.
-Giles's;[627] and Dr. Hodges and Sir Richard Manningham, both first-rate
-authorities on this subject, agree in this assertion.
-
-In August 1665 an additional rate to the amount of L600 was levied.
-Independent of this, very large sums were subscribed by persons resident
-in, or interested in, the parish. The following are a few of the items:--
-
- Mr. Williams, from the Earl of Clare L10 0 0
-
- Mr. Justice (Sir Edmondbury) Godfrey, from the
- Lord Treasurer 50 0 0
-
- Earl Craven and the rest of the justices, towards
- the visited poor, at various times 449 16 10
-
- Earl Craven towards the visited poor 40 3 0
-
-There are also these ominous entries:--
-
- August.--Paid the searchers for viewing the corpse
- of Goodwife Phillips, who died of the
- plague L0 0 6
-
- Laid out for Goodman Phillips and his
- children, being shut up and visited 0 5 0
-
- Laid out for Lylla Lewis, 3 Crane Court,
- being shut up of the plague; and laid
- out for the nurse, and for the nurse and
- burial 0 18 6
-
-In July 1666 the constables, etc. were ordered to make an account of all
-new inmates coming to the parish, and to take security that they would not
-become burdensome. They were also directed to be careful to prevent the
-infection spreading for the future by a timely guard of all "that are or
-hereafter may happen to be visited."
-
-"During the plague time," says an eye-witness, "nobody put on black or
-formal mourning, yet London was all in tears. The shrieks of women and
-children at the doors and windows of their houses where their dearest
-relations were dying, or perhaps dead, were enough to pierce the stoutest
-hearts. At the west end of the town it was a surprising thing to see those
-streets which were usually thronged now grown desolate; so that I have
-sometimes gone the length of a whole street (I mean bye streets), and have
-seen nobody to direct me but watchmen[628] sitting at the doors of such
-houses as were shut up; and one day I particularly observed that even in
-Holborn the people walked in the middle of the street, and not at the
-sides--not to mingle, as I supposed, with anybody that came out of
-infected houses, or meet with smells and scents from them."
-
-Dr. Hodges, a great physician, who shunned no danger, describes even more
-vividly the horrors of that period. "In the streets," he says, "might be
-seen persons seized with the sickness, staggering like drunken men; here
-lay some dozing and almost dead; there others were met fatigued with
-excessive vomiting, as if they had drunk poison; in the midst of the
-market, persons in full health fell suddenly down as if the contagion was
-there exposed to sale. It was not uncommon to see an inheritance pass to
-three heirs within the space of four days. The bearers were not sufficient
-to inter the dead."[629]
-
-It is supposed that till the Leper Hospital was suppressed, the St.
-Giles's people used the oratory there as their parish church. Leland does
-not mention any other church, although he lived and wrote about the time
-of the suppression, and even made an effort to save the monastic MSS. by
-proposing to have them placed in the king's library. The oratory had
-probably a screen walling off the lepers from the rest of the
-congregation. It boasted several chantry chapels, and a high altar at the
-east end, dedicated to St. Giles, before which burnt a great taper called
-"St. Giles's light," and towards which, about A.D. 1200, one William
-Christemas bequeathed an annual sum of twelvepence. There was also a
-Chapel of St. Michael, appropriated to the infirm, and which had its own
-special priest.
-
-In the reign of Charles I. the south aisle of the hospital church was full
-of rubbish, lumber, and coffin-boards; and Lady Dudley put up a screen to
-divide the nave from the chancel. In 1623 the church became so ruinous
-that it had to be rebuilt at an expense of L2068: 7: 2. Among the
-subscribers appear the names of the Duchess of Lennox, Sir Anthony
-Ashleye, Sir John Cotton, and the players at "the Cockpit playhouse." The
-415 householders of the parish subscribed L1065: 9s., the donations
-ranging from the L250 of the Duchess of Dudley to Mother Parker's
-twopence.
-
-Nearly five years elapsed before the new church was consecrated. On the
-9th of June 1628 Pym brought a charge against the rector, Dr. Mainwaring,
-for having preached two obnoxious sermons, entitled "Religion" and
-"Allegiance," and accused the imprudent time-server of persuading citizens
-to obey illegal commands on pain of damnation, and framing, like Guy Faux,
-a mischievous plot to alter and subvert the Government.[630] The third
-sermon in which Mainwaring defended his two first, the stern Commons found
-upon inquiry[631] had been printed by special command of the king. It was
-as full of mischief as a bomb-shell. It held that on any exigency all
-property was transferred to the sovereign; that the consent of Parliament
-was not necessary for the imposition of taxes; and that the divine laws
-required compliance with every demand which a prince should make upon his
-subjects. For these doctrines the Commons impeached Mainwaring; the
-sentence pronounced on him was, that he should be imprisoned during the
-pleasure of the House, that he should be fined L1000, to the king, make
-submission of his offence, be suspended from lay and ecclesiastical office
-for three years, and that his sermons be called in and burnt.
-
-On June 20 the courtly preacher came to the House, and on his knees
-submitted himself in sorrow and repentance for the errors and
-indiscretions he had been guilty of in preaching the sermons "rashly,
-scandalously, and unadvisedly." He further acknowledged the three sermons
-to be full of dangerous passages and aspersions, and craved pardon for
-them of God and the king. No sooner was the session over than the wilful
-king pardoned him, promoted him to the deanery of Winchester, and some
-years after to the bishopric of St. David's.[632]
-
-The new church was consecrated on the 26th of January 1630. Bishop Laud
-performed the ceremony, and was entertained at the house of a Mr.
-Speckart, near the church. There were two tables sufficient to seat
-thirty-two persons. The broken churchyard wall was fenced up with boards,
-the altar hung with green velvet, a rail made to keep the mob from the
-west door, and a train of constables, armed with bills and halberts,
-appointed to maintain order if the Puritans became threatening. The new
-rector, Dr. Heywood, had been chaplain to Laud, and was probably of the
-High Church party. Like his expelled predecessor, he had been chaplain to
-one of the most arbitrary of kings. In 1640 the Puritans, gaining
-strength, petitioned Parliament against him, stating that he had set up
-crucifixes and images of saints, likewise organs, "with other confused
-music, etc., hindering devotion and maintained at the great and needless
-charge of the parish." They described the carved screen as particularly
-obnoxious, and they objected to the altar rail, the chancel carpet, the
-purple velvet in the desk, the needlework covers of the books, the
-tapestry, the lawn cloth, the bone lace of the altar cloths, and the
-taffeta curtains on the walls. These "popish and superstitious" ornaments
-were sold by order of Parliament, all but the plate and the great bell.
-The surplices were given away. The twelve apostles were washed off the
-organ-loft, and the painted glass was taken down from the windows. The
-screen was sold for forty shillings, and the money given to the poor. The
-Covenant was framed and hung up in the church, and five shillings given to
-a pewterer for a new basin cut square on one side for baptisms. The blue
-velvet carpet, embroidered cushions, and blue curtains were sold, and so
-were the communion rails. In 1647 Lady Dudley's pew was lined with green
-baize and supplied with two straw mats. In 1650 the king's arms were taken
-out of the windows, and a sun-dial was substituted. The organ-loft was let
-as a pew.
-
-The Restoration soon followed on these paltry excesses of a low-bred
-fanaticism. The ringers of St. Giles's rang a peal for three days running.
-The king's arms in the vestry and the windows were restored. Galleries
-were erected for the nobility. In 1670 a brass chandelier of sixteen
-branches was bought for the church, and an hour-glass for the pulpit.
-
-In 1718 the old hospital church had become damp and unwholesome. The
-grave-ground had risen eight feet, so that the church lay in a pit.
-Parliament was therefore petitioned that St. Giles's should be one of the
-fifty new churches. It was urged that a good church facing the High
-Street, the chief thoroughfare for all persons who travelled the Oxford
-or Hampstead roads, would be a great ornament. The petitioners also
-contended that St. Giles's already spent L5300 a year on the poor, and
-that a new rate would impoverish many industrious persons. The Duke of
-Newcastle, the Lord Chancellor, and other eminent parishioners strenuously
-supported the petition, which, on the other hand, was warmly opposed by
-the Archbishop of York, five bishops, and eleven temporal peers. The
-opposition contended that the parish was well able to repair the present
-church; that the fund given for building new churches was never meant to
-be devoted to rebuilding old ones; and that so far from the parish not
-requiring church accommodation, St. Giles's contained 40,000 persons, a
-number for which three new churches would be barely sufficient.[633]
-Eleven years longer the church remained a ruin, when in 1729 the
-commissioners granted L8000 for a new church, provided that the parish
-would settle L350 a year on the rector of the new parish of Bloomsbury.
-
-The architect of the new church, opened in 1734, was Henry Flitcroft. The
-roof is supported by Ionic pillars of Portland stone. The steeple is 160
-feet high, and consists of a rustic pedestal supporting Doric pilasters;
-over the clock is an octangular tower, with three-quarter Ionic columns
-supporting a balustrade with vases. The spire is octangular and belled.
-This hideous production of Greek rules was much praised by the critics of
-1736. They called it "simple and elegant." They considered the east end as
-"pleasing and majestic," and found nothing in the west to object to but
-the smallness and poverty of the doors. The steeple they described as
-"light, airy, and genteel."[634] whether taken with the body of the church
-or considered as a _separate building_.
-
-In 1827 the clock of St. Giles's Church was illuminated with gas, and the
-novelty and utility of the plan "attracted crowds to visit it from the
-remotest parts of the metropolis."[635]
-
-St. Giles's Churchyard was enlarged in 1628, and again soon after the
-Restoration. The garden plot from which the new part was divided was
-called Brown's Gardens. In 1670 we find the sexton agreeing, on condition
-of certain windows he had been allowed to introduce into the side of his
-house, facing the churchyard, to furnish the rector and churchwardens,
-every Tuesday se'nnight after Easter, with two fat capons ready dressed.
-
-In 1687 the Resurrection Gate, or Lich Gate, as it was called, and which
-still exists, was erected at a cost of L185: 14: 6. It stood for many
-years farther to the west than the old gate, and contains a heap of
-dully-carved figures in relievo, abridged from Michael Angelo's "Last
-Judgment," and crowded under a large "compass pediment." It has lately,
-however, been replaced in its old position. This work was much admired and
-celebrated, but "Nollekens" Smith says that it is poor stuff.
-
-Pennant, always shrewd and vivacious, was one of the first writers who
-exposed the disgraceful and dangerous condition of the London churchyards.
-He describes seeing at St Giles's a great square pit with rows of coffins
-piled one upon the other, exposed to sight and smell, awaiting the
-mortality of the night. "I turned away," he says, "disgusted at the scene,
-and scandalised at the want of police which so little regards the health
-of the living as to permit so many putrid corpses, packed between some
-slight boards, dispersing their dangerous effluvia over the capital."[636]
-
-In 1808 a new burial-ground for St. Giles's parish was consecrated in St.
-Pancras's. It stands in grim loneliness between the Hampstead Road and
-College Street, Camden Town.
-
-The graves of John Flaxman, the sculptor, and his wife and sister, are
-marked by an altar tomb of brick, surmounted by a thick slab of Portland
-stone. Near it is the ruinous tomb of ingenious, faddling Sir John Soane,
-the architect to the Bank of England. It is a work of great pretension,
-"but cut up into toy-shop prettiness, with all the peculiar defects of
-his style and manner." Two black cypresses mark the grave.[637]
-
-A few eminent persons are buried in the old St. Giles's Churchyard.
-Amongst these, the most illustrious is George Chapman, who produced a fine
-though rugged translation of the _Iliad_ which is to Pope's what heart of
-oak is to veneer, and who died in 1634 aged seventy-seven, and lies buried
-here. Inigo Jones generously erected an altar tomb to his memory at his
-own expense; it is still to be seen in the external southern wall of the
-church. The monument is old; but the inscription is only a copy of all
-that remained visible of the old writing. That chivalrous visionary, Lord
-Herbert of Cherbury, was also buried here, and so was James Shirley, the
-dramatist, who died in 1666. The latter was the last of the great
-ante-Restoration play-writers, and of a thinner fibre than any of the
-rest, except melancholy Ford.
-
-Richard Pendrell, the Staffordshire farmer, "the preserver and conductor
-of King Charles II. after his escape from Worcester Fight," has an altar
-tomb to his memory raised in this churchyard. After the Restoration,
-Richard came to town, to be in the way, I suppose, of the good things then
-falling into Cavaliers' mouths, and probably settled in St. Giles's to be
-near the Court. The story of the Boscobel oak was one with which the
-swarthy king delighted to buttonhole his courtiers. Pendrell died in 1671,
-and had a monument erected to his memory on the south-east side of the
-church. The black marble slab of the old tomb forms the base of the
-present one. The epitaph is in a strain of fulsome bombast, considering
-the king who was preserved showed his gratitude to Heaven only by a long
-career of unblushing vice, and by impoverishing and disgracing the foolish
-country that called him home. It begins thus:--
-
- "Hold, passenger! here's shrouded in this hearse
- Unparalleled Pendrell thro' the universe.
- Like when the eastern star from heaven gave light
- To three lost kings, so he in such dark night
- To Britain's monarch, lost by adverse war,
- On earth appeared a second eastern star."
-
-The dismal poet ends by assuring the world that Pendrell, the king's
-pilot, had gone to heaven to be rewarded for his good steering. In 1702 a
-Pendrell was overseer in this parish. About 1827 a granddaughter of this
-Richard lived near Covent Garden, and still enjoyed part of the family
-pension. In 1827 Mr. John Pendrell, another descendant of Richard, died at
-Eastbourne.[638] His son kept an inn at Lewes, and was afterwards clerk at
-a Brighton hotel.
-
-The only monument at present of interest in the church is a recumbent
-figure of the Duchess Dudley, the great benefactor of the parish, created
-a duchess in her own right by Charles I. She died 1669. The monument was
-preserved by parochial gratitude when the church was rebuilt, in
-consideration of the duchess's numerous bequests to the parish. She was
-buried at Stoneleigh in Warwickshire. This pious and charitable lady was
-the daughter of Sir Thomas Leigh of Stoneleigh, and she married Sir Robert
-Dudley, son of the great Earl of Leicester, who deserted her and his five
-daughters, and went and settled in Florence, where he became chamberlain
-to the Grand Duchess. Clever and unprincipled as his father, Sir Robert
-devised plans for draining the country round Pisa, and improving the port
-of Leghorn. He was outlawed, and his estates at Kenilworth, etc. were
-confiscated and sold for a small sum to Prince Henry; but Charles I.
-generously gave them back to the duchess.
-
-In her funeral sermon, Dr. Boreman says of this good woman: "She was a
-magazine of experience.... I have often said she was a living chronicle
-bound up with the thread of a long-spun age. And in divers incidents and
-things relating to our parish, I have often appealed to her stupendous
-memory as to an ancient record.... In short, I would say to any desirous
-to attain some degree of perfection, 'Vade ad Sancti Egidii oppidum, et
-disce Ducinam Dudleyam'--('Come to St. Giles, and inquire the character of
-Lady Dudley')."[639]
-
-The oldest monument remaining in the churchyard in 1708 was dated 1611. It
-was a tombstone, "close to the wall on the south side, and near the west
-end," and was to the memory of a Mrs. Thornton.[640] Her husband was the
-builder of Thornton Alley, which was probably his estate. The following
-painful lines were round the margin of the stone:--
-
- "Full south this stone four foot doth lie
- His father John and grandsire Henry
- Thornton, of Thornton, in Yorkshire bred,
- Where lives the fame of Thornton's being dead."
-
-Against the east end of the north aisle of the church was the tombstone of
-Eleanor Steward, who died 1725, aged 123 years and five months.
-
-That good and inflexible patriot, Andrew Marvell, the most poignant
-satirist of King Charles II., died in 1678, and is buried in St. Giles's.
-Marvell was Latin secretary to Milton, and in the school of that good
-man's house learnt how a true patriot should live. It is recorded that one
-day when he was dining in Maiden Lane, one of Charles II.'s courtiers came
-to offer him L1000 as a bribe for his silence. Marvell refused the gift,
-took off the dish-cover, and showed his visitor the humble half-picked
-mutton-bone on which he was about to dine. He was member for
-Kingston-upon-Hull for nearly twenty years, and was buried at last at the
-expense of his constituents. They also voted a sum of money to erect a
-monument to him with a harmless epitaph; to this, however, the rector of
-the time, to his own disgrace, refused admittance. Thompson, the editor of
-Marvell's works, searched in vain in 1774 for the patriot's coffin. He
-could find no plate earlier than 1722.
-
-In the same church with this fixed star rests that comet, Sir Roger
-l'Estrange. His monument was said to be the grandest in the church. Sir
-Roger died in 1704, aged eighty-eight.
-
-In 1721, after an ineffectual treaty for Dudley Court, where the
-parsonage-house had once stood, a piece of ground called Vinegar Yard was
-purchased for the sum of L2252: 10s. as a burial-ground, hospital, and
-workhouse for the parish of St. Giles's. At that time St. Giles's relieved
-about 840 persons, at the cost of L4000 a year. Of this number there were
-162 over seventy years of age, 126 parents overburthened with children,
-183 deserted children and orphans, 70 sick at parish nurses', and 300 men
-lame, blind, and mad.
-
-The Earl of Southampton granted land for five almshouses in St. Giles's in
-1656.[641] The site was in Broad Street, nearly at the north end of
-Monmouth and King Streets, where they stood until 1782, at which period
-they were pulled down to widen the road. The new almshouses were erected
-in a close, low, and unhealthy spot in Lewknor's Lane.
-
-In the year 1661 Mr. William Shelton left lands for a school for fifty
-children in Parker's Lane, between Drury Lane and Little Queen Street. The
-tenements, before he bought them, had been in the occupation of the Dutch
-ambassador. The premises were poor houses, and a coach-house and stables
-in the occupation of Lord Halifax. In 1687, the funds proving inadequate,
-the school was discontinued; but in 1815, after being in abeyance for
-fifty-three years, it was re-opened in Lloyd's Court.[642]
-
-The select vestry of St. Giles's was much badgered in 1828 by the excluded
-parishioners. There were endless errors in the accounts, and items
-amounting to L90,000 were found entered only in pencil. The special pleas
-put in by the attorneys of the vestry covered 175 folios of writing.
-
-Hog Lane, built in 1680, was rechristened in 1762 Crown Street, as an
-inscription on a stone let into the wall of a house at the corner of Rose
-Street intimates.[643] Strype calls it a "place not over well built or
-inhabited." The Greeks had a church here, afterwards a French refugee
-place of worship, and subsequently an Independent chapel. It stood on the
-west side of the lane, a few doors from Compton Street; and its site is
-now occupied by St. Mary's Church and clergy-house. Hogarth laid the scene
-of his "Noon" in Hog Lane, at the door of this chapel; but the houses
-being reversed in the engraving, the truth of the picture is destroyed.
-The background contains a view of St. Giles's Church. The painter
-delighted in ridiculing the fantastic airs of the poor French gentry, and
-showed no kindly sympathy with their honest poverty and their sufferings.
-It was to St. Giles's that Hogarth came to study poverty and also vice. A
-scene of his "Harlot's Progress" is in Drury Lane, close by. Tom Nero, in
-the "Four Stages of Cruelty," is a St. Giles's charity-boy, and we see him
-in the first stage tormenting a dog near the church. Hogarth's "Gin
-Street" is situated in St. Giles's. The scenes of all the most hideous and
-painful of his works are in this district.
-
-"Nollekens" Smith, writing of St. Giles's, says: "I recollect the building
-of most of the houses at the north end of New Compton Street--so named in
-compliment to Bishop Compton, Dean of St. Paul's. I also remember a row of
-six small almshouses, surrounded by a dwarf brick wall, standing in the
-middle of High Street. On the left hand of High Street, passing into
-Tottenham Court Road, there were four handsome brick houses, probably of
-Queen Anne's time, with grotesque masks as keystones to the first-floor
-windows. Nearly on the site of the new "Resurrection Gate," in which the
-basso-relievo is, stood a very small old house towards Denmark Street,
-which used to totter, to the terror of passers by, whenever a heavy
-carriage rolled through the street."[644]
-
-Exactly where Oxford Street and Tottenham Court Road meet in a right
-angle, a large circular boundary-stone was let into the pavement. Here
-when the charity-boys of St. Giles's walked the boundaries, those who
-deserved flogging were whipped, in order to impress the parish frontier on
-their memories.
-
-The Pound originally stood in the middle of the High Street, whence it was
-removed in 1656 to make way for the almshouses. It had stood there when
-the village really required a place to imprison straying cattle. The
-latest pound stood in the broad space where the High Street, Tottenham
-Court Road, and Oxford Street meet; it occupied a space of about
-thirty-feet, and was removed in 1768. It must have faced Meux's Brewery.
-An old song that celebrates this locality begins--
-
- "At Newgate steps Jack Chance was found,
- And bred up near St. Giles's Pound."
-
-Criminals on their way to Tyburn used to "halt at the great gate of St.
-Giles's Hospital, where a bowl of ale was provided as their last
-refreshment in this life."[645] A similar custom prevailed at York, which
-gave rise to the proverb, "The saddler of Bawtry was hung for leaving his
-liquor," meaning that if the impatient man had stopped to drink, his
-reprieve would have arrived in time.[646]
-
-Bowl Yard was built about 1623, and was then surrounded by gardens. It is
-a narrow court on the south side of High Street, over against Dyot Street,
-now George Street. There was probably here a public-house, the Bowl, at
-which in later time ale was handed to the passing thieves.
-
-Swift, in a spirited ballad describes "clever Tom Clinch," who rode
-"stately through Holborn to die in his calling," stopping at the George
-for a bottle of sack, and promising to pay for it "_when he came back_."
-No one has sketched the highwayman more perfectly than the Irish prelate.
-Tom Clinch wears waistcoat, stockings, and breeches of white, and his cap
-is tied with cherry ribbon. He bows like a beau at the theatre to the
-ladies in the doors and to the maids in the balconies, who cry, "Lackaday,
-he's a proper young man." He swears at the hawkers crying his last speech,
-kicks the hangman when he kneels to ask his pardon, makes a short speech
-exhorting his comrades to ply their calling, and so carelessly and
-defiantly takes his leave of an ungrateful world.
-
-"Rainy Day" Smith describes,[647] when a boy of eight years old, being
-taken by Nollekens, the sculptor, to see that notorious highwayman John
-Rann, alias "Sixteen-string Jack," on his way to execution at Tyburn, for
-robbing Dr. Bell, chaplain to the Princess Amelia, in Gunnersbury Lane,
-near Brentford, in 1774. Rann was a smart fellow, and had been a coachman
-to Lord Sandwich, who then lived at the south-east corner of Bedford Row,
-Covent Garden. The undaunted malefactor wore a bright pea-green coat, and
-carried an immense nosegay, which some mistress of the highwayman had
-handed him, according to custom, as a last token, from the steps of St.
-Sepulchre's Church. The sixteen strings worn by this freebooter at his
-knees were reported to be in ironical allusion to the number of times he
-had been acquitted. On their return home, Nollekens, stooping to the boy's
-ear, assured him that had his father-in-law, Mr. Justice Welch, been then
-High Constable, they could have walked all the way to Tyburn beside the
-cart.[648]
-
-Holborn used to be called "the Heavy Hill" because it led thieves from
-Newgate to Tyburn. Old fat Ursula, the roast-pig seller in Ben Jonson's
-_Bartholomew Fair_ talks of ambling afoot to hear Knockhem the footpad
-groan out of a cart up the Heavy Hill. This was in James I.'s time. Dryden
-alludes to it in the same way in 1678,[649] and in 1695 Congreve's Sir
-Sampson[650] mentions the same doleful procession. In 1709 (Queen Anne)
-Tom Browne mentions a wily old counsellor in Holborn who used to turn out
-his clerks every execution day for a profitable holiday, saying, "Go, you
-young rogues, go to school and improve."
-
-St. Giles's was always famous for its inns.[651] One of the oldest of
-these was the Croche House, or Croche Hose (Cross Hose), so called from
-its sign--the Crossed Stockings. The sign, still used by hosiers, was a
-red and white stocking forming a St. Andrew's Cross. This inn belonged to
-the hospital cook in 1300, and was given by him to the hospital. It stood
-at the north of the present entrance to Compton Street, and was probably
-destroyed before the reign of Henry VIII.
-
-The Swan on the Hop was an inn of Edward III.'s time; it stood eastward of
-Drury Lane and on the south side of Holborn.[652]
-
-The White Hart is described in Henry VIII.'s time as possessing eighteen
-acres of pasture. It stood near the Holborn end of Drury Lane, and existed
-till 1720. In Aggas's Plan it appears surrounded on three sides by a wall.
-It was bounded on the east by Little Queen Street, and was divided from
-Holborn by an embankment. A court afterwards stood on its site.
-
-The Rose is mentioned as early as Edward III.'s reign. It was near
-Lewknor's Lane, and stood not far from the White Hart.
-
-The Vine was an inn till 1816. It was on the north side of Holborn, a
-little to the east of Kingsgate Street. It is supposed to have stood on
-the site of a vineyard mentioned in Doomsday Book. It was originally a
-country roadside inn, with fields at the back. It became an infamous
-nuisance. The house that replaced it was first occupied by a
-timber-merchant, and afterwards by Probert, the accomplice of Thurtell,
-who, escaping death for the murder of Mr. Weare, was soon after hanged for
-horse-stealing in Gloucestershire. It was at this trial that the
-prisoner's keeping a gig was adduced as an incontestible proof of his
-respectability--a fact immortalised, almost to the weariness of a
-degenerate age, by Mr. Thomas Carlyle. The inn was once called the
-Kingsgate Tavern, from its having stood near the king's gate or turnpike
-in the adjoining street.
-
-The Cock and Pye Inn stood at the west corner of what was once a mere or
-marshland. The fields surrounding it, now Seven Dials, were called from
-it the Cock and Pye Fields.
-
-The Maidenhead Inn stood in Dyot Street, and formed part of Lord
-Mountjoy's estates in Elizabeth's time. It was the house for parish
-meetings in Charles II.'s reign. It then became a resort for mealmen and
-farmers, and latterly a brandy-shop and beggars' haunt of the vilest sort.
-It was finally turned into a stoneyard. Dyot Street, so called after Sir
-John Dyot, who left it by wish to the poor, though it was afterwards a
-poor and even dangerous locality, must have been respectable in 1662, when
-a Presbyterian chapel was built there for Joseph Read, Baxter's friend, an
-ejected minister from Worcestershire. Read was taken up under the
-Conventicles Act in 1677, and endured much persecution, but was restored
-to his congregation on the accession of James II. From 1684 to 1708 the
-building was used as a chapel of ease to St. Giles's Church. At the close
-of the last century men would hurry along Dyot Street as through a
-dangerous defile. There was a legend current of a banker's clerk who,
-returning from his round, with his book of notes and bills fastened by the
-usual chain, as he passed down Dyot Street felt a cellar door sinking
-under him. Conscious of his danger, he made a spring forward, dashed down
-the street, and escaped the trap set for him by the thieves. It may be
-added that Dyot Street gave the name to a song sung by Liston in the
-admirable burlesque of "Bombastes Furioso."
-
-Irish mendicants--the poorest, dirtiest, and most unimprovable of all
-beggars--began to crowd into St. Giles's about the time of Queen
-Elizabeth.[653]
-
-The increase of London soon attracted country artisans and country
-beggars. The closing of the monasteries had filled England with herds of
-sturdy and dangerous vagrants not willing to work, and by no means
-inclined to starve. The new-comers resorting to the suburbs of London to
-escape the penalties of infringing the City jurisdiction, the
-stout-hearted queen ordered all persons within three miles of London
-gates to forbear from allowing any house to be occupied by more than one
-family.
-
-A proclamation of 1583 alludes to the very poor and the beggars, who lived
-"heaped up" in small tenements and let lodgings. A subsequent warning
-orders the suppression of the great multitude of Irish vagrants, many of
-whom haunted the courts under pretence of suits; by day they mixed with
-disbanded soldiers from the Low Countries and other impostors and beggars,
-and at night committed robberies and outrages. St. Giles's was then one of
-the great harbours for these "misdemeaned persons." On one occasion a mob
-of these rogues surrounded the queen as she was riding out in the evening
-to Islington to take the air. That same night Fleetwood, the Recorder,
-issued warrants, and in the morning went out himself and took seventy-four
-rogues, including some blind rich usurers, who were all sent to Bridewell
-for speedy punishment.
-
-James I. pursued the same crusade against vagrants, forbidding new
-buildings in the suburbs, and ordering all newly raised structures to be
-pulled down. The beadles had to attend every Sunday at the vestry to
-report all new inmates, and who lodged them, and to take up all idlers;
-the constables in 1630 were also required to give notice of such persons
-to the churchwardens every month. In an entry in St. Giles's parish books
-in 1637 "families in cellars" are first mentioned.[654] The locality
-afterwards became noted for these dens, and "a cellar in St. Giles's"
-became a proverbial phrase to signify the lowest poverty.
-
-In 1640 Irishmen are first mentioned by name, and money was paid to take
-them back again to their native land.
-
-Sir John Fielding, brother of the great novelist, who was an active
-Westminster magistrate in his time and a great hunter down of highwaymen,
-in a pamphlet on the increase of crime in London, lays special stress on
-the vicious poverty of St. Giles's. He gives a statement on the authority
-of Mr. Welch, the High Constable of Holborn, of the overcrowding of the
-miserable lodgings where idle persons and vagabonds were sheltered for
-twopence a night. One woman alone owned seven of these houses, which were
-crowded with twopenny beds from cellar to garret. In these beds both
-sexes, strangers or not, lay promiscuously, the double bed being a
-halfpenny cheaper. To still more wed vice to poverty, these lodging-house
-keepers sold gin at a penny a quartern, so that no beggar was so poor that
-he could not get drunk. No fewer than seventy of these vile houses were
-found open at all hours, and in one alone, and not the largest, there were
-counted fifty-eight persons sleeping in an atmosphere loathsome if not
-actually poisonous.
-
-This Judge Welch was the father of Mrs. Nollekens, and a brave and
-benevolent man. He was a friend of Dr. Johnson and of Fielding, whom he
-succeeded in his justiceship, Mr. Welch having on one occasion heard that
-a notorious highwayman who infested the Marylebone lanes was sleeping in
-the first floor of a house in Rose Street, Long Acre, he hired the tallest
-hackney-coach he could find, drove under the thief's window, ascended the
-roof, threw up the sash, entered the room, actually dragged the fellow
-naked out of bed on to the roof of the coach, and in that way carried him
-down New Street and up St. Martin's Lane, amidst the huzzas of an immense
-throng which followed him, to Litchfield Street, Soho.[655]
-
-Archenholz, the German traveller, writing circa 1784, describes the
-streets of London as crowded with beggars. "These idle people," says this
-curious observer, "receive in alms three, four, and even five shillings a
-day. They have their clubs in the parish of St. Giles's, where they meet,
-drink and feed well, read the papers, and talk politics. One of my friends
-put on one day a ragged coat, and promised a handsome reward to a beggar
-to introduce him to his club. He found the beggars gay and familiar, and
-poor only in their rags. One threw down his crutch, another untied a
-wooden leg, a third took off a grey wig or removed a plaister from a sound
-eye; then they related their adventures, and planned fresh schemes. The
-female beggars hire children for sixpence and sometimes even two
-shillings a day: a very deformed child is worth four shillings." In the
-same parish the pickpockets met to dine and exchange or sell snuff-boxes,
-handkerchiefs, and other stolen property.
-
-About fifty years before, says Archenholz, there had been a pickpockets'
-club in St. Giles's, where the knives and forks were chained to the table
-and the cloth was nailed on. Rules were, however, decorously observed, and
-chairmen chosen at their meetings. Not far from this house was a
-celebrated gin-shop, on the sign-post of which was written, "Here you may
-get drunk for a penny, dead drunk for twopence, and straw for nothing."
-The cellars of this public-spirited man were never empty.
-
-Archenholz also sketches the conjurors who told fortunes for a shilling.
-They wore black gowns and false beards, advertised in the newspapers, and
-painted their houses with magical figures and planetary emblems.[656]
-
-In 1783 Mr. J. T. Smith describes how he made for Mr. Crowle, the
-illustrator of Pennant, a sketch of Old Simon, a well-known character, who
-took his station daily under one of the gate piers of the old red and
-brown brick gateway at the northern end of St. Giles's Churchyard, which
-then faced Mr. Remnent's timber-yard. This man wore several hats, and was
-remarkable for a long, dirty, yellowish white beard. His chapped fingers
-were adorned with brass rings. He had several coats and waistcoats--the
-upper wrap-rascle covering bundles of rags, parcels of books, canisters of
-bread and cheese, matches, a tinder-box, meat for his dog, scraps from
-_Fox's Book of Martyrs_, and three or four dog's-eared, thumbed, and
-greasy numbers of the _Gentleman's Magazine_. From these random leaves he
-gathered much information, which he retailed to persons who stopped to
-look at him. Simon and his dog lodged under a staircase in an old
-shattered building in Dyot Street, known as "Rat's Castle." It was in this
-beggars' rendezvous that Nollekens the sculptor used to seek models for
-his Grecian Venuses. Rowlandson etched Simon several times in his usual
-gross but droll manner.[657] There was also a whole-length print of him
-published by John Seago, with this monumental inscription--"Simon Edy,
-born at Woodford, near Thrapston, Northamptonshire, in 1709. Died May
-18th, 1783."
-
-Simon had had several dogs, which, one after the other, were stolen, and
-sent for sale at Islington, or killed for their teeth by men employed by
-the dentists. The following anecdote is told of his last and most faithful
-dog:--Rover had been a shepherd's dog at Harrow, and having its left eye
-struck out by a bullock's horn, was left with Simon by its master, a
-Smithfield drover. The beggar tied him to his arm with a long string,
-cured him, and then restored him to the drover. After that, the dog would
-stop at St. Giles's porch every market-day on its way after the drover to
-the slaughter-house in Union Street, and receive caresses from the hand
-which had bathed its wound. Rover would then yelp for joy and gratitude,
-and scamper off to get up with the erring bullocks. At last poor Simon
-missed the dog for several weeks; at the end of that time it appeared one
-morning at his feet, and with its one sorrowful and uplifted eye implored
-Simon's protection by licking his tawny beard. His master the drover was
-dead. Simon was only too glad to adopt Rover, who eventually followed him
-to his last home.
-
-There was an elegy printed for good-natured, inoffensive old Simon, with a
-woodcut portrait attached. The Hon. Daines Barrington is said to have
-never passed the old mendicant without giving him sixpence.
-
-Mr. J. T. Smith, himself afterwards Curator of the Prints at the British
-Museum, published some curious etchings of beggars and street characters
-in 1815. Amongst them are ragged men carrying placards of "The Grand
-Golden Lottery;" strange old-clothesmen in cocked hats and two-tier wigs;
-itinerant wood-merchants; sellers of toys, such as "young lambs" or live
-haddock; flying piemen in pig tails and shorts; women in gipsy hats;
-door-mat sellers; vendors of hot peas, pickled cucumbers, lemons,
-windmills (toys); and, last and least, Sir Harry Dimsdale, the dwarf Mayor
-of Garratt.
-
-The condition of the beggars of St. Giles in 1815 we gather pretty
-accurately from the evidence given by Mr. Sampson Stevenson, overseer of
-the parish, and by trade an ironmonger at No. 11 King Street, Seven Dials,
-before a committee of the House of Commons, the Right Honourable George
-Rose in the chair.
-
-Mr. Stevenson's shop was not more than a few yards from one of the
-beggars' chief rendezvous, and he had therefore been enabled to closely
-study their habits. The inn had lost its licence, as the landlord
-encouraged thieves; and he had made inquiries of petition-writers, the
-highest class of mendicants. He had gone frequently into the bar of the
-Fountain in King Street, another of their haunts, to watch their
-goings-on. The pretended sailors never carried anything on their backs, as
-they only begged or extorted money; but the other rogues, who made it
-their practice to ask for food and clothing, always carried a knapsack to
-put it in. They returned laden with shoes and clothes, which they would
-sell in Monmouth Street. They had been heard to say that they had made
-three or four shillings a day by begging shoes alone.[658] Their mode of
-obtaining charity was to go barefoot and scarify their heels so that the
-blood might show. They went out two or three together, or more, and
-invariably changed their routes each day. Mr. Stevenson had seen them pull
-out their money and share it. Victuals, he believed, they threw away; but
-everything else they sold. They would stop at the Fountain till the house
-closed, or till they got drunk, began to fight, and were turned out by the
-publican, who feared the losing his licence. They probably went to even
-lower places to finish their revel.
-
-"They teach other," he said, "different modes of extortion. They are of
-the worst character, and overwhelm you with cursing and abuse if you
-refuse them money. There is one special rascal, Gannee Manos, who is
-scarcely three months in the year out of gaol. He always goes barefoot,
-and scratches his ankles to make them bleed. He is the greatest collector
-of shoes and clothes, as he goes the most naked to excite compassion."
-Another man had been known in the streets for fifteen or twenty years. He
-generally limped or passed as a cripple; but Mr. Stevenson has seen him
-fencing and jumping about like a pugilist. He went without a hat, with
-bare arms, and a canvas bag on his back. He generally began by singing a
-song, and he carried primroses or something in his hand. He pretended to
-be scarcely able to move one foot before the other; but if a Bow Street
-officer or a beadle came in sight, he was off as quick as any one. There
-was another man, an Irishman who had had a good education, and had been in
-the medical line; he wrote a beautiful hand, and drew up petitions for
-beggars at sixpence or a shilling each.
-
-"These men come out by twenties and thirties from the bottom of Dyot
-Street, and then branch off five or six together. The one who has still
-some money left starts them with a pint or half a pint of gin. They have
-all their divisions, and they quarter the town into sections. Some of them
-collect three, four, or five children, paying sixpence a day for each, and
-then they go begging in gangs, setting the children crying to excite
-people's sympathies. The Irish sometimes have the impudence to bring these
-children to the board and claim relief, and swear the children are their
-own. In a short time they are found out; but till the discovery their
-landlords will swear their story is true. Sometimes, by giving their own
-country people something, the landlords help to detect them. But even in
-cases where the children are their own, they will not work when they have
-once got into the habit of begging. If they will not come into the
-workhouse, their relief is instantly stopped.
-
-"They spend their evenings drinking, after dining at an eating-house.
-Deserving people never beg: they are ashamed of it. They do not eat broken
-victuals. They have seldom any lodgings. There are houses where forty or
-fifty of them sleep. A porter stands at the door and takes the money. In
-the morning there is a general muster to see they have stolen nothing, and
-then the doors are unlocked. For threepence they have clean straw, for
-fourpence something more decent, and for sixpence a bed. These are all
-professional beggars; they beg every day, even Sundays. They will not
-work; they get more money by begging. Sometimes during hard frosts they
-pretend to beg for work; but their children are sent out early by their
-parents to certain prescribed stations to beg, sometimes with a broom. If
-they do not bring home more or less according to their size, they are
-beaten. A large family of children is a revenue to these people."
-
-When beggars did not get enough for their subsistence, Mr. Stevenson
-believed that they had a fund amongst themselves, as they so seldom
-applied for relief. The Irish were generally afraid to apply, for fear of
-being returned to their own country. Beggars had been heard to brag of
-getting six, seven, and eight shillings a day, or more; and if one got
-more than the others, he divided it with the rest. Mr. Stevenson concluded
-his evidence by saying that there were so many low Irish in St. Giles's,
-that out of L30,000 a year collected in that parish by poor-rate, L20,000
-went to this low and shifting population, that decreased in summer and
-increased in winter.
-
-From one or two specimens culled from the London newspapers in 1829 we do
-not augur much improvement in the character and habits of the St. Giles's
-beggars. On the 12th of July 1829 John Driscoll, an old professional
-mendicant, was brought up at the Marylebone Police-office, charged with
-begging, annoying respectable persons, and even following fashionably
-dressed ladies into shops. In his pockets were found a small sum of money,
-some ham sandwiches, and an invitation ticket signed "Car Durre,
-chairman." It requested the favour of Mr. Driscoll's company on Monday
-evening next, at seven o'clock, at the Robin Hood, Church Street, St.
-Giles's, for the purpose of taking supper with others in his line of
-calling or profession. Mr. Rawlinson said he supposed that an alderman in
-chains would grace the beggars' festive board, but he would at least
-prevent the prisoner forming one of the party on Monday, and sent him to
-the House of Correction for fourteen days.[659]
-
-The same day one of those men who chalk "I am starving" on the pavement
-was also sent to the treadmill for fourteen days. Francis Fisher, the
-prisoner in question, was one of a gang of forty pavement chalkers. In the
-evening, "after work," these men changed their dress, and with their
-ladies enjoyed themselves over a good supper, brandy and water, and
-cigars. In the winter time, when they excited more compassion, their
-average earnings were ten shillings a day. This would make L20 a day for
-the gang, and no less than L7300 a year.
-
-Monmouth Street is generally supposed to have derived its name from the
-Duke of Monmouth, Charles II.'s natural son, whose town house stood close
-by in Soho Square. It was perhaps named from Carey, Earl of Monmouth, who
-died in 1626, and his son, who died in 1661: they were both parishioners
-of St. Giles's.[660] It was early known as the great mart for old clothes,
-but was superseded in later times by Holy Well Street, which in its turn
-was displaced by the Minories. Lady Mary Wortley alludes to the lace coats
-hung up for sale in Monmouth Street like Irish patents. Even Prior, in his
-pleasant metaphysical poem of "Alma," says--
-
- "This looks, friend Dick, as Nature had
- But exercised the salesman's trade,
- As if she haply had sat down
- And cut out clothes for all the town,
- Then sent them out to Monmouth Street,
- To try what persons they would fit."
-
-Gay also alludes to this Jewish street in the following distich in his
-"Trivia"--
-
- "Thames Street gives cheeses, Covent Garden fruits,
- Moorfields old books, and Monmouth Street old suits."
-
-Most of the shops in Monmouth Street were occupied by Jew dealers in 1849,
-and horse-shoes were then to be seen nailed under the door-steps of the
-cellars to scare away witches.[661]
-
-Mr. Charles Dickens in his _Sketches by Boz_, published in 1836-7,
-describes Seven Dials and Monmouth Street as they then appeared. The maze
-of streets, the unwholesome atmosphere, the men in fustian spotted with
-brickdust or whitewash, and chronically leaning against posts, are all
-painted by this great artist with the accuracy of a Dutch painter. The
-writer boldly plunges into the region of "first effusions and last dying
-speeches, hallowed by the names of Catnach and of Pitts," and carries us
-at once into a fight between two half-drunk Irish termagants outside a
-gin-shop. He then takes us to the dirty straggling houses, the dark
-chandler's shop, the rag and bone stores, the broker's den, the
-bird-fancier's room as full as Noah's ark, and completes the picture with
-a background of dirty men, filthy women, squalid children, fluttering
-shuttlecocks, noisy battledores, reeking pipes, bad fruit, more than
-doubtful oysters, attenuated cats, depressed dogs, and anatomised fowls.
-Every house has, he says, at least a dozen tenants. The man in the shop is
-in the "baked jemmy" line, or deals in firewood and hearthstones. An Irish
-labourer and his family occupy the back kitchen, while a jobbing
-carpet-beater is in the front. In the front one pair there's another
-family, and in the back one pair a young woman who takes in tambour-work.
-In the back attic is a mysterious man who never buys anything but coffee,
-penny loaves, and ink, and is supposed to write poems for Mr. Warren.[662]
-
-The Monmouth Street inhabitants Mr. Dickens describes as a peaceable,
-thoughtful, and dirty race, who immure themselves in deep cellars or small
-back parlours, and seldom come forth till the dusk and cool of the
-evening, when, seated in chairs on the pavement, smoking their pipes, they
-watch the gambols of their children as they revel in the gutter, a happy
-troop of infantine scavengers.
-
-"A Monmouth Street laced coat" was a byword a century ago, but still we
-find Monmouth Street the same. Pilot coats, double-breasted check
-waistcoats, low broad-brimmed coachmen's hats, and skeleton suits, have
-usurped the place of the old attire; but Monmouth Street, said Charles
-Dickens, is still "the burial-place of the fashions, and we love to walk
-among these extensive groves of the illustrious dead, and indulge in the
-speculations to which they give rise."[663]
-
-In 1816 there were said to be 2348 Irish people resident in St. Giles's;
-but an Irish witness before a committee of the House declared there were
-6000 Irish, and 3000 children in the neighbourhood of George Street alone.
-In 1815 there were 14,164 Irish in the whole of London.[664] The Irish
-portion of the parish of St. Giles's was known by the name of the Holy
-Land in 1829.
-
-[Illustration: THE SEVEN DIALS.]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS THEATRE, 1821.]
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS.
-
-
-Lincoln's Inn, originally belonging to the Black Friars before they
-removed Thames-ward, derives its name from Henry de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln,
-to whom it was given by Edward I., and whose town house or inn stood on
-the same site in the reign of Edward I. Earl Henry died in 1312, the year
-in which Gaveston was killed, and his monument was one of the stateliest
-in the old church. His arms are still those of the inn and of its
-tributaries, Furnival's and Thavies inns. There is yet extant an old
-account of the earl's bailiff, relating to the sale of the fruit of his
-master's garden. The noble's table was supplied and the residue sold. The
-apples, pears, large nuts, and cherries, the beans, onions, garlic, and
-leeks, produced a profit of L9: 2: 3 (about L135 in modern money). The
-only flowers were roses. The bailiff, it appears, expended 8s. a year in
-purchasing small fry, frogs, and eels, to feed the pike in the pond or
-vivary.[665]
-
-Part of the Chancery Lane side of Lincoln's Inn was in 1217 and 1272 "the
-mansion house" of William de Haverhill, treasurer to King Henry III. He
-was attainted for treason, and his house and lands were confiscated to the
-king, who then gave his house to Ralph Neville, Chancellor of England and
-Bishop of Chichester, who built there "a fair house;" and the Bishops of
-Chichester inhabited it there till Henry VII.'s time, when they let it to
-law students, reserving lodgings for themselves, and it fell into the
-hands of Judge Sulyard and other feoffees. This family held it till
-Elizabeth's time, when Sir Edward Sulyard, of Essex, sold the estate to
-the Benchers,[666] who then began enlarging their frontier and building.
-
-The plain Tudor gateway with the two side towers soaked with black smoke,
-the oldest part of the existing structure, was built in 1518 by Sir Thomas
-Lovell, a member of this inn and treasurer of the household to Henry VII.,
-when great alterations took place in the inn. What thousands of wise men
-and rogues have passed under its murky shadow! None of the original
-building is left. The Black Friars' House fronted the Holborn end of the
-Bishop's Palace.[667] The chambers adjoining the Gate House are of a later
-date and it was at these that Mr. Cunningham thinks Ben Jonson
-worked.[668]
-
-The chapel, of debased Perpendicular Gothic, was built by Inigo Jones, and
-consecrated in 1623, Dr. Donne the poet preaching the consecration sermon.
-The stained glass was the work of a Mr. Hale of Fetter Lane. The twelve
-apostles, Moses, and the prophets still glow like immortal flowers,
-bright as when Donne, or Ussher, watched the light they shed. One of the
-windows bears the name of Bernard van Linge, the same man probably who
-executed the windows at Wadham College, Oxford.[669] Noy, the
-Attorney-General and creature of Charles I., a friend of Laud, and the
-proposer of the writ for ship-money, put up the window representing John
-the Baptist, rather an ominous saint, surely, in Charles's time. Noy died
-in 1634, before the storm which would certainly have carried his head off.
-He left his money to a prodigal son, who was afterwards killed in a
-duel,--"Left to be squandered, and I hope no better from him," says the
-dying man, bitterly. It was Noy who decided the curious case of the three
-graziers who left their money with their hostess. One of them afterwards
-returned and ran off with the money; upon which the other two sued the
-woman, denying their consent. Mr. Noy pleaded that the money was ready to
-be given up directly the three men came together and claimed it.[670]
-Rogers tells this story in his poem of "Italy," and gives it a romantic
-turn.
-
-Laud, always restless for novelties that could look like Rome, and yet not
-be Rome, referred to the Lincoln's Inn windows at his trial. He wondered
-at a Mr. Brown objecting to such things, considering he was not of
-Lincoln's Inn, "where Mr. Prynne's zeal had not yet beaten down the images
-of the apostles in the fair windows of that chapel, which windows were set
-up new long since the statute of Edward VI.; and it is well known," says
-that enemy of the Puritans, "that I was once resolved to have returned
-this upon Mr. Brown in the House of Commons, but changed my mind, lest
-thereby I might have set some furious spirit at work to destroy those
-harmless goodly windows, to the just dislike of that worthy society."[671]
-
-The crypt under the chapel rests on many pillars and strong-backed arches,
-and, like the cloisters in the Temple, was intended as a place for
-student-lawyers to walk in and exchange learning. Butler describes
-witnesses of the straw-bail species waiting here for customers,[672] just
-as half a century ago they used to haunt the doors of Chancery Lane
-gin-shops. On a June day in 1663 Pepys came to walk under the chapel by
-appointment, after pacing up and down and admiring the new garden then
-constructing.
-
-The great Sir Thomas More, Chancellor of England in Henry VIII.'s time,
-had chambers at Lincoln's Inn when he was living in Bucklersbury after his
-marriage. This was about 1506. He wrote his _Utopia_ in 1516. King Henry
-grew so fond of More's learned and witty conversation, that he used to
-constantly send for him to supper, and would walk in the garden at Chelsea
-with his arm round his neck. More was beheaded in 1535 for refusing to
-take the oath of succession and acknowledge the legality of the king's
-divorce from Catherine of Arragon. Erasmus, who knew More well, inscribed
-the "Nux" of Ovid to his son. More's skull is still preserved, it is said,
-in the vault of St. Dunstan's Church at Canterbury.[673] More's daughter,
-Margaret Roper, was buried with it in her arms.
-
-Dr. Donne, the divine and poet, whose mother was distantly related to Sir
-Thomas More and to Heywood the epigrammatist, was a student at Lincoln's
-Inn in his seventeenth year, but left it to squander his father's fortune.
-He was a friend of Bacon, with whom he lived for five years, and also of
-Ben Jonson, who corresponded with him. When young, Donne had written a
-thesis to prove that suicide is no sin. "That," he used to say in later
-years, "was written by Jack Donne, not by Dr. Donne."
-
-This same poet was for two years preacher at Lincoln's Inn; so was the
-charitable and amiable Tillotson in 1663. The latter, after preaching the
-doctrine of non-resistance before King Charles II., was nicknamed "Hobbes
-in the pulpit;" he and Dr. Burnet both tried in vain to force the same
-doctrine on Lord William Russell when he was preparing for death.
-Tillotson, who was made Archbishop of Canterbury in 1691 by King William,
-was a valued friend of Locke. Addison considered Tillotson's three folio
-volumes of sermons to be the standard of English, and meant to make them
-the ground-work of a dictionary which he had projected. Warburton, a
-sterner critic, denies that the sermons are oratorical like Jeremy
-Taylor's, or thoughtful like Barrow's, but yet confesses them to be clear,
-rational, equable,[674] and certainly not without a noble simplicity.
-
-Among the most eminent students of Lincoln's Inn we must remember Sir
-Matthew Hale. After a wild and vain youth, Hale suddenly commenced
-studying sixteen hours a day,[675] and became so careless of dress that he
-was once seized by a pressgang. The sight of a friend who fell down in a
-fit from excessive drinking led to this honest man's renouncing all
-revelry and becoming unchangeably religious. Noy directed him in his
-studies; he became a friend of Selden, and was one of the counsel for
-Strafford, Laud, and the king himself. Nevertheless, he obtained the
-esteem of Cromwell, who was tolerant of all shades of goodness. He died
-1675-6. When a nobleman once complained to Charles II. that Hale would not
-discuss with him the arguments in his cause then before him, Charles
-replied, "Ods fish, man! he would have treated me just the same."
-
-Lord Chancellor Egerton, afterwards Lord Ellesmere, was of Lincoln's Inn.
-His son became Earl of Bridgewater. He was a friend of Lord Bacon, and had
-a celebrated dispute with Chief Justice Coke as to whether "the Chancery
-can relieve by subpoena after a judgment at law in the same cause."
-Prudent, discreet, and honest, Ellesmere was esteemed by both Elizabeth
-and James, and died at York House in 1617. Bishop Hacket says of him that
-"He neither did, spoke, nor thought anything in his life but what deserved
-praise."[676] It is said that many persons used to go to the Chancery
-Court only to see and admire his venerable presence.
-
-Sir Henry Spelman was admitted of Lincoln's Inn. He was a friend of
-Dugdale, and one of our earliest students of Anglo-Saxon. He wrote much
-on civil law, sacrilege, and tithes. Aubrey tells us that he was thought a
-dunce at school, and did not seriously sit down to hard study till he was
-about forty. This eminent scholar died in 1641, and was interred with
-great solemnity in Westminster Abbey.
-
-Shaftesbury, the subtle and dangerous, and one of the restorers of the
-king he afterwards worked so hard to depose, was of Lincoln's Inn.
-
-Ashmole, the great herald, antiquary, and numismatist, originally a London
-attorney, was married in Lincoln's Inn Chapel, in 1668, to the daughter of
-his great colleague in topography and heraldry, Sir William Dugdale, the
-part compiler of the _Monasticon_.
-
-In the chapel was buried Alexander Brome, a Royalist attorney, a
-translator of Horace, and a great writer of sharp songs against "The
-Rump," who died in 1666. Here also--in loving companionship with him only
-because dead--rests that irritable Puritan lawyer, William Prynne. He
-twice lost an ear in the pillory, besides being branded on the cheek. He
-ultimately opposed Cromwell and aided the return of Charles, for which he
-was made Keeper of the Tower Records. His works amount to forty folio and
-quarto volumes. He left copies of them to the Lincoln's Inn library.
-Needham calls him "the greatest paper-worm that ever crept into a
-library." He died in his Lincoln's Inn chambers in 1669. Wood computes
-that Prynne wrote as much as would amount to a sheet for every day of his
-life. His epitaph had been erased when Wood wrote the _Athenae Oxonienses_
-in 1691.
-
-In the same chapel lies Secretary Thurloe, the son of an Essex rector and
-the faithful servant of Cromwell. He was admitted of Lincoln's Inn in
-1647, and in 1654 was chosen one of the masters of the upper bench. He
-died suddenly in his chambers in Lincoln's Inn in 1668. Dr. Birch
-published several folio volumes of his _State Papers_. He seems to have
-been an honest, dull, plodding man. Thurloe's chambers were at No. 24 in
-the south angle of the great court leading out of Chancery Lane, formerly
-called the Gatehouse Court, but now Old Buildings--the rooms on the left
-hand of the ground-floor. Here Thurloe had chambers from 1645 to 1659.
-Cromwell must have often come here to discuss dissolutions of Parliament
-and Dutch treaties. State papers sufficient to fill sixty-seven folio
-volumes were discovered in a false ceiling in the garret by a clergyman
-who had borrowed the chambers of a friend during the long vacation. He
-disposed of them to Lord Chancellor Somers.[677] Cautious old Thurloe had
-perhaps sown these papers, hoping to reap the harvest under some new
-Cromwellian dynasty that never came.
-
-Rushworth the historian was a barrister of Lincoln's Inn. During the Civil
-Wars he was assistant clerk to the House of Commons. After the Restoration
-he became secretary to the Lord Keeper, but falling into distress, died in
-the King's Bench in 1690. His eight folio volumes of _Historical
-Collections_ are specially valuable.[678]
-
-Sir John Denham also studied in this pasturing-ground of English genius;
-and here, after squandering all his money in gaming, he wrote an essay
-upon the vice that brings its own punishment. In 1641, when his tragedy of
-"The Sophy" appeared, Waller said that Denham had broken out like the
-Irish rebellion, threescore thousand strong. In 1643 appeared his
-"Cooper's Hill" which the lampooners declared the author had bought of a
-vicar for forty pounds.[679] He became mad for a short time at the close
-of life, and was then ridiculed by Butler, so says Dr. Johnson. He died in
-1668, and was interred in Westminster Abbey. Denham and Waller smoothed
-the way for Dryden,[680] and founded the Pope school of highly polished
-artificial verse. Denham's noble apostrophe to the river Thames is all but
-perfect.
-
-George Wither, one of our fine old poets of a true school, rougher but
-more natural than Denham's, the son of a Hampshire farmer, entered at
-Lincoln's Inn. Sent to the Marshalsea for his just but indiscreet satires,
-he turned soldier, fought against the Royalists, and became one of
-Cromwell's dreaded major-generals. He was in Newgate for a long time after
-the Restoration, and died in 1667. When taken prisoner by Charles, Sir
-John Denham obtained his release on the humorous pretext that, while
-Wither lived, he (Denham) would not be the worst poet in England.[681]
-
-In No. 1 New Square, Arthur Murphy, the friend of Dr. Johnson, resided for
-twenty-three years. He became a member of the inn in 1757. In 1788 he sold
-his chambers, and retired from the bar. As a journalist he was ridiculed
-by Wilkes and Churchill. His plays, "The Grecian Daughter" and "Three
-Weeks after Marriage," were successful. He also translated Tacitus and
-Sallust. He died in 1805.[682]
-
-Judge Fortescue, a great English lawyer of the time of Henry VI., was a
-student of this inn. He wrote his great work, _De Laudibus Legum Angliae_
-to educate Prince Edward when in banishment in Lorraine. This pious,
-loyal, and learned man, after being nominal Chancellor, returned to
-retirement in England, and acknowledged Edward IV.
-
-The Earl of Mansfield belonged to the same illustrious inn. For elegance
-of mind, for honesty and industry, and for eloquence, he stands
-unrivalled. The proceedings against Wilkes, and the destruction of his
-house in Bloomsbury by the fanatical mob of 1780, were the chief events of
-his useful life.
-
-Spencer Perceval was of Lincoln's Inn. A son of the Earl of Egmont, he
-became a student here in 1782. In Parliament he supported Pitt and the war
-against Napoleon. In 1801, under the Addington ministry, he became
-Attorney-General, and persecuted Peltier for a libel on Bonaparte during
-the peace of Amiens. On the death of the Duke of Portland he was raised to
-the head of the Treasury, where he continued till May 1812, when he was
-shot through the heart in the lobby of the House of Commons by Bellingham,
-a bankrupt merchant of Archangel, who considered himself aggrieved because
-ministers had not taken his part and claimed redress for his losses from
-the Russian Government. Perceval was a shrewd, even-tempered lawyer,
-fluent and industrious, who, had time been permitted him, might possibly
-have proved more completely than he did his incapacity for high
-ministerial command.
-
-George Canning became a student at Lincoln's Inn in 1781. His father was a
-bankrupt wine-merchant who died of a broken heart. His mother was a
-provincial actress. His relation, Sheridan, introduced him to Fox, Grey,
-and Burke, the latter of whom, it is said, induced him to make politics
-his profession. He made his maiden speech, attacking Fox and supporting
-Pitt, in 1794. Late in life he gradually began to support some liberal
-measures. In 1827 he became First Lord of the Treasury, and died a few
-months afterwards in the zenith of his power.
-
-Lord Lyndhurst was also one of the glories of this inn. The trial of Dr.
-Watson for treason, in 1817, first gained for this son of an American
-painter a reputation which, joined with his prudent conduct in the trial
-of Cashman the rioter led to his being appointed Solicitor-General in
-1818. From that he rose in rapid succession, to the posts of
-Attorney-General, Master of the Rolls, Lord Chancellor, and Lord
-Lyndhurst. Old, eccentric, "irrepressible" Sir Charles Wetherell was
-Copley's fellow-advocate in Watson's case, that ended in the prisoner's
-acquittal.[683] In 1827, when Abbott became Lord Tenterden, Copley
-accepted the Great Seal, displacing Lord Eldon, and joined Canning's
-cabinet, becoming Lord Lyndhurst. In 1830 he became Chief Baron of the
-Exchequer.
-
-Charles Pepys, Lord Cottenham, born 1781, was called to the bar by the
-Society of Lincoln's Inn in 1804. He was appointed King's Counsel in 1826,
-was made Solicitor-General in 1834, succeeded Sir John Leach as Master of
-the Rolls in the same year, and was elevated to the woolsack in 1836. This
-Chancellor, who was a very excellent lawyer, was descended from a branch
-of the family of Samuel Pepys, author of the celebrated _Diary_.
-
-Sir E. Sugden was a member of Lincoln's Inn. He was born in the year 1781.
-He was the son of a Westminster hairdresser who became rich by inventing a
-substitute for hair-powder. He was created Lord St. Leonards on the
-formation of a Conservative ministry in 1852, when he accepted the Great
-Seal.
-
-Lord Brougham also studied in Lincoln's Inn. He was born in 1778, and
-started the _Edinburgh Review_ in 1802. In 1820 he defended Queen
-Caroline; but it would take a volume to follow the career of this
-impetuous and versatile genius. His struggles for law-reform, for Catholic
-emancipation, for abolition of slavery, for the education of the people,
-and for Parliamentary reform, are matters of history. In his old age,
-though still vigorous, Lord Brougham grew tamer, and condemned the armed
-emancipation of slaves practised by the Northern States in the present
-American war. He died at his residence at Cannes in the South of France in
-1868.
-
-Cottenham and Campbell were students in Lincoln's Inn; so was that
-eccentric reformer Jeremy Bentham, who was called to the bar in 1722, and
-was the son of a Houndsditch attorney; and so was Penn, the founder of
-Pennsylvania.
-
-That "luminary of the Irish Church,"[684] Archbishop Ussher, was preacher
-at Lincoln's Inn in 1647, the society giving the good man handsome rooms
-ready furnished. He continued to preach there for eight years, till his
-eyesight began to fail. He died in 1655, and was buried, by Cromwell's
-permission, with great magnificence, in Erasmus's chapel in Westminster
-Abbey. His library of 10,000 volumes, bought of him by Cromwell's
-officers, was given by Charles II. to Dublin College. Ussher, when only
-eighteen, was the David who discomfited in public dispute the learned
-Jesuit Fitz-Simons. He saw Charles beheaded from the roof of a house on
-the site of the Admiralty.
-
-Dr. Langhorne, the joint translator with his brother of the _Lives of
-Plutarch_, was assistant preacher at Lincoln's Inn. An imitator of
-Sterne, and a writer in Griffiths's _Monthly Review_, he was praised by
-Smollett and abused by Churchill. Langhorne's amiable poem, _The Country
-Justice_, was praised by Scott. He died in 1779.
-
-That fiery controversialist Warburton was preacher at Lincoln's Inn in
-1746, and the same year preached and published a sermon on the Highland
-rebellion. He was the son of an attorney at Newark-upon-Trent. His _Divine
-Legation_ was an effort to show that the absence of allusions in the
-writings of Moses to a system of rewards and punishments was a proof of
-their divine origin. The book is full of perverse digressions. His edition
-of Shakspere is, perhaps, to use a fine expression of Burke, "one of the
-poorest maggots that ever crept from the great man's carcase." Pope left
-half his library to Warburton, who had suggested to him the conclusion of
-the _Dunciad_. Wilkes, Bolingbroke, Dr. Louth, and Churchill were all by
-turns attacked by this arrogant knight-errant. Warburton died in 1779.
-
-Reginald Heber, afterwards the excellent Bishop of Calcutta, was appointed
-preacher at Lincoln's Inn in 1822, the year before he sailed for India. In
-1826 this good man was found dead in his bath at Trichinopoly. The sudden
-death of this energetic missionary was a great loss to East Indian
-Christianity. In the "company of the preachers" we must not forget the
-excellent Dr. Van Mildert, afterwards Bishop of Durham, and Dr. Thomson
-the present Archbishop of York.
-
-In the old times the Lord Chancellor held his sittings in the great hall
-of Lincoln's Inn. Here, too, at the Christmas revels, the King of the
-Cockneys administered _his_ laws. Jack Straw, a sort of rebellious rival,
-was put down, with all his adherents, as a bad precedent for the Essexes
-and Norfolks of the inn, by wary Queen Elizabeth, who always kept a firm
-grip on her prerogative. In the same reign absurd sumptuary laws, vainly
-trying to fix the quicksilver of fashion, forbade the students to wear
-long hair, long beards, large ruffs, huge cloaks, or big spurs. The fine
-for wearing a beard of more than a fortnight's growth was three shillings
-and fourpence.[685] In her father's time beards had been prohibited under
-pain of double commons.
-
-In the old hall, replaced by the new Tudor building, stood one of
-Hogarth's most pretentious but worst pictures, "Paul preaching before
-Felix," an ill-drawn and ludicrous caricature of epic work. The society
-paid for it. It is now rolled up and hid away with as much contumely as
-Kent's absurdity at St. Clement's when Hogarth parodied it.
-
-The new hall of Lincoln's Inn was built by Mr. P. Hardwick, the architect
-of the St. Katherine Docks, and was opened by the Queen in person in 1845.
-It is a fine Tudor building of red brick, with stone dressings. The hall
-is 120 feet, the library 80 feet long. The contract was taken for L55,000,
-but its cost exceeded that sum. The library contains the unique fourth
-volume of Prynne's _Records_, which the society bought for L335 at the
-Stow sale in 1849, and all Sir Matthew Hale's bequests of books and MSS.:
-"a treasure," says that "excellent good man," as Evelyn calls him[686] in
-his will, "that is not fit for every man's view." The hall contains a
-fresco representing the "Lawgivers of the World," by Watts. The gardens
-were much curtailed by the erection of the hall, and their quietude
-destroyed. Ben Jonson talks of the walks under the elms.[687] Steele seems
-to have been fond of this garden when he felt meditative. In May 1709, he
-says much hurry and business having perplexed him into a mood too
-thoughtful for company, instead of the tavern "I went into Lincoln's Inn
-Walk, and having taken a round or two, I sat down, according to the
-allowed familiarity of these places, on a bench." In a more thoughtful
-month (November) of the same year he goes again for a solitary walk in the
-garden, "a favour that is indulged me by several of the benchers, who are
-very intimate friends, and grown old in the neighbourhood." It was this
-bright frosty night, when the whole body of air had been purified into
-"bright transparent aether," that Steele imagined his vision of "The
-Return of the Golden Age."
-
-Brave old Ben Jonson was the son of a Scotch gentleman in Henry VIII.'s
-service, who, impoverished by the persecutions of Queen Mary, took orders
-late in life. His mother married for the second time a small builder or
-master bricklayer. He went to Westminster school, where Camden, the great
-antiquary, was his master. A kind patron sent him to Cambridge.[688] He
-seems to have left college prematurely, and have come back to London to
-work with his father-in-law.[689]
-
-There is an old tradition that he worked at the garden-wall of Lincoln's
-Inn next to Chancery Lane, and that a knight or bencher (Sutton, or
-Camden), walking by, hearing him repeat a passage of Homer, entered into
-conversation with him, and finding him to have extraordinary wit, sent him
-back to college; or, as Fuller quaintly puts it, "some gentlemen pitying
-that his parts should be buried under the rubbish of so mean a calling,
-did by their bounty manumise him freely to follow his own ingenious
-inclinations."[690]
-
-Gifford sneers at the story, for the poet's own words to Drummond of
-Hawthornden were simply these:--"He could not endure the occupation of a
-bricklayer," and therefore joined Vere in Flanders, probably going with
-reinforcements to Ostend in 1591-2.[691] He there fought and slew an
-enemy, and stripped him in sight of both armies. On his return, he became
-an actor at a Shoreditch theatre. His enemies, the rival satirists,
-frequently sneer at the quondam profession of Ben Jonson, and describe him
-stamping on the stage as if he were treading mortar. For myself, I admire
-brave, truculent old Ben, and delight even in his most crabbed and
-pedantic verse, and therefore never pass Lincoln's Inn garden without
-thinking of Shakspere's honest but rugged friend--"a bear only in the
-coat."
-
-On June 27, 1752, there was a dreadful fire in New Square, which
-destroyed countless historical treasures, including Lord Somers's original
-letters and papers.
-
-At No. 2 and afterwards at No. 6 New Square, Lincoln's Inn, which is built
-on Little Lincoln's Inn Fields, and forms no part of the Inn of court,
-lived Sir Samuel Romilly. This "great and amiable man," as Tom Moore calls
-him, killed himself in a fit of melancholy produced by overwork joined to
-the loss of his wife, "a simple, gay, unlearned woman." Sir Samuel was a
-stern, reserved man, and she was the only person in the world to whom he
-could unbosom himself. When he lost her, he said, "the very vent of his
-heart was stopped up."[692]
-
-It was in Old Square, Lincoln's Inn, that Benjamin Disraeli, born in
-December 1805, much too erratic for Plowden and Coke, used to come to
-study conveyancing at the chambers of Mr. Bassevi. He is described as
-often arriving with Spenser's _Faerie Queen_ under his arm, stopping an
-hour or two to read, and then leaving. This led, as might be expected, not
-to the woolsack but to the authorship of _Coningsby_. His Premiership and
-his Patent of Peerage as Lord Beaconsfield, are due to other causes.
-
-Whetstone Park, now a small quiet passage, full of printing-offices and
-stables, between Great Turnstile and Gate Street, derived its name from a
-vestryman of the time of Charles I. It is now chiefly occupied by mews,
-but was once filled by infamous houses and low brandy-shops.
-
-In 1671, the Duke of Monmouth, the Duke of Grafton, and the Duke of St.
-Alban's, three of King Charles II.'s illegitimate sons, killed here a
-beadle in a drunken brawl. A street-ballad was written on the occasion,
-more full of spite against the corrupt court than of sympathy with the
-slain man. In poor doggerel the Catnach of 1671 describes the watch coming
-in, disturbed from sleep, to appease their graces--
-
- "Straight rose mortal jars,
- 'Twixt the night blackguard and (the) silver stars;
- Then fell the beadle by a ducal hand,
- For daring to pronounce the saucy 'Stand!'"
-
-Sadly enough, the silly fellow's death led to a dance at Whitehall being
-put off,--
-
- "Disappoints the queen, 'poor little chuck!'"[693]
-
-and all the brisk courtiers in their gay coats bought with the nation's
-subsidies.
-
-The last two lines are vigorous, sarcastic, and worthy of a humble
-imitator of Dryden. The poet sums up--
-
- "Yet shall Whitehall, the innocent and good,
- See these men dance, all daubed with lace and blood."
-
-In 1682 the misnamed "Park" grew so infamous, that a countryman, having
-been decoyed into one of the houses and robbed, went into Smithfield and
-collected an angry mob of about 500 apprentices, who marched on Whetstone
-Park, broke open the houses, and destroyed the furniture. The constables
-and watchmen, being outnumbered, sent for the king's guard, who dispersed
-them and took eleven of them. Nevertheless, the next night another mob
-stormed the place, again broke in the doors, smashed the windows, and cut
-the feather-beds to pieces.
-
-Lincoln's Inn Fields formed part of the ancient Fickett's Fields, a plot
-of ground of about ten acres, extending formerly from Bell Yard to
-Portugal Street and Carey Street. It seems to have been used in the Middle
-Ages for jousts and tournaments by the Templars and Knights of St. John of
-Jerusalem, to the priory of which last order it belonged till Henry VIII.
-dissolved the monasteries, when it was granted to Anthony Stringer. In an
-inquest of the time of James I. it is described as having two gates for
-horses and carriages at the east end--one gate leading into Chancery Lane,
-the other gate at the western end.[694]
-
-Queen Elizabeth, afraid that London was growing unwieldly, issued several
-proclamations against further building. James I., still more timid and
-conservative, and not thoroughly acquainted with his own capital, issued a
-like absurd ukase in 1612, by the desire of the benchers and students of
-Lincoln's Inn, forbidding the erection of new houses in these fields. But
-no royal edict can prevent a demand for creating a supply, and as the
-building still went on, a commission was appointed in 1618 to lay out the
-square in a regular plan. Bacon, then Lord Chancellor, and many noblemen,
-judges, and masters in Chancery, were on this commission, and Inigo Jones,
-the king's Surveyor-General, drew up the scheme. The report of this body,
-given by Rymer, sets out that in the last sixteen years there had been
-more building near and about the City of London than in ages before, and
-that as these fields were much surrounded by the dwellings and lodgings of
-noblemen and gentlemen of quality, "all small cottages and closes shall be
-paid for and removed, and the square shall be reduced," both for
-sweetness, uniformity, and comeliness, as an ornament to the City, and for
-the health and recreation of the inhabitants, into walks and partitions,
-as Mr. Inigo Jones should in his map devise.[695]
-
-There is a tradition that the area of the square, according to Inigo
-Jones's plan, was to have been made the exact dimensions of the base of
-the great pyramid of Geezeh. The tradition is probably true, for the area
-of the pyramid is 535,824 square feet, and that of Lincoln's Inn Fields
-550,000.[696] The height of the pyramid was 756 feet.
-
-The plan proved too costly, and the subscriptions began probably to fail;
-but in the course of time noblemen and others began to build for
-themselves, but without much regard to uniformity.
-
-The elevation of Inigo's plan for the Fields, painted in oil colours, is
-still preserved at Wilton House, near Salisbury. The view is taken from
-the south, and the principal feature in the elevation is Lindsey House in
-the centre of the west side, whose stone facade, still existing, stands
-boldly out from the brick houses which support it on either side. The
-internal accommodation of Lindsey House was never good.[697]
-
-These fields in Charles I.'s time became the haunt of wrestlers, bowlers,
-beggars, and idle boys; and here, in 1624, Lilly the astrologer, then
-servant to a mantua-maker in the Strand, spent his time in bowling with
-Wat the cobbler, Dick the blacksmith, and such idle apprentices. Hither,
-after the Restoration, came every sort of villain--the Rufflers, or maimed
-soldiers, who told lies of Edgehill and Naseby, and who surrounded the
-coaches of charitable lords; "Dommerers," or sham dumb men; "Mumpers," or
-sham broken gentlemen; "Whipjacks," or sham seamen with bound-up legs;
-"Abram-men," or sham idiots; "Fraters," or rogues with forged patents;
-"Anglers," wild rogues, "Clapper-dudgeons,"[698] and men with gambling
-wheels of fortune.
-
-In Queen Anne's reign Gay sketches the dangers of night in these fields;
-he warns his readers to avoid the lurking thief, by day a beggar, or
-else--
-
- "The crutch, which late compassion moved, shall wound
- Thy bleeding head, and fell thee to the ground.
-
-Nor trust the linkman," he adds, "along the lonely wall, or he'll put out
-his light and rob you, but--
-
- "Still keep the public streets where oily rays
- That from the crystal lamp o'erspread the ways."
-
-The south side of Lincoln's Inn Fields was built and named three years
-before the Restoration, by Sir William Cowper, James Cowper, and Robert
-Henley. In 1668 Portugal Row, as it was called, but not from Charles's
-queen,[699] was extremely fashionable. There were then living here such
-noble and noted persons as Lady Arden, William Perpoint, Esq., Sir Charles
-Waldegrave, Lady Fitzharding, Lady Diana Curzon, Serjeant Maynard, Lord
-Cardigan, Mrs. Anne Heron, Lady Mordant, Richard Adams, Esq., Lady Carr,
-Lady Wentworth, Mr. Attorney Montagu, Lady Coventry, Judge Welch, and Lady
-Davenant.[700]
-
-Mr. Serjeant Maynard was the brave old Presbyterian lawyer, then
-eighty-seven, who replied to the Prince of Orange, when he said that he
-must have outlived all the men of law of his time--"Sir, I should have
-outlived the law itself had not your highness come over."
-
-Lady Davenant was the widow of Sir William Davenant, the Oxford
-innkeeper's son, the poet and manager, who, aided by Whitlocke and
-Maynard, was allowed in Cromwell's time to perform operas at a theatre in
-Charterhouse Square. After the Restoration he had the theatre in Portugal
-Street. He died in 1668, insolvent. His poems were published by his widow,
-and dedicated to the Duke of York in 1673.
-
-Lord Cardigan was the father of the infamous Countess of Shrewsbury, who
-is said, disguised as a page, to have held her lover the Duke of
-Buckingham's horse while he killed her husband in a duel near Barn Elms.
-The Earl of Rochester lived in the house next the Duke's Theatre,[701]
-which stood behind the present College of Surgeons, as Davenant says in
-one of his epilogues--
-
- "The prospect of the sea cannot be shown,
- Therefore be pleased to think that you are all
- Behind the row which men call Portugal."
-
-In September 1586 Ballard, Babington, and other conspirators against the
-life of Queen Elizabeth were put to death in Lincoln's Inn Fields.
-Babington was a young man of good family, who had been a page to the Earl
-of Shrewsbury, and had plotted to rescue Mary and assassinate Elizabeth.
-His plot discovered, he had fled to St. John's Wood for concealment. Seven
-of these plotters were hanged on the first day, and seven on the second.
-The last seven were allowed to die, by special grace, before being
-disembowelled by the executioner.
-
-It was through these fields that, one spring night in 1676-7, Thomas
-Sadler, an impudent and well-known thief, rivalling the audacity of Blood,
-having with some confederates stolen the mace and purse of Lord Chancellor
-Finch from his house in Great Queen Street, bore them in mock procession
-on their way to their lodgings in Knightrider Street, Doctors' Commons.
-Sadler was hanged at Tyburn for this theft.
-
-Lord William Russell was son of William, Earl of Bedford, by Lady Ann
-Carr, daughter of Carr, Earl of Somerset. He was beheaded in the centre of
-Lincoln's Inn Fields, July 21, 1683, the last year but two of the reign of
-King Charles II., for being, as it was alleged, engaged in a plot to
-attack the guards and kill the king, on his return from Newmarket races,
-at the Rye House Farm, in a by-road near Hoddesdon in Hertfordshire, about
-seventeen miles north-east of London.
-
-The Whig party, in their eagerness to restrain the Papists and exclude the
-Duke of York from the throne, had gone too far, and their zeal for the
-Dissenters had produced a violent reaction in the High Church party.
-Charles and the Duke, taking advantage of the return tide, began to
-persecute the Dissenters, denounce Shaftesbury, assail the liberties of
-the City, and finally dissolved the Parliament. Soon after this, that
-subtle politician, Shaftesbury, finding it impossible to rouse the Duke of
-Monmouth, Essex, or Lord Russell, denounced them all as sold and deceived,
-and fled to Holland.
-
-After his flight, meetings of his creatures were held at the chambers of
-one West, an active talking man. Keeling, a vintner of decaying business,
-betrayed the plot, as also did Lord Howard, a man so infamous that Charles
-himself said "he would not hang the worst dog he had upon his evidence."
-Keeling and his brother swore that forty men were hired to intercept the
-king, but that a fire at Newmarket, which had hastened Charles's return,
-had defeated their plans. Goodenough, an ex-sheriff, had told them that
-the Duke of Monmouth and other great men were to raise 4000 soldiers and
-L20,000. The brothers also swore that Goodenough had told them that Lord
-Russell had joined in the design of killing the king and the duke.
-
-Lord Russell acted with great composure. He would not fly, refused to let
-his friends surrender themselves to share his fortunes, and told an
-acquaintance that "he was very sensible he should fall a sacrifice."[702]
-When he appeared at the council, the king himself said that "nobody
-suspected Lord Russell of any design against his own person, but that he
-had good evidence of his being in designs against his government." The
-prisoner denied all knowledge of the intended insurrection, or of the
-attempt to surprise the guards.
-
-The infamous Jeffries was one of the counsel for his prosecution. Lord
-Russell argued at his trial, that, allowing he had compassed the king's
-death, which he denied, he had been guilty only of a conspiracy to levy
-war, which was not treason except by a recent statute of Charles II., the
-prosecutions upon which were limited to a certain time, which had
-elapsed,[703] so that both law and justice were in this case violated.
-
-The truth seems to be that Lord Russell was a true patriot, of a slow and
-sober judgment, a taciturn, good man, of not the quickest intelligence,
-who had allowed himself to listen to dangerous and random talk for the
-sake of political purposes. He wished to debar the duke from the throne,
-but he had never dreamt of accomplishing his purpose by murder. It has
-since been discovered that Sidney, doing evil that good might come, had
-accepted secret-service money from France, and that Russell himself had
-interviews with French agents. Lord John Russell explains away this charge
-very well. Charles was degraded enough to take money from France. The
-patriots, told that Louis XIV. wished to avoid a war, intrigued with the
-French king to maintain peace, fearing that if Charles once raised an army
-under any pretence, he would first employ it to obtain absolute power at
-home, which it is most probable he would have done.[704] On the whole,
-these disingenuous interviews must be lamented; they could not and they
-did not lead to good. It has been justly regretted also that Lord Russell
-on his trial did not boldly denounce the tyranny of the court, and show
-the necessity that had existed for active opposition.
-
-After sentence the condemned man wrote petitions to the king and duke,
-which were unjustly sneered at as abject. They really, however, contain no
-promise but that of living beyond sea and meddling no more in English
-affairs. Of one of them at least, Burnet says it was written at the
-earnest solicitation of Lady Rachel; and Lord Russell himself said, with
-regret, "This will be printed and sold about the streets as my submission
-when I am led out to be hanged." He lamented to Burnet that his wife beat
-every bush and ran about so for his preservation; but he acquiesced in
-what she did when he thought it would be afterwards a mitigation of her
-sorrow.
-
-When his brave and excellent wife, the daughter of Charles I.'s loyal
-servant, Southampton, who was the son of Shakspere's friend, begged for
-her husband's life, the king replied, "How can I grant that man six weeks,
-who would not have granted me six hours?"[705]
-
-There is no scene in history that "goes more directly to the heart," says
-Fox, "than the story of the last days of this excellent man." The night
-before his death it rained hard, and he said, "Such a rain to-morrow will
-spoil a great show," which was a dull thing on a rainy day. He thought a
-violent death only the pain of a minute, not equal to that of drawing a
-tooth; and he was still of opinion _that the king was limited by law, and
-that when he broke through those limits, his subjects might defend
-themselves and restrain him_.[706] He then received the sacrament from
-Tillotson with much devotion, and parted from his wife with a composed
-silence; as soon as she was gone he exclaimed, "The bitterness of death is
-past," saying what a blessing she had been to him, and what a misery it
-had been if she had tried to induce him to turn an informer. He slept
-soundly that night and rose in a few hours, but would take no care in
-dressing. He prayed six or seven times by himself, and drank a little tea
-and some sherry. He then wound up his watch, and said, "Now I have done
-with time and shall go into eternity." When told that he should give the
-executioner ten guineas, he said, with a smile, that it was a pretty thing
-to give a fee to have his head cut off. When the sheriffs came at ten
-o'clock, Lord Russell embraced Lord Cavendish, who had offered to change
-clothes with him and stay in his place in prison, or to attack the coach
-with a troop of horse and carry off his friend; but the noble man would
-not listen to either proposal.
-
-In the street some in the crowd wept, while others insulted him. He said,
-"I hope I shall quickly see a better assembly." He then sang, half to
-himself, the beginning of the 149th Psalm. As the coach turned into Little
-Queen Street, he said, looking at his own house, "I have often turned to
-the one hand with great comfort, but now I turn to this with greater," and
-then a tear or two fell from his eyes. As they entered Lincoln's Inn
-Fields he said, "This has been to me a place of sinning, and God now makes
-it the place of my punishment." When he came to the scaffold, he walked
-about it four or five times: then he prayed by himself, and also with
-Tillotson; then he partly undressed himself, laid his head down without
-any change of countenance, and it was cut off in two strokes. Lord
-William's walking-stick and a cotemporary account of his death are kept at
-Woburn Abbey.
-
-Lady Rachel Russell, the excellent wife of this patriot, had been his
-secretary during the trial. She spent her after-life, not in unwisely
-lamenting the inevitable past, but in doing good works, and in educating
-her children. Writing two months after the execution to Dr. Fritzwilliams,
-this noble woman says:[707] "_Secretly_, my heart mourns and cannot be
-comforted, because I have not the dear companion and sharer of all my joys
-and sorrows. I want him to talk with, to walk with, to eat and sleep with.
-All these things are irksome to me now; all company and meals I could
-avoid, if it might be.... When I see my children before me, I remember
-the pleasure he took in them: this makes my heart shrink."
-
-In 1692 Lady Russell appears to have regained her composure. But she had
-other trials in store: for in 1711 she lost her only son, the Duke of
-Bedford, in the flower of his age, and six months afterwards one of her
-daughters died in childbed.
-
-It is said that, in his hour of need, James II. was mean enough to say to
-the Duke of Bedford, "My lord, you are an honest man, have great credit,
-and can do me signal service." "Ah, sir," replied the duke, with a grave
-severity, "I am old and feeble now, but I once had a _son_."
-
-The Sacheverell riots culminated in these now quiet Fields. In 1710 Daniel
-Dommaree, a queen's waterman, Francis Willis, a footman, and George
-Purchase, were tried at the Old Bailey for heading a riot during the
-Sacheverell trial and pulling down meeting-houses. This Sacheverell was an
-ignorant, impudent incendiary, the adopted son of a Marlborough
-apothecary, and was impeached by the House of Commons for preaching at St.
-Andrew's, Holborn, sermons denouncing the Revolution of 1688. His sermons
-were ordered to be burnt, and he was sentenced to be suspended for three
-years. Atterbury helped the mischievous firebrand in his ineffectual
-defence, and Swift wrote a most scurrilous letter to Bishop Fleetwood, who
-had lamented the excesses of the mob. Sacheverell had been at Oxford with
-Addison, who inscribed a poem to him. During the trial, a mob marched from
-the Temple, whither they had escorted Sacheverell, pulled down Dr.
-Burgess's meeting-house, and threw the pulpit, sconces, and gallery pews
-into a fire in Lincoln's Inn Fields, some waving curtains on poles,
-shouting, "High Church standard!" "Huzza! High Church and Sacheverell!"
-"We will have them all down!" They also burnt other meeting-houses in
-Leather Lane, Drury Lane, and Fetter Lane, and made bonfires of the
-woodwork in the streets. They were eventually dispersed by the
-horse-grenadiers and horse-guards and foot. Dommaree was sentenced to
-death, but pardoned; Willis was acquitted; and Purchase was pardoned.[708]
-
-Wooden posts and rails stood round the Fields till 1735, when an Act was
-passed to enable the inhabitants to make improvements, to put an iron gate
-at each corner, and to erect dwarf walls and iron palisades.[709] Before
-this time grooms used to break in horses on this spot. One day while
-looking at these centaurs, Sir Joseph Jekyll, who had brought a very
-obnoxious bill into Parliament in 1736 in order to raise the price of gin,
-was mobbed, thrown down, and dangerously trampled on. His initials, "J.
-J.," figure under a gibbet chalked on a wall in one of Hogarth's
-prints.[710] Macaulay's _History_ contains a very highly coloured picture
-of these Fields. A comparison of the passage with the facts from which it
-is drawn would be a useful lesson to all historical students who love
-truth in its severity.[711]
-
-Newcastle House stands at the north-west angle of the Fields, at the
-south-eastern corner of Great Queen Street. It derived its name from John
-Holles, Duke of Newcastle, a relative of the noble families of Vere,
-Cavendish, and Holles. This duke bought the house before 1708, but died in
-1711 without issue, and was succeeded in the house by his nephew, the
-leader of the Pelham administration under George II.
-
-The house had been bought by Lord Powis about 1686. It was built for him
-by Captain William Winde, a scholar of Webbe's, the pupil and executor of
-Inigo Jones.[712] William Herbert, first Marquis of Powis, was outlawed
-and fled to St. Germain's to James II., who made him Duke of Powis.
-Government had thought of buying the house when it was inhabited by the
-Lord Keeper, Sir Nathan Wright,[713] and to have settled it officially on
-the Great Seal. It was once the residence of Sir John Somers, the Lord
-Chancellor.
-
-In 1739 Lady Henrietta Herbert, widow of Lord William Herbert, second son
-of the Marquis of Powis, and daughter of James, first Earl of Waldegrave,
-was married to Mr. John Beard,[714] who seems to have been a fine singer
-and a most charitable, estimable man. Lady Henrietta's grandmother was the
-daughter of James II. by the sister of the great Duke of Marlborough. Dr.
-Burner speaks of Beard's great knowledge of music and of his intelligence
-as an actor.[715] In an epitaph on him, still extant, the writer says--
-
- "Whence had that voice such magic to control?
- 'Twas but the echo of a well-tuned soul;
- Through life his morals and his music ran
- In symphony, and spoke the virtuous man.
- ... Go, gentle harmonist! our hopes approve,
- To meet and hear thy sacred songs above;
- When taught by thee, the stage of life well trod,
- We rise to raptures round the throne of God."
-
-Beard, excellent both in oratorios and serious and comic operas, became
-part proprietor of Covent Garden Theatre, and died in 1791.
-
-The Duke of Newcastle's crowded levees were his pleasure and his triumph.
-He generally made people of business wait two or three hours in the
-ante-chamber while he trifled with insignificant favourites in his closet.
-When at last he entered the levee room, he accosted, hugged, embraced, and
-promised everything to everybody with an assumed cordiality and a
-degrading familiarity.[716]
-
-"Long" Sir Thomas Robertson was a great intruder on the duke's time; if
-told that he was out, he would come in to look at the clock or play with
-the monkey, in hopes of the great man relenting. The servants, at last
-tired out with Sir Thomas, concocted a formula of repulses, and the next
-time he came the porter, without waiting for his question, began--"Sir,
-his grace is gone out, the fire has gone out, the clock stands, and the
-monkey is dead."[717]
-
-Sir Timothy Waldo, on his way from the duke's dinner-table to his own
-carriage, once gave the cook, who was waiting in the hall, a crown. The
-rogue returned it, saying he did not take silver. "Oh, don't you, indeed?"
-said Sir Timothy, coolly replacing it in his pocket; "then I don't give
-gold." Jonas Hanway, the great opponent of tea-drinking, published eight
-letters to the duke on this subject,[718] and the custom began from that
-time to decline. But Hogarth had already condemned the exaction.
-
-The duke was very profuse in his promises, and a good story is told of the
-result of his insincerity. At a Cornish election, the duke had obtained
-the turning vote for his candidate by his usual assurances. The elector,
-wishing to secure something definite, had asked for a supervisorship of
-excise for his son-in-law on the present holder's death. "The moment he
-dies," said the premier, "set out post-haste for London; drive directly to
-my house in the Fields: night or day, sleeping or waking, dead or alive,
-thunder at the door; the porter will show you upstairs directly; and the
-place is yours." A few months after the old supervisor died, and up to
-London rushed the Cornish elector.
-
-Now that very night the duke had been expecting news of the death of the
-King of Spain, and had left orders before he went to bed to have the
-courier sent up directly he arrived. The Cornish man, mistaken for this
-important messenger, was instantly, to his great delight, shown up to the
-duke's bedroom. "Is he dead?--is he dead?" cried the duke. "Yes, my lord,
-yes," answered the aspirant, promptly. "When did he die?" "The day before
-yesterday, at half-past one o'clock, after three weeks in his bed, and
-taking a power of doctor's stuff; and I hope your grace will be as good as
-your word, and let my son-in-law succeed him." "_Succeed him!_" shouted
-the duke; "is the man drunk or mad? Where are your despatches?" he
-exclaimed, tearing back the bed-curtains; and there, to his vexation,
-stood the blundering elector, hat in hand, his stupid red face beaming
-with smiles as he kept bowing like a joss. The duke sank back in a
-violent fit of laughter, which, like the electric fluid, was in a moment
-communicated to his attendants.[719] It is not stated whether the Cornish
-man obtained his petition.
-
-There is an agreement in all the stories of the duke, who was thirty years
-Secretary of State, and nearly ten years First Lord of the Treasury,
-"whether told," says Macaulay, "by people who were perpetually seeing him
-in Parliament and attending his levees in Lincoln's Inn Fields, or by Grub
-Street writers, who had never more than a glimpse of his star through the
-windows of his gilded coach."[720] Smollett and Walpole mixed in different
-society, yet they both sketch the duke with the same colours. Smollett's
-Newcastle runs out of his dressing-room with his face covered with
-soapsuds to embrace the Moorish envoy. Walpole's Newcastle pushes his way
-into the Duke of Grafton's sick-room to kiss the old nobleman's plaisters.
-"He was a living, moving, talking caricature. His gait was a shuffling
-trot, his utterance a rapid stutter. He was always in a hurry--he was
-never in time; he abounded in fulsome caresses and in hysterical tears.
-His oratory resembled that of Justice Shallow--it was nonsense
-effervescent with animal spirits and impertinence. 'Oh yes, yes, to be
-sure--Annapolis must be defended; troops must be sent to Annapolis. Pray,
-where is Annapolis?'--'Cape Breton an island! Wonderful! Show it me on the
-map. So it is, sure enough. My dear sir, you always bring us good news. I
-must go and tell the king that Cape Breton is an island.' His success is a
-proof of what may be done by a man who devotes his whole heart and soul to
-one object. His love of power was so intense a passion, that it almost
-supplied the place of talent. He was jealous even of his own brother.
-Under the guise of levity, he was false beyond all example." "All the able
-men of his time ridiculed him as a dunce, a driveller, a child, who never
-knew his own mind for an hour together, and yet he overreached them all
-round." If the country had remained at peace, this man might have been at
-the head of affairs till a new king came with fresh favourites and a
-strong will; "but the inauspicious commencement of the Seven Years' War
-brought on a crisis to which Newcastle was altogether unequal. After a
-calm of fifteen years, the spirit of the nation was again stirred to its
-inmost depths."
-
-This is strongly etched, but Macaulay was too fond of caricature for a
-real lover of truth. Walpole, recounting this greedy imbecile's disgrace,
-reviews his career much more forcibly, for in a few words he shows us how
-great had been the power which this chatterer's fixed purpose had
-attained. The memoir-writer describes the duke as the man "who had begun
-the world by heading mobs against the ministers of Queen Anne; who had
-braved the heir-apparent, afterwards George I., and forced himself upon
-him as godfather to his son; who had recovered that prince's favour, and
-preserved power under him, at the expense of every minister whom that
-prince preferred; who had been a rival of another Prince of Wales for the
-chancellorship of Cambridge; and who was now buffeted from a fourth court
-by a very suitable competitor (Lord Bute), and reduced in his tottery old
-age to have recourse to those mobs and that popularity which had raised
-him fifty years before."
-
-Lord Bute was mean enough to compliment the old duke on his retirement.
-The duke replied, with a spirit that showed the vitality of his ambition:
-"Yes, yes, my lord, I am an old man, but yesterday was my birthday, and I
-recollected that Cardinal Fleury _began_ to be prime-minister of France
-just at my age."[721]
-
-Newcastle House, now occupied by the Society for Promoting Christian
-Knowledge, was, for forty years or more, inhabited by Sir Alan Chambre,
-one of King George III.'s judges. The society, then lodged in Bartlett's
-Buildings, in Holborn, derived its first name from that place, and at Sir
-Alan's death they purchased the house and site.
-
-About the centre of the west side of the square, in Sir Alan's time, lived
-the Earl and Countess of Portsmouth. The earl was half-witted, but was
-always well-conducted and quite producible in society under the guidance
-of his countess, a daughter of Lord Grantley.
-
-Near Surgeons' Hall, at the same epoch, lived the first Lord Wynford, Lord
-Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, better known as Serjeant Best. A
-quarrel between this irritable lawyer and Serjeant Wilde, afterwards Lord
-Chancellor Truro, one of the most stalwart gladiators who ever won a name
-and title in the legal arena, gave rise to an epigram, the point of which
-was--"That Best was wild, and Wilde was best."
-
-In 1774, when Lord Clive had rewarded Wedderburn, his defender, with lacs
-of rupees and a villa at Mitcham, the lawyer had an elegant house in
-Lincoln's Inn Fields, not far from the Duke of Newcastle's,--"a quarter,"
-says Lord Campbell, "which I recollect still the envied resort of legal
-magnates."
-
-Wedderburn, afterwards better known as Lord Chancellor Loughborough, had a
-special hatred for Franklin, and loaded him with abuse before a committee
-of the Privy Council, for having sent to America letters from the
-Lieutenant-Governor of Massachusetts, urging the Government to employ
-military force to suppress the discontents in New England.[722] The effect
-of Wedderburn's brilliant oratory in Parliament was ruined, says Lord
-Campbell, by "his character for insincerity."[723] When George III. heard
-of his death, he is reported to have said, "He has not left a greater
-knave behind him in my dominions;" upon which Lord Thurlow savagely said,
-with his usual oath, "I perceive that his majesty is quite sane at
-present." Wedderburn was a friend of David Hume; his humanity was
-eulogised by Dr. Parr, but he was satirised by Churchill in the _Rosciad_.
-
-Montague, Earl of Sandwich, the great patron of Pepys, lived in Lincoln's
-Inn Fields, paying L250 a year rent.[724] Pepys calls it "a fine house,
-but deadly dear."[725] He visits him, February 10, 1663-4, and finds my
-lord very high and strange and stately, although Pepys had been bound for
-L1000 with him, and the shrewd cit naturally enough did not like my lord
-being angry with him and in debt to him at the same time. The earl was a
-distant cousin of Pepys, and on his marriage received him and his wife
-into his house, and took Pepys with him when he went to bring home Charles
-II., when he was elected one of the Council of State and General at Sea.
-He brought the queen-mother to England and took her back again. He also
-brought the ill-fated queen from Portugal, and became a privy-councillor,
-and was sent as ambassador to Spain. He seems to have been not untainted
-with the vices of the age. He was in the great battle where Van Tromp was
-killed, and in 1668 he took forty-five sail from the Dutch at sea, and
-that is the best thing known of him. He died in 1672, and was buried in
-great state.
-
-Inigo Jones built only the west side of the square. No. 55 was the
-residence of Robert Bertie, Earl of Lindsey, a general of King Charles. It
-is described in 1708 as a handsome building of the Ionic order, with a
-beautiful and strong Court Gate, formed of six spacious brick piers, with
-curious ironwork between them, and on the piers large and beautiful
-vases.[726] The open balustrade at the top bore six urns.
-
-The Earl of Lindsey was shot at Edgehill in 1642, when a reckless and
-intemperate charge of Rupert had led to the total defeat of the
-unsupported foot. His son, Lord Willoughby, was taken in endeavouring to
-rescue his father. Clarendon describes the earl as a lavish, generous, yet
-punctilious man, of great honour and experience in foreign war. He was
-surrounded by Lincolnshire gentlemen, who served in his regiment out of
-personal regard for him. He was jealous of Prince Rupert's interference,
-and had made up his mind to die. As he lay bleeding to death he reproved
-the officers of the Earl of Essex, many of them his old friends, for their
-ingratitude and "foul rebellion."[727]
-
-The fourth Earl of Lindsey was created Duke of Ancaster, and the house
-henceforward bore that now forgotten name. It was subsequently sold to the
-proud Duke of Somerset, the same who married the widow of the Mr. Thynne
-whom Count Koenigsmarck murdered.
-
-In the early part of George III.'s reign Lindsey House became a sort of
-lodging-house for foreign members of the Moravian persuasion. The
-staircase, about 1772, was painted with scenes from the history of the
-Herrnhuthers. The most conspicuous figures were those of a negro
-catechumen in a white shirt, and a missionary who went over to Algiers to
-preach to the galley-slaves, and died in Africa of the plague. There was
-also a painting of a Moravian clergyman being saved from a desert rock on
-which he had been cast.[728]
-
-Repeated mention of the Berties is made in Horace Walpole's pleasant
-_Letters_. Lord Robert Bertie was third son of Robert the first Duke of
-Ancaster and Kesteven. He was a general in the army, a colonel in the
-Guards, and a lord of the bedchamber. He married Lady Raymond in 1762, and
-died in 1782.
-
-The proud Duke of Somerset, in 1748, left to his eldest daughter, Lady
-Frances, married to the Marquis of Granby, three thousand a year, and the
-fine house built by Inigo Jones in Lincoln's Inn Fields, which he had
-bought of the Duke of Ancaster for the Duchess, hoping that his daughter
-would let her mother live with her.[729] In July 1779 the Duke of
-Ancaster, dying of drinking and rioting at two-and-twenty, recalls much
-scandal to Walpole's mind. He had been in love with Lady Honoria,
-Walpole's niece; but Horace does not regret the match dropping through,
-for he says the duke was of a turbulent nature, and, though of a fine
-figure, not noble in manners. Lady Priscilla Elizabeth Bertie, eldest
-sister of the duke, married the grandson of Peter Burrell, a merchant, who
-became husband of the Lady Great Chamberlain of England, and inherited a
-barony and half the Ancaster estate.[730] "The three last duchesses,"
-goes on the cruel gossip, "were never sober." "The present
-duchess-dowager," he adds, "was natural daughter of Panton, a disreputable
-horse-jockey of Newmarket. The other duchess was some lady's woman, or
-young lady's governess." Mr. Burrell's daughters married Lord Percy and
-the Duke of Hamilton.
-
-In 1791 Walpole writes to Miss Berry to describe the marriage of Lord
-Cholmondeley with Lady Georgiana Charlotte Bertie: "The men were in frocks
-and white waistcoats. The endowing purse, I believe, has been left off
-ever since broad pieces were called in and melted down. We were but
-eighteen persons in all.... The poor duchess-mother wept excessively; she
-is now left quite alone,--her two daughters married, and her other
-children dead. She herself, I fear, is in a very dangerous way. She goes
-directly to Spa, where the new married pair are to meet her. We all
-separated in an hour and a half."[731]
-
-Alfred Tennyson in early life had fourth-floor chambers at No. 55, and
-there probably his friend Hallam, whose early death he laments in his _In
-Memoriam_ spent many an hour with him. There, in the airy regions of
-Attica, in a low-roofed room, the single window of which is darkened by a
-huge stone balustrade--a gloomy relic of past grandeur--the young poet may
-have recited the majestic lines of his "King Arthur," or the exquisite
-lament of "Mariana," and there he may have immortalised the "plump
-head-waiter of the Cock," in Fleet Street. Mr. John Foster, the author of
-many sound and delightful historical biographies, had also chambers in
-this house.
-
-No. 68, on the west side, stands on the site of the approach to the
-stables of old Newcastle House. Here Judge Le Blanc lived, and at his
-death the house was occupied by Mr. Thomas Le Blanc, Master of Trinity
-Hall, Cambridge.
-
-At No. 33, on the same side as the Insolvent Debtors' Court, dwelt Judge
-Park, a man much beloved by his friends; in his early days, as a young
-and poor Scotch barrister, he had lived in Carey Street till his house
-there was burnt down. He used to say that his great ambition in youth had
-been to one day live at No. 33 in the Fields, at that time occupied by
-Chief Justice Willis; but in later days, as a judge, leaving the former
-goal of his ambition, he migrated to Bedford Square, where he died.
-
-Nos. 40 and 42, on the south side, form the Museum of the College of
-Surgeons, incorporated in 1800. The Grecian front is a most clever
-contrivance by Sir John Soane. The building contains the incomparable
-anatomical collection of the eminent John Hunter, bought by the Government
-for L15,000 and given to the College of Surgeons on condition of its being
-opened to the public. John Hunter died in 1793; and the first courses of
-lectures in the new building were delivered by Sir Everard Home and Sir
-William Blizard, in 1810. The Museum was built by Barry in 1835, and cost
-about L40,000.[732] It is divided into two rooms, the normal and abnormal.
-The total number of specimens is upwards of 23,000. The collection is
-unequalled in many respects; every article is authentic and in perfect
-preservation. The largest human skeleton is that of Charles O'Brien, the
-Irish giant, who died in Cockspur Street, Charing Cross, in 1783, aged
-twenty-two. It measures eight feet four inches. By its side, in ghastly
-contrast, is the bony sketch of Caroline Crachami, a Sicilian dwarf who
-died in 1824, aged ten years. There is also a cast of the hand of Patrick
-Cotter, another Irish giant, who measured eight feet seven and a half
-inches. Nor must we overlook the vast framework of Chunee, the elephant
-that went mad with toothache at Exeter Change, and was shot by a company
-of riflemen in 1826. The sawn base of the inflamed tusk shows a spicula of
-ivory pressing into the nervous pulp. Toothache is always terrible, but
-only imagine a square foot of it!
-
-Very curious too, are the jaw of the extinct sabre-toothed tiger, and the
-skeleton of a gigantic extinct Irish deer found under a bed of shell-marl
-in a peat bog near Limerick. The antlers are seven feet long, eight feet
-across, and weigh seventy-six pounds. The height of the animal (measured
-from his skull) was seven feet six inches. Amongst other horrors, there is
-a cast of the fleshy band that united the Siamese twins, and one of a
-woman with a long curved horn growing from her forehead. There are also
-many skulls of soldiers perforated and torn with bullets, the lead still
-adhering to some of the bony plates of the crania. But the wonder of
-wonders is the iron pivot of a trysail-mast that was driven clean through
-the chest of a Scarborough lad. The boy recovered in five months, and not
-long after went to work again. It is a tough race that rules the sea.
-
-There are also fragments of the skeleton of a rhinoceros discovered in a
-limestone cavern at Oreston during the formation of the Plymouth
-Breakwater. In a recess from the gallery stands the embalmed body of the
-wife of Martin Van Butchell, an impudent Dutch quack doctor. It is
-coarsely preserved, and is very loathsome to look at. It was prepared in
-1775 by Dr. W. Hunter and Mr. Cruikshank, the vascular system being
-injected with oil of turpentine and camphorated spirits of wine, and
-powdered nitre and camphor being introduced into the cavities. On the case
-containing the body is an advertisement cut from an old newspaper, stating
-the conditions which Dr. Van Butchell required of those who came to see
-the body of his wife. At the feet of Mrs. Van Butchell is the shrunken
-mummy of her pet parrot.
-
-The pictures include the portrait of John Hunter by Reynolds, which Sharp
-engraved: it has much faded. There is also a posthumous bust of Hunter by
-Flaxman, and one of Clive by Chantrey. Any Fellow of the College can
-introduce a visitor, either personally or by written order, the first four
-days of the week. In September the Museum is closed. It would be much more
-convenient for students if some small sum were charged for admission. It
-is now visited but by two or three people a day, when it should be
-inspected by hundreds.
-
-That great surgeon, John Hunter, was the son of a small farmer in
-Lanarkshire. He was born in 1728, and died in 1793. In early life he went
-abroad as an army-surgeon to study gunshot-wounds; and in 1786 he was
-appointed deputy surgeon-general to the army. In 1772 he made discoveries
-as to the property of the gastric juice. He was the first to use cutting
-as a cure for hydrophobia, and to distinguish the various species of
-cancer. He kept at his house at Brompton a variety of wild animals for the
-purposes of comparative anatomy, was often in danger from their violence,
-and as often saved by his own intrepidity. Sir Joseph Banks divided his
-collection between Hunter and the British Museum. Unequalled in the
-dissecting-room, Hunter was a bad lecturer. He was an irritable man, and
-died suddenly during a disputation at St. George's Hospital which vexed
-him. His death is said to have been hastened by fear of death from
-hydrophobia, he having cut his hand while dissecting a man who had died of
-that mysterious disease. Hunter used to call an operation "opprobrium
-medici."
-
-In Portugal Row, as the southern side of the square used to be called,
-lived Sir Richard Fanshawe, the translator of the _Lusiad_ of Camoens, and
-of Guarini's _Pastor Fido_. Sir Richard was our ambassador in Spain; but
-Charles, wishing to get rid of Lord Sandwich from the navy, recalled
-Fanshawe, on the plea that he had ventured to sign a treaty without
-authority. He died in 1666, on the intended day of his return, of a
-violent fever, probably caused by vexation at his unmerited disgrace. Sir
-Richard appears to have been a religious, faithful man and a good scholar,
-but born in unhappy times and to an ill fate. Charles I. had very justly a
-great respect for him. His wife was a brave, determined woman, full of
-affection, good sense, and equally full of hatred and contempt for Lord
-Sandwich, Pepys's friend, who had supplanted her husband in the embassy.
-
-On one occasion, on their way to Malaga, the Dutch trading vessel in which
-she and her husband were was threatened by a Turkish galley which bore
-down on them in full sail. The captain, who had rendered his sixty guns
-useless by lumbering them up with cargo, resolved to fight for his L30,000
-worth of goods, and therefore armed his two hundred men and plied them
-with brandy. The decks were partially cleared, and the women ordered below
-for fear the Turks might think the vessel a merchant-ship and board it.
-Sir Richard, taking his gun, bandolier, and sword, stood with the ship's
-company waiting for the Turks.[733] But we must quote the brave wife's own
-simple words:--"The beast the captain had locked me up in the cabin. I
-knocked and called long to no purpose, until at length the cabin-boy came
-and opened the door. I, all in tears, desired him to be so good as to give
-me the blue thrum cap he wore and his tarred coat, which he did, and I
-gave him half-a-crown; and putting them on, and flinging away my
-night-clothes, I crept up softly and stood upon the deck by my husband's
-side, as free from fear as, I confess, from discretion; but it was the
-effect of that passion which I could never master. By this time the two
-vessels were engaged in parley, and so well satisfied with speech and
-sight of each other's forces, that the Turks' man-of-war tacked about and
-we continued our course. But when your father saw me retreat, looking upon
-me, he blessed himself and snatched me up in his arms, saying, 'Good God!
-that love can make this change!' and though he seemingly chid me, he would
-laugh at it as often as he remembered that journey." This same vessel, a
-short time after, was blown up in the harbour with the loss of more than a
-hundred men and all the lading.[734]
-
-This brave, good woman showed still greater fortitude when her husband
-died and left her almost penniless in a strange country. She had only
-twenty-eight doubloons with which to bring home her children, and sixty
-servants, and the dead body of her husband. She, however, instantly sold
-her carriages and a thousand pounds' worth of plate, and setting apart the
-queen's present of two thousand doubloons for travelling expenses, started
-for England. "God," she says, in her brave, pious way, "did hear, and
-see, and help me, and brought my soul out of trouble."
-
-In 1677 Lady Fanshawe took a house in Holborn Row, the north side of the
-square, and spent a year lamenting "the dear remembrances of her past
-happiness and fortune; and though she had great graces and favours from
-the king and queen and whole court, yet she found at the present no
-remedy."[735]
-
-Lord Kenyon lived at No. 35 in 1805. Jekyll was fond of joking about
-Kenyon's stinginess, and used to say he died of eating apple-pie crust at
-breakfast to save the expense of muffins; and that Lord Ellenborough, who
-succeeded on Kenyon's death to the Chief Justiceship, always used to bow
-to apple-pie ever afterwards which Jekyll called his "apple-pie-ety." The
-princesses Augusta and Sophia once told Tom Moore, at Lady Donegall's that
-the king used to play tricks on Kenyon and send the despatch-box to him at
-a quarter past seven, when it was known the learned lord was in bed to
-save candlelight.[736] Lord Ellenborough used to say that the final word
-in "Mors janua vitae" was mis-spelled _vita_ on Kenyon's tomb to save the
-extra cost of the diphthong.[737] George III. used to say to Kenyon, "My
-Lord, let us have a little more of your good law, and less of your bad
-Latin."
-
-Lord Campbell, who gives a very pleasant sketch of Chief Justice Kenyon,
-with his bad temper and bad Latin, his hatred of newspaper writers and
-gamblers, and his wrath against pettifoggers, describes his being taken in
-by Horne Tooke, and laughs at his ignorantly-mixed metaphors. He seems to
-have been a respectable second-rate lawyer, conscientious and upright. "He
-occupied," says Lord Campbell, "a large gloomy house, in which I have seen
-merry doings when it was afterwards transferred to the Verulam Club." The
-tradition of this house was that "it was always Lent in the kitchen and
-Passion Week in the parlour." On some one mentioning the spits in Lord
-Kenyon's kitchen, Jekyll said, "It is irrelevant to talk about the spits,
-for nothing _turns_ upon them." The judge's ignorance was profound. It is
-reported that in a trial for blasphemy the Chief Justice, after citing the
-names of several remarkable early Christians, said, "Above all, gentlemen,
-need I name to you the Emperor Julian, who was so celebrated for the
-practice of every Christian virtue that he was called Julian the
-Apostle?"[738] On another occasion, talking of a false witness, he is
-supposed to have said, "The allegation is as far from truth as 'old
-Boterium from the northern main'--a line I have heard or met with, God
-knows where."[739]
-
-Lord Erskine lived at No. 36, in 1805, the year before he rose at once to
-the peerage and the woolsack, and presided at Lord Melville's trial. He
-did not hold the seals many months, and died in 1823. This great Whig
-orator was the youngest son of the Earl of Buchan. He was a midshipman and
-an ensign before he became a student at Lincoln's Inn. He began to be
-known in 1778; in 1781 he defended Lord George Gordon, in 1794 Horne
-Tooke, Hardy, Thelwall, and afterwards Tom Paine.
-
-The house that contains the Soane Museum, No. 13 on the north side, was
-built in 1812, and, consisting of twenty-four small apartments crammed
-with curiosities, is in itself a marvel of fantastic ingenuity. Every inch
-of space is turned to account. On one side of the picture-room are
-cabinets, and on the other movable shutters or screens, on which pictures
-are also hung; so that a small area, only thirteen feet long and twelve
-broad, contains as much as a gallery forty-five feet long and twenty feet
-broad. A Roman altar once stood in the outer court.
-
-It is a disgrace to the trustees that this curious museum is kept so
-private, and that such impediments are thrown in the way of visitors. It
-is open only two days a week in April, May, and June, but at certain
-seasons a third day is granted to foreigners, artists, and people from the
-country. To obtain tickets, you are obliged to get, some days before you
-visit, a letter from a trustee, or to write to the curator, enter your
-name in a book, and leave your card. All this vexatious hindrance and
-fuss has the desired effect of preventing many persons from visiting a
-museum left, not to the trustees or the curator, but to the nation--to
-every Englishman. In order to read the books, copy the pictures, or
-examine the plans and drawings, the same tedious and humiliating form must
-be gone through.
-
-The gem of all the Soane treasures is an enormous transparent alabaster
-sarcophagus, discovered by Belzoni in 1816 in a tomb in the valley of
-Beban el Molook, near Thebes. It is nine feet four inches long, three feet
-eight inches wide, two feet eight inches deep, and is covered without and
-within with beautifully-cut hieroglyphics. It was the greatest discovery
-of the runaway Paduan Monk, and was undoubtedly the cenotaph or
-sarcophagus of a Pharaoh or Ptolemy. It was discovered in an enormous tomb
-of endless chambers, which the Arabs still call "Belzoni's tomb." On the
-bottom of the case is a full-length figure in relief, of Isis, the
-guardian of the dead. Sir John Soane gave L2000 for this sarcophagus to
-Mr. Salt, Consul General of Egypt and Belzoni's employer. The raised lid
-is broken into nineteen pieces. The late Sir Gardner Wilkinson considered
-this to be the cenotaph of Osirei, the father of Rameses the Great. But
-the forgotten king for whom the Soane sarcophagus was really executed was
-Seti, surnamed Meni-en-Ptah, the father of Rameses the Great; he is called
-by Manetho Sethos.[740] Dr. Lepsius dates the commencement of his reign
-B.C. 1439. Dr. Brugsch places it twenty years earlier. Mr. Sharpe, with
-that delightful uncertainty characteristic of Egyptian antiquaries, drags
-the epoch down two hundred years later. Seti was the father of the Pharaoh
-who persecuted the Israelites, and he made war against Syria. His son was
-the famous Rameses. All three kings were descended from the Shepherd
-Chiefs. The most beautiful fragment in Karnak represents this monarch,
-Seti, in his chariot, with a sword like a fish-slice in one hand, while in
-the other he clutches the topknots of a group of conquered enemies,
-Nubian, Syrian, and Jewish. The work is full of an almost Raphaelesque
-grace.
-
-After this come some of Flaxman's and Banks's sketches and models, a cast
-of the shield of Achilles by the former, and one of the Boothby monument
-by the latter. There is also a fine collection of ancient gems and
-intaglios, pure in taste and exquisitely cut, and a set of the Napoleon
-medals, selected by Denon for the Empress Josephine, and in the finest
-possible state. We may also mention Sir Christopher Wren's watch, some
-ivory chairs, and a table from Tippoo Saib's devastated palace at
-Seringapatam, and a richly-mounted pistol taken by Peter the Great from a
-Turkish general at Azof in 1696. The latter was given to Napoleon by the
-Russian emperor at the treaty of Tilsit in 1807, and was presented by him
-to a French officer at St. Helena. The books, too, are of great interest.
-Here is the original MS. copy of the _Gierusalemme Liberata_, published at
-Ferrara in 1581, and in Tasso's own handwriting; the first four folio
-editions of Shakspere, once the property of that great actor and
-Shaksperean student John Philip Kemble; a folio of designs for Elizabethan
-and Jacobean houses by the celebrated architect John Thorpe; Fauntleroy
-the forger's illustrated copy of Pennant's _London_, purchased for six
-hundred and fifty guineas; a Commentary on Paul's Epistles, illuminated by
-the laborious Croatian, Giulio Clovio (who died in 1578), for Cardinal
-Grimani. Vasari raves about the minute finish of this painter.
-
-The pictures, too, are good. There are three Canalettis full of that Dutch
-Venetian's clear common sense; the finest, a view on the Grand Canal--his
-favourite subject--and "The Snake in the Grass," better known as "Love
-unloosing the Zone of Beauty," by Reynolds. There is a sadly faded replica
-of this in the Winter Palace at St. Petersburg. This one was purchased at
-the Marchioness of Thomond's sale for L500. The "Rake's Progress," by
-Hogarth, in eight pictures, was purchased by Sir John in 1802 for L598.
-These inimitable pictures are incomparable, and display the fine, pure,
-sober colour of the great artist, and his broad touch so like that of Jan
-Steen.
-
-The Soane collection also boasts of Hogarth's four "Election" pictures,
-purchased at Garrick's sale for L1732 10s. They are rather dark in tone.
-There is also a fine but curious Turner, "Van Tromp's Barge entering the
-Texel;" a portrait by Goma of Napoleon in 1797, when emaciated and
-haggard, and a fine miniature of him in 1814, when fat and already on the
-decline, both physically and mentally, by Isabey the great
-miniature-painter, taken at Elba in 1814. In the dining-room is a portrait
-of Soane by Sir Thomas Lawrence, and in the gallery under the dome a bust
-of him by Chantrey.
-
-Sir John Soane was the son of a humble Reading bricklayer, and brought up
-in Mr. Dance's office. Carrying off a gold and silver medal at the
-Academy, he was sent as travelling student to Rome. In 1791 he obtained a
-Government employment, in 1800 enlarged the Bank of England, and in 1806
-became Professor of Architecture at the Royal Academy. He built the
-Dulwich Gallery, and in 1826 the Masonic Hall in Great Queen Street. In
-1827 he gave L1000 to the Duke of York's monument. At the close of his
-life he left his collection of works of art, valued at L50,000, to the
-nation, and died in 1837,[741] leaving his son penniless. In 1835 the
-English architects presented Sir John with a splendid medal in token of
-their approbation of his conduct and talents.
-
-The Literary Fund Society, instituted in 1790, and incorporated in 1818,
-had formerly rooms at No. 4 Lincoln's Inn Fields. The society was
-established in order to aid authors of merit and good character who might
-be reduced to poverty by unavoidable circumstances, or be deprived of the
-power of exertion by enfeebled faculties or old age. George IV. and
-William IV. both contributed one hundred guineas a year to its funds, and
-this subscription is continued by our present Queen. The society
-distributed L1407 in 1846. The average annual amount of subscriptions and
-donations is about L1100. The Literary Fund Society moved afterwards to
-73 Great Russell Street. Some years ago a split occurred in this society.
-Charles Dickens and Mr. C. W. Dilke, the proprietor of the _Athenaeum_,
-objecting to the wasteful expense of the management, seceded from it; the
-result of this secession was the founding of the Guild of Literature, and
-the collection of L4000 by means of private theatricals--a sum which,
-unfortunately, still lies partly dormant. The Fund is now domiciled in
-Bloomsbury.
-
-Both Pepys and Evelyn praise the house of Mr. Povey in Lincoln's Inn
-Fields as a prodigy of elegant comfort and ingenuity. The marqueterie
-floors, "the perspective picture in the little closet," the grotto
-cellars, with a well for the wine, the fountains and imitation porphyry
-vases, his pictures and the bath at the top of the house, seem to have
-been the abstract of all luxurious ease.
-
-Names were first put on doors in London in 1760, some years before the
-street-signs were removed. In 1764 houses were first numbered; the
-numbering commenced in New Burlington Street, and Lincoln's Inn Fields was
-the second place numbered.
-
-In Carey Street lived that excellent woman Mrs. Hester Chapone, who
-afterwards removed to Arundel Street. She was a friend of Mrs. Carter, who
-translated Epictetus, and of Mrs. Montagu, the Queen of the Blue
-Stockings. She was one of the female admirers who thronged round
-Richardson the novelist, and she married a young Templar whom he had
-introduced to her. It was a love match, and she had the misfortune of
-losing him in less than ten months after their marriage. Her celebrated
-letters on _The Improvement of the Mind_, published in 1773, were written
-for a favourite niece, who married a Westminster Clergyman and died in
-childbed. Though Mrs. Chapone's letters are now rather dry and
-old-fashioned, reminding us of the backboards of a too punctilious age,
-they contain some sensible and well-expressed thoughts. Here is a sound
-passage:--"Those ladies who pique themselves on the particular excellence
-of neatness are very apt to forget that the decent order of the house
-should be designed to promote the convenience and pleasure of those who
-are to be in it; and that if it is converted into a cause of trouble and
-constraint, their husbands' guests would be happier without it."[742]
-
-Gibbons's Tennis Court stood in Vere Street, Clare Market; it was turned
-into a theatre by Thomas Killigrew. Ogilby the poet, started a lottery of
-books at "the old theatre" in June 1668. He describes the books in his
-advertisements as "all of his own designment and composure."
-
-"The Duke's Theatre" stood in Portugal Street, at the back of Portugal
-Row. It was pulled down in 1835 to make room for the enlargement of the
-Museum of the College of Surgeons. Before that it had been the china
-warehouse of Messrs. Spode and Copeland.[743] There had been, however,
-frailer things than china in the house in Pepys's time. Here, the year of
-the Restoration, came Killigrew with the actors from the Red Bull,
-Clerkenwell, and took the name of the King's Company. Three years later
-they moved to Drury Lane. Davenant's company then came to Portugal Street
-in 1662, deserting their theatre, once a granary, in Salisbury Court. They
-played here till 1671, when they returned to their old theatre, then
-renovated under the management of Charles Davenant and the celebrated
-Betterton, the great tragedian. They afterwards united in Drury Lane, and
-again fell apart. In 1695 a company, headed by Betterton, with Congreve
-for a partner, re-opened the theatre in Lincoln's Inn Fields. It then
-became celebrated for pantomimes under Rich, the excellent harlequin. On
-his removal to Covent Garden it was deserted, re-opened by Gifford from
-Goodman's Fields, and finally ceased to be a theatre about 1737, so that
-its whole life did not extend to more than one generation.
-
-Actresses first appeared in London in Prynne's time. Soon after the
-Restoration a lady of Killigrew's company took the part of Desdemona. In
-January 1661 Pepys saw women on the stage at the Cockpit Theatre: the play
-was Beaumont and Fletcher's "Beggars' Bush." The prologue to "Othello" in
-1660 contains the following line:[744]--
-
- "Our women are defective and so sized,
- You'd think they were some of the guard disguised;
- For, to speak truth, men act that are between
- Forty and fifty, wenches of fifteen,
- With bone so large, and nerve so uncompliant,
- That, when you call Desdemona, enter giant."
-
-The Puritans were now happily in the minority, and so the attempt
-succeeded. Davenant did not bring forward his actresses till June 1661,
-when he produced his "Siege of Rhodes." Kynaston, Hart, Burt, and Clun,
-famous actors of Charles II.'s time, were all excellent representatives of
-female characters.
-
-It was at the Duke's Theatre, in 1680, that Nell Gwynn who was present,
-being reviled by one of the audience, and William Herbert, who had married
-a sister of one of the king's mistresses, taking up Nell's quarrel--a
-sword fight took place between the two factions in the house. This
-hot-blooded young gallant Herbert grew up to be Earl of Pembroke and first
-plenipotentiary at Ryswick.
-
-The chief ladies at the Duke's House were Mrs. Davenport, Mrs. Davies, and
-Mrs. Saunderson. The first of these ladies, generally known as "Roxalana,"
-from a character of that name in the "Siege of Rhodes," resisted for a
-long time the addresses of Aubrey de Vere, the last Earl of Oxford, a
-wicked brawling roysterer, and a disgrace to his name, who at last
-obtained her hand by the cruel deception of a sham marriage. The pretended
-priest was a trumpeter, the witness a kettle-drummer in the king's
-regiment. The poor creature threw herself in vain at the king's feet and
-demanded justice, but gradually grew more composed upon an annuity of a
-thousand crowns a year.[745]
-
-As for Mrs. Davies, who danced well and played ill, she won the
-susceptible heart of Charles II. by her singing the song, "My lodging is
-on the cold, cold ground." "Through the marriage of the daughter of Lord
-Derwentwater with the eighth Lord Petre," says Dr. Doran, "the blood of
-the Stuarts and of Moll Davies still runs in their lineal descendant, the
-present and twelfth lord."[746]
-
-Mrs. Saunderson became the excellent wife of the great actor Betterton.
-For about thirty years she played the chief female characters, especially
-in Shakspere's plays, with great success. She taught Queen Anne and her
-sister Mary elocution, and after her husband's death received a pension of
-L500 a year from her royal pupil.
-
-In 1664 Pepys went to Portugal Street to see that clever but impudent
-impostor, the German Princess, appear after her acquittal at the Old
-Bailey for inveigling a young citizen into a marriage, acting her own
-character in a comedy immortalising her exploit.
-
-In February 1666-7 Pepys goes again to the Duke's Playhouse, and observes
-there Rochester the wit and Mrs. Stewart, afterwards Duchess of Richmond,
-the same lady whose portrait we retain as Britannia on the old
-halfpennies. "It was pleasant," says the tuft-hunting gossip, "to see how
-everybody rose up when my Lord John Butler, the Duke of Ormond's son, came
-into the pit, towards the end of the play, who was a servant to Mrs.
-Mallett, and now smiled upon her and she on him."[747]
-
-The same month, 1667-8, Pepys revisits the Duke's House to see Etherege's
-new play, "She Would if She Could." He was there by two o'clock, and yet
-already a thousand people had been refused at the pit. The fussy
-public-office man, not being able to find his wife, who was there, got
-into an eighteenpenny box, and could hardly see or hear. The play done, it
-being dark and rainy, Pepys stays in the pit looking for his wife and
-waiting for the weather to clear up. And there for an hour and a half sat
-also the Duke of Buckingham, Sedley, and Etherege talking; all abusing the
-play as silly, dull, and insipid, except the author, who complained of the
-actors for not knowing their parts.
-
-In May 1668 Pepys is again at this theatre in the balcony box, where sit
-the shameless Lady Castlemaine and her ladies and women; on another
-occasion he sits below the same group, and sees the proud lady look like
-fire when Moll Davies ogles the king her lover. In another place he
-observes how full the pit is, though the seats are two shillings and
-sixpence a piece, whereas in his youth he had never gone higher than
-twelvepence or eighteenpence.[748]
-
-Kynaston, the greatest of the "boy-actresses," was chiefly on this stage
-from 1659 to 1699. Evadne was his favourite female part. Later in life he
-took to heroic characters. Cibber says of him: "He had something of a
-formal gravity in his mien, which was attributed to the stately step he
-had been so early confined to. But even that in characters of superiority
-had its proper graces; it misbecame him not in the part of Leon in
-Fletcher's 'Rule a Wife,' which he executed with a determined manliness
-and honest authority. He had a piercing eye, and in characters of heroic
-life a quick imperious vivacity in his tone of voice that painted the
-tyrant truly terrible. There were two plays of Dryden in which he shone
-with uncommon lustre; in 'Arungzebe,' he played Morat, and in 'Don
-Sebastian' Muley Moloch. In both these parts he had a fierce lion-like
-majesty in his port and utterance that gave the spectator a kind of
-trembling admiration."[749] Kynaston died in 1712, and left a fortune to
-his son, a mercer in Covent Garden, whose son became rector of Aldgate.
-
-James Nokes was Kynaston's contemporary in Portugal Street. Leigh Hunt
-calls him something between Liston and Munden. Dryden mentions him, in a
-political epistle to Southerne, as indispensable to a play. Cibber says,
-"The ridiculous solemnity of his features was enough to have set the whole
-bench of Bishops into a titter." In his ludicrous distresses he sank into
-such piteous pusilanimity that one almost pitied him. "When he debated any
-matter by himself he would shut up his mouth with a dumb, studious pout,
-and roll his full eye into a vacant amazement."[750] He died in 1692,
-leaving a fortune and an estate near Barnet.
-
-But the great star of Portugal Street was Betterton, the Garrick of his
-age. His most admired part was Hamlet; but Steele especially dilates on
-his Othello. He acted his Hamlet from traditions handed down by Davenant
-of Taylor, whom Shakspere himself is said to have instructed. Cibber says
-that there was such enchantment in his voice alone that no one cared for
-the sense of the words; and he adds, "I never heard a line in tragedy come
-from Betterton wherein my judgment, my ear, and my imagination, were not
-fully satisfied." This great man, who created no fewer than 130
-characters, was a friend of Dryden, Pope, and Tillotson. Kneller's
-portrait of him is at Knowle;[751] A copy of it by Pope is preserved in
-Lord Mansfield's gallery at Caen Wood. When he died, in 1710, Steele wrote
-a "Tatler" upon him, in which he says "he laboured incessantly, and lived
-irreproachably. He was the jewel of the English stage." He killed himself
-by driving back the gout in order to perform on his benefit night, and his
-widow went mad from grief. Betterton acted as Colonel Jolly in Colman's
-"Cutter of Coleman Street," as Jaffier in Otway's _chef d'oeuvre_, as fine
-gentlemen in Congreve's vicious but gay comedies, as a hero in Rowe's
-flatulent plays, and as Sir John Brute in Vanbrugh's great comedy.
-
-Mrs. Barry was one of the best actresses in Portugal Street. She was the
-daughter of an old Cavalier colonel, and was instructed for the stage by
-Rochester, whose mistress she became. Dryden pronounced her the best
-actress he had ever seen. Her face and colour varied with each passion,
-whether heroic or tender. "Her mien and motion," says Cibber, "were superb
-and gracefully majestic, her voice full, clear, and strong." In scenes of
-anger, defiance, or resentment, while she was impetuous and terrible, she
-poured out the sentiment with an enchanting harmony. She was so versatile
-that she played Lady Brute as well as Zara or Belvidera. For her King
-James II. originated the custom of actors' benefits. After a career of
-thirty-eight years on the boards, she died at Acton in 1713. Kneller's
-picture represents her with beautiful eyes, fine hair drawn back from her
-forehead, "the face full, fair, and rippling with intellect,"[752] but her
-mouth a little awry.[753]
-
-Mrs. Mountfort also appeared in Portugal Street before the two companies
-united at Drury Lane in 1682. She was the best of male coxcombs, stage
-coquettes, and country dowdies, a vivacious mimic, and of the most
-versatile humour. Cibber sketches her admirably as Melantha in "Marriage a
-la Mode:"--"She is a fluttering, finished impertinent, with a whole
-artillery of airs, eyes, and motions. When the gallant recommended by her
-father brings his letter of introduction, down goes her dainty diving body
-to the ground, as if she were sinking under the conscious load of her own
-attractions; then she launches into a flood of fine language and
-compliment, still playing her chest forward in fifty falls, and rising
-like a swan upon waving water; and to complete her impertinence, she is so
-rapidly fond of her own wit that she will not give her lover leave to
-praise it;[754] and at last she swims from him with a promise to return in
-a twinkling."
-
-The virtuous, good, and discreet Mrs. Bracegirdle was another favourite in
-Portugal Street. For her Congreve, who affected to be her lover, wrote his
-Araminta and Cynthia, his Angelica, his Almeria, and his Millamant in "The
-way of the world." All the town was in love with her youth, cheerful
-gaiety, musical voice, the happy graces of her manner, her dark eyes,
-brown hair, and expressive, rosy-brown face. Her Statira justified Nat
-Lee's frantic Alexander for all his rant; and "when she acted Millamant,
-all the faults, follies, and affectation of that agreeable tyrant were
-venially melted down into so many charms and attractions of a conscious
-beauty." Mrs. Bracegirdle was on the stage from 1680 to 1707. She lived
-long enough to warn Cibber against envy of Garrick, and died in 1748.
-
-Three of Congreve's plays, "Love for Love," "The Mourning Bride," and "The
-Way of the World," came out in Portugal Street. Steele, in the _Tatler_,
-No. 1, mentions "Love for Love" as being acted for Betterton's
-benefit--Mrs. Barry, Mrs. Bracegirdle, and Doggett taking parts. He
-describes the stage as covered with gentlemen and ladies, "so that when
-the curtain was drawn it discovered even there a very splendid audience."
-"In Dryden's time," says Steele, "You used to see songs, epigrams, and
-satires in the hands of every person you met [at the theatre]; now you
-have only a pack of cards, and instead of the cavils about the turn of the
-expression, the elegance of style and the like, the learned now dispute
-only about the truth of the game."
-
-Poor Mountfort, the most handsome, graceful, and ardent of stage lovers,
-the most admirable of courtly fops, and the best dancer and singer of the
-day, strutted his little hour in Portugal Street till run through the body
-by Lord Mohun's infamous boon companion. His career extended from 1682 to
-1695. He was only thirty-three when he died.
-
-The last proprietor of the theatre was Rich, an actor who, failing in
-tragedy, turned harlequin and manager, and became celebrated for producing
-spectacles, ballets, and pantomimes. Under the name of Lun he revelled as
-harlequin, and was admirable in a scene where he was hatched from an egg.
-
-Pope, always sore about theatrical matters, describes this manager's
-pompousness in the _Dunciad_ (book iii.):--
-
- "At ease
- 'Midst storm of paper fierce hail of pease,
- And proud his mistress' order to perform,
- Rides in the whirlwind and directs the storm."
-
-Rich's great success was the production of Gay's _Beggars' Opera_ in
-1727-8. This piece brought L2000 to the author, and for a time drove the
-Italian Opera into the shade. It ran sixty-three nights the first season,
-and then spread to all the great towns in Great Britain. Ladies carried
-about the favourite songs engraved on their fan-mounts, and they were also
-printed on fire-screens and other furniture. Miss Lavinia Fenton, who
-acted Polly, became the idol of the town; engravings of her were sold by
-thousands: her life was written, and collections were made of her
-jests.[755] Eventually she married the Duke of Bolton. Sir Robert Walpole
-laughed at the satire against himself, and "Gay grew rich, and Rich gay,"
-as the popular epigram went. Hogarth drew the chief scene with Walker as
-Macheath, and Spiller as Mat o' the Mint. Swift was vexed to find his
-Gulliver for the time forgotten.
-
-The custom of allowing young men of fashion to have chairs upon the stage
-was an intolerable nuisance to the actors before Garrick. In 1721 it led
-to a desperate riot at the Lincoln's Inn Fields Theatre. Half-a-dozen
-beaux, headed by a tipsy earl, were gathered round the wings, when the
-earl reeled across the stage where Macbeth and his lady were then acting,
-to speak to a boon companion at the opposite side. Rich the manager, vexed
-at the interruption, forbade the earl the house, upon which the earl
-struck Rich and Rich the earl. Half-a-dozen swords at once sprang out and
-decreed that Rich must die; but Quin and his brother actors rushed to the
-rescue with bare blades, charged the coxcombs, and drove them through the
-stage-door into the kennel. The beaux returning to the front, rushed into
-the boxes, broke the sconces, slashed the hangings, and threatened to burn
-the house; upon which doughty Quin and a party of constables and watchmen
-flung themselves on the rioters and haled them to prison. The actors,
-intimidated, refused to re-open the house till the king granted them a
-guard of soldiers, a custom that has not long been discontinued. It was
-not till 1780 that the habit of admitting the vulgar, noisy, and turbulent
-footmen gratis was abandoned.[756]
-
-Macklin, afterwards the inimitable Shylock and Sir Pertinax, played small
-parts at Lincoln's Inn Fields Theatre till 1731, when a short speech as
-Brazencourt, in Fielding's "Coffee-house Politicians," betrayed the true
-actor. He lived till over a hundred, so long that he did not leave Covent
-Garden till after Braham's appearance, and Braham many of our elder
-readers have seen.[757]
-
-Macklin, an Irishman, and in early life a Dragoon officer, was irritable,
-restless, and pugnacious; he obtained his first triumph at Drury Lane, as
-Shylock in 1741. In stern malignity, no one has surpassed Macklin. His
-acting was hard, but manly and weighty, though his features were rather
-rigid. He naturally condemned Garrick's action and gesture as
-superabundant. His Sir Pertinax was excellent in its sly and deadly
-suppleness. He was also admirable in Lovegold, Scrub, Peachem, Polonius,
-and many Irish characters.
-
-Quin was at Portugal Street as early as 1718-19. There he first "delighted
-the town by his chivalry as Hotspur, his bluntness as Clytus, his
-fieriness as Bajazet, his grandeur as Macbeth, his calm dignity as Brutus,
-his unctuousness as Falstaff, his duplicity as Maskwell, and his coarse
-drollery as Sir John Brute."[758] It was just before this, that locked in
-a room and compelled to fight, he had killed Bowen, who was jealous of his
-acting as Bajazet. When Rich refused to give Quin more than L300 a year,
-he joined the Drury Lane company, where he instantly got L500 per annum.
-
-When Rich grew wealthy enough to hire a new theatre in Covent Garden, he
-left Portugal Street. Almost the last play acted there was "The
-Anatomist," by Ravenscroft, a second-rate author of Dryden's time.
-
-The mob attributed the flight of Rich from the old theatre to the
-appearance of a devil during the performance of the pantomime of
-"Harlequin and Dr. Faustus," a play in which demons abound. The
-supernumerary spirit ascending by the roof instead of leaving by the door
-with his paid companions, was believed to have so frightened manager Rich
-that, taking the warning against theatrical profanity to heart, he never
-had the courage to open the theatre again.[759] The legend is curious, as
-it proves that even in 1732 the old Puritan horror of theatricals had not
-quite died out, and that at that period the poorer part of the audience
-was still ignorant enough to attribute mechanical tricks to supernatural
-interference.
-
-Garrick, in one of his prologues, speaks of Rich, under the name of Lun--
-
- "When Lun appeared with matchless art and whim,
- He gave the power of speech to every limb;
- Though masked and mute, convey'd his quick intent,
- And told in frolic gestures all he meant;
- But now the motley coat and sword of wood
- Require a tongue to make them understood."
-
-Every motion of Rich meant something. His "statue scene" and "catching the
-butterfly" were moving pictures. His "harlequin hatched from an egg by
-sun-heat" is highly spoken of; Jackson calls it "a masterpiece of dumb
-show." From the first chipping of the egg, his receiving of motion, his
-feeling the ground, his standing upright, to his quick harlequin trip
-round the broken egg, every limb had its tongue. Walpole says, "His
-pantomimes were full of wit, and coherent, and carried on a story." Yet
-Rich was so ignorant that he called a 'turban' a 'turbot,' and an
-'adjective' an 'adjutant.'
-
-Spiller, who died of apoplexy in Portugal Street, in 1729-30 as he was
-playing in the "Rape of Proserpine," was inimitable in old men. This was
-the year that Quin played Macheath for his benefit, and Fielding brought
-out his inimitable "Tom Thumb" at the Haymarket, to ridicule the bombast
-of Thomson and Young.
-
-King's College Hospital, which occupies a large portion of the southern
-side of Carey Street, is connected with the medical school of King's
-College, and is supported by voluntary contributions. For each guinea a
-year a subscriber may recommend one in and two out patients. Contributors
-acquire the same right for every donation of ten guineas. Annual
-subscribers of three guineas, or donors of thirty guineas, are governors
-of the hospital. The house is surrounded by a population of nearly 400,000
-persons, of whom about 20,000 annually receive relief. In one year 363
-poor married women have been attended in confinements at their own houses.
-
-The last memorial of a gay generation, passed like last year's swallows,
-was a headstone that used to stand in the burial-ground belonging to St.
-Clement's, now the site of King's College Hospital. The slab rose from
-rank green grass that was sprinkled with dead cats, worn-out shoes, and
-fragments of tramps' bonnets; in summer it was half hid by a clump of
-sunflowers.[760] It kept dimly alive the memory of Joe Miller, a taciturn
-actor, in whose mouth Mottley, the poet put his volume of jokes that had
-been raked from every corner of the town. Mottley was a place-seeker and a
-writer of stilted tragedies and a bad comedy, for whose benefit night
-Queen Caroline, wife of George II., condescended to sell tickets at her
-own drawing-room.[761] Miller appears to have been an honest, and stupid
-fellow, but some good sayings are embalmed in the rather coarse book which
-bears his name. His portrait represents Joe as a broad-nosed man with
-large saucer eyes, a big absurd mouth, and a look of comic stolid
-surprise. He died in 1738, and the Jest Book was published the year after,
-price one shilling.
-
-Joe Miller made his first appearance on the stage in 1715, at Drury Lane,
-in Farquhar's comedy of "A trip to the Jubilee." He also played Clodpole
-in Betterton's "Amorous Widow," Sir H. Gubbin in Steele's "Tender
-Husband," La Foole in Ben Jonson's "Epicene," and above all Sir Joseph
-Whittol in Congreve's "Old Bachelor." Hogarth designed a benefit ticket
-for this play. As Ben in "Love for Love," Cibber cut out Joe Miller. In
-1721 Joe opened a booth at Bartholomew Fair with Pinkethman. His last
-great success was as the Miller in Dodsley's farce of "The King and the
-Miller of Mansfield." Stephen Duck, the Wiltshire thresher, afterwards a
-popular preacher, wrote his epitaph. Joe Miller's monument is still
-carefully preserved in one of the rooms in King's College Hospital. John
-Mottley, his editor, was the son of a Colonel Mottley, a Jacobite who
-followed James into France. His son was placed in the Excise Office, and
-grew up a place-hunter. He wrote a bad tragedy called "The Imperial
-Captives," and was promised a commissionership of wine licenses by Lord
-Halifax, and a place in the Exchequer by Sir Robert Walpole, but received
-nothing from either. He compiled the Jest-Book, it is said partly from the
-recollection of the comedian's conversations,[762] but it is doubtful if
-this is true. The compilation (once so useful to diners-out) went through
-three editions in 1739, and at about the thirteenth edition was reprinted,
-after thirty years, by Barker, of Russell Street, Covent Garden.[763]
-
-The Grange public-house close by, with its picturesque old courtyard, is
-mentioned by Davenant, in his "Playhouse to Let," as an inn patronised by
-poets and actors.
-
-The Black Jack public-house in Portsmouth Street was Joe Miller's
-favourite haunt. Some paintings on its walls still testify to the
-occasional presence of artists of the last century. This inn used to be
-called "The Jump," from that adroit young scoundrel Jack Sheppard having
-once jumped from one of its first-floor windows to escape the armed
-emissaries of that still greater thief, the thief-taker, Mr. Jonathan
-Wild.
-
-When paviours dig deep under the Strand they find the fossil remains of
-antediluvian monsters. A church in the street bears a name that carries us
-back to the times of the Saxons and the Danes. In one lane there is a
-Roman bath, in another there are the nodding gable-ends of houses at which
-Beaumont and Fletcher may have looked, and which Shakspere and Ben Jonson
-must have visited. So the Present is built out of the Past. The Strand
-teems with associations of every period of history. The story of St.
-Giles's parish alone should embrace the whole records of London vagrancy.
-The chronicle of Lincoln's Inn Fields embraces reminiscences of half our
-great lawyers. In the chapter on St. Martin's Lane I have been glad to
-note down some interesting incidents in the careers of many of our
-greatest painters. Long Acre leads us to Dryden, Cromwell, Wilson, and
-Stothard. At Charing Cross we have stopped to see how brave men can die
-for a good cause.
-
-A thorough history of our great city, considered in every aspect, would
-almost be a condensed history of the world. I offer these pages to my
-readers only as a humble contribution to the history of London.
-
-[Illustration: THE BLACK JACK, PORTSMOUTH STREET, LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS.]
-
-Our commercial wealth and the vastness of our maritime enterprise is shown
-in nothing more than by the distance from which we fetch our commonest
-articles of consumption--tea from China, sugar from the West Indies,
-coffee from Ceylon, oil from the farthest nooks of Italy, chocolate from
-Mexico. An Englishman need not be very rich in order to consume samples
-of all these productions of different hemispheres at a single meal.
-
-In the same manner many books of far-divided ages have gone to form the
-patchwork of the present volume; I am like the merchant who sends his
-ships to collect in different harbours, and across wide and adverse seas,
-the materials that he needs. In this busy and overworked age there are
-many persons who have no time themselves to make such voyages, no patience
-to traverse such seas, even if they possessed the charts: it is for them I
-have written, and it is from them I hope for some kind approval.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX.
-
- "The West End seems to me one vast cemetery. Hardly a street but has
- in it a house once occupied by dear friends with whom I had daily
- intercourse: if I stopped and knocked now, who would know or take
- interest in me? _The streets to me are peopled with shadows: the city
- is as a city of the dead._"
-
- SAMUEL ROGERS.
-
-
-THE STRAND (SOUTH SIDE).--p. 25.
-
- "I often shed tears in the motley Strand for fulness of joy at such
- multitude of life."--CHARLES LAMB'S _Letters_, vol. i.
-
-The Strand is three-quarters of a mile long. Van de Wyngerede's view,
-1543, shows straggling houses on the south side, but on the north side all
-is open to Covent Garden. There were three water-courses, crossed by
-bridges. Haycock's Ordinary, near Palsgrave Place, was much frequented in
-the seventeenth century by Parliament men and town gallants. No. 217 was
-the shop of Snow, a wealthy goldsmith who withstood the South Sea Bubble
-without injury. Gay describes him during the panic with black pen behind
-his ear. He says to Snow--
-
- "Thou stoodst (an Indian king in size and hue);
- Thy unexhausted shop was our Peru."
-
-The Robin Hood Debating Society held its meetings in Essex Street. Burke
-spoke here, and Goldsmith was a member. The great Cottonian Library was
-kept in Essex House from 1712 to 1730, on the site of the Unitarian
-Chapel, built about 1774. Mr. Lindsey, Dr. Disney, Mr. Belsham
-(Priestley's successor) preached here, and after Mr. Belsham the Rev.
-Thomas Madge. At George's Coffee-house, now 213 Strand, Foote describes
-the town wits meeting in 1751. Shenstone was a frequenter of this house,
-and came here to read pamphlets--the subscription being one shilling. The
-Grecian Coffee-house was used by Goldsmith and the Irish and Lancashire
-Templars. Milford Lane was so named from an adjacent ford over the Thames.
-A windmill stood near St. Mary's Church, temp. James I. Sir Richard Baker,
-the worthy old chronicler whom Sir Roger de Coverley so admired, lived in
-this lane in 1632-9. The old houses were taken down in 1852. No. 191 was
-the shop of William Godwin, bookseller, the author of _Caleb Williams_,
-and the friend of Lamb and Shelley.--Strype mentions the Crown and Anchor
-Tavern. Here, in 1710, was instituted the Academy of Ancient Music. Here,
-on Fox's birthday, in 1798, 2000 guests were feasted. Johnson and Boswell
-occasionally supped here, and here the Royal Societies were held. In
-Surrey Street, in a large garden-house at the east end fronting the river,
-lived the Hon. Charles Howard, the eminent chemist who discovered the
-process of sugar-refining _in vacuo_.
-
-At No. 169, now the Strand Theatre, Barker, an artist, exhibited the
-panorama--his own invention--suggested to him when sketching under an
-umbrella on the Calton Hill. No. 217, now a branch of the London and
-Westminster Bank, was formerly Paul, Strahan, and Bates's,[764] who in
-1858 disposed of their customers' securities to the amount of L113,625,
-and were sentenced to fourteen years' penal servitude. The drinking
-fountain opposite St. Mary's Church is a product of a most useful
-association. The first fountain erected under its auspices was opened in
-April 1859, by Lord John Russell, Lord Carlisle, and Mr. Gurney.--At No.
-147 was published the _Sphinx_, and Jan. 2, 1828, No. 1 of the _Athenaeum_.
-No. 149 is the shop once belonging to Mr. Mawe, the mineralogist, who was
-succeeded by James Tennant, Professor of Mineralogy at King's College. At
-No. 132 Strand (site of Wellington Street), the first circulating library
-in London was started by a Mr. Wright, in 1740. Opposite Southampton
-Street, from 1686 to late in the last century, lived Vaillant, the eminent
-foreign bookseller. No. 143 was the site of the first office of the
-_Morning Chronicle_ (Perry succeeding Woodfall in 1789). Lord Campbell and
-Hazlitt were theatrical critics to this paper. Mr. Dickens was a
-parliamentary reporter, Mr. Serjeant Spankie an editor, Campbell the poet
-a contributor. On Perry's death, in 1821, it was purchased by Mr. Clement
-for L42,000. The _Mirror_, the first cheap illustrated periodical was also
-published at this office. At No. 1 lived Rudolph Ackermann, the German
-printseller, who introduced lithography and annuals. He illuminated his
-gallery when gas was a novelty. Aaron Hill was born in a dwelling on the
-site of the present Beaufort House; Lord Clarendon lived here while his
-unlucky western house was building; and here, in 1660, the Duke of York
-married the chancellor's daughter.
-
-The York Buildings Water Company failed in 1731. Hungerford Hall and its
-panoramic pictures were burnt in 1854. At No. 18 Strand, in 1776, the
-elder Mathews the comedian was born; Dr. Adam Clarke and Rowland Hill used
-to visit his father, who was a religious bookseller. No. 7 Craven Street
-(Franklin's old house) was long occupied by the Society for the Relief of
-Persons imprisoned for Small Debts. In Northumberland Court, once known as
-"Lieutenants' Lodgings," Nelson once lodged.
-
-
-NORFOLK STREET.--p. 44.
-
-Mr. Dickens has sketched Norfolk Street in his own inimitable way.
-"Norfolk is a delightful street to lodge in, provided you don't go lower
-down (Mrs. Lirriper dates from No. 81); but of a summer evening, when the
-dust and waste paper lie in it, and stray children play in it, and a kind
-of gritty calm and bake settles on it, and a peal of church-bells is
-practising in the neighbourhood, it is a trifle dull; and never have I
-seen it since at such a time, and never shall I see it ever more at such a
-time, without seeing the dull June evening when that forlorn young
-creature sat at her open corner window on the second, and me at my open
-corner window (the other corner) on the third."[765]
-
-
-THE STRAND THEATRE.--p. 53.
-
-The Strand Theatre, No. 169, formerly called Punch's Playhouse, was
-altered in 1831 for Rayner, the low comedian, and Mrs. Waylett, the
-singer. Here were produced many of Douglas Jerrold's early plays. Under
-Miss Swanborough's management, Miss Marie Wilton, arch and witty as
-Shakspere's Maria, delighted the town. Here poor Rogers, now dead, was
-inimitable in burlesque female characters.
-
-
-THE SOMERSET COFFEE-HOUSE.--p. 56.
-
-The bold and redoubtable Junius (now pretty well ascertained, after much
-inkshed, to be Sir Philip Francis) occasionally left his letters for
-Woodfall at the bar of the Somerset Coffee-house at the east corner of the
-entrance to King's College. His other houses of call were the bar of the
-New Exchange, and now and then Munday's in Maiden Lane.
-
-
-SOMERSET HOUSE.--p. 56.
-
-The School of Design, formerly located in Somerset House, was established
-in 1857, under the superintendence of the Board of Trade, for the
-improvement of ornamental art, with regard more especially to our staple
-English manufactures. The school is now incorporated with the Science and
-Art Schools at South Kensington, which have been established, under
-Government, in connection with South Kensington Museum.
-
-
-KING'S COLLEGE.--p. 56.
-
-King's College and School (to the latter of which the author owes some
-gratitude for a portion of his education) form a proprietary institution
-that occupies an east wing of Somerset House which was built to receive
-it. The college was founded in 1828; its fundamental principle is, that
-instruction in religion is an indispensable part of instruction, without
-which knowledge "will be conducive neither to the happiness of the
-individual nor the welfare of the State." The college education is divided
-into five departments:--1. Theology. 2. General Literature and Science. 3.
-Applied Sciences. 4. Medicine. 5. The School. A certificate of good
-conduct, signed by his last instructor, is required of each pupil on
-entry. The age for admission is from nine to sixteen years. A limited
-number of matriculated students can live within the walls. Each proprietor
-can nominate two pupils--one to the school, and one to the college. The
-museum once contained the celebrated calculating machine of the late Mr.
-Charles Babbage. This scientific toy was given by the Commissioners of the
-Woods and Forests. It is now at South Kensington. The collection of
-mechanical models and philosophical instruments was formed by George III.
-and presented to the college by Queen Victoria.
-
-
-HELMET COURT.--p. 56.
-
-Helmet Court-so called from the Helmet Inn-is over against Somerset House.
-The inn is enumerated in a list of houses and taverns made in the reign of
-James I.[766] When the King of Denmark came to see his daughter, he was
-lodged in Somerset House, and new kitchen-ranges were set up at the Helmet
-and the Swan at the expense of the Crown. Henry Condell, a fellow-actor
-with Shakspere, left his houses in Helmet Court to "Elizabeth, his
-well-beloved wife."[767]
-
-
-BEAUFORT BUILDINGS.--p. 83.
-
-Charles Dibdin, born 1745, the author of 1300 songs, gave his musical
-entertainments at the Lyceum, and at Scott and Idle's premises in the
-Strand. Latterly, assisted by his pupils, he conducted public musical
-soirees at Beaufort Buildings.
-
-
-COUTTS'S BANK.--p. 86.
-
-Mr. Coutts died in 1822. He was a pallid, sickly, thin old gentleman, who
-wore a shabby coat and a brown scratch-wig.[768] He was once stopped in
-the street by a good-natured man, who insisted on giving him a guinea. The
-banker, however, declined the present with thanks, saying he was in no
-"immediate want." Miss Harriet Mellon first appeared at Drury Lane in
-1795, as Lydia Languish. Mr. Coutts married Miss Mellon in 1815. She made
-her last appearance at Drury Lane, early in the same year, as Audrey. She
-left the bulk of her fortune to Miss Angela Burdett-Coutts, whose gold the
-_Morning Herald_ once computed at 13 tons, or 107 flour-sacks full. The
-sum, L1,800,000, was the exact sum also left by old Jemmy Wood of
-Gloucester. Counting a sovereign a minute, it would take ten weeks to
-count; and placed sovereign to sovereign, it would reach 24 miles 260
-yards.
-
-Coutts's Bank was founded by George Middleton. Till Coutts's time it stood
-near St. Martin's Church. Good-natured Gay banked there, and afterwards
-Dr. Johnson, Sir Walter Scott, and the Duke of Wellington. The Royal
-Family have banked at Coutts's ever since the reign of Queen Anne.
-
-
-THE DARK ARCHES.--p. 97.
-
-"The Adelphi arches, many of which are used for cellars and coal-wharfs,
-remind one in their grim vastness," says Mr. Timbs, "of the Etruscan
-Cloaca of old Rome." Beneath the "dry arches" the most abandoned
-characters used to lurk; outcasts and vagrants came there to sleep, and
-many a street thief escaped from his pursuers in those subterranean haunts
-before the introduction of gas-light and a vigilant police. Mr. Egg, that
-tragic painter, placed the scene of one of his most pathetic pictures by
-this part of what was once the river-bank.
-
-
-SOCIETY OF ARTS.--p. 99.
-
-Lord Folkestone and Mr. Shipley founded the Society of Arts, at a meeting
-at Rawthmell's Coffee-house, in Catharine Street, in March 1754. It was
-proposed to give rewards for the discovery of cobalt and the cultivation
-of madder in England. Premiums were also to be given for the best drawings
-to a certain number of boys and girls under the age of sixteen. The first
-prize, L15, was adjudged by the society to Cosway, then a boy of fifteen.
-The society was initiated in Crane Court; from thence it removed to
-Craig's Court, Charing Cross; from there to the Strand, opposite Beaufort
-Buildings; and from thence, in 1774, to the Adelphi.
-
-The subjects of Barry's six pictures in the Council Room are the following
-(beginning on the left as you enter):--1. "Orpheus." The figure of Orpheus
-and the heads of the two reclining women are thought fine. 2. "A Grecian
-Harvest Home" (the best of the series). 3. "Crowning the Victors at
-Olympia." 4. "Commerce, or the Triumph of the Thames." (Dr. Burney, the
-composer, is composedly floating among tritons and sea-nymphs in his grand
-tie-wig and queue.) 5. "The Distribution of Premiums by the Society of
-Arts." (This picture contains a portrait of Dr. Johnson, for which he
-sat.) 6. "Elysium, or the State of Final Retribution."
-
-Barry did pretty well with this work, which occupied him from 1777 to
-1783. The society gave him L300 and a gold medal, and also L500, the
-profit of two exhibitions-total, L800.
-
-In 1776 the society had proposed to the Academy to decorate the Council
-Room, and be reimbursed by the exhibition of the works. Reynolds and the
-rest refused, but Barry soon afterwards obtained permission to execute the
-whole, stipulating to be paid for his colours and models. Barry at the
-time had only sixteen shillings in his pocket. During the progress of the
-work the painter, being in want, applied for a small subscription through
-Sir George Savile, but in vain. An insolent secretary even objected to his
-charge for colours and models. The society afterwards relented and
-advanced L100. Barry died poor, neglected, and half crazy, in 1806, aged
-sixty-five.
-
-The Adelphi Rooms contain three poor statues (Mars, Venus, and Narcissus)
-by Bacon, R.A., a portrait of Lord Romney by Reynolds, and a full-length
-portrait of Jacob, Lord Folkestone, the first president, by Gainsborough.
-In the ante-room, in a bad light, hangs a characteristic likeness of poor,
-wrongheaded Barry. The pictures are to be seen between ten and four any
-day but Wednesday and Saturday. The society meets every Wednesday at eight
-from October 31 to July 31.
-
-In the Council Room, that parade-ground of learned men, Goldsmith once
-made an attempt at a speech, but was obliged to sit down in confusion. Dr.
-Johnson once spoke there on "Mechanics," "with a propriety, perspicuity,
-and energy which excited general admiration."[769]
-
-Jonas Hanway, that worthy old Russian merchant, when he came to see
-Barry's pictures, insisted on leaving a guinea instead of the customary
-shilling. The Prince of Wales gave Barry sittings. Timothy Hollis left him
-L100. Lord Aldborough declared that the painter had surpassed Raphael.
-Lord Romney gave him 100 guineas for a copy of one of the heads, and Dr.
-Johnson praised the "grasping mind" in the six pictures.[770]
-
-
-DUCHY OF LANCASTER.--p. 110.
-
-The Duchy of Lancaster is a liberty (whatever that means) in the Strand.
-It belongs to the Crown, the Queen being "Duchess of Lancaster." It begins
-without Temple Bar and runs as far as Cecil Street. The annual revenue of
-the duchy is about L75,000.
-
-
-WATERLOO BRIDGE.--p. 124.
-
-Hood's exquisite poem, "The Bridge of Sighs," appeared in "Hood's
-Magazine" in May 1844. The poet's son informs me that he believes that the
-poem was not suggested by any special incident, but that a great many
-suicides had been reported in the papers about that time.
-
- "The bleak wind of _March_
- Made her tremble and shiver"
-
-marks the date of the writing,
-
- "But not the dark arch
- Of the black flowing river."
-
-The dark arch is that of Waterloo Bridge, a spot frequently selected by
-unfortunate women who meditate suicide, on account of its solitude and
-privacy.
-
-
-YORK HOUSE.--p. 135.
-
-After the death of Buckingham, York House was entrusted to the
-guardianship of that Flemish adventurer and quack in art, Sir Balthasar
-Gerbier, who here quarrelled and would have fought with Gentilleschi, a
-Pisan artist who had been invited over by Charles I., and of whom he was
-intolerably jealous. Some of Gentilleschi's work is still preserved at
-Marlborough House. The York Buildings Waterworks Company was started in
-the 27th year of Charles II. In 1688 there were forty-eight shares. After
-the Scotch rebellion in 1715, the company invested large sums in
-purchasing forfeited estates, which no Scotchman would buy. The concern
-became bankrupt. The residue of the Scotch estates was sold in 1783 for
-L102,537.[771]
-
-
-BUCKINGHAM STREET.--p. 135.
-
-It is always pleasant to recall any scenes on which the light of Mr.
-Dickens's fancy has even momentarily rested. It was to Buckingham Street
-that Mr. David Copperfield went with his aunt to take chambers commanding
-a view of the river. They were at the top of the house, very near the
-fire-escape, with a half-blind entry and a stone-blind pantry.[772]
-
-
-HUNGERFORD BRIDGE.--p. 138.
-
-The Hungerford Suspension Bridge was purchased in 1860 by a company of
-gentlemen, and used in the construction of the bridge across the Avon at
-Clifton. This aerial roadway has a span of 703 feet, and is built at the
-height of 245 feet. It cost little short of L100,000. A bridge at Clifton
-was first suggested in 1753 by Alderman Vick of Bristol, who left a
-nest-egg of L1000. The bridge was completed and opened in 1864.
-
-
-THE GAIETY THEATRE, STRAND (NORTH SIDE).--p. 147.
-
-This elegant and well-appointed theatre, near the corner of Wellington
-Street, was built in 1868, from the designs of Mr. C. J. Phillips. It
-occupies the site of the Strand Music Hall, a large building which had
-been erected in the place of an arcade which the late Lord Exeter had
-built here in order to resuscitate the glories of old Exeter 'Change. Both
-the arcade and music hall proved disastrous failures, whilst the Gaiety
-Theatre, on the other hand, has turned out immensely successful, under the
-management of Mr. John Hollingshead.
-
-
-THE STRAND (NORTH SIDE).--p. 147.
-
-Sir John Denham, the poet, when a student at Lincoln's Inn, in 1638, in a
-drunken frolic blotted out with ink all the Strand signs from Temple Bar
-to Charing Cross.
-
-In a house in Butcher Row, Winter, Catesby, Wright, and Guy Fawkes met and
-took the sacrament together. Raleigh's widow lived in Boswell Court, and
-also Lord Chief Justice Lyttelton and Sir Richard and Lady Fanshawe; and
-in Clement's Lane resided Sir John Trevor, cousin to Judge Jeffries and
-Speaker to the House of Commons. Dr. Johnson's pew at St. Clement's is No.
-18 in the north gallery; Dr. Croly put up a tablet to his memory. The
-_Tatler_, 1710, announces a stage-coach from the One Bell in the Strand
-(No. 313) to Dorchester.
-
-No. 317 was the forge kept by the Duchess of Albemarle's father, and it
-faced the Maypole; Aubrey describes it as the corner shop, the first
-turning to the right as you come out of the Strand into Drury Lane. Dr.
-King died at No. 332, once the _Morning Chronicle_ office. The New Exeter
-Change--the site of which is now covered by the Gaiety Theatre and
-Restaurant--was designed by Sydney Smirke, with Jacobean frontage. East of
-Exeter Change stood the Canary House, mentioned by Dryden as famous for
-its sack with the "abricot" flavour. Pepys mentions Cary House, probably
-the same place. At No. 352 was born, in 1798, Henry Neale the poet, son of
-the map and heraldic engraver. In Exeter Change No. 1 of the _Literary
-Gazette_ was published, January 25, 1817. Old Parr lodged at No. 405, the
-Queen's Head public-house. No. 429, built for an insurance office by Mr.
-Cockerell, has a fine facade. At No. 448 is the Electric Telegraph Office;
-the time signal-ball, liberated by a galvanic current sent from Greenwich,
-falls exactly at one, and drops ten feet. The old Golden Cross Hotel stood
-farther west than the present. The Lowther Arcade, designed by Witherden
-Young, is 245 feet long and 20 feet broad. Here the electric eel and
-Perkin's steam-gun were exhibited about 1838. In 1832 a Society for the
-Exhibition of Models had been formed here. In 1831 the skeleton of a whale
-was exhibited in a tent in Trafalgar Square; it was 98 feet long, and
-Cuvier had estimated it to be nearly a thousand years old.
-
-It should be added that for most of the facts in this note the author is
-indebted to that treasure-house of topographical anecdote, _Curiosities of
-London_, by J. Timbs, Esq., F.S.A., a book displaying an almost boundless
-industry.
-
-
-THE CROWN AND ANCHOR TAVERN.--p. 152.
-
-The Crown and Anchor Tavern, at the corner of Arundel Street, was for some
-years the Whittington Club. Before the alterations it had an entrance from
-the Strand, which is now closed, its door being now in Arundel Street.
-Douglas Jerrold was one of the earliest promoters of this club, which was
-much used by young men of business. In 1873, after having been closed for
-some time, it was re-opened as the Temple Club. The King of Clubs was
-started about 1801 by Mr. Robert (Bobus) Smith, brother of Sydney, a
-friend of Canning's, and Advocate-General of Calcutta. It sat every
-Saturday at the Crown and Anchor Tavern, at that time famous for its
-dinners and wine, and a great resort for clubs. Politics were excluded.
-One of the chief members was Mr. Richard Sharpe, a partner in a West India
-house, and a Parliamentary speaker during Addington's and Perceval's
-administrations. Mackintosh, Scarlett, Rogers the poetical banker, John
-Allen, and M. Dumont, an emigre and friend of the Abbe de Lisle, were also
-members. Erskine, too, often dropped in to spend an hour stolen from his
-immense and overflowing business. He there told his story of Lord
-Loughborough trying to persuade him not to take Tom Paine's brief. He once
-met Curran there. A member of the club describes the ape's face of the
-Irish orator, with the sunken and diminutive eyes that flashed lightning
-as he compared poor wronged Ireland to "Niobe palsied with sorrow and
-despair over her freedom, and her prosperity struck dead before her."[773]
-
-
-WYCH STREET.--p. 164.
-
-"In a horrible little court, branching northward from Wych Street," writes
-Mr. Sala, in an essay written in America, "good old George Cruikshank once
-showed me the house where Jack Sheppard, the robber and prison-breaker,
-served his apprenticeship to Mr. Wood, the carpenter; and on a beam in the
-loft of this house Jack is said to have carved his name. * * * Theodore
-Hook used to say that "he never passed through Wych Street in a
-hackney-coach without being blocked up by a hearse and a coal waggon in
-the van, and a mud-cart and the Lord Mayor's carriage in the rear."
-
-
-NEWSPAPER OFFICES.--p. 167.
-
-It is almost impossible to enumerate all the Strand newspaper offices,
-present and past. It is, perhaps, sufficient to mention _The Spectator_ (a
-very able paper,--office in Waterloo Place); _The London Journal_ (a
-cheap, well-conducted paper with an enormous circulation); _The Family
-Herald_ (the house formerly of Mr. Leigh, bookseller, a relation of the
-elder Mathews, and the first introducer of the _Guides_ that Mr. Murray
-has now rendered so complete); _The Illustrated Times_, _The Morning
-Post_, _Notes and Queries_, _The Queen_, _Law Times_, _Athenaeum_, and
-_Field_ (in Wellington Street); _Bell's Life_, _The Globe_, _Bell's
-Messenger_, _The Observer_, and lastly, _The Pall Mall Gazette_, and _The
-Saturday Review_.
-
-
-THE BEEF-STEAK CLUB.--p. 172.
-
-Bubb Doddington, Aaron Hill, "Leonidas" Glover, Sir Peere Williams (a
-youth of promise, shot at the siege of Belleisle), Hoadly, and the elder
-Colman (the author of _The Suspicious Husband_), were either guests or
-members of this illustrious club, whose origin dates back to Rich's days
-in 1735. Then came the days of Lord Sandwich, Wilkes, Bonnell Thornton,
-Arthur Murphy, Churchill, and Tickell. In 1785 the Prince of Wales
-(afterwards George IV.) became the twenty-fifth member.
-
-Churchill resigned when the club began to receive him coldly after his
-desertion of his wife. Wilkes never visited the club after the
-contemptuous rejection of his infamous poem, the _Essay on Woman_. Garrick
-was a great ornament of the club; he once dined there dressed in the
-character of Ranger. Little Serjeant Prime was another club celebrity of
-that period. An anonymous writer describes a meeting of the club in or
-about 1799. There were present John Kemble, Cobb of the India House, the
-Duke of Clarence, Sir John Cox Hippisley, Charles Morris (the writer of
-our best convivial songs), Ferguson of Aberdeen, Mingay, and the Duke of
-Norfolk. As the clock struck five, a curtain drew up, discovering the
-kitchen through a gridiron grating, over which was inscribed this motto--
-
- "If it were done, when 'tis done, then 'twere well
- It were done quickly."
-
-The Duke of Norfolk ate at least three steaks, and then when the cloth was
-removed, took the chair on a dais, elevated some steps above the table,
-and above which hung the small cocked-hat in which Garrick played Ranger,
-and other insignia of the society. He was also invested with an orange
-ribbon, to which a silver gridiron was appended. The sound motto "Beef and
-Liberty" is inscribed on the buttons of the members. It is the duty of the
-junior member at this club to bring up the wine. The writer before quoted
-describes seeing Lord Brougham and the Duke of Leinster performing this
-subordinate duty. Sir John Hippisley was the man who Windham used to say
-was very _nearly_ a clever fellow. Cobb was the author of "First Floor" (a
-farce) and of three comic operas--"The Haunted Tower," "The Siege of
-Belgrade," and "Ramah Drug." To the two former Storace set his finest
-music.
-
-"Captain" Morris, the author of those delightful songs, "The Town and
-Country Life" and "When the Fancy-stirring Bowl wakes the Soul to
-Pleasure," used to brew punch and "out-watch the Bear" at this club till
-after his seventy-eighth year. The Duke of Norfolk, at Kemble's
-solicitation, gave the veteran bard a pleasant little Sabine retreat near
-Dorking. Jack Richards, the presbyter of the club, was famous for
-inflicting long verbal harangues on condemned social culprits.
-
-Another much respected member was old William Linley, Sheridan's
-brother-in-law; nor must we forget Richard Wilson, Lord Eldon's secretary,
-and Mr. Walsh, who had been in early life valet to Lord Chesterfield. The
-club secretary, in 1828, was Mr. Henry Stephenson, comptroller to the Duke
-of Sussex; and about this time also flourished, either as guests or
-members, Lord Viscount Kirkwall, Rowland Stephenson the banker, and Mr.
-Denison, then M.P. for Surrey.[774]
-
-A literary friend tells me that the last time he saw Mr. Thackeray was one
-evening in Exeter Street. The eminent satirist of snobs was peering about
-for the stage door of the Lyceum Theatre, or some other means of entrance
-to the Beef-steak Club, with whose members he had been invited to dine.
-
-
-EXETER CHANGE.--p. 175.
-
-Thomas Clark, "the King of Exeter Change," took a cutler's stall here in
-1765 with L100 lent him by a stranger. By trade and thrift he grew so rich
-that he once returned his income at L6000 a year, and before his death in
-1816 he rented the whole ground-floor of the Change. He left nearly half a
-million of money, and one of his daughters married Mr. Hamlet, the
-celebrated jeweller. Some of the old materials of Exeter House, including
-a pair of large Corinthian columns at the east end, were used in building
-the Change, which was the speculation of a Dr. Barbon, in the reign of
-William and Mary.
-
-
-TRAFALGAR SQUARE.--p. 221.
-
-The fountains were constructed in 1845, after designs from Sir Charles
-Barry.
-
-Morley's Hotel (1 to 3 at the south-east corner) is much frequented by
-American travellers, who may be seen on summer evenings calmly smoking
-their cigars outside the chief entrance. The late proprietor, who died a
-few years since, left nearly a hundred thousand pounds to the Foundling
-and other charities.
-
-
-THE UNION CLUB.--p. 226.
-
-The Union Club House, which stands on the south-west of Trafalgar Square
-and faces Cockspur Street, was built by Sir Robert Smirke, R.A. The club,
-consisting of 1000 members, has been in existence forty-four years; its
-expenditure is about L10,000 a year. Its trustees are the Earl of
-Lonsdale, Viscount Gage, Lord Trimleston, and Sir John Henry Lowther,
-Bart. The entrance money is thirty guineas, the annual subscription six
-guineas. Mr. Peter Cunningham, writing in 1849, describes the club as "the
-resort chiefly of mercantile men of eminence;" but its present members are
-of all the professions.
-
-
-DRUMMOND'S BANK.--p. 227.
-
-This bank is older than Coutts's. Pope banked there. The Duke of
-Sutherland and many of the Scottish nobility bank there.
-
-
-ST. MARTIN'S LANE.--p. 252.
-
-Roger Payne was a celebrated bookbinder in Duke's Court, St. Martin's
-Lane, London. This ingenious artist, a native of Windsor Forest, was born
-in 1739, and first became initiated into the rudiments of his business
-under the auspices of Mr. Pote, bookseller to Eton College. On settling in
-the metropolis, about the year 1766, he worked for a short time for Thomas
-Osborne, bookseller in Holborn, but principally for _honest_ Thomas Payne,
-of the Mews Gate, who, although of the same name, was not related to him.
-His talents as an artist, particularly in the finishing department, were
-of the first order, and such as, up to his time, had not been developed by
-any other of his countrymen. "Roger Payne," says Dr. Dibdin, "rose like a
-star, diffusing lustre on all sides, and rejoicing the hearts of all true
-sons of bibliomania." He succeeded in executing binding with such artistic
-taste as to command the admiration and patronage of many noblemen. His
-_chef-d'oeuvre_ is a large paper copy of AEschylus, translated by the Rev.
-Robert Potter, the ornaments and decorations of which are most splendid
-and classical. The binding of this book cost Earl Spencer fifteen guineas.
-
-It was by his artistic talents alone that Roger Payne became so celebrated
-in his day; for, owing to his excessive indulgence in strong ale, he was
-in person a deplorable specimen of humanity. As evidence of this
-propensity, his account-book contains the following memorandum of one
-day's expenditure: "For bacon, one halfpenny; for liquor, one shilling."
-Even his trade bills are literary curiosities in their way, and frequently
-illustrate his unfortunate propensity. On one delivered to Mr. Evans for
-binding Barry's work on _The Wines of the Ancients_, he wrote:--
-
- "Homer the bard, who sung in highest strains,
- Had, festive gift, a goblet for his pains:
- Falernian gave Horace, Virgil fire,
- And barley-wine my British muse inspire;
- Barley-wine, first from Egypt's learned shore,
- Be this the gift to me from Calvert's store!"
-
-During the latter part of his life, as might have been expected, Roger
-Payne was the victim of poverty and disease. He closed his earthly career
-at his residence in Duke's Court on Nov. 20, 1787, and was interred in the
-burial-ground of St. Martin's-in-the-Fields, at the expense of his worthy
-patron, Mr. Thomas Payne. This excellent man had also a portrait taken and
-engraved of his namesake at his work in his miserable den, under which Mr.
-Bindley wrote the following lines:--
-
- "ROGERUS PAYNE: Natus Vindesor. MDCCXXXIX.; denatus Londin.
- MDCCLXXXVII. Effigiem hanc graphicam solertis BIBLIOPEGI [Greek:
- Mnemosunon] meritis BIBLIOPOLA dedit. Sumptibus Thomae Payne. [Etch'd
- and published by S. Harding, No. 127 Pall Mall, March 1, 1800."][775]
-
-
-HEMINGS' ROW.--p. 252.
-
-Hemings' Row, St. Martin's Lane, was originally called Dirty Lane.[776]
-The place probably derived its name from John Hemings, an apothecary
-living there in 1679. Peter Cunningham writes in 1849: "Upon an old wooden
-house at the west end of this street, near the second-floor window, is the
-name given above, and the date 1680."[777]
-
-
-BEDFORDBURY.--p. 261.
-
-Mr. James Payne, a bookseller of Bedfordbury (perhaps the son of Thomas
-Payne), died in Paris in 1809. Mr. Burnet describes him as remarkable for
-amenity as for probity and learning. Repeated journeys to Italy, France,
-and Germany had enabled him to collect a great number of precious MSS. and
-rare first editions, most of which went to enrich Lord Spencer's
-library--the most splendid collection ever made by a private person.[778]
-
-
-EARL OF BRISTOL.--p. 264.
-
-Digby, Earl of Bristol, whom Pepys accuses of losing King Charles his head
-by breaking off the treaty of Uxbridge, lived in Lincoln's Inn Fields. His
-second daughter, Lady Ann, married the evil Earl of Sutherland. It was
-Bristol who was base enough to impeach Lord Clarendon for selling Dunkirk
-and making Charles marry a barren queen. Burnet describes the earl as
-having become a Roman Catholic in order to be qualified for serving under
-Don John in Flanders. He was an astrologer,[779] and had the impudence to
-tell the king he was in danger from his brother. He renounced his new
-religion openly at Wimbledon,[780] and then fled to France.
-
-
-WILD HOUSE.--p. 277.
-
-Wild House, Drury Lane, was formerly the town mansion of the Welds of
-Lulworth Castle. Short's Gardens were so called from Dudley Short, Esq.,
-who had a mansion here with fine gardens in the reign of Charles II. In
-Parker Street, Philip Parker, Esq., had a mansion in 1623.
-
-
-CRAVEN HOUSE, DRURY LANE.--p. 292.
-
-Pepys frequently mentions Lord Craven as attending the meetings at the
-Trinity House upon Admiralty business. The old veteran, whom he
-irreverently calls "a coxcomb," complimented him on several occasions upon
-his popularity with the Duke of York. Pennant says that Lord Craven and
-the Duke of Albemarle "heroically stayed in town during the dreadful
-pestilence, and, at the hazard of their lives, preserved order in the
-midst of the terrors of the time."[781] This fine old Don Quixote happened
-to be on duty at St. James's when William's Dutch troops were coming
-across the park to take possession. Lord Craven would have opposed their
-entrance, but his timid master forbidding him to resist, he marched away
-"with sullen dignity." The date of the sale of the pest-houses should be
-1722, not 1772.
-
-
-DRURY LANE.--p. 299.
-
-In the Regency time, and before, Drury Lane was what the Haymarket is now.
-Oyster shops, low taverns, and singing-rooms of the worst description
-surrounded the theatre. One of the worst of these, even down to our own
-times, was "Jessop's" ("The Finish")--a great resort of low
-prize-fighters, gamblers, sporting men, swindlers, spendthrifts, and
-drunkards. "_H.'s_" (I veil the infamous name), described in a MS. of
-Horace Walpole, is now a small, dingy theatrical tailor's, and in the
-besmirched back-shop shreds of gilding and smears of colour still show
-where Colonel Hanger knocked off the heads of champagne bottles, and
-afterwards, Lord Waterford and such "bloods" squandered their money and
-their health.
-
-
-THE SAVAGE CLUB.--p. 303.
-
-The Savage Club, which was started at the Crown Tavern in Drury Lane, and
-then removed to rooms next the Lyceum, and said to have been those once
-occupied by the Beef-steak Club, is now moored at Evans's Hotel, Covent
-Garden. The name of the club has a duplex signification; it refers to
-Richard Savage the poet, and also to the Bohemian freedom of its members.
-It includes in its number no small share of the literary talent of the
-London newspaper and dramatic world.
-
-
-CLARE MARKET.--p. 339.
-
-Denzil Street was so called by the Earl of Clare in 1682, in memory of his
-uncle Denzil, Lord Holles, who died 1679-80. He was one of the five
-members of Parliament whom Charles I. so despotically and so unwisely
-attempted to seize. The inscription on the south-west wall of the street
-was renewed in 1796.
-
-
-STREET CHARACTERS.--p. 381.
-
-It would be impossible to recapitulate the street celebrities from
-Hogarth's time to the present day which St. Giles's has harboured. A
-writer in _Notes and Queries_ mentions a man who used to sell dolls'
-bedsteads, and who was always said to have been the king's evidence
-against the Cato Street conspirators. Charles Lamb describes, in his own
-inimitable way, an old sailor without legs who used to propel his
-mutilated body about the streets on a wooden framework supported on
-wheels. He was said to have been maimed during the Gordon riots. But I
-have now myself to add to the list the most remarkable relic of all. There
-is (1868?) to be seen any day in the London streets a gaunt grey-haired
-old blind beggar, with hard strongly-marked features and bushy eyebrows.
-This is no less a person than Hare the murderer, who years ago aided Burke
-in murdering poor mendicants and houseless people in Edinburgh, and
-selling their bodies to the surgeons for dissection. Hare, a young man
-then, turned king's evidence and received a pardon. He came to London with
-his blood money, and entered himself as a labourer under an assumed name
-at a tannery in the suburbs. The men discovering him, threw the wretch
-into a steeping-pit, from which he escaped, but with loss of both eyes.
-
-
-THE SEVEN DIALS.--p. 385.
-
-Evelyn describes going (Oct. 5, 1694) to see the seven new streets in St.
-Giles's, then building by Mr. Neale, who had introduced lotteries in
-imitation of those of Venice. The Doric column was removed in July 1773,
-in the hope of finding a sum of money supposed to be concealed under the
-base. The search was ineffectual; the pillar now ornaments the common at
-Weybridge. Gay describes Seven Dials, in his own pleasant, inimitable way
-(circa 1712).
-
- "Where fam'd St. Giles's ancient limits spread,
- An inrailed column rears its lofty head,
- Here to seven streets seven dials count the day,
- And from each other catch the circling ray;
- Here oft the peasant, with inquiring face,
- Bewildered trudges on from place to place;
- He dwells on every sign with stupid gaze,
- Enters the narrow alley's doubtful maze,
- Tries every winding court and street in vain,
- And doubles o'er his weary steps again."[782]
-
-Martinus Scriblerus is supposed to have been born in Seven Dials. Horace
-Walpole describes the progress of family portraits from the drawing-room
-to the parlour, from the parlour to the counting-house, from the
-housekeeper's room to the garret, and from thence to flutter in rags
-before a broker's shop in the Seven Dials.[783] Here Taylor laid the scene
-of "Monsieur Tonson."
-
- "Be gar! there's Monsieur Tonson come again!"
-
-The celebrated Mr. Catnach, the printer of street ballads, lived in Seven
-Dials. He died about 1847.
-
-
-STREETS IN ST. GILES'S.--p. 385.
-
-In Dyot Street lived Curll's "Corinna," Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas, and her
-mother.[784] At the Black Horse and Turk's Head public-houses in this
-street, those wretches Haggerty and Holloway, in November 1802, planned
-the murder of Mr. Steele on Hounslow Heath, and here they returned after
-the perpetration of the crime. At the execution of these murderers at the
-Old Bailey, in 1807, twenty-eight persons were trampled to death. The
-street was immortalised by a song in _Bombastes Furioso_, an excellent and
-boisterous burlesque tragic opera, written by William Barnes Rhodes, a
-clerk in the Bank of England. Bainbridge and Breckridge Streets, St.
-Giles's, now no more, were built prior to 1672, and derived their names
-from the owners, eminent parishioners in the reign of Charles II. Dyot
-Street was inhabited as late as 1803 by Philip Dyot, Esq., a descendant of
-Richard Dyot, from whom it derived its name. In 1710 there was a
-"Mendicants' Convivial Club" held at the Welsh's Head in this street. The
-club was founded in 1660, when its meetings were held at the Three Crowns
-in the Poultry. Denmark Street was probably built in 1689. Zoffany lived
-at No. 9. Bunbury, the caricaturist, laid the scene of his "Sunday Evening
-Conversation" in this street. In July 1771 Sir John Murray, the
-Pretender's secretary, was carried off in a coach from his house near St.
-Giles's Church by armed men.[785]
-
-
-SAINT GILES.--p. 385.
-
-This saint has some scurvy worshippers. Pierce Egan, in his _Life in
-London_ (1820), afterwards dramatised, describes the thieves' kitchens and
-beggars' revels, which men about town in those days thought it "the
-correct thing," as the slang goes, to see and share. "The Rookery" was a
-triangular mass of buildings, bounded by Bainbridge, George, and High
-Streets. It was swept away by New Oxford Street. The lodgings were
-threepence a night. Sir Henry Ellis, in 1813, counted seventeen
-horse-shoes nailed to thresholds in Monmouth Street as antidotes against
-witches. Jews preponderate in this unsavoury street. Mr. Henry Mayhew
-describes a conversation with a St. Giles's poet who wrote Newgate
-ballads, Courvousier's Lamentation, and elegies. He was paid one shilling
-each for them. A parliamentary report of 1848 describes Seven Dials as in
-a degraded state. "Vagrants, thieves, sharpers, scavengers, basket-women,
-charwomen, army seamstresses, and prostitutes, compose its mass. Infidels,
-chartists, socialists, and blasphemers have their head-quarters there.
-There are a hundred and fifty shops open on the Sunday. The ragged-school
-there is badly situated and uninviting." Mr. Albert Smith says gin shops
-are the only guides in "the dirty labyrinth" of the Seven Dials. The
-author once accompanied a Scripture-reader to some of the lowest and
-poorest courts and alleys of St. Giles's. In one bare room, he remembers,
-on an earth floor, sat a blind beggar waiting for the return of his boy, a
-sweeper, who had been sent out to a street-crossing to try and earn some
-bread. In another room there was a poor old lonely woman who had made a
-pet of an immense ram. We ended our tour by visiting an Irishwoman who had
-been converted from "Popery." While we were there, some Irish boys
-surrounded the house and shouted in at the key-hole, threatening to
-denounce her to the priest. When we emerged from this den we were received
-with a shower of peculiarly hard small potatoes, a penance which the
-author bore somewhat impatiently, while the Scripture-reader, who seemed
-accustomed to such rough compliments, took the blows like an early
-Christian martyr.
-
-
-LINCOLN'S INN HALL.--p. 398.
-
-In 1800 or 1801 Mackintosh delivered lectures in the old Lincoln's Inn
-Hall on the "Laws of Nature and Nations." They were attended by Canning,
-Lord Liverpool, and a brilliant audience. They contained a panegyric on
-Grotius. In style Mackintosh was measured and monotonous--of the school of
-Robertson and Gilbert Stuart. He made one mistake in imputing the doctrine
-of the association of ideas to Hobbes, which Coleridge corrected. He
-refuted the theories of Godwin in a masterly way.[786]
-
-
-SERLE STREET, LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS.--p. 401.
-
-This street derived its name from a Mr. Henry Serle, who died intestate
-circa 1690, much in debt, and with lands heavily mortgaged. He purchased
-the property from the executors of Sir John Birkenhead, the conductor of
-the Royalist paper, _Mercurius Aulicus_, during the Civil War, a writer
-whose poetry Lawes set to music, and who died in 1679. New Square was
-formerly called Serle's Court, and the arms of Serle are over the Carey
-Street gateway. The second edition of _Barnaby's Journal_ was printed in
-1716, for one Illidge, under Serle's Gate, Lincoln's Inn, New Square.[787]
-Addison seems to have visited Serle's Coffee-house, to study from some
-quiet nook the "humours" of the young barristers. There is a letter extant
-from Akenside, the poet, addressed to Jeremiah Dyson, that excellent
-friend and patron who defended him from the attacks of Warburton at
-Serle's Coffee-house.
-
-
-CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE SOCIETY.--p. 414.
-
-The Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, now at 66 Lincoln's Inn
-Fields, had apartments in 1714 at No. 6 Serle's Court. This society was
-founded by Dr. Bray and four friends on the 8th of March 1699, and it
-celebrated its third jubilee, or 150th anniversary, in 1849. The society
-assists schools and colonial churches, and is said to have distributed
-more than a hundred millions of Bibles and Prayer-books since its
-foundation.
-
-
-THE SOANE MUSEUM.--p. 424.
-
-The following squib is said to have been placed under the plates at an
-Academic dinner:--
-
- "THE MODERN GOTH.
-
- "Glory to thee, great artist soul of taste
- For mending pigsties where a plank's displaced,
- Whose towering genius plans from deep research
- Houses and temples fit for Master Birch
- To grace his shop on that important day
- When huge twelfth-cakes are raised in bright array.
- Each pastry pillar shows thy vast design;
- Hail! then, to thee, and all great works of thine.
- Come, let me place thee in the foremost rank
- With him whose dulness discomposed the Bank."
-
-The writer then, apostrophising Wren, adds--
-
- "Oh, had he lived to see thy blessed work,
- To see pilasters scored like loins of pork,
- To see the orders in confusion move,
- Scrolls fixed below and pedestals above,
- To see defiance hurled at Rome and Greece,
- Old Wren had never left the world in peace.
- Look where I will--above, below is shown
- A pure disordered order of thy own;
- Where lines and circles curiously unite
- A base compounded, compound composite,
- A thing from which in turn it may be said,
- Each lab'ring mason turns abash'd his head;
- Which Holland reprobates and Dance derides,
- While tasteful Wyatt holds his aching sides."[788]
-
-Soane foolishly brought an action against the bitter writer; but Lord
-Kenyon directed the jury to find for the defendant on the ground that the
-satire was not personal.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
- Abingdon, Mrs., "Nosegay Fan," 318
-
- Adam, the Brothers, their design, 96;
- joke against their Scotch workmen, 103
-
- Adam, Robert, death and funeral of, 104
-
- Addison, the "Cato" of, 311;
- Booth's representation of "Cato," _ib._
-
- Adelphi, site of the, 97;
- the residence of Garrick, _ib._;
- Johnson and Boswell at, 98;
- prowlers in its arches, 448
-
- Adelphi Rooms, the, 449
-
- Adelphi Theatre, first success of, 180;
- Terry and Yates as its lessees, _ib._;
- appearance of "Jim Crow" in, _ib._;
- the elder Mathews manager of, _ib._;
- last great successes at, 185
-
- Akenside, at Tom's Coffee-house, 38
-
- Albemarle, Duke of. _See_ Monk
-
- Albemarle, Duchess of, 93;
- anecdotes of, 301
-
- "All the Year Round," 170
-
- Ambassador, Spanish, attack of an anti-Catholic mob on his house, 277
-
- Ambassadors, French and Spanish, affray between the retainers of, 134
-
- Amiens, proclamation of peace of, 18
-
- Anderson, Dr. Patrick, his Scotch pills, 53;
- story of Sir Walter Scott relating to, _ib._
-
- Anne of Denmark, her masques and masquerades in Somerset House, 58;
- accident at the funeral of, 195
-
- Anstis, John, Garter King at Arms, 43
-
- Antiquaries, Society of, 70
-
- Apollo Court and Room, 6
-
- Armstrong, Sir Thomas, 11
-
- Arnold, Dr., and the Lyceum, 171
-
- Art, English, institutions for promoting, 75
-
- Arts, the Society of, its place of meeting, 99;
- Barry's paintings, 100, 449;
- premiums and bounties distributed by, _ib._;
- Barry at work on its frescoes, 101;
- foundation and object of, 449;
- Barry's application to, _ib._
-
- Artists' Club in Clare Market, 346
-
- Arundel House, Strand, 39;
- occupants of, 40;
- death of the Countess of Nottingham in, 41;
- the Marquis of Rosney's description of, _ib._;
- Thomas Howard's treasures of art in, 42;
- neglect of antiquities in, _ib._;
- rooms lent to the Royal Society in, 43;
- streets erected on the site of, _ib._;
- Gay's remarks on its glories, _ib._
-
- Arundel Street, Strand, its residents, 43, 164
-
- Astronomical Society, 71
-
- "Athenaeum" (Newspaper), 170
-
- Atterbury, Bishop, 155
-
-
- Bacon, Lord, his ingratitude, 32;
- birthplace of, 127;
- events of his life connected with York House, 127-8;
- anecdotes of his early life, 128;
- verses addressed to him at Durham House, 129;
- his early legal studies, 130
-
- Balmerino, Lord, an anecdote of, 234
-
- Baltimore, Lord, infamous conduct of, 176
-
- Banks. _See_ Coutts, Child, and Drummond
-
- Bannister, Jack, 325
-
- Barrow, Dr. Isaac, the death of, 232
-
- Barry, his violence, 101;
- his diligence at work, _ib._;
- his paintings in the Council Room of the Society of Arts, _ib._;
- effect produced by his paintings, 449;
- his poverty and death, _ib._
-
- Barry, Mrs., her theatrical career, 433
-
- Barry, Spanger, an actor, 315
-
- Basing House, an adventure at, 279
-
- Beard, singer and actor, 249
-
- Beauclerk, Topham, 98
-
- Beaufort, House, Strand, 83, 447
-
- Beckett, Andrew, works of, 99
-
- Beckett, Thomas, bookseller, 99
-
- Bedford, the Earls of, the old town house of, 185;
- streets named after his family, _ib._
-
- Bedford Street once fashionable, 186;
- Half Moon Tavern in, _ib._;
- residents of, 187;
- Constitution Tavern in, 197
-
- Bedfordbury, 236, 459
-
- Beefsteak Club, 172;
- badge of, _ib._;
- members of, 173;
- Peg Woffington, president of one at Dublin, _ib._;
- another started by Rich and Lambert, _ib._;
- its place of meeting, _ib._;
- distinguished members of, 454;
- sale of its effects, 174
-
- Bell, Mr. Jacob, 225
-
- Bellamy, George Anne, actress, 317
-
- Berkeley, Dr., 155
-
- Bermudas, the Justice Overdo's allusion to, 235
-
- Berties, the, 417
-
- Betterton, the "Garrick" of his age, 433;
- the parts he represented, _ib._;
- his death, _ib._
-
- Betty, Master, 321
-
- Billington, Mrs., 333
-
- Bindley, James, father of the Society of Antiquaries, his burial-place,
- 164
-
- Birch, Dr., the antiquary, 36;
- his books and literary remains, 48;
- Dr. Johnson's remark on, _ib._
-
- Birkenhead, Sir John, 245
-
- Bishop, operas produced by, 334
-
- Black Jack, 348, 440
-
- Blake, the mystical painter, 83
-
- Blemund's Ditch, 353
-
- Bohemia, the Queen of, 293;
- reports concerning, 295;
- Sir Henry Wotton's lines to, _ib._;
- memorial of her husband, 296
-
- Boleyn, Anne, at Temple Bar, 21
-
- Bonomi, 78
-
- Booksellers, their shops the haunts of wits and poets, 219
-
- Booth, Barton, 311
-
- Boswell, James, admitted into the Literary Club, 17;
- the supposed Shaksperean MSS., 47.
-
- Bowl-yard, its name, 373
-
- Boydell, Alderman, 258
-
- Bracegirdle, Mrs., 49;
- her abduction, 50;
- her charity, 347;
- her popularity, 434
-
- Braham, John, 333
-
- Bristol, Earl of, 264;
- particulars concerning, 459
-
- Britain's Bourse. _See_ Exchange
-
- Brocklesby, Dr. Richard, friend of Burke and Johnson, 45;
- attends Lord Chatham when he fainted in the House of Lords, _ib._
-
- Brougham, Lord, 396
-
- Buckingham, the first Duke of, 130;
- his residences, _ib._;
- patronage of art, 131;
- Dryden's lines on, 132;
- Pope's lines on, _ib._;
- Clarendon's view of his character, 133
-
- Buckingham, the second Duke of, 133
-
- Buckingham Street, 135;
- distinguished residents in, 136, 137;
- Mr. David Copperfield's visit to, 451
-
- Bull's Head, the, Clare Market, 346
-
- Burgess, Dr., a witty preacher, 159;
- successors of, _ib._
-
- Burleigh, Lord, his residence, 179
-
- Burleigh Street, site of, 179
-
- Burley, Sir Simon, 218
-
- Burnet, Bishop, 44
-
- Burton St. Lazar, 350
-
- Bushnell, John, the sculptor, 7, 8
-
- Butcher Row, 148;
- Lee's death in, 150
-
-
- "Cabinet" Newspaper, _see_ "Pic-Nic"
-
- Caermarthan, Lord, 136
-
- Cameron, Dr., burial place of, 120
-
- Canary House, 452
-
- Canning, George, 395
-
- Carey Street, 428
-
- Carlini, 65
-
- Carlisle, the Countess of, 178
-
- Catherine of Braganza, 61;
- her return to Portugal, 62
-
- Catherine Street, its newspapers and theatre in, 166;
- Gay's description of, _ib._
-
- Cavalini Pietro, works attributed to, 203
-
- Cavendish, William, Earl of Devonshire, 90
-
- Cecil, Robert, Earl of Salisbury, 89, 153
-
- Cecil Street, its residents, 88
-
- Celeste, Madam, 184
-
- Centlivre, Mrs., 230;
- her hatred to the Jacobites, 231;
- Pope's dislike to, _ib._;
- Leigh Hunt's treatment of, 232
-
- Ceracchi, Giuseppe, 66
-
- Chambers, Sir William, 65
-
- Chapone, Mrs. Hester, 428
-
- Charing, village of, 201;
- population under Edward I., _ib._;
- the Falconry or Mews at, 218
-
- Charing Cross, tradition concerning, 201;
- Peele's lines on, 202;
- tradition of Queen Eleanor connected with, _ib._;
- erection and demolition of, 204;
- a Royalist ballad on, _ib._;
- executions at, 205;
- introduction of Punch into England at, 208;
- Titus Oates, in the pillory at, _ib._;
- the royal statue at, 209;
- Waller's lines on the statue, 210;
- Andrew Marvell's lines on the Cross, 211;
- loss of parts of, 212;
- a tradition concerning, _ib._;
- the pedestal of, _ib._;
- a rogue exposed in the pillory at, _ib._;
- punishment of Japhet Crook at, 213;
- old prints of, 215;
- poetical eulogiums of, _ib._;
- coffee-houses in the neighbourhood of, 226;
- Locket's ordinary at, 227;
- Milton's lodging at, 232;
- other memoranda, 248;
- a strange scene at, _ib._;
- a remark of Dr. Johnson's on, 234;
- site of the post office at, _ib._;
- ancient hospital at, 235;
- former improvements at, _ib._;
- the "Swan," and verses by Johnson, 236
-
- Charing Cross Hospital, 233
-
- Charles I., letter written by, 58;
- his statue at Charing Cross, 209;
- strange story regarding the statue of, 212
-
- Charles II., his progress through London, his coronation, 22;
- the two courts in the reign of, 61
-
- Chatterton, 80;
- story concerning, 197
-
- Chaucer, his marriage, 108;
- favours obtained, 109;
- royal post held by, 218
-
- Chesterfield, Earl of, 187
-
- Child's Bank, 6
-
- Christian Knowledge, Society for Promoting, 414, 464
-
- Chunee, the elephant, 95, 419
-
- Cibber, Colley, 312;
- characters originated by, 316;
- his success as actor and manager, _ib._
-
- Cibber, Theophilus, his fate, 317;
- his wife, _ib._
-
- Clare House Court, 298
-
- Clare Market, 339;
- Orator Henley's appearances in, _ib._;
- artists' club at the Bull's Head in, 346;
- Mrs. Bracegirdle's visits to, 347
-
- Clarges, John, farrier, 93, 301
-
- Clarke, William, proprietor of Exeter Change, 177
-
- Clement's Inn, 156;
- a tradition concerning, _ib._;
- the hall of, 157;
- the New Court and Independent Meeting-house in, 159
-
- Clement's, St., Church, improvements round, 152;
- general dislike to, _ib._;
- a ferment in the parish of, 153;
- distinguished men baptized and buried in, _ib._;
- adornments of, 155;
- Dr. Johnson's attendance in, _ib._
-
- Clement's, St., Well, 156;
- Cleopatra's Needle, 145
-
- Clifton, bridge over the Avon at, 451
-
- Clifton's Eating-house, 149
-
- Clinch, Tom, the highwayman, 373
-
- Clive, Kitty, 315
-
- Coaches and coach-stands, 166, 167
-
- Coal Hole, the, 85
-
- Cobb, the upholsterer, anecdote of, 258
-
- Cock and Pye Fields, 356
-
- Cock Lane ghost, the, 196;
- the contriver of, 214
-
- Cockpit, or Phoenix Theatre, its site, 304;
- Puritan violence against, _ib._;
- its reopening at the Restoration, 305
-
- Coffee, 36
-
- Coffee-houses, 36;
- mentioned by Steele in the _Tatler_, _ib._
-
- Coleridge, S. T., 170
-
- Commons, House of, 101
-
- Congreve, William, 53;
- Pope's declaration regarding, 51;
- the successful career of, _ib._;
- Voltaire's visit to, _ib._;
- Curll's life of, 52
-
- Congreve, Sir William, 88
-
- Conway, Lord, memoranda of, 270
-
- Cooke, George Frederick, 321
-
- Cooke, T. P., 174
-
- Cottenham, Lord, 395
-
- Coutts's Bank, the strong room of, 86, 87;
- the first deposit in, 87;
- story of one of the clerks of, _ib._;
- the site of, and additions to, _ib._
-
- Coutts, Thomas, his origin, and marriage, 86;
- anecdote of, 448
-
- Covent Garden, 93
-
- Covent Garden Theatre and Sheridan, 328
-
- Coventry, Secretary, 245
-
- Cowley, enmity of the Royalists to, 115;
- occasion of "The Complaint" by, _ib._;
- beautiful lines by, 116;
- his death at Chertsey, _ib._
-
- Cox, Bessy, 282
-
- Craig's Court, Charing Cross, 227
-
- Craven, Lord, his life, etc., 294;
- miniature Heidelberg erected by, _ib._;
- his services to the Queen of Bohemia, 295;
- patronage of literature, _ib._;
- employment in King William's reign, 296;
- Miss Benger's estimate of, _ib._;
- Quixotic character of, 460
-
- Craven Buildings, fresco portrait at, 297
-
- Craven House, 292, 459
-
- Craven Street, residents of, 139;
- diplomatic consultation in, _ib._;
- epigrams by James Smith and Sir George Rose on it, _ib._
-
- "Cries of London," the, 167
-
- Crockford, his shop in the Strand, 148;
- his club, _ib._
-
- Cromwell, Oliver, residences of, 226, 279
-
- Crook, Japhet, his punishment, 213;
- lines by Pope on, 214
-
- Crouch, Mrs., the singer, 333
-
- Crowle, _bon mot_ on Judge Page by, 217
-
- Crown and Anchor, the, 152, 153;
- the great room of, 444
-
- Cumberland, George, Earl of, 120
-
- Cuper's Gardens, 43
-
- Curl, Edmund, 212
-
- Curtis, Mrs., visits Mrs. Siddons, 91
-
-
- Davenant, Lady, 404
-
- Davenant, the actor, 429
-
- Davies, Moll, 430
-
- Dawson, Jemmy, 15
-
- Denham, Sir John, works written by, 393;
- a drunken frolic of, 452
-
- Denzil Street, 460
-
- Deptford, and Peter the Great in, 45
-
- Design, the School of, 446
-
- De Sully, Duc, 41
-
- Devereux Court, 36;
- duel in, _ib._;
- death of Marchmont Needham in, 37;
- relic of Pope at Tom's Coffee-house, _ib._
-
- Devereux, Robert, Earl of Essex, 28;
- Spenser's relation to, _ib._;
- his house near the Temple, 29;
- his plot against Elizabeth, _ib._;
- his running a-muck in the City, and flight to Essex Gardens, 30;
- his capture and death 31;
- his mother and sister, 32;
- his crimes, 34
-
- Devonshire Club, 148
-
- Dibdin, Charles, his entertainments, 34
-
- Dickens, Charles, 170;
- on Seven Dials and Monmouth Street, 385;
-
- Digby, Sir Kenelm, 241;
- Ben Jonson's lines on, _ib._
-
- Dilke, Sir C. Wentworth, 170
-
- Disraeli, B., 400
-
- Dobson, Vandyke's protege, 200
-
- Dodd, the actor, 328
-
- Doggett, the actor, 310
-
- Donne, Dr., the tomb of his wife, 154;
- his want of self-respect, 289;
- strange circumstance recorded, 290;
- vision seen by, _ib._;
- conceits of, 291;
- his picture in his shroud, 292;
- a divine and a poet, 390
-
- Dowton, the actor, 323
-
- Doyley, 168
-
- Drinking-fountains, the first, 445
-
- Drummond's Bank, 227, 457
-
- Drury family, 288
-
- Drury House, secret meetings there arranged by Essex, 29;
- outbreak decided on at, 288;
- site of, 237
-
- Drury Lane, origin of its name, 288;
- residents in, 297 _et seq._;
- a strange scene in, 298;
- a duel in, _ib._;
- pictures of, 299;
- the poor poet's home in, _ib._;
- its bad repute during the Regency, 460
-
- Drury Lane Theatre, 305;
- Pepys's visits to, 306;
- scuffle in the king's presence in, _ib._;
- distinguished actresses of, 309 _et seq._;
- plays produced at, _ib._;
- Garrick's first appearance at, 313;
- Dr. Johnson's address on its re-opening, 322;
- a riot in 1740 in, 324;
- Charles Lamb's description of, 324, 325;
- the rebuilding of, 329;
- competitive poems for the opening of, 330;
- Byron's opening address at, _ib._;
- statue over its entrance, _ib._;
- pecuniary statements relating to, _ib._;
- revival of its fortunes by Edmund Kean, 331;
- Grimaldi at, 334;
- various actors of, _ib._;
- pictures of royalty at, 338;
- recent productions at, _ib._
-
- Drury, Sir Robert, 288
-
- Dryden, his lines on the death of Buckingham, 132;
- his squabbles with Jacob Tonson, 54;
- attack on, 280;
- established jokes against, _ib._;
- Mulgrave's lines on, 281;
- Otway's defence of, _ib._
-
- Dudley, Sir Robert, 369
-
- Dudley, Duchess of, 369
-
- Duke Street, 135
-
- Duke's Theatre, 429
-
- Durham House, residents of, 92;
- sufferings of the Princess Elizabeth in, _ib._;
- its last occupants, _ib._;
- banquets given by Henry VII. at, _ib._;
- mint established at, 95;
- Lady Jane Grey's marriage in, _ib._;
- the scene of an old legend, 96;
- Raleigh in his turret study at, _ib._;
- purchased by the brothers Adam, _ib._
-
- Durham Street, 91
-
- Dyot Street, 462
-
-
- Eccentrics, club of, 259
-
- Edward III., 110;
- his conduct on the death of John of Gaunt, 114
-
- Edward VI. at Temple Bar, 21
-
- Egerton, Lord Chancellor, 391
-
- Eleanor Cross, model of, 138
-
- Eleanor, Queen, crosses in memory of, 138, 202;
- tombs of, 203;
- the preservation of her body, 204
-
- Elizabeth, Queen, procession on the anniversary of her accession, 9;
- adornment of her statue at Temple Bar, 10;
- her reception at Temple Bar, 21;
- the plot of Essex against, 29;
- her relations with Admiral Seymour, 39;
- story of the Essex ring, 40;
- her favour for Raleigh, 92
-
- Ellesmere. _See_ Egerton
-
- Elliston, Robert William, 326;
- stories told of, 327
-
- Epigram, an, a legacy gained by, 139
-
- Erskine, Lord, 424
-
- Essex House, 29;
- occupants of, 31;
- the Parliamentary general a resident in, 33
-
- Essex, Robert, Earl of, Ben Jonson's masque on his marriage, 33;
- divorce of his countess, and her marriage with Robert Carr, _ib._;
- general for the Parliament, _ib._;
- attempts to seize his papers, 34
-
- Essex Street, Strand, 25;
- residents in, 34;
- Johnson's club at the Essex Head, 35;
- Unitarian chapel in, 443;
- memoranda of, _ib._
-
- Estcourt, 452;
- Steele's compliments to, 180
-
- Etherage, Sir George, 301;
- play by, 431
-
- Etty, residence of, 136
-
- Evans's Hotel, Covent Garden, 460
-
- Evelyn, John, 134
-
- "Examiner," the, 123
-
- Exchange, the New, 93;
- a tragedy in, _ib._;
- legends about, _ib._;
- the White Widow, 94;
- the walks of, _ib._;
- a frequenter of, _ib._;
- its destruction, 95
-
- Exeter Change, 175;
- exhibitions in, _ib._;
- last tenants of, 176
-
- Exeter Hall, 178
-
- Exeter House, 179
-
- Exeter Place, 261
-
- Exeter Street, 178
-
-
- Faithorne, William, 148
-
- Fanshawe, Lady, 423
-
- Fanshawe, Sir Richard, 421
-
- Farren, Miss, the actress, 318
-
- Farren, the actor, 335
-
- Faucit, Helen (Mrs. T. Martin), 337
-
- "Field" newspaper, 168
-
- Finch, Lord Chancellor, 265
-
- Finett, Sir John, 240
-
- Fletcher, his execution, 14
-
- Folkes, Martin, 272
-
- Folly, the, 82
-
- Foote, the actor, 315
-
- Fordyce, George, 34
-
- Fortescue, Judge, 394
-
- Fortescue, Pope's lawyer, 37
-
- Fountain Club, the, 84
-
- Fountain Court Tavern, 84;
- the Coal Hole in, 85
-
- Fountain, the, King Street, 381
-
- Franklin, Benjamin, 139;
- his landlady and the charitable nun, 275;
- extravagance of his fellow-pressmen, 276;
- his visit as ambassador of Massachusetts, 277
-
- Freemasons' Hall, the, 274
-
- Friend, Sir John, 13
-
- Fuseli, 76;
- his residence, 259
-
-
- Gaiety Theatre, 452
-
- Gardelle, the artist and murderer, 251
-
- Garrick, David, 96, 99;
- Johnson's esteem for, _ib._;
- his "Chinese Festival," 185, 186;
- anecdote of, 273;
- Zoffany's portrait of, 304;
- his career, 313;
- his first appearance at Drury Lane, _ib._;
- his varied talent, 314;
- appears on the stage with Quin, _ib._;
- his death, 315
-
- Gatti's cafe, 189
-
- George, Madame St., 59
-
- Geological Society, the, 69
-
- George III., his patronage of art, 73;
- his coolness, 338
-
- George IV., Chantrey's statue of, 226
-
- Gerbier, Sir Balthasar, 72
-
- Gibbons, Grinling, 139
-
- Gibbons's Tennis Court, 429
-
- Gibbs, the architect, 162
-
- Giles, St., tradition of, 353;
- a scurvy worshipper of, 463
-
- Giles's, St., ancient toll in, 350;
- hospital for lepers in, 350;
- death of Sir John Oldcastle in, 351;
- the gallows in, 352;
- site of the hospital, 353;
- the manor of, 352-3;
- gradual growth of, 355, 356;
- its progress after the Great Fire, 356;
- settlement of foreigners in, 357;
- its increase in Queen Anne's reign, _ib._;
- resort of Irish to, _ib._;
- entries in the parish records of, _ib._;
- increase of French refugees in, 357;
- relief to well-known mendicants in, 359;
- the plague in, 360;
- the plague-cart of, _ib._;
- rates levied in consequence of the plague, 361;
- hospital church of, 363;
- Dr. Mainwaring rector of, _ib._;
- new church of, 364;
- Dr. Heywood, the rector of, _ib._;
- celebration of the Restoration in, 365;
- church extension in, _ib._;
- a sexton's bargain with the rector of, 367;
- the Resurrection Gate in the churchyard of, _ib._;
- churchyard of, 367, 368;
- new burial-ground of, 368;
- celebrated persons buried in the churchyard of, 369, 370;
- the oldest monument in the burial-ground of, 370;
- persons relieved in, 371;
- erection of the new almshouses and school for, _ib._;
- Hogarth's studies and scenes in, 372;
- Nollekens Smith's description of, _ib._;
- the whipping-stone of, _ib._;
- the Pound in, 373;
- the inns of, 374;
- resort of Irish beggars to, 376, 377;
- the cellars of, 378;
- lodgings in, _ib._;
- beggars, conjurors, and pickpockets of, 379;
- the mendicants of, 381;
- low Irish in, 385, 386;
- persons connected with several streets in, 463;
- the author's visit with a missionary to houses in, 463
-
- Giles's, St., Hospital, criminals at its gate, on their way to Tyburn,
- 373
-
- Giraud, his quarrel, 93;
- execution, _ib._
-
- Globe Theatre, 165
-
- Glover, Mrs., as an actress, 336
-
- Godfrey, Sir E., murder of, 61;
- residence of, 142
-
- Godwin, William, 444
-
- Golden Cross, the, 232
-
- Goldsmith, Oliver, a quotation of Dr. Johnson's cleverly capped by, 18;
- lines on Caleb Whitefoord by, 141;
- his friends, 197;
- an earl's patronage of, 198;
- anecdote of, _ib._;
- his visit to Northumberland House, _ib._
-
- Gondomar, Spanish ambassador, 298
-
- Goodman, and the Drury Lane Company, 308
-
- Gordon, Lord George, 278
-
- Gorges, Sir Ferdinand, 30
-
- Graham, Dr., a London Cagliostro, his rooms and their chief priestess,
- 102;
- his "celestial bed" and "elixir of life," 103
-
- Grange Inn, 440
-
- Gravelot, the drawing-master, 250
-
- Gray's Inn, Bacon's chambers in, 130
-
- Grecian, the, Addison's description of, 36;
- a quarrel at, _ib._;
- meetings of savans at, 37;
- the privy-council held at, _ib._
-
- Greenhill, John, 271
-
- Green Ribbon Club, the, 8
-
- Gresham College, 68
-
- Grimaldi at Drury Lane, 334
-
- Gwynn, Nell, her last resting-place, 244;
- the birthplace, life, and character of, 301;
- a descendant of, 302;
- Pepys's allusion in his "Diary" to, _ib._;
- her death, _ib._;
- a memorandum of Evelyn's regarding, _ib._;
- Pepys's estimate of the other actresses associated with, 307;
- her last original part, 308
-
-
- Hackman, the Rev. Mr., the murderer of Miss Ray, 160;
- his execution, _ib._
-
- Haines, Joe, a clever actor, 308
-
- Hale, Sir Matthew, an eminent student of Lincoln's Inn, 390
-
- Hare, the murderer, the lamentable condition of, 461
-
- Harley, John Pritt, actor, 336
-
- Harrison, General, the Anabaptist, the brave end of, 205
-
- Haverhill, William de, Henry III.'s treasurer, his mansion and the
- various uses to which it was put, 388
-
- Haycock's Ordinary, 443
-
- Haydon, anecdote of, 1;
- another, of his early life in London, 77
-
- Hayman, Frank, a St. Martin's Lane worthy, amusing anecdotes of, 255
-
- Haymarket Theatre, the, Fielding's "Tom Thumb" brought out at, 438
-
- Hazlitt, William, his criticism of the elder Mathews, 182
-
- Heber, Bishop, 397
-
- Helmet Court, memoranda of, 447
-
- Hemings' Row, St. Martin's Lane, origin of its name, 458
-
- Henderson, the actor, 319
-
- Henley, Orator, sketch of his life, 339;
- his defence of action in a preacher, _ib._;
- his correspondence with William Whiston, 340;
- the shameless advertisements issued by, 340, 341;
- lines by Pope in the "Dunciad" on, 342;
- his controversy with Pope, _ib._;
- a contemporary description of, _ib._;
- his plans for raising money, 343;
- a joke on Archbishop Herring by, _ib._;
- his appearance before the privy-council, _ib._;
- Hogarth's two caricatures of, 344;
- beginning of one of his sermons, 345;
- overawed by two Oxonians, 346
-
- Henrietta Maria, queen of Charles I., the insolent conduct of her French
- household, and the king's difficulty in getting rid of them, 58;
- her last masques at Somerset House, 59
-
- Henry VII., hospital founded on the site of the Savoy by, 114
-
- Herbert, Lord, of Cherbury, a Quixotic quarrel of, 194;
- commencement of his work, "De Veritate," 265;
- a remarkable vision which is said to have appeared to, _ib._;
- reflections on passing the residence of, 266
-
- Herring, Archbishop, Swift's opposition to, 344
-
- Hewson, the supposed original Strap of "Roderick Random," 136
-
- Heywood, Dr., rector of St. Giles's, Puritan petition against, 365
-
- Hill, Captain, a well-known profligate bully, his drunken jealousy of
- Mountfort the actor, 49;
- his attempt to carry off Mrs. Bracegirdle, 50;
- cowardly murder of Mountfort, by, 51
-
- Hill, Mr. Thomas, the supposed prototype of Paul Pry, 103
-
- Hilliard, Nicholas, Queen Elizabeth's miniature-painter, 244
-
- "Histriomastix," the, Prynne's punishment for a scurrilous note in, 59
-
- Hodges, Dr., his account of the commencement and progress of the plague,
- 262
-
- Hogarth, 72;
- his picture of "Noon," 372
-
- Hog Lane, St. Giles's (now Crown Street), 371
-
- Holborn, gradual extension and first pavement of, 355;
- allusions to a doleful procession up the Heavy Hill of, 374
-
- Hollar, the German engraver, description of a scarce view of Somerset
- House by, 63;
- the residence of, 157
-
- Holmes, Copper, a well-known character on the river, 247
-
- Holy Land, the, a part of St. Giles's, 386
-
- Hone, Nathaniel, 258
-
- Hood, Thomas, his "Bridge of Sighs," 450
-
- Hook, Theodore, 102
-
- Howard, Lady Margaret, Sir John Suckling's fantastic simile in lines on
- her feet, 195
-
- Howard, Thomas, Duke of Norfolk, discovery of the cipher used by--his
- treason and death, 27
-
- Howard, Thomas, Earl of Arundel, an amateur of art, Clarendon's
- description of, 42;
- Vansomer's portrait of, _ib._;
- his devotion in the pursuit of objects of art, 43;
- disposal of his statues, marbles, and library, _ib._;
- remarks made by him in a dispute with Charles I., _ib._
-
- Howard, Philip, Earl of Arundel, a letter to, 27;
- memorial in the Tower of, _ib._
-
- Hudson, the portrait-painter, 272
-
- Hungerford, Lord Walter, first Speaker of the House of Commons, 137
-
- Hungerford, Sir Edward, founder of Hungerford Market, 137
-
- Hungerford Market, the site of, 137;
- the origin and object of, 138;
- vicissitudes of, _ib._;
- an unlucky speculation at, _ib._
-
- Hungerford Suspension Bridge, 138;
- the purchase of, 451;
- the new railway bridge in place of, 138;
- the railway station at, _ib._
-
- Hunter, Dr. William, O'Keefe's description of him lecturing on anatomy,
- 78
-
- Hunter, Dr. John, particulars of his professional life, 420, 421
-
- Hunt, Leigh, the imprisonment of, 123;
- his critical remarks on the elder Mathews, 182
-
-
- "Illustrated London News," the proprietor and staff of, 55
-
- Ingram, Mr. Herbert, proprietor of the "Illustrated London News," career
- and death of, 55
-
- Ireland, Samuel, father of the celebrated literary impostor, the
- residence of, 46;
- his belief in the genuineness of "Vortigern" as a work of Shakspere's,
- 47
-
- Ireland, W. H., the true story of the Shakspere forgery committed by, 46;
- effect of the extraordinary praise lavished on, 47;
- supporters and opponents of, _ib._;
- damnation of his play of "Vortigern," _ib._
-
- "Isabella," Southerne's tragedy of, effect of Mrs. Siddons's acting in,
- 91
-
- Ivy Bridge, narrow passage to the Thames under, and mansion near, 91
-
-
- Jacobites, the cant words used by, 15
-
- James I., pageants on his passage through the city, 21
-
- James Street, Adelphi, No. 2, the residence of Mr. Thomas Hill, the Hull
- of "Gilbert Gurney," 103
-
- Jansen, an architect, works by, 191
-
- Jekyll, Sir Joseph, his obnoxious bill, and the fury of the mob against,
- 410;
- his _bon-mot_ on Lord Kenyon's spits, 423
-
- Jennings, Frances. _See_ Widow, the White
-
- Jerdan, William, 83
-
- John, King of France, his entrance as a captive into London, 112;
- his honourable return to England after having been liberated on
- parole, _ib._;
- his death at the Savoy, _ib._
-
- John of Padua, Henry VIII.'s architect, 57
-
- John, Saint, the foundation of the hospital of, 114;
- abuses of, transference of its funds, etc., 115;
- Dr. John Killigrew appointed master of, _ib._;
- Strype's description of the old hall of, 117
-
- John Street, Adelphi, 99
-
- Johnson, Dr., his conversation with Goldsmith on Westminster Abbey, 17;
- club formed at the Essex Head by--its principal members, 35;
- his high estimation for Garrick, 97;
- Garrick's remark on the philosopher's friendship for Beauclerk, 98;
- his three reasons for the black skin of the negro race, 149;
- an Irishman's opinion of, _ib._;
- his pleasant evenings at the Mitre with an old college friend, 150;
- Boswell's account of his solemn devotion during divine service, 155;
- extract from a letter written to Mrs. Thrale by, 156;
- his first residence in London, 178;
- an eccentric habit of, 187;
- beginning of his address for the re-opening of Drury Lane Theatre, 322
-
- Johnstone, Irish, 335
-
- Jones, Colonel, his execution, 205
-
- Jones, Inigo, his plan for laying out Lincoln's Inn Fields, 402
-
- Jones, the actor, 323
-
- Jonson, Ben, dialogues, speeches, and masques by, 22, 33;
- his residence when a child, 142;
- a story of, 251;
- early life of, 399;
- tradition of, _ib._;
- his exploit in Flanders, _ib._
-
- Jordan, Mrs., 326
-
-
- Kauffman, Angelica, 76
-
- Kean, Charles, 338
-
- Kean, Mrs. Charles (Miss Ellen Tree), 338
-
- Kean, Edmund, habits of, 85;
- his early success in London, 88;
- his origin, early life, and first triumphs in London, 331;
- Hazlitt's remarks on, 332
-
- Keeley, Robert, the actor, 337
-
- Keelings the, 405
-
- Kelly, Michael, 334
-
- Kelly, Miss, actress, 336;
- attacks on, _ib._
-
- Kemble, Charles, 321
-
- Kemble, John, 320;
- generous act of the Duke of Northumberland to, _ib._;
- Leigh Hunt's picture of, _ib._
-
- Kenilworth, Lord of, 28
-
- Kennington Common, execution of Jacobites on, 14
-
- Kensington, South, transfer of pictures from the National Gallery to, 224
-
- Kent, the rising under Wat Tyler, 112
-
- Kenyon, Lord, jokes on, 423;
- his stinginess and bad Latin, _ib._
-
- Killigrew, Dr. Henry, 119
-
- Killigrew, Mrs. Anne, 119
-
- Killigrew, Thomas, 119;
- actors in his company, 308
-
- King, Dr., Principal of St. Mary's Hall, Oxford, 36
-
- King, Dr. William, lines on the Beefsteak Club by, 174
-
- King, the original Sir Peter Teazle, 321
-
- King's College and its museum, 66, 447;
- models and instruments presented by Queen Victoria, _ib._
-
- King's College Hospital, 438
-
- Kirby, Mr., 73, 74
-
- Kit Cat Club, 51;
- institution of the, 85;
- origin of its name, _ib._;
- the summer rendezvous of, 86;
- Lady Mary Wortley Montague the toast of, _ib._
-
- Kneller, Sir Godfrey, 72;
- his life and character, 267;
- the witty banter of, 268;
- his vanity, 269;
- how Jacob Tonson got pictures out of, _ib._;
- his conviction of the legitimacy of the Pretender, _ib._
-
- Knight Templars, the, 25
-
- Knollys, Lettice, Countess of Essex, afterwards Lady Leicester, 31
-
- Knowledge, Christian, the Society for Promoting, 461
-
- Koenigsmark, Count, 193
-
- Kynaston, Sir Francis, 71, 187
-
- Kynaston, the actor, 187, 432
-
-
- Lacy, a favourite actor, 308
-
- Laguerre, the French painter, 246
-
- Lamb, Charles, tragedy in his family, 285;
- his devotion to his sister, 286
-
- Lancaster, the Earl of, 107
-
- Lancaster, John, Duke of, favours Wickliffe, 109;
- his peril from the London mob, 110;
- his escape, _ib._;
- _amende_ of the Londoners to, _ib._;
- his marriage and connections, _ib._;
- his unpopularity and violence, 119;
- clause aimed by Wat Tyler against, 112;
- destruction of his London palace, etc., 113;
- his death and burial, 114
-
- Lancaster, the Duchy of, 122, 450
-
- Lander, Richard, 120
-
- Langhorne, Dr., 396
-
- Law Courts, new, 147
-
- "Law Times," Office, 168
-
- Layer, Christopher, 17
-
- Learning, Society for the encouragement of, 49
-
- Lee, the poet, his death, 154
-
- Lepers, 354
-
- Lewis, the comedian, 274;
- his acting, 323, 324
-
- Lillie, Charles, the perfumer, 84
-
- Limput, Remigius van, 187
-
- Liston, the comedian, 323
-
- Lincoln's Inn, origin of its name, 387;
- the Chancery Lane side of, 388;
- the gateway of, _ib._;
- the chapel, 388, 389;
- distinguished students of, 390 _et seq._;
- persons buried in the chapel, 392 _et seq._;
- old customs and laws of, 397, 398;
- disposal of Hogarth's picture, "Preaching before Felix," at, 398;
- the new hall, library, and garden of, _ib._, 464;
- Mr. Disraeli's studies at, 400
-
- Lincoln's Inn Field, part of Fickett's field, 401;
- King James regulates building in, 401, 402;
- Inigo Jones's plan for laying out and building, 402;
- state in the time of Charles I. and Charles II.;
- Gay's sketch of its dangers, 403;
- Earl of Rochester's house in, 404;
- execution of plotters against Elizabeth in, _ib._;
- procession of Thomas Sadler, the thief, through, _ib._;
- Lord Russell's death in, 405;
- improvements in 1735 in, 410;
- Macaulay's picture of, _ib._;
- distinguished inhabitants of, 414 _et seq._;
- Tennyson's chambers in, 418;
- Mr. Povey's house in, 428
-
- Lindsey, Earl, 416, 417
-
- Lindsey House, 417
-
- Literary Club, Boswell and Johnson at, 17
-
- Literary Fund Society, 427
-
- Literature, Royal Society of, 259
-
- Locket's Ordinary, 227
-
- London, growth and changes of, 2;
- points of departure for tours in, _ib._;
- start for the author's tour in, 3;
- banks in, 7;
- the rebels under Tyler in, 112;
- King William at the celebration of the peace of Ryswick in, 23, 24;
- a bishop beheaded by the mob of, 26;
- cruel treatment of a Spaniard by the mob of, 213;
- the street signs of, 237;
- foreigners in 1580 in, 356;
- a glance at an ancient map of, 356, 357;
- Pennant on its churchyards, 367;
- crusade against Irish and other vagrants, 377;
- royal fears as to its increase, 401;
- its history an epitome of that of the world, 441;
- its newspapers and periodicals, 454
-
- Long Acre, the plague in, 262;
- Oliver Cromwell's residence in, 279;
- Tory tavern Club in, 284
-
- Lord Mayor's Day, 23
-
- Loutherberg, De, 167
-
- Lowin, John, 154
-
- Lyceum, the, 171;
- exhibitions in, _ib._;
- experiment in, 172;
- Mathew's entertainment in, _ib._;
- Beefsteak Club meet in, _ib._;
- Mr. T. P. Cooke's early triumphs in, 174
-
- Lyndhurst, Lord, 395
-
- Lyons, Emma (afterwards Lady Hamilton), 102
-
- Lyon's Inn, 165;
- sale of its materials, _ib._;
- murder of Mr. Weare, _ib._
-
- Lyttelton, Sir Thomas, 44
-
-
- M'Ardell, Hogarth's engraver, 251
-
- Mackintosh, Sir James, 464
-
- Macklin, the actor, 436
-
- Macready, William Charles, 337
-
- Maginn, Dr., ballad by, 232
-
- Malibran, Madame, 334
-
- Manos, Gannee, and other beggars, 382
-
- Mansfield, the Earl of, 394
-
- Mardyn, Mrs., the actress, 335
-
- Marlborough, the Duchess of, Congreve's legacy to, 52;
- her regard for Congreve, 53
-
- Martin's St., Lane, residents of, 239 _et seq._;
- Beard, the singer, 249;
- Old Slaughter's Coffee-house, _ib._;
- houses built by Payne in, 252;
- curious staircase in No. 96, 253;
- a house favoured by artists in, _ib._;
- Roubilliac's first studio in, 257;
- old house of the Earls of Salisbury in, 256;
- changes in, 261
-
- Martin's-in-the-Fields, St., 242;
- the church of, 244;
- the dust enshrined in, _ib._;
- J. T. Smith's visit to the vaults of, 246;
- the parochial abuses of, _ib._;
- the old watch and stocks of, 256
-
- Marvell, Andrew, 209;
- the grave of, 370
-
- Mary, Queen, 21
-
- Mary, St. Savoy, the Chapel of, the dead interred in, 121;
- its destruction by fire, 122;
- its restoration, _ib._
-
- Mary, St., Roncevalles, the hospital of, 235
-
- Mary-le-Strand, St., 162;
- construction of, _ib._;
- allusions by Pope and Addison to, 163;
- tragedy at, _ib._;
- interior of, _ib._
-
- Mathews, his entertainment, 140;
- his "Mail-coach Adventures," 172;
- his bargains with Mr. Arnold, 181;
- his various entertainments, _ib._;
- failure of his health, and death, 182;
- his first attempts as an actor, 298;
- his first appearance in London, 323
-
- Matthews, Bishop of Durham, 98
-
- Mayerne, Sir Theodore, 239;
- story of, 240;
- his death, 260
-
- Maynard, Mr. Serjeant, 404
-
- Mainwaring, Dr., 363, 364
-
- Maypole in the Strand, the, 160;
- its fall and restoration, 161;
- removal of, 162
-
- May's Buildings, 259
-
- Mellon, Miss, the actress, 87;
- her first and second marriages, 88;
- her first appearance at Drury Lane, 448;
- leaves her fortune to Miss Burdett Coutts, _ib._
-
- Mendicants' Convivial Club, 462
-
- Mews, origin of the name, 217;
- notes concerning, 218;
- old bookshop at the gate of one, 219
-
- Michael's, St., Alley, Cornhill, 36
-
- Milford Lane, 38
-
- Millar, the publisher, 56
-
- Miller, Joe, his burial-place, 348;
- his debut on the stage, 439;
- his last success, _ib._;
- his haunt, 440
-
- Milton, John, 232
-
- Misaubin, Dr., 253
-
- Mitre, the, 150
-
- Mohun, Lord, 50, 245
-
- Monk, General, his death, 65;
- the Restoration effected by, 61;
- his vulgar wife, 301;
- invited to a conference by the Earl of Northumberland, 200
-
- Monmouth Street, 385;
- Mr. Dickens's description of, _ib._;
- modern civilisation in, 463
-
- Montague, Lady M. W., 86
-
- Montfort, Simon de, 107
-
- More, Sir Thomas, 164
-
- Morgan, the Welsh buccaneer, 264
-
- Morley's Hotel, 456
-
- "Morning Chronicle," 167;
- the end of, 168
-
- "Morning Post," 170
-
- Mortimer, the English Salvator, 46
-
- Moss, the engraver, 63
-
- Mottley, the actor, 439;
- origin of his jest book, 440
-
- Mountfort, Mrs., 434
-
- Mountfort, the actor, 50;
- his career, 435
-
- Munden, Charles Lamb on, 327
-
- Murphy, Arthur, 394
-
- Murray, Major, 143
-
- Mytens, Daniel, 240
-
-
- National Gallery, opening of, 219;
- the paltry design of, 75;
- the first purchase of pictures for, 222;
- the gems of, 223, 224;
- purchases and donations for, _ib._;
- Turner's bequest to, 224;
- proposed removal of the pictures from, _ib._;
- Jacob Bell's bequest, 225;
- enlargement of the, _ib._
-
- Needham, Marchmont, 37;
- his burial-place, 155
-
- Nelson, Admiral, a tradition of, 71
-
- Nelson Column, the, original estimate for, 220;
- bassi relievi on, _ib._;
- adornment of the pedestal of, 221
-
- Newcastle, the Duke of, his house in Lincoln's Inn Fields, 410;
- his levees, _ib._;
- the porter's reply to an intruder on, 411;
- impertinence of his cook, 412;
- anecdote of, _ib._;
- Smollett's and Walpole's sketches of, 413;
- Walpole's review of his career, _ib._;
- his reply to Lord Bute, 414
-
- Newgate ballads, 463
-
- New Inn, 164
-
- Newspaper offices, 454
-
- Nisbett, Mrs., 335
-
- Nivernois, the Duc de, 18
-
- Nokes, James, 432
-
- Nollekens, the sculptor, 379
-
- Norfolk Street, 44 _et seq._;
- Charles Dickens's sketch of, 445
-
- Northampton, the Earl of, 191
-
- Northampton, Algernon, tenth Earl of, 192, 195
-
- Northumberland, the wizard Earl of, his marriage 192;
- treason, etc., _ib._
-
- Northumberland, the Duke of, 192
-
- Northumberland House, 191;
- the oldest part of, 195;
- accident at, _ib._;
- the letters and date on its facade, 196;
- destruction of the Strand front by fire, 197;
- Sir John Hawkins's and Goldsmith's visit to Mr. Percy at, 198;
- Goldsmith's account of a visit to, 199;
- pictures in the gallery of, _ib._
-
- Northumberland Street, 142;
- demolition of, 200
-
- Nottingham, the Countess of, 39, 40
-
- Noy, Attorney-general, 389
-
-
- Oates, Titus, 208, 302
-
- O'Keefe, the dramatist, 18, 258
-
- Oldcastle, Sir John, Lord Cobham, 352;
- his imprisonment, escape, and death, _ib._
-
- Oldfield, Mrs., actress, 186;
- her merits as a comedian, 310;
- her death, 311
-
- "Old Slaughter's," the frequenters of, 249;
- Hogarth and Roubilliac at, _ib._
-
- Olympic, the, 164;
- Mr. Robson's representations at, 165
-
- Oratory, Henley's, 339
-
- Oxberry, the actor, 335
-
- Oxburgh, Sir John, 13
-
- Oxford, the Earl of, 137
-
-
- Page, Judge, 217;
- the "Dunciad" on, _ib._
-
- Paget, Lord, 26
-
- Paintings, the first exhibition in London of, 75
-
- Palsgrave Head Tavern, 148, 151
-
- Parr, Dr., 47
-
- Parr, Old, 91
-
- Parsons, parish-clerk of St. Sepulchre's, 214
-
- Partridge, the charlatan cobbler, 90
-
- Pasquin (Williams), Anthony, 142
-
- Patterson, Samuel, bookseller, 34
-
- Payne, Mr. James, collector of MSS., 459
-
- Payne, Roger, bookbinder, 457
-
- Pendrell, Richard, his tomb and epitaph, 368
-
- Penn, the Quaker, 44
-
- Pepys, residence of, 135;
- his career, 136;
- residence of his father-in-law, 282;
- visits Drury Lane Theatre, 302;
- Lord Cottenham, a descendant of the author of the "Diary," 395
-
- Perceval, Spencer, 394
-
- Percy, the Earl Marshal, 109
-
- Percy, Elizabeth, her marriages, 192
-
- Perkins, Sir William, 12
-
- Perry, James, 167
-
- Pest-houses, 297
-
- Peter the Great, 45;
- his evenings in York Buildings, 136
-
- Peters, Hugh, 207
-
- Petty, William, 42
-
- Philips, Ambrose, 248;
- Pope's lines on, _ib._
-
- Physicians, the Royal College of, 225
-
- Pickett, Alderman, 148;
- street named after, 147
-
- "Pic-Nic," the, London newspaper, 139
-
- Pidgeon, Bat, barber, 160
-
- Pierce, Edward, sculptor, 49
-
- Pine, the engraver, 252
-
- "Pine Apple," the, 178
-
- Plague, the Great, 143;
- its origin in London, 262;
- its progress, 263
-
- Poitiers, the victory of, 111
-
- Pope, the, 9
-
- Pope, a relic of, 37;
- lines on the death of Buckingham by, 132;
- insolence of, 248;
- reply of Sir Godfrey Kneller to, 268;
- his dispute with Orator Henley, 342
-
- Pope, Miss, the actress, 273;
- her manner on the stage, 321
-
- Porridge Island, 236
-
- Porter, Mrs., the actress, 43
-
- Portugal Row, 403, 421
-
- Portugal Street, 429 _et seq._
-
- Precinct of the Savoy, 122
-
- Precinct Club, the, 169
-
- Prior, his boyhood, 229;
- his attachments, 282;
- his death, 283
-
- Pritchard, Mrs., actress, 317
-
- Proctor, student of the Royal Academy, 80
-
- Prynne, William, 398
-
- Punch, the puppet-show, 208
-
- "Punch," the periodical, 303
-
-
- Quakers, the, 44
-
- "Queen" newspaper, 168
-
- Queen Street, Great, 263;
- residents in, 264 _et seq._;
- residence of Lord Herbert of Cherbury in, 266
-
- Quin, the actor, 187, 271;
- appears on the stage with Garrick, 312;
- his career as an actor, _ib._;
- appears at Portugal Street Theatre, 437
-
-
- Radcliffe, Dr., 347
-
- Radford, Thomas, 93
-
- Railton, designer of the Nelson Memorial, 220
-
- Raimbach, the engraver, 258
-
- Raleigh, Sir Walter, 92;
- Durham House unjustly taken from, 96;
- costly dress worn by, _ib._
-
- Rann, John, "Sixteen-stringed Jack," 374
-
- Rawlinson, Dr., 16
-
- Ray, Miss, murder of, 160
-
- Rebecca, Biaggio, 76
-
- Reddish, Samuel, the actor, 318
-
- Reeve, John, 184
-
- _Rejected Addresses_, the, 140
-
- Rennie, John, architect, 124
-
- Reynolds, Sir Joshua, his club in Essex Street, 35;
- his adherence to the Spring Garden Society, 73;
- his lectures, 83;
- lying-in-state of, 79;
- residences of, 274
-
- Rhodes, the bookseller and actor, 233, 305
-
- Rice, Mr. ("Jim Crow"), 180
-
- Rich, Penelope, 31
-
- Rich, the actor and manager, 435;
- legend regarding, 436;
- Garrick's lines on, 438
-
- Richardson, the humourist, 187
-
- Richmond, the Duke of, his gallery at Whitehall, 72
-
- Rimbault, the clockmaker, 303
-
- Rivet, John, a brazier, 212
-
- Roberts, the solicitor, 143
-
- Robin Hood Debating Society, 443
-
- Robinson, Mrs., 318
-
- Robinson's Coffee-house, 215
-
- Robson, Mr. Frederick, 165, 236
-
- Roman Bath, in the Strand, 169
-
- Roman Road, ancient, 349
-
- Romilly, Sir Samuel, 400
-
- Rookery, the, 463
-
- Roubilliac, his burial-place, 246;
- his studio, 255;
- a pupil of, 257
-
- Royal Academy, the, Somerset House, 65;
- the germs of, 71;
- its service to English art, 75;
- its first officers, 74;
- catalogue, etc., 75
-
- Royal Academicians, the, 74
-
- Royal Society, the, 68;
- its portraits of Newton, and other curiosities, 69
-
- "Rummer," the, 229;
- the scene of Jack Sheppard's first robbery, 230
-
- Russel, Lord William, 285;
- his alleged plot, 405;
- his appearance before the Council, 406;
- his interview with French agents, _ib._;
- petition presented for his life, 407;
- the last days of, _ib._;
- his execution, 408
-
- Russel, Lady Rachel, her petition for her husband's life, 407;
- her letter to Dr. Fitzwilliams, 408
-
- Rutland, the Earls of, 91
-
- Ryan, the actor, 272
-
- Rymer, the antiquary, 43, 154
-
-
- Saa, Don Pantaleon de, his quarrel with Giraud, 93
-
- Sacheverell, Dr., 409
-
- Sadler, Thomas, the thief, 404
-
- St. Leonards, Lord, 396
-
- Sala, G. A., 122
-
- Sale, George, 49
-
- Salisbury, Earls of, old house of the, 256
-
- Salisbury House, Little, 89
-
- Salisbury House, Old, 89
-
- Salisbury Street, 89
-
- Sandwich Islands, the king and queen of, 102
-
- Sandwich, Montague, Earl of, 415
-
- Savage, Richard, 216;
- his escape from execution, _ib._
-
- Savage Club, the, 460
-
- Savoy, Peter, Earl of, 107;
- Henry III.'s grant to, _ib._;
- transfer of his manor to the chapter of Montjoy, 108
-
- Savoy, the, moonlight meetings in, 106;
- derivation of the name of, 107;
- occupants of the palace of, 108;
- Chaucer's marriage in, _ib._;
- the vicissitudes of, 109;
- attack of the mob of London on, 110;
- a residence of John, King of France, 111;
- its destruction by Wat Tyler, 112;
- erection of an hospital on its site, 114;
- its suppression and removal, 115;
- Conference of the Savoy, 116;
- a French church in, 117;
- a sanctuary for debtors, _ib._;
- Strype's description of it, _ib._;
- clandestine marriages in, 118;
- its state in the reign of George II., _ib._;
- portions of it remaining in 1816, _ib._;
- the destruction of, 119;
- Mr. G. A. Sala's description of the Precinct of, 122;
- traditions still lingering in, 123
-
- Savoy Street, 116
-
- Scheemakers, 333
-
- School of Design, 446
-
- Serle Street, origin of its name, 464
-
- Serle's coffee-house, Addison's visit to, 464;
- a curious letter extant at, _ib._
-
- Seven Dials, the, Mr. Dickens's description of, 385;
- Gay's description of, 461;
- the degraded state of, 462
-
- Seymour, Lord Thomas, 39;
- the mint established in aid of his designs, 95
-
- Seymour, Sir Edward, anecdote of, 234
-
- Seymour Place. _See_ Arundel House
-
- Shadwell, son of the poet, 135
-
- Shaftesbury, Earl of, 179
-
- Shallow, the revelry of, 158
-
- Sheppard, Jack, the burial-place of, 246
-
- Sheridan, Thomas, 187
-
- Sheridan, Richard Brinsley, produces the "School for Scandal," 322;
- his extravagance, 328;
- _sang froid_ exhibited in the House of Commons by, _ib._;
- his death, 329
-
- Shipley, Mr., founder of the Society of Arts, 100;
- his pupils, _ib._
-
- Shippen, "Honest," 45
-
- Shipyard, the, gable-ended house in, 148
-
- Shorter, Sir John, 22
-
- Siddons, Mrs., 91, 319;
- the homage of distinguished men to, 320
-
- Signs, the suppression of, 237;
- adornment of old London by, 238
-
- Simon, Old, 379-80;
- portraits of, 380;
- anecdotes of his dog "Rover," _ib._
-
- Singers, theatrical, 333 _et seq._
-
- Slaughter's, Old, 249;
- Hogarth and Roubilliac at, _ib._
-
- Slaughter's, New, 253
-
- Sloane, Sir Hans, 284
-
- Smith, the brothers, 330
-
- Smith, James, 139;
- epigram by, 140
-
- Snow, the goldsmith, 151, 443
-
- Soane, Sir John, 427
-
- Soane Museum, the, curiosities in, 424;
- impediments thrown in the way of visitors to, _ib._;
- its treasures, 425 _et seq._;
- its pictures and engravings, 426;
- a satire on, 465
-
- Soeur, Le, French sculptor, 209
-
- Somerset, the Protector, 57
-
- Somerset House, 56;
- Elizabeth's visits to Lord Hunsdon in, 58;
- Anne of Denmark's masquerades in, _ib._;
- pranks of Henrietta Maria's French household in, _ib._;
- Puritans offended by Henrietta Maria's Roman Catholic chapel in, 59;
- tombs under the great square of, _ib._;
- death of Inigo Jones in, _ib._;
- the celebration of Protestant service in, _ib._;
- the lying-in-state of Cromwell in, 60;
- Pepys's description of a strange scene in the presence-chamber of, 61;
- lying-in-state of Monk, Duke of Albemarle, in, _ib._;
- the murder of Sir Edmondbury Godfrey, _ib._;
- Waller made drunk at, 62;
- apartments for poor noblemen, _ib._;
- erection of new Government offices on the site of the old palace of,
- _ib._;
- scene witnessed by Pepys at, 63;
- old prints of, _ib._;
- the architect of the modern buildings of, 64;
- demolition of the old palace of, _ib._;
- Edward VI.'s furniture, and Catherine of Braganza's breakfast room in,
- _ib._;
- dimensions of the building completed by Sir William Chambers, 65;
- retirement of the Royal Academy to, _ib._;
- figures on the Strand front of, _ib._;
- Government clerks and public offices in, 66;
- statue and figure in the east wing of, _ib._;
- office for auditing public accounts in, _ib._;
- learned societies sheltered in, 67;
- distinguished men who must have frequented the halls of, _ib._;
- a legend of, 71;
- a tradition of Nelson at, _ib._;
- accident during Reynolds's lecture at, 78;
- day-dreams in the great quadrangle of, 81
-
- Somerset Coffee-house, 446
-
- Somerset House Stairs, 63
-
- Southampton Street, 185;
- Garrick's house in, _ib._
-
- Sparkes, Isaac, Irish comedian, 274
-
- "Spectator," office of the, 124
-
- Spelman, Lady, 40
-
- Spelman, Sir Henry, 391
-
- Spenser, his death and burial, 28
-
- Spiller, James, comedian, 154;
- his death, 438
-
- Spring Gardens Academy of Art, the, 72;
- dissimulation of the king in relation to, 73;
- intrigues against, _ib._
-
- Stage, the, reform of declamation and costume on, 325;
- first appearance of actresses, in London, on, 429
-
- Stapleton, Walter, his death, 26
-
- Steele, Sir Richard, his coffee-houses, 36;
- his residence, 135;
- his allusions to Lincoln's Inn, 398
-
- Stone, Nicholas, sculptor, 278
-
- Storace, operas written by, 334
-
- Stothard, the artist, sketch of his career, 283
-
- Strahan and Co., bankers, 151, 451 (_note_)
-
- Strand, the:--
- Essex Street, 25;
- Exeter House, 26;
- Exeter Place, _ib._;
- Essex House 29;
- Milford Lane, 38;
- Devereux Court, _ib._;
- Arundel House, 39;
- Arundel Street, 43;
- Norfolk Street, 44;
- Surrey Street, 48;
- Howard Street, 49;
- Strand Lane, 53;
- Anderson's pills in, _ib._;
- Turk's Head Coffee-house, _ib._;
- residence of Jacob Tonson in, 54;
- occupants of No. 141, _ib._;
- office of the "Illustrated London News" in, 55;
- Somerset House, 56;
- Haydon's first London lodgings in, 77;
- Beaufort House, 83;
- the residence of Blake, in, _ib._;
- office of the "Sun" newspaper, 83;
- Coutts's Bank, 86;
- Cecil Street, 88;
- Salisbury Street and House, 89;
- Mrs. Siddons's residence in, 91;
- Durham Street and House, _ib._;
- Buckingham Street, 135;
- Villiers Street, _ib._;
- Duke Street, _ib._;
- York Buildings, _ib._;
- Hungerford Bridge and Market, 136;
- Craven Street, 139;
- Northumberland Street, 143;
- the strata of, 146;
- the footway in Edward II.'s time, 147;
- discovery of a small bridge in, _ib._;
- houses on the north side of, _ib._ _et seq._;
- Butcher Row, 148;
- Palsgrave Place, 151;
- the Maypole in, 160;
- St. Clement's Danes, 152;
- a scene of Elizabeth's time in, 161;
- St. Mary's-le-Strand, 162;
- New Inn, 164;
- Wych Street, _ib._;
- Lyon's Inn, 165;
- Catherine Street, 166;
- Doyley's warehouse in, 168;
- Wellington Street, _ib._;
- Lyceum Theatre, 171;
- Exeter Change, 175;
- familiar sounds to the old residents in, 177;
- Exeter Street, 178;
- Exeter Hall, _ib._;
- a resident in, _ib._;
- Exeter House, 179;
- Burleigh Street, _ib._;
- Adelphi Theatre, 180;
- Southampton Street, 185;
- Bedford Street, 186;
- Gaiety Theatre, 452;
- memoranda relating to the south side of, 443;
- do. relating to the north side of, 452
-
- Strand, Bridge, the, 169
-
- Strand Lane, 53;
- mentioned by Addison, 169
-
- Strand Theatre, 444, 446
-
- Streets, the nomenclature of, 103
-
- Strype, the antiquary, 117
-
- Suckling, Sir John, 195;
- his death, 241
-
- Suett, the actor, 321
-
- Suffolk House, 194
-
- Sullivan, Luke, engraver, 251
-
- "Sun," office of the, 83
-
- Surrey Street, 48
-
- Surgeons, College of, 419
-
- Swan, the, Charing Cross, 236
-
-
- Tart-Hall, 43
-
- Taylor, the water-poet, 279;
- his complaint regarding carriages and tobacco, _ib._;
- epitaph on, 280
-
- Tempest, Peter Molyn, engraver, 167
-
- Temple Bar, its erection, 4;
- description of, 5;
- threatened destruction of, 6;
- fixing the heads of traitors on, 11;
- curious print of, 13;
- heads of Fletcher, Townley, and Oxburgh, exposed on, _ib._;
- apprehension of a man for firing bullets at the two last heads
- exhibited on, 16;
- Counsellor Layer's head blown by a terrible wind from, _ib._;
- removal of the last iron spike from, 17;
- a quotation of Dr. Johnson's at, _ib._;
- proclamation of peace at, 18;
- its adornment on public occasions, 19;
- opening its gates to the sovereign, 20;
- reception of Queen Elizabeth at, _ib._;
- reception of royal persons at, 21;
- pageants on the passage of King James, _ib._;
- the mournful celebrity of, 22
-
- Temple Club, 453
-
- Tenison, Dr. Thomas, 247
-
- Tennyson, Alfred, 418
-
- Terry, an actor, 183
-
- Thames, the, scenery on its banks, 136;
- embankment of, 190;
- old watermen on, 247;
- Copper Holme's ark on, _ib._
-
- Theatres, an old custom at, 172;
- a riot in one, 186
-
- Theatre, the Duke's, 429;
- a sword-fight between two factions in, 430;
- the principal ladies of, _ib._;
- Pepys's visits to, 431;
- the principal performers at, 432 _et seq._;
- plays of Congreve produced at, 434;
- Steele's account of an audience in, 435;
- the last proprietor of, _ib._;
- riot at, 436;
- Macklin's performance at, 437;
- Quin's appearance at, _ib._
-
- Thomson, the music-seller, 177
-
- Thornbury, the Rev. Nathaniel, 47
-
- Thornhill, Sir James, 72
-
- Thurloe, Secretary, 392-393
-
- Thurtell, the murderer of Weare, 165
-
- Thynne, Tom, 193
-
- Tillotson, Dr., 390
-
- Tobacco, introduction of, 96
-
- Tom's Coffee-house, 37
-
- Tonson, Jacob, 54
-
- Tories, they establish tavern-clubs, 284
-
- Townley, execution of, 14
-
- Trafalgar Square, 220;
- statues and fountains in, 221, 456
-
- Trojan Horse, Bushnell's, 7
-
- Tunstall, Bishop, 92
-
- Turk's Head Coffee-house, 53
-
- Turk's Head, Gerrard Street, 72
-
- Turner, J. W. M., anecdote of, 78;
- his opinion of the Thames scenery, 136;
- characteristics of his works, 224;
- his bequests to the nation, _ib._
-
- Tyburn, criminals on their way to, 373
-
- Tyler Wat, 112;
- a mistake of Shakspere regarding, 114 (_note_)
-
- Tyrconnel, the Duchess of. _See_ Widow, the White
-
- Twinings, the Messrs., 35, 152
-
-
- Ussher, Archbishop, 396
-
- Union Club, the, 457
-
-
- Vanderbank starts an academy of art, 72
-
- Vane, Sir Harry, 200
-
- Vere Street, Clare Market, 345
-
- Vernon, Robert, 224
-
- Vertue, 8
-
- Vestris, Madame, 175
-
- Via Trinovantica, 349
-
- Victoria embankment, 191
-
- "Ville de Paris," the Olympic Theatre partially built of its timbers, 164
-
- Villiers Street, 135
-
- "Vine," the, in St. Giles's, 375
-
- Vine Street, origin of the name, 300
-
- Vinegar Yard, Drury Lane, 300
-
- Voltaire rebukes Congreve's vanity, 52
-
- "Vortigern," by W. H. Ireland, 46
-
-
- Waagen, Dr., 199
-
- Waldo, Sir Timothy, 412
-
- Wallack, the actor, 334
-
- Waller, the poet, Saville's saying of, 62;
- lines by, 210
-
- Wallis, Albany, residence of, 46
-
- Walpole, a circumstance to surprise, 78;
- visits the Cock Lane ghost, 196
-
- Warburton, Bishop, 397
-
- Ward, Dr., inventor of "Friar's Balsam," disposal of his statue by
- Carlini, 100;
- attends on George II., _ib._
-
- Ward, Edward, 281
-
- Waterloo Bridge, Dupin and Canova's declaration respecting, 124;
- chief features of, _ib._;
- anecdote of Old Jack, a horse employed to drag the stone to, _ib._;
- the dark arch of, 451
-
- Watling Street, 349
-
- Weare, Mr. William, 165
-
- Webster, Benjamin, as an actor, 184
-
- Wedderburn, his insincerity, 415;
- Lord Clive's reward to, _ib._
-
- Welch, Judge, apprehends a highwayman, 378
-
- Wellington Street, newspapers and periodicals in, 167, 168, 454
-
- West, anecdote of, 73;
- his patronage of Proctor, 80
-
- Westminster Fire Office, 257
-
- Whetstone Park, 400
-
- Whitefoord, Caleb, 141;
- Adam's room in the house of, 142;
- Goldsmith's lines on, _ib._
-
- White Horse livery stables, 257
-
- Whitelock, Bulstrode, 234
-
- Whittington Club, the, 152
-
- Wickliffe, John, refuses tribute to the Pope, 109;
- appears before the Bishop of London, _ib._
-
- Widow, the White, the story of, 94
-
- Wild House, 277, 459
-
- Wilkes, Robert, actor, 311
-
- Wilkinson, Tate, 123
-
- Willis, Dr. Thomas, 241
-
- Wilson, the painter, 189, 283
-
- Wimbledon House, Strand, and Doyley's warehouse erected on the site of,
- 168
-
- Winchester House, 271
-
- Wither, George, 120, 121
-
- Woffington, Peg, president of the Beefsteak Club, 173;
- her career, 316
-
- Wolcot, Dr. (Peter Pinder), 84
-
- Wollaston, Dr., discoveries of, 88;
- anecdote of, 85
-
- Woodward, the actor, 315
-
- Wych Street, 164, 454
-
- Wynford, Lord, epigram on, 415
-
-
- Yates, Mr., the actor, 183
-
- Yates, Mrs., actress, 317
-
- York House, old, 126;
- river view of, 127;
- celebrated men connected with, _ib._;
- Lord Bacon's life here, _ib._;
- pictures, busts, and statues at, 131;
- paintings placed in it by the Duke of Buckingham, _ib._;
- Pepys's visit to, 132;
- streets built on its site, 135
-
- York Stairs, description of, 134
-
- York Buildings, waterworks, 135, 445
-
- York Buildings, Water Company, 445
-
- Young, Charles, the actor, 323, 335
-
-
- Zoffany, the artist, 303;
- Garrick's patronage of, 304
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] Tom Taylor's _Life of Haydon_, vol. i. p. 49.
-
-[2] Strype, B. iii. p. 278.
-
-[3] It was pulled down in January 1878.
-
-[4] The steepness of Holborn Hill was abolished by the new viaduct in
-1869.
-
-[5] Cunningham's _London_, vol. i. p. 260.
-
-[6] Archenholz, p. 227.
-
-[7] Beautifully reprinted in 1863 by Mr. J. C. Hotten.
-
-[8] Walpole's _Anecdotes of Painting_, vol. iii. p. 274.
-
-[9] Pamphlet "The Burning of the Pope," quoted in Brayley's _Londiniana_,
-vol. iv. p. 74.
-
-[10] Roger North's _Examen_, p. 574.
-
-[11] _Ibid._ p. 574.
-
-[12] For a further account of these Anti-Papal proceedings the reader may
-refer to _Sir Roger de Coverly_, with notes by W. H. Wills.
-
-[13] _State Trials_, x. pp. 105-124; Burnet, ii. p. 407.
-
-[14] Hume, vol. vii. p. 220.
-
-[15] Evelyn, vol. ii. p. 341.
-
-[16] _Temple Bar, the City Golgotha_ (1853), p. 33.
-
-[17] Cobbett's _State Trials_, vol. xviii.
-
-[18] _State Trials_, vol. xviii. p. 375.
-
-[19] _Annual Register_ (1766), p. 52.
-
-[20] Nichol's _Literary Anecdotes_.
-
-[21] Brayley.
-
-[22] Boswell, p. 258.
-
-[23] Ovid, _de Art. Amand._, B. v. 339.
-
-[24] _Recollections of the Life of John O'Keefe_, vol. i. p. 81.
-
-[25] _O'Keefe's Life_, vol. i. p. 101.
-
-[26] _London Scenes_, by Aleph (1863), p. 75.
-
-[27] Stow's _Annals_.
-
-[28] Hall's _Chronicle_ (condensed in Nichols' _London Pageants_).
-
-[29] Leland's _Collectanea_, vol. iv. pp. 310 _et seq._
-
-[30] Holinshed.
-
-[31] Nichols' _Progresses_, vol. i. p. 58.
-
-[32] Nichols' _London Pageants_, p. 63.
-
-[33] _London Gazette._
-
-[34] Nichols p. 83.
-
-[35] Dugdale.
-
-[36] Holinshed's _Chronicles_, vol. iii. p. 338.
-
-[37] Sharon Turner's _Hist. of England_, vol. xii. p. 276.
-
-[38] Hygford's _Exam. Murd._, 57.
-
-[39] _Ibid._
-
-[40] Pennant.
-
-[41] Camden, p. 632.
-
-[42] Hepworth Dixon's _Story of Lord Bacon's Life_ (1862), p. 120.
-
-[43] Hepworth Dixon's _Story of Lord Bacon's Life_ (1862), p. 121.
-
-[44] Wotton, _Reliquiae_, p. 160.
-
-[45] Dr. Birch's _Memoirs of the Reign of James I._
-
-[46] Ben Jonson's _Works_ (Gifford), vol. vii. p. 75.
-
-[47] Clarendon's _History of the Rebellion_, x. 80.
-
-[48] MS. Journal of the House of Commons.
-
-[49] Smith's _Nollekens_.
-
-[50] Boswell's _Johnson_ (1860), p. 751.
-
-[51] Jeaffreson's _Book about Doctors_, p. 97.
-
-[52] Boswell, vol. iv. p. 276.
-
-[53] J. T. Smith's _Streets of London_ (1846), vol. i. p. 412.
-
-[54] _The Intelligencer_, Jan. 23, 1664-5.
-
-[55] Disraeli's _Curios. of Lit._, p. 289.
-
-[56] Evelyn, vol. i. p. 10.
-
-[57] Dr. King's _Anecdotes_, p. 117.
-
-[58] Thoresby's _Diary_, ii. 111-117.
-
-[59] _British Bibliographer_, vol. i. p. 574.
-
-[60] Pope's _Works_ (Carruthers), vol. ii. p. 379.
-
-[61] Hawkins's _Life of Johnson_, pp. 207-244.
-
-[62] Jeaffreson's _Book about Doctors_ (2d edit.) pp. 207, 208.
-
-[63] Stow, p. 161.
-
-[64] Dryden's _Misc. Poems_, iv. 275, ed. 1727 (Cunningham).
-
-[65] Latimer's Fourth Sermon, 1st ed.
-
-[66] Strype, B. iv. p. 105.
-
-[67] _Earl of Monmouth's Mem._, ed. 1759, p. 77.
-
-[68] Lysons.
-
-[69] Dr. Birch's _Mems. of the Peers of England_.
-
-[70] Lingard's _History of England_.
-
-[71] Hughson.
-
-[72] Cunningham (1846), vol. i. p. 38.
-
-[73] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, vol. i. p. 292.
-
-[74] Lilly _On the Life and Death of King Charles I._, p. 224.
-
-[75] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, ii. 153.
-
-[76] Smith's _Streets_, vol. i. p. 385.
-
-[77] Thoresby's _Letters_, ii. 329.
-
-[78] Hawkins's _Life of Johnson_, p. 208.
-
-[79] _Spectator_, 329-335.
-
-[80] Ireland's _Authentic Account_, etc. (1796), i. p. 42.
-
-[81] W. H. Ireland's _Vindication_, p. 21.
-
-[82] Ireland's _Vindication_, p. 19.
-
-[83] Boaden's _Life of Kemble_, vol. ii. p. 172.
-
-[84] Andrews's _History of British Journalism_, vol. ii. p. 285.
-
-[85] Strype, B. iv. p. 118.
-
-[86] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, vol. ii. p. 391.
-
-[87] _The Mourning Bride._
-
-[88] It is doubtful whether it was not the duchess. (Wilson's _Life of
-Congreve_, 8vo, 1730, i. p. 1 of Preface.)
-
-[89] Cibber's _Lives of the Poets_ (1753).
-
-[90] Stow, p. 165.
-
-[91] _Spectator_, No. 454.
-
-[92] Malachi Malagrowther's _Letters_.
-
-[93] Croker's _Boswell_, vol. i. p. 475.
-
-[94] Scott's _Dryden_, vol. i. p. 388.
-
-[95] Johnson's _Life of Dryden_.
-
-[96] Strype, B. ii. p. 508.
-
-[97] Hume.
-
-[98] Dugdale, vol. ii. p. 363.
-
-[99] Mitford, v. 201.
-
-[100] Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 756.
-
-[101] Stow, p. 149.
-
-[102] Burleigh's _Diary in Munden_, p. 811.
-
-[103] Wilson's _Life of James I._
-
-[104] L'Estrange's _Life of Charles I._
-
-[105] _Certain Information_, etc., No. 11, p. 87.
-
-[106] Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 755.
-
-[107] Essay by John D'Espagne.
-
-[108] Ludlow's _Memoirs_, vol. ii. p. 615.
-
-[109] Pepys, 2d. edit. vol. i. p. 309.
-
-[110] Pepys, vol. i. p. 357.
-
-[111] Aubrey's _Lives and Letters_.
-
-[112] Stow, p. 1045, ed. 1631.
-
-[113] Pepys's _Diary_, vol. i. p. 16.
-
-[114] Leigh Hunt's _Town_, p. 166.
-
-[115] _Ibid._ p. 168.
-
-[116] Dryden's _Essay on Dramatick Poesy_, 1668.
-
-[117] Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 756.
-
-[118] _European Magazine_ (Mr. Moser).
-
-[119] Smith's _Life of Nollekens_, vol. ii. p. 205.
-
-[120] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, vol. i. p. 22 (Notes by Northcote and Mr.
-Wornum).
-
-[121] Chalmers's _British Poets_, vol. vii. p. 101 (Ode to the Royal
-Society).
-
-[122] Cunningham, vol. i. p. 26.
-
-[123] _Ibid._ p. 757.
-
-[124] _Ibid._
-
-[125] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, vol. i. p. 282.
-
-[126] Galt's _Life of West_, pt. ii. p. 25.
-
-[127] _Ibid._ pp. 36-38.
-
-[128] Strange's _Enquiry into the Rise and Establishment of the Royal
-Academy_ (1775).
-
-[129] Pye's _Patronage of British Art_, p. 134.
-
-[130] The original thirty-six Academicians were--Benjamin West, Francesco
-Zuccarelli, Nathaniel Dance, Richard Wilson, George Michael Moser, Samuel
-Wale (a sign-painter), J. Baptist Cipriani, Jeremiah Meyer, Angelica
-Kauffmann, Charles Catton (a coach and sign painter), Francesco
-Bartolozzi, Francis Cotes, Edward Penny, George Barrett (Wilson's rival),
-Paul Sandby, Richard Yeo, Mary Moser, Agostino Carlini, William Chambers
-(the architect of Somerset House), Joseph Wilton (the sculptor), Francis
-Milner Newton, Francis Hayman, John Baker, Mason Chamberlin, John Gwynn,
-Thomas Gainsborough, Dominick Serres, Peter Toms (a drapery painter for
-Reynolds, who finally committed suicide), Nathaniel Hone (who for his
-libel on Reynolds was expelled the Academy), Joshua Reynolds, John
-Richards, Thomas Sandby, George Dance, J. Tyler, William Hoare of Bath,
-and Johann Zoffani. In 1772 Edward Burch, Richard Cosway, Joseph
-Nollekens, and James Barry (expelled in 1797), made up the
-forty.--Wornum's Preface to the _Lectures on Painting_.
-
-[131] Pye's _Patronage of British Art_, 1845, p. 136.
-
-[132] Royal Academy _Catalogues_, Brit. Mus.
-
-[133] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. i. p. 381.
-
-[134] _Life of Haydon_, by Tom Taylor, vol. i. p. 30.
-
-[135] _Ibid._ p. 20.
-
-[136] Thornbury's _Life of Turner_.
-
-[137] O'Keefe's _Life_ vol. i. p. 386.
-
-[138] Knowles's _Life of Fuseli_, vol. i. p. 32.
-
-[139] Irvine's _Life of Falconer_.
-
-[140] Smith's _Life of Nollekens_, vol. ii. p. 129.
-
-[141] Hatton, p. 785.
-
-[142] _Postman_, No. 80.
-
-[143] _Life of Blake_, by Gilchrist.
-
-[144] Andrews's _History of Journalism_, vol. ii. p. 85.
-
-[145] Strype, B. iii. p. 196.
-
-[146] Glover's _Life_, p. 6.
-
-[147] Dennis's _Letters_, p. 196.
-
-[148] Procter's _Life of Kean_, vol. ii. p. 140.
-
-[149] Dr. King's _Art of Cookery_.
-
-[150] _Spectator_, No. 9.
-
-[151] _Memoirs of the Kit-Cat Club_, p. 6.
-
-[152] Defoe's _Journal_, vol. i. p. 287.
-
-[153] _Letters of Lady M. W. Montagu_, edited by W. M. Thomas, Esq.
-
-[154] _Annual Obituary_, vol. vii.
-
-[155] _Monthly Repository_, by Leigh Hunt, 1836.
-
-[156] Procter's _Life of Kean_.
-
-[157] _The Temple Anecdotes_ (Groombridge), p. 50.
-
-[158] Strype, B. iv. p. 120.
-
-[159] _Ibid._
-
-[160] Dixon's _Bacon_, p. 227.
-
-[161] Appendix to the _Tatler_, vol. iv. p. 615.
-
-[162] Smith's _Streets of London_, vol. iv. p. 244.
-
-[163] _Egerton Papers_, by Collier, p. 376.
-
-[164] Strype, B. vi. p. 76.
-
-[165] Cunningham, vol. i. p. 283.
-
-[166] _London Gazette_, No. 897.
-
-[167] Pepys, vol. i. p. 137, 4to ed.
-
-[168] Horace Walpole.
-
-[169] Otway.
-
-[170] _Spectator_, No. 155.
-
-[171] _Tatler_, No. 26.
-
-[172] _Nouvelle Biographie Univ._, vol. xxxviii. p. 19.
-
-[173] _Ducatus Leodiensis_, fol. 1715, p. 485.
-
-[174] _British Apollo_ (1740), ii. p. 376.
-
-[175] Oldys's _Life of Raleigh_, p. 145.
-
-[176] Aubrey, vol. iii. p. 513.
-
-[177] Gough's _British Topography_, vol. i. p. 743.
-
-[178] Walpole's _Mems. of George III._, vol. iv. p. 173.
-
-[179] Elmes's _Anecdotes_, vol. iii.
-
-[180] Cunningham, vol. i. p. 83.
-
-[181] Boswell, vol. i. p. 225.
-
-[182] Hone's _Everyday Book_, vol. i. p. 237.
-
-[183] Pye's _Patronage of British Art_ (1845), pp. 61, 62.
-
-[184] _Wine and Walnuts_, vol. i. p. 161.
-
-[185] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. i. p. 3.
-
-[186] _Ibid._ vol. ii. p. 203.
-
-[187] _Haydon's Life_, vol. iii. p. 182.
-
-[188] _Book about Doctors_, by J. C. Jeaffreson, p. 221.
-
-[189] Archenholz, p. 109.
-
-[190] Colman's _Random Records_.
-
-[191] See the Percy Society's Publications.
-
-[192] Rymer, iii. 926.
-
-[193] Chaucer's _Works_.
-
-[194] Dugdale's _Baronetage_, vol. 1. p. 789.
-
-[195] _Scala Chron._, p. 175; Froissart, c. 161.
-
-[196] Rymer, vi. 452.
-
-[197] Froissart, lix.
-
-[198] Walsingham, p. 248.
-
-[199] Holinshed, vol. ii. p. 431.
-
-[200] Shakspere incorrectly makes Jack Cade burn the Savoy. He has
-attributed to that Irish impostor the act of Wat Tyler, a far more
-patriotic man.
-
-[201] Stow.
-
-[202] Cowley's _Works_, 10th edit. (Tonson), 1707, vol. ii. p. 587.
-
-[203] Letter to Evelyn. Cowley's _Works_ (1707), vol. ii. p. 731.
-
-[204] J. T. Smith's _Antiquarian Ramble in the Streets of London_ (1846),
-vol. i. p. 255.
-
-[205] Baker's _Chronicle_ (1730), p. 625.
-
-[206] Cunningham's _London_ (1849), vol. ii. p. 728.
-
-[207] _The Postman_ (1696), No. 180.
-
-[208] Strype, B. iv. p. 107, ed. 1720.
-
-[209] Hughson's _Walks through London_, p. 207.
-
-[210] Hughson's _Walks through London_, p. 209.
-
-[211] Dryden's _Works_ (1821 ed.), vol. ii. p. 105.
-
-[212] _Athenae Ox._ vol. ii. p. 1036.
-
-[213] Cunningham (1849), vol. ii. p. 537.
-
-[214] Wood's _Athen. Ox._ ii. 396, ed. 1721.
-
-[215] _The Shepherd's Hunting_ (1633).
-
-[216] Macaulay's _History of England_, vol. ii. chap. v.
-
-[217] Buckingham's _Works_ (1704), p. 15.
-
-[218] _All the Year Round_, May 12, 1860 (_The Precinct_).
-
-[219] Andrews's _History of British Journalism_, vol. ii. p. 83.
-
-[220] Smiles's _Lives of the Engineers_, vol. ii. p. 187.
-
-[221] Smiles's _Lives of the Engineers_, vol. ii. p. 186.
-
-[222] _Ibid._, vol. ii. p. 93.
-
-[223] Hepworth Dixon's _Story of Lord Bacon's Life_ (1862), p. 14.
-
-[224] Montagu, xii. 420, 432.
-
-[225] Aubrey's _Lives_, vol. ii. p. 224; Dixon's _Bacon_, p. 315.
-
-[226] _Character of Lord Bacon._
-
-[227] Dixon's _Story of Lord Bacon's Life_, p. 33 (1862). Pearce's _Inns
-of Court_.
-
-[228] Sir B. Gerbier.
-
-[229] Bassompierre's _Embassy to England_.
-
-[230] Whitelocke, p. 167.
-
-[231] Peacham's _Compleat Gentleman_, ed. 1661, p. 108.
-
-[232] Pepys, 6th June 1663.
-
-[233] Dryden (Scott), vol. ix. p. 233.
-
-[234] Pepys's _Diary_. vol. i. p. 223.
-
-[235] Evelyn's _Memoirs_, vol. i. p. 530.
-
-[236] Rate Books of St. Martin's.
-
-[237] Cole's _MSS._, vol. xx. folio 220.
-
-[238] Gilchrist's _Life of Etty_, vol. i. p. 221.
-
-[239] Barrow's _Life of Peter the Great_, p. 90.
-
-[240] Ballard's Collection, Bodleian.
-
-[241] Pennant.
-
-[242] Strype, B. vi. p. 76.
-
-[243] Cunningham, vol. i. pp. 402, 403.
-
-[244] Rate-books of St. Martin's.
-
-[245] _Memorials of Franklin_, vol. i. p. 261.
-
-[246] Smith's _Comic Misc._ vol. ii. p. 186.
-
-[247] _Memoirs of James Smith_, by Horace Smith, vol. i. p. 32.
-
-[248] _Memoirs of James Smith_, by Horace Smith, vol. i. p. 54.
-
-[249] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. i. p. 340.
-
-[250] _Ibid._ vol. i. pt 302.
-
-[251] Harl. MSS. 6850.
-
-[252] Rate-books of St. Martin's.
-
-[253] Smith's _Book for a Rainy Day_, pp. 281, 282.
-
-[254] Cal. Rot. Patentium.
-
-[255] Brayley's _Beauties of England and Wales_, vol. x. part iv. p. 167.
-
-[256] _Father Hubbard's Tale_, 4to, 1604.--Middleton's _Works_, vol. v. p.
-573.
-
-[257] Archer's _Vestiges of Old London_ (View of Crockford's shop).
-
-[258] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, vol. iii. p. 911.
-
-[259] Malcolm's _Londinum Rediviv._ vol. iii. p. 397.
-
-[260] Hughson's _Walks_ (1829).
-
-[261] Boswell's _Life of Johnson_, vol. i. p. 383.
-
-[262] Boswell, vol. iii. p. 331.
-
-[263] _Censura Literaria_, vol. i. p. 176.
-
-[264] Spence's _Anecdotes_.
-
-[265] _State Poems_, vol. ii. p. 143 ("A Satyr on the Poets.")
-
-[266] Leigh Hunt's _Town_ (1857), p. 135.
-
-[267] Hughson's _Walks_, p. 184.
-
-[268] Leigh Hunt's _Town_ (1859 ed.), p. 134.
-
-[269] Strype, B. iv. p. 117.
-
-[270] Boswell.
-
-[271] Walpole's _Anecdotes_ (ed. Dallaway), vol. ii. p. 315.
-
-[272] Leigh Hunt's _Town_ (1859), p. 145.
-
-[273] Brayley's _Beauties of England and Wales_, vol. x. part iv. p. 166.
-
-[274] Malone's _Shakspere_, vol. iii. p. 516.
-
-[275] Nichols's _Hogarth_, vol. ii. p. 70.
-
-[276] Cunningham (1849), vol. i. p. 210.
-
-[277] Hughson's _Walks through London_, p. 188.
-
-[278] Chalmers's _Biog. Dict._ vol. v. p. 64.
-
-[279] Boswell, ed. Croker, vol. ii. 201.
-
-[280] Stow, p. 166.
-
-[281] Sir G. Buc, in Howes (ed. 1631), p. 1075.
-
-[282] Fitzstephen, circa, 1178: the quotation refers, however, more to the
-north of London.
-
-[283] Tennyson.
-
-[284] Malcolm's _London_, vol. ii.
-
-[285] Knox's _Elegant Extracts_.
-
-[286] Leigh Hunt's _Town_, p. 146.
-
-[287] _Henry IV._ second part, act iii. sc. 2.
-
-[288] _Prot. Dissenters' Magazine_, vol. vi.
-
-[289] Smith's _Life of Nollekens_, vol. i. 365.
-
-[290] Cradock's _Memoirs_, vol. iv. p. 166.
-
-[291] _Garrard to the Earl of Strafford_, vol. i. p. 227.
-
-[292] _Citie's Loyaltie Displayed_, 4to, 1661.
-
-[293] Pepys.
-
-[294] Aubrey's _Anecdotes_, vol. iii. p. 457.
-
-[295] Malcolm's _Streets of London_ (1846), vol. i. p. 363.
-
-[296] _Parish Clerks' Survey_, p. 286.
-
-[297] Cunningham's _Lives of the Painters_, vol. iii. p. 292.
-
-[298] Pope's _Dunciad_.
-
-[299] Addison's _Freeholder_, No. 4.
-
-[300] J. T. Smith's _Streets of London_ (1846), vol. i. pp. 366, 367.
-
-[301] Sir G. Buc (Stow by Howes), p. 1075, ed. 1631.
-
-[302] Roper's _Life of Sir Thomas More_, by Singer, p. 52.
-
-[303] _Spectator_ No. 2, March 2, 1710-11.
-
-[304] Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 606.
-
-[305] Sir G. Buc, in Howes, p. 1076, ed. 1631.
-
-[306] _Trivia._
-
-[307] _Smith's Streets of London_, vol. i. p. 338.
-
-[308] Hone's _Every-day Book_, vol. i. p. 1300.
-
-[309] Walpole's _Anecdotes of Painting_, vol. ii. p. 612.
-
-[310] No. 102.
-
-[311] Pennant's _London_ (1813), p. 204.
-
-[312] _Spectator_, No. 454.
-
-[313] _Spectator_, No. 454.
-
-[314] Andrews's _History of Journalism_, vol. ii. p. 8.
-
-[315] Brayley's _Theatres of London_ (1826), p. 40.
-
-[316] Brayley, p. 42.
-
-[317] Chetwood's _History of the Stage_, p. 141.
-
-[318] _Spectator_, No. 468.
-
-[319] Ward's _Secret History of Clubs_, ed. 1709.
-
-[320] Victor.
-
-[321] Edwards's _Anecdotes of Painting_, p. 20.
-
-[322] _Wine and Walnuts_, vol. i. p. 110.
-
-[323] P. Cunningham.
-
-[324] Dr. King's _Art of Cookery, humbly inscribed to the Beef-steak
-Club_. (1709.)
-
-[325] Leigh Hunt's _Town_ (1859), p. 191.
-
-[326] Cunningham, vol. i. p. 297.
-
-[327] Delaune.
-
-[328] Strype, B. iv. p. 119.
-
-[329] Leigh Hunt's _Town_, ch. iv.
-
-[330] _Wine and Walnuts_, vol. i. p. 281.
-
-[331] _Ibid._ p. 269.
-
-[332] _Wine and Walnuts_, vol. i. p. 276.
-
-[333] Cunningham, p. 187.
-
-[334] Whitelocke.
-
-[335] Lockhart's _Life of Scott_, vol. vi. p. 20.
-
-[336] _The Stage_, by Alfred Bunn, vol. iii. p. 131.
-
-[337] _Life of Mathews_, by Mrs. Mathews (abridged by Mr. Yates), p. 211.
-
-[338] _Life of Mathews_, by Mrs. Mathews.
-
-[339] _Critical Essays_ (1807), p. 140.
-
-[340] Hazlitt's _Criticisms of the English Stage_, p. 98.
-
-[341] Hazlitt's _Criticisms of the English Stage_, p. 98.
-
-[342] Cole's _Life of C. Kean_, vol. ii. p. 260.
-
-[343] Strype, B. vi. p. 93.
-
-[344] Stow.
-
-[345] Davies's _Life of Garrick_, vol. x. p. 217.
-
-[346] Strype, B. vi. p. 93.
-
-[347] Cunningham's _London_ (1850), p. 219.
-
-[348] Whyte's _Miscellanea Nova_, p. 49.
-
-[349] Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 597.--Rate-books of St. Martin's.
-
-[350] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, vol. i. p. 248.
-
-[351] Dixon's _Story of Lord Bacon's Life_, p. 204.
-
-[352] _English Causes Celebres_ (edited by Craik), vol. i. p. 79.
-
-[353] _Memoirs of the Peers of James I._, p. 240.
-
-[354] _Autobiography of Lord Herbert_, p. 110
-
-[355] Suckling's _Poems_.
-
-[356] Camden's _Annals of King James_.
-
-[357] _Londinum Redivivum._
-
-[358] Walpole to Montague, Feb. 2, 1762.
-
-[359] Dix's _Life of Chatterton_, p. 267.
-
-[360] Foster's _Life of Goldsmith_, p. 216.
-
-[361] Irving's _Oliver Goldsmith_ (1850), p. 90.
-
-[362] Dr. Waagen's _Treasures of Art_, vol. i. p. 394.
-
-[363] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, vol. ii. p. 354.
-
-[364] Walpole, vol. i. p. 277.
-
-[365] _The Famous Chronicle of King Edward I._ (4to., 1593).
-
-[366] Bosworth's _Anglo-Saxon Dictionary_.
-
-[367] Hamlet.
-
-[368] _Diversions of Purley._
-
-[369] Peele's _Works_ (Dyce), vii. 575.
-
-[370] Rymer, ii. 498.
-
-[371] Heming, 590.
-
-[372] Walpole, vol. i. p. 32.
-
-[373] _Gleanings from Westminster Abbey_, 2d edition, p. 152 (W. Burges),
-Roxburghe Club.
-
-[374] Lilly's _Observations_.
-
-[375] Carlyle's _Cromwell_, vol. i. p. 99.
-
-[376] _State Trials_, vol. v. pp. 1234-5.
-
-[377] Narcissus Luttrell.
-
-[378] Overseers' Books (_Cunningham_, vol. i. p. 179).
-
-[379] _Harl. MSS._ 7315.
-
-[380] Carpenter (quoted by Walpole, _Anecdotes_, vol. ii. p. 395).
-
-[381] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, vol. ii. p. 394.
-
-[382] Smith's _Streets of London_, vol. i. p. 139.
-
-[383] Archenholz, _Tableau de l'Angleterre_, vol. ii. p. 164, 1788.
-
-[384] _Burnet_, vol. ii. p. 53, ed. 1823.
-
-[385] _Annual Register_ (1810).
-
-[386] Cobbett's _State Trials_, vol. xvii. p. 160.
-
-[387] Archenholz, vol. i. p. 166.
-
-[388] _Daily Advertiser_, 1731.
-
-[389] _Gentleman's Magazine_, vol. i.
-
-[390] v. 85.
-
-[391] Hogarth's _Works_ (Nicholls and Steevens), vol. i. p. 162.
-
-[392] Smith's _London_, vol. i. p. 141.
-
-[393] _Notes and Queries_ (vol. vi., 1858), p. 364.
-
-[394] _Dunciad_, B. iv. 30.
-
-[395] Pope's Works (edited by R. Carruthers), vol. ii. p. 314.
-
-[396] Stow, p. 167.
-
-[397] Report, May 16, 1844.
-
-[398] Smith's _London_, vol. i. p. 133.
-
-[399] Dr. Waagen, vol. i. p. 6.
-
-[400] Waagen, vol. i. p. 322.
-
-[401] _Ibid._ vol. i. p. 331.
-
-[402] Cunningham, nearly always correct, says L10,000 (vol. ii. p. 577).
-
-[403] Waagen, vol. ii. p. 329.
-
-[404] Cunningham's _London_, p. 428.
-
-[405] Smith's _Streets of London_, vol. i. p. 153.
-
-[406] Rate-books of St. Martin's (Cunningham).
-
-[407] MSS., Birch, 4221, quoted in the notes of the _Tatler_.
-
-[408] "Country Wife."
-
-[409] "The Scowrers."
-
-[410] _State Poems._
-
-[411] "The Hind and the Panther Transversed."
-
-[412] "The Relapse."
-
-[413] _The Art of Cookery._
-
-[414] _Weekly Journal_, Nov. 21, 1724.
-
-[415] _London Gazette_, June 4, 1688.
-
-[416] _Dunciad_, B. ii. v. 411.
-
-[417] _Flying Post_, June 23, 1716.
-
-[418] Pope's _Works_ (Carruthers), vol. ii. pp. 309, 310.
-
-[419] Leigh Hunt's _Essays on the Theatres_ (1807), p. 64.
-
-[420] Philips's _Life of Milton_, p. 32, 12mo, 1694.
-
-[421] Cunningham (1850), p. 107.
-
-[422] _Wine and Walnuts_, vol. i. p. 163.
-
-[423] _Royal Guide to the London Charities_, 1878-79.
-
-[424] _Life of Dr. John North._
-
-[425] Whitelock, p. 470, ed. 1732.
-
-[426] Burnet, vol. ii. p. 70, ed. 1823.
-
-[427] Boswell (Croker), vol. iii. p. 213.
-
-[428] Willis's _History of the See of Llandaff_.
-
-[429] _Bartholomew Fair_ (Ben Jonson).
-
-[430] Gifford's _Ben Jonson_, iv. p. 430.
-
-[431] Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 505.
-
-[432] _The World_, Nov. 29, 1753.
-
-[433] _Robson: a Sketch_ (Hotten, 1864).
-
-[434] Aubrey, iii. 415.
-
-[435] "Treacherous Brothers," 4to, 1696.
-
-[436] _St. James's Chronicle_, April 24, 1762.
-
-[437] _Ibid._ May 26, 1761.
-
-[438] Edwards' _Anecdotes_, pp. 116, 117.
-
-[439] Rate-books of St. Martin's.
-
-[440] Lord Orford's _Anecdotes of Painting_.
-
-[441] J. C. Jeaffreson's _Book about Doctors_, p. 109.
-
-[442] _Ath. Ox._ vol. ii.
-
-[443] Gifford's _Ben Jonson_, vol. ix. pp. 48, 63, 64.
-
-[444] Aubrey's _Letters_, vol. ii. p. 332.
-
-[445] Recital in grant to the parish from King James I.
-
-[446] Cunningham's _London_ (1849), vol. ii. p. 526.
-
-[447] Burnet's _Own Times_, vol. i. p. 327, ed. 1823.
-
-[448] Allan Cunningham's _Lives_, vol. iv. p. 290.
-
-[449] _Biog. Brit._
-
-[450] Smith's _Life of Nollekens_, vol. ii. p. 233.
-
-[451] Smith's _Book for a Rainy Day_, pp. 251, 252.
-
-[452] Prologues to the _Satires_, v. 180.
-
-[453] Dr. Johnson's _Life of Ambrose Philips_.
-
-[454] Smith's _Nollekens and his Times_, vol. ii. p. 222.
-
-[455] Cunningham (1850), p. 450.
-
-[456] Smith's _Streets_, vol. ii. p. 208.
-
-[457] Smith, vol. ii. p. 97.
-
-[458] Smith, p. 211.
-
-[459] _Ibid._ vol. ii. p. 212.
-
-[460] Smith, vol. ii. p. 224.
-
-[461] Smith's _Streets of London_, vol. ii. p. 226.
-
-[462] _Wine and Walnuts_, vol. i. p. 178, a curious and amusing book, the
-truth in which is spoiled by an injudicious and eccentric mixture of
-fiction.
-
-[463] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. i. pp. 93, 94.
-
-[464] _Ibid._ vol. ii. p. 233.
-
-[465] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. ii. p. 238.
-
-[466] _Ibid._ p. 241.
-
-[467] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. i. p. 143.
-
-[468] _Ibid._ vol. ii. p. 244.
-
-[469] _Ibid._ p. 250.
-
-[470] _Recollections of O'Keefe_, vol. i. p. 108.
-
-[471] Knowles's _Life of Fuseli_, vol. i. p. 57.
-
-[472] _Passages of a Working Life_, by Charles Knight, vol. i. pp. 114,
-115.
-
-[473] Hume's _Learned Societies_, pp. 84, 85.
-
-[474] Dr. Hodges' _Letter to a Person of Quality_, p. 15.
-
-[475] Defoe's _Journal of the Plague Year_.
-
-[476] Dr. Hodges' _Loimologia_, p. 7 (from the reprint in 1720, when the
-plague was raging in France).
-
-[477] _Ibid._ pp. 19, 20.
-
-[478] Howes, p. 1048.
-
-[479] Bagford, Harl. MSS. 5900, fol. 50.
-
-[480] Walpole's _Royal and Noble Authors_, vol. ii. p. 25.
-
-[481] Evelyn's _Diary_ (1850), vol. ii. p. 59.
-
-[482] Evelyn's _Diary_, vol. ii. p. 153 (1850).
-
-[483] _Life of Lord Herbert_ (1826), p. 304.
-
-[484] Horace Walpole.
-
-[485] Aubrey's _Lives_, vol. ii. p. 387.
-
-[486] Walpole's _Anecdotes of Painting_ (Dallaway), vol. ii. p. 593.
-
-[487] Richardson.
-
-[488] Walpole, vol. ii. p. 563 (partly from Dallaway's version of the same
-story).
-
-[489] Dallaway.
-
-[490] Walpole, vol. ii. p. 594.
-
-[491] Spence.
-
-[492] Aubrey, vol. ii p. 132.
-
-[493] Dallaway's Notes.
-
-[494] Clarendon, B. ii. p. 2117.
-
-[495] _Ibid._ B. i. p. 116.
-
-[496] _Clarendon_, B. viii. p. 694.
-
-[497] Walpole's _Anecdotes of Painting_, vol. ii. p. 452.
-
-[498] Doran's _Her Majesty's Servants_, vol. ii. p. 51.
-
-[499] Leigh Hunt's _Town_, p. 226.
-
-[500] _Ibid._ p. 226.
-
-[501] Hazlitt's _Criticisms of the English Stage_, p. 49.
-
-[502] _O'Keefe's Life_, vol. i. p. 322.
-
-[503] Leigh Hunt, p. 226.
-
-[504] _Life of Benjamin Franklin_ (1826), p. 31.
-
-[505] _Life of the Duke of Ormond_ (1747), pp. 67, 80.
-
-[506] Macaulay, vol. ii. p. 560.
-
-[507] Bramston, p. 339.
-
-[508] _Annual Register_ (1780), pp. 254-287.
-
-[509] _Life of Inigo Jones_, by P. Cunningham, p. 22 (Shakspere Society).
-
-[510] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. ii. p. 90.
-
-[511] Cibber's _Lives_, vol. ii. p. 10.
-
-[512] _Ibid._ p. 11.
-
-[513] Cunningham's _London_, vol. ii. p. 501.
-
-[514] Dryden's Works (Scott), vol. i. p. 204.
-
-[515] Scott's _Dryden_, vol. xiii. p. 7.
-
-[516] Cibber's _Lives_, vol. iv. p. 293.
-
-[517] _Wine and Walnuts_, vol. ii. p. 277.
-
-[518] Cibber's _Lives_, vol. iv. p. 47.
-
-[519] Cibber's _Lives_, vol. iv. p. 47.
-
-[520] Mrs. Bray's _Life of Stothard_, p. 47.
-
-[521] Defoe's _Journey through England_.
-
-[522] _Wine and Walnuts_, vol. ii. p. 167.
-
-[523] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. i. p. 27.
-
-[524] _Times_, Sept. 26, 1796.
-
-[525] Talfourd's _Final Memorials of Charles Lamb_, vol. i. p. 56.
-
-[526] Burke's _Landed Gentry_ (1858), p. 320.
-
-[527] Pennant.
-
-[528] Lingard, vol. vi. p. 607.
-
-[529] Walton's _Lives_ (1852), p. 22.
-
-[530] _Angel in the House_, by Mr. Coventry Patmore.
-
-[531] Dedication to Translation of Juvenal.
-
-[532] Donne's _Poems_ (1719), p. 291.
-
-[533] Miss Benger's _Memoirs of the Queen of Bohemia_, vol. ii. p. 322.
-
-[534] Miss Benger's _Memoirs of the Queen of Bohemia_, vol. ii. p. 428.
-
-[535] Sydney State Papers, vol. ii. p. 723.
-
-[536] Benger, vol. ii. p. 457.
-
-[537] _Ibid._, Preface.
-
-[538] Brayley's _Londiniana_, vol. iv. p. 301.
-
-[539] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, p. 210.
-
-[540] Cunningham, vol. i. p. 204.
-
-[541] Wilson's _Life of James I._ (1653), p. 146.
-
-[542] Aubrey's _Anecdotes and Traditions_, p. 3.
-
-[543] _Trivia._
-
-[544] Rate-books of St. Martin's, quoted by P. Cunningham.
-
-[545] Granger's _Biographical History of England_ (1824), vol. v. p. 356.
-
-[546] Pepys's _Memoirs_, vol. iii. p. 75.
-
-[547] Curll's _History of the English Stage_, vol. i. p. III.
-
-[548] _Miscellaneous Works by the late Duke of Buckingham, etc._, p. 35
-(1704).
-
-[549] _Miscellaneous Works by the late Duke of Buckingham, etc._, vol. i.
-p. 34.
-
-[550] _Burnet's History of his own Times_ (1753), vol. i. p. 387.
-
-[551] Leigh Hunt's _Town_ (1859), p. 282.
-
-[552] Evelyn's _Mems._ vol. ii. p. 339.
-
-[553] Collier, iii. 328.
-
-[554] Prynne's _Histrio-Mastix_ (1633).
-
-[555] Pepys (May 8, 1663).
-
-[556] Cibber's _Apology_, p. 338. ed. 1740.
-
-[557] Doran, vol. i. p. 57.
-
-[558] Dec. 7, 1666.
-
-[559] Jan. 23, 1667.
-
-[560] April 20, 1667.
-
-[561] Doran, p. 97.
-
-[562] Doran, vol. i. p. 79.
-
-[563] Leigh Hunt, p. 267.
-
-[564] Cibber's _Apology_, 250.
-
-[565] Doran, vol. i. p. 466.
-
-[566] _Tatler_, No. 182.
-
-[567] Doran, vol. i. p. 464.
-
-[568] Cumberland's _Memoirs_, p. 59.
-
-[569] Davies's _Miscellanies_, vol. i. p. 126.
-
-[570] Doran, vol. ii. p. 126.
-
-[571] _Ibid._ p. 149.
-
-[572] Doran, vol. i. p. 511.
-
-[573] _Ibid._ vol. ii. p. 7.
-
-[574] Dr. Doran, vol. ii. p. 277.
-
-[575] Dr. Doran's _Knights and their Days_.
-
-[576] _Elia_, p. 217.
-
-[577] Doran, vol. ii. p. 330.
-
-[578] Leigh Hunt's _Essays on the Theatres_, p. 124.
-
-[579] Hazlitt's _Essays_, p. 47.
-
-[580] _Elia_, p. 216.
-
-[581] Moore's _Sheridan_, p. 140.
-
-[582] _Ibid._ p. 181.
-
-[583] Murphy's _Garrick_.
-
-[584] Doran, vol. ii. p. 489.
-
-[585] Leigh Hunt's _Essays on the Theatres_, p. 124.
-
-[586] _Ibid._ p. 78.
-
-[587] Hazlitt's _Criticisms of the Stage_, p. 441.
-
-[588] _Elia_, p. 221.
-
-[589] Doran, vol. ii. p. 476.
-
-[590] Hazlitt's _Essays_, p. 47.
-
-[591] Hazlitt's _Criticisms_, pp. 49, 50.
-
-[592] _Elia_ (1853), p. 206.
-
-[593] _Elia_, p. 232.
-
-[594] _Ibid._ p. 213.
-
-[595] Moore's _Life of Sheridan_, p. 637.
-
-[596] Moore's _Sheridan_, p. 637.
-
-[597] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. ii. p. 113.
-
-[598] Hazlitt's _Essays_, p. 51.
-
-[599] _Ibid._ p. 212.
-
-[600] _The Georgian Era_, vol. iv. p. 43.
-
-[601] Hazlitt's _Essays_, p. 49.
-
-[602] _Lounger's Commonplace Book_, vol. ii. p. 137.
-
-[603] _Dunciad_, B. iii. p. 199.
-
-[604] _Lounger's Commonplace Book_, vol. ii. p. 141.
-
-[605] _The Intelligencer_, No. 3.
-
-[606] Leigh Hunt's _Town_, p. 248.
-
-[607] _Fly Leaves_ (Miller), vol. i. p. 96.
-
-[608] Disraeli's _Miscellanies_, p. 77.
-
-[609] _Wine and Walnuts_, vol. ii. p. 150.
-
-[610] Jeaffreson's _Book about Doctors_ (2d ed.), p. 85.
-
-[611] The very earliest was granted to Philip the Hermit, for gravelling
-the road at Highgate.
-
-[612] Rymer's _Foedera_.
-
-[613] Fuller's _Church History_.
-
-[614] Vaughan's _Life of Wickliffe_.
-
-[615] Dobie's _St. Giles's_, p. 11.
-
-[616] _Ibid._ (1829), p. 2.
-
-[617] Pennant (4th ed.), p. 3.
-
-[618] Butler's _Lives of the Saints_.
-
-[619] Aggas's Map, published in 1578 or 1560.
-
-[620] Stow's _Survey_, 1595.
-
-[621] Dobie's _St. Giles's_, p. 46.
-
-[622] Evelyn's _Diary_.
-
-[623] Brayley's _Londiniana_.
-
-[624] Dobie's _St. Giles's_, pp. 58, 59.
-
-[625] Defoe's _History of the Plague_.
-
-[626] Maitland's _History of London_.
-
-[627] Dr. Sydenham.
-
-[628] Dr. Hodgson's _Journal of the Plague_.
-
-[629] Dr. Hodges on the Plague.
-
-[630] Fuller's _Church History_.
-
-[631] Hume.
-
-[632] Fuller.
-
-[633] Parliamentary Report.
-
-[634] Ralph.
-
-[635] Rowland Dobie's _History of St. Giles's_, p. 119.
-
-[636] Pennant's _London_, p. 159.
-
-[637] Cunningham's _London_, vol. i. p. 339.
-
-[638] _Annual Register_, 1827.
-
-[639] Dobie's _St. Giles's_, p. 367.
-
-[640] Strype.
-
-[641] Strype.
-
-[642] Dobie's _St. Giles's_, p. 225.
-
-[643] Cunningham's _London_, vol. i. p. 384.
-
-[644] Smith's _Book for a Rainy Day_, p. 21.
-
-[645] Stow, p. 164.
-
-[646] Pennant.
-
-[647] Smith's _Book for a Rainy Day_, p. 29, date 1774.
-
-[648] Smith's _Book for a Rainy Day_ is one of the best works of a clever
-London antiquarian, to whose industry, as well as to Mr. Peter
-Cunningham's, the author is much indebted, as his foot-notes pretty well
-show.
-
-[649] Dryden's _Limberham_.
-
-[650] _Love for Love._
-
-[651] Stow.
-
-[652] Dobie's _St. Giles's_, p. 66.
-
-[653] Parton's account of St. Giles's.
-
-[654] Parton.
-
-[655] Smith's _Nollekens_, vol. i. p. 130.
-
-[656] Archenholz, p. 117.
-
-[657] Smith's _Book for a Rainy Day_, p. 74.
-
-[658] Dobie's _History of St. Giles's_, p. 204.
-
-[659] _Bell's Life in London_, July 12, 1829.
-
-[660] Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 565.
-
-[661] Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 566.
-
-[662] _Sketches by Boz_, p. 44.
-
-[663] _Sketches by Boz_, p. 45.
-
-[664] Dobie's _St. Giles's_, p. 362.
-
-[665] T. Hudson Turner, _Archaeological Journal_, Dec. 1848.
-
-[666] Sir G. Buc in Stow, by Howes, p. 1072 (ed. 1631).
-
-[667] Pennant, p. 176.
-
-[668] Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 480.
-
-[669] _Walpole_, by Dallaway, vol. ii. p. 37.
-
-[670] Lloyd's _State Worthies_.
-
-[671] _State Trials_, iv. 445, fol. ed.
-
-[672] _Hudibras_, part iii. c. 3.
-
-[673] Granger's _Biography_ in art. "Margaret Roper."
-
-[674] Dr. Birch's _Life of Tillotson_.
-
-[675] _Hale's Life_, by Burnet.
-
-[676] _Biog. Brit._, by the Hon. and Rev. F. Egerton.
-
-[677] Preface to Thurloe's _State Papers_, 1742.
-
-[678] _Biog. Brit._
-
-[679] _Session of the Poets._
-
-[680] Johnson's _Lives_.
-
-[681] _Ath. Ox._ vol. ii.
-
-[682] Foote's _Life of Murphy_.
-
-[683] Campbell's _Lives of the Chief Justices_, vol. iii. p. 221.
-
-[684] Dr. Johnson.
-
-[685] Pennant, p. 176.
-
-[686] Evelyn's _Diary_, vol. ii. p. 60 (1850).
-
-[687] _The Devil is an Ass._
-
-[688] Aubrey.
-
-[689] Gifford's _Ben Jonson_, vol. i. p. 9.
-
-[690] Fuller's _Worthies_, vol. ii. p. 112.
-
-[691] Gifford, vol. i. p. 14.
-
-[692] Moore's _Memoirs_, vol. ii. p. 211.
-
-[693] _Poems on Affairs of State_, vol. i. p. 147.
-
-[694] Cunningham.
-
-[695] Rymer's _Foedera_, vol. xvii. p. 120.
-
-[696] Wilkinson's _Handbook for Egypt_, p. 185.
-
-[697] Cunningham's _Life of Inigo Jones_, p. 23 (Shakspere Society).
-
-[698] _Canting Academy_, 1674 (Malcolm).
-
-[699] Cunningham.
-
-[700] Rate-books of St. Clement's Danes (Cunningham).
-
-[701] Wharton's _Works_.
-
-[702] _Life of Lord W. Russell_, by Lord John Russell, 3d ed. vol. ii. p.
-18.
-
-[703] Fox's _History of the Reign of James II._ (Introduction).
-
-[704] Lord John Russell, vol. i. p. 121.
-
-[705] Raplin, vol. xiv. p. 333.
-
-[706] Burnet's _History of his own Times_ (1725), vol. ii.
-
-[707] _Letters of Lady Russell_, 7th ed. 1819.
-
-[708] _State Trials_, vol. xviii. p. 522.
-
-[709] _Daily Journal_, July 9, 1735.
-
-[710] Ireland _Inns of Court_, p. 129.
-
-[711] Macaulay's _History of England_, vol. i. p. 353.
-
-[712] Walpole's _Anecdotes_, vol. iii. p. 167.
-
-[713] Pennant, p. 238.
-
-[714] _Lady M. W. Montague's Letters._
-
-[715] Burney's _Hist. of Music_, vol. iv. p. 667.
-
-[716] Lord Chesterfield (Mahon), vol. ii. p. 264.
-
-[717] Hawkins's _Life of Johnson_, p. 192.
-
-[718] Pugh's _Life of Jonas Hanway_ (1787), p. 184.
-
-[719] _Lounger's Commonplace Book_, vol. i. p. 361.
-
-[720] Macaulay's _Essay on Walpole's Letters_.
-
-[721] Walpole's _Memoirs_, vol. i. p. 169.
-
-[722] Campbell's _Lives of the Lord Chancellors_, vol. vi. p. 105.
-
-[723] Campbell's _Chief Justices_, vol. ii. p. 563.
-
-[724] Pepys, vol. ii. p. 272.
-
-[725] _Ibid._ p. 282.
-
-[726] Hatton's _New View of London_ (1708), p. 627.
-
-[727] Clarendon, vol. vi. pp. 89, 90.
-
-[728] Grosley's _Tour to London_, vol. ii. p. 309.
-
-[729] Walpole's _Letters_, vol. ii. p. 137.
-
-[730] Walpole's _Letters_, vol. vii. p. 223.
-
-[731] _Ibid._ vol. ix. p. 307.
-
-[732] Cunningham, vol. i. p. 228.
-
-[733] _Lady Fanshawe's Memoirs_, p. 92.
-
-[734] _Ibid._ p. 94.
-
-[735] _Lady Fanshawe's Memoirs_, pp. 300, 301.
-
-[736] Moore's _Diary_, vol. iv. p. 193.
-
-[737] _Ibid._ p. 35.
-
-[738] Coleridge's _Table Talk_.
-
-[739] Townsend, vol. i. p. 91.
-
-[740] "The Alabaster sarcophagus of Oimeneptah I., King of Egypt, now in
-Sir John Soane's Museum. Drawn by Joseph Bonomi, and described by Samuel
-Sharpe." London: Longmans and Co. 1864.
-
-[741] _Annual Register_ (1837).
-
-[742] Chapone's _Letters_, vol. ii. p. 68.
-
-[743] Leigh Hunt's _Town_, p. 237.
-
-[744] Malone, pp. 135, 136.
-
-[745] Grammont's _Mems._ (1811), vol. ii. p. 142.
-
-[746] Doran's _Her Majesty's Servants_, vol. i. p. 80.
-
-[747] Pepys, vol. iii. p. 136.
-
-[748] Pepys, vol. iv. p. 2.
-
-[749] Cibber's _Apology_, chap. v.
-
-[750] _Ibid._
-
-[751] _Doran_, vol. i. p. 119.
-
-[752] Doran, vol. i. p. 149.
-
-[753] Leigh Hunt's _Town_, p. 245.
-
-[754] Cibber's _Apology_, 2d. ed. p. 138.
-
-[755] Baker's _Biog. Dram._, vol. i. p. 270.
-
-[756] Doran, vol. i. p. 542.
-
-[757] Doran, vol. i. p. 424.
-
-[758] _Ibid._ p. 446.
-
-[759] Leigh Hunt's _Town_, p. 427.
-
-[760] Cunningham (1850), p. 406.
-
-[761] Doran, vol. i. p. 327.
-
-[762] Whincop's _Scanderberg_, p. 80 (1747).
-
-[763] _Fly Leaves_, by John Miller, p. 20.
-
-[764] The name of Strahan, Paul, and Bates's firm was originally Snow and
-Walton. It was one of the oldest banking-houses in London, second only to
-Child's. At the period of the Commonwealth Snow and Co. carried on the
-business of pawnbrokers, under the sign of the "Golden Anchor." The firm
-suspended payment about 1679 (as did many other banks), owing to the
-tyranny of Charles II. Strahan (the partner at the time of the last
-failure) had changed his name from Snow; his uncle, named Strahan (Queen's
-printer?) having left him L180,000, making change of name a condition. It
-is curious that on examining Strahan and Co.'s books, it was found by
-those of 1672 that a decimal system had been then employed. Strahan was
-known to all religious people. Bates had for many years been managing
-clerk. The firm had also a navy agency in Norfolk Street. They had
-encumbered themselves with the Mostyn Collieries to the amount of
-L139,940, and backed up Gandells, contractors who were making railways in
-France and Italy and draining Lake Capestang, lending L300,000 or
-L400,000. They finally pledged securities (L22,000) to the Rev. Dr.
-Griffiths, Prebendary of Rochester. Sir John Dean Paul got into a
-second-class carriage at Reigate, the functionaries trying to get in after
-him; the porter pulled them back, the train being in motion! Paul went to
-London alone, and in spite of telegraph got off, but at eight o'clock next
-night surrendered. The three men were tried October 26 and 27, 1858.
-
-[765] _Mrs. Lirriper's Lodgings_ (1863), pp. 6, 7.
-
-[766] _Harleian MS._, 6850.
-
-[767] _Cunningham_, vol. i. p. 378. I may here, as well as anywhere else,
-express my thanks to this careful and most industrious antiquary.
-
-[768] Mrs. Cornwall Baron Wilson's _Memoirs of the Duchess of St. Albans_
-(1840), vol. i. p. 331.
-
-[769] Kippis, _Bio. Brit._ iv. p. 266.
-
-[770] Thornbury's _British Artists_, vol. i. p. 171.
-
-[771] _Gentleman's Magazine_, August 1783, p. 709.
-
-[772] _David Copperfield_ (1864), p. 208.
-
-[773] _The Clubs of London_, vol. ii. p. 150.
-
-[774] _The Clubs of London_ (1828), vol. ii.
-
-[775] _Notes and Queries_, vol. vi. 2d series, p. 131.
-
-[776] Hatten, p. 24.
-
-[777] Cunningham, vol. i. p. 378.
-
-[778] _Notes and Queries_ (Bolton Corney), vol. viii. 2d series, p. 122.
-
-[779] Burnet, vol. i. p. 338.
-
-[780] Pepys, vol. v. p. 436.
-
-[781] Pennant, p. 215.
-
-[782] _Trivia._
-
-[783] _Anecdotes of Painting_, iv. 22.
-
-[784] Malone's _Dryden_, ii. 97.
-
-[785] Mr. Rimbault in _Notes and Queries_, Feb. 1850.
-
-[786] _Clubs of London_, vol. ii. p. 263.
-
-[787] All from Cunningham, vol. ii. p. 731, and how much else.
-
-[788] _Notes and Queries_, 2d series, vol. xi. p. 289.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
-
-The original text includes Greek characters that have been replaced with
-transliterations in this text version.
-
-Footnote 404 appears on page 224 of the text, but there is no
-corresponding marker on the page.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Haunted London, by Walter Thornbury
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