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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65748 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65748)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Tales from Westminster Abbey, by
-Millicent Frewen Lord
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Tales from Westminster Abbey
- Told to Children by Mrs. Frewen Lord
-
-Author: Millicent Frewen Lord
-
-Release Date: July 3, 2021 [eBook #65748]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Benjamin Fluehr and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
- images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TALES FROM WESTMINSTER
-ABBEY ***
-
-[Illustration: WEST FRONT OF WESTMINSTER ABBEY.
-
-_After a Photograph by the London Stereoscopic and Photographic Co.,
-Ltd._]
-
-
-
-
- TALES
-
- FROM
-
- WESTMINSTER ABBEY
-
- TOLD TO CHILDREN BY
-
- MRS. FREWEN LORD.
-
-
- WITH
- VIGNETTE PORTRAIT OF DEAN STANLEY, PLAN OF THE ABBEY
- AND GENERAL VIEW OF WEST FRONT OF ABBEY.
-
-
- _SECOND EDITION._
-
-
- LONDON:
- SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON & COMPANY
- _LIMITED_,
- St. Dunstan’s House,
- Fetter Lane, Fleet Street, E.C.
- 1894.
-
- [_All rights reserved._]
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,
- STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING CROSS.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: DEAN STANLEY.
-
-_From a Photograph by the London Stereoscopic Company._]
-
-
-
-
- DEDICATED
-
- to the memory of
-
- DEAN STANLEY,
-
- whose walks and talks with children
-
- in Westminster Abbey
-
- can never be effaced from the
-
- grateful recollection of one who as a child
-
- had the happiness of enjoying them.
-
-
-
-
-TALES
-
-FROM
-
-WESTMINSTER ABBEY.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-
-A great many years ago, when I was quite a small child, I was taken
-with some other children over Westminster Abbey by Dean Stanley, who
-was then the Dean of Westminster.
-
-Some of you may have read a book called “Tom Brown’s School Days,”
-and if so you will remember Tom’s great friend, Arthur, who began his
-school life a lonely and home-sick little boy, but who as the years
-went on came to be looked up to and liked almost more than any other
-boy at Rugby. “George Arthur” this boy is called in the book, but
-his real name was Arthur Stanley, and when he grew up he became a
-clergyman, and was for many years Dean of Westminster. He wrote a great
-many books, and one all about Westminster Abbey; for he knew every
-corner and part of this great church, and was full of stories about the
-great people who are buried here, and the kings and queens who were
-crowned here. There was nothing he liked better than taking people over
-the Abbey, and any one who had the happiness of going with him, as I
-did, and of hearing him, would always remember some, at any rate, of
-the stories he told.
-
-He died in 1881, and as none of you can ever see or hear him, standing
-in the Abbey surrounded by children, and telling them all that he
-thought would interest them, I am going to take out of my memory, and
-out of this book of his,[1] just as much of what he used to say as I
-hope will help you to enjoy what you will see there.
-
-When one goes to visit any place for the first time, there is always
-a great deal that one wants to have explained; and what I myself most
-enjoy is to read or be told beforehand something about what I am going
-to see, and then I understand it much better--I do not waste so much
-time in asking questions, and have all the more time to look about.
-
-If we go and stand at the great West Door, as it is called, of
-Westminster Abbey, and look down Victoria Street, it is difficult to
-believe that this very same place was, hundreds of years ago, quite
-wild country. Where there are now houses and streets and churches,
-there used to be only marshy land and forests. Where there are now
-endless streams of carriages, carts, and omnibuses, and people
-hurrying along, there were in the far-off time, when the Abbey Church
-of Westminster was first begun, only wild oxen or huge red deer with
-towering antlers which strayed from the neighbouring hills and roamed
-about in this jungle. It used to be called “the terrible place,” so
-wild and so lonely was it.
-
-Dotted about in the marsh were many little islands, one of which was
-called Thorney Isle, because there were so many wild thorn trees
-growing there, and on this spot Westminster Abbey now stands.
-
-For as the forests in this part of London were gradually cut down,
-this island looked so pretty and quiet with the water flowing all
-round it, and nothing to be seen from it but sunny green meadows,
-that King Edward the Confessor chose it as the place to build a great
-church, which he called the Church of St. Peter. At that time there
-were not many large churches in England, and the Church of St. Peter
-was thought to be one of the most splendid that was ever seen. It took
-fifteen years to build, but at last it was finished, and on Christmas
-Day, 1065, King Edward the Confessor, wearing his crown, as was the
-custom in those days on great occasions, came with all his bishops and
-nobles to the first great service in the Abbey Church which he himself
-had built. He was then a very old man, and a few days after the great
-service he was taken ill and died, and was buried in his own church. He
-is called the Founder of the Abbey, and you will see, when you go round
-it, the shrine of King Edward and of his queen, who was afterwards
-buried at his side.
-
-Now, there is only one more thing to be remembered before we begin to
-look round inside and decide what are the most interesting things to
-see, and that is that this Abbey we are in to-day is _not_ the actual
-Church of St. Peter which King Edward the Confessor built. Of that
-church there is now left only a little bit of one pillar, which perhaps
-a guide will show you, within the altar-rail, in what is called the
-“Sacrarium.” I do not mean that the church was pulled down all at once,
-and this Abbey built instead, but bit by bit, as years went on, it was
-added to and altered. New parts were built on by different kings--for
-Westminster Abbey is a church that has been all built by kings and
-princes--and as the new parts were added, the old were gradually pulled
-down.
-
-Of all the kings who helped to build and beautify the Abbey, Henry III.
-was the one who did most, and he spent on it such enormous sums of
-money that he is often spoken of as one of the most extravagant kings
-England ever had. He made up his mind that the Abbey of Westminster was
-to be the most beautiful church in the world, and he used to invite the
-best foreign artists and sculptors to come and help to make plans and
-paintings and carvings for it. He it was who built the shrine where
-Edward the Confessor is now buried, in the part of the choir behind
-where the communion table (formerly the high altar) now stands. It was
-when he was growing to be an old man that he thought the founder of
-the Abbey ought to be treated with special honour and respect, and so
-almost the last thing he did in his life was to build this shrine,
-which stands in what is called Edward the Confessor’s Chapel.
-
-The king sent all the way to Rome--and in those days the journey was a
-very much longer and more difficult one than it is now--for the mosaics
-and enamels which are still to be seen on the shrine; the workmen who
-made it came from Rome, where the best workmen were then to be found;
-and the twisted columns round the shrine were made in imitation of the
-columns on some of the tombs in the great churches in Rome.[2]
-
-When it was finished, in 1269, the old king himself, his brother
-Richard, and his two sons, Edward and Edmund, carried the coffin of
-Edward the Confessor on their shoulders from the place where it had
-been buried in 1065 to the new chapel, and there it has rested to this
-very day.
-
-Years afterwards a great and magnificent chapel was added by Henry
-VII. at the east end of the Abbey, which was called after him. He was
-buried there when he died, and so were his grandson, Edward VI., and
-Queen Elizabeth, and Mary Queen of Scots, and many others whose tombs
-you must look at by-and-by.
-
-It was in the year 1509 that Henry VII. was buried in Westminster
-Abbey, just four hundred and forty-four years after the burial of King
-Edward the Confessor. But in these four hundred and forty-four years
-the Abbey had been so much altered, the old parts so pulled down and
-rebuilt, that King Edward, could he have seen it again, would hardly
-have believed that this great Abbey, as we see it to-day, had grown up
-from his first Church of St. Peter on Thorney Isle.
-
-And now, as I have said enough about the building of the Abbey, we can
-go inside and begin to see some of the monuments and tombs of which it
-is full.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-
-This chapter on the _geography_ of the Abbey, as I call it, has nothing
-to do with the stories which begin in the next chapter, and the only
-reason that I have written it at all is this. In the days when I first
-heard many of the stories which I am going to tell you now, they were
-told to us by Dean Stanley in the Abbey. As we walked about with him
-he explained to us what part of the church we were in, and pointed out
-the tomb or monument of the man, or woman, or child about whom he was
-telling us. But some of you may read this little book before you have
-ever been to Westminster Abbey, and others may have been there, but may
-not know the names of the different parts of the church, or where any
-particular monument or tomb is.
-
-So, instead of trying to explain at the beginning of every story
-whereabouts we are supposed to be standing, I am putting all such
-explanations in this chapter; and this will, I hope, help you to find
-your way about in the Abbey for yourselves. If you only want to hear
-the stories, you must miss this chapter and go on to the next one.
-
-Just as we have maps to understand the geography of countries, so we
-have maps, which are called _plans_, to understand the geography of
-churches and houses, and the drawing you see on the opposite page is
-a map or plan of the inside of Westminster Abbey. The picture at the
-beginning of this book is a view of the outside.
-
-We will now suppose we have just come into the Abbey at the great
-west door, the door between the two towers (see frontispiece). The
-name is marked on the plan.[3] We should then be standing in what is
-called the nave, and right in front of us and through those iron gates
-underneath the organ is the choir. That is where service is held every
-morning and every afternoon, and where all the Westminster School boys
-sit on Sundays when they come to church, for as Westminster school has
-no chapel of its own, the boys have all their services in the Abbey.
-Through the choir gates you can see the communion table in front of
-you, and behind that, again, are all the chapels where the kings and
-queens are buried. The nave and transepts are full of the monuments and
-graves of great men. The numbers 1, 2, 3, etc., on the plan mark those
-about which you will find stories later on.
-
-[Illustration: PLAN OF WESTMINSTER ABBEY.]
-
- A. Chapel of Edward Confessor.
- B. „ St. Benedict.
- C. „ St. Edmund.
- D. „ St. Nicholas.
- E. Henry VII. Chapel.
- F. Chapel of St. Paul.
- G. „ St. John Baptist.
- H. „ St. Erasmus.
- I. „ Abbot Islip.
- J. „ St. John Evangelist.
- K. „ St. Michael.
- L. „ St. Andrew.
-
- 1. Lord Shaftesbury.
- 2. General Gordon.
- 3. Edward Mansell.
- 4. Edward de Carteret.
- 5. Sir Isaac Newton.
- 6. Lord Lawrence.
- 7. Sir James Outram.
- 8. David Livingstone.
- 9. Henry Fawcett.
- 10. Sir John Franklin.
- 11. Geoffrey Chaucer.
- 12. Alfred Tennyson.
- 13. Shakespeare.
- 14. Handel.
- 15. Lord Beaconsfield.
- 16. George Canning.
- 17. Earl Canning.
- 18. Lord Stratford de Redcliffe.
- 19. Lord Chatham and William Pitt.
- 20. Wilberforce.
- 21. Henry III.
- 22. Queen Eleanor.
- 23. Edward I.
- 24. Edward III.
- 25. Richard II.
- 26. Henry V.
- 27. Henry VII. and Queen.
- 28. Queen Elizabeth and Queen Mary Tudor.
- 29. Mary Queen of Scots.
- 30. Oliver Cromwell.
- 31. Edward VI.
- 32. Dean Stanley.
-
-And now, if you look at the plan, you will see exactly where
-everything is. The whole Abbey is built on a piece of land which has
-the shape of a cross laid upon the ground. The nave and choir represent
-the stem of the cross, and the two transepts form the two arms.
-
-In the part of the choir beyond the communion table are the chapels.
-Altogether there are eleven, and they are arranged like a wreath round
-the shrine of Edward the Confessor. They are marked on the plan by
-the letters A, B, C, etc., and their names you will find on the plan,
-beginning with A, which is the Chapel of Edward the Confessor.
-
-One last thing I must explain before we begin the stories, and that
-is--how this great church came to be called an Abbey, and not a
-Cathedral. It is not at all difficult to remember when you have once
-been told.
-
-The Church of St. Peter did not stand, as you may have supposed, all by
-itself on Thorney Isle, but was only one part of a mass of buildings
-called the Monastery of St. Peter.
-
-A monastery, as you very likely already know, was a kind of college
-for monks. Here they lived under the rule of an abbot; and the church
-belonging to the monastery--for every monastery had a church, as well
-as a school and hospital or infirmary, belonging to it--was called an
-Abbey.
-
-In early days the life of the monks was a very busy one. They did
-all the rough work, such as cooking, and cleaning pots and pans; for
-although many of them had been great soldiers or great nobles, they
-did not think any work done for the monastery was beneath them. They
-ploughed the land and planted seeds; they cut down trees for firewood;
-they nursed the sick; they fed and looked after the poor who lived
-round about them; and they taught in the school, and watched over the
-boys who were sent there to be educated.
-
-Many boys--not only those who intended to become monks when they grew
-up, but those also who were to go out into the world, or become
-soldiers--went to the monastery schools to be taught. Here the sons of
-great nobles sat to learn their lessons side by side with the children
-of the poorest people, who were allowed to come and have as good an
-education as the rich without paying any school fees. The schools were
-open to all who wished to learn.
-
-Of course, Scripture was the chief thing that they were taught, but
-the monks did not think that alone was enough, and the boys often
-learnt, besides reading and writing, grammar, poetry, astronomy, and
-arithmetic. Latin many of the monks talked almost as easily as their
-own language, and very often music and painting were added to all this.
-In the cloisters, or covered walks belonging to the monastery, the
-boys learned their lessons, always with a master near by, and sitting
-one behind another, so that no signals or jokes were possible. And
-very hard it must have been to keep their attention on their work in
-summer time when, if they looked up, they could see through the open
-archways the sun shining on the grass in the centre of the cloisters,
-and inviting them to come and play there. Something was always going
-on in the cloisters. Sometimes the schoolboys were tempted to waste
-their time watching the monks shaving. Once a fortnight in summer,
-and once in three weeks in winter, the monks came out here with hot
-water and soap, and the important business of shaving went on, while
-on “Saturdays the heads and feet of the brethren were duly washed.”
-If while all these things were going on the abbot appeared, every one
-stood up and bowed, and the lessons and the shaving and the washing
-stopped until he had passed by.
-
-Perhaps the most important part of every monastery was the library, and
-an abbot who cared much for the monastery over which he ruled tried
-to collect and preserve and buy as many books as he could. In those
-days printing was not invented, and so every book of which many copies
-were wanted had to be written out by the monks. And this they did in
-a most wonderful way, copying them, so we are told,[4] “on parchment
-of extreme fineness prepared by their own hands,” and ornamenting them
-with “the most delicate miniatures and paintings.” The monks at that
-time loved their books more than anything else, and there was a saying
-among them that a cloister without books was like a fortress without
-an arsenal. Often they took long and difficult journeys to see or to
-copy the books in other monasteries. “Our books,” said a monk, “are
-our delight and our wealth in time of peace, ... our food when we are
-hungry, and our medicine when we are sick.”
-
-And now, having told you a little about the life of the monks in those
-far-off days, we must come back to these buildings on Thorney Isle,
-which as I have said were called the Monastery of St. Peter. It is
-not known when this particular monastery was first founded; but it is
-said that St. Dunstan, who lived in the reign of King Edwy, found
-there some half-ruined buildings. He repaired them, and then brought
-twelve monks to live in company with him. But probably the Danes,
-who were often invading England at that time, destroyed this little
-monastery, for when Edward the Confessor came to the throne, many years
-afterwards, it had almost, if not quite, disappeared; and when he
-rebuilt it he added this great church of St. Peter, about which I told
-you in the first chapter.
-
-There is a pretty story told of how this came about. An old monk was
-one day lying asleep, and in his sleep he was commanded by St. Peter,
-who appeared visibly to him, to acquaint the king that it was his
-pleasure he should restore the monastery. “There is,” said the apostle,
-“a place of mine in the west part of London which I choose and love.
-The name of the place is Thorney.... There let the king by my command
-make a dwelling of monks, stately build and amply endow; it shall be
-no less than the House of God, and the Gates of Heaven.” When he woke
-up, the old monk went to the king and told him his vision. Upon hearing
-it Edward journeyed to “the west part of London;” there he found
-Thorney Isle, and there he built the monastery and church, which he
-called after the apostle.
-
-And now at last we have finished all the explanations. In the first
-chapter I told you how the Abbey came to be built, and in this one I
-have shown you how to find your way about it. In the next I shall begin
-telling you the stories, the first being about Lord Shaftesbury, whose
-monument is in the nave, where you see No. 1 on the plan.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-
-Very likely you have never even heard the name of Lord Shaftesbury;
-but as you will be sure to read and hear of him by-and-by, I will tell
-you a little about what he did, and why a monument was put up in his
-memory. He was born in 1801, and died in 1885, and so was an old man
-of eighty-four when he died. He spent all his long life in trying to
-make other people--especially the poorest and most miserable he could
-find--more happy and more comfortable. He was a great nobleman, and
-very rich, and he gave most of his time to finding out the cause of the
-suffering of the poorest people in England, and, when he had found it
-out, he helped to make laws to improve things for them, and, if money
-was wanted, he gave that too. But he gave away his money wisely and
-well; he never was taken in by idle people and beggars who would not
-work for themselves; his motto seems to have been to “help those who
-help themselves,” and one name by which he was known was “The Working
-Man’s Friend.” But especially may he be remembered by all children
-for what he did for children. More than fifty years ago, when first
-machines (spinning machines and weaving machines) were invented in
-the great cotton factories in England, it was found that children
-could work them just as well as men and women; and as children would
-not have to be paid so much as men, the masters of the mills began to
-employ them. Quite tiny children, sometimes not more than five years
-old, and so small that they often had to be lifted up on stools to
-reach their work, were made to toil in the mills and factories all day,
-and sometimes all night too. They were treated like little slaves. If
-they did not work fast enough, they were beaten and kicked by their
-masters; and they spent all their days in hot rooms, hearing nothing
-but the whirring of the machines, and stopping their work only for
-about half an hour in the middle of the day for their dinner, which
-was generally only black bread and porridge, and sometimes a little
-bacon. They had no time for play, and they had no time to rest, except
-on Sundays, and then they were too tired to move from the berths (or
-shelves) where they slept, for they did not even have proper beds.
-
-Then, again, there were the children who worked in coal-mines, who
-spent all their days in damp, dark mines, who never saw the sun, and
-who had to draw the trucks filled with coal, or carry great baskets
-full of it on their backs. And all this they began to do before they
-were six years old.
-
-When Lord Shaftesbury saw these things--for he went into the mills and
-the factories, and he went down into the mines--he made up his mind
-that something must be done for such children. So he made speeches in
-Parliament, in which he told of the cruelty with which thousands of
-English children were treated; and at last laws were made by which it
-was forbidden to let such little children work in mines and factories
-at all, and by which older children were given shorter hours to work
-and more time for rest and fresh air. All this and much more Lord
-Shaftesbury did during his long life, and when at last he died, this
-monument was put up in Westminster Abbey with these words on it, so
-that people who had never known him might be always reminded of the way
-he spent his life:--
-
- LORD SHAFTESBURY,
- BORN 1801; DIED 1885.
- ENDEARED TO HIS COUNTRYMEN BY A LONG
- LIFE SPENT IN THE CAUSE OF THE
- HELPLESS AND SUFFERING.
- “LOVE--SERVE.”
-
-Close to Lord Shaftesbury, there is a monument to a great soldier,
-General Gordon,[5] who was killed in Egypt in 1885--the same year that
-Lord Shaftesbury died. He fought in the Crimean War and in China, and
-was often called “Chinese Gordon.” All the soldiers who served under
-him were so fond and proud of him that they would have done anything
-for him. He was very brave, and it was well known that he would always
-be in the front rank to lead his men when there was a battle, and this,
-more than anything else, made him popular. He himself never was armed
-except with a little cane, which his soldiers called “the wand of
-victory.” Once when he was wounded his men wanted to carry him out of
-the battle, but he would not allow it, and went on leading them till he
-fainted from pain and weakness.
-
-Lord Shaftesbury, the great statesman, died in England, with all his
-many friends near him, and General Gordon, the great soldier, was
-killed by savages while he was shut up in Khartoum, a town in Africa,
-where he was besieged; but their two monuments are close together in
-Westminster Abbey, and they were alike in one thing--they both did all
-they could to help other people. Of course, Gordon had not time to do
-so much as Lord Shaftesbury,[6] but when he was not fighting he lived
-in England, and then “his house,” said a gentleman who knew him,[7]
-“was school and hospital and almshouse in turn. The poor, the sick, and
-the unfortunate were all welcome. He always took a great delight in
-children, but especially in boys employed on the river or the sea. Many
-he rescued from the gutter, cleansed them and clothed them, and kept
-them for weeks in his house. For their benefit he established reading
-classes. He called them his kings, and for many of them he got berths
-on board ship. One day a friend asked him why there were so many pins
-stuck into the map of the world over his mantelpiece. He was told they
-marked and followed the course of the boys on their voyages; that they
-were moved from point to point as his youngsters advanced, and that he
-prayed for them as they went night and day. The light in which he was
-held by those lads was shown by inscriptions in chalk on the fences.
-A favourite one was ‘God bless the Kernel,’” which was their way of
-spelling “colonel,” for he was at that time Colonel Gordon.
-
-But I must not stay to tell you more of him now, for there are many
-other people I want you to hear about. “This Abbey,” Dean Stanley used
-to say, “is full of the remembrances of great men and famous women.
-But it is also full of the remembrances of little boys and girls whose
-death shot a pang through the hearts of those who loved them, and who
-wished that they should never be forgotten.”
-
-So now, not far from the monuments to these two great men, we come upon
-the tombs of two boys who are buried here: one Edward Mansell,[8] a
-boy of fourteen, who died as long ago as 1681; and another Edward,
-Edward de Carteret,[9] a little boy “seven yeares and nine months
-old,” who “dyed the 30th day of October, 1677.” His father and mother
-put nothing on his tomb to tell us about him except that he was a
-“gentleman;” but that one word tells us much, for it means, said Dean
-Stanley, that “they believed--and no belief can be so welcome to any
-father or mother--they believed that their little son was growing up
-truthful, manly, courageous, courteous, unselfish, and religious.” And
-if this little boy had tried to be a “gentleman” in this true and best
-sense of the word, it does not seem out of place that he should be
-buried in the Abbey among great men and famous women.
-
-Close by little Edward de Carteret is buried Sir Isaac Newton.[10]
-There is on the floor a plain grey stone with these few words in Latin
-on it, “Hic depositum quod mortale fuit Isaaci Newtoni,” which means,
-“Here lies what was mortal of Isaac Newton.” Sir Isaac Newton was one
-of the most celebrated Englishmen who ever lived, and made wonderful
-discoveries in science, especially in astronomy, by which his name
-is known all over the world. He was born on Christmas Day, 1642, and
-lived to be seventy-five years old. In spite of being so learned and so
-famous, he was always modest about what he knew, and believed that what
-he had learned and discovered was only a very, very little bit of all
-there was to learn and discover in the world and about the world. When
-he was quite an old man, some one was saying to him one day how much
-he had done and how wonderful his discoveries were, and he answered,
-“To myself I seem to have been as a child picking up shells on the
-seashore, while the great ocean of truth lay unexplored before me.”
-
-Just above the grey stone in the floor there is a large statue of Sir
-Isaac Newton, sitting with his head resting on his hands as though he
-were thinking, and a great pile of books by his side.
-
-I have already told you about General Gordon. I now come to the
-story of another great soldier, Sir James Outram, who is buried in
-the Abbey. The graves of Sir James Outram and of David Livingstone,
-a great traveller and missionary, and of Lord Lawrence, who was the
-Governor-General of India, and who did a great deal for the natives
-while he lived among them, are all close together, and there is
-something interesting to tell you about all these three men, especially
-Sir James Outram and David Livingstone.
-
-If you have read or heard anything of the story of the Indian Mutiny,
-when the native soldiers of India rebelled against the English who
-governed them, and killed hundreds of men, women, and children, you
-must, I think, have heard the names of Lord Lawrence and Sir James
-Outram.
-
-During the years he had lived among them, the natives of India
-had grown so fond of Lord Lawrence,[11] that when the mutiny (or
-rebellion) broke out, the men of the Punjaub (which was the part of
-India he then governed) said they would be true to the man who had
-been good to them, and so they fought for England with the few English
-soldiers who were then in India, and helped us to conquer the rebels.
-Lord Lawrence has been called the “Saviour of India,” because he came
-to the help of his fellow-countrymen with these Indian soldiers just
-when he was most terribly needed.
-
-Later on, in the same war, came the siege of Lucknow. Lucknow was one
-of the chief cities of India, but the streets were long and narrow and
-dirty, and most of the houses were poor and mean. Among them, however,
-were some magnificent palaces and temples. The Residency, the house
-where the English governor of Lucknow lived, was built on a hill above
-the river, and all round it were the offices and the bungalows of the
-English who were living there. When the mutiny broke out, it was soon
-seen that the native soldiers would attack the English in Lucknow,
-and the people at once set to work to make as many preparations
-against them as they could. To begin with, Sir Henry Lawrence, who
-was in command of the soldiers both English and Indian, and who was
-the brother of Lord Lawrence, of whom we spoke just now, ordered all
-the women and children to come and live in the Residency, which was
-supposed to be the safest place in Lucknow. Then guns, powder and shot,
-and food were brought in and stored in the cellars. At last, at nine
-o’clock on the evening of the 30th of May, 1857, when the officers were
-quietly at dinner, nearly all the native soldiers in Lucknow suddenly
-rose against the English. They loaded their guns, and fired at every
-one they could see; they broke into the houses, and, after stealing
-everything they could, set fire to them; and all night there was
-nothing to be heard save the savage yells of the rebels and the firing
-of the guns, and nothing to be seen but fighting men and burning
-houses. About five hundred of the native soldiers were true to the
-English, and they stayed with them and fought against their rebellious
-countrymen through all the long siege of Lucknow. For though the rebels
-were beaten at their first rising by the English, yet in a month or two
-they rose again, and then every one, including the soldiers, was driven
-by the enemy into the Residency, which was the last place of refuge.
-
-Some day, perhaps, you will read a poem by Lord Tennyson called
-“Lucknow,” which describes all the terrible things that happened during
-the “eighty-seven” days the English and the faithful natives were shut
-up in the Residency, on the topmost roof of which, as he says, the
-“banner of England blew” during the whole siege, though it was shot
-through by bullets, and torn and tattered, and faded in the hot Indian
-summer sun.
-
-One of the first things that happened was that Sir Henry Lawrence was
-killed. He was lying on his bed one morning talking to an officer, when
-a shell was fired from a cannon into his room. It burst as it fell,
-and some of its fragments wounded Sir Henry so terribly that he died
-the next day. Almost the last thing he said to the other officers was
-to beg them never to give in to the natives, but to fight as long as
-there was an English man left alive. Lord Lawrence, his brother, who
-died some years afterwards, was buried, as you remember, in Westminster
-Abbey; but Sir Henry Lawrence was carried out of the Residency while
-the fighting was going on, and the bullets were falling like rain, and
-buried side by side with some private soldiers who had also been killed
-by the rebels. On his gravestone they put these words, which he himself
-had asked should be written there, “Here lies Henry Lawrence, who tried
-to do his duty.”
-
-This was on the 4th of July, and Sir Henry Lawrence had said he thought
-it would be possible to defend the Residency for a fortnight. But as
-time went on the English grew fewer and fewer; every day more soldiers
-were killed, and every day many died of their wounds, while those who
-were left alive had to fight day and night. The English ladies nursed
-the sick men, and cooked the food, which they used to bring out to
-those who were fighting; and they looked after the children, very many
-of whom died too. For it was the hottest time of the year in India--a
-time when English children are sent away to the hills to get fresh
-air--and, besides suffering from the heat, they missed all the comforts
-they were accustomed to; they had no milk and very little to eat, and
-they were terrified by the noise of the firing and all the confusion.
-
-But still the fighting went on day after day, long after the fortnight
-was over, and day after day the enemy saw the English flag still flying
-on the roof of the Residency, and began to think they never would
-conquer this brave little band of Englishmen.
-
-All this time, however, though they did not know it in the Residency,
-Sir James Outram[12] and Sir Henry Havelock, with more English
-soldiers, were fighting their way to Lucknow.[13]
-
-They had both been for many years in India, and were two of the bravest
-and best men who could possibly have been sent to the relief of the
-little band who had been besieged for so many weeks. On the 23rd of
-September, nearly _twelve weeks_ after the day Sir Henry Lawrence died,
-it was heard in Lucknow that Sir James Outram and Sir Henry Havelock
-were close by, and on the 25th the Highlanders were in the city and
-fighting their way through the narrow streets to the Residency. Then
-from every window and every balcony and every roof the rebels fired
-down on them. Many were killed and more were wounded. A story is told,
-by Mr. Archibald Forbes,[14] of two Irishmen who were in the Highland
-regiment. “They were great friends, named Glandell and M‘Donough,
-and in going through one of these narrow streets M‘Donough’s leg was
-broken by a bullet. He fell, but he was not left to die, for his friend
-who was by him took him on his back and trudged on with his heavy
-burden. Although he was carrying M‘Donough, Glandell determined to
-fight at the same time, so when there was a chance to fire a shot, he
-propped his wounded comrade up against a wall and took up his rifle
-instead; then he would pick up M‘Donough again and stagger cheerily on
-till a place of safety was reached.”
-
-At last the gate of the Residency was in sight of the relieving force,
-and then the besieged people looking out saw through the smoke officers
-on horseback--Outram with a great cut across his face, and one arm in
-a sling, on a big white horse, and Havelock walking by his side (for
-his horse had been shot), and the Highlanders in their kilts and for
-the most part in their shirt-sleeves, with no coats on. “Then,” wrote
-some one who had been all these weeks in the Residency--“then all our
-doubts and fears were over, and from every pit, trench, and battery,
-from behind the sand-bags piled on shattered houses, from every post
-still held by a few gallant spirits, even from the hospital, rose cheer
-on cheer.” Sir James Outram’s horse shied at the gate, but with a shout
-the Highlanders hoisted him through; Sir Henry Havelock followed, “and
-then in rushed the eager soldiers, powder-grimed, dusty, and bloody,
-... and all round them as they swarmed in crowded ... the fighting
-men of the garrison, and the civilians whom the siege had made into
-soldiers, and women weeping tears of joy, and the sick and the wounded
-who had crawled out of the hospital to welcome their deliverers. The
-ladies came down among the soldiers to shake their hands, and the
-children hugged them.” “We were all rushing about,” said a lady,
-“to give the poor fellows drinks of water, for they were perfectly
-exhausted; and tea was made, of which a large party of tired, thirsty
-officers partook without milk and sugar, and we had nothing to give
-them to eat. Every one’s tongue seemed going at once with so much to
-ask and to tell, and the faces of utter strangers beamed on each other
-like those of dearest friends and brothers.” So ended the siege of
-Lucknow. Sir Henry Havelock had not been wounded, but he had suffered
-much from hard work and from having so little to eat. “I find it not so
-easy to starve at sixty as at forty-seven,” he said one day. At last,
-in November, he became very ill, and when Sir James Outram went to see
-him in the common soldier’s tent which he had always used since he had
-been in Lucknow, he told him that he was going to die; “but I have
-for forty years so ruled my life that when death came I might face it
-without fear,” he added. He died on the 24th of November, 1857, and
-was buried just outside Lucknow, under a mango tree, and even now the
-letter H, which was carved in the bark--for no other monument could be
-put up to his memory in those days of war and disturbance--can just be
-seen, more than thirty years afterwards.
-
-Sir James Outram was nursed in Dr. Fayrer’s house in Lucknow until
-he was well, and three years afterwards, in 1860, he left India and
-came back to England. Then he had many honours shown him; but, like
-Sir Henry Havelock, he felt the effects of all he had gone through in
-India, and gradually he became more ill, and was at last sent to the
-south of France, where he died on the 11th of March, 1863. His body was
-brought to England and buried in the Abbey under the grey stone which
-you will see in the nave, and on it were written these words--
-
- LIEUTENANT-GENERAL SIR JAMES OUTRAM,
- BORN JAN. 29TH, 1805; DIED MAR. 11TH, 1863.
- “THE BAYARD OF INDIA.”
-
-I remember, in one of the sermons which he used to preach to children,
-Dean Stanley spoke of this grave of Sir James Outram, and said,
-“There was a famous French soldier of bygone days whose name you will
-see written in this Abbey on the gravestone of Sir James Outram,
-because in many ways he was like Bayard. Bayard was a small boy--only
-thirteen--when he went into his first service, and his mother told
-him to remember three things: first, to fear and love God; secondly,
-to have gentle and courteous manners to those above him; and thirdly,
-to be generous and charitable, without pride or haughtiness, to those
-beneath him; and these three things he never forgot, which helped to
-make him the soldier without fear and without reproach.” And it was in
-these three things that Sir James Outram was supposed to be so like the
-French soldier, Bayard.
-
-One more thing I must tell you before we pass on to David Livingstone.
-On the morning of the day when Outram was to be buried, some Highland
-soldiers came to his house and asked to be allowed to carry the coffin
-on their shoulders down to the Abbey. They were some men from the 78th
-Regiment--the very same men who had fought under him at the relief of
-Lucknow, and who had been with him when Sir Henry Havelock was buried
-under the mango tree; and they came now hoping to carry the body of Sir
-James Outram to his burial. Unfortunately, they were too late, and were
-told, much to their disappointment, that this was impossible because
-other arrangements had been made.
-
-We come now to David Livingstone,[15] the great traveller and
-missionary. He was born in Scotland in 1813. His father and mother
-were very poor, and when he was ten years old he was sent to work in a
-cotton factory. He grew up to be a very extraordinary man, as you will
-see, and he certainly was a very unusual boy. He saved up his wages,
-and the first thing he bought was a Latin grammar, from which he used
-to learn in the evenings after he left his work; and so interested was
-he that he often went on till twelve o’clock at night, when his mother
-took away the book and sent him to bed, for he had to be at the factory
-at six every morning. When he grew up he became a missionary, and went
-to Africa, where he made many discoveries, travelling into parts of the
-country where no one had ever been before, and teaching the natives,
-who were quite ignorant and wild, but who grew very fond of this “white
-man who treated black men as his brothers”--for so one native chief
-described him--and who cared for them, and doctored them when they were
-ill, and gave up all his life to them. He had all sorts of adventures.
-Once he lived for some time in a place which was full of lions, who
-used to come and kill the cattle even in the day time. The people made
-up their minds to try to kill one lion; for if one of a party of lions
-is killed, the rest generally go away. Livingstone went out with them,
-and they found the lions on a little hill covered with trees. Some of
-the men fired, but did not hit any of them. Presently Livingstone “saw
-one of the beasts sitting on a rock, behind a little bush”--these are
-his own words--“about thirty yards off. I took a good aim at his body
-through the bush, and fired at him. The men then called out, ‘He is
-shot--he is shot!’ others cried out, ‘He has been shot by another man,
-too; let us go to him.’ I did not see any one else shoot at him, but
-I saw the lion’s tail erected in anger behind the bush, and, turning
-to the people, said, ‘Stop a little till I fire again.’ When in the
-act of ramming down the bullets I heard a shout. Starting and looking
-half round, I saw the lion in the act of springing on me. I was upon
-a little height. He caught my shoulder as he sprang, and we both came
-to the ground together. Growling horribly close to my ear, he shook me
-as a terrier dog does a rat.” It was wonderful that Livingstone did
-not seem to feel any pain or fear; he said he seemed to be in a kind
-of dream, but knew quite well all that was happening. Of course, in
-another minute he would have been killed, had not some of the people
-fired again at the lion and this time killed it. But Livingstone never
-afterwards could use quite easily the arm which the lion had crushed.
-During his travels he discovered Lake Nyassa, which you can find marked
-now on every map of Africa. Before he went there all that part of the
-country used to be marked “unexplored.”
-
-For more than thirty years Livingstone lived in Africa, always
-travelling about, and finding new tribes of natives, all of whom he
-got to know, and all of whom became fond of him; and at last, when he
-died in a little hut which his black servants had built for him in the
-middle of one of these great African forests, Susi and Chumah, two of
-his followers, who had been with him for many years, came all the way
-to England with the body of their dead master. On the day when he was
-buried, the Abbey was crowded with people who came from all parts of
-England and Scotland; and among all the white faces were seen two black
-ones, for the faithful servants stood close by the grave; and Dean
-Stanley, who read the service, said afterwards that he had never seen
-two men seem more broken-hearted. On his tombstone you will read of one
-more thing which he did for the natives whilst he lived among them; and
-that was, to help to abolish the slave-trade in Central Africa. He was
-sixty years old when he died, and he had worked all his life to raise
-the lives of thousands of African savages into something better and
-happier.
-
-Many other great men I have no time to tell you about, but there are
-two more, of whom I particularly want you to hear a few words--Henry
-Fawcett and Sir John Franklin. Henry Fawcett[16] was not a soldier, nor
-a great traveller, but he was known for many years all over England
-as the “Blind Postmaster-General.” He was not born blind, and why I
-want to tell you about him is to show you what a brave man can do when
-such a terrible misfortune as becoming blind happens to him. He was
-born in 1833, and died in 1884, and for twenty-six years of his life
-he was quite blind. He lost his sight in this way. He was out shooting
-one day with his father, who fired at a bird without noticing that
-his son was close by. Suddenly he saw that some of the shots, instead
-of hitting the bird, had hit his son in the eyes. Henry Fawcett was
-wearing spectacles, and a shot went through each of the glasses, making
-a little round hole in them, and then going on into his eyes. From
-that moment he never saw again. His first thought, he afterwards told
-his sister, was that he should never again see the lovely view, and
-the colours of the autumn leaves on the trees, as he had seen them a
-moment before; his second thought was to try and do everything he could
-to comfort his father, who must need comfort almost as much as he did
-himself. So, at twenty-five years of age, Henry Fawcett, who had made
-up his mind to work hard as a barrister--for he was very poor--and make
-enough money to go into Parliament, which had been his great wish ever
-since he was at school, suddenly found all his plans and all his hopes
-upset. But his courage never gave way; he determined that his blindness
-should not make him a helpless, disappointed man. “In ten minutes after
-the accident,” he said some years later, “he had made up his mind that
-he would stick to what he had meant to do.” And so he did. He had been
-a great rider, a great skater, and a great fisherman, and all these
-things he kept up. He skated with his friends, holding on to a stick by
-which they guided him; he rode, he fished, he walked, behaving in all
-things as though he were not blind. He was obliged to give up being a
-barrister, but he became a professor at Cambridge. He wrote in papers
-and magazines (of course some one had to do the actual writing for him,
-but he dictated it), and at last, when he was thirty-two years old,
-that is to say, seven years after the accident, he achieved his object,
-and became member of Parliament (the Blind Member, he was sometimes
-called) for Brighton.
-
-It would take too long to tell you of all the work he did for his
-country after he was in Parliament, but he was always trying to
-improve things; he was never idle, and at last, when he was made
-Postmaster-General, he hardly ever had time for a holiday. He was a
-favourite with every one, and, when he was ill, telegrams and letters
-used to come from all parts of England to ask after him. He always
-took a great interest in other blind people, and was fond of saying
-to them, “Do what you can to act as though you were not blind; be of
-good courage, and help yourselves.” And to his friends, and all who
-had blind friends or relations, he was never tired of saying, “Do not
-treat us as though you pitied us for our misfortune; the kindest thing
-that can be done or said to a blind person is to help him as far as
-possible to be of good cheer, to give him confidence that help will be
-afforded him whenever necessary, that there is still good work for him
-to do, and, the more active his career, the more useful his life to
-others, the more happy his days to himself.” These are his own words.
-They are brave words; but Henry Fawcett was, as you have seen, a brave
-man, and fought and conquered all the great difficulties with which
-his blindness surrounded him, with as much courage as Sir James Outram
-showed when he fought his way into Lucknow, or David Livingstone when
-he journeyed through the deserts and forests of Africa. And that is why
-a memorial of him was put up in Westminster Abbey by the people of
-England, who subscribed for it, so that the heroic life of the Blind
-Postmaster-General should never be forgotten.
-
-Sir John Franklin[17] was a sailor and a great Arctic explorer, who
-made many expeditions, and went nearer to the North Pole than any man
-had ever been before. He and his companions endured every kind of
-hardship in the ice and the snow of the Arctic regions. He died on his
-third expedition, just two years after last leaving England, and was
-buried in the far-away cold North amidst the snow under slabs of ice.
-On the monument in Westminster Abbey, which was put up in his memory by
-his wife, Lady Franklin, are written the words “O ye frost and cold,
-O ye ice and snow, bless ye the Lord: praise Him, and magnify Him for
-ever.” The story of the expedition is a very sad one, for, during the
-winter after Sir John’s death, it became clear to the sailors that the
-ships were so fast in the ice, which had closed in and frozen all
-round them, that they would never be able to move again. So at last,
-nearly all the provisions being exhausted, the men abandoned their
-ships, and with boats and sledges, which they carried or dragged over
-the ice, set out to walk southwards in the hope that they might at last
-reach the unfrozen sea and meet a ship. But this they never did, for
-they were starved and ill, and although another expedition had been
-sent from England to look for them, it was too late to save them. The
-only traces ever found of them were their skeletons, and the boats and
-sledges, containing many books and papers which Sir John had written,
-saying how far he had been, and what he had done on this voyage from
-which he never returned.
-
-His epitaph, written by Lord Tennyson, is one of the most beautiful in
-the Abbey--
-
- “Not here! the white North has thy bones; and thou,
- Heroic sailor-soul,
- Art passing on thine happier voyage now
- Toward no earthly pole.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-
-In Westminster Abbey are the graves of many poets--so many that one
-part of the church (the south transept) is always known as Poets’
-Corner.
-
-Geoffrey Chaucer,[18] who wrote among other things a book called the
-“Canterbury Tales,” and who died as long ago as 1400, was one of the
-first English poets buried in Poets’ Corner; and the last was Alfred
-Tennyson,[19] who died in 1892, and was buried close beside Chaucer,
-just four hundred and ninety-two years afterwards.
-
-When I was telling you the story of the Indian Mutiny, I spoke of
-a poem called “Lucknow,” which described in a wonderful way the
-sufferings of the people who were shut up in the Residency during the
-long siege. This poem and very many others were written by Alfred
-Tennyson, the great poet, who was made by the Queen Poet Laureate of
-England, and then, many years afterwards, Lord Tennyson, by which name
-you will always hear him spoken of.
-
-There is a story told of how the first verses Alfred Tennyson ever made
-were written. His father was a clergyman, and Alfred and his brothers
-and sisters lived all their lives in the country, running wild in the
-woods and the fields, and learning all about birds and flowers, until
-they were old enough to go to school. One Sunday morning, when every
-one but Alfred, who was then very small, was going to church, his elder
-brother Charles said he would give him something to do, and told him
-he must write some verses about the flowers in the garden. When they
-came in, Alfred appeared with his slate covered all over with his
-first poem. He was very fond of story-telling, and he and his brothers
-and sisters would combine to make up long and exciting tales which
-sometimes lasted for months. When he went to school he began to read a
-great deal, especially poetry. If he found any he particularly liked,
-he would try to imitate it in poems of his own, and in this way he and
-his brother Charles, who was with him at school, used to spend a great
-deal of their spare time.
-
-It would take too long, and it would not be interesting, to tell you
-the names of even the chief poems which Lord Tennyson wrote. By-and-by
-you will read many of them for yourselves, and two I am sure you
-will specially enjoy. One is the “Siege of Lucknow,” which we have
-so often spoken of; and the other is the “Revenge,” which is also a
-story of fighting--but a sea-fight in the time of Queen Elizabeth.
-Lord Tennyson, like most poets, was more fond of the country than of
-towns, and most of his life he lived either in the Isle of Wight or in
-Surrey. He used, until quite the end of his life, to enjoy taking long
-country walks, and he never lost his love for flowers or birds, or
-failed to notice them; and this in spite of having all his life been
-very short-sighted. It was said of him that “when he was looking at any
-object he seemed to be smelling it,” so closely used he to hold it to
-his eyes.
-
-And yet, with this difficulty, he noticed “more than most men with
-perfect sight would see. I remember his telling me,” so wrote a friend
-of his, “_if you tread on daisies they turn up underfoot and get rosy_.
-His hearing, on the other hand, was exceptionally keen, and he held it
-as a sort of compensation for his blurred sight; he could hear _the
-shriek of a bat_, which he always said was the test of a quick ear.”
-
-Lord Tennyson was eighty-three when he died, and when he was buried
-in Westminster Abbey the great church was crowded, not only during
-the funeral service, but for many days and even weeks afterwards, by
-hundreds of people, who came to see, and lay flowers on, his grave.
-
-Although so many poets were buried in the Abbey, yet there were many
-others who when they died were buried in the country, or in other
-churches in London, and, when this was the case, monuments were often
-put up in the Abbey in memory of them. For instance, Shakespeare,[20]
-the greatest of all our great poets, was buried at Stratford-on-Avon,
-where he had lived for the last part of his life, and where he died.
-
-There is not a very great deal known about his life. He was the son
-of a country shopkeeper, who was very poor, but who managed to send
-his son to the grammar school at Stratford-on-Avon, where they lived.
-When he was fourteen he was taken away from school, and had to earn
-his own living. It is sometimes said that he was first a butcher’s
-boy, and had to carry out the meat, but no one knows exactly what he
-did after he left school until he was about nineteen. Then he went
-to London, and began to write poetry and plays. He had at this time
-hardly any money, and was thankful to earn a penny whenever he could
-by holding horses, or making himself useful in any way he could think
-of, and was nicknamed by his friends “Jack-of-all-trades.” At last
-he got employment as a writer of plays for the Globe Theatre. This
-Globe Theatre was very different from the theatres of nowadays. It
-was a round wooden building with no roof, except just over the stage,
-and there it was covered in to protect the dresses of the actors and
-actresses in case of bad weather. Gradually it became clear that
-this William Shakespeare, who had come to London quite a poor and
-unknown man, was a great poet, his plays began to be talked of, and
-many great and rich men became his friends. In a few years he was no
-longer poor, and had begun to save money to buy himself a house at
-Stratford-on-Avon, where he had been born. To do this had always been
-a dream of his: for a long time his wife and children had been living
-there while he worked hard for them in London, and when at last he had
-bought his house, which was called New Place, he left London and went
-home to them.
-
-Many years passed away, and Shakespeare, who had written great plays
-such as _Hamlet_ and _The Merchant of Venice_, which you will all know
-and perhaps see acted some day, lived quietly in the little town of
-Stratford-on-Avon, making friends of all the people round him, both
-rich and poor, and seeing his own plays acted in a great empty barn
-near his house, for in those days there was no theatre in Stratford.
-
-“Master Shakespeare,” as he was called, was buried in the churchyard
-of the little town he had been so fond of all his life; and many years
-afterwards, when his name had become known all over England, and his
-plays and his poems had become famous as they had never been during
-his lifetime, a monument was put up to his memory in Westminster Abbey
-close by the graves of two other poets, Spenser and Drayton, who had
-been his friends: on it are written these words out of his own play of
-_The Tempest_--
-
- “The Cloud-capt Towers,
- The Gorgeous Palaces,
- The Solemn Temples,
- The Great Globe itself,
- Yea, all which it inherit,
- Shall dissolve;
- And, like the baseless fabric of a vision,
- Leave not a wreck behind.”[21]
-
-Among all the poets who are buried in the south transept, there is one
-great musician, George Frederick Handel.[22] Dean Stanley says that
-“Handel, who composed the music of the ‘Messiah’ and the ‘Israel in
-Egypt,’ must have been a poet no less than a musician, and therefore he
-was not unfitly buried in Poets’ Corner.”
-
-Handel was the son of a German doctor, and was born in a little German
-town. As a boy he was very fond of music, but as his father meant him
-to be a lawyer, he would not let him hear any for fear that he would
-want to be a musician. Once,[23] when George was seven years old, his
-father went to visit another son who lived at the court of the Duke of
-Saxe-Weissenfels. The little boy, who had most likely heard his brother
-speak of the court concerts, begged to go too, but of course he was
-told that it was impossible. His father drove off, but still George
-determined to go. He managed to slip out, and ran as long as he could
-after the carriage. At last he was seen and taken in, and as there
-was no time to bring him home, he went with his father to the court.
-He soon made friends among the duke’s musicians, who let him try the
-organ. One day after the service he was lifted on to the organ-stool,
-and played so wonderfully that the duke, who was in church, asked who
-it was. When he heard that it was the little seven-year-old Handel, he
-sent for his father, and told him that his son would one day be such
-a great musician that it would be quite wrong to make him a lawyer. So
-from that day George was regularly taught music. When he was older he
-came to England, and here he lived most of his life, and here he wrote
-most of the music which is known almost all over the world. He used
-to give concerts at the English court, to which the Prince of Wales,
-the son of George II., and the princess, and many great people came.
-Sometimes at these concerts ladies would talk instead of listening
-to the music, and then Handel quite lost his temper. “His rage was
-uncontrollable,” so we are told, “and sometimes carried him to the
-length of swearing and calling names; whereupon the gentle princess
-would say to the offenders, ‘Hush, hush! Handel is angry;’ and when
-all was quiet the concert would go on again.” Handel, when he was old,
-became quite blind, but he still played the organ up to the very end
-of his life. He died on Good Friday, April 13, 1759, and was buried
-in the Abbey, and on his monument are written the words, “I know that
-my Redeemer liveth,” from the Book of Job, which he had set to most
-beautiful music, and had asked to have written upon his tomb.
-
-I have only spoken to you of Geoffrey Chaucer and of Alfred Tennyson,
-the first and the last poets who were buried in the Abbey; of
-Shakespeare, the greatest of all English poets, and of George Frederick
-Handel, the musician; but very many others are remembered in Poets’
-Corner. And when you some day walk round the Abbey you will see there
-the graves or monuments of most of the great English writers.
-
-The north transept is full of the graves and monuments of statesmen.
-A great many of them you must have heard of, and some of you perhaps
-belong to the Primrose League, which was founded in 1881 in memory of
-Benjamin Disraeli,[24] Lord Beaconsfield, whose monument is in the
-Abbey. He was twice Prime Minister of England, and when he died the
-Primrose League (the badge of which is a primrose, and which was chosen
-because it was said to be his favourite flower) was started to band
-people together to carry on the work and help on the political party
-to which he had belonged. Then there are monuments to three members
-of one family--the family of Canning--who were all great statesmen.
-George Canning,[25] who was born as long ago as 1770, became known as
-a wonderful orator. When he was quite a small boy at school he used to
-say that he meant some day to be a member of Parliament, and at Eton he
-helped to start a debating society which was modelled on the House of
-Commons. Here his speeches soon became famous among the boys. He lived
-to be not only a member of Parliament, but Prime Minister of England.
-His youngest son Charles,[26] who was also a great man, became Earl
-Canning and first Viceroy of India.
-
-“The third great Canning” was Stratford Canning[27] (a cousin of
-Charles), who has been called “the greatest ambassador of our time,”
-and who before he died was made Lord Stratford de Redcliffe, by which
-name he is best known. Each of these three great men gave all his time
-and all his strength to work for the good of his country. Two of them,
-George Canning and his son, the Viceroy of India, are buried in one
-grave here in the Abbey. Lord Stratford de Redcliffe, although his
-statue stands side by side with the monuments to his uncle and cousin,
-is buried in the little country churchyard of Frant, in Kent.
-
-Lord Stratford de Redcliffe was an old man of ninety-three when he
-died. He had done so much, and known so many great and interesting
-people, that the story of his life is a book you will all like to
-read some day. One of the first things he remembered was how, when he
-was a little boy at school, he had seen Lord Nelson. It was at Eton,
-and Nelson, “with all his wounds and all his honours”--for so Lord
-Stratford describes him--came down to see the boys, and asked that they
-might have a whole holiday. More than eighty years afterwards, when
-Lord Stratford de Redcliffe died, there was found in his room a little
-picture of Lord Nelson, which he had kept ever since those far-off
-school days.
-
-I remember Dean Stanley telling us that when Lord Stratford de
-Redcliffe was a very old man he remembered quite clearly what he had
-learnt and done when he was a little child at home. “Not long ago,”
-the Dean said, “I was visiting this aged and famous statesman, and he
-repeated to me, word for word, the Evening Hymn beginning ‘Glory to
-Thee, my God, this night,’ as he had learnt it, he told me, from his
-nurse ninety years before.”
-
-I must not end this chapter without telling you the names of three
-more great statesmen. You will often hear the two Pitts and William
-Wilberforce spoken of, and I should like to say a few words about all
-three before beginning the stories of the kings and queens.
-
-William Pitt[28] was Prime Minister of England, and was made Lord
-Chatham by King George III. He and his son, the younger William
-Pitt,[29] are as well known to all Englishmen as George Canning and his
-son Earl Canning, about whom I have told you. Lord Chatham was, like
-George Canning, a great orator, and even when he was very old and very
-ill, he would come down to the Houses of Parliament and make wonderful
-speeches, which sometimes lasted as long as three hours and a half,
-but which were so interesting that they were listened to in perfect
-silence; “the stillness,” it is said, “was so deep that the dropping
-of a handkerchief would have been heard.” When he died he was buried
-in the Abbey; and in the same grave, twenty-eight years afterwards,
-was buried his son William, the second Pitt, who was an even greater
-statesman than his father. This William was, when quite a little boy,
-astonishingly clever. “The fineness of William’s mind,” wrote his
-mother, in the old-fashioned words of those times, “makes him enjoy
-with the greatest pleasure what would be above the reach of any other
-creature of his small age.” He was too delicate to be sent to school,
-but he was made to work hard at home till he was old enough to be sent
-to Cambridge. Although a very young man when he became a member of
-Parliament, his first speech in the House was a great success. “It is
-not a chip of the old block,” said some one who heard him--“it is the
-old block himself;” meaning that this speech of young William Pitt
-was as good as any his father had made. When he first became Prime
-Minister he was only just twenty-four years old, and from that time
-until he died (twenty-four years afterwards) he was one of the most
-illustrious men in Europe. He and Wilberforce,[30] the last of the
-statesmen about whom I must tell you, were both very much interested in
-one thing--and this was the abolition of (or doing away with) slavery.
-The name of Wilberforce will never be forgotten, for he it was who
-first thought and said that slavery ought to be put an end to, all
-over the world, wherever Englishmen were the rulers. Wilberforce and
-William Pitt were once staying together in a country house not far
-from London, and sitting together one day under an old tree in the
-park, they began to talk about slavery, and to say how terrible a thing
-it was that the lives of hundreds and thousands of men and women and
-children were made full of misery by cruel masters who worked their
-slaves far harder than they worked their horses or their oxen. “I well
-remember,” wrote Mr. Wilberforce in his Diary, “after this conversation
-with Mr. Pitt I resolved to give notice in the House of Commons of my
-intention to bring forward the abolition of the slave-trade.” And
-not long afterwards Wilberforce made a great speech in the House of
-Commons about slavery, and in the end a law was passed to do away with
-the slave-trade. Wherever the English flag was flying there should be
-no slavery, and a slave who could once set foot on any land held by
-Englishmen became a free man.
-
-When Pitt died Wilberforce was one of those who carried a banner in the
-great funeral procession, when he was buried, as I have told you, in
-the same grave with his father, the first Pitt. Many years afterwards
-Wilberforce too “was buried there amongst his friends,” and in another
-part of the Abbey there is a large statue of him, as an old and bent
-man, sitting in an armchair. When you go round the Abbey you must look
-for this monument, for it is said to be very like him during the last
-part of his life.
-
-But we can spend no more time now in telling stories of statesmen, and
-must in the next chapter go on to the kings and queens.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-
-We now come to the kings and queens who are buried in Westminster
-Abbey, and this will be the last chapter of my book.
-
-You remember my telling you how Henry III. built a new shrine for
-Edward the Confessor. Three years after this Chapel of Edward the
-Confessor (as it is called) was finished, King Henry III.,[31] who had
-reigned for fifty-six years, died, and was buried in the Abbey which
-he had loved so long. His son Edward, who now became Edward I., was
-just starting home from the Holy Land with his wife, Queen Eleanor, who
-always went with him on all his journeys, when his father died, and he
-brought with him from the East the marble for the tomb.
-
-I expect you will all remember having heard of this Queen Eleanor, the
-wife of Edward I. She was so brave and so fond of him that she would go
-with him when he went on his crusade to the Holy Land; and when people
-told her that it was dangerous, and that she might be killed, and tried
-to persuade her to stay at home, her only answer was, “The way to
-heaven is as near from Palestine as from England.”
-
-She was not killed, or even hurt; but there is a story told of how,
-while they were in the Holy Land, Edward was wounded by one of his
-enemies, who stabbed him in the arm with a poisoned dagger. This would
-certainly have killed him, if Eleanor had not at once sucked the poison
-out of the wound, and so saved his life.
-
-Edward I.--Edward Longshanks, as he was called, for he was more than
-six feet high--and Queen Eleanor were crowned King and Queen of England
-in Westminster Abbey when they came back from the Holy Land. After the
-coronation a great banquet was given, to which Edward and his brother
-Edmund and all their nobles and attendants came--five hundred of
-them, riding on five hundred magnificent horses. When they dismounted,
-the horses were let loose in the crowd, and anybody who succeeded in
-catching one was allowed to keep it.
-
-When, after having been Queen of England eighteen years, Eleanor[32]
-died at Hardby, in Nottinghamshire, her body was brought to
-Westminster, to be buried in the Abbey. From Nottinghamshire to London
-was a long journey in those days, and it had to be done by stages.
-Wherever the funeral procession stopped, Edward ordered a cross to be
-put up in memory of the queen. They were called the “Eleanor Crosses,”
-and there were altogether twelve of them. The last was in London, at
-Charing Cross, which was the final halting-place before the procession
-reached the Abbey.
-
-Edward I. was a great soldier, and gradually he “filled the Confessor’s
-Chapel with trophies of war.” One of these trophies you must specially
-notice when you go over the Abbey. At the west end of the Confessor’s
-Chapel stand two chairs. One is a plain, very old-looking wooden chair,
-much scratched and battered, and underneath it is a rough-looking bit
-of stone. This old stone is called the “Stone of Scone,” and on it all
-the Kings of Scotland had been crowned at Scone, which was the capital
-of Scotland up to the time when Edward I. became King of England.
-Edward I. and Alexander III., King of Scotland, were always at war; and
-when the English at last conquered the Scotch, Edward took away this
-ancient treasure, the “Stone of Scone,” and brought it to Westminster
-Abbey, that our kings might be crowned upon it, as Kings of England and
-Scotland. The wooden chair was made by his orders, and the stone put
-underneath it, and there it has been ever since, for nearly six hundred
-years.
-
-The other chair was made long afterwards for the coronation of William
-III. and Mary. Between the two are the sword and shield of Edward
-III., which he is said to have used in all his many wars against
-France. The sword is seven feet long, and weighs eighteen pounds.
-
-Edward I.,[33] “the greatest of the Plantagenets,” was buried close by
-Queen Eleanor, but his tomb is quite plain. There is no figure on it,
-and no carving, as there is on the tombs of the other kings and queens.
-Dean Stanley explained, when he showed us the Abbey as children,
-that, for many years after Edward I. died, there was a kind of belief
-that, although the king was dead, yet, if another war broke out with
-Scotland, he would once again lead his army against the enemy, as he
-had so often done before. And so from time to time they would come and
-lift off the great marble slab which covered his tomb, and which was
-easily moved, and look in to see if the king was still there.
-
-The first of our kings who was crowned on the “Stone of Scone” was
-Edward I.’s son, Edward II. He was crowned in the Abbey, but was not
-buried there. The next king who was buried there was Edward III.,[34]
-whose sword and shield we saw just now.
-
-Richard II.,[35] the grandson of Edward III., is sometimes called the
-“Westminster King,” because he was crowned and married and buried in
-the Abbey.
-
-He was only eleven years old when he became King of England. For a
-week before his coronation he had lived in the Tower of London, which
-was the custom in those days for all kings and queens before they were
-crowned. The procession from the Tower to the Abbey was one of the
-most splendid that had ever been seen. But the service was very long,
-and the sermon was longer, and before it was over the king was carried
-out fainting. After this there was a great banquet, at which he had to
-appear again, and then at last the long day was over.
-
-Five years later he was married in the Abbey to Queen Anne. After
-reigning for twenty-five years, he was deposed by Henry of Lancaster,
-and murdered at Pontefract Castle in Yorkshire by his enemies--for he
-had made many during his life. He was buried in Hertfordshire. When
-Henry V. came to the throne, he ordered that Richard’s body should be
-brought to Westminster, and then at last it was laid in the same tomb
-in which, many years before, his wife, Queen Anne, had been buried.
-Henry V.[36] when he was a boy was so wild that he was called “Madcap
-Harry.” But he was particularly fond of the Abbey, and although most
-of his reign was spent in fighting with France, he did a great deal to
-improve and decorate his great church, and when the English won the
-battle of Agincourt (of which you may have heard or read), his first
-thought was to order a Thanksgiving Service to be held at Westminster.
-He had always said he wished to be buried in the Abbey; so, when he
-died in France his body was brought to England. “The long procession
-from Paris to Calais, and from Dover to London, was headed by the King
-of Scots, James I.... As it approached London it was met by all the
-clergy. The services were held first at St. Paul’s, and then at the
-Abbey. No English king’s funeral had ever been so grand. His three
-chargers were led up to the altar, behind the effigy (a wax model of
-the king carried outside his coffin), which lay on a splendid car,
-accompanied by torches and white-robed priests innumerable, ... and at
-the extreme eastern end of the Confessor’s Chapel was deposited the
-body of the most splendid king that England had to that time produced.”
-
-Above his tomb, on a bar which stretches across the steps leading out
-of the chapel, are hung his helmet and saddle. The helmet is probably
-the very one which he wore at the battle of Agincourt, and which twice
-saved his life on that day; it is much dinted, and shows the marks of
-many sword-cuts.
-
-Henry VI. was crowned king when he was only nine years old, and on the
-day of his coronation it is said that he “sat on the platform in the
-Abbey beholding all the people about sadly and wisely.” But as he was
-so young the service was shortened and he had much less to endure than
-the last boy-king, Richard II.
-
-There is a story told of how, toward the end of his reign, King Henry
-VI. used to come and wander about in the Abbey between seven and eight
-o’clock in the evening, when it was growing dusk. He generally came
-quite alone, and only the abbot who carried a torch went with him round
-the dark and silent church. One night he went into the Confessor’s
-Chapel, where he spent more than an hour, wondering if room could be,
-by-and-by, made for his own tomb. “It was suggested to him that the
-tomb of Henry V. should be pushed a little on one side, and his own
-placed beside it; but he replied, ‘Nay, let him alone; he lieth like
-a noble prince; I would not trouble him.’ But close beside the shrine
-of the Confessor there seemed to be room for another tomb. ‘Lend me
-your staff,’ he said to Lord Cromwell, who was with him that evening;
-‘is it not fitting I should have a place here, where my father and my
-ancestors lie, near St. Edward?’ And then, pointing with a white staff
-to the place indicated, he said, ‘Here, methinks, is a convenient
-place;’ adding, ‘Forsooth, forsooth, here will we lie; here is a good
-place for us.’” Three days afterwards the tomb was ordered to be made;
-but it was never even begun, for Henry was deposed by Edward IV. and
-died in the Tower, and from there his body was taken and buried in the
-Abbey of Chertsey.
-
-Close by all these great kings and queens are several tombs of
-children. Among them is a monument to a little deaf and dumb girl of
-five years old, the Princess Catherine, daughter of Henry III. “Close
-to her, as if to keep her company, are buried her two little brothers,
-and four little nephews.”
-
-So far I have told you principally of kings who are buried in
-Westminster Abbey, but now we come to the tombs of some of the Queens
-of England.
-
-You remember that Henry VII. had built a great and magnificent chapel
-which was called after him. The first queen buried there was his wife,
-Queen Elizabeth, who was the mother of Henry VIII.
-
-She had had a life full of adventures. She was the daughter of Edward
-IV., and sister of the two poor little princes who were murdered in the
-Tower by their uncle Richard.
-
-Princess Elizabeth was born in Westminster, and christened in the
-Abbey, but she lived afterwards in the country at the palace of Sheen.
-When she was four years old, her father, Edward IV., was defeated in
-battle, and King Henry VI. was made King of England in his stead.
-The queen, the Princess Elizabeth, and her two baby sisters had to
-leave Sheen and come back to Westminster, where they were hidden in a
-place of safety while all these wars (the Wars of the Roses, as they
-were called) were going on. After two years, however, her father was
-victorious. Henry was deposed, and Edward IV. was once more King of
-England. To celebrate the victory, a great ball was given at Windsor
-Castle, and the little six-year-old princess, who was a special pet
-of her father’s, came down and danced first with him, and then with
-some of the great nobles. When she was nine years old, her father and
-Louis XI., the King of France, decided that, as soon as she was grown
-up, she should marry the Dauphin, his eldest son, who, if he lived,
-would in time become the King of France. Then began a busy time for
-the little princess who might one day be Queen of France. Besides all
-her English lessons, she had to learn to speak and write French and
-Spanish, and she was always called “Madame la Dauphine,” even while
-she was a little girl in the schoolroom. At last she was old enough to
-be married, but when the time for the wedding came, the King of France
-said he had found another wife for his son. Edward IV., who had set
-his heart on seeing his favourite daughter the Queen of France, was
-so disappointed and angry that he became very ill, and died. Then it
-was that Elizabeth’s little brother Edward became Edward V., and the
-day was fixed for his coronation in the Abbey. A great banquet was
-arranged, and all the guests were invited; but before the day came, the
-little king and his younger brother, the Duke of York, were both killed
-by the order of their uncle, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, who then made
-himself King Richard III. of England. Now began a sad time for Princess
-Elizabeth, who was first taken away from her mother and sisters, and
-afterwards kept a prisoner in a lonely old castle in Yorkshire.
-
-Meanwhile, during the time she was shut up here, many things had been
-going on about which she probably knew nothing.
-
-Richard III. was hated by every one, and two years after he had become
-king, Henry, Earl of Richmond, one of the greatest nobles in England,
-decided to try and depose him, and set free Princess Elizabeth. So
-he got together an army and marched to Leicester, where the king was
-then living. On the evening of a summer day the two armies camped at
-a place called Bosworth Field, and there the next day a great battle,
-the Battle of Bosworth, was fought, and Richard III. was killed. It is
-said that the crown of England had, at the beginning of the battle,
-been hidden in a hawthorn bush, and when afterwards it was found by a
-soldier, the Earl of Richmond was at once crowned King Henry VII., and
-all the soldiers who had been lying down, resting after the long fight,
-stood up round him and sang the _Te Deum_.
-
-When Princess Elizabeth, in her far-away lonely castle, heard cries of
-joy from the people who came crowding to the doors of her prison she
-guessed that something had happened and that a better time might be
-coming for her. And soon came a messenger from the king, who had been
-sent straight from the field of battle, with orders to set the princess
-free and bring her to London.
-
-The end of this story is really almost like the end of a fairy tale,
-for her many troubles were now over, and the next year she married
-Henry VII., and so became Queen of England. And when after many years
-she died, she was buried--as I told you at the beginning of this
-story--in the Chapel of Henry VII. in Westminster Abbey. Some years
-later the king was buried beside her; and inside the bronze railings
-surrounding the tomb (which stands behind the altar) you will see the
-figures of Henry VII.[37] and his wife, Queen Elizabeth, lying side by
-side.
-
-Three other queens who are buried here are known to all of you. Two
-of them were sisters, Queen Mary[38] and Queen Elizabeth,[39] the
-daughters of Henry VIII.; and the third was their cousin, another
-Mary--Mary Queen of Scots,[40] who was beheaded by the order of Queen
-Elizabeth, because she was afraid that Mary wanted to make herself
-Queen of England in her stead. Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth, though
-they were sisters, had all their lives been enemies. They differed
-about everything, but especially about their religion, for Mary had
-been brought up a Roman Catholic, and Elizabeth and their little
-brother Edward (who afterwards became Edward VI.) were Protestants.
-Elizabeth and Edward were very fond of one another, and it is said that
-Elizabeth used to spend a great deal of her time when she was quite a
-little girl in doing needlework for her brother. On his second birthday
-she gave him for a birthday present a little shirt which she had made
-for him all herself, though she was then only six years old.
-
-Both these queens, when little girls, were made to do a great many
-lessons, and were taught Latin and Greek with their brother, as well
-as French and Italian and Spanish. Queen Mary was always very fond of
-music, and there is a story told of how, when she was only three years
-old, some friends of her father’s (King Henry VIII.) came down to see
-her at Richmond, where she was then living. The little princess--for
-this was a long time before she became queen--was not in the least shy:
-she welcomed her visitors, and after talking to them “and entertaining
-them with most goodly countenance”--for so one of the gentlemen who was
-there wrote about her afterwards--she played to them on the virginal
-(a kind of piano), after which strawberries and biscuits and wine were
-brought in, and the baby princess had nothing more to do but enjoy
-herself. These three children, Mary, Elizabeth, and Edward, became in
-turn Queens and King of England.
-
-When Henry VIII. died, Edward, the youngest of the three, became King
-Edward VI. But he had all his life been very delicate, and when he had
-been king just six years, and was sixteen years old, he died, and then
-Mary, his eldest sister, became queen. The reign of Queen Mary--Bloody
-Mary she is sometimes called--was a terrible time in England, for,
-as I told you, she was a Roman Catholic, and so determined was she
-that all English men and women should be Roman Catholics too, that she
-ordered those who were Protestants to change their religion and become
-Catholics; and if they refused, they were burnt alive. Hundreds of
-people were killed in this cruel way; and Queen Mary became at last
-so much hated, that when she died, and the Princess Elizabeth became
-queen, there was rejoicing almost all over England. For in spite of all
-the queen had done to make England a Roman Catholic country, by far the
-greater part of the people had remained Protestants, and now once again
-had a Protestant queen to reign over them.
-
-Almost the last time a Catholic Mass (or service) was held in
-Westminster Abbey was at the funeral of Queen Mary.[41] The procession,
-led by the monks, who knew that this was most likely the last service
-in which they would ever take part, came from St. James’s Palace, where
-she died, down to Westminster, and at the great West Door of the Abbey
-were waiting four bishops and the Abbot of Westminster in all the
-magnificent robes which Catholic priests wear.
-
-The body of the queen was carried into Henry VII.’s chapel, and all
-night the Abbey was dimly lighted by the hundred wax torches which were
-held and kept alight by the soldiers of the Queen’s Guard. The next day
-she was buried, and the Catholic Bishop of Winchester preached before
-Elizabeth, who, although she hated the religion, did not refuse to
-come to the funeral of her sister, as Queen Mary had done years before
-on the death of their brother Edward, when, rather than come to a
-Protestant service in the Abbey, she ordered a separate funeral mass to
-be said before her in the Tower.
-
-A little more than a month after this, Queen Elizabeth was crowned in
-the Abbey, and for the next forty-five years “good Queen Bess,” as
-she is often called, reigned over England, and did much that was wise
-and good. One thing she did, however, that was neither wise nor good,
-and that one thing I spoke about when I told you that two Queen Marys
-were buried here, one of whom was Mary Queen of Scots, the cousin of
-Elizabeth. The story of Mary Queen of Scots is a long and very sad one.
-You will some day read about her, if you have not already done so, and
-when you hear how she was imprisoned in Fotheringay Castle, and at last
-beheaded, you will perhaps feel that in some ways Elizabeth could be as
-cruel as her sister Mary.
-
-These three queens are all buried in Henry VII.’s Chapel--Elizabeth
-and Mary together in a white marble tomb, on the outside of which lies
-the statue of Queen Elizabeth, and on which these words in Latin were
-written by James I.: “Consorts both in throne and grave, here rest we
-two sisters, Elizabeth and Mary, in hope of our resurrection.” And not
-far from them lies Mary Queen of Scots. After she had been beheaded
-at Fotheringay Castle her body was buried in Peterborough Cathedral,
-and from there it was brought to Westminster by her son, James VI. of
-Scotland, who was also James I. of England, “that the like honour,” so
-he wrote, “might be done to his dearest mother” as had been done to
-Queen Elizabeth and the other Queen Mary.
-
-We are now coming to the end of these stories, and I must only mention
-in a very few words some of the other graves in this chapel of Henry
-VII.
-
-Oliver Cromwell[42] who, after Charles I. had been beheaded, made
-himself Protector of England, was buried here among the kings and
-queens. It is said that his funeral was more magnificent than any
-king’s had ever been, and that an immense sum of money was spent upon
-it. Close by him was buried Elizabeth Claypole, his favourite daughter,
-and many of his soldiers and followers.
-
-Three years afterwards his body was dug up and taken to Tyburn. There
-his head was cut off, on the 30th of January, the anniversary of the
-day Charles I. had been beheaded, after which his body was buried
-under the gallows, instead of in Westminster Abbey.
-
-“Here are also buried,” says Dean Stanley, “some of our young princes
-and princesses. There was that wonderfully gifted boy, Edward VI.”[43]
-(of whom we have already spoken), “who was only sixteen when he died,
-and who before that time had by his diligence and his honesty made
-himself beloved and trusted by all about him. There is the good Prince
-Henry, eldest son of James I., who when his foolish attendants provoked
-him to swear because a butcher’s dog had killed a stag that he was
-hunting, said, ‘Away with you! All the pleasure in the world is not
-worth a profane oath.’ Then there was, again, that other Henry, Duke
-of Gloucester, who sat on the knees of his father, Charles I., on the
-day before his execution, and who when his father said to him, ‘They
-will try to make you king instead of your elder brother,’ fired up like
-a little man, and said, ‘I will be torn in pieces first!’ Then there
-are two small tombs of the two infant daughters of James I. (one of
-which is made in the shape of a cradle). And to these tombs of these
-two little girls were brought, in after-days, by King Charles II., the
-bones of the two young murdered princes (Edward V. and Richard, Duke of
-York), which in his time were discovered at the foot of the staircase
-in the Tower. Well might all these princes be mourned and have a place
-in this Abbey, because many of them, though they died early, showed
-of what stuff they were made, and that they would have been fit to be
-kings and to be with kings.”
-
-As I copied down these words of Dean Stanley’s, I was once more
-reminded of him, and once more I seemed to hear him telling the
-children gathered round him in the Abbey some of these stories which I
-have just been telling you. And as the last words in this book about
-the Abbey are his words, so the last grave which I want to tell you of
-is his, and when you some day go to the Abbey you must not forget to
-see (also in Henry VII.’s Chapel) the place where, together in one
-tomb, are buried Arthur Stanley,[44] Dean of Westminster, and his wife,
-Lady Augusta.
-
-Dean Stanley knew more about Westminster Abbey than almost any other
-man; and not only did he _know_ more, but by writing books and by
-telling stories to his friends as he showed them over the great church,
-he helped many other people, who but for him perhaps would not have
-thought much about the Abbey at all to know something of the Church of
-St. Peter on Thorney Isle.
-
-And it is because I hoped that what interested us as children many
-years ago might interest others now, that I have tried to remember, and
-collect, and write down these tales from Westminster Abbey in something
-the same way as they were told to us by the Dean.
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] “Memorials of Westminster Abbey.”
-
-[2] The Basilicas of St. John Lateran, St. Paul, St. Lorenzo, and St.
-Clement.
-
-[3] The west door is hardly ever used now as an entrance for visitors,
-and if we were really coming to the Abbey we should enter by another
-door, called Solomon’s Porch, close by St. Margaret’s Church. But as
-soon as we had got inside we should walk straight down to the great
-west door, and imagine we had just come in that way.
-
-[4] Montalembert, “Monks of the West.”
-
-[5] No. 2 on plan.
-
-[6] Gordon was fifty-two when he was killed.
-
-[7] See Mr. Hake’s “Life of Gordon.”
-
-[8] No. 3 on plan.
-
-[9] No. 4 on plan.
-
-[10] No. 5 on plan.
-
-[11] No. 6 on plan.
-
-[12] No. 7 on plan.
-
-[13] Sir James Outram was born on the 29th of January, 1805, and Sir
-Henry Havelock was born on the 5th of April, 1795; so at the time of
-the siege of Lucknow Sir James was fifty-one, and Sir Henry sixty-two
-years old.
-
-[14] See “Havelock,” by Archibald Forbes (“English Men of Action
-Series”).
-
-[15] No. 8 on plan.
-
-[16] No. 9 on plan.
-
-[17] No. 10 on plan.
-
-[18] No. 11 on plan.
-
-[19] No. 12 on plan.
-
-[20] No. 13 on plan.
-
-[21] This is the actual inscription on the monument. The last line as
-written by Shakespeare reads, “Leave not a rack behind.”
-
-[22] No. 14 on plan.
-
-[23] See Sir George Grove’s “Dictionary of Music.”
-
-[24] No. 15 on plan.
-
-[25] No. 16 on plan.
-
-[26] No. 17 on plan.
-
-[27] No. 18 on plan.
-
-[28] No. 19 on plan.
-
-[29] Also No. 19 on plan.
-
-[30] No. 20 on plan.
-
-[31] No. 21 on plan.
-
-[32] No. 22 on plan.
-
-[33] No. 23 on plan.
-
-[34] No. 24 on plan.
-
-[35] No. 25 on plan.
-
-[36] No. 26 on plan.
-
-[37] No. 27 on plan.
-
-[38] No. 28 on plan.
-
-[39] Also No. 28 on plan.
-
-[40] No. 29 on plan.
-
-[41] The last Catholic funeral service was held in the Abbey a few days
-later, when by the order of Elizabeth a requiem mass was said for the
-Emperor Charles V.
-
-[42] No. 30 on plan.
-
-[43] No. 31 on plan.
-
-[44] No. 32 on plan.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
- On the Plan diagram (facing Pg 14), Geoffery Chaucer changed to
- Geoffrey Chaucer.
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Tales from Westminster Abbey, by Millicent Frewen Lord</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Tales from Westminster Abbey</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>Told to Children by Mrs. Frewen Lord</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Millicent Frewen Lord</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: July 3, 2021 [eBook #65748]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Benjamin Fluehr and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TALES FROM WESTMINSTER ABBEY ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i002" style="max-width: 30em;">
-<img src="images/i002.jpg" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-
-<p class="center">WEST FRONT OF WESTMINSTER ABBEY.<br />
-
-<i>After a Photograph by the London Stereoscopic and Photographic Co., Ltd.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h1 style="line-height: 1.8em;">
-TALES<br />
-<span style="font-size: 0.5em;">FROM</span><br />
-WESTMINSTER ABBEY
-</h1>
-
-<p class="center titleSmall">TOLD TO CHILDREN BY</p>
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 1.4em">MRS. FREWEN LORD.</p>
-
-<p class="center titleSmall" style="padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 2em;">WITH
-VIGNETTE PORTRAIT OF DEAN STANLEY, PLAN OF THE ABBEY
-AND GENERAL VIEW OF WEST FRONT OF ABBEY.</p>
-
-<p class="center titleSmall"><i>SECOND EDITION.</i></p>
-
-<p class="center titleLarge" style="padding-top: 2em;">LONDON:<br />
-SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON &amp; COMPANY</p>
-<p class="center titleSmall"><i>LIMITED</i>,</p>
-<p class="center titleLarge">St. Dunstan’s House,</p>
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Fetter Lane, Fleet Street, E.C.</span></p>
-<p class="center titleSmall">1894.</p>
-<p class="center titleXSmall">[<i>All rights reserved.</i>]</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center">LONDON:<br />
-PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,<br />
-STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING CROSS.
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="figcenter chapter" id="i005" style="max-width: 25em;">
-<img src="images/i005.jpg" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<p class="center">DEAN STANLEY.<br />
-<i>From a Photograph by the London Stereoscopic Company.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center">DEDICATED</p>
-<p class="center">to the memory of</p>
-<p class="center titleLarge">DEAN STANLEY,</p>
-<p class="center">whose walks and talks with children</p>
-<p class="center">in Westminster Abbey</p>
-<p class="center">can never be effaced from the</p>
-<p class="center">grateful recollection of one who as a child</p>
-<p class="center">had the happiness of enjoying them.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center titleHuge">TALES</p>
-<p class="center">FROM</p>
-<p class="center titleHuge">WESTMINSTER ABBEY.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5 x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>A great many years ago, when I was quite a
-small child, I was taken with some other children
-over Westminster Abbey by Dean Stanley,
-who was then the Dean of Westminster.</p>
-
-<p>Some of you may have read a book called
-“Tom Brown’s School Days,” and if so you
-will remember Tom’s great friend, Arthur, who
-began his school life a lonely and home-sick
-little boy, but who as the years went on came
-to be looked up to and liked almost more than
-any other boy at Rugby. “George Arthur” this
-boy is called in the book, but his real name<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span>
-was Arthur Stanley, and when he grew up he
-became a clergyman, and was for many years
-Dean of Westminster. He wrote a great many
-books, and one all about Westminster Abbey;
-for he knew every corner and part of this
-great church, and was full of stories about the
-great people who are buried here, and the
-kings and queens who were crowned here.
-There was nothing he liked better than taking
-people over the Abbey, and any one who had
-the happiness of going with him, as I did, and
-of hearing him, would always remember some,
-at any rate, of the stories he told.</p>
-
-<p>He died in 1881, and as none of you can
-ever see or hear him, standing in the Abbey
-surrounded by children, and telling them all
-that he thought would interest them, I am
-going to take out of my memory, and out of
-this book of his,<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> just as much of what he used
-to say as I hope will help you to enjoy what
-you will see there.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span></p>
-
-<p>When one goes to visit any place for the
-first time, there is always a great deal that
-one wants to have explained; and what I
-myself most enjoy is to read or be told beforehand
-something about what I am going to see,
-and then I understand it much better&mdash;I do
-not waste so much time in asking questions,
-and have all the more time to look about.</p>
-
-<p>If we go and stand at the great West Door,
-as it is called, of Westminster Abbey, and look
-down Victoria Street, it is difficult to believe
-that this very same place was, hundreds of years
-ago, quite wild country. Where there are now
-houses and streets and churches, there used to
-be only marshy land and forests. Where there
-are now endless streams of carriages, carts, and
-omnibuses, and people hurrying along, there
-were in the far-off time, when the Abbey
-Church of Westminster was first begun, only
-wild oxen or huge red deer with towering
-antlers which strayed from the neighbouring
-hills and roamed about in this jungle. It used<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span>
-to be called “the terrible place,” so wild and so
-lonely was it.</p>
-
-<p>Dotted about in the marsh were many little
-islands, one of which was called Thorney Isle,
-because there were so many wild thorn trees
-growing there, and on this spot Westminster
-Abbey now stands.</p>
-
-<p>For as the forests in this part of London
-were gradually cut down, this island looked
-so pretty and quiet with the water flowing all
-round it, and nothing to be seen from it but
-sunny green meadows, that King Edward the
-Confessor chose it as the place to build a great
-church, which he called the Church of St. Peter.
-At that time there were not many large churches
-in England, and the Church of St. Peter was
-thought to be one of the most splendid that was
-ever seen. It took fifteen years to build, but
-at last it was finished, and on Christmas Day,
-1065, King Edward the Confessor, wearing his
-crown, as was the custom in those days on
-great occasions, came with all his bishops and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span>
-nobles to the first great service in the Abbey
-Church which he himself had built. He was
-then a very old man, and a few days after the
-great service he was taken ill and died, and
-was buried in his own church. He is called the
-Founder of the Abbey, and you will see, when
-you go round it, the shrine of King Edward
-and of his queen, who was afterwards buried
-at his side.</p>
-
-<p>Now, there is only one more thing to be
-remembered before we begin to look round inside
-and decide what are the most interesting things
-to see, and that is that this Abbey we are in
-to-day is <i>not</i> the actual Church of St. Peter
-which King Edward the Confessor built. Of
-that church there is now left only a little bit
-of one pillar, which perhaps a guide will show
-you, within the altar-rail, in what is called the
-“Sacrarium.” I do not mean that the church
-was pulled down all at once, and this Abbey
-built instead, but bit by bit, as years went
-on, it was added to and altered. New parts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span>
-were built on by different kings&mdash;for Westminster
-Abbey is a church that has been all built
-by kings and princes&mdash;and as the new parts
-were added, the old were gradually pulled down.</p>
-
-<p>Of all the kings who helped to build and
-beautify the Abbey, Henry III. was the one
-who did most, and he spent on it such
-enormous sums of money that he is often
-spoken of as one of the most extravagant kings
-England ever had. He made up his mind that
-the Abbey of Westminster was to be the most
-beautiful church in the world, and he used to
-invite the best foreign artists and sculptors
-to come and help to make plans and paintings
-and carvings for it. He it was who built the
-shrine where Edward the Confessor is now
-buried, in the part of the choir behind where
-the communion table (formerly the high altar)
-now stands. It was when he was growing to be
-an old man that he thought the founder of the
-Abbey ought to be treated with special honour
-and respect, and so almost the last thing he did<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span>
-in his life was to build this shrine, which stands in
-what is called Edward the Confessor’s Chapel.</p>
-
-<p>The king sent all the way to Rome&mdash;and in
-those days the journey was a very much longer
-and more difficult one than it is now&mdash;for the
-mosaics and enamels which are still to be seen
-on the shrine; the workmen who made it came
-from Rome, where the best workmen were then
-to be found; and the twisted columns round the
-shrine were made in imitation of the columns on
-some of the tombs in the great churches in
-Rome.<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
-
-<p>When it was finished, in 1269, the old king
-himself, his brother Richard, and his two sons,
-Edward and Edmund, carried the coffin of
-Edward the Confessor on their shoulders from
-the place where it had been buried in 1065 to
-the new chapel, and there it has rested to this
-very day.</p>
-
-<p>Years afterwards a great and magnificent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span>
-chapel was added by Henry VII. at the east
-end of the Abbey, which was called after him.
-He was buried there when he died, and so were
-his grandson, Edward VI., and Queen Elizabeth,
-and Mary Queen of Scots, and many others
-whose tombs you must look at by-and-by.</p>
-
-<p>It was in the year 1509 that Henry VII.
-was buried in Westminster Abbey, just four
-hundred and forty-four years after the burial
-of King Edward the Confessor. But in these
-four hundred and forty-four years the Abbey
-had been so much altered, the old parts so
-pulled down and rebuilt, that King Edward,
-could he have seen it again, would hardly
-have believed that this great Abbey, as we see
-it to-day, had grown up from his first Church
-of St. Peter on Thorney Isle.</p>
-
-<p>And now, as I have said enough about the
-building of the Abbey, we can go inside and
-begin to see some of the monuments and tombs
-of which it is full.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>This chapter on the <i>geography</i> of the Abbey, as
-I call it, has nothing to do with the stories
-which begin in the next chapter, and the only
-reason that I have written it at all is this.
-In the days when I first heard many of the
-stories which I am going to tell you now, they
-were told to us by Dean Stanley in the Abbey.
-As we walked about with him he explained
-to us what part of the church we were in, and
-pointed out the tomb or monument of the man,
-or woman, or child about whom he was telling
-us. But some of you may read this little book
-before you have ever been to Westminster
-Abbey, and others may have been there, but
-may not know the names of the different parts
-of the church, or where any particular monument
-or tomb is.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span></p>
-
-<p>So, instead of trying to explain at the beginning
-of every story whereabouts we are supposed
-to be standing, I am putting all such
-explanations in this chapter; and this will, I
-hope, help you to find your way about in the
-Abbey for yourselves. If you only want to
-hear the stories, you must miss this chapter
-and go on to the next one.</p>
-
-<p>Just as we have maps to understand the
-geography of countries, so we have maps, which
-are called <i>plans</i>, to understand the geography
-of churches and houses, and the drawing you
-see on the opposite page is a map or plan of
-the inside of Westminster Abbey. The picture
-at the beginning of this book is a view of
-the outside.</p>
-
-<p>We will now suppose we have just come into
-the Abbey at the great west door, the door
-between the two towers (see frontispiece). The
-name is marked on the plan.<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> We should
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span>
-then be standing in what is called the nave,
-and right in front of us and through those
-iron gates underneath the organ is the choir.
-That is where service is held every morning
-and every afternoon, and where all the
-Westminster School boys sit on Sundays when
-they come to church, for as Westminster
-school has no chapel of its own, the boys
-have all their services in the Abbey. Through
-the choir gates you can see the communion
-table in front of you, and behind that, again,
-are all the chapels where the kings and queens
-are buried. The nave and transepts are full
-of the monuments and graves of great men.
-The numbers 1, 2, 3, etc., on the plan mark
-those about which you will find stories
-later on.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i017" style="max-width: 40em;">
-<img src="images/i017.png" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<p class="center">PLAN OF WESTMINSTER ABBEY.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div style="border: 1px dotted; padding: 1em;">
-<p class="plan">
-A. Chapel of Edward Confessor.<br />
-B. Chapel of St. Benedict.<br />
-C. Chapel of St. Edmund.<br />
-D. Chapel of St. Nicholas.<br />
-E. Henry VII. Chapel.<br />
-F. Chapel of St. Paul.<br />
-G. Chapel of St. John Baptist.<br />
-H. Chapel of St. Erasmus.<br />
-I. Chapel of Abbot Islip.<br />
-J. Chapel of St. John Evangelist.<br />
-K. Chapel of St. Michael.<br />
-L. Chapel of St. Andrew.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="plan">
-1. Lord Shaftesbury.<br />
-2. General Gordon.<br />
-3. Edward Mansell.<br />
-4. Edward de Carteret.<br />
-5. Sir Isaac Newton.<br />
-6. Lord Lawrence.<br />
-7. Sir James Outram.<br />
-8. David Livingstone.<br />
-9. Henry Fawcett.<br />
-10. Sir John Franklin.<br />
-11. Geoffrey Chaucer.<br />
-12. Alfred Tennyson.<br />
-13. Shakespeare.<br />
-14. Handel.<br />
-15. Lord Beaconsfield.<br />
-16. George Canning.<br />
-17. Earl Canning.<br />
-18. Lord Stratford de Redcliffe.<br />
-19. Lord Chatham and William Pitt.<br />
-20. Wilberforce.<br />
-21. Henry III.<br />
-22. Queen Eleanor.<br />
-23. Edward I.<br />
-24. Edward III.<br />
-25. Richard II.<br />
-26. Henry V.<br />
-27. Henry VII. and Queen.<br />
-28. Queen Elizabeth and Queen Mary Tudor.<br />
-29. Mary Queen of Scots.<br />
-30. Oliver Cromwell.<br />
-31. Edward VI.<br />
-32. Dean Stanley.<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>And now, if you look at the plan, you
-will see exactly where everything is. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span>
-whole Abbey is built on a piece of land which
-has the shape of a cross laid upon the ground.
-The nave and choir represent the stem of the
-cross, and the two transepts form the two
-arms.</p>
-
-<p>In the part of the choir beyond the communion
-table are the chapels. Altogether there are
-eleven, and they are arranged like a wreath
-round the shrine of Edward the Confessor.
-They are marked on the plan by the letters
-A, B, C, etc., and their names you will find on
-the plan, beginning with A, which is the Chapel
-of Edward the Confessor.</p>
-
-<p>One last thing I must explain before we begin
-the stories, and that is&mdash;how this great church
-came to be called an Abbey, and not a Cathedral.
-It is not at all difficult to remember when you
-have once been told.</p>
-
-<p>The Church of St. Peter did not stand, as
-you may have supposed, all by itself on Thorney
-Isle, but was only one part of a mass of buildings
-called the Monastery of St. Peter.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span></p>
-
-<p>A monastery, as you very likely already
-know, was a kind of college for monks. Here
-they lived under the rule of an abbot; and the
-church belonging to the monastery&mdash;for every
-monastery had a church, as well as a school
-and hospital or infirmary, belonging to it&mdash;was
-called an Abbey.</p>
-
-<p>In early days the life of the monks was a
-very busy one. They did all the rough work,
-such as cooking, and cleaning pots and pans; for
-although many of them had been great soldiers
-or great nobles, they did not think any work
-done for the monastery was beneath them. They
-ploughed the land and planted seeds; they cut
-down trees for firewood; they nursed the sick;
-they fed and looked after the poor who lived
-round about them; and they taught in the
-school, and watched over the boys who were
-sent there to be educated.</p>
-
-<p>Many boys&mdash;not only those who intended to
-become monks when they grew up, but those
-also who were to go out into the world, or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span>
-become soldiers&mdash;went to the monastery schools
-to be taught. Here the sons of great nobles
-sat to learn their lessons side by side with the
-children of the poorest people, who were allowed
-to come and have as good an education as the
-rich without paying any school fees. The
-schools were open to all who wished to learn.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, Scripture was the chief thing that
-they were taught, but the monks did not think
-that alone was enough, and the boys often
-learnt, besides reading and writing, grammar,
-poetry, astronomy, and arithmetic. Latin many
-of the monks talked almost as easily as their
-own language, and very often music and painting
-were added to all this. In the cloisters,
-or covered walks belonging to the monastery,
-the boys learned their lessons, always with a
-master near by, and sitting one behind another,
-so that no signals or jokes were possible. And
-very hard it must have been to keep their
-attention on their work in summer time when,
-if they looked up, they could see through the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span>
-open archways the sun shining on the grass
-in the centre of the cloisters, and inviting them
-to come and play there. Something was always
-going on in the cloisters. Sometimes the schoolboys
-were tempted to waste their time watching
-the monks shaving. Once a fortnight in
-summer, and once in three weeks in winter,
-the monks came out here with hot water and
-soap, and the important business of shaving
-went on, while on “Saturdays the heads and
-feet of the brethren were duly washed.” If
-while all these things were going on the abbot
-appeared, every one stood up and bowed, and
-the lessons and the shaving and the washing
-stopped until he had passed by.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the most important part of every
-monastery was the library, and an abbot who
-cared much for the monastery over which he
-ruled tried to collect and preserve and buy as
-many books as he could. In those days printing
-was not invented, and so every book of
-which many copies were wanted had to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span>
-written out by the monks. And this they did
-in a most wonderful way, copying them, so
-we are told,<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> “on parchment of extreme fineness
-prepared by their own hands,” and ornamenting
-them with “the most delicate miniatures and
-paintings.” The monks at that time loved their
-books more than anything else, and there was
-a saying among them that a cloister without
-books was like a fortress without an arsenal.
-Often they took long and difficult journeys to
-see or to copy the books in other monasteries.
-“Our books,” said a monk, “are our delight
-and our wealth in time of peace, ... our food
-when we are hungry, and our medicine when we
-are sick.”</p>
-
-<p>And now, having told you a little about the life
-of the monks in those far-off days, we must come
-back to these buildings on Thorney Isle, which
-as I have said were called the Monastery of St.
-Peter. It is not known when this particular
-monastery was first founded; but it is said that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span>
-St. Dunstan, who lived in the reign of King
-Edwy, found there some half-ruined buildings.
-He repaired them, and then brought twelve
-monks to live in company with him. But
-probably the Danes, who were often invading
-England at that time, destroyed this little monastery,
-for when Edward the Confessor came
-to the throne, many years afterwards, it had
-almost, if not quite, disappeared; and when he
-rebuilt it he added this great church of St. Peter,
-about which I told you in the first chapter.</p>
-
-<p>There is a pretty story told of how this came
-about. An old monk was one day lying asleep,
-and in his sleep he was commanded by St.
-Peter, who appeared visibly to him, to acquaint
-the king that it was his pleasure he should
-restore the monastery. “There is,” said the
-apostle, “a place of mine in the west part of
-London which I choose and love. The name
-of the place is Thorney.... There let the king
-by my command make a dwelling of monks,
-stately build and amply endow; it shall be no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>
-less than the House of God, and the Gates of
-Heaven.” When he woke up, the old monk
-went to the king and told him his vision.
-Upon hearing it Edward journeyed to “the
-west part of London;” there he found Thorney
-Isle, and there he built the monastery and church,
-which he called after the apostle.</p>
-
-<p>And now at last we have finished all the
-explanations. In the first chapter I told you
-how the Abbey came to be built, and in this
-one I have shown you how to find your way
-about it. In the next I shall begin telling
-you the stories, the first being about Lord
-Shaftesbury, whose monument is in the nave,
-where you see No. 1 on the plan.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Very likely you have never even heard the
-name of Lord Shaftesbury; but as you will be
-sure to read and hear of him by-and-by, I will
-tell you a little about what he did, and why
-a monument was put up in his memory. He
-was born in 1801, and died in 1885, and so was
-an old man of eighty-four when he died. He
-spent all his long life in trying to make other
-people&mdash;especially the poorest and most miserable
-he could find&mdash;more happy and more comfortable.
-He was a great nobleman, and very
-rich, and he gave most of his time to finding
-out the cause of the suffering of the poorest
-people in England, and, when he had found it
-out, he helped to make laws to improve things
-for them, and, if money was wanted, he gave<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>
-that too. But he gave away his money wisely
-and well; he never was taken in by idle
-people and beggars who would not work for
-themselves; his motto seems to have been to
-“help those who help themselves,” and one
-name by which he was known was “The
-Working Man’s Friend.” But especially may
-he be remembered by all children for what he
-did for children. More than fifty years ago,
-when first machines (spinning machines and
-weaving machines) were invented in the great
-cotton factories in England, it was found that
-children could work them just as well as men
-and women; and as children would not have
-to be paid so much as men, the masters of
-the mills began to employ them. Quite tiny
-children, sometimes not more than five years
-old, and so small that they often had to be
-lifted up on stools to reach their work, were
-made to toil in the mills and factories all
-day, and sometimes all night too. They were
-treated like little slaves. If they did not work<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span>
-fast enough, they were beaten and kicked by
-their masters; and they spent all their days
-in hot rooms, hearing nothing but the whirring
-of the machines, and stopping their work only
-for about half an hour in the middle of the
-day for their dinner, which was generally only
-black bread and porridge, and sometimes a little
-bacon. They had no time for play, and they
-had no time to rest, except on Sundays, and
-then they were too tired to move from the
-berths (or shelves) where they slept, for they
-did not even have proper beds.</p>
-
-<p>Then, again, there were the children who
-worked in coal-mines, who spent all their days
-in damp, dark mines, who never saw the sun,
-and who had to draw the trucks filled with coal,
-or carry great baskets full of it on their backs.
-And all this they began to do before they were
-six years old.</p>
-
-<p>When Lord Shaftesbury saw these things&mdash;for
-he went into the mills and the factories,
-and he went down into the mines&mdash;he made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span>
-up his mind that something must be done
-for such children. So he made speeches in
-Parliament, in which he told of the cruelty
-with which thousands of English children were
-treated; and at last laws were made by which
-it was forbidden to let such little children work
-in mines and factories at all, and by which older
-children were given shorter hours to work and
-more time for rest and fresh air. All this
-and much more Lord Shaftesbury did during
-his long life, and when at last he died, this
-monument was put up in Westminster Abbey
-with these words on it, so that people who had
-never known him might be always reminded of
-the way he spent his life:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="center">LORD SHAFTESBURY,<br />
-BORN 1801; DIED 1885.<br />
-ENDEARED TO HIS COUNTRYMEN BY A LONG<br />
-LIFE SPENT IN THE CAUSE OF THE<br />
-HELPLESS AND SUFFERING.<br />
-“LOVE&mdash;SERVE.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span></p>
-
-<p>Close to Lord Shaftesbury, there is a monument
-to a great soldier, General Gordon,<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> who
-was killed in Egypt in 1885&mdash;the same year
-that Lord Shaftesbury died. He fought in
-the Crimean War and in China, and was often
-called “Chinese Gordon.” All the soldiers who
-served under him were so fond and proud of him
-that they would have done anything for him.
-He was very brave, and it was well known
-that he would always be in the front rank to
-lead his men when there was a battle, and this,
-more than anything else, made him popular. He
-himself never was armed except with a little
-cane, which his soldiers called “the wand of
-victory.” Once when he was wounded his men
-wanted to carry him out of the battle, but
-he would not allow it, and went on leading
-them till he fainted from pain and weakness.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Shaftesbury, the great statesman, died
-in England, with all his many friends near
-him, and General Gordon, the great soldier, was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>
-killed by savages while he was shut up in
-Khartoum, a town in Africa, where he was
-besieged; but their two monuments are close
-together in Westminster Abbey, and they were
-alike in one thing&mdash;they both did all they could
-to help other people. Of course, Gordon had not
-time to do so much as Lord Shaftesbury,<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> but
-when he was not fighting he lived in England,
-and then “his house,” said a gentleman who
-knew him,<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> “was school and hospital and almshouse
-in turn. The poor, the sick, and the
-unfortunate were all welcome. He always
-took a great delight in children, but especially
-in boys employed on the river or the sea.
-Many he rescued from the gutter, cleansed them
-and clothed them, and kept them for weeks in
-his house. For their benefit he established
-reading classes. He called them his kings, and
-for many of them he got berths on board ship.
-One day a friend asked him why there were so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>
-many pins stuck into the map of the world
-over his mantelpiece. He was told they marked
-and followed the course of the boys on their
-voyages; that they were moved from point to
-point as his youngsters advanced, and that he
-prayed for them as they went night and day.
-The light in which he was held by those lads
-was shown by inscriptions in chalk on the fences.
-A favourite one was ‘God bless the Kernel,’”
-which was their way of spelling “colonel,”
-for he was at that time Colonel Gordon.</p>
-
-<p>But I must not stay to tell you more of him
-now, for there are many other people I want
-you to hear about. “This Abbey,” Dean
-Stanley used to say, “is full of the remembrances
-of great men and famous women. But it is also
-full of the remembrances of little boys and girls
-whose death shot a pang through the hearts of
-those who loved them, and who wished that
-they should never be forgotten.”</p>
-
-<p>So now, not far from the monuments to these
-two great men, we come upon the tombs of two<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>
-boys who are buried here: one Edward Mansell,<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>
-a boy of fourteen, who died as long ago as 1681;
-and another Edward, Edward de Carteret,<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> a
-little boy “seven yeares and nine months old,”
-who “dyed the 30th day of October, 1677.” His
-father and mother put nothing on his tomb to
-tell us about him except that he was a “gentleman;”
-but that one word tells us much, for it
-means, said Dean Stanley, that “they believed&mdash;and
-no belief can be so welcome to any father
-or mother&mdash;they believed that their little son
-was growing up truthful, manly, courageous,
-courteous, unselfish, and religious.” And if this
-little boy had tried to be a “gentleman” in
-this true and best sense of the word, it does not
-seem out of place that he should be buried in the
-Abbey among great men and famous women.</p>
-
-<p>Close by little Edward de Carteret is buried
-Sir Isaac Newton.<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> There is on the floor a
-plain grey stone with these few words in Latin
-on it, “Hic depositum quod mortale fuit Isaaci<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span>
-Newtoni,” which means, “Here lies what was
-mortal of Isaac Newton.” Sir Isaac Newton
-was one of the most celebrated Englishmen
-who ever lived, and made wonderful discoveries
-in science, especially in astronomy, by which
-his name is known all over the world. He was
-born on Christmas Day, 1642, and lived to be
-seventy-five years old. In spite of being so
-learned and so famous, he was always modest
-about what he knew, and believed that what
-he had learned and discovered was only a very,
-very little bit of all there was to learn and
-discover in the world and about the world.
-When he was quite an old man, some one was
-saying to him one day how much he had done
-and how wonderful his discoveries were, and he
-answered, “To myself I seem to have been as a
-child picking up shells on the seashore, while the
-great ocean of truth lay unexplored before me.”</p>
-
-<p>Just above the grey stone in the floor there
-is a large statue of Sir Isaac Newton, sitting
-with his head resting on his hands as though<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span>
-he were thinking, and a great pile of books by
-his side.</p>
-
-<p>I have already told you about General Gordon.
-I now come to the story of another great soldier,
-Sir James Outram, who is buried in the Abbey.
-The graves of Sir James Outram and of David
-Livingstone, a great traveller and missionary,
-and of Lord Lawrence, who was the Governor-General
-of India, and who did a great deal for
-the natives while he lived among them, are all
-close together, and there is something interesting
-to tell you about all these three men, especially
-Sir James Outram and David Livingstone.</p>
-
-<p>If you have read or heard anything of the
-story of the Indian Mutiny, when the native
-soldiers of India rebelled against the English
-who governed them, and killed hundreds of
-men, women, and children, you must, I think,
-have heard the names of Lord Lawrence and
-Sir James Outram.</p>
-
-<p>During the years he had lived among them,
-the natives of India had grown so fond of Lord<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span>
-Lawrence,<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> that when the mutiny (or rebellion)
-broke out, the men of the Punjaub (which was
-the part of India he then governed) said they
-would be true to the man who had been good
-to them, and so they fought for England with
-the few English soldiers who were then in India,
-and helped us to conquer the rebels. Lord
-Lawrence has been called the “Saviour of India,”
-because he came to the help of his fellow-countrymen
-with these Indian soldiers just when
-he was most terribly needed.</p>
-
-<p>Later on, in the same war, came the siege of
-Lucknow. Lucknow was one of the chief cities
-of India, but the streets were long and narrow
-and dirty, and most of the houses were poor
-and mean. Among them, however, were some
-magnificent palaces and temples. The Residency,
-the house where the English governor of Lucknow
-lived, was built on a hill above the river,
-and all round it were the offices and the
-bungalows of the English who were living there.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span>
-When the mutiny broke out, it was soon seen
-that the native soldiers would attack the English
-in Lucknow, and the people at once set to work
-to make as many preparations against them as
-they could. To begin with, Sir Henry Lawrence,
-who was in command of the soldiers
-both English and Indian, and who was the
-brother of Lord Lawrence, of whom we spoke
-just now, ordered all the women and children
-to come and live in the Residency, which was
-supposed to be the safest place in Lucknow.
-Then guns, powder and shot, and food were
-brought in and stored in the cellars. At last, at
-nine o’clock on the evening of the 30th of May,
-1857, when the officers were quietly at dinner,
-nearly all the native soldiers in Lucknow suddenly
-rose against the English. They loaded
-their guns, and fired at every one they could see;
-they broke into the houses, and, after stealing
-everything they could, set fire to them; and all
-night there was nothing to be heard save the
-savage yells of the rebels and the firing of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span>
-guns, and nothing to be seen but fighting men
-and burning houses. About five hundred of the
-native soldiers were true to the English, and
-they stayed with them and fought against
-their rebellious countrymen through all the long
-siege of Lucknow. For though the rebels were
-beaten at their first rising by the English, yet
-in a month or two they rose again, and then
-every one, including the soldiers, was driven
-by the enemy into the Residency, which was
-the last place of refuge.</p>
-
-<p>Some day, perhaps, you will read a poem
-by Lord Tennyson called “Lucknow,” which
-describes all the terrible things that happened
-during the “eighty-seven” days the English
-and the faithful natives were shut up in the
-Residency, on the topmost roof of which, as
-he says, the “banner of England blew” during
-the whole siege, though it was shot through by
-bullets, and torn and tattered, and faded in the
-hot Indian summer sun.</p>
-
-<p>One of the first things that happened was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span>
-that Sir Henry Lawrence was killed. He was
-lying on his bed one morning talking to an
-officer, when a shell was fired from a cannon into
-his room. It burst as it fell, and some of its
-fragments wounded Sir Henry so terribly that
-he died the next day. Almost the last thing he
-said to the other officers was to beg them never
-to give in to the natives, but to fight as long
-as there was an English man left alive. Lord
-Lawrence, his brother, who died some years
-afterwards, was buried, as you remember, in
-Westminster Abbey; but Sir Henry Lawrence
-was carried out of the Residency while the
-fighting was going on, and the bullets were
-falling like rain, and buried side by side with
-some private soldiers who had also been killed
-by the rebels. On his gravestone they put these
-words, which he himself had asked should be
-written there, “Here lies Henry Lawrence, who
-tried to do his duty.”</p>
-
-<p>This was on the 4th of July, and Sir Henry
-Lawrence had said he thought it would be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span>
-possible to defend the Residency for a fortnight.
-But as time went on the English grew fewer
-and fewer; every day more soldiers were killed,
-and every day many died of their wounds, while
-those who were left alive had to fight day and
-night. The English ladies nursed the sick men,
-and cooked the food, which they used to bring
-out to those who were fighting; and they looked
-after the children, very many of whom died too.
-For it was the hottest time of the year in India&mdash;a
-time when English children are sent away
-to the hills to get fresh air&mdash;and, besides suffering
-from the heat, they missed all the comforts
-they were accustomed to; they had no milk and
-very little to eat, and they were terrified by the
-noise of the firing and all the confusion.</p>
-
-<p>But still the fighting went on day after day,
-long after the fortnight was over, and day after
-day the enemy saw the English flag still flying
-on the roof of the Residency, and began to
-think they never would conquer this brave
-little band of Englishmen.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span></p>
-
-<p>All this time, however, though they did not
-know it in the Residency, Sir James Outram<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a>
-and Sir Henry Havelock, with more English
-soldiers, were fighting their way to Lucknow.<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></p>
-
-<p>They had both been for many years in India,
-and were two of the bravest and best men who
-could possibly have been sent to the relief of
-the little band who had been besieged for so
-many weeks. On the 23rd of September, nearly
-<i>twelve weeks</i> after the day Sir Henry Lawrence
-died, it was heard in Lucknow that Sir James
-Outram and Sir Henry Havelock were close
-by, and on the 25th the Highlanders were in
-the city and fighting their way through the
-narrow streets to the Residency. Then from
-every window and every balcony and every roof
-the rebels fired down on them. Many were
-killed and more were wounded. A story is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>
-told, by Mr. Archibald Forbes,<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> of two Irishmen
-who were in the Highland regiment.
-“They were great friends, named Glandell and
-M‘Donough, and in going through one of these
-narrow streets M‘Donough’s leg was broken by
-a bullet. He fell, but he was not left to die, for
-his friend who was by him took him on his
-back and trudged on with his heavy burden.
-Although he was carrying M‘Donough, Glandell
-determined to fight at the same time, so when
-there was a chance to fire a shot, he propped
-his wounded comrade up against a wall and
-took up his rifle instead; then he would pick
-up M‘Donough again and stagger cheerily on till
-a place of safety was reached.”</p>
-
-<p>At last the gate of the Residency was in sight
-of the relieving force, and then the besieged
-people looking out saw through the smoke
-officers on horseback&mdash;Outram with a great cut
-across his face, and one arm in a sling, on a
-big white horse, and Havelock walking by his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span>
-side (for his horse had been shot), and the
-Highlanders in their kilts and for the most
-part in their shirt-sleeves, with no coats on.
-“Then,” wrote some one who had been all
-these weeks in the Residency&mdash;“then all our
-doubts and fears were over, and from every pit,
-trench, and battery, from behind the sand-bags
-piled on shattered houses, from every post still
-held by a few gallant spirits, even from the
-hospital, rose cheer on cheer.” Sir James
-Outram’s horse shied at the gate, but with a
-shout the Highlanders hoisted him through; Sir
-Henry Havelock followed, “and then in rushed
-the eager soldiers, powder-grimed, dusty, and
-bloody, ... and all round them as they
-swarmed in crowded ... the fighting men of
-the garrison, and the civilians whom the siege
-had made into soldiers, and women weeping
-tears of joy, and the sick and the wounded
-who had crawled out of the hospital to welcome
-their deliverers. The ladies came down
-among the soldiers to shake their hands, and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span>
-children hugged them.” “We were all rushing
-about,” said a lady, “to give the poor fellows
-drinks of water, for they were perfectly exhausted;
-and tea was made, of which a large
-party of tired, thirsty officers partook without
-milk and sugar, and we had nothing to give
-them to eat. Every one’s tongue seemed going
-at once with so much to ask and to tell, and
-the faces of utter strangers beamed on each
-other like those of dearest friends and brothers.”
-So ended the siege of Lucknow. Sir Henry
-Havelock had not been wounded, but he had
-suffered much from hard work and from having
-so little to eat. “I find it not so easy to
-starve at sixty as at forty-seven,” he said one
-day. At last, in November, he became very ill,
-and when Sir James Outram went to see him
-in the common soldier’s tent which he had
-always used since he had been in Lucknow, he
-told him that he was going to die; “but I have
-for forty years so ruled my life that when death
-came I might face it without fear,” he added.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span>
-He died on the 24th of November, 1857, and
-was buried just outside Lucknow, under a
-mango tree, and even now the letter H, which
-was carved in the bark&mdash;for no other monument
-could be put up to his memory in those days
-of war and disturbance&mdash;can just be seen, more
-than thirty years afterwards.</p>
-
-<p>Sir James Outram was nursed in Dr. Fayrer’s
-house in Lucknow until he was well, and three
-years afterwards, in 1860, he left India and came
-back to England. Then he had many honours
-shown him; but, like Sir Henry Havelock, he
-felt the effects of all he had gone through in
-India, and gradually he became more ill, and was
-at last sent to the south of France, where he
-died on the 11th of March, 1863. His body was
-brought to England and buried in the Abbey
-under the grey stone which you will see in the
-nave, and on it were written these words&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="center">LIEUTENANT-GENERAL SIR JAMES OUTRAM,<br />
-BORN JAN. 29TH, 1805; DIED MAR. 11TH, 1863.<br />
-“THE BAYARD OF INDIA.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span></p>
-
-<p>I remember, in one of the sermons which he
-used to preach to children, Dean Stanley spoke
-of this grave of Sir James Outram, and said,
-“There was a famous French soldier of bygone
-days whose name you will see written in this
-Abbey on the gravestone of Sir James Outram,
-because in many ways he was like Bayard.
-Bayard was a small boy&mdash;only thirteen&mdash;when
-he went into his first service, and his mother
-told him to remember three things: first, to
-fear and love God; secondly, to have gentle
-and courteous manners to those above him;
-and thirdly, to be generous and charitable,
-without pride or haughtiness, to those beneath
-him; and these three things he never forgot,
-which helped to make him the soldier without
-fear and without reproach.” And it was in these
-three things that Sir James Outram was supposed
-to be so like the French soldier, Bayard.</p>
-
-<p>One more thing I must tell you before we
-pass on to David Livingstone. On the morning
-of the day when Outram was to be buried, some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span>
-Highland soldiers came to his house and asked
-to be allowed to carry the coffin on their
-shoulders down to the Abbey. They were
-some men from the 78th Regiment&mdash;the very
-same men who had fought under him at the
-relief of Lucknow, and who had been with him
-when Sir Henry Havelock was buried under
-the mango tree; and they came now hoping to
-carry the body of Sir James Outram to his
-burial. Unfortunately, they were too late, and
-were told, much to their disappointment, that
-this was impossible because other arrangements
-had been made.</p>
-
-<p>We come now to David Livingstone,<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> the
-great traveller and missionary. He was born
-in Scotland in 1813. His father and mother
-were very poor, and when he was ten years old
-he was sent to work in a cotton factory. He
-grew up to be a very extraordinary man, as you
-will see, and he certainly was a very unusual
-boy. He saved up his wages, and the first thing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span>
-he bought was a Latin grammar, from which he
-used to learn in the evenings after he left
-his work; and so interested was he that he
-often went on till twelve o’clock at night, when
-his mother took away the book and sent him to
-bed, for he had to be at the factory at six every
-morning. When he grew up he became a
-missionary, and went to Africa, where he made
-many discoveries, travelling into parts of the
-country where no one had ever been before,
-and teaching the natives, who were quite
-ignorant and wild, but who grew very fond of
-this “white man who treated black men as his
-brothers”&mdash;for so one native chief described him&mdash;and
-who cared for them, and doctored them
-when they were ill, and gave up all his life to
-them. He had all sorts of adventures. Once
-he lived for some time in a place which was full
-of lions, who used to come and kill the cattle
-even in the day time. The people made up
-their minds to try to kill one lion; for if one
-of a party of lions is killed, the rest generally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span>
-go away. Livingstone went out with them,
-and they found the lions on a little hill covered
-with trees. Some of the men fired, but did not
-hit any of them. Presently Livingstone “saw
-one of the beasts sitting on a rock, behind
-a little bush”&mdash;these are his own words&mdash;“about
-thirty yards off. I took a good aim
-at his body through the bush, and fired at
-him. The men then called out, ‘He is shot&mdash;he
-is shot!’ others cried out, ‘He has been
-shot by another man, too; let us go to him.’
-I did not see any one else shoot at him,
-but I saw the lion’s tail erected in anger
-behind the bush, and, turning to the people,
-said, ‘Stop a little till I fire again.’ When in
-the act of ramming down the bullets I heard
-a shout. Starting and looking half round, I
-saw the lion in the act of springing on me.
-I was upon a little height. He caught my
-shoulder as he sprang, and we both came to
-the ground together. Growling horribly close
-to my ear, he shook me as a terrier dog does<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span>
-a rat.” It was wonderful that Livingstone did
-not seem to feel any pain or fear; he said he
-seemed to be in a kind of dream, but knew quite
-well all that was happening. Of course, in
-another minute he would have been killed, had
-not some of the people fired again at the lion
-and this time killed it. But Livingstone never
-afterwards could use quite easily the arm which
-the lion had crushed. During his travels he
-discovered Lake Nyassa, which you can find
-marked now on every map of Africa. Before
-he went there all that part of the country used
-to be marked “unexplored.”</p>
-
-<p>For more than thirty years Livingstone lived
-in Africa, always travelling about, and finding
-new tribes of natives, all of whom he got to
-know, and all of whom became fond of him;
-and at last, when he died in a little hut which
-his black servants had built for him in the
-middle of one of these great African forests,
-Susi and Chumah, two of his followers, who had
-been with him for many years, came all the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span>
-way to England with the body of their dead
-master. On the day when he was buried, the
-Abbey was crowded with people who came from
-all parts of England and Scotland; and among
-all the white faces were seen two black ones, for
-the faithful servants stood close by the grave;
-and Dean Stanley, who read the service, said
-afterwards that he had never seen two men
-seem more broken-hearted. On his tombstone
-you will read of one more thing which he did
-for the natives whilst he lived among them;
-and that was, to help to abolish the slave-trade
-in Central Africa. He was sixty years old
-when he died, and he had worked all his life
-to raise the lives of thousands of African savages
-into something better and happier.</p>
-
-<p>Many other great men I have no time to
-tell you about, but there are two more, of
-whom I particularly want you to hear a few
-words&mdash;Henry Fawcett and Sir John Franklin.
-Henry Fawcett<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> was not a soldier, nor a great<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span>
-traveller, but he was known for many years
-all over England as the “Blind Postmaster-General.”
-He was not born blind, and why
-I want to tell you about him is to show you
-what a brave man can do when such a terrible
-misfortune as becoming blind happens to him.
-He was born in 1833, and died in 1884,
-and for twenty-six years of his life he was
-quite blind. He lost his sight in this way.
-He was out shooting one day with his father,
-who fired at a bird without noticing that
-his son was close by. Suddenly he saw that
-some of the shots, instead of hitting the bird,
-had hit his son in the eyes. Henry Fawcett
-was wearing spectacles, and a shot went
-through each of the glasses, making a little
-round hole in them, and then going on into
-his eyes. From that moment he never saw
-again. His first thought, he afterwards told
-his sister, was that he should never again see
-the lovely view, and the colours of the autumn
-leaves on the trees, as he had seen them a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>
-moment before; his second thought was to try
-and do everything he could to comfort his
-father, who must need comfort almost as much
-as he did himself. So, at twenty-five years of
-age, Henry Fawcett, who had made up his mind
-to work hard as a barrister&mdash;for he was very
-poor&mdash;and make enough money to go into
-Parliament, which had been his great wish
-ever since he was at school, suddenly found all
-his plans and all his hopes upset. But his
-courage never gave way; he determined that
-his blindness should not make him a helpless,
-disappointed man. “In ten minutes after the
-accident,” he said some years later, “he had
-made up his mind that he would stick to what
-he had meant to do.” And so he did. He
-had been a great rider, a great skater, and a
-great fisherman, and all these things he kept
-up. He skated with his friends, holding on to
-a stick by which they guided him; he rode, he
-fished, he walked, behaving in all things as
-though he were not blind. He was obliged to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>
-give up being a barrister, but he became a
-professor at Cambridge. He wrote in papers
-and magazines (of course some one had to do
-the actual writing for him, but he dictated it),
-and at last, when he was thirty-two years old,
-that is to say, seven years after the accident,
-he achieved his object, and became member of
-Parliament (the Blind Member, he was sometimes
-called) for Brighton.</p>
-
-<p>It would take too long to tell you of all
-the work he did for his country after he was
-in Parliament, but he was always trying to
-improve things; he was never idle, and at
-last, when he was made Postmaster-General,
-he hardly ever had time for a holiday. He
-was a favourite with every one, and, when he
-was ill, telegrams and letters used to come
-from all parts of England to ask after him.
-He always took a great interest in other
-blind people, and was fond of saying to
-them, “Do what you can to act as though
-you were not blind; be of good courage, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>
-help yourselves.” And to his friends, and all
-who had blind friends or relations, he was
-never tired of saying, “Do not treat us as
-though you pitied us for our misfortune; the
-kindest thing that can be done or said to a
-blind person is to help him as far as possible
-to be of good cheer, to give him confidence
-that help will be afforded him whenever
-necessary, that there is still good work for
-him to do, and, the more active his career, the
-more useful his life to others, the more happy
-his days to himself.” These are his own
-words. They are brave words; but Henry
-Fawcett was, as you have seen, a brave man,
-and fought and conquered all the great difficulties
-with which his blindness surrounded
-him, with as much courage as Sir James
-Outram showed when he fought his way into
-Lucknow, or David Livingstone when he
-journeyed through the deserts and forests of
-Africa. And that is why a memorial of him
-was put up in Westminster Abbey by the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span>
-people of England, who subscribed for it, so
-that the heroic life of the Blind Postmaster-General
-should never be forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>Sir John Franklin<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> was a sailor and a great
-Arctic explorer, who made many expeditions,
-and went nearer to the North Pole than any
-man had ever been before. He and his companions
-endured every kind of hardship in the
-ice and the snow of the Arctic regions. He
-died on his third expedition, just two years
-after last leaving England, and was buried in
-the far-away cold North amidst the snow under
-slabs of ice. On the monument in Westminster
-Abbey, which was put up in his memory by
-his wife, Lady Franklin, are written the words
-“O ye frost and cold, O ye ice and snow, bless
-ye the Lord: praise Him, and magnify Him
-for ever.” The story of the expedition is a
-very sad one, for, during the winter after Sir
-John’s death, it became clear to the sailors
-that the ships were so fast in the ice, which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span>
-had closed in and frozen all round them, that
-they would never be able to move again. So
-at last, nearly all the provisions being exhausted,
-the men abandoned their ships, and
-with boats and sledges, which they carried
-or dragged over the ice, set out to walk southwards
-in the hope that they might at last reach
-the unfrozen sea and meet a ship. But this
-they never did, for they were starved and ill,
-and although another expedition had been sent
-from England to look for them, it was too late
-to save them. The only traces ever found of
-them were their skeletons, and the boats and
-sledges, containing many books and papers
-which Sir John had written, saying how far he
-had been, and what he had done on this voyage
-from which he never returned.</p>
-
-<p>His epitaph, written by Lord Tennyson, is
-one of the most beautiful in the Abbey&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>
-“Not here! the white North has thy bones; and thou,<br />
-<span class="indent1">Heroic sailor-soul,</span><br />
-Art passing on thine happier voyage now<br />
-<span class="indent1">Toward no earthly pole.”</span><br />
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>In Westminster Abbey are the graves of many
-poets&mdash;so many that one part of the church (the
-south transept) is always known as Poets’ Corner.</p>
-
-<p>Geoffrey Chaucer,<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> who wrote among other
-things a book called the “Canterbury Tales,”
-and who died as long ago as 1400, was one of the
-first English poets buried in Poets’ Corner; and
-the last was Alfred Tennyson,<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> who died in 1892,
-and was buried close beside Chaucer, just four
-hundred and ninety-two years afterwards.</p>
-
-<p>When I was telling you the story of the
-Indian Mutiny, I spoke of a poem called “Lucknow,”
-which described in a wonderful way
-the sufferings of the people who were shut
-up in the Residency during the long siege.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span>
-This poem and very many others were written
-by Alfred Tennyson, the great poet, who was
-made by the Queen Poet Laureate of England,
-and then, many years afterwards, Lord Tennyson,
-by which name you will always hear him
-spoken of.</p>
-
-<p>There is a story told of how the first verses
-Alfred Tennyson ever made were written. His
-father was a clergyman, and Alfred and his
-brothers and sisters lived all their lives in the
-country, running wild in the woods and the
-fields, and learning all about birds and flowers,
-until they were old enough to go to school.
-One Sunday morning, when every one but
-Alfred, who was then very small, was going to
-church, his elder brother Charles said he would
-give him something to do, and told him he
-must write some verses about the flowers in the
-garden. When they came in, Alfred appeared
-with his slate covered all over with his first
-poem. He was very fond of story-telling, and
-he and his brothers and sisters would combine<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span>
-to make up long and exciting tales which sometimes
-lasted for months. When he went to
-school he began to read a great deal, especially
-poetry. If he found any he particularly liked,
-he would try to imitate it in poems of his own,
-and in this way he and his brother Charles,
-who was with him at school, used to spend a
-great deal of their spare time.</p>
-
-<p>It would take too long, and it would not
-be interesting, to tell you the names of even
-the chief poems which Lord Tennyson wrote.
-By-and-by you will read many of them for yourselves,
-and two I am sure you will specially
-enjoy. One is the “Siege of Lucknow,” which
-we have so often spoken of; and the other is
-the “Revenge,” which is also a story of fighting&mdash;but
-a sea-fight in the time of Queen Elizabeth.
-Lord Tennyson, like most poets, was more fond
-of the country than of towns, and most of his
-life he lived either in the Isle of Wight or in
-Surrey. He used, until quite the end of his life,
-to enjoy taking long country walks, and he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>
-never lost his love for flowers or birds, or failed
-to notice them; and this in spite of having all
-his life been very short-sighted. It was said of
-him that “when he was looking at any object
-he seemed to be smelling it,” so closely used he
-to hold it to his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>And yet, with this difficulty, he noticed “more
-than most men with perfect sight would see.
-I remember his telling me,” so wrote a friend of
-his, “<i>if you tread on daisies they turn up
-underfoot and get rosy</i>. His hearing, on the
-other hand, was exceptionally keen, and he held
-it as a sort of compensation for his blurred
-sight; he could hear <i>the shriek of a bat</i>, which
-he always said was the test of a quick ear.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Tennyson was eighty-three when he
-died, and when he was buried in Westminster
-Abbey the great church was crowded, not only
-during the funeral service, but for many days
-and even weeks afterwards, by hundreds of
-people, who came to see, and lay flowers on, his
-grave.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span></p>
-
-<p>Although so many poets were buried in the
-Abbey, yet there were many others who when
-they died were buried in the country, or in
-other churches in London, and, when this was the
-case, monuments were often put up in the Abbey
-in memory of them. For instance, Shakespeare,<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a>
-the greatest of all our great poets, was buried at
-Stratford-on-Avon, where he had lived for the
-last part of his life, and where he died.</p>
-
-<p>There is not a very great deal known about
-his life. He was the son of a country shopkeeper,
-who was very poor, but who managed
-to send his son to the grammar school at
-Stratford-on-Avon, where they lived. When he
-was fourteen he was taken away from school,
-and had to earn his own living. It is sometimes
-said that he was first a butcher’s boy,
-and had to carry out the meat, but no one
-knows exactly what he did after he left school
-until he was about nineteen. Then he went
-to London, and began to write poetry and plays.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span>
-He had at this time hardly any money, and was
-thankful to earn a penny whenever he could
-by holding horses, or making himself useful in
-any way he could think of, and was nicknamed
-by his friends “Jack-of-all-trades.” At last he
-got employment as a writer of plays for the
-Globe Theatre. This Globe Theatre was very
-different from the theatres of nowadays. It
-was a round wooden building with no roof,
-except just over the stage, and there it was
-covered in to protect the dresses of the actors
-and actresses in case of bad weather. Gradually
-it became clear that this William Shakespeare,
-who had come to London quite a poor and
-unknown man, was a great poet, his plays
-began to be talked of, and many great and rich
-men became his friends. In a few years he
-was no longer poor, and had begun to save
-money to buy himself a house at Stratford-on-Avon,
-where he had been born. To do
-this had always been a dream of his: for a long
-time his wife and children had been living there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span>
-while he worked hard for them in London, and
-when at last he had bought his house, which
-was called New Place, he left London and went
-home to them.</p>
-
-<p>Many years passed away, and Shakespeare,
-who had written great plays such as <i>Hamlet</i>
-and <i>The Merchant of Venice</i>, which you will
-all know and perhaps see acted some day, lived
-quietly in the little town of Stratford-on-Avon,
-making friends of all the people round him,
-both rich and poor, and seeing his own plays
-acted in a great empty barn near his house, for
-in those days there was no theatre in Stratford.</p>
-
-<p>“Master Shakespeare,” as he was called, was
-buried in the churchyard of the little town
-he had been so fond of all his life; and many
-years afterwards, when his name had become
-known all over England, and his plays and
-his poems had become famous as they had
-never been during his lifetime, a monument was
-put up to his memory in Westminster Abbey
-close by the graves of two other poets, Spenser<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span>
-and Drayton, who had been his friends: on
-it are written these words out of his own play
-of <i>The Tempest</i>&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="indent1">“The Cloud-capt Towers,</span><br />
-<span class="indent1">The Gorgeous Palaces,</span><br />
-<span class="indent1">The Solemn Temples,</span><br />
-<span class="indent1">The Great Globe itself,</span><br />
-<span class="indent1">Yea, all which it inherit,</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Shall dissolve;</span><br />
-And, like the baseless fabric of a vision,<br />
-<span class="indent1">Leave not a wreck behind.”<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></span><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>Among all the poets who are buried in the
-south transept, there is one great musician,
-George Frederick Handel.<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> Dean Stanley says
-that “Handel, who composed the music of the
-‘Messiah’ and the ‘Israel in Egypt,’ must have
-been a poet no less than a musician, and therefore
-he was not unfitly buried in Poets’ Corner.”</p>
-
-<p>Handel was the son of a German doctor, and
-was born in a little German town. As a boy
-he was very fond of music, but as his father<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span>
-meant him to be a lawyer, he would not let
-him hear any for fear that he would want to
-be a musician. Once,<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> when George was seven
-years old, his father went to visit another son
-who lived at the court of the Duke of Saxe-Weissenfels.
-The little boy, who had most
-likely heard his brother speak of the court
-concerts, begged to go too, but of course he was
-told that it was impossible. His father drove
-off, but still George determined to go. He
-managed to slip out, and ran as long as he could
-after the carriage. At last he was seen and
-taken in, and as there was no time to bring
-him home, he went with his father to the
-court. He soon made friends among the duke’s
-musicians, who let him try the organ. One
-day after the service he was lifted on to the
-organ-stool, and played so wonderfully that the
-duke, who was in church, asked who it was.
-When he heard that it was the little seven-year-old
-Handel, he sent for his father, and told<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span>
-him that his son would one day be such a great
-musician that it would be quite wrong to make
-him a lawyer. So from that day George was
-regularly taught music. When he was older he
-came to England, and here he lived most of his
-life, and here he wrote most of the music which
-is known almost all over the world. He used
-to give concerts at the English court, to which
-the Prince of Wales, the son of George II., and
-the princess, and many great people came.
-Sometimes at these concerts ladies would talk
-instead of listening to the music, and then
-Handel quite lost his temper. “His rage was
-uncontrollable,” so we are told, “and sometimes
-carried him to the length of swearing and
-calling names; whereupon the gentle princess
-would say to the offenders, ‘Hush, hush! Handel
-is angry;’ and when all was quiet the concert
-would go on again.” Handel, when he was old,
-became quite blind, but he still played the
-organ up to the very end of his life. He died
-on Good Friday, April 13, 1759, and was buried<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>
-in the Abbey, and on his monument are written
-the words, “I know that my Redeemer liveth,”
-from the Book of Job, which he had set to most
-beautiful music, and had asked to have written
-upon his tomb.</p>
-
-<p>I have only spoken to you of Geoffrey
-Chaucer and of Alfred Tennyson, the first and
-the last poets who were buried in the Abbey;
-of Shakespeare, the greatest of all English poets,
-and of George Frederick Handel, the musician;
-but very many others are remembered in Poets’
-Corner. And when you some day walk round
-the Abbey you will see there the graves or
-monuments of most of the great English writers.</p>
-
-<p>The north transept is full of the graves and
-monuments of statesmen. A great many of
-them you must have heard of, and some of you
-perhaps belong to the Primrose League, which
-was founded in 1881 in memory of Benjamin
-Disraeli,<a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> Lord Beaconsfield, whose monument is
-in the Abbey. He was twice Prime Minister<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span>
-of England, and when he died the Primrose
-League (the badge of which is a primrose, and
-which was chosen because it was said to be
-his favourite flower) was started to band people
-together to carry on the work and help on the
-political party to which he had belonged.
-Then there are monuments to three members
-of one family&mdash;the family of Canning&mdash;who
-were all great statesmen. George Canning,<a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a>
-who was born as long ago as 1770, became
-known as a wonderful orator. When he was
-quite a small boy at school he used to say that he
-meant some day to be a member of Parliament,
-and at Eton he helped to start a debating society
-which was modelled on the House of Commons.
-Here his speeches soon became famous among
-the boys. He lived to be not only a member
-of Parliament, but Prime Minister of England.
-His youngest son Charles,<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> who was also a great
-man, became Earl Canning and first Viceroy of
-India.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The third great Canning” was Stratford
-Canning<a id="FNanchor_27" href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> (a cousin of Charles), who has been
-called “the greatest ambassador of our time,”
-and who before he died was made Lord Stratford
-de Redcliffe, by which name he is best known.
-Each of these three great men gave all his
-time and all his strength to work for the good
-of his country. Two of them, George Canning
-and his son, the Viceroy of India, are buried
-in one grave here in the Abbey. Lord Stratford
-de Redcliffe, although his statue stands side by
-side with the monuments to his uncle and
-cousin, is buried in the little country churchyard
-of Frant, in Kent.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Stratford de Redcliffe was an old man
-of ninety-three when he died. He had done so
-much, and known so many great and interesting
-people, that the story of his life is a book you
-will all like to read some day. One of the first
-things he remembered was how, when he was
-a little boy at school, he had seen Lord Nelson.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span>
-It was at Eton, and Nelson, “with all his
-wounds and all his honours”&mdash;for so Lord
-Stratford describes him&mdash;came down to see the
-boys, and asked that they might have a whole
-holiday. More than eighty years afterwards,
-when Lord Stratford de Redcliffe died, there
-was found in his room a little picture of Lord
-Nelson, which he had kept ever since those far-off
-school days.</p>
-
-<p>I remember Dean Stanley telling us that
-when Lord Stratford de Redcliffe was a very
-old man he remembered quite clearly what he
-had learnt and done when he was a little child
-at home. “Not long ago,” the Dean said, “I
-was visiting this aged and famous statesman, and
-he repeated to me, word for word, the Evening
-Hymn beginning ‘Glory to Thee, my God, this
-night,’ as he had learnt it, he told me, from his
-nurse ninety years before.”</p>
-
-<p>I must not end this chapter without telling
-you the names of three more great statesmen.
-You will often hear the two Pitts and William<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span>
-Wilberforce spoken of, and I should like to say
-a few words about all three before beginning
-the stories of the kings and queens.</p>
-
-<p>William Pitt<a id="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> was Prime Minister of England,
-and was made Lord Chatham by King George
-III. He and his son, the younger William Pitt,<a id="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a>
-are as well known to all Englishmen as George
-Canning and his son Earl Canning, about whom
-I have told you. Lord Chatham was, like
-George Canning, a great orator, and even when
-he was very old and very ill, he would come
-down to the Houses of Parliament and make
-wonderful speeches, which sometimes lasted as
-long as three hours and a half, but which were
-so interesting that they were listened to in
-perfect silence; “the stillness,” it is said, “was
-so deep that the dropping of a handkerchief
-would have been heard.” When he died he
-was buried in the Abbey; and in the same
-grave, twenty-eight years afterwards, was buried
-his son William, the second Pitt, who was an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>
-even greater statesman than his father. This
-William was, when quite a little boy, astonishingly
-clever. “The fineness of William’s mind,”
-wrote his mother, in the old-fashioned words of
-those times, “makes him enjoy with the greatest
-pleasure what would be above the reach of any
-other creature of his small age.” He was too
-delicate to be sent to school, but he was made
-to work hard at home till he was old enough to
-be sent to Cambridge. Although a very young
-man when he became a member of Parliament,
-his first speech in the House was a great
-success. “It is not a chip of the old block,” said
-some one who heard him&mdash;“it is the old block
-himself;” meaning that this speech of young
-William Pitt was as good as any his father
-had made. When he first became Prime Minister
-he was only just twenty-four years old, and from
-that time until he died (twenty-four years afterwards)
-he was one of the most illustrious
-men in Europe. He and Wilberforce,<a id="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> the last<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span>
-of the statesmen about whom I must tell
-you, were both very much interested in one
-thing&mdash;and this was the abolition of (or doing
-away with) slavery. The name of Wilberforce
-will never be forgotten, for he it was who
-first thought and said that slavery ought to
-be put an end to, all over the world, wherever
-Englishmen were the rulers. Wilberforce
-and William Pitt were once staying together
-in a country house not far from London, and
-sitting together one day under an old tree
-in the park, they began to talk about slavery,
-and to say how terrible a thing it was that
-the lives of hundreds and thousands of men
-and women and children were made full of
-misery by cruel masters who worked their
-slaves far harder than they worked their horses
-or their oxen. “I well remember,” wrote
-Mr. Wilberforce in his Diary, “after this conversation
-with Mr. Pitt I resolved to give notice
-in the House of Commons of my intention to
-bring forward the abolition of the slave-trade.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span>
-And not long afterwards Wilberforce made a
-great speech in the House of Commons about
-slavery, and in the end a law was passed to
-do away with the slave-trade. Wherever the
-English flag was flying there should be no
-slavery, and a slave who could once set foot on
-any land held by Englishmen became a free man.</p>
-
-<p>When Pitt died Wilberforce was one of those
-who carried a banner in the great funeral procession,
-when he was buried, as I have told you,
-in the same grave with his father, the first Pitt.
-Many years afterwards Wilberforce too “was
-buried there amongst his friends,” and in
-another part of the Abbey there is a large
-statue of him, as an old and bent man, sitting
-in an armchair. When you go round the
-Abbey you must look for this monument, for it
-is said to be very like him during the last part
-of his life.</p>
-
-<p>But we can spend no more time now in
-telling stories of statesmen, and must in the
-next chapter go on to the kings and queens.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>We now come to the kings and queens who are
-buried in Westminster Abbey, and this will be
-the last chapter of my book.</p>
-
-<p>You remember my telling you how Henry III.
-built a new shrine for Edward the Confessor.
-Three years after this Chapel of Edward the
-Confessor (as it is called) was finished, King
-Henry III.,<a id="FNanchor_31" href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> who had reigned for fifty-six years,
-died, and was buried in the Abbey which he
-had loved so long. His son Edward, who now
-became Edward I., was just starting home from
-the Holy Land with his wife, Queen Eleanor,
-who always went with him on all his journeys,
-when his father died, and he brought with him
-from the East the marble for the tomb.</p>
-
-<p>I expect you will all remember having heard<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span>
-of this Queen Eleanor, the wife of Edward I.
-She was so brave and so fond of him that she
-would go with him when he went on his crusade
-to the Holy Land; and when people told her
-that it was dangerous, and that she might be
-killed, and tried to persuade her to stay at home,
-her only answer was, “The way to heaven is as
-near from Palestine as from England.”</p>
-
-<p>She was not killed, or even hurt; but there
-is a story told of how, while they were in the
-Holy Land, Edward was wounded by one of his
-enemies, who stabbed him in the arm with a
-poisoned dagger. This would certainly have
-killed him, if Eleanor had not at once sucked the
-poison out of the wound, and so saved his life.</p>
-
-<p>Edward I.&mdash;Edward Longshanks, as he was
-called, for he was more than six feet high&mdash;and
-Queen Eleanor were crowned King and
-Queen of England in Westminster Abbey when
-they came back from the Holy Land. After
-the coronation a great banquet was given, to
-which Edward and his brother Edmund and all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span>
-their nobles and attendants came&mdash;five hundred
-of them, riding on five hundred magnificent
-horses. When they dismounted, the horses were
-let loose in the crowd, and anybody who succeeded
-in catching one was allowed to keep it.</p>
-
-<p>When, after having been Queen of England
-eighteen years, Eleanor<a id="FNanchor_32" href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> died at Hardby, in
-Nottinghamshire, her body was brought to
-Westminster, to be buried in the Abbey. From
-Nottinghamshire to London was a long journey
-in those days, and it had to be done by
-stages. Wherever the funeral procession stopped,
-Edward ordered a cross to be put up in memory
-of the queen. They were called the “Eleanor
-Crosses,” and there were altogether twelve of
-them. The last was in London, at Charing
-Cross, which was the final halting-place before
-the procession reached the Abbey.</p>
-
-<p>Edward I. was a great soldier, and gradually
-he “filled the Confessor’s Chapel with trophies
-of war.” One of these trophies you must<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span>
-specially notice when you go over the Abbey.
-At the west end of the Confessor’s Chapel stand
-two chairs. One is a plain, very old-looking
-wooden chair, much scratched and battered, and
-underneath it is a rough-looking bit of stone.
-This old stone is called the “Stone of Scone,”
-and on it all the Kings of Scotland had been
-crowned at Scone, which was the capital of
-Scotland up to the time when Edward I.
-became King of England. Edward I. and
-Alexander III., King of Scotland, were always
-at war; and when the English at last conquered
-the Scotch, Edward took away this ancient
-treasure, the “Stone of Scone,” and brought it
-to Westminster Abbey, that our kings might be
-crowned upon it, as Kings of England and Scotland.
-The wooden chair was made by his orders,
-and the stone put underneath it, and there it has
-been ever since, for nearly six hundred years.</p>
-
-<p>The other chair was made long afterwards
-for the coronation of William III. and Mary.
-Between the two are the sword and shield of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span>
-Edward III., which he is said to have used in
-all his many wars against France. The sword
-is seven feet long, and weighs eighteen pounds.</p>
-
-<p>Edward I.,<a id="FNanchor_33" href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> “the greatest of the Plantagenets,”
-was buried close by Queen Eleanor, but his tomb
-is quite plain. There is no figure on it, and no
-carving, as there is on the tombs of the other
-kings and queens. Dean Stanley explained,
-when he showed us the Abbey as children,
-that, for many years after Edward I. died,
-there was a kind of belief that, although
-the king was dead, yet, if another war broke
-out with Scotland, he would once again lead his
-army against the enemy, as he had so often done
-before. And so from time to time they would
-come and lift off the great marble slab which
-covered his tomb, and which was easily moved,
-and look in to see if the king was still there.</p>
-
-<p>The first of our kings who was crowned on
-the “Stone of Scone” was Edward I.’s son,
-Edward II. He was crowned in the Abbey, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span>
-was not buried there. The next king who was
-buried there was Edward III.,<a id="FNanchor_34" href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> whose sword
-and shield we saw just now.</p>
-
-<p>Richard II.,<a id="FNanchor_35" href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> the grandson of Edward III.,
-is sometimes called the “Westminster King,”
-because he was crowned and married and buried
-in the Abbey.</p>
-
-<p>He was only eleven years old when he became
-King of England. For a week before his coronation
-he had lived in the Tower of London,
-which was the custom in those days for all
-kings and queens before they were crowned. The
-procession from the Tower to the Abbey was one
-of the most splendid that had ever been seen.
-But the service was very long, and the sermon
-was longer, and before it was over the king was
-carried out fainting. After this there was a
-great banquet, at which he had to appear again,
-and then at last the long day was over.</p>
-
-<p>Five years later he was married in the Abbey
-to Queen Anne. After reigning for twenty-five<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span>
-years, he was deposed by Henry of Lancaster,
-and murdered at Pontefract Castle in Yorkshire
-by his enemies&mdash;for he had made many during
-his life. He was buried in Hertfordshire. When
-Henry V. came to the throne, he ordered that
-Richard’s body should be brought to Westminster,
-and then at last it was laid in the
-same tomb in which, many years before, his
-wife, Queen Anne, had been buried. Henry V.<a id="FNanchor_36" href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a>
-when he was a boy was so wild that he was
-called “Madcap Harry.” But he was particularly
-fond of the Abbey, and although most
-of his reign was spent in fighting with France,
-he did a great deal to improve and decorate
-his great church, and when the English won
-the battle of Agincourt (of which you may
-have heard or read), his first thought was to
-order a Thanksgiving Service to be held at
-Westminster. He had always said he wished
-to be buried in the Abbey; so, when he died in
-France his body was brought to England. “The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span>
-long procession from Paris to Calais, and from
-Dover to London, was headed by the King of
-Scots, James I.... As it approached London
-it was met by all the clergy. The services were
-held first at St. Paul’s, and then at the Abbey.
-No English king’s funeral had ever been so
-grand. His three chargers were led up to the
-altar, behind the effigy (a wax model of the king
-carried outside his coffin), which lay on a
-splendid car, accompanied by torches and white-robed
-priests innumerable, ... and at the extreme
-eastern end of the Confessor’s Chapel
-was deposited the body of the most splendid
-king that England had to that time produced.”</p>
-
-<p>Above his tomb, on a bar which stretches
-across the steps leading out of the chapel, are
-hung his helmet and saddle. The helmet is
-probably the very one which he wore at the
-battle of Agincourt, and which twice saved
-his life on that day; it is much dinted, and
-shows the marks of many sword-cuts.</p>
-
-<p>Henry VI. was crowned king when he was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span>
-only nine years old, and on the day of his coronation
-it is said that he “sat on the platform in
-the Abbey beholding all the people about sadly
-and wisely.” But as he was so young the
-service was shortened and he had much less to
-endure than the last boy-king, Richard II.</p>
-
-<p>There is a story told of how, toward the end
-of his reign, King Henry VI. used to come and
-wander about in the Abbey between seven
-and eight o’clock in the evening, when it was
-growing dusk. He generally came quite alone,
-and only the abbot who carried a torch went
-with him round the dark and silent church.
-One night he went into the Confessor’s Chapel,
-where he spent more than an hour, wondering
-if room could be, by-and-by, made for his own
-tomb. “It was suggested to him that the
-tomb of Henry V. should be pushed a little on
-one side, and his own placed beside it; but he
-replied, ‘Nay, let him alone; he lieth like a
-noble prince; I would not trouble him.’ But
-close beside the shrine of the Confessor there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span>
-seemed to be room for another tomb. ‘Lend me
-your staff,’ he said to Lord Cromwell, who was
-with him that evening; ‘is it not fitting I
-should have a place here, where my father and
-my ancestors lie, near St. Edward?’ And then,
-pointing with a white staff to the place indicated,
-he said, ‘Here, methinks, is a convenient place;’
-adding, ‘Forsooth, forsooth, here will we lie;
-here is a good place for us.’” Three days afterwards
-the tomb was ordered to be made; but
-it was never even begun, for Henry was deposed
-by Edward IV. and died in the Tower, and from
-there his body was taken and buried in the
-Abbey of Chertsey.</p>
-
-<p>Close by all these great kings and queens
-are several tombs of children. Among them is
-a monument to a little deaf and dumb girl of
-five years old, the Princess Catherine, daughter
-of Henry III. “Close to her, as if to keep her
-company, are buried her two little brothers, and
-four little nephews.”</p>
-
-<p>So far I have told you principally of kings<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span>
-who are buried in Westminster Abbey, but now
-we come to the tombs of some of the Queens of
-England.</p>
-
-<p>You remember that Henry VII. had built a
-great and magnificent chapel which was called
-after him. The first queen buried there was
-his wife, Queen Elizabeth, who was the mother
-of Henry VIII.</p>
-
-<p>She had had a life full of adventures. She
-was the daughter of Edward IV., and sister of
-the two poor little princes who were murdered
-in the Tower by their uncle Richard.</p>
-
-<p>Princess Elizabeth was born in Westminster,
-and christened in the Abbey, but she lived
-afterwards in the country at the palace of
-Sheen. When she was four years old, her father,
-Edward IV., was defeated in battle, and King
-Henry VI. was made King of England in his
-stead. The queen, the Princess Elizabeth, and
-her two baby sisters had to leave Sheen and
-come back to Westminster, where they were
-hidden in a place of safety while all these wars<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span>
-(the Wars of the Roses, as they were called)
-were going on. After two years, however, her
-father was victorious. Henry was deposed, and
-Edward IV. was once more King of England.
-To celebrate the victory, a great ball was given
-at Windsor Castle, and the little six-year-old
-princess, who was a special pet of her father’s,
-came down and danced first with him, and then
-with some of the great nobles. When she was
-nine years old, her father and Louis XI., the
-King of France, decided that, as soon as she
-was grown up, she should marry the Dauphin,
-his eldest son, who, if he lived, would in time
-become the King of France. Then began a busy
-time for the little princess who might one day
-be Queen of France. Besides all her English
-lessons, she had to learn to speak and write
-French and Spanish, and she was always called
-“Madame la Dauphine,” even while she was a
-little girl in the schoolroom. At last she was
-old enough to be married, but when the time
-for the wedding came, the King of France said<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span>
-he had found another wife for his son. Edward
-IV., who had set his heart on seeing his
-favourite daughter the Queen of France, was so
-disappointed and angry that he became very
-ill, and died. Then it was that Elizabeth’s little
-brother Edward became Edward V., and the day
-was fixed for his coronation in the Abbey. A
-great banquet was arranged, and all the guests
-were invited; but before the day came, the
-little king and his younger brother, the Duke
-of York, were both killed by the order of their
-uncle, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, who then
-made himself King Richard III. of England.
-Now began a sad time for Princess Elizabeth,
-who was first taken away from her mother and
-sisters, and afterwards kept a prisoner in a
-lonely old castle in Yorkshire.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, during the time she was shut up
-here, many things had been going on about
-which she probably knew nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Richard III. was hated by every one, and two
-years after he had become king, Henry, Earl of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span>
-Richmond, one of the greatest nobles in England,
-decided to try and depose him, and set free
-Princess Elizabeth. So he got together an army
-and marched to Leicester, where the king was
-then living. On the evening of a summer day
-the two armies camped at a place called Bosworth
-Field, and there the next day a great
-battle, the Battle of Bosworth, was fought,
-and Richard III. was killed. It is said that the
-crown of England had, at the beginning of the
-battle, been hidden in a hawthorn bush, and
-when afterwards it was found by a soldier, the
-Earl of Richmond was at once crowned King
-Henry VII., and all the soldiers who had been
-lying down, resting after the long fight, stood up
-round him and sang the <i>Te Deum</i>.</p>
-
-<p>When Princess Elizabeth, in her far-away
-lonely castle, heard cries of joy from the people
-who came crowding to the doors of her prison she
-guessed that something had happened and that
-a better time might be coming for her. And soon
-came a messenger from the king, who had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span>
-sent straight from the field of battle, with orders
-to set the princess free and bring her to London.</p>
-
-<p>The end of this story is really almost like the
-end of a fairy tale, for her many troubles were
-now over, and the next year she married Henry
-VII., and so became Queen of England. And
-when after many years she died, she was buried&mdash;as
-I told you at the beginning of this story&mdash;in
-the Chapel of Henry VII. in Westminster
-Abbey. Some years later the king was buried
-beside her; and inside the bronze railings surrounding
-the tomb (which stands behind the
-altar) you will see the figures of Henry VII.<a id="FNanchor_37" href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a>
-and his wife, Queen Elizabeth, lying side by side.</p>
-
-<p>Three other queens who are buried here are
-known to all of you. Two of them were
-sisters, Queen Mary<a id="FNanchor_38" href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> and Queen Elizabeth,<a id="FNanchor_39" href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> the
-daughters of Henry VIII.; and the third was
-their cousin, another Mary&mdash;Mary Queen of
-Scots,<a id="FNanchor_40" href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> who was beheaded by the order of Queen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span>
-Elizabeth, because she was afraid that Mary
-wanted to make herself Queen of England in
-her stead. Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth,
-though they were sisters, had all their lives been
-enemies. They differed about everything, but
-especially about their religion, for Mary had been
-brought up a Roman Catholic, and Elizabeth
-and their little brother Edward (who afterwards
-became Edward VI.) were Protestants. Elizabeth
-and Edward were very fond of one another, and
-it is said that Elizabeth used to spend a great
-deal of her time when she was quite a little girl
-in doing needlework for her brother. On his
-second birthday she gave him for a birthday present
-a little shirt which she had made for him all
-herself, though she was then only six years old.</p>
-
-<p>Both these queens, when little girls, were
-made to do a great many lessons, and were
-taught Latin and Greek with their brother, as
-well as French and Italian and Spanish. Queen
-Mary was always very fond of music, and there
-is a story told of how, when she was only three<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span>
-years old, some friends of her father’s (King
-Henry VIII.) came down to see her at Richmond,
-where she was then living. The little
-princess&mdash;for this was a long time before she
-became queen&mdash;was not in the least shy: she
-welcomed her visitors, and after talking to them
-“and entertaining them with most goodly
-countenance”&mdash;for so one of the gentlemen who
-was there wrote about her afterwards&mdash;she
-played to them on the virginal (a kind of
-piano), after which strawberries and biscuits and
-wine were brought in, and the baby princess had
-nothing more to do but enjoy herself. These
-three children, Mary, Elizabeth, and Edward,
-became in turn Queens and King of England.</p>
-
-<p>When Henry VIII. died, Edward, the youngest
-of the three, became King Edward VI. But he
-had all his life been very delicate, and when
-he had been king just six years, and was
-sixteen years old, he died, and then Mary, his
-eldest sister, became queen. The reign of Queen
-Mary&mdash;Bloody Mary she is sometimes called&mdash;was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span>
-a terrible time in England, for, as I told
-you, she was a Roman Catholic, and so determined
-was she that all English men and women
-should be Roman Catholics too, that she ordered
-those who were Protestants to change their
-religion and become Catholics; and if they
-refused, they were burnt alive. Hundreds of
-people were killed in this cruel way; and Queen
-Mary became at last so much hated, that when
-she died, and the Princess Elizabeth became
-queen, there was rejoicing almost all over
-England. For in spite of all the queen had
-done to make England a Roman Catholic
-country, by far the greater part of the people
-had remained Protestants, and now once again
-had a Protestant queen to reign over them.</p>
-
-<p>Almost the last time a Catholic Mass (or
-service) was held in Westminster Abbey was at
-the funeral of Queen Mary.<a id="FNanchor_41" href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> The procession, led
-by the monks, who knew that this was most<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span>
-likely the last service in which they would
-ever take part, came from St. James’s Palace,
-where she died, down to Westminster, and at the
-great West Door of the Abbey were waiting four
-bishops and the Abbot of Westminster in all the
-magnificent robes which Catholic priests wear.</p>
-
-<p>The body of the queen was carried into Henry
-VII.’s chapel, and all night the Abbey was dimly
-lighted by the hundred wax torches which were
-held and kept alight by the soldiers of the
-Queen’s Guard. The next day she was buried,
-and the Catholic Bishop of Winchester preached
-before Elizabeth, who, although she hated the
-religion, did not refuse to come to the funeral of
-her sister, as Queen Mary had done years before
-on the death of their brother Edward, when,
-rather than come to a Protestant service in the
-Abbey, she ordered a separate funeral mass to
-be said before her in the Tower.</p>
-
-<p>A little more than a month after this, Queen
-Elizabeth was crowned in the Abbey, and for
-the next forty-five years “good Queen Bess,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span>
-as she is often called, reigned over England, and
-did much that was wise and good. One thing
-she did, however, that was neither wise nor good,
-and that one thing I spoke about when I told
-you that two Queen Marys were buried here,
-one of whom was Mary Queen of Scots, the
-cousin of Elizabeth. The story of Mary Queen
-of Scots is a long and very sad one. You will
-some day read about her, if you have not already
-done so, and when you hear how she was imprisoned
-in Fotheringay Castle, and at last beheaded,
-you will perhaps feel that in some ways
-Elizabeth could be as cruel as her sister Mary.</p>
-
-<p>These three queens are all buried in Henry
-VII.’s Chapel&mdash;Elizabeth and Mary together in
-a white marble tomb, on the outside of which
-lies the statue of Queen Elizabeth, and on which
-these words in Latin were written by James I.:
-“Consorts both in throne and grave, here rest we
-two sisters, Elizabeth and Mary, in hope of our
-resurrection.” And not far from them lies Mary
-Queen of Scots. After she had been beheaded
-at Fotheringay Castle her body was buried in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span>
-Peterborough Cathedral, and from there it was
-brought to Westminster by her son, James VI.
-of Scotland, who was also James I. of England,
-“that the like honour,” so he wrote, “might be
-done to his dearest mother” as had been done to
-Queen Elizabeth and the other Queen Mary.</p>
-
-<p>We are now coming to the end of these stories,
-and I must only mention in a very few words some
-of the other graves in this chapel of Henry VII.</p>
-
-<p>Oliver Cromwell<a id="FNanchor_42" href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> who, after Charles I. had
-been beheaded, made himself Protector of England,
-was buried here among the kings and
-queens. It is said that his funeral was more
-magnificent than any king’s had ever been, and
-that an immense sum of money was spent upon
-it. Close by him was buried Elizabeth Claypole,
-his favourite daughter, and many of his soldiers
-and followers.</p>
-
-<p>Three years afterwards his body was dug up
-and taken to Tyburn. There his head was cut
-off, on the 30th of January, the anniversary of
-the day Charles I. had been beheaded, after<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span>
-which his body was buried under the gallows,
-instead of in Westminster Abbey.</p>
-
-<p>“Here are also buried,” says Dean Stanley,
-“some of our young princes and princesses.
-There was that wonderfully gifted boy, Edward
-VI.”<a id="FNanchor_43" href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> (of whom we have already spoken), “who
-was only sixteen when he died, and who before
-that time had by his diligence and his honesty
-made himself beloved and trusted by all about
-him. There is the good Prince Henry, eldest
-son of James I., who when his foolish attendants
-provoked him to swear because a butcher’s dog
-had killed a stag that he was hunting, said,
-‘Away with you! All the pleasure in the world
-is not worth a profane oath.’ Then there was,
-again, that other Henry, Duke of Gloucester,
-who sat on the knees of his father, Charles I.,
-on the day before his execution, and who when
-his father said to him, ‘They will try to make
-you king instead of your elder brother,’ fired up
-like a little man, and said, ‘I will be torn in
-pieces first!’ Then there are two small tombs<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>
-of the two infant daughters of James I. (one of
-which is made in the shape of a cradle). And
-to these tombs of these two little girls were
-brought, in after-days, by King Charles II., the
-bones of the two young murdered princes
-(Edward V. and Richard, Duke of York), which
-in his time were discovered at the foot of the
-staircase in the Tower. Well might all these
-princes be mourned and have a place in this
-Abbey, because many of them, though they died
-early, showed of what stuff they were made, and
-that they would have been fit to be kings and
-to be with kings.”</p>
-
-<p>As I copied down these words of Dean
-Stanley’s, I was once more reminded of him, and
-once more I seemed to hear him telling the
-children gathered round him in the Abbey some
-of these stories which I have just been telling
-you. And as the last words in this book about
-the Abbey are his words, so the last grave which
-I want to tell you of is his, and when you some
-day go to the Abbey you must not forget to
-see (also in Henry VII.’s Chapel) the place<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>
-where, together in one tomb, are buried Arthur
-Stanley,<a id="FNanchor_44" href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> Dean of Westminster, and his wife,
-Lady Augusta.</p>
-
-<p>Dean Stanley knew more about Westminster
-Abbey than almost any other man; and not only
-did he <i>know</i> more, but by writing books and
-by telling stories to his friends as he showed
-them over the great church, he helped many
-other people, who but for him perhaps would
-not have thought much about the Abbey at all
-to know something of the Church of St. Peter
-on Thorney Isle.</p>
-
-<p>And it is because I hoped that what interested
-us as children many years ago might interest
-others now, that I have tried to remember, and
-collect, and write down these tales from Westminster
-Abbey in something the same way as
-they were told to us by the Dean.</p>
-
-<p class="center titleSmall" style="padding: 2em">THE END.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> “Memorials of Westminster Abbey.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> The Basilicas of St. John Lateran, St. Paul, St. Lorenzo,
-and St. Clement.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> The west door is hardly ever used now as an entrance for
-visitors, and if we were really coming to the Abbey we should
-enter by another door, called Solomon’s Porch, close by St.
-Margaret’s Church. But as soon as we had got inside we
-should walk straight down to the great west door, and imagine
-we had just come in that way.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> Montalembert, “Monks of the West.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> No. 2 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> Gordon was fifty-two when he was killed.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[7]</a> See Mr. Hake’s “Life of Gordon.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[8]</a> No. 3 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[9]</a> No. 4 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">[10]</a> No. 5 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">[11]</a> No. 6 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">[12]</a> No. 7 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">[13]</a> Sir James Outram was born on the 29th of January, 1805,
-and Sir Henry Havelock was born on the 5th of April, 1795;
-so at the time of the siege of Lucknow Sir James was fifty-one,
-and Sir Henry sixty-two years old.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">[14]</a> See “Havelock,” by Archibald Forbes (“English Men of
-Action Series”).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">[15]</a> No. 8 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">[16]</a> No. 9 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">[17]</a> No. 10 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">[18]</a> No. 11 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">[19]</a> No. 12 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">[20]</a> No. 13 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">[21]</a> This is the actual inscription on the monument. The
-last line as written by Shakespeare reads, “Leave not a rack
-behind.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">[22]</a> No. 14 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">[23]</a> See Sir George Grove’s “Dictionary of Music.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="label">[24]</a> No. 15 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_25" href="#FNanchor_25" class="label">[25]</a> No. 16 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_26" href="#FNanchor_26" class="label">[26]</a> No. 17 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_27" href="#FNanchor_27" class="label">[27]</a> No. 18 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_28" href="#FNanchor_28" class="label">[28]</a> No. 19 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_29" href="#FNanchor_29" class="label">[29]</a> Also No. 19 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_30" href="#FNanchor_30" class="label">[30]</a> No. 20 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_31" href="#FNanchor_31" class="label">[31]</a> No. 21 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_32" href="#FNanchor_32" class="label">[32]</a> No. 22 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_33" href="#FNanchor_33" class="label">[33]</a> No. 23 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_34" href="#FNanchor_34" class="label">[34]</a> No. 24 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_35" href="#FNanchor_35" class="label">[35]</a> No. 25 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_36" href="#FNanchor_36" class="label">[36]</a> No. 26 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_37" href="#FNanchor_37" class="label">[37]</a> No. 27 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_38" href="#FNanchor_38" class="label">[38]</a> No. 28 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_39" href="#FNanchor_39" class="label">[39]</a> Also No. 28 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_40" href="#FNanchor_40" class="label">[40]</a> No. 29 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_41" href="#FNanchor_41" class="label">[41]</a> The last Catholic funeral service was held in the Abbey
-a few days later, when by the order of Elizabeth a requiem
-mass was said for the Emperor Charles V.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_42" href="#FNanchor_42" class="label">[42]</a> No. 30 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_43" href="#FNanchor_43" class="label">[43]</a> No. 31 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_44" href="#FNanchor_44" class="label">[44]</a> No. 32 on plan.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="transnote chapter">
-<p><strong>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE</strong></p>
-<p>
-On the Plan diagram (facing Pg 14), Geoffery Chaucer changed to
-Geoffrey Chaucer.
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TALES FROM WESTMINSTER ABBEY ***</div>
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